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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Modern French Philosophy, by J. Alexander Gunn
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: Modern French Philosophy: A Study Of The Development Since Comte
+
+Author: J. Alexander Gunn
+
+Release Date: June 09, 2002 [EBook #5246]
+[Most recently updated: March 17, 2020]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MODERN FRENCH PHILOSOPHY ***
+
+
+
+
+Modern French Philosophy
+
+_A study of the Development since Comte._
+
+by J. Alexander Gunn, M.A., PH.D.
+
+_Fellow of the University of Liverpool; Lecturer in Psychology to the
+Liverpool University Extension Board_
+
+WITH A FOREWORD BY
+HENRI BERGSON
+
+_de l’Academie francaise et de l’Academie des
+Sciences morales et politiques_
+
+T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD.
+LONDON: ADELPHI TERRACE
+
+_First published in 1922._
+_(All rights reserved)_
+
+TO
+MY TEACHER
+ALEXANDER MAIR
+PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL
+AS A SMALL TOKEN OF ESTEEM
+AND AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF HIS INSTRUCTION
+
+Contents
+
+ FOREWORD BY HENRI BERGSON
+ PREFACE
+
+ CHAPTER I. ANTECEDENTS
+ CHAPTER II. MAIN CURRENTS SINCE 1851
+ CHAPTER III. SCIENCE
+ CHAPTER IV. FREEDOM
+ CHAPTER V. PROGRESS
+ CHAPTER VI. ETHICS
+ CHAPTER VII. RELIGION
+ CONCLUSION
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY
+ COMPARATIVE TABLE
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+
+“Mais il n’y a pas que cette France, que cette France glorieuse, que
+cette France révolutionnaire, cette France émancipatrice et initiatrice
+du genre humain, que cette France d’une activité merveilleuse et comme
+on l’a dit, cette France nourrie des idées générales du monde, il y a
+une autre France que je n’aime pas moins, une autre France qui m’est
+encore plus chère, c’est la France misérable, c’est la France vaincue
+et humiliée, c’est la France qui est accablée, c’est la France qui
+traîne son boulet depuis quatorze siècles, la France qui crie,
+suppliante vers la justice et vers la liberté, la France que les
+despotes poussent constamment sur les champs de bataille, sous prétexte
+de liberté, pour lui faire verser son sang par toutes les artères et
+par toutes les veines, oh! cette France-là, je l’aime.”—GAMBETTA,
+_Discours_, 29 _September_, 1872.
+
+“Les jeunes gens de tous les pays du monde qui sont venus dans les
+campagnes de France combattre pour la civilisation et le droit seront
+sans doute plus disposés à y revenir, apres la guerre chercher la
+nourriture intellectuelle. Il importe qu’ils soient assurés de l’y
+trouver, saine, abondante et forte.”—M. D. PARODI, _Inspecteur de
+l’Académie de Paris, 1919_.
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+
+_Je serais heureux que le public anglais sût le bien que je pense du
+livre de M. Gunn, sur la philosophie francaise depuis 1851. Le sujet
+choisi est neuf, car il n’existe pas, à ma connaissance, d’ouvrage
+relatif à toute cette période de la philosophie française. Le beau
+livre que M. Parodi vient de publier en français traite surtout des
+vingt dernières années de notre activité philosophique. M. Gunn,
+remontant jusqu’à Auguste Comte, a eu raison de placer ainsi devant
+nous toute le seconde moitié du siècle passé. Cette période de
+cinquante ans qui a précédée notre vingtième siècle est d’une
+importance capitale. Elle constitue réellement notre dix-neuvième
+siècle philosophique, car l’oeuvre même de Maine de Biran, qui est
+antérieure, n’a été bien connue et étudiée qu’à ce moment, et la
+plupart de nos idées philosophiques actuelles ont été élaborées pendant
+ces cinquante ans._
+
+_Le sujet est d’ailleurs d’une complication extrême, en raison du
+nombre et de la variété des doctrines, en raison surtout de la
+diversité des questions entre lesquelles se sont partagés tant de
+penseurs. Dr. Gunn a su ramener toutes ces questions à un petit nombre
+de problèmes essentiels : la science, la liberté, le progrès, la
+morale, la religion. Cette division me paraît heureuse. Elle répond
+bien, ce me semble, aux principales préoccupations de la philosophie
+francaise. Elle a permis à l’auteur d’être complet, tout en restant
+simple, clair, et facile à suivre._
+
+_Elle présente, il est vrai, un inconvénient, en ce qu’elle morcelle la
+doctrine d’un auteur en fragments dont chacun, pris à part, perd un peu
+de sa vitalite et de son individualité. Elle risque ainsi de présenter
+comme trop semblable à d’autres la solution que tel philosophe a donnée
+de tel problème, solution qui, replacée dans l’ensemble de la doctrine,
+apparaîtrait comme propre à ce penseur, originale et plus forte. Mais
+cet inconvénient était inévitable et l’envers de l’avantage que je
+signalais plus haut, celui de l’ordre, de la continuité et de la
+clarté._
+
+_Le travail du Dr. Gunn m’apparaît comme tout à fait distingué. Il
+témoigne d’une information singulièrement étendue, précise et sûre.
+C’est l’oeuvre d’un esprit d’une extrême souplesse, capable de
+s’assimiler vite et bien la pensée des philosophes, de classer les
+idées dans leur ordre d’importance, de les exposer méthodiquement et
+les apprécier à leur juste valeur._
+
+ H. Bergson
+
+[These pages are a revised extract from the more formal _Rapport_ which
+was presented by M. Bergson to the University of Liverpool].
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This work is the fruit of much reading and research done in Paris at
+the Sorbonne and Bibliothèque nationale. It is, substantially, a
+revised form of the thesis presented by the writer to the University of
+Liverpool for the degree of Doctor in Philosophy, obtained in 1921. The
+author is indebted, therefore, to the University for permission to
+publish. More especially must he record his deep gratitude to the
+French thinkers who gave both stimulus and encouragement to him during
+his sojourn in Paris. Foremost among these is M. Henri Bergson, upon
+whose _rapport_ the Doctorate was conferred, and who has expressed his
+appreciation of the work by contributing a Foreword for publication.
+
+Mention must also be made of the encouragement given by the late M.
+Emile Boutroux and by the eminent editor of the well-known _Revue de
+Métaphysique et de Morale_, M. Xavier Léon, a leading spirit in the
+_Société de Philosophie_, whose meetings the writer was privileged to
+attend by invitation. Then MM. Brunschvicg, Levy-Bruhl, Lalande, Rey
+and Lenoir, from time to time discussed the work with him and he must
+record his appreciation of their kindness.
+
+To Professor Mair of Liverpool is due the initial suggestion, and it
+has been felt a fitting tribute to his supervision, criticism,
+encouragement and sympathy that this book should be respectfully
+dedicated to him by one of his grateful pupils. In the labour of
+dealing with the proofs, the writer has to acknowledge the co-operation
+of Miss M. Linn and Mr. J. E. Turner, M.A.
+
+* * * * * * * * *
+
+
+The method adopted in this history has been deliberately chosen for its
+usefulness in emphasising the development of ideas. A purely
+chronological method has not been followed. The biographical system has
+likewise been rejected. The history of the development of thought
+centres round problems, and it progresses in relation to these
+problems. The particular manner in which the main problems presented
+themselves to the French thinkers of the second half of the nineteenth
+century was largely determined by the events and ideas which marked the
+period from 1789 to 1851. For this reason a chapter has been devoted to
+Antecedents. Between the Revolution and the _coup d’état_ of Napoleon
+III., four distinct lines of thought are discernible. Then the main
+currents from the year 1851 down to 1921 are described, with special
+reference to the development of the main problems. The reconciliation
+of _science_ and _conscience_ proved to be the main general problem,
+which became more definitely that of Freedom. This in itself is
+intimately bound up with the doctrines of progress, of history, of
+ethics and religion. These topics are discussed in a manner which shows
+their bearing upon each other. The conclusion aims at displaying the
+characteristics of French thought which reveal themselves in the study
+of these great problems. Its vitality, concreteness, clearness,
+brilliance and precision are noted and a comparison made between French
+thought and German philosophy.
+
+From a general philosophical standpoint few periods could be so
+fascinating. Few, if any, could show such a complete revolution of
+thought as that witnessed since the year 1851. To bring this out
+clearly is the main object of the present book. It is intended to serve
+a double purpose. Primarily, it aims at being a contribution to the
+history of thought which will provide a definite knowledge of the best
+that has been said and thought among philosophers in France during the
+last seventy years. Further, it is itself an appeal for serious
+attention to be given to French philosophy. This is a field which has
+been comparatively neglected by English students, so far as the
+nineteenth century is concerned, and this is especially true of our
+period, which is roughly that from Comte to Boutroux (who passed away
+last month) and Bergson (who has this year resigned his professorship).
+It is the earnest desire of the writer to draw both philosophical
+students and lovers of France and its literature to a closer study and
+appreciation of modern French philosophy. Emotion and sentiment are
+inadequate bases for an _entente_ which is to be really _cordiale_
+between any two peoples. An understanding of their deepest thoughts is
+also necessary and desirable. Such an understanding is, after all, but
+a step towards that iternationalisation of thought, that common fund of
+human culture and knowledge, which sets itself as an ideal before the
+nations of the world. _La philosophie n’a pas de patrie! Les idées sont
+actuellement les forces internationales._
+
+J. A. G.
+
+THE UNIVERSITY,
+ LIVERPOOL,
+ _December_, 1921
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+(INTRODUCTORY)
+ANTECEDENTS
+
+
+HISTORICAL SURVEY OF THE MAIN CURRENTS FROM THE REVOLUTION OF 1789 UP
+TO 1851.
+
+After the Revolution—The Traditionalists: Chateaubuand, De Bonald, De
+Maistre, Lamennais, Lacordaire
+
+_Main Currents:_
+
+1. Maine de Biran.
+
+2. The Eclectics: Cousin, Jouffroy.
+
+3. The Socialists: Saint-Simon, Fourier and Cabal, Proudhon and Blanc.
+
+4.Positivism: Auguste Comte.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ANTECEDENTS
+
+This work deals with the great French thinkers since the time of
+Auguste Comte, and treats, under various aspects, the development of
+thought in relation to the main problems which confronted these men. In
+the commencement of such an undertaking we are obliged to acknowledge
+the continuity of human thought, to recognise that it tends to
+approximate to an organic whole, and that, consequently, methods
+resembling those of surgical amputation are to be avoided. We cannot
+absolutely isolate one period of thought. For this reason a brief
+survey of the earlier years is necessary in order to orient the
+approach to the period specially placed in the limelight, namely
+1851-1921.
+
+In the world of speculative thought and in the realm of practical
+politics we find reflected, at the opening of the century, the work of
+the French Revolutionaries on the one hand, and that of Immanuel Kant
+on the other. Coupled with these great factors was the pervading
+influence of the Encyclopædists and of the thinkers of the
+Enlightenment. These two groups of influences, the one sudden and in
+the nature of a shock to political and metaphysical thought, the other
+quieter but no less effective, combined to produce a feeling of
+instability and of dissatisfaction at the close of the eighteenth
+century. A sense of change, indeed of resurrection, filled the minds
+and hearts of those who saw the opening of the nineteenth century. The
+old aristocracy and the monarchy in France had gone, and in philosophy
+the old metaphysic had received a blow at the hands of the author of
+the Three Critiques.
+
+No better expression was given to the psychological state of France at
+this time than that of Alfred de Musset in his _Confession d’un Enfant
+du Siècle_. _Toute la maladie du siècle présent_ (he wrote) _vient de
+deux causes; le peuple qui a passé par ’93 et par 1814 porte au cœur
+deux blessures. Tout ce qui était n’est plus; tout ce qui sera n’est
+pas encore. Ne cherchez ailleurs le secret de nos maux._[1] De Musset
+was right, the whole course of the century was marked by conflict
+between two forces—on the one hand a tendency to reaction and
+conservatism, on the other an impulse to radicalism and revolution.
+
+ [1] The extract is taken from _Première partie_, ch. 2. The book was
+ published in 1836. Somewhat similar sentiments are uttered with
+ reference to this time by Michelet. (See his _Histoire du XIXe
+ Siècle_, vol. i., p. 9).
+
+
+It is true that one group of thinkers endeavoured, by a perfectly
+natural reaction, to recall their fellow-countrymen, at this time of
+unrest, back to the doctrines and traditions of the past, and tried to
+find in the faith of the Christian Church and the practice of the
+Catholic religion a rallying-point. The monarchy and the Church were
+eulogised by Chateaubriand, while on the more philosophical side
+efforts on behalf of traditionalism were made very nobly by De Bonald
+and Joseph de Maistre. While they represented the old aristocracy and
+recalled the theocracy and ecclesiasticism of the past by advocating
+reaction and Ultramontanism, Lamennais attempted to adapt Catholicism
+to the new conditions, only to find, as did Renan later, that “one
+cannot argue with a bar of iron.” Not the brilliant appeals of a
+Lacordaire, who thundered from Notre Dame, nor the modernism of a
+Lamennais, nor the efforts in religious philosophy made by De Maistre,
+were, however, sufficient to meet the needs of the time.
+
+The old traditions and the old dogmas did not offer the salvation they
+professed to do. Consequently various groups of thinkers worked out
+solutions satisfactory to themselves and which they offered to others.
+We can distinguish clearly four main currents, the method of
+introspection and investigation of the inner life of the soul, the
+adoption of a spiritualist philosophy upon an eclectic basis, the
+search for a new society after the manner of the socialists and,
+lastly, a positive philosophy and religion of humanity. These four
+currents form the historical antecedents of our period and to a brief
+survey of them we now turn.
+
+* * * * * * * * *
+
+I
+
+To find the origin of many of the tendencies which appear prominently
+in the thought of the second half of the nineteenth century,
+particularly those displayed by the new spiritualistic philosophy
+(which marked the last thirty years of the century), we must go back to
+the period of the Revolution, to Maine de Biran (1766-1824)—a unique
+and original thinker who laid the foundations of modern French
+psychology and who was, we may note in passing, a contemporary of
+Chateaubriand. A certain tone of romanticism marks the work of both the
+literary man and the philosopher. Maine de Biran was not a thinker who
+reflected upon his own experiences in retreat from the world. Born a
+Count, a Lifeguardsman to Louis XVI. at the Revolution, and faithful to
+the old aristocracy, he was appointed, at the Restoration, to an
+important administrative position, and later became a deputy and a
+member of the State Council. His writings were much greater in extent
+than is generally thought, but only one important work appeared in
+publication during his lifetime. This was his treatise, or _mémoire_,
+entitled _Habitude_, which appeared in 1803. This work well illustrates
+Maine de Biran’s historical position in the development of French
+philosophy. It came at a tome when attention and interest, so far as
+philosophical problems were concerned, centred round two “foci.” These
+respective centres are indicated by Destutt de Tracy,[2] the disciple
+of Condillac on the one hand, and by Cabanis[3] on the other. Both were
+“ideologues” and were ridiculed by Napoleon who endeavoured to lay much
+blame upon the philosophers. We must notice, however, this difference.
+While the school of Condillac,[4] influenced by Locke, endeavoured to
+work out a psychology in terms of abstractions, Cabanis, anxious to be
+more concrete, attempted to interpret the life of the mind by reference
+to physical and physiological phenomena.
+
+ [2] Destutt de Tracy, 1754-1836. His _Elements of Ideology_ appeared
+ in 1801. He succeeded Cabanis in the Académie in 1808, and in a
+ complimentary _Discours_ pronounced upon his predecessor claimed that
+ Cabanis had introduced medicine into philosophy and philosophy into
+ medicine. This remark might well have been applied later to Claude
+ Bernard.
+
+
+ [3] Cabanis, 1757-1808, _Rapports du Physique et du Morale de
+ l’Homme_, 1802. He was a friend of De Biran, as also was Ampère, the
+ celebrated physicist and a man of considerable philosophical power. A
+ group used to meet _chez Cabanis_ at Auteuil, comprising De Biran,
+ Cabanis, Ampère, Royard-Collard, Guizot, and Cousin.
+
+
+ [4] Condillac belongs to the eighteenth century. He died in 1780. His
+ _Traité des Sensations_ is dated 1754.
+
+
+It is the special merit of De Biran that he endeavoured, and that
+successfully, to establish both the concreteness and the essential
+spirituality of the inner life. The attitude and method which he
+adopted became a force in freeing psychology, and indeed philosophy in
+general, from mere play with abstractions. His doctrines proved
+valuable, too, in establishing the reality and irreducibility of the
+mental or spiritual nature of man.
+
+Maine de Biran took as his starting-point a psychological fact, the
+reality of conscious effort. The self is active rather than
+speculative; the self is action or effort—that is to say, the self is,
+fundamentally and primarily, will. For the Cartesian formula _Cogito,
+ergo sum,_ De Biran proposed to substitute that of _Volo, ergo sum_. He
+went on to maintain that we have an internal and immediate perception
+of this effort of will through which we realise, at one and the same
+time, our self in its fullest activity and the resistance to its
+operations. In such effort we realise ourselves as free causes and, in
+spite of the doctrine of physical determinism, we realise in ourselves
+the self as a cause of its own volitions. The greater the resistance or
+the greater the effort, the more do we realise ourselves as being free
+and not the absolute victims of habit. Of this freedom we have an
+immediate consciousness, it is _une donnée immédiate de la conscience._
+
+This freedom is not always realised, for over against the tendency to
+action we must set the counter-tendency to passivity. Between these two
+exists, in varying degrees of approach to the two extremes, _habitude_.
+Our inner life is seen by the psychologist as a field of conflict
+between the sensitive and the reflective side of our nature. It is this
+which gives to the life of this _homo duplex_ all the elements of
+struggle and tragedy. In the desires and the passions, says Maine de
+Biran, the true self is not seen. The true self appears in memory,
+reasoning and, above all, in will.
+
+Such, in brief, is the outline of De Biran’s psychology. To his two
+stages, _vie sensitive_ and _vie active_ (_ou réflexive_), he added a
+third, _la vie divine_. In his religious psychology he upheld the great
+Christian doctrines of divine love and grace as against the less human
+attitude of the Stoics. He still insists upon the power of will and
+action and is an enemy of the religious vice of quietism. In his
+closing years De Biran penned his ideas upon our realisation of the
+divine love by intuition. His intense interest in the inner life of the
+spirit gives De Biran’s _Journal Intime_ a rank among the illuminating
+writings upon religious psychology.
+
+Maine de Biran was nothing if not a psychologist. The most absurd
+statement ever made about him was that he was “the French Kant.” This
+is very misleading, for De Biran’s genius showed itself in his
+psychological power and not in critical metaphysics. The importance of
+his work and his tremendous influence upon our period, especially upon
+the new spiritualism, will be apparent. Indeed he himself foresaw the
+great possibilities which lay open to philosophy along the lines he
+laid down. “_Qui sait,_” he remarked,[5] “_tout ce que peut la
+réflection concentrée et s’il n’y a pas un nouveau monde intérieur qui
+pourra être découvert un jour par quelque ‘Colomb métaphysicien.’_”
+With Maine de Biran began the movement in French philosophy which
+worked through the writings of Ravaisson, Lachelier, Guyau, Boutroux
+and particularly Bergson. A careful examination of the philosophy of
+this last thinker shows how great is his debt to Maine de Biran, whose
+inspiration he warmly acknowledges.
+
+ [5] Pensées, p. 213.
+
+
+But it is only comparatively recently that Maine de Biran has come to
+his own and that his real power and influence have been recognised.
+There are two reasons for this, firstly the lack of publication of his
+writings, and secondly his being known for long only through the work
+of Cousin and the Eclectics, who were imperfectly acquainted with his
+work. Upon this school of thought he had some little influence which
+was immediate and personal, but Cousin, although he edited some of his
+unpublished work, failed to appreciate its originality and value.
+
+So for a time De Biran’s influence waned when that of Cousin himself
+faded. Maine de Biran stands quite in a different category from the
+Eclectics, as a unique figure at a transition period, the herald of the
+best that was to be in the thought of the century. Cousin and the
+Eclectic school, however, gained the official favour, and eclecticism
+was for many years the “official philosophy.”
+
+II
+
+This Eclectic School was due to the work of various thinkers, of whom
+we may cite Laromiguière (1756-1837), who marks the transition from
+Condillac, Royer-Collard (1763-1845), who, abandoning Condillac, turned
+for inspiration to the Scottish School (particularly to Reid), Victor
+Cousin (1792-1867), Jouffroy (1796-1842) and Paul Janet (1823-1899),
+the last of the notable eclectics. Of these “the chief” was Cousin. His
+personality dominated this whole school of thought, his _ipse dixit_
+was the criterion of orthodoxy, an orthodoxy which we must note was
+supported by the powers of officialdom.
+
+He rose from the Ecole Normale Supérieure to a professorship at the
+Sorbonne, which he held from the Restoration (1815 to 1830), with a
+break of a few years during which his course was suspended. These years
+he spent in Germany, to which country attention had been attracted by
+the work of Madame de Staël, _De l’Allemagne_ (1813). From 1830 to the
+beginning of our period (1851) Cousin, as director of the Ecole Normale
+Supérieure, as a _pair de France_ and a minister of state, organised
+and controlled the education of his country. He thus exercised a very
+great influence over an entire generation of Frenchmen, to whom he
+propounded the doctrines of his spiritualism.
+
+His teaching was marked by a strong reaction against the doctrines of
+the previous century, which had given such value to the data of sense.
+Cousin abhorred the materialism involved in these doctrines, which he
+styled _une doctrine désolante_, and he endeavoured to raise the
+dignity and conception of man as a spiritual being. In the Preface to
+his Lectures of 1818, _Du Vrai, du Beau et du Bien_ (Edition of 1853),
+published first in 1846, he lays stress upon the elements of his
+philosophy, which he presents as a true spiritualism, for it
+subordinates the sensory and sensual to the spiritual. He upholds the
+essentially spiritual nature of man, his liberty, moral responsibility
+and obligation, the dignity of human virtue, disinterestedness,
+charity, justice and beauty. These fruits of the spirit reveal, Cousin
+claimed, a God who is both the author and the ideal type of humanity, a
+Being who is not indifferent to the welfare and happiness of his
+creatures. There is a vein of romanticism about Cousin, and in him may
+be seen the same spirit which, on the literary side, was at work in
+Hugo, Lamartine and De Vigny.
+
+Cousin’s philosophy attached itself rather to the Scottish school of
+“common sense” than to the analytic type of doctrine which had
+prevailed in his own country in the previous century. To this he added
+much from various sources, such as Schelling and Hegel among the
+moderns, Plato and the Alexandrians among the ancients. In viewing the
+history of philosophy, Cousin advocated a division of systems into four
+classes—sensualism, idealism, scepticism and mysticism. Owing to the
+insufficiency of his _vérités de sens commun_ he was prone to confuse
+the history of philosophy with philosophy itself. There is perhaps no
+branch of science or art so intimately bound up with its own history as
+is philosophy, but we must beware of substituting an historical survey
+of problems for an actual handling of those problems themselves.
+Cousin, however, did much to establish in his native land the teaching
+of the history of philosophy.
+
+His own aim was to found a metaphysic spiritual in character, based
+upon psychology. While he did not agree with the system of Kant, he
+rejected the doctrines of the empiricists and set his influence against
+the materialistic and sceptical tendencies of his time. Yet he cannot
+be excused from “opportunism” not only in politics but in thought. In
+order to retain his personal influence he endeavoured to present his
+philosophy as a sum of doctrines perfectly consistent with the Catholic
+faith. This was partly, no doubt, to counteract the work and influence
+of that group of thinkers already referred to as Traditionalists, De
+Bonald, De Maistre and Lamennais. Cousin’s efforts in this direction,
+however, dissatisfied both churchmen and philosophers and gave rise to
+the remark that his teaching was but _une philosophie de convenance_.
+We must add too that the vagueness of his spiritual teaching was
+largely responsible for the welcome accorded by many minds to the
+positivist teaching of Auguste Comte.
+
+While Maine de Biran had a real influence upon the thought of our
+period 1851-1921, Cousin stands in a different relation to subsequent
+thought, for that thought is largely characterised by its being a
+reaction against eclecticism. Positivism rose as a direct revolt
+against it, the neo-critical philosophy dealt blows at both, while
+Ravaisson, the initiator of the neo-spiritualism, upon whom Cousin did
+not look very favourably, endeavoured to reorganise upon a different
+footing, and on sounder principles, free from the deficiencies which
+must always accompany eclectic thought, those ideas and ideals to which
+Cousin in his spiritualism had vaguely indicated his loyalty. It is
+interesting to note that Cousin’s death coincides in date with the
+foundation of the neo-spiritual philosophy by Ravaisson’s celebrated
+manifesto to idealists, for such, as we shall see, was his _Rapport sur
+la Philosophie au Dix-neuvième Siècle_ (1867). Cousin’s spiritualism
+had a notable influence upon several important men—e.g., Michelet and
+his friend Edgar Quinet, and more indirectly upon Renan. The latter
+spoke of him in warm terms as un _excitateur de ma pensée_.[6]
+
+ [6] It is worth noting that two of the big currents of opposition,
+ those of Comte and Renouvier, arose outside the professional and
+ official teaching, free from the University which was entirely
+ dominated by Cousin. This explains much of the slowness with which
+ Comte and Renouvier were appreciated.
+
+
+Among Cousin’s disciples one of the most prominent was Jouffroy of the
+Collège de France. The psychological interest was keen in his work, but
+his _Mélanges philosophiques_ (1883) showed him to be occupied with the
+problem of human destiny. Paul Janet was a noble upholder of the
+eclectic doctrine or older spiritualism, while among associates and
+tardy followers must be mentioned Gamier, Damiron, Franke, Caro and
+Jules Simon.
+
+III
+
+We have seen how, as a consequence of the Revolution and of the cold,
+destructive, criticism of the eighteenth century, there was a demand
+for constructive thought. This was a desire common not only to the
+Traditionalists but to De Biran and Cousin. They aimed at intellectual
+reconstruction. While, however, there were some who combated the
+principles of the Revolution, as did the Traditionalists, while some
+tried to correct and to steady those principles (as De Biran and
+Cousin), there were others who endeavoured to complete them and to
+carry out a more rigorous application of the Revolutionary watchwords,
+_Liberté_, _Egalité_, _Fraternité_. The Socialists (and later Comte)
+aimed at not merely intellectual, but social reconstruction.
+
+The Revolution and the War had shown men that many changes could be
+produced in society in a comparatively short time. This encouraged bold
+and imaginative spirits. Endeavours after better things, after new
+systems and a new order of society, showed themselves. The work of
+political philosophers attempted to give expression to the socialist
+idea of society. For long there had been maintained the ecclesiastical
+conception of a perfect social order in another world. It was now
+thought that humanity would be better employed, not in imagining the
+glories of a “hereafter,” but in “tilling its garden,” in striving to
+realise here on earth something of that blessed fellowship and happy
+social order treasured up in heaven. This is the dominant note of
+socialism, which is closely bound up at its origin, not only with
+political thought, but with humanitarianism and a feeling essentially
+religious. Its progress is a feature of the whole century.
+
+The most notable expression of the new socialistic idea was that of
+Count Henri de Saint-Simon (1760-1825), a relative of the celebrated
+Duke. He had great confidence in the power of science as an instrument
+for social reconstruction, and he took over from a medical man, Dr.
+Burdin, the notions which, later on, Auguste Comte was to formulate
+into the doctrines of Positivism. Saint-Simon’s influence showed itself
+while the century was young, his first work _Lettres d’un Habitant de
+Genève_ appearing in 1803. In this he outlined a scheme for placing the
+authoritative power of the community, not in the hands of Church and
+State, but in a freely elected body of thinkers and _artistes_. He then
+endeavoured to urge the importance of order in society, as a
+counterpart to the order erected by science in the world of knowledge.
+To this end was directed his _Introduction aux Travaux scientifiques du
+Dix-neuvième Siècle_ (1807-8). He also indicated the importance for
+social welfare of abandoning the preoccupation with an imaginary
+heaven, and pointed out that the more social and political theory could
+be emancipated from the influence of theological dogmas the better. At
+the same time he quite recognised the importance of religious beliefs
+to a community, and his sociological view of religion foreshadowed
+Guyau’s study, an important work which will claim our attention in due
+course.
+
+In 1813, Saint-Simon published his _Mémoire sur la Science de l’Homme_,
+in which he laid down notions which were the germ of Auguste Comte’s
+_Law of the Three Stages_. With the peace which followed the Battle of
+Waterloo, a tremendous stimulus was given in France to industrial
+activity, and Saint-Simon formulated his motto “All by industry and all
+for industry.” Real power, he showed, lay not in the hands of
+governments or government agents, but with the industrial class.
+Society therefore should be organised in the manner most favourable to
+the working class. Ultimate economic and political power rests with
+them. These ideas he set forth in _L’Industrie_, 1817-18, _La
+Politique_, 1819, _L’Organisateur_, 1819-30, _Le Système industriel_,
+1821-22, _Le Catéchisme des Industriels_, 1822-24. Since 1817 among his
+fellow- workers were now Augustin Thierry and young Auguste Comte, his
+secretary, the most important figure in the history of the first half
+of the century.
+
+Finding that exposition and reasoned demonstration of his ideas were
+not sufficient, Saint-Simon made appeal to sentiment by his _Appel aux
+Philanthropes_, a treatise on human brotherhood and solidarity. This he
+followed up in 1825 by his last book, published the year of his death,
+_Le Nouveau Christianisme_. This book endeavoured to outline a religion
+which should prove itself capable of reorganising society by
+inculcating the brotherhood of man in a more effective manner than that
+of the Christian Church. _Fraternité_ was the watchword he stressed,
+and he placed women on an equal political and social footing with men.
+He set forth the grave deficiencies of the Christian doctrines as
+proclaimed by Catholic and Protestant alike. Both are cursed by the sin
+of individualism, the virtue of saving one’s own soul, while no attempt
+at social salvation is made. Both Catholics and Protestants he labelled
+vile heretics, inasmuch as they have turned aside from the social
+teaching of Christianity. If we are to love our neighbour as ourselves
+we must as a whole community work for the betterment of our fellows
+socially, by erecting a form of society more in accord with Christian
+principles. We must strive to do it here and now, and not sit piously
+getting ready for the next world. We must not think it religious to
+despise the body or material welfare. God manifests Himself as matter
+and spirit, so Religion must not despise economics but rather unite
+industry and science as Love unites spirit and matter. Eternal Life, of
+which Christianity makes so much, is not to be sought, argued
+Saint-Simon, in another world, but here and now in the love and service
+of our brothers, in the uplift of humanity as a whole.
+
+Saint-Simon believed in a fated progress and an inevitable betterment
+of the condition of the working classes. The influence of Hegel’s view
+of history and Condorcet’s social theories is apparent in some of his
+writings. His insistence upon organisation, social authority and the
+depreciative view of liberty which he held show well how he was the
+real father of many later doctrines and of applications of these
+doctrines, as for example by Lenin in the Soviet system of Bolshevik
+Russia. Saint-Simon foreshadowed the dictatorship of the proletariat,
+although his scheme of social organisation involved a triple division
+of humanity into intellectuals, artists and industrials. Many of his
+doctrines had a definite communistic tendency. Among them we find
+indicated the abolition of all hereditary rights of inheritance and the
+distribution of property is placed, as in the communist programme, in
+the hands of the organising authority. Saint-Simon had a keen insight
+into modern social conditions and problems. He stressed the economic
+inter-relationships and insisted that the world must be regarded as
+“one workshop.” A statement of the principles of the Saint- Simonist
+School, among whom was the curious character Enfantin, was presented to
+the _Chambre des Députés_ in the critical year 1830. The disciples seem
+to have shown a more definite communism than their master. The
+influence of Saint-Simon, precursor of both socialism and positivism,
+had considerable influence upon the social philosophy of the whole
+century. It only diminished when the newer type of socialist doctrine
+appeared, the so-called “scientific” socialism of Marx and Engels.
+Saint-Simon’s impulse, however, acted powerfully upon the minds of most
+of the thinkers of the century, especially in their youth. Renouvier
+and Renan were fired with some of his ideas. The spirit of Saint-Simon
+expressed itself in our period by promoting an intense interest in
+philosophy as applied to social problems.
+
+Saint-Simon was not, however, the only thinker at this time with a
+social programme to offer. In contrast to his scheme we have that of
+Fourier (1772-1837) who endeavoured to avoid the suppression of liberty
+involved in the organisation proposed by Saint-Simon.
+
+The psychology of Fourier was peculiar and it coloured his ethical and
+social doctrine. He believed that the evils of the world were due to
+the repression of human passions. These in themselves, if given liberty
+of expression, would prove harmonious. As Newton had propounded the law
+of the universal attraction of matter, Fourier endeavoured to propound
+the law of attraction between human beings. Passion and desire lead to
+mutual attraction; the basis of society is free association.
+
+Fourier’s _Traité de l’Association domestique et agricole_ (1822),
+which followed his _Théorie des Quatre Mouvements_ (1808), proposed the
+formation of associations or groups, _phalanges_, in which workers
+unite with capital for the self-government of industry. He, like Saint-
+Simon, attacks idlers, but the two thinkers look upon the capitalist
+manager as a worker. The intense class- antagonism of capitalist and
+labourer had not yet formulated itself and was not felt strongly until
+voiced on behalf of the proletariat by Proudhon and Marx. Fourier’s
+proposals were those of a _bourgeois_ business man who knew the
+commercial world intimately, who criticised it and condemned the
+existing system of civilisation. Various experiments were made to
+organise communities based upon his _phalanges_.
+
+Cabet, the author of _Icaria_ (1840) and _Le nouveau Christianisme_,
+was a further power in the promotion of socialism and owed not a little
+of his inspiration to Robert Owen.
+
+The most interesting and powerful of the early socialist philosophers
+is undoubtedly Proudhon (1809- 1865), a striking personality, much
+misunderstood.
+
+While Saint-Simon, a count, came from the aristocracy, Fourier from the
+_bourgeoisie_, Proudhon was a real son of the people, a mouthpiece of
+the proletariat. He was a man of admirable mental energy and learning,
+which he had obtained solely by his own efforts and by a struggle with
+poverty and misery. Earnest and passionate by nature, he yet formulated
+his doctrines with more sanity and moderation than is usually supposed.
+Labels of “atheist” and “anarchist” have served well to misrepresent
+him. Certainly two of his watchwords were likely enough to raise
+hostility in many quarters. “God,” he said, “is evil,” “Property is
+theft.” This last maxim was the subject of his book, published in 1840,
+_Qu’est-ce que la propriété_? (_ou, Recherches sur le principe du droit
+et du gouvernement_) to which his answer was “_C’est le vol!_” Proudhon
+took up the great watchword of _Egalité_, and had a passion for social
+justice which he based on “the right to the whole product of labour.”
+This could only come by mutual exchange, fairly and freely. He
+distinguished between private “property” and individual “possession.”
+The latter is an admitted fact and is not to be abolished; what he is
+anxious to overthrow is private “property,” which is a toll upon the
+labour of others and is therefore ultimately and morally theft. He
+hated the State for its support of the “thieves,” and his doctrines are
+a philosophy of anarchy. He further enunciated them in _Système des
+Contradictions économiques_ (1846) and _De la Justice_ (1858). In 1848
+he was elected a _député_ and, together with Louis Blanc and Pierre
+Leroux, figured in the Revolution of 1848. Blanc was a man of action,
+who had a concrete scheme for transition from the capitalist régime to
+the socialist state. He believed in the organisation of labour,
+universal suffrage and a new distribution of wealth, but he disapproved
+strongly of the dictatorship of the proletariat and of violent
+revolution. Proudhon expressed his great admiration for Blanc.
+
+The work of both of these men is a contradiction to the assertion put
+forward by the Marxian school that socialist doctrine was merely
+sentimental, utopian and “unscientific” prior to Marx. Many of the
+views of Proudhon and Blanc were far more “scientific” than those of
+Marx, because they were closer to facts. Proudhon differed profoundly
+from Marx in his view of history in which he saw the influence of ideas
+and ideals, as well as the operation of purely economic factors. To the
+doctrine of a materialistic determination of history Proudhon rightly
+opposes that of a spiritual determination, by the thoughts and ideals
+of men.[7] The true revolution Proudhon and Blanc maintained can come
+only through the power of ideas.
+
+ [7] Indeed, it is highly probable that with the growing
+ dissatisfaction with Marxian theories the work of Proudhon will come
+ into greater prominence, replacing largely that of Marx.
+ On the personal relations of Proudhon with Marx (1818-1883), who
+ was nine years younger than the Frenchman, see the interesting
+ volume by Marx’s descendant, M. Jean Longuet (Député de la Seine),
+ _La Politique internationale du Marxisme_ (_Karl Marx et la
+ France_) (Alcan).
+ On the debt of Marx to the French social thinkers see the account
+ given by Professor Charles Andler in his special edition of the
+ Communist Manifesto, _Le Manifeste Communiste_ (_avec introduction
+ historique et commentaire_), (Rieder), also the last section of
+ Renouvier’s Philosophie analytique de l’Histoire, vol. iv.
+
+
+All these early socialist thinkers had this in common: they agreed that
+purely economic solutions would not soothe the ills of society, but
+that moral, religious and philosophic teaching must accompany, or
+rather precede, all efforts towards social reform. The earliest of
+them, Saint-Simon, had asserted that no society, no system of
+civilisation, can endure if its spiritual principles and its economic
+organisation are in direct contradiction. When brotherly love on the
+one hand and merciless competition on the other are equally extolled,
+then hypocrisy, unrest and conflict are inevitable.
+
+IV
+
+The rise of positivism ranks with the rise of socialism as a movement
+of primary importance. Both were in origin nearer to one another than
+they now appear to be. We have seen how Saint-Simon was imbued with a
+spirit of social reform, a desire to reorganise human society. This
+desire Auguste Comte (1798-1857) shared; he felt himself called to it
+as a sacred work, and he extolled his “incomparable mission.” He
+lamented the anarchical state of the world and contrasted it with the
+world of the ancients and that of the Middle Ages. The harmony and
+stability of mediaeval society were due, Comte urged, to the spiritual
+power and unity of the Catholic Church and faith. The liberty of the
+Reformation offers no real basis for society, it is the spirit of
+criticism and of revolution. The modern world needs a new spiritual
+power. Such was Comte’s judgment upon the world of his time. Where in
+the modern world could such a new organising power be found? To this
+question Comte gave an answer similar to that of Saint-Simon: he turned
+to science. The influence of Saint-Simon is here apparent, and we must
+note the personal relations between the two men. In 1817 Comte became
+secretary to Saint-Simon, and became intimately associated with his
+ideas and his work. Comte recognised, with his master, the supreme
+importance of establishing, at the outset, the relations actually
+obtaining and the relations possible between science and political
+organisation. This led to the publication, in 1822, of a treatise,
+_Plan des Travaux scientifiques nécessaires pour réorganiser la
+Société_, which unfortunately led to a quarrel between the two friends,
+and finally, in 1824, to a definite rupture by which Comte seems to
+have been embittered and made rather hostile to his old master and to
+have assumed an ungenerous attitude.[8] Comte, however, being a proud
+and ambitious spirit, was perhaps better left alone to hew out his own
+path. In him we have one of the greatest minds of modern France, and
+his doctrine of positivism is one of the dominating features of the
+first half of the century.
+
+ [8] In considering the relations between Saint-Simon and Comte we may
+ usefully compare those between Schelling and Hegel in Germany.
+
+
+His break with Saint-Simon showed his own resources; he had undoubtedly
+a finer sense of the difficulties of his reforming task than had
+Saint-Simon; moreover, he possessed a scientific knowledge which his
+master lacked. Such equipment he needed in his ambitious task, and it
+is one of the chief merits of Comte that he _attempted_ so large a
+project as the Positive Philosophy endeavoured to be.
+
+This philosophy was contained in his _Cours de Philosophie positive_
+(1830-1842), which he regarded as the theoretic basis of a reforming
+political philosophy. One of the most interesting aspects of this work,
+however, is its claim to be a positive _philosophy_. Had not Comte
+accepted the Saint-Simonist doctrine of a belief in science as the
+great future power in society? How then comes it that he gives us a
+“_philosophie_ positive” in the first place and not, as we might
+expect, a “_science_ positive”? Comte’s answer to this is that science,
+no less than society itself, is disordered and stands in need of
+organisation. The sciences have proceeded to work in a piecemeal
+fashion and are unable to present us with _une vue d’ensemble_. It is
+the rôle of philosophy to work upon the data presented by the various
+sciences and, without going beyond these data, to arrange them and give
+us an organic unity of thought, a synthesis, which shall produce order
+in the mind of man and subsequently in human society.
+
+The precise part to be played by philosophy is determined by the
+existing state of scientific knowledge in the various departments and
+so depends upon the general stage of intelligence which humanity has
+reached. The intellectual development of humanity was formulated
+generally by Comte in what is known as “The Law of the Three Stages,”
+probably that part of his doctrine which is best known and which is
+most obvious. “The Law of the Three Stages” merely sets down the fact
+that in the race and in the individual we find three successive stages,
+under which conceptions are formed differently. The first is the
+theological or fictitious stage, in which the explanation of things is
+referred to the operations of divine agency. The second is the
+metaphysical or abstract stage when, for divinities, abstract
+principles are substituted. In the third, the scientific or positive
+stage, the human mind has passed beyond a belief in divine agencies or
+metaphysical abstractions to a rational study of the effective laws of
+phenomena. The human spirit here encounters the real, but it abstains
+from pretensions to absolute knowledge; it does not theorise about the
+beginning or the end of the universe or, indeed, its absolute nature;
+it takes only into consideration facts within human knowledge. Comte
+laid great emphasis upon the necessity of recognising the relativity of
+all things. All is relative; this is the one absolute principle. Our
+knowledge, he insisted (especially in his _Discours sur l’Esprit
+positif_, 1844, which forms a valuable introduction to his thought as
+expressed in his larger works), is entirely relative to our
+organisation and our situation. Relativity, however, does not imply
+uncertainty. Our knowledge is indeed relative and never absolute, but
+it grows to a greater accord with reality. It is this passion for
+“accord with reality” which is characteristic of the scientific or
+positivist spirit.
+
+The sciences are themselves relative and much attention is given by
+Comte to the proper classification of the sciences. He determines his
+hierarchy by arranging them in the order in which they have themselves
+completed the three stages and arrived at positivity. Mathematics,
+astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology and sociology are his
+arrangement. This last named has not yet arrived at the final stage; it
+is but a science in the making. Comte, indeed, himself gives it its
+name and founds it as the science of society, science applied to
+politics, as was first indicated in his scheme of work and early ideas
+of reform.
+
+Comte strongly insists upon the social aspect of all knowledge and all
+action. He even goes to the extent of regarding the individual man as
+an abstraction; for him the real being is the social being, Humanity.
+The study of human society has a double aspect, which is also a feature
+of the other sciences. As in biology there is the study of anatomy on
+the one hand and of physiology on the other, so in sociology we must
+investigate both the laws which govern the existence of a society and
+those which control its movements. The distinction is, in short, that
+of the static and the dynamic, and it embraces in sociological study
+the important conceptions of order and of progress. Comte very rightly
+stressed the idea of progress as characteristic of modern times, but he
+lamented its being divorced from that of order. He blamed the
+conservative view of order as responsible for promoting among
+“progressives” the spirit of anarchy and revolution. A positive
+sociology would, Comte maintained, reconcile a true order, which does
+not exclude change, with real progress, a movement which is neither
+destructive nor capricious. Comte here owes a debt in part to
+Montesquieu and largely to Condorcet, whose _Esquisse d’un Tableau
+historique des Progrès de l’Esprit humain_ (1795) did much to promote
+serious reflection upon the question of progress.
+
+We have already noted Comte’s intense valuation of Humanity as a whole
+as a Supreme Being. In his later years, notably after 1845, when he met
+his “Beatrice” in the person of Clotilde de Vaux, he gave to his
+doctrines a sentimental expression of which the Religion of Humanity
+with its ritualism was the outcome. This positivist religion
+endeavoured to substitute for the traditional God the Supreme Being of
+Humanity—a Being capable, according to Comte, of sustaining our
+courage, becoming the end of our actions and the object of our love. To
+this he attached a morality calculated to combat the egoism which tends
+to dominate and to destroy mankind and intended to strengthen the
+altruistic motives in man and to raise them to the service of Humanity.
+
+We find Comte, at the opening of our period, restating his doctrines in
+his _Système de Politique positive_ (1851-54), to which his first work
+was meant to serve as an Introduction. In 1856 he began his _Synthèse
+subjective_, but he died in 1857. Comte is a singularly desolate
+figure; the powers of officialdom were against him, and he existed
+mainly by what he could gain from teaching mathematics and by a pension
+raised by his admirers in England and his own land.
+
+The influence of his philosophy has been great and far- reaching, but
+it is the _spirit_ of positivism which has survived, not its content.
+Subsequent developments in science have rendered much of his work
+obsolete, while his Religion has never made a great appeal. Comte’s
+most noted disciple, Littré (1801-1881), regarded this latter as a
+retrograde step and confined himself to the early part of his master’s
+work. Most important for us in the present work is Comte’s influence
+upon subsequent thinkers in France, notably Taine, and we may add,
+Renan, Cournot, and even Renouvier, although these last two promoted a
+vigorous reaction against his philosophy in general. He influenced his
+adversaries, a notable testimony. Actually, however, the positivist
+philosophy found a greater welcome on the English side of the Channel
+from John Stuart Mill, Spencer and Lewes. The empiricism of the English
+school proved a more fruitful soil for positivism than the vague
+spiritualism of Cousin to which it offered strong opposition.
+Positivism, or rather the positivist standpoint in philosophy, turned
+at a later date to reseek its fatherland and after a sojourn in England
+reappears as an influence in the work of French thinkers near the end
+of the century—e.g., Fouillée, Guyau, Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson
+express elements of positivism.
+
+We have now passed in review the four main currents of the first half
+of the century, in a manner intended to orient the approach to our
+period, 1851-1921. Without such an orientation much of the subsequent
+thought would lose its correct colouring and perspective. There is a
+continuity, even if it be partly a continuity marked by reactions, and
+this will be seen when we now examine the three general currents into
+which the thought of the subsequent period is divided.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+MAIN CURRENTS SINCE 1851
+
+
+Introductory: Influence of events of 1848-1851—Reactionary character of
+Second Empire—Disgust of many thinkers (e.g., Vacherot, Taine, Renan,
+Renouvier, Hugo, Quinet)—Effects of 1870, the War, the Commune, and the
+Third Republic.
+
+General character of the Philosophy of the Period—Reaction against both
+Eclecticism and Positivism.
+
+THE THREE MAIN CURRENTS.
+
+
+I. Positivist and naturalist current turning upon itself, seen in
+Vacherot, Taine, and Renan.
+
+II. Cournot, Renouvier, and the neo-critical philosophy.
+
+III. The New Spiritual Philosophy, to which the main contributors were
+Ravaisson, Lachelier, Boutroux, Fouillée, Guyau, Bergson, Blondel, and
+Weber.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+MAIN CURRENTS
+
+The year 1851 was one of remarkable importance for France; a crisis
+then occurred in its political and intellectual life. The hopes and
+aspirations to which the Revolution of 1848 had given rise were
+shattered by the _coup d’état_ of Louis Napoleon in the month of
+December. The proclamation of the Second Empire heralded the revival of
+an era of imperialism and reaction in politics, accompanied by a
+decline in liberty and a diminution of idealism in the world of
+thought. A censorship of books was established, the press was deprived
+of its liberty, and the teaching of philosophy forbidden in
+_lycées_.[1]
+
+ [1] The revival of philosophy in the _lycées_ began when Victor Drury
+ reintroduced the study of Logic.
+
+
+Various ardent and thoughtful spirits, whose minds and hearts had been
+uplifted by the events of 1848, hoping to see the dawn of an era
+expressing in action the ideals of the first Revolution, _Liberté_,
+_Egalité_, _Fraternité_, were bitterly disappointed. Social ideals such
+as had been created by Saint-Simon and his school received a rude
+rebuff from force, militarism and imperialism. So great was the mingled
+disappointment and disgust of many that they left for ever the realm of
+practical politics to apply themselves to the arts, letters or
+sciences. Interesting examples of this state of mind are to be found in
+Vacherot, Taine, Renan and Renouvier, and, we may add, in Michelet,
+Victor Hugo and Edgar Quinet. The first of these, Vacherot, who had
+succeeded Cousin as Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne, lost his
+chair, as did Quinet and also Michelet, who was further deprived of his
+position as Archivist. Hugo and Quinet, having taken active political
+part in the events of 1848, were driven into exile. Disgust,
+disappointment, disillusionment and pessimism characterise the attitude
+of all this group of thinkers to political events, and this reacted not
+only upon their careers but upon their entire philosophy. “With regard
+to the Second Empire,” we find Renan saying,[2] “if the last ten years
+of its duration in some measure repaired the mischief done in the first
+eight, it must never be forgotten how strong this Government was when
+it was a question of crushing the intelligence, and how feeble when it
+came to raising it up.”
+
+ [2] In his Preface to _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse._
+
+
+The disheartening end of the Empire in moral degeneracy and military
+defeat only added to the gloominess, against which the Red Flag and the
+red fires of the Commune cast a lurid and pathetic glow, upon which the
+Prussians could look down with a grim smile from the heights of Paris.
+Only with the establishment of the Third Republic in 1871, and its
+ratification a few years later, does a feeling of cheerfulness make
+itself felt in the thought of the time. The years from 1880 onwards
+have been remarkable for their fruitfulness in the philosophic field—to
+such an extent do political and social events react upon the most
+philosophical minds. This is a healthy sign; it shows that those minds
+have not detached themselves from contact with the world, that the
+spirit of philosophy is a living spirit and not merely an academic or
+professional product divorced from the fierce realities of history.
+
+We have already indicated, in the treatment of the “Antecedents” of our
+period, the dominance of Eclecticism, supported by the powers of
+officialdom, and have remarked how Positivism arose as a reaction
+against Cousin’s vague spiritualism. In approaching the second half of
+the century we may in general characterise its thought as a reaction
+against both eclecticism and positivism. A transitional current can be
+distinguished where positivism turns, as it were, against itself in the
+work of Vacherot, Taine and Renan. The works of Cournot and the
+indefatigable Renouvier with his neo-criticism mark another main
+current. Ultimately there came to triumph towards the close of the
+century a new spiritualism, owing much inspiration to De Biran, but
+which, unlike Cousin’s doctrines, had suffered the discipline of the
+positivist spirit. The main contributors to this current are Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Fouillée and Guyau, Boutroux, Bergson, Blondel and Weber.
+Our study deals with the significance of these three currents, and
+having made this clear we shall then discuss the development of thought
+in connection with the various problems and ideas in which the
+philosophy of the period found its expression.
+
+In his _Critique of Pure Reason_ Kant endeavoured, at a time when
+speculation of a dogmatic and uncritical kind was current, to call
+attention to the necessity for examining the instrument of knowledge
+itself, and thereby discovering its fitness or inadequacy, as the case
+might be, for dealing with the problems which philosophy proposes to
+investigate. This was a word spoken in due season and, however much
+subsequent philosophy has deviated from the conclusions of Kant, it has
+at least remembered the significance of his advice. The result has been
+that the attitude adopted by philosophers to the problems before them
+has been determined largely by the kind of answer which they offer to
+the problems of knowledge itself. Obviously a mind which asserts that
+we can never be sure of knowing anything (or as in some cases, that
+this assertion is itself uncertain) will see all questions through the
+green-glasses of scepticism. On the other hand, a thinker who believes
+that we do have knowledge of certain things and can be certain of
+thiss, whether by objective proof or a subjective intuition, is sure to
+have, not only a different conclusion about problems, but, what is
+probably more important for the philosophic spirit, a different means
+of approaching them.
+
+Writing in 1860 on the general state of philosophy, Renan pointed out,
+in his Essay _La Métaphysique el son Avenir_[3] that metaphysical
+speculation, strictly so-called, had been in abeyance for thirty years,
+and did not seem inclined to continue the traditions of Kant, Hegel,
+Hamilton and Cousin. The reasons which he gave for this depression of
+the philosophical market were, firstly, the feeling of the
+impossibility of ultimate knowledge, a scepticism of the instrument, so
+far as the human mind was concerned, and secondly, the rather
+disdainful attitude adopted by many minds towards philosophy owing to
+the growing importance of science—in short, the question, “Is there any
+place left for philosophy; has it any _raison d’être_?”
+
+ [3] Essay published later (1876) in his _Dialogues et Fragments
+ philosophiques_. Cf. especially pp. 265-266.
+
+
+The progress of the positive sciences, and the assertions of many that
+philosophy was futile and treacherous, led philosophy to give an
+account of itself by a kind of _apologia pro vita sua_. In the face of
+remarks akin to that of Newton’s “Physics beware of metaphysics,” the
+latter had to bestir itself or pass out of existence. It was, indeed,
+this extinction which the more ardent and devoted scientific spirits
+heralded, re-iterating the war-cry of Auguste Comte.
+
+It was a crisis, in fact, for philosophy. Was it to become merely a
+universal science? Was it to abandon the task of solving the problems
+of the universe by rapid intuitions and a _priori_ constructions and
+undertake the construction of a science of the whole, built up from the
+data and results of the science of the parts—_i.e._, the separate
+sciences of nature? Was there, then, to be no place for metaphysics in
+this classification of the sciences to which the current of thought was
+tending with increasing impetuosity? Was a science of primary or
+ultimate truths a useless chimera, to be rejected entirely by the human
+mind in favour of an all-sufficing belief in positive science? These
+were the questions which perplexed the thoughtful minds of that time.
+
+We shall do well, therefore, in our survey of the half century before
+us, to investigate the two problems which were stressed by Renan in the
+essay we have quoted, for his acute mind possessed a unique power of
+sensing the feeling and thought of his time. Our preliminary task will
+be the examination of the general attitude to knowledge adopted by the
+various thinkers and schools of thought, following this by an inquiry
+into the attitude adopted to science itself and its relation to
+philosophy.
+
+I
+
+With these considerations in mind, let us examine the three currents of
+thought in our period beginning with that which is at once a
+prolongation of positivism and a transformation of it, a current
+expressed in the work of Vacherot, Taine and Renan.
+
+Etienne Vacherot (1809-1897) was partially a disciple of Victor Cousin
+and a representative also of the positivist attitude to knowledge. His
+work, however, passed beyond the bounds indicated by these names. He
+remained a convinced naturalist and believer in positive science, but,
+unlike Comte, he did not despise metaphysical inquiry, and he sought to
+find a place for it in thought. Vacherot, who had won a reputation for
+himself by an historical work on the Alexandrian School, became tne
+director of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, an important position in the
+intellectual world. He here advocated the doctrines by which he sought
+to give a to metaphysics. His most important book, _La Métaphysique et
+la Science_, in three volumes, appeared in 1858. He suffered
+imprisonment the following year for His liberal principles under the
+Empire which had already deprived him of his position at the Sorbonne.
+
+The general attitude to knowledge adopted by Vacherot recalls in some
+respects the metaphysical doctrines of Spinoza, and he endeavours to
+combine the purely naturalistic view of the world with a metaphysical
+conception. The result is a profound and, for Vacherot, irreconcilable
+dualism, in which the real and the ideal are set against one another in
+rigorous contrast, and the gap between them is not bridged or even
+attempted to be filled up, as, at a later date, was the task assumed by
+Fouillee in his philosophy of _idées-forces_. For Vacherot the world is
+a unity, eternal and infinite, but lacking perfection. Perfection, the
+ideal, is incompatible with reality. The real is not at all ideal, and
+the ideal has no reality.[4] In this unsatisfactory dualism Vacherot
+leaves us. His doctrine, although making a superficial appeal by its
+seeming positivism on the one hand, and its maintenance of the notion
+of the ideal or perfection on the other, is actually far more
+paradoxical than that which asserts that ultimately it is the ideal
+only which is real. While St. Anselm had endeavoured to establish by
+his proof of the existence of God the reality of perfection, Vacherot,
+by a reversal of this proof, arrives at the opposite conclusion, and at
+a point where it seems that it would be for the ideal an imperfection
+to exist. The absolute existence of all things is thus separated from
+the ideal, and no attempt is made to relate the two, as Spinoza had so
+rigorously done, by maintaining that reality _is_ perfection.[5]
+
+ [4] It is interesting to contrast this with the attitude of the new
+ spiritualists, especially Fouillée’s conception of idees-forces, of
+ ideas and ideals realising themselves. See also Guyau’s attitude.
+ “_L’idéal n’est-il pas, sur la terre où nous sommes
+ Plus fécond et plus beau que la réalité?”
+ —Illusion féconde_.
+
+
+ [5] Vacherot contributed further to the thought of his time, notably
+ by a book on religion, 1869, and later in life seems to have become
+ sympathetic to the New Spiritualism, on which he also wrote a book in
+ 1884.
+
+
+The influence of Vacherot was in some measure continued in that of his
+pupil, Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893), a thinker who had considerable
+influence upon the development of thought in our period. His ability as
+a critic of art and literature was perhaps more marked than his purely
+philosophical influence, but this is, nevertheless, important, and
+cannot be overlooked.
+
+Taine was a student of the Ecole Normale, and in 1851 was appointed to
+teach philosophy at Nevers. The _coup d’état_, however, changed his
+career, and he turned to literature as his main field, writing a work
+on La Fontaine for his doctorate in 1853. In the year of Comte’s death
+(1857) Taine published his book, _Les Philosophes français du XIXe
+Siècle_, in which he turned his powerful batteries of criticism upon
+the vague spiritualism professed by Cousin and officially favoured in
+France at that time.[6] By his adverse criticism of Cousin and the
+Eclectic School, Taine placed his influence upon the side of the
+positivist followers of Comte. It would, however, be erroneous to
+regard him as a mere disciple of Comte, as Taine’s positivism was in
+its general form a wider doctrine, yet more rigorously scientific in
+some respects than that of Comte. There was also an important
+difference in their attitude to metaphysics. Taine upheld strongly the
+value, and, indeed, the necessity, of a metaphysical doctrine. He never
+made much of any debt or allegiance to Comte.
+
+ [6] See his chapter xii. on “The Success of Eclecticism,” pp. 283-307.
+ Cousin, he criticises at length; De Biran, Royer-Collard and Jouffroy
+ are included in his censures. We might mention that this book was
+ first issued in the form of articles in the _Revue de l’Instruction
+ publique_ during the years 1855, 1856.
+
+
+In 1860 a volume dealing with the _Philosophy of Art_ appeared from his
+pen, in which he not only endeavoured to relate the art of a period to
+the general environment in which it arose, but, in addition, he dealt
+with certain psychological aspects of the problem. Largely as a result
+of the talent displayed in this work, he was appointed in 1864 to tne
+chair of the History of Art and Æsthetics in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.
+
+Taine’s interest in philosophy, and especially in psychological
+problems, was more prominently demon strated in his book _De
+l’Intelligence_, the two volumes of which appeared in 1870. In this
+work he takes a strict view of the human intelligence as a mechanism,
+the workings of which he sets forth in a precise and cold manner. His
+treatment of knowledge is akin, in some respects, to the doctrines of
+the English Utilitarian and Evolutionary School as represented by John
+Stuart Mill, Bain and Spencer. The main feature of the Darwinian
+doctrine is set by Taine in the foreground of epistemology. There is,
+according to him, “a struggle for existence” in the realm of the
+individual consciousness no less than in the external world. This inner
+conflict is between psychical elements which, when victorious, result
+in sense-perception. This awareness, or _hallucination vraie_, is not
+knowledge of a purely speculative character; it is (as, at a later
+date, Bergson was to maintain in his doctrine of perception)
+essentially bound up with action, with the instinct and mechanism of
+movement.
+
+One of the most notable features of Taine’s work is his attitude to
+psychology. He rejects absolutely the rather scornful attitude adopted
+with regard to this science by Comte; at the same time he shatters the
+flimsy edifice of the eclectics in order to lay the foundation of a
+scientific psychology. “The true and independent psychology is,” he
+remarks, “a magnificent science which lays the foundation of the
+philosophy of history, which gives life to physiology and opens up the
+pathway to metaphysics.”[7] Our debt to Taine is immense, for he
+initiated the great current of experimental psychology for which his
+country has since become famous. It is not our intention in this
+present work to follow out in any detail the purely psychological work
+of the period. Psychology has more and more become differentiated from,
+and to a large degree, independent of, philosophy in a strictly
+metaphysical meaning of that word. Yet we shall do well in passing to
+note that through Taine’s work the scientific attitude to psychologv
+and its many problems was taken up and developed by Ribot, whose study
+of English Psychology appeared in the same year as Taine’s
+_Intelligence_. Particularly by his frequent illustrations drawn from
+abnormal psychology, Taine “set the tone” for contemporary and later
+study of mental activity of this type. Ribot’s later books have been
+mainly devoted to the study of “the abnormal,”and his efforts are
+characteristic of the labours of the Paris School, comprising Charcot,
+Paulhan, Binet and Janet.[8] French psychology has in consequence
+become a clearly defined “school,” with characteristics peculiar to
+itself which distinguish it at once from the psychophysical research of
+German workers and from the analytic labours of English psychologists.
+Its debt to Taine at the outset must not be forgotten.
+
+ [7] De l’Intelligence, Conclusion.
+
+
+ [8] By Charcot (1825-1893), _Leçons sur les Maladies du Système
+ nerveux faites à la Salpêtrière_ and _Localisation dans les Maladies
+ du Cerveau et de la Moelle épinière_, 1880.
+ By Ribot (1839-1916), _Hérédité, Etude psychologique_, 1873, Eng.
+ trans., 1875; _Les Maladies de la Mémoire, Essai dans la
+ Psychologie positive_, 1881, Eng. trans., 1882; _Maladies de la
+ Volonté_, 1883, Eng. trans., 1884; _Maladies de la Personnalité_,
+ 1885, Eng. trans., 1895. Ribot expressed regret at the way in which
+ abnormal psychology has been neglected in England. See his critique
+ of Bain in his _Psychologie anglaise contemporaine_. In 1870 Ribot
+ declared the independence of psychology as a study, separate from
+ philosophy. Ribot had very wide interests beyond pure psychology, a
+ fact which is stressed by his commencing in 1876 the periodical _La
+ Revue philosophique de la France et de l’Etranger_.
+ By Binet (1857-191!), _Magnétisme animal_, 1886; _Les Altérations
+ de la personnalité_, 1892; _L’Introduction à la Psychologie
+ expérimentale_, 1894. He founded the review _L’Année psychologique
+ in 1895_.
+
+By Janet (Pierre), born 1859 now Professeur at the Collège de France,
+_L’Automatisme psychologique_, 1889; _Etat mental des Hystériques_,
+1894; and _Neuroses et Idées-fixes_, 1898. He founded the _Journal de
+Psychologie_.
+
+By Paulhan, _Phénomenes affectifs and L’Activité mentale_.
+
+To the fame of the Paris School of Psychology must now be added that of
+the Nancy School embracing the work of Coué.
+
+
+The War and the subsequent course of events in France seemed to deepen
+the sadness and pessimism of Taine’s character. He described himself as
+_naturellement triste_, and finally his severe positivism developed
+into a rigorous stoicism akin to that of Marcus Aurelius and Spinoza.
+This attitude of mind coloured his unfinished historical work, _Les
+Origines de la France contemporaine_, upon which he was engaged for the
+last years of his life (1876-1894). It may be noticed for its bearing
+upon the study of sociological problems which it indirectly encouraged.
+Just as Taine had regarded a work of art as the product of social
+environment, so he looks upon historical events. This history bears all
+the marks of Taine’s rigid, positive philosophy, intensified by his
+later stoicism. The Revolution of 1789 is treated in a cold and stern
+manner devoid of enthusiasm of any sort. He could not make historical
+narrative live like Michelet, and from his own record the Revolution
+itself is almost unintelligible. For Taine, however, we must remember,
+human nature is absolutely the product of race, environment and
+history.[9]
+
+ [9] Michelet (1798-1874), mentioned here as an historian of a type
+ entirely different from Taine, influenced philosophic thought by his
+ volumes _Le Peuple_, 1846; _L’Amour_, 1858; _Le Prêtre, La Femme et la
+ Famille_, 1859; and _La Bible de l’Humanité_, 1864. He and his friend
+ Quinet (1803-1875), who was also a Professor at the College de France,
+ and was the author of _Génie des Religions_, 1842, had considerable
+ influence prior to 1848 of a political and religious character. They
+ were in strong opposition to the Roman Catholic Church and had keen
+ controversies with the Jesuits and Ultramontanists.
+
+
+In the philosophy of Taine various influences are seen at work
+interacting. The spirit of the French thinkers of the previous
+century—sensualists and ideologists—reappears in him. While in a
+measure he fluctuates between naturalism and idealism, the
+predominating tone of his work is clearly positivist. He was a great
+student of Spinoza and of Hegel, and the influence of both these
+thinkers appears in his work. Like Spinoza, he believes in a universal
+determination; like Hegel, he asserts the real and the rational to be
+identical. In his general attitude to the problems of knowledge Taine
+criticises and passes beyond the standpoints of both Hume and Kant. He
+opposes the purely empiricist schools of both France and England. The
+purely empirical attitude which looks upon the world as fragmentary and
+phenomenal is deficient, according to Taine, and is, moreover,
+incompatible with the notion of necessity. This notion of necessity is
+characteristic of Taine’s whole work, and his strict adherence to it
+was mainly due to his absolute belief in science and its methods, which
+is a mark of all the positivist type of thought.
+
+While he rejected Hume’s empiricism he also opposed the doctrines of
+Kant and the neo-critical school which found its inspiration in Kant
+and Hume. Taine asserted that it is possible to have a knowledge of
+things in their objective reality, and he appears to have based his
+epistemology upon the doctrine of analysis proposed by Condillac. Taine
+disagreed with the theory of the relativity of human knowledge and with
+the phenomenal basis of the neo-critical teaching, its rejection of
+“the thing in itself.” He believed we had knowledge not merely relative
+but absolute, and he claimed that we can pass from phenomena and their
+laws to comprehend the essence of things in themselves. He endeavours
+to avoid the difficulties of Hume by dogmatism. While clinging to a
+semi-Hegelian view of rationality he avoids Kant’s critical attitude to
+reason itself. We have in Taine not a critical rationalist but a
+dogmatic rationalist. While the rational aspect of his thought commands
+a certain respect and has had in many directions a very wholesome
+influence, notably, as we have remarked, upon psychology, yet it proves
+itself in the last analysis self-contradictory, for a true rationalism
+is critical in character rather than dogmatic.
+
+In Taine’a great contemporary, Ernest Renan (1823-1892), a very
+different temper is seen. The two thinkers both possessed popularity as
+men of letters, and resembled one another in being devoted to literary
+and historical pursuits rather than to philosophy itself.
+
+Renan was trained for the priesthood of the Roman Catholic Church. He
+has left us a record of his early life in _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de
+Jeunesse_. We there have an autobiography of a sincere and sensitive
+soul, encouraged in his priestly career by his family and his teachers
+to such a degree that he had conceived of no other career for himself,
+until at the age of twenty, under the influence of modern scientific
+doctrines and the criticism of the Biblical records, he found himself
+an unbeliever, certainly not a Roman Catholic, and not, in the ordinary
+interpretation of that rather vague term, a Christian. The harsh,
+unrelenting dogmatism of the Roman Church drove Renan from
+Christianity. We find him remarking that had he lived in a Protestant.
+country he might not have been faced with the dilemma.[10] A _via
+media_ might have presented itself in one of the very numerous forms
+into which Protestant Christianity, is divided. He might have exercised
+in such a sphere, his priestly functions as did Schleiermacher. Renan’s
+break with Rome emphasises the clear-cut division which exists in
+France between the Christian faith (represented, almost entirely by the
+Roman Church) and _libre-pensée_, a point which will claim our
+attention later, when we come to treat of the Philosophy of Religion.
+
+ [10] Cf. his _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_, p. 292.
+
+
+Having abandoned the seminary and the Church, Renan worked for his
+university degrees. The events of 1848-49 inspired his young heart with
+great enthusiasm, under the influence of which he wrote his _Avenir de
+la Science_. This book was not published, however, until 1890, when he
+had lost his early hopes and illusions. In 1849 he went away upon a
+mission to Italy. “The reaction of 1850-51 and the _coup d’état_
+instilled into me a pessimism of which I am not yet cured,” so he wrote
+in the preface to his _Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques_.[11] Some
+years after the _coup d’état_ he published a volume of essays (_Essais
+de Morale et de Critique_), and he showed his acquaintance with Arabic
+philosophy by an excellent treatise on _Averroes et l’Averroisme_
+(1859). The following year he visited Syria and, in 1861, was appointed
+Professor of Hebrew at the Collège de France. He then began his
+monumental work on _Les Origines du Christianisme_, of which the first
+volume, _La Vie de Jésus_, appeared in 1863. Its importance for
+religious thought we shall consider in our last chapter; here it must
+suffice to observe its immediate consequences. These were terrific
+onslaughts from the clergy upon its author, which, although they
+brought the attention of his countrymen and of the world upon Renan,
+resulted in the Imperial Government suspending his tenure of the chair.
+After the fall of the Empire, however, he returned to it, and under the
+Third Republic became Director of the Collège de France.
+
+ [11] Published only in 1895. The preface referred to is dated 1871.
+
+
+Renan, although he broke off his career in the Church and his
+connection with organised religion, retained, nevertheless, much of the
+priestly character all his life, and he himself confesses this: “I have
+learned several things, but I have changed in nowise as to the general
+system of intellectual and moral life. My habitation has become more
+spacious, but it still stands on the same ground. I look upon my
+estrangement from orthodoxy as only a change of opinion concerning an
+important historical question, a change which does not prevent me from
+dwelling on the same foundations as before.” He indeed found it
+impossible to reconcile the Catholic faith with free and honest
+thought. His break with the Church made him an enemy of all
+superstition, and his writings raised against him the hatred of the
+Catholic clergy, who regarded him as a deserter. In the customary terms
+of heated theological debate he was styled an atheist. This was grossly
+unfair or meaningless. Which word we use here depends upon our
+definition of theism. As a matter of fact, Renan was one of the most
+deeply religious minds of his time. His early religious sentiments
+remained, in essence if not in form, with him throughout his life.
+These were always associated with the tender memories he had of his
+mother and beloved sister and his virtuous teachers, the priests in the
+little town of Brittany, whence he came. Much of the Breton mysticism
+clung to his soul, and much of his philosophy is a restated,
+rationalised form of his early beliefs.
+
+As a figure in the intellectual life of the time, Renan is difficult to
+estimate. The very subtilty of his intellect betrayed him into an
+oscillation which was far from admirable, and prevented his countrymen
+in his own day from “getting to grips” with his ideas. These were
+kaleidoscopic. Renan seems a type, reflecting many tendencies of the
+time, useful as an illustration to the historian of the ideas of the
+period; but for philosophy in the special sense he has none of the
+clearly defined importance of men like Renouvier, Lachelier, Guyau,
+Fouillée, Bergson or Blondel. His humanism keeps him free from
+dogmatism, but his mind fluctuates so that his general attitude to the
+ultimate problems is one of reserve, of scepticism and of frequent
+paradox and contradiction. Renan seems to combine the positivist scorn
+of metaphysics with the Kantian idealism. At times, however, his
+attitude is rather Hegelian, and he believes in universal change which
+is an evolving of spirit, the ideal or God, call it what we will. We
+need not be too particular about names or forms of thought, for, after
+all, everything “may be only a dream.” That is Renan’s attitude, to
+temper enthusiasm by irony, to assert a duty of doubt, and often,
+perhaps, to gain a literary brilliance by contradictory statements.
+“The survey of human affairs is not complete,” he reminds us, “unless
+we allot a place for irony beside that of tears, a place for pity
+beside that of rage, and a place for a smile alongside respect.”[12]
+
+ [12] Preface to his _Drames philosophiques_, 1888.
+
+
+It was this versatility which made Renan a lover of the philosophic
+dialogue. This literary and dramatic form naturally appealed strongly
+to a mind who was so very conscious of the fact that the truths with
+which philosophy deals cannot be directly denied or directly affirmed,
+as they are not subject to demonstration. All the high problems of
+humanity Renan recognised as being of this kind, as involving finally a
+rational faith; and he claimed that the best we can do is to present
+the problems of life from different points of view. This is due
+entirely to the peculiar character of philosophy itself, and to the
+distinction, which must never be overlooked, between knowledge and
+belief, between certitude and opinion. Geometry, for example, is not a
+subject for dialogues but for demonstration, as it involves knowledge
+and certitude. The problems of philosophy, on the contrary, involve
+“_une nuance de foi_,” as Renan styles it. They involve willed
+adhesion, acceptance or choice; they provoke sympathy or hate, and call
+into play human personality with its varying shades of colour.
+
+This state of _nuance_ Renan asserts to be the one of the hour for
+philosophy. It is not the time, he thinks, to attempt to strengthen by
+abstract reasoning the “proofs” of God’s existence or of the reality of
+a future life. “Men see just now that they can never know anything of
+the supreme cause of the universe or of their own destiny. Nevertheless
+they are anxious to listen to those who will speak to them about
+either.”[13]
+
+ [13] From his Preface to _Drames philosophiques_.
+
+
+Knowledge, Renan maintained, lies somewhere between the two schools
+into which the majority of men are divided. “What you are looking for
+has long since been discovered and made clear,” say the orthodox. “What
+you are looking for is impossible to find,” say the practical
+positivists, the political “raillers” and the atheists. It is true that
+we shall never know the ultimate secret of all being, but we shall
+never prevent man from desiring more and more knowledge or from
+creating for himself working hypotheses or beliefs.
+
+Yet although Renan admits this truth he never approaches even the
+pragmatist position of supporting “creative beliefs.” He rather urges a
+certain passivity towards problems and opinions. We should, he argues
+in his _Examen de Conscience philosophique_,[14] let them work
+themselves out in us. Like a spectator we must let them modify our
+“intellectual retina”; we must let reality reflect itself in us. By
+this he does not mean to assert that the truth about that reality is a
+matter of pure indifference to us-far from it. Precisely because he is
+so conscious of the importance of true knowledge, he is anxious that we
+should approach the study of reality without previous prejudices. “We
+have no right,” he remarks, “to have a desire when reason speaks; we
+must listen and nothing more.”[15]
+
+ [14] In his _Feuilles detachées_, pp. 401-443.
+
+
+ [15] _Feuilles détachées_, p. 402.
+
+
+It must be admitted, however, that Renan’s attitude to the problems of
+knowledge was largely sceptical. While, as we shall see in the
+following chapter, he extolled science, his attitude to belief and to
+knowledge was irritating in its vagueness and changeableness. He
+appeared to pose too much as a _dilettante_ making a show of subtle
+intellect, rather than a serious thinker of the first rank. His
+eminence and genius are unquestioned, but he played in a bewitching and
+frequently bewildering manner with great and serious problems, and one
+cannot help wishing that this great intellect of his—and it was
+unquestionably great—was not more steady and was not applied by its
+owner more steadfastly and courageously to ultimate problems. His
+writings reflect a bewildering variety of contradictory moods, playful,
+scathing, serious and mocking. Indeed, he replied in his _Feuilles
+detachées_ (1892) to the accusations of Amiel by insisting that irony
+is the philosopher’s last word. For him as for his brilliant
+fellow-countryman, Anatole France, ironical scepticism is the ultimate
+product of his reflection upon life. His _Examen de Conscience_
+philosophique is his Confession of Faith, written four years before his
+death, in which he tries to defend his sceptical attitude and to put
+forward scepticism as an apology for his own uncertainty and his
+paradoxical changes of view. Irony intermingles with his doubt here
+too. We do not know, he says, ultimate reality; we do not know whether
+there be any purpose or end in the universe at all. There may be, but
+on the other hand it may be a farce and fiasco. By refusing to believe
+in anything, rejecting both alternatives, Renan argues, with a kind of
+mental cowardice, we avoid the consequence of being absolutely
+deceived. He recommended an adoption of mixed belief and doubt,
+optimism and irony.
+
+This is a surprising attitude in a philosopher and is not
+characteristic of great modern thinkers, most of whom prefer belief
+(hypothetical although that be) to non-belief. Doubtless Renan’s early
+training had a psychological effect which operated perhaps largely
+unconsciously throughout his life, and his literary and linguistic
+ability seems to have given him a reputation which was rather that of a
+man of letters than a philosopher. He had not the mental strength or
+frankness to face alternatives squarely and to decide to adopt one.
+Consequently he merited the application of the old proverb about being
+between two stools. This application was actually made to Renan’s
+attitude in a critical remark by Renouvier in his _Esquisse d’une
+Classification des Doctrines philosphiques_.[16] Renouvier had no
+difficulty in pointing out that the man who hesitates deprives himself
+of that great reality, the exercise of his own power of free choice, in
+itself valuable and more akin to reality (whatever be the choice) than
+a mere “sitting on the fence,” an attitude which, so far from assuring
+one of getting the advantages of both possibilities as Renan claims,
+may more justly seem to deprive one of the advantages in both
+directions. The needs of life demand that we construct beliefs of some
+sort. We may be wrong and err, but pure scepticism such as Renan
+advocated is untenable. Life, if it is to be real and earnest, demands
+of us that we have faith in _some_ values, that we construct _some_
+beliefs, _some_ hypotheses, by which we may work.
+
+ [16] Vol. ii., p. 395.
+
+
+Both Renan and Taine exercised a considerable influence upon French
+thought. While inheriting the positivist outlook they, to a great
+degree, perhaps unconsciously, undermined the positive position, both
+by their interest in the humanities, in art, letters and religion and
+in their metaphysical attitude. Taine, beginning with a rigid
+naturalism, came gradually to approach an idealistic standpoint in many
+respects, while Renan, beginning with a dogmatic idealism, came to
+acute doubt, hypotheses, “dreams” and scepticism. Taine kept his
+thoughts in too rigid a mould, solidified, while those of Renan seem
+finally to have existed only in a gaseous state, intangible, vague and
+hazy. We have observed how the positivist current from Comte was
+carried over by Vacherot to Taine. In Renan we find that current
+present also, but it has begun to turn against itself. While we may say
+that his work reflects in a very remarkable manner the spirit of his
+time, especially the positivist faith in science, yet we are also able
+to find in it, in spite of his immense scepticism, the indications of a
+spiritualist or idealist movement, groping and shaping itself as the
+century grows older.
+
+II
+
+While the positivist current of thought was working itself out through
+Vacherot, Taine and Renan to a position which forms a connecting link
+between Comte and the new spiritualism in which the reaction against
+positivism and eclecticism finally culminated, another influence was
+making itself felt independently in the neo-critical philosophy of
+Renouvier.
+
+We must here note the work and influence of Cournot (1801-1877), which
+form a very definite link between the doctrines of Comte and those of
+Renouvier. He owed much to positivism, and he contributed to the
+formation of neo-criticism by his influence upon Renouvier. Cournot’s
+_Essai sur le Fondement de nos Connaissances_ appeared in 1851, three
+years before Renouvier gave to the world the first volume of his
+_Essais de Critique générale_. In 1861 Cournot published his _Traité de
+l’Enchaînement des Idées_, which was followed by his _Considerations
+sur le Marche des Idées_ (1872) and _Matérialisme_, _Vitalisme_,
+_Rationalisme_ (1875). These volumes form his contribution to
+philosophical thought, his remaining works being mainly concerned with
+political economy and mathematics, a science in which he won
+distinction.
+
+Like Comte, Cournot opposed the spiritualism, the eclecticism and the
+psychology of Cousin, but he was possessed of a more philosophic mind
+than Comte; he certainly had greater philosophical knowledge, was
+better equipped in the history of philosophy and had much greater
+respect for metaphysical theory. He shared with Comte, however, an
+interest in social problems and biology; he also adopted his general
+attitude to knowledge, but the spirit of Cournot’s work is much less
+dogmatic than that of the great positivist, and he made no pretensions
+to be a “pontiff” such as Comte aspired to be. Indeed his lack of
+pretensions may account partly for the lack of attention with which his
+work (which is shrewd, thoughtful and reserved) has been treated. He
+aimed at indicating the foundations of a sound philosophy rather than
+at offering a system of thought to the public. This temper was the
+product of his scientific attitude. It was by an examination of the
+sciences and particularly of the principles upon which they depend that
+he formulated his group of fundamental doctrines.
+
+He avoided hasty generalisations or a _priori_ constructions and, true
+to the scientific spirit, based his thought upon the data afforded by
+experience. He agreed heartily with Comte regarding the relativity of
+our knowledge. An investigation of this knowledge shows it to be based
+on three principles—order, chance, and probability. We find order
+existing in the universe and by scientific methods we try to grasp this
+order. This involves induction, a method which cannot give us absolute
+certainty, although it approximates to it. It gives us probability
+only. There is therefore a reality of chances, and contingency or
+chance must be admitted as a factor in evolution and in human history.
+
+Cournot foreshadows many of the doctrines of the new spiritualists as
+well as those of the neo-critical school. Much in his work heralds a
+Bergson as well as a Renouvier. This is noticeable in his attitude to
+science and to the problem of contingency or freedom. It is further
+seen in his doctrine that the _vivant_ is incapable of demonstration,
+in his view of the soul or higher instinct which he distinguished from
+the intelligence, in the biological interest displayed in his work (due
+partly to the work of Bichat[17]), and in his idea of a _Travail de
+Création_. Unlike Bergson, however, he admits a teleology, for he
+believed this inseparable from living beings, but he regards it as a
+hazardous finality, not rigid or inconsistent with freedom.
+
+ [17] Bichat (1771-1802) was a noted physiologist and anatomist. In
+ 1800 appeared his _Recherches physiologiques sur la Vie et la Mort_,
+ followed in 1801 by _Anatomie générale, appliquée à la Physiologie et
+ à la Médecine_.
+
+
+The immediate influence of Cournot was felt by only a small circle, and
+his most notable affinity was with Renouvier, although Cournot was less
+strictly an intellectualist. Like Renouvier he looked upon philosophy
+as a “_Critique générale_.” He was also concerned with the problem of
+the categories and with the compatibility of science and freedom, a
+problem which was now assuming a very central position in the thought
+of the period.
+
+Renouvier, in the construction of his philosophy, was partly influenced
+by the work of Cournot. In this lone, stern, indefatigable worker we
+have one of the most powerful minds of the century. Charles Renouvier
+shares with Auguste Comte the first honours of the century in France so
+far as philosophical work is concerned. Curiously enough he came from
+Comte’s birth-place, Montpellier. When Renouvier was born in 1815,
+seventeen years later than Comte, the great positivist was in his
+second year of study at the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris. To this great
+scientific and mathematical institution came Renouvier, to find Comte
+as _Répétiteur_ of Higher Mathematics. He was not only a keen student
+of the mathematical sciences but also an ardent follower of
+Saint-Simon, and although in later life he lost many of the hopes of
+his youth the Saint-Simon spirit remained with him, and he retained a
+keen interest in social ethics and particularly in the ideas of
+Fourier, Proudhon and Blanc. At the Ecole he met as fellow-pupils Jules
+Lequier and Felix Ravaisson.
+
+Instead of entering the civil service Renouvier then applied himself to
+philosophy and political science, influenced undoubtedly by Comte’s
+work. The year 1848, which saw the second attempt to establish a
+republic, gave Renouvier, now a zealous republican, an opportunity, and
+he issued his _Manuel républicain de l’Homme et du Citoyen_. This
+volume, intended for schoolmasters, had the approval of Carnot,
+Minister of Education to the Provisionary Government. Its socialist
+doctrines were so criticised by the Chamber of 1849 that Carnot, and
+with him the Government, fell from power. Renouvier went further in his
+_Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale et centrale de la
+République_, in which he collaborated with his socialist friends in
+outlining a scheme of communism, making the canton a local power, a
+scheme which contained the germ-idea of the Soviet of Bolshevik Russia.
+Such ideas were, however, far too advanced for the France of that date
+and their proposal did more harm than good to the progressive party by
+producing a reaction in wavering minds. Renouvier, through the paper
+_Liberté de penser_, launched attacks upon the policy of the
+Presidency, and began in the _Revue philosophique_ a serial _Uchronie_,
+a novel of a political and philosophical character. It was never
+finished. Suddenly, like a bolt from the blue, came, on December and,
+the _coup d’état_. The effect of this upon Renouvier was profound.
+Disgusted at the power of the monarchy, the shattering of the
+republican hopes, the suppression of liberty and the general reaction,
+he abandoned political life entirely. What politics lost, however,
+philosophy has gained, for he turned his acute mind with its tremendous
+energy to the study of the problems of the universe.
+
+Three years after the _coup d’état_, in the same year in which Comte
+completed his _Système de Politique_ positive, 1854, Renouvier
+published the first volume of his _magnum opus_, the _Essais de
+Critique générale_.[18] The appearance of this work is a notable date
+in the development of modern French philosophy. The problems therein
+discussed will concern us in later chapters. Here we must point out the
+indefatigable labour given to this work by Renouvier. The writing and
+revision of these essays covered almost the whole of the half century,
+concluding in 1897. In their first, briefer form they occupied the
+decade 1854-64, and consisted of four volumes only, which on revision
+became finally thirteen.[19] These Essays range over Logic, Psychology,
+the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Philosophy of History.
+
+ [18] It is interesting for the comparative study of the thought of the
+ century to observe that the great work of Lotze in Germany,
+ _Mikrocosmos_, was contemporaneous with the _Essais_ of Renouvier.
+ Lotze’s three volumes appeared in 1856, 1858 and 1864. The _Logik_ and
+ _Metaphysik_ of Lotze should also be compared with Renouvier’s
+ _Essais_. Further comparison or contrast may be made with reference to
+ the _Logic_ of both Bradley and Bosanquet in England.
+
+
+ [19] Since 1912 the _Essais de Critique générale_ are available in ten
+ volumes, owing to the publications of new editions of the first three
+ Essays by A. Colin in five volumes. For details of the original and
+ revised publication of the work, see our Bibliography, under Renouvier
+ (pp. 334-335).
+
+
+Having thus laid the foundations of his own throught, Renouvier, in
+conjunction with his scholarly friend Pillon, undertook the publication
+of a monthly periodical, _L’Année philosophique_, to encourage
+philosophic thought in France. This appeared first in 1867, the same
+year in which Ravaisson laid the foundations of the new spiritualism by
+his celebrated _Rapport_. In 1869 Renouvier published his noteworthy
+treatise upon Ethics, in two volumes, _La Science de la Morale_.
+
+The war of 1870 brought his monthly periodical to an untimely end. The
+conclusion of the war in 1871 resulted in the establishment, for the
+third time, of a republic, which in spite of many vicissitudes has
+continued even to this day. With the restoration of peace and of a
+republic, Renouvier felt encouraged to undertake the ambitious scheme
+of publishing a weekly paper, not only philosophical in character but
+political, literary and religious. He desired ardently to address his
+countrymen at a time when they were rather intellectually and morally
+bewildered. He felt he had something constructive to offer, and hoped
+that the “new criticism,” as he called it, might become the philosophy
+of the new republic. Thus was founded, in 1872, the famous _Critique
+philosophique_, which aimed primarily at the consolidation of the
+republic politically and morally,[20] This paper appeared as a weekly
+from its commencement until 1884,then continued for a further five
+years as a monthly. Renouvier and his friend Pillon were assisted by
+other contributors, A. Sabatier, L. Dauriac, R. Allier, who were more
+or less disciples of the neo-critical school. Various articles were
+contributed by William James, who had a great admiration for Renouvier.
+The two men, although widely different in temperament and method, had
+certain affinities in their doctrine of truth and certitude.[21]
+
+ [20] In the early numbers, political articles, as was natural in the
+ years following 1871, were prominent. Among these early articles we
+ may cite the one, “Is France morally obliged to carry out the terms of
+ the Treaty imposed upon her by Prussia?”
+
+
+ [21] On this relationship see James’s _Will to Believe_, p. 143, 1897,
+ and the dedications in his _Some Problems of Philosophy_ (to
+ Renouvier), and his _Principles of Psychology_ (to Pillon), also
+ _Letters of William James_, September i8th, 1892.
+
+
+Renouvier’s enthusiasm for his periodical did not, however, abate his
+energy or ardour for more lasting work. He undertook the task of
+revising and augmenting his great work, the _Essais de Critique
+générale_, and added to the series another (fifth) Essay, in four
+volumes. He also issued in 1876 the curious work _Uchronie_, a history
+of “what might have been” (in his view) the development of European
+civilisation. Together with Pillon he translated _Hume’s Treatise on
+Human Nature_.
+
+Meanwhile the _Critique philosophique_ continued to combat any symptoms
+of a further _coup d’état_, and “to uphold strictly republican
+principles and to fight all that savoured of Caesar or imperialism.” In
+1878 a quarterly supplement _La Critique religieuse_ was added to
+attack the Roman Catholic Church and to diminish its power in
+France.[22]
+
+ [22] The significance of this effort is more fully dealt with in our
+ last chapter.
+
+
+Articles which had appeared in this quarterly were published as
+_Esquisse d’une Classification systématique des Doctrines
+philosophiques_ in 1885 in two volumes, the second of which contained
+the important Confession of Faith of Renouvier, entitled, _How I
+arrived at this Conclusion_.
+
+His thought assumed a slightly new form towards the close of the
+century, at the end of which he published, in conjunction with his
+disciple Prat, a remarkable volume, which took a prize at the _Académie
+des Sciences morales et politiques_, to which rather late in the day he
+was admitted as a member at the age of eighty-five. In its title _La
+Nouvelle Monadologie_, and method it reveals the influence of Leibnitz.
+
+The close of the century shows us Renouvier as an old man, still an
+enormous worker, celebrating his eighty-sixth birthday by planning and
+writing further volumes (_Les Dilemmes de la Métaphysique pure_ and its
+sequel, _Histoire et Solution des Problèmes métaphysiques_). This
+“grand old man” of modern French philosophy lived on into the early
+years of the twentieth century, still publishing, still writing to the
+last. His final volume, _Le Personnalisme_, was a restatement of his
+philosophy, issued when he was in his eighty-ninth year. He died “in
+harness” in 1903, dictating to his friend Prat a _résumé_ of his
+thought on important points and leaving an unpublished work on the
+philosophy of Kant.[23]
+
+ [23] The _résumé_ was published by Prat a couple of years later as
+ _Derniers Entretiens_, the volume on the _Doctrine de Kant_, followed
+ in 1906.
+
+
+Renouvier’s career is a striking one and we have sketched it somewhat
+fully here because of its showing more distinctly than that of Taine or
+Renan the reflections of contemporary history upon the thinking minds
+who lived through the years 1848-51 and 1870-71. Renouvier was a young
+spirit in the year of the revolution, 1848, and lived right on through
+the _coup d’état_, the Second Empire, the Franco-Prussian War, the
+Commune, the Third Republic, and he foresaw and perhaps influenced the
+Republic’s attitude to the Roman Church. His career is the most
+significant and enlightening one to follow of all the thinkers who come
+within our period. Let us note that he never held any academic or
+public teaching appointment. His life was in the main a secluded one
+and, like Comte, he found the University a limited preserve closed
+against him and his philosophy, dominated by the declining eclecticism
+which drew its inspiration from Cousin. Only gradually did his
+influence make itself felt to such a degree that the University was
+compelled to take notice of it. Now his work is more appreciated, but
+not as much as it might be, and outside his own country he is little
+known. The student finds his writings somewhat difficult owing to the
+author’s heavy style. He has none of the literary ease and brilliance
+of a Renan. But his work was great and noble, animated by a passion for
+truth and a hatred of philosophical “shams” and a current of deep moral
+earnestness colours all his work. He had considerable power as a
+critic, for the training of the Ecole Polytechnique produced a strictly
+logical temper in his work, which is that of a true philosopher, not
+that of a merely brilliant _litterateur_ or _dilettante_, and he must
+be regarded as one of the intellectual giants of the century.
+
+While we see in Positivism a system of thought which opposed itself to
+Eclecticism, we find in the philosophy of Renouvier a system of
+doctrine which is opposed to both Eclecticism and Positivism. Indeed
+Renouvier puts up a strong mental fight against both of these systems;
+the latter he regarded as an ambitious conceit. He agreed, however,
+with Comte and with Cournot upon the relativity of our knowledge. “I
+accept,” he says, “one fundamental principle of the Positivist
+School—namely, the reduction of knowledge to the laws of
+phenomena.”[24] The author of the _Essais de Critique générale_
+considered himself, however, to be the apostolic successor, not of
+Comte, but of Kant. The title of _neo-criticisme_[25] which he gave to
+his philosophy shows his affinity with the author of the _Kritik der
+reinen Vernunft_. This is very noticeable in his method of treating the
+problem of knowledge by criticising the human mind and especially in
+his giving a preference to moral considerations.[26] It would be,
+however, very erroneous to regard Renouvier as a disciple of Kant, for
+he amends and rejects many of the doctrines of the German philosopher.
+We have noted the fact that he translated Hume; we must observe also
+that Hume’s influence is very strongly marked in Renouvier’s
+“phenomenalism.”[27] “Renouvier is connected with Hume,” says Pillon,
+in the preface he contributed to the translation,[28] “as much as with
+Kant. . . . He reconciles Hume and Kant. . . . Something is lacking in
+Hume, the notion of law; something is superfluous in Kant, the notion
+of substance. It was necessary to unite the phenomenalism of Hume with
+the a _priori_ teaching of Kant. This was the work accomplished by
+Renouvier.”
+
+ [24] Preface to _Essais de Critique générale_.
+
+
+ [25] The English word “_criticism_” is, it should be noted, translated
+ in French by “_critique_” and not by the word “_criticisme_,” a term
+ which is used for the philosophy of the _Kritik_ of Kant.
+
+
+ [26] In recognising the primacy of the moral or practical reason in
+ Kant, Renouvier resembles Fichte.
+
+
+ [27] Renouvier’s phenomenalism should be compared with that of
+ Shadworth Hodgson, as set forth in the volumes of his large work on
+ _The Metaphysic of Experience_, 1899. Hodgson has given his estimate
+ of Renouvier and his relationship to him in _Mind_ (volume for 1881).
+
+
+ [28] _Psychologie de Hume : Traité de la Nature humaine_, Renouvier
+ Préface par Pillon, p. lxviii.
+
+
+It may be doubted whether Pillon’s eulogy is altogether sound in its
+approval of the “reconciliation” of Hume and Kant, for such a
+reconciliation of opposites may well appear impossible. Renouvier
+himself faced this problem of the reconciliation of opposites when at
+an early age he inclined to follow the Hegelian philosophy, a doctrine
+which may very well be described as a “reconciliation of opposites,”
+_par excellence_. Dissatisfied, however, with such a scheme Renouvier
+came round to the Kantian standpoint and then passed beyond it to a
+position absolutely contrary to that of Hegel. This position is frankly
+that opposites cannot be reconciled, one or the other must be rejected.
+Renouvier thus made the law of contradiction the basis of his
+philosophy, as it is the basis of our principles of thought or logic.
+
+He rigorously applied this principle to that very interesting part of
+Kant’s work, the antinomies, which he held should never have been
+formulated. The reasons put forward for this statement were two: the
+principle of contradiction and the law of number. Renouvier did not
+believe in what mathematicians call an “infinite number.” He held it to
+be an absurd and contradictory notion, for to be a number at all it
+must be numerical and therefore not infinite. The application of this
+to the Kantian antinomies, as for example to the questions, “Is space
+infinite or finite? Had the world a beginning or not?” is interesting
+because it treats them as Alexander did the Gordian knot. The admission
+that space is infinite, or that the world had no beginning, involves
+the admission of an “infinite number,” a contradiction and an
+absurdity. Since, therefore, such a number is a pure fiction we _must_
+logically conclude that space is finite,[29] that the world had a
+beginning and that the ascending series of causes has a first term,
+which admission involves freedom at the heart of things.
+
+ [29] It is interesting to observe how the stress laid by Renouvier
+ upon the finiteness of space and upon relativity has found expression
+ in the scientific world by Einstein, long after it had been expressed
+ philosophically.
+
+
+As Renouvier had treated the antinomies of Kant, so he makes short work
+of the Kantian conception of a world of noumena (_Dinge an sich_) of
+which we know nothing, but which is the foundation of the phenomena we
+know. Like Hume, he rejects all notion of substance, of which Kant’s
+noumenon is a survival from ancient times. The idea of substance he
+abhors as leading to pantheism and to fatalism, doctrines which
+Renouvier energetically opposes, to uphold man’s freedom and the
+dignity of human personality.
+
+In the philosophy of Kant personality was not included among the
+categories. Renouvier draws up for himself a new list of categories
+differing from those of Kant. Beginning with Relation they culminate in
+Personality. These two categories indicate two of the strongholds of
+Renouvier’s philosophy. Beginning from his fundamental thesis “All is
+relative,” Renouvier points out that as nothing can possibly be known
+save by or in a relation of some sort it is evident that the most
+general law of all is that of Relation itself. Relation is therefore
+the first and fundamental category embracing all the others. Then
+follow, Number, Position, Succession, Quality. To these are added the
+important ones, Becoming, Causality, Finality proceeding from the
+simple to the composite, from the abstract to the concrete, from the
+elements most easily selected from our experience to that which
+embraces the experience itself, Renouvier comes to the final category
+in which they all find their consummation-Personality. The importance
+which he attaches to this category colours his entire thought and
+particularly determines his attitude to the various problems which we
+shall discuss in our following chapters.
+
+As we can think of nothing save in relation to consciousness and
+consequently we cannot conceive the universe apart from personality,
+our knowledge of the universe, our philosophies, our beliefs are
+“personal” constructions. But they need not be on that account merely
+subjective and individualistic in character, for they refer to
+personality in its wide sense, a sense shared by other persons. This
+has important consequences for the problem of certitude in knowledge
+and Renouvier has here certain affinities to the pragmatist standpoint.
+
+His discussion of certitude is very closely bound up with his treatment
+of the problem of freedom, but we may indicate here Renouvier’s
+attitude to Belief and Knowledge, a problem in which he was aided by
+the work of his friend Jules Lequier,[30] whom he quotes in his second
+_Essai de Critique générale_. Renouvier considers it advisable to
+approach the problem of certitude by considering its opposite, doubt.
+In a famous passage in his second _Essai_ he states the circumstances
+under which we do not doubt—namely, “when we see, when we know, when we
+believe.” Owing to our liability to error (even seeing is not
+believing, and we frequently change our minds even about our “seeing”),
+it appears that belief is always involved, and more correctly “we
+believe that we see, we believe that we know.” Belief is a state of
+consciousness involved in a certain affirmation of which the motives
+show themselves as adequate. Certitude arises when the possibility of
+an affirmation of the contrary is entirely rejected by the mind.
+Certitude thus appears as a kind of belief. All knowledge, Renouvier
+maintains, involves an affirmation of will. It is here we see the
+contrast so strongly marked between him and Renan, who wished us to
+“let things think themselves out in us.” “Every affirmation in which
+consciousness is reflective is subordinated, in consciousness, to the
+determination to affirm.” Our knowledge, our certitude, our belief,
+whatever we prefer to call it, is a construction not purely
+intellectual but involving elements of feeling and, above all, of will.
+Even the most logically incontrovertible truth are sometimes
+unconvincing. This is because certitude is not purely intellectual; it
+is _une affaire passionnelle_.[31] Renouvier here not only approaches
+the pragmatist position, but he recalls the attitude to will, assumed
+by Maine de Biran. For the Cartesian formula De Biran had suggested the
+substitution of _Volo, ergo sum_. The inadequacy of the the _Cogito,
+ergo sum_ is remarked upon by Lequier, whose treatment of the question
+of certainty Renouvier follows. As all demonstration is deductive in
+character and so requires existing premises, we cannot expect the
+_première vérité_ to be demonstrable. If, from the or certainty, we
+must turn to the will to create belief, or certainty, we must turn to
+the will to create beliefs, for no evidence or previous truths exist
+for us. The _Cogito, ergo sum_ really does not give us a starting
+point, as Descartes claimed for it, since there is no proper sequence
+from _cogito_ to _sum_. Here we have merely two selves, _moi-pensée_
+and _moi-objet_. We need a live spark to bridge this gap to unite the
+two into one complete living self; this is found in _moi-volonté_, in a
+free act of will. This free act of will affirms the existence of the
+self by uniting in a synthetic judgment the thinking-self to the
+object-self. “I refuse,” says Renouvier, quoting Lequier, “to follow
+the work of a knowledge which would not be mine. I accept the certainty
+of which I am the author.” The _première vérité_ is a free personal act
+of faith. Certainty in philosophy or in science reposes ultimately upon
+freedom and the consciousness of freedom.
+
+ [30] Jules Lequier was born in 1814 and entered the Ecole
+ polytechnique in 1834, leaving two years later for a military staff
+ appointment. This he abandoned in 1838. He died in 1862 after having
+ destroyed most of his writings. Three Years after his death was
+ published the volume, _La Recherche d’une première Vérité, fragments
+ posthumes de Jules Lequier_. The reader should note the very
+ interesting remarks by Renouvier at the end of the first volume of his
+ Psychologie rationnelle, 1912 ed., pp. 369-393, on Lequier and his
+ Philosophy, also the Fragments reprinted by Renouvier in that work,
+ _Comment trouver, comment chercher_, vol. i., on Subject and Object
+ (vol. ii.), and on Freedom.
+
+
+ [31] Lotze employs a similar phrase, eine Gemüths-sache.
+
+
+Here again, as in the philosophy of Cournot, we find the main emphasis
+falling upon the double problem of the period. It is in reality one
+problem with two aspects—the relation of science to morality, or, in
+other words, the place and significance of freedom.
+
+The general influence of Renouvier has led to the formation of a
+neo-critical “school” of thought, prominent members of which may be
+cited: Pillon and Prat, his intimate friends, Séailles and Darlu, who
+have contributed monographs upon their master’s teaching, together with
+Hamelin, Liard and Brochard, eminent disciples. Hamelin (1856-1907),
+whose premature and accidental death deprived France of a keen thinker,
+is known for his _Essai sur les Eléments principaux de la
+Représentation_ (1907), supplementing the doctrines of Renouvier by
+those of Hegel.
+
+In the work of Liard (1846-1917), _La Science positive et la
+Métaphysique_ (1879), we see a combination of the influence of
+Vacherot, Renouvier and Kant. He was also perplexed by the problem of
+efficient and final causes as was Lachelier, whose famous thesis _De
+l’Induction_ appeared eight years earlier. While Lachelier was
+influenced by Kant, he, none the less, belongs to the current of the
+new spiritualism which we shall presently examine. Liard, however, by
+his adherence to many critical and neo-critical standpoints may be
+justly looked upon as belonging to that great current of which
+Renouvier is the prominent thinker.
+
+Brochard (1848-1907) is mainly known by his _treatise De l’Erreur_
+(1879) and his volumes on Ethics, _De la Responsabilité morale_ (1876),
+and _De l’Universalité des Notions morales_ (1876), in all of which the
+primacy of moral considerations is advocated in a tone inspired by
+Renouvier’s strong moral standpoint. The work _De l’Erreur_ emphasises
+the importance of the problem of freedom as being the crux of the whole
+question involved in the relation of science and morality. Adhering to
+the neo-critical doctrines in general, and particularly to the value of
+the practical reason, Brochard, by his insistence upon action as a
+foundation for belief, has marked affinities with the doctrines of
+Blondel (and Olle-Laprune), the significance of whose work will appear
+at the end of our next section.
+
+The phenomenalism of Renouvier was followed up by two thinkers, who
+cannot, however, be regarded as belonging to his neo-critical school.
+In 1888 Gourd published his work entitled _Le Phénomène_, which was
+followed six years later by the slightly more coherent attempt of
+Boirac to base a philosophy upon the phenomenalism which expresses
+itself so rigidly in Hume. In his book _L’Idée du Phénomène_ (1894), he
+had, however, recourse to the Leibnitzian doctrines, which had finally
+exercised a considerable influence over Renouvier himself.
+
+III
+
+The reaction against positivism and against eclecticism took another
+form quite apart from that of the neocritical philosophy. This was the
+triumphant spiritualist philosophy, as we may call it, to give it a
+general name, represented by a series of great thinkers—Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Fouillée, Guyau, Boutroux, Bergson and, we may add, Blondel.
+These men have all of them had an influence much greater than that of
+Renouvier, and this is true of each of them separately. This is rather
+noteworthy for, if we exclude Fouillee, whose writings are rather too
+numerous, the works of all the other men together do not equal in
+quantity the work of Renouvier. There is another point which is worthy
+of notice. While Renouvier worked in comparative solitude and never
+taught philosophy in any college or university, being, in fact,
+neglected by the University of Paris, all the company—Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Fouillée, Guyau, Boutroux and Bergson—had a connection with
+the University of Paris in general, being associated with the Sorbonne,
+the Collège de France or the important Ecole Normale Supérieure.
+
+The initiator of the spiritualistic philosophy was Ravaisson
+(1815-1900), who himself drew inspiration from Maine de Biran, to whose
+work he had called attention as early as 1840 in a vigorous article
+contributed to the _Revue des Deux Mondes_. This roused the indignation
+of Victor Cousin and the eclectics, who in revenge excluded Ravaisson
+from the Institute. His independent spirit had been shown in his thesis
+_De l’Habitude_ (1838)[32] and his remarkable study of the metaphysics
+of Aristotle (1837-1846).
+
+ [32] Reproduced in 1894 in the _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_.
+
+
+Ravaisson’s chief title to fame, however, lies in his famous
+philosophic manifesto of 1867, for such, in fact, was his _Rapport sur
+la Philosophie en France au XIXè Siècle_. This Report, prepared for the
+_Exposition universelle_ at the request of the Ministry of Education,
+marks an epoch, for with it began the current of thought which was to
+dominate the close of the century. The “manifesto” was a call to free
+spirits to assert themselves in favour of a valid idealism. It, in
+itself, laid the foundations of such a philosophy and dealt a blow to
+both the Eclectic School of Cousin and the followers of Auguste Comte.
+Ravaisson wrote little, but his influence was powerful and made itself
+felt in the University, where in his office of president of the
+_agrégation en philosophie_ he exercised no little influence over the
+minds of younger men. His pupils, among whom are to be found Lachelier,
+Boutroux and Bergson, have testified to the profound and inspiring
+influence which this thinker exercised. A notable tribute to his memory
+is the address given by Bergson when he was appointed to take
+Ravaisson’s place at the _Académie des Sciences morales et politiques_
+in 1904.
+
+Various influences meet in Ravaisson and determine his general attitude
+to thought. He reverts, as we have said, to Maine de Biran, whose
+insistence upon the inner life he approves. We must examine human
+consciousness and make it our basis. We have in it powers of will, of
+desire and of love. Ravaisson blends the Aristotelian insistence upon
+Thought with the Christian insistence upon Love. In his method he
+manifests the influence of the German philosopher, Schelling, whose
+lectures he attended at Munich in company with the young Swiss thinker,
+Secretan.[33] This influence is seen in his doctrine of synthesis and
+his intellectual intuition. Science continues to give us analyses ever
+more detailed, but it cannot lead us to the absolute. Our highest, most
+sublime knowledge is gained by a synthesis presented in and to our
+consciousness, an intuition. Further, he argues that efficient causes,
+about which science has so much to say, are really dependent upon final
+causes. Spiritual reality is anterior to material reality, and is
+characterised by goodness and beauty. Himself an artist, imbued with a
+passionate love of the beautiful (he was guardian of sculptures at the
+Louvre), he constructs a philosophy in the manner of an artist. Like
+Guyau, he writes metaphysics like poetry, and although he did not give
+us anything like _Vers d’un Philosophe_, he would have endorsed the
+remarks which Guyau made on the relation of poetry and philosophy if,
+indeed, it is not a fact that his influence inspired the younger man.
+
+ [33] Charles Secretan (1815-1895), a Swiss thinker with whom Renouvier
+ had interesting correspondence. His _Philosophie de la Liberté_
+ appeared in 1848-1849, followed by other works on religious
+ philosophy. Pillon wrote a monograph upon him.
+
+
+After surveying the currents of thought up to 1867 Ravaisson not only
+summed up in his concluding pages the elements of his own philosophy,
+but he ventured to assume the role of prophet. “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 spiritualistic
+realism or positivism, having as generating principle the consciousness
+which the mind has of itself as an existence recognised as being the
+source and support of every other existence, being none other than its
+action.”[34] His prophecy has been fulfilled in the work of Lachelier,
+Guyau, Fouillée, Boutroux, Bergson, Blondel and Weber.
+
+ [35] _Rapport_, 2nd ed., 1885, p. 275.
+
+
+After Ravaisson the spiritualist philosophy found expression in the
+work of Lachelier (1832-1918), a thinker whose importance and whose
+influence are both quite out of proportion to the small amount which he
+has written.[36] A brilliant thesis of only one hundred pages, _Du
+Fondement de l’Induction_, sustained in 1871, together with a little
+study on the Syllogism and a highly important article on _Psychologie
+et Métaphysique_, contributed to the _Revue philosophique_ in May of
+1885, constitute practically all his written work.[37] It was orally
+that he made his influence felt; by his teaching at the Ecole Normale
+Supérieure (1864-1875) he made a profound impression upon the youth of
+the University and the Ecole by the dignity and richness of his
+thought, as well as by its thoroughness.
+
+ [36] Dr. Merz, in his admirable _History of European Thought in the
+ Nineteenth Century_, is wrong in regard to Lachelier’s dates; he
+ confuses his resignation of professorship (1875) with his death. This,
+ however, did not occur until as late as 1918. See the references in
+ Mertz, vol. iii., p. 620, and vol. iv., p. 217.
+
+
+ [37] The thesis and the article have been published together by Alcan,
+ accompanied by notes on Pascal’s Wager. The _Etude sur le Syllogisme_
+ also forms a volume in Alcan’s _Bibliothèque de Philosophie
+ contemporaine_.
+
+
+Lachelier was a pupil of Ravaisson, and owes his initial inspiration to
+him. He had, however, a much more rigorous and precise attitude to
+problems. This is apparent in the concentration of thought contained in
+his thesis. It is one of Lachelier’s merits that he recognised the
+significance of Kant’s work in a very profound manner. Until his thesis
+appeared the influence of Leibnitz had been more noticeable in French
+thought than that of Kant. It was noticeable in Ravaisson, and
+Renouvier, in spite of his professed adherence to Kant, passed to a
+Leibnitzian position in his _Nouvelle Monadologie_.
+
+The valuable work _Du Fondement de l’Induction_ is concerned mainly
+with the problem of final causes, which Lachelier deduces from the
+necessity of totality judgments over and above those which concern
+merely efficient causes. On the principle of final causes, or a
+ideological conception of a rational unity and order, he founds
+Induction. It cannot be founded, he claims, upon a mere empiricism.
+This is a point which will concern us later in our examination of the
+problem of science.
+
+Lachelier was left, however, with the dualism of mechanism, operating
+solely by efficient causes, and teleology manifested in final causes, a
+dualism from which Kant did not manage to escape. In his article
+_Psychologic et Métaphysique_ he endeavoured to interpret mechanism
+itself as a teleological activity of the spirit.[38] He indicates the
+absolute basis of our life and experience, indeed of the universe
+itself, to be the absolute spontaneity of spirit. In spirit and in
+freedom we live and move and have our being. We do not affirm ourselves
+to be what we are, but rather we are what we affirm ourselves to be. We
+must not say that our present depends upon our past, for we really
+create all the moments of our life in one and the same act, which is
+both present to each moment and above them all.[39] Here psychology
+appears as the science of thought itself and resolves itself into
+metaphysics. Here, too, we find the significance of the new
+spiritualism; we see its affinity with, and its contrast to, the
+doctrines of the older spiritualism as professed by Cousin. Lachelier
+here strikes the note which is so clearly characteristic of this
+current of thought, and is no less marked in his work than in that of
+Bergson—namely, a belief in the supremacy of spirit and in the reality
+of freedom.
+
+ [38] It is interesting to compare this with the attitude taken by
+ Lotze in Germany.
+
+
+ [39] _Psychologie et Métaphysique_, p. 171.
+
+
+The notion of freedom and of the spontaneity of the spirit became
+watchwords of the new spiritualist philosophers. Under the work and
+influence of Boutroux (1845-1921) these ideas were further emphasised
+and worked out more definitely to a position which assumes a critical
+attitude to the dogmatism of modern science and establishes a
+contingency in all things. Boutroux’s thesis _De la Contingence des
+Lois de la Nature_ appeared in 1874 and was dedicated to Ravaisson. His
+chief fame and his importance in the development of the spiritualist
+philosophy rest upon this book alone. In 1894 he published a course of
+lectures given at the Sorbonne in 1892-3, _Sur l’Idée de Loi
+naturelle_, which supplements the thesis. Outside his own country
+attention has been more readily bestowed upon his writings on the
+history of philosophy, of which subject he was Professor. In his own
+country, however, great interest and value are attached to his work on
+_The Contingency of the Laws of Nature_. In this Boutroux combines the
+attitude of Ravaisson with that of Lachelier. The totality of the laws
+of the universe manifests, according to him, a contingency. No
+explanation of these laws is possible apart from a free spiritual
+activity. The stress laid upon contingency in the laws of nature
+culminates in the belief in the freedom of man.
+
+The critique of science which marked Boutroux’s work has profoundly
+influenced thinkers like Hannequin, Payot and Milhaud,[40] and in the
+following century appears in the work of Duhem and of Henri Poincaré,
+the noted mathematician, whose books on _La Science et l’Hypothèse_
+(1902), _La Valeur de la Science_ (1905), and _Science et Méthode_
+(1909) have confirmed many of Boutroux’s conclusions.[41]
+
+ [40] Hannequin’s notable work is the _Essai critique sur L’Hypothèse
+ des Atomes_ (1896). Payot’s chief book is _La Croyance_ (1896).
+ Milhaud’s critique of science is contained in his _Essai sur les
+ Conditions et les Limites de la Certitude logique_ (1894), and in _Le
+ Rationnel_ (1898). Duhem’s book is _La Théorie physique_ (1906).
+
+
+ [41] It is interesting to note that Boutroux married Poincaré’s
+ sister, and that his son, Pierre Boutroux, whose education was guided
+ by both his uncle and his father, is now Professor at the Collège de
+ France. Emile Boutroux was a pupil of Zeller, whose lectures on Greek
+ philosophy he attended in Heidelberg, 1868. He expressed to the writer
+ his grief at the later prostitution of German thought to nationalist
+ and materialist aims. He was Professor of the History of Philosophy in
+ Paris from 1888, then Honorary Professor of Modern Philosophy. In 1914
+ he gave the Hertz Lecture to the British Academy on _Certitude et
+ Vérité_. He was until his death Directeur de la Fondation Thiers, a
+ college for post-graduate study, literary, philosophical and
+ scientific.
+
+
+While the new spiritualist current was thus tending to a position far
+removed from that of Taine, at the commencement of our period, a
+wavering note was struck by the idealist Fouillée (1838-1912), who,
+while maintaining a general attitude in harmony with the new doctrines
+endeavoured to effect a reconciliation with the more positive attitude
+to science and philosophy. In his _philosophie des ideés-forces_[42] he
+endeavoured to combine and reconcile the diverging attitudes of Plato
+and of Comte. He shows a scorn of the neo-critical though of Renouvier.
+He wrote in his shorter life more books than did Renouvier, and he is
+conspicuous among this later group of thinkers for his mass-production
+of books, which appeared steadily at the rate of one _per annum_ to the
+extent of some thirty-seven volumes, after he gave up his position as
+_maître de conférence_ at the Ecole Normale owing to ill-health.[43]
+
+ [42] His _Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces_ appeared in 1890, _La
+ Psychologie des Idées-forces_ three years later. His _Morale des
+ Idées-forces_ belongs to the next century (1907), but its principles
+ were contained already in his thesis _Liberté et Déterminisme_.
+
+
+ [43] He only held this for three years, 1872-75.
+
+
+Fouillée, with the noblest intentions, set himself to the solution of
+that problem which we have already indicated as being the central one
+of our period, the relation of science and ethics, or, in brief, the
+problem of freedom. This was the subject of his thesis, undoubtedly the
+best book he ever wrote, _La Liberté et le Déterminisme_, which he
+sustained in 1872.[44] The attitude which he takes in that work is the
+keynote to his entire philosophy. Well grounded in a knowledge of the
+history of systems of philosophy, ancient and modern, he recognises
+elements of truth in each, accompanied by errors due mainly to a
+one-sided perspective.[45] He recalls a statement of Leibnitz to the
+effect that most systems are right in their assertions and err in their
+denials. Fouillée was convinced that there was reconciliation at the
+heart of things, and that the contradictions we see are due to our
+point of view. Facing, therefore, in this spirit, the problems of the
+hour, he set himself “to reconcile the findings of science with the
+reality of spirit, to establish harmony between the determinism upheld
+by science and the liberty which the human spirit acclaims, between the
+mechanism of nature and the aspirations of man’s heart, between the
+True which is the object of all science and the Good which is the goal
+of morality.”[46]
+
+ [44] This work created quite a stir in the intellectual and political
+ world in France just after the war. Fouillée’s book led to an attack
+ on the ministry, which did not go so far as that occasioned by
+ Renouvier’s volume in 1849. (See p. 61.)
+
+
+ [45] Fouillée stands in marked contrast to Comte in his general
+ acquaintance with the history of ideas. Comte, like Spencer, knew
+ little of any philosophy but his own. Fouillée, however, was well
+ schooled, not only in Plato and the ancients, but had intimate
+ knowledge of the work of Kant, Comte, Spencer, Lotze, Renouvier,
+ Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson.
+
+
+ [46] This is also the idea expressed at length in his _Avenir de la
+ Métaphysique_, 1889.
+
+
+Fouillée had no desire to offer merely another eclecticism _à la mode
+de Cousin_; he selects, therefore, his own principle of procedure. This
+principle is found in his notion of _idée-force_. Following ancient
+usage, he employs the term “idea” for _any_ mental presentation. For
+Fouillée, however, ideas are not _idées-spectacles_, merely exercising
+a platonic influence “remote as the stars shining above us.” They are
+not merely mental reproductions of an object, real or hypothetical,
+outside the mind. Ideas are in themselves forces which endeavour to
+work out their own realisation. Fouillée opposes his doctrine to the
+evolutionary theory of Spencer and Huxley. He disagrees with their
+mechanism and epiphenomenalism, pointing out legitimately that our
+ideas, far from being results of purely physical and independent
+causes, are themselves factors, and very vital factors, in the process
+of evolution. Fouillée looks upon the mechanistic arrangement of the
+world as an expression or symbol of idea or spirit in a manner not
+unlike that of Lotze.
+
+He bears out his view of _idées-forces_ by showing how a state of
+consciousness tries to realise its object. The idea of movement is
+closely bound up with the physiological and physical action, and,
+moreover, tends to produce it. This realisation is not a merely
+mechanistic process but is teleological and depends on the vital unity
+between the physical and the mental. On this fundamental notion
+Fouillée constructs his psychology, his ethic, his sociology and his
+metaphysic. He sees in the evolutionary process ideas at work which
+tend to realise themselves. One of these is the idea of freedom, in
+which idea he endeavours to find a true reconciliation of the problem
+of determinism in science and the demands of the human spirit which
+declares itself free. The love of freedom arising from the idea of
+freedom creates in the long run this freedom. This is Fouillée’s method
+all through. “To conceive and to desire the ideal is already to begin
+its realisation.” He applies his method with much success in the realm
+of ethics and sociology where he opposes to the Marxian doctrine of a
+materialist determination of history that of a spiritual and
+intellectual determination by ideas. Fouillée’s philosophy is at once
+intellectual and voluntarist. He has himself described it as
+“spiritualistic voluntarism.” It is a system of idealism which reflects
+almost all the elements of modern thought. In places his doctrine of
+reconciliation appears to break down, and the psychological law summed
+up in _idées-forces_ is hardly sufficient to bear the vast erection
+which Fouillée builds upon it. The idea is nevertheless a valuable and
+fruitful one. Fouillée’s respect for positive science is noteworthy, as
+is also his great interest in social problems.[47]
+
+ [47] At the end of the century these problems received highly
+ specialised attention in the work of the sociologists inspired by
+ Comte’s influence. Works of special merit in this direction are:
+ tspmas, with his _Société’s animales_ (1876) and Tarde, predecessor of
+ Bergson at the Collège de France (1843-1907), with his _Criminalité
+ comparée_ (1898) and _Les Lois de l’Imitation_ (1900), also Durkheim’s
+ work _De la Division du Travail social_ (1893) and _Les Régles de la
+ Méthode sociologique_ (1894), and Izoulet, with his _La Cité moderne_
+ (1894). Note those of Levy-Bruhl, Bouglé, and Le Bon.
+
+
+The importance of the sociological aspect of all problems was
+emphasised in a brilliant manner by Guyau (1854-1888), the step-son of
+Fouillée. Guyau was a gifted young man, whose death at the early age of
+thirty-four was a sore bereavement for Fouillée and undoubtedly a
+disaster for philosophy. Guyau was trained by his step-father,[48] and
+assisted him in his work. When ill-health forced both men from their
+professorships,[49] they lived in happy comradeship at Mentone at the
+same time, it is interesting to note, that Nietzsche was residing
+there. Equally interesting is it to observe that although Guyau and
+Fouillée were unaware of the German thinker’s presence or his work,
+Nietzsche was well acquainted with theirs, particularly that of Guyau.
+Doubtless he would have been pleased to meet the author of the
+_Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_ (1885) and
+_L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_ (1887). Editions of these books exist in the
+_Nietzsche-Archiv_ bearing Nietzsche’s notes and comments.
+
+ [48] Some authorities are of opinion that Fouillée was actually the
+ father of Guyau. Fouillée married Guyau’s mother.
+
+
+ [49] Guyau taught at the Lycée Condorcet (1874) where young Henri
+ Bergson was studying (1868-1878).
+
+
+Guyau himself has a certain affinity with Nietzsche, arising from his
+insistence upon Life and its power; but the author of the delightful
+little collection _Vers d’un Philosophe_ (1881) is free from the egoism
+expressed in _Der Wille zur Macht_. Guyau posits as his
+_idée-directrice_ the conception of Life, both individual and social,
+and in this concept he professes to find a basis more fundamental than
+that of force, movement or existence. Life involves expansion and
+intension, fecundity and creation. It means also consciousness,
+intelligence and feeling, generosity and sociability. “He only lives
+well who lives for others.” Life can only exist by extending. It can
+never be purely egoistic and endure; a certain giving of itself, in
+generosity and in love, is necessary for its continuance. Such is the
+view which the French philosopher-poet expresses in opposition to
+Nietzsche, starting, however, from the concept of Life did Nietzsche.
+Guyau worked out a doctrine of ethics and of religion based upon this
+concept which will demand our special attention in its proper place,
+when we consider the moral and religious problem. He strove to give an
+idealistic setting to the doctrines of evolution, and this alone would
+give him a place among the great thinkers of the period.
+
+In his doctrine of the relation of thought and action Guyau followed
+the _philosophie des idées-forces_. On the other hand there are very
+remarkable affinities between the thought of Guyau and that of Bergson.
+Guyau is not so severely intellectual as Fouillée; his manner of
+thought and excellence of style are not unlike Bergson. More noticeably
+he has a conception of life not far removed from the _élan vital_. His
+“expansion of life” has, like Bergson’s _évolution créatrice_, no goal
+other than that of its own activity. After Guyau’s death in 1888 it was
+found that he had been exercised in mind about the problem of Time, for
+he left the manuscript of a book entitled _La Genèse de l’Idée de
+Temps_.[50] He therein set forth a belief in a psychological,
+heterogeneous time other than mathematical time, which is really
+spatial in character. In this psychological time the spirit lives. The
+year following Guyau’s death, but before his posthumous work appeared,
+Bergson published his thesis _Les Données immédiates de la Conscience_
+(1889), which is better described by its English title _Time and Free
+Will_, and in which this problem which had been present to Guyau’s mind
+is taken up and treated in an original and striking manner. In Guyau,
+too, is seen the rise of the conception of activity so marked in the
+work of Bergson and of Blondel. “It is _action_ and the power of life,”
+he insists, “which alone can solve, if not entirely at least partially,
+those problems to which abstract thought gives rise.”[51]
+
+ [50] This work was edited and published by Fouillée two years after
+ Guyau’s death, and reviewed by Bergson in the _Revue philosophique_ in
+ 1891.
+
+
+ [51] _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_, p. 250.
+
+
+Bergson, born in 1859, Professor at the Collège de France from 1901 to
+1921, now retired, has had a popularity to which none of the other
+thinkers of this group, or indeed of our period, has attained. He is
+the only one of the new idealists or spiritualists who is well known
+outside his own country. For this reason foreigners are apt to regard
+him as a thinker unrelated to any special current of thought, an
+innovator. Although much is original and novel in his philosophy, his
+thought marks the stage in the development to which the spiritualist
+current has attained in contemporary thought. The movement of which he
+forms a part we can trace back as far as Maine de Biran, to whom
+Bergson owes much, as he does also to Ravaisson, Lachelier, Boutroux
+and Guyau.
+
+Two important books by Bergson came prior to 1900, his _Time and Free
+Will_ (1889) and his _Matter and Memory_ (1896). His famous _Creative
+Evolution_ appeared in 1907. It is but his first work “writ large,” for
+we have in _Time and Free Will_ the essentials of his philosophy.
+
+He makes, as did Guyau, a central point of Change, a universal
+becoming, and attacks the ordinary notion of time, which he regards as
+false because it is spatial. We ourselves live and act in _durée_,
+which is Bergson’s term for real time as opposed to that fictitious
+time of the mathematician or astronomer. He thus lays stress upon the
+inward life of the spirit, with its richness and novelty, its eternal
+becoming, its self-creation. He has his own peculiar manner of
+approaching our central problem, that of freedom, of which he realises
+the importance. For him the problem resolves itself into an application
+of his doctrine of _la durée_, to which we shall turn in due course.
+
+Bergson insists with Guyau and Blondel upon the primary significance of
+action. The importance attached to action colours his whole theory of
+knowledge. His epistemology rests upon the thesis that “the brain is an
+instrument of action and not of representation,” and that “in the study
+of the problems of perception the starting- point should be action and
+not sensation.” This is a psychology far different from that of
+Condillac and Taine, and it is largely upon his merit as a psychologist
+that Bergson’s fame rests. He devoted his second work, _Matter and
+Memory_, to showing that memory is something other than a function of
+the brain. His distinction between “pure” memory and mere memorising
+power, which is habit, recalls the _mémoire_ of Maine de Biran and of
+Ravaisson upon _Habit_. Bergson sees in memory a manifestation of
+spirit, which is a fundamental reality, no mere epiphenomenon. Spirit
+is ever striving against matter, but in spite of this dualism which he
+cannot escape, he maintains that spirit is at the origin of things.
+This is a difficulty which is more clearly seen in his later book,
+_Creative Evolution_. Matter is our enemy and threatens our personality
+in its spiritual reality by a tendency to lead us into habit, away from
+life, freedom and creativeness.
+
+Further we must, he claims, endeavour to see things _sub specie
+durationis in a durée_, in an eternal becoming. We cannot expect to
+grasp all the varied reality of life in a formula or indeed in any
+purely intellectual manner. This is the chief defect of science and of
+the so-called scientific point of view. It tries to fix in concepts,
+moulds and solid forms a reality which is living and moving eternally.
+For Bergson all is Change, and this eternal becoming we can only grasp
+by intuition. Intuition and intellect do not, however, oppose one
+another. We are thus led to realise that Life is more than logic. The
+Bergsonian philosophy concludes with intuitionism and contingency,
+which drew upon it the severe criticisms of Fouillée,[52] who termed it
+a philosophy of scepticism and nihilism. Of all the spiritualist group
+Fouillée stands nearest the positive attitude to science, and his
+strong intellectualism comes out in his criticism of Bergson, who well
+represents, together with Blondel, the tendency towards
+non-intellectual attitudes inherent in the spiritualist development.
+Blondel has endeavoured to treat the great problems, a task which
+Bergson has not attempted as yet, partly because he (Bergson) shares
+Renan’s belief that “the day of philosophic systems has gone,” partly
+because he desires to lay the basis of a philosophy of the spirit to
+which others after him may contribute, and so he devotes his attention
+to method and to those crucial points, such as the problem of freedom
+upon which a larger doctrine must necessarily rest.[53]
+
+ [52] Particularly in his work _Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction
+ contre la Science positive_ (cf. .206), 1896, and later in _La Pensée
+ et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intellectualistes_, 1910.
+
+
+ [53] For a fuller appreciation of the Bergsonian doctrines than is
+ possible in such a survey as this, the reader is referred to the
+ author’s monograph, _Bergson and His Philosophy_, Methuen and Co.,
+ 1920.
+
+
+The current of the new idealism or spiritualism reaches a culminating
+point in the work of Blondel (born about 1870), whose remarkable and
+noteworthy book _L’Action_ appeared in l893.[54] The fundamental thesis
+of the Philosophy of Action[55] is that man’s life is primarily one of
+action, consequently philosophy must concern itself with the active
+life and not merely with thought. By its nature, action is something
+unique and irreducible to other elements or factors. It is not the
+result of any synthesis: it is itself a living synthesis, and cannot be
+dealt with as the scientist deals with his data. Blondel lays emphasis,
+as did Bergson, upon “the living” being unique and inexpressible in
+formulae. Intellect cannot grasp action; “one penetrates the living
+reality only by placing oneself at the dynamic point of view of the
+will.”[56] His words recall Bergson’s attitude to the free act. “The
+principle of action eludes positive knowledge at the moment at which it
+makes it possible, and, in a word that needs to be better defined, it
+is subjectivity.”[57]
+
+ [54] The same year in which the philosophic interest in France,
+ growing since 1870, and keener in the eighties, led to the foundation
+ of the famous _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_ by Xavier Léon. In
+ 1876 (the same year in which Professor Croom Robertson in England
+ established the periodical _Mind_) Ribot had founded the _Revue
+ philosophique de la France et de l’Etranger_. These journals, along
+ with the teaching in the Lycées, have contributed to make the French
+ people the best educated, philosophically, of any people.
+
+
+ [55] It is interesting to note that this designation has been used by
+ its author to replace his original term “_pragmatisme_,” which he
+ employed in 1888 and abandoned upon becoming acquainted with the
+ theory of Peirce and James, and with their use of the term in another
+ manner, with which he did not agree. See _Bulletin de la Société
+ française de Philosophie_, 1902.
+
+
+ [56] _L’ Action_, p. 100.
+
+
+ [57] _Ibid_., p. 87.
+
+
+Blondel, however, leads us beyond this subjectivity, for it is not the
+will which causes what is. Far from that, he maintains that in so far
+as it wills it implies something which it does not and cannot create of
+itself; it wills to be what it is not yet. We do not act for the mere
+sake of acting, but for some end, something beyond the particular act.
+Action is not self-contained or self- sufficing: it is a striving to
+further attainment or achievement. It therefore pre-supposes some
+reality beyond itself. Here appear the elements of “passion” and
+“suffering” due to resistance, for all action involves some opposition.
+In particular moral action implies this resistance and a consciousness
+of power to overcome the resistance, and it therefore involves a
+reality which transcends the sphere in which we act.
+
+Owing to this inequality between the power and the wish, we are obliged
+to complete our actions or our activity in general by a belief in a
+Reality beyond. It is, however, “a beyond that is within,” a Divine
+power immanent in man. This view, Blondel claims, unites the idea of
+God “transcendent” with the idea of God as “immanent.” Man’s action
+partakes of both, for in so far as it results from his own will it is
+immanent; transcendence is, however, implied in the fact that the end
+of man’s action as a whole is not “given.” Blondel leads us to a
+conception of a religious idealism in which every act of our ordinary
+existence leads ultimately to a religious faith. Every action is
+sacramental. Blondel and his follower Laberthonnière, who has taken up
+this idea from his master in his volume of _Essais de Philosophie
+réligieuse_ (1901), go beyond a purely pragmatist or voluntarist
+position by finding the supreme value of all action, and of the
+universe, not in will but in love. For Blondel this word is no mere
+sentiment or transient feeling, but a concrete reality which is the
+perfection of will and of intellect alike, of action and of knowledge.
+The “Philosophy of Action,” asserts Blondel, includes the “Philosophy
+of the Idea.” In the fact of love, he claims, is found the perfect
+unity between the self and the non-self, the ground of personality and
+its relation to the totality of persons, producing a unity in which
+each is seen as an end to others as well as to himself. “Love,” says
+Laberthonnière, “is the first and last word of all. It is the
+principle, the means and the end. It is in loving that one gets away
+from self and raises oneself above one’s temporal individuality. It is
+in loving that one finds God and other beings, and that one finds
+oneself.” It is, in short, these idealists claim, the _Summum Bonum_;
+in it is found the Absolute which philosophers and religious mystics of
+all ages have ever sought.
+
+The “philosophy of action” is intimately bound up with the “philosophy
+of belief,” formulated by Ollé-Laprune, and the movement in religious
+thought known generally as Modernism, which is itself due to the
+influence of modern philosophic thought upon the dogmas of the
+Christian religion, as these are stated by the Roman Church. Both the
+Philosophy of Belief and Modernism are characterised by an intense
+spirituality and a moral earnestness which maintain the primacy of the
+practical reason over the theoretical reason. Life, insists
+Ollé-Laprune in his book _Le Prix de la Vie_ (l885),[58] is not
+contemplation but active creation. He urges us to a creative evolution
+of the good, to an employment of _idées-forces_. “There are things to
+be made whose measure is not determined; there are things to be
+discovered, to be invented, new forms of the good, ideas which have
+never yet been received—creations, as it were, of the spirit that loves
+the good.” This dynamism and power of will is essential. We must not
+lose ourselves in abstractions; action is the supreme thing: it alone
+constitutes reality.
+
+ [58] This has been followed in the new century by _La Raison et le
+ Rationalisme_, 1906. As early as 1880, however, he issued his work _La
+ Certitude morale_, which influenced Blondel, his pupil.
+
+
+A similar note is sounded by the Modernists or Neo-Catholics,
+particularly by the brilliant disciple and successor of Bergson, Le
+Roy, who in _Dogme et Critique_ (1907) has based the reality of
+religious dogma upon its practical significance. We find Péguy (who
+fell on the field of battle in 1914) applying Bergsonian ideas to a
+fervid religious faith. Wilbois unites these ideas to social ethics in
+his _Devoir et Durée_ (1912). In quite different quarters the new
+spiritualism and philosophy of action have appeared as inspiring the
+Syndicalism of Sorel, who endeavours to apply the doctrines of Bergson,
+Ollé-Laprune and Blondel to the solution of social questions in his
+_Réflexions sur la Violence_ (1907) and _Illusions du Progrès_ (1911).
+
+It would be erroneous to regard Bergson’s intuitional philosophy as
+typical of all contemporary French thought. Following Renouvier,
+Fouillée and Boutroux, there prevail currents of a more intellectualist
+or rationalist type, to which we are, perhaps, too close to see in true
+and historical perspective. The _élan vital_ of French thought
+continues to manifest itself in a manner which combines the work of
+Boutroux and Bergson with Blondel’s idealism. A keen interest is being
+taken in the works of Spinoza, Kant and Hegel, and this is obviously
+influencing the trend of French philosophy at the moment, without
+giving rise to a mere eclecticism. French thought is too original and
+too energetic for that. In addition to these classical studies we
+should note the great and growing influence of the work of Durkheim and
+of Hamelin, both of whom we have already mentioned. The former gave an
+immense impetus to sociological studies by his earlier work. Further
+interest arose with his _Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse_ in
+1912. Hamelin indicated a turning-point from _neo-criticisme_ through
+the new spiritualist doctrines to Hegelian methods and ideas.
+Brunschwicg, who produced a careful study of Spinoza, wrote as early as
+1897 on _La Modalité du Jugement_, a truly Kantian topic. This
+thinker’s later works, _Les Etapes de la Philosophie mathematique_
+(1912) and the little volume _La Vie de l’esprit_, illustrate a
+tendency to carry out the line taken by Boutroux—namely, to arrive at
+the statement of a valid idealism disciplined by positivism. The papers
+of Berthelot in his _Evolutionnisme et Platonisme_ are a further
+contribution to this great end. In the work of Evellin, _La Raison pure
+et les Antinomies_ (1907), the interest in Kant and Hegel is again
+seen. Noël, who contributed an excellent monograph on Lachelier to the
+_Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_ (that journal which is an
+excellent witness in itself to the vitality of contemporary French
+philosophy), produced a careful study of Hegel’s Logik in 1897. Since
+that date interest has grown along the lines of Boutroux, Bergson and
+Blondel in an attempt to reach a positive idealism, which would combine
+the strictly positivist attitude so dear to French minds with the
+tendency to spiritualism or idealism which they also manifest. This
+attempt, which in some respects amounts to an effort to restate the
+principles of Hegel in modern or contemporary terms, was undertaken by
+Weber in 1903 in his book entitled _Vers le Positivisme absolu par
+l’Idéalisme_. Philosophy in France realises to-day that the true course
+of spiritual development will be at once positive and idealistic.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+SCIENCE
+
+
+INTRODUCTION: The scientific outlook—Progress of the sciences—The
+positivist spirit, its action on science, philosophy and literature—The
+problem as presented to philosophy.
+
+I. Comte’s positivism—Work of prominent scientists—Position maintained
+by Berthelot and Bernard—Renan’s confidence—Vacherot and
+Taine—Insufficiency of sciences alone.
+
+II. Cournot and Renouvier attack the dogmatism of science.
+
+III. The neo-spiritualist group continue and develop this attack, which
+becomes a marked feature in Lachelier, Boutroux, and Bergson.
+
+Entire change of attitude in the development of the period.
+
+The problem of freedom opened up in the process.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+SCIENCE
+
+Having thus surveyed the main currents of our period and indicated the
+general attitude adopted to knowledge by the various thinkers, we
+approach more closely to the problem of the relation of science and
+philosophy. The nineteenth century was a period in which this problem
+was keenly felt, and France was the country in which it was tensely
+discussed by the most acute minds among the philosophers and among the
+scientists. French thought and culture, true to the tradition of the
+great geometrician and metaphysician Descartes, have produced men whose
+training has been highly scientific as well as philosophical. Her
+philosophers have been keenly versed in mathematics and physical
+science, while her scientists have had considerable power as
+philosophical thinkers.
+
+One of the very prominent tendencies of thought in the first half of
+the nineteenth century was the growing belief and confidence in the
+natural sciences. In France this was in large measure due to the
+progress of those sciences themselves and to the influences of Comte,
+which was supported by the foreign influences of Kant’s teaching and
+that of the English School, particularly John Stuart Mill. These three
+great streams of thought, widely different in many respects, had this
+in common—that they tended to confuse philosophy and science to such a
+degree that it seemed doubtful whether the former could be granted any
+existence by itself. Science, somewhat intoxicated by the praise and
+worship bestowed upon her, became proud, arrogant and overbearing. She
+scorned facts which could not be adapted to her own nature, she ignored
+data which were not quantitative and materialistic, and she regarded
+truth as a system of laws capable of expression by strict mathematical
+methods and formulae*. Hence science became characterised by a firm
+belief in absolute determinism, in laws of necessity operating after
+the manner of mathematical laws. This “universal mathematic”
+endeavoured also to explain the complex by reference to the simple.
+Difficulties were encountered all along the line, for experience, it
+was found, did not quite fit into rigid formulae*, “new” elements of
+experience presented a unique character and distressing discrepancy.
+Confidence in science, however, was not shaken by this, for the perfect
+science, it was imagined, was assured in a short time. Patience might
+be needed, but no doubt was entertained of the _possibility_ of such a
+construction. Doubters were told to look at the rising sciences of
+psychology and sociology, which, as Auguste Comte had himself
+prophesied, were approaching gradually to the “type” venerated—namely,
+an exact and mathematical character. Biology, it was urged, was merely
+a special branch of physico-chemistry. As for beliefs in freedom, in
+art, morality and religion, these, like philosophy (metaphysics)
+itself, belonged to the earlier stages (the theological and
+metaphysical) of Comte’s list, stages rapidly to be replaced by the
+third and final “positive” era.
+
+Such, briefly stated, were the affirmations so confidently put forward
+on behalf of science by its devoted worshippers. Confidence in science
+was a marked feature of the work written by Renan in the years
+1848-1849, _L’Avenir de la Science_. Yet, paradoxical as it may seem,
+Renan himself played a large part in undermining this confidence. Yet
+the time of his writing this work is undoubtedly the period when the
+confidence in science was most marked. By this it is not implied that
+an even greater confidence in science has not been professed since by
+many thinkers. That is probably true, but the important point is that
+at this time the confidence in science was less resisted than ever in
+its history. It seemed to have a clear field and positivism seemed to
+be getting unto itself a mighty victory.
+
+The cult of facts, which is so marked a characteristic of the
+scientific or positivist temper, penetrated, it is interesting to note,
+into the realm of literature, where it assumed the form of “realism.”
+In his Intelligence we find Taine remarking, “_de tout petits fails
+bien choisis, importants, significatifs, amplement circonstanciés et
+minutieusement notés, voilà aujourd’hui la matière de toute
+science_.”[1] It was also, in the opinion of several writers, the
+_matière de toute littérature_. The passion for minute details shows
+itself in the realism of Flaubert and Zola, in the psychology of
+Stendthal* and the novels of the Goncourts. It was no accident that
+their works were so loved by Taine. A similar spirit of “positivism” or
+“realism” animated both them and him.
+
+ [1] Preface to _Intelligence_.
+
+
+With the turn of the half century, however, a change manifested itself
+by the fact that the positivist current began to turn against itself,
+and our period is, in some respects, what Fouillée has called _la
+réaction centre la science positive_.[2] The function of philosophy is
+essentially criticism, and although at that period the vitality of
+philosophy was low, it nevertheless found enough energy to criticise
+the demands and credentials of Science.
+
+ [2] Compare also Aliotta’s book, _The Idealistic Reaction against
+ Science_, Eng. trans., 19l4.
+
+
+The publication of Claude Bernard’s volume _Introduction à la Médecine
+experimentale_[3] drew from the pen of Paul Janet, the last of the
+Eclectic School dominated by Cousin, an article of criticism which
+appeared in the _Revue des Deux Mondes_, and was later published in his
+volume of essays entitled, _Les Problèmes du XIXe Siècle_. Although
+Janet’s essay reveals all the deficiencies of the older spiritualism,
+he makes a gallant attempt to combat the dogmatism and the assumed
+finality of Bernard’s point of view and that of the scientists in
+general. Janet regarded the sciences and their relation to philosophy
+as constituting an important problem for the century and in this
+judgment he was not mistaken.
+
+ [3] _Cf_. Livre III., _Science_, chap, i., on “Method in General”;
+ chap, ii., on The Experimental Method in Physiology,” pp. 213-279.
+
+I
+
+We have, in our Introductory Chapter, reckoned Auguste Comte among the
+influential antecedents of our period. Here, in approaching the study
+of the problem of science, we may note that the tendency towards the
+strictly scientific attitude, and to the promotion of the scientific
+_spirit_ in general, was partly due to the influence of his positivism.
+Comte’s intended Religion of Humanity failed, his system of positive
+philosophy has been neglected, but the SPIRIT which he inculcated has
+abided and has borne fruit. We would be wrong, however, if we
+attributed much to Comte as the originator of that spirit. His positive
+philosophy, although it greatly stimulated and strengthened the
+positive attitude adopted by the natural sciences, was itself in large
+measure inspired by and based upon these sciences. Consequently much of
+Comte’s glory was a reflected light, his thought was a challenge to the
+old spiritualism, an assertion of the rights of the sciences to
+proclaim their existence and to demand serious consideration.
+
+Although he succeeded in calling the attention of philosophy to the
+natural sciences, yet owing to the mere fact that he based himself on
+the sciences of his day much of his thought has become obsolete by the
+progress and extension of those very sciences themselves. He tended,
+with a curious dogmatism, to assign limits to the sciences by keeping
+them in separate compartments and in general by desiring knowledge to
+be limited to human needs. Although there is important truth in his
+doctrine of discontinuity or irreducible differences, the subsequent
+development of the natural sciences has cleared away many barriers
+which he imagined to be impassable. There still are, and may always be,
+gaps in our knowledge of the progress from inorganic to organic, from
+the living creature to self-conscious personality, but we have a
+greater conception of the unity of Nature than had Comte. Many new
+ideas and discoveries have transformed science since his day,
+particularly the doctrines dealing with heat as a form of motion, with
+light, electricity, and the radio-activity of matter, the structure of
+the atom, and the inter-relation of physics and chemistry.
+
+Comte’s claim for different methods in the different departments of
+science is of considerable interest, in view of present-day biological
+problems and the controversies of vitalists, mechanists and
+neo-vitalists.[4] Although Comte insisted upon discontinuity, yet he
+urged the necessity for an _esprit d’ensemble_, the consideration of
+things synthetically, in their “togetherness.” He feared that analysis,
+the _esprit de détail_ or mathematisation, was being carried out _à
+l’outrance_. This opinion he first stated in 1825 in his tract entitled
+_Considérations sur les Sciences et les Savants_. On the social side he
+brought this point out further by insisting on the _esprit d’ensemble_
+as involving the social standpoint in opposition to a purely
+individualistic view of human life.
+
+ [4] See, for example, _The Mechanism of Life_, by Dr. Johnstone,
+ Professor of Oceanography in the University of Liverpool. (Arnold,
+ 1921.)
+
+
+Comte was slow to realise the importance of Ethics as an independent
+study. Psychology he never recognised as a separate discipline, deeming
+it part of physiology. He gave a curious appreciation to phrenology.
+Unfortunately he overlooked the important work done by the
+introspectionist psychologists in England and the important work of
+Maine de Biran in his own country. One is struck by Comte’s inability
+to appreciate the immense place occupied by psychology in modern life
+and in particular its expression in the modern novel and in much modern
+poetry. An acquaintance with the works of men like De Regnier, Pierre
+Loti and Anatole France is sufficient to show how large a factor the
+psychological method is in French literature and life. It is to be put
+down to Comte’s eternal discredit that he failed to appreciate
+psychology. Here lies the greatest defect in his work, and it is in
+this connection that his work is now being supplemented. Positivism in
+France to-day is not a synonym for “Comtism” at all; the term is now
+employed to denote the spirit and temper displayed in the methods of
+the exact sciences. For Comte, we must never forget, scientific
+investigation was a means and not an end in itself. His main purpose
+was social and political regeneration. Positivism since Comte differs
+from his philosophy by a keen attention bestowed upon psychology, and
+many of Comte’s inadequate conceptions have been enriched by the
+introduction of a due recognition of psychological factors.
+
+It is to be noted that Comte died two years before Darwin’s
+_chef-d’œuvre_ appeared, and that he opposed the doctrine of evolution
+as put forward by Lamarck. Although Comte’s principle of discontinuity
+may in general have truth in it, the problem is a far more complicated
+one than he imagined it to be. Again, while Comte’s opposition to the
+subjectivism of Cousin was a wholesome influence, he did not accord to
+psychology its full rights, and this alone has been gravely against the
+acceptance of his philosophy, and explains partly the rise and progress
+of the new spiritualist doctrines. His work served a useful purpose,
+but Comte never closed definitely with the problem of the precise
+significance of “positivism” or with its relation to a general
+conception of the universe; in short, he confined himself to increasing
+the scientific spirit in thought, leaving aside the difficulty of
+relating science and philosophy.
+
+Comte stated in his _Philosophie positive_[5] that he regarded attempts
+to explain all phenomena by reference to one law as futile, even when
+undertaken by the most competent minds well versed in the study of the
+sciences. Although he believed in discontinuity he tried to bridge some
+gaps, notably by his endeavour to refer certain physiological phenomena
+to the law of gravitation.
+
+ [5] Vol. i., pp. 53-56.
+
+
+The chief work which this undoubtedly great mind accomplished was the
+organisation of the scientific spirit as it appeared in his time. Renan
+hardly does justice to him in his sarcastic remark in his _Souvenirs
+d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_. “I felt quite irritated at the idea of
+Auguste Comte being dignified with the title of a great man for having
+expressed in bad French what all scientific minds had seen for the last
+two hundred years as clearly as he had done.” His work merits more than
+dismissal in such a tone, and we may here note, as the essence of the
+spirit which he tried to express, his definition of the positive or
+scientific attitude to the universe given at the commencement of his
+celebrated Cours de _Philosophie positive_. There, in defining the
+positive stage, Comte speaks of it as that period in which “the human
+spirit, recognising the impossibility of obtaining absolute
+conceptions, abandons the search for the origin and the goal of the
+universe and the inner causes of things, to set itself the task merely
+of discovering, by reasoning and by experience combined, the effective
+laws of phenomena—that is to say, their invariable relations of
+succession and of similarity.”[6] This positive spirit Comte strove to
+express rather than to originate, for it was already there in the
+sciences. Undoubtedly his work made it more prominent, more clear, and
+so we have to note an interaction between positivism in the sciences
+and in philosophy.
+
+ [6] Leçon i.
+
+
+It is equally important for our purpose to notice that the period was
+one rich in scientific thought. The work of Lavoisier and Bichat, both
+of whom as contemporaries of Maine de Biran, belong to the former
+century, was now bearing fruit. Lavoisier’s influence had been great
+over chemistry, which he established on a modern basis, by formulating
+the important theory of the conservation of mass and by clearing away
+false and fan- tastic conceptions regarding combustion.[7] Bichat, the
+great anatomist and physiologist, died in 1802, but the publication of
+his works in a completed form was not accomplished until 1854. The work
+and influence of the _Académie des Sciences_ are noteworthy features of
+French culture at this time. There stands out prominently the highly
+important work of Cuvier in anatomy, zoology and palæontology.[8] The
+nineteenth century was a period of great scientists and of great
+scientific theories. Leverrier, applying himself to the problem of the
+motions of Uranus, found a solution in the hypothesis of another
+planet, Neptune, which was actually discovered from his calculations in
+1846. This was a notable victory for logical and scientific method. In
+1809 Lamarck had outlined, prior to Spencer or Darwin, the scheme of
+the evolutionary theory (Transformism).[9] Spencer’s work, which
+appeared from 1850 onwards, has always commanded respect and attention
+in France even among its critics.[10] Interest increased upon the
+publication of Darwin’s _Origin of Species_ in 1859, and its
+translation into French in 1862. These dates coincide with the rise of
+the _Société d’Anthropologie_ de Paris, founded by Broca in the same
+year that Darwin’s book appeared. Another translation from Darwin’s
+work followed in 1872, _Descendance de l’Homme_, which aroused further
+interest in the evolutionary theory. At the same time the work of men
+such as Pasteur, Bertrand, Berthelot and Bernard gave an impetus and a
+power to science. Poincare belongs rather to the twentieth century.
+Pasteur (1822-1895) showed mankind how science could cure its ills by
+patient labour and careful investigation, and earned the world’s
+gratitude for his noble work. His various _Discours_ and his volume,
+_Le Budget de la Science_ (1868), show his faith in this progressive
+power of science. In Bertrand (1822-1900), his contemporary who held
+the position of Professor of Mathematics at the College de France, a
+similar attitude appears.
+
+ [7] Lavoisier perished at the guillotine in 1794, and his death was a
+ tragic loss to science.
+
+
+ [8] Cuvier’s _Anatomie comparée_ appeared in the years 1800-1805,
+ following his _Histoire naturelle_ (1798-1799). Later came his
+ _Rapport sur les Sciences naturelles_ (1810) and his work _Le Regne
+ animal_ (1816).He died in 1832. We may note that Cuvier opposed the
+ speculative evolutionary doctrines of Lamarck, with whom he indulged
+ in controversy.
+
+
+ [9] In his work, _Philosophie zoologique, ou Exposition des
+ Considérations relatives a l’Histoire naturelle des Animaux_, 2 vols
+ Paris, Dentu, 1809.
+
+
+ [10] His _Social Statics_ was published in 1850, and his _Psychology_
+ five years later. His life work, _The Synthetic Philosophy_, extends
+ over the period 1860-1896.
+
+
+One of the foremost scientific minds, however, was Claude Bernard
+(1813-1878), a friend of Renan, who held the Chair of Medicine at the
+College de France, and was, in addition, the Professor of Physiology at
+the Faculté des Sciences at the Sorbonne. Science, Bernard maintained,
+concerns itself only with phenomena and their laws. He endeavoured in
+his celebrated _Introduction à l’Etude de la Médécine expérimentale_,
+published in 1865, to establish the science of physiology upon a sound
+basis, having respect only to fact, not owning homage to theories of a
+metaphysical character or to the authority of persons or creeds. He
+desired to obtain by such a rigorous and precise method, objectivity.
+“The experimental method is,” he insists, “the really scientific
+method, which proclaims the freedom of the human spirit and its
+intelligence. It not only shakes off the yoke of metaphysics and of
+theology, in addition it refuses to admit personal considerations and
+subjective standpoints.”[11]
+
+ [11] _Introduction à l’Etude de la Médécine expérimentale_, chap. ii,
+ sect. 4.
+
+
+Bernard’s attitude is distinctly that of a positivist, and the general
+tone of his remarks as well as his attitude on many special points
+agrees with that of Comte. His conclusions regarding physiology are
+akin to those expressed by Comte concerning biology. Bernard excludes
+any metaphysical hypothesis such as the operation of a vital principle,
+and adheres strictly to physicochemical formulas. He accepts, however,
+Comte’s warning about the reduction of the higher to terms of the
+lower, or, in Spencerian phraseology, the explanation of the more
+complex by the less complex. Consequently, he carefully avoids the
+statement that he desires to “reduce” physiology to physics and
+chemistry. He makes no facile and light-hearted transition as did
+Spencer; on the contrary, he claims that the living has some specific
+quality which cannot be “reduced” to other terms, and which cannot be
+summed up in the formulae of physics or chemistry. The physiologist and
+the medical practitioner must never overlook the fact that every living
+being forms an organism and an individuality. The physiologist,
+continues Bernard, must take notice of this unity or harmony of the
+whole, even while he penetrates the interior to know the mechanism of
+each of its parts. The physicist and the chemist can ignore any notion
+of final causes in the facts they observe, but the physiologist must
+admit a harmonious finality, a harmony pre-established in the organism,
+whose actions form and express a unity and solidarity, since they
+generate one another. Life itself is _creation_; it is not capable of
+expression merely in physico-chemical formulae. The creative character,
+which is its essence, never can be so expressed. Bernard postulated an
+abstract, _idée directrice et créatrice_, presiding over the evolution
+of an organism. “_Dans tout germe vivant, il y a une idée créatrice qui
+se développe et se manifeste par l’organisation. Pendant toute sa durée
+l’être vivant reste sous l’influence de cette même force vitale,
+créatrice, et la mort arrive lorsqu’elle ne peut plus se réaliser. Ici
+comme partout, tout dérive de l’idée, qui, seule, crée et dirige_.”[12]
+
+ [12] _Introduction à l’Etude de la Médécine expérimentale_, p.151 ff.
+
+
+The positivist spirit is again very marked in the doctrines of
+Berthelot (1827-1907), another very great friend of Renan, who, in
+addition to being a Senator, and Minister of Education and of Foreign
+Affairs, held the Chair of Organic Chemistry at the Collège de France.
+In 1886 he published his volume, Science et Philosophie, which contains
+some interesting and illuminating observations upon _La Science idéale
+et la Science positive_. Part of this, it may be noted, was written as
+early as 1863, in correspondence with Renan, and as a reply to a letter
+of his of which we shall speak presently.[13] Berthelot states his case
+with a clearness which merits quotation.
+
+ [13] See the _Fragments_ of Renan, published 1876, pp 193-241.
+ _Reponse de M. Berthelot_.
+
+
+“Positive science,” he says, “seeks neither first causes nor the
+ultimate goal of things. In order to link together a multitude of
+phenomena by one single law, general in character and conformable to
+the nature of things, the human spirit has followed a simple and
+invariable method. It has stated the facts in accordance with
+observation and experience, compared them, extracted their relations,
+that is the general facts, which have in turn been verified by
+observation and experience, which verification constitutes their only
+guarantee of truth. A progressive generalisation, deduced from prior
+facts and verified unceasingly by new observations, thus brings our
+knowledge from the plane of particular and popular facts to general
+laws of an abstract and universal character. But, in the construction
+of this pyramid of science, everything from base to summit rests upon
+observation and experience. It is one of the principles of positive
+science that no reality can be established by a process of reasoning.
+The universe cannot be grasped by a _priori_ methods.”
+
+Like Comte, Berthelot believed in the progress of all knowledge through
+a theological and metaphysical stage to a definitely scientific or
+positive era. The sciences are as yet young, and we cannot imagine the
+development and improvement, social and moral, which will accrue from
+their triumph in the future. For Berthelot, as for Renan, the idea of
+progress was bound up essentially with the triumph of the scientific
+spirit. In a Discourse at the Sorbonne given in commemoration of the
+fiftieth anniversary of his being appointed Professor at the Collège de
+France, we find this faith in science reiterated. “To-day,” he remarks,
+“Science claims a triple direction of societies, materially,
+intellectually and morally. By this fact the role of the men of
+science, both as individuals and as a class, has unceasingly come to
+play a great part in modern states.”
+
+These scientific men, Berthelot and Bernard, with whom Renan was on
+terms of friendship, had a large influence in the formation of his
+thought, after he had quitted the seminary and the Church. As a young
+man Renan possessed the positive spirit in a marked degree, and did not
+fail to disclose his enthusiasm for “Science” and for the scientific
+method. His book _L’Avenir de la Science_, which we have already noted,
+was written when he was only twenty-five, and under the immediate
+influence of the events of 1848, particularly the socialist spirit of
+Saint-Simon and the “organising” attitude of Auguste Comte. It did not,
+however, see publication until 1890, when the Empire had produced a
+pessimistic temper in him, later accentuated by the Commune and the
+Prussian War. The dominant note of the whole work is the touching and
+almost pathetic belief in Science, which leads the young writer to an
+optimism both in thought and in politics. “Science” constitutes for him
+the all-in-all. Although he had just previously abandoned the seminary,
+his priestly style remained with him to such a degree that even his
+treatment of science is characterised by a mixture of the unction of
+the _curé_ and the subtilty of the dialectician. Levites were still to
+be necessary to the people of Israel, but they were to be the priests
+of the most High, whose name, according to Renan, was “Science.”
+
+His ardour for Science is not confined to this one book: it runs
+through all his writings. Prospero, a character who personifies
+rational thought in _L’Eau de Jouvence_, one of Renan’s _Drames
+philosophiques_, expresses an ardent love for science continually. In
+his preface to _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_ we find Renan upon
+the same theme. Quaintly enough he not only praises the objectivity
+which is characteristic of the scientific point of view, but seems to
+delight in its abstraction. The superiority of modern science consists,
+he claims, in this very abstraction. But he is aware that the very
+indefatigability with which we fathom nature removes us, in a sense,
+further from her. He recognises how science leads away from the
+immediacy of vital and close contact with nature herself. “This is,
+however, as it should be,” asserts Renan, “and let no one fear to
+prosecute his researches, for out of this merciless dissection comes
+life.” He does not stay to assure us, or to enlighten us, as to how
+that life can be infused into the abstract facts which have resulted
+from the process of dissection. Fruitful and suggestive as many of his
+pages are, they fail to approach the concrete difficulties which this
+passage mentions.
+
+Writing from Dinant in Brittany in 1863 to his friend, Berthelot, Renan
+gives his view of the Sciences of Nature and the Historical Sciences.
+This letter, reprinted in his _Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques_,
+in 1876, expresses Renan’s.views in a clear and simple form upon the
+place of science in his mind and also upon the idea of progress, as for
+him the two are intimately connected. Extreme confidence is expressed
+in the power of science. Renan at this time had written, but not
+published, his _Avenir de la Science_. In a brief manner this letter
+summarises much contained in the larger work. The point of view is
+similar. Science is to be the great reforming power.
+
+The word “Science” is so constantly upon Renan’s lips that we can see
+that it has become an obsession with mm to employ it, or a device.
+Certainly Renan’s extensive and ill-defined usage of it conceals grave
+difficulties. One is tempted frequently to regard it as a synonym for
+philosophy or metaphysics, a word which he dislikes. That does not,
+however, add to clearness, and Renan’s usage of “Science” as a term
+confuses both science and philosophy together. Even if this were not
+the case, there is another important point to note— namely, that even
+on a stricter interpretation Renan, by his wide use of the term,
+actually undermines the confidence in the natural sciences. For he
+embraces within the term “Science” not merely those branches of
+investigation which we term in general the sciences of nature, but also
+the critical study of language, of history and literature. He expressly
+endeavours to show in the letter to Berthelot that true science must
+include the product of man’s spirit and the record of the development
+of that spirit.
+
+Renan assumed quite definitely a positivist attitude to metaphysics.
+“Philosophy,” he remarks, “is not a separate science; it is one side of
+every science. In the great optic pencil of human knowledge it is the
+central region where the rays meet in one and the same light.”
+Metaphysical speculation he scorned, but he admitted the place for a
+criticism of the human mind such as had been given by Kant in _The
+Critique of Pure Reason_.
+
+Kantian also, in its professions at least, was the philosophy of
+Vacherot, who stated that the aim of his work, _La Métaphysique et la
+Science_, was “the reconciliation of metaphysics with science.”[14]
+These dialogues between a philosopher and a man of science, for of such
+discussions the book is composed, never really help us to get close to
+the problem, for Vacherot’s Kantianism is a profession which merely
+covers an actual positivism. His metaphysical doctrines are
+superimposed on a severe and rigid naturalism, but are kept from
+conflict with them, or even relation with them, by being allotted to a
+distant limbo of pure ideals, outside the world which science displays
+to us.
+
+ [14] See particularly his statements to this effect in his Preface,
+ pp. xxxvii-xl.
+
+
+Taine, in spite of his severely positive attitude, was a strong
+champion of metaphysics. The sciences needed, he claimed, a science of
+first principles, a metaphysic. Without it, “the man of science is
+merely a _manœuvre_ and the artist a _dilettante_.” The positive
+sciences he re- garded as inferior types of analysis. Above them “is a
+superior analysis which is metaphysics, and which reduces or takes up
+these laws of the sciences into a universal formula.” This higher
+analysis, however, does not give the lie to the others: it completes
+them.
+
+It was indeed a belief and hope of Taine that the sciences will be more
+and more perfected until they can each be expressed in a kind of
+generic formula, which in turn may be capable of expression in some
+single formula. This single law is being sought by science and
+metaphysic, although it must belong to the latter rather than to the
+former. From it, as from a spring, proceeds, according to Taine, the
+eternal roll of events and the infinite sea of things.
+
+Taine’s antagonism to the purely empirical schools centres round his
+conception of the law of causality. He disagrees with the assertion
+that this law is a synthetic, a _posteriori_ judgment, a habit, as Hume
+said, or a mechanical _attente_, as Mill thought, or a generalisation
+of the sensation of effort which we feel in ourselves, as was suggested
+by Maine de Biran. Yet he also opposes Kant’s doctrine, in which
+causality is regarded as a synthetic _a priori_ judgment. His own
+criticism of Hume and Kant was directed to denial of the elements of
+heterogeneity in experience, which are so essential to Hume’s view, and
+to a denial of the distinction maintained by Kant between logical and
+causal relations. Taine considered that all might be explained by
+logical relations, that all experience might some day be expressed in
+one law, one formula. The _more geometrico_ of Spinoza and the
+“universal mathematic” of Descartes reappear in Taine. He even essays
+in _L’Intelligence_ to equate the principle of causality (_principe de
+raison explicative_) with that of identity.
+
+His attempt to reduce the principle of causality to that of identity
+did not succeed very well, and from the nature of the case this was to
+be expected. As Fouillée well points out in his criticism of Taine,
+both in _La Liberté et le Déterminisme_ and the concluding pages of his
+earlier work on Plato,[15] the notion of difference and heterogeneity
+which arises in the action of cause and effect can never be reducible
+to a mere identity, for the notion of identity has nothing in common
+with that of difference. Differences cannot be ignored; variety and
+change are undeniable facts of experience. Fouillée here touches the
+weak spot of Taine’s doctrine. In spite of a seemingly great power of
+criticism there is an underlying dogmatism in his work, and the chief
+of those dogmas, which he does not submit to criticism, is the
+assertion of the universal necessity of all things. To this postulate
+he gives a false air of objectivity. He avoids stating why we do
+objectify causality, and he diverts discussion from the position that
+this postulate may itself be subjective.
+
+ [15] Vol. 4.
+
+
+The particular bearing of Taine’s psychology upon the general problem
+of knowledge is interesting. He defines perception in _L’Intelligence_
+as _une hallucination vraie_. His doctrine of the “double aspect,”
+physical and mental, recalls to mind the Modes of Spinoza. In his
+attitude to the difficult problem of movement and thought he rests in
+the dualism of Spinoza, fluctuating and not enunciating his doctrine
+clearly. The primacy of movement to thought he abandoned as too
+mechanical a doctrine, and regarded the type of existence as mental in
+character. Taine thus passes from the materialism of Hobbes to the
+idealism of Leibnitz. “The physical world is reducible to a system of
+signs, and no more is needed for its construction and conception than
+the materials of the moral world.”
+
+When we feel ourselves constrained to admit the necessity of certain
+truths, if we are inclined to regard this as due to the character of
+our minds themselves (_notre structure mentale_), as Kant maintained,
+Taine reminds us that we must admit that our mind adapts itself to its
+environment. He here adopts the view of Spencer, a thinker who seems to
+have had far more influence upon the Continent than in his own country.
+Although Taine thus reposes his epistemology upon this basis, he does
+not answer the question which the Kantian can still put to him—namely,
+“How do we know the structure of things?” He is unable to escape from
+the difficulty of admitting either that it is from experience, an
+admission which his anti-empirical attitude forbids him to make (and
+which would damage his dogma of universal logical necessity), or that
+our knowledge is obtained by analysing our own thoughts, in which case
+he leaves us in a vicious circle of pure subjectivity from which there
+is no means of escape.
+
+The truth is that Taine vainly tried to establish a phenomenal
+doctrine, not purely empirical in character like that of Hume, but a
+phenomenalism wedded to a necessity which is supposed to be
+self-explanatory. Such a notion of necessity, however, is formal and
+abstract. Rather than accept Taine’s view of a law, a formula, an
+“eternal axiom” at the basis of things, we are obliged to postulate an
+activity, creative in character, of whose action universal laws are but
+expressions. Law, formula, axiom without action are mere abstractions
+which can of themselves produce nothing.
+
+Taine’s positivism, however, was not so rigid as to exclude a belief in
+the value of metaphysics. It is this which distinguishes him from the
+Comtian School. We see in him the confidence in science complemented by
+an admission of metaphysics, equivalent to a turning of “positivism” in
+science and philosophy against itself. Much heavier onslaughts upon the
+sovereignty of science came, however, from the thinker who is the great
+logician and metaphysician of our period, Renouvier. To him and to
+Cournot we now turn.
+
+II
+
+While Taine had indeed maintained the necessity of a metaphysic, he
+shared to a large degree the general confidence in science displayed by
+Comte, Bernard, Berthelot and Renan. But the second and third groups of
+thinkers into which we have divided our period took up first a critical
+attitude to science and, finally, a rather hostile one.
+
+Cournot marks the transition between Comte and Renouvier. His _Essai
+sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances et sur les Caractères de la
+Critique philosophique_ contains some very calm and careful thought on
+the relation of science and philosophy, which is the product of a
+sincere and well-balanced mind.[16] He inherits from the positivists an
+intense respect for scientific knowledge, and remarks at the outset
+that he is hostile to any philosophy which would be so foolish as to
+attempt to ignore the work of the modern sciences.
+
+ [16] See in particular the second chapter of vol. 2, _Du Contraste de
+ la Science et de la Philosophie et de la Philosophie des Sciences_,
+ pp. 216-255.
+
+
+His work _Matérialisme, Vitalisme, Rationalisme_ is a striking example
+of this effort on Cournot’s part, being devoted to a study of the use
+which can be made in philosophy of the data afforded by the sciences.
+Somewhat after the manner of Comte, Cournot looks upon the various
+sciences as a hierarchy ranging from mathematics to sociology. Yet he
+reminds the scientists of the insufficiency of their point of view, for
+the sciences, rightly pursued, lead on to philosophy. He laments,
+however, the confusion of the two, and thinks that such confusion is
+“partly due to the fact that in the realm of speculations which are
+naturally within the domain of the philosopher, there are to be found
+here and there certain theories which can actually be reduced to a
+scientific form”[17] He offers, as an instance of this, the theory of
+the syllogism, which has affinities to algebraical equations—but this
+interpenetration should not cause us, he argues, to abandon or to lose
+sight of the distinction between science and philosophy.
+
+ [17] _Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances_, vol. 2, p. 224.
+
+
+This distinction, according to Cournot, lies in the fact that science
+has for its object that which can be measured, and that which can be
+reduced to a rigorous chain or connection. In brief, science is
+characterised by quantity. Philosophy, on the other hand, concerns
+itself with quality, for it endeavours not so much to measure as to
+appreciate.
+
+Cournot reminds the apostles of science that quantity, however
+intimately bound up with reality it may be, is not the essence of that
+reality itself. He is afraid, too, that the neglect of philosophy by
+science may cause the latter to develop along purely utilitarian lines.
+As an investigation of reality, science is not ultimate. It has limits
+by the fact that it is concerned with measurement, and thus is excluded
+from those things which are qualitative and incapable of quantitative
+expression. Science, moreover, has its roots in philosophy by virtue of
+the metaphysical postulates which it utilises as its basis. Physics and
+geometry, Cournot maintains, both rest upon definitions which owe their
+origin to speculative thought rather than to experience, yet these
+sciences claim an absolute value for themselves and for those
+postulates as being descriptions of reality in an ultimate sense.
+
+Following out his distinction between philosophy and the sciences,
+Cournot claims in a Kantian manner that while the latter are products
+of the human understanding the former is due to the operation of
+reason. This apparent dualism Cournot does not shrink from maintaining;
+indeed, he makes it an argument for his doctrine of discontinuity. The
+development of a science involves a certain breach with reality, for
+the progress of the science involves abstraction, which ever becomes
+more complicated. Cournot here brings out the point which we noticed
+was stressed by Renan.[18]
+
+ [18] See above, p. 105.
+
+
+Reason produces in us the idea of order, and this “idea of order and of
+reason in things is the basis of philosophic probability, of induction
+and analogy.”[19] This has important bearings upon the unity of science
+and upon the conception of causality which it upholds. In a careful
+examination of the problems of induction and analogy, Cournot
+emphasises the truth that there are facts which cannot be fitted into a
+measured or logical sequence of events. Reality cannot be fitted into a
+formula or into concepts, for these fail to express the infinite
+variety and richness of the reality which displays itself to us.
+Science can never be adequate to life, with its pulsing spontaneity and
+freedom. It is philosophy with its _vue d’ensemble_ which tries to
+grasp and to express this concreteness, which the sciences, bound to
+their systematic connection of events within separate compartments,
+fail to reach or to show us. Referring to the ideas of beauty and of
+goodness, Cournot urges a “transrationalism,” as he calls it, which,
+while loyal to the rational requirements of science, will enable us to
+take the wider outlook assumed by philosophy.[20]
+
+ [19] _Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances_, p. 384.
+
+
+ [20] The parallelism of some of Cournot’s ideas here with those
+ expressed by Bergson, although they have been enunciated by the later
+ thinker in a more decided manner, is so obvious as hardly to need to
+ be indicated.
+
+
+Like Cournot, the author of the _Essais de Critique générale_ was a
+keen antagonist of all those who sought to deify Science. It was indeed
+this which led Renouvier to give this title to his great work, the
+first part of which was published at a time when the confidence in
+Science appeared to be comparatively unassailed. We find him defending
+philosophy as against the scientists and others by an insistence upon
+its critical function.
+
+In examining Comte’s positivism in his work _Histoire et Solution des
+Problèmes métaphysiques_, Renouvier points out that its initial idea is
+a false one—namely, that philosophy can be constituted by an assembling
+together of the sciences.[21] Such an assembly does not, he objects,
+make a system. Each science has its own postulates, its own data, and
+Science as a whole unity of thought or knowledge does not exist. He
+attacks at the same time the calm presumption of the positivist who
+maintains that the scientific stage is the final and highest
+development. Renouvier is considerably annoyed at this unwarranted
+dogmatism and assumed air of finality.
+
+ [21] Book X.: _De l’Etat actuel de la Philosophie en France_, chap.
+ 1., _De l’Aboutissement des Esprits au Positivisme_, pp. 416-417.
+
+
+Owing to the excellent training he had received at the Ecole
+Polytechnique, and by his own profound study, Renouvier was able on
+many technical points to meet the scientists on their own ground. His
+third _Essai de Critique générale_ is devoted to a study of “the
+Principles of Nature,” in which he criticises many of the principles
+and assumptions of mechanism, while many pages of his two previous
+_Essais_ are concerned with the discussion of questions intimately
+affecting the sciences.[22]
+
+ [22] This is particularly noticeable in the matter printed as
+ appendices to his chapters. (_Cf_. the _Logic_, vol 2.)
+
+
+An important section of his second Essay, _Psychologie rationnelle_,
+deals with the “Classification of the Sciences.”[23] Renouvier there
+points out that the attempt to classify the sciences in accordance with
+their degrees of certainty ends in failure. All of them, when loyal to
+their own principles, endeavour to display equal certainty. By loyalty
+Renouvier shows that he means adherence to an examination of certain
+classes of phenomena, the observation of facts and laws, with the
+proposal of hypotheses, put forward frankly as such. He draws a line
+between the logical and the physical sciences—a division which he
+claims is not only a division according to the nature of their data,
+but also according to method. Following another division, we may draw a
+line between sciences which deal with objects which are organic, living
+creatures, and those which are not.
+
+ [23] Vol. 2, chap. xviii., _De la Certitude des Sciences et leur
+ Classification rationnelle_, pp. 139-186, including later observations
+ on Spencer.
+
+
+Renouvier’s line is not, it must be remembered in this connection, a
+purely imaginary one. It is a real line, an actual gap. For him there
+is a real discontinuity in the universe. Taine’s doctrine of a
+universal explanation, of a rigid unity and continuity, is, for
+Renouvier, anathema, _c’est la mathématisation a l’outrance_. This
+appears most markedly in the pages which he devotes to the
+consideration of _la synthèse totale_.
+
+An important section of his _Traité de Logique_ (the first _Essai de
+Critique générale_) deals with the problem of this Total Synthesis of
+all phenomena.[24] This is a conception which Renouvier affirms to be
+unwarrantable and, indeed, in the last analysis impossible. A general
+synthesis, an organisation or connected hierarchy of sciences, is a
+fond hope, an illusion only of a mind which can overlook the real
+discontinuity which exists between things and between groups of things.
+
+ [24] Vol. I, pp. 107-115, and also vol. 2, pp. 202-245.
+
+
+He sees in it the fetish of the Absolute and the Infinite and the lure
+of pantheism, a doctrine to which he opposes his “Personalism.” He
+reminds the scientists that personality is the great factor to which
+all knowledge is related, and that all knowledge is relative. A law is
+a law, but the guarantee of its permanence is not a law. It is no more
+easy, claims Renouvier, to say why phenomena do not stop than it is to
+know why they have begun. Laws indeed abide, but “not apart from
+conscious personalities who affirm them.”[25] Further, attacking the
+self-confident and dogmatic attitude in the scientists, Renouvier
+reminds them that it is impossible to demonstrate _every_ proposition;
+and in an important note on “Induction and the Sciences”[26] he points
+out that induction always implies a certain _croyance_. This is no
+peculiar, mystical thing; it is a fact, he remarks, which colours all
+the interesting acts of human personality. He here approaches Cournot
+in observing that all speculation is attended by a certain coefficient
+of doubt or uncertainty and so becomes really rational belief. With
+Cournot, too, Renouvier senses the importance of analogy and
+probability in connection with hypotheses in the world of nature and of
+morals. In short, he recognises as central the problem of freedom.
+
+ [25] _Logique_, vol. 2, p. 321.
+
+
+ [26] Note B to chap. xxxv. of the _Logique_, vol. 2, p. 13.
+
+
+Renouvier attacks Comte’s classification or “hierarchy” of the sciences
+as mischievous and inexact. It is not based, he claims, upon any
+distinction in method, nor of data. It is not true that the sciences
+are arranged by Comte in an order where they successively imply one
+another, nor in an order in which they have come to be constituted as
+“positive”.[27]
+
+ [27] This outburst of attack is a sample of Renouvier’s usual attitude
+ to Positivism. (_Deuxième Essai_, vol. 2, pp. 166-170.)
+
+
+He justifies to the scientist the formulation of hypothesis as a
+necessary working method of co-ordinating in a provisional manner
+varying phenomena. Many hypotheses and inductions of science are,
+however, unjustifiable from a strictly logical standpoint, Renouvier
+reminds us. His chief objection, however, is that those hypotheses and
+inductions are put forward so frequently as certainties by a science
+which is dogmatic and surpasses its limits.
+
+Science, Renouvier claims, does not give us a knowledge of the
+absolute, but an understanding of the relative. It is in the light of
+his doctrine of relativity and of the application of the law of number
+that he criticises many of the attitudes adopted by the scientists.
+Whatever savours of the Absolute or the Infinite he opposes, and his
+view of cause depends on this. He scorns the fiction of an infinite
+regress, and affirms real beginnings to various classes of phenomena.
+Causality is not to be explained, he urges in his _Nouvelle
+Monadologie_, save by a harmony. He differs from Leibnitz, however, in
+claiming in the interests of freedom that this harmony is not
+pre-established. In meeting the doctrine of the reduction of the
+complex to the simple, Renouvier cites the case of “reducing” sound,
+heat, light and electricity to movement. This may be superficially
+correct as a generality, but Renouvier aptly points out that it
+overlooks the fact that, although they may all be abstractly
+characterised as movement, yet there are differences between them as
+movements which correspond to the differences of sensation they arouse
+in us.
+
+Renouvier upholds real differences, real beginnings, and, it must be
+added, a reality behind and beyond the appearances of nature. His
+_Monadologie_ admits that “we can continue to explain nature
+mathematically and mechanically, provided we recognise that it is an
+external appearance—that thought, mind or spirit is at the heart of
+it.” This links Renouvier to the group of new spiritualists. His
+attitude to science is akin to theirs. He does not fear science when it
+confines itself to its proper limits and recognises these. It has no
+quarrel with philosophy nor philosophy with it. Advance in science
+involves, he believes, an advance also in theology and in metaphysics.
+
+The sciences are responsible for working out the laws determining the
+development of the Universe. But between Science, an ideal unachieved,
+and the sciences which in themselves are so feeble, imperfect and
+limited, Renouvier claims that General Criticism, or Philosophy, has
+its place. “In spite of the discredit into which philosophy has fallen
+in these days, it can and ought to exist. Its object has been always
+the investigation of God, man, liberty, immortality, the fundamental
+laws of the sciences. ‘All these intimately connected and
+interpenetrating problems comprise the domain of philosophy.” In those
+cases where no science is possible, this seeming impossibility must
+itself be investigated, and philosophy remains as a “General Criticism”
+(_Critique générale_) of our knowledge. “It is this notion,” he says,
+“which I desired to indicate by banishing the word ‘Philosophy’ from
+the title of my Essays. The name ought to change when the method
+changes.”[28] Thus Renouvier seeks to establish a “critique” midway
+between scepticism and dogmatism, and endeavours to found a philosophy
+which recognises at one and the same time the demands of _science et
+conscience_.
+
+ [28] _Logique_, vol. 2, p. 352.
+
+III
+
+On turning to the spiritualist current of thought we find it, like the
+neo-criticism, no less keen in its criticism of science. The inadequacy
+of the purely scientific attitude is the recurring theme from Ravaisson
+to Boutroux, Bergson and Le Roy. The attitude assumed by Ravaisson
+coloured the whole of the subsequent development of the new
+spiritualist doctrines, and not least their bearing upon the problem of
+science and its relation to metaphysics.
+
+Mechanism, Ravaisson pointed out, quoting the classical author upon
+whom he had himself written so brilliantly (Aristotle), does not
+explain itself, for it implies a “prime mover,” not itself in motion,
+but which produces movement by spiritual activity. Ravaisson also
+refers to the testimony of Leibnitz, who, while agreeing that all is
+mechanical, carefully added to this statement one to the effect that
+mechanism itself has a principle which must be looked for outside
+matter and which is the object of metaphysical research. This spiritual
+reality is found only, according to Ravaisson, in the power of goodness
+and beauty—that is to say, in a reality which is not non-scientific but
+rather ultra-scientific. There are realities, he claims, to which
+science does not attain.
+
+The explanation of nature presupposes soul or spirit. It is true,
+Ravaisson admits, that the physical and chemical sciences consider
+themselves independent of metaphysics; true also that the metaphysician
+in ignoring the study of those sciences omits much from his estimate of
+the spirit. Indeed, he cannot well dispense with the results of the
+sciences. That admission, however, does not do away with the
+possibility of a true “apologia” for metaphysics. To Newton’s sarcastic
+remark, “Physics beware of metaphysics,” Hegel replied cogently that
+this was equivalent to saying, “Physics, keep away from thought.”
+Spirit, however, cannot be omitted from the account; it is the
+condition of all that is, the light by which we see that there is such
+a thing as a material universe. This is the central point of
+Ravaisson’s philosophy. The sciences of nature may be allowed and
+encouraged to work diligently upon their own principles, but the very
+fact that they are individual sciences compels them to admit that they
+view the whole “piecemeal”. Philosophy seeks to interpret the whole as
+a whole. Ravaisson quotes Pascal’s saying, “_Il faut avoir une pensée
+de derrière la tête et juger de tout par là_.” This _pensée de derrière
+la tête_, says Ravaisson, while not preventing the various sciences
+from speaking in their own tongue, is just the metaphysical or
+philosophical idea of the whole.
+
+It is claimed, Aristotle used to say, that mathematics have absolutely
+nothing in common with the idea of the good. “But order, proportion,
+symmetry, are not these great forms of beauty?” asks Ravaisson. For him
+there is spirit at the heart of things, an activity, _un feu primitif
+qui est l’âme_, which expresses itself in thought, in will and in love.
+It is a fire which does not burn itself out, because it is enduring
+spirit, an eternal cause, the absolute substance is this spiritual
+reality. Where the sciences fall short is that they fail to show that
+nature is but the refraction of this spirit. This is a fact, however,
+which both religion and philosophy grasp and uphold.
+
+These criticisms were disturbing for those minds who found entire
+satisfaction in Science or rather in the sciences, but they were
+somewhat general. Ravaisson’s work inculcated a spirit rather than
+sustained a dialectic. Its chief value lay in the inspiration which it
+imparted to subsequent thinkers who endeavoured to work out his general
+ideas with greater precision.
+
+It was this task which Lachelier set himself in his _Induction_. He had
+keenly felt the menace of science, as had Janet;[29] he had appreciated
+the challenge offered to it by Ravaisson’s ideas. Moreover, Lachelier’s
+acute mind discovered the crucial points upon which the new
+spiritualism could base its attack upon the purely scientific
+dogmatism. Whatever Leibnitz might have said, creative spontaneity of
+the spirit, as it was acclaimed by Ravaisson, could not easily be
+fitted into the mechanism and determinism upheld by the sciences.
+Ravaisson had admitted the action of efficient causes in so far as he
+admitted the action of mechanism, which is but the outcome of these
+causes. In this way he endeavoured to satisfy the essential demands of
+the scientific attitude to the universe. But recognising the inadequacy
+of this attitude he had upheld the reality of final causes and thus
+opposed to the scientists a metaphysical doctrine akin to the religious
+attitude of Hellenism and Christianity.
+
+ [29] We refer here to the quotation from Janet’s _Problèmes du XIXe
+ Siècle_, given above on p. 95. Janet himself wrote on _Final Causes_
+ but not Wlth the depth or penetration of Lachelier.
+
+
+Lachelier saw that the important point of Ravaisson’s doctrine lay in
+the problem of these two types of causality. His thesis is therefore
+devoted to the examination of efficient and final causes. This little
+work of Lachelier marks a highly important advance in the development
+of the spiritualist philosophy. He clarifies and re-affirms more
+precisely the position indicated by Ravaisson. Lacheher tears up the
+treaty of compromise which was drafted by Leibnitz to meet the rival
+demands of science with its efficient causes and philosophy with its
+final causes. The world of free creative spontaneity of the spirit
+cannot be regarded, Lachelier claims (and this is his vital point), as
+merely the complement of, or the reflex from, the world of mechanism
+and determinism.
+
+He works out in his thesis the doctrine that efficient causes can be
+deduced from the formal laws of thought. This was Taine’s position, and
+it was the limit of Taine’s doctrine. Lachelier goes further and
+undermines Taine’s theories by upholding final causes, which he shows
+depend upon the conception of a totality, a whole which is capable of
+creating its parts. This view of the whole is a philosophical
+conception to which the natural sciences never rise, and which they
+cannot, by the very nature of their data and their methods, comprehend.
+Yet it is only such a conception which can supply any rational basis
+for the unity of phenomena and of experience. Only by seeing the
+variety of all phenomena in the light of such an organic unity can we
+find any meaning in the term universe, and only thus, continues
+Lachelier, only on the principle of a rational and universal order and
+on the reality of final causes, can we base our inductions. The
+“uniformity of nature,” that fetish of the scientists which, as
+Lachelier well points out, is merely the empirical regularity of
+phenomena, offers no adequate basis for a single induction.
+
+Lachelier developed his doctrines further in the article, _Psychologie
+et Métaphysique_. We can observe in it the marks which so profoundly
+distinguish the new spiritualism from the old, as once taught by
+Cousin. The old spiritualism had no place between its psychology and
+its metaphysics for the natural sciences. Indeed it was quite incapable
+of dealing with the problem which their existence and success
+presented, and so it chose to ignore them as far as possible. The new
+spiritualism, of which Lachelier is perhaps the profoundest speculative
+mind, not only is acquainted with the place and results of the
+sciences, but it feels itself equal to a criticism of them, an advance
+which marks a highly important development in philosophy.
+
+In this article Lachelier endeavours to pass beyond the standpoint of
+Cousin, and in so doing we see not only the influence of Ravaisson’s
+ideas of the creative activity of the spirit, but also of the
+discipline of the Kantian criticism, with which Lachelier, unlike many
+of his contemporaries in France at that time, was well acquainted.
+
+He first shows that the study of psychology reveals to us the human
+powers of sensation, feeling and will. These are the immediate data of
+consciousness. Another element, however, enters into consciousness, not
+as these three, a definite content, but as a colouring of the whole.
+This other element is “objectivity,” an awareness or belief that the
+world without exists and continues to exist independently of our
+observation of it. Lachelier combats, however, the Kantian conception
+of the “thing-in-itself.” If, he argues, the world around us appears as
+a reality which is independent of our perception, it is _not_ because
+it is a “thing-in-itself,” but rather it appears as independent because
+we, possessing conscious intelligence, succeed in making it an object
+of our thought, and thus save it from the mere subjectivity which
+characterises our sense-experience. It is upon this fact, Lachelier
+rightly insists, that all our science reposes. A theory of knowledge as
+proposed by Taine, based solely on sensation and professing belief in
+_hallucination vraie_, is itself a contradiction and an abuse of
+language. “If thought is an illusion,” remarks Lachelier, “we must
+suppress all the sciences.”[30]
+
+ [30] _Psychologie et Métaphisique_, p.151.(See especially the passages
+ on pp.150-158.)
+
+
+He then proceeds to show that if we admit thought to be the basis of
+our knowledge of the world, that is, of our sciences, then we admit
+that our sciences are themselves connstructions, based upon a
+synthetic, constructive, creative activity of our mind or spirit. For
+our thought is not merely another “thing” added to the world of things
+outside us. Our thought is not a given and predetermined datum, it is
+“a living dialectic,” a creative activity, a self-creative process,
+which is synthetic, and not merely analytic in character. “Thought,” he
+says, “can rest upon itself, while everything else can only rest upon
+it; the ultimate _point d’appui_ of all truth and of all existence is
+to be found in the absolute spontaneity of the spirit.”[31] Here,
+Lachelier maintains, lies the real _a priori_; here, too, is the very
+important passage from psychology to metaphysics.
+
+ [31] _Psychologie et Métaphysique_, p. 158.
+
+
+Finally his treatment of the problems of knowledge and of the
+foundations of science leads him to reemphasise not only the reality of
+spirit but its spontaneity. He recognises with Cournot and Renouvier
+that the vital problem for science and philosophy is that of freedom.
+The nature of existence is for Lachelier a manifestation of spirit, and
+is seen in will, in necessity and in freedom. It is important to note
+that for him it is _all_ these simultaneously. “Being,” he remarks in
+concluding his brilliant essay,[32] “is not first, a blind necessity,
+then a will which must be for ever bound down in advance to necessity
+and, lastly, a freedom which would merely be able to recognise such
+necessity and such a bound will; being is entirely free, in so far as
+it is self-creative; it is entirely an expression of will, in so far as
+it creates itself in the form of something concrete and real; it is
+also entirely an expression of necessity, in so far as its
+self-creation is intelligible and gives an account of itself.”
+
+ [32] _Ibid_., p. 170.
+
+
+At this stage something in the nature of a temporary “set-back” is
+given to the flow of the spiritualist current by Fouillee’s attitude,
+which takes a different line from that of Ravaisson and Lachelier. The
+attitude towards Science, which we find adopted by Fouillee, is
+determined by his two general principles, that of reconcilation, and
+his own doctrine of _idées-forces_. His conciliatory spirit is well
+seen in the fact that, although he has a great respect for science and
+inherits many of the qualities contained in Taine’s philosophy,
+particularly the effort to maintain a regular continuity and solidarity
+in the development of reality, nevertheless he is imbued with the
+spirit of idealism which characterises all this group of thinkers. The
+result is a mixture of Platonism and naturalism, and to this he himself
+confesses in his work, _Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la
+Science positive_, where he expresses a desire “to bring back Plato’s
+ideas from heaven to earth, and so to make idealism consonant with
+naturalism.”[33]
+
+ [33] _Le Mouvement idéaliste el la Réaction contre la Science
+ positive_, p. xxi.
+
+
+Fouillée claims to take up a position midway between the materialists
+and the idealists. Neither standpoint is, in his view, adequate to
+describe reality. He is particularly opposed to the materialistic and
+mechanistic thought of the English Evolutionary School, as presented by
+Spencer and Huxley, with its pretensions to be scientific. Fouillee
+accepts, with them, the notion of evolution, but he disagrees entirely
+with Spencer’s attempt to refer everything to mechanism, the mechanism
+of matter in motion. In any case, Fouillée claims, movement is a very
+slender and one-sided element of experience upon which to base our
+characterisation of all reality, for the idea of motion arises only
+from our visual and tactual experience. He revolts from the
+epiphenomenalism of Huxley as from a dire heresy. Consciousness cannot
+be regarded as a mere “flash in the pan.” Even science must admit that
+all phenomena are to be defined by their relation to, and action upon,
+other phenomena. Consciousness, so regarded, will be seen, he claims,
+as a unique power, possessing the property of acting upon matter and of
+initiating movement. It is itself a factor, and a very vital one, in
+the evolutionary process. It is no mere reflex or passive
+representation. On this point of the irreducibility of the mental life
+and the validity of its action, Fouillée parts company with Taine. On
+the other hand, he disagrees with the idealistic school of thought,
+which upholds a pure intellectualism and for whom thought is the
+accepted characterisation of reality. This, complains Fouillée, is as
+much an abstraction and a one-sided view as that of Spencer.
+
+In this manner Fouillée endeavours to “rectify the scientific
+conception of evolution” by his doctrine of _idées-forces_. “There is,”
+he says,[34] “in every idea a commencement of action, and even of
+movement, which tends to persist and to increase like an _élan_. . . .
+Every idea is already a force.” Psychologically it is seen in the
+active, conative or appetitive aspect of consciousness. To think of a
+thing involves already, in some measure, a tendency toward it, to
+desire it. Physiologically considered, _idées-forces_ are found to
+operate, not mechanically, but by a vital solidarity which is much more
+than mere mechanism, and which unites the inner consciousness to the
+outer physical fact of movement. From a general philosophical point of
+view the doctrine of _idées-forces_ establishes the irreducibility of
+the mental, and the fact that, so far from the mental being a kind of
+phosphorescence produced as a result of the evolutionary process, it is
+a prime factor in that evolution, of which mechanism is only a symbol.
+Here Fouillée rises almost to the spiritualism of Ravaisson. Mechanism,
+he declares, is, after all, but a manner of representing to ourselves
+things in space and time. Scientists speak of forces, but the real
+forces are ideas, and other so-called “forces” are merely analogies
+which we have constructed, based upon the inner mental feeling of
+effort, tendency, desire and will.[35]
+
+ [34] _La Liberté et le Déterminisme_, p. 97, 4e ed.
+
+
+ [35] This was a point upon which Maine de Biran had insisted. (See p.
+ 20.)
+
+
+The scientists have too often, as Fouillée well points in his work on
+_L’Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces_, regarded the concept of Evolution
+as all-sufficing, as self-explanatory. Philosophy, however, cannot
+accept such dogmatism from science, and asserts that evolution is
+itself a result and not in itself a cause. With such a view Fouillée is
+found ultimately in the line of the general development of the
+spiritual philosophy continuing the hostility to science as ultimate or
+all-sufficing. Further developments of this attitude are seen in
+Boutroux and in Bergson.
+
+In the work of Boutroux we find a continuation of that type of
+criticism of science which was a feature in Ravaisson and Lachelier. He
+has also affinities with Renouvier (and, we may add, with Comte),
+because of his insistence upon the discontinuity of the sciences; upon
+the element of “newness” found in each which prevents the higher being
+deduced from the lower, or the superior explained by reference to the
+inferior. Boutroux opposes Spencer’s doctrines and is a keen antagonist
+of Taine and his claim to deduce all from one formula. Such a notion as
+that of Taine is quite absurd, according to Boutroux, for there is no
+necessary bond between one and another science. This is Boutroux’s main
+point in _La Contingence des Lois de la Nature_.
+
+By a survey of laws of various types, logical, mathematical,
+mechanical, physical, chemical, biological, psychological and
+sociological, Boutroux endeavours to show that they are constructions
+built up from facts. Just as nature offers to the scientist facts for
+data, so the sciences themselves offer these natural laws as data to
+the philosopher, for his constructed explanation of things which is
+metaphysics or philosophy.
+
+“In the actual condition of our knowledge,” he remarks, “science is not
+one, but multiple; science, conceived as embracing all the sciences, is
+a mere abstraction.” This is a remark which recalls Renouvier’s witty
+saying, “I should very much like to meet this person I hear so much
+about, called ‘science.’” We have only sciences, each working after its
+own manner upon a small portion of reality. Man has a thirst for
+knowledge, and he sees, says Boutroux, in the world an “ensemble” of
+facts of infinite variety. These facts man endeavours to observe,
+analyse, and describe with increasing exactness. Science, he points
+out, is just this description.
+
+It is futile to attempt a resolution of all things into the principle
+of identity. “The world is full of a number of things,” and, therefore,
+argues Boutroux, the formula A = B can never be strictly and absolutely
+true. “Nature never offers to us identities, but only resemblances.”
+This has important bearing upon the law of causality, of which the
+sciences make so much. For there is such a degree of heterogeneity in
+the things to which the most elementary and general laws of physics and
+chemistry are applied that it is impossible to say that the consequent
+is proportional to the antecedent—that is to say, it is impossible to
+work out absolutely the statement that an effect is the unique result
+of a certain invariable cause. The fundamental link escapes us and so,
+for us, there is a certain contingency in experience. There is,
+further, a creativeness, a newness, which is unforeseeable. The passage
+from the inorganic to the organic stresses this, for the observation of
+the former would never lead us to the other, for it is a creation, a
+veritable “new” thing. Boutroux is here dealing hard blows at Taine’s
+conception. He continues it by showing that in the conscious living
+being we are introduced to a new element which is again absolutely
+irreducible to physical factors. Life, and consciousness too, are both
+creators. The life of the mind is absolutely _sui generis_; it cannot
+be explained by physiology, by reflex action, or looked upon as merely
+an epiphenomenon. Already Boutroux finds himself facing the central
+problem of Freedom. He recognises that as psychological phenomena
+appear to contain qualities not given in their immediate antecedents,
+the law of proportion of cause to effect does not apply to the actions
+of the human mind.
+
+The principle of causality and the principle of the conservation of
+energy are m themselves scientific “shibboleths,” and neither of them,
+asserts Boutroux, can be worked out so absolutely as to justify
+themselves as ultimate descriptions of the universe. They are valuable
+as practical maxims for the scientist, whose object is to follow the
+threads of action in this varied world of ours. They are incomplete,
+and have merely a relative value. Philosophy cannot permit their
+application to the totality of this living, pulsing universe. For
+cause, we must remember, does not in its strictly scientific meaning
+imply creative power. The cause of a phenomenon is itself a phenomenon.
+“The positive sciences in vain pretend to seize the divine essence or
+reason behind things.”[36] They arrive at descriptive formulæ and there
+they leave us. But, as Boutroux well reminds us in concluding his
+thesis, formulas never explain anything because they cannot even
+explain themselves. They are simply constructions made by observation
+and abstraction and which themselves require explanation.
+
+ [36] _Contingence des Lois de la Nature_, p 154.
+
+
+The laws of nature are not restrictions which have been, as it were,
+imposed upon her They are themselves products of freedom; they are, in
+her, what habits are to the individual. Their constancy is like the
+stability of a river-bed which the freely running stream at some early
+time hollowed out.
+
+The world is an assembly of beings, and its vitality and nature cannot
+be expressed in a formula. It comprises a hierarchy of creatures,
+rising from inorganic to organic forms, from matter to spirit, and in
+man it displays an observing intelligence, rising above mere
+sensibility and expressly modifying things by free will. In this
+conception Boutroux follows Ravaisson, and he is also influenced by
+that thinker’s belief in a spiritual Power of goodness and beauty. He
+thus leads us to the sphere of religion and philosophy, both of which
+endeavour, in their own manner, to complete the inadequacy of the
+purely scientific standpoint. He thus stands linked up in the total
+development with Cournot and Renouvier, and in his own group with
+Lachelier, in regard to this question of the relation of philosophy and
+the sciences.
+
+The critique of science, which is so prominent in Boutroux, was
+characteristic of a number of thinkers whom we cannot do more than
+mention here in passing, for in general their work is not in line with
+the spiritualist development, but is a sub-current running out and
+separated from the main stream. This is shown prominently in the fact
+that, while Boutroux’s critique is in the interests of idealism and the
+maintenance of some spiritual values, much subsequent criticism of
+science is a mere empiricism and, being divorced from the general
+principles of the spiritualist philosophy, tends merely to accentuate a
+vein of uncertainty—indeed, scepticism of knowledge. Such is the
+general standpoint taken by Milhaud, Payot, and Duhem. Rather apart
+from these stands the works of acute minds like Poincaré, Durand de
+Gros, and Hannequin, whose discussion of the atomic doctrines is a work
+of considerable merit. To these may be added Lalande’s criticism of the
+doctrine of evolution and integration by his opposing to it that of
+dissolution and disintegration. Passing references to these books must
+not, however, detain us from following the main development which, from
+Boutroux, is carried on by Bergson.
+
+We find that Bergson, like Boutroux, holds no brief for science, and in
+particular he opposes some of its doctrines which have been
+dogmatically and uncritically accepted. His work, _Matiére et Mémoire_,
+is a direct critique of the scientific postulate of psycho-physical
+parallelism which Bergson regards as the crux of the problem at issue
+between science and philosophy—namely, that of freedom. He shows that
+this theory, which has been adopted by science because of its
+convenience, ought not to be accepted by philosophy without criticism.
+In his opinion it cannot stand the criticism which he brings against
+it. A relation between soul and body is undeniable, but he does not
+agree that that relation is one of absolute parallelism. To maintain
+parallelism is to settle at once and beforehand, in an unwarrantably _a
+priori_ manner, the whole problem of freedom. His intense spiritualism
+sees also in such a doctrine the deadly enemy Epiphenomenalism, the
+belief that the spiritual is only a product of the physical. He
+maintains the unique and irreducible nature of consciousness, and
+claims that the life of the soul or spirit is richer and wider than the
+mere physical activity of the brain, which is really its instrument.
+Bergson asks us to imagine the revolution which might have been, had
+our early scientists devoted themselves to the study of mind rather
+than matter, and claims that we suffer from the dogmatism of
+materialistic science and the geometrical and mathematical conceptions
+of “a universal science” or “mathematic” which come from the
+seventeenth century, and are seen later in Taine.
+
+The inadequacy of the scientific standpoint is a theme upon which
+Bergson never tires of insisting. Not only does he regard a metaphysic
+as necessary to complete this inadequacy, but he claims that our
+intellect is incapable of grasping reality in its flux and change. The
+true instrument of metaphysics is, according to him, intuition.
+Bergson’s doctrine of intuition does not, however, amount to a pure
+hostility to intellectual constructions. These are valuable, but they
+are not adequate to reality. Metaphysics cannot dispense with the
+natural sciences. These sciences work with concepts, abstractions, and
+so suffer by being intellectual moulds. We must not mistake them for
+the living, pulsing, throbbing reality of life itself which is far
+wider than any intellectual construction.
+
+By his insistence upon this point, in which he joins hands with several
+of his predecessors, Bergson claims to have got over the Kantian
+difficulties of admitting the value and possibility of a metaphysic.
+There is nothing irrational, he insists, in his doctrine of
+metaphysical intuition or “intellectual sympathy”; it is rather
+super-rational, akin to the spirit of the poet and the artist. The
+various sciences can supply data and, as such, are to be respected, for
+they have a relative value. What Bergson is eager to do is to combat
+their absolute value. His metaphysic is, however, no mere “philosophy
+of the sciences” in the sense of being a mere summary of the results of
+the sciences. His intuition is more than a mere generalisation of
+facts; it is an “integral experience,” a penetration of reality in its
+flux and change, a looking upon the world _sub specie durationis_. It
+is a vision, but it is one which we cannot obtain without intellectual
+or scientific labour. We can become better acquainted with reality only
+by the progressive development of science _and_ philosophy. We cannot
+live on the dry bread of the sciences alone, an intuitional philosophy
+is necessary for our spiritual welfare. Science promises us well-being
+or pleasure, but philosophy, claims Bergson, can give us joy, by its
+intuitions, its super-intellectual vision, that vital contact with life
+itself in its fulness, which is far grander and truer than all the
+abstractions of science. This is the culmination of much already
+indicated in Cournot, Renouvier, Ravaisson, Lachelier, and Boutroux,
+which Bergson presents in a manner quite unique, thus closing in our
+period the development of that criticism and hostility to the finality
+and absoluteness of the purely scientific attitude which is so marked a
+feature of both our second and third groups, the neo-critical thinkers
+and the neo-spiritualists.
+
+* * * * * * * * *
+
+
+Beginning with a glowing confidence in the sciences as ultimate
+interpretations of reality, we thus have witnessed a complete turn of
+the tide during the develop-* since 1851. Also, in following out the
+changes in the attitude adopted to Science, we have been enabled to
+discover in a general manner that the central and vital problem which
+our period presents is that of Freedom. It will be interesting to find
+whether in regard to this problem, too, a similar change of front will
+be noticeable as the period is followed to its close.
+
+NOTE.—The reader may be interested to find that Einstein has brought
+out some of Boutroux’s points very emphatically, and has confirmed the
+view of geometry held by Poincaré. Compare the following statements:
+ Boutroux: “Mathematics cannot be applied with exactness to
+ reality.” “Mathematics and experience can never be exactly fitted
+ into each other.”
+ Poincaré: “Formulæ are not true, they are convenient.”
+ Einstein: “If we deny the relation between the body of axiomatic
+ Euclidean geometry or the practically rigid body of reality, we
+ readily arrive at the view entertained by that acute and profound
+ thinker, H. Poincaré . . . _Sub specie æterni_, Poincaré, in my
+ opinion, is right” (_Sidelights on Relativity_, pp. 33-35).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+FREEDOM
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY: The central problem of our period—The reconciliation of
+science with man’s beliefs centres around the question of
+Freedom—Unsatisfactoriness of Kant’s solution felt.
+
+I. The positivist belief in universal and rigid determinism, especially
+shown in Taine. Renan’s view.
+
+II. Cournot and Renouvier uphold Freedom—Strong logical and moral case
+put forward for it.
+
+III. The new spiritualists, Ravaisson and Lacheher, set Freedom in the
+forefront of their philosophy—Fouillée attempts a reconciliation by the
+idea of Freedom as a determining force—Guyau, Boutroux, Blondel and
+Bergson insist on the reality of Freedom—They surpass Cournot and
+Renouvier by upholding contingency —This is especially true of Guyau,
+Boutroux and Bergson.
+
+Belief in creativeness and spontaneity replace the older belief in
+determinism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+FREEDOM
+
+The discussions regarding the relation between science and philosophy
+led the thinkers of our period naturally to the crucial problem of
+freedom. Science has almost invariably stood for determinism, and men
+were becoming impatient of a dogmatism which, by its denial of freedom,
+left little or no place for man, his actions, his beliefs, his moral
+feelings.
+
+“_La nature fatale offre à la Liberté
+Un problème_.”[1]
+
+
+ [1] Guyau, in his _Vers d’un Philosophe_, “_Moments de Foi_—I.,” _En
+ lisant Kant_, p. 57.
+
+
+It was precisely this problem which was acutely felt in the philosophy
+of our period as it developed and approached the close of the century.
+
+In a celebrated passage of his _Critique of Judgment_ the philosopher
+Kant had drawn attention to the necessity of bringing together the
+concept of freedom and the concept of nature as constructed by modern
+science, for the two were, he remarked, separated by an abyss. He
+himself felt that the realm of freedom should exercise an influence
+upon the realm of science, but his own method prohibited his attempting
+to indicate with any preciseness what that influence might be. The
+fatal error of his system, the artificial division of noumena and
+phenomena, led him to assign freedom only to the world of noumena.
+Among phenomena it had no place, but reigned transcendent, unknown and
+unknowable, beyond the world we know.
+
+The artificiality of such a solution was apparent to the thinkers who
+followed Kant, and particularly was this felt in France. “Poor
+consolation is it,” remarked Fouillée, in reply to Kant’s view, “for a
+prisoner bound with chains to know that in some unknown realm afar he
+can walk freely devoid of his fetters.”
+
+The problem of freedom, both in its narrow sphere of personal free-will
+and in its larger social significance, is one which has merited the
+attention of all peoples in history. France, however, has been
+pre-eminently a cradle for much acute thought on this matter. It loomed
+increasingly large on the horizon as the Revolution approached, it
+shone brilliantly in Rousseau. Since the Revolution it has been equally
+discussed, and is the first of the three watchwords of the republic,
+whose philosophers, no less than its politicians, have found it one of
+their main themes.
+
+The supreme importance of the problem of freedom in our period was due
+mainly to the need felt by all thinkers for attempting, in a manner
+different from that of Kant, a reconciliation between science and
+morals (_science et conscience_), and to find amid the development of
+scientific thought a place for the personality of the thinker himself,
+not merely as a passive spectator, but as an agent, a willing and
+acting being. Paul Janet, in his essays entitled _Problèmes du XIXe
+Siècle_,[2] treating the question of science, asks whether the growing
+precision of the natural sciences and “the extension of their
+‘positive’ methods, which involve a doctrine or assumption of
+infallible necessity, do not imperil gravely the freedom of the moral
+agent?” While himself believing that, however closely the sciences may
+seem to encroach upon the free power of the human soul, they will only
+approach in an indefinite “asymptote,” never succeeding in annulling
+it, he senses the importance of the problem. Science may endeavour to
+tie us down to a belief in universal and rigid determinism, but the
+human spirit revolts from the acceptance of such a view, and acclaims,
+to some degree at least, the reality of a freedom which cannot be
+easily reconciled with the determinist doctrines.
+
+ [2] Published in 1872.
+
+
+In the period which we have under review the central problem is
+undoubtedly that of freedom. Practically all the great thinkers in
+France during this period occupied themselves with this problem, and
+rightly so, for they realised that most of the others with which
+philosophy concerns itself depend in a large degree upon the attitude
+adopted to freedom. Cournot, Renouvier, Ravaisson, Lachelier, Fouillée,
+Boutroux, Blondel and Bergson have played the chief part in the arena
+of discussion, and although differing considerably in their methods of
+treatment and not a little in the form of their conclusions, they are
+at one in asserting the vital importance of this problem and its
+primacy for philosophy. The remark of Fouillée is by no means too
+strong: “The problem which we are going to discuss is not only a
+philosophical problem; it is, _par excellence_, _the_ problem for
+philosophy. All the other questions are bound up with this.”[3] This
+truth will be apparent when, after showing the development of the
+doctrines concerning freedom, we come, in our subsequent chapters, to
+consider its application to the questions of progress, of ethics and of
+the philosophy of religion.
+
+ [3] In his preface to his Thesis _Liberté et Déterminisme_, later
+ editions, p. vii.
+
+I
+
+We find in the thought of our period a very striking development or
+change in regard to the problem of freedom. Beginning with a strictly
+positivist and naturalist belief in determinism, it concludes with a
+spiritualism or idealism which not only upholds freedom but goes
+further in its reaction against the determinist doctrines by
+maintaining contingency.
+
+Taine and Renan both express the initial attitude, a firm belief in
+determinism, but it is most clear and rigid in the work of Taine. His
+whole philosophy is hostile to any belief in freedom. The strictly
+positivist, empiricist and naturalist tone of his thought combined with
+the powerful influence of Spinoza’s system to produce in him a firm
+belief in necessity—a necessity which, as we have seen, was severely
+rational and of the type seen in mathematics and in logic. Although it
+must also be admitted that in this view of change and development Taine
+was partly influenced by the Hegelian philosophy, yet his formulations
+were far more precise and mathematical than those of the German
+thinker.
+
+We have, in considering his attitude to science, seen the tenacious
+manner in which he clings to his dogma of causality or universal
+necessity. All living things, man included, are held in the firm grip
+of “the steel pincers of necessity.” Every fact and every law in the
+universe has its _raison explicative_, as Taine styles it. He quotes
+with approval, in his treatment of this question at the close of his
+work _De l’Intelligence_, the words of the great scientist and
+positivist Claude Bernard: “_Il y a un déterminisme absolu, dans les
+conditions d’existence des phénomènes naturels, aussi bien pour les
+corps vivants que pour les corps bruts_.”[4] In Taine and the school of
+scientists like Bernard, whose opinions on this matter he voices, no
+room is accorded to freedom.
+
+ [4] _De l’Intelligence_, vol. 2, p. 480, the quotation from Bernard is
+ to be found in his _Introduction à l’Etude de la Médecine
+ expérimentale_, p. 115.
+
+
+Taine’s belief in universal necessity and his naturalistic outlook led
+him to regard man from the physical standpoint as a mechanism, from the
+mental point of view a theorem. Vice and virtue are, to quote his own
+words, “products just as vitriol or sugar.” This remark having appeared
+to many thinkers a scandalous assertion, Taine explained in an article
+contributed to the _Journal des Débats_[5] that he did not mean to say
+that vice and virtue were, like vitriol or sugar, _chemical_ but they
+are nevertheless products, _moral_ products, which moral elements bring
+into being by their assemblage. And, he argues, just as it is necessary
+in order to make vitriol to know the chemical elements which go to its
+composition, so in order to create in man the hatred of a lie it is
+useful to search for the psychological elements which, by their union,
+produce truthfulness.
+
+ [5] On December 19th, 1872.
+
+
+Even this explanation of his position, however, did not prevent the
+assertion being made that such a view entirely does away with all
+question of moral responsibility. To this criticism Taine objected. “It
+does not involve moral indifference. We do not excuse a wicked man
+because we have explained to ourselves the causes of his wickedness.
+One can be determinist with Leibnitz and nevertheless admit with
+Leibnitz that man is responsible —that is to say, that the dishonest
+man is worthy of blame, of censure and punishment, while the honest man
+is worthy of praise, respect and reward.”
+
+In one of his _Essais_ Taine further argued in defence of his doctrine
+of universal determination that since WE ourselves are determined—that
+is to say, since there is a psychological determinism as well as a
+physical determinism—we do not feel the restriction which this
+determinism implies, we have the illusion of freedom and act just as if
+we were free. To this Fouillée replied that the value of Taine’s
+argument was equal to that of a man who might say, “Because _I_ am
+asleep, all of me, all my powers and faculties, therefore I am in a
+state where I am perfectly free and responsible.” Certainly Taine’s
+remark that _we_ are determined had nothing in common with the belief
+in that true determinism, which is equally true freedom, since it is
+_self_-determination. Taine professed no such doctrine, and rested in a
+purely naturalistic fatalism, built upon formulæ of geometry and logic,
+in abstraction from the actual living and acting of the soul, and this
+dogma of determinism, to which he clung so dearly, colours his view of
+ethics and of history. For Taine, “the World is a living geometry” and
+“man is a theorem that walks.”
+
+Like Taine, Renan set out from the belief in universal causation, but
+he employed the conception not so much in a warfare against man’s
+freedom of action as against the theologians’ belief in miracle and the
+supernatural. There is none of Taine’s rigour and preciseness in Renan,
+and it is difficult to grasp his real attitude to the problem of
+freedom. If he ever had one, may be doubted. The blending of
+viewpoints, the paradox so characteristic of him, seems apparent even
+in this question.
+
+His intense humanism prompted him to remarks in praise of freedom, and
+he seems to have recognised in man a certain power of freedom; but in
+view of his belief in universal cause he is careful to qualify this.
+Further, his intensely religious mind remained in love with the
+doctrine of divine guidance which is characteristic of Christian and
+most religious thought. Although Renan left the Church, this belief
+never left Renan. He sees God working out an eternal purpose in
+history, and this he never reconciled with the problem of man’s free
+will. The humanist in him could remark that the one object of life is
+the development of the mind, and the first condition for this is
+freedom. Here he appears to have in view freedom from political and
+religious restrictions. He is thinking of the educational problem. His
+own attitude to the ultimate question of freedom in itself, as opposed
+to determinism, is best expressed in his _Examen d’une Conscience
+philosophique_. He there shows that the universe is the result of a
+lengthy development, the. beginnings of which we do not know. “In the
+innumerable links of that chain,” says Renan, “we find not one free act
+before the appearance of man, or, if you like, living beings.” With
+man, however, freedom comes into the scheme of things. A free cause is
+seen employing the forces of nature for willed ends. Yet this is but
+nature itself blossoming to self-consciousness; this free cause
+emanates from nature itself. There is no rude break between man with
+his free power and unconscious nature. Both are interconnected. Freedom
+is indeed the appearance of something “new,” but it is not, insists
+Renan, something divorced from what has gone before.
+
+We see in Renan a rejection of the severely deterministic doctrine of
+Taine, but it is by no means a complete rejection or refutation of it.
+Renan adheres largely to the scientific and positivist attitude which
+is such a feature of Taine’s work. His humanism, however, recognises
+the inadequacy of such doctrines and compels him to speak of freedom as
+a human factor, and he thus brings us a step nearer to the development
+of the case for freedom put forward so strongly by Cournot and
+Renouvier and by the neo-spiritualists.
+
+II
+
+A very powerful opposition to all doctrines based upon or upholding
+determinism shows itself in the work of Cournot and the neo-critical
+philosophy. The idea of freedom is a central one in the thought of both
+Cournot and Renouvier.
+
+Cournot devoted his early labours to a critical and highly technical
+examination of the question of probability, considered in its
+mathematical form, a task for which he was well equipped.[6] Being not
+only a man of science but also a metaphysician, or rather a philosopher
+who approached metaphysical problems from the impulse and data accorded
+him by the sciences, Cournot was naturally led to the wider problem of
+_probabilité philosophique_. He shows in his _Essai sur les Fondements
+de nos Connaissances_ that hazard or chance are not merely words which
+we use to cover our ignorance, as Taine would have claimed. Over
+against the doctrine of a universal determinism he asserts the reality
+of these factors. The terms chance and hazard represent a real and
+vital element in our experience and in the nature of reality itself.
+Probability is a factor to be reckoned with, and this is so because of
+the elements of contingency in nature and in life. Freedom is bound up
+essentially with the vitality which is nature itself.
+
+ [6] See his _Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances: “Hazard,”_
+ chap. iii.; “_Probabilité Philosophique_,” chap, iv., pp. 71-101; and
+ chap. v., “_De l’Harmonie et de la Finalité_,” pp. 101-144.
+
+
+The neo-critical philosopher, Renouvier, is a notable champion of
+freedom. We have already seen the importance he attaches to the
+category of personality. For him, personality represents a
+consciousness in possession of itself, a free and rational harmony—in
+short, freedom personified.
+
+From a strictly demonstrative point of view Renouvier thinks it is
+impossible to prove freedom as a fact. However, he lays before us with
+intense seriousness various. considerations of a psychological and a
+moral character which have an important bearing upon the problem. This
+problem, he asserts, not only concerns our actions but also our
+knowledge. To bring out this point clearly, Renouvier develops some of
+the ideas of his friend, Jules Lequier, on the notion of the autonomy
+of the reason, or rather of the reasonable will. In this way he shows
+doubt and criticism to be themselves signs of freedom, and asserts that
+we form our notions of truth freely, or that at least they are
+creations of our free thought, not laid upon us by an external
+authority.
+
+More light is thrown on the problem by considering what Renouvier calls
+_vertige mental_, a psychopathological condition due to a disturbance
+of the rational harmony or self-possession which constitutes the
+essence of the personal consciousness. This state is characterised by
+hallucination and error. It is the extreme opposite of the
+self-conscious, reflective personality in full possession of itself and
+exercising its will rationally. Renouvier shows that between these two
+extremes there are numerous planes of _vertige mental_ in which the
+part played by our will is small or negligible, and we are thus victims
+of habit or tendency. Is there, then, any place for freedom? There most
+certainly is, says Renouvier, for our freedom manifests itself whenever
+we inhibit an action to which we are excited by habit, passion or
+imagination. Our freedom is the product of reflection. We are at
+liberty to be free, to determine ourselves in accordance with higher
+motives. This power is just our personality asserting itself, and it
+does not contradict our being, more often than not, victims of habit.
+We have it in our power to make fresh beginnings. Renouvier’s disbelief
+in strict continuity is here again apparent. We must admit freedom of
+creation in the personality itself, and not seek to explain our actions
+by trying to ascend some scale of causes to infinity. There is no such
+thing as a sum to infinity of a series; there is no such thing as the
+influence of an infinite series of causes upon the performance of a
+consciously willed act in which the personality asserts its initiative—
+that is, its power of initiation of a new series, in short, its
+freedom.
+
+Passing from these psychological considerations, Renouvier calls our
+attention to some of a moral nature, no less important, in his opinion,
+for shedding light upon the nature of freedom. If, he argues, all is
+necessary, if all human actions are predetermined, then popular
+language is guilty of a grave extravagance and appears ridiculous,
+insinuating, as it does, that many acts might have been left undone and
+many events might have occurred differently, and that a man might have
+done other than he did. In the light of the hypothesis of rigorous
+necessity, the mention of ambiguous futures and the notion of “being
+otherwise” (_le pouvoir être autrement_) seem foolish. Science may
+assert the docrine of necessity and preach it valiantly, but the human
+conscience feels it to be untrue and will not be gainsaid. The
+scientist himself is forced to admit that man does not accept his
+gospel of universal predestination or fatalism. This Renouvier
+recognises as an important point in the debate. Strange, is it not, he
+remarks, that the mind of the philosopher himself, a sanctuary or
+shrine for truth, should appear as a rebellious citadel refusing to
+surrender to the truth of this universal necessity. We believe
+ourselves to be free agents or, at least beings who are capable of some
+free action. However slight such action, it would invalidate the
+hypothesis of universal necessity.
+
+If all things are necessitated, then moral judgments, the notions of
+right and of duty, have no foundation in the nature of things. Virtue
+and crime lose their character; the sentiments and feelings, such as
+regret, hope, fear, desire, change their meaning or become meaningless.
+Renouvier lays great stress upon these moral considerations.
+
+Again, if everything be necessitated, error is as necessary as truth.
+The false is indeed true, being necessary, and the true may become
+false. Disputes rage over what is false or true, but these disputes
+cannot be condemned, for they themselves are, by virtue of the
+hypothesis, necessary, and the disputes are necessarily absurd and
+ridiculous from this point of view. Where then is truth? Where is
+morality? We have here no basis for either. Looking thus at history,
+all its crimes and infamies are equally lawful, for they are
+inevitable; such is the result, Renouvier shows, of viewing all human
+action as universally predetermined.
+
+The objections thus put forward by Renouvier against the doctrine of
+universal necessity are powerful ones. They possess great weight and
+result in the admission, even by its upholders, that “the judgment of
+freedom is a natural datum of consciousness and is bound up with our
+reflective judgments upon which we act, being itself the foundation of
+these.”
+
+Yet, we have, Renouvier reminds us, no logical proof of the reality of
+freedom. We feel ourselves moved, spontaneously and unconstrained. The
+future, in so far as it depends upon ourselves, appears not as
+prearranged but ambiguous, open.[7] Whether our judgment be true or
+false, we in practical life act invariably on the belief in freedom.
+That, of course, as Renouvier admits at this stage of his discussion,
+does not prove that our belief is not an illusion. It is a feeling,
+natural and spontaneous.
+
+ [7] Cf., later, Bergson’s remark: “The portals of the future stand
+ wide open, the future is being made.”
+
+
+One of the most current forms of the doctrine of freedom has been that
+known as the “liberty of indifference.” The upholders of this theory
+regard the will as separated from motives and ends. The operation of
+the will is regarded by them as indifferent to the claims or influence
+of reason or feeling. Will is superadded externally to motives, where
+such exist, or may be superimposed on intellectual views even to the
+extent of annulling these. Judgment and will are separated in this
+view, and the will is a purely arbitrary or indifferent factor. It can
+operate without reason against reason. The opponents of freedom find
+little difficulty in assailing this view, in which the will appears to
+operate like a dice or a roulette game, absolutely at hazard, reducing
+man to a non-rational creature. Such a type of will, however, Renouvier
+declares to be non-existent, for every man who has full consciousness
+of an act of his has at the same time a consciousness of an end or
+purpose for this act, and he proposes to realise by this means a good
+which he regards as preferable to any other. In so far as he has doubts
+of this preference the act and the judgment will be suspended. He must,
+however, if he be an intelligent being, pursue what he deems to be his
+good—that is to say, what he deems to be good at the time of acting.
+Renouvier here agrees with Socrates and Plato in the view that no man
+deliberately and knowingly wills what he considers to be evil or to be
+bad for him. Virtue involves knowledge, and although there is the
+almost proverbial phrase of Ovid and of Paul, about seeing and
+approving the better, yet nevertheless doing the worse, it is a general
+statement which does not express an antithesis as present to
+consciousness at the time of action. The agent may afterwards say
+
+. . . “_Video meliora proboque
+deteriora sequor_.”
+
+
+but at the time of action “the worse” must appear to him as a good, at
+any rate then and in his own judgment. Further, beyond these
+psychological considerations there are grave moral objections,
+Renouvier points out, to admitting “an indifferent will,” for the acts
+of such a will being purely arbitrary and haphazard, the man will be no
+moral agent, no responsible person. A man who wills apart from the
+consideration of any motive whatever can never perform any meritorious
+action. Under the conception of an indifferent will the term “merit”
+ceases to have a meaning. The theologians who have asserted the
+doctrine (indeed, it seems to have originated, Renouvier thinks, with
+them) have readily admitted this point, for it opens up the way for
+their theory of divine grace or the good will of God acting directly
+upon or within the agent. Will and merit are for them quite separate,
+the latter being due to the mystical operations of divine favour or
+grace, in honour of which the indifference of the will has been
+postulated. Philosophers not given to appeals to divine grace, who have
+upheld the doctrine of the indifferent will, have really been less
+consistent than the theoloians and have fallen into grave error.
+
+Renouvier appeals to the testimony of the penal laws of all nations in
+favour of his criticism of an indifferent will. Motive _is_ deemed a
+real factor, for men are not deemed to have acted indifferently. Some
+deliberation, indeed, is implied in all action which is conscious and
+human, some comparison of motives and a conscious, decision. The values
+of truth, as well as those of morality are equally fatal to the
+indifferentist; for, asks Renouvier, is a man to be regarded as not
+determined to affirm as true what he judges to be true?
+
+The doctrine of freedom as represented by that of an indifferent will
+is no less vicious, Renouvier affirms, than the opposing doctrine of
+universal necessity. The truth is that they both rest on fictions.
+“Indifferentism” imagines a will divorced from judgment, separated from
+the rational man himself, an unseizable power, a mysterious absolute
+cause unconnected with reflection or deliberation, a mere chimera. For
+determinism the will is equally a fiction.
+
+A way out of this difficulty is to be found, according to Renouvier, in
+viewing the will in a manner different from that of the
+“indifferentists.” Let us suppose the will bound up with motive, a
+motive drawn from the intellectual and moral equipment of the man.
+This, however, gives rise to psychological determinism. The will, it is
+argued, follows always the last determination of the understanding.
+Greater subtilty attends on this argument against freedom than those
+put forward on behalf of physical determinism. Renouvier sees that
+there is no escape from such a doctrine as psychological determinism
+unless we take a view of the will as bound up with the nature of man as
+a whole, with his powers of intellect and feeling. Such a will cannot
+be characterised as indifferent or as the mere resultant of motives.
+
+The Kantian element in Renouvier’s thought is noticeable in the strong
+moral standpoint from which he discusses all problems, and this is
+particularly true of his discussion of this very vital one of freedom.
+He is by no means, however, a disciple of Kant, and he joins battle
+strongly with the Kantian doctrine of freedom. This is natural in view
+of his entire rejection of Kant’s “thing-in-itself,” or noumena, and it
+follows therefrom, for Kant attached freedom only to the noumenal
+world, denying its operation in the world of phenomena. The rejection
+of noumena leaves Renouvier free to discuss freedom in a less remote or
+less artificial manner than that of Kant.
+
+If it be true, argues Renouvier, that necessity rules supreme, then the
+human spirit can find peace in absolute resignation; and in looking
+back over the past history of humanity one need not have different
+feelings from those entertained by the geologist or paleontologist.
+Ethics, politics and history thus become purely “natural” sciences (if
+indeed ethics could here have meaning, would it not be identical with
+anthropology? At any rate, it would be purely positive. A normative
+view of ethics would be quite untenable in the face of universal
+necessity). Any inconvenience, pain or injustice would have to be
+accepted and not even named “evil,” much less could any effort be truly
+made to expel it from the scheme of things. To these accusations the
+defenders of necessity object. The practical man, they say, need not
+feel this, in so far as he is under the illusion of freedom and unaware
+of the rigorous necessity of all things. He need not refrain from
+action.
+
+But this defence of necessity leads those who wish to maintain the case
+against it to continue the argument. Suppose that the agent does _not_
+forget that all is necessitated, what then? Under no illusion of the
+idea of freedom, he then acts at every moment of his existence in the
+knowledge that he cannot but do what he is doing, he cannot but will
+what he wills, he cannot but desire what he desires. In time this must
+produce, says Renouvier, insanity either of an idle type or a furious
+kind, he will become an indifferent imbecile or a raving fanatic, in
+either case a character quite abnormal and dangerous. These are extreme
+results, but between the two extremes all degrees of character are to
+be, found. The most common type of practical reason presents an
+antinomy in the system of universal necessity. The case for necessity
+must reckon with this fact—namely, that the operation of necessity has
+itself given rise to ethics which exists, and, according to the case,
+its existence is a necessary one; yet ethics constitutes itself in
+opposition to necessity, and under the sway of necessity is quite
+meaningless. Here is a paradox which is not lessened if we suppose the
+ethical position to be an absurd and false one. Whether false or not,
+morality in some form is practically as universal as human nature. That
+nature, Renouvier insists, can hardly with sincerity believe an
+hypothesis or a dogma which its own moral instincts belie continually.
+
+If, on the other hand, truth lies with the upholders of freedom, then
+man’s action is seen to have great value and significance, for man then
+appears as creating a new order of things in the world. His new acts,
+Renouvier admits, will not be without preceding ones, without roots or
+reasons, but they will be without _necessary_ connection with the whole
+scheme of things. He is thus creating a new order; he is creating
+himself and making his own history. Conscious pride or bitter remorse
+can both alike be present to him. The great revolutions of history will
+be regarded by him not as mystical sweepings of some unknown force
+external to himself, but as results of the thought and work of humanity
+itself. A philosophy which so regards freedom will thus be a truly
+“human” philosophy. Renouvier rightly recognises that the whole
+philosophy of history turns upon the attitude which we adopt to
+freedom.
+
+In view of the many difficulties connected with the problem of freedom
+many thinkers would urge us to a compromise. Renouvier is aware of the
+dangers of this attitude, and he brings into play against it his
+logical method of dealing with problems. This does not contradict his
+statement about the indemonstrability of freedom, nor does it minimise
+the weight and significance of the moral case for freedom: it
+complements it. Between contradictories or incompatible propositions no
+middle course can be followed. Freedom and necessity cannot be both at
+the same time true, or both at the same time false, for of the two
+things one must be true—namely, either human actions are all of them
+totally predetermined by their conditions or antecedents, or they are
+not all of them totally predetermined. It is to this pass that we are
+brought in the logical statement of the case. Now sceptics would here
+assert that doubt was the only solution. This would not realh be a
+solution, and however legitimate doubt is in front of conflicting
+theories, it involves the death of the soul if it operates in practical
+affairs and in any circumstances where some belief is absolutely
+necessary to the conduct of life and to action.
+
+The freedom in question, as Renouvier is careful to remind us, does not
+involve our maintaining the total indetermination of things or denial
+of the operations of necessity within limits. Room is left for freedom
+when it is shown that this necessity is not universal. Many
+consequences of free acts may be necessitated. For example, says
+Renouvier, I have a stone in my hand. I can freely will to hurl it
+north or south, high or low, but once thrown from my hand its path is
+strictly determined by the law of gravity. The voluntary movement of a
+man on the earth may, however slightly, alter the course of a distant
+planet. Freedom, we might say, operates in a sphere to which necessity
+supplies the matter. Ultimately any free act is a choice between two
+alternatives, equally possible, but both necessitated as possibilities.
+The points of free action may seem to take up a small amount of room in
+the world, so to speak, but we must realise how vital they are to any
+judgment regarding its character, and how tremendously important they
+are from a moral point of view. So far, claims Renouvier, from the
+admittance of freedom being a destruction of the laws of the universe,
+it really shows us a special law of that universe, not otherwise to be
+explained—namely, the moral law. Freedom is thus regarded by Renouvier
+as a positive fact, a moral certainty.
+
+Freedom is the pillar of the neo-critical philosophy; it is the first
+truth involved at once in all action and in all knowledge. Truth and
+error are not well explained, or, indeed, at all explained, by a
+doctrine which, embracing them both as equally necessary, justifies
+them equally, and so in a sense verifies both of them. It was this
+point which Brochard developed in his work _L’Erreur_, which has
+neo-critical affinities. Man is only capable of science because he is
+free; it is also because he is free that he is subject to error.[8]
+Renouvier claims that “we do not avoid error always, but we always
+_can_ avoid it.”[9] Truth and error can only be explained, he urges, by
+belief in the ambiguity of futures, movements of thought involving
+choice between opinions which conflict—in short, by belief in freedom.
+The calculation of probabilities and the law of the great numbers
+demonstrates, Renouvier claims, the indetermination of futures, and
+consciousness is aware of this ambiguity in practical life. This belief
+in the ambiguity of futures is a condition, he shows, of the exercise
+of the human consciousness in its moral aspect, and this consciousness
+in action regards itself as suspended before indetermination—that is,
+it affirms freedom. This affirmation of freedom Renouvier asserts to be
+a necessary element of any rational belief whatever. It alone gives
+moral dignity and supremacy to personality, whose existence is the
+deepest and most radical of all existences. The personal life in its
+highest sense and its noblest manifestation is precisely Freedom.
+Renouvier assures us that there is nothing mysterious or mystical about
+this freedom. It is not absolute liberty and contingency of all things;
+it is an attribute of persons. The part played thus freely by
+personality in the scheme or order of the universe proves to us that
+that order or scheme is not defined or formed in a predetermined
+manner; it is only in process of being formed, and our personal efforts
+are essential factors in its formation. The world is an order which
+becomes and which is creating itself, not a pre-established order which
+simply unrolls itself in time. For a proper understanding of the nature
+of this problem “we are obliged to turn to the practical reason. It is
+a moral affirmation of freedom which we require; indeed, any other kind
+of affirmation would, Renouvier maintains, presuppose this. The
+practical reason must lay down its own basis and that of all true
+reason, for reason is not divided against itself reason is not
+something apart from man; it is man, and man is never other than
+practical—_i.e._, acting.”[10] Considered from this standpoint there
+are four cases which present themselves to the tribunal of our
+judgment—namely, the case for freedom, the case against freedom, the
+case for necessity and the case against necessity.
+
+ [8] _De L’Erreur_, p. 47.
+
+
+ [9] _Psychologie rationnelle_, vol. 2, p. 96.
+
+
+ [10] _Psychologie rationnelle_, vol. 2, p 78.
+
+
+The position is tersely put in the Dilemma presented by Jules Lequier,
+the friend of Renouvier, quoted in the _Psychologie rationnelle_. There
+are four possibilities:
+
+To affirm necessity, necessarily. To affirm necessity, freely. To
+affirm freedom, necessarily. To affirm freedom, freely.
+
+On examining these possibilities we find that to affirm necessity,
+necessarily, is valueless, for its contradictory, freedom, is equally
+necessary. To affirm necessity, freely, does not offer us a better
+position, for here again it is necessity which is affirmed. If we
+affirm freedom necessarily, we are in little better case, for necessity
+operates again (although Renouvier notes that this gives a certain
+basis for morality). In the free affirmation of freedom, however, is to
+be found not only a basis for morals, but also for knowledge and the
+search for truth. Indeed, as we are thus forced “to admit the truth of
+either necessity or freedom, and to choose between the one and the
+other with the one or with the other,”[11] we find that the affirmation
+of necessity involves contradiction, for there are many persons who
+affirm freedom, and this they do, if the determinist be right,
+necessarily. The affirmation of freedom, on the other hand, is free
+from such an absurdity.
+
+ [11] _Ibid_., p. 138.
+
+
+Such is the conclusion to which Renouvier brings us after his wealth of
+logical and moral considerations. He combines both types of discussion
+and argument in order to undermine the belief in determinism and to
+uphold freedom, which is, in his view, the essential attribute of
+personality and of the universe itself. He thus succeeded in altering
+substantially the balance of thought in favour of freedom, and further
+weight was added to the same side of the scales by the new spiritualist
+group who placed freedom in the forefront of their thought.
+
+III
+
+The development of the treatment of this problem within the thought of
+the new spiritualists or idealists is extremely interesting, and it
+proceeded finally to a definite doctrine of contingency as the century
+drew to its close. The considerations set forth are usually
+psychological in tone, and not so largely ethical as in the
+neo-critical philosophy.
+
+Ravaisson declared himself a champion of freedom. He accepted the
+principle of Leibnitz, to the effect that everything has a reason, from
+which it follows that everything is necessitated, without which there
+could be no certitude and no science. But, says Ravaisson, there are
+two kinds of necessity—one absolute, one relative. The former is
+logical, the type of the principle of identity, and is found in
+syllogisms and in mathematics, which is just logic applied to quantity.
+The other type of necessity is moral, and is, unlike the former,
+perfectly in accord with freedom. It indeed implies freedom, the
+freedom of self-determination. The truly wise man can- not help doing
+what is right and good. The slave of Passion and caprice and evil has
+no freedom. The wise man selecting the good chooses it infallibly, but
+at the time with perfect free-will. “It is perhaps because the good or
+the beautiful is simply nothing other than love—that is, the power of
+will in all its purity, and so to will what is truly good is to will
+oneself (_c’est se vouloir soi-même_).”[12]
+
+ [12] _La Philosophie en France_, p. 268.
+
+
+Nature is not, as the materialists endeavour to maintain, entirely
+geometrical—that is to say, fatalistic in character. Morality enters
+into the scheme of things and, with it, ends freely striven for. There
+is present a freedom which is a kind of necessity, yet opposed to
+fatalism. This freedom involves a determination by conceptions of
+perfection, ideals of beauty and of good. “Fatality is but an
+appearance; spontaneity and freedom constitute reality.”[13] So far,
+continues Ravaisson, from all things operating by brute mechanism or by
+pure hazard, things operate by the development of a tendency to
+perfection, to goodness and beauty. Instead of everything submitting to
+a blind destiny, everything obeys, and obeys willingly, a divine
+Providence.
+
+ [13] _Ibid_., p. 270.
+
+
+Ravaisson’s fundamental spiritualism is clear in all this, and it
+serves as the starting-point for the thinkers who follow him.
+Spiritualism is bound up with spontaneity, creation, freedom, and this
+is his central point, this insistence on freedom. While resisting
+mechanical determination he endeavours to retain a determination of
+another kind—namely, by ends, a teleology or finalism. This is
+extremely interesting when observed in relation to the subsequent
+development in Lachelier, Boutroux, Blondel and Bergson.
+
+Lachelier’s treatment of freedom is an important landmark in the
+spiritualist development. By his concentrated analysis of the problem
+of induction he brought out the significance of efficient and final
+causes respectively. He appears as the pupil of Ravaisson, whose
+initial inspiration is apparent in his whole work, especially in his
+treatment of freedom. He dwells upon the fact of the spontaneity of the
+spirit—a point of view which Ravaisson succeeded in imparting to the
+three thinkers, Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson. Besides the influence
+of Ravaisson, however, that of Kant and Leibnitz appears in Lachelier’s
+attitude to freedom. Yet he passes beyond the Kantian position, and he
+rejects the double-aspect doctrine which Leibnitz maintained with
+regard to efficient and final causes. Lachelier insists that the
+spontaneity of spirit stands above and underlies the whole of nature.
+This is the point which Boutroux, under Lachelier’s influence, took up
+in his _Contingence des Lois de la Nature_. Lachelier, in attacking the
+purely mechanistic conception of the universe, endeavoured, as he
+himself put it, “to substitute everywhere force for inertia, life for
+death and freedom for fatalism.” Rather than universal necessity it is
+universal contingence which is the real definition of existence. We are
+free to determine ourselves in accordance with ends we set before us,
+and to act in the manner necessary to accomplish those ends. Our life
+itself, as he shows in the conclusion of his brilliant little article
+_Psychologie et Métaphysique_, is creative, and we must beware of
+arguing that what we have been makes us what we are, for that character
+which we look upon as determining us need not do so if we free
+ourselves from habit, and, further, this character is, in any case,
+itself the result of our free actions over extended time, the free
+creation of our own personality.
+
+While with Ravaisson and Lachelier the concept of freedom was being
+rather fully developed in opposition to the determinist doctrines,
+Fouillée, in his brilliant and acute thesis on _Liberté et
+Déterminisme_, endeavoured to call a halt to this supremacy of Freedom,
+and to be true to the principles of reconciliation which he laid down
+for himself in his philosophy. He confesses himself, at the outset, to
+be a pacifist rather than a belligerent in this classic dispute between
+determinists on the one hand and partisans of freedom on the other. He
+believes that, on intimate investigation pursued sufficiently far, the
+two opposing doctrines will be seen to converge. Such a declaration
+would seem to be dangerously superficial in a warfare as bitter and as
+sharp as this. It must be admitted that, as is the case with many who
+profess to conciliate two conflicting views, Fouillée leaves us at
+times without precise and definite indication of his own position.
+
+In contrast to the attitude of Ravaisson and Lachelier Fouillée
+inclines in some respects to the attitude of Taine and many passages of
+his book show him to be holding at least a temporary brief for the
+partisans of determinism. He agrees notably with Taine in his objecting
+to the contention that under the determinist theory moral values lose
+their significance. Fouillée claims that it is both incorrect and
+unfair to argue that “under the necessity-hypothesis a thing being all
+that it can be is thereby all that it should be.”[14].
+
+ [14] _La Liberté et le Déterminisme_, p. 51 (fourth edition).
+
+
+He goes on to point out that the consciousness of independence, which
+is an essential of freedom, may be nothing more than a lack of
+consciousness of our dependence. Motives he is inclined to speak of as
+determining the will itself, while he looks upon the “liberty of
+indifference” or of hazard as merely a concession to the operations of
+mechanical necessity. The “liberty of indifference” is often the mere
+play of instinct and of fatality, while hazard, so far from being an
+argument in the hands of the upholders of freedom, is really a
+determination made previously by something other than one’s own will.
+
+This is a direct attack upon the doctrines put forward by both Cournot
+and Renouvier. Fouillée is well aware of this, and twenty pages of his
+thesis are devoted to a critical and hostile examination of the
+statements of both Renouvier and his friend Lequier.[15] Fouillée
+claims that these two thinkers have only disguised and misplaced the
+“liberty of indifference”; they have not, he thinks, really suppressed
+it, although both of them profess to reject it absolutely. A keen
+discussion between Fouillée and Renouvier arose from this and continued
+for some time, being marked on both sides by powerful dialectic.
+Renouvier used his paper the _Critique philosophique_ as his medium,
+while Fouillée continued in subsequent editions of his thesis, in his
+_Idée moderne du Droit_ and also in his acute study _Critique des
+Systèmes de Morale contemporains_. Fouillée took Renouvier to task
+particularly for his maintaining that if all be determined then truth
+and error are indistinguishable. Fouillée claims that the distinction
+between truth and error is by no means parallel to that between
+necessity and freedom. An error may, he points out, be necessitated,
+and consequently we must look elsewhere for our doctrine of certitude
+than to the affirmation of freedom. In the philosophy of Renouvier, as
+we have seen, these two are intimately connected. Fouillée criticises
+the neo-critical doctrine of freedom on the ground that Renouvier mars
+his thought by a tendency to look upon the determinist as a passive and
+inert creature. This, he says, is “the argument of laziness” applied to
+the intelligence. “One forgets,” says Fouillée, “that if intelligence
+is a mirror, it is not an immovable and powerless mirror: it is a
+mirror always turning itself to reality.”[16]
+
+ [15] _Ibid_., pp. 117-137.
+
+
+ [16] _La Liberté et le Déterminisme_, p. 129.
+
+
+On examining closely the difference between Renouvier and Fouillée over
+this problem of freedom, we may attribute it to the fact that while the
+one thinker is distinctly and rigorously an upholder of continuity, the
+other believes in no such absolute continuity. For Fouillée there is,
+in a sense, nothing new under the sun, while Renouvier in his thought,
+which has been well described as a philosophy of discontinuity, has a
+place for new things, real beginnings, and he is in this way linked up
+to the doctrine of creative development as set forth ultimately by
+Bergson. It will be seen also as we proceed that Fouillée, for all he
+has to say on behalf of determinism, is not so widely separated in his
+view of freedom from that worked out by Bergson, although at the first
+glance the gulf between them seems a wide one.
+
+Fouillée, while attacking Renouvier, did not spare that other acute
+thinker, Lachelier, from the whip of his criticism. He takes objection
+to a passage in that writer’s _Induction_ where he advocates the
+doctrine that the production of ideas “is free in the most rigorous
+sense of that word, since each idea is in itself absolutely independent
+of that which precedes it, and is born out of nothing, as is a world.”
+To this view of the spontaneity of the spirit Fouillée opposes the
+remark that Lachelier is considering only the _new forms_ which are
+assumed by a mechanism which is always operating under the same laws of
+causality. He asks us in this connection to imagine a kaleidoscope
+which is being turned round. The images which succeed each other will
+be in this sense a formal creation, a form _independent_ of that which
+went before, but, as he is anxious to remind us, the same mechanical
+and geometrical laws will be operating continually in producing these
+forms.
+
+Having had these encounters with the upholders of freedom, and thus to
+some degree having conveyed the impression of being on the side of the
+determinists, Fouillée proceeds to the task he had set himself—namely,
+that of reconciliation. He felt the unsatisfactoriness of Kant’s
+treatment of freedom,[17] and he endeavours to remedy the lack in Kant
+of a real link between the determinism of the natural sciences and the
+human consciousness of freedom, realised in the practical reason.
+Fouillée proposes to find in his _idées-forces_ a middle term and to
+offer us a solution of the problem at issue in the dispute.
+
+ [17] See above, p. 136.
+
+
+He begins by showing that there has been an unfortunate neglect of one
+important factor in the case—a factor whose reality is frankly admitted
+by both parties. This central, incontestable fact is the _idea_ of
+freedom. This idea, according to Fouillée, arises in us as the result
+Of a combination of various psychological factors, such as notions of
+diversity, possibility, with the tendency to action arising from the
+notion of action, which thus shows itself as a force. The combination
+of these results in the genesis of the idea of freedom. Now the
+stronger this idea of freedom is in our minds the more we make it
+become a reality. It is an “idea-force” which by being thought tends to
+action and thus increases in power and fruitfulness. The idea of
+freedom becomes, by a kind of determinism, more powerful in proportion
+to the degree with which it is acted upon. Determinism thus reflects
+upon itself and in a curious way turns to operate against itself. This
+directing power of the idea of freedom cannot be denied even by the
+most rigorous upholders of determinism. They at least are forced to
+find room in their doctrine for _the idea_ of freedom and its practical
+action on the lives of men, both individually and in societies. The
+vice of the doctrines of determinism has been the refusal to admit the
+reality of the liberating idea of freedom, which is tending always to
+realise itself.
+
+The belief in freedom is, therefore, Fouillée claims, a powerful force
+in the world. Nothing is a more sure redeemer of men and societies from
+evil ways than the realisation of this idea of freedom. So largely is
+this the case that indeed the extinction of the _belief_ in freedom
+would, he argues, not differ much in consequence from the finding that
+freedom was an illusion, or, if it be a fact, its abolition.
+
+Having thus rectified the doctrine of determinism by including a place
+within it for _the idea_ of freedom, Fouillée proceeds by careful
+analysis to show the error of belief in freedom understood as that of
+an indifferent will. This raises as many fallacious views as that of a
+determinism bereft of the idea of freedom. The capricious and
+indifferent liberty he rejects, and in so doing shows us the importance
+of the intelligent power of willing, and also reaffirms the
+determinists’ thesis of inability to do certain things. The psychology
+of character shows us a determined freedom, and in the intelligent
+personality a reconciliation of freedom and determinism is seen to be
+effected. Fouillée shows that if it were not true that very largely
+what we have been makes us what we are, and that what we are determines
+our future actions, then education, moral guidance, laws and social
+sanctions would all be useless. Indifferentism in thought is the
+reversal of all thought.
+
+Fouillée sees that the antithesis between Freedom and Necessity is not
+absolute, and he modifies the warmth of Renouvier’s onslaughts upon the
+upholders of determinism. But he believes we can construct a notion of
+moral freedom which will not be incompatible with the determinism of
+nature. To effect this reconciliation, however, we must abandon the
+view of Freedom as a decision indifferently made, an action of sheer
+will unrelated to intelligence. Freedom is not caprice; it is, Fouillée
+claims, a power of indefinite development.
+
+Yet, in the long and penetrating Introduction to his volume on the
+_Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces_, Fouillée points out that however
+much science may feel itself called upon to uphold a doctrine of
+determinism for its own specific purposes, we must remember that the
+sphere of science is not all-embracing. There is the sphere of action,
+and the practical life demands and, to a degree demonstrates, freedom.
+Fouillee admits in this connection the indetermination of the future,
+_pour notre esprit_. We act upon this idea of relative indeterminism,
+combining with it the idea of our own action, the part which we
+personally feel called upon to play. He recognises in his analysis how
+important is this point for the solution of the problem. We cannot
+overlook the contribution which our personality is capable of making to
+the whole unity of life and experience, not only by its achievements in
+action, but by its ideals, by that which we feel both _can_ and
+_should_ be. Herein lies, according to Fouillée’s analysis, the secret
+of duty and the ideal of our power to fulfil it, based upon the central
+idea of our freedom. By thus acting on these ideas, and by the light
+and inspiration of these ideals, we tend to realise them. It is this
+which marks the point where a doctrine of pure determinism not only
+shows itself erroneous and inadequate, but as Fouillee puts it, the
+human consciousness is the point where it is obliged to turn against
+itself “as a serpent which bites its own tail.”[18] Fatalism is a
+speculative hypothesis and nothing else. Freedom is equally an
+hypothesis, but, adds Fouillée, it is an hypothesis which is at work in
+the world.
+
+ [18] _Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces_, Introduction, p. lxxiv.
+
+
+In the thought of Guyau there is a further insistence upon freedom in
+spite of the fact that his spiritualism is super-added to much which
+reveals the naturalist and positive outlook. He upholds freedom and,
+indeed, contingency, urging, as against Ravaisson’s teleology, that
+there is no definite tendency towards truth, beauty and goodness. At
+all times, too, Guyau is conscious of union with nature and with his
+fellows in a way which operates against a facile assertion of freedom.
+In his _Vers d’un Philosophe_ he remarks:
+
+“_Ce mot si doux au coeur et si cher, Liberté,
+J’en préfèrs encore un: c’est Solidarité._”[19]
+
+
+ [19] _Vers d’un Philosophe, “Solidarité,”_ p. 38.
+
+
+The maintenance of the doctrine of liberty, which in view of the facts
+we are bound to maintain, does away, Guyau insists, with the doctrine
+of Providence; for him, as for Bergson, there is no _prévision_ but
+only _nouveauté_ in the universe. Guyau indeed is not inclined to admit
+even that end which Bergson seems to favour—namely, “spontaneity of
+life itself.” The world does not find its end in us, any more than we
+find our “ends” fixed for us in advance. Nothing is fixed, arranged or
+predetermined; there is not even a primitive adaptation of things to
+one another, for such adaptation would involve the pre-existence of
+ideas prior to the material world, together with a demiurge arranging
+things upon a plan in the manner of an architect. In reality there is
+no plan; every worker conceives his own. The world is a superb example,
+not of order, such as we associate with the idea of Providence in
+action, but the reverse, disorder, the result of contingency and
+freedom.
+
+The supreme emphasis upon the reality of freedom appears, however, in
+the work of Boutroux and of Bergson at the end of our period. They
+arrive at a position diametrically opposed to that of the upholders of
+determinism, by their doctrines of contingency as revealed both in the
+evolution of the universe and in the realm of personal life. There is
+thus seen, as was the case with the problem of science, a complete
+“turn of the tide” in the development since Comte.
+
+Boutroux, summing up his thesis _La contingence des Lois de la Nature_,
+indicates clearly in his concluding chapter his belief in contingency,
+freedom and creativeness. The old adage, “nothing is lost, nothing is
+created,” to which science seems inclined to attach itself, has not an
+absolute value, for in the hierarchy of creatures contingency, freedom,
+newness appear in the higher ranks. There is at work no doubt a
+principle of conservation, but this must not lead us to deny the
+existence and action of another principle, that of creation. The world
+rises from inorganic to organic forms, from matter to spirit, and in
+man himself from mere sensibility to intelligence, with its capacity
+for criticising and observing, and to will capable of acting upon
+things and modifying them by freedom.
+
+Boutroux inclines to a doctrine of finalism somewhat after the manner
+of Ravaisson. The world he conceives as attracted to an end; the
+beautiful and the good are ideals seeking to be realised; but this
+belief in finality does not, he expressly maintains, exclude
+contingency. To illustrate this, Boutroux uses a metaphor from
+seamanship: the sailors in a ship have a port to make for, yet their
+adaptations to the weather and sea en route permit of contingency along
+with the finality involved in their making for port. So it is with
+beings in nature. They have not merely the one end, to exist amid the
+obstacles and difficulties around them, “they have an ideal to realise,
+and this ideal consists in approaching to God, to his likeness, each
+after his kind. The ideal varies with the creatures, because each has
+his special nature, and can only imitate God in and by his own
+nature.”[20]
+
+ [20] _La Contingence des Lois de la Nature_, p. 158.
+
+
+Boutroux’s doctrine of freedom and contingency is not opposed to a
+teleological conception of the universe, and in this respect he stands
+in contrast to Bergson, who, in the rigorous application of his theory
+of freedom, rules out all question of teleology. With Renouvier and
+with Bergson, however, Boutroux agrees in maintaining that this
+freedom, which is the basis of contingency in things, is not and cannot
+be a datum of experience, directly or indirectly, because experience
+only seizes things which are actually realised, whereas this freedom is
+a creative power, anterior to the act. Heredity, instinct, character
+and habit are words by which we must not be misled or overawed into a
+disbelief in freedom. They are not absolutely fatal and fully
+determined. The same will, insists Boutroux, which has created a habit
+_can_ conquer it. Will must not be paralysed by bowing to the assumed
+supremacy of instincts or habits. Habit itself is not a contradiction
+of spontaneity; it is itself a result of spontaneity, a state of
+spontaneity itself, and does not exclude contingency or freedom.
+
+Metaphysics can, therefore, according to Boutroux, construct a doctrine
+of freedom based on the conception of contingency. The supreme
+principles according to this philosophy will be laws, not those of the
+positive sciences, but the laws of beauty and goodness, expressing in
+some measure the divine life and supposing free agents. In fact the
+triumph of the good and the beautiful will result in the replacement of
+laws of nature, strictly so called, by the free efforts of wills
+tending to perfection—that is, to God.
+
+Further studies upon the problem of freedom are to be found in
+Boutroux’s lectures given at the Sorbonne in 1892-93 in the course
+entitled _De l’Idée de la Loi naturelle dans la Science et la
+Philosophie contemporaines_. He there recognises in freedom the crucial
+question at issue between the scientists and the philosophers, for he
+states the object of this course of lectures as being a critical
+examination of the notion we have of the laws of nature, with a view to
+determining the situation of human personality, particularly in regard
+to free action.[21] Boutroux recognises that when the domain of science
+was less extensive and less rigorous than it is now it was much easier
+to believe in freedom. The belief in Destiny possessed by the ancients
+has faded, but we may well ask ourselves, says Boutroux, whether modern
+science has not replaced it by a yet more rigorous fatalism.[22] He
+considers that the modern doctrine of determinism rests upon two
+assumptions—namely, that mathematics is a perfectly intelligible
+science, and is the expression of absolute determinism; also that
+mathematics can be applied with exactness to reality. These assumptions
+the lecturer shows to be unjustifiable. Mathematics and experience can
+never be fitted exactly into each other, for there are elements in our
+experience and in our own nature which cannot be mathematically
+expressed. This Boutroux well emphasises in his lecture upon
+sociological laws, where he asserts that history cannot be regarded as
+the unrolling of a single law, nor can the principle of causality,
+strictly speaking, be applied to it.[23] An antecedent certainly may be
+an influence but not a cause, as properly understood. He here agrees
+with Renouvier s position and attitude to history, and shows the vital
+bearing of the problem of freedom upon the philosophy of history, to
+which we shall presently give our special attention.
+
+ [21] _De l’Idée de la Loi naturelle_, Lecture IV., p. 29.
+
+
+ [22] Compare Janet’s remark, given on p. 136.
+
+
+ [23] Lecture XIII.
+
+
+Instead of the ideal of science, a mathematical unity, experience shows
+us, Boutroux affirms, a hierarchy of beings, displaying variety and
+spontaneity—in short, freedom. So far, therefore, from modern science
+being an advocate of universal determinism, it is really, when rightly
+regarded, a demonstration, not of necessity, but of freedom. Boutroux’s
+treatment of the problem of freedom thus demonstrates very clearly its
+connection with that of science, and also with that of progress. It
+forms pre-eminently the central problem.
+
+The idea of freedom is prominent in the “philosophy of action” and in
+the Bergsonian philosophy; indeed, Bergson’s treatment of the problem
+is the culmination of the development of the idea in Cournot, Renouvier
+and the neo-spiritualists. In Blondel the notion is not so clearly
+worked out, as there are other considerations upon which he wishes to
+insist. Blondel is deeply concerned with the power of ideals over
+action, and his thought of freedom has affinities to the psychology of
+the _idées-forces_. This is apparent in his view of the will, where he
+does not admit a purely voluntarist doctrine. His insistence on the
+dynamic of the will in action is clear, but he reminds us that the will
+does not cause or produce everything, for the will wills to be what is
+not yet; it strives for achievement, to gain something beyond itself.
+Much of Blondel’s treatment of freedom is coloured by his religious and
+moral psychology, factors with which Bergson does not greatly concern
+himself in his writings. Blondel endeavours to maintain man’s freedom
+of action and at the same time to remain loyal to the religious notion
+of a Divine Providence, or something akin to that. Consequently he is
+led to the dilemma which always presents itself to the religious
+consciousness when it asserts its own freedom—namely, how can that
+freedom be consistent with Divine guidance or action? Christian
+theology has usually been determinist in character, but Blondel
+attempts to save freedom by looking upon God as a Being immanent in
+man.
+
+Bergson makes Freedom a very central point in his philosophy, and his
+treatment of it bears signs of the influence of De Biran, Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Guyau and Boutroux. He rejects, however, the doctrine of
+finality as upheld by Ravaisson, Lachelier and Boutroux, while he
+stresses the contingency which this last thinker had brought forward.
+His solution of the problem is, however, peculiarly his own, and is
+bound up with his fundamental idea of change, or LA DURÉE.
+
+In his work _Les Données immédiates de la Conscience_, or _Time and
+Free-Will_, he criticises the doctrine of physical determinism, which
+is based on the principle of the conservation of energy, and on a
+purely mechanistic conception of the universe. He here points out, and
+later stresses in his _Matiere et Mémoire_, the fact that it has not
+been proved that a strictly determined psychical state corresponds to a
+definite cerebral state. We have no warrant for concluding that because
+the physiological and the psychological series exhibit some
+corresponding terms that therefore the two series are absolutely
+parallel. To do so is to settle the problem of freedom in an entirely
+_a priori_ manner, which is unjustifiable.
+
+The more subtle and plausible case for psychological determinism
+Bergson shows to be no more tenable than that offered for the physical.
+It is due to adherence to the vicious Association-psychology, which is
+a psychology without a self. To say the self is determined by motive
+will not suffice, for in a sense it is true, in another sense it is
+not, and we must be careful of our words. If we say the self acts in
+accordance with the strongest motive, well and good, but how do we know
+it is the strongest? Only because it has prevailed—that is, only
+because the self acted upon it, which is totally different from
+claiming that the self was determined by it externally. To say the self
+is determined by certain tives is to say it is self-determined. The
+essential thing in all this is the vitality of the self.
+
+The whole difficulty, Bergson points out, arises from the fact that all
+attempts to demonstrate freedom tend only to strengthen the artificial
+case for determinism, because freedom is only characteristic of a self
+_in action_. He is here in line on this point with Renouvier and
+Boutroux, although the reasons he gives for it go beyond in
+psychological penetration those assigned by these thinkers. When our
+action is over, says Bergson, it seems plausible to argue a case for
+determinism because of our spatial conception of time and the
+relationships of events in time. We have a habit of thinking in terms
+of space, by mathematical time, not in real time or _la durée_ as
+Bergson calls it, the time in which the living soul acts.
+
+Bergson thus makes room in the universe for a freedom of the human
+will, a creative activity, and thus delivers us from the bonds of
+necessity and fatalism in which the physical sciences and the
+associationist psychology would bind us. We perceive ourselves as
+centres of indetermination, creative spirits. We must guard our
+freedom, for it is an essential attribute of spirit. In so far as we
+tend to become dominated by matter, which acts upon us in habit and
+convention, we lose our freedom. It is not absolute, and many never
+achieve it, for their personality never shines forth at all: they live
+their lives in habit and routine, victims of automatism. We have,
+however, Bergson urges, great power of creation. He stresses, as did
+Guyau, the Conception of Life, as free, expanding, and in several
+respects his view of freedom is closer to that of Guyau than to that of
+Boutroux, in spite of the latter’s contingency. There is no finalism
+admitted by Bergson, for he sees in any teleology only “a reversed
+mechanism.”
+
+Obviously the maintenance of such a doctrine of freedom as that of
+Bergson is of central importance in any philosophy which contains it.
+Our conceptions of ethics and of progress depend upon our view of
+freedom. For Bergson “the portals of the future stand wide open, the
+future is being made.” He is an apostle of a doctrine of absolute
+contingency which he applied to the evolution of the world, in his
+famous volume _L’Evolution Créatrice_ (published in 1907). His
+philosophy has been termed pessimistic by some in view of his rejection
+of any teleological conception. Such a doctrine would conflict with his
+“free” universe and his absolute contingency. On the other hand, it
+leaves open an optimistic view, because of its freedom, its insistence
+upon the possibilities of development. It is not only a reaction
+against the earlier doctrines of determinism, it is a deliverance of
+the human soul which has always refused, even when religious, to
+abandon entirely the belief in its own freedom.
+
+Such is the doctrine of freedom which closes our period, a striking
+contrast to the determinism which, under the influence of modern
+science, characterised its opening. The critique of science and the
+assaults upon determinism proceeded upon parallel lines. In many
+respects they were two aspects of the one problem, and in themselves
+were sufficient to describe the essential development in the thought of
+our half century, for the considerations of progress, ethics and
+religion to which we now turn derive their significance largely from
+what has been set forth in these chapters on Science and Freedom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+PROGRESS
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY : Freedom and Progress intimately connected—Confidence in
+Progress, a marked feature of the earlier half of the nineteenth
+century, was bound up with confidence in Science and Reason, and in a
+belief in determinism, either natural or divine—Condorcet, Saint-Simon,
+Comte and others proclaim Progress as a dogma.
+
+I. The idea of progress in Vacherot, Tame and Renan—Interesting
+reflections of Renan based on belief in Reason.
+
+II. Cournot and Renouvier regard Progress in a different light, owing
+to their ideas on Freedom—They look upon it as a possibility only, but
+not assured, not inevitable—Renouvier’s study of history in relation to
+progress and his view of immortality as Progress—No law of progress
+exists.
+
+III. The new spiritualist group emphasise the lack of any law of
+progress, by their insistence on the spontaneity of the spirit,
+creativeness and contingency—Difficulties of finalsm or teleology in
+relation to progress as free—No law or guarantee of progress.
+
+CONCLUSION : Complete change from earlier period regarding Progress—New
+view of it developed—Facile optimism rejected.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+PROGRESS
+
+Intimately bound up with the idea of freedom is that of progress. For,
+although our main approach to the discussion of freedom was made by way
+of the natural sciences, by a critique of physical determinism, and
+also by way of the problem of personal action, involving a critique of
+psychological determinism, it must be noted that there have appeared
+throughout the discussion very clear indications of the vital bearing
+of freedom upon the wide field of humanity’s development considered as
+a whole—in short, its history. The philosopher must give some account
+of history, if he is to leave no gap in his view of the universe. The
+philosophy of history will obviously be vastly different if it be based
+on determinism rather than on freedom. When the philosopher looks at
+history his thoughts must inevitably centre around the idea of
+progress. He may believe in it or may reject it as an illusion, but his
+attitude to it will be very largely a reflection of the doctrine which
+he has formed regarding freedom.
+
+The notion of progress is probably the most characteristic feature
+which distinguishes modern civilisation from those of former times. It
+would have seemed to the Greeks foolishness. We owe it to the people
+who, in the modern world, have been what Greece was in the ancient
+world, the glorious mother of ideas. The eighteenth century was marked
+in France by a growing belief in progress, which was encouraged by the
+Encyclopaedists and rose to enthusiasm at the Revolution. Its best
+expression was that given by Condorcet, himself an Encyclopaedist, and
+originally a supporter of the Revolution. His _Sketch of an Historical
+Picture of the Progress of the Human Mind_ was written in 1793 (while
+its author was threatened with the guillotine[1]), published two years
+later, and became, in the early years of the nineteenth century, a
+powerful stimulus to thought concerning progress. Much of the work is
+defective, but it had a great influence upon Saint-Simon, the early
+socialists, and upon the doctrines of Auguste Comte, which themselves
+are immediate antecedents of our own period. We may note briefly here,
+that Condorcet believed in a sure and infallible progress in knowledge
+and in social welfare. This is the important doctrine which Saint-Simon
+and Comte both accepted from him. His ideal of progress is contained in
+the three watchwords of the Revolution, _Liberté_, _Egalité_,
+_Fraternité_, particularly the last two. He forecasts an abandonment of
+militarism, prophesies an era of universal peace, and the reign of
+equality between the sexes. Equality is a point which he insists upon
+very keenly, and, although he did not speak of sociology as did Comte,
+nor of socialism as did Saint-Simon, he claimed that the true history
+of mankind is the history of the great mass of workers: it is not
+diplomatic and military, not the record of dazzling deeds of great men.
+Condorcet, however, was dogmatic in his belief in progress, and he did
+not work out any “law” of progress, although he believed progress to be
+a law of the universe, in general, and an undeniable truth in regard to
+the life-history of mankind.
+
+ [1] He was ultimately imprisoned and driven to suicide.
+
+
+Later, his friend Cabanis upheld a similarly optimistic view, and
+endeavoured to argue for it, against the Traditionalists, who we may
+remember endeavoured to restate Catholicism, and to make an appeal to
+those whom the events of the Revolution had disturbed and
+disillusioned. The outcome of the Terror had somewhat shaken the belief
+in a straightforward progress, but enthusiastic exponents of the
+doctrine were neither lacking nor silent. Madame de Staël continued the
+thought of Condorcet, thus forming a link between him and Saint-Simon
+and Comte. The influence of the Traditionalists and the general current
+of thought and literature known as Romanticism, helped also to solve a
+difficulty which distinguishes Condorcet from Comte. This difficulty
+lay in the eighteenth-century attitude to the Middle Ages, which
+Condorcet had accepted, and which seriously damaged his thesis of
+general progress, for in the eighteenth century the Middle Ages were
+looked upon as a black, dark regress, for which no thinker had a good
+word to say. The change of view is seen most markedly when we come to
+Comte, whose admiration of the Middle Ages is a conspicuous feature of
+his work. While, however, Saint-Simon and Comte were working out their
+ideas, great popularity was given to the belief in progress by the
+influence of Cousin, Jouffroy, Guizot, and by Michelet’s translation of
+the _Scienza nuova_ of the Italian thinker Vico, a book then a century
+old but practically unknown in France. For Cousin, the world process
+was a result of a necessary evolution of thought, which he conceived in
+rather Hegelian fashion. Jouffroy agreed with this fatal progress,
+although he endeavoured to reconcile it with that of personal freedom.
+Guizot’s main point was that progress and civilisation are the same
+thing, or rather, that civilisation is to be defined only by progress,
+for that is its fundamental idea. His definition of progress is not,
+however, strikingly clear, and he calls attention to two types of
+progress—one involving an improvement in social welfare, the other in
+the spiritual or intellectual life. Although Guizot tried to show that
+progress in both these forms is a fact, he did not touch ultimate
+questions, nor did he successfully show that progress is the universal
+key to human history. He did not really support his argument that
+civilisation _is_ progress in any convincing way, but he gave a
+stimulus to reflection on the question of the relationship of these
+two. Michelet’s translation of Vico came at an appropriate time, and
+served a useful purpose. It showed to France a thinker who, while not
+denying a certain progress over short periods, denied it over the long
+period, and reverted rather to the old notion of an eternal recurrence.
+For Vico, the course of human history was not rectilineal but rather
+spiral, although he, too, refrained from indicating any law. He claimed
+clearly enough that each civilisation must give way to barbarism and
+anarchy, and the cycle be again begun.
+
+Such were the ideas upon progress which were current at the time when
+Saint-Simon, Fourier and Comte were busily thinking out their
+doctrines, the main characteristics of which we have already noted in
+our Introduction on the immediate antecedents of our period. The
+thought given to the question of progress in modern France is almost
+unintelligible save in the light of the doctrines current from
+Condorcet, through Saint-Simon to Comte, for the second half of the
+century is again characterised by a criticism and indeed a reaction
+against the idea professed in the first half. This was true in regard
+to Science and to Freedom. We shall see a similar type of development
+illustrated again respecting Progress.
+
+Already we have noted the general aim and object which both Saint-Simon
+and Comte had in view. The important fact for our discussion here is
+that Saint-Simon, by his respect for the Middle Ages, and for the power
+of religion, was able to rectify the defects which the ideas of the
+eighteenth century had left in Condorcet’s doctrine of progress.
+Moreover, he claimed, as Condorcet had not done, to indicate a “law of
+progress,” which gives rise alternately to “organic” and to “critical”
+periods. The Middle Ages were, in the opinion of Saint-Simon, an
+admirable period, displaying as they did an organic society, where
+there was a temporal and spiritual authority. With Luther began an
+anarchical, critical period. According to Saint-Simon s law of progress
+a new organic period will succeed this, and the characteristic of that
+period will be socialism. He advocated a gradual change, not a violent
+revolutionary one, but he saw in socialism the inevitable feature of
+the new era. With its triumph would come a new world organisation and a
+league of peoples in which war would be no more, and in which the lot
+of the proletariat would be free from oppression and misery. The
+Saint-Simonist School became practically a religious sect, and the
+chief note in its gospel was “Progress.”
+
+That the notion of progress was conspicuous in the thought of this time
+is very evident. It was, indeed, in the foreground, and a host of
+writers testify to this, whom we cannot do much more than mention here.
+A number of them figured in the events of 1848. The social reformers
+all invoked “Progress” as justification for their theories being put
+into action. Bazard took up the ideas of Saint-Simon and expounded them
+in his _Exposition de la Doctrine saint-simonienne_ (1830). Buchez, in
+his work on the philosophy of history, assumed progress (1833). The
+work of Louis Blanc on _L’Organisation du Travail_ appeared in 1839 in
+a periodical calling itself _Revue des Progrès_. The brochure from
+Proudhon, on property, came in 1840, and was followed later by _La
+Philosophie du Progrès_ (1851). Meanwhile Fourier’s _Théorie des Quatre
+Mouvements et des Destinées générales_ attempted in rather a fantastic
+manner to point the road to progress. Worthless as many of his quaint
+pages are, they were a severe indictment of much in the existing order,
+and helped to increase the interest and the faith in progress.
+Fourier’s disciple, Considérant, was a prominent figure in 1848. The
+Utopia proposed by Cabet insisted upon _fraternité_ as the keynote to
+progress, while the volumes of Pierre Leroux, _De l’Humanité_, which
+appeared in the same year as Cabet’s volume, 1840, emphasised _égalité_
+as the essential factor. His humanitarianism influenced the
+woman-novelist, George Sand. This same watchword of the Revolution had
+been eulogised by De Tocqueville in his important study of the American
+Republic in 1834, and that writer had claimed _égalité_ as the goal of
+human progress. All these men take progress as an undoubted fact; they
+only vary by using a different one of the three watchwords, _Liberté_,
+_Egalité_, _Fraternité_, to denote the kind of progress they mean.
+Meanwhile, Michelet and his friend Quinet combated the Hegelian
+conception of history maintained by Cousin, and they claimed _liberté_
+to be the watchword of progress. The confidence of all in progress is
+almost pathetic in its unqualified optimism. It is not remarkable that
+the events of 1851 proved a rude shock. Javary, a writer who, in 1850,
+published a little work, _De l’Idée du Progrès_, claimed that the idea
+is the supremely interesting question of the time in its relation to a
+general philosophy of history and to the ultimate destiny of mankind.
+This is fairly evident from the writers we have cited, without Javary’s
+remark, but it is worth noting as being the observation of a
+contemporary. With the mention of Reynaud’s _Philosophie religieuse_,
+upholding the principle of indefinite perfectability and Pelletan’s
+_Profession du Foi du XIXe Siècle_, wherein he maintained confidently
+and dogmatically that progress is the general law of the universe, we
+must pass on from these minor people to consider one who had a
+profounder influence on the latter half of the century, and who took
+over the notion of progress from Saint-Simon.
+
+This was Comte, whose attitude to progress in many respects resembles
+that of Saint-Simon, but he brought to his work a mental equipment
+lacking in the earlier writer and succeeded, by the position he gave to
+it in his Positive Philosophy, in making the idea of progress one which
+subsequent thinkers could not omit from consideration.
+
+According to Comte, the central factor in progress is the mental.
+Ideas, as Fouillée was later to assert, are the real forces in
+humanity’s history. These ideas develop in accordance with the “Law of
+the Three Stages,” already explained in our Introduction. In spite of
+the apparent clearness and simplicity of this law, Comte had to admit
+that as a general law of all development it was to some degree rendered
+difficult in its application by the lack of simultaneity in development
+in the different spheres of knowledge and social life. While
+recognising the mental as the keynote to progress, he also insisted
+upon the solidarity of the physical, intellectual, moral and social
+life of man, and to this extent admitted a connection and interaction
+between material welfare and intellectual progress. The importance of
+this admission lay in the fact that it led Comte to qualify what first
+appears as a definite and confident belief in a rectilineal progress.
+He admits that such a conception is not true, for there is
+retrogression, conflict, wavering, and not a steady development. Yet he
+claims that there is a general and ultimate progress about a mean line.
+The causes which shake and retard the steady progress are not
+all-powerful, they cannot upset the fundamental order of development.
+These causes which do give rise to variations are, we may note in
+passing, the effects of race, climate and political and military feats
+like those of Napoleon, for whom Comte did not disguise his hatred,
+styling him the man who had done most harm to humanity. Great men upset
+his sociological theories, but Comte was no democrat and strongly
+opposed ideas of Liberty and Equality. We have remarked upon his
+general attitude to his own age, as one of criticism and anarchy. In
+this he was probably correct, but he quite underestimated the extent
+and duration of that anarchy, particularly by his estimate of the
+decline and fall of Catholicism and of militarism, which he regarded as
+the two evils of Europe. The events of the twentieth century would have
+been a rude shock to him, particularly the international conflagration
+of 1914-1918. It was to Europe that Comte confined his philosophy of
+history and consequently narrowed it. He knew little outside this
+field.
+
+He endeavoured, however, to apply his new science of sociology to the
+development of European history. His work contains much which is good
+and instructive, but fails ultimately to establish any law of progress.
+It does not seem to have occurred to Comte’s mind that there might not
+be one. This was the question which was presented to the thinkers after
+him, and occupies the chief place in the subsequent discussion of
+progress.
+
+I
+
+In the second half of the century the belief in a definite and
+inevitable progress appears in the work of those thinkers inspired by
+the positivist spirit, Vacherot, Taine and Renan. Vacherot’s views on
+the subject are given in one of his _Essais de Philosophie
+critique_,[2] entitled “_Doctrine du Progrès_.” These pages, in which
+sublime confidence shines undimmed, were intended as part of a longer
+work on the Philosophy of History. Many of Renan’s essays, and
+especially the concluding chapters of his work _L’Avenir de la
+Science_, likewise profess an extreme confidence in progressive
+development. Yet Taine and Renan are both free from the excessive and
+glowing confidence expressed by Condorcet, Saint-Simon and Comte.
+Undoubtedly the events of their own time reacted upon their doctrine of
+progress, and we have already noted the pessimism and disappointment
+which coloured their thoughts regarding contemporary political events.
+Both, however, are rationalists, and have unshaken faith in the
+ultimate triumph of reason.
+
+ [2] Published in 1864.
+
+
+The attitude which Taine adopts to history finds a parallel in the
+fatalism and determinism of Spinoza, for he looks upon the entire life
+of mankind as the unrolling of a rigidly predetermined series of
+events. “Our preferences,” he remarks, “are futile; nature and history
+have determined things in advance; we must accommodate ourselves to
+them, for it is certain that they will not accommodate themselves to
+us.” Taine’s view of history reflects his rejection of freedom, for he
+maintains that it is a vast regulated chain which operates
+independently of individuals. Fatalism colours it entirely. It is
+precisely this attitude of Taine which raises the wrath of Renouvier,
+and also that of both Cournot and Fouillée, whose discussions we shall
+examine presently. They see in such a doctrine an untrue view of
+history and a theory vicious and detestable from a moral standpoint,
+although it doubtless, as Fouillée sarcastically remarks, has been a
+very advantageous one for the exploiters of humanity in all ages to
+teach and to preach to the people.
+
+In passing from Taine’s fatalistic view of history to note his views on
+progress we find him asserting that man’s nature does not in itself
+inspire great optimism, for that nature is largely animal, and man is
+ever ready, however “civilised” he may appear to be, to return to his
+native primitive ferocity and barbarism. Man is not, according to
+Taine, even a sane animal, for he is by nature mad and foolish. Health
+and wisdom only occasionally reign, and so we have no great ground for
+optimism when we examine closely the nature of man, as it really is.
+Taine’s treatment of the French Revolution[3] shows his hostility to
+democracy, and he is sceptical about the value or meaning of the
+watchwords, “Rights of Man,” or _Liberté_, _Egalité_, _Fraternité_.
+This last, he claims, is merely a verbal fiction useful for disguising
+the reality, which is actual warfare of all against all.
+
+ [3] _“La Révolution,”_ in his large work, _Les Origines de la France
+ contemporaine_.
+
+
+Yet in spite of these considerations Taine believes in a definitely
+guaranteed progress. Man’s lower nature does not inspire optimism, but
+his high power of reason does, and it is on this faith in reason that
+Taine confidently founds his assertions regarding progress. He sees in
+reason the ultimate end and meaning of all else. The triumph of reason
+is an ideal goal to which, in spite of so many obstacles, all the
+forces of the universe are striving. In this intellectual progress,
+this gradual rationalisation of mankind, Taine sees the essential
+element of progress upon which all other goods depend. The betterment
+of social conditions will naturally follow; it is the spiritual and
+mental factor which is the keynote of progress Reason, he contends,
+will give us a new ethic, a new politic and a new religion.
+
+Renan shares with Taine the belief in reason and its ultimate triumph.
+His views on progress are, however, more discursive, and are extremely
+interesting and suggestive. He was in his later years shrewd enough to
+discover the difficulties of his own doctrine. Thus although he
+believed in a “guaranteed” progress, Renan marks a stage midway between
+the idea of progress as held by Comte and Taine on the one hand, and by
+Cournot and Renouvier on the other.
+
+His early book, _L’Avenir de la Science_, glows with ardent belief in
+this assured progress, which is bound up with his confidence in science
+and rationality. “Our creed,” he there declares, “is the reasonableness
+of progress.” This idea of progress is almost as central a point in
+Renan’s thought as it was in that of Comte, and he gave it a more
+metaphysical significance. His general philosophy owes much to history,
+and for him the philosophy of history is the explanation of progress.
+By this term he means an ever-growing tendency to perfection, to fuller
+consciousness and life, to nobler, better and more beautiful ends. He
+thinks it necessary to conceive of a sort of inner spring, urging all
+things on to fuller life. He seems here to anticipate vaguely the
+central conception of Guyau and of Bergson. But, like Taine, Renan
+founds his doctrine of progress on rationalism. He well expresses this
+in one of his _Drames philosophiques (L’Eau de Jouvence)_, through the
+mouth of Prospero, who represents rational thought. This character
+declares that “it is science which brings about social progress, and
+not progress which gives rise to science. Science only asks from
+society to have granted to it the conditions necessary to its life and
+to produce a sufficient number of minds capable of understanding
+it.”[4] In the preface written for this drama he declares that science
+or reason will ultimately succeed in creating the power and force of
+government in humanity.
+
+ [4] _L’Eau de Jouvence_, Act 4, Scene I., Conclusion.
+
+
+These thoughts re-echo many of the sentiments voiced on behalf of
+progress by Condorcet, Saint-Simon and Comte. It is interesting,
+however, to note an important point on which Renan not only parts
+company with them, but ranges himself in opposition to them. This point
+is that of socialism or democracy, call it what one will.
+
+In the spring of 1871 Renan was detained at Versailles during the
+uproar of the Commune in Paris, and there wrote his _Dialogues et
+Fragments philosophiques_, which were published five years later. In
+these pages certain doctrines of progress and history are set forth,
+notably in the “dialogues of three philosophers of that school whose
+ground-principles are the cult of the ideal, the negation of the
+supernatural and the investigation of reality.” Renan raises a
+discussion of the end of the world’s development. The universe, he
+maintains, is not devoid of purpose: it pursues an ideal end. This goal
+to which the evolutionary process moves is the reign of reason. But
+there are striking limitations to this advance. From this kingdom of
+reason on the earth the mass of men are shut out. Renan does not
+believe in a gradual improvement of the mass of mankind accompanied by
+a general rationalisation which is democratic. The truth is that Renan
+was an intellectual aristocrat and, as such, he abhorred Demos. His
+gospel of culture, upon which he lays the greatest stress, is for the
+few who are called and chosen, while the many remain outside the pale,
+beyond the power of the salvation he offers. The development of the
+democratic idea he looks upon as thoroughly mischievous, inasmuch as it
+involves, in his opinion, degeneration, a levelling down to mediocrity.
+In his philosophy of history he adopts an attitude somewhat akin to
+that of Carlyle in his worship of Great Men. The end of history is,
+Renan states, the production of men of genius. The great mass of men,
+the common stuff of humanity, he likens to the soil from which these
+Great Ones grow. The majority of men have their existence justified
+only by the appearance upon the scene of “Heroes of Culture.” In this
+teaching the parallelism to the gospel of the Superman is apparent, yet
+it seems clear that although Renan’s man of culture despises the
+ignorance and vulgarity of the crowd, he does so condescendingly as a
+benefactor, and is free from the passionate hatred and scorn to which
+Nietzsche’s Superman is addicted. Nevertheless, Renan’s attitude of
+uncompromising hostility to democratic development is very marked. He
+couples his confidence in Science to his anti-democratic views, and
+affirms the “Herd” to be incapable of culture. Although the process of
+rationalisation and the establishment of the kingdom of reason is
+applicable only to the patrician and not to the _plebs_, this process
+is claimed by Renan to be capable of great extension, not in the number
+of its adherents but in the extent of culture. In this final reign of
+reason, instinctive action and impulse will be replaced by
+deliberation, and science will succeed religion.
+
+His famous letter to Berthelot includes a brief statement of his views
+on progressive culture, which, for him, constitutes the sign of
+progress. “One ought never,” he writes, “to regret seeing clearer into
+the depths.” By endeavouring to increase the treasure of the truths
+which form the paid-up capital of humanity, we shall be carrying on the
+work of our pious ancestors, who loved the good and the true as it was
+understood in their time. The true men of progress, he claims, are
+those who profess as their starting-point a profound respect for the
+past. Renan himself was a great lover of the past, yet we find him
+remarking in his _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_ that he has no
+wish to be taken for an uncompromising reactionist. “I love the past,
+but I envy the future,” and he thinks that it would be extremely
+pleasant to live upon this planet at as late a period as possible. He
+appears jealous of the future and of the young, whose fate it will be
+to know what will be the outcome of the activities of the German
+Emperor, what will be the climax of the conflict of European
+nationalities, what development socialism will take. His shrewd mind
+had alreadv foreseen in a measure the possible development of German
+militarism and of Bolshevism. He regards the world as moving towards a
+kind of “Americanism,” by which he means a type of life in which
+culture and refinement shall have little place. Yet, although he has a
+horror and a dread of democracy, he feels also that the evils
+accompanying it may be, after all, no worse than those involved in the
+reactionary dominance of nobles and clergy.
+
+Humanity has not hitherto marched, he thinks, with much method. Order
+he considers to be desirable, but only in view of progress. Revolutions
+are only absurd and odious, he asserts in _L’Avenir de la Science_, to
+those who do not believe in progress. Yet he claims that reaction has
+its place in the plan of Providence, for it works unwittingly for the
+general good. “There are,” to quote his metaphor, “declivities down
+which the _rôle_ of the traction engine consists solely in holding
+back.”
+
+Renan thinks that if democratic ideas should secure a clear triumph,
+science and scientific teaching would soon find the modest subsidies
+now accorded them cut off. He fears the approach of an era of
+mediocrity, of vulgarity, in fact, which will persecute the
+intellectuals and deprive the world of liberty. He is not thoughtlessly
+optimistic; he was far too shrewd an intellect for that. Our age, he
+suggests, may be regarded in future as the turning point of humanity’s
+history, that point where its deterioration set in, the prelude to its
+decline and fall. But he asserts, as against this, that Nature does not
+know the meaning of the word “discouragement.” Humanity, proving itself
+incapable of progress, but only capable of further deterioration, would
+be replaced by other forms. “We must not, because of our personal
+tastes, our prejudices perhaps, set ourselves to oppose the action of
+our time. This action goes on without regard to us and probably is
+right.”[5] The future of science is assured. With its progress, Renan
+points out, we must reckon upon the decay of organised religion, as
+professed by sects or churches. The disappearance of this organised
+religion will, however, result most assuredly in a temporary moral
+degeneration, since morality has been so conventionally bound up with
+the Church. An era of egoism, military and economic in character, will
+arise and for a time prevail.
+
+ [5] Preface to _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_.
+
+
+Yet we must not, Renan reminds us, grumble at having too much unrest
+and conflict. The great object in life is the development of the mind,
+and this requires liberty or freedom. The worst type of society is the
+theocratic state, or the ancient pontifical dominion or any modern
+replica of these where dogma reigns supreme. A humanity which could not
+be revolutionary, which had lost the attraction of “Utopias,” believing
+itself to have established the perfect form of existence would be
+intolerable. This raises also the query that if progress be the main
+feature of our universe, then we have a dilemma to face, for either it
+leads us to a _terminus ad quem_, and so finally contradicts itself, or
+else it goes on for ever, and it is doubtful then in what sense it can
+be a progress.
+
+Renan’s own belief was essentially religious, and was coloured by
+Christian and Hebrew conceptions. It was a rationalised belief in a
+Divine Providence. He professed a confidence in the final triumph of
+truth and goodness, and has faith in a dim, far-off divine event which
+he terms “the complete advent of God.” The objections which are so
+frequently urged by learned men against finalism or teleology of any
+kind whatsoever Renan deemed superficial and claimed, rightly enough,
+that they are not so much directed against teleology but against
+theology, against obsolete ideas of God, particularly against the dogma
+of a deliberate and omnipotent Creator. Renan’s own doctrine of the
+Deity is by no means clear, but he believed in a spiritual power
+capable of becoming some day conscious, omniscient and omnipotent. God
+will then have come to himself. From this point of view the universe is
+a progress to God, to an increasing realisation of the Divinity in
+truth, beauty and goodness.
+
+The universe, Renan claims, must be ultimately rooted and grounded in
+goodness; there must be, in spite of all existing “evils,” a balance on
+the side of goodness, otherwise the universe would, like a vast
+banking-concern, fail. This balance of goodness is the _raison d’être_
+of the world and the means of its existence. The general life of the
+universe can be illustrated, according to Renan, by that of the oyster,
+and the formation within it of the pearl, by a malady, a process vague,
+obscure and painful. The pearl is the spirit which is the end, the
+final cause and last result, and assuredly the most brilliant outcome
+of this universe. Through suffering the pearl is formed; and likewise,
+through constant pain and conflict, suffering and hardship, the spirit
+of man moves intellectually and morally onward and upward, to the
+completed realisation of justice, beauty, truth and infinite goodness
+and love, to the complete and triumphant realisation of God. We must
+have patience, claims Renan, and have faith in these things, and have
+hope and take courage. “One day virtue will prove itself to have been
+the better part.” Such is his doctrine of progress.
+
+II
+
+With Cournot and Renouvier our discussion takes a new form. Renan,
+Taine, Vacherot and the host of social and political writers, together
+with August Comte himself, had accepted the fact of progress and clung
+to the idea of a law of progress. With these two thinkers, however,
+there is a more careful consideration given to the problem of progress.
+It was recognised as a problem and this was an immense advance upon the
+previous period, whose thinkers accepted it as a dogma.
+
+True to the philosophic spirit of criticism and examination which
+involves the rejection of dogma as such, Cournot and Renouvier approach
+the idea of progress with reserve and free from the confidently
+optimistic assertions of the eighteenth and early nineteenth century.
+Scorning the rhetoric of political socialists, positivists and
+rationalists, they endeavour to view progress as the central problem of
+the philosophy of history, to ascertain what it involves, and to see
+whether such a phrase as “law of progress” has a meaning before they
+invoke it and repeat it in the overconfident manner which characterised
+their predecessors. We have maintained throughout this work that the
+central problem of our period was that of freedom. By surveying the
+general character of the thought of the time, and in following this by
+an examination of the relation of science and philosophy, we were able
+to show how vital and how central this problem was. From another side
+we are again to emphasise this. Having seen the way in which the
+problem of freedom was dealt with, we are in a position to observe how
+this coloured the solutions of other problems. The illustration is
+vivid here, for Cournot and Renouvier develop their philosophy of
+history from their consideration of freedom, and base their doctrines
+of progress upon their maintenance of freedom.
+
+It is obvious that the acceptance of such views as those expressed on
+freedom by both Cournot and Renouvier must have far-reaching effects
+upon their general attitude to history, for how is the dogma of
+progress, as it had been preached, to be reconciled with free action?
+It is much easier to believe in progress if one be a fatalist. The
+difficulty here was apparent to Comte when he admitted the influence of
+variations, disturbing causes, which resulted in the development of
+mankind assuming an oscillating character rather than that of a
+straight-forward progress. He did not, however, come sufficiently close
+to this problem, and left the difficulty of freedom on one side by
+asserting that the operation of freedom, chance or contingency (call it
+what we will), issuing in non-predetermined actions, was so limited as
+not to interfere with the general course of progress.
+
+Cournot and Renouvier take up the problem where Comte left it at this
+point. Each of them takes it a stage further onward in the development.
+The fundamental ideas of Cournot we have briefly noted as being those
+of order, chance and probability. The relation of these to progress he
+discusses, not only in his _Essai sur les Fondements de nos
+Connaissances_ and the _Traité de l’Enchaînement d’Idées_, but also in
+a most interesting manner in his two volumes entitled _Considérations
+sur la Marche des Idées et des Evènements dans les Temps modernes_.
+Like Comte, he is faithful, as far as his principles will allow, to the
+idea of order. There is order in the universe to a certain degree;
+science shows it to us. There is also, he maintains, freedom, hazard or
+chance. Looking at history he sees, as did Comte, phenomena which, upon
+taking a long perspective, appear as interferences. Pure reason is, he
+claims, really incapable of deciding the vital question whether these
+disturbances are due to a pure contingency, chance or freedom, or
+whether they mark the points of the influence of the supernatural upon
+mankind’s development. He refers to the _enchaînement de circonstances
+providentielles_ which helped the early Jews and led to the propagation
+of their monotheism; which helped also the development of the Christian
+religion in the Roman Empire. Hazard itself, he claims,[6] may be the
+agent or minister of Providence. Such a view claims to be loyal at once
+to freedom and to order.
+
+ [6] _Essai sur les Fondaments de nos Connaissances_, vol. i, chap. 5.
+
+
+Cournot continues his discussion further and submits many other
+considerations upon progress. He claims that it is absurd to see in
+every single occurrence the operations of a divine providence or the
+work of a divine architect. Such a view would exalt his conception of
+order, undoubtedly, but only at the expense of his view of freedom. He
+will not give up his belief in freedom, and in consequence declares
+that there is no pre-arranged order or plan in the sense of a “law.” He
+sets down many considerations which appear as dilemmas to the pure
+reason, and which only action, he thinks, will solve. He points out the
+difficulty of economic and social progress owing to our being unable to
+test theories until they are in action on a large field. He shows too
+how conflicting various developments may be, and how progress in one
+direction may involve degeneration in another. Equality may be good in
+some ways, unnatural and evil in others. Increase of population may be
+applauded as a progress from a military standpoint, but may be an
+economic evil with disastrous suffering as its consequence. The
+“progress” to peace and stability in a society usually involves a
+decrease in vitality and initiative. By much wealth of argument, no
+less than by his general attitude, Cournot was able to apply the breaks
+to the excessive confidence in progress and to call a halt for sounder
+investigation of the matter.
+
+Renouvier did much more in this direction. In his _Second Essay of
+General Criticism_ he touched upon the problem of progress in relation
+to freedom, and his fourth and fifth essays constitute five large
+volumes dealing with the “Philosophy of History.” He also devotes the
+last two chapters of _La Nouvelle Monadologie_ to progress in relation
+to societies, and brings out the central point of his social ethics,
+that justice is the criterion of progress. Indeed, all that Renouvier
+says regarding history and progress leads up, in a manner peculiarly
+his own, to his treatment of ethics, which will claim attention in our
+next chapter.
+
+_The Analytic Philosophy of History_ forms an important item in the
+philosophical repertoire of Renouvier. He claims it to be a necessary
+feature of the neo-critical, and indeed of any serious, philosophy. It
+is, he claims, not a branch of knowledge which has an isolated place,
+for it is as intimately connected to life as is any theory to the facts
+which it embraces. That is not to say, and Renouvier is careful to make
+this clear, that we approach history assuming that there are laws
+governing it, or a single law or formula by which human development can
+be expressed. The “Philosophy of History” assumes no such thing; it is
+precisely this investigation which it undertakes, loyal to the
+principles of General Criticism of which it, in a sense, forms a part.
+In a classification it strictly stands between General Criticism or
+Pure Philosophy and History itself.
+
+“History,” says Renouvier, “is the experience which humanity has of
+itself,”[7] and his conclusions regarding progress depend on the views
+he holds regarding human personality and its essential attribute,
+freedom. The philosophy of history has to consider whether, in
+observing the development of humanity on the earth, one may assert the
+presence of any general law or laws. Can one say legitimately that
+there has been development? Is there really such a thing as progress?
+If so, what is our idea of progress? What is the trend of humanity’s
+history? These are great questions.
+
+ [7] _Introduction à la Philosophie de l’Histoire_, Préface.
+
+
+The attitude which Renouvier adopts to the whole course of human
+history is based upon his fundamental doctrines of discontinuity,
+freedom and personality. There are, he claims, real beginnings,
+unpredicable occurrences, happenings which cannot be explained as
+having been caused by preceding events. We must not, he urges, allow
+ourselves to be hypnotised by the name “History,” as if it were in
+itself some great power, sweeping all of us onward in its course, or a
+vast ocean in which we are merely waves. Renouvier stands firm in his
+loyalty to personality, and sees in history, not a power of this sort,
+but simply the total result of human actions. History is the collective
+work of the human spirit or of free personalities.[8]
+
+ [8] Renouvier’s great objection to Comte’s work was due to his
+ disagreement with Comte’s conception of Humanity. To Renouvier, with
+ his intense valuation of personality, this Comtian conception was too
+ much of an abstraction.
+
+
+It is erroneous to look upon it as either the fatalistic functioning of
+a law of things or as the results of the action of an all-powerful
+Deity or Providence. Neither the “scientific” view of determinism nor
+the theological conception of God playing with loaded dice, says
+Renouvier, will explain history. It is the outcome of human action, of
+personal acts which have real worth and significance in its formation.
+History is no mere display of marionettes, no Punch-and-Judy show with
+a divine operator pulling strings from his concealed position behind
+the curtain. Equally Renouvier disagrees with the view that history is
+merely an unrolling in time of a plan conceived from eternity. Human
+society and civilisation (of which history is the record) are products
+of man’s own thought and action, and in consequence manifest
+discontinuity, freedom and contingency. Renouvier thus opposes strongly
+all those thinkers, such as the Saint-Simonists, Hegelians and
+Positivists, who see in history only a fatalistic development. He joins
+battle especially with those who claim that there is a fatalistic or
+necessitated progress. History has no law, he claims, and there is not
+and cannot be any law of progress.
+
+The idea of progress is certainly, he admits, one with which the
+philosopher is brought very vitally into contact in his survey of
+history. Indeed an elucidation of, this notion might itself be a part
+of the historian’s task. If so, the historians have sadly neglected
+part of their work. Renouvier calls attention to the fact that all
+those historians or philosophers who accept a comforting doctrine of
+humanity’s assured progress make very plausible statements, but they
+never seem able to state with any clearness or definiteness what
+constitutes progress, or what significance lies in their oft-repeated
+phrase, “the law of progress.” He rightly points out that this
+insistence upon a law, coupled with a manifest inability to indicate
+what it is, causes naturally a certain scepticism as to there being any
+such law at all.
+
+Renouvier brands the search for any law of progress a futile one, since
+we cannot scientifically or logically define the goal of humanity or
+the course of its development because of the fact of freedom and
+because of our ignorance. We must realise that we, personally at
+firsthand, see only an infinitesimal part of humanity’s life on this
+planet alone, not to speak of a destiny possible beyond this globe, and
+that, at second-hand, we have only evidence of a portion of the great
+procession of human events. We do not know humanity’s beginning and
+primitive history, nor do we know its goal, if it has one. These
+factors alone are grave hindrances to the formulation of any conception
+of progress. Reflection upon them might have saved men, Renouvier
+observes, from the presumptuous belief in assured progress. We cannot
+presume even to estimate the tendencies, the direction of its course,
+because of the enormous and ever-increasing complexity of free human
+activity.
+
+By his large work on the “Philosophy of History,” Renouvier shows that
+the facts of history themselves are against the theory of a universal
+and continuous progress, for the record shows us conflict, advance,
+retrogression, peoples rising, others degenerating, empires
+establishing themselves and passing away by inward ruin or outer
+assaults, or both, and civilisations evolving and disintegrating in
+their turn. The spectacle does not readily promote an optimistic view
+of human development at all, much less support the doctrine of a sure
+and certain progress. Renouvier does not blind himself to the constant
+struggle and suffering. The theatre, or rather the arena, of history
+presents a curious spectacle. In politics and in religion he shows us
+that there are conflicts of authority and of free thought, a warfare of
+majorities with minorities, a method of fighting issues slightly less
+savage than the appeal to pure force, but amounting to what he terms “a
+pacific application of the principle of force.” History shows us the
+corruption, tyranny and blindness of many majorities, and the tragic
+and necessary resort to force as the only path to liberty for
+down-trodden minorities. How, Renouvier asks, can we fit this in with a
+doctrine of assured progress, or, indeed, progress at all?
+
+Further, he does not find it difficult to show that much unthinking
+utterance on the part of the optimists may be somewhat checked by calm
+reflection on even one or two questions. For example, Was progress
+involved in the change from ancient slavery to the wage-slavery of
+modern industrialism? Was Christianity, as Nietzsche and others have
+attempted to maintain, a retrogression? Or, again, Was the change from
+Greek city life to the conditions of the Middle Ages in any way to be
+regarded as a progress?
+
+Renouvier considers it quite erroneous to assert, as did Comte, that
+there is a steady and continuous development underlying the
+oscillations, and that the variations, as it were, from the direct line
+of progress cancel one another or balance each other, leaving, as Renan
+claimed, a balance always and inevitably on the side of goodness.
+
+Such a confidence in the great world banking concern Renouvier does not
+possess. There is no guarantee that the account of goodness may not be
+overdrawn and found wanting. He reminds us sternly and solemnly of the
+terrible solidarity which characterises evil. Deceit, greed, lust,
+violence and war have an enormous power of breeding each other and of
+supporting one another increasingly. The optimistic doctrines of
+progress are simply untrue statements of the facts of history, and
+falsely coloured views of human nature. It is an appalling error in
+“social dynamics” to overlook the clash of interest, the greed of
+nation and of class, the fundamental passionate hate and war. With it
+is coupled an error in “social statics,” in which faith is put in
+institutions, in the mechanism of society. These, declares Renouvier,
+will not save humanity; they will, indeed, ruin it if it allow itself,
+through spiritual and moral lethargy, to be dominated by them. They
+have been serviceable creations of humanity at some time or other, and
+they must serve men, but men must not be bound down to serve them. This
+servitude is evil, and it has profoundly evil consequences.
+
+Having attacked Comte’s view of progress and of order in its static and
+dynamic point of view, Renouvier then brings up his heavy artillery of
+argument against Comte’s idealisation of the Middle Ages. To assert
+that this period was an advance on the life of the Greek city,
+Renouvier considers to be little short of impudence. The art and
+science and philosophy of the Greeks are our best heritage, while the
+Middle Ages, dominated by a vicious and intolerant Church, with its
+infallible theology and its crushing power of the clergy, was a “dead
+hand” upon the human spirit. While it provided an organic society, it
+only succeeded in doing so by narrowing and crushing the human
+intellect. The Renascence and the Reformation proved that there were
+essential elements of human life being crushed down. They reached a
+point, however, where they exploded.
+
+Not only does Renouvier thus declare the Middle Ages to be a regress,
+but he goes the length of asserting that the development of European
+history _could_ have been different. This is his doctrine of freedom
+applied to history. There is no reason at all for our regarding the
+Middle Ages or any such period as necessitated in the order of
+mankind’s development. There is no law governing that development;
+consequently, had mankind, or even a few of its number, willed and
+acted upon their freedom differently, the whole trend of the period we
+call the Dark Ages might have been quite other than it was. Renouvier
+does not shirk the development of this point, which is a central one
+for his purpose. It may seem fantastic to the historians, who must of
+course accept the past as given and consequently regard reflection on
+“what might have been” as wasted time. Certainly the past cannot be
+altered—that is not Renouvier’s point. He intends to give a lesson to
+humanity, a stern lesson to cure it of its belief in fatalism in regard
+to history. This is the whole purpose of the curious volume he
+published in 1876, entitled _Uchronie_, which had as its explanatory
+sub-title _L’Utopie dans l’Histoire, Esquisse historique du
+Développement de la Civilisation européenne, tel qu’il n’a pas été, tel
+qu’il avail pu être_. The book, consisting of two manuscripts supposed
+to be kept in the care of an old Dutch monk, is actually an imaginary
+construction by Renouvier himself of European history in the period 100
+to 800 A.D., written to show the real possibility that the sequence of
+events from the Emperor Nerva to the Emperor Charlemagne might have
+been radically different from what it actually was.
+
+All this is intended by Renouvier to combat the “universal
+justification of the past.” He sees that the doctrine of progress as
+usually stated is not only a lie, but that it is an extremely dangerous
+one, for it justifies the past, or at least condones it as inevitable,
+and thus makes evil a condition of goodness, demoralises history,
+nullifies ethics and encourages the damnation of humanity itself. This
+fatalistic doctrine, asserts Renouvier with great earnestness, must be
+abandoned; freedom must be recognised as operative, and the human will
+as making history.There is no law of progress, and the sooner humanity
+can come to realise this the better it will be for it. Only by such a
+realisation can it work out its own salvation. “The real law lies”,
+declares Renouvier,”only in an equal possibility of progress or
+deterioration for both societies and individuals.” If there is to be
+progress it can only come because, and when, humanity recognises itself
+as collectively responsible for its own history, and when each person
+feels his own responsibility regarding that action. No acceptance of
+events will avail; we must _will_ progress and consciously set
+ourselves to realise it. It is possible, but it depends on us. Here
+Renouvier’s considerations lead him from history to ethics. “Almost all
+the Great Men, men of great will, have been fatalists. So slowly does
+humanity emerge from its shadows and beget for itself a just notion of
+its autonomy. The phantom of necessity weighs heavily,” he laments,
+“over the night of history.”[9] With freedom and a recognition of its
+freedom by humanity generally we may see the dawn of better things.
+Humanity will then consciously and deliberately make its history, and
+not be led by the operations of herd-instinct and fatalistic beliefs
+which in the past have so disgraced and marred its record.
+
+ [9] _Psychologie ralionnelle_, vol. 2, p. 91.
+
+
+The existing condition of human society can only be described frankly,
+in Renouvier’s opinion, as a state of war. Each individual, each class,
+each nation, each race, is actually at war with others. It matters not
+whether a diplomatic state of peace, as it is called, exists or not;
+that must not blind us to the facts. By institutions, customs, laws,
+hidden fraud, diplomacy, and open violence, this conflict is kept up.
+It is all war, says Renouvier. Modern society is based on war,
+economic, military or judicial. Indeed, military and naval warfare is a
+clear issue, but only a symbol of what always goes on. Might always has
+the upper hand, hence ordinary life in modern society is just a state
+of war. Our civilisation does not rest on justice, or on the conception
+of justice; it rests on power and might. Until it is founded on
+justice, peace, he urges, will not be possible; humanity will be
+enslaved in further struggles disastrous o itself. This doctrine of the
+_état de guerre_, as descriptive of modern society, he makes a feature
+of his ethics, upon which we must not here encroach, but may point out
+that he insists upon justice as the ultimate social criterion, and
+claims that this is higher than charity, which is inadequate as a basis
+for society, however much it may alleviate its ills. One of the chief
+necessities, he points out, an essential to any progressive measure
+would be to moralise our modern notion of the state.[10] In the notes
+to his last chapter of the _Nouvelle Monadologie_ Renouvier attacks the
+Marxian doctrine of the materialistic determination of history.
+
+ [10] This point was further emphasised by Henri Michel in his work,
+ _L’Idée de l’Etat_.
+
+
+This same book, however, we must note, marks a stage in Renouvier’s own
+thought different from his doctrines in the earlier _Essais de Critique
+générale_, and this later philosophy, of which the _Monadologie_ and
+_Personnalisme_ are the two most notable volumes, displays an attempt
+to look upon progress from a more ultimate standpoint. His _théodicée_
+here involves the notion, seen in Ravaisson, of an early perfection,
+involving a subsequent “fall,” the world now, with its _guerre
+universelle_, being an intermediate stage between a perfect or
+harmonious state in the past and one which lies in the future.
+
+The march of humanity is an uncertain one because it is free. The
+philosophy of history thus reiterates the central importance of
+freedom. The actual end or purpose of this freedom is not simply, says
+Renouvier, the attainment of perfection, but rather the possibility of
+progress. It was this thought which led him on in his reflections
+further than any of the thinkers of our period, or at least more
+deliberately than any, to indicate his views on the doctrine of a
+future life for humanity. So far from this being a purely religious
+problem, Renouvier rightly looks upon it as merely a carrying further
+afield of the conception of progress.
+
+For him, and this is the significant point for us here, any notion of a
+future life for humanity, in the accepted sense of immortality, is
+bound up with, and indeed based upon, the conception of progressive
+development. It is true that Renouvier, like Kant, looks upon the
+problems of “God, Freedom and Immortality” as the central ones in
+philosophy, true also that he recognises the significance of this
+belief in a Future Life as an extremely important one for religious
+teaching; but his main attitude to the question is merely a
+continuation of his general doctrine of progress, coupled with his
+appreciation of personality. It is in this light only that Renouvier
+reflects upon the problem of Immortality. He makes no appeal to a world
+beyond our experience—a fact which follows from his rejection of the
+Kantian world of “noumena”; nor does he wish the discussion to be based
+on the assertions of religious faith. He admits that belief in a Future
+Life involves faith, in a sense, but it is a rational belief, a
+philosophical hypothesis and, more particularly, according to
+Renouvier, a moral hypothesis. He asserts against critics that the
+undertaking of such a discussion is a necessary part of any Critical
+Philosophy, which would be incomplete without it, as its omission would
+involve an inadequate account of human experience.
+
+Renouvier claims that, in the first instance, the question of a future
+existence arises naturally in the human mind from the discrepancy which
+is manifest in our experience between nature on the one hand and
+conscience on the other. The course of events is not in accord with
+what we feel to be morally right, and the demands of the moral law are,
+to Renouvier’s mind, supreme. He realises how acutely this discrepancy
+is sometimes felt by the human mind, and his remarks on this point
+recall those of the sensitive soul, who, feeling this acutely, cried
+out:
+
+“Ah, Love! could thou and I with Fate conspire
+To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
+Would we not shatter it to bits—and then
+Re-mould it nearer to the heart’s desire.”
+
+
+These lines well express the sharpness of Renouvier’s own feelings, and
+he claims that, such a conspiracy being impossible, the belief in
+Immortality becomes a necessary moral postulate or probability.
+
+The grounds for such a postulate are to be found, he claims, even in
+the processes of nature itself. The law of finality or teleology
+manifests itself throughout the universe: purpose is to be seen at work
+in the Cosmos. It is true that in the lower stages of existence it
+seems obscure and uncertain, but an observer cannot fail to see “ends”
+being achieved in the biological realm. The functions of organisms,
+more particularly those of the animal world, show us a realm of ends
+and means at work for achieving those ends. This development in the
+direction of an end, this teleology, implies, says Renouvier, a
+destiny. The whole of existence is a gradual procession of beings at
+higher and higher levels of development, ends and means to each other,
+and all inheriting an immense past, which is itself a means to their
+existence as ends in themselves. May one not then, suggests Renouvier,
+make a valid induction from the destiny thus recognised and partially
+fulfilled of certain individual creatures, to a destiny common to all
+these creatures indefinitely prolonged?[11]
+
+ [11] _Psychologic rationnelle_, vol. 2, pp. 220-221.
+
+
+The objection is here made that Nature does not concern herself with
+individuals; for her the individual is merely a means for the carrying
+on and propagation of the species. Individuals come into being, live
+for a time and pass away, the species lives on perpetually; only
+species are in the plan of the universe, individuals are of little or
+no worth. To this Renouvier replies that species live long but are not
+perpetual; whole species have been wiped out by happenings on our
+planet, many now are dying out. The insinuation about the worthlessness
+of individuals rouses his wrath, for it strikes at the very root of his
+philosophy, of which personality is the keynote. This, he says, is to
+lapse into Pantheism, into doctrines of Buddhists and of Spinoza.
+Pantheism and all kindred views are to be rejected. It is not in the
+indefinable, All-existing, the eternal and infinite One, that we find
+help with regard to the significance of ends in nature. Ends are to be
+sought in the individuals or the species. But while it behoves us to
+look upon the world as existing for the species and not the species for
+the sake of the world, we must remember that the species exists for the
+sake of the individuals in it. It is false to look upon the individuals
+as existing merely for the sake of the species.
+
+If we subordinate the individual to the species, sacrificing his
+inherent worth and unique value, and then subordinate species to genus
+and all genera to the All, we lose ourselves in the Infinite substance
+in which everything is swallowed up. Again, Pantheism tends to speak of
+the perfection of individuals, and speaks loudly of progress from one
+generation to another. But it tells only of a future which involves the
+entire sacrifice of all that has worth or value in the past. It shows
+endless sacrifice, improvement too, but all for naught. “What does it
+matter to say that the best is yet to be, if the best must perish as
+the good, to give place to a yet better ‘best’ which will not have the
+virtue of enduring any more than the others? Do we offer any real
+consolation to Sisyphus,” asks Renouvier, “by promising him
+annihilation, which is coupled with the promise of successors capable
+of lifting his old rock higher and still higher up the fatal slope, by
+offering him the eternal falling of this rock and successors who will
+continually be annihilated and endlessly be replaced by others?” The
+rock is the personal life. On this theory, however high the rock be
+pushed, it always is destined to fall back to the same depth, as low as
+if it had never been pushed up hill at all. We refuse to reconcile a
+world containing real ends and purposes within it with such a game,
+vast and miserable, in which no actor plays for his own sake, and all
+the false winners lose all their gains by being obliged to leave the
+party while the play goes on for ever. This is to throw away all
+individual worth, the value of all personal work and effort, to declare
+individuality a sham, and to embrace fatality. It is this mischievous
+Pantheism which is the curse of many religions and many philosophies.
+Against it Renouvier wages a ceaseless warfare. The individuals, he
+asserts exist both for their own sake and worth, also for the sake and
+welfare of others. In the person, the law of finality finds its highest
+expression. Personality is of supreme and unique value.
+
+This being so, it becomes a necessary postulate of our philosophy, if
+we really believe in the significance of personalities and in progress
+(which Renouvier considers to have no meaning apart from them), to
+conclude that death is but an event in the career of these
+personalities. They are perpetuated beyond death.
+
+For Renouvier, as for Kant, the chief arguments for survival are based
+on considerations of a moral character, upon the demands of the moral
+ideal for self- realisation, for the attainment of holiness or, more
+properly, “wholeness.” This progress can only be made possible by the
+continued existence after bodily death of the identical personality,
+unique and of eternal worth in the scheme of things, capable of further
+development than is possible amid the conditions of life as we know it.
+
+We must, however, present to ourselves Immortality as given by the
+development of appearances in this world of phenomena, under the
+general laws with which we are acquainted to-day, thus correcting the
+method of Kant, who placed Immortality in a noumenal world. The
+salvation of a philosopher should not be of such a kind. We must treat
+Immortality as a Law, not as a miracle. The thinker who accepts the
+latter view quits the realm of science—that is, of experience and
+reason—to establish a mystic order in contradiction with the laws of
+nature. The appeal to the “supernatural” is the denial of nature, and
+the appellant ruins his own case by his appeal. If Immortality is a
+fact, it must be considered rationally.
+
+Is Death—that is, the destruction of individuals as such, or the
+annihilation of personalities—a reality? Renouvier reminds those who
+jeer at the doctrine of Immortality that “the reality of death (as so
+defined) has not been, and cannot be, proved.” Our considerations must
+of necessity be hypothetical, but they can be worthy of rational
+beings. We must then keep our hopes and investigations within the realm
+of the universe and not seek to place our hope of immortality in a
+region where nothing exists, “not even an ether to support the wings of
+our hope.”
+
+Renouvier’s general considerations led him to view all individuals as
+having a destiny in which their individuality should be conserved and
+developed. When we turn in particular to man, these points are to be
+seen in fuller light. The instinctive belief in Immortality is bound up
+with his nature as a thinking being who is capable of setting up, and
+of striving after, ends. This continual striving is a marked
+characteristic of all human life, a counting oneself not to have
+attained, a missing of the mark.
+
+The human consciousness protests against annihilation. At times this is
+very keenly expressed. “At the period of the great aspirations of the
+heart, the ecstasy of noble passions is accompanied by the conviction
+of Immortality. Life at its highest, realising its richest personality,
+protests, in virtue of its own worth, and in the name of the depths of
+power it still feels latent in itself, against the menace of
+annihilation.”[12] It cries out with its unconquerable soul:
+
+“Give me the glory of going on and not to die!”
+
+
+ [12] _Psychologie rationnelle_, vol. 2, p. 249.
+
+
+Renouvier finds a further witness in the testimony of Love—that is to
+say, in nature itself arrived at the consciousness of that passion in
+virtue of which it exists and assuring itself by this passion, of the
+power to surmount all these short-comings and failures. Love casteth
+out fear, the dread of annihilation, and shows itself “stronger than
+death.” Hope and Love unite in strengthening the initial belief in
+Immortality and the “will to survive.”
+
+Renouvier admits that this is _a priori_ reasoning, and speedily _a
+posteriori_ arguments can be brought up as mighty battering-rams
+against the fortress of immortal life, but although they mav shake its
+walls, they are unable to destroy the citadel. Nothing can demonstrate
+the impossibility of future existence, whereas the whole weight of the
+moral law and the teleological elements at work in the universe are,
+according to Renouvier, in favour of such a belief.
+
+Morality, like every other science, is entitled to, nay obliged to,
+employ the hypothesis of harmony. Now in this connection the hypothesis
+of harmony (or, as Kant styled it, the concurrence of happiness and
+virtue necessary to a conception of order) finds reinforcement from the
+consideration of the meaning and significance of freedom. For the
+actual end or purpose of freedom is not simply the attainment of
+perfection, but rather the possibility of progress. Immortality becomes
+a necessary postulate, reinforced by instinct, reason, morality, by the
+fact of freedom, and the notion of progress. Further, Renouvier feels
+that if we posit death as the end of all we thereby give an absolute
+victory to physical evil in the universe.
+
+The postulate of Immortality has a certain dignity and worth. The
+discussion of future life must, however, be kept within the
+possibilities of law and phenomena. Religious views, such as those of
+Priestley, by their appeal to the miraculous debase the notion of
+Immortality itself. Talk of an immortal essence, and a mortal essence
+is meaningless, for unless the same identical person, with his unique
+character and memory, persists, then our conception of immortality is
+of little or no value. The idea of an indestructible spiritual
+substance is not any better or more acceptable. Our notion of a future
+life must be based upon the inherent and inalienable rights of the
+moral person to persistence and to chances of further development or
+progress. Although we must beware of losing ourselves in vain
+speculations, which really empty our thought of all its content,
+Renouvier claims that we are quite entitled to lay down hypotheses.
+
+The same general laws which we see in operation and which have brought
+the universe and the beings in it to the stage of development in which
+they now are may, without contradiction, be conceived as operating in
+further developments after the change we call bodily death. There is no
+incongruity in conceiving the self-same personality continuing in a
+second and different organism. Renouvier cites the case of the grub and
+the butterfly and other metamorphoses. In man himself he points to
+organic crises, which give the organism a very different character and
+effect a radical change in its constitution. For example, there is the
+critical exit from the mother’s womb, involving the change from a being
+living in an enclosure to that of an independent creature. When once
+the crisis of the first breath be passed the organism starts upon
+another life. There are other crises, as, for instance, the radical
+changes which operate in both sexes at the stage of puberty. Just as
+the personality persists in its identity through all these changes, may
+it not pass through that of bodily death?
+
+The Stoics believed in a cosmic resurrection. Substituting the idea of
+progress for their view of a new beginning, Renouvier claims that we
+may attain the hypothesis that all human history is but a fragment in a
+development incomparably greater and grander. Again, we may conceive of
+life in two worlds co-existing, indeed interpenetrating, so that the
+dead are not gone far from us into some remote heaven.
+
+But, whatever form we give to our hypothesis regarding progress into
+another existence beyond this present one, Renouvier does not easily
+allow us to forget that it must be based upon the significance of
+freedom, progress and personality supported by moral considerations.
+Even this progress is not guaranteed, and even if it should be the
+achievement of some spirits there is no proof that it is universal. Our
+destiny, he finally reminds us, lies in our own hands, for progress
+here means an increased capacity for progress later, while spiritual
+and moral indifference will result finally, and indeed, necessarily, in
+annihilation. Here, as so often in his work, Renouvier puts moral
+arguments and appeals in the forefront of his thought. Progress in
+relation to humanity’s life on earth drew from him an appeal for the
+establishment of justice: progress in a further world implies equally a
+moral appeal. Our duty is to keep the ideal of progress socially and
+individually ever before us, and to be worthy of immortality if it be a
+fact, rather than to lose ourselves in the mistaken piety of “other-
+worldliness.” About neither progress can we be dogmatic; it is not
+assured, Renouvier has shown, and we must work for it by the right use
+of our freedom, our intelligence and our will.
+
+III
+
+No thinker discussed the problem of progress with greater energy or
+penetration than Renouvier. The new spiritualist group, however,
+developed certain views arising from the question of contingency, or
+the relation of freedom to progress. These thinkers were concerned more
+with psychological and metaphysical work, and with the exception of
+Fouillée and Guyau, they wrote little which bore directly upon the
+problem of progress. Many of their ideas, however, have an indirect
+bearing upon important points at issue.
+
+In Ravaisson, Lachelier and Boutroux, we find the question of teleology
+presented, and also that of the opposition of spirit and matter. From
+the outset the new spiritualism had to wrestle with two difficulties
+inherent in the thought of Ravaisson. These were, firstly, the
+reconciliation of the freedom and spontaneity of the spirit with the
+operations of a Divine Providence or teleology of some kind; and,
+secondly, the dualism assumed in the warfare of spirit and matter,
+although spirit was held to be superior and anterior to matter. This
+last involved a complication for any doctrine of progress, as it
+required a primitive “fall” to account for matter, even a fall of the
+Deity himself. This Ravaisson himself admits, and he thinks that in
+creating the world God had to sacrifice some of his own being. In this
+case “progress” is set over against a transcendental existence, and is
+but the reawakening of what once existed in God, and in a sense now and
+eternally exists. Progress there is, claims Ravaisson, towards truth
+and beauty and goodness. This is the operation of a Divine Providence
+acting by attracting men freely to these ideals, and as these are
+symbols of God himself, progress is the return of the spirit through
+self-conscious personalities to the fuller realisation of harmony,
+beauty and love—that is, to the glory of God, who has ever been, now
+is, and ever shall be, perfect beauty, goodness and love.
+
+Thus, although from a temporal and finite standpoint Ravaisson can
+speak of progress, it is doubtful if he is justified in doing so
+ultimately, _sub specie æternitatis_. To solve the problem in the way
+he presents it, one would need to know more about the ultimate value
+and significance of the personalities themselves, and their destiny in
+relation to the Divinity who is, as he claims, perfect harmony, beauty
+and love. It was this point, so dear to an upholder of personality,
+which had led Renouvier to continue his discussion of progress in
+relation to history as generally understood, until it embraced a wider
+field of eternal destiny, and to consider the idea of a future life as
+arising from, and based upon, the conception of progress. It is this
+same point which later perplexes Bergson, when he recognises this
+self-conscious personality as the ultimate development of the évolution
+créatrice, and so constituting in a sense the goal of the spirit,
+although he is careful to state that there is no finalism involved at
+all. Ravaisson stands for this finalism, however, in claiming that
+there are ends. He does not see how otherwise we could speak of
+progress, as we should have no criterion, no _terminus ad quem_; all
+would be simply process, not progress.
+
+_“Détachement de Dieu, retour à Dieu, clôture du grand cercle cosmique,
+restitution de l’universel équilibre, telle est l’histoire du monde.”_
+Such is Ravaisson’s doctrine, much of which is akin to, and indeed
+re-echoes, much in Christian theology from St. Augustine, with his idea
+of an eternal and restless movement of return to the divinity, to the
+Westminster divines in their answer to the important query about the
+chief end of man, which they considered to be not only to glorify God
+but to enjoy Him for ever. This last and rather strange phrase only
+seems to have significance if we conceive, in Ravaisson’s manner, of
+beauty, truth and goodness as expressions or manifestations of the
+Divinity to whom the world-process may freely tend.
+
+For Lachelier the universal process presents a triple aspect, mechanism
+which is coupled with finalism and with freedom. These three principles
+are in action simultaneously in the world and in the individual. Each
+of us is at once matter, living soul and personality—that is,
+necessity, finality and freedom. The laws of the universe, so far from
+being expressed entirely by mechanical formulae, can only be expressed,
+as Ravaisson had claimed, by an approach to harmony and beauty, not in
+terms of logic or geometry. All this involves a real progress, a
+creativeness, which differs from Ravaisson’s return, as it were, to the
+bosom of God.
+
+Boutroux combines the views of Ravaisson and Lachelier by insisting on
+freedom and contingency, but maintaining at the same time a
+teleological doctrine. Already in discussing his conception of freedom
+we have referred to his metaphor of the sailors in the ship. His
+doctrine of contingency is directly opposed to any rigid pre-ordained
+plan of reality or progress, but it does not prevent the spirit from a
+creative teleology, the formation of a plan as it advances. This is
+precisely, is it not, the combination of free action and of teleology
+which we find in our own lives? Boutroux is thus able to side with
+Ravaisson in his claim to see tendencies to beauty and truth and
+goodness, the fruits of the spirit, which it creates and to which it
+draws us, while at the same time he maintains freedom in a manner quite
+as emphatic as Lachelier. He is careful to remind us that “not all
+developments are towards perfection.”[13] In particular he dislikes the
+type of social theory or of sociology which undervalues the personal
+life.[14]
+
+ [13] _Contingence des Lois de la Nature_, p. 127.
+
+
+ [14] Thus he agrees with Renouvier’s objection to Comte’s view and to
+ Communism.
+
+
+Similar in many ways to the ideas of Ravaisson and of Boutroux are
+those expressed by Blondel. He is concerned deeply with the problem of
+God and progress, which arises out of his view of the Deity as immanent
+and as transcendent. He is quite Bergsonian in his statement that God
+creates Himself in us, but he qualifies this by asking the significant
+question, “If he does not EXIST how can He create Himself in us.” This
+brings us back to Ravaisson’s view. Other remarks of Blondel, however,
+recall the doctrine of Vacherot and of Renan, that God is the ideal to
+which we are ever striving. “It is a necessity that we should be moving
+on, for He is always beyond.” All action is an advance, a progress
+through the realm of materialistic determinism to the self-conscious
+personality in man, but it is from a transcendent teleology, a Divine
+Providence, that this action proceeds.
+
+This is the line of thought pursued by Fouillée, who in many of his
+writings gives considerable attention to the doctrines of progress. It
+may be doubted, however if he ever surpassed the pages in his _Liberté
+et Déterminisme_ and _L’Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces_, which deal
+with this point. These are the best expressions of his philosophy, and
+Fouillée repeated himself a great deal. We might add, however, his
+_Socialism_ and his book on _L’Avenir de la Métaphysique_.
+
+We have observed the importance attached by Comte to his new science of
+sociology. Fouillée endeavours to give to it a metaphysical
+significance with which Comte did not concern himself. He suggests in
+his volume on _La Science sociale contemporaine_ that as biology and
+sociology are closely related, the laws common to them may have a
+cosmic significance. Is the universe, he asks, anything more than a
+vast society in process of formation, a vast system of conscious,
+striving atoms? Social science which Fouillée looks upon, as did Comte,
+as constituting the crown of human knowledge, may offer us, he thinks,
+the secret of universal life, and show us the world as the great
+society in process of development, erring here and blundering there in
+an effort to rise above the sphere of physical determinism and
+materialism to a sphere where justice shall be supreme, and brotherhood
+take the place of antagonism, greed and war. The power at the heart of
+things, which is always ready to manifest itself in the human
+consciousness when it can, might be expressed, says Fouillée, in one
+word as “sociability.”
+
+Life in its social aspect displays a _conspiration_ to a common end.
+The life of a community resembles a highly evolved organism in many
+respects, as Fouillée shows; but although he thus partially adopts the
+biological and positivist view of the sociologists, Fouillée does not
+overlook the idealistic conceptions of Renouvier and his plea for
+social justice. He rather emphasises this plea, and takes the
+opportunity to point out that it represents the best political thought
+of his country, being founded on the doctrine of the _contrat social_
+of Rousseau, of which social theory it is a clear and modern
+interpretation.
+
+We may take the opportunity afforded here by Fouillée’s mention of
+sociology, in which he was so keenly interested, to observe that the
+positivist tendency to emphasise an indefinite progress remained with
+most of the sociologists and some of the historians. It is seen in the
+two famous sociological works of Tarde and Durkheim respectively, _Les
+Lois de l’Imitation_ and _La Division du Travail social_. Two writers
+on history deserve mention as illustrating the same tendency: Lacombe,
+whose work _De l’Histoire considérée comme Science_ (1894) was very
+positivist in outlook, and Xénopol. This last writer, treating history
+in 1899 in his _Principes fondamentaux de l’Histoire_,[15]
+distinguished cause in history from causality in science, and showed
+that white the latter leads to the formation of general laws the former
+does not. History has no laws, for it is succession but never
+repetition. Much of his book, however, reflects the naturalism and
+positivism which is a feature of the sociological writers.[16]
+
+ [15] This work, revised and considerably augmented, was re-issued in
+ 1905 with the new title, _La Théorie de l’Histoire_.
+
+
+ [16] It was this which made Enouvier criticise sociology. He disagreed
+ with its principles almost entirely. On this, see his notes to “_La
+ Justice_,” Part VII. of _La Nouvelle Monadogie_, pp. 527-530.
+
+
+It was his doctrine of _idées-forces_ and its essential spiritualism or
+idealism which distinguished Fouillée’s attitude from that of these
+sociologists who were his contemporaries. It was the basis, too, of his
+trenchant criticisms of socialism, particularly its Marxian forms.
+Fouillée agrees with Comte’s doctrine that speculation or thought is
+the chief factor and prime mover in social change. For Fouillée the
+idea is always a force; and it is, in this connection, the supreme
+force. The history of action can only be understood, he asserts, in
+relation to the history of ideas. This is the central gospel of the
+_évolutionnisme des idées-forces_. The mental or spiritual is the
+important factor. This he opposes to the Marxian doctrine of economic
+determinism. Will is, he claims a greater reality than brute forces,
+and in will lies the essence of the human spirit. It is a will,
+however, which is bound up with reason and self-consciousness, and
+which is progressive in character.
+
+Summing up his work, _Histoire générale de la Philosophie_, Fouillée
+refers in his Conclusion to the idea of progress as having become the
+dominant note in philosophy. He looks upon the history of philosophy
+as, in some measure, witness to this. Above the ebb and flow of the
+varied systems and ideas which the ages have produced he sees an
+advance accomplished in the direction to which humanity is
+tending—perfect knowledge of itself or collective self-consciousness
+and perfect self- possession. This type of progress is not to be
+equated with scientific progress. He points out that in the development
+of philosophy, which is that of human reflection itself, two
+characteristics appear. The distinction of two kinds or aspects of
+truth is seen in philosophy; one section, dealing with logic,
+psychology, aesthetic and applied ethics, or sociology, approaches to a
+scientific character of demonstrability, while the other section, which
+constitutes philosophy in the strict sense of metaphysic, deals with
+ultimate questions not capable of proof but demanding a rational faith.
+Obviously the same kind of progress cannot be found in each of these
+sections. This must be realised when progress in knowledge is spoken
+about. He suggests, as illustrative of progress even in the speculative
+realm, the fact that humanity is slowly purifying its conception of
+God—a point for further notice in our last chapter.
+
+However much Fouillée is concerned with establishing; a case for
+progress in knowledge, it is clear that his main stress is on the
+progress in self-consciousness or that self- determination which is
+freedom. This freedom can only grow as man consciously realises it
+himself. It is an _idée-force_, and has against it all the forces of
+fatalism and of egoism. For Fouillée quite explicitly connects his
+doctrine of freedom with that of altruism. The real freedom and the
+real progress are one, he claims, since they both are to be realised
+only in the increasing power of disinterestedness and love. He believes
+in the possibility of a free progress. Fatality is really egoism, or
+produces it.
+
+Fouillée has a rather clear optimism, for he finds in the development
+of real freedom a movement which will involve a moral and social union
+of mankind. The good- will is more truly human nature than egoism and
+selfishness. These vices, he maintains in his _Idée moderne du
+Droit_,[17] are largely a product of unsatisfied physical wants. The
+ideal of the good-will is not a contradiction of human nature, because,
+he asserts, that nature desires and wills its good. More strikingly, he
+states that the human will tends ultimately not to conflict but to
+co-operation as it becomes enlightened and universalised. He disagrees
+with the pessimists and upholds a comparatively cheerful view of human
+nature. Egoism is much less deeply rooted than sympathy, and therefore,
+he says, war and strife are transitory features of human development.
+One contrasts the views of Taine and Renouvier with this, and feels
+that man’s history has been, as far as we know it, entirely of this
+“transitory” nature, and is long likely to be so.
+
+ [17] _L’Idée moderne du Droit_, Livre IV.
+
+
+Fouillée’s optimism seems to be overdrawn mainly because of his
+doctrine of the _idée-force_. He exaggerates the response which human
+nature is likely to make to the ideal good. Even if it be lifted up, it
+is not likely to draw _all_ men to it. Yet Fouillée’s social and
+ethical doctrines stand entirely upon this foundation. They are
+valuable views, and Fouillée is never better than when he is exhorting
+his fellows to act upon the ideas of freedom, of justice, of love and
+brotherhood. He is right in his insistence upon humanity’s power to
+create good- will, to develop a new order. For the good man, he says,
+fatality and egoism are obstacles to be overcome Believing in freedom
+and in sympathy, he acts to others in a spirit of freedom and love. By
+his very belief in universal good-will among men, he assists largely in
+creating it and realising it in the world.[18]
+
+ [18] Conclusion to _Liberté et Déterminisme_.
+
+
+But did not Fouillée, one asks, overrate the number of good men (as
+good in his sense), or rather did he not exaggerate the capacities of
+human nature to respond to the ideal which he presents? Much of his
+confidence in moral and social progress finds its explanation here.
+
+His step-son, Guyau, was not quite so optimistic, although he believed
+in a progress towards “sociability” and he adopted many of the
+doctrines of the _philosphie des idées-forces_. He attacks cheerful
+optimism in his _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_,
+where he remarks[19] that an absolute theory of optimism is really an
+immoral theory, for it involves the negation of progress in the strict
+and true sense. This is because, when it dominates the mind, it
+produces a feeling of entire satisfaction and contentment with the
+existing reality, resulting in resignation and acceptance of, if not an
+actual worship of, the _status quo_. In its utter obedience to all
+“powers that be,” the notions of right and of duty are dimmed, if not
+lost. A definitely pessimistic view of the universe would, he suggests,
+be in many respects better and more productive of good than an
+outrageous optimism. Granting that it is a wretched state in which a
+man sees all things black, it is preferable, Guyau thinks, to that in
+which all things appear rosy or blue.
+
+ [19] _Esquisse d’une Morale_, p. 10.
+
+
+Guyau concludes his _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_
+by remarking: “We are, as it were, on the _Leviathan_, from which a
+wave has torn the rudder and a blast of wind carried away the mainmast.
+It is lost in the ocean as our earth is lost in space. It floats thus
+at random, driven by the tempest, like a huge derelict, yet with men
+upon it, and yet it reaches port. Perhaps our earth, perhaps humanity,
+will also reach that unknown end which they will have created for
+themselves. No hand directs us; the rudder has long been broken, or
+rather it has never existed; we must make it: it is a great task, and
+it is our task.” This paragraph speaks for itself as regards Guyau’s
+attitude to the doctrine of an assured progress.
+
+In his notable book _L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_, the importance of which
+we shall note more fully when we deal with the religious problem in our
+last chapter, Guyau indicates the possibilities of general intellectual
+progress in the future. The demand of life itself for fuller expression
+will involve the decay of cramping superstitions and ecclesiastical
+dogmas. The aesthetic elements will be given a larger place, and there
+will be intellectual freedom. Keen as Guyau is upon maintaining the
+sociological standpoint, he sees the central factor in progress to be
+the mental. “Progress,” he remarks,[20] “is not simply a sensible
+amelioration of life—it is also the achievement of a better
+intellectual formulation of life, it is a triumph of logic. To progress
+is to attain to a more complete consciousness of one’s self and of the
+world, and by that very fact to a more complete inner consistency of
+one’s theory of the world.” Guyau follows his stepfather in his view of
+“sociability” or _fraternité_ (to use the watchword of the Revolution)
+as the desirable end at which we should progressively aim—a conclusion
+which is but the social application of his central concept of Life.
+
+ [20] Introduction to _L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_.
+
+
+The next step in human progress must be in the direction of human
+solidarity. Guyau thinks it will arise from collective, co-operative
+energy (_synergie sociale_). Further progress must involve
+simultaneously _sympathie sociale_, a community of fellowship or
+comradeship, promoted by education of a true kind, not mere
+instruction, but a proper development and valuation of the feelings.
+Here art will play its part and have its place beside science, ethics
+and philosophy in furthering the ideal harmony in human society. Such
+Progress involves, therefore, that the Beautiful must be sought and
+appreciated no less than the True and the Good, for it is a revelation
+of the larger Life of which we ourselves are part. These ideals are in
+themselves but manifestations of the Supreme Vitality.
+
+The same spontaneous vital activity of which Guyau makes a central
+doctrine characterises Bergson’s view of reality. He upholds, like
+Boutroux, freedom and contingency, but he will not admit finalism in
+any shape or form, not even a teleology which is created in the process
+of development. He refuses to admit as true of the universal process in
+nature and in human history what is certainly true of human life—the
+fact that we create ends as we go on living. For Bergson there is no
+end in the universe, unless it be that of spontaneity of life such as
+Guyau had maintained. There is no guarantee of progress, no law of
+development, but endless possibility of progress. Such a view, as we
+have already insisted, is not pessimistic. It is, however, a warning to
+facile optimism to realise that humanity, being free, may go “dead
+wrong.” While Boutroux maintains with Ravaisson that there is at the
+heart of things a tendency to superior values such as beauty, goodness
+and truth, and while Renan assures us that the balance of goodness in
+the world is a guarantee of its ultimate triumph, Bergson, like
+Renouvier, gives us stern warning that there is no guarantee in the
+nature of things that humanity should not set its heart on other
+values, on materialistic and egoistic conceptions, and go down in ruin
+quarrelling and fighting for these things. There is no power, he
+reminds us, keeping humanity right and in the line of desirable
+progress. All is change, but that is not to say that all changes are
+desirable or progressive. Here we arrive at a point far removed from
+the rosy optimism of the earlier thinkers. Progress as a comfortable
+doctrine, confidently accepted and dogmatically asserted, no longer
+holds ground; it is seen to be quite untenable.
+
+In Bergson the difficulty which besets Ravaisson reappears more
+markedly—namely, the relation of spirit and matter to one another, and
+to the power at the heart of things, which, according to Bergson
+himself, is a spiritual principle. Here we seem forced to admit
+Ravaisson’s view of a “fall” or, as the theologians would say, a
+“Kenosis” of the deity in order to create the material universe. Yet in
+the processes of nature we see spirit having to fight against matter,
+and of this warfare Bergson makes a great point. These considerations
+lead to discussions which Bergson has not touched upon as yet. He does
+not follow Ravaisson and Boutroux into the realm of theological ideas.
+If he did he might have to make admissions which would compromise, or
+at least modify, other doctrines expressed by him. He will have none of
+Hegel or of the Absolute Idealism which sees the world process as a
+development of a Divine Idea. It is new and it is creation; there is no
+repetition. Even God himself _se fait_ in the process, and it may be,
+suggests Bergson, that love is the secret of the universe. If so we may
+well ask with Blondel, “If God _se fait_ in the process, then does he
+not already exist and, in a sense, the process with him?” Instead,
+however, of reverting to Ravaisson’s view of the whole affair being a
+search for, and return to God, Bergson claims that the development is a
+purely contingent one, in which a super-consciousness develops by
+experiment and error.
+
+Bergson’s God, if he may be so-called, is not so much a Creator, but a
+power creative of creators—that is, human personalities capable of free
+action. The Deity is immanent in man, and, like man, is ignorant of the
+trend of the whole process. The universe, according to Bergson, is a
+very haphazard affair, in which the only permanence is change. There is
+no goal, and progress has little meaning if it be only and merely
+further change, which may be equally regress rather than progress. To
+live is not merely to change, but to triumph over change to set up some
+values as of absolute worth, and to aim at realising and furthering
+these. Apart from some philosophy of values the conception of progress
+has little meaning.
+
+Interesting discussions of various aspects of the problem are to be
+found in the writings of the sociologist we have mentioned, Durkheim,
+particularly _La Division du Travail sociale_, _Le Suicide_ and _Les
+Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse_. There is an interesting
+volume by Weber, entitled _Le Rythme du Progres_, and there are the
+numerous books of Dr. Gustave Le Bon.
+
+Although he is not strictly a philosopher in the academic or
+professional sense, and his work belongs to literature rather than to
+the philosophy of the period, we cannot help calling attention briefly
+here, at the conclusion of this chapter, to the genial pessimism of
+Bergson’s great literary contemporary, Anatole France, the famous
+satirist of our age. His irony on questions like that of progress is
+very marked in _L’Ile des Penguins_ and in _Jérôme Coignard_. A remark
+from one of his works, this latter, will sufficiently illustrate his
+view on progress. “I take little interest,” remarks his character, the
+Abbé Coignard, “in what is done in the King’s Cabinet, for I notice
+that the course of life is in no way changed, and after reforms men are
+as before, selfish, avaricious, cowardly, cruel, stupid and furious by
+turns, and there is always a nearly even number of births, marriages,
+cuckolds and gallows-birds, in which is made manifest the beautiful
+ordering of our society. This condition is stable, sir, and nothing
+could shake it, for it is founded on human misery and imbecility, and
+those are foundations which will never be wanting.” The genial old Abbé
+then goes on to remind socialist revolutionaries that new economic
+schemes will not radically change human nature. We easily see the ills
+in history and blind ourselves with optimism for the future. Even in
+Sorel, the Syndicalist, who has added to his articles on _Violence_
+(which appeared in 1907 in the periodical _Le Mouvement socialiste_) a
+work on _Les Illusions du Progrès_, we find the same doctrines about
+the vices of modern societies, which he considers no better than
+ancient ones in their morality; they are filled with more hypocrisy,
+that is all. France and Sorel only add more testimony to the utter
+collapse of the old doctrine of assured and general progress.
+
+* * * * * * * * *
+
+
+To such a final position do we come in following out the development of
+the idea of progress. The early assurance and dogmatic confidence which
+marked the early years of the century are followed by a complete
+abandonment of the idea of a guaranteed or assured progress, whether
+based on the operations of a Divine Providence, or on faith in the
+ultimate triumph of reason, or on merely a fatalistic determinism.
+Progress is only a possibility, and its realisation depends on
+‘humanity’s own actions. Further, any mention of progress in future
+must not only present it as quite contingent, but we have to reckon
+with the fact that the idea of progress may itself progress until it
+resolves itself into another conception less complicated and less
+paradoxical, such as “the attainment of a new equilibrium.” Some effort
+must be devoted also to a valuation of criteria. Various values have in
+the past been confused together, scientific, materialistic, hedonistic,
+moral, aesthetic. Ultimately it seems that we shall find difficulty in
+settling this apart from the solution offered by Renouvier—namely, that
+true progress is not merely intellectual, but moral. It involves not
+merely a conquest of material nature but of human nature—a self-
+mastery. Progress is to be measured not by the achievements of any
+aristocracy, intellectual or other, but by the general social status,
+and our criterion of progress must be ultimately that of social
+justice. This itself is a term needing interpretation, and to this
+question of ethics we now turn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+ETHICS
+
+
+INTRODUCTION : Difficulties of the moral problem as presented in the
+nineteenth century—Recognised as a social problem—Influence of Comte
+important in this connection—Other influences—Christianity—Kant—The
+practical reason.
+
+I. Taine and Renan—Renan’s critique of Christian morality—Early
+socialistic views—Change in his later life—Prefers criterion of beauty
+to that of goodness.
+
+II. Renouvier the great moralist of our period—Relation to Kant —His
+Science de la Morale—Personality in Ethics—Justice.
+
+III. Fouillée, Guyau, Ollé-Laprune and Rauh pass further from the
+Kantian rigorism to an ethic in harmony with the philosophy of
+idées-forces of life and action—Humanitarianism of Fouillée and
+Guyau—Idées-forces and Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction —Rauh’s
+doctrines—Other thinkers.
+
+CONCLUSION: Action and belief—Ethics and Religion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+ETHICS
+
+Moral philosophy is probably the most difficult branch of those various
+disciplines of the human spirit summed up in the general conception of
+philosophy. This difficulty is one which all the thinkers of our period
+recognised. Many of them, occupied with other problems on the
+psychological or metaphysical side, did not write explicitly upon
+ethics. Yet the problem of ethics, its place, significance and
+authority, is but the other side of that problem of freedom which has
+appeared throughout this development as central and vital. The ethical
+consciousness of man has never been content for long with the assertion
+that ethics is a purely positive science, although it has obviously a
+positive side. The essence of morality has been regarded as not merely
+a description of what exists, but what might, should or ought to exist.
+Ethics is normative, it erects or endeavours to outline a standard
+which is an ideal standard. This is the characteristic of ethics, and
+so long as the moral conscience of humanity, individually and
+collectively, does not slumber nor die, it will remain so. This
+conflict between the ideal and the real, the positive and normative is
+indeed the chief source of pain and conflict to man, but without it he
+would cease to be human.
+
+Whatever the difficulties, the philosopher who aspires to look upon
+human life as a whole must give _some_ interpretation of this vital
+aspect of human consciousness. It is in this connection that a solution
+of the problem of freedom is so valuable, for under a purely
+determinist and positivist reading of life, the moral sentiments become
+mere data for an anthropological survey, the hope and tragedy of human
+life are replaced, comfortably perhaps for some, by an interpretation
+in which the true significance of ethics is lost.
+
+One of the outstanding features of the discussion upon ethics in our
+period is the fact that the social standpoint colours most of the
+discussion. This was largely due to the impulse given by Comte and
+continued by the sociologists. We have already remarked the importance
+which he attached to his new science of society or “sociology.” However
+much the development of this branch of study may have disappointed the
+hopes of Comte, it has laid a powerful and necessary emphasis upon the
+solidarity of the problems of society. As Comte claimed that psychology
+could not be profitably studied in the isolated individual alone, so he
+insisted that ethics could only be studied with profit from a social
+standpoint. This was not forgotten by subsequent thinkers, even by
+those who were not his followers, and the main development of the
+ethical problem in our period is marked by an increasing insistence
+upon sociability and solidarity. Comte was able to turn the thoughts of
+philosophers away from pre-occupation with the isolated individual,
+conceived as a cold and calculating intellectual machine, a “fiction”
+which had engrossed the minds of thinkers of the previous century. He
+was able also to indicate the enormous part played by instincts,
+particularly “herd-instincts,” by passion and feelings of social hatred
+and social sympathy. It was the extension of social sympathy upon which
+Comte insisted as the chief good. The great defect of Christianity from
+an ethical standpoint was, Comte pointed out, due to its
+individualistic ethic. To the doctrine of “saving one’s own soul” Comte
+opposed that of the salvation of humanity. The social unit is not the
+individual man or woman, it is the family. In that society which is not
+a mere association but a union, arising from common interests and
+sympathy, the individual realises himself as part of society. The
+highest ethical conception, however, arises when the individual,
+transcending himself and his family, feels and acts as a member of
+humanity itself, not only in his public, but also in his private life.
+In the idea of humanity Comte finds the concrete form of that universal
+which in the ethic of Kant was the symbol of duty itself.
+
+It was by this insistence on human social solidarity that Comte left
+his mark upon the ethical problem. Many of the details of social ethics
+given in the last three large volumes of his work are extremely
+thoughtful and interesting, in spite of their excessive optimism, but
+we can only here indicate what is sufficient for our purpose, his
+influence over subsequent thought. That is summed up in the words
+“solidarity” and “social standpoint.”
+
+We may observe that the supreme problems in social ethics Comte
+regarded as being those of education or mental development and the
+“right to work.”[1] He foresaw, as did Renan, that Culture and Economic
+Justice were the two _foci_ around which the ethical problems were to
+be ranged in the immediate future. He regretted that the proletariat in
+their cry for justice had not sufficient culture to observe that they
+themselves are not a class apart, however class-conscious they be. They
+stand solid with the community, and Comte prophesied that, finding this
+out sooner or later, they would have to realise the folly of violent
+revolution. Only a positive culture or education of the democracy
+could, he believed, solve this social problem, which is there precisely
+because the proletariat are not sufficiently, and do not feel
+themselves to be, incorporated in the life of the community or of
+humanity. Only when they realise this will work be ennobled by a
+feeling of service. The Church has a moral advantage here, in that she
+has her organisation complete for furthering the conception of service
+to God. Comte realised this advantage of religious morality, but he
+thought it would come also to “positive” morality when men came to a
+conception of service for humanity To this great end, he urged, our
+education should be directed, and it should aim, he thought, at the
+decline and elimination of militarism which, in Comte’s view
+corresponds to the second stage of development (marked also by
+theology), a stage to be superseded in man’s development, by an era in
+which the war-spirit will be replaced by that of productive service
+performed not only _pour la patrie_, but _pour l’humanité_.
+
+ [1] Comte criticised the teaching given to the young in France as
+ being “instruction” rather than “education.” This has frequently been
+ insisted upon since his time.
+
+
+In viewing the general influences which bore upon the study of the
+ethical problem in our period this stress upon the social character of
+morality is supreme, and is the most distinctly marked. But in addition
+to the sociological influence there are others which it is both
+interesting and important to note briefly. There is the influence of
+traditional religious morality, bound up with Christianity as presented
+by the Roman Catholic Church. The deficiencies of this are frequently
+brought out in the discussion, but in certain of the thinkers, chiefly
+the “modernists,” it appears as an influence contributing to a
+religious morality and as offering, indeed, the basis of a religion.
+Other writers, however, while rejecting the traditional morality of the
+Church, lay stress upon a humanitarian ethic which has an affinity to
+the idealistic morality preached by the founder of Christianity, a
+morality which manifests a spirit different from that which his Church
+has usually shown. Indeed, the general tendency of the ethical
+development in our period is one of opposition to the ecclesiastical
+and traditional standpoint in ethics.
+
+Then there is the influence of Kant’s ethics, and here again, although
+Renouvier owed much to Kant, the general tendency is to get away from
+the formalism and rigorism of his “categorical imperative.” The current
+of English Utilitarian ethics appears as rather a negative influence,
+and is rather scorned when mentioned. The common feature is that of the
+social standpoint, issuing in conceptions of social justice or
+humanitarianism and finding in action and life a concrete morality
+which is but the reflection of the living conscience of mankind
+creating itself and finding in the claims of the practical reason that
+Absolute or Ideal to which the pure reason feels it cannot alone
+attain.
+
+I
+
+Taine and Renan were influenced by the outlook adopted by Comte. It
+might well be said that Taine was more strictly positivist than Comte.
+In his view of ethics, Taine, as might be expected from the general
+character of his work and his philosophical attitude, adheres to a
+rigidly positivist and naturalist conception. He looks upon ethics as
+purely positive, since it merely states the scientific conditions of
+virtue and vice, and he despairs of altering human nature or conduct.
+This is due almost entirely to his doctrine of rigid determinism which
+reacts with disastrous consequences upon his ethical outlook. This only
+further confirms our contention that the problem of freedom is the
+central and vital one of the period. We have already pointed out the
+criticism which Fouillée brought against Taine’s dogmatic belief in
+determinism, as an incomplete doctrine, a half-truth, which involves
+mischievous consequences and permits of no valuable discussion of the
+ethical problem.
+
+More interesting and useful, if we are to follow at all closely the
+ethical thought of our period, is it to observe the attitude adopted to
+ethics by Taine’s contemporary, Renan.
+
+The extreme confidence which Renan professed to have in “science,” and
+indeed in all intellectual pursuits, led him to accord to morality
+rather a secondary place. “There are three great things,” he remarks in
+his _Discours et Conférences_,[2] “goodness, beauty and truth, and the
+greatest of these is truth.” Neither virtue, he continues, nor art is
+able to exclude illusions. Truth is the representation of reality, and
+in this world the search for truth is the most serious occupation of
+all. One of his main charges against the Christian Church in general is
+that it has insisted upon moral good to such an extent as to undervalue
+and depreciate the other goods, expressed in beauty and in truth. It
+has looked upon life from one point of view only—namely, the moral—and
+has judged all action by ethical values alone, despising in this way
+philosophy, science, literature, poetry, painting and music. In its
+more ascetic moods it has claimed that these things are “of the devil.”
+Thus Christianity has introduced a vicious distinction which has done
+much to mutilate human nature and to cramp the wholesome expression of
+the life of the human spirit. Whatever is an expression of spirit is,
+claims Renan, to be looked upon as sacred. If such a distinction as
+that of sacred and profane were to be drawn it should be between what
+appertains to the soul and what does not. The distinction, when made
+between the ethical and the beautiful or true, is disastrous.
+
+ [2] _Discours_, dated November 26th, 1885.
+
+
+Renan considers that of the two, the ethical and the beautiful, the
+latter may be the finer and grander distinction, the former merely a
+species of it. The moral, he thinks, will give place to the beautiful.
+“Before any action,” he himself says in _L’Avenir de la Science_, “I
+prefer to ask myself, not whether it be good or bad, but whether it be
+beautiful or ugly, and I feel that I have in this an excellent
+criterion.”
+
+Morality, he further insists, has been conceived up to now in far too
+rigid a manner as obedience to a law, as a warfare and strife between
+opposing laws. But the really virtuous man is an artist who is creating
+beauty, the beauty of character, and is fashioning it out of his human
+nature, as the sculptor fashions a statue out of marble or a musician
+composes a melody from sounds. Neither the sculptor nor the musician
+feels that he is obeying a law. He is expressing and creating beauty.
+
+Another criticism which Renan brings against the ethic of Christianity
+is its insistence upon humility as a virtue. He sees nothing virtuous
+in it as it is generally interpreted: quite rightly he suspects it of
+hypocritically covering a gross pride, after the manner of the
+Pharisees. He gives a place to honest asceticism which has its
+nobility, even although it be a narrow, misconceived ideal. Much nobler
+is it, he thinks, than the type of life which has only one object,
+getting a fortune.
+
+This leads him to another remark on the moral hypocrisy of so many
+professedly religious folk. Having an easy substance and possessing
+already a decent share of this world’s goods, they devote all their
+energies to the pursuit of pleasure or of further superfluous wealth.
+From this position they criticise the worker who endeavours to improve
+his lot, and have the audacity to tell him in pious fashion that he
+must not be materialistic, and must not set his heart on this world’s
+goods. It would be laughable were it not so tragic. The whole question
+of the relativity of the two positions is overlooked, the whole ethic
+of the business ignored. Material welfare is good and valuable, says
+Renan, in so far as it frees man’s spirit from mean and wretched
+dependence and a cramped life which injures development, physical and
+spiritual. These goods are a means to an end. When, therefore, a man,
+already comfortably endowed, amasses more and more for its own sake, he
+commits both a profane and immoral act. But when a worker endeavours to
+augment his recompense for his labour, he is but demanding “what is the
+condition of his redemption. He is performing a virtuous action.”[3]
+
+ [3] _L’Avenir de la Science_, p. 83.
+
+
+Sound as many of these considerations undoubtedly are, they come from
+the Renan, who wrote in the years 1848-9 _L’Avenir de la Science_. He
+lived long enough to see that these truths had complements, that there
+might be, even ethically, another side. In speaking of Progress this
+has been noted: in his later years he forecasted the coming of an era
+of egoism, of national and industrial selfishness, working itself out
+in policies of military imperialism among the nations, and of economic
+greed and tyranny among the proletariat. His remarks about the virtuous
+action of the worker bettering his lot were inspired by the socialism
+of Saint-Simon. Renan did not at that time raise in his own mind the
+question of the workers themselves carrying their reaction so far, that
+it, although just at first, might reach a point where it became a
+dictatorship decreed by self-interest alone. It is in Renouvier that we
+find this danger more clearly indicated. In so far as Renan felt it,
+his solution was that which he suggested for the elimination of all
+social wickedness— namely, the increase of education. He looked upon
+wickedness as a symptom of a lack of culture, particularly the lack of
+any moral teaching.
+
+It was precisely this point, the education of the democracy, morally no
+less than intellectually, which presented a certain difficulty to the
+French Republic when, after several unsuccessful attempts, the plan for
+state education of a compulsory, gratuitous and secular character was
+carried in 1882, largely through the efforts of Jules Ferry.[4]
+
+ [4] In 1848 Hippolyle Carnot had this plan ready. The fall of the
+ Ministry, in which he was Minister of Education, was due partly to the
+ discussion raised by Renouvier’s book (see p. 61 of the present work).
+ With the fall of the Ministry, and in 1851, of the Republic, the
+ scheme went too. France had to wait eleven years longer than England
+ for free, compulsory education. Her educational problem has always
+ been complicated by the attitude of the Roman Catholic Church to
+ religious education and its hostility to “lay” schools. Brilliant as
+ France is intellectually, there are numbers of her people who do not
+ read or write owing to the delay of compulsory state education. The
+ latest census, that of 1921, asked the question, “_Savez-vous à la
+ fois lire et écrire?_” in order to estimate this number.
+
+II
+
+The great moralist of our period was Renouvier. Not only, as we have
+already seen, did ethical considerations mark and colour his whole
+thought, but he set forth those considerations themselves with a
+remarkable power. His treatise in two volumes on _The Science of
+Ethics_ is one of the most noteworthy contributions to ethical thought
+which has been made in modern times. Although half a century has
+elapsed since its publication on the eve of the Franco-Prussian War,
+its intense pre-occupation with the problems which beset our modern
+industrial civilisation, its profound judgments and discussions
+concerning subjects so vital to the world of to-day (such as the
+relations of the sexes, marriage, sex-ethics, civil liberty, property,
+communism, state intervention, socialist ideals, nationalism, war, the
+modern idea of the State, and international law), give to it a value,
+which very few works upon the subject possess. Long as the work is, it
+has the merit of thoroughness, and difficulties are not slurred over,
+but stated frankly, and some endeavours are made to overcome them.
+Consequently, it is a work which amply repays careful study. It is
+almost presumption to attempt in a few pages to summarise Renouvier’s
+important treatise. Some estimate of its significance is, however,
+vital to our history.
+
+The title itself is noteworthy and must at that date have appeared more
+striking than it does to us now by its claim that there is a _science_
+of ethics.[5] We are accustomed to regard physics, mathematics and even
+logic as entitled to the name Sciences. Can we legitimately speak of a
+Science of Ethics?
+
+ [5] It is interesting for comparative study to note that Leslie
+ Stephen’s _Science of Ethics_ was a much later production than
+ Renouvier’s treatise, appearing thirteen years later.
+
+
+Renouvier insists that we can. Morality deals with facts, although they
+are not embraced by the categories of number, extension, duration or
+becoming (as mathematical and physical data), but rather by those of
+causality, finality and consciousness. The facts “are not the natural
+being of things, but the _devoir-être_ of the human will, the
+_devoir-faire_ of persons, and the devoir-être of things in so far as
+they depend upon persons.”[6] Personal effort, initiative and
+responsibility lie at the basis of all ethics. Morality is a
+construction, like every science, partly individual and partly
+collective; it must lay down postulates, and if it is to justify the
+claim to be a science, these postulates must be such as to command a
+_consensus gentium_. Further, if ethics is to be scientifically based
+it must be independent. In the past this has unfortunately not been the
+case, for history shows us ethics bound up with some system of religion
+or metaphysics. If ethics is to be established as a science, Renouvier
+points out that it must be free from all hypothesis of an irrelevant
+character, such as cosmological speculations and theological dogmas.
+Renouvier’s insistence upon the independence of ethics was followed up
+in an even clearer and more trenchant manner by Guyau in his famous
+_Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_.
+
+ [6] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 10.
+
+
+Although, generally, ethics has suffered by reason of its alliance to
+theological and metaphysical systems, Renouvier affirms that, in this
+connection, there is one philosophy which is not open to
+objection—namely, the Critical Philosophy of Kant. This is because it
+subordinates all the unknown to phenomena, all phenomena to
+consciousness, and, within the sphere of consciousness itself,
+subordinates the speculative reason (_reinen Vernunft_) to the
+practical reason (_praktischen Vernunft_). Its chief value, according
+to Renouvier, lies precisely in this maintenance of the primacy of
+moral considerations.
+
+Two standpoints or lines of thought which are characteristic of
+Renouvier, and whose presence we have already noted in our first
+chapter, operate also in his ethics and govern his whole treatment of
+the nature of morality and the problems of the moral life. Briefly
+stated these are, firstly, his regard for the Critical Philosophy of
+Kant; secondly, his view of man as “an order, a harmony of functions
+reciprocally conditioned, and, by this fact, inseparable.”[7] As in his
+treatment of Certitude, Renouvier showed this to be a psychological
+complex into which entered elements not only of cognition, but of
+feeling and will, the same insistence upon this unity of human nature
+meets us again in his ethics. “Any ethical doctrine which definitely
+splits up the elements of human nature is erroneous.”[8] Abstraction is
+necessary and useful for any science, even the science of ethics, but
+however far we may carry our scientific analysis, we must never lose
+sight of the fact that we are dealing with abstractions. To lose sight
+of the relationship of the data under observation or discussion is,
+indeed, working away from the goal of scientific knowledge.
+
+ [7] _Science de la Morale_ (first edition, 1869), vol. I, p. 189.
+
+
+ [8] _Ibid_.
+
+
+“Nothing,” remarks Renouvier in this connection, “has done more to
+hinder the spread of Kant’s doctrines in the world than his assertion
+that the morally good act must be performed absolutely without
+feeling.” In view of man as he is, and in so far as we understand human
+nature at all, it seems a vain and foolish statement. For Kant, Duty
+was supreme, and the sole criterion of a good act was, for him, its
+being done from a consciousness of Duty. He himself had to confess that
+he did not know of any act which quite fulfilled this ideal of moral
+action. With this view of morality Renouvier so heartily disagrees that
+he is inclined to think that, so far from a purely rational act (if we
+suppose such an act possible) being praiseworthy, he would almost give
+greater moral worth to an act purely emotional, whose “motive” lay, not
+in the idea of cold and stern Duty, but in the warm impulses of the
+human heart, springing from emotion or feeling alone. Emotion is a part
+of our nature—it has its role to play; the rational element enters as a
+guide or controlling power. It is desirable that all acts should be so
+guided, but that is far from stating, as does Kant, that they should
+proceed solely from rational considerations. Ultimately reason and
+sentiment unite in furthering the same ends. No adequate conception of
+justice can be arrived at which is not accompanied by, and determined
+by, correlatively, love of humanity. Kant rigorously excluded from
+operation even the most noble feelings, whose intrusion should dim the
+worth and glory of his moral act, devoid of feeling. But “without
+good-will and mutual sympathy of persons, no society could ever have
+established itself beyond the family, and scarcely the family
+itself.”[9]
+
+ [9] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 184.
+
+
+Renouvier confesses that in most of this treatment of the problem of
+ethics he follows Kant[10] and although his admiration for Kant’s work
+is not concealed, nevertheless he is not altogether satisfied with it,
+and does not refrain from criticism. Indeed this reconstruction of the
+Critical Philosophy in a revised version is the main effort of the
+neo-critical philosopher, and it is constantly manifest.
+
+ [10] On p. 108 (vol. I) he refers to “_le philosophie que je suis, et
+ que j’aimerais de pouvoir suivre toujours_.”
+
+
+He complains that Kant did not adhere rigorously to his own principles,
+but vainly strove to give an objectivity to the laws of the practical
+reason by connecting them to metaphysics. But, he says, “on the other
+hand I maintain that the errors of Kant can be corrected in accordance
+with the actual principles of his own philosophy. I continue my serious
+attachment to this great reformer in spite of the very serious
+modifications I am endeavouring to make in his work.”[11]
+
+ [11] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. no. 110.
+
+
+In the opinion of Renouvier, Kant’s work, the _Metaphysic of Morals_,
+is marred by its neglect of history in its relation to ethics, by a
+disfigured picture of right which does not make it any more applicable
+to existing human conditions, also by the rather artificial and
+complicated nature of its doctrines. He further reproaches Kant for
+excessive rigorism and formalism, accompanied by a vagueness which
+prevents the application of much of his teaching. This, it seems to us,
+is a reproach which can be hurled easily at most of the ethical
+teachers whom the world has seen. The incessant vagueness of
+paradoxical elements in the utterances of such teachers has inevitably
+compelled their disciples to find refuge in insisting upon a “right
+spirit” of action, being devoid of any clear teaching as to what might
+constitute right action in any particular case.
+
+The rudiments of morality, according to Renouvier, are found in the
+general notion of “obligation,” the sense of ought (_devoir-faire_)
+which the human consciousness cannot escape. Any end of action is
+conceived as a good for the agent himself; and because of liberty of
+choice between actions or ends, or between both, certain of these are
+deemed morally preferable. There are certain obligations which are
+purely personal, elementary virtues demanded from any rational being.
+It is his interest to preserve his body by abstaining from excesses; it
+is his interest also to conserve and develop the faculties of his
+nature. This is the point upon which Guyau makes such insistence in
+common with Nietzsche—the development, expansion and intensification of
+life. There are, Renouvier points out, duties towards oneself,
+involving constant watchfulness and intelligence, so that the agent may
+be truly self-possessed under all circumstances, maintaining an empire
+over himself and not falling a constant victim to passion. “Greater is
+he that ruleth himself than he that taketh a city,” are not vain words.
+This is the rudimentary but essential virtue which Renouvier calls
+“virtue militant”—moral courage. Intellectually it issues in Prudence
+or Wisdom; on the side of sense and passion it is represented by
+Temperance. These duties are present to conscience, which itself arises
+from a doubling of consciousness. “We have the empirical person with
+his experience of the past, and we have the ideal person—that is to
+say, that which we wish to be,”[12] our ideal character. In so far as
+we are conscientious we endeavour to bring “what we are” into line with
+“what we conceive we should be.” The moral agent thus has duties
+towards himself, obligations apart from any relation to or with others
+of his kind.
+
+ [12] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 25.
+
+
+This elementary morality is “essentially subjective,”[13] but this only
+shows us that the most thorough-going individualism does not by its
+neglect of others, its denial of altruism, thereby escape entirely from
+moral obligations. There are always duties to one’s higher self, even
+for a Robinson Crusoe. Frequently it is stated that duties and rights
+are co-relative; but Renouvier regards Duty as more fundamental than
+Right, which he uses only of man in association with his fellows.
+Between persons, right and duty are in a synthesis, but the person
+himself has no rights as distinct from duties to himself; he has no
+right not to do what it is his duty to perform. From this it follows
+that if his personal notion of obligation changes, he has no right
+whatever to carry out actions in accordance with his judgments made
+prior to his change of conscience, merely for the sake of consistency.
+He is in this respect a law to him- self, for no man can act as a
+conscience for another. The notion of rights only arises when others
+are in question, and only too often the word has been abused by being
+employed where simply power is meant, as, for example, in many views of
+“natural right.” This procedure both sullies the usage of the term
+Right and lowers the status of personality. It is always, Renouvier
+claims, to “the inherent worth and force of personality, with its
+powers of reflection, deliberation, liberty, self-possession and
+self-direction, that one must return in order to understand each and
+every virtue.”
+
+ [13] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 81.
+
+
+Renouvier’s insistence upon the inherent worth, the dignity and moral
+value of personality becomes clearer as he proceeds from his treatment
+of the lonely individual (who, it may be objected, is to such an extent
+an abstraction, as to resemble a fiction) to associated persons. The
+reciprocal relation of two persons brings out the essential meaning of
+Justice. Two personalities co-operating for a common end find
+themselves each possessed of duties and, inversely therefore, of rights
+which are simply duties regarded from the point of view not of the
+agent, but of the other party. The neo-critical ethic here brings
+itself definitely into line with the principle of practical reason of
+the Critical Philosophy. This, says Renouvier,[14] is the profound
+meaning of Justice, which consists in the fact that the moral agent,
+instead of subordinating the ends of other people to his own, considers
+the personalities[15] of others as similar to his own and possessing
+their own ends which he must respect. This principle is that which Kant
+formulated under the name of “practical obligation” or “supreme
+principle.”[16] “Recognise the personality of others as equal in nature
+and dignity, as being an end in itself, and consequently refrain from
+employing the personality of others merely as a means to achieve your
+own ends.”
+
+ [14] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, pp. 82-83.
+
+
+ [15] Personality is a better translation, as it avoids the rather
+ legal and technical meaning of “person” in English.
+
+
+ [16] In a footnote to this passage, Renouvier states his own
+ preference for “moral obligation” rather than “imperative of
+ conscience.”
+
+
+This doctrine of Personalism is an assertion not only of _Liberté_,
+_Egalité_, _Fraternité_ as necessary and fundamental principles, but
+also of the value of personality in general and the relativity of
+“things.” It constitutes an ethical challenge to the existing state of
+society which is not only inclined, in its headlong pursuit of wealth,
+its fanatical worship of Mammon, to treat its workers as purely “means”
+to the attainment of its end, but further minimises personality by its
+legal codes and social conventions, which both operate far more readily
+and efficiently in the defence of property than in the defence or
+protection of personality. From the ethical standpoint the world is a
+realm of ends or persons and all other values must be adjusted in
+relation to these.
+
+We have been told by religious ethical teachers that we must love our
+neighbour as ourself, and have been reminded by moralists continually
+of the conflict between Egoism and Altruism. Renouvier points out that
+ultimately obligation towards others is reducible to a duty to oneself.
+He does not do this from the point of view of Hobbes, who regarded all
+actions, however altruistic they appeared to be, as founded purely upon
+self-interest, but rather from the opposite standpoint. “We should make
+our duty to others rank foremost among our duties to ourselves.”[17]
+This is the transcendent duty through the performance of which we
+achieve a realisation of the solidarity of persons, demonstrate an
+objective value for our own existence, and gain a fuller and richer
+life.
+
+ [17] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 85.
+
+
+The idea of personal and moral reciprocity was formulated by the
+Chinese and the Greeks; at a later date it reappeared in the teaching
+of Jesus. This ancient and almost universal maxim has been stated both
+positively and negatively: “Do not to others what you would not have
+them do unto you,” “Do as you would be done by.” The maxim itself,
+however, beyond a statement of the principle of reciprocity rather
+vaguely put, has no great value for the science of ethics. Renouvier
+regards it not as a principle of morality but a rule-of-thumb, and he
+considers the negative statement of it to be more in harmony with what
+was intended by the early ethical teachers—namely, to give a practical
+warning against the committing of evil actions rather than to establish
+a scientific principle of right action.
+
+Renouvier has shown the origin of the notion of Justice as arising
+primarily from an association of two persons. “Reason established a
+kind of community and moral solidarity in this reciprocity.”[18] This
+right and duty unite to constitute Justice. It is truly said that it is
+just to fulfil one’s duty, just to demand one’s right, and Justice is
+formed by a union of these two in such a manner that they always
+complement one another. Bearing in mind the doctrine of personality as
+an end, we get a general law of action which may be stated in these
+terms: “Always act in such a way that the maxim applicable to your act
+can be erected by your conscience into a law common to you and your
+associate.” Now to apply this to an association of any number of
+persons—_e g._, human society as a whole—we need only generalise it and
+state it in these terms: “Act always in such a way that the maxim of
+your conduct can be erected by your conscience into a universal law or
+formulated in an article of legislation which you can look upon as
+expressing the will of every rational being.” This “categorical
+obligation” is the basis of ethics. It stands clear of hypothetical
+cases as a general law of action, and “there is no such thing really as
+practical morality,” remarks Renouvier, “except by voluntary obedience
+to a law.”[19]
+
+ [18] _Ibid_., pp. 79-80.
+
+
+ [19] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 100.
+
+
+The fulfilment of our duties to ourselves generally tends to fit us for
+fulfilling our duties to others, and the neglect of the former will
+lead inevitably to inability to perform these latter. Our duty to
+others thus involves our duty to ourselves.[20]
+
+ [20] The notion of self-sacrifice itself involves also, to a degree,
+ the maintenance of self, without which there could be no self to
+ sacrifice. History has frequently given examples of men of all types
+ refusing to sacrifice their lives for a certain cause because they
+ wished to preserve them for some other (and possibly better—in their
+ minds at any rate, better) form of self-sacrifice.
+
+
+Personality which lies at the root of the moral problem demands Truth
+and Liberty, and it has a right to these two, for without them it is
+injured. They are essential to a society of persons. Another vital
+element in society is Work, the neglect of which is a grave immoral
+act, for as there is in any society a certain amount of necessary work
+to be performed, a “slacker” dumps his share upon his fellows to
+perform in addition to their own share. With industrial or general
+laziness, and the parasitism of those whose riches enable them to live
+without working, is to be condemned also the shirking of intellectual
+work by all. Quite apart from those who are “intellectuals” as such, a
+solemn duty of work, of thought, reflection and reasoning lies on each
+person in a society. Apathy among citizens is really a form of culpable
+negligence. The duty of work and thought is so vital and of such
+ethical, political and social importance that Renouvier suggests that
+the two words, work and duty, be regarded as synonyms. It might, he
+thinks, make clearer to many the obligation involved.
+
+Justice has been made clear in the foregoing remarks, but in view of
+Kant’s distinction of “large” and “strict” duties, Renouvier raises the
+question of the relation of Justice and Goodness. He concludes that
+acts proceeding from the latter are to be distinguished from Justice.
+They proceed not from considerations of persons as such, but from their
+“nature” or common humanity, and are near to being “duties to oneself.”
+They are of the heart rather than of the head, proceeding from
+sentiments of humanity, and sentiment is not, strictly speaking, the
+foundation of justice, which is based on the notions of duties and
+rights. There can be, therefore, an opposition of Justice and of
+Goodness (Kindness or Love), and the sphere of the latter is often
+limited by considering the former. Renouvier recognises the fact that
+Justice in the moral sense of recognition and respect for personality
+is itself often “constitutionally and legally” violated in societies by
+custom, laws and institutions as well as by members of society in their
+actions, and he notes that this “legal” injustice makes the problem of
+the relation of Justice and Charity excessively difficult.
+
+The science of ethics is faced with a double task owing to the nature
+of man’s evolution and history. Human societies have been built upon a
+basis which is not that of justice and right, but upon the basis of
+force and tyranny—in short, upon war. There is, therefore, for the
+moralist the twin duty of constructing laws and principles for the true
+society founded upon an ethical basis, that is to say on conceptions of
+Justice, while at the same time he must give practical advice to his
+fellows living and striving in present society, where a continual state
+of war exists owing to the operation of force and tyranny in place of
+justice, and he must so _apply_ his principles that they may be capable
+of moving this unjust existing society progressively towards the ideal
+society.
+
+In our account of Renouvier’s “Philosophy of History” we brought out
+his insistence upon war as the essential feature of man’s life on this
+planet, as the basis of our present “civilisation.” Here he proclaims
+it again in his ethics.[21] War reigns everywhere: it is around us and
+within us—individuals, families, tribes, classes, nations and races. He
+includes in the term much more than open fighting with guns. The
+distribution of wealth, of property (especially of land), wages, custom
+duties, diplomacy, fraud, violence, bigotry, orthodoxy, and
+persecution, lies themselves, are all, to him, forms of war. Its most
+ludicrous stronghold is among men who pride themselves on being at
+peace with all men, while they force their idea of God upon other men’s
+consciences. Religious intolerance is one, and a very absurd kind of
+warfare.[22]
+
+ [21] _Science de la Morale_, vol. I, p. 332.
+
+
+ [22] Renouvier sums up its spirit in the words: “_Crois ce que je
+ crois moi, où je te tue_” (_La Nouvelle Monadologie_).
+
+
+The principle of justice confers upon the person a certain “right of
+defence” in the midst of all this existing varied warfare of mankind.
+It involves, according to Renouvier, resistance. The just man cannot
+stand by and see the unjust man oppress his fellow so that the victim
+is “obliged to give up his waistcoat after having had his coat torn
+from him.” Otherwise we must confuse the _just_ with the _saintly_ man
+who only admits one law—namely, that of sacrifice. But Renouvier will
+have us be clear as to the price involved in all this violent
+resistance. It means calling up powers of evil, emissaries of
+injustice. He does not found his “right of defence” on rational right;
+it is to misconceive it so to found it. We must recognise the use of
+violence and force, even in self-defence, as in itself evil, an evil
+necessitated by facts which do not conform to the rules of peace and
+justice themselves. It is to a large degree necessary, unfortunately,
+but is none the less evil and to be frankly regarded as evil, and
+likely to multiply evil in the world, owing to the tremendous
+solidarity of wickedness of which Renouvier has already spoken in
+history. It is the absence of the reign of justice which necessitates
+these conflicts, and we have to content ourselves with a conception of
+actual “right,” a conception already based on war, not with one of
+“rational right” or justice.
+
+Right in the true sense, Renouvier insists, belongs to a state of
+peace; in a state of war, such as our civilisation is perpetually in,
+it cannot be realised. The objection may be made that Renouvier is then
+justifying the means by the end. He emphatically denies this. By no
+means is this the case, for “the evil,” he remarks, “which corrects
+another evil does not therefore become good; it may be useful, but it
+is none the less evil, immoral, or unjust, and what is not just is not
+justifiable. Wars, rebellions, revolutions may lessen certain evils,
+but they do not thereby cease to be any the less evils themselves.
+Morally we are obliged to avoid all violence; a revolution is only
+justified if its success gives an indication of its absolute necessity.
+We must lament, from the standpoint of ethics or justice, the evil
+state of affairs which gives rise to it.[23]
+
+ [23] On this point, it is interesting to compare with the above the
+ views of Spinoza in his _Tractatus Theologico-politicus_ and
+ _Tractatus-politicus_, and those of T. H. Green in his _Lectures on
+ Political Obligation_.
+
+
+Renouvier devotes a considerable portion of his treatise to problems of
+domestic morals, economic questions and problems of a political and
+international character. In all these discussions, however, he
+maintains as central his thesis of the supremacy of personality.
+
+Under _droit domestique_ he defends very warmly the right of the woman
+and the wife to treatment as a personality. He laments particularly the
+injustice which usually rules in marriage, where, under a cloak of
+legality, the married man denies to his wife a personal control of her
+own body and the freedom of self-determination in matters of sexual
+intercourse. So unjust and loathsome in its violation of the
+personality of woman is the modern view of marriage that Renouvier
+considers it little better than polygamy (which is often a better state
+for women than monogamy) or prostitution. It is less just than either,
+owing to its degradation of the personality of the wife. He remarked
+too in his _Nouvelle Monadologie_ that love (in the popular sense),
+being so largely an affair of passion and physical attraction, is
+usually unjust, and that friendship is a better basis for the
+relationship of marriage, which should be, while it lasts among
+mankind, one of justice.[24] Consequently, it should involve neither
+the idea of possession nor of obedience, but of mutual comradeship.
+
+ [24] See particularly the notes in _La Nouvelle Monadologie_ appended
+ to the fourth part, “Passion,” pp. 216-222.
+
+
+In the economic sphere Renouvier endeavours to uphold freedom, and for
+this reason he is an enemy of communism. Hostile to the communistic
+doctrine of property, he is a definite defender of property which he
+considers to be a necessity of personality. He considers each person in
+the community entitled to property as a guarantee of his own liberty
+and development. While disagreeing with communism, Renouvier is
+sympathetic to the socialist view that property might be, and should
+be, more justly distributed, and he advocates means to limit excessive
+possession by private persons and to “generalise” the distribution of
+the goods of the community among its members. Progressive taxation, a
+guarantee of the “right to work” and a complete system of insurance are
+among his suggestions. He is careful, however, to avoid giving to the
+state too much power.
+
+Renouvier was no lover of the state. While regarding it as necessary
+under present conditions, he agrees with the anarchist idealists, to
+whom government is an evil. He admits its use, however, as a guarantor
+of personal liberty, but is against any semblance of state- worship.
+The state is not a person, nor is it, as it exists at present, a moral
+institution. One of the needs of modern times is, he points out, the
+moralising of the conception of the state, and of the state itself.
+Although, therefore, he has no _a priori_ objection to state
+interference in the economic sphere, and would not advocate a mere
+_laissez-faire_ policy, with its vicious consequences, yet he does not
+look with approval upon such interference unless it be “the collective
+expression of the personalities forming the community.”
+
+The fact of living in a society, highly organised although it be, does
+not diminish at all the moral significance of personality. Rights and
+duties belong essentially to persons and to them only. We must beware
+of the political philosophy which regards the citizens as existing only
+for the state. Rather the state exists, or should exist, for the
+welfare of the citizens. In the past this was a grave defect of
+military despotisms, and was well illustrated by the view of the state
+taken, or rather inculcated, by German political philosophy. In the
+future the danger of the violation of personality may lie, Renouvier
+thinks, in another direction—namely, in the establishment of
+Communistic states. The basic principle of his ethic is the person as
+an end in himself, and the treatment of persons as ends. If this be so,
+a Communistic Republic which has as its motto “Each for all,” without
+also “All for each,” may gravely violate personality and the moral law
+if, by constraint, it treats all its citizens and their efforts not as
+ends in themselves, but merely means to the collective ends of all.
+
+The moral ideal demands that personality must not be obliterated.
+Personality bound up with “autonomy of reason” is the fundamental
+ethical fact.[25] In the last resort, responsibility rests upon the
+individuals of the society for the evils of the system of social
+organisation under which they live. The state itself cannot be regarded
+as a moral person. Renouvier opposes strongly any doctrine which tends
+to the personalisation or the deification of the state.
+
+ [25] Note that Renouvier prefers this term to Kant’s “autonomy of
+ will,” which he thinks confuses moral obligation and free-will.
+
+
+He combats also the modern doctrines of “nationality,” and claims that
+even the idea of the state is a higher one, for it at any rate involves
+co-operating personalities, while a nation is a fiction, of which no
+satisfactory definition can be given. He laughs at the “unity of
+language, race, culture and religion,” and asks where we can find a
+nation?[26] War and death have long since destroyed such united and
+harmonious groups as were found in ancient times.
+
+ [27] _Science de la Morale_, vol. 2, chap. xcvi, “_Idées de la
+ Nationalité et d’Etat_,” pp. 416-427.
+
+
+In approaching the questions of international morality Renouvier makes
+clear that there is only one morality, one code of justice. Morality
+cannot be divided against itself, and there cannot be an admission that
+things which are immoral in the individual are justifiable, or
+permissible, between different states. Morality has not been applied to
+these relationships, which are governed by aggressive militarism and
+diplomacy, the negation of all conceptions of justice. Ethical
+obligation has only a meaning and significance for personalities, and
+our states do but reflect the morality of those who constitute them;
+our world reflects the relationships and immorality of the states. War
+characterises our whole civilisation, domestic, economic and
+international. To have inter- national peace, internal peace is
+essential, and this pre- supposes the reign of justice within states.
+War we shall have with us, Renouvier reminds us, in all its forms, in
+our institutions, our laws and customs, until it has disappeared from
+our hearts. Treaties of “peace” and federations or leagues of nations
+are themselves based on injustice and on force, and in this he sees but
+another instance of the “terrible solidarity of evil.”[28] Better it is
+to recognise this, thinks Renouvier, than to consider ourselves in, or
+even near, a Utopia, whence human greed and passion have fled.
+
+ [28] _Science de la Morale_, vol. 2, p. 474.
+
+
+We find in Renouvier’s ethics a notable reversion to the individualism
+which characterised the previous century. Much of the individualistic
+tone of his work is, however, due to his finding himself in opposition
+to the doctrines preached by communists, positivists, sociologists,
+pessimistic and fatalistic historians, and supporters of the deified
+state. Renouvier acclaims the freedom of the individual, but his
+individualism is “personalism.” In proclaiming that the basis of
+justice and of all morality is respect for personality, as such, he has
+no desire to set up a standard of selfish individualism; he wishes only
+to combat those heretical doctrines which would minimise and crush
+personality. For him the moral “person” is not an isolated
+individual—he is a social human being, free and responsible, who lives
+with his fellows in society. Only upon a recognition of personality as
+a supreme value can justice or peace ever be attained in human society;
+and it is to this end that all moral education, Renouvier advocates,
+should tend. The moral ideal should be, in practice, the constant
+effort to free man from the terrible solidarity of evil which
+characterises the civilisation into which he is born, and to establish
+a community or association of personalities. Such an ideal does not lie
+necessarily at the end of a determined evolution; Renouvier’s views on
+history and progress have shown us that. Consequently it depends upon
+us; it is our duty to believe in its possibility and to work, each
+according to his or her power, for its realisation. The ideal or the
+idea, will, in so far as it is set before self-conscious personalities
+as an end, become a force. Renouvier agrees on this point with
+Fouillée, to whose ethic, founded on the conception of _idées-forces_,
+we now turn.
+
+III
+
+The philosophy of _idée-forces_ propounded by Fouillée assumes, in its
+ethical aspect, a role of reconciliation (which is characteristic, as
+we have noted, of his whole method and his entire philosophy) by
+attempting a synthesis of individualism and humanitarianism. It is
+therefore another kind of _personnalisme_, differing in type from that
+of Renouvier. Fouillée’s full statement of his ethical doctrines was
+not written until the year 1907,[29] but long before the conclusion of
+the nineteenth century he had already indicated the essential points of
+his ethics. The conclusion of his thesis _La Liberté et le
+Déterminisme_ (1872) is very largely filled with his ethical views and
+with his optimism. Four years later appeared his study _L’Idée moderne
+du Droit en Allemagne, en Angleterre et en France_, which was followed
+in 1880 by _La Science sociale contemporaine_, where the relation of
+the study of ethics to that of sociology was discussed. A volume
+containing much acute criticism of current ethical theories was his
+_Critique des Systèmes de Morale contemporains_ (1883), which gave him
+a further opportunity of offering by way of contrast his application of
+the doctrine of _idées-forces_ to the solution of moral problems. To
+this he added in the following year a study upon _La Propriété sociale
+et la Démocratie_, where he discussed the ethical value and
+significance of various political and socialist doctrines. Ethical
+questions raised by the problems of education he discussed in his
+_L’Enseignement au Point de Vue national_ (1891). At the close of the
+century he issued his book on morality in his own country, _La France
+au Point de Vue morale_ (1900).[30]
+
+ [29] His _Morale des Idées-forces_ was then published.
+
+
+ [30] It is interesting to note the wealth of Fouillée’s almost annual
+ output on ethics alone in his later years. We may cite, in the
+ twentieth century: _La Réforme de l’Enseignement par la Philosophie_,
+ 1901; _La Conception morale et critique de l’Enseignement_; _Nietzsche
+ et l’Immoralisme_, 1904; _Le Moralisme de Kant et l’Amoralisme
+ contemporaine_, 1905; _Les Eléments sociologiques de la Morale_, 1905;
+ _La Morale des Idées-forces_, 1907; _Le Socialisme_, 1910; _La
+ Démocratie politique et sociale en France_, 1910; and the posthumous
+ volume, _Humanitaires et Libertaires au Point de Vue sociologique et
+ morale_, 1914.
+
+
+Fouillée endeavours to unite the purely ideal aspect of ethics—that is
+to say, its notion of what ought to be, with the more positive view of
+ethics as dealing with what now is. His ethic is, therefore, an attempt
+to relate more intimately the twin spheres of Renouvier, _l’état de
+guerre_ with _l’état de paix_, for it is concerned not only with what
+_is_, but with that which _tends_ to be and which _can_ be by the
+simple fact that it is _thought_. As, however, what _can_ be is a
+matter of intense interest to us, we are inevitably led from this to
+consider what _ought_ to be—that is to say, what is better, or of more
+worth or value. The ethical application of the philosophy of
+_idées-forces_ is at once theoretical and practical, that philosophy
+being concerned both with ideas and values.
+
+As in his treatment of freedom we found Fouillée beginning with the
+_idea_ of freedom, so here in a parallel manner he lays down the _idea_
+of an end of action as an incontestable fact of experience, although
+the existence of such an end is contested and is a separate question.
+This idea operates in consciousness as a power of will (_volonté de
+conscience_). Intelligence, power, love and happiness-in short, the
+highest conscious life—are involved in it, not only for us, but for
+all. Thus it comes about that the conscious subject, just because he
+finds himself confronted by nature and by over-individual ends,
+proposes to himself an ideal, and imposes at the same time upon himself
+the obligation to act in conformity with this full consciousness which
+is in all, as in him, and thus he allows universal consciousness to
+operate in his own individual life. Here we have conscience, the idea
+of duty or obligation, accounted for, and the principle of autonomy of
+the moral person laid down. The ethical life is shown as the conscious
+will in action, finding within itself its own end and rule of action,
+finding also the conscious wills of others like itself. Morality is the
+indefinite extension of the conscious will which brings about the
+condition that others tend to become “me.” Through the increasing power
+of intellectual disinterestedness and social sympathy, the old formula
+“_cogito, conscius sum_” gives place to that of “_conscii sumus_,” and
+this is no mere intellectual speculation, but a concrete principle of
+action and feeling which is itself akin to the highest and best in all
+religions.
+
+One of the features of this ethic is its insistence upon the primacy of
+self-consciousness. Indeed, it has its central point in the doctrine of
+self-consciousness, which, according to Fouillée, implies the
+consciousness of others and of the whole unity of mankind. Emphasising
+his gospel of _idées-forces_, he outlines a morality in which the ideal
+shall attract men persuasively, and not dominate them in what he
+regards as the arbitrary and rather despotic manner of Kant.
+
+By advocating the primacy of self-consciousness Fouillée claims to
+establish an ethic which towers above those founded upon pleasure,
+happiness and feeling. The morality of the _idées-forces_ is not purely
+sentimental, not purely intellectual, not purely voluntarist; it claims
+to rest on the totality of the functions of consciousness, as revealed
+in the feelings, in intellect and will, acting in solidarity and in
+harmony.
+
+He endeavours to unite the positive and evolutionary views of morality
+to those associated with theological or metaphysical doctrines,
+concerning the deity or the morally perfect absolute. He claims,
+against the theologians and on behalf of the positivists, that ethics
+can be an independent study, that it is not necessarily bound up with
+theological dogmas. There is no need to found the notion of duty upon
+that of the existence of God. Our own existence is sufficient; the
+voice of conscience is within our human nature. He objects, as did
+Nietzsche, to the formality and rigour of Kant’s “categorical
+imperative.” His method is free from the legalism of Kant, and in him
+and Guyau is seen an attempt to relate morality itself to life,
+expanding and showing itself creative of ideals and tending to their
+fulfilment.
+
+From the primacy of self-consciousness which can be expressed in the
+notion, _Je pense, donc j’ai une valeur morale_, a transition is made
+to a conception of values. _Je pense, donc j’evalue des objets_. The
+essential element in the psychology of the _idees-forces_ then comes
+into play by tending to the realisation of the ideals conceived and
+based on the valuation previously made. Finally, Fouillée claims that
+on this ethical operation of the _idées-forces_ can be founded the
+notion of a universal society of consciences. This notion itself is a
+force operating to create that society. The ideal is itself persuasive,
+and Fouillee’s inherent optimism, which we have observed in his
+doctrine of progress, colours also his ethical theory. He has faith in
+men’s capacity to be attracted by the ideals of love and brotherhood,
+and insists that in the extension of these lies the supreme duty, and
+the ideal, like the notion of duty itself, is a creation of our own
+thought. The realisation of the universality, altruism, love and
+brotherhood of which he speaks, depends upon our action, our power to
+foster ideas, to create ideals, particularly in the minds of the young,
+and to strive ever for their realisation. This is the great need of our
+time, Fouillée rightly urges.[31] Such a morality contains in a more
+concentrated form, he thinks, the best that has been said and thought
+in the world-religions; it achieves also that union of the scientific
+spirit with the aspirations of man, which Fouillée regards as so
+desirable, and he claims for it a philosophical value by its success in
+uniting the subjective and personal factors of consciousness with those
+which are objective and universal.
+
+ [31] The work of Benjamin Kidd should be compared in this connection,
+ particularly his _Social Evolution_, 1894; _Principles of Western
+ Civilisation_, 1902; and _The Science of Power_, 1918 (chap, v., “The
+ Emotion of the Ideal”).
+
+
+Similar in several respects to the ethical doctrines of Fouillée are
+those of his step-son. Guyau insists more profoundly, however, upon the
+“free” conception of morality, as spontaneous and living, thus marking
+a further reaction from Kant’s doctrine. Both Fouillée and Guyau
+interacted upon one another in their mental relationship, and both of
+them (particularly Guyau) have affinities with Nietzsche, who knew
+their work. While the three thinkers are in revolt against the Kantian
+conception of ethics, the two Frenchmen use their conceptions to
+develop an ethic altruistic in character, far removed from the egoism
+which characterises the German.[32]
+
+ [32] We find the optimism and humanitarian idealism of the Frenchmen
+ surprising. May not this be piecisely because the world has followed
+ the gospel of Nietzsche? We may dislike him, but he is a greater
+ painter of the real state of world-morality than are the two
+ Frenchmen. They, with their watchword of _fraternité_, are proclaiming
+ a more excellent way they are standing for an ethical ideal of the
+ highest type.
+
+
+Guyau, after showing in his critique of English Ethics (_La Morale
+anglaise contemporaine_, 1879) the inadequacies of a purely utilitarian
+doctrine of morality, endeavoured to set forth in a more constructive
+manner the principles of a scientific morality in his _Esquisse d’une
+Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_.
+
+He takes as his starting-point the position where John Stuart Mill fell
+foul of the word “desirable.” What, asks Guyau, is the supreme desire
+of every living creature? The answer to this question is “Life.” What
+we all of us desire most and constantly is Life, the most intensive and
+extensive in all its relationships, physical and spiritual. In the
+principle of Life we find cause and end—a unity which is a synthesis of
+all desires and all desirables. Moreover, the concept or the principle
+of Life embraces all functions of our nature—those within consciousness
+and those which are subconscious or unconscious. It thus relates
+intimately purely instinctive action and reflective acts, both of which
+are manifestations of Life and can enrich and increase its power.
+
+The purely hedonistic views of the Utilitarians he considers untrue.
+Doubtless, he admits, there is a degree of truth in the doctrine that
+consciousness tends to pursue the line of greatest pleasure or least
+resistance, but then we must remember how slight a part this
+consciousness actually plays. Instincts and an intensive subconscious
+“will-to-live” are constantly operating. A purely scientific ethic, if
+it is to present a complete scheme, must allow for this by admitting
+that the purely hedonistic search after pleasure is not in itself a
+cause of action, but is an effect of a more fundamental or dominating
+factor. This factor is precisely the effort of Life to maintain itself,
+to intensify itself and expand. The chief motive power lies in the
+“intensity of Life.” “The end which actually determines all conscious
+action is also the cause which produces every unconscious action; it is
+Life itself, Life at once the most intense and the most varied in its
+forms. From the first thrill of the embryo in its mother’s womb to the
+last convulsion of the old man, every movement of the being has had as
+cause Life in its evolution; this universal cause of actions is, from
+another point of view, its constant effect and end.”[33]
+
+ [33] _Esquisse d’une Morale_, p. 87.
+
+
+A true ethic proceeding upon the recognition of these principles is
+scientific, and constitutes a science having as its object all the
+means by which Life, material and spiritual, may be conserved and
+expanded. Rising in the evolutionary development we find the variety
+and scope of action increased. The highest beings find rest not in
+sleep merely, but in variety and change of action. The moral ideal lies
+in activity, in all the variety of its manifestations. For Guyau, as
+for Bergson, the worst vice is idleness, inertia, lack of _élan vital_,
+decay of personal initiative, and a consequent degeneration to merely
+automatic existence.
+
+Hedonism is quite untenable as a principle; pleasure is merely a
+consequence, and its being set in the van of ethics is due to a false
+psychology and false science. Granting that pleasure attends the
+satisfaction of a desire, pain its repression, recognising that a
+feeling of pleasure accompanies many actions which expand life, we must
+live, as Guyau reminds us, before we enjoy. The activity of life surges
+within us, and we do not act with a view to pleasure or with pleasure
+as a motive, but life, just because it is life, seeks to expand. Man in
+acting has created his pleasures and his organs. The pleasure and the
+organ alike proceed from function—that is, life itself. The pleasure of
+an action and even the consciousness of it are attributes, not ends.
+The action arises naturally from the inherent intensity of life.
+
+The hedonists, too, says Guyau, have been negligent of the widest
+pleasures, and have frequently confined their attention to those of
+eating and drinking and sexual intercourse, purely sensitive, and have
+neglected those of living, willing and thinking, which are more
+fundamental as being identical with the consciousness of life. But
+Guyau asserts that, as the greatest intensity of life involves
+necessarily its widest expansion, we must give special attention to
+thought and will and feeling, which bring us into touch universally
+with our fellows and promote the widest life. This expansiveness of
+life has great ethical importance. With the change in the nature of
+reproduction, involving the sexual union of two beings, “a new moral
+phase began in the world.” It involved an expansion not merely
+physical, but mental—a union, however crude, of soul.
+
+It is in the extension of this feature of human life that Guyau sees
+the ethical ideal. The most perfect organism is the most sociable, for
+the ideal of the individual life is the common or social life. Morality
+is for him almost synonymous with sociability, disinterestedness, love
+and brotherhood, and in it we find, he says, “the flower of human
+life.”
+
+All our action should be referred to this moral ideal of sociability.
+Guyau sees in the phrase “social service” a conception which should not
+be confined to those who are endeavouring in some religious or
+philanthropic manner to alleviate the suffering caused by evil in human
+society, but a conception to which the acts, all acts, of all members
+of society should be related. Like Renouvier, he gives to work an
+important ethical value. “To work is to produce—that is, to be useful
+to oneself and to others.” In work he sees the economic and moral
+reconciliation of egoism and altruism. It is a good and it is
+praiseworthy. Those who neglect and despise it are parasites, and their
+existence in society is a negation of the moral ideal of sociability
+and social service. In so far as the work of certain persons leads to
+the accumulation of excessive capital in individual hands, it is likely
+to annul itself sooner or later in luxury and idleness. Such an immoral
+state of affairs, it is the concern of society, by its laws of
+inheritance and possession, to prevent.
+
+Having made clear his principle of morality, Guyau then has to face the
+question of its relation to the notion of duty or obligation. Duty in
+itself is an idea which he rejects as vague, and he disapproves of the
+external and artificial element present in the Kantian “rigorism.” For
+Guyau the very power of action contained in life itself creates an
+impersonal duty. While Emerson could write:
+
+“Duty says, ‘I must,’
+The youth replies, ‘I can,’”
+
+
+the view of Guyau is directly the converse; for him “I can” gives the
+“I must”; it is the power which precedes and creates the obligation.
+Life cannot maintain itself unless it grows and expands. The soul that
+liveth to itself, that liveth solely by habit and automatism, is
+already dead. Morality is the unity of the personality expanding by
+action and by sympathy. It is at this point that Guyau’s thought
+approaches closely to the _philosophie des idées-forces_ of his
+step-father, by his doctrine of thought and action.
+
+Immorality is really unsociability, and Guyau thinks this a better
+key-note than to regard it as disobedience. If it is so to be spoken
+of, it is disobedience to the social elements in one’s own self—a
+mischievous duplication of personality, egoistic in character and
+profoundly antisocial. The sociological elements which characterise all
+Guyau’s work are here very marked. In the notion of sociability we find
+an equivalent of the older and more artificial conception of Duty—a
+conception which lacks concreteness and offers in itself so little
+guidance because it is abstract and empty. The criterion of
+sociability, Guyau claims, is much more concrete and useful. He asks us
+to observe its spirituality, for the more gross and materialistic
+pleasures fall short of the criterion by the very fact that they cannot
+be shared. Guyau’s thought is here at its best. The higher pleasures,
+which are not those of bodily enjoyment and satisfaction, but those of
+the spirit, which thinks, feels, wills and loves, are precisely those
+which come nearest to fulfilling the ideal of sociability, for they
+tend less to divide men than to unite them and to urge them to a closer
+co-operation for their spiritual advancement. Guyau writes here with
+sarcasm regarding the lonely imbecile in the carriage drawn by four
+horses. For his own part it is enough to have—
+
+“. . . a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough,
+A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse—and Thou
+Beside me singing in the Wilderness—
+And Wilderness is Paradise enow.”
+
+
+He knows who really has chosen the better part. One cannot rejoice much
+and rejoice alone. Companionship and love are supremely valuable
+“goods,” and the pleasure of others he recognises as a very real part
+of his own. The egoist’s pleasure is, on the other hand, very largely
+an illusion. He loses, says Guyau, far more by his isolated enjoyment
+than he would gain by sharing.
+
+Life itself is the greatest of all goods, as it is the condition of all
+others, but life’s value fades if we are not loved. It is love,
+comradeship and the fellowship of kindred souls which give to the
+humblest life a significance and a feeling of value. This, Guyau points
+out with some tenderness, is the tragedy of suicides. These occurrences
+are a social no less than an individual tragedy. The tragic element
+lies in the fact that they were persons who were unable to give their
+devotion to some object, and the loss of personalities in this way is a
+real loss to society, but it is mainly society itself which is to blame
+for them.
+
+We need not fear, says Guyau, that such a gospel will promote unduly
+the operation of mere animality or instinctive action, for in the
+growth of the scientific spirit he sees the development of the great
+enemy of all instinct. It is the dissolving force _par excellence_, the
+revolutionary spirit which incessantly wages warfare within society
+against authority, and in the individual it operates through reason
+against the instinctive impulses. Every instinct tends to lapse in so
+far as it is reflected upon by consciousness.
+
+The old notion of duty or obligation must, in Guyau’s opinion, be
+abandoned. The sole commandment which a scientific and positive ethic,
+such as he endeavours to indicate, can recognise, is expressible only
+in the words, “Develop your life in all directions, be an individual as
+rich as possible in energy, intensive and extensive”—in other words,
+“Be the most social and sociable being you can.” It is this which
+replaces the “categorical imperative.”
+
+He aptly points out the failure of modern society to offer scope for
+devotion, which is really a superabundance of life, and its proneness
+to crush out opportunities which offer a challenge to the human spirit.
+There is a claim of life itself to adventure; there is a pleasure in
+risk and in conflict; and this pleasure in risk and adventure has been
+largely overlooked in its relation to the moral life. Such risk and
+adventure are not merely a pure negation of self or of personal life,
+but rather, he considers, that life raised to its highest power,
+reaching the sublime. By virtue of such devotion our lives are
+enriched. He draws a touching picture of the sacrifice upon which our
+modern social life and civilisation are based, and draws an analogy
+between the blood of dead horses used by the ploughman in fertilising
+his field, and the blood of the martyrs of humanity, _qui ont fécondé
+l’avenir_. Often they may have been mistaken; later generations may
+wonder if their cause was worth fighting for; yet, although nothing
+truly is sadder than to die in vain, that devotion was valuable in and
+for itself.
+
+With the demand of life for risk in action is bound up the impetus to
+undertake risk in thought. From this springs the moral need for faith,
+for belief and acceptance of some hypotheses. The very divergence or
+diversity of the world-religions is not discouraging but rather the
+reverse. It is a sign of healthy moral life. Uniformity would be highly
+detrimental; it would cease to express life, for with conformity of
+belief would come spiritual decline and stagnation. Guyau anticipates
+here his doctrine of a religion of free thought, a “non-religion” of
+the future, which we shall discuss in our next chapter, when we examine
+his book on that subject. In the diversity of religious views Guyau
+sees a moral good, for these religions are themselves an expression of
+life in its richness, and the conservation and expansion of this rich
+variety of life are precisely the moral ideal itself.
+
+We must endeavour to realise how rich and varied the nature of human
+life really is. Revolutionaries, Guyau points out, are always making
+the mistake of regarding life and truth as too simple. Life and truth
+are so complex that evolution is the key-note to what is desirable in
+the individual intellect and in society, not a revolution which must
+inevitably express the extreme of one side or the other. The search for
+truth is slow and needs faith and patience, but the careful seekers of
+it are making the future of mankind. But truth will be discovered only
+in relation to action and life and in proportion to the labour put into
+its realisation. The search for truth must never be divorced from the
+active life, Guyau insists, and, indeed, he approaches the view that
+the action will produce the knowledge, “He that doeth the will shall
+know of the doctrine.” Moreover he rightly sees in action the wholesome
+cure for pessimism and that cynicism which all too frequently arises
+from an equal appreciation of opposing views. “Even in doubt,” he
+exclaims, “we can love; even in the intellectual night, which prevents
+our seeing any ultimate goal, we can stretch out a hand to him who
+weeps at our feet.”[34] In other words, we must do the duty that lies
+nearest, in the hope and faith that by that action itself light will
+come.
+
+ [34] _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_, p. 178.
+
+
+In the last part of his treatise Guyau deals with the difficult problem
+of “sanction,” so ultimately connected with ethics, and, it must be
+added, with religion. The Providence who rewards and punishes us,
+according to the orthodox religious creed of Christendom, is merely a
+personified “sanction” or distributive justice, operating in a
+terrestrial and celestial court of assize. Guyau condemns this as an
+utterly immoral conception. Religious sanctions, as he has not much
+difficulty in showing, are more cruel than those which a man could
+imagine himself inflicting upon his mortal enemy. The “Heavenly Father”
+ought at least to be as good as earthly ones, who do not cruelly punish
+their children. Guyau touches upon an important point here, which will
+be further emphasised—namely, the necessity for making our idea of God,
+if we have one at all, harmonious with our own ethical conceptions. The
+old ideas of the divinity are profoundly immoral and are based on
+physical force. This is natural because those views which have survived
+in modern times are those of primitive and savage people to whom the
+most holy was the most powerful and physically majestic. But, says
+Guyau, now that we see that “all physical force represents moral
+weakness,” the idea of God the All-terrible, with his hell-fire ready
+for the sinful soul, must be condemned as immoral blasphemy itself.
+“God,” he remarks, “in damning any soul might be said to damn himself.”
+
+Virtue is really its own reward. No one should be or do good in order
+to gain an entry into paradise or to escape the torments of hell. That
+is to build morality on an immoral principle and on a belief, not in
+goodness as valuable in and for itself, but on a basis of material
+self-interest alone, “the best policy.” It is true, Guyau admits, that
+virtue involves happiness, but it is not in this sense. A conflict
+between “pleasure” and virtue is usually one of higher _versus_ lower
+ideals. Virtue is not a precedent to sense-happiness, and in this sense
+is not at all equivalent or bound up with happiness, but, as the facts
+of life reveal, very often opposed to it.
+
+Guyau opposes the ordinary view of punishment in society and shows that
+it is both immoral and socially harmful in its application. It adds
+evil to evil, and legal murder is really more absurd than the illegal
+murder. Punishment, capital or other, is no “compensation” exacted for
+the crime committed, and it never can be such. Attempts to treat and
+cure the guilty one would, Guyau suggests, be far more rational, humane
+and really beneficial to society itself, which at present creates by
+its punishments, especially those inflicted for first offences, a
+“criminal class.” One should convert the criminal before punishing him,
+and then, Guvau asks, if he is converted, why punish him?
+
+The appeal to justice denoted in the words “To everyone according to
+his works” is frequently heard in the defence of punishment. This is an
+excellent maxim in Guyau’s opinion, but he is careful to point out that
+it is purely one of social economics. It is a plea for a just
+distribution of the products of labour, but does not apply at all to
+the problem of punishment. In a manner which recalls the remarks of
+Renan, Guyau sees in evil-doing a lack of culture, or rather of that
+sociability, which comes of social culture, from consciousness of a
+membership of society and a solidarity with one’s fellows. In vice and
+in virtue alike the human will appears aspiring to better things
+according to its lights. As virtue is its own reward, so is evil; and
+the moralist must say to the wicked: “Verily they have their reward”
+(_Comme si ce n’était pas assez pour eux d’être méchants_).
+
+Guyau comments upon the gradual modifications of punishment from a
+social point of view. There was the day when the chastisement was
+infinitely worse than the crime itself. Then came the morality of
+reciprocity, “an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,” an ethic
+which represented a high ideal for primitive man to reach, and one to
+which, Guyau thinks, we have yet to reach to-day in some spheres of
+life. Yet a further moral development will show how foolish, in a
+civilised society, are wrath and hatred of the criminal and the cry for
+vengeance. Society must aim at ensuring protection for itself with the
+minimum of individual suffering. Punishment must be regarded as an
+example for the future rather than as revenge or compensation. In the
+individual himself Guyau observes how powerful can be the inner
+sanction of remorse, the suffering caused by the unrealised ideal. This
+is perhaps the only real moral punishment, and it is one which society
+cannot itself directly enforce. Only by increasing “sociability” and
+social sensitiveness can this sanction be indirectly developed.
+
+Herein lies the highest ethical ideal, far more concrete and living, in
+Guyau’s opinion, than the rigorism of a Kant or the “scholastic”[35]
+temper of a Renouvier. Charity or love for all men, whatever their
+value morally, intellectually or physically, must, he claims, “be the
+final end pursued even by public opinion.”In co-operation and
+sociability, he finds the vital moral ideal; in love and brotherhood,
+he finds the real sanction which should operate.”Love supposes
+mutuality of love,” he says; and there is one idea superior to that of
+justice, that is the idea of brotherhood, and he remarks with a humane
+tenderness “the guilty have probably more need for love than anyone
+else.” “I have,” he cries, “two hands—the one for gripping the hand of
+those with whom I march along in life, the other to lift up the fallen.
+Indeed, to these I should be able to stretch out both hands
+together.”[36]
+
+ [35] This is Guyau’s word to describe Renouvier, whom he regards as
+ far too much under the influence of Kant.
+
+
+ [36] _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_, p. 223.
+
+
+While Fouillée and, more especially, Guyau were thus outlining an ethic
+marked by a strong humanitarianism, a more definitely religious ethic
+was being proclaimed by that current of philosophy of belief and of
+action which has profoundly associated itself in its later developments
+with “Modernism” in the Roman Church. The tendency to stress action and
+the practical reason is noticeable in the work of Brochard,
+Ollé-Laprune and Blondel, also in Rauh. They agree with Renouvier in
+advocating the primacy of the practical reason, but their own reasons
+for this are different from his, or at least in them the reasons are
+more clearly enunciated. Plainly these reasons lie in the difficulties
+of intellectualism and the quest of truth. They propose the quest of
+the good in the hope of finding in that sphere some objectivity, some
+absolute, in fact, which they cannot find out by intellectual
+searching. They correspond in a somewhat parallel fashion to the
+philosophy of intuition with its rejection of intellectualism as
+offering a final solution. These thinkers desire by action, by doing
+the will, to attain to a knowledge of the doctrine. The first word in
+their gospel is—
+
+“Im Anfang war die That.”
+
+
+It is for them the beginning and the end. Their certainty is an act of
+belief, which grows out of action and life. It is a curious mixture of
+insistence upon life and action, such as we find in Guyau and in
+Bergson, coupled with a religious Platonism. Brochard’s work is of this
+type. He wrote as early as 1874 on _La Responsabilité morale_, and in
+1876 on _L’Universalité des Notions morales_. Three years later
+appeared his work _L’Erreur_. Ollé-Laprune and Blondel, who best
+represent this tendency, do not like Guyau’s ethics, which lacks the
+religious idealism which they consider should be bound up with
+morality. This was the thesis developed in the volume _La Certitude
+morale_, written by Ollé-Laprune in 1881. “By what right,” says
+Ollé-Laprune in his subsequent book _Le Prix de la Vie_ (1895), “can
+Guyau speak of a high exalted life, of a moral ideal? It is impossible
+to speak so when you have only a purely naturalistic ethic; for merely
+to name these things is an implication that there is not only intensity
+in life, but also quality. You suppress duty because you can see in it
+only a falsely mystical view of life and of nature. What you fail to
+realise is that between duty and life there is a profound agreement.
+You reduce duty to life, and in life itself you consider only its
+quantity and intensity, and regard as illusion everything that is of a
+different order from the natural physical order in which you imprison
+yourself.”[37]
+
+ [37] _Le Prix de la Vie_, p. 139.
+
+
+Such a criticism is not altogether fair to Guyau who, as we noted,
+proclaimed the superiority of the higher qualities of spiritual life.
+It does, however, attack his abandonment of the idea of Duty; and we
+must now turn to examine a thinker, who, by his contribution to ethics,
+endeavoured to satisfy the claims of life and of duty.
+
+This was Rauh, whose _Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale_
+appeared in 1890. It had been preceded by a study of the psychology of
+the feelings, and was later followed by _L’Expérience morale_ (1903).
+In seeking a metaphysical foundation for morality, Rauh recalls Kant’s
+_Metaphysic of Morals_. He, indeed, agrees with Kant in the view that
+the essence of morality lies in the sentiment of obligation. Belief or
+faith in an ideal, by which it behoves us to act, imposes itself, says
+Rauh, upon the mind of man as essential. It is as positive a fact as
+the laws of the natural sciences. Man not only states facts and
+formulates general laws in a scientific manner, he also conceives and
+believes in ideals, which become bound up in his mind with the
+sentiment of obligation—that is, the general feeling of duty. But
+beyond a general agreement upon this point, Rauh does not follow Kant.
+He tends to look upon the ethical problem in the spirit which Guyau,
+Bergson and Blondel show in their general philosophic outlook. In life,
+action and immediacy alone can we find a solution. Nothing practical
+can be deduced from the abstract principle of obligation or duty in
+general. The moral consciousness of man is, in Rauh’s opinion, akin to
+the intuitional perceptions of Bergson’s philosophy. Morality,
+moreover, is creating itself perpetually by the reflection of sensitive
+minds on action and on life itself. “Morality, or rather moral action,
+is not merely the crown of metaphysical speculation, but itself the
+true metaphysic, which is learnt only in living, as it is naught but
+life itself.”[38] In concluding his thesis, Rauh reminds us that “the
+essential and most certain factor in the midst of the uncertainties of
+life and of duty lies in the constant consciousness of the moral
+ideal.” In it he sees a spiritual reality which, if we keep it ever
+before us, may inspire the most insignificant of our actions and render
+them into a harmony, a living harmony of character.
+
+ [38] _Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale_, p. 255.
+
+
+Rauh’s doctrines, we claim, have affinities to the doctrines of action
+and intuition. That does not imply, however, that the intelligence is
+to be minimised—far from this; but the intelligence triumphs here in
+realising that it is not all-sufficing or supreme. “The heart hath
+reasons which the reason cannot know.” While Fouillée had remarked that
+morality is metaphysics in action, Rauh points out that “metaphysics in
+action” is the foundation of our knowledge. We must, he insists, seek
+for certitude in an immediate and active adaptation to reality instead
+of deducing a rule or rules of action from abstract systems.
+
+He separates himself from the sociologists[39] by pointing out that,
+however largely social environment may determine our moral ideals and
+rules of conduct, nevertheless the ethical decision is fundamentally an
+absolutely personal affair. The human conscience, in so far as active,
+must never _passively_ accept the existing social morality. It finds
+itself sometimes in agreement, sometimes obliged to give a newer
+interpretation to old conventions, and at times is obliged to revolt
+against them. In no case can the idea of duty be equated simply and
+calmly with acquiescence in the collective general will. It must demand
+from social morality its credentials and hold itself free to criticise
+the current ethic of the community. More often than not society acts,
+Rauh thinks, as a break rather than a stimulus; and social interest is
+not a measure of the moral ideal, but rather a limitation of it.
+
+ [39] The relation of ethics and sociology is well discussed, not only
+ by Durkheim (who, in his _Division du Travail social_, speaks of the
+ development of democracy and increasing respect for human
+ personality), but also by Lévy-Bruhl, who followed his thesis on
+ _L’Idée de Responsabilité_, 1883, by the volume, _La Morale el la
+ Science des Moeurs_.
+
+
+Although the moral ideal is one which must be personally worked out, it
+is not a merely individualistic affair. Rauh does not abandon the
+guidance of reason, but he objects equally to the following of instinct
+or a transcendent teaching divorced from the reality of life. Our guide
+must be reflection upon instinct, and this is only possible by action
+and experience, the unique experience of living itself. Reason itself
+is experience; and it is our duty to face problems personally and
+sincerely, in a manner which the rational element in us renders
+“impersonal, universal and disinterested.”
+
+Any code of morality which is not directly in contact with life is
+worthless, and all ethical ideas which are not those of our time are of
+little value. Only he is truly a man who lives the life of his time.
+The truly moral man is he who is alive to this spirit and who does not
+unreflectingly deduce his rules of conduct from ancient books or
+teachers of a past age. The art of living is the supreme art, and it is
+this which the great moralists have endeavoured to show humanity.
+Neither Socrates nor Jesus wrote down their ethical ideas: they lived
+them.
+
+Rauh thus reminds us partly of Guyau in his insistence upon life. He
+regards the ethical life at its highest, as one _sans obligation ni
+sanction_. Rather than the Kantian obligation of duty, of constraint,
+he favours in his second book, _L’Expérience morale_, a state of
+spontaneity, of passion and exaltation of the personal conscience which
+faces the issue in a disinterested manner. The man who is morally
+honest himself selects his values, his ideals, his ends, by the light
+which reason gives him. Ethics becomes thus an independent science, a
+science of “ends,” which Reason, as reflected in the personal
+conscience, acclaims a science of the ideal ordering of life.
+
+Such was Rauh’s conception of rational moral experience, one which he
+endeavoured to apply in his lectures to the two problems which he
+considered to be supreme in his time, that of patriotism and of social
+justice.
+
+These problems were further touched upon in 1896, when Léon Bourgeois
+(since noted for his advocacy of the “League of Nations”) published his
+little work _Solidarité_, which was also a further contribution to an
+independent, positive and lay morality. In the conception of the
+solidarity of humanity throughout the ages, Bourgeois accepted the
+teaching of the sociologists, and urges that herein can be found an
+obligation, for the present generation must repay their debt to their
+ancestors and be worthy of the social heritage which has made them what
+they are. Somewhat similar sentiments had Been expressed by Marion in
+his Solidarité morale (1880). Ethical questions were kept in the
+forefront by the society known as _L’Union pour l’Action morale_,
+founded by Desjardins and supported by Lagneau (1851- 1894). After the
+excitement of the Dreyfus case (1894- 1899) this society took the name
+_L’Union pour la Verité_. In 1902 Lapie made an eloquent plea for a
+rational morality in his _Logique de la Volonté_, and in the following
+year Séailles published his _Affirmations de la Conscience moderne_.
+The little _Précis_ of André Lalande, written in the form of a
+catechism, was a further contribution to the establishment of a
+rational and independent lay morality, which the teaching of ethics as
+a subject in the _lycées_ and lay schools rendered in some degree
+necessary.[40] This little work appeared in 1907, the same year in
+which Paul Bureau wrote his book _La Crise morale des Temps nouveaux_.
+Then Parodi (who in 1919 produced a fine study of French thought since
+1890[41]) followed up the discussion of ethical problems by his work
+_Le Problème morale et la Pensée contemporaine_ (1909), and in 1912
+Wilbois published his contribution entitled _Devoir et Durée: Essai de
+Morale sociale_.
+
+ [40] The teaching of a lay morality is a vital and practical problem
+ which the Government of the Republic is obliged to face. The urgent
+ need for such lay teaching will be more clearly demonstrated or
+ evident when our next chapter, dealing with the religious problem, has
+ been read.
+
+
+ [41] _La Philosophie contemporaine en France_.
+
+
+Thus concludes a period in which the discussion, although not marked by
+a definite turning round of positions as was manifested in our
+discussions of science, freedom and progress, bears signs of a general
+development. This development is shown by the greater insistence upon
+the social aspects of ethics and by a turning away from the formalism
+of Kant to a more concrete conception of duty, or an ethic in which the
+notion of duty itself has disappeared. This is the general tendency
+from Renan with his insistence upon the aesthetic element, Renouvier
+with his claim for justice in terms of personality, to Fouillée, Guyau,
+Ollé-Laprune and Rauh with their insistence upon action, upon love and
+life.
+
+Yet, although the departure from an intense individualism in ethics is
+desirable, we must beware of the danger which threatens from the other
+extreme. We cannot close this chapter without insisting upon this
+point. Good must be personally realised in the inner life of
+individuals, even if they form a community. The collective life is
+indeed necessary, but it is not collectively that the good is
+experienced. It is personal. In the neglect of this important aspect
+lies the error of much Communistic philosophy and of that social
+science which looks on society as purely an organism. This analogy is
+false, for however largely a community exhibits a general likeness to
+an organism, it is a superficial resemblance. There is not a centre of
+consciousness, but a multitude of such centres each living an inner
+life of personal experience which is peculiarly its own; and these
+personalities, we must remember, are not simply a homogeneous mass of
+social matter, they are capable of realising the good each in his or
+her own manner. This is the only realisation of the good.
+
+In this chapter we have traced the attempt to reconcile _science et
+conscience_, after the way had been opened up by the maintenance of
+freedom. It was recognised that reason is not entirely pure
+speculation: it is also practical. Human nature seeks for goodness as
+well as for truth. It is noticeable that while the insistence upon the
+primacy of the practical reason developed, on the one hand, into a
+philosophy of action (anti-intellectual action in its extreme
+development as shown in Syndicalism), the same tendency, operating in a
+different manner and upon different data, essayed to find in action,
+and in the belief which arises from action, that Absolute or Ideal to
+which the pure reason feels it cannot alone attain—namely, the
+realisation of God. To this problem of religion we devote our next
+chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+RELIGION
+
+
+INTRODUCTION: The religious situation in France in the nineteenth
+century—The intellectual and political forces against the Roman
+Catholic Church—Its claims, its orthodoxy and tyranny—The
+humanitarians—The power of Rome—Church and State—The educational
+problem—Clericalism—The cult of Jeanne d’Arc—The lack of a _via media_
+between Roman orthodoxy and _libre pensée_—Protestantism negligible.
+
+I. Comte’s effort in his “Religion of Humanity”—Renan and the
+Church—Freedom—Denial of supernatural elements in Christianity—_Vie de
+Jésus_—Renan not irreligious—Piety—Love and Goodness reveal the
+Divine—God the “ideal”—Vacherot and Taine.
+
+II. Renouvier’s efforts, with Pillon, in the _Critique philosophique_
+and _Critique religieuse_—His republican theology—Freedom, personality
+and God—The deity as finite—God as Goodness and as a Person.
+
+III. Ravaisson’s blend of Hellenism and Christian
+thought—Boutroux—Fouillée on the Idea of God—The importance of Guyau’s
+_L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_—The decay of dogma and ecclesiasticism—The
+term “irreligion” misleading—Sociology and religion-Freedom—Religious
+education and tolerance—Modernism and the Church—Loisy and
+others—Symbolism and _Fidéisme_.
+
+CONCLUSION: The personal factor in faith—Freedom vital to
+religion—Change of attitude since the eighteenth century—Value of
+religion—Tendency towards a free religion devoid of dogmas, expressive
+of the best aspirations of man’s mind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+RELIGION
+
+It is outside our purpose to embark upon discussions of the religious
+problem in France, in so far as this became a problem of politics. Our
+intention is rather to examine the inner core of religious thought, the
+philosophy of religion, which forms an appropriate final chapter to our
+history of the development of ideas.
+
+Yet, although our discussion bears mainly upon the general attitude to
+religion, upon the development of central religious ideas such as the
+idea of God, and upon the place of religion in the future—that is to
+say, upon the philosophy of religion—it is practically impossible to
+understand the religious attitude of our thinkers without a brief
+notice of the religious situation in France during the nineteenth and
+twentieth centuries.
+
+In our Introduction we briefly called attention to the attempt of the
+Traditionalists after the Revolution to recall their countrymen to the
+Christian faith as presented in and by the Roman Catholic Church. The
+efforts made by De Bonald, De Maistre, Chateaubriand, Lamennais and
+Lacordaire did not succeed as they had hoped, but, nevertheless, a
+considerable current of loyalty to the Church and the Catholic religion
+set in. Much of this loyalty was bound up with sentimental affection
+for a monarchy, and arose partly from anti-revolutionary sentiments.[1]
+It cannot, however, be entirely explained by these political feelings.
+There was the expression of a deeper and more spiritual reaction
+directed against the materialistic and sceptical teachings of the
+eighteenth century. Man’s heart craved comfort, consolation and warmth.
+It had been starved in the previous century, and revolution and war had
+only added to the cup of bitterness. Thus there came an epoch of
+Romanticism in religion of which the sentimental and assumed orthodoxy
+of Chateaubriand was a sign of the times. His _Génie du Christianisme_
+may now appear to us full of sentimentality, but it was welcomed at the
+time, since it expressed at least some of those aspirations which had
+for long been denied an expression. It was this which marked the great
+difference between the two centuries in France. The eighteenth was
+mainly concerned with scoffing at religion. Its rationalism was that of
+Voltaire. In the first half of the nineteenth century the pendulum
+swung in the opposite direction. Romanticism, in poetry, in literature,
+in philosophy and in religion was _à la mode_, and it led frequently to
+sentimentality or morbidity. Lamartine, Victor Hugo and De Vigny
+professed the Catholic faith for many years. We may note, and this is
+important, that in France the only form of Christianity which holds any
+sway over the people in general is the Roman Catholic faith. Outside
+the Roman Church there is no religious organisation which is of much
+account. This explains why it is so rare to find a thinker who owns
+allegiance to any Church or religion, and yet it would be wrong to deem
+them irreligious. There is no _via media_ between Catholicism and free
+personal thought. This was a point which Renan quite keenly felt, and
+of which his own spiritual pilgrimage, which took him out of the bounds
+of the Church of his youth, is a fine illustration. Many of France’s
+noblest sons have been brought up in the religious atmosphere of the
+Church and owe much of their education to her, and Rome believes in
+education. The control of education has been throughout the century a
+problem severely contested by Church and State. More important for our
+purpose than the details of the quarrels of Church and State is the
+intellectual condition of the Church itself.
+
+ [1] De Maistre regarded the Revolution as an infliction specially
+ bestowed upon France for her national neglect of religion—his
+ religion, of course. The same crude, misleading, and vicious arguments
+ have since been put forward by the theologians in their efforts to
+ push the cause of the Church with the people. This was very noticeable
+ both in the war of 1870 and that of 1914. In each case it was argued
+ that the war was a punishment from God for France’s frivolity and
+ neglect of the Church. In 1914, in addition, it was deemed a direct
+ divine reply to “Disestablishment.”
+
+
+This reveals a striking vitality, a vigour and initiative at war with
+the central powers of the Vatican, a seething unrest which uniformity
+and authority find annoying. How strong the power of the central
+authority was, the affair of the Concordat had shown, when forty
+bishops were deposed for non-acceptance of the arrangement between
+Napoleon and the Pope.[2] Stronger still was the iron hand of the Pope
+over intellectual freedom.
+
+ [2] The Revolution had separated Church and State and suppressed
+ clerical privilege by the “Civil Constitution of the Clergy” enactment
+ of 1790. Napoleon, alive to the patriotic value of a State Church,
+ repealed this law and declared the divorce of Church and State to be
+ null and void. His negotiations with the Pope (Pius VII.) resulted, in
+ 1801, in the arrangement known as the _Concordat_, by which the Roman
+ Catholic Church was again made the established national Church, its
+ clergy became civil servants paid by the State, and its worship became
+ a branch of public administration.
+
+
+Lamennais was not a “modernist,” as this term is now understood, for
+his theology was orthodox. His fight with the Vatican was for freedom
+in the relations of the Church to society. He pleaded in his _Essai sur
+L’indifference en Matière de Religion_ for the Church to accept the
+principle of freedom, to leave the cherished fondling of the royalist
+cause, and to present to the world the principles of a Christian
+democracy. Lamennais and other liberal-minded men desired the
+separation of Church and State, and were tolerant of those who were not
+Catholic. They claimed, along with their own “right to believe,” that
+of others “not to believe.” His was a liberal Catholicism, but its
+proposals frightened his co-religionists, and drew upon him in 1832 an
+encyclical letter (_Mirari vos_) from the Vatican. The Pope denounced
+liberalism absolutely as an absurd and an erroneous doctrine, a piece
+of folly sprung from the “fetid source of indifferentism.” Lamennais
+found he could not argue, as Renan himself later put it, “with a bar of
+iron.” It was the reactionary De Maistre, with his principle of papal
+authority,[3] and not Lamennais, whom the Vatican, naturally enough,
+chose to favour, or rather to follow.
+
+ [3] As stated in _Du Pape_, 1819.
+
+
+Thus Lamennais found himself, by an almost natural and inevitable
+process, outside the Church, and this in spite of the fact that his
+theology was orthodox. He endeavoured to present his case in his paper
+_L’Avenir_ and in an influential brochure, _The Words of a Believer_,
+which left its mark upon Hugo, Michelet, Lamartine, and George Sand.
+His views blended with the current of humanitarian and democratic
+doctrines which developed from the Saint-Simonists, Pierre Leroux and
+similar thinkers. We have already noted that these social reformers
+held to their beliefs with the conviction that in them and not in the
+Roman Church lay salvation.
+
+This brings us to a crucial point which is the clue to much of the
+subsequent thought upon religion. This is the profound and seemingly
+irreconcilable difference between these two conceptions of religion.
+
+The orthodox Catholic faith believes in a supernatural revelation, and
+is firmly convinced that man is inherently vile and corrupt, born in
+sin from which he cannot be redeemed, save by the mystical operations
+of divine grace, working only through the holy sacraments and clergy of
+the one true Church, to whom all power was given, according to its
+view, by the historic Jesus. Its methods are conservative, its
+discipline rigid and based on tradition and authority. Its system of
+salvation is excessively individualistic. It holds firmly to this
+pessimistic view of human nature, based on the doctrine of original
+sin, thus maintaining a creed which, in the hands of a devoted clergy,
+who are free from domestic ties, works as a powerful moral force upon
+the individual believer. His freedom of thought is restricted; he can
+neither read nor think what he likes, and the Church, having made the
+thirteenth-century doctrines of Aquinas its official philosophy, hurls
+anathema at ideas scientific, political, philosophical or theological
+which have appeared since. No half-measures are allowed: either one is
+a loyal Catholic or one is not a Catholic at all. In this relentlessly
+uncompromising attitude lies the main strength of Catholicism; herein
+also is contained its weakness, or at least that element which makes it
+manufacture its own greatest adversaries.
+
+While claiming to be the one Church of Jesus Christ, it does not by any
+means put him in the foreground of its religion. Its hierarchy of
+saints is rather a survival of polytheism; its worship of the Virgin
+and cult of the _Sacré Cœur_ issue often in a religious sentimentality
+and sensuality promoted by the denial of a more healthy outlet for
+instincts which are an essential part of human nature. Tribute,
+however, must be paid—high tribute—to the devotion of individuals,
+particularly to the work done by the religious orders of women, whose
+devotion the Church having won by its intense appeal to women keeps,
+consecrates and organises in a manner which no other Church has
+succeeded in doing. This is largely the secret of the vigorous life of
+the Church, for as a power of charity the Roman Church is remarkable
+and deserves respect. Her educational efforts, her missions, hospitals,
+her humbler clergy, and her orders which offer opportunity of service
+or of sanctuary to all types of human nature—these constitute Roman
+Catholicism in a truer manner than the diplomacy of the Jesuits or the
+councils of the Vatican. It is this pulsing human heart of hers which
+keeps her alive, not the rigid intellectual dogmatism and antiquated
+theology which she expounds, nor her loyalty to the established
+political order, which, siding with the rich and powerful, frequently
+gives to this professedly spiritual power a debasing taint of
+materialism.
+
+Against all this, and in vital opposition to this, we have the
+humanitarians who, rejecting the doctrine of corruption, believe that
+human instincts and human reason themselves make for goodness and for
+God. While Catholicism looks to the past, humanitarianism looks
+forward, believes in freedom and in progress, and regards the immanent
+Christ-spirit as working in mankind. Its gospel is one of love and
+brotherhood, a romantic doctrine issuing in love and pity for the
+oppressed and the sinful. In the collective consciousness of mankind it
+sees the incarnation, the growth of the immanent God. Therefore it
+claims that in democracy, socialism and world brotherhood lies the true
+Christianity. This, the humanitarians claim, is the true religious
+idealism—that which was preached by the Founder himself and which his
+Church has betrayed. The humanitarians make service to mankind the
+essence of religion, and regard themselves as more truly Christian than
+the Church.
+
+In those countries where Protestantism has a large following, the two
+doctrines of humanitarian optimism and of the orthodox pessimism
+regarding human nature are confused vaguely together. The English mind
+in particular is able to compromise and to blend the two conflicting
+philosophies in varying degrees; but in the French mind its clearer
+penetration and more logical acumen prevent this. The Frenchman is an
+idealist and tends to extremes, either that of whole-hearted devotion
+to a dominating Church or that of the abandonment of organised
+religion. In Protestantism he sees only a halfway house, built upon the
+first principles of criticism, and unwilling to pursue those principles
+to their conclusion—namely, the rejection of all organised Church
+religion, the adoption of perfect freedom for the individual in all
+matters of belief, a religion founded on freedom and on personal
+thought which alone is free.
+
+Such were the two dominant notes in religious thought in France at the
+opening of our period.
+
+Catholicism resisted the humanitarianism of 1848 and strengthened its
+power after the _coup d’état_. The Church and the Vatican became more
+staunch in their opposition to all doctrines of modern thought. The
+French clergy profited by the alliance with the aristocracy, while
+religious orders, particularly the Jesuits, increased in number and in
+power. Veuillot proclaimed the virtues of Catholicism in his writings.
+Meanwhile the Pope’s temporal power decreased, but his spiritual power
+was increasing in extent and in intensity. Centralisation went on
+within the Church, and Rome (_i.e._, the Pope and the Vatican) became
+all-powerful.
+
+Just after the half-century opens the Pope (Pius IX.), in 1854,
+proclaimed his authority in announcing the dogma of the Immaculate
+Conception of the Virgin Mary.[4] As France had heard the sentence,
+_L’Etat, c’est moi_, from the lips of one of its greatest monarchs, it
+now heard from another quarter a similar principle enunciated,
+L’Eglise, c’est moi. As democracy and freedom cried out against the
+one, they did so against the other. Undaunted, the Vatican continued in
+its absolutism, even although it must have seen that in some quarters
+revolt would be the result. Ten years later the Pope attacked the whole
+of modern thought, to which he was diametrically opposed, in his
+encyclical _Quanta Cura_ and in his famous _Syllabus_, which
+constituted a catalogue of the modern errors and heresies which he
+condemned. This famous challenge was quite clear and uncompromising in
+its attitude, concluding with a curse upon “him who should maintain
+that the Roman Pontiff can, and must, be reconciled and compromise with
+progress, liberalism and modern civilisation!” To the doctrine of
+_L’Eglise, c’est moi_ had now been added that of _La Science, aussi,
+c’est moi_. This was not all. In 1870 the dogma of Papal Infallibility
+was proclaimed. By a strange irony of history, however, this
+declaration of spiritual absolutism was followed by an entire loss of
+temporal power. The outbreak of the war in that same year between
+France and Prussia led to the hasty withdrawal of French troops from
+the Papal Domain and the Eternal City fell to the secular power of the
+Italian national army under Victor Emmanuel.
+
+ [4] This new dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin must
+ not, of course, be confused, as it often is by those outside the
+ Catholic Church, with the quite different and more ancient proposition
+ which asserts the Virgin Birth of Jesus.
+
+
+The defeat of France at the hands of Prussia in 1871 issued in a
+revival of religious sentiment, frequently seen in defeated nations. A
+special mission or crusade of national repentance gathered in large
+subscriptions which built the enormous Church of the Sacré Coeur
+overlooking Paris from the heights of Montmartre.[5]
+
+ [5] The anti-Catholic element, however, have had the audacity, and
+ evidently the legal right, to place a statue to a man who, some
+ centuries back, was burned at the stake for failing to salute a
+ religious procession, in such a position immediately in front of this
+ great church that the plan for the large staircase cannot be carried
+ out.
+
+
+Seeking for religious consolation, the French people found a
+Catholicism which had become embittered and centralised for warfare
+upon liberal religion and humanitarianism. They found that the only
+organised religion they knew was dominated by the might of Rome and the
+powers of the clergy. These even wished France, demoralised as she was
+for the moment, to undertake the restoration of the Pope’s temporal
+power in Italy. Further, they were definitely in favour of monarchy:
+“the altar and the throne” were intimately associated in the
+ecclesiastical mind.
+
+It was the realisation of this which prompted Gambetta to cry out to
+the Third Republic with stern warning, “Clericalism is your enemy.”
+Thus began the political fight for which Rome had been strengthening
+herself. With the defeat of the clerical-monarchy party in 1877 the
+safety of the Republic was assured. From then until 1905 the Republic
+and the Church fought each other. Educational questions were bitterly
+contested (1880). The power of the Jesuits, especially, was regarded as
+a constant menace to the State. The Dreyfus affair (1894- 1899) did not
+improve relations, with its intense anti-semitism and anti-clericalism.
+The battle was only concluded by the legislation of Waldeck-Rousseau in
+1901 and Combes in 1903, expelling religious orders. Combes himself had
+studied for the priesthood and was violently anti-clerical. The
+culmination came in the Separation Law of 1905 carried by Briand, in
+the Pope’s protest against this, followed by the Republic’s
+confiscation of much Church property, a step which might have been
+avoided if the French Catholics had been allowed to have their way in
+an arrangement with the State regarding their churches. This was
+prevented by the severance of diplomatic relations between France and
+the Vatican and by the Pope’s disagreement with the French Catholics
+whose wishes he ignored in his policy of definite hostility to the
+French Government.[6]
+
+ [6] Relations with the Vatican, which were seen to be desirable during
+ the Great European War, have since been resumed (in 1921) by the
+ Republic.
+
+
+During our period a popular semi-nationalist and semi-religious cult of
+Jeanne d’Arc, “the Maid of Orleans,” appeared in France. The clergy
+expressly encouraged this, with the definite object of enlisting
+sentiments of nationality and patriotism on the side of the Church.
+Ecclesiastical diplomacy at headquarters quickly realised the use which
+might be made of this patriotic figure whom, centuries before, the
+Church had thought fit to burn as a witch. The Vatican saw a
+possibility of blending French patriotism with devotion to Catholicism
+and thus possibly strengthening, in the eyes of the populace at least,
+the waning cause of the Church.
+
+The adoration of Jeanne d’Arc was approved as early as 1894, but when
+the Church found itself in a worse plight with its relation to the
+State, it made preparations in 1903 for her enrolment among the
+saints.[7] She was honoured the following year with the title of
+“Venerable,” but in 1908, after the break of Church and State, she was
+accorded the full status of a saint, and her statue, symbolic of
+patriotism militant, stands in most French churches as conspicuous
+often as that of the Virgin, who, in curious contrast, fondles the
+young child, and expresses the supreme loveliness of motherhood.[8] The
+cult of Jeanne d’Arc flourished particularly in 1914 on the sentiments
+of patriotism, militarism and religiosity then current. This was
+natural because it is for these very sentiments that she stands as a
+symbol. She is evidently a worthy goddess whose worship is worth while,
+for we are assured that it was through _her_ beneficent efforts that
+the German Army retired from Paris in 1914 and again in 1918. The
+saintly maid of Orleans reappeared and beat them back! Such is the
+power of the “culte” which the Church eagerly fosters. The Sacré Coeur
+also has its patriotic and military uses, figuring as it did as an
+emblem on some regimental flags on the battlefield. Meanwhile, the
+celebrations of Napoleon’s centenary (1921) give rise to the conjecture
+that he, too, will in time rank with Joan of Arc as a saint. His
+canonisation would achieve absolutely that union of patriotic and
+religious sentimentality to which the Church in France directs its
+activities.
+
+ [7] t is interesting to observe the literature on Jeanne d’Arc
+ published at this time: Anatole France, _Vie de Jeanne d’Arc_ (2
+ vols., 1908); Durand, _Jeanne d’Arc et l’Eglise_ (1908). These are
+ noteworthy, also Andrew Lang’s work, _The Maid of Orleans_ (also
+ 1908).
+
+
+ [8] Herein, undoubtedly, lies the strong appeal of the Church to
+ women.
+
+
+The vast majority of the 39,000,000 French people are at least
+nominally Catholic, even if only from courtesy or from a utilitarian
+point of view. Only about one in sixty of the population are
+Protestant. Although among cultured conservatives there is a real
+devotion to the Church, the creed of France is in general something far
+more broad and human than Catholicism, in spite of the tremendously
+human qualities which that Church possesses. The creed of France is
+summed up better in art, nature, beauty, music, science, _la patrie_,
+humanity, in the worship of life itself.[9]
+
+ [9] Those who desire to study the religious psychology of France
+ during our period cannot find a better revelation than that given in
+ the wonderful novel by Roger Martin du Card, entitled Jean Barois.
+
+I
+
+It was against such a background of ecclesiastical and political
+affairs that the play of ideas upon religion went on. Such was the
+environment, the tradition which surrounded our thinkers, and we may
+very firmly claim that only by a recognition that their religious and
+national _milieu_ was of such a type as we have outlined, can the real
+significance of their religious thought be understood. Only when we
+have grasped the essential attitude of authority and tradition of the
+Roman Church, its ruthless attitude to modern thought of all kinds, can
+we understand the religious attitude of men like Renan, Renouvier and
+Guyau.
+
+We are also enabled to see why the appeal of the Saint-Simonist group
+could present itself as a religious and, indeed, Christian appeal
+outside the Church. It enables us to understand why Cousin’s
+spiritualism pleased neither the Catholics nor their opponents, and to
+realise why the “Religion of Humanity,” which Auguste Comte
+inaugurated, made so little appeal.[10] This has been well styled an
+“inverted Catholicism,” since it endeavours to preserve the ritual of
+that religion and to embody the doctrines of humanitarianism. Naturally
+enough it drew upon itself the scorn of both these groups. The Catholic
+saw in it only blasphemy: the humanitarian saw no way in which it might
+further his ends.
+
+ [10] Littré, his disciple, as we have already noted, rejected this
+ part of his master’s teaching. Littré was opposed by Robinet, who laid
+ the stress upon the “Religion of Humanity” as the crown of Comte’s
+ work.
+
+
+Comte’s attempt to base his new religion upon Catholicism was quite
+deliberate, for he strove to introduce analogies with “everything great
+and deep which the Catholic system of the Middle Ages effected or even
+projected.” He offered a new and fantastic trinity, compiled a calendar
+of renowned historical personalities, to replace that of unknown
+saints. He proclaimed “positive dogmas “and aspired to all the
+authority and infallibility of the Roman Pontiff, supported by a
+trained clergy, whose word should be law. Curiously enough he, too, had
+his anathemas, in that he had days set apart for the solemn cursing of
+the great enemies of the human race, such as Napoleon. It was indeed a
+reversed Catholicism, offering a fairly good caricature of the methods
+of the Roman Church, and it was equally obnoxious in its tyrannical
+attitude.[11] While it professed to express humanity and love as its
+central ideas it proceeded to outline a method which is the utter
+negation of these. Comte made the great mistake of not realising that
+loyalty to these ideals must involve spiritual freedom, and that the
+religion of humanity must be a collective inspiration of free
+individuals, who will in love and fellowship tolerate differences upon
+metaphysical questions. Uniformity can only be mischievous.
+
+ [11] Guyau’s criticisms of Comte’s “Religion of Humanity” in his
+ _L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_ are interesting. “The marriage of positive
+ science and blind sentiment cannot produce religion” (p. 314; Eng.
+ trans., p. 366). “Comtism, which consists of the rites of religion and
+ nothing else, is an attempt to maintain life in the body after the
+ departure of the soul” (p. 307; Eng. trans., p. 359).
+
+
+It was because he grasped this vital point that Renan’s discussion of
+the religious question is so instructive. For him, religion is
+essentially an affair of personal taste. Here we have another
+indication of the clear way in which Renan was able to discern the
+tendencies of his time. He published his _Etudes d’Histoire religieuse_
+in 1857, and his Preface to the _Nouvelles Etudes d’Histoire
+religieuse_ was written in 1884. He claims there that freedom is
+essential to religion, and that it is absolutely necessary that the
+State should have no power whatever over it. Religion is as personal
+and private a matter as taste in literature or art. There should be no
+State laws, he claims, relating to religion at all, any more than dress
+is prescribed for citizens by law. He well points out that only a State
+which is strictly neutral in religion can ever be absolutely free from
+playing the _rôle_ of persecutor. The favouring of one sect will entail
+some persecution or hardship upon others. Further, he sees the iniquity
+of taxing the community to pay the expenses of clergy to whose
+teachings they may object, or whose doctrines are not theirs. Freedom,
+Renan believed, would claim its own in the near future and, denouncing
+the Concordat, he prophesied the abolition of the State Church.
+
+The worst type of organisation Renan holds to be the theocratic state,
+like Islam, or the ancient Pontifical State in which dogma reigns
+supreme. He condemns also the State whose religion is based upon the
+profession of a majority of its citizens. There should be, as Spinoza
+was wont to style it, “liberty of philosophising.” The days of the
+dominance of dogma are passing, in many quarters gone by already,
+“Religion has become for once and all a matter of personal taste.”
+
+Renan himself was deeply religious in mind. He was never an atheist and
+did not care for the term “free-thinker” because of its implied
+associations with the irreligion of the previous century. He stands
+out, however, not only in our period of French thought, but in the
+world development of the century as one of the greatest masters of
+religious criticism. His historical work is important, and he possessed
+a knowledge and equipment for that task. His distinguished Semitic
+scholarship led to his obtaining the chair of Hebrew at the Collège de
+France, and enabled him to write his Histories, one of the Jews and one
+of Christianity.
+
+It was as a volume of this _Histoire des Origines du Christianisme_
+that his _Vie de Jésus_ appeared in 1863. This life of the Founder of
+Christianity produced a profound stir in the camps of religious
+orthodoxy, and drew upon its author severe criticisms. Apart from the
+particular views set forth in that volume, we must remember that the
+very fact of his writing upon “a sacred subject,” which was looked upon
+as a close preserve, reserved for the theologians or churchmen alone,
+was deemed at that time an original and daring feat in France.
+
+His particular views, which created at the time such scandal, were akin
+to those of Baur and the Tubingen School, which Strauss (Renan’s
+contemporary) had already set forth in his _Leben Jesu_.[12] Briefly,
+they may be expressed as the rejection of the supernatural. Herein is
+seen the scientific or “positive” influence at work upon the dogmas of
+the Christian religion, a tendency which culminated in “Modernism”
+within the Church, only to be condemned violently by the Pope in 1907.
+It was this temper, produced by the study of documents, by criticism
+and historical research which put Renan out of the Catholic Church. His
+rational mind could not accept the dogmas laid down. Lamennais (who was
+conservative and orthodox in his theology, and possessed no taint of
+“modernism” in the technical sense) had declared that the
+starting-point should be faith and not reason. Renan aptly asks in
+reply to this, “and what is to be the test, in the last resort, of the
+claims of faith is not reason?”
+
+ [12] Written in 1835. Littré issued a French translation in 1839, a
+ year previous to the appearance of the English version by George
+ Eliot. Strauss’s life covers 1808-1874.
+
+
+In Renan we find a good illustration of the working of the spirit of
+modern thought upon a religious mind. Being a sincere and penetrating
+intellect he could not, like so many people, learned folk among them,
+keep his religious ideas and his reason in separate watertight
+compartments. This kind of people Renan likens in his _Souvenirs
+d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_ to mother-o’-pearl shells of Francois de
+Sales “which are able to live in the sea without tasting a drop of salt
+water.” Yet he realises the comfort of such an attitude. “I see around
+me,” he continues, “men of pure and simple lives whom Christianity has
+had the power to make virtuous and happy. . . . But I have noticed that
+none of them have the critical faculty, for which let them bless God!”
+He well realises the contentment which, springing sometimes from a
+dullness of mind or lack of sensitiveness, excludes all doubt and all
+problems.
+
+In Catholicism he sees a bar of iron which will not reason or bend. “I
+can only return to it by amputation of my faculties, by definitely
+stigmatising my reason and condemning it to perpetual silence.” Writing
+of his exit from the Seminary of Saint Sulpice, where he was trained
+for the priesthood, he remarks in his _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de
+Jeunesse_ that “there were times when I was sorry that I was not a
+Protestant, so that I might be a philosopher without ceasing to be a
+Christian.” For Renan, as for so many minds in modern France, severance
+from the Roman Church is equivalent to severance from Christianity as
+an organised religion. The practical dilemma is presented of
+unquestioning obedience to an infallible Church on the one hand, or the
+attitude of _libre-penseur_ on the other. There are not the
+accommodating varieties of the Protestant presentation of the Christian
+religion. Renan’s spiritual pilgrimage is but an example of many. In a
+measure this condition of affairs is a source of strength to the Roman
+Church for, since a break with it so often means a break with
+Christianity or indeed with all definite religion, only the bolder and
+stronger thinkers make the break which their intellect makes
+imperative. The mass of the people, however dissatisfied they may be
+with the Church, nevertheless accept it, for they see no alternative
+but the opposite extreme. No half-way house of non-conformity presents
+itself as a rule.
+
+Yet, as we have insisted, Renan had an essentially religious view of
+the universe, and he expressly claimed that his break with the Church
+and his criticism of her were due to a devotion to pure religion, and
+he even adds, to a loyalty to the spirit of her Founder. Although, as
+he remarks in his _Nouvelles Etudes religieuses_, it is true that the
+most modest education tends to destroy the belief in the superstitious
+elements in religion, it is none the less true that the very highest
+culture can never destroy religion in the highest sense. “Dogmas pass,
+but piety is eternal.” The external trappings of religion have suffered
+by the growth of the modern sciences of nature and of historical
+criticism. The mind of cultivated persons does not now present the same
+attitude to evidence in regard to religious doctrines which were once
+accepted without question. The sources of the origins of the Christian
+religion are themselves questionable. This, Renan says, must not
+discourage the believers in true religion, for that is not the kind of
+foundation upon which religion reposes. Dogmas in the past gave rise to
+divisions and quarrels, only by feeling can religious persons be united
+in fellowship. The most prophetic words of Jesus were, Renan points
+out, those in which he indicated a time when men “would not worship God
+in this mountain nor in Jerusalem, but when the true worshippers would
+worship in spirit and in truth.” It was precisely this spirit which
+Renan admired in Jesus, whom he considered more of a philosopher than
+the Church, and he reminds the “Christians”[13] who railed against him
+as an unbeliever that Jesus had had much more influence upon him than
+they gave him credit for, and, more particularly, that his break with
+the Church was due to loyalty to Jesus. By such loyalty Renan meant not
+a blind worship, but a reverence which endeavoured to appreciate and
+follow the ideals for which Jesus himself stood. It did not involve
+slavish acceptance of all he said, even if that were intelligible, and
+clear, which it is not. “To be a Platonist,” remarks Renan, “I need not
+adore Plato, or believe _all_ that he said.”[14]
+
+ [13] Renan complains of the ignorance of the clergy of Rome regarding
+ his own work, which they did not understand because they had not read
+ it, merely relying on the Press and other sources for false and
+ biassed accounts.
+
+
+ [14] _Cf._ Renan’s Essay in _Questions contemporaines_ on “_L’Avenir
+ religieux des Sociétés modernes_.”
+
+
+Renan is in agreement with the central ideas of Jesus’ own faith, and
+he rightly regards him as one of the greatest contributors to the
+world’s religious thought. Renan’s religion is free from
+supernaturalism and dogma. He believes in infinite Goodness or
+Providence, but he despises the vulgar and crude conceptions of God
+which so mar a truly religious outlook. He points out how prayer, in
+the sense of a request to Heaven for a particular object, is becoming
+recognised as foolish. ‘As a “meditation,” an interview with one’s own
+conscience, it has a deeply religious value. The vulgar idea of prayer
+reposes on an immoral conception of God. Renan rightly sees the central
+importance for religion of possessing a sane view of the divinity, not
+one which belongs to primitive tribal wargods and weather-gods. He
+aptly says, in this connection, that the one who was defeated in 1871
+was not only France but _le bon Dieu_ to which she in vain appealed. In
+his place was to be found, remarks Renan with a little sarcasm, “only a
+Lord God of Hosts who was unmoved by the moral ‘délicatesse’ of the
+Uhlans and the incontestable excellence of the Prussian shells.”[15] He
+rightly points to the immoral use made of the divinity by pious folk
+whose whole religion is utilitarian and materialistic. They do good
+only in order to get to heaven or escape hell,[16] and believe in God
+because it is necessary for them to have a confidant and sonsoler, to
+whom they may cry in time of trouble, and to whose will they may
+resignedly impute the evil chastisement which their own errors have
+brought upon them individually or collectively. But, he rightly claims,
+it is only where utilitarian calculations and self-interest end, that
+religion begins with the sense of the Infinite and of the Ideal
+Goodness and Beauty and Love.
+
+ [15] _Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques_, p. ix.
+
+
+ [16] One pious individual thought to convert Renan himself by writing
+ him every month, quite briefly, to this effect “There is a hell.”
+
+
+He endeavours in his _Examen de Conscience philosophique_ (1888) to sum
+up his attitude upon this question. There he affirms that it is beyond
+dispute or doubt that we have no evidence whatever of the action in the
+universe of one or of several wills superior to that of man. The actual
+state of this universe gives no sign of any external intervention, and
+we know nothing of its beginning. No beneficent interfering power, a
+_deus ex machinâ_, corrects or directs the operation of blind forces,
+enlightens man or improves his lot. No God appears miraculously to
+prevent evils, to crush disease, stop wars, or save his children from
+peril. No end or purpose is visible to us. God in the popular sense,
+living and acting as a Divine Providence, is not to be seen in our
+universe. The question is, however, whether this universe of ours is
+the totality of existence. Doubt comes into play here, and if our
+universe is not this totality, then God, although absent from his
+world, might still exist outside it. Our finite world is little in
+relation to the Infinite, it is a mere speck in the universe we know,
+and its duration to a divine Being might be only a day.
+
+The Infinite, continues Renan, surrounds our finite world above and
+below. It stretches on the one hand to the infinitely large concourse
+of worlds and systems, and, on the other, to the infinitely little as
+atoms, microbes and the germs by which human life itself is passed on
+from one generation to another. The prospect of the world we know
+involves logically and fatally, says Renan, atheism. But this atheism,
+he adds, may be due to the fact that we cannot see far enough. Our
+universe is a phenomenon which has had a beginning and will have an
+end. That which has had no beginning and will have no end is the
+Absolute All, or God. Metaphysics has always been a science proceeding
+upon this assumption, “Something exists, therefore something has
+existed from all eternity.” which is akin to the scientific principle,
+“No effect with- out a cause.”[17]
+
+ [17] _Examen de Conscience philosophique_, p. 412 of the volume
+ _Feuilles détachées_.
+
+
+We must not allow ourselves to be misled too far by the constructions
+or inductions about the uniformity and immutability of the laws of
+nature. “A God may reveal himself, perhaps, one day.” The infinite may
+dispose of our finite world, use it for its own ends. The expression,
+“Nature and its author,” may not be so absurd as some seem to think it.
+It is true that our experience presents no reason for forming such an
+hypothesis, but we must keep our sense of the infinite. “Everything is
+possible, even God,” and Renan adds, “If God exists, he must be good,
+and he will finish by being just.” It is as foolish to deny as to
+assert his existence in a dogmatic and thoughtless manner. It is upon
+this sense of the infinite and upon the ideals of Goodness, Beauty and
+Love that true faith or piety reposes.
+
+Love, declares Renan, is one of the principal revelations of the
+divine, and he laments the neglect of it by philosophy. It runs in a
+certain sense through all living beings, and in man has been the school
+of gentleness and courtesy—nay more, of morals and of religion. Love,
+understood in the high sense, is a sacred, religious thing, or rather
+is a part of religion itself. In a tone which recalls that of the New
+Testament and Tolstoi, Renan beseeches us to remember that God _is_
+Love, and that where Love is there God is. In loving, man is at his
+best; he goes out of himself and feels himself in contact with the
+infinite. The very act of love is veritably sacred and divine, the
+union of body and soul with another is a holy communion with the
+infinite. He remarks in his _Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_,
+doubtless remembering the simple purity and piety of his mother and
+sister, that when reflection has brought us to doubt, and even to a
+scepticism regarding goodness, then the spontaneous affirmation of
+goodness and beauty which exists in a noble and virtuous woman saves us
+from cynicism and restores us to communication with the eternal spring
+in which God reflects himself. Love, which Renan with reason laments as
+having been neglected on its most serious side and looked upon as mere
+sentimentality, offers the highest proof of God. In it lies our
+umbilical link with nature, but at the same time our communion with the
+infinite. He recalls some of Browning’s views in his attitude to love
+as a redeeming power. The most wretched criminal still has something
+good in him, a divine spark, if he be capable of loving.
+
+It is the spirit of love and goodness which Renan admires in the simple
+faith of those separated far from him in their theological ideas. “God
+forbid,” he says,[18] “that I should speak slightingly of those who,
+devoid of the critical sense, and impelled by very pure and powerful
+religious motives, are attached to one or other of the great
+established systems of faith. I love the simple faith of the peasant,
+the serious conviction of the priest.”
+
+ [18] _L’Avenir de la Science_, pp. 436, 437; Eng. trans., p. 410.
+
+
+“Supprimer Dieu, serait-ce amoindrir l’univers?”
+
+
+asks Guyau in one of his _Vers d’un Philosophe_.’[19] Renan observes
+that if we tell the simple to live by aspiration after truth and
+beauty, these words would have no meaning for them. “Tell them to love
+God, not to offend God, they will understand you perfectly. God,
+Providence, soul, good old words, rather heavy, but expressive and
+respectable which science will explain, but will never replace with
+advantage. What is God for humanity if not the category of the
+_ideal_?”[20]
+
+ [19] _“Question,” Vers d’un Philosophe_, p. 65.
+
+
+ [20] _L’Avenir de la Science_,” p. 476; Eng. trans., p. 445.
+
+
+This is the point upon which Vacherot insisted in his treatment of
+religion. He claimed that the conception of God arises in the human
+consciousness from a combination of two separate ideas. The first is
+the notion of the Infinite which Science itself approves, the second
+the notion of perfection which Science is unable to show us anywhere
+unless it be found in the human consciousness and its thoughts, where
+it abides as the magnetic force ever drawing us onward and acts at the
+same time as a dynamic, giving power to every progressive movement,
+being “the Ideal” in the mind and heart of man.
+
+Similar was the doctrine of Taine, who saw in Reason the ideal which
+would produce in mankind a new religion, which would be that of Science
+and Philosophy demanding from art forms of expression in harmony with
+themselves. This religion would be free in doctrine. Taine himself
+looked upon religion as “a metaphysical poem accompanied by belief,”
+and he approached to the conception of Spinoza of a contemplation which
+may well be called an “intellectual love of God.”
+
+II
+
+Like Renan, Renouvier was keenly interested in religion and its
+problems; he was also a keen opponent of the Roman Catholic Church and
+faith, against which he brought his influence into play in two ways—by
+his _néo-criticisme_ as expressed in his written volumes and by his
+energetic editing of the two periodicals _La Critique philosophique_
+and _La Critique religieuse_.
+
+In undertaking the publication of these periodicals Renouvier’s
+confessed aim was that of a definite propaganda. While the Roman Church
+profited by the feelings of disappointment and demoralisation which
+followed the Franco-Prussian War, and strove to shepherd wavering souls
+again into its fold, to find there a peace which evidently the world
+could not give, Renouvier (together with his friend Pillon) endeavoured
+to rally his countrymen by urging the importance, and, if possible, the
+acceptance of his own political and religious convictions arising out
+of his philosophy. The _Critique philosophique_ appeared weekly from
+its commencement in 1872 until 1884, thereafter as a monthly until
+1889. Among its contributors, whose names are of religious
+significance, were A. Sabatier, L. Dauriac, R. Allier[21] and William
+James.
+
+ [21] Now Dean of the Protestant Faculty of Theology in Paris.
+
+
+Renouvier’s great enthusiasm for his periodical is the main feature of
+this period of his life, although, owing to his tremendous energy, it
+does not seem to have interfered with the publication of his more
+permanent works. The political and general policy of this journal may
+be summed up in a sentence from the last year’s issue,[22] where we
+find Renouvier remarking that it had been his aim throughout “to uphold
+strictly republican principles and to fight all that savoured of
+Caesar, or imperialism.” The declared foe of monarchy in politics, he
+was equally the declared foe of the Pope in the religious realm. His
+attitude was one of very marked hostility to the power of the Vatican,
+which he realised to be increasing within the Roman Church, and one of
+keen opposition to the general power of that Church and her clergy in
+France. Renouvier’s paper was quite definitely and aggressively
+anti-Catholic. He urged all Catholic readers of his paper who professed
+loyalty to the Republic to quit the Roman Church and to affiliate
+themselves to the Protestant body.
+
+ [22] _La Critique philosophique_, 1889, tome ii., p. 403.
+
+
+It was with this precise object in view that, in 1878, he added to his
+_Critique philosophique_ a supplement which he entitled _La Critique
+religieuse_, a quarterly intended purely for propaganda purposes.
+“Criticism,” he had said, “is in philosophy what Protestantism is in
+religion.”[23] As certitude is, according to Renouvier’s doctrines, the
+fruit of intelligence, heart and will, it can never be obtained by the
+coercion of authority or by obedience such as the Roman Church demands.
+He appealed to the testimony of history, as a witness to the conflict
+between authority and the individual conscience. Jesus, whom the Church
+adores, was himself a superb example of such revolt. History, however,
+shows us, says Renouvier, the gradual decay of authority in such
+matters. Thought, if it is really to be thought in its sincerity, must
+be free. This Renouvier realised, and in this freedom he saw the
+characteristic of the future development of religion, and shows
+himself, in this connection, in substantial agreement with Renan and
+Guyau.
+
+ [23] _Ibid_., 1873, pp. 145-146.
+
+
+Renouvier’s interest in theology and religion, and in the theological
+implications of all philosophical thought, was not due merely to a
+purely speculative impulse, but to a very practical desire to initiate
+a rational restatement of religious conceptions, which he considered to
+be an urgent need of his time. He lamented the influence of the Roman
+Church over the minds of the youth of his country, and realised the
+vital importance of the controversy between Church and State regarding
+secular education. Renouvier was a keen supporter of the secular
+schools (_écoles laïques_). In 1879, when the educational controversy
+was at its height, he issued a little book on ethics for these
+institutions (_Petit Traité de Morale pour les Ecoles laïques_), which
+was republished in an enlarged form in 1882, when the secular party,
+ably led by Jules Ferry, triumphed in the establishment of compulsory,
+free, secular education. That great achievement, however, did not solve
+all the difficulties presented by the Church in its educational
+attitude, and even now the influence of clericalism is dreaded.
+
+Renouvier realised all the dangers, but he was forced also to realise
+that his enthusiastic and energetic campaign against the power of the
+Church had failed to achieve what he had desired. He complained of
+receiving insufficient support from quarters where he might well have
+expected it. His failure is a fairly conclusive proof that
+Protestantism has no future in France: it is a stubborn survival,
+rather than a growing influence. With the decline in the power and
+appeal of the Roman Catholic Church will come the decline of religion
+of a dogmatic and organised kind. Renouvier probably had an influence
+in hastening the day of the official severance of Church and State, an
+event which he did not live long enough to see.[24]
+
+ [24] It occurred, however, only two years after his death.
+
+
+Having become somewhat discouraged, Renouvier stopped the publication
+of his religious quarterly in 1885 and made the _Critique
+philosophique_ a monthly instead of a weekly Journal. It ceased in
+1889, but the following year Renouvier’s friend, Pillon, began a new
+periodical, which bore the same name as the one which had ceased with
+the outbreak of the war in 1870. This was _L’Année philosophique_, to
+which Renouvier contributed articles from time to time on religious
+topics.
+
+Some writers are of the opinion that Renouvier’s attacks on the Roman
+Catholic Church and faith, so far from strengthening the Protestant
+party in France, tended rather to increase the hostility to the
+Christian religion generally or, indeed, to any religious view of the
+universe.
+
+Renouvier’s own statements in his philosophy, in so far as these
+concern religion and theology, are in harmony with his rejection of the
+Absolute in philosophy and the Absolute in politics. His criticism of
+the idea of God, the central point in any philosophy of religion, is in
+terms similar to his critique of the worship of the Absolute or the
+deification of the State.
+
+In dealing with the question of a “Total Synthesis” Renouvier indicated
+his objections to the metaphysical doctrine of an Absolute, which is
+diametrically opposed to his general doctrine of relativity. He is
+violently in conflict with all religious conceptions which savour of
+this Absolute or have a pantheistic emphasis, which would diminish the
+value and significance of relativity and of personality. The
+“All-in-All” conception of God, which represents the pantheistic
+elements in many theologies and religions, both Christian and other, is
+not really a consciousness, he shows, for consciousness itself implies
+a relation, a union of the self and non-self. In such a conception
+actor, play and theatre all blend into one, God alone is real, and he
+is unconscious, for there is, according to this hypothesis, nothing
+outside himself which he can know. Renouvier realises that he is faced
+with the ancient problem of the One and the Many, with the alternative
+of unity or plurality. With his usual logical decisiveness Renouvier
+posits plurality. He does not attempt to reconcile the two opposites,
+and he deals with the problem in the manner in which he faced the
+antinomies of Kant. Both cannot be true, and the enemy of pantheism and
+absolutism acclaims pluralism, both for logical reasons and in order to
+safeguard the significance of personality. In particular he directly
+criticises the philosophy of Spinoza in which he sees the supreme
+statement of this philosophy of the eternal, the perfect, necessary,
+unchanging One, who is the same yesterday, to-day and forever. He
+admits that the idea of law or a system of laws leads to the
+introduction of something approaching the hypothesis of unity, but he
+is careful to show by his doctrine of freedom and personality that this
+is only a limited unity and that, considered even from a scientific
+standpoint, a Total Synthesis, which is the logical outcome of such an
+hypothesis, is ultimately untenable. He overthrows the idols of Spinoza
+and Hegel. Such absolutes, infinite and eternal, whether described as
+an infinite love which loves itself or a thought thinking thought, are
+nothing more to Renouvier than vain words, which it is absurd to offer
+as “The Living God.”
+
+Against these metaphysical erections Renouvier opposes his doctrines of
+freedom, of personality, relativity and pluralism. He offers in
+contrast the conception of God as a Person, not an Absolute, but
+relative, not infinite, but finite, limited by man’s freedom and by
+contingency in the world of creatures. God, in his view, is not a Being
+who is omnipotent, or omniscient. He is a Person of whom man is a type,
+certainly a degraded type, but man is made in the image of the divine
+personality. Our notion of God, Renouvier reminds us, must be
+consistent with the doctrine of freedom, hence we must conceive of him
+not merely as a creator of creatures or subjects, but of creative power
+itself in those creatures. The relation of God to man is more complex
+than that of simple “creation” as this word is usually comprehended,
+“It is a creation of creation,” says Renouvier,[25] a remark which is
+parallel to the view expressed by Bergson, to the effect that, we must
+conceive of God as a “creator of creators.”[26] The existence of this
+Creative Person must be conceived, Renouvier insists, as indissolubly
+bound up with his work, and it is unintelligible otherwise. That work
+is one of creation and not emanation—it involves more than mere power
+and transcendence. God is immanent in the universe.
+
+ [25] _Psychologie ralionnelle_, vol. 2, p. 104.
+
+
+ [26] In his address to the Edinburgh Philosophical Society, 1914.
+
+
+Theology has wavered between the two views—that of absolute
+transcendence and omnipotence and that of immanence based on freedom
+and limitation. In the first, every single thing depends upon the
+operation of God, whose Providence rules all. This is pure determinism
+of a theological character. In the other view man’s free personality is
+recognised; part of the creation is looked upon as partaking of freedom
+and contingency, therefore the divinity is conceived as limited and
+finite.
+
+Renouvier insists that this view of God as finite is the only tenable
+one, for it is the only one which gives a rational and moral
+explanation of evil. In the first view God is responsible for all
+things, evil included, and man is therefore much superior to him from a
+moral standpoint. The idea of God must be ethically acceptable, and it
+is unfortunate that this idea, so central to religion, is the least
+susceptible to modification in harmony with man’s ethical development.
+We already have noticed Guyau’s stress upon this point in our
+discussion of ethics. Our conception of God must, Renouvier claims, be
+the affirmation of our highest category, Personality, and must express
+the best ethical ideals of mankind. Society suffers for its immoral and
+primitive view of God, which gives to its religion a barbarous
+character which is disgraceful and revolting to finer or more
+thoughtful minds.
+
+It is true that the acceptance of the second view, which carries with
+it the complete rejection of the ideas of omnipotence and omniscience,
+modifies profoundly many of the old and primitive views of God.
+Renouvier recognises this, and wishes his readers also to grasp this
+point, for only so is religion to be brought forward in a development
+harmonious with the growth of man’s mind in other spheres. Man should
+not profess the results of elaborate culture in science while he
+professes at the same time doctrines of God which are not above those
+of a savage or primitive people. This is the chief mischief which the
+influence of the Hebrew writings of the Old Testament has had upon the
+Christian religion. The moral conscience now demands their rejection,
+for to those who value religion they can only appear as being of pure
+blasphemy. God is neither omnipotent nor omniscient, consequently many
+things must be unknown to him until they happen. Foreknowledge and
+predetermination on his part are impossible, according to Renouvier.
+God is not to be conceived as a consciousness enveloping the entire
+universe, past, present and future, in a total synthesis. Such a belief
+is mischievous to humanity because of its fatalism, in spite of the
+comfortable consolation it offers to pious souls. Moreover, it presents
+the absurd view of God working often against himself.
+
+The idea of God, Renouvier shows, arises out of the discussions of the
+nature of the universal laws of the universe and from the progress of
+personalities. The plausible conceptions of God based on causality and
+on “necessary essence” have not survived the onslaughts of Criticism.
+The personality of God seems to us, says Renouvier, indicated as the
+conclusion and the almost necessary culmination of the consideration of
+the probabilities laid down by the practical reason or moral law. The
+primary, though not primitive, evidence for the existence of God is
+contained in, and results from, the generalisation of the idea of
+“ends” in the universe. We must not go bevond phenomena or seek
+evidence in some fictitious sphere outside of our experience. In its
+most general and abstract sense the idea of God arises from the
+conception of moral order, immortality, or the accord of happiness and
+goodness. We cannot deny the existence of a morality in the order and
+movements of the world, a physical sanction to the moral laws of virtue
+and of progress, an external reality of good, a supremacy of good, a
+witness of the Good itself. Renouvier does not think that any man,
+having sufficiently developed his thought, would refuse to give the
+name God to the object of this supreme conception, which at first may
+seem abstract because it is not in any way crude, many of its intrinsic
+elements remaining undetermined in face of our ignorance, but which,
+nevertheless, or just for that very reason, is essentially practical
+and moral, representing the most notable fact of all those included in
+our belief. This method of approaching the problem of God is, he
+thinks, both simple and grand. It is a noble contrast to the scholastic
+edifice built up on the metaphysical perfection of being, called the
+Absolute. In this conception all attributes of personality are replaced
+by an accumulation of metaphysical properties, contradictory in
+themselves and quite incompatible with one another. This Absolute is a
+pure chimerical abstraction; its pure being and pure essence are
+equivalent to pure nothing or pure nonsense.
+
+The fetish of pure substance, substantial cause, absolute being,
+whatever it be called, is vicious at all times, but particularly when
+we are dealing with the fundamental problems of science. It would be
+advisable here that the only method of investigation be that of
+atheism, for scientific investigation should not be tainted by any
+prejudices or preconceived ideas upon the nature of the divinity.
+
+What really is Atheism? The answer to this query, says Renouvier, is
+clear. The idea of God is essentially a product of the moral law or
+conscience. An atheist is, strictly speaking, one who does not admit
+the reality of this moral order of ends and of persons as valuable in
+themselves. Verily, he himself may personally lead a much more upright
+life than the loud champions of theism, but he denies the general moral
+order, which is God. With the epithet of atheist as commonly used for
+those who merelv have a conception of God which differs from the
+orthodox view, we are not here concerned. That may be dismissed as a
+misuse of the word due to religious bigotry. The fruits of true atheism
+are materialism, pantheism and fatalism. Indeed any doctrine, even a
+theological doctrine, which debases and destroys the inherent value of
+the human consciousness and personality, is rightly to be regarded,
+whatever it may _say_ about God, however it may repeat his name (and
+two of these doctrines are very fond of this repetition, but this must
+not blind us to the real issue)—that doctrine is atheistic. The most
+resolute materialists, the most high-minded worshippers of Providence
+and the great philosophers of the Absolute, find themselves united here
+in atheism. God is not a mere totality of laws operating in the
+universe. Such a theism is but a form of real atheism. We must, insists
+Renouvier, abandon views of this type, with all that savours of an
+Absolute, a Perfect Infinite, and affirm our belief in the existence of
+an order of Goodness which gives value to human personality and assures
+ultimate victory to Justice. This is to believe in God. We arrive at
+this belief rationally and after consideration of the world and of the
+moral law of persons. Through these we come to God. We do not begin
+with him and pretend to deduce these from his nature by some
+incomprehensible _a priori_ propositions. The methods of the old
+dogmatic theology are reversed. Instead of beginning with a Being of
+whom we know nothing and can obviously deduce nothing, let us proceed
+inductively, and by careful consideration of the revelation we have
+before us in the world and in humanity let us build up our idea of God.
+
+Renouvier is anxious that we should examine the data upon which we may
+found “rational hypotheses” as to the nature of God. The Critical
+Philosophy has upset the demonstrations of the existence of God, which
+were based upon causality and upon necessary existence (the
+cosmological and ontological proofs). Neo-criticism not only
+establishes the existence of God as a rational hypothesis, but “this
+point of view of the divine problem is the most favourable to the
+notion of the personality of God. The personality of God seems to us to
+be indicated as the looked-for conclusion and almost necessary
+consummation of the probabilities of practical reason.”[27]
+
+ [27] _Psychologie rationnelle_, vol. 2, p. 300.
+
+
+The admission of ends, of finality, or purpose in the universe is
+frequently given as involving a supreme consciousness embracing this
+teleology. Also it is argued that Good could not exist in its
+generality save in an external consciousness—that is, a divine mind. By
+recalling the objections to a total synthesis of phenomena, Renouvier
+refutes both these arguments which rest upon erroneous methods in
+ontology and in theology. The explanation of the world by God, as in
+the cosmological argument, is fanciful, while the ontological argument
+leads us to erect an unintelligible and illogical absolute. Renouvier
+regards God as existing as a general consciousness corresponding to the
+generality of ends which man himself finds before him, finite, limited
+in power and in knowledge. But in avowing this God, Renouvier points
+him out to us as the first of all beings, a being like them, not an
+absolute, but a personality, possessing (and this is important) the
+perfection of morality, goodness and justice. He is the supreme
+personality in action, and as a perfect person he respects the
+personality of others and operates on our world only in the degree
+which the freedom and individuality of persons who are not himself can
+permit him, and within the limits of the general laws under which he
+represents to himself his own enveloped existence. This is the
+hypothesis of unity rendered intelligible, and as such Renouvier claims
+that it bridges in a marvellous manner the gap always deemed to exist
+between monotheism and polytheism—the two great currents of religious
+thought in humanity. The monotheists have appeared intolerant and
+fanatical in their religion and in their deity (not in so far as it was
+manifest in the thoughts of the simple, who professed a faith of the
+heart, but as shown in the ambitious theology of books and of schools),
+bearing on their banner the signs of a jealous deity, wishing no other
+gods but himself, declaring to his awed worshippers: “I am that I am;
+have no other gods but me!” On the other hand, the polytheistic peoples
+have been worshippers of beauty and goodness in all things, and where
+they saw these things they created a deity. They were more concerned
+with the immortality of good souls than the eternal existence of one
+supreme being; they were free-thinkers, creators of beauty and seekers
+after truth, and believers in freedom. The humanism of Greece stands in
+contrast to the idolatrous theocracy of the Hebrews.
+
+The unity of God previously mentioned does not exclude the possibility
+of a plurality of divine persons. God the one would be the first and
+foremost, _rex hominum deorumque_. Some there may be that rise through
+saintliness to divinity, Sons of God, persons surpassing man in
+intelligence, power and morality. To take sides in this matter is
+equivalent to professing a particular religion. We must avoid the
+absolutist spirit in religion no less than in philosophy. By this
+Renouvier means that brutal fanaticism which prohibits the Gods of
+other people by passion and hatred, which aims at establishing and
+imposing its own God (which is, after all, but its own idea of God) as
+the imperialist plants his flag, his kind and his customs in new
+territory, in the spirit of war and conquest. Such a “holy war” is an
+outrage, based not upon real religion, but on intolerant fanaticism in
+which freedom and the inherent rights of personality to construct its
+own particular faith are denied.
+
+Renouvier finds a parallelism between the worship of the State in
+politics and of the One God in religion. The systems in which unity or
+plurality of divine personality appears differ from one another in the
+same way in which monarchal and republican ideas differ. Monarchy in
+religion offers the same obstacles to progress as it has done in
+politics. It involves a parallel enslavement of one’s entire self and
+goods, a conscription which is hateful to freedom and detrimental to
+personality. To this supreme and regal Providence all is due; it alone
+in any real sense exists. Persons are shadows, of no reality, serfs
+less than the dust, to whom a miserable dole is given called grace, for
+which prayer and sacrifice are to be unceasingly made or chastisements
+from the Almighty will follow. This notion is the product of monarchy
+in politics, and with monarchy it will perish. The two are bound up,
+for “by the grace of God” we are told monarchs hold their thrones, by
+his favour their sceptre sways and their battalions move on to victory.
+This monarchal God, this King of kings and Lord of hosts, ruler of
+heaven and earth, is the last refuge of monarchs on the earth.
+Confidence in both has been shaken, and both, Renouvier asserts, will
+disappear and give place to a real democracy, not only to republics on
+earth, but to the conception of the whole universe as a republic. Men
+raise up saints and intercessors to bridge the gulf between the divine
+Monarch and his slaves. They conceive angels as doing his work in
+heaven; they tolerate priests to bring down grace to them here and now.
+The doctrine of unity thus gives rise to fanatical religious devotion
+or philosophical belief in the absolute, which stifles religion and
+perishes in its own turn. The doctrine of immortality, based on the
+belief in the value of human personality, leads us away from monarchy
+to a republic of free spirits. A democratic religion in this sense will
+display human nature raised to its highest dignity by virtue of an
+energetic affirmation of personal liberty, tolerance, mutual respect
+and liberty of faith—a free religion without priests or clericalism,
+not in conflict with science and philosophy, but encouraging these
+pursuits and in turn encouraged by them.[28]
+
+ [28] The fullest treatment of this is the large section in the
+ conclusion to the _Philosophie analytique de l’Histoire_ (tome iv.).
+ _Cf_. also the discussion of the influence of religious beliefs on
+ societies in the last chapter of _La Nouvelle Monadologie_.
+
+III
+
+Ravaisson, in founding the new spiritual philosophy, professed certain
+doctrines which were a blending of Hellenism and Christianity. In the
+midst of thought which was dominated by positivism, naturalism or
+materialism, or by a shallow eclecticism, wherein religious ideas were
+rather held in contempt, he issued a challenge on behalf of spiritual
+values and ideals. Beauty, love and goodness, he declared, were divine.
+God himself is these things, said Ravaisson, and the divinity is “not
+far from any of us.” In so far as we manifest these qualities we
+approach the perfect personality of God himself. In the infinite, in
+God, will is identical with love, which itself is not distinguished
+from the absolutely good and the absolutely beautiful. This love can
+govern our wills; the love of the beautiful and the good can operate in
+our lives. In so far as this is so, we participate in the love and the
+life of God.
+
+Boutroux agrees substantially with Ravaisson, but he lays more stress
+upon the free creative power of the deity as immanent. “God,” he
+remarks in his thesis, “is not only the creator of the world, he is
+also its Providence, and watches over the details as well as over the
+whole.”[29] God is thus an immanent and creative power in his world as
+well as the perfect being of supreme goodness and beauty. Boutroux here
+finds this problem of divine immanence and transcendence as important
+as does Blondel, and his attitude is like that of Blondel, midway
+between that of Ravaisson and Bergson.
+
+ [29] _La Contingence des Lois de la Nature_, p. 150.
+
+
+Religion, Boutroux urges, must show man that the supreme ideal for him
+is to realise in his own nature this idea of God. There is an
+obligation upon man to pursue after these things-goodness, truth,
+beauty and love—for they are his good, they are the Good; they are,
+indeed, God. In them is a harmony which satisfies his whole nature, and
+which does not neglect or crush any aspect of character, as narrow
+conceptions of religion inevitably do. Boutroux insists upon the
+necessity for intellectual satisfaction, and opposes the “philosophy of
+action” in ils doctrine of “faith for faith’s sake.” At the same time
+he conceives Reason as a harmony, not merely a coldly logical thing.
+Feeling and will must be satisfied also.[30]
+
+ [30] Boutroux has in his volume, _Science et Religion dans la
+ Philosophie contemporaine_, contributed a luminous and penetrating
+ discussion of various religious doctrines from Comte to William James.
+ This was published in 1908.
+
+
+We have observed already how Fouillée claimed that the ethics of his
+_idées-forces_ contained the gist of what was valuable in the world
+religions. He claims that philosophy includes under the form of
+rational belief or thought what the religions include as instinctive
+belief. In religion he sees a spontaneous type of metaphysic, while
+metaphysic or philosophy is a rationalised religion.
+
+Nothing in this connection is more important than a rational and
+harmonious view of God. This he insists upon in his thesis and in his
+_Sketch of the Future of a Metaphysic founded on Experience_. The old
+idea of God was that of a monarch governing the world as a despot
+governs his subjects. The government of the universe may still be held
+to be a monarchy, but modern science is careful to assure us that it
+must be regarded as an absolutely constitutional monarchy. The monarch,
+if there be one, acts in accordance with the laws and respects the
+established constitution. Reason obliges us to conceive of the
+sovereign: experience enlightens us as to the constitution.
+
+There can be little doubt that one of the world’s greatest books upon
+religion is the work of Guyau, which appeared in 1886, bearing the
+arresting title, _L’Irreligion de l’Avenir_. Its sub-title describes it
+as an Etude sociologique, and it is this treatment of the subject from
+the standpoint of sociology which is such a distinctive feature of the
+book. The notion of a _social bond_ between man and the powers superior
+to him, but resembling him, is, claims Guyau, a point of unity in which
+all religions are at one. The foundation of the religious sentiment
+lies in sociality, and the religious man is just the man who is
+disposed to be sociable, not only with all living beings whom he meets,
+but with those whom he imaginatively creates as gods. Guyau’s thesis,
+briefly put, is that religion is a manifestation of life (again he
+insists on “Life,” as in his Ethics, as a central conception), becoming
+self-conscious and seeking the explanation of things by analogies drawn
+from human society. Religion is “sociomorphic” rather than merely
+anthropomorphic; it is, indeed, a universal sociological hypothesis,
+mythical in form.
+
+The religious sentiment expresses a consciousness of dependence, and in
+addition, adds Guyau, it expresses the need of affection, tenderness
+and love—that is to say, the “social” side of man’s nature. In the
+conception of the Great Companion or Loving Father, humanity finds
+consolation and hope. Children and women readily turn to such an ideal,
+and primitive peoples, who are just like children, conceive of the
+deity as severe and all- powerful. To this conception moral attributes
+were subsequently added, as man’s own moral conscience developed, and
+it now issues in a doctrine of God as Love. All this development is,
+together with that of esthetics and ethics, a manifestation of life in
+its individual and more especially social manifestations.
+
+It is the purpose of Guyau’s book not only to present a study of the
+evolution of religion in this manner, from a sociological point of
+view, but to indicate a further development of which the beginnings are
+already manifest—namely, a decomposition of all systems of dogmatic
+religion. It is primarily the decay of dogma and ecclesiasticism which
+he intends to indicate by the French term _irréligion_. The English
+translation of his work bears the title _The Non-religion of the
+Future_. Had Guyau been writing and living in another country it is
+undoubtedly true that his work would probably have been entitled _The
+Religion of the Future_. Owing to the Roman Catholic environment and
+the conception of religion in his own land, he was, however, obliged to
+abandon the use of the word religion altogether. In order to avoid
+misunderstanding, we must examine the sense he gives to this word, and
+shall see then that his title is not meant to convey the impression of
+being anti-religious in the widest sense, nor is it irreligious in the
+English meaning of that word.
+
+Guyau considers every positive and historical religion to present three
+distinct and essential elements:
+
+An attempt at a mythical and non-scientific explanation of (_a_)
+natural phenomena—_e.g._, intervention, miracles, efficacious prayer;
+(_b_) historical facts—_e.g._, incarnation of Buddha or Jesus.
+A system of dogmas—that is to say, symbolic ideas or imaginative
+beliefs—forcibly imposed upon one’s faith as absolute verities, even
+though they are susceptible to no scientific demonstration or
+philosophical justification.
+A cult and a system of rites or of worship, made up of more or less
+immutable practices which are looked upon as possessing a marvellous
+efficacy upon the course of things, a propitiatory virtue.[31]
+
+ [31] _L’Irréligion de l’Avenir_, p. xiii; Eng. trans., p. 10.
+
+
+By these three different and really organic elements, religion is
+clearly marked off from philosophy. Owing to the stability of these
+elements religion is apt to be centuries behind science and philosophy,
+and consequently reconciliation is only effected by a subtle process
+which, while maintaining the traditional dogmas and phrases, evolves a
+new interpretation of them sufficiently modern to harmonise a little
+more with the advance in thought, but which presents a false appearance
+of stability and consistency, disguising the real change of meaning, of
+view-point and of doctrine. Of this effort we shall see the most
+notable instance is that of the “Modernists” or Neo-Catholics in France
+and Italy, and the Liberal Christians in England and America.
+
+Guyau claims that these newer interpretations, subtle and useful as
+they are, and frequently the assertions of minds who desire sincerely
+to adapt the ancient traditions to modern needs, are in themselves
+hypocritical, and the Church in a sense does right to oppose them.
+Guyau cannot see any satisfactoriness in these compromises and
+adaptations which lack the clearness of the old teaching, which they in
+a sense betray, while they do not sufficiently satisfy the demands of
+modern thought.
+
+With the decay of the dogmatic religion of Christendom which is
+supremely stated in the faith of the Roman Catholic Church, there must
+follow the non-religion of the future, which may well preserve, he
+points out, all that is pure in the religious sentiment and carry with
+it an admiration for the cosmos and for the infinite powers which are
+there displayed. It will be a search for, and a belief in, an ideal not
+only individual, but social and even cosmic, which shall pass the
+limits of actual reality. Hence it appears that “non-religion” or
+“a-religion,” which is for Guyau simply “the negation of all dogma, of
+all traditional and supernatural authority, of all revelation, of all
+miracle, of all myth, of all rite erected into a duty,” is most
+certainly not a synonym for irreligion or impiety, nor does it involve
+any contempt for the moral and metaphysical doctrines expressed by the
+ancient religions of the world. The non-religious man in Guyau’s sense
+of the term is simply the man without a religion, as he has defined it
+above, and he may quite well admire and sympathise with the great
+founders of religion, not only in that they were thinkers,
+metaphysicians, moralists and philanthropists, but in that they were
+reformers of established belief, more or less avowed enemies of
+religious authority and of every affirmation laid down by an
+ecclesiastical body in order to bind the intellectual freedom of
+individuals. Guyau’s remarks in this connection agree with the tone in
+which Renan spoke of his leaving the Church because of a feeling of
+respect and loyalty to its Founder. Guyau points out that there exists
+in the bosom of every great religion a dissolving force—namely, the
+very force which in the beginning served to constitute it and to
+establish its triumphant revolt over its predecessor. That force is the
+absolute right of private judgment, the free factor of the personal
+conscience, which no external authority can succeed, ultimately, in
+coercing or silencing. The Roman Church, and almost every other
+organised branch of the Christian religion, forgets, when faced with a
+spirit which will not conform, that it is precisely to this spirit that
+it owes its own foundation and also the best years of its existence.
+Guyau has little difficulty in pressing the conclusions which follow
+from the recognition of this vital point.
+
+Briefly, it follows that the hope of a world-religion is an illusion,
+whether it be the dream of a perfect and world-wide Judaism, Buddhism,
+Christianity, or Mohammedanism. The sole authority in religious
+matters, that of the individual conscience, prevents any such
+consummation, which, even if it could be achieved, would be
+mischievous. The future will display a variety of beliefs and
+religions, as it does now. This need not discourage us, for therein is
+a sign of vitality or spiritual life, of which the world-religions are
+examples, marred, however, by their profession of universality, an
+ideal which they do not and never will realise.
+
+The notion of a Catholic Church or a great world- religion is really
+contrary to the duty of personal thought and reflection, which must
+inevitably (unless they give way to mere lazy repetition of other
+people’s thoughts) lead to differences. The tendency is for humanity to
+move away from dogmatic religion, with its pretensions to universality,
+catholicity, and monarchy (of which, says Guyau, the most curious type
+has just recently been achieved in our own day, by the Pope’s
+proclamation of the dogma of papal infallibility), towards religious
+individualism and to a plurality of religions. There may, of course, be
+religious associations or federations, but these will be free, and will
+not demand the adherence to any dogma as such.
+
+With the decay of dogmatic religion the best elements of religious life
+will have freer scope to develop themselves, and will grow both in
+intensity and in extent. “He alone is religious, in the philosophical
+sense of the word, who researches for, who thinks about, who loves,
+truth.” Such inquiry or search involves freedom, it involves conflict,
+but the conflict of ideas, which is perfectly compatible with
+toleration in a political sense, and is the essence of the spirit of
+the great world teachers. This is what Jesus foresaw when he remarked:
+“I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.” More fully, he might have
+put it, Guyau suggests: “I came not to bring peace into human thought,
+but an incessant battle of ideas; not repose, but movement and progress
+of spirit; not universal dogma, but liberty of belief, which is the
+first condition of growth.” Well might Renan remark that it was loyalty
+to such a spirit which caused him to break with the Church.
+
+While attacking religious orthodoxy in this manner, Guyau is careful to
+point out that if religious fanaticism ls bad, anti-religious
+fanaticism is equally mischievous, wicked and foolish.[32] While the
+eighteenth century could only scoff at religion, the nineteenth
+realised the absurdity of such raillery. We have come to see that even
+although a belief may be irrational and even erroneous, it may still
+survive, and it may console multitudes whose minds would be lost on the
+stormy sea of life without such an anchor. While dogmatic or positive
+religions do exist they will do so, Guyau reminds us, for quite
+definite and adequate reasons, chiefly because there are people who
+believe them, to whom they mean something and often a great deal. These
+reasons certainly do diminish daily, and the number of adherents, too,
+but we must refrain from all that savours of anti- religious
+fanaticism.[33] He himself speaks with great respect of a Christian
+missionary. Are we not, he asks, both brothers and humble collaborators
+in the work and advance of humanity? He sees no real inconsistency
+between his own dislike of orthodoxy and dogma and the missionary’s
+work of raising the ignorant to a better life by those very dogmas. It
+is a case of relative advance and mental progress.
+
+ [32] He cites a curious case of anti-religious fanaticism at
+ Marseilles in 1885, when all texts and scripture pictures were removed
+ fromthe schools.
+
+
+ [33] Guyau’s book abounds in illustrations. He mentions here Huss’s
+ approval of the sincerity of one man who brought straw from his own
+ house to burn him. Huss admired this act of a man in whom he saw a
+ brother in sincerity.
+
+
+It is with great wealth of discussion that Guyau recounts the genesis
+of religions in primitive societies to indicate the sociological basis
+of religion. More important are his chapters on the dissolution of
+religions in existing societies, in which he shows the
+unsatisfactoriness of the dogmas of orthodox Protestantism equally with
+those of the Catholic Church. As mischievous as the notion of an
+infallible Church is that of an infallible book, literally—that is to
+say, foolishly-interpreted. He recognises that for a literal
+explanation of the Bible must be substituted, and is, indeed, being
+substituted, a literary explanation. Like Renan, he criticises the
+vulgar conception of prayer and of religious morality which promotes
+goodness by promise of paradise or fear of hell. He urges in this
+connection the futility of the effort made by Michelet, Quinet and,
+more especially, by Renouvier and Pillon to “Protestantise” France.
+While admitting a certain intellectual, moral and political superiority
+to it, Guyau claims that for the promotion of morality there is little
+use in substituting Protestantism for Catholicism. He forecasts the
+limitation of the power of priests and other religious teachers over
+the minds of young children. Protestant clergymen in England and
+America he considers to be no more tolerant in regard to the
+educational problem than the priests. Guyau urges the importance of an
+elementary education being free from religious propaganda. He was
+writing in 1886, some years after the secular education law had been
+carried. There is, however, more to be done, and he points out “how
+strange it is that a society should not do its best to form those whose
+function it is to form it.”[34] In higher education some attention
+should be given to the comparative study of religions. “Even from the
+point of view of philosophy, Buddha and Jesus are more important than
+Anaximander or Thales.”[35] It is a pity, he thinks, that there is not
+a little more done to acquaint the young with the ideas for which the
+great world-teachers, Confucius, Zoroaster, Buddha, Socrates, Mohammed,
+stood, instead of cramming a few additional obscure names from early
+national history. It would give children at least a notion that history
+had a wider range than their own country, a realisation of the fact
+that humanity was already old when Christ appeared, and that there are
+great religions other than Christianity, religions whose followers are
+not poor ignorant savages or heathen, but intelligent beings, from whom
+even Christians may learn much. It is thoroughly mischievous, he aptly
+adds, to bring up children in such a narrow mental atmosphere that the
+rest of their life is one long disillusionment.
+
+ [34] _L’Irréligion de l’Avenir_, p. 232; Eng. trans., p. 278.
+
+
+ [35] _Ibid_., p. 236; Eng. trans., p. 283.
+
+
+With particular reference to his own country, Guyau criticises the
+religious education of women, the question of “mixed marriages,” the
+celibacy of the Roman Catholic clergy, and the influence of religious
+beliefs upon the limitation or increase of the family.
+
+After having summed up the tendency of dogmatic religion to decay, he
+asks if any unification of the great religions is to-day possible, or
+whether any new religion may be expected? The answer he gives to both
+these questions is negative, and he produces a wealth of very valid
+reasons in support of his finding. He is, of course, here using the
+term religion as he has himself defined it. The claim to universality
+by all world-religions, the insistence by each that it alone is the
+really best or true religion, precludes any question of unity. As well
+might we imagine unity between Protestantism and the Roman Catholic
+Church.
+
+In the “non-religious” state, dogma will be replaced by individual
+constructions. Religion will be a free, personal affair, in which the
+great philosophical hypotheses (_e.g._, Theism and Pantheism) will be
+to a large extent utilised. They will, however, be regarded as such by
+all, as rational hypotheses, which some individuals will accept, others
+will reject. Certain doctrines will appeal to some, not to others. The
+evidence for a certain type of theism will seem adequate to some, not
+to others. There will be no endeavour to impose corporately or singly
+the acceptance of any creed upon others.
+
+With Guyau’s conception of the future of religion or non-religion,
+whichever we care to call it, we may well close this survey of the
+religious ideas in modern France. In the Roman Church on the one hand,
+and, on the other, in the thought of Renan, Renouvier and Guyau,
+together with the multitude of thinking men and women they represent,
+may be seen the two tendencies—one conservative, strengthening its
+internal organisation and authority, in defiance of all the influences
+of modern thought, the other a free and personal effort, issuing in a
+genuine humanising of religion and freeing it from ecclesiasticism and
+dogma.
+
+A word may be said here, however, with reference to the “Modernists.”
+The Modernist movement is a French product, the result of the
+interaction of modern philosophical and scientific ideas upon the
+teaching of the Roman Church. It has produced a philosophical religion
+which owes much to Ollé-Laprune and Blondel, and is in reality modern
+science with a veneer of religious idealism or platonism. It is a
+theological compromise, and has no affinities with the efforts of
+Lamennais. As a compromise it was really opposed to the traditions of
+the French, to whose love of sharp and clear thinking such general and
+rather vague syntheses are unacceptable. It must be admitted, however,
+that there is a concreteness, a nearness to reality and life, which
+separates it profoundly from the highly abstract theology of Germany,
+as seen in Ritschl and Harnack.
+
+The Abbé Marat of the Theological School at the Sorbonne and Father
+Gratry of the Ecole Normale were the initiators of this movement, as
+far back as the Second Empire. “Modernism” was never a school of
+thought, philosophical or religious, and it showed itself in a freedom
+and life, a spirit rather than in any formula;. As Sorel’s syndicalism
+is an application of the Bergsonian and kindred doctrines to the left
+wings, and issues in a social theory of “action,” so Modernism is an
+attempt to apply them to the right and issues in a religion founded on
+action rather than theology. The writings of the Modernists are
+extensive, but we mention the names of the chief thinkers. There is the
+noted exegetist Loisy, who was dismissed in 1894 from the Catholic
+Institute of Paris and now holds the chair of the History of Religions
+at the College de France. His friend, the Abbé Bourier, maintained the
+doctrine, “ Where Christ is there is the Church,” with a view to
+insisting upon the importance of being a Christian rather than a
+Catholic or a Protestant.
+
+The importance of the Catholic thinker, Blondel, both for religion and
+for philosophy, has already been indicated at an earlier stage in this
+book. His work inspires most.Modernist thought. Blondel preaches, with
+great wealth of philosophical and psychological argument, the great
+Catholic doctrine of the collaboration of God with man and of man with
+God. Man at one with himself realises his highest aspirations. Divine
+transcendence and divine immanence in man are reconciled. God and man,
+in this teaching, are brought together, and the stern realism of
+every-day life and the idealism of religion unite in a sacramental
+union. The supreme principle in this union Laberthonnière shows to be
+Love. He is at pains to make clear, however, that belief in Love as the
+ultimate reality is no mere sentimentality, no mere assertion of the
+will-to-believe. For him the intellect must play its part in the
+religious life and in the expression of faith. No profounder
+intellectual judgment exists than just the one which asserts “God is
+Love,” when this statement is properly apprehended and its momentous
+significance clearly realised. We cannot but lament, with
+Laberthonnière, the abuse of this proposition and its subsequent loss
+of both appeal and meaning through a shallow familiarity. The
+reiteration of great conceptions, which is the method by which the
+great dogmas have been handed down from generations, tends to blurr
+their real significance. They become stereotyped and empty of life. It
+is for this reason that Le Roy in _Dogme et Critique_ (1907) insisted
+upon the advisability of regarding all dogmas as expressions of
+practical value in and for action, rather than as intellectual
+propositions of a purely “religious” or ecclesiastical type, belonging
+solely to the creeds.
+
+To Blondel, Laberthonnière, and Le Roy can be added the names of
+Fonsegrive, Sertillanges, Loyson and Houtin, the last two of whom
+ultimately left the Church, for the Church made up its mind to crush
+Modernism. The Pope had intimated in 1879 that the thirteenth-century
+philosophy of Aquinas was to be recognised as the only official
+philosophy.[36] Finally, Modernism was condemned in a Vatican
+encyclical (_Pascendi Dominici Gregis_) in 1907, as was also the social
+and educational effort, _Le Sillon_.
+
+ [36] This led to revival of the study of the _Summa Theologiæ_ and to
+ the commencement of the review of Catholic philosophy, _Revue
+ Thomiste_.
+
+
+Such has been Rome’s last word, and it is not surprising, therefore,
+that France is the most ardent home of free thought upon religious
+matters, that the French people display a spirit which is unable to
+stop at Protestantism, but which heralds the religion or the
+_non-religion_ of the future to which Guyau has so powerfully indicated
+the tendencies and has by so doing helped, in conjunction with Renan
+and Renouvier, to hasten its realisation.
+
+A parallel to the “modernist” theology of the Catholic thinkers was
+indicated on the Protestant side by the theology of Auguste Sabatier,
+whose _Esquisse d’une Philosophie de la Religion d’après la Psychologie
+et l’Histoire_ appeared in 1897[37] and of Menegoz,[38] whose
+_Publications diverges sur le Fidéisme et son Application a
+l’Enseignement chrétien traditionnel_ were issued in 1900. Sabatier
+assigns the beginning of religion to man’s trouble and distress of
+heart caused by his aspirations, his belief in ideals and higher
+values, being at variance with his actual condition. Religion arises
+from this conflict of real and ideal in the soul of man. This is the
+essence of religion which finds its expression in the life of faith
+rather than in the formation of beliefs which are themselves accidental
+and transitory, arising from environment and education, changing in
+form from aee to age both in the individual and the race. While LeRoy
+on the Catholic side, maintained that dogmas were valuable for their
+practical significance, Sabatier and Ménégoz claimed that all religious
+knowledge is symbolical. Dogmas are but symbols, which inadequately
+attempt to reveal their object. That object can only be grasped by
+“faith” as distinct from “belief”—that is to say, by an attitude in
+which passion, instinct and intuition blend and not by an attitude
+which is purely one of intellectual conviction. This doctrine of
+“salvation by faith independently of beliefs” has a marked relationship
+not only to pragmatism and the philosophy of action, but to the
+philosophy of intuition. A similar anti-intellectualism colours the
+“symbolo-fidéist” currents within Catholicism, which manifest a more
+extreme character. A plea voiced against all such tendencies is to be
+found in Bois’ book, _De la Connaissance religieuse_ (1894), where an
+endeavour is made to retain a more intellectual attitude, and it again
+found expression in the volume by Boutroux, written as late as 1908,
+which deals with the religious problem in our period.
+
+ [37] It was followed after his death in 1901 by the volume _Les
+ Religions d’Authorité et la Religion de l’Esprit_, 1904.
+
+
+ [38] This is the late Eugene Ménégoz, Professor of Theology in Paris,
+ not Ferdinand Ménégoz, his nephew, who is also a Professor of Theology
+ now at Strasbourg.
+
+
+Quoting Boehme in the interesting conclusion to this book on _Science
+and Religion in Contemporary Philosophy_ (1908) Boutroux sums up in the
+words of the old German mystic his attitude to the diversity of
+religious opinions. “Consider the birds in our forests, they praise God
+each in his own way, in diverse tones and fashions. Think you God is
+vexed by this diversity and desires to silence discordant voices? All
+the forms of being are dear to the infinite Being himself!”[39]
+
+ [39] It is interesting to compare with the above the sentiments
+ expressed in Matthew Arnold’s poem, entitled Progress:
+
+“Children of men! the unseen Power, whose eye
+For ever doth accompany mankind,
+Hath look’d on no religion scornfully
+That men did ever find.
+
+
+This survey of the general attitude adopted towards religion and the
+problems which it presents only serves to emphasise more clearly those
+tendencies which we have already denoted in previous chapters. As the
+discussion of progress was radically altered by the admission of the
+principle of freedom, and the discussion of ethics passes bevond rigid
+formulae to a freer conception of morality, so here in religion the
+insistence upon freedom and that recognition of personality which
+accompanies it, colours the whole religious outlook. Renan, Renouvier
+and Guyau, the three thinkers who have most fully discussed religion in
+our period, join in proclaiming the importance of the personal factor
+in religious belief, and in valiant opposition to that Church which is
+the declared enemy of freedom, they urge that in freedom of thought
+lies the course of all religious development in the future, for only
+thus can be expressed the noblest and highest aspirations of man’s
+spirit.
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+The foregoing pages have been devoted to a history of ideas rather than
+to the maintenance of any special thesis or particular argument.
+Consequently it does not remain for us to draw any definitely logical
+conclusions from the preceding chapters. The opportunity may be justly
+taken, however, of summing up the general features of the development.
+
+Few periods in the history of human thought can rival in interest that
+of the second half of the nineteenth century in France. The discussion
+covers the principal problems with which man’s mind is occupied in
+modern times and presents these in a manner which is distinctly human
+and not merely national. This alone would give value to the study of
+such a period. There is, however, to be added the more striking fact
+that there is a complete “turning of the tide” manifested during these
+fifty years in the attitude to most of the problems. Beginning with an
+overweening confidence in science and a belief in determinism and in a
+destined progress, the century closed with a complete reversal of these
+conceptions.
+
+Materialism and naturalism are both recognised as inadequate, a
+reaction sets in against positivism and culminates in the triumph of
+spiritualism or idealism. This idealism is free from the cruder aspects
+of the Kantian or Hegelian philosophy. The Thing-in-itself and the
+Absolute are abandoned; relativity is proclaimed in knowledge, and
+freedom in the world of action. Thoughts or ideas show themselves as
+forces operating in the evolution of history. This is maintained in
+opposition to the Marxian doctrine of the purely economic or
+materialistic determination of history. A marked tendency, however, is
+manifested to regard all problems from a social stand point. The
+dogmatic confidence in science gives way to a more philosophical
+attitude, while the conflict of science and religion resolves itself
+into a decay of dogma and the conception of a free religion.
+
+We have indicated the problem presented by “_science et conscience_,”
+and in so far as we have laid down any thesis or argument in these
+pages, as distinct from an historical account of the development, that
+thesis has been, that the central problem in the period was that of
+freedom. It was to this point which the consideration of science, or
+rather of the sciences, led us. We have observed the importance of the
+sciences for philosophy, and it is clear that, so far from presenting
+any real hostility to philosophy, it can acclaim their autonomy and
+freedom, without attempting by abstract methods to absorb them into
+itself. They are equally a concrete part of human thought, and in a
+deep and real sense a manifestation of the same spirit which animates
+philosophy.
+
+By recognising the sciences philosophy can avoid the fallacy of
+ideology on the one hand and naturalism on the other. Unlike the old
+eclecticism, the new thought is able to take account of science and to
+criticise its assertions. We have seen how this has been accomplished,
+and the rigidly mechanical view of the world abandoned for one into
+which human freedom enters as a real factor. This transforms the view
+of history and shows us human beings creating that history and not
+merely being its blind puppets. History offers no cheerful outlook for
+the easy-going optimist; it is not any more to be regarded as mere data
+for pessimistic reflections, but rather a record which prompts a
+feeling of responsibility. The world is not ready-made, and if there is
+to be progress it must be willed by us and achieved by our struggle and
+labour.
+
+The doctrine of immanence upon which the modern tendency is to insist,
+in place of the older idea of transcendence, makes us feel, not only
+that we are free, but that our freedom is not in opposition to, or in
+spite of, the divine spirit, but is precisely an expression of divine
+immanence. Instead of the gloomy conception of a whole which determines
+itself apart from us, we feel ourselves part, and a very responsible
+part, of a reality which determines itself collectively and creatively
+by its own action, by its own ideals, which it has itself created. This
+freedom must extend not only to our conceptions of history but also to
+those of ethics and of religion.
+
+“English philosophy ends in considering nature as an assemblage of
+facts; German philosophy looks upon it chiefly as a system of laws. If
+there is a place midway between the two nations it belongs to us
+Frenchmen. We applied the English ideas in the eighteenth century; we
+can in the nineteenth give precision to the German ideas. What we have
+to do is to temper, amend and complete the two spirits, one by the
+other, to fuse them into one, to express them in a style that shall be
+intelligible to everybody and thus to make of them the universal
+spirit.”
+
+Such was Taine’s attitude, and it indicates clearly the precise
+position of French thought. We are apt to consider Taine purely as an
+empiricist, but we must remember that he disagreed with the radical
+empiricism of John Stuart Mill. His own attitude was largely that of a
+reaction against the vague spiritualism of the Eclectic School,
+especially Cousin’s eclecticism, a foreign growth on French soil, due
+to German influence. The purely _a priori_ constructions of the older
+spiritualism could find no room, and allowed none, for the sciences.
+This was sufficient to doom it, and to lead naturally to a reaction of
+a positive kind, revolting from all _a priori_ constructions.
+
+It was to combat the excessive positive reaction against metaphysics
+that Renouvier devoted his energies, but while professing to modernise
+Kant and to follow out the general principles of his Critical
+Philosophy, Renouvier was further removed from the German thinker than
+he at times seems to have observed. Renouvier must undoubtedly share
+with Comte the honours of the century in French Philosophy. Many
+influences, however, prevented the general or speedy acceptance of
+Renouvier’s doctrines. The University was closed against him, as
+against Comte. He worked in isolation and his style of presentation,
+which is heavy and laborious, does not appeal to the _esprit_ of the
+French mind. Probably, too, his countrymen’s ignorance of Kant at the
+time Renouvier wrote his _Essais de Critique générale_ prevented an
+understanding and appreciation of the neo-critical advance on
+Criticism.
+
+Renouvier commands respect, but he does not appear to be in the line of
+development which manifests so essentially the character of French
+thought. This is to be found rather in that spiritualism, which, unlike
+the old, does not exclude science, but welcomes it, finds a place for
+it, although not by any means an exclusive place. The new spiritualists
+did not draw their inspiration, as did Cousin, from any German source,
+their initial impulse is derived from a purely French thinker, Maine de
+Biran, who, long neglected, came to recognition in the work of
+Ravaisson and those subsequent thinkers of this group, right up to
+Bergson.
+
+This current of thought is marked by a vitality and a concreteness
+which are a striking contrast to the older eclectic spiritualism.
+Having submitted itself to the discipline of the sciences, it is
+acquainted with their methods and data in a manner which enables it to
+oppose the dogmatism of science, and to acclaim the reality of values
+other than those which are purely scientific. Ignoring _a priori_
+construction, or eclectic applications of doctrines, it investigates
+the outer world of nature and the inner life of the spirit.
+
+We have said that these ideas are presented, not merely from a national
+standpoint, but from one which is deeply human and universal. “_La
+Science_,” re-marked Pasteur, “_n’a pas de patrie_.” We may add that
+philosophy, too, owns no special fatherland. There is not in
+philosophy, any more than in religion, “a chosen people,” even although
+the Jews of old thought themselves such, and among moderns the Germans
+have had this conceit about their _Kultur_. In so far as philosophy
+aims at the elucidation of a true view of the universe, it thereby
+tends inevitably to universality. But just as a conception of
+internationalism, which should fail to take into account the factors of
+nationality, would be futile and disastrous, so a conception of the
+evolution of thought must likewise estimate the characteristics which
+nationality produces even in the philosophical field.
+
+Such characteristics, it will be found, are not definite doctrines, for
+these may be transferred, as are scientific discoveries, from one
+nation to another, and absorbed in such a manner that they become part
+of the general consciousness of mankind. They are rather differences of
+tone and colour, form or expression, which express the vital genius of
+the nation. There are features which serve to distinguish French
+philosophy from the development which has occurred in Germany, Italy,
+England and America.
+
+Modern French thought does not deliberately profess to maintain
+allegiance to any past traditions, for it realises that such a
+procedure would be inconsistent with that freedom of thought which is
+bound up with the spirit of philosophy. It does, however, betray
+certain national features, which are characteristic of the great French
+thinkers from Descartes, Pascal and Malebranche onwards.
+
+One of the most remarkable points about these thinkers was their
+intimacy with the sciences. Descartes, while founding modern
+philosophy, also gave the world analytic geometry; Pascal made certain
+physical discoveries and was an eminent mathematician. Malebranche,
+too, was keenly interested in science. In the following century the
+Encyclopaedists displayed their wealth of scientific knowledge, and in
+the nineteenth century we have seen the work of Comte based on science,
+the ability of Cournot and Renouvier in mathematics, while men like
+Boutroux, Hergson and Le Roy possess a thorough acquaintance with
+modern science.
+
+These facts have marked results, and distinguish French philosophy from
+that of Germany, where the majority of philosophers appear to haye been
+theological students in their youth and to have suffered from the
+effects of their subject for the remainder of their lives. Theological
+study does not produce clearness; it does not tend to cultivate a
+spirit of precision, but rather one of vagueness, of which much German
+philosophy is the product. On the other hand, mathematics is a study
+which demands clearness and which in turn increases the spirit of
+clarity and precision.
+
+There is to be seen in our period a strong tendency to adhere to this
+feature of clearness. Modern French philosophy is remarkably lucid.
+Indeed, it is claimed that there is no notion, however profound it may
+be, or however based on technical research it may be, which cannot be
+conveyed in the language of every day. French philosophy does not
+invent a highly technical vocabulary in order to give itself airs in
+the eyes of the multitude, on the plea that obscurity is a sign of
+erudition and learning. On the contrary, it remembers Descartes’
+intimate association of clearness with truth, remembers, too, his clear
+and simple French which he preferred to the scholastic Latin. It knows
+that to convince others of truth one must be at least clear to them
+and, what is equally important, one must be clear in one’s own mind
+first. Clarity does not mean shallowness but rather the reverse,
+because it is due to keen perceptive power, to a seeing further into
+the heart of things, involving an intimate contact with reality.
+
+French thought has always remained true to a certain “common sense.”
+This is a dangerous and ambiguous term. In its true meaning it
+signifies the general and sane mind of man free from all that prejudice
+or dogma or tradition, upon which, of course, “common sense” in the
+popular meaning is usually based. A genuine “common sense” is merely
+“_liberté_” for the operation of that general reason which makes man
+what he is. It must be admitted that, owing to the fact that philosophy
+is taught in the _lycées_, the French are the best educated of any
+nation in philosophical ideas and have a finer general sense of that
+spirit of criticism and appreciation which is the essence of
+philosophy, than has any other modern nation. Philosophy in France is
+not written in order to appeal to any school or class. Not limited to
+an academic circle only, it makes its pronouncements to humanity and
+thus embodies in a real form the principles of _egalité_ and
+_fraternité_. It makes a democratic appeal both by its _clarté_ and its
+belief that _la raison commune_ is in some degree present in every
+human being.
+
+Not only was clearness a strong point in the philosophy of Descartes,
+but there was also an insistence upon method. Since the time of his
+famous _Discours de la Méthode_ there has always been a unique value
+placed upon method in French thought, and this again serves to
+distinguish it profoundly from German philosophy, which is, in general,
+concerned with the conception and production of entire systems. The
+idea of an individual and systematic construction is an ambitious
+conceit which is not in harmony with the principles of _liberté_,
+_egalité_, _fraternité_. Such a view of philosophical work is not a
+sociable one, from a human standpoint, and tends to give rise to a
+spirit of authority and tradition. Apart from this aspect of it, there
+is a more important consideration. All those systems take one idea as
+their starting-point and build up an immense construction _a priori_.
+But another idea may be taken and opposed to that. There is thus an
+immense wastage of labour, and the individual effort is never
+transcended. Yet an idea is only a portion of our intelligence, and
+that intelligence itself is, in turn, only a portion of reality. A
+wider conception of philosophy must be aimed at, one in which the _vue
+d’ensemble_ is not the effort of one mind, but of many, each
+contributing its share to a harmonious conception, systematic in a
+sense, but not in the German sense. Modern French thought has a dislike
+of system of the individualistic type; it realises that reality is too
+rich and complex for such a rapid construction to grasp it. It is
+opposed to systems, for the French mind looks upon philosophy as a
+manifestation of life itself—life blossoming to self-consciousness,
+striving ever to unfold itself more explicitly and more clearly,
+endeavouring to become more harmonious, more beautiful, and more noble.
+The real victories of philosophical thought are not indicated by the
+production of systems but by the discovery or creation of ideas. Often
+these ideas have been single and simple, but they have become veritable
+forces, in the life of mankind.
+
+French thinkers prefer to work collectively at particular problems
+rather than at systems. Hence the aim and tone of their work is more
+universal and human, and being more general is apt to be more generous.
+This again is the expression of _liberte_, _égalité_ and _fraternité_
+in a true sense. The French prefer, as it were, in their philosophical
+campaign for the intellectual conquest of reality diverse batteries of
+_soixante-quinze_ acting with precision and alertness to the clumsy
+production of a “Big Bertha.” The production of ambitious systems, each
+professing to be the final word in the presentation of reality, has not
+attracted the French spirit. It looks at reality differently and
+prefers to deal with problems in a clear way, thereby indicating a
+method which may be applied to the solution of others as they present
+themselves. This is infinitely preferable to an ambitious unification,
+which can only be obtained at the sacrifice of clearness or meaning,
+and it arises from that keen contact with life, which keeps the mind
+from dwelling too much in the slough of abstraction, from which some of
+the German philosophers never succeed in escaping. Their pilgrimage to
+the Celestial City ends there, and consequently the account of their
+itinerary cannot be of much use to other pilgrims.
+
+Another feature of modern French thought is the intimacy of the
+connection between psychology and metaphysics, and the intensive
+interest in psychology, which is but the imestigation of the inner life
+of man. While in the early beginnings of ancient Greek philosophy some
+time was spent in examining the outer world before man gave his
+attention to the world within, we find Descartes, at the beginning of
+modern philosophy, making his own consciousness of his own existence
+his starting-point. Introspection has always played a prominent part in
+French philosophy. Pascal was equally interested in the outer and the
+inner world. Through Maine de Biran this feature has come down to the
+new spiritualists and culminates in Bergson’s thought, in which
+psychological considerations hold first rank.
+
+The social feature of modern French thought should not be omitted. In
+Germany subsequent thought has been coloured by the Reformation and the
+particular aspects of that movement. In France one may well say that
+subsequent thought has been marked by the Revolution. There is a
+theological flavour about most German philosophy, while France, a
+seething centre of political and social thought, has given to her
+philosophy a more sociological trend.
+
+The French spirit in philosophy stands for clearness, concreteness and
+vitality. Consequently it presents a far greater brilliance, richness
+and variety than German philosophy displays.[1] This vitality and even
+exuberance, which are those of the spirit of youth manifesting a _joie
+de vivre_ or an _élan vital_, have been very strongly marked since the
+year 1880, and have placed French philosophy in the van of human
+thought.
+
+ [1] It is, therefore to be lamented that French thought has not
+ received the attention which it deseives. In England far more
+ attention has been given to the nineteenth-century German philosophy,
+ while the history of thought in France, especially in the period
+ between Comte and Bergson, has remained in sad neglect. This can and
+ should be speedily remedied.
+
+
+It would be vain to ask whither its advance will lead. Even its own
+principles prevent any such forecast; its creative richness may blossom
+forth to-morrow in forms entirely new, for such is the characteristic
+of life itself, especially the life of the spirit, upon which so much
+stress is laid in modern French philosophy. The New Idealism lays great
+stress upon dynamism, voluntarism or action. Freedom and creative
+activity are its keynotes, and life, ever fuller and richer, is its
+aspiration. _La Vie_, of which France (and its centre, Paris) is such
+an expression, finds formulation in the philosophy of contemporary
+thinkers.[2]
+
+ [2] The student of comparative thought will find it both interesting
+ and profitable to compare the work done recently in Italy by Croce and
+ Gentile. The intellectual kinship of Croce and Bergson has frequently
+ been pointed out, but Gentile’s work comes very close to the
+ philosophy of action and to the whole positive-idealistic tendency of
+ contemporary French thought. This is particularly to be seen in
+ _L’atto del pensare come atto puro_ (1912), and in _Teoria generalo
+ dello spirito come atto puro_ (1916). Professor Carr, the well-known
+ exponent of Bergson’s philosophy, remarks in his introduction to the
+ English edition of Gentile’s book, “We may individualise the mind as a
+ natural thing-object person. . . . Yet our power to think the mind in
+ this way would be impossible were not the mind with and by which we
+ think it, itself not a thing, not a _fact_, but _act_; . . . never
+ _factum_, but always _fieri_.” This quotation is from p. xv of the
+ _Theory of Mind as Pure Act_. With one other quotation direct from
+ Gentile we must close this reference to Italian neo-idealism. “In so
+ far as the subject is constituted a subject by its own act it
+ constitutes the object. . . . Mind is the transcendental activity
+ productive of the objective world of experience” (pp. 18, 43). Compare
+ with this our quotation from Ravaisson, given on p. 75 of this work,
+ and the statement by Lachelier on p. 122, both essential principles of
+ the French New Idealism.
+
+
+One word of warning must be uttered against those who declare that the
+tendency of French thought is in the direction of anti-intellectualism.
+Such a declaration rests on a misunderstanding, which we have
+endeavoured in our pages to disclose It is based essentially upon a
+doctrine of Reason which belongs to the eighteenth century. The severe
+rationalism of that period was mischievous in that it rested upon a
+one-sided view of human nature, on a narrow interpretation of “Reason”
+which gave it only a logical and almost mathematical significance. To
+the Greeks, whom the French represent in the modern world, the term
+“NOUS” meant more than this—it meant an intelligible harmony. We would
+do wrong to look upon the most recent developments in France as being
+anti-rational, they are but a revolt against the narrow view of Reason,
+and they constitute an attempt to present to the modern world a
+conception akin to that of the Greeks. Human reason is much more than a
+purely logical faculty, and it is this endeavour to relate all problems
+to life itself with its pulsing throb, which represents the real
+attitude of the French mind. There is a realisation expressed
+throughout that thought, that life is more than logic. The clearness of
+geometry showed Descartes that geometry is not all-embracing. Pascal
+found that to the logic of geometry must be added a spirit of
+appreciation which is not logical in its nature, but expresses another
+side of man’s mind. To-day France sees that, although a philosophy must
+endeavour to satisfy the human intelligence, a merely intellectual
+satisfaction is not enough. The will and the feelings play their part,
+and it was the gteat fault of the eighteenth century to misunderstand
+this The search to-day is for a system of values and of truth in action
+as well as a doctrine about things in their purely theoretical aspects.
+
+This is a serious demand, and it is one which philosophy must endeavour
+to appreciate Salvation will not be found in a mere dilettantism which
+can only express ieal indifference, nor in a dogmatism which results in
+bigotry and pride. Criticism is required, but not a purely destructive
+criticism, rather one which will offer some acceptable view of the
+universe. Such a view must combine true positivism or realism with a
+true idealism, by uniting fact and spirit, things and ideas. Its
+achievement can only be possible to minds possessing some creative and
+constructive power, yet minds who have been schooled in the college of
+reality. This is the task of philosophy in France and in other lands.
+That task consists not only in finding values and in defining them but
+in expressing them actively, and in endeavouring to realise them in the
+common life.
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+
+I. Works of the Period classified under Authors. (The more important
+monographs are cited.) Names of philosophical journals.
+
+II. Books on the Period.
+
+III. Comparative Table showing contemporary German and Anglo-American
+Works from 1851 to 1921.
+
+I
+WORKS OF THE PERIOD CLASSIFIED UNDER AUTHORS.
+
+BERGSON: _Les Données immédiates de la Conscience_. 1889. English
+Translation—_Time and Free-Will._ 1910.
+_Matière et Mémoire_. 1896. (E.T.[1] 1911.)
+_Le Rire_. 1901. (E.T. 1911.)
+_Introduction a la Métaphysique_. 1903. _Revue de Métaphysique et de
+Morale_. (E.T. 1913.)
+_L’Evolution créatrice_. 1907. (E.T. 1911.)
+_L’Energie spirituelle_. 1919. (E.T. 1920.)
+Some monographs on Bergson: Le Roy (1912), Maritain (1914) in France,
+Meckauer (1917) in Germany, and for the English reader Lindsay (1911),
+Stewart (1911), Carr (1912), Cunningham (1916), and Gunn (1920).
+BERNARD: _Introduction a l’Etude de la Médecine expérimental_. 1865.
+BERTHELOT: _Science et Philosophie_. 1886. BINET: _Magnétisme animal_.
+1886.
+_Les Altérations de la Personnalité_. 1892.
+_L’Introduction à la Psychologie expérimental_. 1894.
+(Founded the _Année psychologique_ in 1895.) BLONDEL: _L’Action, Essai
+d’une Critique de la Vie et d’une Science de la Pratique_. 1893.
+_Histoire et Dogme_. 1904. BOIRAC: _L’Idée du Phénomène_. 1894. BOIS:
+_De la Connaissance religieuse_. 1894. BOURGEOIS: _Solidarité_. 1896.
+BOUTROUX (EMILE): _De la Contingence des Lois de la Nature_ 1874. (E.T.
+1916.)
+_De l’Idée de Loi naturelle dans la Science et la Philosophie
+contemporaines_. 1895. (E.T. 1914.)
+_Questions de Morale et d’Education_. 1895. (E.T. 1913.)
+_De l’Influence de la Philosophie écossaise sur la Philosophie
+française_. 1897.
+_La Science et la Religion dans la Philosophie contemporaine_. 1908.
+(E.T. 1909.)
+_Rapport sur la Philosophie en France depuis_ 1867. Paper read to Third
+Congress of Philosophy at Heidelberg in 1908. _Revue de Métaphysique et
+de Morale_. Nov., 1908.
+_Etudes d’Histoire de la Philosophie_. (E.T. 1912.)
+_The Beyond that is Within_. E.T. 1912. (Addresses.) BROCHARD: _De la
+Responsabilité morale_. 1874.
+_De l’Universalité des Notions morales_. 1876.
+_De L’Erreur_. 1879. BRUNSCHWICG: _La Modalité du jugement_. 1897.
+_La Vie de l’Esprit_. 1900.
+_Les Etapes de la Philosophie mathématique_. 1912. BUREAU: _La Crise
+morale des Temps nouveau_. 1907. CARO: _Le Matérialisme et la Science_.
+1868.
+_Problèmes de Morale sociale_. 1876. COMTE: _Cours de Philosophie
+positive_. 6 vols. 1830-42.
+_Discours sur l’Esprit positive_. 1844.
+_Système de Politique positive_. 4 vols. 1851-4.
+_Catéchisme positiviste._ _Synthèse subjective_ (vol. i.). 1856.
+_Note_.—The Free and Condensed Translation of Comte’s Positive
+Philosophy in English by Miss Martineau, appeared in two volumes in
+1853. Monograph by Lévy-Bruhl. COURNOT: _Essai sur les Fondements de
+nos Connaissances et sur les Caractères de la Critique philosophique_
+(2 vols.). 1851.
+_Traité de l’Enchaînement des Idées fondamentales dans les Sciences et
+dans l’Histoire_ (2 vols.). 1861.
+_Considérations sur la Marche des Idées et des Evénements dans les
+Temps modernes_ (2 vols.). 1872.
+_Matérialisme, Vitalisme, Rationalisine: Etude sur l’Emploi des Données
+de la Science en Philosophie_. 1875.
+_Note_.—A number of the _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_ was
+devoted to Cournot in 1905. See also the Monograph by Bottinelli and
+his _Souvenirs de Cournot_. 1913. COUTURAT: _De l’Infini mathématique_.
+_Les Principes des Mathématiques_. CRESSON: _Le Malaise de la pensée
+philosophique contemporaine_. 1905. DAURIAC: _Croyance et Realité_.
+1889.
+_Motions de Matière et de Force_. 1878. DELBOS: _L’Esprit philosophique
+de l’Allemagne et la Pensée française_. 1915. DUHEM: _La Théorie
+physique_. 1906. DUNAN: _Les deux Idéalismes_. 1911. DURKHEIM: _De la
+Division du Travail social_. 1893.
+_Les Regles de la Méthode sociologique_. 1894.
+_Le Suicide_. 1897.
+_Les Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse_. 1912. (E. T.) ESPINAS:
+_Societés animales_. 1876. EVELLlN: _La Raison pure et les Antinomies_.
+1907. FONSEGRIVE: _Morale et Société_. 1907. FOUILLÉE: _La Philosophie
+de Platon 2 vols_. 1869. Prize for competition in 1867, on the. Theory
+of Ideas, offered by the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.
+“Crowned” after publication by the Académie française. 1871. Second
+Edition, revised, and enlarged to four volumes. 1888-9.
+_La Liberté et le Determinisme_. 1872. (Doctorate Thesis)
+_La Philosophie de Socrate_. 2 vols 1874. Prize in 1868, Académie des
+Sciences morales et politiques.
+_Histoire générale de la Philosophie_. 1875. New Edition revised and
+augmented, 1910.
+_Extraits des grands Philosophes_. 1877.
+_L’Idée moderne du Droit en Allemagne, en Ingleterre et en France_.
+1878.
+_La Science sociale contemporaine_. 1880.
+_Critique des Systèmes contemporains_. 1883.
+_La Propriété sociale et la Démocratie_. 1884.
+_L’Avenir de la Métaphysique fondée sur l’Expérience_. 1889.
+_L’Evolutionisme des Idées-forces_. 1890.
+_L’Enseignement au Point de Vue national_. 1891 (E. T. 1892.)
+_La Psychologie des Idées-forces_. 2 vols. 1893.
+_Tempérament et Caractère selon les Individus, les Sexes et les Races_.
+1895.
+_Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la Science positive_.
+1895.
+_Le Mouvement positiviste et la Conception sociologique du Monde_.
+1896.
+_Psychologie du Peuple français_. 1898.
+_Les Etudes classiques et la Démocratie_. 1898.
+_La France au Point de Vue moral_. 1900.
+_La Reforme de l’Enseignement par la Philosophie_. 1901.
+_La Conception morale et civique de L’Enseignement_.
+_Nietzsche et l’Immoralisme_. 1904.
+_Esquisse psychologique des Peuples européens_. 1903.
+_Le Moralisme de Kant et l’Amoralisme contemporain_. 1905.
+_Les Elements sociologiques de la Morale_. 1905.
+_La Morale des Idées-forces_. 1907.
+_Le Socialisme et la Sociologie réformiste_. 1909.
+_La Démocratie politique et sociale en France_. 1911.
+_La Pensée et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intéllectualistes_. 1912.
+Posthumous: _Esquisse d’une Interprétation du Monde_.
+_Humanitaires et Libertaires_. 1914.
+_Equivalents philosophiques des Religions_.
+On Fouillée, monograph by Augustin Guyau, son of J. M. Guyau. GOBLOT:
+_Traité de Logique_. 1918. GOURD: _Le Phénomène_. 1888.
+_La Philosophie de la Religion_. 1911. GUYAU: _La Morale d’Epicure et
+ses Rapports avec les Doctrines contemporaines_. 1878. “Crowned” four
+years before by the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.
+_La Morale anglaise contemporaine_. 1879. An extension of the Prize
+Essay (Second Part).
+_Vers d’un Philosophe_. 1881.
+_Problèmes de l’Esthétique contemporaine_. 1884.
+_Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_. 1885. (E.T. 1898.)
+_L’Irréligion de l’Avenir_. 1887. (E.T. 1897.)
+Posthumous: _Education et Hérédité_. (E.T. 1891.)
+_L’Art au Point de Vue sociologique_.
+_La Genèse de l’Idée de Temps_. 1890.
+There is a monograph on Guyau by Fouillée. HAMELIN: _Essai sur les
+Eléments principaux de la Représentation_. 1907. HANNEQUIN: _Essai
+critique sur l’Hypothèse des Atomes_. 1896. IZOULET: _La Cité moderne_.
+1894. JANET (PAUL): _La Famille_. 1855.
+_Histoire de la Philosophie morale et politique dans L’Antiquité et
+dans les Temps modernes._ 2 vols. 1858. Republished as _Histoire de la
+Science politique dans ses Rapports avec la Morale_. 1872.
+_La Philosophie du Bonheur_. 1862.
+_La Crise philosophique_. 1865.
+_Le Cerveau et la Pensée_. 1867.
+_Eléments de Morale_. 1869.
+_Les Problèmes du XIXe Siècle_. 1872.
+_La Morale_. 1874 (E T. 1884.)
+_Philosophie de la Révolution française_. 1875.
+_Les Causes finales_. 1876. (E.T. 1878.)
+JANET (PIERRE): _L’Automatisme psychologique_. 1889
+_L’Etat mental des Hystériques_. 1894.
+_Névroses et Idées-fixes_. 1898.
+(Janet founded the _Journal de Psychologie_. 1904). JAVARY: _L’Idée du
+Progrès_. 1850. LABERTHONNIÈRE. _Le Dogmatisme morale_. 1898.
+_Essais de Philosophie religieuse_. 1901.
+_Le Réalisme chrétien et l’Idéalisme grec_. LACHELIER: _Du Fondement de
+l’Induction_. 1871.
+_Psychologie et Métaphysique_. 1885. Article in _Revue de Métaphysique
+et de Morale_, now published with the above.
+_Etude sur le Syllogisme_. 1907.
+Monograph by Séailles, article by Noël. LACOMBE: _De l’Histoire
+considérée comme Science_. 1894. LALANDE: _La Dissolution opposée à
+l’Evolution, dans les Sciences physiques et morales_. 1899.
+_Précis raisonné de Morale pratique par Questions et Réponses_. 1907.
+LAPIE: _Logique de la Volonté_. 1902. LE BON: _Lois psychologiques de
+l’Evolution des Peuples_.
+_Les Opinions et les Croyances._ 1911.
+_Psychologie du Socialisme_. 1899.
+_Psychologie des Foules._ (E.T.)
+_La Vie des Vérités_. 1914. LEQUIER: _La Recherche d’une Première
+Vérité (Fragments posthumes)_. 1865. LE ROY: _Dogme et Critique_. 1907.
+LIARD: _Des Définitions géometriques et des Définitions empiriques_.
+1873.
+_La Science positive et la Métaphysique_. 1879.
+_Morale et Enseignement civique_. 1883.
+_L’Enseignement supérieure en France_, 1789 à 1889. 1889. LOISY:
+_L’Evangile et l’Eglise_. (E.T.) MARION: _La Solidarité morale_. 1880.
+MÉNÉGOZ: _Publications diverses sur le Fidéisme et son Application à
+l’Enseignement chrétien traditionnel_. 1900. Two additional volumes
+later. MEYERSON: _Identité et Réalité_. 1907 MICHELET: _L’Amour_. 1858
+_Le Prêtre la Femme et la Famille_. 1859.
+_La Bible de l’Humanité._ 1864
+MILHAUD: _Essai sur les Conditions et les Limites de la Certitude
+logique._ 1894
+_Le Rationnel_. 1898. OLLÉ-LAPRUNE: _La Certitude morale_. 1880.
+_Le Prix de la Vie_. 1885
+_La Philosophie et le Temps présent_. 1895.
+_La Raison et le Rationalisme_. 1906. PARODI: _Le Problème morale et la
+Pensée contemporaine_. 1910. PASTEUR: _Le Budget de la Science_. 1868
+PAULHAN: _Phénomènes affectifs_.
+_L’Activité mentale_. 1889 PAYOT: _La Croyance_. 1896. PELLETAN:
+_Profession da Foi du XIXe Siècle_. 1852. POINCAIRÉ: _La Science et
+l’Hypothèse_. 1902. (E.T. 1905.)
+_La Valeur de la Science_. 1905.
+_Science et Méthode_. 1909
+_Dernières pensées_. PROUDHON: _Qu’est-ce que la Propriété?_ 1840
+_Système des Contradictions économiques_. 1846
+_La Philosophie du Progrès_. 1851.
+_De la Justice_. 1858. RAUH: _Psychologie appliquée à la Morale et à
+l’Education_.
+_De la Méthode dans la Psychologie des Sentiments_.
+_Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale_. 1890.
+_L’Expérience morale_. 1903. RAVAISSON-MOLLIEN (1813-1900): _Habitude_.
+1838. (Thesis.) Reprinted 1894 in _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_.
+_Aristote_. 1837. Vol. I. Vol. II. in 1846. Development of work crowned
+by Académie des Sciences morales et politiques in 1833, when the author
+was twenty.
+_Rapport sur la Philosophie en France au XIXe Siècle_. 1867.
+_La Philosophie de Pascal (Revue des Deux Mondes_. 1887)
+_L’Education (Revue bleue_. 1887).
+_Métaphysique et Morale (Revue des Deux Mondes_. 1893).
+_Le Testament philosophique (Revue des Deux Mondes_. 1901).
+_Cf_. Boutroux on Ravaisson (_Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_.
+1900).
+Bergson : _Discours à l’Académie des Sciences morales et politiques_.
+1904. RENAN: _Averroès et l’Averroisme_. 1852.
+_Etudes d’Histoire religieuse_. 1857.
+_Essais de Morale et de Critique_. 1851).
+_Les Origines du Christianisme_. 1863-83. 8 vols., of which: _Vie de
+Jésus_. 1863. (E.T.)
+_Questions contemporaines_. 1868.
+_La Réforme intellectual et morale_. 1871.
+_Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques_. 1870. (E.T. 1883.)
+_Drames philosophiques_.
+_Souvenirs d’Enfance et de Jeunesse_. 1883. (E.T. 1883.)
+_Nouvelles Etudes d’Histoire religieuse_. 1884. (E.T. 1886.)
+_Histoire du Peuple d’Israël_. 5 vols. 1887-04. (E.T. 1888-91. 3 vols.)
+_L’Avenir de la Science_. 1890. Written 1848-9. (E.T.)
+_Feuilles détachées_. 1802.
+For monographs on Renan: Allier: _La Philosophie de Renan_. 1895.
+Monod: _Renan, Taine, Michelet_. 1894.
+Séailles: _Renan_. 1894*. RENOUVIER: _Manuel de Philosophie moderne_.
+1842.
+_Manuel de Philosophie ancienne_. 1844.
+_Manuel républicaine de l’Homme et du Citoyen_. 1848.
+_Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale et centrale de la
+République_. 1851.
+_Essais de Critique générale_. 4 vols. 1854, 1859, 1864, 1864. (On
+revision these four became thirteen vols.)
+_La Science de la Morale_. 2 vols. 1869.
+_1er Essai_, revised: _Traité de Logique général et de Logique
+formelle_. 3 vols. 1875.
+_2e Essai_, revised: _Traité de Psychologie rationnelle_. 3 vols. 1875.
+_Uchronie (L’Utopie dans l’Histoire), Esquisse historique du
+Développement de la Civilisation européenne, tel qu’il n’a pas été, tel
+qu’il aurait pu être_. 1876.
+_Petit Traité de Morale pour les Ecoles laïques_. 1879.
+_Esquisse d’une Classification systématique des Doctrines
+philosophiques_. 2 vols. 1886.
+_3e Essai_, revised: _Les Principes de la Nature_. 1892.
+_Victor Hugo, le Poète_. 1893.
+_4e Essai_, revised: _L’lntroduction à la Philosophie analytique de
+l’Histoire_. 1896.
+_5e Essai_, new: _La Philosophie analytique de l’Histoire_. 4 vols. I.
+and II. 1806. III. and IV. 1897. (This brought the Essais up to
+thirteen volumes.)
+_La Nouvelle Monadologie_. 1891). (With L. Prat.) (“Crowned” by the
+Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.)
+_Victor Hugo, le Philosophe_. 1900.
+_Les Dilemmes de la Métaphysique pure_. 1901.
+_Histoire et Solution des Problèmes métaphysiques_. 1901.
+_Le Personnalisme, suivi d’une Etude sur la Perception externe et sur
+la Force_ 1903.
+Posthumous:
+_Derniers entretiens_. 1905.
+_Doctrine de Kant_. 1906.
+For his two journals, see under “Periodicals.”
+In the latest edition the complete _Essais de Critique générale_ are
+only ten volumes, as follows: _Logic_, 2; _Psychology_, 2; _Principles
+of Nature_, 1; _Introduction to Philosophy of History_, 1; _and the
+Philosophy of History_, 4.
+The best monograph is that of Séailles, 1905.
+Renouvier’s Correspondence with the Swiss Philosopher, Sécretan, has
+been published; _cf_. also _The Letters of William James_. REYNAUD:
+_Philosophie religieuse_. 1858. (Third Edition.) RIBOT: _La Psychologie
+anglaise contemporaine_. 1870. (E.T. 1873.)
+_Hérédité, Etude psychologique_. 1873. (E.T. 1875.)
+_La Psychologie allemande contemporaine_. 1879. (E.T. 1886.)
+_Les Maladies de la Mémoire, Essai dans la Psychologie positive_. 1881.
+(E.T. 1882.)
+_Les Maladies de la Volonté_. 1883. (E.T. 1884.)
+_Les Maladies de la Personnalité_. 1885. (E.T. 1895.)
+_La Psychologie de l’Attention_. 1889. (E.T. 1890.)
+_La Psychologie des Sentiments._ 1896. (E.T. 1897.)
+_L’Evolution des Idées générales._ 1897. (E.T. 1899.)
+_Essai sur l’Imagination créatrice_. 1900.
+_La Logique des Sentiments_. 1904.
+_Essai sur les Passions_. 1906.
+_La Vie inconsciente et les Mouvements_. SABATIER (AUGUSTE): _Esquisse
+d’une Philosophie de Religion d’après la Psychologie et l’Histoire_.
+1897.
+_Les Religions d’Autorité et la Religion de l’Esprit_. 1904. (E.T.)
+SABATIER (PAUL): _A propos de la Séparation des Eglises de l’Etat_.
+1905. E.T., Robert Dell, 1906 (with Text of the Law). SÉAILLES:
+_Affirmations de la Conscience moderne_. 1903. SIMON: _La Liberté de
+Conscience_. 1859.
+_Dieu, Patrie, Liberté_. 1883. SOREL: _Reflexions sur la Violence_.
+1907. (E.T 1916.)
+_Illusions du Progrès_. 1911. TAINE: _Les Philosophes français au XIXe
+Siecle_. 1857.
+_Essais de Critique et d’Histoire_. 1858.
+_Philosophie de l’Art_. 2 vols. 1865. (E.T. 1865.)
+_Nouveaux Essais de Critique et d’Histoire_. 1865.
+_De l’Intélligence_. 2 vols. 1870. (E T. 1871.)
+The work _Origines de la France contemporaine_ in 5 vols, 1876-93.
+_Histoire de la Littérature anglaise_. 5 vols. 1863. (E.T. by Van Laun.
+1887.)
+Monographs: De Margerie: _Taine_. 1894.
+Monod: _Renan, Taine, et Michelet_. 1894.
+Barzellotti: _La Philosophie de Taine._
+Boutmy: _H. Taine_. 1897.
+Giraud: _Essai sur Taine_. 1901. TARDE: _Criminalité comparée_. 1898.
+_Les Lois de l’Imitation_. 1900. VACHEROT: _Histoire de l’Ecole
+d’Alexandrie_. 1846-51.
+_La Métaphysique et la Science_. 3 vols. 1858.
+_La Démocratie_. 1860.
+_Essais de Philosophie critique_. 1864.
+_La Religion_. 1868.
+_La Science et la Conscience_. 1870.
+_Le Nouveau Spiritualisme_. 1884.
+_Cf_. Parodi on Vacherot, _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_. 1899.
+WEBER: _Le Rythme du Progrès_.
+_Vers le Positivisme absolu par l’Idéalisme_. 1903. WlLBOIS: _Devoir et
+Durée: Essai de Morale sociale_. 1912. XÉNOPOL: _Principes fondamentaux
+de l’Histoire_. 1899. Revised and reissued in larger form in 1905 as
+_La Théorie de l’Histoire_.
+
+ [1] This abbreviation is used throughout for “English Translation.”
+
+PERIODICALS
+
+“LA CRITIQUE PHILOSOPHIQUE,” of Renouvier and Pillon, 1872. to 1884,
+weekly; monthly from 1885 to 1889.
+“LA CRITIQUE RELIGIEUSE,” 1878-1884 (quarterly). Renouvier.
+“REVUE PHILOSOPHIQUE DE LA FRANCE ET DE L’ÉTRANGER,” founded by Ribot
+in 1876.
+“L’ANNÉE PHILOSOPHIQUE.” 1867-1869. Renouvier and Pillon, refounded in
+1890 by Pillon.
+“REVUE DE MÉTAPHYSIQUE ET DE MORALE,” founded by Xavier Leon in 1893.
+“Crowned” by Académie des Sciences morales et politiques, 1921.
+“ANNÉE PSYCHOLOGIQUE,” founded by Beaunet and Binet, 1895.
+“REVUE DE PHILOSOPHIE,” founded by Peillaube, 1900.
+“REVUE THOMISTE.”
+“ANNALES DE PHILOSOPHIE CHRÉTIENNE.” Laberthonnière.
+“ANNÉE SOCIOLOGIQUE.” 1896-1912. Durkheim.
+“JOURNAL DE PSYCHOLOGIE NORMALE ET PATHOLOGIQUE.” Founded 1904 by Janet
+and Dumas.
+“BULLETIN DE LA SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DE PHILOSOPHIE.” From 1901.
+
+II
+GENERAL BOOKS ON THE PERIOD.
+
+ALIOTTA: _The Idealistic Reaction against Science_. (E.T. from Italian.
+1914.) BARTH: _Die Philosophie der Geschichte als Sociologie_. 1897.
+BERGSON: _La Philosophie française_. 1915. BOUTROUX: _Philosophie en
+France depuis_ 1867. Report to Congress of Philosophy given in the
+_Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_. 1908.
+_La Philosophie_: an Essay in the volume of collected Essays entitled:
+_Un Demi-Siècle de la Civilisation française_. 1870- 1915. Pp. 25-48.
+(Paris: Hachette. 1916.) DWELSHAUVERS: _La Psychologie française
+contemporaine_. 1920. FAGUET: _Dix-Neuvième Siècle_. 1887.
+_Politiques et Moralistes du XIXe Siècle_. 1881. FERRAZ: _Etudes sur la
+Philosophie en France au XIXe Siècle_. 3 vols. 1882-9.
+It is interesting to notice the triple division adopted by Ferraz:
+Socialism (under which heading he also groups Naturalism and
+Positivism). Traditionalism (Ultramontanism). Spiritualism (together
+with Liberalism).
+FISCHER: _Geschichte der neuern Philosophie_. 9 vols. FOUILLÉE:
+_Histoire de la Philosophie_, Latest Edition, last Chapter.
+_Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la Science positive._
+1896.
+_La Pensée et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intellectualistes_. 1912.
+HÖFFDING: _Modern Philosophers._ (E.T. from Danish. 1915.) LÉVY-BRUHL:
+_Modern Philosophy in France_. Chicago, 1899. MERZ: _History of
+European Thought in the Nineteenth Century_. 4 vols.
+A great work. Very comprehensive, particularly for German and British
+thought. PARODI: _La Philosophie contemporaine en France_. 1919.
+An excellent treatment of the development from 1890 onwards by a French
+thinker. (“Crowned” by Académie.) RAVAISSON: _Rapport sur la
+Philosophie en France au XIXe Siècle_. 1867. (Second Edition, 1889.)
+This has become an acknowledged classic. RENOUVIER: _Philosophie
+analytique de l’Histoire_. (Vol. IV. latest sections.) 1897.
+RUGGIERO: _Modern Philosophy_. 1912. (E.T. from Italian. 1921.)
+Gives a stimulating account of German, French, Anglo- American and
+Italian thought. STEBBING: _Pragmatism and French Voluntarism_. 1914.
+TAINE: _Les Philosophes français du XIXe Siècle_. 1857. TURQUET-MILNES,
+G.: _Some Modern French Writers: A Study in Bergsonism_. 1921.
+Deals mainly with literary figures-e.g., Barres, Péguy, France,
+Bourget, Claudel. VILLA: _Contemporary Psychology_. (E.T. from Italian.
+1903.)
+_L’Idealismo moderno_. 1905. WEBER: _Histoire de la Philosophie
+européenne_. (Eighth Edition, 1914.)
+
+* * * * *
+
+The article contributed by Ribot to _Mind_ in 1877 is worthy of notice,
+while much light is thrown on the historical development by articles in
+the current periodicals cited on p. 338, especially in the _Revue
+philosophique_ and the _Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale_.
+
+
+
+IIII
+COMPARATIVE TABLE
+
+THE CHIEF PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS IN FRANCE, GERMANY, ENGLAND AND AMERICA
+FROM 1851 TO 1921.
+
+
+_FRANCE._ _GERMANY._ _ENGLAND AND AMERICA._ l851 COURNOT: “Essai
+sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances.” 1851 FECHNER: “Zend
+Avesta.” 1851 MANSEL: “Prolegomena to Logic.” RENOUVIER:
+“Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale.”
+
+PROUDHON: “La Philosophie du Progrès.”
+
+1852 MOLESCHOTT: “Der Kreislauf des Lebens.” LOTZE: “Medizinische
+Psychologie oder Physiologie der Seele.” 1854 RENOUVIER: “Essai de
+Critique générale”(Ier Essai).
+1854 FERRIER: “Institutes of Metaphysic.” COMTE completes “Systeme
+de Politique positive.”
+
+1855 BÜCHNER: “Kraft und Stoff.” 1855 BAIN: “The Senses and
+the Intellect.” FECHNER: “Uber die physikalische und die philosophische
+Atomlehre.” SPENCER: “Principles of Psychology.” CZOLBE: “Neue
+Darstellung des Sensualismus.”
+1856 COMTE: “Synthèse subjective,” vol. i. 1856 LOTZE:
+“Mikrokosmos” (1856-1864).
+
+CZOLBE: “Die Enstehung des Selbstbewusstseins.” 1857 TAINE:
+“Philosophes rançais du XIXe Siecle.”
+1857 BUCKLE: “History of Civilization in England” (vol. i.). RENAN:
+“Etudes d’Histoire religieuse.” MANSEL: “The Limits of Religious
+Thought.” 1858 VACHEROT: “La Métaphysique et la Science.” 1858
+ HAMILTON: “Lectures” (1858-1860). 1859 RENOUVIER: “Deuxième
+Essai de Critique generale.” I859 DARWIN: “Origin of Species.”
+
+1860 FECHNER: “Elemente der Psychophysik.”
+1861 COURNOT: “Traité de l’Enchaînement des Idees.” 1861
+FECHNER: “Uber die Seelenfrage.”
+
+1862 HÄCKEL: “Generalle Morphologie” (1862-1866). 1862
+SPENCER: “First Principles.” 1863 RENAN: “Vie de Jésus.” 1863
+ VOGT: “Vorlesungen iiber den Menschen.” 1863 MILL (J. S.):
+“Utilitarianism.”
+
+FECHNER: “Die Drei Motive des Glaubens.”
+1864 RENOUVIER: “Troisième Essai de Critique générale”; “Quatrième
+Essai de Critique générale.”
+1865 BERNARD: “Introduction à l’Etude de la Médecine
+expérimentale.” 1865 DÜHRING: “Der Wert des Lebens.” 1865
+ HODGSON: “Time and Space.”
+
+CZOLBE: “Die Grenzen und der Ursprung der Menschlichen Erkenntnis.”
+MILL (J. S): “Examination of Sir William Hamilton’s Philosophy.”
+
+HAMILTON: “Lectures on Metaphysics.” STIRLING: “Secret of Hegel.” 1866
+ LANGE: “Geschichte des Materialismus.”
+1867 RAVAISSON: “Rapport sur la Philosophie en France au XIXe
+Siecle.” 1867 MARX: “Das Kapital.” 1867 BUCKLE:
+“History of Civilization in England” ( vol. ii.). 1868 RENAN:
+“Questions contemporaines.” 1868 LOTZE: “Geschichte der
+Asthetik in Deutschland.”
+
+HÄCKEL: “Natürliche Schöpftungsgeschichte 1869 RENOUVIER: “Science
+deU Morale.” 1869 HARTMANN: “Philosophic des Unbewussten.” 1870
+ TAINE: “De l’Intelligence.” 1870 RITSCHL: “Lehre von der
+Rechfertigung”(1870-1874). 1871 LACHELIER: “Du Fondement de
+l’Induction.”
+1872 FOUILLÉE: “La LibertcS et la Determinisme,” 1872
+STRAUSS: “Der Alte und der neue Glaube.” 1872 MAURICE: “Moral
+and Metaphysical Philosophy.” JANET: “Problemes du XIXe Siecle.”
+NIETZSCHE: “Die Geburt der Tragödie” WALLACE: “Logic of Hegel.”
+COURNOT: “Considerations sur la Marche des Idees.”
+1873 RIBOT: “IWredite.” 1873 1973 SIGWART: “Logik”
+(1873-1878). 1873 1973 STEPHEN (J. F.): “Liberty,
+Equality,Fraternity.” 1874 BOUTROUX: “La Contingence des Lois de la
+Nature.” 1874 LOTZE: “Drei Bucher der Logik.” 1874
+SIDGWICK: “Method of Ethics.”
+
+WUNDT: “Physiologische Psychologie.”
+BRENTANO: “Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt.” 1875 COURNOT:
+“Materialisme, Vitalisme,Rationalisme.”
+RENOUVIER: Revises first and second “Essais.” 1876 RENAN:
+“Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques.” 1876 FECHNER:
+“Vorschule der Asthetik.” 1876 BRADLEY: “Ethical Studies.”
+JANET: “Les Causes finales.”
+GROTE: “Moral Ideals.”
+
+
+1877 FLINT: “Theism.” 1878 FOUILLEE: “L’Idee du Droit.”
+1878 NIETZSCHE: “Menschliches Allzumenschhches “(1878-1880).
+1878 HODGSON: “Philosophy of Reflection.” 1879 BROCHARD: “De
+l’Erreur.” 1879 LOTZE: “Drei Bucher der Metaphysik.” 1879
+ SPENCER: “Data of Ethics.”
+
+HARTMANN: “Phanomenologie des sittlichen Bewusstseins.” BALFOUR:
+“Defence of Philosophic Doubt.” 1880 AVENARIUS: “Kritik der reinen
+Erfahrung”(1880-1890) 1880 CAIRD: “Philosophy ol Religion.”
+1881 GUYAU: “Vers d’un Philosophe.” 1881 NIETZSCHE:
+“Morgenrote.”
+
+1882 NIETZSCHE: “Die frohliche Wissenschaft.” 1882 STEPHEN
+(L.): “Science of Ethics.” 1883 NIETZSCHE: “Also sprach
+Zarathustra”(1883-1891) 1883 GREEN: “Prolegomena to Ethics.”
+DUHRING: “Der Ersatz der Religion.” BRADLEY: “Principles of Logic.”
+WUNDT: “Logik.”
+MACH: “Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwicklung.” 1885 GUYAU: “Esquisse
+d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction.”
+1885 MARTINEAU: “Types o. Ethical Theory.” LACHELIER: “Psychologic
+et Métaphysique.” BOSANQUET: “Knowledge and Reality.” 1886
+GUYAU: “L’Irreligion de l’Avenir.” 1886 MACH: “Analyse der
+Empfindungen.” 1886 WARD: “Psychology” (article).
+
+WUNDT: “Ethik.”
+NIETZSCHE: “Jenseits von Gut und Böse.” 1887 NIETZSCHE: “Zur
+Genealogie der Moral.” 1887 SETH (Pringle-Pattison):
+“Hegelianism and Personality.” 1888 EUCKEN: “Die Einheit des
+Geisteslebens.” 1888 BOSANQUKT: “Logic.” 1889 BERGSON: “Les
+Donnees immediates de la Conscience.” 1889 WUNDT: “System der
+Philosophie.” 1889 MARTINEAU: “Study of Religion.” FOUILLEE:
+“L’Avenir de la Metaphysique.” LIPPS: “Grundthatsachen des
+Seelenlebens.” ALEXANDER: “Moral Order and Progress.” JANET
+(Pierre): “L’Automatisme psychologique.”
+
+PAULHAN: “L’Activité mentale.” 1890 RENAN: “L’Avenir de la
+Science.” 1890 JAMES: “Principles of Psychology.” FOUILLÉE:
+“L’Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces.”
+RAUH: “Le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale”
+
+1891 SIMMEL: “Moralwissenschaft.” AVENARIUS: “Der menschliche
+Weltbegriff.” 1892 RENOUVIER Revises third “Essai.”
+1892 PEARSON: “Grammar Of Science.” RENAN “Feuilles détachées.”
+1893 DURKHEIM: “De la Division du Travail social.” 1893
+HUXLEY: “Evolution and Ethics.” BLONDEL: “L’Action.” CAIRD:
+“Evolution of Religion” FOUILLÉE: “Psychologie des Idées-forces.”
+BRADLEY: “Appearance and Reality.”
+
+1894 MEINONG: “Werththeorie” (Psychologisch-ethische
+Untersuchungen). 1894 FRASER: “Philosophy of Theism” HERTZ:
+“Prinzipien der Mechanik.”
+1895 FOUILLÉE: “Le Mouvement idéaliste.”
+1895 BALFOUR: “Foundations of Belief.” 1896 BERGSON: “Matière
+et Mémoire” 1896 EUCKEN: “Der Kampf um einen geistigen
+Lebensinhalt.” 1896 STOUT: “Analytic Psychology.” RENOUVIER:
+Revises fourth “Essai.”
+HOBHOUSE: “Theory of Knowledge.” RENOUVIER: Publishes fifth “Essai” (La
+Philosophie analytique de l’Histoire), vols. 1 and 2. MERZ:
+“History of Thought in the Nineteenth Century” (1896-1914).
+
+MACTAGGART: “Hegelian Dialectic.” 1897 RENOUVIER: Ditto, vols. 3
+and 4. 1897 HARTMANN: “Kategorienlehre.” 1897 JAMES:
+“The Will to Believe SABATIER: “Esquisse d’une Philosophie de
+Religion.” DREWS: “Das Ich als Grundproblem der Metaphysik.”
+
+EHRENFELS: “System der Werttheorie” (1897-1898).
+
+1898 WALLACE: “Natural Theology and Ethics.” 1899 RENOUVIER
+(and Prat): “La Nouvelle Monadologie.” 1899 MEINONG: “Uber
+gegenstände höheren Ordnung.” 1899 WARD: “Naturalism and
+Agnosticism.”
+
+
+BOSANQUET: “Philosophical Theory of the State.” HODGSON: “Metaphysic of
+Experience.” 1900 TARDE: “Les Lois de l’Imitation.” 1900
+PETZOLDT: “Die Philosophie der reinen Erfahrung.” 1900 ROYCE:
+“The World and the Individual.” BRUNSCHWICG: “La Vie de l’Esprit.”
+
+
+1901 EUCKEN: “Das Wesen der Religion.” EUCKEN: “Das Wahrheitsgehalt
+der Religion.” 1902 POINCARÉ 1902 COHEN: “System der
+Philosophie: Logik.” 1902 JAMES: “Varieties of Religious
+Experience.”
+
+
+CLIFFORD: “Essays and Lectures.” 1903 WEBER: “Vers le Positivisme
+absolu par l’Idéalisme.” 1903 BERGMANN: “System des objectiven
+Idealismus.” 1903 RUSSELL: “Principles of Mathematics.” RAUH:
+“L’Expérience morale.”
+SCHILLER: “Humanism.” RENOUVIER: “Le Personnalisme.”
+
+1904 COHEN: “System der Philosophie: Ethik.” 1904
+MACTAGGART: “Hegelian Cosmology.” 1905 POINCARÉ: “Valeur de la
+Science.” 1905 MACH: Erkenntnis und Irrtum.”
+1906 OLLÉ-LAPRUNE: “La Raison et le Rationalisme.” 1906
+MEINONG: “Die Stellung der Gegenstandtheorie ein System der
+Wissenschaften.” 1906 BAILLIE: “Idealistic Construction of
+Experience.” DUHEM: “La Théorie physique.”
+BALDWIN: “Thought and Things.” 1907 HAMELIN: “Les Eléments
+principaux de la Répresentation.” 1907 EUCKEN: “Grundlinien
+einer neuen Lebensauschauung.” 1907 SCHILLER: “Studies in
+Humanism.” BERGSON: “L’Evolution créatrice.” EUCKEN: “Hauptprobleme
+der Religionsphilosophie.”
+EVELLIN: “La Raison pure et les Antinomies.”
+LALANDEL “Précis de Morale.” FOUILLÉE: “Morale des Idées-forces.” 1908
+ BOUTROUX: “Science et Religion.” 1908 EUCKEN: “Sinn und
+Wertdes Lebens.”
+
+EUCKEN: “Philosophie des Geisteslebens.” MÜNSTERBERG: “Philosophie der
+Werte.” 1909 POINCARÉ: “Science et Méthode.”
+1909 DEWEY: “Logical Theory.”
+
+1910 REMKHE: “Philosophie als Grundwissenschaft”
+1911 DUNAN: “Les Deux Idéalismes.” 1911 EUCKEN: “Konnen wir
+noch Christen sein?” 1911 WARD: “Realm of Ends.” 1912
+FOUILLÉE: “La Pensée.” 1912 COHEN: “System der Philosophie:
+Æsthetik.” 1912 BOSANQUET: “Value and Destiny of the
+Individual” DURKHEIM: “Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse.”
+EUCKEN: “Erkennen und Leben.”
+
+
+1913 BOSANQUET: “Value and Destiny of the Individual.” 1914
+FOUILLÉE: “Humanitaires et Libertaires.”
+
+1915 SORLEY: “Moral Values and the Idea of God.” 1917 LOISY:
+“La Religion.”
+1918 GOBLOT: “Traité de Logique.” 1919 BERGSON: “L’Energie
+spirituelle.”
+
+1920 ALEXANDER: “Space, Time and Deity.” 1921 RUSSELL:
+“Analysis of Mind.” MACTAGGART: “Nature of Existence.”
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Modern French Philosophy, by J. Alexander Gunn
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
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+<title>Modern French Philosophy, by J. Alexander Gunn</title>
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+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Modern French Philosophy, by J. Alexander Gunn
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: Modern French Philosophy: A Study Of The Development Since Comte
+
+Author: J. Alexander Gunn
+
+Release Date: June 09, 2002 [EBook #5246]
+[Most recently updated: March 17, 2020]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MODERN FRENCH PHILOSOPHY ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>Modern French Philosophy</h1>
+
+<h4><i>A study of the Development since Comte.</i></h4>
+
+<h2>by J. Alexander Gunn, M.A., PH.D.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>Fellow of the University of Liverpool; Lecturer in Psychology to the
+Liverpool University Extension Board</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+WITH A FOREWORD BY<br/>
+HENRI BERGSON
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>de l&rsquo;Academie francaise et de l&rsquo;Academie des<br/>
+Sciences morales et politiques</i>
+</p>
+
+<h5>T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD.<br/>
+LONDON: ADELPHI TERRACE</h5>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>First published in 1922.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>(All rights reserved)</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+TO<br/>
+MY TEACHER<br/>
+ALEXANDER MAIR<br/>
+PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL<br/>
+AS A SMALL TOKEN OF ESTEEM<br/>
+AND AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF HIS INSTRUCTION
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref01">FOREWORD BY HENRI BERGSON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref02">PREFACE</a><br/><br/></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. ANTECEDENTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. MAIN CURRENTS SINCE 1851</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. SCIENCE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. FREEDOM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. PROGRESS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. ETHICS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. RELIGION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CONCLUSION</a><br/><br/></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">BIBLIOGRAPHY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">COMPARATIVE TABLE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mais il n&rsquo;y a pas que cette France, que cette France glorieuse, que cette
+France révolutionnaire, cette France émancipatrice et initiatrice du genre
+humain, que cette France d&rsquo;une activité merveilleuse et comme on l&rsquo;a dit, cette
+France nourrie des idées générales du monde, il y a une autre France que je
+n&rsquo;aime pas moins, une autre France qui m&rsquo;est encore plus chère, c&rsquo;est la France
+misérable, c&rsquo;est la France vaincue et humiliée, c&rsquo;est la France qui est
+accablée, c&rsquo;est la France qui traîne son boulet depuis quatorze siècles,
+la France qui crie, suppliante vers la justice et vers la liberté, la France
+que les despotes poussent constamment sur les champs de bataille, sous prétexte
+de liberté, pour lui faire verser son sang par toutes les artères et par toutes
+les veines, oh! cette France-là, je l&rsquo;aime.&rdquo;&mdash;GAMBETTA,
+<i>Discours</i>, 29 <i>September</i>, 1872.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Les jeunes gens de tous les pays du monde qui sont venus dans les campagnes de
+France combattre pour la civilisation et le droit seront sans doute plus
+disposés à y revenir, apres la guerre chercher la nourriture
+intellectuelle. Il importe qu&rsquo;ils soient assurés de l&rsquo;y trouver, saine,
+abondante et forte.&rdquo;&mdash;M. D. PARODI, <i>Inspecteur de l&rsquo;Académie de Paris,
+1919</i>.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="pref01"></a>FOREWORD</h2>
+
+<p>
+<i>Je serais heureux que le public anglais sût le bien que je pense du
+livre de M. Gunn, sur la philosophie francaise depuis 1851. Le sujet choisi est
+neuf, car il n&rsquo;existe pas, à ma connaissance, d&rsquo;ouvrage relatif à
+toute cette période de la philosophie française. Le beau livre que M.
+Parodi vient de publier en français traite surtout des vingt dernières
+années de notre activité philosophique. M. Gunn, remontant jusqu&rsquo;à
+Auguste Comte, a eu raison de placer ainsi devant nous toute le seconde moitié
+du siècle passé. Cette période de cinquante ans qui a précédée notre vingtième
+siècle est d&rsquo;une importance capitale. Elle constitue réellement notre
+dix-neuvième siècle philosophique, car l&rsquo;oeuvre même de Maine de Biran,
+qui est antérieure, n&rsquo;a été bien connue et étudiée qu&rsquo;à ce moment, et la
+plupart de nos idées philosophiques actuelles ont été élaborées pendant ces
+cinquante ans.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Le sujet est d&rsquo;ailleurs d&rsquo;une complication extrême, en raison du
+nombre et de la variété des doctrines, en raison surtout de la diversité des
+questions entre lesquelles se sont partagés tant de penseurs. Dr. Gunn a su
+ramener toutes ces questions à un petit nombre de problèmes essentiels :
+la science, la liberté, le progrès, la morale, la religion. Cette division me
+paraît heureuse. Elle répond bien, ce me semble, aux principales
+préoccupations de la philosophie francaise. Elle a permis à l&rsquo;auteur
+d&rsquo;être complet, tout en restant simple, clair, et facile à
+suivre.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elle présente, il est vrai, un inconvénient, en ce qu&rsquo;elle morcelle la
+doctrine d&rsquo;un auteur en fragments dont chacun, pris à part, perd un peu
+de sa vitalite et de son individualité. Elle risque ainsi de présenter comme
+trop semblable à d&rsquo;autres la solution que tel philosophe a donnée de tel
+problème, solution qui, replacée dans l&rsquo;ensemble de la doctrine,
+apparaîtrait comme propre à ce penseur, originale et plus forte.
+Mais cet inconvénient était inévitable et l&rsquo;envers de l&rsquo;avantage que je
+signalais plus haut, celui de l&rsquo;ordre, de la continuité et de la clarté.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Le travail du Dr. Gunn m&rsquo;apparaît comme tout à fait distingué.
+Il témoigne d&rsquo;une information singulièrement étendue, précise et sûre.
+C&rsquo;est l&rsquo;oeuvre d&rsquo;un esprit d&rsquo;une extrême souplesse, capable de
+s&rsquo;assimiler vite et bien la pensée des philosophes, de classer les idées dans
+leur ordre d&rsquo;importance, de les exposer méthodiquement et les apprécier
+à leur juste valeur.</i>
+</p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:100%;"> <img src="images/img1.jpg" width="400"
+height="137" alt="H. Bergson" /> </div>
+
+<p>
+[These pages are a revised extract from the more formal <i>Rapport</i> which
+was presented by M. Bergson to the University of Liverpool].
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="pref02"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>
+This work is the fruit of much reading and research done in Paris at the
+Sorbonne and Bibliothèque nationale. It is, substantially, a revised form of
+the thesis presented by the writer to the University of Liverpool for the
+degree of Doctor in Philosophy, obtained in 1921. The author is indebted,
+therefore, to the University for permission to publish. More especially must he
+record his deep gratitude to the French thinkers who gave both stimulus and
+encouragement to him during his sojourn in Paris. Foremost among these is M.
+Henri Bergson, upon whose <i>rapport</i> the Doctorate was conferred, and who
+has expressed his appreciation of the work by contributing a Foreword for
+publication.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mention must also be made of the encouragement given by the late M. Emile
+Boutroux and by the eminent editor of the well-known <i>Revue de Métaphysique
+et de Morale</i>, M. Xavier Léon, a leading spirit in the <i>Société de
+Philosophie</i>, whose meetings the writer was privileged to attend by
+invitation. Then MM. Brunschvicg, Levy-Bruhl, Lalande, Rey and Lenoir, from
+time to time discussed the work with him and he must record his appreciation of
+their kindness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Professor Mair of Liverpool is due the initial suggestion, and it has been
+felt a fitting tribute to his supervision, criticism, encouragement and
+sympathy that this book should be respectfully dedicated to him by one of his
+grateful pupils. In the labour of dealing with the proofs, the writer has to
+acknowledge the co-operation of Miss M. Linn and Mr. J. E. Turner, M.A.
+</p>
+
+<p class="asterism">
+*    *    *    *    *    *    *    *    *
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The method adopted in this history has been deliberately chosen for its
+usefulness in emphasising the development of ideas. A purely chronological
+method has not been followed. The biographical system has likewise been
+rejected. The history of the development of thought centres round problems, and
+it progresses in relation to these problems. The particular manner in which the
+main problems presented themselves to the French thinkers of the second half of
+the nineteenth century was largely determined by the events and ideas which
+marked the period from 1789 to 1851. For this reason a chapter has been devoted
+to Antecedents. Between the Revolution and the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i> of Napoleon
+III., four distinct lines of thought are discernible. Then the main currents
+from the year 1851 down to 1921 are described, with special reference to the
+development of the main problems. The reconciliation of <i>science</i> and
+<i>conscience</i> proved to be the main general problem, which became more
+definitely that of Freedom. This in itself is intimately bound up with the
+doctrines of progress, of history, of ethics and religion. These topics are
+discussed in a manner which shows their bearing upon each other. The conclusion
+aims at displaying the characteristics of French thought which reveal
+themselves in the study of these great problems. Its vitality, concreteness,
+clearness, brilliance and precision are noted and a comparison made between
+French thought and German philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From a general philosophical standpoint few periods could be so fascinating.
+Few, if any, could show such a complete revolution of thought as that witnessed
+since the year 1851. To bring this out clearly is the main object of the
+present book. It is intended to serve a double purpose. Primarily, it aims at
+being a contribution to the history of thought which will provide a definite
+knowledge of the best that has been said and thought among philosophers in
+France during the last seventy years. Further, it is itself an appeal for
+serious attention to be given to French philosophy. This is a field which has
+been comparatively neglected by English students, so far as the nineteenth
+century is concerned, and this is especially true of our period, which is
+roughly that from Comte to Boutroux (who passed away last month) and Bergson
+(who has this year resigned his professorship). It is the earnest desire of the
+writer to draw both philosophical students and lovers of France and its
+literature to a closer study and appreciation of modern French philosophy.
+Emotion and sentiment are inadequate bases for an <i>entente</i> which is to be
+really <i>cordiale</i> between any two peoples. An understanding of their
+deepest thoughts is also necessary and desirable. Such an understanding is,
+after all, but a step towards that iternationalisation of thought, that common
+fund of human culture and knowledge, which sets itself as an ideal before the
+nations of the world. <i>La philosophie n&rsquo;a pas de patrie! Les idées sont
+actuellement les forces internationales.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<b>J. A. G.</b>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+THE UNIVERSITY,<br/>
+        LIVERPOOL,<br/>
+            <i>December</i>, 1921
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I<br/>
+(INTRODUCTORY)<br/>
+ANTECEDENTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+HISTORICAL SURVEY OF THE MAIN CURRENTS FROM THE REVOLUTION OF 1789 UP TO 1851.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the Revolution&mdash;The Traditionalists: Chateaubuand, De Bonald, De
+Maistre, Lamennais, Lacordaire
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Main Currents:</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1. Maine de Biran.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+2. The Eclectics: Cousin, Jouffroy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+3. The Socialists: Saint-Simon, Fourier and Cabal, Proudhon and Blanc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+4.Positivism: Auguste Comte.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I<br/>
+ANTECEDENTS</h3>
+
+<p>
+This work deals with the great French thinkers since the time of Auguste Comte,
+and treats, under various aspects, the development of thought in relation to
+the main problems which confronted these men. In the commencement of such an
+undertaking we are obliged to acknowledge the continuity of human thought, to
+recognise that it tends to approximate to an organic whole, and that,
+consequently, methods resembling those of surgical amputation are to be
+avoided. We cannot absolutely isolate one period of thought. For this reason a
+brief survey of the earlier years is necessary in order to orient the approach
+to the period specially placed in the limelight, namely 1851-1921.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the world of speculative thought and in the realm of practical politics we
+find reflected, at the opening of the century, the work of the French
+Revolutionaries on the one hand, and that of Immanuel Kant on the other.
+Coupled with these great factors was the pervading influence of the
+Encyclopædists and of the thinkers of the Enlightenment. These two groups of
+influences, the one sudden and in the nature of a shock to political and
+metaphysical thought, the other quieter but no less effective, combined to
+produce a feeling of instability and of dissatisfaction at the close of the
+eighteenth century. A sense of change, indeed of resurrection, filled the minds
+and hearts of those who saw the opening of the nineteenth century. The old
+aristocracy and the monarchy in France had gone, and in philosophy the old
+metaphysic had received a blow at the hands of the author of the Three
+Critiques.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No better expression was given to the psychological state of France at this
+time than that of Alfred de Musset in his <i>Confession d&rsquo;un Enfant du
+Siècle</i>. <i>Toute la maladie du siècle présent</i> (he wrote) <i>vient de
+deux causes; le peuple qui a passé par &rsquo;93 et par 1814 porte au cœur deux
+blessures. Tout ce qui était n&rsquo;est plus; tout ce qui sera n&rsquo;est pas encore. Ne
+cherchez ailleurs le secret de nos maux.</i><b><a href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1" id="linknoteref-1"><sup>[1]</sup></a></b>
+De Musset was right, the whole course of the century was marked by conflict
+between two forces&mdash;on the one hand a tendency to reaction and
+conservatism, on the other an impulse to radicalism and revolution.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-1" id="linknote-1"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-1">[1]</a>
+The extract is taken from <i>Première partie</i>, ch. 2. The book was published
+in 1836. Somewhat similar sentiments are uttered with reference to this time by
+Michelet. (See his <i>Histoire du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>, vol. i., p. 9).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is true that one group of thinkers endeavoured, by a perfectly natural
+reaction, to recall their fellow-countrymen, at this time of unrest, back to
+the doctrines and traditions of the past, and tried to find in the faith of the
+Christian Church and the practice of the Catholic religion a rallying-point.
+The monarchy and the Church were eulogised by Chateaubriand, while on the more
+philosophical side efforts on behalf of traditionalism were made very nobly by
+De Bonald and Joseph de Maistre. While they represented the old aristocracy and
+recalled the theocracy and ecclesiasticism of the past by advocating reaction
+and Ultramontanism, Lamennais attempted to adapt Catholicism to the new
+conditions, only to find, as did Renan later, that &ldquo;one cannot argue with a bar
+of iron.&rdquo; Not the brilliant appeals of a Lacordaire, who thundered from Notre
+Dame, nor the modernism of a Lamennais, nor the efforts in religious philosophy
+made by De Maistre, were, however, sufficient to meet the needs of the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old traditions and the old dogmas did not offer the salvation they
+professed to do. Consequently various groups of thinkers worked out solutions
+satisfactory to themselves and which they offered to others. We can distinguish
+clearly four main currents, the method of introspection and investigation of
+the inner life of the soul, the adoption of a spiritualist philosophy upon an
+eclectic basis, the search for a new society after the manner of the socialists
+and, lastly, a positive philosophy and religion of humanity. These four
+currents form the historical antecedents of our period and to a brief survey of
+them we now turn.
+</p>
+
+<p class="asterism">
+*    *    *    *    *    *    *    *    *
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+To find the origin of many of the tendencies which appear prominently in the
+thought of the second half of the nineteenth century, particularly those
+displayed by the new spiritualistic philosophy (which marked the last thirty
+years of the century), we must go back to the period of the Revolution, to
+Maine de Biran (1766-1824)&mdash;a unique and original thinker who laid the
+foundations of modern French psychology and who was, we may note in passing, a
+contemporary of Chateaubriand. A certain tone of romanticism marks the work of
+both the literary man and the philosopher. Maine de Biran was not a thinker who
+reflected upon his own experiences in retreat from the world. Born a Count, a
+Lifeguardsman to Louis XVI. at the Revolution, and faithful to the old
+aristocracy, he was appointed, at the Restoration, to an important
+administrative position, and later became a deputy and a member of the State
+Council. His writings were much greater in extent than is generally thought,
+but only one important work appeared in publication during his lifetime. This
+was his treatise, or <i>mémoire</i>, entitled <i>Habitude</i>, which appeared
+in 1803. This work well illustrates Maine de Biran&rsquo;s historical position in the
+development of French philosophy. It came at a tome when attention and
+interest, so far as philosophical problems were concerned, centred round two
+&ldquo;foci.&rdquo; These respective centres are indicated by Destutt de Tracy,<a href="#linknote-2" name="linknoteref-2" id="linknoteref-2"><sup>[2]</sup></a> the disciple of Condillac on the one hand, and by
+Cabanis<a href="#linknote-3" name="linknoteref-3" id="linknoteref-3"><sup>[3]</sup></a> on the other. Both were
+&ldquo;ideologues&rdquo; and were ridiculed by Napoleon who endeavoured to lay much blame
+upon the philosophers. We must notice, however, this difference. While the
+school of Condillac,<a href="#linknote-4" name="linknoteref-4" id="linknoteref-4"><sup>[4]</sup></a> influenced by
+Locke, endeavoured to work out a psychology in terms of abstractions, Cabanis,
+anxious to be more concrete, attempted to interpret the life of the mind by
+reference to physical and physiological phenomena.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-2" id="linknote-2"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-2">[2]</a>
+Destutt de Tracy, 1754-1836. His <i>Elements of
+Ideology</i> appeared in 1801. He succeeded Cabanis in the Académie in 1808,
+and in a complimentary <i>Discours</i> pronounced upon his predecessor claimed
+that Cabanis had introduced medicine into philosophy and philosophy into
+medicine. This remark might well have been applied later to Claude Bernard.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-3" id="linknote-3"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-3">[3]</a>
+Cabanis, 1757-1808, <i>Rapports du Physique et du
+Morale de l&rsquo;Homme</i>, 1802. He was a friend of De Biran, as also was Ampère,
+the celebrated physicist and a man of considerable philosophical power. A group
+used to meet <i>chez Cabanis</i> at Auteuil, comprising De Biran, Cabanis,
+Ampère, Royard-Collard, Guizot, and Cousin.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-4" id="linknote-4"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-4">[4]</a>
+Condillac belongs to the eighteenth century. He
+died in 1780. His <i>Traité des Sensations</i> is dated 1754.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the special merit of De Biran that he endeavoured, and that successfully,
+to establish both the concreteness and the essential spirituality of the inner
+life. The attitude and method which he adopted became a force in freeing
+psychology, and indeed philosophy in general, from mere play with abstractions.
+His doctrines proved valuable, too, in establishing the reality and
+irreducibility of the mental or spiritual nature of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maine de Biran took as his starting-point a psychological fact, the reality of
+conscious effort. The self is active rather than speculative; the self is
+action or effort&mdash;that is to say, the self is, fundamentally and
+primarily, will. For the Cartesian formula <i>Cogito, ergo sum,</i> De Biran
+proposed to substitute that of <i>Volo, ergo sum</i>. He went on to maintain
+that we have an internal and immediate perception of this effort of will
+through which we realise, at one and the same time, our self in its fullest
+activity and the resistance to its operations. In such effort we realise
+ourselves as free causes and, in spite of the doctrine of physical determinism,
+we realise in ourselves the self as a cause of its own volitions. The greater
+the resistance or the greater the effort, the more do we realise ourselves as
+being free and not the absolute victims of habit. Of this freedom we have an
+immediate consciousness, it is <i>une donnée immédiate de la conscience.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This freedom is not always realised, for over against the tendency to action we
+must set the counter-tendency to passivity. Between these two exists, in
+varying degrees of approach to the two extremes, <i>habitude</i>. Our inner
+life is seen by the psychologist as a field of conflict between the sensitive
+and the reflective side of our nature. It is this which gives to the life of
+this <i>homo duplex</i> all the elements of struggle and tragedy. In the
+desires and the passions, says Maine de Biran, the true self is not seen. The
+true self appears in memory, reasoning and, above all, in will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such, in brief, is the outline of De Biran&rsquo;s psychology. To his two stages,
+<i>vie sensitive</i> and <i>vie active</i> (<i>ou réflexive</i>), he added a
+third, <i>la vie divine</i>. In his religious psychology he upheld the great
+Christian doctrines of divine love and grace as against the less human attitude
+of the Stoics. He still insists upon the power of will and action and is an
+enemy of the religious vice of quietism. In his closing years De Biran penned
+his ideas upon our realisation of the divine love by intuition. His intense
+interest in the inner life of the spirit gives De Biran&rsquo;s <i>Journal Intime</i>
+a rank among the illuminating writings upon religious psychology.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maine de Biran was nothing if not a psychologist. The most absurd statement
+ever made about him was that he was &ldquo;the French Kant.&rdquo; This is very misleading,
+for De Biran&rsquo;s genius showed itself in his psychological power and not in
+critical metaphysics. The importance of his work and his tremendous influence
+upon our period, especially upon the new spiritualism, will be apparent. Indeed
+he himself foresaw the great possibilities which lay open to philosophy along
+the lines he laid down. &ldquo;<i>Qui sait,</i>&rdquo; he remarked,<a href="#linknote-5" name="linknoteref-5" id="linknoteref-5"><sup>[5]</sup></a> &ldquo;<i>tout ce que peut la réflection concentrée et
+s&rsquo;il n&rsquo;y a pas un nouveau monde intérieur qui pourra être découvert un
+jour par quelque &lsquo;Colomb métaphysicien.&rsquo;</i>&rdquo; With Maine de Biran began the
+movement in French philosophy which worked through the writings of Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Guyau, Boutroux and particularly Bergson. A careful examination of
+the philosophy of this last thinker shows how great is his debt to Maine de
+Biran, whose inspiration he warmly acknowledges.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-5" id="linknote-5"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-5">[5]</a>
+Pensées, p. 213.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is only comparatively recently that Maine de Biran has come to his own
+and that his real power and influence have been recognised. There are two
+reasons for this, firstly the lack of publication of his writings, and secondly
+his being known for long only through the work of Cousin and the Eclectics, who
+were imperfectly acquainted with his work. Upon this school of thought he had
+some little influence which was immediate and personal, but Cousin, although he
+edited some of his unpublished work, failed to appreciate its originality and
+value.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So for a time De Biran&rsquo;s influence waned when that of Cousin himself faded.
+Maine de Biran stands quite in a different category from the Eclectics, as a
+unique figure at a transition period, the herald of the best that was to be in
+the thought of the century. Cousin and the Eclectic school, however, gained the
+official favour, and eclecticism was for many years the &ldquo;official philosophy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+This Eclectic School was due to the work of various thinkers, of whom we may
+cite Laromiguière (1756-1837), who marks the transition from Condillac,
+Royer-Collard (1763-1845), who, abandoning Condillac, turned for inspiration to
+the Scottish School (particularly to Reid), Victor Cousin (1792-1867), Jouffroy
+(1796-1842) and Paul Janet (1823-1899), the last of the notable eclectics. Of
+these &ldquo;the chief&rdquo; was Cousin. His personality dominated this whole school of
+thought, his <i>ipse dixit</i> was the criterion of orthodoxy, an orthodoxy
+which we must note was supported by the powers of officialdom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose from the Ecole Normale Supérieure to a professorship at the Sorbonne,
+which he held from the Restoration (1815 to 1830), with a break of a few years
+during which his course was suspended. These years he spent in Germany, to
+which country attention had been attracted by the work of Madame de Staël,
+<i>De l&rsquo;Allemagne</i> (1813). From 1830 to the beginning of our period (1851)
+Cousin, as director of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, as a <i>pair de France</i>
+and a minister of state, organised and controlled the education of his country.
+He thus exercised a very great influence over an entire generation of
+Frenchmen, to whom he propounded the doctrines of his spiritualism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His teaching was marked by a strong reaction against the doctrines of the
+previous century, which had given such value to the data of sense. Cousin
+abhorred the materialism involved in these doctrines, which he styled <i>une
+doctrine désolante</i>, and he endeavoured to raise the dignity and conception
+of man as a spiritual being. In the Preface to his Lectures of 1818, <i>Du
+Vrai, du Beau et du Bien</i> (Edition of 1853), published first in 1846, he
+lays stress upon the elements of his philosophy, which he presents as a true
+spiritualism, for it subordinates the sensory and sensual to the spiritual. He
+upholds the essentially spiritual nature of man, his liberty, moral
+responsibility and obligation, the dignity of human virtue, disinterestedness,
+charity, justice and beauty. These fruits of the spirit reveal, Cousin claimed,
+a God who is both the author and the ideal type of humanity, a Being who is not
+indifferent to the welfare and happiness of his creatures. There is a vein of
+romanticism about Cousin, and in him may be seen the same spirit which, on the
+literary side, was at work in Hugo, Lamartine and De Vigny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cousin&rsquo;s philosophy attached itself rather to the Scottish school of &ldquo;common
+sense&rdquo; than to the analytic type of doctrine which had prevailed in his own
+country in the previous century. To this he added much from various sources,
+such as Schelling and Hegel among the moderns, Plato and the Alexandrians among
+the ancients. In viewing the history of philosophy, Cousin advocated a division
+of systems into four classes&mdash;sensualism, idealism, scepticism and
+mysticism. Owing to the insufficiency of his <i>vérités de sens commun</i> he
+was prone to confuse the history of philosophy with philosophy itself. There is
+perhaps no branch of science or art so intimately bound up with its own history
+as is philosophy, but we must beware of substituting an historical survey of
+problems for an actual handling of those problems themselves. Cousin, however,
+did much to establish in his native land the teaching of the history of
+philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His own aim was to found a metaphysic spiritual in character, based upon
+psychology. While he did not agree with the system of Kant, he rejected the
+doctrines of the empiricists and set his influence against the materialistic
+and sceptical tendencies of his time. Yet he cannot be excused from
+&ldquo;opportunism&rdquo; not only in politics but in thought. In order to retain his
+personal influence he endeavoured to present his philosophy as a sum of
+doctrines perfectly consistent with the Catholic faith. This was partly, no
+doubt, to counteract the work and influence of that group of thinkers already
+referred to as Traditionalists, De Bonald, De Maistre and Lamennais. Cousin&rsquo;s
+efforts in this direction, however, dissatisfied both churchmen and
+philosophers and gave rise to the remark that his teaching was but <i>une
+philosophie de convenance</i>. We must add too that the vagueness of his
+spiritual teaching was largely responsible for the welcome accorded by many
+minds to the positivist teaching of Auguste Comte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While Maine de Biran had a real influence upon the thought of our period
+1851-1921, Cousin stands in a different relation to subsequent thought, for
+that thought is largely characterised by its being a reaction against
+eclecticism. Positivism rose as a direct revolt against it, the neo-critical
+philosophy dealt blows at both, while Ravaisson, the initiator of the
+neo-spiritualism, upon whom Cousin did not look very favourably, endeavoured to
+reorganise upon a different footing, and on sounder principles, free from the
+deficiencies which must always accompany eclectic thought, those ideas and
+ideals to which Cousin in his spiritualism had vaguely indicated his loyalty.
+It is interesting to note that Cousin&rsquo;s death coincides in date with the
+foundation of the neo-spiritual philosophy by Ravaisson&rsquo;s celebrated manifesto
+to idealists, for such, as we shall see, was his <i>Rapport sur la Philosophie
+au Dix-neuvième Siècle</i> (1867). Cousin&rsquo;s spiritualism had a notable
+influence upon several important men&mdash;e.g., Michelet and his friend Edgar
+Quinet, and more indirectly upon Renan. The latter spoke of him in warm terms
+as un <i>excitateur de ma pensée</i>.<a href="#linknote-6" name="linknoteref-6" id="linknoteref-6"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-6" id="linknote-6"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-6">[6]</a>
+It is worth noting that two of the big currents of
+opposition, those of Comte and Renouvier, arose outside the professional and
+official teaching, free from the University which was entirely dominated by
+Cousin. This explains much of the slowness with which Comte and Renouvier were
+appreciated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among Cousin&rsquo;s disciples one of the most prominent was Jouffroy of the Collège
+de France. The psychological interest was keen in his work, but his <i>Mélanges
+philosophiques</i> (1883) showed him to be occupied with the problem of human
+destiny. Paul Janet was a noble upholder of the eclectic doctrine or older
+spiritualism, while among associates and tardy followers must be mentioned
+Gamier, Damiron, Franke, Caro and Jules Simon.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+We have seen how, as a consequence of the Revolution and of the cold,
+destructive, criticism of the eighteenth century, there was a demand for
+constructive thought. This was a desire common not only to the Traditionalists
+but to De Biran and Cousin. They aimed at intellectual reconstruction. While,
+however, there were some who combated the principles of the Revolution, as did
+the Traditionalists, while some tried to correct and to steady those principles
+(as De Biran and Cousin), there were others who endeavoured to complete them
+and to carry out a more rigorous application of the Revolutionary watchwords,
+<i>Liberté</i>, <i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i>. The Socialists (and later
+Comte) aimed at not merely intellectual, but social reconstruction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Revolution and the War had shown men that many changes could be produced in
+society in a comparatively short time. This encouraged bold and imaginative
+spirits. Endeavours after better things, after new systems and a new order of
+society, showed themselves. The work of political philosophers attempted to
+give expression to the socialist idea of society. For long there had been
+maintained the ecclesiastical conception of a perfect social order in another
+world. It was now thought that humanity would be better employed, not in
+imagining the glories of a &ldquo;hereafter,&rdquo; but in &ldquo;tilling its garden,&rdquo; in
+striving to realise here on earth something of that blessed fellowship and
+happy social order treasured up in heaven. This is the dominant note of
+socialism, which is closely bound up at its origin, not only with political
+thought, but with humanitarianism and a feeling essentially religious. Its
+progress is a feature of the whole century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most notable expression of the new socialistic idea was that of Count Henri
+de Saint-Simon (1760-1825), a relative of the celebrated Duke. He had great
+confidence in the power of science as an instrument for social reconstruction,
+and he took over from a medical man, Dr. Burdin, the notions which, later on,
+Auguste Comte was to formulate into the doctrines of Positivism. Saint-Simon&rsquo;s
+influence showed itself while the century was young, his first work <i>Lettres
+d&rsquo;un Habitant de Genève</i> appearing in 1803. In this he outlined a scheme for
+placing the authoritative power of the community, not in the hands of Church
+and State, but in a freely elected body of thinkers and <i>artistes</i>. He
+then endeavoured to urge the importance of order in society, as a counterpart
+to the order erected by science in the world of knowledge. To this end was
+directed his <i>Introduction aux Travaux scientifiques du Dix-neuvième
+Siècle</i> (1807-8). He also indicated the importance for social welfare of
+abandoning the preoccupation with an imaginary heaven, and pointed out that the
+more social and political theory could be emancipated from the influence of
+theological dogmas the better. At the same time he quite recognised the
+importance of religious beliefs to a community, and his sociological view of
+religion foreshadowed Guyau&rsquo;s study, an important work which will claim our
+attention in due course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In 1813, Saint-Simon published his <i>Mémoire sur la Science de l&rsquo;Homme</i>, in
+which he laid down notions which were the germ of Auguste Comte&rsquo;s <i>Law of the
+Three Stages</i>. With the peace which followed the Battle of Waterloo, a
+tremendous stimulus was given in France to industrial activity, and Saint-Simon
+formulated his motto &ldquo;All by industry and all for industry.&rdquo; Real power, he
+showed, lay not in the hands of governments or government agents, but with the
+industrial class. Society therefore should be organised in the manner most
+favourable to the working class. Ultimate economic and political power rests
+with them. These ideas he set forth in <i>L&rsquo;Industrie</i>, 1817-18, <i>La
+Politique</i>, 1819, <i>L&rsquo;Organisateur</i>, 1819-30, <i>Le Système
+industriel</i>, 1821-22, <i>Le Catéchisme des Industriels</i>, 1822-24. Since
+1817 among his fellow- workers were now Augustin Thierry and young Auguste
+Comte, his secretary, the most important figure in the history of the first
+half of the century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finding that exposition and reasoned demonstration of his ideas were not
+sufficient, Saint-Simon made appeal to sentiment by his <i>Appel aux
+Philanthropes</i>, a treatise on human brotherhood and solidarity. This he
+followed up in 1825 by his last book, published the year of his death, <i>Le
+Nouveau Christianisme</i>. This book endeavoured to outline a religion which
+should prove itself capable of reorganising society by inculcating the
+brotherhood of man in a more effective manner than that of the Christian
+Church. <i>Fraternité</i> was the watchword he stressed, and he placed women on
+an equal political and social footing with men. He set forth the grave
+deficiencies of the Christian doctrines as proclaimed by Catholic and
+Protestant alike. Both are cursed by the sin of individualism, the virtue of
+saving one&rsquo;s own soul, while no attempt at social salvation is made. Both
+Catholics and Protestants he labelled vile heretics, inasmuch as they have
+turned aside from the social teaching of Christianity. If we are to love our
+neighbour as ourselves we must as a whole community work for the betterment of
+our fellows socially, by erecting a form of society more in accord with
+Christian principles. We must strive to do it here and now, and not sit piously
+getting ready for the next world. We must not think it religious to despise the
+body or material welfare. God manifests Himself as matter and spirit, so
+Religion must not despise economics but rather unite industry and science as
+Love unites spirit and matter. Eternal Life, of which Christianity makes so
+much, is not to be sought, argued Saint-Simon, in another world, but here and
+now in the love and service of our brothers, in the uplift of humanity as a
+whole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saint-Simon believed in a fated progress and an inevitable betterment of the
+condition of the working classes. The influence of Hegel&rsquo;s view of history and
+Condorcet&rsquo;s social theories is apparent in some of his writings. His insistence
+upon organisation, social authority and the depreciative view of liberty which
+he held show well how he was the real father of many later doctrines and of
+applications of these doctrines, as for example by Lenin in the Soviet system
+of Bolshevik Russia. Saint-Simon foreshadowed the dictatorship of the
+proletariat, although his scheme of social organisation involved a triple
+division of humanity into intellectuals, artists and industrials. Many of his
+doctrines had a definite communistic tendency. Among them we find indicated the
+abolition of all hereditary rights of inheritance and the distribution of
+property is placed, as in the communist programme, in the hands of the
+organising authority. Saint-Simon had a keen insight into modern social
+conditions and problems. He stressed the economic inter-relationships and
+insisted that the world must be regarded as &ldquo;one workshop.&rdquo; A statement of the
+principles of the Saint- Simonist School, among whom was the curious character
+Enfantin, was presented to the <i>Chambre des Députés</i> in the critical year
+1830. The disciples seem to have shown a more definite communism than their
+master. The influence of Saint-Simon, precursor of both socialism and
+positivism, had considerable influence upon the social philosophy of the whole
+century. It only diminished when the newer type of socialist doctrine appeared,
+the so-called &ldquo;scientific&rdquo; socialism of Marx and Engels. Saint-Simon&rsquo;s impulse,
+however, acted powerfully upon the minds of most of the thinkers of the
+century, especially in their youth. Renouvier and Renan were fired with some of
+his ideas. The spirit of Saint-Simon expressed itself in our period by
+promoting an intense interest in philosophy as applied to social problems.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saint-Simon was not, however, the only thinker at this time with a social
+programme to offer. In contrast to his scheme we have that of Fourier
+(1772-1837) who endeavoured to avoid the suppression of liberty involved in the
+organisation proposed by Saint-Simon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The psychology of Fourier was peculiar and it coloured his ethical and social
+doctrine. He believed that the evils of the world were due to the repression of
+human passions. These in themselves, if given liberty of expression, would
+prove harmonious. As Newton had propounded the law of the universal attraction
+of matter, Fourier endeavoured to propound the law of attraction between human
+beings. Passion and desire lead to mutual attraction; the basis of society is
+free association.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fourier&rsquo;s <i>Traité de l&rsquo;Association domestique et agricole</i> (1822), which
+followed his <i>Théorie des Quatre Mouvements</i> (1808), proposed the
+formation of associations or groups, <i>phalanges</i>, in which workers unite
+with capital for the self-government of industry. He, like Saint- Simon,
+attacks idlers, but the two thinkers look upon the capitalist manager as a
+worker. The intense class- antagonism of capitalist and labourer had not yet
+formulated itself and was not felt strongly until voiced on behalf of the
+proletariat by Proudhon and Marx. Fourier&rsquo;s proposals were those of a
+<i>bourgeois</i> business man who knew the commercial world intimately, who
+criticised it and condemned the existing system of civilisation. Various
+experiments were made to organise communities based upon his <i>phalanges</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cabet, the author of <i>Icaria</i> (1840) and <i>Le nouveau Christianisme</i>,
+was a further power in the promotion of socialism and owed not a little of his
+inspiration to Robert Owen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most interesting and powerful of the early socialist philosophers is
+undoubtedly Proudhon (1809- 1865), a striking personality, much misunderstood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While Saint-Simon, a count, came from the aristocracy, Fourier from the
+<i>bourgeoisie</i>, Proudhon was a real son of the people, a mouthpiece of the
+proletariat. He was a man of admirable mental energy and learning, which he had
+obtained solely by his own efforts and by a struggle with poverty and misery.
+Earnest and passionate by nature, he yet formulated his doctrines with more
+sanity and moderation than is usually supposed. Labels of &ldquo;atheist&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;anarchist&rdquo; have served well to misrepresent him. Certainly two of his
+watchwords were likely enough to raise hostility in many quarters. &ldquo;God,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;is evil,&rdquo; &ldquo;Property is theft.&rdquo; This last maxim was the subject of his
+book, published in 1840, <i>Qu&rsquo;est-ce que la propriété</i>? (<i>ou, Recherches
+sur le principe du droit et du gouvernement</i>) to which his answer was
+&ldquo;<i>C&rsquo;est le vol!</i>&rdquo; Proudhon took up the great watchword of <i>Egalité</i>,
+and had a passion for social justice which he based on &ldquo;the right to the whole
+product of labour.&rdquo; This could only come by mutual exchange, fairly and freely.
+He distinguished between private &ldquo;property&rdquo; and individual &ldquo;possession.&rdquo; The
+latter is an admitted fact and is not to be abolished; what he is anxious to
+overthrow is private &ldquo;property,&rdquo; which is a toll upon the labour of others and
+is therefore ultimately and morally theft. He hated the State for its support
+of the &ldquo;thieves,&rdquo; and his doctrines are a philosophy of anarchy. He further
+enunciated them in <i>Système des Contradictions économiques</i> (1846) and
+<i>De la Justice</i> (1858). In 1848 he was elected a <i>député</i> and,
+together with Louis Blanc and Pierre Leroux, figured in the Revolution of 1848.
+Blanc was a man of action, who had a concrete scheme for transition from the
+capitalist régime to the socialist state. He believed in the organisation of
+labour, universal suffrage and a new distribution of wealth, but he disapproved
+strongly of the dictatorship of the proletariat and of violent revolution.
+Proudhon expressed his great admiration for Blanc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The work of both of these men is a contradiction to the assertion put forward
+by the Marxian school that socialist doctrine was merely sentimental, utopian
+and &ldquo;unscientific&rdquo; prior to Marx. Many of the views of Proudhon and Blanc were
+far more &ldquo;scientific&rdquo; than those of Marx, because they were closer to facts.
+Proudhon differed profoundly from Marx in his view of history in which he saw
+the influence of ideas and ideals, as well as the operation of purely economic
+factors. To the doctrine of a materialistic determination of history Proudhon
+rightly opposes that of a spiritual determination, by the thoughts and ideals
+of men.<a href="#linknote-7" name="linknoteref-7" id="linknoteref-7"><sup>[7]</sup></a> The true revolution Proudhon and Blanc
+maintained can come only through the power of ideas.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-7" id="linknote-7"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-7">[7]</a>
+Indeed, it is highly probable that with the growing
+dissatisfaction with Marxian theories the work of Proudhon will come into
+greater prominence, replacing largely that of Marx.<br/>
+    On the personal relations of Proudhon with Marx (1818-1883), who was nine years
+younger than the Frenchman, see the interesting volume by Marx&rsquo;s descendant, M.
+Jean Longuet (Député de la Seine), <i>La Politique internationale du
+Marxisme</i> (<i>Karl Marx et la France</i>) (Alcan).<br/>
+    On the debt of Marx to the French social thinkers see the account given by
+Professor Charles Andler in his special edition of the Communist Manifesto,
+<i>Le Manifeste Communiste</i> (<i>avec introduction historique et
+commentaire</i>), (Rieder), also the last section of Renouvier&rsquo;s Philosophie
+analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire, vol. iv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All these early socialist thinkers had this in common: they agreed that purely
+economic solutions would not soothe the ills of society, but that moral,
+religious and philosophic teaching must accompany, or rather precede, all
+efforts towards social reform. The earliest of them, Saint-Simon, had asserted
+that no society, no system of civilisation, can endure if its spiritual
+principles and its economic organisation are in direct contradiction. When
+brotherly love on the one hand and merciless competition on the other are
+equally extolled, then hypocrisy, unrest and conflict are inevitable.
+</p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>
+The rise of positivism ranks with the rise of socialism as a movement of
+primary importance. Both were in origin nearer to one another than they now
+appear to be. We have seen how Saint-Simon was imbued with a spirit of social
+reform, a desire to reorganise human society. This desire Auguste Comte
+(1798-1857) shared; he felt himself called to it as a sacred work, and he
+extolled his &ldquo;incomparable mission.&rdquo; He lamented the anarchical state of the
+world and contrasted it with the world of the ancients and that of the Middle
+Ages. The harmony and stability of mediaeval society were due, Comte urged, to
+the spiritual power and unity of the Catholic Church and faith. The liberty of
+the Reformation offers no real basis for society, it is the spirit of criticism
+and of revolution. The modern world needs a new spiritual power. Such was
+Comte&rsquo;s judgment upon the world of his time. Where in the modern world could
+such a new organising power be found? To this question Comte gave an answer
+similar to that of Saint-Simon: he turned to science. The influence of
+Saint-Simon is here apparent, and we must note the personal relations between
+the two men. In 1817 Comte became secretary to Saint-Simon, and became
+intimately associated with his ideas and his work. Comte recognised, with his
+master, the supreme importance of establishing, at the outset, the relations
+actually obtaining and the relations possible between science and political
+organisation. This led to the publication, in 1822, of a treatise, <i>Plan des
+Travaux scientifiques nécessaires pour réorganiser la Société</i>, which
+unfortunately led to a quarrel between the two friends, and finally, in 1824,
+to a definite rupture by which Comte seems to have been embittered and made
+rather hostile to his old master and to have assumed an ungenerous
+attitude.<a href="#linknote-8" name="linknoteref-8" id="linknoteref-8"><sup>[8]</sup></a> Comte, however, being a proud and
+ambitious spirit, was perhaps better left alone to hew out his own path. In him
+we have one of the greatest minds of modern France, and his doctrine of
+positivism is one of the dominating features of the first half of the century.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-8" id="linknote-8"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-8">[8]</a>
+In considering the relations between Saint-Simon and Comte we may
+usefully compare those between Schelling and Hegel in Germany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His break with Saint-Simon showed his own resources; he had undoubtedly a finer
+sense of the difficulties of his reforming task than had Saint-Simon; moreover,
+he possessed a scientific knowledge which his master lacked. Such equipment he
+needed in his ambitious task, and it is one of the chief merits of Comte that
+he <i>attempted</i> so large a project as the Positive Philosophy endeavoured
+to be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This philosophy was contained in his <i>Cours de Philosophie positive</i>
+(1830-1842), which he regarded as the theoretic basis of a reforming political
+philosophy. One of the most interesting aspects of this work, however, is its
+claim to be a positive <i>philosophy</i>. Had not Comte accepted the
+Saint-Simonist doctrine of a belief in science as the great future power in
+society? How then comes it that he gives us a &ldquo;<i>philosophie</i> positive&rdquo; in
+the first place and not, as we might expect, a &ldquo;<i>science</i> positive&rdquo;?
+Comte&rsquo;s answer to this is that science, no less than society itself, is
+disordered and stands in need of organisation. The sciences have proceeded to
+work in a piecemeal fashion and are unable to present us with <i>une vue
+d&rsquo;ensemble</i>. It is the rôle of philosophy to work upon the data
+presented by the various sciences and, without going beyond these data, to
+arrange them and give us an organic unity of thought, a synthesis, which shall
+produce order in the mind of man and subsequently in human society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The precise part to be played by philosophy is determined by the existing state
+of scientific knowledge in the various departments and so depends upon the
+general stage of intelligence which humanity has reached. The intellectual
+development of humanity was formulated generally by Comte in what is known as
+&ldquo;The Law of the Three Stages,&rdquo; probably that part of his doctrine which is best
+known and which is most obvious. &ldquo;The Law of the Three Stages&rdquo; merely sets down
+the fact that in the race and in the individual we find three successive
+stages, under which conceptions are formed differently. The first is the
+theological or fictitious stage, in which the explanation of things is referred
+to the operations of divine agency. The second is the metaphysical or abstract
+stage when, for divinities, abstract principles are substituted. In the third,
+the scientific or positive stage, the human mind has passed beyond a belief in
+divine agencies or metaphysical abstractions to a rational study of the
+effective laws of phenomena. The human spirit here encounters the real, but it
+abstains from pretensions to absolute knowledge; it does not theorise about the
+beginning or the end of the universe or, indeed, its absolute nature; it takes
+only into consideration facts within human knowledge. Comte laid great emphasis
+upon the necessity of recognising the relativity of all things. All is
+relative; this is the one absolute principle. Our knowledge, he insisted
+(especially in his <i>Discours sur l&rsquo;Esprit positif</i>, 1844, which forms a
+valuable introduction to his thought as expressed in his larger works), is
+entirely relative to our organisation and our situation. Relativity, however,
+does not imply uncertainty. Our knowledge is indeed relative and never
+absolute, but it grows to a greater accord with reality. It is this passion for
+&ldquo;accord with reality&rdquo; which is characteristic of the scientific or positivist
+spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sciences are themselves relative and much attention is given by Comte to
+the proper classification of the sciences. He determines his hierarchy by
+arranging them in the order in which they have themselves completed the three
+stages and arrived at positivity. Mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry,
+biology and sociology are his arrangement. This last named has not yet arrived
+at the final stage; it is but a science in the making. Comte, indeed, himself
+gives it its name and founds it as the science of society, science applied to
+politics, as was first indicated in his scheme of work and early ideas of
+reform.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comte strongly insists upon the social aspect of all knowledge and all action.
+He even goes to the extent of regarding the individual man as an abstraction;
+for him the real being is the social being, Humanity. The study of human
+society has a double aspect, which is also a feature of the other sciences. As
+in biology there is the study of anatomy on the one hand and of physiology on
+the other, so in sociology we must investigate both the laws which govern the
+existence of a society and those which control its movements. The distinction
+is, in short, that of the static and the dynamic, and it embraces in
+sociological study the important conceptions of order and of progress. Comte
+very rightly stressed the idea of progress as characteristic of modern times,
+but he lamented its being divorced from that of order. He blamed the
+conservative view of order as responsible for promoting among &ldquo;progressives&rdquo;
+the spirit of anarchy and revolution. A positive sociology would, Comte
+maintained, reconcile a true order, which does not exclude change, with real
+progress, a movement which is neither destructive nor capricious. Comte here
+owes a debt in part to Montesquieu and largely to Condorcet, whose <i>Esquisse
+d&rsquo;un Tableau historique des Progrès de l&rsquo;Esprit humain</i> (1795) did much to
+promote serious reflection upon the question of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have already noted Comte&rsquo;s intense valuation of Humanity as a whole as a
+Supreme Being. In his later years, notably after 1845, when he met his
+&ldquo;Beatrice&rdquo; in the person of Clotilde de Vaux, he gave to his doctrines a
+sentimental expression of which the Religion of Humanity with its ritualism was
+the outcome. This positivist religion endeavoured to substitute for the
+traditional God the Supreme Being of Humanity&mdash;a Being capable, according
+to Comte, of sustaining our courage, becoming the end of our actions and the
+object of our love. To this he attached a morality calculated to combat the
+egoism which tends to dominate and to destroy mankind and intended to
+strengthen the altruistic motives in man and to raise them to the service of
+Humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We find Comte, at the opening of our period, restating his doctrines in his
+<i>Système de Politique positive</i> (1851-54), to which his first work was
+meant to serve as an Introduction. In 1856 he began his <i>Synthèse
+subjective</i>, but he died in 1857. Comte is a singularly desolate figure; the
+powers of officialdom were against him, and he existed mainly by what he could
+gain from teaching mathematics and by a pension raised by his admirers in
+England and his own land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The influence of his philosophy has been great and far- reaching, but it is the
+<i>spirit</i> of positivism which has survived, not its content. Subsequent
+developments in science have rendered much of his work obsolete, while his
+Religion has never made a great appeal. Comte&rsquo;s most noted disciple, Littré
+(1801-1881), regarded this latter as a retrograde step and confined himself to
+the early part of his master&rsquo;s work. Most important for us in the present work
+is Comte&rsquo;s influence upon subsequent thinkers in France, notably Taine, and we
+may add, Renan, Cournot, and even Renouvier, although these last two promoted a
+vigorous reaction against his philosophy in general. He influenced his
+adversaries, a notable testimony. Actually, however, the positivist philosophy
+found a greater welcome on the English side of the Channel from John Stuart
+Mill, Spencer and Lewes. The empiricism of the English school proved a more
+fruitful soil for positivism than the vague spiritualism of Cousin to which it
+offered strong opposition. Positivism, or rather the positivist standpoint in
+philosophy, turned at a later date to reseek its fatherland and after a sojourn
+in England reappears as an influence in the work of French thinkers near the
+end of the century&mdash;e.g., Fouillée, Guyau, Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson
+express elements of positivism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have now passed in review the four main currents of the first half of the
+century, in a manner intended to orient the approach to our period, 1851-1921.
+Without such an orientation much of the subsequent thought would lose its
+correct colouring and perspective. There is a continuity, even if it be partly
+a continuity marked by reactions, and this will be seen when we now examine the
+three general currents into which the thought of the subsequent period is
+divided.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II<br/>
+MAIN CURRENTS SINCE 1851</h2>
+
+<p>
+Introductory: Influence of events of 1848-1851&mdash;Reactionary character of
+Second Empire&mdash;Disgust of many thinkers (e.g., Vacherot, Taine, Renan,
+Renouvier, Hugo, Quinet)&mdash;Effects of 1870, the War, the Commune, and the
+Third Republic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+General character of the Philosophy of the Period&mdash;Reaction against both
+Eclecticism and Positivism.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+THE THREE MAIN CURRENTS.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. Positivist and naturalist current turning upon itself, seen in Vacherot,
+Taine, and Renan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Cournot, Renouvier, and the neo-critical philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. The New Spiritual Philosophy, to which the main contributors were
+Ravaisson, Lachelier, Boutroux, Fouillée, Guyau, Bergson, Blondel, and Weber.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER II<br/>
+MAIN CURRENTS</h3>
+
+<p>
+The year 1851 was one of remarkable importance for France; a crisis then
+occurred in its political and intellectual life. The hopes and aspirations to
+which the Revolution of 1848 had given rise were shattered by the <i>coup
+d&rsquo;état</i> of Louis Napoleon in the month of December. The proclamation of the
+Second Empire heralded the revival of an era of imperialism and reaction in
+politics, accompanied by a decline in liberty and a diminution of idealism in
+the world of thought. A censorship of books was established, the press was
+deprived of its liberty, and the teaching of philosophy forbidden in
+<i>lycées</i>.<a href="#linknote-9" name="linknoteref-9" id="linknoteref-9"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-9" id="linknote-9"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-9">[1]</a>
+The revival of philosophy in the <i>lycées</i> began when
+Victor Drury reintroduced the study of Logic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Various ardent and thoughtful spirits, whose minds and hearts had been uplifted
+by the events of 1848, hoping to see the dawn of an era expressing in action
+the ideals of the first Revolution, <i>Liberté</i>, <i>Egalité</i>,
+<i>Fraternité</i>, were bitterly disappointed. Social ideals such as had been
+created by Saint-Simon and his school received a rude rebuff from force,
+militarism and imperialism. So great was the mingled disappointment and disgust
+of many that they left for ever the realm of practical politics to apply
+themselves to the arts, letters or sciences. Interesting examples of this state
+of mind are to be found in Vacherot, Taine, Renan and Renouvier, and, we may
+add, in Michelet, Victor Hugo and Edgar Quinet. The first of these, Vacherot,
+who had succeeded Cousin as Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne, lost his
+chair, as did Quinet and also Michelet, who was further deprived of his
+position as Archivist. Hugo and Quinet, having taken active political part in
+the events of 1848, were driven into exile. Disgust, disappointment,
+disillusionment and pessimism characterise the attitude of all this group of
+thinkers to political events, and this reacted not only upon their careers but
+upon their entire philosophy. &ldquo;With regard to the Second Empire,&rdquo; we find Renan
+saying,<a href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10" id="linknoteref-10"><sup>[2]</sup></a> &ldquo;if the last ten years of its duration
+in some measure repaired the mischief done in the first eight, it must never be
+forgotten how strong this Government was when it was a question of crushing the
+intelligence, and how feeble when it came to raising it up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-10" id="linknote-10"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-10">[2]</a>
+In his Preface to <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The disheartening end of the Empire in moral degeneracy and military defeat
+only added to the gloominess, against which the Red Flag and the red fires of
+the Commune cast a lurid and pathetic glow, upon which the Prussians could look
+down with a grim smile from the heights of Paris. Only with the establishment
+of the Third Republic in 1871, and its ratification a few years later, does a
+feeling of cheerfulness make itself felt in the thought of the time. The years
+from 1880 onwards have been remarkable for their fruitfulness in the
+philosophic field&mdash;to such an extent do political and social events react
+upon the most philosophical minds. This is a healthy sign; it shows that those
+minds have not detached themselves from contact with the world, that the spirit
+of philosophy is a living spirit and not merely an academic or professional
+product divorced from the fierce realities of history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have already indicated, in the treatment of the &ldquo;Antecedents&rdquo; of our period,
+the dominance of Eclecticism, supported by the powers of officialdom, and have
+remarked how Positivism arose as a reaction against Cousin&rsquo;s vague
+spiritualism. In approaching the second half of the century we may in general
+characterise its thought as a reaction against both eclecticism and positivism.
+A transitional current can be distinguished where positivism turns, as it were,
+against itself in the work of Vacherot, Taine and Renan. The works of Cournot
+and the indefatigable Renouvier with his neo-criticism mark another main
+current. Ultimately there came to triumph towards the close of the century a
+new spiritualism, owing much inspiration to De Biran, but which, unlike
+Cousin&rsquo;s doctrines, had suffered the discipline of the positivist spirit. The
+main contributors to this current are Ravaisson, Lachelier, Fouillée and Guyau,
+Boutroux, Bergson, Blondel and Weber. Our study deals with the significance of
+these three currents, and having made this clear we shall then discuss the
+development of thought in connection with the various problems and ideas in
+which the philosophy of the period found its expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his <i>Critique of Pure Reason</i> Kant endeavoured, at a time when
+speculation of a dogmatic and uncritical kind was current, to call attention to
+the necessity for examining the instrument of knowledge itself, and thereby
+discovering its fitness or inadequacy, as the case might be, for dealing with
+the problems which philosophy proposes to investigate. This was a word spoken
+in due season and, however much subsequent philosophy has deviated from the
+conclusions of Kant, it has at least remembered the significance of his advice.
+The result has been that the attitude adopted by philosophers to the problems
+before them has been determined largely by the kind of answer which they offer
+to the problems of knowledge itself. Obviously a mind which asserts that we can
+never be sure of knowing anything (or as in some cases, that this assertion is
+itself uncertain) will see all questions through the green-glasses of
+scepticism. On the other hand, a thinker who believes that we do have knowledge
+of certain things and can be certain of thiss, whether by objective proof or a
+subjective intuition, is sure to have, not only a different conclusion about
+problems, but, what is probably more important for the philosophic spirit, a
+different means of approaching them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Writing in 1860 on the general state of philosophy, Renan pointed out, in his
+Essay <i>La Métaphysique el son Avenir</i><a href="#linknote-11" name="linknoteref-11" id="linknoteref-11"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+that metaphysical speculation, strictly so-called, had been in abeyance for
+thirty years, and did not seem inclined to continue the traditions of Kant,
+Hegel, Hamilton and Cousin. The reasons which he gave for this depression of
+the philosophical market were, firstly, the feeling of the impossibility of
+ultimate knowledge, a scepticism of the instrument, so far as the human mind
+was concerned, and secondly, the rather disdainful attitude adopted by many
+minds towards philosophy owing to the growing importance of science&mdash;in
+short, the question, &ldquo;Is there any place left for philosophy; has it any
+<i>raison d&rsquo;être</i>?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-11" id="linknote-11"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-11">[3]</a>
+Essay published later (1876) in his <i>Dialogues et Fragments
+philosophiques</i>. Cf. especially pp. 265-266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The progress of the positive sciences, and the assertions of many that
+philosophy was futile and treacherous, led philosophy to give an account of
+itself by a kind of <i>apologia pro vita sua</i>. In the face of remarks akin
+to that of Newton&rsquo;s &ldquo;Physics beware of metaphysics,&rdquo; the latter had to bestir
+itself or pass out of existence. It was, indeed, this extinction which the more
+ardent and devoted scientific spirits heralded, re-iterating the war-cry of
+Auguste Comte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a crisis, in fact, for philosophy. Was it to become merely a universal
+science? Was it to abandon the task of solving the problems of the universe by
+rapid intuitions and a <i>priori</i> constructions and undertake the
+construction of a science of the whole, built up from the data and results of
+the science of the parts&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the separate sciences of nature?
+Was there, then, to be no place for metaphysics in this classification of the
+sciences to which the current of thought was tending with increasing
+impetuosity? Was a science of primary or ultimate truths a useless chimera, to
+be rejected entirely by the human mind in favour of an all-sufficing belief in
+positive science? These were the questions which perplexed the thoughtful minds
+of that time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We shall do well, therefore, in our survey of the half century before us, to
+investigate the two problems which were stressed by Renan in the essay we have
+quoted, for his acute mind possessed a unique power of sensing the feeling and
+thought of his time. Our preliminary task will be the examination of the
+general attitude to knowledge adopted by the various thinkers and schools of
+thought, following this by an inquiry into the attitude adopted to science
+itself and its relation to philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+With these considerations in mind, let us examine the three currents of thought
+in our period beginning with that which is at once a prolongation of positivism
+and a transformation of it, a current expressed in the work of Vacherot, Taine
+and Renan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Etienne Vacherot (1809-1897) was partially a disciple of Victor Cousin and a
+representative also of the positivist attitude to knowledge. His work, however,
+passed beyond the bounds indicated by these names. He remained a convinced
+naturalist and believer in positive science, but, unlike Comte, he did not
+despise metaphysical inquiry, and he sought to find a place for it in thought.
+Vacherot, who had won a reputation for himself by an historical work on the
+Alexandrian School, became tne director of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, an
+important position in the intellectual world. He here advocated the doctrines
+by which he sought to give a to metaphysics. His most important book, <i>La
+Métaphysique et la Science</i>, in three volumes, appeared in 1858. He suffered
+imprisonment the following year for His liberal principles under the Empire
+which had already deprived him of his position at the Sorbonne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general attitude to knowledge adopted by Vacherot recalls in some respects
+the metaphysical doctrines of Spinoza, and he endeavours to combine the purely
+naturalistic view of the world with a metaphysical conception. The result is a
+profound and, for Vacherot, irreconcilable dualism, in which the real and the
+ideal are set against one another in rigorous contrast, and the gap between
+them is not bridged or even attempted to be filled up, as, at a later date, was
+the task assumed by Fouillee in his philosophy of <i>idées-forces</i>. For
+Vacherot the world is a unity, eternal and infinite, but lacking perfection.
+Perfection, the ideal, is incompatible with reality. The real is not at all
+ideal, and the ideal has no reality.<a href="#linknote-12" name="linknoteref-12" id="linknoteref-12"><sup>[4]</sup></a> In this
+unsatisfactory dualism Vacherot leaves us. His doctrine, although making a
+superficial appeal by its seeming positivism on the one hand, and its
+maintenance of the notion of the ideal or perfection on the other, is actually
+far more paradoxical than that which asserts that ultimately it is the ideal
+only which is real. While St. Anselm had endeavoured to establish by his proof
+of the existence of God the reality of perfection, Vacherot, by a reversal of
+this proof, arrives at the opposite conclusion, and at a point where it seems
+that it would be for the ideal an imperfection to exist. The absolute existence
+of all things is thus separated from the ideal, and no attempt is made to
+relate the two, as Spinoza had so rigorously done, by maintaining that reality
+<i>is</i> perfection.<a href="#linknote-13" name="linknoteref-13" id="linknoteref-13"><sup>[5]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-12" id="linknote-12"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-12">[4]</a>
+It is interesting to contrast this with the attitude of the
+new spiritualists, especially Fouillée&rsquo;s conception of idees-forces, of ideas
+and ideals realising themselves. See also Guyau&rsquo;s attitude.<br/>
+                    &ldquo;<i>L&rsquo;idéal n&rsquo;est-il pas, sur la terre où nous sommes<br/>
+                    Plus fécond et plus beau que la réalité?&rdquo;<br/>
+                                        &mdash;Illusion féconde</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-13" id="linknote-13"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-13">[5]</a>
+Vacherot contributed further to the thought of his
+time, notably by a book on religion, 1869, and later in life seems to have
+become sympathetic to the New Spiritualism, on which he also wrote a book in
+1884.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The influence of Vacherot was in some measure continued in that of his pupil,
+Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893), a thinker who had considerable influence upon the
+development of thought in our period. His ability as a critic of art and
+literature was perhaps more marked than his purely philosophical influence, but
+this is, nevertheless, important, and cannot be overlooked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine was a student of the Ecole Normale, and in 1851 was appointed to teach
+philosophy at Nevers. The <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>, however, changed his career, and
+he turned to literature as his main field, writing a work on La Fontaine for
+his doctorate in 1853. In the year of Comte&rsquo;s death (1857) Taine published his
+book, <i>Les Philosophes français du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>, in
+which he turned his powerful batteries of criticism upon the vague spiritualism
+professed by Cousin and officially favoured in France at that time.<a href="#linknote-14" name="linknoteref-14" id="linknoteref-14"><sup>[6]</sup></a> By his adverse criticism of Cousin and the Eclectic
+School, Taine placed his influence upon the side of the positivist followers of
+Comte. It would, however, be erroneous to regard him as a mere disciple of
+Comte, as Taine&rsquo;s positivism was in its general form a wider doctrine, yet more
+rigorously scientific in some respects than that of Comte. There was also an
+important difference in their attitude to metaphysics. Taine upheld strongly
+the value, and, indeed, the necessity, of a metaphysical doctrine. He never
+made much of any debt or allegiance to Comte.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-14" id="linknote-14"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-14">[6]</a>
+See his chapter xii. on &ldquo;The Success of Eclecticism,&rdquo; pp.
+283-307. Cousin, he criticises at length; De Biran, Royer-Collard and Jouffroy
+are included in his censures. We might mention that this book was first issued
+in the form of articles in the <i>Revue de l&rsquo;Instruction publique</i> during
+the years 1855, 1856.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In 1860 a volume dealing with the <i>Philosophy of Art</i> appeared from his
+pen, in which he not only endeavoured to relate the art of a period to the
+general environment in which it arose, but, in addition, he dealt with certain
+psychological aspects of the problem. Largely as a result of the talent
+displayed in this work, he was appointed in 1864 to tne chair of the History of
+Art and Æsthetics in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine&rsquo;s interest in philosophy, and especially in psychological problems, was
+more prominently demon strated in his book <i>De l&rsquo;Intelligence</i>, the two
+volumes of which appeared in 1870. In this work he takes a strict view of the
+human intelligence as a mechanism, the workings of which he sets forth in a
+precise and cold manner. His treatment of knowledge is akin, in some respects,
+to the doctrines of the English Utilitarian and Evolutionary School as
+represented by John Stuart Mill, Bain and Spencer. The main feature of the
+Darwinian doctrine is set by Taine in the foreground of epistemology. There is,
+according to him, &ldquo;a struggle for existence&rdquo; in the realm of the individual
+consciousness no less than in the external world. This inner conflict is
+between psychical elements which, when victorious, result in sense-perception.
+This awareness, or <i>hallucination vraie</i>, is not knowledge of a purely
+speculative character; it is (as, at a later date, Bergson was to maintain in
+his doctrine of perception) essentially bound up with action, with the instinct
+and mechanism of movement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the most notable features of Taine&rsquo;s work is his attitude to psychology.
+He rejects absolutely the rather scornful attitude adopted with regard to this
+science by Comte; at the same time he shatters the flimsy edifice of the
+eclectics in order to lay the foundation of a scientific psychology. &ldquo;The true
+and independent psychology is,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;a magnificent science which lays
+the foundation of the philosophy of history, which gives life to physiology and
+opens up the pathway to metaphysics.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-15" name="linknoteref-15" id="linknoteref-15"><sup>[7]</sup></a> Our debt
+to Taine is immense, for he initiated the great current of experimental
+psychology for which his country has since become famous. It is not our
+intention in this present work to follow out in any detail the purely
+psychological work of the period. Psychology has more and more become
+differentiated from, and to a large degree, independent of, philosophy in a
+strictly metaphysical meaning of that word. Yet we shall do well in passing to
+note that through Taine&rsquo;s work the scientific attitude to psychologv and its
+many problems was taken up and developed by Ribot, whose study of English
+Psychology appeared in the same year as Taine&rsquo;s <i>Intelligence</i>.
+Particularly by his frequent illustrations drawn from abnormal psychology,
+Taine &ldquo;set the tone&rdquo; for contemporary and later study of mental activity of
+this type. Ribot&rsquo;s later books have been mainly devoted to the study of &ldquo;the
+abnormal,&rdquo;and his efforts are characteristic of the labours of the Paris
+School, comprising Charcot, Paulhan, Binet and Janet.<a href="#linknote-16" name="linknoteref-16" id="linknoteref-16"><sup>[8]</sup></a> French psychology has in consequence become a
+clearly defined &ldquo;school,&rdquo; with characteristics peculiar to itself which
+distinguish it at once from the psychophysical research of German workers and
+from the analytic labours of English psychologists. Its debt to Taine at the
+outset must not be forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-15" id="linknote-15"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-15">[7]</a>
+De l&rsquo;Intelligence, Conclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-16" id="linknote-16"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-16">[8]</a>
+By Charcot (1825-1893), <i>Leçons sur les Maladies
+du Système nerveux faites à la Salpêtrière</i> and <i>Localisation
+dans les Maladies du Cerveau et de la Moelle épinière</i>, 1880.<br/>
+    By Ribot (1839-1916), <i>Hérédité, Etude psychologique</i>, 1873, Eng. trans.,
+1875; <i>Les Maladies de la Mémoire, Essai dans la Psychologie positive</i>,
+1881, Eng. trans., 1882; <i>Maladies de la Volonté</i>, 1883, Eng. trans.,
+1884; <i>Maladies de la Personnalité</i>, 1885, Eng. trans., 1895. Ribot
+expressed regret at the way in which abnormal psychology has been neglected in
+England. See his critique of Bain in his <i>Psychologie anglaise
+contemporaine</i>. In 1870 Ribot declared the independence of psychology as a
+study, separate from philosophy. Ribot had very wide interests beyond pure
+psychology, a fact which is stressed by his commencing in 1876 the periodical
+<i>La Revue philosophique de la France et de l&rsquo;Etranger</i>.<br/>
+    By Binet (1857-191!), <i>Magnétisme animal</i>, 1886; <i>Les Altérations de la
+personnalité</i>, 1892; <i>L&rsquo;Introduction à la Psychologie
+expérimentale</i>, 1894. He founded the review <i>L&rsquo;Année psychologique in
+1895</i>.<br/>
+    
+By Janet (Pierre), born 1859 now Professeur at the Collège de France,
+<i>L&rsquo;Automatisme psychologique</i>, 1889; <i>Etat mental des Hystériques</i>,
+1894; and <i>Neuroses et Idées-fixes</i>, 1898. He founded the <i>Journal de
+Psychologie</i>.<br/>
+    
+By Paulhan, <i>Phénomenes affectifs and L&rsquo;Activité mentale</i>.<br/>
+    
+To the fame of the Paris School of Psychology must now be added that of the
+Nancy School embracing the work of Coué.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The War and the subsequent course of events in France seemed to deepen the
+sadness and pessimism of Taine&rsquo;s character. He described himself as
+<i>naturellement triste</i>, and finally his severe positivism developed into a
+rigorous stoicism akin to that of Marcus Aurelius and Spinoza. This attitude of
+mind coloured his unfinished historical work, <i>Les Origines de la France
+contemporaine</i>, upon which he was engaged for the last years of his life
+(1876-1894). It may be noticed for its bearing upon the study of sociological
+problems which it indirectly encouraged. Just as Taine had regarded a work of
+art as the product of social environment, so he looks upon historical events.
+This history bears all the marks of Taine&rsquo;s rigid, positive philosophy,
+intensified by his later stoicism. The Revolution of 1789 is treated in a cold
+and stern manner devoid of enthusiasm of any sort. He could not make historical
+narrative live like Michelet, and from his own record the Revolution itself is
+almost unintelligible. For Taine, however, we must remember, human nature is
+absolutely the product of race, environment and history.<a href="#linknote-17" name="linknoteref-17" id="linknoteref-17"><sup>[9]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-17" id="linknote-17"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-17">[9]</a>
+Michelet (1798-1874), mentioned here as an historian of a
+type entirely different from Taine, influenced philosophic thought by his
+volumes <i>Le Peuple</i>, 1846; <i>L&rsquo;Amour</i>, 1858; <i>Le Prêtre, La
+Femme et la Famille</i>, 1859; and <i>La Bible de l&rsquo;Humanité</i>, 1864. He and
+his friend Quinet (1803-1875), who was also a Professor at the College de
+France, and was the author of <i>Génie des Religions</i>, 1842, had
+considerable influence prior to 1848 of a political and religious character.
+They were in strong opposition to the Roman Catholic Church and had keen
+controversies with the Jesuits and Ultramontanists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the philosophy of Taine various influences are seen at work interacting. The
+spirit of the French thinkers of the previous century&mdash;sensualists and
+ideologists&mdash;reappears in him. While in a measure he fluctuates between
+naturalism and idealism, the predominating tone of his work is clearly
+positivist. He was a great student of Spinoza and of Hegel, and the influence
+of both these thinkers appears in his work. Like Spinoza, he believes in a
+universal determination; like Hegel, he asserts the real and the rational to be
+identical. In his general attitude to the problems of knowledge Taine
+criticises and passes beyond the standpoints of both Hume and Kant. He opposes
+the purely empiricist schools of both France and England. The purely empirical
+attitude which looks upon the world as fragmentary and phenomenal is deficient,
+according to Taine, and is, moreover, incompatible with the notion of
+necessity. This notion of necessity is characteristic of Taine&rsquo;s whole work,
+and his strict adherence to it was mainly due to his absolute belief in science
+and its methods, which is a mark of all the positivist type of thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While he rejected Hume&rsquo;s empiricism he also opposed the doctrines of Kant and
+the neo-critical school which found its inspiration in Kant and Hume. Taine
+asserted that it is possible to have a knowledge of things in their objective
+reality, and he appears to have based his epistemology upon the doctrine of
+analysis proposed by Condillac. Taine disagreed with the theory of the
+relativity of human knowledge and with the phenomenal basis of the neo-critical
+teaching, its rejection of &ldquo;the thing in itself.&rdquo; He believed we had knowledge
+not merely relative but absolute, and he claimed that we can pass from
+phenomena and their laws to comprehend the essence of things in themselves. He
+endeavours to avoid the difficulties of Hume by dogmatism. While clinging to a
+semi-Hegelian view of rationality he avoids Kant&rsquo;s critical attitude to reason
+itself. We have in Taine not a critical rationalist but a dogmatic rationalist.
+While the rational aspect of his thought commands a certain respect and has had
+in many directions a very wholesome influence, notably, as we have remarked,
+upon psychology, yet it proves itself in the last analysis self-contradictory,
+for a true rationalism is critical in character rather than dogmatic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Taine&rsquo;a great contemporary, Ernest Renan (1823-1892), a very different
+temper is seen. The two thinkers both possessed popularity as men of letters,
+and resembled one another in being devoted to literary and historical pursuits
+rather than to philosophy itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan was trained for the priesthood of the Roman Catholic Church. He has left
+us a record of his early life in <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i>. We
+there have an autobiography of a sincere and sensitive soul, encouraged in his
+priestly career by his family and his teachers to such a degree that he had
+conceived of no other career for himself, until at the age of twenty, under the
+influence of modern scientific doctrines and the criticism of the Biblical
+records, he found himself an unbeliever, certainly not a Roman Catholic, and
+not, in the ordinary interpretation of that rather vague term, a Christian. The
+harsh, unrelenting dogmatism of the Roman Church drove Renan from Christianity.
+We find him remarking that had he lived in a Protestant. country he might not
+have been faced with the dilemma.<a href="#linknote-18" name="linknoteref-18" id="linknoteref-18"><sup>[10]</sup></a> A <i>via
+media</i> might have presented itself in one of the very numerous forms into
+which Protestant Christianity, is divided. He might have exercised in such a
+sphere, his priestly functions as did Schleiermacher. Renan&rsquo;s break with Rome
+emphasises the clear-cut division which exists in France between the Christian
+faith (represented, almost entirely by the Roman Church) and
+<i>libre-pensée</i>, a point which will claim our attention later, when we come
+to treat of the Philosophy of Religion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-18" id="linknote-18"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-18">[10]</a>
+Cf. his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i>, p. 292.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having abandoned the seminary and the Church, Renan worked for his university
+degrees. The events of 1848-49 inspired his young heart with great enthusiasm,
+under the influence of which he wrote his <i>Avenir de la Science</i>. This
+book was not published, however, until 1890, when he had lost his early hopes
+and illusions. In 1849 he went away upon a mission to Italy. &ldquo;The reaction of
+1850-51 and the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i> instilled into me a pessimism of which I am
+not yet cured,&rdquo; so he wrote in the preface to his <i>Dialogues et Fragments
+philosophiques</i>.<a href="#linknote-19" name="linknoteref-19" id="linknoteref-19"><sup>[11]</sup></a> Some years after the
+<i>coup d&rsquo;état</i> he published a volume of essays (<i>Essais de Morale et de
+Critique</i>), and he showed his acquaintance with Arabic philosophy by an
+excellent treatise on <i>Averroes et l&rsquo;Averroisme</i> (1859). The following
+year he visited Syria and, in 1861, was appointed Professor of Hebrew at the
+Collège de France. He then began his monumental work on <i>Les Origines du
+Christianisme</i>, of which the first volume, <i>La Vie de Jésus</i>, appeared
+in 1863. Its importance for religious thought we shall consider in our last
+chapter; here it must suffice to observe its immediate consequences. These were
+terrific onslaughts from the clergy upon its author, which, although they
+brought the attention of his countrymen and of the world upon Renan, resulted
+in the Imperial Government suspending his tenure of the chair. After the fall
+of the Empire, however, he returned to it, and under the Third Republic became
+Director of the Collège de France.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-19" id="linknote-19"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-19">[11]</a>
+Published only in 1895. The preface referred to is dated 1871.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan, although he broke off his career in the Church and his connection with
+organised religion, retained, nevertheless, much of the priestly character all
+his life, and he himself confesses this: &ldquo;I have learned several things, but I
+have changed in nowise as to the general system of intellectual and moral life.
+My habitation has become more spacious, but it still stands on the same ground.
+I look upon my estrangement from orthodoxy as only a change of opinion
+concerning an important historical question, a change which does not prevent me
+from dwelling on the same foundations as before.&rdquo; He indeed found it impossible
+to reconcile the Catholic faith with free and honest thought. His break with
+the Church made him an enemy of all superstition, and his writings raised
+against him the hatred of the Catholic clergy, who regarded him as a deserter.
+In the customary terms of heated theological debate he was styled an atheist.
+This was grossly unfair or meaningless. Which word we use here depends upon our
+definition of theism. As a matter of fact, Renan was one of the most deeply
+religious minds of his time. His early religious sentiments remained, in
+essence if not in form, with him throughout his life. These were always
+associated with the tender memories he had of his mother and beloved sister and
+his virtuous teachers, the priests in the little town of Brittany, whence he
+came. Much of the Breton mysticism clung to his soul, and much of his
+philosophy is a restated, rationalised form of his early beliefs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a figure in the intellectual life of the time, Renan is difficult to
+estimate. The very subtilty of his intellect betrayed him into an oscillation
+which was far from admirable, and prevented his countrymen in his own day from
+&ldquo;getting to grips&rdquo; with his ideas. These were kaleidoscopic. Renan seems a
+type, reflecting many tendencies of the time, useful as an illustration to the
+historian of the ideas of the period; but for philosophy in the special sense
+he has none of the clearly defined importance of men like Renouvier, Lachelier,
+Guyau, Fouillée, Bergson or Blondel. His humanism keeps him free from
+dogmatism, but his mind fluctuates so that his general attitude to the ultimate
+problems is one of reserve, of scepticism and of frequent paradox and
+contradiction. Renan seems to combine the positivist scorn of metaphysics with
+the Kantian idealism. At times, however, his attitude is rather Hegelian, and
+he believes in universal change which is an evolving of spirit, the ideal or
+God, call it what we will. We need not be too particular about names or forms
+of thought, for, after all, everything &ldquo;may be only a dream.&rdquo; That is Renan&rsquo;s
+attitude, to temper enthusiasm by irony, to assert a duty of doubt, and often,
+perhaps, to gain a literary brilliance by contradictory statements. &ldquo;The survey
+of human affairs is not complete,&rdquo; he reminds us, &ldquo;unless we allot a place for
+irony beside that of tears, a place for pity beside that of rage, and a place
+for a smile alongside respect.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-20" name="linknoteref-20" id="linknoteref-20"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-20" id="linknote-20"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-20">[12]</a>
+Preface to his <i>Drames philosophiques</i>, 1888.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was this versatility which made Renan a lover of the philosophic dialogue.
+This literary and dramatic form naturally appealed strongly to a mind who was
+so very conscious of the fact that the truths with which philosophy deals
+cannot be directly denied or directly affirmed, as they are not subject to
+demonstration. All the high problems of humanity Renan recognised as being of
+this kind, as involving finally a rational faith; and he claimed that the best
+we can do is to present the problems of life from different points of view.
+This is due entirely to the peculiar character of philosophy itself, and to the
+distinction, which must never be overlooked, between knowledge and belief,
+between certitude and opinion. Geometry, for example, is not a subject for
+dialogues but for demonstration, as it involves knowledge and certitude. The
+problems of philosophy, on the contrary, involve &ldquo;<i>une nuance de foi</i>,&rdquo; as
+Renan styles it. They involve willed adhesion, acceptance or choice; they
+provoke sympathy or hate, and call into play human personality with its varying
+shades of colour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This state of <i>nuance</i> Renan asserts to be the one of the hour for
+philosophy. It is not the time, he thinks, to attempt to strengthen by abstract
+reasoning the &ldquo;proofs&rdquo; of God&rsquo;s existence or of the reality of a future life.
+&ldquo;Men see just now that they can never know anything of the supreme cause of the
+universe or of their own destiny. Nevertheless they are anxious to listen to
+those who will speak to them about either.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-21" name="linknoteref-21" id="linknoteref-21"><sup>[13]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-21" id="linknote-21"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-21">[13]</a>
+From his Preface to <i>Drames philosophiques</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Knowledge, Renan maintained, lies somewhere between the two schools into which
+the majority of men are divided. &ldquo;What you are looking for has long since been
+discovered and made clear,&rdquo; say the orthodox. &ldquo;What you are looking for is
+impossible to find,&rdquo; say the practical positivists, the political &ldquo;raillers&rdquo;
+and the atheists. It is true that we shall never know the ultimate secret of
+all being, but we shall never prevent man from desiring more and more knowledge
+or from creating for himself working hypotheses or beliefs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet although Renan admits this truth he never approaches even the pragmatist
+position of supporting &ldquo;creative beliefs.&rdquo; He rather urges a certain passivity
+towards problems and opinions. We should, he argues in his <i>Examen de
+Conscience philosophique</i>,<a href="#linknote-22" name="linknoteref-22" id="linknoteref-22"><sup>[14]</sup></a> let them work
+themselves out in us. Like a spectator we must let them modify our
+&ldquo;intellectual retina&rdquo;; we must let reality reflect itself in us. By this he
+does not mean to assert that the truth about that reality is a matter of pure
+indifference to us-far from it. Precisely because he is so conscious of the
+importance of true knowledge, he is anxious that we should approach the study
+of reality without previous prejudices. &ldquo;We have no right,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;to
+have a desire when reason speaks; we must listen and nothing more.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-23" name="linknoteref-23" id="linknoteref-23"><sup>[15]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-22" id="linknote-22"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-22">[14]</a>
+In his <i>Feuilles detachées</i>, pp. 401-443.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-23" id="linknote-23"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-23">[15]</a>
+<i>Feuilles détachées</i>, p. 402.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be admitted, however, that Renan&rsquo;s attitude to the problems of
+knowledge was largely sceptical. While, as we shall see in the following
+chapter, he extolled science, his attitude to belief and to knowledge was
+irritating in its vagueness and changeableness. He appeared to pose too much as
+a <i>dilettante</i> making a show of subtle intellect, rather than a serious
+thinker of the first rank. His eminence and genius are unquestioned, but he
+played in a bewitching and frequently bewildering manner with great and serious
+problems, and one cannot help wishing that this great intellect of
+his&mdash;and it was unquestionably great&mdash;was not more steady and was not
+applied by its owner more steadfastly and courageously to ultimate problems.
+His writings reflect a bewildering variety of contradictory moods, playful,
+scathing, serious and mocking. Indeed, he replied in his <i>Feuilles
+detachées</i> (1892) to the accusations of Amiel by insisting that irony is the
+philosopher&rsquo;s last word. For him as for his brilliant fellow-countryman,
+Anatole France, ironical scepticism is the ultimate product of his reflection
+upon life. His <i>Examen de Conscience</i> philosophique is his Confession of
+Faith, written four years before his death, in which he tries to defend his
+sceptical attitude and to put forward scepticism as an apology for his own
+uncertainty and his paradoxical changes of view. Irony intermingles with his
+doubt here too. We do not know, he says, ultimate reality; we do not know
+whether there be any purpose or end in the universe at all. There may be, but
+on the other hand it may be a farce and fiasco. By refusing to believe in
+anything, rejecting both alternatives, Renan argues, with a kind of mental
+cowardice, we avoid the consequence of being absolutely deceived. He
+recommended an adoption of mixed belief and doubt, optimism and irony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is a surprising attitude in a philosopher and is not characteristic of
+great modern thinkers, most of whom prefer belief (hypothetical although that
+be) to non-belief. Doubtless Renan&rsquo;s early training had a psychological effect
+which operated perhaps largely unconsciously throughout his life, and his
+literary and linguistic ability seems to have given him a reputation which was
+rather that of a man of letters than a philosopher. He had not the mental
+strength or frankness to face alternatives squarely and to decide to adopt one.
+Consequently he merited the application of the old proverb about being between
+two stools. This application was actually made to Renan&rsquo;s attitude in a
+critical remark by Renouvier in his <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Classification des
+Doctrines philosphiques</i>.<a href="#linknote-24" name="linknoteref-24" id="linknoteref-24"><sup>[16]</sup></a> Renouvier had no
+difficulty in pointing out that the man who hesitates deprives himself of that
+great reality, the exercise of his own power of free choice, in itself valuable
+and more akin to reality (whatever be the choice) than a mere &ldquo;sitting on the
+fence,&rdquo; an attitude which, so far from assuring one of getting the advantages
+of both possibilities as Renan claims, may more justly seem to deprive one of
+the advantages in both directions. The needs of life demand that we construct
+beliefs of some sort. We may be wrong and err, but pure scepticism such as
+Renan advocated is untenable. Life, if it is to be real and earnest, demands of
+us that we have faith in <i>some</i> values, that we construct <i>some</i>
+beliefs, <i>some</i> hypotheses, by which we may work.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-24" id="linknote-24"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-24">[16]</a>
+Vol. ii., p. 395.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both Renan and Taine exercised a considerable influence upon French thought.
+While inheriting the positivist outlook they, to a great degree, perhaps
+unconsciously, undermined the positive position, both by their interest in the
+humanities, in art, letters and religion and in their metaphysical attitude.
+Taine, beginning with a rigid naturalism, came gradually to approach an
+idealistic standpoint in many respects, while Renan, beginning with a dogmatic
+idealism, came to acute doubt, hypotheses, &ldquo;dreams&rdquo; and scepticism. Taine kept
+his thoughts in too rigid a mould, solidified, while those of Renan seem
+finally to have existed only in a gaseous state, intangible, vague and hazy. We
+have observed how the positivist current from Comte was carried over by
+Vacherot to Taine. In Renan we find that current present also, but it has begun
+to turn against itself. While we may say that his work reflects in a very
+remarkable manner the spirit of his time, especially the positivist faith in
+science, yet we are also able to find in it, in spite of his immense
+scepticism, the indications of a spiritualist or idealist movement, groping and
+shaping itself as the century grows older.
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+While the positivist current of thought was working itself out through
+Vacherot, Taine and Renan to a position which forms a connecting link between
+Comte and the new spiritualism in which the reaction against positivism and
+eclecticism finally culminated, another influence was making itself felt
+independently in the neo-critical philosophy of Renouvier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We must here note the work and influence of Cournot (1801-1877), which form a
+very definite link between the doctrines of Comte and those of Renouvier. He
+owed much to positivism, and he contributed to the formation of neo-criticism
+by his influence upon Renouvier. Cournot&rsquo;s <i>Essai sur le Fondement de nos
+Connaissances</i> appeared in 1851, three years before Renouvier gave to the
+world the first volume of his <i>Essais de Critique générale</i>. In 1861
+Cournot published his <i>Traité de l&rsquo;Enchaînement des Idées</i>, which
+was followed by his <i>Considerations sur le Marche des Idées</i> (1872) and
+<i>Matérialisme</i>, <i>Vitalisme</i>, <i>Rationalisme</i> (1875). These
+volumes form his contribution to philosophical thought, his remaining works
+being mainly concerned with political economy and mathematics, a science in
+which he won distinction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like Comte, Cournot opposed the spiritualism, the eclecticism and the
+psychology of Cousin, but he was possessed of a more philosophic mind than
+Comte; he certainly had greater philosophical knowledge, was better equipped in
+the history of philosophy and had much greater respect for metaphysical theory.
+He shared with Comte, however, an interest in social problems and biology; he
+also adopted his general attitude to knowledge, but the spirit of Cournot&rsquo;s
+work is much less dogmatic than that of the great positivist, and he made no
+pretensions to be a &ldquo;pontiff&rdquo; such as Comte aspired to be. Indeed his lack of
+pretensions may account partly for the lack of attention with which his work
+(which is shrewd, thoughtful and reserved) has been treated. He aimed at
+indicating the foundations of a sound philosophy rather than at offering a
+system of thought to the public. This temper was the product of his scientific
+attitude. It was by an examination of the sciences and particularly of the
+principles upon which they depend that he formulated his group of fundamental
+doctrines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He avoided hasty generalisations or a <i>priori</i> constructions and, true to
+the scientific spirit, based his thought upon the data afforded by experience.
+He agreed heartily with Comte regarding the relativity of our knowledge. An
+investigation of this knowledge shows it to be based on three
+principles&mdash;order, chance, and probability. We find order existing in the
+universe and by scientific methods we try to grasp this order. This involves
+induction, a method which cannot give us absolute certainty, although it
+approximates to it. It gives us probability only. There is therefore a reality
+of chances, and contingency or chance must be admitted as a factor in evolution
+and in human history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot foreshadows many of the doctrines of the new spiritualists as well as
+those of the neo-critical school. Much in his work heralds a Bergson as well as
+a Renouvier. This is noticeable in his attitude to science and to the problem
+of contingency or freedom. It is further seen in his doctrine that the
+<i>vivant</i> is incapable of demonstration, in his view of the soul or higher
+instinct which he distinguished from the intelligence, in the biological
+interest displayed in his work (due partly to the work of Bichat<a href="#linknote-25" name="linknoteref-25" id="linknoteref-25"><sup>[17]</sup></a>), and in his idea of a <i>Travail de Création</i>.
+Unlike Bergson, however, he admits a teleology, for he believed this
+inseparable from living beings, but he regards it as a hazardous finality, not
+rigid or inconsistent with freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-25" id="linknote-25"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-25">[17]</a>
+Bichat (1771-1802) was a noted physiologist and anatomist.
+In 1800 appeared his <i>Recherches physiologiques sur la Vie et la Mort</i>,
+followed in 1801 by <i>Anatomie générale, appliquée à la Physiologie et
+à la Médecine</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The immediate influence of Cournot was felt by only a small circle, and his
+most notable affinity was with Renouvier, although Cournot was less strictly an
+intellectualist. Like Renouvier he looked upon philosophy as a &ldquo;<i>Critique
+générale</i>.&rdquo; He was also concerned with the problem of the categories and
+with the compatibility of science and freedom, a problem which was now assuming
+a very central position in the thought of the period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier, in the construction of his philosophy, was partly influenced by the
+work of Cournot. In this lone, stern, indefatigable worker we have one of the
+most powerful minds of the century. Charles Renouvier shares with Auguste Comte
+the first honours of the century in France so far as philosophical work is
+concerned. Curiously enough he came from Comte&rsquo;s birth-place, Montpellier. When
+Renouvier was born in 1815, seventeen years later than Comte, the great
+positivist was in his second year of study at the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris.
+To this great scientific and mathematical institution came Renouvier, to find
+Comte as <i>Répétiteur</i> of Higher Mathematics. He was not only a keen
+student of the mathematical sciences but also an ardent follower of
+Saint-Simon, and although in later life he lost many of the hopes of his youth
+the Saint-Simon spirit remained with him, and he retained a keen interest in
+social ethics and particularly in the ideas of Fourier, Proudhon and Blanc. At
+the Ecole he met as fellow-pupils Jules Lequier and Felix Ravaisson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of entering the civil service Renouvier then applied himself to
+philosophy and political science, influenced undoubtedly by Comte&rsquo;s work. The
+year 1848, which saw the second attempt to establish a republic, gave
+Renouvier, now a zealous republican, an opportunity, and he issued his
+<i>Manuel républicain de l&rsquo;Homme et du Citoyen</i>. This volume, intended for
+schoolmasters, had the approval of Carnot, Minister of Education to the
+Provisionary Government. Its socialist doctrines were so criticised by the
+Chamber of 1849 that Carnot, and with him the Government, fell from power.
+Renouvier went further in his <i>Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale
+et centrale de la République</i>, in which he collaborated with his socialist
+friends in outlining a scheme of communism, making the canton a local power, a
+scheme which contained the germ-idea of the Soviet of Bolshevik Russia. Such
+ideas were, however, far too advanced for the France of that date and their
+proposal did more harm than good to the progressive party by producing a
+reaction in wavering minds. Renouvier, through the paper <i>Liberté de
+penser</i>, launched attacks upon the policy of the Presidency, and began in
+the <i>Revue philosophique</i> a serial <i>Uchronie</i>, a novel of a political
+and philosophical character. It was never finished. Suddenly, like a bolt from
+the blue, came, on December and, the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>. The effect of this
+upon Renouvier was profound. Disgusted at the power of the monarchy, the
+shattering of the republican hopes, the suppression of liberty and the general
+reaction, he abandoned political life entirely. What politics lost, however,
+philosophy has gained, for he turned his acute mind with its tremendous energy
+to the study of the problems of the universe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three years after the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>, in the same year in which Comte
+completed his <i>Système de Politique</i> positive, 1854, Renouvier published
+the first volume of his <i>magnum opus</i>, the <i>Essais de Critique
+générale</i>.<a href="#linknote-26" name="linknoteref-26" id="linknoteref-26"><sup>[18]</sup></a> The appearance of this work is a
+notable date in the development of modern French philosophy. The problems
+therein discussed will concern us in later chapters. Here we must point out the
+indefatigable labour given to this work by Renouvier. The writing and revision
+of these essays covered almost the whole of the half century, concluding in
+1897. In their first, briefer form they occupied the decade 1854-64, and
+consisted of four volumes only, which on revision became finally thirteen.<a href="#linknote-27" name="linknoteref-27" id="linknoteref-27"><sup>[19]</sup></a> These Essays range over Logic, Psychology, the
+Philosophy of the Sciences and the Philosophy of History.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-26" id="linknote-26"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-26">[18]</a>
+It is interesting for the comparative study of the thought
+of the century to observe that the great work of Lotze in Germany,
+<i>Mikrocosmos</i>, was contemporaneous with the <i>Essais</i> of Renouvier.
+Lotze&rsquo;s three volumes appeared in 1856, 1858 and 1864. The <i>Logik</i> and
+<i>Metaphysik</i> of Lotze should also be compared with Renouvier&rsquo;s
+<i>Essais</i>. Further comparison or contrast may be made with reference to the
+<i>Logic</i> of both Bradley and Bosanquet in England.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-27" id="linknote-27"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-27">[19]</a>
+Since 1912 the <i>Essais de Critique générale</i> are
+available in ten volumes, owing to the publications of new editions of the
+first three Essays by A. Colin in five volumes. For details of the original and
+revised publication of the work, see our Bibliography, under Renouvier (pp.
+334-335).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having thus laid the foundations of his own throught, Renouvier, in conjunction
+with his scholarly friend Pillon, undertook the publication of a monthly
+periodical, <i>L&rsquo;Année philosophique</i>, to encourage philosophic thought in
+France. This appeared first in 1867, the same year in which Ravaisson laid the
+foundations of the new spiritualism by his celebrated <i>Rapport</i>. In 1869
+Renouvier published his noteworthy treatise upon Ethics, in two volumes, <i>La
+Science de la Morale</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The war of 1870 brought his monthly periodical to an untimely end. The
+conclusion of the war in 1871 resulted in the establishment, for the third
+time, of a republic, which in spite of many vicissitudes has continued even to
+this day. With the restoration of peace and of a republic, Renouvier felt
+encouraged to undertake the ambitious scheme of publishing a weekly paper, not
+only philosophical in character but political, literary and religious. He
+desired ardently to address his countrymen at a time when they were rather
+intellectually and morally bewildered. He felt he had something constructive to
+offer, and hoped that the &ldquo;new criticism,&rdquo; as he called it, might become the
+philosophy of the new republic. Thus was founded, in 1872, the famous
+<i>Critique philosophique</i>, which aimed primarily at the consolidation of
+the republic politically and morally,<a href="#linknote-28" name="linknoteref-28" id="linknoteref-28"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+This paper appeared as a weekly from its commencement until 1884,then continued
+for a further five years as a monthly. Renouvier and his friend Pillon were
+assisted by other contributors, A. Sabatier, L. Dauriac, R. Allier, who were
+more or less disciples of the neo-critical school. Various articles were
+contributed by William James, who had a great admiration for Renouvier. The two
+men, although widely different in temperament and method, had certain
+affinities in their doctrine of truth and certitude.<a href="#linknote-29" name="linknoteref-29" id="linknoteref-29"><sup>[21]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-28" id="linknote-28"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-28">[20]</a>
+In the early numbers, political articles, as was
+natural in the years following 1871, were prominent. Among these early articles
+we may cite the one, &ldquo;Is France morally obliged to carry out the terms of the
+Treaty imposed upon her by Prussia?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-29" id="linknote-29"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-29">[21]</a>
+On this relationship see James&rsquo;s <i>Will to Believe</i>,
+p. 143, 1897, and the dedications in his <i>Some Problems of Philosophy</i> (to
+Renouvier), and his <i>Principles of Psychology</i> (to Pillon), also
+<i>Letters of William James</i>, September i8th, 1892.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s enthusiasm for his periodical did not, however, abate his energy or
+ardour for more lasting work. He undertook the task of revising and augmenting
+his great work, the <i>Essais de Critique générale</i>, and added to the series
+another (fifth) Essay, in four volumes. He also issued in 1876 the curious work
+<i>Uchronie</i>, a history of &ldquo;what might have been&rdquo; (in his view) the
+development of European civilisation. Together with Pillon he translated
+<i>Hume&rsquo;s Treatise on Human Nature</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the <i>Critique philosophique</i> continued to combat any symptoms of
+a further <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>, and &ldquo;to uphold strictly republican principles and
+to fight all that savoured of Caesar or imperialism.&rdquo; In 1878 a quarterly
+supplement <i>La Critique religieuse</i> was added to attack the Roman Catholic
+Church and to diminish its power in France.<a href="#linknote-30" name="linknoteref-30" id="linknoteref-30"><sup>[22]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-30" id="linknote-30"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-30">[22]</a>
+The significance of this effort is more fully dealt with in our last chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Articles which had appeared in this quarterly were published as <i>Esquisse
+d&rsquo;une Classification systématique des Doctrines philosophiques</i> in 1885 in
+two volumes, the second of which contained the important Confession of Faith of
+Renouvier, entitled, <i>How I arrived at this Conclusion</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His thought assumed a slightly new form towards the close of the century, at
+the end of which he published, in conjunction with his disciple Prat, a
+remarkable volume, which took a prize at the <i>Académie des Sciences morales
+et politiques</i>, to which rather late in the day he was admitted as a member
+at the age of eighty-five. In its title <i>La Nouvelle Monadologie</i>, and
+method it reveals the influence of Leibnitz.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The close of the century shows us Renouvier as an old man, still an enormous
+worker, celebrating his eighty-sixth birthday by planning and writing further
+volumes (<i>Les Dilemmes de la Métaphysique pure</i> and its sequel,
+<i>Histoire et Solution des Problèmes métaphysiques</i>). This &ldquo;grand old man&rdquo;
+of modern French philosophy lived on into the early years of the twentieth
+century, still publishing, still writing to the last. His final volume, <i>Le
+Personnalisme</i>, was a restatement of his philosophy, issued when he was in
+his eighty-ninth year. He died &ldquo;in harness&rdquo; in 1903, dictating to his friend
+Prat a <i>résumé</i> of his thought on important points and leaving an
+unpublished work on the philosophy of Kant.<a href="#linknote-31" name="linknoteref-31" id="linknoteref-31"><sup>[23]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-31" id="linknote-31"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-31">[23]</a>
+The <i>résumé</i> was published by Prat a couple of years
+later as <i>Derniers Entretiens</i>, the volume on the <i>Doctrine de Kant</i>,
+followed in 1906.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s career is a striking one and we have sketched it somewhat fully
+here because of its showing more distinctly than that of Taine or Renan the
+reflections of contemporary history upon the thinking minds who lived through
+the years 1848-51 and 1870-71. Renouvier was a young spirit in the year of the
+revolution, 1848, and lived right on through the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>, the Second
+Empire, the Franco-Prussian War, the Commune, the Third Republic, and he
+foresaw and perhaps influenced the Republic&rsquo;s attitude to the Roman Church. His
+career is the most significant and enlightening one to follow of all the
+thinkers who come within our period. Let us note that he never held any
+academic or public teaching appointment. His life was in the main a secluded
+one and, like Comte, he found the University a limited preserve closed against
+him and his philosophy, dominated by the declining eclecticism which drew its
+inspiration from Cousin. Only gradually did his influence make itself felt to
+such a degree that the University was compelled to take notice of it. Now his
+work is more appreciated, but not as much as it might be, and outside his own
+country he is little known. The student finds his writings somewhat difficult
+owing to the author&rsquo;s heavy style. He has none of the literary ease and
+brilliance of a Renan. But his work was great and noble, animated by a passion
+for truth and a hatred of philosophical &ldquo;shams&rdquo; and a current of deep moral
+earnestness colours all his work. He had considerable power as a critic, for
+the training of the Ecole Polytechnique produced a strictly logical temper in
+his work, which is that of a true philosopher, not that of a merely brilliant
+<i>litterateur</i> or <i>dilettante</i>, and he must be regarded as one of the
+intellectual giants of the century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While we see in Positivism a system of thought which opposed itself to
+Eclecticism, we find in the philosophy of Renouvier a system of doctrine which
+is opposed to both Eclecticism and Positivism. Indeed Renouvier puts up a
+strong mental fight against both of these systems; the latter he regarded as an
+ambitious conceit. He agreed, however, with Comte and with Cournot upon the
+relativity of our knowledge. &ldquo;I accept,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;one fundamental principle of
+the Positivist School&mdash;namely, the reduction of knowledge to the laws of
+phenomena.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-32" name="linknoteref-32" id="linknoteref-32"><sup>[24]</sup></a> The author of the <i>Essais de
+Critique générale</i> considered himself, however, to be the apostolic
+successor, not of Comte, but of Kant. The title of <i>neo-criticisme</i><a href="#linknote-33" name="linknoteref-33" id="linknoteref-33"><sup>[25]</sup></a> which he gave to his philosophy shows his
+affinity with the author of the <i>Kritik der reinen Vernunft</i>. This is very
+noticeable in his method of treating the problem of knowledge by criticising
+the human mind and especially in his giving a preference to moral
+considerations.<a href="#linknote-34" name="linknoteref-34" id="linknoteref-34"><sup>[26]</sup></a> It would be, however, very
+erroneous to regard Renouvier as a disciple of Kant, for he amends and rejects
+many of the doctrines of the German philosopher. We have noted the fact that he
+translated Hume; we must observe also that Hume&rsquo;s influence is very strongly
+marked in Renouvier&rsquo;s &ldquo;phenomenalism.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-35" name="linknoteref-35" id="linknoteref-35"><sup>[27]</sup></a>
+&ldquo;Renouvier is connected with Hume,&rdquo; says Pillon, in the preface he contributed
+to the translation,<a href="#linknote-36" name="linknoteref-36" id="linknoteref-36"><sup>[28]</sup></a> &ldquo;as much as with
+Kant. . . . He reconciles Hume and Kant. . . . Something is lacking in Hume,
+the notion of law; something is superfluous in Kant, the notion of substance.
+It was necessary to unite the phenomenalism of Hume with the a <i>priori</i>
+teaching of Kant. This was the work accomplished by Renouvier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-32" id="linknote-32"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-32">[24]</a>
+Preface to <i>Essais de Critique générale</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-33" id="linknote-33"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-33">[25]</a>
+The English word &ldquo;<i>criticism</i>&rdquo; is, it should
+be noted, translated in French by &ldquo;<i>critique</i>&rdquo; and not by the word
+&ldquo;<i>criticisme</i>,&rdquo; a term which is used for the philosophy of the
+<i>Kritik</i> of Kant.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-34" id="linknote-34"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-34">[26]</a>
+In recognising the primacy of the moral or practical
+reason in Kant, Renouvier resembles Fichte.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-35" id="linknote-35"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-35">[27]</a>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s phenomenalism should be compared with that of
+Shadworth Hodgson, as set forth in the volumes of his large work on <i>The
+Metaphysic of Experience</i>, 1899. Hodgson has given his estimate of Renouvier
+and his relationship to him in <i>Mind</i> (volume for 1881).
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-36" id="linknote-36"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-36">[28]</a>
+<i>Psychologie de Hume : Traité de la Nature
+humaine</i>, Renouvier Préface par Pillon, p. lxviii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be doubted whether Pillon&rsquo;s eulogy is altogether sound in its approval
+of the &ldquo;reconciliation&rdquo; of Hume and Kant, for such a reconciliation of
+opposites may well appear impossible. Renouvier himself faced this problem of
+the reconciliation of opposites when at an early age he inclined to follow the
+Hegelian philosophy, a doctrine which may very well be described as a
+&ldquo;reconciliation of opposites,&rdquo; <i>par excellence</i>. Dissatisfied, however,
+with such a scheme Renouvier came round to the Kantian standpoint and then
+passed beyond it to a position absolutely contrary to that of Hegel. This
+position is frankly that opposites cannot be reconciled, one or the other must
+be rejected. Renouvier thus made the law of contradiction the basis of his
+philosophy, as it is the basis of our principles of thought or logic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rigorously applied this principle to that very interesting part of Kant&rsquo;s
+work, the antinomies, which he held should never have been formulated. The
+reasons put forward for this statement were two: the principle of contradiction
+and the law of number. Renouvier did not believe in what mathematicians call an
+&ldquo;infinite number.&rdquo; He held it to be an absurd and contradictory notion, for to
+be a number at all it must be numerical and therefore not infinite. The
+application of this to the Kantian antinomies, as for example to the questions,
+&ldquo;Is space infinite or finite? Had the world a beginning or not?&rdquo; is interesting
+because it treats them as Alexander did the Gordian knot. The admission that
+space is infinite, or that the world had no beginning, involves the admission
+of an &ldquo;infinite number,&rdquo; a contradiction and an absurdity. Since, therefore,
+such a number is a pure fiction we <i>must</i> logically conclude that space is
+finite,<a href="#linknote-37" name="linknoteref-37" id="linknoteref-37"><sup>[29]</sup></a> that the world had a beginning and
+that the ascending series of causes has a first term, which admission involves
+freedom at the heart of things.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-37" id="linknote-37"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-37">[29]</a>
+It is interesting to observe how the stress laid by Renouvier upon
+the finiteness of space and upon relativity has found expression in the
+scientific world by Einstein, long after it had been expressed
+philosophically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Renouvier had treated the antinomies of Kant, so he makes short work of the
+Kantian conception of a world of noumena (<i>Dinge an sich</i>) of which we
+know nothing, but which is the foundation of the phenomena we know. Like Hume,
+he rejects all notion of substance, of which Kant&rsquo;s noumenon is a survival from
+ancient times. The idea of substance he abhors as leading to pantheism and to
+fatalism, doctrines which Renouvier energetically opposes, to uphold man&rsquo;s
+freedom and the dignity of human personality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the philosophy of Kant personality was not included among the categories.
+Renouvier draws up for himself a new list of categories differing from those of
+Kant. Beginning with Relation they culminate in Personality. These two
+categories indicate two of the strongholds of Renouvier&rsquo;s philosophy. Beginning
+from his fundamental thesis &ldquo;All is relative,&rdquo; Renouvier points out that as
+nothing can possibly be known save by or in a relation of some sort it is
+evident that the most general law of all is that of Relation itself. Relation
+is therefore the first and fundamental category embracing all the others. Then
+follow, Number, Position, Succession, Quality. To these are added the important
+ones, Becoming, Causality, Finality proceeding from the simple to the
+composite, from the abstract to the concrete, from the elements most easily
+selected from our experience to that which embraces the experience itself,
+Renouvier comes to the final category in which they all find their
+consummation-Personality. The importance which he attaches to this category
+colours his entire thought and particularly determines his attitude to the
+various problems which we shall discuss in our following chapters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we can think of nothing save in relation to consciousness and consequently
+we cannot conceive the universe apart from personality, our knowledge of the
+universe, our philosophies, our beliefs are &ldquo;personal&rdquo; constructions. But they
+need not be on that account merely subjective and individualistic in character,
+for they refer to personality in its wide sense, a sense shared by other
+persons. This has important consequences for the problem of certitude in
+knowledge and Renouvier has here certain affinities to the pragmatist
+standpoint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His discussion of certitude is very closely bound up with his treatment of the
+problem of freedom, but we may indicate here Renouvier&rsquo;s attitude to Belief and
+Knowledge, a problem in which he was aided by the work of his friend Jules
+Lequier,<a href="#linknote-38" name="linknoteref-38" id="linknoteref-38"><sup>[30]</sup></a> whom he quotes in his second
+<i>Essai de Critique générale</i>. Renouvier considers it advisable to approach
+the problem of certitude by considering its opposite, doubt. In a famous
+passage in his second <i>Essai</i> he states the circumstances under which we
+do not doubt&mdash;namely, &ldquo;when we see, when we know, when we believe.&rdquo; Owing
+to our liability to error (even seeing is not believing, and we frequently
+change our minds even about our &ldquo;seeing&rdquo;), it appears that belief is always
+involved, and more correctly &ldquo;we believe that we see, we believe that we know.&rdquo;
+Belief is a state of consciousness involved in a certain affirmation of which
+the motives show themselves as adequate. Certitude arises when the possibility
+of an affirmation of the contrary is entirely rejected by the mind. Certitude
+thus appears as a kind of belief. All knowledge, Renouvier maintains, involves
+an affirmation of will. It is here we see the contrast so strongly marked
+between him and Renan, who wished us to &ldquo;let things think themselves out in
+us.&rdquo; &ldquo;Every affirmation in which consciousness is reflective is subordinated,
+in consciousness, to the determination to affirm.&rdquo; Our knowledge, our
+certitude, our belief, whatever we prefer to call it, is a construction not
+purely intellectual but involving elements of feeling and, above all, of will.
+Even the most logically incontrovertible truth are sometimes unconvincing. This
+is because certitude is not purely intellectual; it is <i>une affaire
+passionnelle</i>.<a href="#linknote-39" name="linknoteref-39" id="linknoteref-39"><sup>[31]</sup></a> Renouvier here not only
+approaches the pragmatist position, but he recalls the attitude to will,
+assumed by Maine de Biran. For the Cartesian formula De Biran had suggested the
+substitution of <i>Volo, ergo sum</i>. The inadequacy of the the <i>Cogito,
+ergo sum</i> is remarked upon by Lequier, whose treatment of the question of
+certainty Renouvier follows. As all demonstration is deductive in character and
+so requires existing premises, we cannot expect the <i>première vérité</i> to
+be demonstrable. If, from the or certainty, we must turn to the will to create
+belief, or certainty, we must turn to the will to create beliefs, for no evidence or previous truths exist for us.
+The <i>Cogito, ergo sum</i> really does not give us a starting point, as
+Descartes claimed for it, since there is no proper sequence from <i>cogito</i>
+to <i>sum</i>. Here we have merely two selves, <i>moi-pensée</i> and
+<i>moi-objet</i>. We need a live spark to bridge this gap to unite the two into
+one complete living self; this is found in <i>moi-volonté</i>, in a free act of
+will. This free act of will affirms the existence of the self by uniting in a
+synthetic judgment the thinking-self to the object-self. &ldquo;I refuse,&rdquo; says
+Renouvier, quoting Lequier, &ldquo;to follow the work of a knowledge which would not
+be mine. I accept the certainty of which I am the author.&rdquo; The <i>première
+vérité</i> is a free personal act of faith. Certainty in philosophy or in
+science reposes ultimately upon freedom and the consciousness of freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-38" id="linknote-38"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-38">[30]</a>
+Jules Lequier was born in 1814 and entered the Ecole
+polytechnique in 1834, leaving two years later for a military staff
+appointment. This he abandoned in 1838. He died in 1862 after having destroyed
+most of his writings. Three Years after his death was published the volume,
+<i>La Recherche d&rsquo;une première Vérité, fragments posthumes de Jules
+Lequier</i>. The reader should note the very interesting remarks by Renouvier
+at the end of the first volume of his Psychologie rationnelle, 1912 ed., pp.
+369-393, on Lequier and his Philosophy, also the Fragments reprinted by
+Renouvier in that work, <i>Comment trouver, comment chercher</i>, vol. i., on
+Subject and Object (vol. ii.), and on Freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-39" id="linknote-39"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-39">[31]</a>
+Lotze employs a similar phrase, eine Gemüths-sache.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here again, as in the philosophy of Cournot, we find the main emphasis falling
+upon the double problem of the period. It is in reality one problem with two
+aspects&mdash;the relation of science to morality, or, in other words, the
+place and significance of freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general influence of Renouvier has led to the formation of a neo-critical
+&ldquo;school&rdquo; of thought, prominent members of which may be cited: Pillon and Prat,
+his intimate friends, Séailles and Darlu, who have contributed monographs upon
+their master&rsquo;s teaching, together with Hamelin, Liard and Brochard, eminent
+disciples. Hamelin (1856-1907), whose premature and accidental death deprived
+France of a keen thinker, is known for his <i>Essai sur les Eléments principaux
+de la Représentation</i> (1907), supplementing the doctrines of Renouvier by
+those of Hegel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the work of Liard (1846-1917), <i>La Science positive et la Métaphysique</i>
+(1879), we see a combination of the influence of Vacherot, Renouvier and Kant.
+He was also perplexed by the problem of efficient and final causes as was
+Lachelier, whose famous thesis <i>De l&rsquo;Induction</i> appeared eight years
+earlier. While Lachelier was influenced by Kant, he, none the less, belongs to
+the current of the new spiritualism which we shall presently examine. Liard,
+however, by his adherence to many critical and neo-critical standpoints may be
+justly looked upon as belonging to that great current of which Renouvier is the
+prominent thinker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brochard (1848-1907) is mainly known by his <i>treatise De l&rsquo;Erreur</i> (1879)
+and his volumes on Ethics, <i>De la Responsabilité morale</i> (1876), and <i>De
+l&rsquo;Universalité des Notions morales</i> (1876), in all of which the primacy of
+moral considerations is advocated in a tone inspired by Renouvier&rsquo;s strong
+moral standpoint. The work <i>De l&rsquo;Erreur</i> emphasises the importance of the
+problem of freedom as being the crux of the whole question involved in the
+relation of science and morality. Adhering to the neo-critical doctrines in
+general, and particularly to the value of the practical reason, Brochard, by
+his insistence upon action as a foundation for belief, has marked affinities
+with the doctrines of Blondel (and Olle-Laprune), the significance of whose
+work will appear at the end of our next section.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The phenomenalism of Renouvier was followed up by two thinkers, who cannot,
+however, be regarded as belonging to his neo-critical school. In 1888 Gourd
+published his work entitled <i>Le Phénomène</i>, which was followed six years
+later by the slightly more coherent attempt of Boirac to base a philosophy upon
+the phenomenalism which expresses itself so rigidly in Hume. In his book
+<i>L&rsquo;Idée du Phénomène</i> (1894), he had, however, recourse to the Leibnitzian
+doctrines, which had finally exercised a considerable influence over Renouvier
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+The reaction against positivism and against eclecticism took another form quite
+apart from that of the neocritical philosophy. This was the triumphant
+spiritualist philosophy, as we may call it, to give it a general name,
+represented by a series of great thinkers&mdash;Ravaisson, Lachelier, Fouillée,
+Guyau, Boutroux, Bergson and, we may add, Blondel. These men have all of them
+had an influence much greater than that of Renouvier, and this is true of each
+of them separately. This is rather noteworthy for, if we exclude Fouillee,
+whose writings are rather too numerous, the works of all the other men together
+do not equal in quantity the work of Renouvier. There is another point which is
+worthy of notice. While Renouvier worked in comparative solitude and never
+taught philosophy in any college or university, being, in fact, neglected by
+the University of Paris, all the company&mdash;Ravaisson, Lachelier, Fouillée,
+Guyau, Boutroux and Bergson&mdash;had a connection with the University of Paris
+in general, being associated with the Sorbonne, the Collège de France or the
+important Ecole Normale Supérieure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The initiator of the spiritualistic philosophy was Ravaisson (1815-1900), who
+himself drew inspiration from Maine de Biran, to whose work he had called
+attention as early as 1840 in a vigorous article contributed to the <i>Revue
+des Deux Mondes</i>. This roused the indignation of Victor Cousin and the
+eclectics, who in revenge excluded Ravaisson from the Institute. His
+independent spirit had been shown in his thesis <i>De l&rsquo;Habitude</i>
+(1838)<a href="#linknote-40" name="linknoteref-40" id="linknoteref-40"><sup>[32]</sup></a> and his remarkable study of the
+metaphysics of Aristotle (1837-1846).
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-40" id="linknote-40"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-40">[32]</a>
+Reproduced in 1894 in the <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ravaisson&rsquo;s chief title to fame, however, lies in his famous philosophic
+manifesto of 1867, for such, in fact, was his <i>Rapport sur la Philosophie en
+France au XIX<sup>è</sup> Siècle</i>. This Report, prepared for the
+<i>Exposition universelle</i> at the request of the Ministry of Education,
+marks an epoch, for with it began the current of thought which was to dominate
+the close of the century. The &ldquo;manifesto&rdquo; was a call to free spirits to assert
+themselves in favour of a valid idealism. It, in itself, laid the foundations
+of such a philosophy and dealt a blow to both the Eclectic School of Cousin and
+the followers of Auguste Comte. Ravaisson wrote little, but his influence was
+powerful and made itself felt in the University, where in his office of
+president of the <i>agrégation en philosophie</i> he exercised no little
+influence over the minds of younger men. His pupils, among whom are to be found
+Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson, have testified to the profound and inspiring
+influence which this thinker exercised. A notable tribute to his memory is the
+address given by Bergson when he was appointed to take Ravaisson&rsquo;s place at the
+<i>Académie des Sciences morales et politiques</i> in 1904.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Various influences meet in Ravaisson and determine his general attitude to
+thought. He reverts, as we have said, to Maine de Biran, whose insistence upon
+the inner life he approves. We must examine human consciousness and make it our
+basis. We have in it powers of will, of desire and of love. Ravaisson blends
+the Aristotelian insistence upon Thought with the Christian insistence upon
+Love. In his method he manifests the influence of the German philosopher,
+Schelling, whose lectures he attended at Munich in company with the young Swiss
+thinker, Secretan.<a href="#linknote-41" name="linknoteref-41" id="linknoteref-41"><sup>[33]</sup></a> This influence is seen in
+his doctrine of synthesis and his intellectual intuition. Science continues to
+give us analyses ever more detailed, but it cannot lead us to the absolute. Our
+highest, most sublime knowledge is gained by a synthesis presented in and to
+our consciousness, an intuition. Further, he argues that efficient causes,
+about which science has so much to say, are really dependent upon final causes.
+Spiritual reality is anterior to material reality, and is characterised by
+goodness and beauty. Himself an artist, imbued with a passionate love of the
+beautiful (he was guardian of sculptures at the Louvre), he constructs a
+philosophy in the manner of an artist. Like Guyau, he writes metaphysics like
+poetry, and although he did not give us anything like <i>Vers d&rsquo;un
+Philosophe</i>, he would have endorsed the remarks which Guyau made on the
+relation of poetry and philosophy if, indeed, it is not a fact that his
+influence inspired the younger man.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-41" id="linknote-41"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-41">[33]</a>
+Charles Secretan (1815-1895), a Swiss thinker with whom
+Renouvier had interesting correspondence. His <i>Philosophie de la Liberté</i>
+appeared in 1848-1849, followed by other works on religious philosophy. Pillon
+wrote a monograph upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After surveying the currents of thought up to 1867 Ravaisson not only summed up
+in his concluding pages the elements of his own philosophy, but he ventured to
+assume the role of prophet. &ldquo;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 spiritualistic realism or positivism, having as
+generating principle the consciousness which the mind has of itself as an
+existence recognised as being the source and support of every other existence,
+being none other than its action.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-42" name="linknoteref-42" id="linknoteref-42"><sup>[34]</sup></a> His
+prophecy has been fulfilled in the work of Lachelier, Guyau, Fouillée,
+Boutroux, Bergson, Blondel and Weber.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-42" id="linknote-42"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-42">[35]</a>
+<i>Rapport</i>, 2nd ed., 1885, p. 275.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After Ravaisson the spiritualist philosophy found expression in the work of
+Lachelier (1832-1918), a thinker whose importance and whose influence are both
+quite out of proportion to the small amount which he has written.<a href="#linknote-43" name="linknoteref-43" id="linknoteref-43"><sup>[36]</sup></a> A brilliant thesis of only one hundred
+pages, <i>Du Fondement de l&rsquo;Induction</i>, sustained in 1871, together with a
+little study on the Syllogism and a highly important article on <i>Psychologie
+et Métaphysique</i>, contributed to the <i>Revue philosophique</i> in May of
+1885, constitute practically all his written work.<a href="#linknote-44" name="linknoteref-44" id="linknoteref-44"><sup>[37]</sup></a> It was orally that he made his influence felt; by
+his teaching at the Ecole Normale Supérieure (1864-1875) he made a profound
+impression upon the youth of the University and the Ecole by the dignity and
+richness of his thought, as well as by its thoroughness.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-43" id="linknote-43"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-43">[36]</a>
+Dr. Merz, in his admirable <i>History of European
+Thought in the Nineteenth Century</i>, is wrong in regard to Lachelier&rsquo;s dates;
+he confuses his resignation of professorship (1875) with his death. This,
+however, did not occur until as late as 1918. See the references in Mertz, vol.
+iii., p. 620, and vol. iv., p. 217.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-44" id="linknote-44"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-44">[37]</a>
+The thesis and the article have been published together by
+Alcan, accompanied by notes on Pascal&rsquo;s Wager. The <i>Etude sur le
+Syllogisme</i> also forms a volume in Alcan&rsquo;s <i>Bibliothèque de Philosophie
+contemporaine</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lachelier was a pupil of Ravaisson, and owes his initial inspiration to him. He
+had, however, a much more rigorous and precise attitude to problems. This is
+apparent in the concentration of thought contained in his thesis. It is one of
+Lachelier&rsquo;s merits that he recognised the significance of Kant&rsquo;s work in a very
+profound manner. Until his thesis appeared the influence of Leibnitz had been
+more noticeable in French thought than that of Kant. It was noticeable in
+Ravaisson, and Renouvier, in spite of his professed adherence to Kant, passed
+to a Leibnitzian position in his <i>Nouvelle Monadologie</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The valuable work <i>Du Fondement de l&rsquo;Induction</i> is concerned mainly with
+the problem of final causes, which Lachelier deduces from the necessity of
+totality judgments over and above those which concern merely efficient causes.
+On the principle of final causes, or a ideological conception of a rational
+unity and order, he founds Induction. It cannot be founded, he claims, upon a
+mere empiricism. This is a point which will concern us later in our examination
+of the problem of science.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lachelier was left, however, with the dualism of mechanism, operating solely by
+efficient causes, and teleology manifested in final causes, a dualism from
+which Kant did not manage to escape. In his article <i>Psychologic et
+Métaphysique</i> he endeavoured to interpret mechanism itself as a teleological
+activity of the spirit.<a href="#linknote-45" name="linknoteref-45" id="linknoteref-45"><sup>[38]</sup></a> He indicates the
+absolute basis of our life and experience, indeed of the universe itself, to be
+the absolute spontaneity of spirit. In spirit and in freedom we live and move
+and have our being. We do not affirm ourselves to be what we are, but rather we
+are what we affirm ourselves to be. We must not say that our present depends
+upon our past, for we really create all the moments of our life in one and the
+same act, which is both present to each moment and above them all.<a href="#linknote-46" name="linknoteref-46" id="linknoteref-46"><sup>[39]</sup></a> Here psychology appears as the science of
+thought itself and resolves itself into metaphysics. Here, too, we find the
+significance of the new spiritualism; we see its affinity with, and its
+contrast to, the doctrines of the older spiritualism as professed by Cousin.
+Lachelier here strikes the note which is so clearly characteristic of this
+current of thought, and is no less marked in his work than in that of
+Bergson&mdash;namely, a belief in the supremacy of spirit and in the reality of
+freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-45" id="linknote-45"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-45">[38]</a>
+It is interesting to compare this with the attitude taken
+by Lotze in Germany.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-46" id="linknote-46"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-46">[39]</a>
+<i>Psychologie et Métaphysique</i>, p. 171.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The notion of freedom and of the spontaneity of the spirit became watchwords of
+the new spiritualist philosophers. Under the work and influence of Boutroux
+(1845-1921) these ideas were further emphasised and worked out more definitely
+to a position which assumes a critical attitude to the dogmatism of modern
+science and establishes a contingency in all things. Boutroux&rsquo;s thesis <i>De la
+Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i> appeared in 1874 and was dedicated to
+Ravaisson. His chief fame and his importance in the development of the
+spiritualist philosophy rest upon this book alone. In 1894 he published a
+course of lectures given at the Sorbonne in 1892-3, <i>Sur l&rsquo;Idée de Loi
+naturelle</i>, which supplements the thesis. Outside his own country attention
+has been more readily bestowed upon his writings on the history of philosophy,
+of which subject he was Professor. In his own country, however, great interest
+and value are attached to his work on <i>The Contingency of the Laws of
+Nature</i>. In this Boutroux combines the attitude of Ravaisson with that of
+Lachelier. The totality of the laws of the universe manifests, according to
+him, a contingency. No explanation of these laws is possible apart from a free
+spiritual activity. The stress laid upon contingency in the laws of nature
+culminates in the belief in the freedom of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The critique of science which marked Boutroux&rsquo;s work has profoundly influenced
+thinkers like Hannequin, Payot and Milhaud,<a href="#linknote-47" name="linknoteref-47" id="linknoteref-47"><sup>[40]</sup></a>
+and in the following century appears in the work of Duhem and of Henri
+Poincaré, the noted mathematician, whose books on <i>La Science et
+l&rsquo;Hypothèse</i> (1902), <i>La Valeur de la Science</i> (1905), and <i>Science
+et Méthode</i> (1909) have confirmed many of Boutroux&rsquo;s conclusions.<a href="#linknote-48" name="linknoteref-48" id="linknoteref-48"><sup>[41]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-47" id="linknote-47"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-47">[40]</a>
+Hannequin&rsquo;s notable work is the <i>Essai critique sur
+L&rsquo;Hypothèse des Atomes</i> (1896). Payot&rsquo;s chief book is <i>La Croyance</i>
+(1896). Milhaud&rsquo;s critique of science is contained in his <i>Essai sur les
+Conditions et les Limites de la Certitude logique</i> (1894), and in <i>Le
+Rationnel</i> (1898). Duhem&rsquo;s book is <i>La Théorie physique</i> (1906).
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-48" id="linknote-48"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-48">[41]</a>
+It is interesting to note that Boutroux married
+Poincaré&rsquo;s sister, and that his son, Pierre Boutroux, whose education was
+guided by both his uncle and his father, is now Professor at the Collège de
+France. Emile Boutroux was a pupil of Zeller, whose lectures on Greek
+philosophy he attended in Heidelberg, 1868. He expressed to the writer his
+grief at the later prostitution of German thought to nationalist and
+materialist aims. He was Professor of the History of Philosophy in Paris from
+1888, then Honorary Professor of Modern Philosophy. In 1914 he gave the Hertz
+Lecture to the British Academy on <i>Certitude et Vérité</i>. He was until his
+death Directeur de la Fondation Thiers, a college for post-graduate study,
+literary, philosophical and scientific.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the new spiritualist current was thus tending to a position far removed
+from that of Taine, at the commencement of our period, a wavering note was
+struck by the idealist Fouillée (1838-1912), who, while maintaining a general
+attitude in harmony with the new doctrines endeavoured to effect a
+reconciliation with the more positive attitude to science and philosophy. In
+his <i>philosophie des ideés-forces</i><a href="#linknote-49" name="linknoteref-49" id="linknoteref-49"><sup>[42]</sup></a> he
+endeavoured to combine and reconcile the diverging attitudes of Plato and of
+Comte. He shows a scorn of the neo-critical though of Renouvier. He wrote in
+his shorter life more books than did Renouvier, and he is conspicuous among
+this later group of thinkers for his mass-production of books, which appeared
+steadily at the rate of one <i>per annum</i> to the extent of some thirty-seven
+volumes, after he gave up his position as <i>maître de conférence</i> at
+the Ecole Normale owing to ill-health.<a href="#linknote-50" name="linknoteref-50" id="linknoteref-50"><sup>[43]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-49" id="linknote-49"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-49">[42]</a>
+His <i>Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces</i> appeared in
+1890, <i>La Psychologie des Idées-forces</i> three years later. His <i>Morale
+des Idées-forces</i> belongs to the next century (1907), but its principles
+were contained already in his thesis <i>Liberté et Déterminisme</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-50" id="linknote-50"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-50">[43]</a>
+He only held this for three years, 1872-75.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée, with the noblest intentions, set himself to the solution of that
+problem which we have already indicated as being the central one of our period,
+the relation of science and ethics, or, in brief, the problem of freedom. This
+was the subject of his thesis, undoubtedly the best book he ever wrote, <i>La
+Liberté et le Déterminisme</i>, which he sustained in 1872.<a href="#linknote-51" name="linknoteref-51" id="linknoteref-51"><sup>[44]</sup></a> The attitude which he takes in that work is
+the keynote to his entire philosophy. Well grounded in a knowledge of the
+history of systems of philosophy, ancient and modern, he recognises elements of
+truth in each, accompanied by errors due mainly to a one-sided
+perspective.<a href="#linknote-52" name="linknoteref-52" id="linknoteref-52"><sup>[45]</sup></a> He recalls a statement of
+Leibnitz to the effect that most systems are right in their assertions and err
+in their denials. Fouillée was convinced that there was reconciliation at the
+heart of things, and that the contradictions we see are due to our point of
+view. Facing, therefore, in this spirit, the problems of the hour, he set
+himself &ldquo;to reconcile the findings of science with the reality of spirit, to
+establish harmony between the determinism upheld by science and the liberty
+which the human spirit acclaims, between the mechanism of nature and the
+aspirations of man&rsquo;s heart, between the True which is the object of all science
+and the Good which is the goal of morality.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-53" name="linknoteref-53" id="linknoteref-53"><sup>[46]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-51" id="linknote-51"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-51">[44]</a>
+This work created quite a stir in the intellectual
+and political world in France just after the war. Fouillée&rsquo;s book led to an
+attack on the ministry, which did not go so far as that occasioned by
+Renouvier&rsquo;s volume in 1849. (See p. 61.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-52" id="linknote-52"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-52">[45]</a>
+Fouillée stands in marked contrast to Comte in his
+general acquaintance with the history of ideas. Comte, like Spencer, knew
+little of any philosophy but his own. Fouillée, however, was well schooled, not
+only in Plato and the ancients, but had intimate knowledge of the work of Kant,
+Comte, Spencer, Lotze, Renouvier, Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-53" id="linknote-53"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-53">[46]</a>
+This is also the idea expressed at length in his <i>Avenir
+de la Métaphysique</i>, 1889.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée had no desire to offer merely another eclecticism <i>à la mode
+de Cousin</i>; he selects, therefore, his own principle of procedure. This
+principle is found in his notion of <i>idée-force</i>. Following ancient usage,
+he employs the term &ldquo;idea&rdquo; for <i>any</i> mental presentation. For Fouillée,
+however, ideas are not <i>idées-spectacles</i>, merely exercising a platonic
+influence &ldquo;remote as the stars shining above us.&rdquo; They are not merely mental
+reproductions of an object, real or hypothetical, outside the mind. Ideas are
+in themselves forces which endeavour to work out their own realisation.
+Fouillée opposes his doctrine to the evolutionary theory of Spencer and Huxley.
+He disagrees with their mechanism and epiphenomenalism, pointing out
+legitimately that our ideas, far from being results of purely physical and
+independent causes, are themselves factors, and very vital factors, in the
+process of evolution. Fouillée looks upon the mechanistic arrangement of the
+world as an expression or symbol of idea or spirit in a manner not unlike that
+of Lotze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bears out his view of <i>idées-forces</i> by showing how a state of
+consciousness tries to realise its object. The idea of movement is closely
+bound up with the physiological and physical action, and, moreover, tends to
+produce it. This realisation is not a merely mechanistic process but is
+teleological and depends on the vital unity between the physical and the
+mental. On this fundamental notion Fouillée constructs his psychology, his
+ethic, his sociology and his metaphysic. He sees in the evolutionary process
+ideas at work which tend to realise themselves. One of these is the idea of
+freedom, in which idea he endeavours to find a true reconciliation of the
+problem of determinism in science and the demands of the human spirit which
+declares itself free. The love of freedom arising from the idea of freedom
+creates in the long run this freedom. This is Fouillée&rsquo;s method all through.
+&ldquo;To conceive and to desire the ideal is already to begin its realisation.&rdquo; He
+applies his method with much success in the realm of ethics and sociology where
+he opposes to the Marxian doctrine of a materialist determination of history
+that of a spiritual and intellectual determination by ideas. Fouillée&rsquo;s
+philosophy is at once intellectual and voluntarist. He has himself described it
+as &ldquo;spiritualistic voluntarism.&rdquo; It is a system of idealism which reflects
+almost all the elements of modern thought. In places his doctrine of
+reconciliation appears to break down, and the psychological law summed up in
+<i>idées-forces</i> is hardly sufficient to bear the vast erection which
+Fouillée builds upon it. The idea is nevertheless a valuable and fruitful one.
+Fouillée&rsquo;s respect for positive science is noteworthy, as is also his great
+interest in social problems.<a href="#linknote-54" name="linknoteref-54" id="linknoteref-54"><sup>[47]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-54" id="linknote-54"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-54">[47]</a>
+At the end of the century these problems received highly
+specialised attention in the work of the sociologists inspired by Comte&rsquo;s
+influence. Works of special merit in this direction are: tspmas, with his
+<i>Société&rsquo;s animales</i> (1876) and Tarde, predecessor of Bergson at the
+Collège de France (1843-1907), with his <i>Criminalité comparée</i> (1898) and
+<i>Les Lois de l&rsquo;Imitation</i> (1900), also Durkheim&rsquo;s work <i>De la Division
+du Travail social</i> (1893) and <i>Les Régles de la Méthode sociologique</i>
+(1894), and Izoulet, with his <i>La Cité moderne</i> (1894). Note those of
+Levy-Bruhl, Bouglé, and Le Bon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The importance of the sociological aspect of all problems was emphasised in a
+brilliant manner by Guyau (1854-1888), the step-son of Fouillée. Guyau was a
+gifted young man, whose death at the early age of thirty-four was a sore
+bereavement for Fouillée and undoubtedly a disaster for philosophy. Guyau was
+trained by his step-father,<a href="#linknote-55" name="linknoteref-55" id="linknoteref-55"><sup>[48]</sup></a> and assisted him
+in his work. When ill-health forced both men from their professorships,<a href="#linknote-56" name="linknoteref-56" id="linknoteref-56"><sup>[49]</sup></a> they lived in happy comradeship at Mentone
+at the same time, it is interesting to note, that Nietzsche was residing there.
+Equally interesting is it to observe that although Guyau and Fouillée were
+unaware of the German thinker&rsquo;s presence or his work, Nietzsche was well
+acquainted with theirs, particularly that of Guyau. Doubtless he would have
+been pleased to meet the author of the <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation
+ni Sanction</i> (1885) and <i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i> (1887). Editions of
+these books exist in the <i>Nietzsche-Archiv</i> bearing Nietzsche&rsquo;s notes and
+comments.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-55" id="linknote-55"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-55">[48]</a>
+Some authorities are of opinion that Fouillée was actually
+the father of Guyau. Fouillée married Guyau&rsquo;s mother.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-56" id="linknote-56"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-56">[49]</a>
+Guyau taught at the Lycée Condorcet (1874) where
+young Henri Bergson was studying (1868-1878).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau himself has a certain affinity with Nietzsche, arising from his
+insistence upon Life and its power; but the author of the delightful little
+collection <i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i> (1881) is free from the egoism expressed
+in <i>Der Wille zur Macht</i>. Guyau posits as his <i>idée-directrice</i> the
+conception of Life, both individual and social, and in this concept he
+professes to find a basis more fundamental than that of force, movement or
+existence. Life involves expansion and intension, fecundity and creation. It
+means also consciousness, intelligence and feeling, generosity and sociability.
+&ldquo;He only lives well who lives for others.&rdquo; Life can only exist by extending. It
+can never be purely egoistic and endure; a certain giving of itself, in
+generosity and in love, is necessary for its continuance. Such is the view
+which the French philosopher-poet expresses in opposition to Nietzsche,
+starting, however, from the concept of Life did Nietzsche. Guyau worked out a
+doctrine of ethics and of religion based upon this concept which will demand
+our special attention in its proper place, when we consider the moral and
+religious problem. He strove to give an idealistic setting to the doctrines of
+evolution, and this alone would give him a place among the great thinkers of
+the period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his doctrine of the relation of thought and action Guyau followed the
+<i>philosophie des idées-forces</i>. On the other hand there are very
+remarkable affinities between the thought of Guyau and that of Bergson. Guyau
+is not so severely intellectual as Fouillée; his manner of thought and
+excellence of style are not unlike Bergson. More noticeably he has a conception
+of life not far removed from the <i>élan vital</i>. His &ldquo;expansion of life&rdquo;
+has, like Bergson&rsquo;s <i>évolution créatrice</i>, no goal other than that of its
+own activity. After Guyau&rsquo;s death in 1888 it was found that he had been
+exercised in mind about the problem of Time, for he left the manuscript of a
+book entitled <i>La Genèse de l&rsquo;Idée de Temps</i>.<a href="#linknote-57" name="linknoteref-57" id="linknoteref-57"><sup>[50]</sup></a> He therein set forth a belief in a psychological,
+heterogeneous time other than mathematical time, which is really spatial in
+character. In this psychological time the spirit lives. The year following
+Guyau&rsquo;s death, but before his posthumous work appeared, Bergson published his
+thesis <i>Les Données immédiates de la Conscience</i> (1889), which is better
+described by its English title <i>Time and Free Will</i>, and in which this
+problem which had been present to Guyau&rsquo;s mind is taken up and treated in an
+original and striking manner. In Guyau, too, is seen the rise of the conception
+of activity so marked in the work of Bergson and of Blondel. &ldquo;It is
+<i>action</i> and the power of life,&rdquo; he insists, &ldquo;which alone can solve, if
+not entirely at least partially, those problems to which abstract thought gives
+rise.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-58" name="linknoteref-58" id="linknoteref-58"><sup>[51]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-57" id="linknote-57"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-57">[50]</a>
+This work was edited and published by Fouillée two years
+after Guyau&rsquo;s death, and reviewed by Bergson in the <i>Revue philosophique</i>
+in 1891.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-58" id="linknote-58"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-58">[51]</a>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni
+Sanction</i>, p. 250.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bergson, born in 1859, Professor at the Collège de France from 1901 to 1921,
+now retired, has had a popularity to which none of the other thinkers of this
+group, or indeed of our period, has attained. He is the only one of the new
+idealists or spiritualists who is well known outside his own country. For this
+reason foreigners are apt to regard him as a thinker unrelated to any special
+current of thought, an innovator. Although much is original and novel in his
+philosophy, his thought marks the stage in the development to which the
+spiritualist current has attained in contemporary thought. The movement of
+which he forms a part we can trace back as far as Maine de Biran, to whom
+Bergson owes much, as he does also to Ravaisson, Lachelier, Boutroux and Guyau.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two important books by Bergson came prior to 1900, his <i>Time and Free
+Will</i> (1889) and his <i>Matter and Memory</i> (1896). His famous <i>Creative
+Evolution</i> appeared in 1907. It is but his first work &ldquo;writ large,&rdquo; for we
+have in <i>Time and Free Will</i> the essentials of his philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He makes, as did Guyau, a central point of Change, a universal becoming, and
+attacks the ordinary notion of time, which he regards as false because it is
+spatial. We ourselves live and act in <i>durée</i>, which is Bergson&rsquo;s term for
+real time as opposed to that fictitious time of the mathematician or
+astronomer. He thus lays stress upon the inward life of the spirit, with its
+richness and novelty, its eternal becoming, its self-creation. He has his own
+peculiar manner of approaching our central problem, that of freedom, of which
+he realises the importance. For him the problem resolves itself into an
+application of his doctrine of <i>la durée</i>, to which we shall turn in due
+course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bergson insists with Guyau and Blondel upon the primary significance of action.
+The importance attached to action colours his whole theory of knowledge. His
+epistemology rests upon the thesis that &ldquo;the brain is an instrument of action
+and not of representation,&rdquo; and that &ldquo;in the study of the problems of
+perception the starting- point should be action and not sensation.&rdquo; This is a
+psychology far different from that of Condillac and Taine, and it is largely
+upon his merit as a psychologist that Bergson&rsquo;s fame rests. He devoted his
+second work, <i>Matter and Memory</i>, to showing that memory is something
+other than a function of the brain. His distinction between &ldquo;pure&rdquo; memory and
+mere memorising power, which is habit, recalls the <i>mémoire</i> of Maine de
+Biran and of Ravaisson upon <i>Habit</i>. Bergson sees in memory a
+manifestation of spirit, which is a fundamental reality, no mere epiphenomenon.
+Spirit is ever striving against matter, but in spite of this dualism which he
+cannot escape, he maintains that spirit is at the origin of things. This is a
+difficulty which is more clearly seen in his later book, <i>Creative
+Evolution</i>. Matter is our enemy and threatens our personality in its
+spiritual reality by a tendency to lead us into habit, away from life, freedom
+and creativeness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Further we must, he claims, endeavour to see things <i>sub specie durationis in
+a durée</i>, in an eternal becoming. We cannot expect to grasp all the varied
+reality of life in a formula or indeed in any purely intellectual manner. This
+is the chief defect of science and of the so-called scientific point of view.
+It tries to fix in concepts, moulds and solid forms a reality which is living
+and moving eternally. For Bergson all is Change, and this eternal becoming we
+can only grasp by intuition. Intuition and intellect do not, however, oppose
+one another. We are thus led to realise that Life is more than logic. The
+Bergsonian philosophy concludes with intuitionism and contingency, which drew
+upon it the severe criticisms of Fouillée,<a href="#linknote-59" name="linknoteref-59" id="linknoteref-59"><sup>[52]</sup></a>
+who termed it a philosophy of scepticism and nihilism. Of all the spiritualist
+group Fouillée stands nearest the positive attitude to science, and his strong
+intellectualism comes out in his criticism of Bergson, who well represents,
+together with Blondel, the tendency towards non-intellectual attitudes inherent
+in the spiritualist development. Blondel has endeavoured to treat the great
+problems, a task which Bergson has not attempted as yet, partly because he
+(Bergson) shares Renan&rsquo;s belief that &ldquo;the day of philosophic systems has gone,&rdquo;
+partly because he desires to lay the basis of a philosophy of the spirit to
+which others after him may contribute, and so he devotes his attention to
+method and to those crucial points, such as the problem of freedom upon which a
+larger doctrine must necessarily rest.<a href="#linknote-60" name="linknoteref-60" id="linknoteref-60"><sup>[53]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-59" id="linknote-59"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-59">[52]</a>
+Particularly in his work <i>Le Mouvement idéaliste et la
+Réaction contre la Science positive</i> (cf. .206), 1896, and later in <i>La
+Pensée et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intellectualistes</i>, 1910.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-60" id="linknote-60"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-60">[53]</a>
+For a fuller appreciation of the Bergsonian doctrines than
+is possible in such a survey as this, the reader is referred to the author&rsquo;s
+monograph, <i>Bergson and His Philosophy</i>, Methuen and Co., 1920.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The current of the new idealism or spiritualism reaches a culminating point in
+the work of Blondel (born about 1870), whose remarkable and noteworthy book
+<i>L&rsquo;Action</i> appeared in l893.<a href="#linknote-61" name="linknoteref-61" id="linknoteref-61"><sup>[54]</sup></a> The
+fundamental thesis of the Philosophy of Action<a href="#linknote-62" name="linknoteref-62" id="linknoteref-62"><sup>[55]</sup></a> is that man&rsquo;s life is primarily one of
+action, consequently philosophy must concern itself with the active life and
+not merely with thought. By its nature, action is something unique and
+irreducible to other elements or factors. It is not the result of any
+synthesis: it is itself a living synthesis, and cannot be dealt with as the
+scientist deals with his data. Blondel lays emphasis, as did Bergson, upon &ldquo;the
+living&rdquo; being unique and inexpressible in formulae. Intellect cannot grasp
+action; &ldquo;one penetrates the living reality only by placing oneself at the
+dynamic point of view of the will.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-63" name="linknoteref-63" id="linknoteref-63"><sup>[56]</sup></a> His words
+recall Bergson&rsquo;s attitude to the free act. &ldquo;The principle of action eludes
+positive knowledge at the moment at which it makes it possible, and, in a word
+that needs to be better defined, it is subjectivity.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-64" name="linknoteref-64" id="linknoteref-64"><sup>[57]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-61" id="linknote-61"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-61">[54]</a>
+The same year in which the philosophic interest in
+France, growing since 1870, and keener in the eighties, led to the foundation
+of the famous <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i> by Xavier Léon. In 1876
+(the same year in which Professor Croom Robertson in England established the
+periodical <i>Mind</i>) Ribot had founded the <i>Revue philosophique de la
+France et de l&rsquo;Etranger</i>. These journals, along with the teaching in the
+Lycées, have contributed to make the French people the best educated,
+philosophically, of any people.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-62" id="linknote-62"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-62">[55]</a>
+It is interesting to note that this designation has
+been used by its author to replace his original term &ldquo;<i>pragmatisme</i>,&rdquo;
+which he employed in 1888 and abandoned upon becoming acquainted with the
+theory of Peirce and James, and with their use of the term in another manner,
+with which he did not agree. See <i>Bulletin de la Société française de
+Philosophie</i>, 1902.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-63" id="linknote-63"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-63">[56]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo; Action</i>, p. 100.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-64" id="linknote-64"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-64">[57]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., p. 87.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blondel, however, leads us beyond this subjectivity, for it is not the will
+which causes what is. Far from that, he maintains that in so far as it wills it
+implies something which it does not and cannot create of itself; it wills to be
+what it is not yet. We do not act for the mere sake of acting, but for some
+end, something beyond the particular act. Action is not self-contained or self-
+sufficing: it is a striving to further attainment or achievement. It therefore
+pre-supposes some reality beyond itself. Here appear the elements of &ldquo;passion&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;suffering&rdquo; due to resistance, for all action involves some opposition. In
+particular moral action implies this resistance and a consciousness of power to
+overcome the resistance, and it therefore involves a reality which transcends
+the sphere in which we act.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owing to this inequality between the power and the wish, we are obliged to
+complete our actions or our activity in general by a belief in a Reality
+beyond. It is, however, &ldquo;a beyond that is within,&rdquo; a Divine power immanent in
+man. This view, Blondel claims, unites the idea of God &ldquo;transcendent&rdquo; with the
+idea of God as &ldquo;immanent.&rdquo; Man&rsquo;s action partakes of both, for in so far as it
+results from his own will it is immanent; transcendence is, however, implied in
+the fact that the end of man&rsquo;s action as a whole is not &ldquo;given.&rdquo; Blondel leads
+us to a conception of a religious idealism in which every act of our ordinary
+existence leads ultimately to a religious faith. Every action is sacramental.
+Blondel and his follower Laberthonnière, who has taken up this idea from his
+master in his volume of <i>Essais de Philosophie réligieuse</i> (1901), go
+beyond a purely pragmatist or voluntarist position by finding the supreme value
+of all action, and of the universe, not in will but in love. For Blondel this
+word is no mere sentiment or transient feeling, but a concrete reality which is
+the perfection of will and of intellect alike, of action and of knowledge. The
+&ldquo;Philosophy of Action,&rdquo; asserts Blondel, includes the &ldquo;Philosophy of the Idea.&rdquo;
+In the fact of love, he claims, is found the perfect unity between the self and
+the non-self, the ground of personality and its relation to the totality of
+persons, producing a unity in which each is seen as an end to others as well as
+to himself. &ldquo;Love,&rdquo; says Laberthonnière, &ldquo;is the first and last word of all. It
+is the principle, the means and the end. It is in loving that one gets away
+from self and raises oneself above one&rsquo;s temporal individuality. It is in
+loving that one finds God and other beings, and that one finds oneself.&rdquo; It is,
+in short, these idealists claim, the <i>Summum Bonum</i>; in it is found the
+Absolute which philosophers and religious mystics of all ages have ever sought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The &ldquo;philosophy of action&rdquo; is intimately bound up with the &ldquo;philosophy of
+belief,&rdquo; formulated by Ollé-Laprune, and the movement in religious thought
+known generally as Modernism, which is itself due to the influence of modern
+philosophic thought upon the dogmas of the Christian religion, as these are
+stated by the Roman Church. Both the Philosophy of Belief and Modernism are
+characterised by an intense spirituality and a moral earnestness which maintain
+the primacy of the practical reason over the theoretical reason. Life, insists
+Ollé-Laprune in his book <i>Le Prix de la Vie</i> (l885),<a href="#linknote-65" name="linknoteref-65" id="linknoteref-65"><sup>[58]</sup></a> is not contemplation but active creation. He urges
+us to a creative evolution of the good, to an employment of
+<i>idées-forces</i>. &ldquo;There are things to be made whose measure is not
+determined; there are things to be discovered, to be invented, new forms of the
+good, ideas which have never yet been received&mdash;creations, as it were, of
+the spirit that loves the good.&rdquo; This dynamism and power of will is essential.
+We must not lose ourselves in abstractions; action is the supreme thing: it
+alone constitutes reality.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-65" id="linknote-65"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-65">[58]</a>
+This has been followed in the new century by <i>La Raison
+et le Rationalisme</i>, 1906. As early as 1880, however, he issued his work
+<i>La Certitude morale</i>, which influenced Blondel, his pupil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A similar note is sounded by the Modernists or Neo-Catholics, particularly by
+the brilliant disciple and successor of Bergson, Le Roy, who in <i>Dogme et
+Critique</i> (1907) has based the reality of religious dogma upon its practical
+significance. We find Péguy (who fell on the field of battle in 1914) applying
+Bergsonian ideas to a fervid religious faith. Wilbois unites these ideas to
+social ethics in his <i>Devoir et Durée</i> (1912). In quite different quarters
+the new spiritualism and philosophy of action have appeared as inspiring the
+Syndicalism of Sorel, who endeavours to apply the doctrines of Bergson,
+Ollé-Laprune and Blondel to the solution of social questions in his
+<i>Réflexions sur la Violence</i> (1907) and <i>Illusions du Progrès</i>
+(1911).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would be erroneous to regard Bergson&rsquo;s intuitional philosophy as typical of
+all contemporary French thought. Following Renouvier, Fouillée and Boutroux,
+there prevail currents of a more intellectualist or rationalist type, to which
+we are, perhaps, too close to see in true and historical perspective. The
+<i>élan vital</i> of French thought continues to manifest itself in a manner
+which combines the work of Boutroux and Bergson with Blondel&rsquo;s idealism. A keen
+interest is being taken in the works of Spinoza, Kant and Hegel, and this is
+obviously influencing the trend of French philosophy at the moment, without
+giving rise to a mere eclecticism. French thought is too original and too
+energetic for that. In addition to these classical studies we should note the
+great and growing influence of the work of Durkheim and of Hamelin, both of
+whom we have already mentioned. The former gave an immense impetus to
+sociological studies by his earlier work. Further interest arose with his
+<i>Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse</i> in 1912. Hamelin indicated a
+turning-point from <i>neo-criticisme</i> through the new spiritualist doctrines
+to Hegelian methods and ideas. Brunschwicg, who produced a careful study of
+Spinoza, wrote as early as 1897 on <i>La Modalité du Jugement</i>, a truly
+Kantian topic. This thinker&rsquo;s later works, <i>Les Etapes de la Philosophie
+mathematique</i> (1912) and the little volume <i>La Vie de l&rsquo;esprit</i>,
+illustrate a tendency to carry out the line taken by Boutroux&mdash;namely, to
+arrive at the statement of a valid idealism disciplined by positivism. The
+papers of Berthelot in his <i>Evolutionnisme et Platonisme</i> are a further
+contribution to this great end. In the work of Evellin, <i>La Raison pure et
+les Antinomies</i> (1907), the interest in Kant and Hegel is again seen.
+Noël, who contributed an excellent monograph on Lachelier to the <i>Revue
+de Métaphysique et de Morale</i> (that journal which is an excellent witness in
+itself to the vitality of contemporary French philosophy), produced a careful
+study of Hegel&rsquo;s Logik in 1897. Since that date interest has grown along the
+lines of Boutroux, Bergson and Blondel in an attempt to reach a positive
+idealism, which would combine the strictly positivist attitude so dear to
+French minds with the tendency to spiritualism or idealism which they also
+manifest. This attempt, which in some respects amounts to an effort to restate
+the principles of Hegel in modern or contemporary terms, was undertaken by
+Weber in 1903 in his book entitled <i>Vers le Positivisme absolu par
+l&rsquo;Idéalisme</i>. Philosophy in France realises to-day that the true course of
+spiritual development will be at once positive and idealistic.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III<br/>
+SCIENCE</h2>
+
+<p>
+INTRODUCTION: The scientific outlook&mdash;Progress of the sciences&mdash;The
+positivist spirit, its action on science, philosophy and literature&mdash;The
+problem as presented to philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. Comte&rsquo;s positivism&mdash;Work of prominent scientists&mdash;Position maintained
+by Berthelot and Bernard&mdash;Renan&rsquo;s confidence&mdash;Vacherot and
+Taine&mdash;Insufficiency of sciences alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Cournot and Renouvier attack the dogmatism of science.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. The neo-spiritualist group continue and develop this attack, which becomes a
+marked feature in Lachelier, Boutroux, and Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Entire change of attitude in the development of the period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The problem of freedom opened up in the process.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER III<br/>
+SCIENCE</h3>
+
+<p>
+Having thus surveyed the main currents of our period and indicated the general
+attitude adopted to knowledge by the various thinkers, we approach more closely
+to the problem of the relation of science and philosophy. The nineteenth
+century was a period in which this problem was keenly felt, and France was the
+country in which it was tensely discussed by the most acute minds among the
+philosophers and among the scientists. French thought and culture, true to the
+tradition of the great geometrician and metaphysician Descartes, have produced
+men whose training has been highly scientific as well as philosophical. Her
+philosophers have been keenly versed in mathematics and physical science, while
+her scientists have had considerable power as philosophical thinkers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the very prominent tendencies of thought in the first half of the
+nineteenth century was the growing belief and confidence in the natural
+sciences. In France this was in large measure due to the progress of those
+sciences themselves and to the influences of Comte, which was supported by the
+foreign influences of Kant&rsquo;s teaching and that of the English School,
+particularly John Stuart Mill. These three great streams of thought, widely
+different in many respects, had this in common&mdash;that they tended to
+confuse philosophy and science to such a degree that it seemed doubtful whether
+the former could be granted any existence by itself. Science, somewhat
+intoxicated by the praise and worship bestowed upon her, became proud, arrogant
+and overbearing. She scorned facts which could not be adapted to her own
+nature, she ignored data which were not quantitative and materialistic, and she
+regarded truth as a system of laws capable of expression by strict mathematical
+methods and formulae*. Hence science became characterised by a firm belief in
+absolute determinism, in laws of necessity operating after the manner of
+mathematical laws. This &ldquo;universal mathematic&rdquo; endeavoured also to explain the
+complex by reference to the simple. Difficulties were encountered all along the
+line, for experience, it was found, did not quite fit into rigid formulae*,
+&ldquo;new&rdquo; elements of experience presented a unique character and distressing
+discrepancy. Confidence in science, however, was not shaken by this, for the
+perfect science, it was imagined, was assured in a short time. Patience might
+be needed, but no doubt was entertained of the <i>possibility</i> of such a
+construction. Doubters were told to look at the rising sciences of psychology
+and sociology, which, as Auguste Comte had himself prophesied, were approaching
+gradually to the &ldquo;type&rdquo; venerated&mdash;namely, an exact and mathematical
+character. Biology, it was urged, was merely a special branch of
+physico-chemistry. As for beliefs in freedom, in art, morality and religion,
+these, like philosophy (metaphysics) itself, belonged to the earlier stages
+(the theological and metaphysical) of Comte&rsquo;s list, stages rapidly to be
+replaced by the third and final &ldquo;positive&rdquo; era.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such, briefly stated, were the affirmations so confidently put forward on
+behalf of science by its devoted worshippers. Confidence in science was a
+marked feature of the work written by Renan in the years 1848-1849, <i>L&rsquo;Avenir
+de la Science</i>. Yet, paradoxical as it may seem, Renan himself played a
+large part in undermining this confidence. Yet the time of his writing this
+work is undoubtedly the period when the confidence in science was most marked.
+By this it is not implied that an even greater confidence in science has not
+been professed since by many thinkers. That is probably true, but the important
+point is that at this time the confidence in science was less resisted than
+ever in its history. It seemed to have a clear field and positivism seemed to
+be getting unto itself a mighty victory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cult of facts, which is so marked a characteristic of the scientific or
+positivist temper, penetrated, it is interesting to note, into the realm of
+literature, where it assumed the form of &ldquo;realism.&rdquo; In his Intelligence we find
+Taine remarking, &ldquo;<i>de tout petits fails bien choisis, importants,
+significatifs, amplement circonstanciés et minutieusement notés, voilà
+aujourd&rsquo;hui la matière de toute science</i>.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-66" name="linknoteref-66" id="linknoteref-66"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+It was also, in the opinion of several writers, the <i>matière de toute
+littérature</i>. The passion for minute details shows itself in the realism of
+Flaubert and Zola, in the psychology of Stendthal* and the novels of the
+Goncourts. It was no accident that their works were so loved by Taine. A
+similar spirit of &ldquo;positivism&rdquo; or &ldquo;realism&rdquo; animated both them and him.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-66" id="linknote-66"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-66">[1]</a>
+Preface to <i>Intelligence</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the turn of the half century, however, a change manifested itself by the
+fact that the positivist current began to turn against itself, and our period
+is, in some respects, what Fouillée has called <i>la réaction centre la science
+positive</i>.<a href="#linknote-67" name="linknoteref-67" id="linknoteref-67"><sup>[2]</sup></a> The function of
+philosophy is essentially criticism, and although at that period the vitality
+of philosophy was low, it nevertheless found enough energy to criticise the
+demands and credentials of Science.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-67" id="linknote-67"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-67">[2]</a>
+Compare also Aliotta&rsquo;s book, <i>The Idealistic
+Reaction against Science</i>, Eng. trans., 19l4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publication of Claude Bernard&rsquo;s volume <i>Introduction à la Médecine
+experimentale</i><a href="#linknote-68" name="linknoteref-68" id="linknoteref-68"><sup>[3]</sup></a> drew from the pen of
+Paul Janet, the last of the Eclectic School dominated by Cousin, an article of
+criticism which appeared in the <i>Revue des Deux Mondes</i>, and was later
+published in his volume of essays entitled, <i>Les Problèmes du XIX<sup>e</sup>
+Siècle</i>. Although Janet&rsquo;s essay reveals all the deficiencies of the older
+spiritualism, he makes a gallant attempt to combat the dogmatism and the
+assumed finality of Bernard&rsquo;s point of view and that of the scientists in
+general. Janet regarded the sciences and their relation to philosophy as
+constituting an important problem for the century and in this judgment he was
+not mistaken.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-68" id="linknote-68"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-68">[3]</a>
+<i>Cf</i>. Livre III., <i>Science</i>, chap, i.,
+on &ldquo;Method in General&rdquo;; chap, ii., on The Experimental Method in Physiology,&rdquo;
+pp. 213-279.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+We have, in our Introductory Chapter, reckoned Auguste Comte among the
+influential antecedents of our period. Here, in approaching the study of the
+problem of science, we may note that the tendency towards the strictly
+scientific attitude, and to the promotion of the scientific <i>spirit</i> in
+general, was partly due to the influence of his positivism. Comte&rsquo;s intended
+Religion of Humanity failed, his system of positive philosophy has been
+neglected, but the SPIRIT which he inculcated has abided and has borne fruit.
+We would be wrong, however, if we attributed much to Comte as the originator of
+that spirit. His positive philosophy, although it greatly stimulated and
+strengthened the positive attitude adopted by the natural sciences, was itself
+in large measure inspired by and based upon these sciences. Consequently much
+of Comte&rsquo;s glory was a reflected light, his thought was a challenge to the old
+spiritualism, an assertion of the rights of the sciences to proclaim their
+existence and to demand serious consideration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although he succeeded in calling the attention of philosophy to the natural
+sciences, yet owing to the mere fact that he based himself on the sciences of
+his day much of his thought has become obsolete by the progress and extension
+of those very sciences themselves. He tended, with a curious dogmatism, to
+assign limits to the sciences by keeping them in separate compartments and in
+general by desiring knowledge to be limited to human needs. Although there is
+important truth in his doctrine of discontinuity or irreducible differences,
+the subsequent development of the natural sciences has cleared away many
+barriers which he imagined to be impassable. There still are, and may always
+be, gaps in our knowledge of the progress from inorganic to organic, from the
+living creature to self-conscious personality, but we have a greater conception
+of the unity of Nature than had Comte. Many new ideas and discoveries have
+transformed science since his day, particularly the doctrines dealing with heat
+as a form of motion, with light, electricity, and the radio-activity of matter,
+the structure of the atom, and the inter-relation of physics and chemistry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comte&rsquo;s claim for different methods in the different departments of science is
+of considerable interest, in view of present-day biological problems and the
+controversies of vitalists, mechanists and neo-vitalists.<a href="#linknote-69" name="linknoteref-69" id="linknoteref-69"><sup>[4]</sup></a> Although Comte insisted upon discontinuity, yet he
+urged the necessity for an <i>esprit d&rsquo;ensemble</i>, the consideration of
+things synthetically, in their &ldquo;togetherness.&rdquo; He feared that analysis, the
+<i>esprit de détail</i> or mathematisation, was being carried out <i>à
+l&rsquo;outrance</i>. This opinion he first stated in 1825 in his tract entitled
+<i>Considérations sur les Sciences et les Savants</i>. On the social side he
+brought this point out further by insisting on the <i>esprit d&rsquo;ensemble</i> as
+involving the social standpoint in opposition to a purely individualistic view
+of human life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-69" id="linknote-69"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-69">[4]</a>
+See, for example, <i>The Mechanism of Life</i>, by Dr.
+Johnstone, Professor of Oceanography in the University of Liverpool. (Arnold,
+1921.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comte was slow to realise the importance of Ethics as an independent study.
+Psychology he never recognised as a separate discipline, deeming it part of
+physiology. He gave a curious appreciation to phrenology. Unfortunately he
+overlooked the important work done by the introspectionist psychologists in
+England and the important work of Maine de Biran in his own country. One is
+struck by Comte&rsquo;s inability to appreciate the immense place occupied by
+psychology in modern life and in particular its expression in the modern novel
+and in much modern poetry. An acquaintance with the works of men like De
+Regnier, Pierre Loti and Anatole France is sufficient to show how large a
+factor the psychological method is in French literature and life. It is to be
+put down to Comte&rsquo;s eternal discredit that he failed to appreciate psychology.
+Here lies the greatest defect in his work, and it is in this connection that
+his work is now being supplemented. Positivism in France to-day is not a
+synonym for &ldquo;Comtism&rdquo; at all; the term is now employed to denote the spirit and
+temper displayed in the methods of the exact sciences. For Comte, we must never
+forget, scientific investigation was a means and not an end in itself. His main
+purpose was social and political regeneration. Positivism since Comte differs
+from his philosophy by a keen attention bestowed upon psychology, and many of
+Comte&rsquo;s inadequate conceptions have been enriched by the introduction of a due
+recognition of psychological factors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be noted that Comte died two years before Darwin&rsquo;s <i>chef-d&rsquo;œuvre</i>
+appeared, and that he opposed the doctrine of evolution as put forward by
+Lamarck. Although Comte&rsquo;s principle of discontinuity may in general have truth
+in it, the problem is a far more complicated one than he imagined it to be.
+Again, while Comte&rsquo;s opposition to the subjectivism of Cousin was a wholesome
+influence, he did not accord to psychology its full rights, and this alone has
+been gravely against the acceptance of his philosophy, and explains partly the
+rise and progress of the new spiritualist doctrines. His work served a useful
+purpose, but Comte never closed definitely with the problem of the precise
+significance of &ldquo;positivism&rdquo; or with its relation to a general conception of
+the universe; in short, he confined himself to increasing the scientific spirit
+in thought, leaving aside the difficulty of relating science and philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comte stated in his <i>Philosophie positive</i><a href="#linknote-70" name="linknoteref-70" id="linknoteref-70"><sup>[5]</sup></a> that he regarded attempts to explain all phenomena
+by reference to one law as futile, even when undertaken by the most competent
+minds well versed in the study of the sciences. Although he believed in
+discontinuity he tried to bridge some gaps, notably by his endeavour to refer
+certain physiological phenomena to the law of gravitation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-70" id="linknote-70"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-70">[5]</a>
+Vol. i., pp. 53-56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief work which this undoubtedly great mind accomplished was the
+organisation of the scientific spirit as it appeared in his time. Renan hardly
+does justice to him in his sarcastic remark in his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de
+Jeunesse</i>. &ldquo;I felt quite irritated at the idea of Auguste Comte being
+dignified with the title of a great man for having expressed in bad French what
+all scientific minds had seen for the last two hundred years as clearly as he
+had done.&rdquo; His work merits more than dismissal in such a tone, and we may here
+note, as the essence of the spirit which he tried to express, his definition of
+the positive or scientific attitude to the universe given at the commencement
+of his celebrated Cours de <i>Philosophie positive</i>. There, in defining the
+positive stage, Comte speaks of it as that period in which &ldquo;the human spirit,
+recognising the impossibility of obtaining absolute conceptions, abandons the
+search for the origin and the goal of the universe and the inner causes of
+things, to set itself the task merely of discovering, by reasoning and by
+experience combined, the effective laws of phenomena&mdash;that is to say,
+their invariable relations of succession and of similarity.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-71" name="linknoteref-71" id="linknoteref-71"><sup>[6]</sup></a> This positive spirit Comte strove to express rather
+than to originate, for it was already there in the sciences. Undoubtedly his
+work made it more prominent, more clear, and so we have to note an interaction
+between positivism in the sciences and in philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-71" id="linknote-71"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-71">[6]</a>
+Leçon i.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is equally important for our purpose to notice that the period was one rich
+in scientific thought. The work of Lavoisier and Bichat, both of whom as
+contemporaries of Maine de Biran, belong to the former century, was now bearing
+fruit. Lavoisier&rsquo;s influence had been great over chemistry, which he
+established on a modern basis, by formulating the important theory of the
+conservation of mass and by clearing away false and fan- tastic conceptions
+regarding combustion.<a href="#linknote-72" name="linknoteref-72" id="linknoteref-72"><sup>[7]</sup></a> Bichat, the great
+anatomist and physiologist, died in 1802, but the publication of his works in a
+completed form was not accomplished until 1854. The work and influence of the
+<i>Académie des Sciences</i> are noteworthy features of French culture at this
+time. There stands out prominently the highly important work of Cuvier in
+anatomy, zoology and palæontology.<a href="#linknote-73" name="linknoteref-73" id="linknoteref-73"><sup>[8]</sup></a> The
+nineteenth century was a period of great scientists and of great scientific
+theories. Leverrier, applying himself to the problem of the motions of Uranus,
+found a solution in the hypothesis of another planet, Neptune, which was
+actually discovered from his calculations in 1846. This was a notable victory
+for logical and scientific method. In 1809 Lamarck had outlined, prior to
+Spencer or Darwin, the scheme of the evolutionary theory (Transformism).<a href="#linknote-74" name="linknoteref-74" id="linknoteref-74"><sup>[9]</sup></a> Spencer&rsquo;s work, which appeared from 1850
+onwards, has always commanded respect and attention in France even among its
+critics.<a href="#linknote-75" name="linknoteref-75" id="linknoteref-75"><sup>[10]</sup></a> Interest increased upon the
+publication of Darwin&rsquo;s <i>Origin of Species</i> in 1859, and its translation
+into French in 1862. These dates coincide with the rise of the <i>Société
+d&rsquo;Anthropologie</i> de Paris, founded by Broca in the same year that Darwin&rsquo;s
+book appeared. Another translation from Darwin&rsquo;s work followed in 1872,
+<i>Descendance de l&rsquo;Homme</i>, which aroused further interest in the
+evolutionary theory. At the same time the work of men such as Pasteur,
+Bertrand, Berthelot and Bernard gave an impetus and a power to science.
+Poincare belongs rather to the twentieth century. Pasteur (1822-1895) showed
+mankind how science could cure its ills by patient labour and careful
+investigation, and earned the world&rsquo;s gratitude for his noble work. His various
+<i>Discours</i> and his volume, <i>Le Budget de la Science</i> (1868), show his
+faith in this progressive power of science. In Bertrand (1822-1900), his
+contemporary who held the position of Professor of Mathematics at the College
+de France, a similar attitude appears.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-72" id="linknote-72"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-72">[7]</a>
+Lavoisier perished at the guillotine in 1794, and his death was a tragic loss
+to science.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-73" id="linknote-73"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-73">[8]</a>
+Cuvier&rsquo;s <i>Anatomie comparée</i> appeared in the
+years 1800-1805, following his <i>Histoire naturelle</i> (1798-1799). Later
+came his <i>Rapport sur les Sciences naturelles</i> (1810) and his work <i>Le
+Regne animal</i> (1816).He died in 1832. We may note that Cuvier opposed the
+speculative evolutionary doctrines of Lamarck, with whom he indulged in
+controversy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-74" id="linknote-74"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-74">[9]</a>
+In his work, <i>Philosophie zoologique, ou
+Exposition des Considérations relatives a l&rsquo;Histoire naturelle des Animaux</i>,
+2 vols Paris, Dentu, 1809.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-75" id="linknote-75"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-75">[10]</a>
+His <i>Social Statics</i> was published in 1850, and
+his <i>Psychology</i> five years later. His life work, <i>The Synthetic
+Philosophy</i>, extends over the period 1860-1896.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the foremost scientific minds, however, was Claude Bernard (1813-1878),
+a friend of Renan, who held the Chair of Medicine at the College de France, and
+was, in addition, the Professor of Physiology at the Faculté des Sciences at
+the Sorbonne. Science, Bernard maintained, concerns itself only with phenomena
+and their laws. He endeavoured in his celebrated <i>Introduction à
+l&rsquo;Etude de la Médécine expérimentale</i>, published in 1865, to establish the
+science of physiology upon a sound basis, having respect only to fact, not
+owning homage to theories of a metaphysical character or to the authority of
+persons or creeds. He desired to obtain by such a rigorous and precise method,
+objectivity. &ldquo;The experimental method is,&rdquo; he insists, &ldquo;the really scientific
+method, which proclaims the freedom of the human spirit and its intelligence.
+It not only shakes off the yoke of metaphysics and of theology, in addition it
+refuses to admit personal considerations and subjective standpoints.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-76" name="linknoteref-76" id="linknoteref-76"><sup>[11]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-76" id="linknote-76"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-76">[11]</a>
+<i>Introduction à l&rsquo;Etude de la Médécine expérimentale</i>, chap. ii,
+sect. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bernard&rsquo;s attitude is distinctly that of a positivist, and the general tone of
+his remarks as well as his attitude on many special points agrees with that of
+Comte. His conclusions regarding physiology are akin to those expressed by
+Comte concerning biology. Bernard excludes any metaphysical hypothesis such as
+the operation of a vital principle, and adheres strictly to physicochemical
+formulas. He accepts, however, Comte&rsquo;s warning about the reduction of the
+higher to terms of the lower, or, in Spencerian phraseology, the explanation of
+the more complex by the less complex. Consequently, he carefully avoids the
+statement that he desires to &ldquo;reduce&rdquo; physiology to physics and chemistry. He
+makes no facile and light-hearted transition as did Spencer; on the contrary,
+he claims that the living has some specific quality which cannot be &ldquo;reduced&rdquo;
+to other terms, and which cannot be summed up in the formulae of physics or
+chemistry. The physiologist and the medical practitioner must never overlook
+the fact that every living being forms an organism and an individuality. The
+physiologist, continues Bernard, must take notice of this unity or harmony of
+the whole, even while he penetrates the interior to know the mechanism of each
+of its parts. The physicist and the chemist can ignore any notion of final
+causes in the facts they observe, but the physiologist must admit a harmonious
+finality, a harmony pre-established in the organism, whose actions form and
+express a unity and solidarity, since they generate one another. Life itself is
+<i>creation</i>; it is not capable of expression merely in physico-chemical
+formulae. The creative character, which is its essence, never can be so
+expressed. Bernard postulated an abstract, <i>idée directrice et créatrice</i>,
+presiding over the evolution of an organism. &ldquo;<i>Dans tout germe vivant, il y a
+une idée créatrice qui se développe et se manifeste par l&rsquo;organisation. Pendant
+toute sa durée l&rsquo;être vivant reste sous l&rsquo;influence de cette même
+force vitale, créatrice, et la mort arrive lorsqu&rsquo;elle ne peut plus se
+réaliser. Ici comme partout, tout dérive de l&rsquo;idée, qui, seule, crée et
+dirige</i>.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-77" name="linknoteref-77" id="linknoteref-77"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-77" id="linknote-77"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-77">[12]</a>
+<i>Introduction à l&rsquo;Etude de la Médécine
+expérimentale</i>, p.151 ff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The positivist spirit is again very marked in the doctrines of Berthelot
+(1827-1907), another very great friend of Renan, who, in addition to being a
+Senator, and Minister of Education and of Foreign Affairs, held the Chair of
+Organic Chemistry at the Collège de France. In 1886 he published his volume,
+Science et Philosophie, which contains some interesting and illuminating
+observations upon <i>La Science idéale et la Science positive</i>. Part of
+this, it may be noted, was written as early as 1863, in correspondence with
+Renan, and as a reply to a letter of his of which we shall speak
+presently.<a href="#linknote-78" name="linknoteref-78" id="linknoteref-78"><sup>[13]</sup></a> Berthelot states his case with a
+clearness which merits quotation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-78" id="linknote-78"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-78">[13]</a>
+See the <i>Fragments</i> of Renan, published 1876, pp
+193-241. <i>Reponse de M. Berthelot</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Positive science,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;seeks neither first causes nor the ultimate goal
+of things. In order to link together a multitude of phenomena by one single
+law, general in character and conformable to the nature of things, the human
+spirit has followed a simple and invariable method. It has stated the facts in
+accordance with observation and experience, compared them, extracted their
+relations, that is the general facts, which have in turn been verified by
+observation and experience, which verification constitutes their only guarantee
+of truth. A progressive generalisation, deduced from prior facts and verified
+unceasingly by new observations, thus brings our knowledge from the plane of
+particular and popular facts to general laws of an abstract and universal
+character. But, in the construction of this pyramid of science, everything from
+base to summit rests upon observation and experience. It is one of the
+principles of positive science that no reality can be established by a process
+of reasoning. The universe cannot be grasped by a <i>priori</i> methods.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like Comte, Berthelot believed in the progress of all knowledge through a
+theological and metaphysical stage to a definitely scientific or positive era.
+The sciences are as yet young, and we cannot imagine the development and
+improvement, social and moral, which will accrue from their triumph in the
+future. For Berthelot, as for Renan, the idea of progress was bound up
+essentially with the triumph of the scientific spirit. In a Discourse at the
+Sorbonne given in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of his being
+appointed Professor at the Collège de France, we find this faith in science
+reiterated. &ldquo;To-day,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;Science claims a triple direction of
+societies, materially, intellectually and morally. By this fact the role of the
+men of science, both as individuals and as a class, has unceasingly come to
+play a great part in modern states.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These scientific men, Berthelot and Bernard, with whom Renan was on terms of
+friendship, had a large influence in the formation of his thought, after he had
+quitted the seminary and the Church. As a young man Renan possessed the
+positive spirit in a marked degree, and did not fail to disclose his enthusiasm
+for &ldquo;Science&rdquo; and for the scientific method. His book <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la
+Science</i>, which we have already noted, was written when he was only
+twenty-five, and under the immediate influence of the events of 1848,
+particularly the socialist spirit of Saint-Simon and the &ldquo;organising&rdquo; attitude
+of Auguste Comte. It did not, however, see publication until 1890, when the
+Empire had produced a pessimistic temper in him, later accentuated by the
+Commune and the Prussian War. The dominant note of the whole work is the
+touching and almost pathetic belief in Science, which leads the young writer to
+an optimism both in thought and in politics. &ldquo;Science&rdquo; constitutes for him the
+all-in-all. Although he had just previously abandoned the seminary, his
+priestly style remained with him to such a degree that even his treatment of
+science is characterised by a mixture of the unction of the <i>curé</i> and the
+subtilty of the dialectician. Levites were still to be necessary to the people
+of Israel, but they were to be the priests of the most High, whose name,
+according to Renan, was &ldquo;Science.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His ardour for Science is not confined to this one book: it runs through all
+his writings. Prospero, a character who personifies rational thought in
+<i>L&rsquo;Eau de Jouvence</i>, one of Renan&rsquo;s <i>Drames philosophiques</i>,
+expresses an ardent love for science continually. In his preface to
+<i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i> we find Renan upon the same theme.
+Quaintly enough he not only praises the objectivity which is characteristic of
+the scientific point of view, but seems to delight in its abstraction. The
+superiority of modern science consists, he claims, in this very abstraction.
+But he is aware that the very indefatigability with which we fathom nature
+removes us, in a sense, further from her. He recognises how
+science leads away from the immediacy of vital and close contact with nature
+herself. &ldquo;This is, however, as it should be,&rdquo; asserts Renan, &ldquo;and let no one
+fear to prosecute his researches, for out of this merciless dissection comes
+life.&rdquo; He does not stay to assure us, or to enlighten us, as to how that life
+can be infused into the abstract facts which have resulted from the process of
+dissection. Fruitful and suggestive as many of his pages are, they fail to
+approach the concrete difficulties which this passage mentions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Writing from Dinant in Brittany in 1863 to his friend, Berthelot, Renan gives
+his view of the Sciences of Nature and the Historical Sciences. This letter,
+reprinted in his <i>Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques</i>, in 1876,
+expresses Renan&rsquo;s.views in a clear and simple form upon the place of science in
+his mind and also upon the idea of progress, as for him the two are intimately
+connected. Extreme confidence is expressed in the power of science. Renan at
+this time had written, but not published, his <i>Avenir de la Science</i>. In a
+brief manner this letter summarises much contained in the larger work. The
+point of view is similar. Science is to be the great reforming power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word &ldquo;Science&rdquo; is so constantly upon Renan&rsquo;s lips that we can see that it
+has become an obsession with mm to employ it, or a device. Certainly Renan&rsquo;s
+extensive and ill-defined usage of it conceals grave difficulties. One is
+tempted frequently to regard it as a synonym for philosophy or metaphysics, a
+word which he dislikes. That does not, however, add to clearness, and Renan&rsquo;s
+usage of &ldquo;Science&rdquo; as a term confuses both science and philosophy together.
+Even if this were not the case, there is another important point to note&mdash;
+namely, that even on a stricter interpretation Renan, by his wide use of the
+term, actually undermines the confidence in the natural sciences. For he
+embraces within the term &ldquo;Science&rdquo; not merely those branches of investigation
+which we term in general the sciences of nature, but also the critical study of
+language, of history and literature. He expressly endeavours to show in the
+letter to Berthelot that true science must include the product of man&rsquo;s spirit
+and the record of the development of that spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan assumed quite definitely a positivist attitude to metaphysics.
+&ldquo;Philosophy,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;is not a separate science; it is one side of every
+science. In the great optic pencil of human knowledge it is the central region
+where the rays meet in one and the same light.&rdquo; Metaphysical speculation he
+scorned, but he admitted the place for a criticism of the human mind such as
+had been given by Kant in <i>The Critique of Pure Reason</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kantian also, in its professions at least, was the philosophy of Vacherot, who
+stated that the aim of his work, <i>La Métaphysique et la Science</i>, was &ldquo;the
+reconciliation of metaphysics with science.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-79" name="linknoteref-79" id="linknoteref-79"><sup>[14]</sup></a>
+These dialogues between a philosopher and a man of science, for of such
+discussions the book is composed, never really help us to get close to the
+problem, for Vacherot&rsquo;s Kantianism is a profession which merely covers an
+actual positivism. His metaphysical doctrines are superimposed on a severe and
+rigid naturalism, but are kept from conflict with them, or even relation with
+them, by being allotted to a distant limbo of pure ideals, outside the world
+which science displays to us.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-79" id="linknote-79"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-79">[14]</a>
+See particularly his statements to this effect in his
+Preface, pp. xxxvii-xl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine, in spite of his severely positive attitude, was a strong champion of
+metaphysics. The sciences needed, he claimed, a science of first principles, a
+metaphysic. Without it, &ldquo;the man of science is merely a <i>manœuvre</i> and the
+artist a <i>dilettante</i>.&rdquo; The positive sciences he re- garded as inferior
+types of analysis. Above them &ldquo;is a superior analysis which is metaphysics, and
+which reduces or takes up these laws of the sciences into a universal formula.&rdquo;
+This higher analysis, however, does not give the lie to the others: it
+completes them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was indeed a belief and hope of Taine that the sciences will be more and
+more perfected until they can each be expressed in a kind of generic formula,
+which in turn may be capable of expression in some single formula. This single
+law is being sought by science and metaphysic, although it must belong to the
+latter rather than to the former. From it, as from a spring, proceeds,
+according to Taine, the eternal roll of events and the infinite sea of things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine&rsquo;s antagonism to the purely empirical schools centres round his conception
+of the law of causality. He disagrees with the assertion that this law is a
+synthetic, a <i>posteriori</i> judgment, a habit, as Hume said, or a mechanical
+<i>attente</i>, as Mill thought, or a generalisation of the sensation of effort
+which we feel in ourselves, as was suggested by Maine de Biran. Yet he also
+opposes Kant&rsquo;s doctrine, in which causality is regarded as a synthetic <i>a
+priori</i> judgment. His own criticism of Hume and Kant was directed to denial
+of the elements of heterogeneity in experience, which are so essential to
+Hume&rsquo;s view, and to a denial of the distinction maintained by Kant between
+logical and causal relations. Taine considered that all might be explained by
+logical relations, that all experience might some day be expressed in one law,
+one formula. The <i>more geometrico</i> of Spinoza and the &ldquo;universal
+mathematic&rdquo; of Descartes reappear in Taine. He even essays in
+<i>L&rsquo;Intelligence</i> to equate the principle of causality (<i>principe de
+raison explicative</i>) with that of identity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His attempt to reduce the principle of causality to that of identity did not
+succeed very well, and from the nature of the case this was to be expected. As
+Fouillée well points out in his criticism of Taine, both in <i>La Liberté et le
+Déterminisme</i> and the concluding pages of his earlier work on Plato,<a href="#linknote-80" name="linknoteref-80" id="linknoteref-80"><sup>[15]</sup></a> the notion of difference and heterogeneity which
+arises in the action of cause and effect can never be reducible to a mere
+identity, for the notion of identity has nothing in common with that of
+difference. Differences cannot be ignored; variety and change are undeniable
+facts of experience. Fouillée here touches the weak spot of Taine&rsquo;s doctrine.
+In spite of a seemingly great power of criticism there is an underlying
+dogmatism in his work, and the chief of those dogmas, which he does not submit
+to criticism, is the assertion of the universal necessity of all things. To
+this postulate he gives a false air of objectivity. He avoids stating why we do
+objectify causality, and he diverts discussion from the position that this
+postulate may itself be subjective.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-80" id="linknote-80"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-80">[15]</a>
+Vol. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The particular bearing of Taine&rsquo;s psychology upon the general problem of
+knowledge is interesting. He defines perception in <i>L&rsquo;Intelligence</i> as
+<i>une hallucination vraie</i>. His doctrine of the &ldquo;double aspect,&rdquo; physical
+and mental, recalls to mind the Modes of Spinoza. In his attitude to the
+difficult problem of movement and thought he rests in the dualism of Spinoza,
+fluctuating and not enunciating his doctrine clearly. The primacy of movement
+to thought he abandoned as too mechanical a doctrine, and regarded the type of
+existence as mental in character. Taine thus passes from the materialism of
+Hobbes to the idealism of Leibnitz. &ldquo;The physical world is reducible to a
+system of signs, and no more is needed for its construction and conception than
+the materials of the moral world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we feel ourselves constrained to admit the necessity of certain truths, if
+we are inclined to regard this as due to the character of our minds themselves
+(<i>notre structure mentale</i>), as Kant maintained, Taine reminds us that we
+must admit that our mind adapts itself to its environment. He here adopts the
+view of Spencer, a thinker who seems to have had far more influence upon the
+Continent than in his own country. Although Taine thus reposes his epistemology
+upon this basis, he does not answer the question which the Kantian can still
+put to him&mdash;namely, &ldquo;How do we know the structure of things?&rdquo; He is unable
+to escape from the difficulty of admitting either that it is from experience,
+an admission which his anti-empirical attitude forbids him to make (and which
+would damage his dogma of universal logical necessity), or that our knowledge
+is obtained by analysing our own thoughts, in which case he leaves us in a
+vicious circle of pure subjectivity from which there is no means of escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The truth is that Taine vainly tried to establish a phenomenal doctrine, not
+purely empirical in character like that of Hume, but a phenomenalism wedded to
+a necessity which is supposed to be self-explanatory. Such a notion of
+necessity, however, is formal and abstract. Rather than accept Taine&rsquo;s view of
+a law, a formula, an &ldquo;eternal axiom&rdquo; at the basis of things, we are obliged to
+postulate an activity, creative in character, of whose action universal laws
+are but expressions. Law, formula, axiom without action are mere abstractions
+which can of themselves produce nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine&rsquo;s positivism, however, was not so rigid as to exclude a belief in the
+value of metaphysics. It is this which distinguishes him from the Comtian
+School. We see in him the confidence in science complemented by an admission of
+metaphysics, equivalent to a turning of &ldquo;positivism&rdquo; in science and philosophy
+against itself. Much heavier onslaughts upon the sovereignty of science came,
+however, from the thinker who is the great logician and metaphysician of our
+period, Renouvier. To him and to Cournot we now turn.
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+While Taine had indeed maintained the necessity of a metaphysic, he shared to a
+large degree the general confidence in science displayed by Comte, Bernard,
+Berthelot and Renan. But the second and third groups of thinkers into which we
+have divided our period took up first a critical attitude to science and,
+finally, a rather hostile one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot marks the transition between Comte and Renouvier. His <i>Essai sur les
+Fondements de nos Connaissances et sur les Caractères de la Critique
+philosophique</i> contains some very calm and careful thought on the relation
+of science and philosophy, which is the product of a sincere and well-balanced
+mind.<a href="#linknote-81" name="linknoteref-81" id="linknoteref-81"><sup>[16]</sup></a> He inherits from the positivists an
+intense respect for scientific knowledge, and remarks at the outset that he is
+hostile to any philosophy which would be so foolish as to attempt to ignore the
+work of the modern sciences.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-81" id="linknote-81"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-81">[16]</a>
+See in particular the second chapter of vol. 2, <i>Du
+Contraste de la Science et de la Philosophie et de la Philosophie des
+Sciences</i>, pp. 216-255.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His work <i>Matérialisme, Vitalisme, Rationalisme</i> is a striking example of
+this effort on Cournot&rsquo;s part, being devoted to a study of the use which can be
+made in philosophy of the data afforded by the sciences. Somewhat after the
+manner of Comte, Cournot looks upon the various sciences as a hierarchy ranging
+from mathematics to sociology. Yet he reminds the scientists of the
+insufficiency of their point of view, for the sciences, rightly pursued, lead
+on to philosophy. He laments, however, the confusion of the two, and thinks
+that such confusion is &ldquo;partly due to the fact that in the realm of
+speculations which are naturally within the domain of the philosopher, there
+are to be found here and there certain theories which can actually be reduced
+to a scientific form&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-82" name="linknoteref-82" id="linknoteref-82"><sup>[17]</sup></a> He offers, as an
+instance of this, the theory of the syllogism, which has affinities to
+algebraical equations&mdash;but this interpenetration should not cause us, he
+argues, to abandon or to lose sight of the distinction between science and
+philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-82" id="linknote-82"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-82">[17]</a>
+<i>Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances</i>, vol.
+2, p. 224.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This distinction, according to Cournot, lies in the fact that science has for
+its object that which can be measured, and that which can be reduced to a
+rigorous chain or connection. In brief, science is characterised by quantity.
+Philosophy, on the other hand, concerns itself with quality, for it endeavours
+not so much to measure as to appreciate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot reminds the apostles of science that quantity, however intimately bound
+up with reality it may be, is not the essence of that reality itself. He is
+afraid, too, that the neglect of philosophy by science may cause the latter to
+develop along purely utilitarian lines. As an investigation of reality, science
+is not ultimate. It has limits by the fact that it is concerned with
+measurement, and thus is excluded from those things which are qualitative and
+incapable of quantitative expression. Science, moreover, has its roots in
+philosophy by virtue of the metaphysical postulates which it utilises as its
+basis. Physics and geometry, Cournot maintains, both rest upon definitions
+which owe their origin to speculative thought rather than to experience, yet
+these sciences claim an absolute value for themselves and for those postulates
+as being descriptions of reality in an ultimate sense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Following out his distinction between philosophy and the sciences, Cournot
+claims in a Kantian manner that while the latter are products of the human
+understanding the former is due to the operation of reason. This apparent
+dualism Cournot does not shrink from maintaining; indeed, he makes it an
+argument for his doctrine of discontinuity. The development of a science
+involves a certain breach with reality, for the progress of the science
+involves abstraction, which ever becomes more complicated. Cournot here brings
+out the point which we noticed was stressed by Renan.<a href="#linknote-83" name="linknoteref-83" id="linknoteref-83"><sup>[18]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-83" id="linknote-83"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-83">[18]</a>
+See above, p. 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reason produces in us the idea of order, and this &ldquo;idea of order and of reason
+in things is the basis of philosophic probability, of induction and
+analogy.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-84" name="linknoteref-84" id="linknoteref-84"><sup>[19]</sup></a> This has important bearings
+upon the unity of science and upon the conception of causality which it
+upholds. In a careful examination of the problems of induction and analogy,
+Cournot emphasises the truth that there are facts which cannot be fitted into a
+measured or logical sequence of events. Reality cannot be fitted into a formula
+or into concepts, for these fail to express the infinite variety and richness
+of the reality which displays itself to us. Science can never be adequate to
+life, with its pulsing spontaneity and freedom. It is philosophy with its
+<i>vue d&rsquo;ensemble</i> which tries to grasp and to express this concreteness,
+which the sciences, bound to their systematic connection of events within
+separate compartments, fail to reach or to show us. Referring to the ideas of
+beauty and of goodness, Cournot urges a &ldquo;transrationalism,&rdquo; as he calls it,
+which, while loyal to the rational requirements of science, will enable us to
+take the wider outlook assumed by philosophy.<a href="#linknote-85" name="linknoteref-85" id="linknoteref-85"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-84" id="linknote-84"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-84">[19]</a>
+<i>Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances</i>, p. 384.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-85" id="linknote-85"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-85">[20]</a>
+The parallelism of some of Cournot&rsquo;s ideas here
+with those expressed by Bergson, although they have been enunciated by the
+later thinker in a more decided manner, is so obvious as hardly to need to be
+indicated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like Cournot, the author of the <i>Essais de Critique générale</i> was a keen
+antagonist of all those who sought to deify Science. It was indeed this which
+led Renouvier to give this title to his great work, the first part of which was
+published at a time when the confidence in Science appeared to be comparatively
+unassailed. We find him defending philosophy as against the scientists and
+others by an insistence upon its critical function.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In examining Comte&rsquo;s positivism in his work <i>Histoire et Solution des
+Problèmes métaphysiques</i>, Renouvier points out that its initial idea is a
+false one&mdash;namely, that philosophy can be constituted by an assembling
+together of the sciences.<a href="#linknote-86" name="linknoteref-86" id="linknoteref-86"><sup>[21]</sup></a> Such an assembly
+does not, he objects, make a system. Each science has its own postulates, its
+own data, and Science as a whole unity of thought or knowledge does not exist.
+He attacks at the same time the calm presumption of the positivist who
+maintains that the scientific stage is the final and highest development.
+Renouvier is considerably annoyed at this unwarranted dogmatism and assumed air
+of finality.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-86" id="linknote-86"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-86">[21]</a>
+Book X.: <i>De l&rsquo;Etat actuel de la Philosophie en
+France</i>, chap. 1., <i>De l&rsquo;Aboutissement des Esprits au Positivisme</i>, pp.
+416-417.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owing to the excellent training he had received at the Ecole Polytechnique, and
+by his own profound study, Renouvier was able on many technical points to meet
+the scientists on their own ground. His third <i>Essai de Critique générale</i>
+is devoted to a study of &ldquo;the Principles of Nature,&rdquo; in which he criticises
+many of the principles and assumptions of mechanism, while many pages of his
+two previous <i>Essais</i> are concerned with the discussion of questions
+intimately affecting the sciences.<a href="#linknote-87" name="linknoteref-87" id="linknoteref-87"><sup>[22]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-87" id="linknote-87"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-87">[22]</a>
+This is particularly noticeable in the matter
+printed as appendices to his chapters. (<i>Cf</i>. the <i>Logic</i>, vol 2.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An important section of his second Essay, <i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>, deals
+with the &ldquo;Classification of the Sciences.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-88" name="linknoteref-88" id="linknoteref-88"><sup>[23]</sup></a> Renouvier there points out that the attempt
+to classify the sciences in accordance with their degrees of certainty ends in
+failure. All of them, when loyal to their own principles, endeavour to display
+equal certainty. By loyalty Renouvier shows that he means adherence to an
+examination of certain classes of phenomena, the observation of facts and laws,
+with the proposal of hypotheses, put forward frankly as such. He draws a line
+between the logical and the physical sciences&mdash;a division which he claims
+is not only a division according to the nature of their data, but also
+according to method. Following another division, we may draw a line between
+sciences which deal with objects which are organic, living creatures, and those
+which are not.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-88" id="linknote-88"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-88">[23]</a>
+Vol. 2, chap. xviii., <i>De la Certitude des
+Sciences et leur Classification rationnelle</i>, pp. 139-186, including later
+observations on Spencer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s line is not, it must be remembered in this connection, a purely
+imaginary one. It is a real line, an actual gap. For him there is a real
+discontinuity in the universe. Taine&rsquo;s doctrine of a universal explanation, of
+a rigid unity and continuity, is, for Renouvier, anathema, <i>c&rsquo;est la
+mathématisation a l&rsquo;outrance</i>. This appears most markedly in the pages which
+he devotes to the consideration of <i>la synthèse totale</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An important section of his <i>Traité de Logique</i> (the first <i>Essai de
+Critique générale</i>) deals with the problem of this Total Synthesis of all
+phenomena.<a href="#linknote-89" name="linknoteref-89" id="linknoteref-89"><sup>[24]</sup></a> This is a conception which
+Renouvier affirms to be unwarrantable and, indeed, in the last analysis
+impossible. A general synthesis, an organisation or connected hierarchy of
+sciences, is a fond hope, an illusion only of a mind which can overlook the
+real discontinuity which exists between things and between groups of things.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-89" id="linknote-89"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-89">[24]</a>
+Vol. I, pp. 107-115, and also vol. 2, pp. 202-245.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sees in it the fetish of the Absolute and the Infinite and the lure of
+pantheism, a doctrine to which he opposes his &ldquo;Personalism.&rdquo; He reminds the
+scientists that personality is the great factor to which all knowledge is
+related, and that all knowledge is relative. A law is a law, but the guarantee
+of its permanence is not a law. It is no more easy, claims Renouvier, to say
+why phenomena do not stop than it is to know why they have begun. Laws indeed
+abide, but &ldquo;not apart from conscious personalities who affirm them.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-90" name="linknoteref-90" id="linknoteref-90"><sup>[25]</sup></a> Further, attacking the self-confident and
+dogmatic attitude in the scientists, Renouvier reminds them that it is
+impossible to demonstrate <i>every</i> proposition; and in an important note on
+&ldquo;Induction and the Sciences&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-91" name="linknoteref-91" id="linknoteref-91"><sup>[26]</sup></a> he points out
+that induction always implies a certain <i>croyance</i>. This is no peculiar,
+mystical thing; it is a fact, he remarks, which colours all the interesting
+acts of human personality. He here approaches Cournot in observing that all
+speculation is attended by a certain coefficient of doubt or uncertainty and so
+becomes really rational belief. With Cournot, too, Renouvier senses the
+importance of analogy and probability in connection with hypotheses in the
+world of nature and of morals. In short, he recognises as central the problem
+of freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-90" id="linknote-90"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-90">[25]</a>
+<i>Logique</i>, vol. 2, p. 321.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-91" id="linknote-91"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-91">[26]</a>
+Note B to chap. xxxv. of the <i>Logique</i>, vol. 2, p. 13.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier attacks Comte&rsquo;s classification or &ldquo;hierarchy&rdquo; of the sciences as
+mischievous and inexact. It is not based, he claims, upon any distinction in
+method, nor of data. It is not true that the sciences are arranged by Comte in
+an order where they successively imply one another, nor in an order in which
+they have come to be constituted as &ldquo;positive&rdquo;.<a href="#linknote-92" name="linknoteref-92" id="linknoteref-92"><sup>[27]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-92" id="linknote-92"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-92">[27]</a>
+This outburst of attack is a sample of Renouvier&rsquo;s
+usual attitude to Positivism. (<i>Deuxième Essai</i>, vol. 2, pp. 166-170.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He justifies to the scientist the formulation of hypothesis as a necessary
+working method of co-ordinating in a provisional manner varying phenomena. Many
+hypotheses and inductions of science are, however, unjustifiable from a
+strictly logical standpoint, Renouvier reminds us. His chief objection,
+however, is that those hypotheses and inductions are put forward so frequently
+as certainties by a science which is dogmatic and surpasses its limits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Science, Renouvier claims, does not give us a knowledge of the absolute, but an
+understanding of the relative. It is in the light of his doctrine of relativity
+and of the application of the law of number that he criticises many of the
+attitudes adopted by the scientists. Whatever savours of the Absolute or the
+Infinite he opposes, and his view of cause depends on this. He scorns the
+fiction of an infinite regress, and affirms real beginnings to various classes
+of phenomena. Causality is not to be explained, he urges in his <i>Nouvelle
+Monadologie</i>, save by a harmony. He differs from Leibnitz, however, in
+claiming in the interests of freedom that this harmony is not pre-established.
+In meeting the doctrine of the reduction of the complex to the simple,
+Renouvier cites the case of &ldquo;reducing&rdquo; sound, heat, light and electricity to
+movement. This may be superficially correct as a generality, but Renouvier
+aptly points out that it overlooks the fact that, although they may all be
+abstractly characterised as movement, yet there are differences between them as
+movements which correspond to the differences of sensation they arouse in us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier upholds real differences, real beginnings, and, it must be added, a
+reality behind and beyond the appearances of nature. His <i>Monadologie</i>
+admits that &ldquo;we can continue to explain nature mathematically and mechanically,
+provided we recognise that it is an external appearance&mdash;that thought,
+mind or spirit is at the heart of it.&rdquo; This links Renouvier to the group of new
+spiritualists. His attitude to science is akin to theirs. He does not fear
+science when it confines itself to its proper limits and recognises these. It
+has no quarrel with philosophy nor philosophy with it. Advance in science
+involves, he believes, an advance also in theology and in metaphysics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sciences are responsible for working out the laws determining the
+development of the Universe. But between Science, an ideal unachieved, and the
+sciences which in themselves are so feeble, imperfect and limited, Renouvier
+claims that General Criticism, or Philosophy, has its place. &ldquo;In spite of the
+discredit into which philosophy has fallen in these days, it can and ought to
+exist. Its object has been always the investigation of God, man, liberty,
+immortality, the fundamental laws of the sciences. &lsquo;All these intimately
+connected and interpenetrating problems comprise the domain of philosophy.&rdquo; In
+those cases where no science is possible, this seeming impossibility must
+itself be investigated, and philosophy remains as a &ldquo;General Criticism&rdquo;
+(<i>Critique générale</i>) of our knowledge. &ldquo;It is this notion,&rdquo; he says,
+&ldquo;which I desired to indicate by banishing the word &lsquo;Philosophy&rsquo; from the title
+of my Essays. The name ought to change when the method changes.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-93" name="linknoteref-93" id="linknoteref-93"><sup>[28]</sup></a> Thus Renouvier seeks to establish a &ldquo;critique&rdquo;
+midway between scepticism and dogmatism, and endeavours to found a philosophy
+which recognises at one and the same time the demands of <i>science et
+conscience</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-93" id="linknote-93"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-93">[28]</a>
+<i>Logique</i>, vol. 2, p. 352.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+On turning to the spiritualist current of thought we find it, like the
+neo-criticism, no less keen in its criticism of science. The inadequacy of the
+purely scientific attitude is the recurring theme from Ravaisson to Boutroux,
+Bergson and Le Roy. The attitude assumed by Ravaisson coloured the whole of the
+subsequent development of the new spiritualist doctrines, and not least their
+bearing upon the problem of science and its relation to metaphysics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mechanism, Ravaisson pointed out, quoting the classical author upon whom he had
+himself written so brilliantly (Aristotle), does not explain itself, for it
+implies a &ldquo;prime mover,&rdquo; not itself in motion, but which produces movement by
+spiritual activity. Ravaisson also refers to the testimony of Leibnitz, who,
+while agreeing that all is mechanical, carefully added to this statement one to
+the effect that mechanism itself has a principle which must be looked for
+outside matter and which is the object of metaphysical research. This spiritual
+reality is found only, according to Ravaisson, in the power of goodness and
+beauty&mdash;that is to say, in a reality which is not non-scientific but
+rather ultra-scientific. There are realities, he claims, to which science does
+not attain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The explanation of nature presupposes soul or spirit. It is true, Ravaisson
+admits, that the physical and chemical sciences consider themselves independent
+of metaphysics; true also that the metaphysician in ignoring the study of those
+sciences omits much from his estimate of the spirit. Indeed, he cannot well
+dispense with the results of the sciences. That admission, however, does not do
+away with the possibility of a true &ldquo;apologia&rdquo; for metaphysics. To Newton&rsquo;s
+sarcastic remark, &ldquo;Physics beware of metaphysics,&rdquo; Hegel replied cogently that
+this was equivalent to saying, &ldquo;Physics, keep away from thought.&rdquo; Spirit,
+however, cannot be omitted from the account; it is the condition of all that
+is, the light by which we see that there is such a thing as a material
+universe. This is the central point of Ravaisson&rsquo;s philosophy. The sciences of
+nature may be allowed and encouraged to work diligently upon their own
+principles, but the very fact that they are individual sciences compels them to
+admit that they view the whole &ldquo;piecemeal&rdquo;. Philosophy seeks to interpret the
+whole as a whole. Ravaisson quotes Pascal&rsquo;s saying, &ldquo;<i>Il faut avoir une
+pensée de derrière la tête et juger de tout par là</i>.&rdquo; This
+<i>pensée de derrière la tête</i>, says Ravaisson, while not preventing
+the various sciences from speaking in their own tongue, is just the
+metaphysical or philosophical idea of the whole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is claimed, Aristotle used to say, that mathematics have absolutely nothing
+in common with the idea of the good. &ldquo;But order, proportion, symmetry, are not
+these great forms of beauty?&rdquo; asks Ravaisson. For him there is spirit at the
+heart of things, an activity, <i>un feu primitif qui est l&rsquo;âme</i>, which
+expresses itself in thought, in will and in love. It is a fire which does not
+burn itself out, because it is enduring spirit, an eternal cause, the absolute
+substance is this spiritual reality. Where the sciences fall short is that they
+fail to show that nature is but the refraction of this spirit. This is a fact,
+however, which both religion and philosophy grasp and uphold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These criticisms were disturbing for those minds who found entire satisfaction
+in Science or rather in the sciences, but they were somewhat general.
+Ravaisson&rsquo;s work inculcated a spirit rather than sustained a dialectic. Its
+chief value lay in the inspiration which it imparted to subsequent thinkers who
+endeavoured to work out his general ideas with greater precision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was this task which Lachelier set himself in his <i>Induction</i>. He had
+keenly felt the menace of science, as had Janet;<a href="#linknote-94" name="linknoteref-94" id="linknoteref-94"><sup>[29]</sup></a> he had appreciated the challenge offered to it by
+Ravaisson&rsquo;s ideas. Moreover, Lachelier&rsquo;s acute mind discovered the crucial
+points upon which the new spiritualism could base its attack upon the purely
+scientific dogmatism. Whatever Leibnitz might have said, creative spontaneity
+of the spirit, as it was acclaimed by Ravaisson, could not easily be fitted
+into the mechanism and determinism upheld by the sciences. Ravaisson had
+admitted the action of efficient causes in so far as he admitted the action of
+mechanism, which is but the outcome of these causes. In this way he endeavoured
+to satisfy the essential demands of the scientific attitude to the universe.
+But recognising the inadequacy of this attitude he had upheld the reality of
+final causes and thus opposed to the scientists a metaphysical doctrine akin to
+the religious attitude of Hellenism and Christianity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-94" id="linknote-94"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-94">[29]</a>
+We refer here to the quotation from Janet&rsquo;s <i>Problèmes du
+XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>, given above on p. 95. Janet himself wrote on
+<i>Final Causes</i> but not Wlth the depth or penetration of Lachelier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lachelier saw that the important point of Ravaisson&rsquo;s doctrine lay in the
+problem of these two types of causality. His thesis is therefore devoted to the
+examination of efficient and final causes. This little work of Lachelier marks
+a highly important advance in the development of the spiritualist philosophy.
+He clarifies and re-affirms more precisely the position indicated by Ravaisson.
+Lacheher tears up the treaty of compromise which was drafted by Leibnitz to
+meet the rival demands of science with its efficient causes and philosophy with
+its final causes. The world of free creative spontaneity of the spirit cannot
+be regarded, Lachelier claims (and this is his vital point), as merely the
+complement of, or the reflex from, the world of mechanism and determinism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He works out in his thesis the doctrine that efficient causes can be deduced
+from the formal laws of thought. This was Taine&rsquo;s position, and it was the
+limit of Taine&rsquo;s doctrine. Lachelier goes further and undermines Taine&rsquo;s
+theories by upholding final causes, which he shows depend upon the conception
+of a totality, a whole which is capable of creating its parts. This view of the
+whole is a philosophical conception to which the natural sciences never rise,
+and which they cannot, by the very nature of their data and their methods,
+comprehend. Yet it is only such a conception which can supply any rational
+basis for the unity of phenomena and of experience. Only by seeing the variety
+of all phenomena in the light of such an organic unity can we find any meaning
+in the term universe, and only thus, continues Lachelier, only on the principle
+of a rational and universal order and on the reality of final causes, can we
+base our inductions. The &ldquo;uniformity of nature,&rdquo; that fetish of the scientists
+which, as Lachelier well points out, is merely the empirical regularity of
+phenomena, offers no adequate basis for a single induction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lachelier developed his doctrines further in the article, <i>Psychologie et
+Métaphysique</i>. We can observe in it the marks which so profoundly
+distinguish the new spiritualism from the old, as once taught by Cousin. The
+old spiritualism had no place between its psychology and its metaphysics for
+the natural sciences. Indeed it was quite incapable of dealing with the problem
+which their existence and success presented, and so it chose to ignore them as
+far as possible. The new spiritualism, of which Lachelier is perhaps the
+profoundest speculative mind, not only is acquainted with the place and results
+of the sciences, but it feels itself equal to a criticism of them, an advance
+which marks a highly important development in philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this article Lachelier endeavours to pass beyond the standpoint of Cousin,
+and in so doing we see not only the influence of Ravaisson&rsquo;s ideas of the
+creative activity of the spirit, but also of the discipline of the Kantian
+criticism, with which Lachelier, unlike many of his contemporaries in France at
+that time, was well acquainted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He first shows that the study of psychology reveals to us the human powers of
+sensation, feeling and will. These are the immediate data of consciousness.
+Another element, however, enters into consciousness, not as these three, a
+definite content, but as a colouring of the whole. This other element is
+&ldquo;objectivity,&rdquo; an awareness or belief that the world without exists and
+continues to exist independently of our observation of it. Lachelier combats,
+however, the Kantian conception of the &ldquo;thing-in-itself.&rdquo; If, he argues, the
+world around us appears as a reality which is independent of our perception, it
+is <i>not</i> because it is a &ldquo;thing-in-itself,&rdquo; but rather it appears as
+independent because we, possessing conscious intelligence, succeed in making it
+an object of our thought, and thus save it from the mere subjectivity which
+characterises our sense-experience. It is upon this fact, Lachelier rightly
+insists, that all our science reposes. A theory of knowledge as proposed by
+Taine, based solely on sensation and professing belief in <i>hallucination
+vraie</i>, is itself a contradiction and an abuse of language. &ldquo;If thought is
+an illusion,&rdquo; remarks Lachelier, &ldquo;we must suppress all the sciences.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-95" name="linknoteref-95" id="linknoteref-95"><sup>[30]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-95" id="linknote-95"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-95">[30]</a>
+<i>Psychologie et Métaphisique</i>, p.151.(See especially the
+passages on pp.150-158.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then proceeds to show that if we admit thought to be the basis of our
+knowledge of the world, that is, of our sciences, then we admit that our
+sciences are themselves connstructions, based upon a synthetic, constructive,
+creative activity of our mind or spirit. For our thought is not merely another
+&ldquo;thing&rdquo; added to the world of things outside us. Our thought is not a given and
+predetermined datum, it is &ldquo;a living dialectic,&rdquo; a creative activity, a
+self-creative process, which is synthetic, and not merely analytic in
+character. &ldquo;Thought,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;can rest upon itself, while everything else can
+only rest upon it; the ultimate <i>point d&rsquo;appui</i> of all truth and of all
+existence is to be found in the absolute spontaneity of the spirit.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-96" name="linknoteref-96" id="linknoteref-96"><sup>[31]</sup></a> Here, Lachelier maintains, lies the real <i>a
+priori</i>; here, too, is the very important passage from psychology to
+metaphysics.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-96" id="linknote-96"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-96">[31]</a>
+<i>Psychologie et Métaphysique</i>, p. 158.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally his treatment of the problems of knowledge and of the foundations of
+science leads him to reemphasise not only the reality of spirit but its
+spontaneity. He recognises with Cournot and Renouvier that the vital problem
+for science and philosophy is that of freedom. The nature of existence is for
+Lachelier a manifestation of spirit, and is seen in will, in necessity and in
+freedom. It is important to note that for him it is <i>all</i> these
+simultaneously. &ldquo;Being,&rdquo; he remarks in concluding his brilliant essay,<a href="#linknote-97" name="linknoteref-97" id="linknoteref-97"><sup>[32]</sup></a> &ldquo;is not first, a blind necessity, then a
+will which must be for ever bound down in advance to necessity and, lastly, a
+freedom which would merely be able to recognise such necessity and such a bound
+will; being is entirely free, in so far as it is self-creative; it is entirely
+an expression of will, in so far as it creates itself in the form of something
+concrete and real; it is also entirely an expression of necessity, in so far as
+its self-creation is intelligible and gives an account of itself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-97" id="linknote-97"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-97">[32]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., p. 170.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this stage something in the nature of a temporary &ldquo;set-back&rdquo; is given to the
+flow of the spiritualist current by Fouillee&rsquo;s attitude, which takes a
+different line from that of Ravaisson and Lachelier. The attitude towards
+Science, which we find adopted by Fouillee, is determined by his two general
+principles, that of reconcilation, and his own doctrine of <i>idées-forces</i>.
+His conciliatory spirit is well seen in the fact that, although he has a great
+respect for science and inherits many of the qualities contained in Taine&rsquo;s
+philosophy, particularly the effort to maintain a regular continuity and
+solidarity in the development of reality, nevertheless he is imbued with the
+spirit of idealism which characterises all this group of thinkers. The result
+is a mixture of Platonism and naturalism, and to this he himself confesses in
+his work, <i>Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la Science
+positive</i>, where he expresses a desire &ldquo;to bring back Plato&rsquo;s ideas from
+heaven to earth, and so to make idealism consonant with naturalism.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-98" name="linknoteref-98" id="linknoteref-98"><sup>[33]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-98" id="linknote-98"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-98">[33]</a>
+<i>Le Mouvement idéaliste el la Réaction contre la Science
+positive</i>, p. xxi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée claims to take up a position midway between the materialists and the
+idealists. Neither standpoint is, in his view, adequate to describe reality. He
+is particularly opposed to the materialistic and mechanistic thought of the
+English Evolutionary School, as presented by Spencer and Huxley, with its
+pretensions to be scientific. Fouillee accepts, with them, the notion of
+evolution, but he disagrees entirely with Spencer&rsquo;s attempt to refer everything
+to mechanism, the mechanism of matter in motion. In any case, Fouillée claims,
+movement is a very slender and one-sided element of experience upon which to
+base our characterisation of all reality, for the idea of motion arises only
+from our visual and tactual experience. He revolts from the epiphenomenalism of
+Huxley as from a dire heresy. Consciousness cannot be regarded as a mere &ldquo;flash
+in the pan.&rdquo; Even science must admit that all phenomena are to be defined by
+their relation to, and action upon, other phenomena. Consciousness, so
+regarded, will be seen, he claims, as a unique power, possessing the property
+of acting upon matter and of initiating movement. It is itself a factor, and a
+very vital one, in the evolutionary process. It is no mere reflex or passive
+representation. On this point of the irreducibility of the mental life and the
+validity of its action, Fouillée parts company with Taine. On the other hand,
+he disagrees with the idealistic school of thought, which upholds a pure
+intellectualism and for whom thought is the accepted characterisation of
+reality. This, complains Fouillée, is as much an abstraction and a one-sided
+view as that of Spencer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this manner Fouillée endeavours to &ldquo;rectify the scientific conception of
+evolution&rdquo; by his doctrine of <i>idées-forces</i>. &ldquo;There is,&rdquo; he says,<a href="#linknote-99" name="linknoteref-99" id="linknoteref-99"><sup>[34]</sup></a> &ldquo;in every idea a commencement of action, and even
+of movement, which tends to persist and to increase like an <i>élan</i>. . . .
+Every idea is already a force.&rdquo; Psychologically it is seen in the active,
+conative or appetitive aspect of consciousness. To think of a thing involves
+already, in some measure, a tendency toward it, to desire it. Physiologically
+considered, <i>idées-forces</i> are found to operate, not mechanically, but by
+a vital solidarity which is much more than mere mechanism, and which unites the
+inner consciousness to the outer physical fact of movement. From a general
+philosophical point of view the doctrine of <i>idées-forces</i> establishes the
+irreducibility of the mental, and the fact that, so far from the mental being a
+kind of phosphorescence produced as a result of the evolutionary process, it is
+a prime factor in that evolution, of which mechanism is only a symbol. Here
+Fouillée rises almost to the spiritualism of Ravaisson. Mechanism, he declares,
+is, after all, but a manner of representing to ourselves things in space and
+time. Scientists speak of forces, but the real forces are ideas, and other
+so-called &ldquo;forces&rdquo; are merely analogies which we have constructed, based upon
+the inner mental feeling of effort, tendency, desire and will.<a href="#linknote-100" name="linknoteref-100" id="linknoteref-100"><sup>[35]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-99" id="linknote-99"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-99">[34]</a>
+<i>La Liberté et le Déterminisme</i>, p. 97, 4e ed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-100" id="linknote-100"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-100">[35]</a>
+This was a point upon which Maine de Biran had insisted. (See p. 20.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scientists have too often, as Fouillée well points in his work on
+<i>L&rsquo;Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces</i>, regarded the concept of Evolution as
+all-sufficing, as self-explanatory. Philosophy, however, cannot accept such
+dogmatism from science, and asserts that evolution is itself a result and not
+in itself a cause. With such a view Fouillée is found ultimately in the line of
+the general development of the spiritual philosophy continuing the hostility
+to science as ultimate or all-sufficing. Further developments of this attitude
+are seen in Boutroux and in Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the work of Boutroux we find a continuation of that type of criticism of
+science which was a feature in Ravaisson and Lachelier. He has also affinities
+with Renouvier (and, we may add, with Comte), because of his insistence upon
+the discontinuity of the sciences; upon the element of &ldquo;newness&rdquo; found in each
+which prevents the higher being deduced from the lower, or the superior
+explained by reference to the inferior. Boutroux opposes Spencer&rsquo;s doctrines
+and is a keen antagonist of Taine and his claim to deduce all from one formula.
+Such a notion as that of Taine is quite absurd, according to Boutroux, for
+there is no necessary bond between one and another science. This is Boutroux&rsquo;s
+main point in <i>La Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By a survey of laws of various types, logical, mathematical, mechanical,
+physical, chemical, biological, psychological and sociological, Boutroux
+endeavours to show that they are constructions built up from facts. Just as
+nature offers to the scientist facts for data, so the sciences themselves offer
+these natural laws as data to the philosopher, for his constructed explanation
+of things which is metaphysics or philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the actual condition of our knowledge,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;science is not one,
+but multiple; science, conceived as embracing all the sciences, is a mere
+abstraction.&rdquo; This is a remark which recalls Renouvier&rsquo;s witty saying, &ldquo;I
+should very much like to meet this person I hear so much about, called
+&lsquo;science.&rsquo;&rdquo; We have only sciences, each working after its own manner upon a
+small portion of reality. Man has a thirst for knowledge, and he sees, says
+Boutroux, in the world an &ldquo;ensemble&rdquo; of facts of infinite variety. These facts
+man endeavours to observe, analyse, and describe with increasing exactness.
+Science, he points out, is just this description.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is futile to attempt a resolution of all things into the principle of
+identity. &ldquo;The world is full of a number of things,&rdquo; and, therefore, argues
+Boutroux, the formula A = B can never be strictly and absolutely true. &ldquo;Nature
+never offers to us identities, but only resemblances.&rdquo; This has important
+bearing upon the law of causality, of which the sciences make so much. For
+there is such a degree of heterogeneity in the things to which the most
+elementary and general laws of physics and chemistry are applied that it is
+impossible to say that the consequent is proportional to the
+antecedent&mdash;that is to say, it is impossible to work out absolutely the
+statement that an effect is the unique result of a certain invariable cause.
+The fundamental link escapes us and so, for us, there is a certain contingency
+in experience. There is, further, a creativeness, a newness, which is
+unforeseeable. The passage from the inorganic to the organic stresses this, for
+the observation of the former would never lead us to the other, for it is a
+creation, a veritable &ldquo;new&rdquo; thing. Boutroux is here dealing hard blows at
+Taine&rsquo;s conception. He continues it by showing that in the conscious living
+being we are introduced to a new element which is again absolutely irreducible
+to physical factors. Life, and consciousness too, are both creators. The life
+of the mind is absolutely <i>sui generis</i>; it cannot be explained by
+physiology, by reflex action, or looked upon as merely an epiphenomenon.
+Already Boutroux finds himself facing the central problem of Freedom. He
+recognises that as psychological phenomena appear to contain qualities not
+given in their immediate antecedents, the law of proportion of cause to effect
+does not apply to the actions of the human mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The principle of causality and the principle of the conservation of energy are
+m themselves scientific &ldquo;shibboleths,&rdquo; and neither of them, asserts Boutroux,
+can be worked out so absolutely as to justify themselves as ultimate
+descriptions of the universe. They are valuable as practical maxims for the
+scientist, whose object is to follow the threads of action in this varied world
+of ours. They are incomplete, and have merely a relative value. Philosophy
+cannot permit their application to the totality of this living, pulsing
+universe. For cause, we must remember, does not in its strictly scientific
+meaning imply creative power. The cause of a phenomenon is itself a phenomenon.
+&ldquo;The positive sciences in vain pretend to seize the divine essence or reason
+behind things.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-101" name="linknoteref-101" id="linknoteref-101"><sup>[36]</sup></a> They arrive at descriptive
+formulæ and there they leave us. But, as Boutroux well reminds us in concluding
+his thesis, formulas never explain anything because they cannot even explain
+themselves. They are simply constructions made by observation and abstraction
+and which themselves require explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-101" id="linknote-101"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-101">[36]</a>
+<i>Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>, p 154.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The laws of nature are not restrictions which have been, as it were, imposed
+upon her They are themselves products of freedom; they are, in her, what habits
+are to the individual. Their constancy is like the stability of a river-bed
+which the freely running stream at some early time hollowed out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The world is an assembly of beings, and its vitality and nature cannot be
+expressed in a formula. It comprises a hierarchy of creatures, rising from
+inorganic to organic forms, from matter to spirit, and in man it displays an
+observing intelligence, rising above mere sensibility and expressly modifying
+things by free will. In this conception Boutroux follows Ravaisson, and he is
+also influenced by that thinker&rsquo;s belief in a spiritual Power of goodness and
+beauty. He thus leads us to the sphere of religion and philosophy, both of
+which endeavour, in their own manner, to complete the inadequacy of the purely
+scientific standpoint. He thus stands linked up in the total development with
+Cournot and Renouvier, and in his own group with Lachelier, in regard to this
+question of the relation of philosophy and the sciences.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The critique of science, which is so prominent in Boutroux, was characteristic
+of a number of thinkers whom we cannot do more than mention here in passing,
+for in general their work is not in line with the spiritualist development, but
+is a sub-current running out and separated from the main stream. This is shown
+prominently in the fact that, while Boutroux&rsquo;s critique is in the interests of
+idealism and the maintenance of some spiritual values, much subsequent
+criticism of science is a mere empiricism and, being divorced from the general
+principles of the spiritualist philosophy, tends merely to accentuate a vein of
+uncertainty&mdash;indeed, scepticism of knowledge. Such is the general
+standpoint taken by Milhaud, Payot, and Duhem. Rather apart from these stands
+the works of acute minds like Poincaré, Durand de Gros, and Hannequin, whose
+discussion of the atomic doctrines is a work of considerable merit. To these
+may be added Lalande&rsquo;s criticism of the doctrine of evolution and integration
+by his opposing to it that of dissolution and disintegration. Passing
+references to these books must not, however, detain us from following the main
+development which, from Boutroux, is carried on by Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We find that Bergson, like Boutroux, holds no brief for science, and in
+particular he opposes some of its doctrines which have been dogmatically and
+uncritically accepted. His work, <i>Matiére et Mémoire</i>, is a direct
+critique of the scientific postulate of psycho-physical parallelism which
+Bergson regards as the crux of the problem at issue between science and
+philosophy&mdash;namely, that of freedom. He shows that this theory, which has
+been adopted by science because of its convenience, ought not to be accepted by
+philosophy without criticism. In his opinion it cannot stand the criticism
+which he brings against it. A relation between soul and body is undeniable, but
+he does not agree that that relation is one of absolute parallelism. To
+maintain parallelism is to settle at once and beforehand, in an unwarrantably
+<i>a priori</i> manner, the whole problem of freedom. His intense spiritualism
+sees also in such a doctrine the deadly enemy Epiphenomenalism, the belief that
+the spiritual is only a product of the physical. He maintains the unique and
+irreducible nature of consciousness, and claims that the life of the soul or
+spirit is richer and wider than the mere physical activity of the brain, which
+is really its instrument. Bergson asks us to imagine the revolution which might
+have been, had our early scientists devoted themselves to the study of mind
+rather than matter, and claims that we suffer from the dogmatism of
+materialistic science and the geometrical and mathematical conceptions of &ldquo;a
+universal science&rdquo; or &ldquo;mathematic&rdquo; which come from the seventeenth century, and
+are seen later in Taine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The inadequacy of the scientific standpoint is a theme upon which Bergson never
+tires of insisting. Not only does he regard a metaphysic as necessary to
+complete this inadequacy, but he claims that our intellect is incapable of
+grasping reality in its flux and change. The true instrument of metaphysics is,
+according to him, intuition. Bergson&rsquo;s doctrine of intuition does not, however,
+amount to a pure hostility to intellectual constructions. These are valuable,
+but they are not adequate to reality. Metaphysics cannot dispense with the
+natural sciences. These sciences work with concepts, abstractions, and so
+suffer by being intellectual moulds. We must not mistake them for the living,
+pulsing, throbbing reality of life itself which is far wider than any
+intellectual construction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By his insistence upon this point, in which he joins hands with several of his
+predecessors, Bergson claims to have got over the Kantian difficulties of
+admitting the value and possibility of a metaphysic. There is nothing
+irrational, he insists, in his doctrine of metaphysical intuition or
+&ldquo;intellectual sympathy&rdquo;; it is rather super-rational, akin to the spirit of the
+poet and the artist. The various sciences can supply data and, as such, are to
+be respected, for they have a relative value. What Bergson is eager to do is to
+combat their absolute value. His metaphysic is, however, no mere &ldquo;philosophy of
+the sciences&rdquo; in the sense of being a mere summary of the results of the
+sciences. His intuition is more than a mere generalisation of facts; it is an
+&ldquo;integral experience,&rdquo; a penetration of reality in its flux and change, a
+looking upon the world <i>sub specie durationis</i>. It is a vision, but it is
+one which we cannot obtain without intellectual or scientific labour. We can
+become better acquainted with reality only by the progressive development of
+science <i>and</i> philosophy. We cannot live on the dry bread of the sciences
+alone, an intuitional philosophy is necessary for our spiritual welfare.
+Science promises us well-being or pleasure, but philosophy, claims Bergson, can
+give us joy, by its intuitions, its super-intellectual vision, that vital
+contact with life itself in its fulness, which is far grander and truer than
+all the abstractions of science. This is the culmination of much already
+indicated in Cournot, Renouvier, Ravaisson, Lachelier, and Boutroux, which
+Bergson presents in a manner quite unique, thus closing in our period the
+development of that criticism and hostility to the finality and absoluteness of
+the purely scientific attitude which is so marked a feature of both our second
+and third groups, the neo-critical thinkers and the neo-spiritualists.
+</p>
+
+<p class="asterism">
+*    *    *    *    *    *    *    *    *
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beginning with a glowing confidence in the sciences as ultimate interpretations
+of reality, we thus have witnessed a complete turn of the tide during the
+develop-* since 1851. Also, in following out the changes in the attitude
+adopted to Science, we have been enabled to discover in a general manner that
+the central and vital problem which our period presents is that of Freedom. It
+will be interesting to find whether in regard to this problem, too, a similar
+change of front will be noticeable as the period is followed to its close.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTE.&mdash;The reader may be interested to find that Einstein has brought out
+some of Boutroux&rsquo;s points very emphatically, and has confirmed the view of
+geometry held by Poincaré. Compare the following statements:<br/>
+    Boutroux: &ldquo;Mathematics cannot be applied with exactness to reality.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Mathematics and experience can never be exactly fitted into each other.&rdquo;<br/>
+    Poincaré: &ldquo;Formulæ are not true, they are convenient.&rdquo;<br/>
+    Einstein: &ldquo;If we deny the relation between the body of axiomatic Euclidean
+geometry or the practically rigid body of reality, we readily arrive at the
+view entertained by that acute and profound thinker, H. Poincaré . . . <i>Sub
+specie æterni</i>, Poincaré, in my opinion, is right&rdquo; (<i>Sidelights on
+Relativity</i>, pp. 33-35).
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV<br/>
+FREEDOM</h2>
+
+<p>
+INTRODUCTORY: The central problem of our period&mdash;The reconciliation of
+science with man&rsquo;s beliefs centres around the question of
+Freedom&mdash;Unsatisfactoriness of Kant&rsquo;s solution felt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. The positivist belief in universal and rigid determinism, especially shown in
+Taine. Renan&rsquo;s view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Cournot and Renouvier uphold Freedom&mdash;Strong logical and moral case put
+forward for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. The new spiritualists, Ravaisson and Lacheher, set Freedom in the forefront of
+their philosophy&mdash;Fouillée attempts a reconciliation by the idea of
+Freedom as a determining force&mdash;Guyau, Boutroux, Blondel and Bergson
+insist on the reality of Freedom&mdash;They surpass Cournot and Renouvier by
+upholding contingency &mdash;This is especially true of Guyau, Boutroux and
+Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Belief in creativeness and spontaneity replace the older belief in determinism.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IV<br/>
+FREEDOM</h3>
+
+<p>
+The discussions regarding the relation between science and philosophy led the
+thinkers of our period naturally to the crucial problem of freedom. Science has
+almost invariably stood for determinism, and men were becoming impatient of a
+dogmatism which, by its denial of freedom, left little or no place for man, his
+actions, his beliefs, his moral feelings.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;<i>La nature fatale offre à la Liberté<br/>
+Un problème</i>.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-102" name="linknoteref-102" id="linknoteref-102"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-102" id="linknote-102"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-102">[1]</a>
+Guyau, in his <i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i>, &ldquo;<i>Moments de
+Foi</i>&mdash;I.,&rdquo; <i>En lisant Kant</i>, p. 57.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was precisely this problem which was acutely felt in the philosophy of our
+period as it developed and approached the close of the century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a celebrated passage of his <i>Critique of Judgment</i> the philosopher Kant
+had drawn attention to the necessity of bringing together the concept of
+freedom and the concept of nature as constructed by modern science, for the two
+were, he remarked, separated by an abyss. He himself felt that the realm of
+freedom should exercise an influence upon the realm of science, but his own
+method prohibited his attempting to indicate with any preciseness what that
+influence might be. The fatal error of his system, the artificial division of
+noumena and phenomena, led him to assign freedom only to the world of noumena.
+Among phenomena it had no place, but reigned transcendent, unknown and
+unknowable, beyond the world we know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The artificiality of such a solution was apparent to the thinkers who followed
+Kant, and particularly was this felt in France. &ldquo;Poor consolation is it,&rdquo;
+remarked Fouillée, in reply to Kant&rsquo;s view, &ldquo;for a prisoner bound with chains
+to know that in some unknown realm afar he can walk freely devoid of his
+fetters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The problem of freedom, both in its narrow sphere of personal free-will and in
+its larger social significance, is one which has merited the attention of all
+peoples in history. France, however, has been pre-eminently a cradle for much
+acute thought on this matter. It loomed increasingly large on the horizon as
+the Revolution approached, it shone brilliantly in Rousseau. Since the
+Revolution it has been equally discussed, and is the first of the three
+watchwords of the republic, whose philosophers, no less than its politicians,
+have found it one of their main themes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The supreme importance of the problem of freedom in our period was due mainly
+to the need felt by all thinkers for attempting, in a manner different from
+that of Kant, a reconciliation between science and morals (<i>science et
+conscience</i>), and to find amid the development of scientific thought a place
+for the personality of the thinker himself, not merely as a passive spectator,
+but as an agent, a willing and acting being. Paul Janet, in his essays entitled
+<i>Problèmes du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>,<a href="#linknote-103" name="linknoteref-103" id="linknoteref-103"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+treating the question of science, asks whether the growing precision of the
+natural sciences and &ldquo;the extension of their &lsquo;positive&rsquo; methods, which involve
+a doctrine or assumption of infallible necessity, do not imperil gravely the
+freedom of the moral agent?&rdquo; While himself believing that, however closely the
+sciences may seem to encroach upon the free power of the human soul, they will
+only approach in an indefinite &ldquo;asymptote,&rdquo; never succeeding in annulling it,
+he senses the importance of the problem. Science may endeavour to tie us down
+to a belief in universal and rigid determinism, but the human spirit revolts
+from the acceptance of such a view, and acclaims, to some degree at least, the
+reality of a freedom which cannot be easily reconciled with the determinist
+doctrines.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-103" id="linknote-103"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-103">[2]</a>
+Published in 1872.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the period which we have under review the central problem is undoubtedly
+that of freedom. Practically all the great thinkers in France during this
+period occupied themselves with this problem, and rightly so, for they realised
+that most of the others with which philosophy concerns itself depend in a large
+degree upon the attitude adopted to freedom. Cournot, Renouvier, Ravaisson,
+Lachelier, Fouillée, Boutroux, Blondel and Bergson have played the chief part
+in the arena of discussion, and although differing considerably in their
+methods of treatment and not a little in the form of their conclusions, they
+are at one in asserting the vital importance of this problem and its primacy
+for philosophy. The remark of Fouillée is by no means too strong: &ldquo;The problem
+which we are going to discuss is not only a philosophical problem; it is,
+<i>par excellence</i>, <i>the</i> problem for philosophy. All the other
+questions are bound up with this.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-104" name="linknoteref-104" id="linknoteref-104"><sup>[3]</sup></a> This truth
+will be apparent when, after showing the development of the doctrines
+concerning freedom, we come, in our subsequent chapters, to consider its
+application to the questions of progress, of ethics and of the philosophy of
+religion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-104" id="linknote-104"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-104">[3]</a>
+In his preface to his Thesis <i>Liberté et Déterminisme</i>, later editions, p.
+vii.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+We find in the thought of our period a very striking development or change in
+regard to the problem of freedom. Beginning with a strictly positivist and
+naturalist belief in determinism, it concludes with a spiritualism or idealism
+which not only upholds freedom but goes further in its reaction against the
+determinist doctrines by maintaining contingency.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine and Renan both express the initial attitude, a firm belief in
+determinism, but it is most clear and rigid in the work of Taine. His whole
+philosophy is hostile to any belief in freedom. The strictly positivist,
+empiricist and naturalist tone of his thought combined with the powerful
+influence of Spinoza&rsquo;s system to produce in him a firm belief in
+necessity&mdash;a necessity which, as we have seen, was severely rational and
+of the type seen in mathematics and in logic. Although it must also be admitted
+that in this view of change and development Taine was partly influenced by the
+Hegelian philosophy, yet his formulations were far more precise and
+mathematical than those of the German thinker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have, in considering his attitude to science, seen the tenacious manner in
+which he clings to his dogma of causality or universal necessity. All living
+things, man included, are held in the firm grip of &ldquo;the steel pincers of
+necessity.&rdquo; Every fact and every law in the universe has its <i>raison
+explicative</i>, as Taine styles it. He quotes with approval, in his treatment
+of this question at the close of his work <i>De l&rsquo;Intelligence</i>, the words
+of the great scientist and positivist Claude Bernard: &ldquo;<i>Il y a un
+déterminisme absolu, dans les conditions d&rsquo;existence des phénomènes naturels,
+aussi bien pour les corps vivants que pour les corps bruts</i>.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-105" name="linknoteref-105" id="linknoteref-105"><sup>[4]</sup></a> In Taine and the school of scientists like Bernard,
+whose opinions on this matter he voices, no room is accorded to freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-105" id="linknote-105"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-105">[4]</a>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Intelligence</i>, vol. 2, p. 480, the quotation
+from Bernard is to be found in his <i>Introduction à l&rsquo;Etude de la
+Médecine expérimentale</i>, p. 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taine&rsquo;s belief in universal necessity and his naturalistic outlook led him to
+regard man from the physical standpoint as a mechanism, from the mental point
+of view a theorem. Vice and virtue are, to quote his own words, &ldquo;products just
+as vitriol or sugar.&rdquo; This remark having appeared to many thinkers a scandalous
+assertion, Taine explained in an article contributed to the <i>Journal des
+Débats</i><a href="#linknote-106" name="linknoteref-106" id="linknoteref-106"><sup>[5]</sup></a> that he did not mean to say
+that vice and virtue were, like vitriol or sugar, <i>chemical</i> but they are
+nevertheless products, <i>moral</i> products, which moral elements bring into
+being by their assemblage. And, he argues, just as it is necessary in order to
+make vitriol to know the chemical elements which go to its composition, so in
+order to create in man the hatred of a lie it is useful to search for the
+psychological elements which, by their union, produce truthfulness.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-106" id="linknote-106"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-106">[5]</a>
+On December 19th, 1872.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even this explanation of his position, however, did not prevent the assertion
+being made that such a view entirely does away with all question of moral
+responsibility. To this criticism Taine objected. &ldquo;It does not involve moral
+indifference. We do not excuse a wicked man because we have explained to
+ourselves the causes of his wickedness. One can be determinist with Leibnitz
+and nevertheless admit with Leibnitz that man is responsible &mdash;that is to
+say, that the dishonest man is worthy of blame, of censure and punishment,
+while the honest man is worthy of praise, respect and reward.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In one of his <i>Essais</i> Taine further argued in defence of his doctrine of
+universal determination that since WE ourselves are determined&mdash;that is to
+say, since there is a psychological determinism as well as a physical
+determinism&mdash;we do not feel the restriction which this determinism
+implies, we have the illusion of freedom and act just as if we were free. To
+this Fouillée replied that the value of Taine&rsquo;s argument was equal to that of a
+man who might say, &ldquo;Because <i>I</i> am asleep, all of me, all my powers and
+faculties, therefore I am in a state where I am perfectly free and
+responsible.&rdquo; Certainly Taine&rsquo;s remark that <i>we</i> are determined had
+nothing in common with the belief in that true determinism, which is equally
+true freedom, since it is <i>self</i>-determination. Taine professed no such
+doctrine, and rested in a purely naturalistic fatalism, built upon formulæ of
+geometry and logic, in abstraction from the actual living and acting of the
+soul, and this dogma of determinism, to which he clung so dearly, colours his
+view of ethics and of history. For Taine, &ldquo;the World is a living geometry&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;man is a theorem that walks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like Taine, Renan set out from the belief in universal causation, but he
+employed the conception not so much in a warfare against man&rsquo;s freedom of
+action as against the theologians&rsquo; belief in miracle and the supernatural.
+There is none of Taine&rsquo;s rigour and preciseness in Renan, and it is difficult
+to grasp his real attitude to the problem of freedom. If he ever had one, may
+be doubted. The blending of viewpoints, the paradox so characteristic of him,
+seems apparent even in this question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His intense humanism prompted him to remarks in praise of freedom, and he seems
+to have recognised in man a certain power of freedom; but in view of his belief
+in universal cause he is careful to qualify this. Further, his intensely
+religious mind remained in love with the doctrine of divine guidance which is
+characteristic of Christian and most religious thought. Although Renan left the
+Church, this belief never left Renan. He sees God working out an eternal
+purpose in history, and this he never reconciled with the problem of man&rsquo;s free
+will. The humanist in him could remark that the one object of life is the
+development of the mind, and the first condition for this is freedom. Here he
+appears to have in view freedom from political and religious restrictions. He
+is thinking of the educational problem. His own attitude to the ultimate
+question of freedom in itself, as opposed to determinism, is best expressed in
+his <i>Examen d&rsquo;une Conscience philosophique</i>. He there shows that the
+universe is the result of a lengthy development, the. beginnings of which we do
+not know. &ldquo;In the innumerable links of that chain,&rdquo; says Renan, &ldquo;we find not
+one free act before the appearance of man, or, if you like, living beings.&rdquo;
+With man, however, freedom comes into the scheme of things. A free cause is
+seen employing the forces of nature for willed ends. Yet this is but nature
+itself blossoming to self-consciousness; this free cause emanates from nature
+itself. There is no rude break between man with his free power and unconscious
+nature. Both are interconnected. Freedom is indeed the appearance of something
+&ldquo;new,&rdquo; but it is not, insists Renan, something divorced from what has gone
+before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We see in Renan a rejection of the severely deterministic doctrine of Taine,
+but it is by no means a complete rejection or refutation of it. Renan adheres
+largely to the scientific and positivist attitude which is such a feature of
+Taine&rsquo;s work. His humanism, however, recognises the inadequacy of such
+doctrines and compels him to speak of freedom as a human factor, and he thus
+brings us a step nearer to the development of the case for freedom put forward
+so strongly by Cournot and Renouvier and by the neo-spiritualists.
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+A very powerful opposition to all doctrines based upon or upholding determinism
+shows itself in the work of Cournot and the neo-critical philosophy. The idea
+of freedom is a central one in the thought of both Cournot and Renouvier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot devoted his early labours to a critical and highly technical
+examination of the question of probability, considered in its mathematical
+form, a task for which he was well equipped.<a href="#linknote-107" name="linknoteref-107" id="linknoteref-107"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+Being not only a man of science but also a metaphysician, or rather a
+philosopher who approached metaphysical problems from the impulse and data
+accorded him by the sciences, Cournot was naturally led to the wider problem of
+<i>probabilité philosophique</i>. He shows in his <i>Essai sur les Fondements
+de nos Connaissances</i> that hazard or chance are not merely words which we
+use to cover our ignorance, as Taine would have claimed. Over against the
+doctrine of a universal determinism he asserts the reality of these factors.
+The terms chance and hazard represent a real and vital element in our
+experience and in the nature of reality itself. Probability is a factor to be
+reckoned with, and this is so because of the elements of contingency in nature
+and in life. Freedom is bound up essentially with the vitality which is nature
+itself.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-107" id="linknote-107"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-107">[6]</a>
+See his <i>Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances:
+&ldquo;Hazard,&rdquo;</i> chap. iii.; &ldquo;<i>Probabilité
+Philosophique</i>,&rdquo; chap, iv., pp. 71-101; and chap. v., &ldquo;<i>De
+l&rsquo;Harmonie et de la Finalité</i>,&rdquo; pp. 101-144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The neo-critical philosopher, Renouvier, is a notable champion of freedom. We
+have already seen the importance he attaches to the category of personality.
+For him, personality represents a consciousness in possession of itself, a free
+and rational harmony&mdash;in short, freedom personified.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From a strictly demonstrative point of view Renouvier thinks it is impossible
+to prove freedom as a fact. However, he lays before us with intense seriousness
+various. considerations of a psychological and a moral character which have an
+important bearing upon the problem. This problem, he asserts, not only concerns
+our actions but also our knowledge. To bring out this point clearly, Renouvier
+develops some of the ideas of his friend, Jules Lequier, on the notion of the
+autonomy of the reason, or rather of the reasonable will. In this way he shows
+doubt and criticism to be themselves signs of freedom, and asserts that we form
+our notions of truth freely, or that at least they are creations of our free
+thought, not laid upon us by an external authority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More light is thrown on the problem by considering what Renouvier calls
+<i>vertige mental</i>, a psychopathological condition due to a disturbance of
+the rational harmony or self-possession which constitutes the essence of the
+personal consciousness. This state is characterised by hallucination and error.
+It is the extreme opposite of the self-conscious, reflective personality in
+full possession of itself and exercising its will rationally. Renouvier shows
+that between these two extremes there are numerous planes of <i>vertige
+mental</i> in which the part played by our will is small or negligible, and we
+are thus victims of habit or tendency. Is there, then, any place for freedom?
+There most certainly is, says Renouvier, for our freedom manifests itself
+whenever we inhibit an action to which we are excited by habit, passion or
+imagination. Our freedom is the product of reflection. We are at liberty to be
+free, to determine ourselves in accordance with higher motives. This power is
+just our personality asserting itself, and it does not contradict our being,
+more often than not, victims of habit. We have it in our power to make fresh
+beginnings. Renouvier&rsquo;s disbelief in strict continuity is here again apparent.
+We must admit freedom of creation in the personality itself, and not seek to
+explain our actions by trying to ascend some scale of causes to infinity. There
+is no such thing as a sum to infinity of a series; there is no such thing as
+the influence of an infinite series of causes upon the performance of a
+consciously willed act in which the personality asserts its initiative&mdash;
+that is, its power of initiation of a new series, in short, its freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing from these psychological considerations, Renouvier calls our attention
+to some of a moral nature, no less important, in his opinion, for shedding
+light upon the nature of freedom. If, he argues, all is necessary, if all human
+actions are predetermined, then popular language is guilty of a grave
+extravagance and appears ridiculous, insinuating, as it does, that many acts
+might have been left undone and many events might have occurred differently,
+and that a man might have done other than he did. In the light of the
+hypothesis of rigorous necessity, the mention of ambiguous futures and the
+notion of &ldquo;being otherwise&rdquo; (<i>le pouvoir être autrement</i>) seem
+foolish. Science may assert the docrine of necessity and preach it valiantly,
+but the human conscience feels it to be untrue and will not be gainsaid. The
+scientist himself is forced to admit that man does not accept his gospel of
+universal predestination or fatalism. This Renouvier recognises as an important
+point in the debate. Strange, is it not, he remarks, that the mind of the
+philosopher himself, a sanctuary or shrine for truth, should appear as a
+rebellious citadel refusing to surrender to the truth of this universal
+necessity. We believe ourselves to be free agents or, at least beings who are
+capable of some free action. However slight such action, it would invalidate
+the hypothesis of universal necessity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If all things are necessitated, then moral judgments, the notions of right and
+of duty, have no foundation in the nature of things. Virtue and crime lose
+their character; the sentiments and feelings, such as regret, hope, fear,
+desire, change their meaning or become meaningless. Renouvier lays great stress
+upon these moral considerations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again, if everything be necessitated, error is as necessary as truth. The false
+is indeed true, being necessary, and the true may become false. Disputes rage
+over what is false or true, but these disputes cannot be condemned, for they
+themselves are, by virtue of the hypothesis, necessary, and the disputes are
+necessarily absurd and ridiculous from this point of view. Where then is truth?
+Where is morality? We have here no basis for either. Looking thus at history,
+all its crimes and infamies are equally lawful, for they are inevitable; such
+is the result, Renouvier shows, of viewing all human action as universally
+predetermined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The objections thus put forward by Renouvier against the doctrine of universal
+necessity are powerful ones. They possess great weight and result in the
+admission, even by its upholders, that &ldquo;the judgment of freedom is a natural
+datum of consciousness and is bound up with our reflective judgments upon which
+we act, being itself the foundation of these.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, we have, Renouvier reminds us, no logical proof of the reality of freedom.
+We feel ourselves moved, spontaneously and unconstrained. The future, in so far
+as it depends upon ourselves, appears not as prearranged but ambiguous,
+open.<a href="#linknote-108" name="linknoteref-108" id="linknoteref-108"><sup>[7]</sup></a> Whether our judgment be true or false,
+we in practical life act invariably on the belief in freedom. That, of course,
+as Renouvier admits at this stage of his discussion, does not prove that our
+belief is not an illusion. It is a feeling, natural and spontaneous.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-108" id="linknote-108"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-108">[7]</a>
+Cf., later, Bergson&rsquo;s remark: &ldquo;The portals of the future
+stand wide open, the future is being made.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the most current forms of the doctrine of freedom has been that known as
+the &ldquo;liberty of indifference.&rdquo; The upholders of this theory regard the will as
+separated from motives and ends. The operation of the will is regarded by them
+as indifferent to the claims or influence of reason or feeling. Will is
+superadded externally to motives, where such exist, or may be superimposed on
+intellectual views even to the extent of annulling these. Judgment and will are
+separated in this view, and the will is a purely arbitrary or indifferent
+factor. It can operate without reason against reason. The opponents of freedom
+find little difficulty in assailing this view, in which the will appears to
+operate like a dice or a roulette game, absolutely at hazard, reducing man to a
+non-rational creature. Such a type of will, however, Renouvier declares to be
+non-existent, for every man who has full consciousness of an act of his has at
+the same time a consciousness of an end or purpose for this act, and he
+proposes to realise by this means a good which he regards as preferable to any
+other. In so far as he has doubts of this preference the act and the judgment
+will be suspended. He must, however, if he be an intelligent being, pursue what
+he deems to be his good&mdash;that is to say, what he deems to be good at the
+time of acting. Renouvier here agrees with Socrates and Plato in the view that
+no man deliberately and knowingly wills what he considers to be evil or to be
+bad for him. Virtue involves knowledge, and although there is the almost
+proverbial phrase of Ovid and of Paul, about seeing and approving the better,
+yet nevertheless doing the worse, it is a general statement which does not
+express an antithesis as present to consciousness at the time of action. The
+agent may afterwards say
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+. . . &ldquo;<i>Video meliora proboque<br/>
+deteriora sequor</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+but at the time of action &ldquo;the worse&rdquo; must appear to him as a good, at any rate
+then and in his own judgment. Further, beyond these psychological
+considerations there are grave moral objections, Renouvier points out, to
+admitting &ldquo;an indifferent will,&rdquo; for the acts of such a will being purely
+arbitrary and haphazard, the man will be no moral agent, no responsible person.
+A man who wills apart from the consideration of any motive whatever can never
+perform any meritorious action. Under the conception of an indifferent will the
+term &ldquo;merit&rdquo; ceases to have a meaning. The theologians who have asserted the
+doctrine (indeed, it seems to have originated, Renouvier thinks, with them)
+have readily admitted this point, for it opens up the way for their theory of
+divine grace or the good will of God acting directly upon or within the agent.
+Will and merit are for them quite separate, the latter being due to the
+mystical operations of divine favour or grace, in honour of which the
+indifference of the will has been postulated. Philosophers not given to appeals
+to divine grace, who have upheld the doctrine of the indifferent will, have
+really been less consistent than the theoloians and have fallen into grave
+error.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier appeals to the testimony of the penal laws of all nations in favour
+of his criticism of an indifferent will. Motive <i>is</i> deemed a real factor,
+for men are not deemed to have acted indifferently. Some deliberation, indeed,
+is implied in all action which is conscious and human, some comparison of
+motives and a conscious, decision. The values of truth, as well as those of
+morality are equally fatal to the indifferentist; for, asks Renouvier, is a man
+to be regarded as not determined to affirm as true what he judges to be true?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctrine of freedom as represented by that of an indifferent will is no
+less vicious, Renouvier affirms, than the opposing doctrine of universal
+necessity. The truth is that they both rest on fictions. &ldquo;Indifferentism&rdquo;
+imagines a will divorced from judgment, separated from the rational man
+himself, an unseizable power, a mysterious absolute cause unconnected with
+reflection or deliberation, a mere chimera. For determinism the will is equally
+a fiction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A way out of this difficulty is to be found, according to Renouvier, in viewing
+the will in a manner different from that of the &ldquo;indifferentists.&rdquo; Let us
+suppose the will bound up with motive, a motive drawn from the intellectual and
+moral equipment of the man. This, however, gives rise to psychological
+determinism. The will, it is argued, follows always the last determination of
+the understanding. Greater subtilty attends on this argument against freedom
+than those put forward on behalf of physical determinism. Renouvier sees that
+there is no escape from such a doctrine as psychological determinism unless we
+take a view of the will as bound up with the nature of man as a whole, with his
+powers of intellect and feeling. Such a will cannot be characterised as
+indifferent or as the mere resultant of motives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Kantian element in Renouvier&rsquo;s thought is noticeable in the strong moral
+standpoint from which he discusses all problems, and this is particularly true
+of his discussion of this very vital one of freedom. He is by no means,
+however, a disciple of Kant, and he joins battle strongly with the Kantian
+doctrine of freedom. This is natural in view of his entire rejection of Kant&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;thing-in-itself,&rdquo; or noumena, and it follows therefrom, for Kant attached
+freedom only to the noumenal world, denying its operation in the world of
+phenomena. The rejection of noumena leaves Renouvier free to discuss freedom in
+a less remote or less artificial manner than that of Kant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If it be true, argues Renouvier, that necessity rules supreme, then the human
+spirit can find peace in absolute resignation; and in looking back over the
+past history of humanity one need not have different feelings from those
+entertained by the geologist or paleontologist. Ethics, politics and history
+thus become purely &ldquo;natural&rdquo; sciences (if indeed ethics could here have
+meaning, would it not be identical with anthropology? At any rate, it would be
+purely positive. A normative view of ethics would be quite untenable in the
+face of universal necessity). Any inconvenience, pain or injustice would have
+to be accepted and not even named &ldquo;evil,&rdquo; much less could any effort be truly
+made to expel it from the scheme of things. To these accusations the defenders
+of necessity object. The practical man, they say, need not feel this, in so far
+as he is under the illusion of freedom and unaware of the rigorous necessity of
+all things. He need not refrain from action.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this defence of necessity leads those who wish to maintain the case against
+it to continue the argument. Suppose that the agent does <i>not</i> forget that
+all is necessitated, what then? Under no illusion of the idea of freedom, he
+then acts at every moment of his existence in the knowledge that he cannot but
+do what he is doing, he cannot but will what he wills, he cannot but desire
+what he desires. In time this must produce, says Renouvier, insanity either of
+an idle type or a furious kind, he will become an indifferent imbecile or a
+raving fanatic, in either case a character quite abnormal and dangerous. These
+are extreme results, but between the two extremes all degrees of character are
+to be, found. The most common type of practical reason presents an antinomy in
+the system of universal necessity. The case for necessity must reckon with this
+fact&mdash;namely, that the operation of necessity has itself given rise to
+ethics which exists, and, according to the case, its existence is a necessary
+one; yet ethics constitutes itself in opposition to necessity, and under the
+sway of necessity is quite meaningless. Here is a paradox which is not lessened
+if we suppose the ethical position to be an absurd and false one. Whether false
+or not, morality in some form is practically as universal as human nature. That
+nature, Renouvier insists, can hardly with sincerity believe an hypothesis or a
+dogma which its own moral instincts belie continually.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If, on the other hand, truth lies with the upholders of freedom, then man&rsquo;s
+action is seen to have great value and significance, for man then appears as
+creating a new order of things in the world. His new acts, Renouvier admits,
+will not be without preceding ones, without roots or reasons, but they will be
+without <i>necessary</i> connection with the whole scheme of things. He is thus
+creating a new order; he is creating himself and making his own history.
+Conscious pride or bitter remorse can both alike be present to him. The great
+revolutions of history will be regarded by him not as mystical sweepings of
+some unknown force external to himself, but as results of the thought and work
+of humanity itself. A philosophy which so regards freedom will thus be a truly
+&ldquo;human&rdquo; philosophy. Renouvier rightly recognises that the whole philosophy of
+history turns upon the attitude which we adopt to freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In view of the many difficulties connected with the problem of freedom many
+thinkers would urge us to a compromise. Renouvier is aware of the dangers of
+this attitude, and he brings into play against it his logical method of dealing
+with problems. This does not contradict his statement about the
+indemonstrability of freedom, nor does it minimise the weight and significance
+of the moral case for freedom: it complements it. Between contradictories or
+incompatible propositions no middle course can be followed. Freedom and
+necessity cannot be both at the same time true, or both at the same time false,
+for of the two things one must be true&mdash;namely, either human actions are
+all of them totally predetermined by their conditions or antecedents, or they
+are not all of them totally predetermined. It is to this pass that we are
+brought in the logical statement of the case. Now sceptics would here assert
+that doubt was the only solution. This would not realh be a solution, and
+however legitimate doubt is in front of conflicting theories, it involves the
+death of the soul if it operates in practical affairs and in any circumstances
+where some belief is absolutely necessary to the conduct of life and to action.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The freedom in question, as Renouvier is careful to remind us, does not involve
+our maintaining the total indetermination of things or denial of the operations
+of necessity within limits. Room is left for freedom when it is shown that this
+necessity is not universal. Many consequences of free acts may be necessitated.
+For example, says Renouvier, I have a stone in my hand. I can freely will to
+hurl it north or south, high or low, but once thrown from my hand its path is
+strictly determined by the law of gravity. The voluntary movement of a man on
+the earth may, however slightly, alter the course of a distant planet. Freedom,
+we might say, operates in a sphere to which necessity supplies the matter.
+Ultimately any free act is a choice between two alternatives, equally possible,
+but both necessitated as possibilities. The points of free action may seem to
+take up a small amount of room in the world, so to speak, but we must realise
+how vital they are to any judgment regarding its character, and how
+tremendously important they are from a moral point of view. So far, claims
+Renouvier, from the admittance of freedom being a destruction of the laws of
+the universe, it really shows us a special law of that universe, not otherwise
+to be explained&mdash;namely, the moral law. Freedom is thus regarded by
+Renouvier as a positive fact, a moral certainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Freedom is the pillar of the neo-critical philosophy; it is the first truth
+involved at once in all action and in all knowledge. Truth and error are not
+well explained, or, indeed, at all explained, by a doctrine which, embracing
+them both as equally necessary, justifies them equally, and so in a sense
+verifies both of them. It was this point which Brochard developed in his work
+<i>L&rsquo;Erreur</i>, which has neo-critical affinities. Man is only capable of
+science because he is free; it is also because he is free that he is subject to
+error.<a href="#linknote-109" name="linknoteref-109" id="linknoteref-109"><sup>[8]</sup></a> Renouvier claims that &ldquo;we do not avoid
+error always, but we always <i>can</i> avoid it.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-110" name="linknoteref-110" id="linknoteref-110"><sup>[9]</sup></a> Truth and error can only be explained, he
+urges, by belief in the ambiguity of futures, movements of thought involving
+choice between opinions which conflict&mdash;in short, by belief in freedom.
+The calculation of probabilities and the law of the great numbers demonstrates,
+Renouvier claims, the indetermination of futures, and consciousness is aware of
+this ambiguity in practical life. This belief in the ambiguity of futures is a
+condition, he shows, of the exercise of the human consciousness in its moral
+aspect, and this consciousness in action regards itself as suspended before
+indetermination&mdash;that is, it affirms freedom. This affirmation of freedom
+Renouvier asserts to be a necessary element of any rational belief whatever. It
+alone gives moral dignity and supremacy to personality, whose existence is the
+deepest and most radical of all existences. The personal life in its highest
+sense and its noblest manifestation is precisely Freedom. Renouvier assures us
+that there is nothing mysterious or mystical about this freedom. It is not
+absolute liberty and contingency of all things; it is an attribute of persons.
+The part played thus freely by personality in the scheme or order of the
+universe proves to us that that order or scheme is not defined or formed in a
+predetermined manner; it is only in process of being formed, and our personal
+efforts are essential factors in its formation. The world is an order which
+becomes and which is creating itself, not a pre-established order which simply
+unrolls itself in time. For a proper understanding of the nature of this
+problem &ldquo;we are obliged to turn to the practical reason. It is a moral
+affirmation of freedom which we require; indeed, any other kind of affirmation
+would, Renouvier maintains, presuppose this. The practical reason must lay down
+its own basis and that of all true reason, for reason is not divided against
+itself reason is not something apart from man; it is man, and man is never
+other than practical&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, acting.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-111" name="linknoteref-111" id="linknoteref-111"><sup>[10]</sup></a> Considered from this standpoint there are four
+cases which present themselves to the tribunal of our judgment&mdash;namely,
+the case for freedom, the case against freedom, the case for necessity and the
+case against necessity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-109" id="linknote-109"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-109">[8]</a>
+<i>De L&rsquo;Erreur</i>, p. 47.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-110" id="linknote-110"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-110">[9]</a>
+<i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>, vol. 2, p. 96.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-111" id="linknote-111"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-111">[10]</a>
+<i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>, vol. 2, p 78.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The position is tersely put in the Dilemma presented by Jules Lequier, the
+friend of Renouvier, quoted in the <i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>. There are
+four possibilities:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To affirm necessity, necessarily. To affirm necessity, freely. To affirm
+freedom, necessarily. To affirm freedom, freely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On examining these possibilities we find that to affirm necessity, necessarily,
+is valueless, for its contradictory, freedom, is equally necessary. To affirm
+necessity, freely, does not offer us a better position, for here again it is
+necessity which is affirmed. If we affirm freedom necessarily, we are in little
+better case, for necessity operates again (although Renouvier notes that this
+gives a certain basis for morality). In the free affirmation of freedom,
+however, is to be found not only a basis for morals, but also for knowledge and
+the search for truth. Indeed, as we are thus forced &ldquo;to admit the truth of
+either necessity or freedom, and to choose between the one and the other with
+the one or with the other,&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-112" name="linknoteref-112" id="linknoteref-112"><sup>[11]</sup></a> we find
+that the affirmation of necessity involves contradiction, for there are many
+persons who affirm freedom, and this they do, if the determinist be right,
+necessarily. The affirmation of freedom, on the other hand, is free from such
+an absurdity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-112" id="linknote-112"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-112">[11]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., p. 138.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such is the conclusion to which Renouvier brings us after his wealth of logical
+and moral considerations. He combines both types of discussion and argument in
+order to undermine the belief in determinism and to uphold freedom, which is,
+in his view, the essential attribute of personality and of the universe itself.
+He thus succeeded in altering substantially the balance of thought in favour of
+freedom, and further weight was added to the same side of the scales by the new
+spiritualist group who placed freedom in the forefront of their thought.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+The development of the treatment of this problem within the thought of the new
+spiritualists or idealists is extremely interesting, and it proceeded finally
+to a definite doctrine of contingency as the century drew to its close. The
+considerations set forth are usually psychological in tone, and not so largely
+ethical as in the neo-critical philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ravaisson declared himself a champion of freedom. He accepted the principle of
+Leibnitz, to the effect that everything has a reason, from which it follows
+that everything is necessitated, without which there could be no certitude and
+no science. But, says Ravaisson, there are two kinds of necessity&mdash;one
+absolute, one relative. The former is logical, the type of the principle of
+identity, and is found in syllogisms and in mathematics, which is just logic
+applied to quantity. The other type of necessity is moral, and is, unlike the
+former, perfectly in accord with freedom. It indeed implies freedom, the
+freedom of self-determination. The truly wise man can- not help doing what is
+right and good. The slave of Passion and caprice and evil has no freedom. The
+wise man selecting the good chooses it infallibly, but at the time with perfect
+free-will. &ldquo;It is perhaps because the good or the beautiful is simply nothing
+other than love&mdash;that is, the power of will in all its purity, and so to
+will what is truly good is to will oneself (<i>c&rsquo;est se vouloir
+soi-même</i>).&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-113" name="linknoteref-113" id="linknoteref-113"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-113" id="linknote-113"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-113">[12]</a>
+<i>La Philosophie en France</i>, p. 268.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nature is not, as the materialists endeavour to maintain, entirely
+geometrical&mdash;that is to say, fatalistic in character. Morality enters into
+the scheme of things and, with it, ends freely striven for. There is present a
+freedom which is a kind of necessity, yet opposed to fatalism. This freedom
+involves a determination by conceptions of perfection, ideals of beauty and of
+good. &ldquo;Fatality is but an appearance; spontaneity and freedom constitute
+reality.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-114" name="linknoteref-114" id="linknoteref-114"><sup>[13]</sup></a> So far, continues Ravaisson,
+from all things operating by brute mechanism or by pure hazard, things operate
+by the development of a tendency to perfection, to goodness and beauty. Instead
+of everything submitting to a blind destiny, everything obeys, and obeys
+willingly, a divine Providence.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-114" id="linknote-114"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-114">[13]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., p. 270.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ravaisson&rsquo;s fundamental spiritualism is clear in all this, and it serves as the
+starting-point for the thinkers who follow him. Spiritualism is bound up with
+spontaneity, creation, freedom, and this is his central point, this insistence
+on freedom. While resisting mechanical determination he endeavours to retain a
+determination of another kind&mdash;namely, by ends, a teleology or finalism.
+This is extremely interesting when observed in relation to the subsequent
+development in Lachelier, Boutroux, Blondel and Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lachelier&rsquo;s treatment of freedom is an important landmark in the spiritualist
+development. By his concentrated analysis of the problem of induction he
+brought out the significance of efficient and final causes respectively. He
+appears as the pupil of Ravaisson, whose initial inspiration is apparent in his
+whole work, especially in his treatment of freedom. He dwells upon the fact of
+the spontaneity of the spirit&mdash;a point of view which Ravaisson succeeded
+in imparting to the three thinkers, Lachelier, Boutroux and Bergson. Besides
+the influence of Ravaisson, however, that of Kant and Leibnitz appears in
+Lachelier&rsquo;s attitude to freedom. Yet he passes beyond the Kantian position, and
+he rejects the double-aspect doctrine which Leibnitz maintained with regard to
+efficient and final causes. Lachelier insists that the spontaneity of spirit
+stands above and underlies the whole of nature. This is the point which
+Boutroux, under Lachelier&rsquo;s influence, took up in his <i>Contingence des Lois
+de la Nature</i>. Lachelier, in attacking the purely mechanistic conception of
+the universe, endeavoured, as he himself put it, &ldquo;to substitute everywhere
+force for inertia, life for death and freedom for fatalism.&rdquo; Rather than
+universal necessity it is universal contingence which is the real definition of
+existence. We are free to determine ourselves in accordance with ends we set
+before us, and to act in the manner necessary to accomplish those ends. Our
+life itself, as he shows in the conclusion of his brilliant little article
+<i>Psychologie et Métaphysique</i>, is creative, and we must beware of arguing
+that what we have been makes us what we are, for that character which we look
+upon as determining us need not do so if we free ourselves from habit, and,
+further, this character is, in any case, itself the result of our free actions
+over extended time, the free creation of our own personality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While with Ravaisson and Lachelier the concept of freedom was being rather
+fully developed in opposition to the determinist doctrines, Fouillée, in his
+brilliant and acute thesis on <i>Liberté et Déterminisme</i>, endeavoured to
+call a halt to this supremacy of Freedom, and to be true to the principles of
+reconciliation which he laid down for himself in his philosophy. He confesses
+himself, at the outset, to be a pacifist rather than a belligerent in this
+classic dispute between determinists on the one hand and partisans of freedom
+on the other. He believes that, on intimate investigation pursued sufficiently
+far, the two opposing doctrines will be seen to converge. Such a declaration
+would seem to be dangerously superficial in a warfare as bitter and as sharp as
+this. It must be admitted that, as is the case with many who profess to
+conciliate two conflicting views, Fouillée leaves us at times without precise
+and definite indication of his own position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In contrast to the attitude of Ravaisson and Lachelier Fouillée inclines in
+some respects to the attitude of Taine and many passages of his book show him
+to be holding at least a temporary brief for the partisans of determinism. He
+agrees notably with Taine in his objecting to the contention that under the
+determinist theory moral values lose their significance. Fouillée claims that
+it is both incorrect and unfair to argue that &ldquo;under the necessity-hypothesis a
+thing being all that it can be is thereby all that it should be.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-115" name="linknoteref-115" id="linknoteref-115"><sup>[14]</sup></a>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-115" id="linknote-115"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-115">[14]</a>
+<i>La Liberté et le Déterminisme</i>, p. 51 (fourth edition).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He goes on to point out that the consciousness of independence, which is an
+essential of freedom, may be nothing more than a lack of consciousness of our
+dependence. Motives he is inclined to speak of as determining the will itself,
+while he looks upon the &ldquo;liberty of indifference&rdquo; or of hazard as merely a
+concession to the operations of mechanical necessity. The &ldquo;liberty of
+indifference&rdquo; is often the mere play of instinct and of fatality, while hazard,
+so far from being an argument in the hands of the upholders of freedom, is
+really a determination made previously by something other than one&rsquo;s own will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is a direct attack upon the doctrines put forward by both Cournot and
+Renouvier. Fouillée is well aware of this, and twenty pages of his thesis are
+devoted to a critical and hostile examination of the statements of both
+Renouvier and his friend Lequier.<a href="#linknote-116" name="linknoteref-116" id="linknoteref-116"><sup>[15]</sup></a>
+Fouillée claims that these two thinkers have only disguised and misplaced the
+&ldquo;liberty of indifference&rdquo;; they have not, he thinks, really suppressed it,
+although both of them profess to reject it absolutely. A keen discussion
+between Fouillée and Renouvier arose from this and continued for some time,
+being marked on both sides by powerful dialectic. Renouvier used his paper the
+<i>Critique philosophique</i> as his medium, while Fouillée continued in
+subsequent editions of his thesis, in his <i>Idée moderne du Droit</i> and also
+in his acute study <i>Critique des Systèmes de Morale contemporains</i>.
+Fouillée took Renouvier to task particularly for his maintaining that if all be
+determined then truth and error are indistinguishable. Fouillée claims that the
+distinction between truth and error is by no means parallel to that between
+necessity and freedom. An error may, he points out, be necessitated, and
+consequently we must look elsewhere for our doctrine of certitude than to the
+affirmation of freedom. In the philosophy of Renouvier, as we have seen, these
+two are intimately connected. Fouillée criticises the neo-critical doctrine of
+freedom on the ground that Renouvier mars his thought by a tendency to look
+upon the determinist as a passive and inert creature. This, he says, is &ldquo;the
+argument of laziness&rdquo; applied to the intelligence. &ldquo;One forgets,&rdquo; says
+Fouillée, &ldquo;that if intelligence is a mirror, it is not an immovable and
+powerless mirror: it is a mirror always turning itself to reality.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-117" name="linknoteref-117" id="linknoteref-117"><sup>[16]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-116" id="linknote-116"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-116">[15]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., pp. 117-137.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-117" id="linknote-117"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-117">[16]</a>
+<i>La Liberté et le Déterminisme</i>, p. 129.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On examining closely the difference between Renouvier and Fouillée over this
+problem of freedom, we may attribute it to the fact that while the one thinker
+is distinctly and rigorously an upholder of continuity, the other believes in
+no such absolute continuity. For Fouillée there is, in a sense, nothing new
+under the sun, while Renouvier in his thought, which has been well described as
+a philosophy of discontinuity, has a place for new things, real beginnings, and
+he is in this way linked up to the doctrine of creative development as set
+forth ultimately by Bergson. It will be seen also as we proceed that Fouillée,
+for all he has to say on behalf of determinism, is not so widely separated in
+his view of freedom from that worked out by Bergson, although at the first
+glance the gulf between them seems a wide one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée, while attacking Renouvier, did not spare that other acute thinker,
+Lachelier, from the whip of his criticism. He takes objection to a passage in
+that writer&rsquo;s <i>Induction</i> where he advocates the doctrine that the
+production of ideas &ldquo;is free in the most rigorous sense of that word, since
+each idea is in itself absolutely independent of that which precedes it, and is
+born out of nothing, as is a world.&rdquo; To this view of the spontaneity of the
+spirit Fouillée opposes the remark that Lachelier is considering only the
+<i>new forms</i> which are assumed by a mechanism which is always operating
+under the same laws of causality. He asks us in this connection to imagine a
+kaleidoscope which is being turned round. The images which succeed each other
+will be in this sense a formal creation, a form <i>independent</i> of that
+which went before, but, as he is anxious to remind us, the same mechanical and
+geometrical laws will be operating continually in producing these forms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having had these encounters with the upholders of freedom, and thus to some
+degree having conveyed the impression of being on the side of the determinists,
+Fouillée proceeds to the task he had set himself&mdash;namely, that of
+reconciliation. He felt the unsatisfactoriness of Kant&rsquo;s treatment of
+freedom,<a href="#linknote-118" name="linknoteref-118" id="linknoteref-118"><sup>[17]</sup></a> and he endeavours to remedy the lack
+in Kant of a real link between the determinism of the natural sciences and the
+human consciousness of freedom, realised in the practical reason. Fouillée
+proposes to find in his <i>idées-forces</i> a middle term and to offer us a
+solution of the problem at issue in the dispute.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-118" id="linknote-118"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-118">[17]</a>
+See above, p. 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He begins by showing that there has been an unfortunate neglect of one
+important factor in the case&mdash;a factor whose reality is frankly admitted
+by both parties. This central, incontestable fact is the <i>idea</i> of
+freedom. This idea, according to Fouillée, arises in us as the result Of a
+combination of various psychological factors, such as notions of diversity,
+possibility, with the tendency to action arising from the notion of action,
+which thus shows itself as a force. The combination of these results in the
+genesis of the idea of freedom. Now the stronger this idea of freedom is in our
+minds the more we make it become a reality. It is an &ldquo;idea-force&rdquo; which by
+being thought tends to action and thus increases in power and fruitfulness. The
+idea of freedom becomes, by a kind of determinism, more powerful in proportion
+to the degree with which it is acted upon. Determinism thus reflects upon
+itself and in a curious way turns to operate against itself. This directing
+power of the idea of freedom cannot be denied even by the most rigorous
+upholders of determinism. They at least are forced to find room in their
+doctrine for <i>the idea</i> of freedom and its practical action on the lives of men,
+both individually and in societies. The vice of the doctrines of determinism
+has been the refusal to admit the reality of the liberating idea of freedom,
+which is tending always to realise itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The belief in freedom is, therefore, Fouillée claims, a powerful force in the
+world. Nothing is a more sure redeemer of men and societies from evil ways than
+the realisation of this idea of freedom. So largely is this the case that
+indeed the extinction of the <i>belief</i> in freedom would, he argues, not differ
+much in consequence from the finding that freedom was an illusion, or, if it be
+a fact, its abolition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having thus rectified the doctrine of determinism by including a place within
+it for <i>the idea</i> of freedom, Fouillée proceeds by careful analysis to show the
+error of belief in freedom understood as that of an indifferent will. This
+raises as many fallacious views as that of a determinism bereft of the idea of
+freedom. The capricious and indifferent liberty he rejects, and in so doing
+shows us the importance of the intelligent power of willing, and also reaffirms
+the determinists&rsquo; thesis of inability to do certain things. The psychology of
+character shows us a determined freedom, and in the intelligent personality a
+reconciliation of freedom and determinism is seen to be effected. Fouillée
+shows that if it were not true that very largely what we have been makes us
+what we are, and that what we are determines our future actions, then
+education, moral guidance, laws and social sanctions would all be useless.
+Indifferentism in thought is the reversal of all thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée sees that the antithesis between Freedom and Necessity is not
+absolute, and he modifies the warmth of Renouvier&rsquo;s onslaughts upon the
+upholders of determinism. But he believes we can construct a notion of moral
+freedom which will not be incompatible with the determinism of nature. To
+effect this reconciliation, however, we must abandon the view of Freedom as a
+decision indifferently made, an action of sheer will unrelated to intelligence.
+Freedom is not caprice; it is, Fouillée claims, a power of indefinite
+development.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, in the long and penetrating Introduction to his volume on the
+<i>Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces</i>, Fouillée points out that however much
+science may feel itself called upon to uphold a doctrine of determinism for its
+own specific purposes, we must remember that the sphere of science is not
+all-embracing. There is the sphere of action, and the practical life demands
+and, to a degree demonstrates, freedom. Fouillee admits in this connection the
+indetermination of the future, <i>pour notre esprit</i>. We act upon this idea
+of relative indeterminism, combining with it the idea of our own action, the
+part which we personally feel called upon to play. He recognises in his
+analysis how important is this point for the solution of the problem. We cannot
+overlook the contribution which our personality is capable of making to the
+whole unity of life and experience, not only by its achievements in action, but
+by its ideals, by that which we feel both <i>can</i> and <i>should</i> be.
+Herein lies, according to Fouillée&rsquo;s analysis, the secret of duty and the ideal
+of our power to fulfil it, based upon the central idea of our freedom. By thus
+acting on these ideas, and by the light and inspiration of these ideals, we
+tend to realise them. It is this which marks the point where a doctrine of pure
+determinism not only shows itself erroneous and inadequate, but as Fouillee
+puts it, the human consciousness is the point where it is obliged to turn
+against itself &ldquo;as a serpent which bites its own tail.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-119" name="linknoteref-119" id="linknoteref-119"><sup>[18]</sup></a> Fatalism is a speculative hypothesis and nothing
+else. Freedom is equally an hypothesis, but, adds Fouillée, it is an hypothesis
+which is at work in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-119" id="linknote-119"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-119">[18]</a>
+<i>Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces</i>, Introduction, p. lxxiv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the thought of Guyau there is a further insistence upon freedom in spite of
+the fact that his spiritualism is super-added to much which reveals the
+naturalist and positive outlook. He upholds freedom and, indeed, contingency,
+urging, as against Ravaisson&rsquo;s teleology, that there is no definite tendency
+towards truth, beauty and goodness. At all times, too, Guyau is conscious of
+union with nature and with his fellows in a way which operates against a facile
+assertion of freedom. In his <i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i> he remarks:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;<i>Ce mot si doux au coeur et si cher, Liberté,<br/>
+J&rsquo;en préfèrs encore un: c&rsquo;est Solidarité.</i>&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-120" name="linknoteref-120" id="linknoteref-120"><sup>[19]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-120" id="linknote-120"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-120">[19]</a>
+<i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe, &ldquo;Solidarité,&rdquo;</i> p. 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maintenance of the doctrine of liberty, which in view of the facts we are
+bound to maintain, does away, Guyau insists, with the doctrine of Providence;
+for him, as for Bergson, there is no <i>prévision</i> but only <i>nouveauté</i>
+in the universe. Guyau indeed is not inclined to admit even that end which
+Bergson seems to favour&mdash;namely, &ldquo;spontaneity of life itself.&rdquo; The world
+does not find its end in us, any more than we find our &ldquo;ends&rdquo; fixed for us in
+advance. Nothing is fixed, arranged or predetermined; there is not even a
+primitive adaptation of things to one another, for such adaptation would
+involve the pre-existence of ideas prior to the material world, together with a
+demiurge arranging things upon a plan in the manner of an architect. In reality
+there is no plan; every worker conceives his own. The world is a superb
+example, not of order, such as we associate with the idea of Providence in
+action, but the reverse, disorder, the result of contingency and freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The supreme emphasis upon the reality of freedom appears, however, in the work
+of Boutroux and of Bergson at the end of our period. They arrive at a position
+diametrically opposed to that of the upholders of determinism, by their
+doctrines of contingency as revealed both in the evolution of the universe and
+in the realm of personal life. There is thus seen, as was the case with the
+problem of science, a complete &ldquo;turn of the tide&rdquo; in the development since
+Comte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boutroux, summing up his thesis <i>La contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>,
+indicates clearly in his concluding chapter his belief in contingency, freedom
+and creativeness. The old adage, &ldquo;nothing is lost, nothing is created,&rdquo; to
+which science seems inclined to attach itself, has not an absolute value, for
+in the hierarchy of creatures contingency, freedom, newness appear in the
+higher ranks. There is at work no doubt a principle of conservation, but this
+must not lead us to deny the existence and action of another principle, that of
+creation. The world rises from inorganic to organic forms, from matter to
+spirit, and in man himself from mere sensibility to intelligence, with its
+capacity for criticising and observing, and to will capable of acting upon
+things and modifying them by freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boutroux inclines to a doctrine of finalism somewhat after the manner of
+Ravaisson. The world he conceives as attracted to an end; the beautiful and the
+good are ideals seeking to be realised; but this belief in finality does not,
+he expressly maintains, exclude contingency. To illustrate this, Boutroux uses
+a metaphor from seamanship: the sailors in a ship have a port to make for, yet
+their adaptations to the weather and sea en route permit of contingency along
+with the finality involved in their making for port. So it is with beings in
+nature. They have not merely the one end, to exist amid the obstacles and
+difficulties around them, &ldquo;they have an ideal to realise, and this ideal
+consists in approaching to God, to his likeness, each after his kind. The ideal
+varies with the creatures, because each has his special nature, and can only
+imitate God in and by his own nature.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-121" name="linknoteref-121" id="linknoteref-121"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-121" id="linknote-121"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-121">[20]</a>
+<i>La Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>, p. 158.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boutroux&rsquo;s doctrine of freedom and contingency is not opposed to a teleological
+conception of the universe, and in this respect he stands in contrast to
+Bergson, who, in the rigorous application of his theory of freedom, rules out
+all question of teleology. With Renouvier and with Bergson, however, Boutroux
+agrees in maintaining that this freedom, which is the basis of contingency in
+things, is not and cannot be a datum of experience, directly or indirectly,
+because experience only seizes things which are actually realised, whereas this
+freedom is a creative power, anterior to the act. Heredity, instinct, character
+and habit are words by which we must not be misled or overawed into a disbelief
+in freedom. They are not absolutely fatal and fully determined. The same will,
+insists Boutroux, which has created a habit <i>can</i> conquer it. Will must
+not be paralysed by bowing to the assumed supremacy of instincts or habits.
+Habit itself is not a contradiction of spontaneity; it is itself a result of
+spontaneity, a state of spontaneity itself, and does not exclude contingency or
+freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Metaphysics can, therefore, according to Boutroux, construct a doctrine of
+freedom based on the conception of contingency. The supreme principles
+according to this philosophy will be laws, not those of the positive sciences,
+but the laws of beauty and goodness, expressing in some measure the divine life
+and supposing free agents. In fact the triumph of the good and the beautiful
+will result in the replacement of laws of nature, strictly so called, by the
+free efforts of wills tending to perfection&mdash;that is, to God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Further studies upon the problem of freedom are to be found in Boutroux&rsquo;s
+lectures given at the Sorbonne in 1892-93 in the course entitled <i>De l&rsquo;Idée
+de la Loi naturelle dans la Science et la Philosophie contemporaines</i>. He
+there recognises in freedom the crucial question at issue between the
+scientists and the philosophers, for he states the object of this course of
+lectures as being a critical examination of the notion we have of the laws of
+nature, with a view to determining the situation of human personality,
+particularly in regard to free action.<a href="#linknote-122" name="linknoteref-122" id="linknoteref-122"><sup>[21]</sup></a>
+Boutroux recognises that when the domain of science was less extensive and less
+rigorous than it is now it was much easier to believe in freedom. The belief in
+Destiny possessed by the ancients has faded, but we may well ask ourselves,
+says Boutroux, whether modern science has not replaced it by a yet more
+rigorous fatalism.<a href="#linknote-123" name="linknoteref-123" id="linknoteref-123"><sup>[22]</sup></a> He considers that
+the modern doctrine of determinism rests upon two assumptions&mdash;namely,
+that mathematics is a perfectly intelligible science, and is the expression of
+absolute determinism; also that mathematics can be applied with exactness to
+reality. These assumptions the lecturer shows to be unjustifiable. Mathematics
+and experience can never be fitted exactly into each other, for there are
+elements in our experience and in our own nature which cannot be mathematically
+expressed. This Boutroux well emphasises in his lecture upon sociological laws,
+where he asserts that history cannot be regarded as the unrolling of a single
+law, nor can the principle of causality, strictly speaking, be applied to
+it.<a href="#linknote-124" name="linknoteref-124" id="linknoteref-124"><sup>[23]</sup></a> An antecedent certainly may be an
+influence but not a cause, as properly understood. He here agrees with
+Renouvier s position and attitude to history, and shows the vital bearing of
+the problem of freedom upon the philosophy of history, to which we shall
+presently give our special attention.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-122" id="linknote-122"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-122">[21]</a>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Idée de la Loi naturelle</i>, Lecture IV., p. 29.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-123" id="linknote-123"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-123">[22]</a>
+Compare Janet&rsquo;s remark, given on p. 136.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-124" id="linknote-124"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-124">[23]</a>
+Lecture XIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of the ideal of science, a mathematical unity, experience shows us,
+Boutroux affirms, a hierarchy of beings, displaying variety and
+spontaneity&mdash;in short, freedom. So far, therefore, from modern science
+being an advocate of universal determinism, it is really, when rightly
+regarded, a demonstration, not of necessity, but of freedom. Boutroux&rsquo;s
+treatment of the problem of freedom thus demonstrates very clearly its
+connection with that of science, and also with that of progress. It forms
+pre-eminently the central problem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of freedom is prominent in the &ldquo;philosophy of action&rdquo; and in the
+Bergsonian philosophy; indeed, Bergson&rsquo;s treatment of the problem is the
+culmination of the development of the idea in Cournot, Renouvier and the
+neo-spiritualists. In Blondel the notion is not so clearly worked out, as there
+are other considerations upon which he wishes to insist. Blondel is deeply
+concerned with the power of ideals over action, and his thought of freedom has
+affinities to the psychology of the <i>idées-forces</i>. This is apparent in
+his view of the will, where he does not admit a purely voluntarist doctrine.
+His insistence on the dynamic of the will in action is clear, but he reminds us
+that the will does not cause or produce everything, for the will wills to be
+what is not yet; it strives for achievement, to gain something beyond itself.
+Much of Blondel&rsquo;s treatment of freedom is coloured by his religious and moral
+psychology, factors with which Bergson does not greatly concern himself in his
+writings. Blondel endeavours to maintain man&rsquo;s freedom of action and at the
+same time to remain loyal to the religious notion of a Divine Providence, or
+something akin to that. Consequently he is led to the dilemma which always
+presents itself to the religious consciousness when it asserts its own
+freedom&mdash;namely, how can that freedom be consistent with Divine guidance
+or action? Christian theology has usually been determinist in character, but
+Blondel attempts to save freedom by looking upon God as a Being immanent in
+man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bergson makes Freedom a very central point in his philosophy, and his treatment
+of it bears signs of the influence of De Biran, Ravaisson, Lachelier, Guyau and
+Boutroux. He rejects, however, the doctrine of finality as upheld by Ravaisson,
+Lachelier and Boutroux, while he stresses the contingency which this last
+thinker had brought forward. His solution of the problem is, however,
+peculiarly his own, and is bound up with his fundamental idea of change, or LA
+DURÉE.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his work <i>Les Données immédiates de la Conscience</i>, or <i>Time and
+Free-Will</i>, he criticises the doctrine of physical determinism, which is
+based on the principle of the conservation of energy, and on a purely
+mechanistic conception of the universe. He here points out, and later stresses
+in his <i>Matiere et Mémoire</i>, the fact that it has not been proved that a
+strictly determined psychical state corresponds to a definite cerebral state.
+We have no warrant for concluding that because the physiological and the
+psychological series exhibit some corresponding terms that therefore the two
+series are absolutely parallel. To do so is to settle the problem of freedom in
+an entirely <i>a priori</i> manner, which is unjustifiable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The more subtle and plausible case for psychological determinism Bergson shows
+to be no more tenable than that offered for the physical. It is due to
+adherence to the vicious Association-psychology, which is a psychology without
+a self. To say the self is determined by motive will not suffice, for in a
+sense it is true, in another sense it is not, and we must be careful of our
+words. If we say the self acts in accordance with the strongest motive, well
+and good, but how do we know it is the strongest? Only because it has
+prevailed&mdash;that is, only because the self acted upon it, which is totally
+different from claiming that the self was determined by it externally. To say
+the self is determined by certain tives is to say it is self-determined. The
+essential thing in all this is the vitality of the self.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The whole difficulty, Bergson points out, arises from the fact that all
+attempts to demonstrate freedom tend only to strengthen the artificial case for
+determinism, because freedom is only characteristic of a self <i>in action</i>.
+He is here in line on this point with Renouvier and Boutroux, although the
+reasons he gives for it go beyond in psychological penetration those assigned
+by these thinkers. When our action is over, says Bergson, it seems plausible to
+argue a case for determinism because of our spatial conception of time and the
+relationships of events in time. We have a habit of thinking in terms of space,
+by mathematical time, not in real time or <i>la durée</i> as Bergson calls it,
+the time in which the living soul acts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bergson thus makes room in the universe for a freedom of the human will, a
+creative activity, and thus delivers us from the bonds of necessity and
+fatalism in which the physical sciences and the associationist psychology would
+bind us. We perceive ourselves as centres of indetermination, creative spirits.
+We must guard our freedom, for it is an essential attribute of spirit. In so
+far as we tend to become dominated by matter, which acts upon us in habit and
+convention, we lose our freedom. It is not absolute, and many never achieve it,
+for their personality never shines forth at all: they live their lives in habit
+and routine, victims of automatism. We have, however, Bergson urges, great
+power of creation. He stresses, as did Guyau, the Conception of Life, as free,
+expanding, and in several respects his view of freedom is closer to that of
+Guyau than to that of Boutroux, in spite of the latter&rsquo;s contingency. There is
+no finalism admitted by Bergson, for he sees in any teleology only &ldquo;a reversed
+mechanism.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Obviously the maintenance of such a doctrine of freedom as that of Bergson is
+of central importance in any philosophy which contains it. Our conceptions of
+ethics and of progress depend upon our view of freedom. For Bergson &ldquo;the
+portals of the future stand wide open, the future is being made.&rdquo; He is an
+apostle of a doctrine of absolute contingency which he applied to the evolution
+of the world, in his famous volume <i>L&rsquo;Evolution Créatrice</i> (published in
+1907). His philosophy has been termed pessimistic by some in view of his
+rejection of any teleological conception. Such a doctrine would conflict with
+his &ldquo;free&rdquo; universe and his absolute contingency. On the other hand, it leaves
+open an optimistic view, because of its freedom, its insistence upon the
+possibilities of development. It is not only a reaction against the earlier
+doctrines of determinism, it is a deliverance of the human soul which has
+always refused, even when religious, to abandon entirely the belief in its own
+freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such is the doctrine of freedom which closes our period, a striking contrast to
+the determinism which, under the influence of modern science, characterised its
+opening. The critique of science and the assaults upon determinism proceeded
+upon parallel lines. In many respects they were two aspects of the one problem,
+and in themselves were sufficient to describe the essential development in the
+thought of our half century, for the considerations of progress, ethics and
+religion to which we now turn derive their significance largely from what has
+been set forth in these chapters on Science and Freedom.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V<br/>
+PROGRESS</h2>
+
+<p>
+INTRODUCTORY : Freedom and Progress intimately connected&mdash;Confidence in
+Progress, a marked feature of the earlier half of the nineteenth century, was
+bound up with confidence in Science and Reason, and in a belief in determinism,
+either natural or divine&mdash;Condorcet, Saint-Simon, Comte and others
+proclaim Progress as a dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. The idea of progress in Vacherot, Tame and Renan&mdash;Interesting reflections
+of Renan based on belief in Reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Cournot and Renouvier regard Progress in a different light, owing to their
+ideas on Freedom&mdash;They look upon it as a possibility only, but not
+assured, not inevitable&mdash;Renouvier&rsquo;s study of history in relation to
+progress and his view of immortality as Progress&mdash;No law of progress
+exists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. The new spiritualist group emphasise the lack of any law of progress, by their
+insistence on the spontaneity of the spirit, creativeness and
+contingency&mdash;Difficulties of finalsm or teleology in relation to progress
+as free&mdash;No law or guarantee of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+CONCLUSION : Complete change from earlier period regarding Progress&mdash;New
+view of it developed&mdash;Facile optimism rejected.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER V<br/>
+PROGRESS</h3>
+
+<p>
+Intimately bound up with the idea of freedom is that of progress. For, although
+our main approach to the discussion of freedom was made by way of the natural
+sciences, by a critique of physical determinism, and also by way of the problem
+of personal action, involving a critique of psychological determinism, it must
+be noted that there have appeared throughout the discussion very clear
+indications of the vital bearing of freedom upon the wide field of humanity&rsquo;s
+development considered as a whole&mdash;in short, its history. The philosopher
+must give some account of history, if he is to leave no gap in his view of the
+universe. The philosophy of history will obviously be vastly different if it be
+based on determinism rather than on freedom. When the philosopher looks at
+history his thoughts must inevitably centre around the idea of progress. He may
+believe in it or may reject it as an illusion, but his attitude to it will be
+very largely a reflection of the doctrine which he has formed regarding
+freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The notion of progress is probably the most characteristic feature which
+distinguishes modern civilisation from those of former times. It would have
+seemed to the Greeks foolishness. We owe it to the people who, in the modern
+world, have been what Greece was in the ancient world, the glorious mother of
+ideas. The eighteenth century was marked in France by a growing belief in
+progress, which was encouraged by the Encyclopaedists and rose to enthusiasm at
+the Revolution. Its best expression was that given by Condorcet, himself an
+Encyclopaedist, and originally a supporter of the Revolution. His <i>Sketch of
+an Historical Picture of the Progress of the Human Mind</i> was written in 1793
+(while its author was threatened with the guillotine<a href="#linknote-125" name="linknoteref-125" id="linknoteref-125"><sup>[1]</sup></a>), published two years later, and became, in the
+early years of the nineteenth century, a powerful stimulus to thought
+concerning progress. Much of the work is defective, but it had a great
+influence upon Saint-Simon, the early socialists, and upon the doctrines of
+Auguste Comte, which themselves are immediate antecedents of our own period. We
+may note briefly here, that Condorcet believed in a sure and infallible
+progress in knowledge and in social welfare. This is the important doctrine
+which Saint-Simon and Comte both accepted from him. His ideal of progress is
+contained in the three watchwords of the Revolution, <i>Liberté</i>,
+<i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i>, particularly the last two. He forecasts an
+abandonment of militarism, prophesies an era of universal peace, and the reign
+of equality between the sexes. Equality is a point which he insists upon very
+keenly, and, although he did not speak of sociology as did Comte, nor of
+socialism as did Saint-Simon, he claimed that the true history of mankind is
+the history of the great mass of workers: it is not diplomatic and military,
+not the record of dazzling deeds of great men. Condorcet, however, was dogmatic
+in his belief in progress, and he did not work out any &ldquo;law&rdquo; of progress,
+although he believed progress to be a law of the universe, in general, and an
+undeniable truth in regard to the life-history of mankind.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-125" id="linknote-125"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-125">[1]</a>
+He was ultimately imprisoned and driven to suicide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later, his friend Cabanis upheld a similarly optimistic view, and endeavoured
+to argue for it, against the Traditionalists, who we may remember endeavoured
+to restate Catholicism, and to make an appeal to those whom the events of the
+Revolution had disturbed and disillusioned. The outcome of the Terror had
+somewhat shaken the belief in a straightforward progress, but enthusiastic
+exponents of the doctrine were neither lacking nor silent. Madame de Staël
+continued the thought of Condorcet, thus forming a link between him and
+Saint-Simon and Comte. The influence of the Traditionalists and the general
+current of thought and literature known as Romanticism, helped also to solve a
+difficulty which distinguishes Condorcet from Comte. This difficulty lay in the
+eighteenth-century attitude to the Middle Ages, which Condorcet had accepted,
+and which seriously damaged his thesis of general progress, for in the
+eighteenth century the Middle Ages were looked upon as a black, dark regress,
+for which no thinker had a good word to say. The change of view is seen most
+markedly when we come to Comte, whose admiration of the Middle Ages is a
+conspicuous feature of his work. While, however, Saint-Simon and Comte were
+working out their ideas, great popularity was given to the belief in progress
+by the influence of Cousin, Jouffroy, Guizot, and by Michelet&rsquo;s translation of
+the <i>Scienza nuova</i> of the Italian thinker Vico, a book then a century old
+but practically unknown in France. For Cousin, the world process was a result
+of a necessary evolution of thought, which he conceived in rather Hegelian
+fashion. Jouffroy agreed with this fatal progress, although he endeavoured to
+reconcile it with that of personal freedom. Guizot&rsquo;s main point was that
+progress and civilisation are the same thing, or rather, that civilisation is
+to be defined only by progress, for that is its fundamental idea. His
+definition of progress is not, however, strikingly clear, and he calls
+attention to two types of progress&mdash;one involving an improvement in social
+welfare, the other in the spiritual or intellectual life. Although Guizot tried
+to show that progress in both these forms is a fact, he did not touch ultimate
+questions, nor did he successfully show that progress is the universal key to
+human history. He did not really support his argument that civilisation
+<i>is</i> progress in any convincing way, but he gave a stimulus to reflection
+on the question of the relationship of these two. Michelet&rsquo;s translation of
+Vico came at an appropriate time, and served a useful purpose. It showed to
+France a thinker who, while not denying a certain progress over short periods,
+denied it over the long period, and reverted rather to the old notion of an
+eternal recurrence. For Vico, the course of human history was not rectilineal
+but rather spiral, although he, too, refrained from indicating any law. He
+claimed clearly enough that each civilisation must give way to barbarism and
+anarchy, and the cycle be again begun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such were the ideas upon progress which were current at the time when
+Saint-Simon, Fourier and Comte were busily thinking out their doctrines, the
+main characteristics of which we have already noted in our Introduction on the
+immediate antecedents of our period. The thought given to the question of
+progress in modern France is almost unintelligible save in the light of the
+doctrines current from Condorcet, through Saint-Simon to Comte, for the second
+half of the century is again characterised by a criticism and indeed a reaction
+against the idea professed in the first half. This was true in regard to
+Science and to Freedom. We shall see a similar type of development illustrated
+again respecting Progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already we have noted the general aim and object which both Saint-Simon and
+Comte had in view. The important fact for our discussion here is that
+Saint-Simon, by his respect for the Middle Ages, and for the power of religion,
+was able to rectify the defects which the ideas of the eighteenth century had
+left in Condorcet&rsquo;s doctrine of progress. Moreover, he claimed, as Condorcet
+had not done, to indicate a &ldquo;law of progress,&rdquo; which gives rise alternately to
+&ldquo;organic&rdquo; and to &ldquo;critical&rdquo; periods. The Middle Ages were, in the opinion of
+Saint-Simon, an admirable period, displaying as they did an organic society,
+where there was a temporal and spiritual authority. With Luther began an
+anarchical, critical period. According to Saint-Simon s law of progress a new
+organic period will succeed this, and the characteristic of that period will be
+socialism. He advocated a gradual change, not a violent revolutionary one, but
+he saw in socialism the inevitable feature of the new era. With its triumph
+would come a new world organisation and a league of peoples in which war would
+be no more, and in which the lot of the proletariat would be free from
+oppression and misery. The Saint-Simonist School became practically a religious
+sect, and the chief note in its gospel was &ldquo;Progress.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the notion of progress was conspicuous in the thought of this time is very
+evident. It was, indeed, in the foreground, and a host of writers testify to
+this, whom we cannot do much more than mention here. A number of them figured
+in the events of 1848. The social reformers all invoked &ldquo;Progress&rdquo; as
+justification for their theories being put into action. Bazard took up the
+ideas of Saint-Simon and expounded them in his <i>Exposition de la Doctrine
+saint-simonienne</i> (1830). Buchez, in his work on the philosophy of history,
+assumed progress (1833). The work of Louis Blanc on <i>L&rsquo;Organisation du
+Travail</i> appeared in 1839 in a periodical calling itself <i>Revue des
+Progrès</i>. The brochure from Proudhon, on property, came in 1840, and was
+followed later by <i>La Philosophie du Progrès</i> (1851). Meanwhile Fourier&rsquo;s
+<i>Théorie des Quatre Mouvements et des Destinées générales</i> attempted in
+rather a fantastic manner to point the road to progress. Worthless as many of
+his quaint pages are, they were a severe indictment of much in the existing
+order, and helped to increase the interest and the faith in progress. Fourier&rsquo;s
+disciple, Considérant, was a prominent figure in 1848. The Utopia proposed by
+Cabet insisted upon <i>fraternité</i> as the keynote to progress, while the
+volumes of Pierre Leroux, <i>De l&rsquo;Humanité</i>, which appeared in the same year
+as Cabet&rsquo;s volume, 1840, emphasised <i>égalité</i> as the essential factor. His
+humanitarianism influenced the woman-novelist, George Sand. This same watchword
+of the Revolution had been eulogised by De Tocqueville in his important study
+of the American Republic in 1834, and that writer had claimed <i>égalité</i> as
+the goal of human progress. All these men take progress as an undoubted fact;
+they only vary by using a different one of the three watchwords,
+<i>Liberté</i>, <i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i>, to denote the kind of
+progress they mean. Meanwhile, Michelet and his friend Quinet combated the
+Hegelian conception of history maintained by Cousin, and they claimed
+<i>liberté</i> to be the watchword of progress. The confidence of all in
+progress is almost pathetic in its unqualified optimism. It is not remarkable
+that the events of 1851 proved a rude shock. Javary, a writer who, in 1850,
+published a little work, <i>De l&rsquo;Idée du Progrès</i>, claimed that the idea is
+the supremely interesting question of the time in its relation to a general
+philosophy of history and to the ultimate destiny of mankind. This is fairly
+evident from the writers we have cited, without Javary&rsquo;s remark, but it is
+worth noting as being the observation of a contemporary. With the mention of
+Reynaud&rsquo;s <i>Philosophie religieuse</i>, upholding the principle of indefinite
+perfectability and Pelletan&rsquo;s <i>Profession du Foi du XIX<sup>e</sup>
+Siècle</i>, wherein he maintained confidently and dogmatically that progress is
+the general law of the universe, we must pass on from these minor people to
+consider one who had a profounder influence on the latter half of the century,
+and who took over the notion of progress from Saint-Simon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was Comte, whose attitude to progress in many respects resembles that of
+Saint-Simon, but he brought to his work a mental equipment lacking in the
+earlier writer and succeeded, by the position he gave to it in his Positive
+Philosophy, in making the idea of progress one which subsequent thinkers could
+not omit from consideration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+According to Comte, the central factor in progress is the mental. Ideas, as
+Fouillée was later to assert, are the real forces in humanity&rsquo;s history. These
+ideas develop in accordance with the &ldquo;Law of the Three Stages,&rdquo; already
+explained in our Introduction. In spite of the apparent clearness and
+simplicity of this law, Comte had to admit that as a general law of all
+development it was to some degree rendered difficult in its application by the
+lack of simultaneity in development in the different spheres of knowledge and
+social life. While recognising the mental as the keynote to progress, he also
+insisted upon the solidarity of the physical, intellectual, moral and social
+life of man, and to this extent admitted a connection and interaction between
+material welfare and intellectual progress. The importance of this admission
+lay in the fact that it led Comte to qualify what first appears as a definite
+and confident belief in a rectilineal progress. He admits that such a
+conception is not true, for there is retrogression, conflict, wavering, and not
+a steady development. Yet he claims that there is a general and ultimate
+progress about a mean line. The causes which shake and retard the steady
+progress are not all-powerful, they cannot upset the fundamental order of
+development. These causes which do give rise to variations are, we may note in
+passing, the effects of race, climate and political and military feats like
+those of Napoleon, for whom Comte did not disguise his hatred, styling him the
+man who had done most harm to humanity. Great men upset his sociological
+theories, but Comte was no democrat and strongly opposed ideas of Liberty and
+Equality. We have remarked upon his general attitude to his own age, as one of
+criticism and anarchy. In this he was probably correct, but he quite
+underestimated the extent and duration of that anarchy, particularly by his
+estimate of the decline and fall of Catholicism and of militarism, which he
+regarded as the two evils of Europe. The events of the twentieth century would
+have been a rude shock to him, particularly the international conflagration of
+1914-1918. It was to Europe that Comte confined his philosophy of history and
+consequently narrowed it. He knew little outside this field.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He endeavoured, however, to apply his new science of sociology to the
+development of European history. His work contains much which is good and
+instructive, but fails ultimately to establish any law of progress. It does not
+seem to have occurred to Comte&rsquo;s mind that there might not be one. This was the
+question which was presented to the thinkers after him, and occupies the chief
+place in the subsequent discussion of progress.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+In the second half of the century the belief in a definite and inevitable
+progress appears in the work of those thinkers inspired by the positivist
+spirit, Vacherot, Taine and Renan. Vacherot&rsquo;s views on the subject are given in
+one of his <i>Essais de Philosophie critique</i>,<a href="#linknote-126" name="linknoteref-126" id="linknoteref-126"><sup>[2]</sup></a> entitled &ldquo;<i>Doctrine du Progrès</i>.&rdquo; These pages,
+in which sublime confidence shines undimmed, were intended as part of a longer
+work on the Philosophy of History. Many of Renan&rsquo;s essays, and especially the
+concluding chapters of his work <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, likewise profess
+an extreme confidence in progressive development. Yet Taine and Renan are both
+free from the excessive and glowing confidence expressed by Condorcet,
+Saint-Simon and Comte. Undoubtedly the events of their own time reacted upon
+their doctrine of progress, and we have already noted the pessimism and
+disappointment which coloured their thoughts regarding contemporary political
+events. Both, however, are rationalists, and have unshaken faith in the
+ultimate triumph of reason.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-126" id="linknote-126"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-126">[2]</a>
+Published in 1864.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attitude which Taine adopts to history finds a parallel in the fatalism and
+determinism of Spinoza, for he looks upon the entire life of mankind as the
+unrolling of a rigidly predetermined series of events. &ldquo;Our preferences,&rdquo; he
+remarks, &ldquo;are futile; nature and history have determined things in advance; we
+must accommodate ourselves to them, for it is certain that they will not
+accommodate themselves to us.&rdquo; Taine&rsquo;s view of history reflects his rejection
+of freedom, for he maintains that it is a vast regulated chain which operates
+independently of individuals. Fatalism colours it entirely. It is precisely
+this attitude of Taine which raises the wrath of Renouvier, and also that of
+both Cournot and Fouillée, whose discussions we shall examine presently. They
+see in such a doctrine an untrue view of history and a theory vicious and
+detestable from a moral standpoint, although it doubtless, as Fouillée
+sarcastically remarks, has been a very advantageous one for the exploiters of
+humanity in all ages to teach and to preach to the people.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In passing from Taine&rsquo;s fatalistic view of history to note his views on
+progress we find him asserting that man&rsquo;s nature does not in itself inspire
+great optimism, for that nature is largely animal, and man is ever ready,
+however &ldquo;civilised&rdquo; he may appear to be, to return to his native primitive
+ferocity and barbarism. Man is not, according to Taine, even a sane animal, for
+he is by nature mad and foolish. Health and wisdom only occasionally reign, and
+so we have no great ground for optimism when we examine closely the nature of
+man, as it really is. Taine&rsquo;s treatment of the French Revolution<a href="#linknote-127" name="linknoteref-127" id="linknoteref-127"><sup>[3]</sup></a> shows his hostility to democracy, and he is
+sceptical about the value or meaning of the watchwords, &ldquo;Rights of Man,&rdquo; or
+<i>Liberté</i>, <i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i>. This last, he claims, is
+merely a verbal fiction useful for disguising the reality, which is actual
+warfare of all against all.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-127" id="linknote-127"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-127">[3]</a>
+<i>&ldquo;La Révolution,&rdquo;</i> in his large work, <i>Les Origines de la
+France contemporaine</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet in spite of these considerations Taine believes in a definitely guaranteed
+progress. Man&rsquo;s lower nature does not inspire optimism, but his high power of
+reason does, and it is on this faith in reason that Taine confidently founds
+his assertions regarding progress. He sees in reason the ultimate end and
+meaning of all else. The triumph of reason is an ideal goal to which, in spite
+of so many obstacles, all the forces of the universe are striving. In this
+intellectual progress, this gradual rationalisation of mankind, Taine sees the
+essential element of progress upon which all other goods depend. The betterment
+of social conditions will naturally follow; it is the spiritual and mental
+factor which is the keynote of progress Reason, he contends, will give us a new
+ethic, a new politic and a new religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan shares with Taine the belief in reason and its ultimate triumph. His
+views on progress are, however, more discursive, and are extremely interesting
+and suggestive. He was in his later years shrewd enough to discover the
+difficulties of his own doctrine. Thus although he believed in a &ldquo;guaranteed&rdquo;
+progress, Renan marks a stage midway between the idea of progress as held by
+Comte and Taine on the one hand, and by Cournot and Renouvier on the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His early book, <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, glows with ardent belief in this
+assured progress, which is bound up with his confidence in science and
+rationality. &ldquo;Our creed,&rdquo; he there declares, &ldquo;is the reasonableness of
+progress.&rdquo; This idea of progress is almost as central a point in Renan&rsquo;s
+thought as it was in that of Comte, and he gave it a more metaphysical
+significance. His general philosophy owes much to history, and for him the
+philosophy of history is the explanation of progress. By this term he means an
+ever-growing tendency to perfection, to fuller consciousness and life, to
+nobler, better and more beautiful ends. He thinks it necessary to conceive of a
+sort of inner spring, urging all things on to fuller life. He seems here to
+anticipate vaguely the central conception of Guyau and of Bergson. But, like
+Taine, Renan founds his doctrine of progress on rationalism. He well expresses
+this in one of his <i>Drames philosophiques (L&rsquo;Eau de Jouvence)</i>, through
+the mouth of Prospero, who represents rational thought. This character declares
+that &ldquo;it is science which brings about social progress, and not progress which
+gives rise to science. Science only asks from society to have granted to it the
+conditions necessary to its life and to produce a sufficient number of minds
+capable of understanding it.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-128" name="linknoteref-128" id="linknoteref-128"><sup>[4]</sup></a> In the preface
+written for this drama he declares that science or reason will ultimately
+succeed in creating the power and force of government in humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-128" id="linknote-128"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-128">[4]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Eau de Jouvence</i>, Act 4, Scene I., Conclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These thoughts re-echo many of the sentiments voiced on behalf of progress by
+Condorcet, Saint-Simon and Comte. It is interesting, however, to note an
+important point on which Renan not only parts company with them, but ranges
+himself in opposition to them. This point is that of socialism or democracy,
+call it what one will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the spring of 1871 Renan was detained at Versailles during the uproar of the
+Commune in Paris, and there wrote his <i>Dialogues et Fragments
+philosophiques</i>, which were published five years later. In these pages
+certain doctrines of progress and history are set forth, notably in the
+&ldquo;dialogues of three philosophers of that school whose ground-principles are the
+cult of the ideal, the negation of the supernatural and the investigation of
+reality.&rdquo; Renan raises a discussion of the end of the world&rsquo;s development. The
+universe, he maintains, is not devoid of purpose: it pursues an ideal end. This
+goal to which the evolutionary process moves is the reign of reason. But there
+are striking limitations to this advance. From this kingdom of reason on the
+earth the mass of men are shut out. Renan does not believe in a gradual
+improvement of the mass of mankind accompanied by a general rationalisation
+which is democratic. The truth is that Renan was an intellectual aristocrat
+and, as such, he abhorred Demos. His gospel of culture, upon which he lays the
+greatest stress, is for the few who are called and chosen, while the many
+remain outside the pale, beyond the power of the salvation he offers. The
+development of the democratic idea he looks upon as thoroughly mischievous,
+inasmuch as it involves, in his opinion, degeneration, a levelling down to
+mediocrity. In his philosophy of history he adopts an attitude somewhat akin to
+that of Carlyle in his worship of Great Men. The end of history is, Renan
+states, the production of men of genius. The great mass of men, the common
+stuff of humanity, he likens to the soil from which these Great Ones grow. The
+majority of men have their existence justified only by the appearance upon the
+scene of &ldquo;Heroes of Culture.&rdquo; In this teaching the parallelism to the gospel of
+the Superman is apparent, yet it seems clear that although Renan&rsquo;s man of
+culture despises the ignorance and vulgarity of the crowd, he does so
+condescendingly as a benefactor, and is free from the passionate hatred and
+scorn to which Nietzsche&rsquo;s Superman is addicted. Nevertheless, Renan&rsquo;s attitude
+of uncompromising hostility to democratic development is very marked. He
+couples his confidence in Science to his anti-democratic views, and affirms the
+&ldquo;Herd&rdquo; to be incapable of culture. Although the process of rationalisation and
+the establishment of the kingdom of reason is applicable only to the patrician
+and not to the <i>plebs</i>, this process is claimed by Renan to be capable of
+great extension, not in the number of its adherents but in the extent of
+culture. In this final reign of reason, instinctive action and impulse will be
+replaced by deliberation, and science will succeed religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His famous letter to Berthelot includes a brief statement of his views on
+progressive culture, which, for him, constitutes the sign of progress. &ldquo;One
+ought never,&rdquo; he writes, &ldquo;to regret seeing clearer into the depths.&rdquo; By
+endeavouring to increase the treasure of the truths which form the paid-up
+capital of humanity, we shall be carrying on the work of our pious ancestors,
+who loved the good and the true as it was understood in their time. The true
+men of progress, he claims, are those who profess as their starting-point a
+profound respect for the past. Renan himself was a great lover of the past, yet
+we find him remarking in his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i> that he
+has no wish to be taken for an uncompromising reactionist. &ldquo;I love the past,
+but I envy the future,&rdquo; and he thinks that it would be extremely pleasant to
+live upon this planet at as late a period as possible. He appears jealous of
+the future and of the young, whose fate it will be to know what will be the
+outcome of the activities of the German Emperor, what will be the climax of the
+conflict of European nationalities, what development socialism will take. His
+shrewd mind had alreadv foreseen in a measure the possible development of
+German militarism and of Bolshevism. He regards the world as moving towards a
+kind of &ldquo;Americanism,&rdquo; by which he means a type of life in which culture and
+refinement shall have little place. Yet, although he has a horror and a dread
+of democracy, he feels also that the evils accompanying it may be, after all,
+no worse than those involved in the reactionary dominance of nobles and clergy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Humanity has not hitherto marched, he thinks, with much method. Order he
+considers to be desirable, but only in view of progress. Revolutions are only
+absurd and odious, he asserts in <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, to those who do
+not believe in progress. Yet he claims that reaction has its place in the plan
+of Providence, for it works unwittingly for the general good. &ldquo;There are,&rdquo; to
+quote his metaphor, &ldquo;declivities down which the <i>rôle</i> of the
+traction engine consists solely in holding back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan thinks that if democratic ideas should secure a clear triumph, science
+and scientific teaching would soon find the modest subsidies now accorded them
+cut off. He fears the approach of an era of mediocrity, of vulgarity, in fact,
+which will persecute the intellectuals and deprive the world of liberty. He is
+not thoughtlessly optimistic; he was far too shrewd an intellect for that. Our
+age, he suggests, may be regarded in future as the turning point of humanity&rsquo;s
+history, that point where its deterioration set in, the prelude to its decline
+and fall. But he asserts, as against this, that Nature does not know the
+meaning of the word &ldquo;discouragement.&rdquo; Humanity, proving itself incapable of
+progress, but only capable of further deterioration, would be replaced by other
+forms. &ldquo;We must not, because of our personal tastes, our prejudices perhaps,
+set ourselves to oppose the action of our time. This action goes on without
+regard to us and probably is right.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-129" name="linknoteref-129" id="linknoteref-129"><sup>[5]</sup></a> The
+future of science is assured. With its progress, Renan points out, we must
+reckon upon the decay of organised religion, as professed by sects or churches.
+The disappearance of this organised religion will, however, result most
+assuredly in a temporary moral degeneration, since morality has been so
+conventionally bound up with the Church. An era of egoism, military and
+economic in character, will arise and for a time prevail.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-129" id="linknote-129"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-129">[5]</a>
+Preface to <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet we must not, Renan reminds us, grumble at having too much unrest and
+conflict. The great object in life is the development of the mind, and this
+requires liberty or freedom. The worst type of society is the theocratic state,
+or the ancient pontifical dominion or any modern replica of these where dogma
+reigns supreme. A humanity which could not be revolutionary, which had lost the
+attraction of &ldquo;Utopias,&rdquo; believing itself to have established the perfect form
+of existence would be intolerable. This raises also the query that if progress
+be the main feature of our universe, then we have a dilemma to face, for either
+it leads us to a <i>terminus ad quem</i>, and so finally contradicts itself, or
+else it goes on for ever, and it is doubtful then in what sense it can be a
+progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan&rsquo;s own belief was essentially religious, and was coloured by Christian and
+Hebrew conceptions. It was a rationalised belief in a Divine Providence. He
+professed a confidence in the final triumph of truth and goodness, and has
+faith in a dim, far-off divine event which he terms &ldquo;the complete advent of
+God.&rdquo; The objections which are so frequently urged by learned men against
+finalism or teleology of any kind whatsoever Renan deemed superficial and
+claimed, rightly enough, that they are not so much directed against teleology
+but against theology, against obsolete ideas of God, particularly against the
+dogma of a deliberate and omnipotent Creator. Renan&rsquo;s own doctrine of the Deity
+is by no means clear, but he believed in a spiritual power capable of becoming
+some day conscious, omniscient and omnipotent. God will then have come to
+himself. From this point of view the universe is a progress to God, to an
+increasing realisation of the Divinity in truth, beauty and goodness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The universe, Renan claims, must be ultimately rooted and grounded in goodness;
+there must be, in spite of all existing &ldquo;evils,&rdquo; a balance on the side of
+goodness, otherwise the universe would, like a vast banking-concern, fail. This
+balance of goodness is the <i>raison d&rsquo;être</i> of the world and the
+means of its existence. The general life of the universe can be illustrated,
+according to Renan, by that of the oyster, and the formation within it of the
+pearl, by a malady, a process vague, obscure and painful. The pearl is the
+spirit which is the end, the final cause and last result, and assuredly the
+most brilliant outcome of this universe. Through suffering the pearl is formed;
+and likewise, through constant pain and conflict, suffering and hardship, the
+spirit of man moves intellectually and morally onward and upward, to the
+completed realisation of justice, beauty, truth and infinite goodness and love,
+to the complete and triumphant realisation of God. We must have patience,
+claims Renan, and have faith in these things, and have hope and take courage.
+&ldquo;One day virtue will prove itself to have been the better part.&rdquo; Such is his
+doctrine of progress.
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+With Cournot and Renouvier our discussion takes a new form. Renan, Taine,
+Vacherot and the host of social and political writers, together with August
+Comte himself, had accepted the fact of progress and clung to the idea of a law
+of progress. With these two thinkers, however, there is a more careful
+consideration given to the problem of progress. It was recognised as a problem
+and this was an immense advance upon the previous period, whose thinkers
+accepted it as a dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True to the philosophic spirit of criticism and examination which involves the
+rejection of dogma as such, Cournot and Renouvier approach the idea of progress
+with reserve and free from the confidently optimistic assertions of the
+eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Scorning the rhetoric of political
+socialists, positivists and rationalists, they endeavour to view progress as
+the central problem of the philosophy of history, to ascertain what it
+involves, and to see whether such a phrase as &ldquo;law of progress&rdquo; has a meaning
+before they invoke it and repeat it in the overconfident manner which
+characterised their predecessors. We have maintained throughout this work that
+the central problem of our period was that of freedom. By surveying the general
+character of the thought of the time, and in following this by an examination
+of the relation of science and philosophy, we were able to show how vital and
+how central this problem was. From another side we are again to emphasise this.
+Having seen the way in which the problem of freedom was dealt with, we are in a
+position to observe how this coloured the solutions of other problems. The
+illustration is vivid here, for Cournot and Renouvier develop their philosophy
+of history from their consideration of freedom, and base their doctrines of
+progress upon their maintenance of freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is obvious that the acceptance of such views as those expressed on freedom
+by both Cournot and Renouvier must have far-reaching effects upon their general
+attitude to history, for how is the dogma of progress, as it had been preached,
+to be reconciled with free action? It is much easier to believe in progress if
+one be a fatalist. The difficulty here was apparent to Comte when he admitted
+the influence of variations, disturbing causes, which resulted in the
+development of mankind assuming an oscillating character rather than that of a
+straight-forward progress. He did not, however, come sufficiently close to this
+problem, and left the difficulty of freedom on one side by asserting that the
+operation of freedom, chance or contingency (call it what we will), issuing in
+non-predetermined actions, was so limited as not to interfere with the general
+course of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot and Renouvier take up the problem where Comte left it at this point.
+Each of them takes it a stage further onward in the development. The
+fundamental ideas of Cournot we have briefly noted as being those of order,
+chance and probability. The relation of these to progress he discusses, not
+only in his <i>Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances</i> and the
+<i>Traité de l&rsquo;Enchaînement d&rsquo;Idées</i>, but also in a most interesting
+manner in his two volumes entitled <i>Considérations sur la Marche des Idées et
+des Evènements dans les Temps modernes</i>. Like Comte, he is faithful, as far
+as his principles will allow, to the idea of order. There is order in the
+universe to a certain degree; science shows it to us. There is also, he
+maintains, freedom, hazard or chance. Looking at history he sees, as did Comte,
+phenomena which, upon taking a long perspective, appear as interferences. Pure
+reason is, he claims, really incapable of deciding the vital question whether
+these disturbances are due to a pure contingency, chance or freedom, or whether
+they mark the points of the influence of the supernatural upon mankind&rsquo;s
+development. He refers to the <i>enchaînement de circonstances
+providentielles</i> which helped the early Jews and led to the propagation of
+their monotheism; which helped also the development of the Christian religion
+in the Roman Empire. Hazard itself, he claims,<a href="#linknote-130" name="linknoteref-130" id="linknoteref-130"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+may be the agent or minister of Providence. Such a view claims to be loyal at
+once to freedom and to order.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-130" id="linknote-130"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-130">[6]</a>
+<i>Essai sur les Fondaments de nos Connaissances</i>, vol. i, chap. 5.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cournot continues his discussion further and submits many other considerations
+upon progress. He claims that it is absurd to see in every single occurrence
+the operations of a divine providence or the work of a divine architect. Such a
+view would exalt his conception of order, undoubtedly, but only at the expense
+of his view of freedom. He will not give up his belief in freedom, and in
+consequence declares that there is no pre-arranged order or plan in the sense
+of a &ldquo;law.&rdquo; He sets down many considerations which appear as dilemmas to the
+pure reason, and which only action, he thinks, will solve. He points out the
+difficulty of economic and social progress owing to our being unable to test
+theories until they are in action on a large field. He shows too how
+conflicting various developments may be, and how progress in one direction may
+involve degeneration in another. Equality may be good in some ways, unnatural
+and evil in others. Increase of population may be applauded as a progress from
+a military standpoint, but may be an economic evil with disastrous suffering as
+its consequence. The &ldquo;progress&rdquo; to peace and stability in a society usually
+involves a decrease in vitality and initiative. By much wealth of argument, no
+less than by his general attitude, Cournot was able to apply the breaks to the
+excessive confidence in progress and to call a halt for sounder investigation
+of the matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier did much more in this direction. In his <i>Second Essay of General
+Criticism</i> he touched upon the problem of progress in relation to freedom,
+and his fourth and fifth essays constitute five large volumes dealing with the
+&ldquo;Philosophy of History.&rdquo; He also devotes the last two chapters of <i>La
+Nouvelle Monadologie</i> to progress in relation to societies, and brings out
+the central point of his social ethics, that justice is the criterion of
+progress. Indeed, all that Renouvier says regarding history and progress leads
+up, in a manner peculiarly his own, to his treatment of ethics, which will
+claim attention in our next chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Analytic Philosophy of History</i> forms an important item in the
+philosophical repertoire of Renouvier. He claims it to be a necessary feature
+of the neo-critical, and indeed of any serious, philosophy. It is, he claims,
+not a branch of knowledge which has an isolated place, for it is as intimately
+connected to life as is any theory to the facts which it embraces. That is not
+to say, and Renouvier is careful to make this clear, that we approach history
+assuming that there are laws governing it, or a single law or formula by which
+human development can be expressed. The &ldquo;Philosophy of History&rdquo; assumes no such
+thing; it is precisely this investigation which it undertakes, loyal to the
+principles of General Criticism of which it, in a sense, forms a part. In a
+classification it strictly stands between General Criticism or Pure Philosophy
+and History itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;History,&rdquo; says Renouvier, &ldquo;is the experience which humanity has of
+itself,&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-131" name="linknoteref-131" id="linknoteref-131"><sup>[7]</sup></a> and his conclusions regarding
+progress depend on the views he holds regarding human personality and its
+essential attribute, freedom. The philosophy of history has to consider
+whether, in observing the development of humanity on the earth, one may assert
+the presence of any general law or laws. Can one say legitimately that there
+has been development? Is there really such a thing as progress? If so, what is
+our idea of progress? What is the trend of humanity&rsquo;s history? These are great
+questions.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-131" id="linknote-131"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-131">[7]</a>
+<i>Introduction à la Philosophie de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>, Préface.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attitude which Renouvier adopts to the whole course of human history is
+based upon his fundamental doctrines of discontinuity, freedom and personality.
+There are, he claims, real beginnings, unpredicable occurrences, happenings
+which cannot be explained as having been caused by preceding events. We must
+not, he urges, allow ourselves to be hypnotised by the name &ldquo;History,&rdquo; as if it
+were in itself some great power, sweeping all of us onward in its course, or a
+vast ocean in which we are merely waves. Renouvier stands firm in his loyalty
+to personality, and sees in history, not a power of this sort, but simply the
+total result of human actions. History is the collective work of the human
+spirit or of free personalities.<a href="#linknote-132" name="linknoteref-132" id="linknoteref-132"><sup>[8]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-132" id="linknote-132"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-132">[8]</a>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s great objection to Comte&rsquo;s work was due to his
+disagreement with Comte&rsquo;s conception of Humanity. To Renouvier, with his
+intense valuation of personality, this Comtian conception was too much of an
+abstraction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is erroneous to look upon it as either the fatalistic functioning of a law
+of things or as the results of the action of an all-powerful Deity or
+Providence. Neither the &ldquo;scientific&rdquo; view of determinism nor the theological
+conception of God playing with loaded dice, says Renouvier, will explain
+history. It is the outcome of human action, of personal acts which have real
+worth and significance in its formation. History is no mere display of
+marionettes, no Punch-and-Judy show with a divine operator pulling strings from
+his concealed position behind the curtain. Equally Renouvier disagrees with the
+view that history is merely an unrolling in time of a plan conceived from
+eternity. Human society and civilisation (of which history is the record) are
+products of man&rsquo;s own thought and action, and in consequence manifest
+discontinuity, freedom and contingency. Renouvier thus opposes strongly all
+those thinkers, such as the Saint-Simonists, Hegelians and Positivists, who see
+in history only a fatalistic development. He joins battle especially with those
+who claim that there is a fatalistic or necessitated progress. History has no
+law, he claims, and there is not and cannot be any law of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of progress is certainly, he admits, one with which the philosopher is
+brought very vitally into contact in his survey of history. Indeed an
+elucidation of, this notion might itself be a part of the historian&rsquo;s task. If
+so, the historians have sadly neglected part of their work. Renouvier calls
+attention to the fact that all those historians or philosophers who accept a
+comforting doctrine of humanity&rsquo;s assured progress make very plausible
+statements, but they never seem able to state with any clearness or
+definiteness what constitutes progress, or what significance lies in their
+oft-repeated phrase, &ldquo;the law of progress.&rdquo; He rightly points out that this
+insistence upon a law, coupled with a manifest inability to indicate what it
+is, causes naturally a certain scepticism as to there being any such law at
+all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier brands the search for any law of progress a futile one, since we
+cannot scientifically or logically define the goal of humanity or the course of
+its development because of the fact of freedom and because of our ignorance. We
+must realise that we, personally at firsthand, see only an infinitesimal part
+of humanity&rsquo;s life on this planet alone, not to speak of a destiny possible
+beyond this globe, and that, at second-hand, we have only evidence of a portion
+of the great procession of human events. We do not know humanity&rsquo;s beginning
+and primitive history, nor do we know its goal, if it has one. These factors
+alone are grave hindrances to the formulation of any conception of progress.
+Reflection upon them might have saved men, Renouvier observes, from the
+presumptuous belief in assured progress. We cannot presume even to estimate the
+tendencies, the direction of its course, because of the enormous and
+ever-increasing complexity of free human activity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By his large work on the &ldquo;Philosophy of History,&rdquo; Renouvier shows that the
+facts of history themselves are against the theory of a universal and
+continuous progress, for the record shows us conflict, advance, retrogression,
+peoples rising, others degenerating, empires establishing themselves and
+passing away by inward ruin or outer assaults, or both, and civilisations
+evolving and disintegrating in their turn. The spectacle does not readily
+promote an optimistic view of human development at all, much less support the
+doctrine of a sure and certain progress. Renouvier does not blind himself to
+the constant struggle and suffering. The theatre, or rather the arena, of
+history presents a curious spectacle. In politics and in religion he shows us
+that there are conflicts of authority and of free thought, a warfare of
+majorities with minorities, a method of fighting issues slightly less savage
+than the appeal to pure force, but amounting to what he terms &ldquo;a pacific
+application of the principle of force.&rdquo; History shows us the corruption,
+tyranny and blindness of many majorities, and the tragic and necessary resort
+to force as the only path to liberty for down-trodden minorities. How,
+Renouvier asks, can we fit this in with a doctrine of assured progress, or,
+indeed, progress at all?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Further, he does not find it difficult to show that much unthinking utterance
+on the part of the optimists may be somewhat checked by calm reflection on even
+one or two questions. For example, Was progress involved in the change from
+ancient slavery to the wage-slavery of modern industrialism? Was Christianity,
+as Nietzsche and others have attempted to maintain, a retrogression? Or, again,
+Was the change from Greek city life to the conditions of the Middle Ages in any
+way to be regarded as a progress?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier considers it quite erroneous to assert, as did Comte, that there is a
+steady and continuous development underlying the oscillations, and that the
+variations, as it were, from the direct line of progress cancel one another or
+balance each other, leaving, as Renan claimed, a balance always and inevitably
+on the side of goodness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a confidence in the great world banking concern Renouvier does not
+possess. There is no guarantee that the account of goodness may not be
+overdrawn and found wanting. He reminds us sternly and solemnly of the terrible
+solidarity which characterises evil. Deceit, greed, lust, violence and war have
+an enormous power of breeding each other and of supporting one another
+increasingly. The optimistic doctrines of progress are simply untrue statements
+of the facts of history, and falsely coloured views of human nature. It is an
+appalling error in &ldquo;social dynamics&rdquo; to overlook the clash of interest, the
+greed of nation and of class, the fundamental passionate hate and war. With it
+is coupled an error in &ldquo;social statics,&rdquo; in which faith is put in institutions,
+in the mechanism of society. These, declares Renouvier, will not save humanity;
+they will, indeed, ruin it if it allow itself, through spiritual and moral
+lethargy, to be dominated by them. They have been serviceable creations of
+humanity at some time or other, and they must serve men, but men must not be
+bound down to serve them. This servitude is evil, and it has profoundly evil
+consequences.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having attacked Comte&rsquo;s view of progress and of order in its static and dynamic
+point of view, Renouvier then brings up his heavy artillery of argument against
+Comte&rsquo;s idealisation of the Middle Ages. To assert that this period was an
+advance on the life of the Greek city, Renouvier considers to be little short
+of impudence. The art and science and philosophy of the Greeks are our best
+heritage, while the Middle Ages, dominated by a vicious and intolerant Church,
+with its infallible theology and its crushing power of the clergy, was a &ldquo;dead
+hand&rdquo; upon the human spirit. While it provided an organic society, it only
+succeeded in doing so by narrowing and crushing the human intellect. The
+Renascence and the Reformation proved that there were essential elements of
+human life being crushed down. They reached a point, however, where they
+exploded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not only does Renouvier thus declare the Middle Ages to be a regress, but he
+goes the length of asserting that the development of European history
+<i>could</i> have been different. This is his doctrine of freedom applied to
+history. There is no reason at all for our regarding the Middle Ages or any
+such period as necessitated in the order of mankind&rsquo;s development. There is no
+law governing that development; consequently, had mankind, or even a few of its
+number, willed and acted upon their freedom differently, the whole trend of the
+period we call the Dark Ages might have been quite other than it was. Renouvier
+does not shirk the development of this point, which is a central one for his
+purpose. It may seem fantastic to the historians, who must of course accept the
+past as given and consequently regard reflection on &ldquo;what might have been&rdquo; as
+wasted time. Certainly the past cannot be altered&mdash;that is not Renouvier&rsquo;s
+point. He intends to give a lesson to humanity, a stern lesson to cure it of
+its belief in fatalism in regard to history. This is the whole purpose of the
+curious volume he published in 1876, entitled <i>Uchronie</i>, which had as its
+explanatory sub-title <i>L&rsquo;Utopie dans l&rsquo;Histoire, Esquisse historique du
+Développement de la Civilisation européenne, tel qu&rsquo;il n&rsquo;a pas été, tel qu&rsquo;il
+avail pu être</i>. The book, consisting of two manuscripts supposed to be
+kept in the care of an old Dutch monk, is actually an imaginary construction by
+Renouvier himself of European history in the period 100 to 800 A.D., written to
+show the real possibility that the sequence of events from the Emperor Nerva to
+the Emperor Charlemagne might have been radically different from what it
+actually was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this is intended by Renouvier to combat the &ldquo;universal justification of the
+past.&rdquo; He sees that the doctrine of progress as usually stated is not only a
+lie, but that it is an extremely dangerous one, for it justifies the past, or
+at least condones it as inevitable, and thus makes evil a condition of
+goodness, demoralises history, nullifies ethics and encourages the damnation of
+humanity itself. This fatalistic doctrine, asserts Renouvier with great
+earnestness, must be abandoned; freedom must be recognised as operative, and
+the human will as making history.There is no law of progress, and the sooner
+humanity can come to realise this the better it will be for it. Only by such a
+realisation can it work out its own salvation. &ldquo;The real law lies&rdquo;, declares
+Renouvier,&rdquo;only in an equal possibility of progress or deterioration for both
+societies and individuals.&rdquo; If there is to be progress it can only come
+because, and when, humanity recognises itself as collectively responsible for
+its own history, and when each person feels his own responsibility regarding
+that action. No acceptance of events will avail; we must <i>will</i> progress
+and consciously set ourselves to realise it. It is possible, but it depends on
+us. Here Renouvier&rsquo;s considerations lead him from history to ethics. &ldquo;Almost
+all the Great Men, men of great will, have been fatalists. So slowly does
+humanity emerge from its shadows and beget for itself a just notion of its
+autonomy. The phantom of necessity weighs heavily,&rdquo; he laments, &ldquo;over the night
+of history.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-133" name="linknoteref-133" id="linknoteref-133"><sup>[9]</sup></a> With freedom and a recognition of
+its freedom by humanity generally we may see the dawn of better things.
+Humanity will then consciously and deliberately make its history, and not be
+led by the operations of herd-instinct and fatalistic beliefs which in the past
+have so disgraced and marred its record.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-133" id="linknote-133"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-133">[9]</a>
+<i>Psychologie ralionnelle</i>, vol. 2, p. 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The existing condition of human society can only be described frankly, in
+Renouvier&rsquo;s opinion, as a state of war. Each individual, each class, each
+nation, each race, is actually at war with others. It matters not whether a
+diplomatic state of peace, as it is called, exists or not; that must not blind
+us to the facts. By institutions, customs, laws, hidden fraud, diplomacy, and
+open violence, this conflict is kept up. It is all war, says Renouvier. Modern
+society is based on war, economic, military or judicial. Indeed, military and
+naval warfare is a clear issue, but only a symbol of what always goes on. Might
+always has the upper hand, hence ordinary life in modern society is just a
+state of war. Our civilisation does not rest on justice, or on the conception
+of justice; it rests on power and might. Until it is founded on justice, peace,
+he urges, will not be possible; humanity will be enslaved in further struggles
+disastrous o itself. This doctrine of the <i>état de guerre</i>, as descriptive
+of modern society, he makes a feature of his ethics, upon which we must not
+here encroach, but may point out that he insists upon justice as the ultimate
+social criterion, and claims that this is higher than charity, which is
+inadequate as a basis for society, however much it may alleviate its ills. One
+of the chief necessities, he points out, an essential to any progressive
+measure would be to moralise our modern notion of the state.<a href="#linknote-134" name="linknoteref-134" id="linknoteref-134"><sup>[10]</sup></a> In the notes to his last chapter of the <i>Nouvelle
+Monadologie</i> Renouvier attacks the Marxian doctrine of the materialistic
+determination of history.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-134" id="linknote-134"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-134">[10]</a>
+This point was further emphasised by Henri Michel in his
+work, <i>L&rsquo;Idée de l&rsquo;Etat</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This same book, however, we must note, marks a stage in Renouvier&rsquo;s own thought
+different from his doctrines in the earlier <i>Essais de Critique générale</i>,
+and this later philosophy, of which the <i>Monadologie</i> and
+<i>Personnalisme</i> are the two most notable volumes, displays an attempt to
+look upon progress from a more ultimate standpoint. His <i>théodicée</i> here
+involves the notion, seen in Ravaisson, of an early perfection, involving a
+subsequent &ldquo;fall,&rdquo; the world now, with its <i>guerre universelle</i>, being an
+intermediate stage between a perfect or harmonious state in the past and one
+which lies in the future.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The march of humanity is an uncertain one because it is free. The philosophy of
+history thus reiterates the central importance of freedom. The actual end or
+purpose of this freedom is not simply, says Renouvier, the attainment of
+perfection, but rather the possibility of progress. It was this thought which
+led him on in his reflections further than any of the thinkers of our period,
+or at least more deliberately than any, to indicate his views on the doctrine
+of a future life for humanity. So far from this being a purely religious
+problem, Renouvier rightly looks upon it as merely a carrying further afield of
+the conception of progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For him, and this is the significant point for us here, any notion of a future
+life for humanity, in the accepted sense of immortality, is bound up with, and
+indeed based upon, the conception of progressive development. It is true that
+Renouvier, like Kant, looks upon the problems of &ldquo;God, Freedom and Immortality&rdquo;
+as the central ones in philosophy, true also that he recognises the
+significance of this belief in a Future Life as an extremely important one for
+religious teaching; but his main attitude to the question is merely a
+continuation of his general doctrine of progress, coupled with his appreciation
+of personality. It is in this light only that Renouvier reflects upon the
+problem of Immortality. He makes no appeal to a world beyond our
+experience&mdash;a fact which follows from his rejection of the Kantian world
+of &ldquo;noumena&rdquo;; nor does he wish the discussion to be based on the assertions of
+religious faith. He admits that belief in a Future Life involves faith, in a
+sense, but it is a rational belief, a philosophical hypothesis and, more
+particularly, according to Renouvier, a moral hypothesis. He asserts against
+critics that the undertaking of such a discussion is a necessary part of any
+Critical Philosophy, which would be incomplete without it, as its omission
+would involve an inadequate account of human experience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier claims that, in the first instance, the question of a future
+existence arises naturally in the human mind from the discrepancy which is
+manifest in our experience between nature on the one hand and conscience on the
+other. The course of events is not in accord with what we feel to be morally
+right, and the demands of the moral law are, to Renouvier&rsquo;s mind, supreme. He
+realises how acutely this discrepancy is sometimes felt by the human mind, and
+his remarks on this point recall those of the sensitive soul, who, feeling this
+acutely, cried out:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Ah, Love! could thou and I with Fate conspire<br/>
+To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,<br/>
+Would we not shatter it to bits&mdash;and then<br/>
+Re-mould it nearer to the heart&rsquo;s desire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These lines well express the sharpness of Renouvier&rsquo;s own feelings, and he
+claims that, such a conspiracy being impossible, the belief in Immortality
+becomes a necessary moral postulate or probability.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The grounds for such a postulate are to be found, he claims, even in the
+processes of nature itself. The law of finality or teleology manifests itself
+throughout the universe: purpose is to be seen at work in the Cosmos. It is
+true that in the lower stages of existence it seems obscure and uncertain, but
+an observer cannot fail to see &ldquo;ends&rdquo; being achieved in the biological realm.
+The functions of organisms, more particularly those of the animal world, show
+us a realm of ends and means at work for achieving those ends. This development
+in the direction of an end, this teleology, implies, says Renouvier, a destiny.
+The whole of existence is a gradual procession of beings at higher and higher
+levels of development, ends and means to each other, and all inheriting an
+immense past, which is itself a means to their existence as ends in themselves.
+May one not then, suggests Renouvier, make a valid induction from the destiny
+thus recognised and partially fulfilled of certain individual creatures, to a
+destiny common to all these creatures indefinitely prolonged?<a href="#linknote-135" name="linknoteref-135" id="linknoteref-135"><sup>[11]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-135" id="linknote-135"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-135">[11]</a>
+<i>Psychologic rationnelle</i>, vol. 2, pp. 220-221.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The objection is here made that Nature does not concern herself with
+individuals; for her the individual is merely a means for the carrying on and
+propagation of the species. Individuals come into being, live for a time and
+pass away, the species lives on perpetually; only species are in the plan of
+the universe, individuals are of little or no worth. To this Renouvier replies
+that species live long but are not perpetual; whole species have been wiped out
+by happenings on our planet, many now are dying out. The insinuation about the
+worthlessness of individuals rouses his wrath, for it strikes at the very root
+of his philosophy, of which personality is the keynote. This, he says, is to
+lapse into Pantheism, into doctrines of Buddhists and of Spinoza. Pantheism and
+all kindred views are to be rejected. It is not in the indefinable,
+All-existing, the eternal and infinite One, that we find help with regard to
+the significance of ends in nature. Ends are to be sought in the individuals or
+the species. But while it behoves us to look upon the world as existing for the
+species and not the species for the sake of the world, we must remember that
+the species exists for the sake of the individuals in it. It is false to look
+upon the individuals as existing merely for the sake of the species.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If we subordinate the individual to the species, sacrificing his inherent worth
+and unique value, and then subordinate species to genus and all genera to the
+All, we lose ourselves in the Infinite substance in which everything is
+swallowed up. Again, Pantheism tends to speak of the perfection of individuals,
+and speaks loudly of progress from one generation to another. But it tells only
+of a future which involves the entire sacrifice of all that has worth or value
+in the past. It shows endless sacrifice, improvement too, but all for naught.
+&ldquo;What does it matter to say that the best is yet to be, if the best must perish
+as the good, to give place to a yet better &lsquo;best&rsquo; which will not have the
+virtue of enduring any more than the others? Do we offer any real consolation
+to Sisyphus,&rdquo; asks Renouvier, &ldquo;by promising him annihilation, which is coupled
+with the promise of successors capable of lifting his old rock higher and still
+higher up the fatal slope, by offering him the eternal falling of this rock and
+successors who will continually be annihilated and endlessly be replaced by
+others?&rdquo; The rock is the personal life. On this theory, however high the rock
+be pushed, it always is destined to fall back to the same depth, as low as if
+it had never been pushed up hill at all. We refuse to reconcile a world
+containing real ends and purposes within it with such a game, vast and
+miserable, in which no actor plays for his own sake, and all the false winners
+lose all their gains by being obliged to leave the party while the play goes on
+for ever. This is to throw away all individual worth, the value of all personal
+work and effort, to declare individuality a sham, and to embrace fatality. It
+is this mischievous Pantheism which is the curse of many religions and many
+philosophies. Against it Renouvier wages a ceaseless warfare. The individuals,
+he asserts exist both for their own sake and worth, also for the sake and
+welfare of others. In the person, the law of finality finds its highest
+expression. Personality is of supreme and unique value.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This being so, it becomes a necessary postulate of our philosophy, if we really
+believe in the significance of personalities and in progress (which Renouvier
+considers to have no meaning apart from them), to conclude that death is but an
+event in the career of these personalities. They are perpetuated beyond death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Renouvier, as for Kant, the chief arguments for survival are based on
+considerations of a moral character, upon the demands of the moral ideal for
+self- realisation, for the attainment of holiness or, more properly,
+&ldquo;wholeness.&rdquo; This progress can only be made possible by the continued existence
+after bodily death of the identical personality, unique and of eternal worth in
+the scheme of things, capable of further development than is possible amid the
+conditions of life as we know it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We must, however, present to ourselves Immortality as given by the development
+of appearances in this world of phenomena, under the general laws with which we
+are acquainted to-day, thus correcting the method of Kant, who placed
+Immortality in a noumenal world. The salvation of a philosopher should not be
+of such a kind. We must treat Immortality as a Law, not as a miracle. The
+thinker who accepts the latter view quits the realm of science&mdash;that is,
+of experience and reason&mdash;to establish a mystic order in contradiction
+with the laws of nature. The appeal to the &ldquo;supernatural&rdquo; is the denial of
+nature, and the appellant ruins his own case by his appeal. If Immortality is a
+fact, it must be considered rationally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Is Death&mdash;that is, the destruction of individuals as such, or the
+annihilation of personalities&mdash;a reality? Renouvier reminds those who jeer
+at the doctrine of Immortality that &ldquo;the reality of death (as so defined) has
+not been, and cannot be, proved.&rdquo; Our considerations must of necessity be
+hypothetical, but they can be worthy of rational beings. We must then keep our
+hopes and investigations within the realm of the universe and not seek to place
+our hope of immortality in a region where nothing exists, &ldquo;not even an ether to
+support the wings of our hope.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s general considerations led him to view all individuals as having a
+destiny in which their individuality should be conserved and developed. When we
+turn in particular to man, these points are to be seen in fuller light. The
+instinctive belief in Immortality is bound up with his nature as a thinking
+being who is capable of setting up, and of striving after, ends. This continual
+striving is a marked characteristic of all human life, a counting oneself not
+to have attained, a missing of the mark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The human consciousness protests against annihilation. At times this is very
+keenly expressed. &ldquo;At the period of the great aspirations of the heart, the
+ecstasy of noble passions is accompanied by the conviction of Immortality. Life
+at its highest, realising its richest personality, protests, in virtue of its
+own worth, and in the name of the depths of power it still feels latent in
+itself, against the menace of annihilation.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-136" name="linknoteref-136" id="linknoteref-136"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+It cries out with its unconquerable soul:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Give me the glory of going on and not to die!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-136" id="linknote-136"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-136">[12]</a>
+<i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>, vol. 2, p. 249.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier finds a further witness in the testimony of Love&mdash;that is to
+say, in nature itself arrived at the consciousness of that passion in virtue of
+which it exists and assuring itself by this passion, of the power to surmount
+all these short-comings and failures. Love casteth out fear, the dread of
+annihilation, and shows itself &ldquo;stronger than death.&rdquo; Hope and Love unite in
+strengthening the initial belief in Immortality and the &ldquo;will to survive.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier admits that this is <i>a priori</i> reasoning, and speedily <i>a
+posteriori</i> arguments can be brought up as mighty battering-rams against the
+fortress of immortal life, but although they mav shake its walls, they are
+unable to destroy the citadel. Nothing can demonstrate the impossibility of
+future existence, whereas the whole weight of the moral law and the
+teleological elements at work in the universe are, according to Renouvier, in
+favour of such a belief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morality, like every other science, is entitled to, nay obliged to, employ the
+hypothesis of harmony. Now in this connection the hypothesis of harmony (or, as
+Kant styled it, the concurrence of happiness and virtue necessary to a
+conception of order) finds reinforcement from the consideration of the meaning
+and significance of freedom. For the actual end or purpose of freedom is not
+simply the attainment of perfection, but rather the possibility of progress.
+Immortality becomes a necessary postulate, reinforced by instinct, reason,
+morality, by the fact of freedom, and the notion of progress. Further,
+Renouvier feels that if we posit death as the end of all we thereby give an
+absolute victory to physical evil in the universe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The postulate of Immortality has a certain dignity and worth. The discussion of
+future life must, however, be kept within the possibilities of law and
+phenomena. Religious views, such as those of Priestley, by their appeal to the
+miraculous debase the notion of Immortality itself. Talk of an immortal
+essence, and a mortal essence is meaningless, for unless the same identical
+person, with his unique character and memory, persists, then our conception of
+immortality is of little or no value. The idea of an indestructible spiritual
+substance is not any better or more acceptable. Our notion of a future life
+must be based upon the inherent and inalienable rights of the moral person to
+persistence and to chances of further development or progress. Although we must
+beware of losing ourselves in vain speculations, which really empty our thought
+of all its content, Renouvier claims that we are quite entitled to lay down
+hypotheses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same general laws which we see in operation and which have brought the
+universe and the beings in it to the stage of development in which they now are
+may, without contradiction, be conceived as operating in further developments
+after the change we call bodily death. There is no incongruity in conceiving
+the self-same personality continuing in a second and different organism.
+Renouvier cites the case of the grub and the butterfly and other metamorphoses.
+In man himself he points to organic crises, which give the organism a very
+different character and effect a radical change in its constitution. For
+example, there is the critical exit from the mother&rsquo;s womb, involving the
+change from a being living in an enclosure to that of an independent creature.
+When once the crisis of the first breath be passed the organism starts upon
+another life. There are other crises, as, for instance, the radical changes
+which operate in both sexes at the stage of puberty. Just as the personality
+persists in its identity through all these changes, may it not pass through
+that of bodily death?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Stoics believed in a cosmic resurrection. Substituting the idea of progress
+for their view of a new beginning, Renouvier claims that we may attain the
+hypothesis that all human history is but a fragment in a development
+incomparably greater and grander. Again, we may conceive of life in two worlds
+co-existing, indeed interpenetrating, so that the dead are not gone far from us
+into some remote heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, whatever form we give to our hypothesis regarding progress into another
+existence beyond this present one, Renouvier does not easily allow us to forget
+that it must be based upon the significance of freedom, progress and
+personality supported by moral considerations. Even this progress is not
+guaranteed, and even if it should be the achievement of some spirits there is
+no proof that it is universal. Our destiny, he finally reminds us, lies in our
+own hands, for progress here means an increased capacity for progress later,
+while spiritual and moral indifference will result finally, and indeed,
+necessarily, in annihilation. Here, as so often in his work, Renouvier puts
+moral arguments and appeals in the forefront of his thought. Progress in
+relation to humanity&rsquo;s life on earth drew from him an appeal for the
+establishment of justice: progress in a further world implies equally a moral
+appeal. Our duty is to keep the ideal of progress socially and individually
+ever before us, and to be worthy of immortality if it be a fact, rather than to
+lose ourselves in the mistaken piety of &ldquo;other- worldliness.&rdquo; About neither
+progress can we be dogmatic; it is not assured, Renouvier has shown, and we
+must work for it by the right use of our freedom, our intelligence and our
+will.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+No thinker discussed the problem of progress with greater energy or penetration
+than Renouvier. The new spiritualist group, however, developed certain views
+arising from the question of contingency, or the relation of freedom to
+progress. These thinkers were concerned more with psychological and
+metaphysical work, and with the exception of Fouillée and Guyau, they wrote
+little which bore directly upon the problem of progress. Many of their ideas,
+however, have an indirect bearing upon important points at issue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Ravaisson, Lachelier and Boutroux, we find the question of teleology
+presented, and also that of the opposition of spirit and matter. From the
+outset the new spiritualism had to wrestle with two difficulties inherent in
+the thought of Ravaisson. These were, firstly, the reconciliation of the
+freedom and spontaneity of the spirit with the operations of a Divine
+Providence or teleology of some kind; and, secondly, the dualism assumed in the
+warfare of spirit and matter, although spirit was held to be superior and
+anterior to matter. This last involved a complication for any doctrine of
+progress, as it required a primitive &ldquo;fall&rdquo; to account for matter, even a fall
+of the Deity himself. This Ravaisson himself admits, and he thinks that in
+creating the world God had to sacrifice some of his own being. In this case
+&ldquo;progress&rdquo; is set over against a transcendental existence, and is but the
+reawakening of what once existed in God, and in a sense now and eternally
+exists. Progress there is, claims Ravaisson, towards truth and beauty and
+goodness. This is the operation of a Divine Providence acting by attracting men
+freely to these ideals, and as these are symbols of God himself, progress is
+the return of the spirit through self-conscious personalities to the fuller
+realisation of harmony, beauty and love&mdash;that is, to the glory of God, who
+has ever been, now is, and ever shall be, perfect beauty, goodness and love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, although from a temporal and finite standpoint Ravaisson can speak of
+progress, it is doubtful if he is justified in doing so ultimately, <i>sub
+specie æternitatis</i>. To solve the problem in the way he presents it, one
+would need to know more about the ultimate value and significance of the
+personalities themselves, and their destiny in relation to the Divinity who is,
+as he claims, perfect harmony, beauty and love. It was this point, so dear to
+an upholder of personality, which had led Renouvier to continue his discussion
+of progress in relation to history as generally understood, until it embraced a
+wider field of eternal destiny, and to consider the idea of a future life as
+arising from, and based upon, the conception of progress. It is this same point
+which later perplexes Bergson, when he recognises this self-conscious
+personality as the ultimate development of the évolution créatrice, and so
+constituting in a sense the goal of the spirit, although he is careful to state
+that there is no finalism involved at all. Ravaisson stands for this finalism,
+however, in claiming that there are ends. He does not see how otherwise we
+could speak of progress, as we should have no criterion, no <i>terminus ad
+quem</i>; all would be simply process, not progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>&ldquo;Détachement de Dieu, retour à Dieu, clôture du grand cercle
+cosmique, restitution de l&rsquo;universel équilibre, telle est l&rsquo;histoire du
+monde.&rdquo;</i> Such is Ravaisson&rsquo;s doctrine, much of which is akin to, and indeed
+re-echoes, much in Christian theology from St. Augustine, with his idea of an
+eternal and restless movement of return to the divinity, to the Westminster
+divines in their answer to the important query about the chief end of man,
+which they considered to be not only to glorify God but to enjoy Him for ever.
+This last and rather strange phrase only seems to have significance if we
+conceive, in Ravaisson&rsquo;s manner, of beauty, truth and goodness as expressions
+or manifestations of the Divinity to whom the world-process may freely tend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Lachelier the universal process presents a triple aspect, mechanism which
+is coupled with finalism and with freedom. These three principles are in action
+simultaneously in the world and in the individual. Each of us is at once
+matter, living soul and personality&mdash;that is, necessity, finality and
+freedom. The laws of the universe, so far from being expressed entirely by
+mechanical formulae, can only be expressed, as Ravaisson had claimed, by an
+approach to harmony and beauty, not in terms of logic or geometry. All this
+involves a real progress, a creativeness, which differs from Ravaisson&rsquo;s
+return, as it were, to the bosom of God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boutroux combines the views of Ravaisson and Lachelier by insisting on freedom
+and contingency, but maintaining at the same time a teleological doctrine.
+Already in discussing his conception of freedom we have referred to his
+metaphor of the sailors in the ship. His doctrine of contingency is directly
+opposed to any rigid pre-ordained plan of reality or progress, but it does not
+prevent the spirit from a creative teleology, the formation of a plan as it
+advances. This is precisely, is it not, the combination of free action and of
+teleology which we find in our own lives? Boutroux is thus able to side with
+Ravaisson in his claim to see tendencies to beauty and truth and goodness, the
+fruits of the spirit, which it creates and to which it draws us, while at the
+same time he maintains freedom in a manner quite as emphatic as Lachelier. He
+is careful to remind us that &ldquo;not all developments are towards
+perfection.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-137" name="linknoteref-137" id="linknoteref-137"><sup>[13]</sup></a> In particular he dislikes the
+type of social theory or of sociology which undervalues the personal life.<a href="#linknote-138" name="linknoteref-138" id="linknoteref-138"><sup>[14]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-137" id="linknote-137"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-137">[13]</a>
+<i>Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>, p. 127.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-138" id="linknote-138"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-138">[14]</a>
+Thus he agrees with Renouvier&rsquo;s objection to
+Comte&rsquo;s view and to Communism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Similar in many ways to the ideas of Ravaisson and of Boutroux are those
+expressed by Blondel. He is concerned deeply with the problem of God and
+progress, which arises out of his view of the Deity as immanent and as
+transcendent. He is quite Bergsonian in his statement that God creates Himself
+in us, but he qualifies this by asking the significant question, &ldquo;If he does
+not EXIST how can He create Himself in us.&rdquo; This brings us back to Ravaisson&rsquo;s
+view. Other remarks of Blondel, however, recall the doctrine of Vacherot and of
+Renan, that God is the ideal to which we are ever striving. &ldquo;It is a necessity
+that we should be moving on, for He is always beyond.&rdquo; All action is an
+advance, a progress through the realm of materialistic determinism to the
+self-conscious personality in man, but it is from a transcendent teleology, a
+Divine Providence, that this action proceeds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the line of thought pursued by Fouillée, who in many of his writings
+gives considerable attention to the doctrines of progress. It may be doubted,
+however if he ever surpassed the pages in his <i>Liberté et Déterminisme</i>
+and <i>L&rsquo;Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces</i>, which deal with this point. These
+are the best expressions of his philosophy, and Fouillée repeated himself a
+great deal. We might add, however, his <i>Socialism</i> and his book on
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Métaphysique</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have observed the importance attached by Comte to his new science of
+sociology. Fouillée endeavours to give to it a metaphysical significance with
+which Comte did not concern himself. He suggests in his volume on <i>La Science
+sociale contemporaine</i> that as biology and sociology are closely related,
+the laws common to them may have a cosmic significance. Is the universe, he
+asks, anything more than a vast society in process of formation, a vast system
+of conscious, striving atoms? Social science which Fouillée looks upon, as did
+Comte, as constituting the crown of human knowledge, may offer us, he thinks,
+the secret of universal life, and show us the world as the great society in
+process of development, erring here and blundering there in an effort to rise
+above the sphere of physical determinism and materialism to a sphere where
+justice shall be supreme, and brotherhood take the place of antagonism, greed
+and war. The power at the heart of things, which is always ready to manifest
+itself in the human consciousness when it can, might be expressed, says
+Fouillée, in one word as &ldquo;sociability.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Life in its social aspect displays a <i>conspiration</i> to a common end. The
+life of a community resembles a highly evolved organism in many respects, as
+Fouillée shows; but although he thus partially adopts the biological and
+positivist view of the sociologists, Fouillée does not overlook the idealistic
+conceptions of Renouvier and his plea for social justice. He rather emphasises
+this plea, and takes the opportunity to point out that it represents the best
+political thought of his country, being founded on the doctrine of the
+<i>contrat social</i> of Rousseau, of which social theory it is a clear and
+modern interpretation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may take the opportunity afforded here by Fouillée&rsquo;s mention of sociology,
+in which he was so keenly interested, to observe that the positivist tendency
+to emphasise an indefinite progress remained with most of the sociologists and
+some of the historians. It is seen in the two famous sociological works of
+Tarde and Durkheim respectively, <i>Les Lois de l&rsquo;Imitation</i> and <i>La
+Division du Travail social</i>. Two writers on history deserve mention as
+illustrating the same tendency: Lacombe, whose work <i>De l&rsquo;Histoire considérée
+comme Science</i> (1894) was very positivist in outlook, and Xénopol. This last
+writer, treating history in 1899 in his <i>Principes fondamentaux de
+l&rsquo;Histoire</i>,<a href="#linknote-139" name="linknoteref-139" id="linknoteref-139"><sup>[15]</sup></a> distinguished cause in history
+from causality in science, and showed that white the latter leads to the
+formation of general laws the former does not. History has no laws, for it is
+succession but never repetition. Much of his book, however, reflects the
+naturalism and positivism which is a feature of the sociological writers.<a href="#linknote-140" name="linknoteref-140" id="linknoteref-140"><sup>[16]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-139" id="linknote-139"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-139">[15]</a>
+This work, revised and considerably augmented, was
+re-issued in 1905 with the new title, <i>La Théorie de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-140" id="linknote-140"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-140">[16]</a>
+It was this which made Enouvier criticise
+sociology. He disagreed with its principles almost entirely. On this, see his
+notes to &ldquo;<i>La Justice</i>,&rdquo; Part VII. of <i>La Nouvelle Monadogie</i>, pp.
+527-530.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was his doctrine of <i>idées-forces</i> and its essential spiritualism or
+idealism which distinguished Fouillée&rsquo;s attitude from that of these
+sociologists who were his contemporaries. It was the basis, too, of his
+trenchant criticisms of socialism, particularly its Marxian forms. Fouillée
+agrees with Comte&rsquo;s doctrine that speculation or thought is the chief factor
+and prime mover in social change. For Fouillée the idea is always a force; and
+it is, in this connection, the supreme force. The history of action can only be
+understood, he asserts, in relation to the history of ideas. This is the
+central gospel of the <i>évolutionnisme des idées-forces</i>. The mental or
+spiritual is the important factor. This he opposes to the Marxian doctrine of
+economic determinism. Will is, he claims a greater reality than brute forces,
+and in will lies the essence of the human spirit. It is a will, however, which
+is bound up with reason and self-consciousness, and which is progressive in
+character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Summing up his work, <i>Histoire générale de la Philosophie</i>, Fouillée
+refers in his Conclusion to the idea of progress as having become the dominant
+note in philosophy. He looks upon the history of philosophy as, in some
+measure, witness to this. Above the ebb and flow of the varied systems and
+ideas which the ages have produced he sees an advance accomplished in the
+direction to which humanity is tending&mdash;perfect knowledge of itself or
+collective self-consciousness and perfect self- possession. This type of
+progress is not to be equated with scientific progress. He points out that in
+the development of philosophy, which is that of human reflection itself, two
+characteristics appear. The distinction of two kinds or aspects of truth is
+seen in philosophy; one section, dealing with logic, psychology, aesthetic and
+applied ethics, or sociology, approaches to a scientific character of
+demonstrability, while the other section, which constitutes philosophy in the
+strict sense of metaphysic, deals with ultimate questions not capable of proof
+but demanding a rational faith. Obviously the same kind of progress cannot be
+found in each of these sections. This must be realised when progress in
+knowledge is spoken about. He suggests, as illustrative of progress even in the
+speculative realm, the fact that humanity is slowly purifying its conception of
+God&mdash;a point for further notice in our last chapter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However much Fouillée is concerned with establishing; a case for progress in
+knowledge, it is clear that his main stress is on the progress in
+self-consciousness or that self- determination which is freedom. This freedom
+can only grow as man consciously realises it himself. It is an
+<i>idée-force</i>, and has against it all the forces of fatalism and of egoism.
+For Fouillée quite explicitly connects his doctrine of freedom with that of
+altruism. The real freedom and the real progress are one, he claims, since they
+both are to be realised only in the increasing power of disinterestedness and
+love. He believes in the possibility of a free progress. Fatality is really
+egoism, or produces it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée has a rather clear optimism, for he finds in the development of real
+freedom a movement which will involve a moral and social union of mankind. The
+good- will is more truly human nature than egoism and selfishness. These vices,
+he maintains in his <i>Idée moderne du Droit</i>,<a href="#linknote-141" name="linknoteref-141" id="linknoteref-141"><sup>[17]</sup></a> are largely a product of unsatisfied physical
+wants. The ideal of the good-will is not a contradiction of human nature,
+because, he asserts, that nature desires and wills its good. More strikingly,
+he states that the human will tends ultimately not to conflict but to
+co-operation as it becomes enlightened and universalised. He disagrees with the
+pessimists and upholds a comparatively cheerful view of human nature. Egoism is
+much less deeply rooted than sympathy, and therefore, he says, war and strife
+are transitory features of human development. One contrasts the views of Taine
+and Renouvier with this, and feels that man&rsquo;s history has been, as far as we
+know it, entirely of this &ldquo;transitory&rdquo; nature, and is long likely to be so.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-141" id="linknote-141"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-141">[17]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Idée moderne du Droit</i>, Livre IV.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée&rsquo;s optimism seems to be overdrawn mainly because of his doctrine of the
+<i>idée-force</i>. He exaggerates the response which human nature is likely to
+make to the ideal good. Even if it be lifted up, it is not likely to draw
+<i>all</i> men to it. Yet Fouillée&rsquo;s social and ethical doctrines stand
+entirely upon this foundation. They are valuable views, and Fouillée is never
+better than when he is exhorting his fellows to act upon the ideas of freedom,
+of justice, of love and brotherhood. He is right in his insistence upon
+humanity&rsquo;s power to create good- will, to develop a new order. For the good
+man, he says, fatality and egoism are obstacles to be overcome Believing in
+freedom and in sympathy, he acts to others in a spirit of freedom and love. By
+his very belief in universal good-will among men, he assists largely in
+creating it and realising it in the world.<a href="#linknote-142" name="linknoteref-142" id="linknoteref-142"><sup>[18]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-142" id="linknote-142"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-142">[18]</a>
+Conclusion to <i>Liberté et Déterminisme</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But did not Fouillée, one asks, overrate the number of good men (as good in his
+sense), or rather did he not exaggerate the capacities of human nature to
+respond to the ideal which he presents? Much of his confidence in moral and
+social progress finds its explanation here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His step-son, Guyau, was not quite so optimistic, although he believed in a
+progress towards &ldquo;sociability&rdquo; and he adopted many of the doctrines of the
+<i>philosphie des idées-forces</i>. He attacks cheerful optimism in his
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i>, where he remarks<a href="#linknote-143" name="linknoteref-143" id="linknoteref-143"><sup>[19]</sup></a> that an absolute theory of optimism is
+really an immoral theory, for it involves the negation of progress in the
+strict and true sense. This is because, when it dominates the mind, it produces
+a feeling of entire satisfaction and contentment with the existing reality,
+resulting in resignation and acceptance of, if not an actual worship of, the
+<i>status quo</i>. In its utter obedience to all &ldquo;powers that be,&rdquo; the notions
+of right and of duty are dimmed, if not lost. A definitely pessimistic view of
+the universe would, he suggests, be in many respects better and more productive
+of good than an outrageous optimism. Granting that it is a wretched state in
+which a man sees all things black, it is preferable, Guyau thinks, to that in
+which all things appear rosy or blue.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-143" id="linknote-143"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-143">[19]</a>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale</i>, p. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau concludes his <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i> by
+remarking: &ldquo;We are, as it were, on the <i>Leviathan</i>, from which a wave has
+torn the rudder and a blast of wind carried away the mainmast. It is lost in
+the ocean as our earth is lost in space. It floats thus at random, driven by
+the tempest, like a huge derelict, yet with men upon it, and yet it reaches
+port. Perhaps our earth, perhaps humanity, will also reach that unknown end
+which they will have created for themselves. No hand directs us; the rudder has
+long been broken, or rather it has never existed; we must make it: it is a
+great task, and it is our task.&rdquo; This paragraph speaks for itself as regards
+Guyau&rsquo;s attitude to the doctrine of an assured progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his notable book <i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>, the importance of which we
+shall note more fully when we deal with the religious problem in our last
+chapter, Guyau indicates the possibilities of general intellectual progress in
+the future. The demand of life itself for fuller expression will involve the
+decay of cramping superstitions and ecclesiastical dogmas. The aesthetic
+elements will be given a larger place, and there will be intellectual freedom.
+Keen as Guyau is upon maintaining the sociological standpoint, he sees the
+central factor in progress to be the mental. &ldquo;Progress,&rdquo; he remarks,<a href="#linknote-144" name="linknoteref-144" id="linknoteref-144"><sup>[20]</sup></a> &ldquo;is not simply a sensible amelioration of
+life&mdash;it is also the achievement of a better intellectual formulation of
+life, it is a triumph of logic. To progress is to attain to a more complete
+consciousness of one&rsquo;s self and of the world, and by that very fact to a more
+complete inner consistency of one&rsquo;s theory of the world.&rdquo; Guyau follows his
+stepfather in his view of &ldquo;sociability&rdquo; or <i>fraternité</i> (to use the
+watchword of the Revolution) as the desirable end at which we should
+progressively aim&mdash;a conclusion which is but the social application of
+his central concept of Life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-144" id="linknote-144"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-144">[20]</a>
+Introduction to <i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next step in human progress must be in the direction of human solidarity.
+Guyau thinks it will arise from collective, co-operative energy (<i>synergie
+sociale</i>). Further progress must involve simultaneously <i>sympathie
+sociale</i>, a community of fellowship or comradeship, promoted by education of
+a true kind, not mere instruction, but a proper development and valuation of
+the feelings. Here art will play its part and have its place beside science,
+ethics and philosophy in furthering the ideal harmony in human society. Such
+Progress involves, therefore, that the Beautiful must be sought and appreciated
+no less than the True and the Good, for it is a revelation of the larger Life
+of which we ourselves are part. These ideals are in themselves but
+manifestations of the Supreme Vitality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same spontaneous vital activity of which Guyau makes a central doctrine
+characterises Bergson&rsquo;s view of reality. He upholds, like Boutroux, freedom and
+contingency, but he will not admit finalism in any shape or form, not even a
+teleology which is created in the process of development. He refuses to admit
+as true of the universal process in nature and in human history what is
+certainly true of human life&mdash;the fact that we create ends as we go on
+living. For Bergson there is no end in the universe, unless it be that of
+spontaneity of life such as Guyau had maintained. There is no guarantee of
+progress, no law of development, but endless possibility of progress. Such a
+view, as we have already insisted, is not pessimistic. It is, however, a
+warning to facile optimism to realise that humanity, being free, may go &ldquo;dead
+wrong.&rdquo; While Boutroux maintains with Ravaisson that there is at the heart of
+things a tendency to superior values such as beauty, goodness and truth, and
+while Renan assures us that the balance of goodness in the world is a guarantee
+of its ultimate triumph, Bergson, like Renouvier, gives us stern warning that
+there is no guarantee in the nature of things that humanity should not set its
+heart on other values, on materialistic and egoistic conceptions, and go down
+in ruin quarrelling and fighting for these things. There is no power, he
+reminds us, keeping humanity right and in the line of desirable progress. All
+is change, but that is not to say that all changes are desirable or
+progressive. Here we arrive at a point far removed from the rosy optimism of
+the earlier thinkers. Progress as a comfortable doctrine, confidently accepted
+and dogmatically asserted, no longer holds ground; it is seen to be quite
+untenable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Bergson the difficulty which besets Ravaisson reappears more
+markedly&mdash;namely, the relation of spirit and matter to one another, and to
+the power at the heart of things, which, according to Bergson himself, is a
+spiritual principle. Here we seem forced to admit Ravaisson&rsquo;s view of a &ldquo;fall&rdquo;
+or, as the theologians would say, a &ldquo;Kenosis&rdquo; of the deity in order to create
+the material universe. Yet in the processes of nature we see spirit having to
+fight against matter, and of this warfare Bergson makes a great point. These
+considerations lead to discussions which Bergson has not touched upon as yet.
+He does not follow Ravaisson and Boutroux into the realm of theological ideas.
+If he did he might have to make admissions which would compromise, or at least
+modify, other doctrines expressed by him. He will have none of Hegel or of the
+Absolute Idealism which sees the world process as a development of a Divine
+Idea. It is new and it is creation; there is no repetition. Even God himself
+<i>se fait</i> in the process, and it may be, suggests Bergson, that love is
+the secret of the universe. If so we may well ask with Blondel, &ldquo;If God <i>se
+fait</i> in the process, then does he not already exist and, in a sense, the
+process with him?&rdquo; Instead, however, of reverting to Ravaisson&rsquo;s view of the
+whole affair being a search for, and return to God, Bergson claims that the
+development is a purely contingent one, in which a super-consciousness develops
+by experiment and error.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bergson&rsquo;s God, if he may be so-called, is not so much a Creator, but a power
+creative of creators&mdash;that is, human personalities capable of free action.
+The Deity is immanent in man, and, like man, is ignorant of the trend of the
+whole process. The universe, according to Bergson, is a very haphazard affair,
+in which the only permanence is change. There is no goal, and progress has
+little meaning if it be only and merely further change, which may be equally
+regress rather than progress. To live is not merely to change, but to triumph
+over change to set up some values as of absolute worth, and to aim at realising
+and furthering these. Apart from some philosophy of values the conception of
+progress has little meaning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Interesting discussions of various aspects of the problem are to be found in
+the writings of the sociologist we have mentioned, Durkheim, particularly <i>La
+Division du Travail sociale</i>, <i>Le Suicide</i> and <i>Les Formes
+élémentaires de la Vie religieuse</i>. There is an interesting volume by Weber,
+entitled <i>Le Rythme du Progres</i>, and there are the numerous books of Dr.
+Gustave Le Bon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although he is not strictly a philosopher in the academic or professional
+sense, and his work belongs to literature rather than to the philosophy of the
+period, we cannot help calling attention briefly here, at the conclusion of
+this chapter, to the genial pessimism of Bergson&rsquo;s great literary contemporary,
+Anatole France, the famous satirist of our age. His irony on questions like
+that of progress is very marked in <i>L&rsquo;Ile des Penguins</i> and in
+<i>Jérôme Coignard</i>. A remark from one of his works, this latter, will
+sufficiently illustrate his view on progress. &ldquo;I take little interest,&rdquo; remarks
+his character, the Abbé Coignard, &ldquo;in what is done in the King&rsquo;s Cabinet, for I
+notice that the course of life is in no way changed, and after reforms men are
+as before, selfish, avaricious, cowardly, cruel, stupid and furious by turns,
+and there is always a nearly even number of births, marriages, cuckolds and
+gallows-birds, in which is made manifest the beautiful ordering of our society.
+This condition is stable, sir, and nothing could shake it, for it is founded on
+human misery and imbecility, and those are foundations which will never be
+wanting.&rdquo; The genial old Abbé then goes on to remind socialist revolutionaries
+that new economic schemes will not radically change human nature. We easily see
+the ills in history and blind ourselves with optimism for the future. Even in
+Sorel, the Syndicalist, who has added to his articles on <i>Violence</i> (which
+appeared in 1907 in the periodical <i>Le Mouvement socialiste</i>) a work on
+<i>Les Illusions du Progrès</i>, we find the same doctrines about the vices of
+modern societies, which he considers no better than ancient ones in their
+morality; they are filled with more hypocrisy, that is all. France and Sorel
+only add more testimony to the utter collapse of the old doctrine of assured
+and general progress.
+</p>
+
+<p class="asterism">
+*    *    *    *    *    *    *    *    *
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To such a final position do we come in following out the development of the
+idea of progress. The early assurance and dogmatic confidence which marked the
+early years of the century are followed by a complete abandonment of the idea
+of a guaranteed or assured progress, whether based on the operations of a
+Divine Providence, or on faith in the ultimate triumph of reason, or on merely
+a fatalistic determinism. Progress is only a possibility, and its realisation
+depends on &lsquo;humanity&rsquo;s own actions. Further, any mention of progress in future
+must not only present it as quite contingent, but we have to reckon with the
+fact that the idea of progress may itself progress until it resolves itself
+into another conception less complicated and less paradoxical, such as &ldquo;the
+attainment of a new equilibrium.&rdquo; Some effort must be devoted also to a
+valuation of criteria. Various values have in the past been confused together,
+scientific, materialistic, hedonistic, moral, aesthetic. Ultimately it seems
+that we shall find difficulty in settling this apart from the solution offered
+by Renouvier&mdash;namely, that true progress is not merely intellectual, but
+moral. It involves not merely a conquest of material nature but of human
+nature&mdash;a self- mastery. Progress is to be measured not by the
+achievements of any aristocracy, intellectual or other, but by the general
+social status, and our criterion of progress must be ultimately that of social
+justice. This itself is a term needing interpretation, and to this question of
+ethics we now turn.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI<br/>
+ETHICS</h2>
+
+<p>
+INTRODUCTION : Difficulties of the moral problem as presented in the nineteenth
+century&mdash;Recognised as a social problem&mdash;Influence of Comte
+important in this connection&mdash;Other
+influences&mdash;Christianity&mdash;Kant&mdash;The practical reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. Taine and Renan&mdash;Renan&rsquo;s critique of Christian morality&mdash;Early
+socialistic views&mdash;Change in his later life&mdash;Prefers criterion of
+beauty to that of goodness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Renouvier the great moralist of our period&mdash;Relation to Kant &mdash;His
+Science de la Morale&mdash;Personality in Ethics&mdash;Justice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. Fouillée, Guyau, Ollé-Laprune and Rauh pass further from the Kantian rigorism
+to an ethic in harmony with the philosophy of idées-forces of life and
+action&mdash;Humanitarianism of Fouillée and Guyau&mdash;Idées-forces and
+Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction &mdash;Rauh&rsquo;s doctrines&mdash;Other
+thinkers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+CONCLUSION: Action and belief&mdash;Ethics and Religion.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VI<br/>
+ETHICS</h3>
+
+<p>
+Moral philosophy is probably the most difficult branch of those various
+disciplines of the human spirit summed up in the general conception of
+philosophy. This difficulty is one which all the thinkers of our period
+recognised. Many of them, occupied with other problems on the psychological or
+metaphysical side, did not write explicitly upon ethics. Yet the problem of
+ethics, its place, significance and authority, is but the other side of that
+problem of freedom which has appeared throughout this development as central
+and vital. The ethical consciousness of man has never been content for long
+with the assertion that ethics is a purely positive science, although it has
+obviously a positive side. The essence of morality has been regarded as not
+merely a description of what exists, but what might, should or ought to exist.
+Ethics is normative, it erects or endeavours to outline a standard which is an
+ideal standard. This is the characteristic of ethics, and so long as the moral
+conscience of humanity, individually and collectively, does not slumber nor
+die, it will remain so. This conflict between the ideal and the real, the
+positive and normative is indeed the chief source of pain and conflict to man,
+but without it he would cease to be human.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whatever the difficulties, the philosopher who aspires to look upon human life
+as a whole must give <i>some</i> interpretation of this vital aspect of human
+consciousness. It is in this connection that a solution of the problem of
+freedom is so valuable, for under a purely determinist and positivist reading
+of life, the moral sentiments become mere data for an anthropological survey,
+the hope and tragedy of human life are replaced, comfortably perhaps for some,
+by an interpretation in which the true significance of ethics is lost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the outstanding features of the discussion upon ethics in our period is
+the fact that the social standpoint colours most of the discussion. This was
+largely due to the impulse given by Comte and continued by the sociologists. We
+have already remarked the importance which he attached to his new science of
+society or &ldquo;sociology.&rdquo; However much the development of this branch of study
+may have disappointed the hopes of Comte, it has laid a powerful and necessary
+emphasis upon the solidarity of the problems of society. As Comte claimed that
+psychology could not be profitably studied in the isolated individual alone, so
+he insisted that ethics could only be studied with profit from a social
+standpoint. This was not forgotten by subsequent thinkers, even by those who
+were not his followers, and the main development of the ethical problem in our
+period is marked by an increasing insistence upon sociability and solidarity.
+Comte was able to turn the thoughts of philosophers away from pre-occupation
+with the isolated individual, conceived as a cold and calculating intellectual
+machine, a &ldquo;fiction&rdquo; which had engrossed the minds of thinkers of the previous
+century. He was able also to indicate the enormous part played by instincts,
+particularly &ldquo;herd-instincts,&rdquo; by passion and feelings of social hatred and
+social sympathy. It was the extension of social sympathy upon which Comte
+insisted as the chief good. The great defect of Christianity from an ethical
+standpoint was, Comte pointed out, due to its individualistic ethic. To the
+doctrine of &ldquo;saving one&rsquo;s own soul&rdquo; Comte opposed that of the salvation of
+humanity. The social unit is not the individual man or woman, it is the family.
+In that society which is not a mere association but a union, arising from
+common interests and sympathy, the individual realises himself as part of
+society. The highest ethical conception, however, arises when the individual,
+transcending himself and his family, feels and acts as a member of humanity
+itself, not only in his public, but also in his private life. In the idea of
+humanity Comte finds the concrete form of that universal which in the ethic of
+Kant was the symbol of duty itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was by this insistence on human social solidarity that Comte left his mark
+upon the ethical problem. Many of the details of social ethics given in the
+last three large volumes of his work are extremely thoughtful and interesting,
+in spite of their excessive optimism, but we can only here indicate what is
+sufficient for our purpose, his influence over subsequent thought. That is
+summed up in the words &ldquo;solidarity&rdquo; and &ldquo;social standpoint.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may observe that the supreme problems in social ethics Comte regarded as
+being those of education or mental development and the &ldquo;right to work.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-145" name="linknoteref-145" id="linknoteref-145"><sup>[1]</sup></a> He foresaw, as did Renan, that Culture and Economic
+Justice were the two <i>foci</i> around which the ethical problems were to be
+ranged in the immediate future. He regretted that the proletariat in their cry
+for justice had not sufficient culture to observe that they themselves are not
+a class apart, however class-conscious they be. They stand solid with the
+community, and Comte prophesied that, finding this out sooner or later, they
+would have to realise the folly of violent revolution. Only a positive culture
+or education of the democracy could, he believed, solve this social problem,
+which is there precisely because the proletariat are not sufficiently, and do
+not feel themselves to be, incorporated in the life of the community or of
+humanity. Only when they realise this will work be ennobled by a feeling of
+service. The Church has a moral advantage here, in that she has her
+organisation complete for furthering the conception of service to God. Comte
+realised this advantage of religious morality, but he thought it would come
+also to &ldquo;positive&rdquo; morality when men came to a conception of service for
+humanity To this great end, he urged, our education should be directed, and it
+should aim, he thought, at the decline and elimination of militarism which, in
+Comte&rsquo;s view corresponds to the second stage of development (marked also by
+theology), a stage to be superseded in man&rsquo;s development, by an era in which
+the war-spirit will be replaced by that of productive service performed not
+only <i>pour la patrie</i>, but <i>pour l&rsquo;humanité</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-145" id="linknote-145"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-145">[1]</a>
+Comte criticised the teaching given to the young in France
+as being &ldquo;instruction&rdquo; rather than &ldquo;education.&rdquo; This has frequently been
+insisted upon since his time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In viewing the general influences which bore upon the study of the ethical
+problem in our period this stress upon the social character of morality is
+supreme, and is the most distinctly marked. But in addition to the sociological
+influence there are others which it is both interesting and important to note
+briefly. There is the influence of traditional religious morality, bound up
+with Christianity as presented by the Roman Catholic Church. The deficiencies
+of this are frequently brought out in the discussion, but in certain of the
+thinkers, chiefly the &ldquo;modernists,&rdquo; it appears as an influence contributing to
+a religious morality and as offering, indeed, the basis of a religion. Other
+writers, however, while rejecting the traditional morality of the Church, lay
+stress upon a humanitarian ethic which has an affinity to the idealistic
+morality preached by the founder of Christianity, a morality which manifests a
+spirit different from that which his Church has usually shown. Indeed, the
+general tendency of the ethical development in our period is one of opposition
+to the ecclesiastical and traditional standpoint in ethics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then there is the influence of Kant&rsquo;s ethics, and here again, although
+Renouvier owed much to Kant, the general tendency is to get away from the
+formalism and rigorism of his &ldquo;categorical imperative.&rdquo; The current of English
+Utilitarian ethics appears as rather a negative influence, and is rather
+scorned when mentioned. The common feature is that of the social standpoint,
+issuing in conceptions of social justice or humanitarianism and finding in
+action and life a concrete morality which is but the reflection of the living
+conscience of mankind creating itself and finding in the claims of the
+practical reason that Absolute or Ideal to which the pure reason feels it
+cannot alone attain.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+Taine and Renan were influenced by the outlook adopted by Comte. It might well
+be said that Taine was more strictly positivist than Comte. In his view of
+ethics, Taine, as might be expected from the general character of his work and
+his philosophical attitude, adheres to a rigidly positivist and naturalist
+conception. He looks upon ethics as purely positive, since it merely states the
+scientific conditions of virtue and vice, and he despairs of altering human
+nature or conduct. This is due almost entirely to his doctrine of rigid
+determinism which reacts with disastrous consequences upon his ethical outlook.
+This only further confirms our contention that the problem of freedom is the
+central and vital one of the period. We have already pointed out the criticism
+which Fouillée brought against Taine&rsquo;s dogmatic belief in determinism, as an
+incomplete doctrine, a half-truth, which involves mischievous consequences and
+permits of no valuable discussion of the ethical problem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More interesting and useful, if we are to follow at all closely the ethical
+thought of our period, is it to observe the attitude adopted to ethics by
+Taine&rsquo;s contemporary, Renan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The extreme confidence which Renan professed to have in &ldquo;science,&rdquo; and indeed
+in all intellectual pursuits, led him to accord to morality rather a secondary
+place. &ldquo;There are three great things,&rdquo; he remarks in his <i>Discours et
+Conférences</i>,<a href="#linknote-146" name="linknoteref-146" id="linknoteref-146"><sup>[2]</sup></a> &ldquo;goodness, beauty and truth,
+and the greatest of these is truth.&rdquo; Neither virtue, he continues, nor art
+is able to exclude illusions. Truth is the representation of reality, and in
+this world the search for truth is the most serious occupation of all. One of
+his main charges against the Christian Church in general is that it has
+insisted upon moral good to such an extent as to undervalue and depreciate the
+other goods, expressed in beauty and in truth. It has looked upon life from one
+point of view only&mdash;namely, the moral&mdash;and has judged all action by
+ethical values alone, despising in this way philosophy, science, literature,
+poetry, painting and music. In its more ascetic moods it has claimed that these
+things are &ldquo;of the devil.&rdquo; Thus Christianity has introduced a vicious
+distinction which has done much to mutilate human nature and to cramp the
+wholesome expression of the life of the human spirit. Whatever is an expression
+of spirit is, claims Renan, to be looked upon as sacred. If such a distinction
+as that of sacred and profane were to be drawn it should be between what
+appertains to the soul and what does not. The distinction, when made between
+the ethical and the beautiful or true, is disastrous.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-146" id="linknote-146"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-146">[2]</a>
+<i>Discours</i>, dated November 26th, 1885.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan considers that of the two, the ethical and the beautiful, the latter may
+be the finer and grander distinction, the former merely a species of it. The
+moral, he thinks, will give place to the beautiful. &ldquo;Before any action,&rdquo; he
+himself says in <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, &ldquo;I prefer to ask myself, not
+whether it be good or bad, but whether it be beautiful or ugly, and I feel that
+I have in this an excellent criterion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morality, he further insists, has been conceived up to now in far too rigid a
+manner as obedience to a law, as a warfare and strife between opposing laws.
+But the really virtuous man is an artist who is creating beauty, the beauty of
+character, and is fashioning it out of his human nature, as the sculptor
+fashions a statue out of marble or a musician composes a melody from sounds.
+Neither the sculptor nor the musician feels that he is obeying a law. He is
+expressing and creating beauty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another criticism which Renan brings against the ethic of Christianity is its
+insistence upon humility as a virtue. He sees nothing virtuous in it as it is
+generally interpreted: quite rightly he suspects it of hypocritically covering
+a gross pride, after the manner of the Pharisees. He gives a place to honest
+asceticism which has its nobility, even although it be a narrow, misconceived
+ideal. Much nobler is it, he thinks, than the type of life which has only one
+object, getting a fortune.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This leads him to another remark on the moral hypocrisy of so many professedly
+religious folk. Having an easy substance and possessing already a decent share
+of this world&rsquo;s goods, they devote all their energies to the pursuit of
+pleasure or of further superfluous wealth. From this position they criticise
+the worker who endeavours to improve his lot, and have the audacity to tell him
+in pious fashion that he must not be materialistic, and must not set his heart
+on this world&rsquo;s goods. It would be laughable were it not so tragic. The whole
+question of the relativity of the two positions is overlooked, the whole ethic
+of the business ignored. Material welfare is good and valuable, says Renan, in
+so far as it frees man&rsquo;s spirit from mean and wretched dependence and a cramped
+life which injures development, physical and spiritual. These goods are a means
+to an end. When, therefore, a man, already comfortably endowed, amasses more
+and more for its own sake, he commits both a profane and immoral act. But when
+a worker endeavours to augment his recompense for his labour, he is but
+demanding &ldquo;what is the condition of his redemption. He is performing a virtuous
+action.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-147" name="linknoteref-147" id="linknoteref-147"><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-147" id="linknote-147"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-147">[3]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, p. 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sound as many of these considerations undoubtedly are, they come from the
+Renan, who wrote in the years 1848-9 <i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>. He lived
+long enough to see that these truths had complements, that there might be, even
+ethically, another side. In speaking of Progress this has been noted: in his
+later years he forecasted the coming of an era of egoism, of national and
+industrial selfishness, working itself out in policies of military imperialism
+among the nations, and of economic greed and tyranny among the proletariat. His
+remarks about the virtuous action of the worker bettering his lot were inspired
+by the socialism of Saint-Simon. Renan did not at that time raise in his own
+mind the question of the workers themselves carrying their reaction so far,
+that it, although just at first, might reach a point where it became a
+dictatorship decreed by self-interest alone. It is in Renouvier that we find
+this danger more clearly indicated. In so far as Renan felt it, his solution
+was that which he suggested for the elimination of all social wickedness&mdash;
+namely, the increase of education. He looked upon wickedness as a symptom of a
+lack of culture, particularly the lack of any moral teaching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was precisely this point, the education of the democracy, morally no less
+than intellectually, which presented a certain difficulty to the French
+Republic when, after several unsuccessful attempts, the plan for state
+education of a compulsory, gratuitous and secular character was carried in
+1882, largely through the efforts of Jules Ferry.<a href="#linknote-148" name="linknoteref-148" id="linknoteref-148"><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-148" id="linknote-148"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-148">[4]</a>
+In 1848 Hippolyle Carnot had this plan ready. The fall of the
+Ministry, in which he was Minister of Education, was due partly to the
+discussion raised by Renouvier&rsquo;s book (see p. 61 of the present work). With the
+fall of the Ministry, and in 1851, of the Republic, the scheme went too. France
+had to wait eleven years longer than England for free, compulsory education.
+Her educational problem has always been complicated by the attitude of the
+Roman Catholic Church to religious education and its hostility to &ldquo;lay&rdquo;
+schools. Brilliant as France is intellectually, there are numbers of her people
+who do not read or write owing to the delay of compulsory state education. The
+latest census, that of 1921, asked the question, &ldquo;<i>Savez-vous à la
+fois lire et écrire?</i>&rdquo; in order to estimate this number.
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+The great moralist of our period was Renouvier. Not only, as we have already
+seen, did ethical considerations mark and colour his whole thought, but he set
+forth those considerations themselves with a remarkable power. His treatise in
+two volumes on <i>The Science of Ethics</i> is one of the most noteworthy
+contributions to ethical thought which has been made in modern times. Although
+half a century has elapsed since its publication on the eve of the
+Franco-Prussian War, its intense pre-occupation with the problems which beset
+our modern industrial civilisation, its profound judgments and discussions
+concerning subjects so vital to the world of to-day (such as the relations of
+the sexes, marriage, sex-ethics, civil liberty, property, communism, state
+intervention, socialist ideals, nationalism, war, the modern idea of the State,
+and international law), give to it a value, which very few works upon the
+subject possess. Long as the work is, it has the merit of thoroughness, and
+difficulties are not slurred over, but stated frankly, and some endeavours are
+made to overcome them. Consequently, it is a work which amply repays careful
+study. It is almost presumption to attempt in a few pages to summarise
+Renouvier&rsquo;s important treatise. Some estimate of its significance is, however,
+vital to our history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The title itself is noteworthy and must at that date have appeared more
+striking than it does to us now by its claim that there is a <i>science</i> of
+ethics.<a href="#linknote-149" name="linknoteref-149" id="linknoteref-149"><sup>[5]</sup></a> We are accustomed to regard physics,
+mathematics and even logic as entitled to the name Sciences. Can we
+legitimately speak of a Science of Ethics?
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-149" id="linknote-149"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-149">[5]</a>
+It is interesting for comparative study to note that Leslie
+Stephen&rsquo;s <i>Science of Ethics</i> was a much later production than Renouvier&rsquo;s
+treatise, appearing thirteen years later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier insists that we can. Morality deals with facts, although they are not
+embraced by the categories of number, extension, duration or becoming (as
+mathematical and physical data), but rather by those of causality, finality and
+consciousness. The facts &ldquo;are not the natural being of things, but the
+<i>devoir-être</i> of the human will, the <i>devoir-faire</i> of persons,
+and the devoir-être of things in so far as they depend upon
+persons.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-150" name="linknoteref-150" id="linknoteref-150"><sup>[6]</sup></a> Personal effort, initiative and
+responsibility lie at the basis of all ethics. Morality is a construction, like
+every science, partly individual and partly collective; it must lay down
+postulates, and if it is to justify the claim to be a science, these postulates
+must be such as to command a <i>consensus gentium</i>. Further, if ethics is to
+be scientifically based it must be independent. In the past this has
+unfortunately not been the case, for history shows us ethics bound up with some
+system of religion or metaphysics. If ethics is to be established as a science,
+Renouvier points out that it must be free from all hypothesis of an irrelevant
+character, such as cosmological speculations and theological dogmas.
+Renouvier&rsquo;s insistence upon the independence of ethics was followed up in an
+even clearer and more trenchant manner by Guyau in his famous <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une
+Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-150" id="linknote-150"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-150">[6]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although, generally, ethics has suffered by reason of its alliance to
+theological and metaphysical systems, Renouvier affirms that, in this
+connection, there is one philosophy which is not open to
+objection&mdash;namely, the Critical Philosophy of Kant. This is because it
+subordinates all the unknown to phenomena, all phenomena to consciousness, and,
+within the sphere of consciousness itself, subordinates the speculative reason
+(<i>reinen Vernunft</i>) to the practical reason (<i>praktischen Vernunft</i>).
+Its chief value, according to Renouvier, lies precisely in this maintenance of
+the primacy of moral considerations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two standpoints or lines of thought which are characteristic of Renouvier, and
+whose presence we have already noted in our first chapter, operate also in his
+ethics and govern his whole treatment of the nature of morality and the
+problems of the moral life. Briefly stated these are, firstly, his regard for
+the Critical Philosophy of Kant; secondly, his view of man as &ldquo;an order, a
+harmony of functions reciprocally conditioned, and, by this fact,
+inseparable.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-151" name="linknoteref-151" id="linknoteref-151"><sup>[7]</sup></a> As in his treatment of
+Certitude, Renouvier showed this to be a psychological complex into which
+entered elements not only of cognition, but of feeling and will, the same
+insistence upon this unity of human nature meets us again in his ethics. &ldquo;Any
+ethical doctrine which definitely splits up the elements of human nature is
+erroneous.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-152" name="linknoteref-152" id="linknoteref-152"><sup>[8]</sup></a> Abstraction is necessary
+and useful for any science, even the science of ethics, but however far we may
+carry our scientific analysis, we must never lose sight of the fact that we are
+dealing with abstractions. To lose sight of the relationship of the data under
+observation or discussion is, indeed, working away from the goal of scientific
+knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-151" id="linknote-151"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-151">[7]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i> (first edition, 1869), vol. I, p. 189.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-152" id="linknote-152"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-152">[8]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; remarks Renouvier in this connection, &ldquo;has done more to hinder the
+spread of Kant&rsquo;s doctrines in the world than his assertion that the morally
+good act must be performed absolutely without feeling.&rdquo; In view of man as he
+is, and in so far as we understand human nature at all, it seems a vain and
+foolish statement. For Kant, Duty was supreme, and the sole criterion of a good
+act was, for him, its being done from a consciousness of Duty. He himself had
+to confess that he did not know of any act which quite fulfilled this ideal of
+moral action. With this view of morality Renouvier so heartily disagrees that
+he is inclined to think that, so far from a purely rational act (if we suppose
+such an act possible) being praiseworthy, he would almost give greater moral
+worth to an act purely emotional, whose &ldquo;motive&rdquo; lay, not in the idea of cold
+and stern Duty, but in the warm impulses of the human heart, springing from
+emotion or feeling alone. Emotion is a part of our nature&mdash;it has its role
+to play; the rational element enters as a guide or controlling power. It is
+desirable that all acts should be so guided, but that is far from stating, as
+does Kant, that they should proceed solely from rational considerations.
+Ultimately reason and sentiment unite in furthering the same ends. No adequate
+conception of justice can be arrived at which is not accompanied by, and
+determined by, correlatively, love of humanity. Kant rigorously excluded from
+operation even the most noble feelings, whose intrusion should dim the worth
+and glory of his moral act, devoid of feeling. But &ldquo;without good-will and
+mutual sympathy of persons, no society could ever have established itself
+beyond the family, and scarcely the family itself.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-153" name="linknoteref-153" id="linknoteref-153"><sup>[9]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-153" id="linknote-153"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-153">[9]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier confesses that in most of this treatment of the problem of ethics he
+follows Kant<a href="#linknote-154" name="linknoteref-154" id="linknoteref-154"><sup>[10]</sup></a> and although his
+admiration for Kant&rsquo;s work is not concealed, nevertheless he is not altogether
+satisfied with it, and does not refrain from criticism. Indeed this
+reconstruction of the Critical Philosophy in a revised version is the main
+effort of the neo-critical philosopher, and it is constantly manifest.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-154" id="linknote-154"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-154">[10]</a>
+On p. 108 (vol. I) he refers to &ldquo;<i>le philosophie
+que je suis, et que j&rsquo;aimerais de pouvoir suivre toujours</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He complains that Kant did not adhere rigorously to his own principles, but
+vainly strove to give an objectivity to the laws of the practical reason by
+connecting them to metaphysics. But, he says, &ldquo;on the other hand I maintain
+that the errors of Kant can be corrected in accordance with the actual
+principles of his own philosophy. I continue my serious attachment to this
+great reformer in spite of the very serious modifications I am endeavouring to
+make in his work.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-155" name="linknoteref-155" id="linknoteref-155"><sup>[11]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-155" id="linknote-155"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-155">[11]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. no. 110.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the opinion of Renouvier, Kant&rsquo;s work, the <i>Metaphysic of Morals</i>, is
+marred by its neglect of history in its relation to ethics, by a disfigured
+picture of right which does not make it any more applicable to existing human
+conditions, also by the rather artificial and complicated nature of its
+doctrines. He further reproaches Kant for excessive rigorism and formalism,
+accompanied by a vagueness which prevents the application of much of his
+teaching. This, it seems to us, is a reproach which can be hurled easily at
+most of the ethical teachers whom the world has seen. The incessant vagueness
+of paradoxical elements in the utterances of such teachers has inevitably
+compelled their disciples to find refuge in insisting upon a &ldquo;right spirit&rdquo; of
+action, being devoid of any clear teaching as to what might constitute right
+action in any particular case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rudiments of morality, according to Renouvier, are found in the general
+notion of &ldquo;obligation,&rdquo; the sense of ought (<i>devoir-faire</i>) which the
+human consciousness cannot escape. Any end of action is conceived as a good for
+the agent himself; and because of liberty of choice between actions or ends, or
+between both, certain of these are deemed morally preferable. There are certain
+obligations which are purely personal, elementary virtues demanded from any
+rational being. It is his interest to preserve his body by abstaining from
+excesses; it is his interest also to conserve and develop the faculties of his
+nature. This is the point upon which Guyau makes such insistence in common with
+Nietzsche&mdash;the development, expansion and intensification of life. There
+are, Renouvier points out, duties towards oneself, involving constant
+watchfulness and intelligence, so that the agent may be truly self-possessed
+under all circumstances, maintaining an empire over himself and not falling a
+constant victim to passion. &ldquo;Greater is he that ruleth himself than he that
+taketh a city,&rdquo; are not vain words. This is the rudimentary but essential
+virtue which Renouvier calls &ldquo;virtue militant&rdquo;&mdash;moral courage.
+Intellectually it issues in Prudence or Wisdom; on the side of sense and
+passion it is represented by Temperance. These duties are present to
+conscience, which itself arises from a doubling of consciousness. &ldquo;We have the
+empirical person with his experience of the past, and we have the ideal
+person&mdash;that is to say, that which we wish to be,&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-156" name="linknoteref-156" id="linknoteref-156"><sup>[12]</sup></a> our ideal character. In so far as we are
+conscientious we endeavour to bring &ldquo;what we are&rdquo; into line with &ldquo;what we
+conceive we should be.&rdquo; The moral agent thus has duties towards himself,
+obligations apart from any relation to or with others of his kind.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-156" id="linknote-156"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-156">[12]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This elementary morality is &ldquo;essentially subjective,&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-157" name="linknoteref-157" id="linknoteref-157"><sup>[13]</sup></a> but this only shows us that the most thorough-going
+individualism does not by its neglect of others, its denial of altruism,
+thereby escape entirely from moral obligations. There are always duties to
+one&rsquo;s higher self, even for a Robinson Crusoe. Frequently it is stated that
+duties and rights are co-relative; but Renouvier regards Duty as more
+fundamental than Right, which he uses only of man in association with his
+fellows. Between persons, right and duty are in a synthesis, but the person
+himself has no rights as distinct from duties to himself; he has no right not
+to do what it is his duty to perform. From this it follows that if his personal
+notion of obligation changes, he has no right whatever to carry out actions in
+accordance with his judgments made prior to his change of conscience, merely
+for the sake of consistency. He is in this respect a law to him- self, for no
+man can act as a conscience for another. The notion of rights only arises when
+others are in question, and only too often the word has been abused by being
+employed where simply power is meant, as, for example, in many views of
+&ldquo;natural right.&rdquo; This procedure both sullies the usage of the term Right and
+lowers the status of personality. It is always, Renouvier claims, to &ldquo;the
+inherent worth and force of personality, with its powers of reflection,
+deliberation, liberty, self-possession and self-direction, that one must return
+in order to understand each and every virtue.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-157" id="linknote-157"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-157">[13]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 81.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s insistence upon the inherent worth, the dignity and moral value of
+personality becomes clearer as he proceeds from his treatment of the lonely
+individual (who, it may be objected, is to such an extent an abstraction, as to
+resemble a fiction) to associated persons. The reciprocal relation of two
+persons brings out the essential meaning of Justice. Two personalities
+co-operating for a common end find themselves each possessed of duties and,
+inversely therefore, of rights which are simply duties regarded from the point
+of view not of the agent, but of the other party. The neo-critical ethic here
+brings itself definitely into line with the principle of practical reason of
+the Critical Philosophy. This, says Renouvier,<a href="#linknote-158" name="linknoteref-158" id="linknoteref-158"><sup>[14]</sup></a> is the profound meaning of Justice, which consists
+in the fact that the moral agent, instead of subordinating the ends of other
+people to his own, considers the personalities<a href="#linknote-159" name="linknoteref-159" id="linknoteref-159"><sup>[15]</sup></a> of others as similar to his own and
+possessing their own ends which he must respect. This principle is that which
+Kant formulated under the name of &ldquo;practical obligation&rdquo; or &ldquo;supreme
+principle.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-160" name="linknoteref-160" id="linknoteref-160"><sup>[16]</sup></a> &ldquo;Recognise the personality
+of others as equal in nature and dignity, as being an end in itself, and
+consequently refrain from employing the personality of others merely as a means
+to achieve your own ends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-158" id="linknote-158"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-158">[14]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, pp. 82-83.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-159" id="linknote-159"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-159">[15]</a>
+Personality is a better translation, as it avoids
+the rather legal and technical meaning of &ldquo;person&rdquo; in English.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-160" id="linknote-160"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-160">[16]</a>
+In a footnote to this passage, Renouvier states his
+own preference for &ldquo;moral obligation&rdquo; rather than &ldquo;imperative of conscience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This doctrine of Personalism is an assertion not only of <i>Liberté</i>,
+<i>Egalité</i>, <i>Fraternité</i> as necessary and fundamental principles, but
+also of the value of personality in general and the relativity of &ldquo;things.&rdquo; It
+constitutes an ethical challenge to the existing state of society which is not
+only inclined, in its headlong pursuit of wealth, its fanatical worship of
+Mammon, to treat its workers as purely &ldquo;means&rdquo; to the attainment of its end,
+but further minimises personality by its legal codes and social conventions,
+which both operate far more readily and efficiently in the defence of property
+than in the defence or protection of personality. From the ethical standpoint
+the world is a realm of ends or persons and all other values must be adjusted
+in relation to these.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have been told by religious ethical teachers that we must love our neighbour
+as ourself, and have been reminded by moralists continually of the conflict
+between Egoism and Altruism. Renouvier points out that ultimately obligation
+towards others is reducible to a duty to oneself. He does not do this from the
+point of view of Hobbes, who regarded all actions, however altruistic they
+appeared to be, as founded purely upon self-interest, but rather from the
+opposite standpoint. &ldquo;We should make our duty to others rank foremost among our
+duties to ourselves.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-161" name="linknoteref-161" id="linknoteref-161"><sup>[17]</sup></a> This is the
+transcendent duty through the performance of which we achieve a realisation of
+the solidarity of persons, demonstrate an objective value for our own
+existence, and gain a fuller and richer life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-161" id="linknote-161"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-161">[17]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 85.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of personal and moral reciprocity was formulated by the Chinese and
+the Greeks; at a later date it reappeared in the teaching of Jesus. This
+ancient and almost universal maxim has been stated both positively and
+negatively: &ldquo;Do not to others what you would not have them do unto you,&rdquo; &ldquo;Do as
+you would be done by.&rdquo; The maxim itself, however, beyond a statement of the
+principle of reciprocity rather vaguely put, has no great value for the science
+of ethics. Renouvier regards it not as a principle of morality but a
+rule-of-thumb, and he considers the negative statement of it to be more in
+harmony with what was intended by the early ethical teachers&mdash;namely, to
+give a practical warning against the committing of evil actions rather than to
+establish a scientific principle of right action.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier has shown the origin of the notion of Justice as arising primarily
+from an association of two persons. &ldquo;Reason established a kind of community and
+moral solidarity in this reciprocity.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-162" name="linknoteref-162" id="linknoteref-162"><sup>[18]</sup></a>
+This right and duty unite to constitute Justice. It is truly said that it is
+just to fulfil one&rsquo;s duty, just to demand one&rsquo;s right, and Justice is formed by
+a union of these two in such a manner that they always complement one another.
+Bearing in mind the doctrine of personality as an end, we get a general law of
+action which may be stated in these terms: &ldquo;Always act in such a way that the
+maxim applicable to your act can be erected by your conscience into a law
+common to you and your associate.&rdquo; Now to apply this to an association of any
+number of persons&mdash;<i>e g.</i>, human society as a whole&mdash;we need
+only generalise it and state it in these terms: &ldquo;Act always in such a way that
+the maxim of your conduct can be erected by your conscience into a universal
+law or formulated in an article of legislation which you can look upon as
+expressing the will of every rational being.&rdquo; This &ldquo;categorical obligation&rdquo; is
+the basis of ethics. It stands clear of hypothetical cases as a general law of
+action, and &ldquo;there is no such thing really as practical morality,&rdquo; remarks
+Renouvier, &ldquo;except by voluntary obedience to a law.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-163" name="linknoteref-163" id="linknoteref-163"><sup>[19]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-162" id="linknote-162"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-162">[18]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., pp. 79-80.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-163" id="linknote-163"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-163">[19]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 100.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fulfilment of our duties to ourselves generally tends to fit us for
+fulfilling our duties to others, and the neglect of the former will lead
+inevitably to inability to perform these latter. Our duty to others thus
+involves our duty to ourselves.<a href="#linknote-164" name="linknoteref-164" id="linknoteref-164"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-164" id="linknote-164"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-164">[20]</a>
+The notion of self-sacrifice itself involves also,
+to a degree, the maintenance of self, without which there could be no self to
+sacrifice. History has frequently given examples of men of all types refusing
+to sacrifice their lives for a certain cause because they wished to preserve
+them for some other (and possibly better&mdash;in their minds at any rate,
+better) form of self-sacrifice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Personality which lies at the root of the moral problem demands Truth and
+Liberty, and it has a right to these two, for without them it is injured. They
+are essential to a society of persons. Another vital element in society is
+Work, the neglect of which is a grave immoral act, for as there is in any
+society a certain amount of necessary work to be performed, a &ldquo;slacker&rdquo; dumps
+his share upon his fellows to perform in addition to their own share. With
+industrial or general laziness, and the parasitism of those whose riches enable
+them to live without working, is to be condemned also the shirking of
+intellectual work by all. Quite apart from those who are &ldquo;intellectuals&rdquo; as
+such, a solemn duty of work, of thought, reflection and reasoning lies on each
+person in a society. Apathy among citizens is really a form of culpable
+negligence. The duty of work and thought is so vital and of such ethical,
+political and social importance that Renouvier suggests that the two words,
+work and duty, be regarded as synonyms. It might, he thinks, make clearer to
+many the obligation involved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Justice has been made clear in the foregoing remarks, but in view of Kant&rsquo;s
+distinction of &ldquo;large&rdquo; and &ldquo;strict&rdquo; duties, Renouvier raises the question of
+the relation of Justice and Goodness. He concludes that acts proceeding from
+the latter are to be distinguished from Justice. They proceed not from
+considerations of persons as such, but from their &ldquo;nature&rdquo; or common humanity,
+and are near to being &ldquo;duties to oneself.&rdquo; They are of the heart rather than of
+the head, proceeding from sentiments of humanity, and sentiment is not,
+strictly speaking, the foundation of justice, which is based on the notions of
+duties and rights. There can be, therefore, an opposition of Justice and of
+Goodness (Kindness or Love), and the sphere of the latter is often limited by
+considering the former. Renouvier recognises the fact that Justice in the moral
+sense of recognition and respect for personality is itself often
+&ldquo;constitutionally and legally&rdquo; violated in societies by custom, laws and
+institutions as well as by members of society in their actions, and he notes
+that this &ldquo;legal&rdquo; injustice makes the problem of the relation of Justice and
+Charity excessively difficult.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The science of ethics is faced with a double task owing to the nature of man&rsquo;s
+evolution and history. Human societies have been built upon a basis which is
+not that of justice and right, but upon the basis of force and tyranny&mdash;in
+short, upon war. There is, therefore, for the moralist the twin duty of
+constructing laws and principles for the true society founded upon an ethical
+basis, that is to say on conceptions of Justice, while at the same time he must
+give practical advice to his fellows living and striving in present society,
+where a continual state of war exists owing to the operation of force and
+tyranny in place of justice, and he must so <i>apply</i> his principles that
+they may be capable of moving this unjust existing society progressively
+towards the ideal society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In our account of Renouvier&rsquo;s &ldquo;Philosophy of History&rdquo; we brought out his
+insistence upon war as the essential feature of man&rsquo;s life on this planet, as
+the basis of our present &ldquo;civilisation.&rdquo; Here he proclaims it again in his
+ethics.<a href="#linknote-165" name="linknoteref-165" id="linknoteref-165"><sup>[21]</sup></a> War reigns everywhere: it is around
+us and within us&mdash;individuals, families, tribes, classes, nations and
+races. He includes in the term much more than open fighting with guns. The
+distribution of wealth, of property (especially of land), wages, custom duties,
+diplomacy, fraud, violence, bigotry, orthodoxy, and persecution, lies
+themselves, are all, to him, forms of war. Its most ludicrous stronghold is
+among men who pride themselves on being at peace with all men, while they force
+their idea of God upon other men&rsquo;s consciences. Religious intolerance is one,
+and a very absurd kind of warfare.<a href="#linknote-166" name="linknoteref-166" id="linknoteref-166"><sup>[22]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-165" id="linknote-165"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-165">[21]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. I, p. 332.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-166" id="linknote-166"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-166">[22]</a>
+Renouvier sums up its spirit in the words:
+&ldquo;<i>Crois ce que je crois moi, où je te tue</i>&rdquo; (<i>La Nouvelle
+Monadologie</i>).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The principle of justice confers upon the person a certain &ldquo;right of defence&rdquo;
+in the midst of all this existing varied warfare of mankind. It involves,
+according to Renouvier, resistance. The just man cannot stand by and see the
+unjust man oppress his fellow so that the victim is &ldquo;obliged to give up his
+waistcoat after having had his coat torn from him.&rdquo; Otherwise we must confuse
+the <i>just</i> with the <i>saintly</i> man who only admits one
+law&mdash;namely, that of sacrifice. But Renouvier will have us be clear as to
+the price involved in all this violent resistance. It means calling up powers
+of evil, emissaries of injustice. He does not found his &ldquo;right of defence&rdquo; on
+rational right; it is to misconceive it so to found it. We must recognise the
+use of violence and force, even in self-defence, as in itself evil, an evil
+necessitated by facts which do not conform to the rules of peace and justice
+themselves. It is to a large degree necessary, unfortunately, but is none the
+less evil and to be frankly regarded as evil, and likely to multiply evil in
+the world, owing to the tremendous solidarity of wickedness of which Renouvier
+has already spoken in history. It is the absence of the reign of justice which
+necessitates these conflicts, and we have to content ourselves with a
+conception of actual &ldquo;right,&rdquo; a conception already based on war, not with one
+of &ldquo;rational right&rdquo; or justice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Right in the true sense, Renouvier insists, belongs to a state of peace; in a
+state of war, such as our civilisation is perpetually in, it cannot be
+realised. The objection may be made that Renouvier is then justifying the means
+by the end. He emphatically denies this. By no means is this the case, for &ldquo;the
+evil,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;which corrects another evil does not therefore become good;
+it may be useful, but it is none the less evil, immoral, or unjust, and what is
+not just is not justifiable. Wars, rebellions, revolutions may lessen certain
+evils, but they do not thereby cease to be any the less evils themselves.
+Morally we are obliged to avoid all violence; a revolution is only justified if
+its success gives an indication of its absolute necessity. We must lament, from
+the standpoint of ethics or justice, the evil state of affairs which gives rise
+to it.<a href="#linknote-167" name="linknoteref-167" id="linknoteref-167"><sup>[23]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-167" id="linknote-167"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-167">[23]</a>
+On this point, it is interesting to compare with the above
+the views of Spinoza in his <i>Tractatus Theologico-politicus</i> and
+<i>Tractatus-politicus</i>, and those of T. H. Green in his <i>Lectures on
+Political Obligation</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier devotes a considerable portion of his treatise to problems of
+domestic morals, economic questions and problems of a political and
+international character. In all these discussions, however, he maintains as
+central his thesis of the supremacy of personality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under <i>droit domestique</i> he defends very warmly the right of the woman and
+the wife to treatment as a personality. He laments particularly the injustice
+which usually rules in marriage, where, under a cloak of legality, the married
+man denies to his wife a personal control of her own body and the freedom of
+self-determination in matters of sexual intercourse. So unjust and loathsome in
+its violation of the personality of woman is the modern view of marriage that
+Renouvier considers it little better than polygamy (which is often a better
+state for women than monogamy) or prostitution. It is less just than either,
+owing to its degradation of the personality of the wife. He remarked too in his
+<i>Nouvelle Monadologie</i> that love (in the popular sense), being so largely
+an affair of passion and physical attraction, is usually unjust, and that
+friendship is a better basis for the relationship of marriage, which should be,
+while it lasts among mankind, one of justice.<a href="#linknote-168" name="linknoteref-168" id="linknoteref-168"><sup>[24]</sup></a>
+Consequently, it should involve neither the idea of possession nor of
+obedience, but of mutual comradeship.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-168" id="linknote-168"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-168">[24]</a>
+See particularly the notes in <i>La Nouvelle
+Monadologie</i> appended to the fourth part, &ldquo;Passion,&rdquo; pp. 216-222.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the economic sphere Renouvier endeavours to uphold freedom, and for this
+reason he is an enemy of communism. Hostile to the communistic doctrine of
+property, he is a definite defender of property which he considers to be a
+necessity of personality. He considers each person in the community entitled to
+property as a guarantee of his own liberty and development. While disagreeing
+with communism, Renouvier is sympathetic to the socialist view that property
+might be, and should be, more justly distributed, and he advocates means to
+limit excessive possession by private persons and to &ldquo;generalise&rdquo; the
+distribution of the goods of the community among its members. Progressive
+taxation, a guarantee of the &ldquo;right to work&rdquo; and a complete system of insurance
+are among his suggestions. He is careful, however, to avoid giving to the state
+too much power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier was no lover of the state. While regarding it as necessary under
+present conditions, he agrees with the anarchist idealists, to whom government
+is an evil. He admits its use, however, as a guarantor of personal liberty, but
+is against any semblance of state- worship. The state is not a person, nor is
+it, as it exists at present, a moral institution. One of the needs of modern
+times is, he points out, the moralising of the conception of the state, and of
+the state itself. Although, therefore, he has no <i>a priori</i> objection to
+state interference in the economic sphere, and would not advocate a mere
+<i>laissez-faire</i> policy, with its vicious consequences, yet he does not
+look with approval upon such interference unless it be &ldquo;the collective
+expression of the personalities forming the community.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fact of living in a society, highly organised although it be, does not
+diminish at all the moral significance of personality. Rights and duties belong
+essentially to persons and to them only. We must beware of the political
+philosophy which regards the citizens as existing only for the state. Rather
+the state exists, or should exist, for the welfare of the citizens. In the past
+this was a grave defect of military despotisms, and was well illustrated by the
+view of the state taken, or rather inculcated, by German political philosophy.
+In the future the danger of the violation of personality may lie, Renouvier
+thinks, in another direction&mdash;namely, in the establishment of Communistic
+states. The basic principle of his ethic is the person as an end in himself,
+and the treatment of persons as ends. If this be so, a Communistic Republic
+which has as its motto &ldquo;Each for all,&rdquo; without also &ldquo;All for each,&rdquo; may gravely
+violate personality and the moral law if, by constraint, it treats all its
+citizens and their efforts not as ends in themselves, but merely means to the
+collective ends of all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moral ideal demands that personality must not be obliterated. Personality
+bound up with &ldquo;autonomy of reason&rdquo; is the fundamental ethical fact.<a href="#linknote-169" name="linknoteref-169" id="linknoteref-169"><sup>[25]</sup></a> In the last resort, responsibility rests upon the
+individuals of the society for the evils of the system of social organisation
+under which they live. The state itself cannot be regarded as a moral person.
+Renouvier opposes strongly any doctrine which tends to the personalisation or
+the deification of the state.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-169" id="linknote-169"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-169">[25]</a>
+Note that Renouvier prefers this term to Kant&rsquo;s &ldquo;autonomy
+of will,&rdquo; which he thinks confuses moral obligation and free-will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He combats also the modern doctrines of &ldquo;nationality,&rdquo; and claims that even the
+idea of the state is a higher one, for it at any rate involves co-operating
+personalities, while a nation is a fiction, of which no satisfactory definition
+can be given. He laughs at the &ldquo;unity of language, race, culture and religion,&rdquo;
+and asks where we can find a nation?<a href="#linknote-170" name="linknoteref-170" id="linknoteref-170"><sup>[26]</sup></a>
+War and death have long since destroyed such united and harmonious groups as
+were found in ancient times.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-170" id="linknote-170"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-170">[27]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. 2, chap. xcvi,
+&ldquo;<i>Idées de la Nationalité et d&rsquo;Etat</i>,&rdquo; pp. 416-427.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In approaching the questions of international morality Renouvier makes clear
+that there is only one morality, one code of justice. Morality cannot be
+divided against itself, and there cannot be an admission that things which are
+immoral in the individual are justifiable, or permissible, between different
+states. Morality has not been applied to these relationships, which are
+governed by aggressive militarism and diplomacy, the negation of all
+conceptions of justice. Ethical obligation has only a meaning and significance
+for personalities, and our states do but reflect the morality of those who
+constitute them; our world reflects the relationships and immorality of the
+states. War characterises our whole civilisation, domestic, economic and
+international. To have inter- national peace, internal peace is essential, and
+this pre- supposes the reign of justice within states. War we shall have with
+us, Renouvier reminds us, in all its forms, in our institutions, our laws and
+customs, until it has disappeared from our hearts. Treaties of &ldquo;peace&rdquo; and
+federations or leagues of nations are themselves based on injustice and on
+force, and in this he sees but another instance of the &ldquo;terrible solidarity of
+evil.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-171" name="linknoteref-171" id="linknoteref-171"><sup>[28]</sup></a> Better it is to recognise this, thinks
+Renouvier, than to consider ourselves in, or even near, a Utopia, whence human
+greed and passion have fled.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-171" id="linknote-171"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-171">[28]</a>
+<i>Science de la Morale</i>, vol. 2, p. 474.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We find in Renouvier&rsquo;s ethics a notable reversion to the individualism which
+characterised the previous century. Much of the individualistic tone of his
+work is, however, due to his finding himself in opposition to the doctrines
+preached by communists, positivists, sociologists, pessimistic and fatalistic
+historians, and supporters of the deified state. Renouvier acclaims the freedom
+of the individual, but his individualism is &ldquo;personalism.&rdquo; In proclaiming that
+the basis of justice and of all morality is respect for personality, as such,
+he has no desire to set up a standard of selfish individualism; he wishes only
+to combat those heretical doctrines which would minimise and crush personality.
+For him the moral &ldquo;person&rdquo; is not an isolated individual&mdash;he is a social
+human being, free and responsible, who lives with his fellows in society. Only
+upon a recognition of personality as a supreme value can justice or peace ever
+be attained in human society; and it is to this end that all moral education,
+Renouvier advocates, should tend. The moral ideal should be, in practice, the
+constant effort to free man from the terrible solidarity of evil which
+characterises the civilisation into which he is born, and to establish a
+community or association of personalities. Such an ideal does not lie
+necessarily at the end of a determined evolution; Renouvier&rsquo;s views on history
+and progress have shown us that. Consequently it depends upon us; it is our
+duty to believe in its possibility and to work, each according to his or her
+power, for its realisation. The ideal or the idea, will, in so far as it is set
+before self-conscious personalities as an end, become a force. Renouvier agrees
+on this point with Fouillée, to whose ethic, founded on the conception of
+<i>idées-forces</i>, we now turn.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+The philosophy of <i>idée-forces</i> propounded by Fouillée assumes, in its
+ethical aspect, a role of reconciliation (which is characteristic, as we have
+noted, of his whole method and his entire philosophy) by attempting a synthesis
+of individualism and humanitarianism. It is therefore another kind of
+<i>personnalisme</i>, differing in type from that of Renouvier. Fouillée&rsquo;s full
+statement of his ethical doctrines was not written until the year 1907,<a href="#linknote-172" name="linknoteref-172" id="linknoteref-172"><sup>[29]</sup></a> but long before the conclusion of the nineteenth
+century he had already indicated the essential points of his ethics. The
+conclusion of his thesis <i>La Liberté et le Déterminisme</i> (1872) is very
+largely filled with his ethical views and with his optimism. Four years later
+appeared his study <i>L&rsquo;Idée moderne du Droit en Allemagne, en Angleterre et en
+France</i>, which was followed in 1880 by <i>La Science sociale
+contemporaine</i>, where the relation of the study of ethics to that of
+sociology was discussed. A volume containing much acute criticism of current
+ethical theories was his <i>Critique des Systèmes de Morale contemporains</i>
+(1883), which gave him a further opportunity of offering by way of contrast his
+application of the doctrine of <i>idées-forces</i> to the solution of moral
+problems. To this he added in the following year a study upon <i>La Propriété
+sociale et la Démocratie</i>, where he discussed the ethical value and
+significance of various political and socialist doctrines. Ethical questions
+raised by the problems of education he discussed in his <i>L&rsquo;Enseignement au
+Point de Vue national</i> (1891). At the close of the century he issued his
+book on morality in his own country, <i>La France au Point de Vue morale</i>
+(1900).<a href="#linknote-173" name="linknoteref-173" id="linknoteref-173"><sup>[30]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-172" id="linknote-172"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-172">[29]</a>
+His <i>Morale des Idées-forces</i> was then published.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-173" id="linknote-173"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-173">[30]</a>
+It is interesting to note the wealth of Fouillée&rsquo;s almost
+annual output on ethics alone in his later years. We may cite, in the twentieth
+century: <i>La Réforme de l&rsquo;Enseignement par la Philosophie</i>, 1901; <i>La
+Conception morale et critique de l&rsquo;Enseignement</i>; <i>Nietzsche et
+l&rsquo;Immoralisme</i>, 1904; <i>Le Moralisme de Kant et l&rsquo;Amoralisme
+contemporaine</i>, 1905; <i>Les Eléments sociologiques de la Morale</i>, 1905;
+<i>La Morale des Idées-forces</i>, 1907; <i>Le Socialisme</i>, 1910; <i>La
+Démocratie politique et sociale en France</i>, 1910; and the posthumous volume,
+<i>Humanitaires et Libertaires au Point de Vue sociologique et morale</i>,
+1914.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fouillée endeavours to unite the purely ideal aspect of ethics&mdash;that is to
+say, its notion of what ought to be, with the more positive view of ethics as
+dealing with what now is. His ethic is, therefore, an attempt to relate more
+intimately the twin spheres of Renouvier, <i>l&rsquo;état de guerre</i> with
+<i>l&rsquo;état de paix</i>, for it is concerned not only with what <i>is</i>, but
+with that which <i>tends</i> to be and which <i>can</i> be by the simple fact
+that it is <i>thought</i>. As, however, what <i>can</i> be is a matter of
+intense interest to us, we are inevitably led from this to consider what
+<i>ought</i> to be&mdash;that is to say, what is better, or of more worth or
+value. The ethical application of the philosophy of <i>idées-forces</i> is at
+once theoretical and practical, that philosophy being concerned both with ideas
+and values.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in his treatment of freedom we found Fouillée beginning with the <i>idea</i>
+of freedom, so here in a parallel manner he lays down the <i>idea</i> of an end
+of action as an incontestable fact of experience, although the existence of
+such an end is contested and is a separate question. This idea operates in
+consciousness as a power of will (<i>volonté de conscience</i>). Intelligence,
+power, love and happiness-in short, the highest conscious life&mdash;are
+involved in it, not only for us, but for all. Thus it comes about that the
+conscious subject, just because he finds himself confronted by nature and by
+over-individual ends, proposes to himself an ideal, and imposes at the same
+time upon himself the obligation to act in conformity with this full
+consciousness which is in all, as in him, and thus he allows universal
+consciousness to operate in his own individual life. Here we have conscience,
+the idea of duty or obligation, accounted for, and the principle of autonomy of
+the moral person laid down. The ethical life is shown as the conscious will in
+action, finding within itself its own end and rule of action, finding also the
+conscious wills of others like itself. Morality is the indefinite extension of
+the conscious will which brings about the condition that others tend to become
+&ldquo;me.&rdquo; Through the increasing power of intellectual disinterestedness and social
+sympathy, the old formula &ldquo;<i>cogito, conscius sum</i>&rdquo; gives place to that of
+&ldquo;<i>conscii sumus</i>,&rdquo; and this is no mere intellectual speculation, but a
+concrete principle of action and feeling which is itself akin to the highest
+and best in all religions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the features of this ethic is its insistence upon the primacy of
+self-consciousness. Indeed, it has its central point in the doctrine of
+self-consciousness, which, according to Fouillée, implies the consciousness of
+others and of the whole unity of mankind. Emphasising his gospel of
+<i>idées-forces</i>, he outlines a morality in which the ideal shall attract
+men persuasively, and not dominate them in what he regards as the arbitrary and
+rather despotic manner of Kant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By advocating the primacy of self-consciousness Fouillée claims to establish an
+ethic which towers above those founded upon pleasure, happiness and feeling.
+The morality of the <i>idées-forces</i> is not purely sentimental, not purely
+intellectual, not purely voluntarist; it claims to rest on the totality of the
+functions of consciousness, as revealed in the feelings, in intellect and will,
+acting in solidarity and in harmony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He endeavours to unite the positive and evolutionary views of morality to those
+associated with theological or metaphysical doctrines, concerning the deity or
+the morally perfect absolute. He claims, against the theologians and on behalf
+of the positivists, that ethics can be an independent study, that it is not
+necessarily bound up with theological dogmas. There is no need to found the
+notion of duty upon that of the existence of God. Our own existence is
+sufficient; the voice of conscience is within our human nature. He objects, as
+did Nietzsche, to the formality and rigour of Kant&rsquo;s &ldquo;categorical imperative.&rdquo;
+His method is free from the legalism of Kant, and in him and Guyau is seen an
+attempt to relate morality itself to life, expanding and showing itself
+creative of ideals and tending to their fulfilment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the primacy of self-consciousness which can be expressed in the notion,
+<i>Je pense, donc j&rsquo;ai une valeur morale</i>, a transition is made to a
+conception of values. <i>Je pense, donc j&rsquo;evalue des objets</i>. The essential
+element in the psychology of the <i>idees-forces</i> then comes into play by
+tending to the realisation of the ideals conceived and based on the valuation
+previously made. Finally, Fouillée claims that on this ethical operation of the
+<i>idées-forces</i> can be founded the notion of a universal society of
+consciences. This notion itself is a force operating to create that society.
+The ideal is itself persuasive, and Fouillee&rsquo;s inherent optimism, which we have
+observed in his doctrine of progress, colours also his ethical theory. He has
+faith in men&rsquo;s capacity to be attracted by the ideals of love and brotherhood,
+and insists that in the extension of these lies the supreme duty, and the
+ideal, like the notion of duty itself, is a creation of our own thought. The
+realisation of the universality, altruism, love and brotherhood of which he
+speaks, depends upon our action, our power to foster ideas, to create ideals,
+particularly in the minds of the young, and to strive ever for their
+realisation. This is the great need of our time, Fouillée rightly urges.<a href="#linknote-174" name="linknoteref-174" id="linknoteref-174"><sup>[31]</sup></a> Such a morality contains in a more concentrated
+form, he thinks, the best that has been said and thought in the
+world-religions; it achieves also that union of the scientific spirit with the
+aspirations of man, which Fouillée regards as so desirable, and he claims for
+it a philosophical value by its success in uniting the subjective and personal
+factors of consciousness with those which are objective and universal.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-174" id="linknote-174"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-174">[31]</a>
+The work of Benjamin Kidd should be compared in this
+connection, particularly his <i>Social Evolution</i>, 1894; <i>Principles of
+Western Civilisation</i>, 1902; and <i>The Science of Power</i>, 1918 (chap,
+v., &ldquo;The Emotion of the Ideal&rdquo;).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Similar in several respects to the ethical doctrines of Fouillée are those of
+his step-son. Guyau insists more profoundly, however, upon the &ldquo;free&rdquo;
+conception of morality, as spontaneous and living, thus marking a further
+reaction from Kant&rsquo;s doctrine. Both Fouillée and Guyau interacted upon one
+another in their mental relationship, and both of them (particularly Guyau)
+have affinities with Nietzsche, who knew their work. While the three thinkers
+are in revolt against the Kantian conception of ethics, the two Frenchmen use
+their conceptions to develop an ethic altruistic in character, far removed from
+the egoism which characterises the German.<a href="#linknote-175" name="linknoteref-175" id="linknoteref-175"><sup>[32]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-175" id="linknote-175"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-175">[32]</a>
+We find the optimism and humanitarian idealism of the
+Frenchmen surprising. May not this be piecisely because the world has followed
+the gospel of Nietzsche? We may dislike him, but he is a greater painter of the
+real state of world-morality than are the two Frenchmen. They, with their
+watchword of <i>fraternité</i>, are proclaiming a more excellent way they are
+standing for an ethical ideal of the highest type.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau, after showing in his critique of English Ethics (<i>La Morale anglaise
+contemporaine</i>, 1879) the inadequacies of a purely utilitarian doctrine of
+morality, endeavoured to set forth in a more constructive manner the principles
+of a scientific morality in his <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni
+Sanction</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He takes as his starting-point the position where John Stuart Mill fell foul of
+the word &ldquo;desirable.&rdquo; What, asks Guyau, is the supreme desire of every living
+creature? The answer to this question is &ldquo;Life.&rdquo; What we all of us desire most
+and constantly is Life, the most intensive and extensive in all its
+relationships, physical and spiritual. In the principle of Life we find cause
+and end&mdash;a unity which is a synthesis of all desires and all desirables.
+Moreover, the concept or the principle of Life embraces all functions of our
+nature&mdash;those within consciousness and those which are subconscious or
+unconscious. It thus relates intimately purely instinctive action and
+reflective acts, both of which are manifestations of Life and can enrich and
+increase its power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The purely hedonistic views of the Utilitarians he considers untrue. Doubtless,
+he admits, there is a degree of truth in the doctrine that consciousness tends
+to pursue the line of greatest pleasure or least resistance, but then we must
+remember how slight a part this consciousness actually plays. Instincts and an
+intensive subconscious &ldquo;will-to-live&rdquo; are constantly operating. A purely
+scientific ethic, if it is to present a complete scheme, must allow for this by
+admitting that the purely hedonistic search after pleasure is not in itself a
+cause of action, but is an effect of a more fundamental or dominating factor.
+This factor is precisely the effort of Life to maintain itself, to intensify
+itself and expand. The chief motive power lies in the &ldquo;intensity of Life.&rdquo; &ldquo;The
+end which actually determines all conscious action is also the cause which
+produces every unconscious action; it is Life itself, Life at once the most
+intense and the most varied in its forms. From the first thrill of the embryo
+in its mother&rsquo;s womb to the last convulsion of the old man, every movement of
+the being has had as cause Life in its evolution; this universal cause of
+actions is, from another point of view, its constant effect and end.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-176" name="linknoteref-176" id="linknoteref-176"><sup>[33]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-176" id="linknote-176"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-176">[33]</a>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale</i>, p. 87.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A true ethic proceeding upon the recognition of these principles is scientific,
+and constitutes a science having as its object all the means by which Life,
+material and spiritual, may be conserved and expanded. Rising in the
+evolutionary development we find the variety and scope of action increased. The
+highest beings find rest not in sleep merely, but in variety and change of
+action. The moral ideal lies in activity, in all the variety of its
+manifestations. For Guyau, as for Bergson, the worst vice is idleness, inertia,
+lack of <i>élan vital</i>, decay of personal initiative, and a consequent
+degeneration to merely automatic existence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hedonism is quite untenable as a principle; pleasure is merely a consequence,
+and its being set in the van of ethics is due to a false psychology and false
+science. Granting that pleasure attends the satisfaction of a desire, pain its
+repression, recognising that a feeling of pleasure accompanies many actions
+which expand life, we must live, as Guyau reminds us, before we enjoy. The
+activity of life surges within us, and we do not act with a view to pleasure or
+with pleasure as a motive, but life, just because it is life, seeks to expand.
+Man in acting has created his pleasures and his organs. The pleasure and the
+organ alike proceed from function&mdash;that is, life itself. The pleasure of
+an action and even the consciousness of it are attributes, not ends. The action
+arises naturally from the inherent intensity of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hedonists, too, says Guyau, have been negligent of the widest pleasures,
+and have frequently confined their attention to those of eating and drinking
+and sexual intercourse, purely sensitive, and have neglected those of living,
+willing and thinking, which are more fundamental as being identical with the
+consciousness of life. But Guyau asserts that, as the greatest intensity of
+life involves necessarily its widest expansion, we must give special attention
+to thought and will and feeling, which bring us into touch universally with our
+fellows and promote the widest life. This expansiveness of life has great
+ethical importance. With the change in the nature of reproduction, involving
+the sexual union of two beings, &ldquo;a new moral phase began in the world.&rdquo; It
+involved an expansion not merely physical, but mental&mdash;a union, however
+crude, of soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is in the extension of this feature of human life that Guyau sees the
+ethical ideal. The most perfect organism is the most sociable, for the ideal of
+the individual life is the common or social life. Morality is for him almost
+synonymous with sociability, disinterestedness, love and brotherhood, and in it
+we find, he says, &ldquo;the flower of human life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All our action should be referred to this moral ideal of sociability. Guyau
+sees in the phrase &ldquo;social service&rdquo; a conception which should not be confined
+to those who are endeavouring in some religious or philanthropic manner to
+alleviate the suffering caused by evil in human society, but a conception to
+which the acts, all acts, of all members of society should be related. Like
+Renouvier, he gives to work an important ethical value. &ldquo;To work is to
+produce&mdash;that is, to be useful to oneself and to others.&rdquo; In work he sees
+the economic and moral reconciliation of egoism and altruism. It is a good and
+it is praiseworthy. Those who neglect and despise it are parasites, and their
+existence in society is a negation of the moral ideal of sociability and social
+service. In so far as the work of certain persons leads to the accumulation of
+excessive capital in individual hands, it is likely to annul itself sooner or
+later in luxury and idleness. Such an immoral state of affairs, it is the
+concern of society, by its laws of inheritance and possession, to prevent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having made clear his principle of morality, Guyau then has to face the
+question of its relation to the notion of duty or obligation. Duty in itself is
+an idea which he rejects as vague, and he disapproves of the external and
+artificial element present in the Kantian &ldquo;rigorism.&rdquo; For Guyau the very power
+of action contained in life itself creates an impersonal duty. While Emerson
+could write:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Duty says, &lsquo;I must,&rsquo;<br/>
+The youth replies, &lsquo;I can,&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+the view of Guyau is directly the converse; for him &ldquo;I can&rdquo; gives the &ldquo;I must&rdquo;;
+it is the power which precedes and creates the obligation. Life cannot maintain
+itself unless it grows and expands. The soul that liveth to itself, that liveth
+solely by habit and automatism, is already dead. Morality is the unity of the
+personality expanding by action and by sympathy. It is at this point that
+Guyau&rsquo;s thought approaches closely to the <i>philosophie des idées-forces</i>
+of his step-father, by his doctrine of thought and action.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immorality is really unsociability, and Guyau thinks this a better key-note
+than to regard it as disobedience. If it is so to be spoken of, it is
+disobedience to the social elements in one&rsquo;s own self&mdash;a mischievous
+duplication of personality, egoistic in character and profoundly antisocial.
+The sociological elements which characterise all Guyau&rsquo;s work are here very
+marked. In the notion of sociability we find an equivalent of the older and
+more artificial conception of Duty&mdash;a conception which lacks concreteness
+and offers in itself so little guidance because it is abstract and empty. The
+criterion of sociability, Guyau claims, is much more concrete and useful. He
+asks us to observe its spirituality, for the more gross and materialistic
+pleasures fall short of the criterion by the very fact that they cannot be
+shared. Guyau&rsquo;s thought is here at its best. The higher pleasures, which are
+not those of bodily enjoyment and satisfaction, but those of the spirit, which
+thinks, feels, wills and loves, are precisely those which come nearest to
+fulfilling the ideal of sociability, for they tend less to divide men than to
+unite them and to urge them to a closer co-operation for their spiritual
+advancement. Guyau writes here with sarcasm regarding the lonely imbecile in
+the carriage drawn by four horses. For his own part it is enough to have&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;. . . a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough,<br/>
+A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse&mdash;and Thou<br/>
+Beside me singing in the Wilderness&mdash;<br/>
+And Wilderness is Paradise enow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knows who really has chosen the better part. One cannot rejoice much and
+rejoice alone. Companionship and love are supremely valuable &ldquo;goods,&rdquo; and the
+pleasure of others he recognises as a very real part of his own. The egoist&rsquo;s
+pleasure is, on the other hand, very largely an illusion. He loses, says Guyau,
+far more by his isolated enjoyment than he would gain by sharing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Life itself is the greatest of all goods, as it is the condition of all others,
+but life&rsquo;s value fades if we are not loved. It is love, comradeship and the
+fellowship of kindred souls which give to the humblest life a significance and
+a feeling of value. This, Guyau points out with some tenderness, is the tragedy
+of suicides. These occurrences are a social no less than an individual tragedy.
+The tragic element lies in the fact that they were persons who were unable to
+give their devotion to some object, and the loss of personalities in this way
+is a real loss to society, but it is mainly society itself which is to blame
+for them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We need not fear, says Guyau, that such a gospel will promote unduly the
+operation of mere animality or instinctive action, for in the growth of the
+scientific spirit he sees the development of the great enemy of all instinct.
+It is the dissolving force <i>par excellence</i>, the revolutionary spirit
+which incessantly wages warfare within society against authority, and in the
+individual it operates through reason against the instinctive impulses. Every
+instinct tends to lapse in so far as it is reflected upon by consciousness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old notion of duty or obligation must, in Guyau&rsquo;s opinion, be abandoned.
+The sole commandment which a scientific and positive ethic, such as he
+endeavours to indicate, can recognise, is expressible only in the words,
+&ldquo;Develop your life in all directions, be an individual as rich as possible in
+energy, intensive and extensive&rdquo;&mdash;in other words, &ldquo;Be the most social and
+sociable being you can.&rdquo; It is this which replaces the &ldquo;categorical
+imperative.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He aptly points out the failure of modern society to offer scope for devotion,
+which is really a superabundance of life, and its proneness to crush out
+opportunities which offer a challenge to the human spirit. There is a claim of
+life itself to adventure; there is a pleasure in risk and in conflict; and this
+pleasure in risk and adventure has been largely overlooked in its relation to
+the moral life. Such risk and adventure are not merely a pure negation of self
+or of personal life, but rather, he considers, that life raised to its highest
+power, reaching the sublime. By virtue of such devotion our lives are enriched.
+He draws a touching picture of the sacrifice upon which our modern social life
+and civilisation are based, and draws an analogy between the blood of dead
+horses used by the ploughman in fertilising his field, and the blood of the
+martyrs of humanity, <i>qui ont fécondé l&rsquo;avenir</i>. Often they may have been
+mistaken; later generations may wonder if their cause was worth fighting for;
+yet, although nothing truly is sadder than to die in vain, that devotion was
+valuable in and for itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the demand of life for risk in action is bound up the impetus to undertake
+risk in thought. From this springs the moral need for faith, for belief and
+acceptance of some hypotheses. The very divergence or diversity of the
+world-religions is not discouraging but rather the reverse. It is a sign of
+healthy moral life. Uniformity would be highly detrimental; it would cease to
+express life, for with conformity of belief would come spiritual decline and
+stagnation. Guyau anticipates here his doctrine of a religion of free thought,
+a &ldquo;non-religion&rdquo; of the future, which we shall discuss in our next chapter,
+when we examine his book on that subject. In the diversity of religious views
+Guyau sees a moral good, for these religions are themselves an expression of
+life in its richness, and the conservation and expansion of this rich variety
+of life are precisely the moral ideal itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We must endeavour to realise how rich and varied the nature of human life
+really is. Revolutionaries, Guyau points out, are always making the mistake of
+regarding life and truth as too simple. Life and truth are so complex that
+evolution is the key-note to what is desirable in the individual intellect and
+in society, not a revolution which must inevitably express the extreme of one
+side or the other. The search for truth is slow and needs faith and patience,
+but the careful seekers of it are making the future of mankind. But truth will
+be discovered only in relation to action and life and in proportion to the
+labour put into its realisation. The search for truth must never be divorced
+from the active life, Guyau insists, and, indeed, he approaches the view that
+the action will produce the knowledge, &ldquo;He that doeth the will shall know of
+the doctrine.&rdquo; Moreover he rightly sees in action the wholesome cure for
+pessimism and that cynicism which all too frequently arises from an equal
+appreciation of opposing views. &ldquo;Even in doubt,&rdquo; he exclaims, &ldquo;we can love;
+even in the intellectual night, which prevents our seeing any ultimate goal, we
+can stretch out a hand to him who weeps at our feet.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-177" name="linknoteref-177" id="linknoteref-177"><sup>[34]</sup></a> In other words, we must do the duty that lies
+nearest, in the hope and faith that by that action itself light will come.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-177" id="linknote-177"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-177">[34]</a>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i>, p. 178.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the last part of his treatise Guyau deals with the difficult problem of
+&ldquo;sanction,&rdquo; so ultimately connected with ethics, and, it must be added, with
+religion. The Providence who rewards and punishes us, according to the orthodox
+religious creed of Christendom, is merely a personified &ldquo;sanction&rdquo; or
+distributive justice, operating in a terrestrial and celestial court of assize.
+Guyau condemns this as an utterly immoral conception. Religious sanctions, as
+he has not much difficulty in showing, are more cruel than those which a man
+could imagine himself inflicting upon his mortal enemy. The &ldquo;Heavenly Father&rdquo;
+ought at least to be as good as earthly ones, who do not cruelly punish their
+children. Guyau touches upon an important point here, which will be further
+emphasised&mdash;namely, the necessity for making our idea of God, if we have
+one at all, harmonious with our own ethical conceptions. The old ideas of the
+divinity are profoundly immoral and are based on physical force. This is
+natural because those views which have survived in modern times are those of
+primitive and savage people to whom the most holy was the most powerful and
+physically majestic. But, says Guyau, now that we see that &ldquo;all physical force
+represents moral weakness,&rdquo; the idea of God the All-terrible, with his
+hell-fire ready for the sinful soul, must be condemned as immoral blasphemy
+itself. &ldquo;God,&rdquo; he remarks, &ldquo;in damning any soul might be said to damn himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Virtue is really its own reward. No one should be or do good in order to gain
+an entry into paradise or to escape the torments of hell. That is to build
+morality on an immoral principle and on a belief, not in goodness as valuable
+in and for itself, but on a basis of material self-interest alone, &ldquo;the best
+policy.&rdquo; It is true, Guyau admits, that virtue involves happiness, but it is
+not in this sense. A conflict between &ldquo;pleasure&rdquo; and virtue is usually one of
+higher <i>versus</i> lower ideals. Virtue is not a precedent to
+sense-happiness, and in this sense is not at all equivalent or bound up with
+happiness, but, as the facts of life reveal, very often opposed to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau opposes the ordinary view of punishment in society and shows that it is
+both immoral and socially harmful in its application. It adds evil to evil, and
+legal murder is really more absurd than the illegal murder. Punishment, capital
+or other, is no &ldquo;compensation&rdquo; exacted for the crime committed, and it never
+can be such. Attempts to treat and cure the guilty one would, Guyau suggests,
+be far more rational, humane and really beneficial to society itself, which at
+present creates by its punishments, especially those inflicted for first
+offences, a &ldquo;criminal class.&rdquo; One should convert the criminal before punishing
+him, and then, Guvau asks, if he is converted, why punish him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The appeal to justice denoted in the words &ldquo;To everyone according to his works&rdquo;
+is frequently heard in the defence of punishment. This is an excellent maxim in
+Guyau&rsquo;s opinion, but he is careful to point out that it is purely one of social
+economics. It is a plea for a just distribution of the products of labour, but
+does not apply at all to the problem of punishment. In a manner which recalls
+the remarks of Renan, Guyau sees in evil-doing a lack of culture, or rather of
+that sociability, which comes of social culture, from consciousness of a
+membership of society and a solidarity with one&rsquo;s fellows. In vice and in
+virtue alike the human will appears aspiring to better things according to its
+lights. As virtue is its own reward, so is evil; and the moralist must say to
+the wicked: &ldquo;Verily they have their reward&rdquo; (<i>Comme si ce n&rsquo;était pas assez
+pour eux d&rsquo;être méchants</i>).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau comments upon the gradual modifications of punishment from a social point
+of view. There was the day when the chastisement was infinitely worse than the
+crime itself. Then came the morality of reciprocity, &ldquo;an eye for an eye, and a
+tooth for a tooth,&rdquo; an ethic which represented a high ideal for primitive man
+to reach, and one to which, Guyau thinks, we have yet to reach to-day in some
+spheres of life. Yet a further moral development will show how foolish, in a
+civilised society, are wrath and hatred of the criminal and the cry for
+vengeance. Society must aim at ensuring protection for itself with the minimum
+of individual suffering. Punishment must be regarded as an example for the
+future rather than as revenge or compensation. In the individual himself Guyau
+observes how powerful can be the inner sanction of remorse, the suffering
+caused by the unrealised ideal. This is perhaps the only real moral punishment,
+and it is one which society cannot itself directly enforce. Only by increasing
+&ldquo;sociability&rdquo; and social sensitiveness can this sanction be indirectly
+developed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Herein lies the highest ethical ideal, far more concrete and living, in Guyau&rsquo;s
+opinion, than the rigorism of a Kant or the &ldquo;scholastic&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-178" name="linknoteref-178" id="linknoteref-178"><sup>[35]</sup></a> temper of a Renouvier. Charity or love for all men,
+whatever their value morally, intellectually or physically, must, he claims,
+&ldquo;be the final end pursued even by public opinion.&rdquo;In co-operation and
+sociability, he finds the vital moral ideal; in love and brotherhood, he finds
+the real sanction which should operate.&rdquo;Love supposes mutuality of love,&rdquo; he
+says; and there is one idea superior to that of justice, that is the idea of
+brotherhood, and he remarks with a humane tenderness &ldquo;the guilty have probably
+more need for love than anyone else.&rdquo; &ldquo;I have,&rdquo; he cries, &ldquo;two hands&mdash;the
+one for gripping the hand of those with whom I march along in life, the other
+to lift up the fallen. Indeed, to these I should be able to stretch out both
+hands together.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-179" name="linknoteref-179" id="linknoteref-179"><sup>[36]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-178" id="linknote-178"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-178">[35]</a>
+This is Guyau&rsquo;s word to describe Renouvier, whom he regards
+as far too much under the influence of Kant.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-179" id="linknote-179"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-179">[36]</a>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i>, p. 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While Fouillée and, more especially, Guyau were thus outlining an ethic marked
+by a strong humanitarianism, a more definitely religious ethic was being
+proclaimed by that current of philosophy of belief and of action which has
+profoundly associated itself in its later developments with &ldquo;Modernism&rdquo; in the
+Roman Church. The tendency to stress action and the practical reason is
+noticeable in the work of Brochard, Ollé-Laprune and Blondel, also in Rauh.
+They agree with Renouvier in advocating the primacy of the practical reason,
+but their own reasons for this are different from his, or at least in them the
+reasons are more clearly enunciated. Plainly these reasons lie in the
+difficulties of intellectualism and the quest of truth. They propose the quest
+of the good in the hope of finding in that sphere some objectivity, some
+absolute, in fact, which they cannot find out by intellectual searching. They
+correspond in a somewhat parallel fashion to the philosophy of intuition with
+its rejection of intellectualism as offering a final solution. These thinkers
+desire by action, by doing the will, to attain to a knowledge of the doctrine.
+The first word in their gospel is&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Im Anfang war die That.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is for them the beginning and the end. Their certainty is an act of belief,
+which grows out of action and life. It is a curious mixture of insistence upon
+life and action, such as we find in Guyau and in Bergson, coupled with a
+religious Platonism. Brochard&rsquo;s work is of this type. He wrote as early as 1874
+on <i>La Responsabilité morale</i>, and in 1876 on <i>L&rsquo;Universalité des
+Notions morales</i>. Three years later appeared his work <i>L&rsquo;Erreur</i>.
+Ollé-Laprune and Blondel, who best represent this tendency, do not like Guyau&rsquo;s
+ethics, which lacks the religious idealism which they consider should be bound
+up with morality. This was the thesis developed in the volume <i>La Certitude
+morale</i>, written by Ollé-Laprune in 1881. &ldquo;By what right,&rdquo; says Ollé-Laprune
+in his subsequent book <i>Le Prix de la Vie</i> (1895), &ldquo;can Guyau speak of a
+high exalted life, of a moral ideal? It is impossible to speak so when you have
+only a purely naturalistic ethic; for merely to name these things is an
+implication that there is not only intensity in life, but also quality. You
+suppress duty because you can see in it only a falsely mystical view of life
+and of nature. What you fail to realise is that between duty and life there is
+a profound agreement. You reduce duty to life, and in life itself you consider
+only its quantity and intensity, and regard as illusion everything that is of a
+different order from the natural physical order in which you imprison
+yourself.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-180" name="linknoteref-180" id="linknoteref-180"><sup>[37]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-180" id="linknote-180"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-180">[37]</a>
+<i>Le Prix de la Vie</i>, p. 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a criticism is not altogether fair to Guyau who, as we noted, proclaimed
+the superiority of the higher qualities of spiritual life. It does, however,
+attack his abandonment of the idea of Duty; and we must now turn to examine a
+thinker, who, by his contribution to ethics, endeavoured to satisfy the claims
+of life and of duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was Rauh, whose <i>Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale</i>
+appeared in 1890. It had been preceded by a study of the psychology of the
+feelings, and was later followed by <i>L&rsquo;Expérience morale</i> (1903). In
+seeking a metaphysical foundation for morality, Rauh recalls Kant&rsquo;s
+<i>Metaphysic of Morals</i>. He, indeed, agrees with Kant in the view that the
+essence of morality lies in the sentiment of obligation. Belief or faith in an
+ideal, by which it behoves us to act, imposes itself, says Rauh, upon the mind
+of man as essential. It is as positive a fact as the laws of the natural
+sciences. Man not only states facts and formulates general laws in a scientific
+manner, he also conceives and believes in ideals, which become bound up in his
+mind with the sentiment of obligation&mdash;that is, the general feeling of
+duty. But beyond a general agreement upon this point, Rauh does not follow
+Kant. He tends to look upon the ethical problem in the spirit which Guyau,
+Bergson and Blondel show in their general philosophic outlook. In life, action
+and immediacy alone can we find a solution. Nothing practical can be deduced
+from the abstract principle of obligation or duty in general. The moral
+consciousness of man is, in Rauh&rsquo;s opinion, akin to the intuitional perceptions
+of Bergson&rsquo;s philosophy. Morality, moreover, is creating itself perpetually by
+the reflection of sensitive minds on action and on life itself. &ldquo;Morality, or
+rather moral action, is not merely the crown of metaphysical speculation, but
+itself the true metaphysic, which is learnt only in living, as it is naught but
+life itself.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-181" name="linknoteref-181" id="linknoteref-181"><sup>[38]</sup></a> In concluding his thesis, Rauh
+reminds us that &ldquo;the essential and most certain factor in the midst of the
+uncertainties of life and of duty lies in the constant consciousness of the
+moral ideal.&rdquo; In it he sees a spiritual reality which, if we keep it ever
+before us, may inspire the most insignificant of our actions and render them
+into a harmony, a living harmony of character.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-181" id="linknote-181"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-181">[38]</a>
+<i>Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale</i>, p. 255.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rauh&rsquo;s doctrines, we claim, have affinities to the doctrines of action and
+intuition. That does not imply, however, that the intelligence is to be
+minimised&mdash;far from this; but the intelligence triumphs here in realising
+that it is not all-sufficing or supreme. &ldquo;The heart hath reasons which the
+reason cannot know.&rdquo; While Fouillée had remarked that morality is metaphysics
+in action, Rauh points out that &ldquo;metaphysics in action&rdquo; is the foundation of
+our knowledge. We must, he insists, seek for certitude in an immediate and
+active adaptation to reality instead of deducing a rule or rules of action from
+abstract systems.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He separates himself from the sociologists<a href="#linknote-182" name="linknoteref-182" id="linknoteref-182"><sup>[39]</sup></a> by
+pointing out that, however largely social environment may determine our moral
+ideals and rules of conduct, nevertheless the ethical decision is fundamentally
+an absolutely personal affair. The human conscience, in so far as active, must
+never <i>passively</i> accept the existing social morality. It finds itself
+sometimes in agreement, sometimes obliged to give a newer interpretation to old
+conventions, and at times is obliged to revolt against them. In no case can the
+idea of duty be equated simply and calmly with acquiescence in the collective
+general will. It must demand from social morality its credentials and hold
+itself free to criticise the current ethic of the community. More often than
+not society acts, Rauh thinks, as a break rather than a stimulus; and social
+interest is not a measure of the moral ideal, but rather a limitation of it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-182" id="linknote-182"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-182">[39]</a>
+The relation of ethics and sociology is well discussed,
+not only by Durkheim (who, in his <i>Division du Travail social</i>, speaks of
+the development of democracy and increasing respect for human personality), but
+also by Lévy-Bruhl, who followed his thesis on <i>L&rsquo;Idée de Responsabilité</i>,
+1883, by the volume, <i>La Morale el la Science des Moeurs</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although the moral ideal is one which must be personally worked out, it is not
+a merely individualistic affair. Rauh does not abandon the guidance of reason,
+but he objects equally to the following of instinct or a transcendent teaching
+divorced from the reality of life. Our guide must be reflection upon instinct,
+and this is only possible by action and experience, the unique experience of
+living itself. Reason itself is experience; and it is our duty to face problems
+personally and sincerely, in a manner which the rational element in us renders
+&ldquo;impersonal, universal and disinterested.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Any code of morality which is not directly in contact with life is worthless,
+and all ethical ideas which are not those of our time are of little value. Only
+he is truly a man who lives the life of his time. The truly moral man is he who
+is alive to this spirit and who does not unreflectingly deduce his rules of
+conduct from ancient books or teachers of a past age. The art of living is the
+supreme art, and it is this which the great moralists have endeavoured to show
+humanity. Neither Socrates nor Jesus wrote down their ethical ideas: they lived
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rauh thus reminds us partly of Guyau in his insistence upon life. He regards
+the ethical life at its highest, as one <i>sans obligation ni sanction</i>.
+Rather than the Kantian obligation of duty, of constraint, he favours in his
+second book, <i>L&rsquo;Expérience morale</i>, a state of spontaneity, of passion and
+exaltation of the personal conscience which faces the issue in a disinterested
+manner. The man who is morally honest himself selects his values, his ideals,
+his ends, by the light which reason gives him. Ethics becomes thus an
+independent science, a science of &ldquo;ends,&rdquo; which Reason, as reflected in the
+personal conscience, acclaims a science of the ideal ordering of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was Rauh&rsquo;s conception of rational moral experience, one which he
+endeavoured to apply in his lectures to the two problems which he considered to
+be supreme in his time, that of patriotism and of social justice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These problems were further touched upon in 1896, when Léon Bourgeois (since
+noted for his advocacy of the &ldquo;League of Nations&rdquo;) published his little work
+<i>Solidarité</i>, which was also a further contribution to an independent,
+positive and lay morality. In the conception of the solidarity of humanity
+throughout the ages, Bourgeois accepted the teaching of the sociologists, and
+urges that herein can be found an obligation, for the present generation must
+repay their debt to their ancestors and be worthy of the social heritage which
+has made them what they are. Somewhat similar sentiments had Been expressed by
+Marion in his Solidarité morale (1880). Ethical questions were kept in the
+forefront by the society known as <i>L&rsquo;Union pour l&rsquo;Action morale</i>, founded
+by Desjardins and supported by Lagneau (1851- 1894). After the excitement of
+the Dreyfus case (1894- 1899) this society took the name <i>L&rsquo;Union pour la
+Verité</i>. In 1902 Lapie made an eloquent plea for a rational morality in his
+<i>Logique de la Volonté</i>, and in the following year Séailles published his
+<i>Affirmations de la Conscience moderne</i>. The little <i>Précis</i> of André
+Lalande, written in the form of a catechism, was a further contribution to the
+establishment of a rational and independent lay morality, which the teaching of
+ethics as a subject in the <i>lycées</i> and lay schools rendered in some
+degree necessary.<a href="#linknote-183" name="linknoteref-183" id="linknoteref-183"><sup>[40]</sup></a> This little work appeared
+in 1907, the same year in which Paul Bureau wrote his book <i>La Crise morale
+des Temps nouveaux</i>. Then Parodi (who in 1919 produced a fine study of
+French thought since 1890<a href="#linknote-184" name="linknoteref-184" id="linknoteref-184"><sup>[41]</sup></a>) followed up
+the discussion of ethical problems by his work <i>Le Problème morale et la
+Pensée contemporaine</i> (1909), and in 1912 Wilbois published his contribution
+entitled <i>Devoir et Durée: Essai de Morale sociale</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-183" id="linknote-183"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-183">[40]</a>
+The teaching of a lay morality is a vital and practical
+problem which the Government of the Republic is obliged to face. The urgent
+need for such lay teaching will be more clearly demonstrated or evident when
+our next chapter, dealing with the religious problem, has been read.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-184" id="linknote-184"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-184">[41]</a>
+<i>La Philosophie contemporaine en France</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus concludes a period in which the discussion, although not marked by a
+definite turning round of positions as was manifested in our discussions of
+science, freedom and progress, bears signs of a general development. This
+development is shown by the greater insistence upon the social aspects of
+ethics and by a turning away from the formalism of Kant to a more concrete
+conception of duty, or an ethic in which the notion of duty itself has
+disappeared. This is the general tendency from Renan with his insistence upon
+the aesthetic element, Renouvier with his claim for justice in terms of
+personality, to Fouillée, Guyau, Ollé-Laprune and Rauh with their insistence
+upon action, upon love and life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, although the departure from an intense individualism in ethics is
+desirable, we must beware of the danger which threatens from the other extreme.
+We cannot close this chapter without insisting upon this point. Good must be
+personally realised in the inner life of individuals, even if they form a
+community. The collective life is indeed necessary, but it is not collectively
+that the good is experienced. It is personal. In the neglect of this important
+aspect lies the error of much Communistic philosophy and of that social science
+which looks on society as purely an organism. This analogy is false, for
+however largely a community exhibits a general likeness to an organism, it is a
+superficial resemblance. There is not a centre of consciousness, but a
+multitude of such centres each living an inner life of personal experience
+which is peculiarly its own; and these personalities, we must remember, are not
+simply a homogeneous mass of social matter, they are capable of realising the
+good each in his or her own manner. This is the only realisation of the good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this chapter we have traced the attempt to reconcile <i>science et
+conscience</i>, after the way had been opened up by the maintenance of freedom.
+It was recognised that reason is not entirely pure speculation: it is also
+practical. Human nature seeks for goodness as well as for truth. It is
+noticeable that while the insistence upon the primacy of the practical reason
+developed, on the one hand, into a philosophy of action (anti-intellectual
+action in its extreme development as shown in Syndicalism), the same tendency,
+operating in a different manner and upon different data, essayed to find in
+action, and in the belief which arises from action, that Absolute or Ideal to
+which the pure reason feels it cannot alone attain&mdash;namely, the
+realisation of God. To this problem of religion we devote our next chapter.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII<br/>
+RELIGION</h2>
+
+<p>
+INTRODUCTION: The religious situation in France in the nineteenth
+century&mdash;The intellectual and political forces against the Roman Catholic
+Church&mdash;Its claims, its orthodoxy and tyranny&mdash;The
+humanitarians&mdash;The power of Rome&mdash;Church and State&mdash;The
+educational problem&mdash;Clericalism&mdash;The cult of Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc&mdash;The
+lack of a <i>via media</i> between Roman orthodoxy and <i>libre
+pensée</i>&mdash;Protestantism negligible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I. Comte&rsquo;s effort in his &ldquo;Religion of Humanity&rdquo;&mdash;Renan and the
+Church&mdash;Freedom&mdash;Denial of supernatural elements in
+Christianity&mdash;<i>Vie de Jésus</i>&mdash;Renan not
+irreligious&mdash;Piety&mdash;Love and Goodness reveal the Divine&mdash;God the
+&ldquo;ideal&rdquo;&mdash;Vacherot and Taine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Renouvier&rsquo;s efforts, with Pillon, in the <i>Critique philosophique</i> and
+<i>Critique religieuse</i>&mdash;His republican theology&mdash;Freedom,
+personality and God&mdash;The deity as finite&mdash;God as Goodness and as a
+Person.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. Ravaisson&rsquo;s blend of Hellenism and Christian
+thought&mdash;Boutroux&mdash;Fouillée on the Idea of God&mdash;The importance
+of Guyau&rsquo;s <i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>&mdash;The decay of dogma and
+ecclesiasticism&mdash;The term &ldquo;irreligion&rdquo; misleading&mdash;Sociology and
+religion-Freedom&mdash;Religious education and tolerance&mdash;Modernism and
+the Church&mdash;Loisy and others&mdash;Symbolism and <i>Fidéisme</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+CONCLUSION: The personal factor in faith&mdash;Freedom vital to
+religion&mdash;Change of attitude since the eighteenth century&mdash;Value of
+religion&mdash;Tendency towards a free religion devoid of dogmas, expressive of
+the best aspirations of man&rsquo;s mind.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VII<br/>
+RELIGION</h3>
+
+<p>
+It is outside our purpose to embark upon discussions of the religious problem
+in France, in so far as this became a problem of politics. Our intention is
+rather to examine the inner core of religious thought, the philosophy of
+religion, which forms an appropriate final chapter to our history of the
+development of ideas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, although our discussion bears mainly upon the general attitude to
+religion, upon the development of central religious ideas such as the idea of
+God, and upon the place of religion in the future&mdash;that is to say, upon
+the philosophy of religion&mdash;it is practically impossible to understand the
+religious attitude of our thinkers without a brief notice of the religious
+situation in France during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In our Introduction we briefly called attention to the attempt of the
+Traditionalists after the Revolution to recall their countrymen to the
+Christian faith as presented in and by the Roman Catholic Church. The efforts
+made by De Bonald, De Maistre, Chateaubriand, Lamennais and Lacordaire did not
+succeed as they had hoped, but, nevertheless, a considerable current of loyalty
+to the Church and the Catholic religion set in. Much of this loyalty was bound
+up with sentimental affection for a monarchy, and arose partly from
+anti-revolutionary sentiments.<a href="#linknote-185" name="linknoteref-185" id="linknoteref-185"><sup>[1]</sup></a> It cannot,
+however, be entirely explained by these political feelings. There was the
+expression of a deeper and more spiritual reaction directed against the
+materialistic and sceptical teachings of the eighteenth century. Man&rsquo;s heart
+craved comfort, consolation and warmth. It had been starved in the previous
+century, and revolution and war had only added to the cup of bitterness. Thus
+there came an epoch of Romanticism in religion of which the sentimental and
+assumed orthodoxy of Chateaubriand was a sign of the times. His <i>Génie du
+Christianisme</i> may now appear to us full of sentimentality, but it was
+welcomed at the time, since it expressed at least some of those aspirations
+which had for long been denied an expression. It was this which marked the
+great difference between the two centuries in France. The eighteenth was mainly
+concerned with scoffing at religion. Its rationalism was that of Voltaire. In
+the first half of the nineteenth century the pendulum swung in the opposite
+direction. Romanticism, in poetry, in literature, in philosophy and in religion
+was <i>à la mode</i>, and it led frequently to sentimentality or
+morbidity. Lamartine, Victor Hugo and De Vigny professed the Catholic faith for
+many years. We may note, and this is important, that in France the only form of
+Christianity which holds any sway over the people in general is the Roman
+Catholic faith. Outside the Roman Church there is no religious organisation
+which is of much account. This explains why it is so rare to find a thinker who
+owns allegiance to any Church or religion, and yet it would be wrong to deem
+them irreligious. There is no <i>via media</i> between Catholicism and free
+personal thought. This was a point which Renan quite keenly felt, and of which
+his own spiritual pilgrimage, which took him out of the bounds of the Church of
+his youth, is a fine illustration. Many of France&rsquo;s noblest sons have been
+brought up in the religious atmosphere of the Church and owe much of their
+education to her, and Rome believes in education. The control of education has
+been throughout the century a problem severely contested by Church and State.
+More important for our purpose than the details of the quarrels of Church and
+State is the intellectual condition of the Church itself.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-185" id="linknote-185"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-185">[1]</a>
+De Maistre regarded the Revolution as an infliction
+specially bestowed upon France for her national neglect of religion&mdash;his
+religion, of course. The same crude, misleading, and vicious arguments have
+since been put forward by the theologians in their efforts to push the cause of
+the Church with the people. This was very noticeable both in the war of 1870
+and that of 1914. In each case it was argued that the war was a punishment from
+God for France&rsquo;s frivolity and neglect of the Church. In 1914, in addition, it
+was deemed a direct divine reply to &ldquo;Disestablishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This reveals a striking vitality, a vigour and initiative at war with the
+central powers of the Vatican, a seething unrest which uniformity and authority
+find annoying. How strong the power of the central authority was, the affair of
+the Concordat had shown, when forty bishops were deposed for non-acceptance of
+the arrangement between Napoleon and the Pope.<a href="#linknote-186" name="linknoteref-186" id="linknoteref-186"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+Stronger still was the iron hand of the Pope over intellectual freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-186" id="linknote-186"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-186">[2]</a>
+The Revolution had separated Church and State and
+suppressed clerical privilege by the &ldquo;Civil Constitution of the Clergy&rdquo;
+enactment of 1790. Napoleon, alive to the patriotic value of a State Church,
+repealed this law and declared the divorce of Church and State to be null and
+void. His negotiations with the Pope (Pius VII.) resulted, in 1801, in the
+arrangement known as the <i>Concordat</i>, by which the Roman Catholic Church
+was again made the established national Church, its clergy became civil
+servants paid by the State, and its worship became a branch of public
+administration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lamennais was not a &ldquo;modernist,&rdquo; as this term is now understood, for his
+theology was orthodox. His fight with the Vatican was for freedom in the
+relations of the Church to society. He pleaded in his <i>Essai sur
+L&rsquo;indifference en Matière de Religion</i> for the Church to accept the
+principle of freedom, to leave the cherished fondling of the royalist cause,
+and to present to the world the principles of a Christian democracy. Lamennais
+and other liberal-minded men desired the separation of Church and State, and
+were tolerant of those who were not Catholic. They claimed, along with their
+own &ldquo;right to believe,&rdquo; that of others &ldquo;not to believe.&rdquo; His was a liberal
+Catholicism, but its proposals frightened his co-religionists, and drew upon
+him in 1832 an encyclical letter (<i>Mirari vos</i>) from the Vatican. The Pope
+denounced liberalism absolutely as an absurd and an erroneous doctrine, a piece
+of folly sprung from the &ldquo;fetid source of indifferentism.&rdquo; Lamennais found he
+could not argue, as Renan himself later put it, &ldquo;with a bar of iron.&rdquo; It was
+the reactionary De Maistre, with his principle of papal authority,<a href="#linknote-187" name="linknoteref-187" id="linknoteref-187"><sup>[3]</sup></a> and not Lamennais, whom the Vatican, naturally
+enough, chose to favour, or rather to follow.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-187" id="linknote-187"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-187">[3]</a>
+As stated in <i>Du Pape</i>, 1819.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus Lamennais found himself, by an almost natural and inevitable process,
+outside the Church, and this in spite of the fact that his theology was
+orthodox. He endeavoured to present his case in his paper <i>L&rsquo;Avenir</i> and
+in an influential brochure, <i>The Words of a Believer</i>, which left its mark
+upon Hugo, Michelet, Lamartine, and George Sand. His views blended with the
+current of humanitarian and democratic doctrines which developed from the
+Saint-Simonists, Pierre Leroux and similar thinkers. We have already noted that
+these social reformers held to their beliefs with the conviction that in them
+and not in the Roman Church lay salvation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This brings us to a crucial point which is the clue to much of the subsequent
+thought upon religion. This is the profound and seemingly irreconcilable
+difference between these two conceptions of religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The orthodox Catholic faith believes in a supernatural revelation, and is
+firmly convinced that man is inherently vile and corrupt, born in sin from
+which he cannot be redeemed, save by the mystical operations of divine grace,
+working only through the holy sacraments and clergy of the one true Church, to
+whom all power was given, according to its view, by the historic Jesus. Its
+methods are conservative, its discipline rigid and based on tradition and
+authority. Its system of salvation is excessively individualistic. It holds
+firmly to this pessimistic view of human nature, based on the doctrine of
+original sin, thus maintaining a creed which, in the hands of a devoted clergy,
+who are free from domestic ties, works as a powerful moral force upon the
+individual believer. His freedom of thought is restricted; he can neither read
+nor think what he likes, and the Church, having made the thirteenth-century
+doctrines of Aquinas its official philosophy, hurls anathema at ideas
+scientific, political, philosophical or theological which have appeared since.
+No half-measures are allowed: either one is a loyal Catholic or one is not a
+Catholic at all. In this relentlessly uncompromising attitude lies the main
+strength of Catholicism; herein also is contained its weakness, or at least
+that element which makes it manufacture its own greatest adversaries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While claiming to be the one Church of Jesus Christ, it does not by any means
+put him in the foreground of its religion. Its hierarchy of saints is rather a
+survival of polytheism; its worship of the Virgin and cult of the <i>Sacré
+Cœur</i> issue often in a religious sentimentality and sensuality promoted by
+the denial of a more healthy outlet for instincts which are an essential part
+of human nature. Tribute, however, must be paid&mdash;high tribute&mdash;to
+the devotion of individuals, particularly to the work done by the religious
+orders of women, whose devotion the Church having won by its intense appeal to
+women keeps, consecrates and organises in a manner which no other Church has
+succeeded in doing. This is largely the secret of the vigorous life of the
+Church, for as a power of charity the Roman Church is remarkable and deserves
+respect. Her educational efforts, her missions, hospitals, her humbler clergy,
+and her orders which offer opportunity of service or of sanctuary to all types
+of human nature&mdash;these constitute Roman Catholicism in a truer manner than
+the diplomacy of the Jesuits or the councils of the Vatican. It is this pulsing
+human heart of hers which keeps her alive, not the rigid intellectual dogmatism
+and antiquated theology which she expounds, nor her loyalty to the established
+political order, which, siding with the rich and powerful, frequently gives to
+this professedly spiritual power a debasing taint of materialism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Against all this, and in vital opposition to this, we have the humanitarians
+who, rejecting the doctrine of corruption, believe that human instincts and
+human reason themselves make for goodness and for God. While Catholicism looks
+to the past, humanitarianism looks forward, believes in freedom and in
+progress, and regards the immanent Christ-spirit as working in mankind. Its
+gospel is one of love and brotherhood, a romantic doctrine issuing in love and
+pity for the oppressed and the sinful. In the collective consciousness of
+mankind it sees the incarnation, the growth of the immanent God. Therefore it
+claims that in democracy, socialism and world brotherhood lies the true
+Christianity. This, the humanitarians claim, is the true religious
+idealism&mdash;that which was preached by the Founder himself and which his
+Church has betrayed. The humanitarians make service to mankind the essence of
+religion, and regard themselves as more truly Christian than the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In those countries where Protestantism has a large following, the two doctrines
+of humanitarian optimism and of the orthodox pessimism regarding human nature
+are confused vaguely together. The English mind in particular is able to
+compromise and to blend the two conflicting philosophies in varying degrees;
+but in the French mind its clearer penetration and more logical acumen prevent
+this. The Frenchman is an idealist and tends to extremes, either that of
+whole-hearted devotion to a dominating Church or that of the abandonment of
+organised religion. In Protestantism he sees only a halfway house, built upon
+the first principles of criticism, and unwilling to pursue those principles to
+their conclusion&mdash;namely, the rejection of all organised Church religion,
+the adoption of perfect freedom for the individual in all matters of belief, a
+religion founded on freedom and on personal thought which alone is free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such were the two dominant notes in religious thought in France at the opening
+of our period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Catholicism resisted the humanitarianism of 1848 and strengthened its power
+after the <i>coup d&rsquo;état</i>. The Church and the Vatican became more staunch in
+their opposition to all doctrines of modern thought. The French clergy profited
+by the alliance with the aristocracy, while religious orders, particularly the
+Jesuits, increased in number and in power. Veuillot proclaimed the virtues of
+Catholicism in his writings. Meanwhile the Pope&rsquo;s temporal power decreased, but
+his spiritual power was increasing in extent and in intensity. Centralisation
+went on within the Church, and Rome (<i>i.e.</i>, the Pope and the Vatican)
+became all-powerful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just after the half-century opens the Pope (Pius IX.), in 1854, proclaimed his
+authority in announcing the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin
+Mary.<a href="#linknote-188" name="linknoteref-188" id="linknoteref-188"><sup>[4]</sup></a> As France had heard the sentence,
+<i>L&rsquo;Etat, c&rsquo;est moi</i>, from the lips of one of its greatest monarchs, it now
+heard from another quarter a similar principle enunciated, L&rsquo;Eglise, c&rsquo;est moi.
+As democracy and freedom cried out against the one, they did so against the
+other. Undaunted, the Vatican continued in its absolutism, even although it
+must have seen that in some quarters revolt would be the result. Ten years
+later the Pope attacked the whole of modern thought, to which he was
+diametrically opposed, in his encyclical <i>Quanta Cura</i> and in his famous
+<i>Syllabus</i>, which constituted a catalogue of the modern errors and
+heresies which he condemned. This famous challenge was quite clear and
+uncompromising in its attitude, concluding with a curse upon &ldquo;him who should
+maintain that the Roman Pontiff can, and must, be reconciled and compromise
+with progress, liberalism and modern civilisation!&rdquo; To the doctrine of
+<i>L&rsquo;Eglise, c&rsquo;est moi</i> had now been added that of <i>La Science, aussi,
+c&rsquo;est moi</i>. This was not all. In 1870 the dogma of Papal Infallibility was
+proclaimed. By a strange irony of history, however, this declaration of
+spiritual absolutism was followed by an entire loss of temporal power. The
+outbreak of the war in that same year between France and Prussia led to the
+hasty withdrawal of French troops from the Papal Domain and the Eternal City
+fell to the secular power of the Italian national army under Victor Emmanuel.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-188" id="linknote-188"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-188">[4]</a>
+This new dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin
+must not, of course, be confused, as it often is by those outside the Catholic
+Church, with the quite different and more ancient proposition which asserts the
+Virgin Birth of Jesus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The defeat of France at the hands of Prussia in 1871 issued in a revival of
+religious sentiment, frequently seen in defeated nations. A special mission or
+crusade of national repentance gathered in large subscriptions which built the
+enormous Church of the Sacré Coeur overlooking Paris from the heights of
+Montmartre.<a href="#linknote-189" name="linknoteref-189" id="linknoteref-189"><sup>[5]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-189" id="linknote-189"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-189">[5]</a>
+The anti-Catholic element, however, have had the audacity,
+and evidently the legal right, to place a statue to a man who, some centuries
+back, was burned at the stake for failing to salute a religious procession, in
+such a position immediately in front of this great church that the plan for the
+large staircase cannot be carried out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeking for religious consolation, the French people found a Catholicism which
+had become embittered and centralised for warfare upon liberal religion and
+humanitarianism. They found that the only organised religion they knew was
+dominated by the might of Rome and the powers of the clergy. These even wished
+France, demoralised as she was for the moment, to undertake the restoration of
+the Pope&rsquo;s temporal power in Italy. Further, they were definitely in favour of
+monarchy: &ldquo;the altar and the throne&rdquo; were intimately associated in the
+ecclesiastical mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the realisation of this which prompted Gambetta to cry out to the Third
+Republic with stern warning, &ldquo;Clericalism is your enemy.&rdquo; Thus began the
+political fight for which Rome had been strengthening herself. With the defeat
+of the clerical-monarchy party in 1877 the safety of the Republic was assured.
+From then until 1905 the Republic and the Church fought each other. Educational
+questions were bitterly contested (1880). The power of the Jesuits, especially,
+was regarded as a constant menace to the State. The Dreyfus affair (1894-
+1899) did not improve relations, with its intense anti-semitism and
+anti-clericalism. The battle was only concluded by the legislation of
+Waldeck-Rousseau in 1901 and Combes in 1903, expelling religious orders. Combes
+himself had studied for the priesthood and was violently anti-clerical. The
+culmination came in the Separation Law of 1905 carried by Briand, in the Pope&rsquo;s
+protest against this, followed by the Republic&rsquo;s confiscation of much Church
+property, a step which might have been avoided if the French Catholics had been
+allowed to have their way in an arrangement with the State regarding their
+churches. This was prevented by the severance of diplomatic relations between
+France and the Vatican and by the Pope&rsquo;s disagreement with the French Catholics
+whose wishes he ignored in his policy of definite hostility to the French
+Government.<a href="#linknote-190" name="linknoteref-190" id="linknoteref-190"><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-190" id="linknote-190"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-190">[6]</a>
+Relations with the Vatican, which were seen to be
+desirable during the Great European War, have since been resumed (in 1921) by
+the Republic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During our period a popular semi-nationalist and semi-religious cult of Jeanne
+d&rsquo;Arc, &ldquo;the Maid of Orleans,&rdquo; appeared in France. The clergy expressly
+encouraged this, with the definite object of enlisting sentiments of
+nationality and patriotism on the side of the Church. Ecclesiastical diplomacy
+at headquarters quickly realised the use which might be made of this patriotic
+figure whom, centuries before, the Church had thought fit to burn as a witch.
+The Vatican saw a possibility of blending French patriotism with devotion to
+Catholicism and thus possibly strengthening, in the eyes of the populace at
+least, the waning cause of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The adoration of Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc was approved as early as 1894, but when the
+Church found itself in a worse plight with its relation to the State, it made
+preparations in 1903 for her enrolment among the saints.<a href="#linknote-191" name="linknoteref-191" id="linknoteref-191"><sup>[7]</sup></a> She was honoured the following year with the
+title of &ldquo;Venerable,&rdquo; but in 1908, after the break of Church and State, she was
+accorded the full status of a saint, and her statue, symbolic of patriotism
+militant, stands in most French churches as conspicuous often as that of the
+Virgin, who, in curious contrast, fondles the young child, and expresses the
+supreme loveliness of motherhood.<a href="#linknote-192" name="linknoteref-192" id="linknoteref-192"><sup>[8]</sup></a> The cult of
+Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc flourished particularly in 1914 on the sentiments of patriotism,
+militarism and religiosity then current. This was natural because it is for
+these very sentiments that she stands as a symbol. She is evidently a worthy
+goddess whose worship is worth while, for we are assured that it was through
+<i>her</i> beneficent efforts that the German Army retired from Paris in 1914
+and again in 1918. The saintly maid of Orleans reappeared and beat them back!
+Such is the power of the &ldquo;culte&rdquo; which the Church eagerly fosters. The Sacré
+Coeur also has its patriotic and military uses, figuring as it did as an emblem
+on some regimental flags on the battlefield. Meanwhile, the celebrations of
+Napoleon&rsquo;s centenary (1921) give rise to the conjecture that he, too, will in
+time rank with Joan of Arc as a saint. His canonisation would achieve
+absolutely that union of patriotic and religious sentimentality to which the
+Church in France directs its activities.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-191" id="linknote-191"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-191">[7]</a>
+t is interesting to observe the literature on
+Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc published at this time: Anatole France, <i>Vie de Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc</i>
+(2 vols., 1908); Durand, <i>Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc et l&rsquo;Eglise</i> (1908). These are
+noteworthy, also Andrew Lang&rsquo;s work, <i>The Maid of Orleans</i> (also 1908).
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-192" id="linknote-192"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-192">[8]</a>
+Herein, undoubtedly, lies the strong appeal of the Church
+to women.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vast majority of the 39,000,000 French people are at least nominally
+Catholic, even if only from courtesy or from a utilitarian point of view. Only
+about one in sixty of the population are Protestant. Although among cultured
+conservatives there is a real devotion to the Church, the creed of France is in
+general something far more broad and human than Catholicism, in spite of the
+tremendously human qualities which that Church possesses. The creed of France
+is summed up better in art, nature, beauty, music, science, <i>la patrie</i>,
+humanity, in the worship of life itself.<a href="#linknote-193" name="linknoteref-193" id="linknoteref-193"><sup>[9]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-193" id="linknote-193"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-193">[9]</a>
+Those who desire to study the religious psychology of
+France during our period cannot find a better revelation than that given in the
+wonderful novel by Roger Martin du Card, entitled Jean Barois.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>
+It was against such a background of ecclesiastical and political affairs that
+the play of ideas upon religion went on. Such was the environment, the
+tradition which surrounded our thinkers, and we may very firmly claim that only
+by a recognition that their religious and national <i>milieu</i> was of such a
+type as we have outlined, can the real significance of their religious thought
+be understood. Only when we have grasped the essential attitude of authority
+and tradition of the Roman Church, its ruthless attitude to modern thought of
+all kinds, can we understand the religious attitude of men like Renan,
+Renouvier and Guyau.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We are also enabled to see why the appeal of the Saint-Simonist group could
+present itself as a religious and, indeed, Christian appeal outside the Church.
+It enables us to understand why Cousin&rsquo;s spiritualism pleased neither the
+Catholics nor their opponents, and to realise why the &ldquo;Religion of Humanity,&rdquo;
+which Auguste Comte inaugurated, made so little appeal.<a href="#linknote-194" name="linknoteref-194" id="linknoteref-194"><sup>[10]</sup></a> This has been well styled an &ldquo;inverted
+Catholicism,&rdquo; since it endeavours to preserve the ritual of that religion and
+to embody the doctrines of humanitarianism. Naturally enough it drew upon
+itself the scorn of both these groups. The Catholic saw in it only blasphemy:
+the humanitarian saw no way in which it might further his ends.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-194" id="linknote-194"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-194">[10]</a>
+Littré, his disciple, as we have already noted,
+rejected this part of his master&rsquo;s teaching. Littré was opposed by Robinet, who
+laid the stress upon the &ldquo;Religion of Humanity&rdquo; as the crown of Comte&rsquo;s work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comte&rsquo;s attempt to base his new religion upon Catholicism was quite deliberate,
+for he strove to introduce analogies with &ldquo;everything great and deep which the
+Catholic system of the Middle Ages effected or even projected.&rdquo; He offered a
+new and fantastic trinity, compiled a calendar of renowned historical
+personalities, to replace that of unknown saints. He proclaimed &ldquo;positive
+dogmas &ldquo;and aspired to all the authority and infallibility of the Roman
+Pontiff, supported by a trained clergy, whose word should be law. Curiously
+enough he, too, had his anathemas, in that he had days set apart for the solemn
+cursing of the great enemies of the human race, such as Napoleon. It was indeed
+a reversed Catholicism, offering a fairly good caricature of the methods of the
+Roman Church, and it was equally obnoxious in its tyrannical attitude.<a href="#linknote-195" name="linknoteref-195" id="linknoteref-195"><sup>[11]</sup></a> While it professed to express humanity and love as
+its central ideas it proceeded to outline a method which is the utter negation
+of these. Comte made the great mistake of not realising that loyalty to these
+ideals must involve spiritual freedom, and that the religion of humanity must
+be a collective inspiration of free individuals, who will in love and
+fellowship tolerate differences upon metaphysical questions. Uniformity can
+only be mischievous.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-195" id="linknote-195"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-195">[11]</a>
+Guyau&rsquo;s criticisms of Comte&rsquo;s &ldquo;Religion of Humanity&rdquo; in
+his <i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i> are interesting. &ldquo;The marriage of positive
+science and blind sentiment cannot produce religion&rdquo; (p. 314; Eng. trans., p.
+366). &ldquo;Comtism, which consists of the rites of religion and nothing else, is an
+attempt to maintain life in the body after the departure of the soul&rdquo; (p. 307;
+Eng. trans., p. 359).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was because he grasped this vital point that Renan&rsquo;s discussion of the
+religious question is so instructive. For him, religion is essentially an
+affair of personal taste. Here we have another indication of the clear way in
+which Renan was able to discern the tendencies of his time. He published his
+<i>Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire religieuse</i> in 1857, and his Preface to the
+<i>Nouvelles Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire religieuse</i> was written in 1884. He claims
+there that freedom is essential to religion, and that it is absolutely
+necessary that the State should have no power whatever over it. Religion is as
+personal and private a matter as taste in literature or art. There should be no
+State laws, he claims, relating to religion at all, any more than dress is
+prescribed for citizens by law. He well points out that only a State which is
+strictly neutral in religion can ever be absolutely free from playing the
+<i>rôle</i> of persecutor. The favouring of one sect will entail some
+persecution or hardship upon others. Further, he sees the iniquity of taxing
+the community to pay the expenses of clergy to whose teachings they may object,
+or whose doctrines are not theirs. Freedom, Renan believed, would claim its own
+in the near future and, denouncing the Concordat, he prophesied the abolition
+of the State Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The worst type of organisation Renan holds to be the theocratic state, like
+Islam, or the ancient Pontifical State in which dogma reigns supreme. He
+condemns also the State whose religion is based upon the profession of a
+majority of its citizens. There should be, as Spinoza was wont to style it,
+&ldquo;liberty of philosophising.&rdquo; The days of the dominance of dogma are passing, in
+many quarters gone by already, &ldquo;Religion has become for once and all a matter
+of personal taste.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan himself was deeply religious in mind. He was never an atheist and did not
+care for the term &ldquo;free-thinker&rdquo; because of its implied associations with the
+irreligion of the previous century. He stands out, however, not only in our
+period of French thought, but in the world development of the century as one of
+the greatest masters of religious criticism. His historical work is important,
+and he possessed a knowledge and equipment for that task. His distinguished
+Semitic scholarship led to his obtaining the chair of Hebrew at the Collège de
+France, and enabled him to write his Histories, one of the Jews and one of
+Christianity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was as a volume of this <i>Histoire des Origines du Christianisme</i> that
+his <i>Vie de Jésus</i> appeared in 1863. This life of the Founder of
+Christianity produced a profound stir in the camps of religious orthodoxy, and
+drew upon its author severe criticisms. Apart from the particular views set
+forth in that volume, we must remember that the very fact of his writing upon
+&ldquo;a sacred subject,&rdquo; which was looked upon as a close preserve, reserved for the
+theologians or churchmen alone, was deemed at that time an original and daring
+feat in France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His particular views, which created at the time such scandal, were akin to
+those of Baur and the Tubingen School, which Strauss (Renan&rsquo;s contemporary) had
+already set forth in his <i>Leben Jesu</i>.<a href="#linknote-196" name="linknoteref-196" id="linknoteref-196"><sup>[12]</sup></a>
+Briefly, they may be expressed as the rejection of the supernatural. Herein is
+seen the scientific or &ldquo;positive&rdquo; influence at work upon the dogmas of the
+Christian religion, a tendency which culminated in &ldquo;Modernism&rdquo; within the
+Church, only to be condemned violently by the Pope in 1907. It was this temper,
+produced by the study of documents, by criticism and historical research which
+put Renan out of the Catholic Church. His rational mind could not accept the
+dogmas laid down. Lamennais (who was conservative and orthodox in his theology,
+and possessed no taint of &ldquo;modernism&rdquo; in the technical sense) had declared that
+the starting-point should be faith and not reason. Renan aptly asks in reply to
+this, &ldquo;and what is to be the test, in the last resort, of the claims of faith
+is not reason?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-196" id="linknote-196"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-196">[12]</a>
+Written in 1835. Littré issued a French translation in
+1839, a year previous to the appearance of the English version by George Eliot.
+Strauss&rsquo;s life covers 1808-1874.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Renan we find a good illustration of the working of the spirit of modern
+thought upon a religious mind. Being a sincere and penetrating intellect he
+could not, like so many people, learned folk among them, keep his religious
+ideas and his reason in separate watertight compartments. This kind of people
+Renan likens in his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i> to
+mother-o&rsquo;-pearl shells of Francois de Sales &ldquo;which are able to live in the sea
+without tasting a drop of salt water.&rdquo; Yet he realises the comfort of such an
+attitude. &ldquo;I see around me,&rdquo; he continues, &ldquo;men of pure and simple lives whom
+Christianity has had the power to make virtuous and happy. . . . But I have
+noticed that none of them have the critical faculty, for which let them bless
+God!&rdquo; He well realises the contentment which, springing sometimes from a
+dullness of mind or lack of sensitiveness, excludes all doubt and all problems.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Catholicism he sees a bar of iron which will not reason or bend. &ldquo;I can only
+return to it by amputation of my faculties, by definitely stigmatising my
+reason and condemning it to perpetual silence.&rdquo; Writing of his exit from the
+Seminary of Saint Sulpice, where he was trained for the priesthood, he remarks
+in his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i> that &ldquo;there were times when I
+was sorry that I was not a Protestant, so that I might be a philosopher without
+ceasing to be a Christian.&rdquo; For Renan, as for so many minds in modern France,
+severance from the Roman Church is equivalent to severance from Christianity as
+an organised religion. The practical dilemma is presented of unquestioning
+obedience to an infallible Church on the one hand, or the attitude of
+<i>libre-penseur</i> on the other. There are not the accommodating varieties of
+the Protestant presentation of the Christian religion. Renan&rsquo;s spiritual
+pilgrimage is but an example of many. In a measure this condition of affairs is
+a source of strength to the Roman Church for, since a break with it so often
+means a break with Christianity or indeed with all definite religion, only the
+bolder and stronger thinkers make the break which their intellect makes
+imperative. The mass of the people, however dissatisfied they may be with the
+Church, nevertheless accept it, for they see no alternative but the opposite
+extreme. No half-way house of non-conformity presents itself as a rule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet, as we have insisted, Renan had an essentially religious view of the
+universe, and he expressly claimed that his break with the Church and his
+criticism of her were due to a devotion to pure religion, and he even adds, to
+a loyalty to the spirit of her Founder. Although, as he remarks in his
+<i>Nouvelles Etudes religieuses</i>, it is true that the most modest education
+tends to destroy the belief in the superstitious elements in religion, it is
+none the less true that the very highest culture can never destroy religion in
+the highest sense. &ldquo;Dogmas pass, but piety is eternal.&rdquo; The external trappings
+of religion have suffered by the growth of the modern sciences of nature and of
+historical criticism. The mind of cultivated persons does not now present the
+same attitude to evidence in regard to religious doctrines which were once
+accepted without question. The sources of the origins of the Christian religion
+are themselves questionable. This, Renan says, must not discourage the
+believers in true religion, for that is not the kind of foundation upon which
+religion reposes. Dogmas in the past gave rise to divisions and quarrels, only
+by feeling can religious persons be united in fellowship. The most prophetic
+words of Jesus were, Renan points out, those in which he indicated a time when
+men &ldquo;would not worship God in this mountain nor in Jerusalem, but when the true
+worshippers would worship in spirit and in truth.&rdquo; It was precisely this spirit
+which Renan admired in Jesus, whom he considered more of a philosopher than the
+Church, and he reminds the &ldquo;Christians&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-197" name="linknoteref-197" id="linknoteref-197"><sup>[13]</sup></a> who
+railed against him as an unbeliever that Jesus had had much more influence upon
+him than they gave him credit for, and, more particularly, that his break with
+the Church was due to loyalty to Jesus. By such loyalty Renan meant not a blind
+worship, but a reverence which endeavoured to appreciate and follow the ideals
+for which Jesus himself stood. It did not involve slavish acceptance of all he
+said, even if that were intelligible, and clear, which it is not. &ldquo;To be a
+Platonist,&rdquo; remarks Renan, &ldquo;I need not adore Plato, or believe <i>all</i> that
+he said.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-198" name="linknoteref-198" id="linknoteref-198"><sup>[14]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-197" id="linknote-197"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-197">[13]</a>
+Renan complains of the ignorance of the clergy of Rome
+regarding his own work, which they did not understand because they had not read
+it, merely relying on the Press and other sources for false and biassed
+accounts.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-198" id="linknote-198"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-198">[14]</a>
+<i>Cf.</i> Renan&rsquo;s Essay in <i>Questions
+contemporaines</i> on &ldquo;<i>L&rsquo;Avenir religieux des Sociétés modernes</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renan is in agreement with the central ideas of Jesus&rsquo; own faith, and he
+rightly regards him as one of the greatest contributors to the world&rsquo;s
+religious thought. Renan&rsquo;s religion is free from supernaturalism and dogma. He
+believes in infinite Goodness or Providence, but he despises the vulgar and
+crude conceptions of God which so mar a truly religious outlook. He points out
+how prayer, in the sense of a request to Heaven for a particular object, is
+becoming recognised as foolish. &lsquo;As a &ldquo;meditation,&rdquo; an interview with one&rsquo;s own
+conscience, it has a deeply religious value. The vulgar idea of prayer reposes
+on an immoral conception of God. Renan rightly sees the central importance for
+religion of possessing a sane view of the divinity, not one which belongs to
+primitive tribal wargods and weather-gods. He aptly says, in this connection,
+that the one who was defeated in 1871 was not only France but <i>le bon
+Dieu</i> to which she in vain appealed. In his place was to be found, remarks
+Renan with a little sarcasm, &ldquo;only a Lord God of Hosts who was unmoved by the
+moral &lsquo;délicatesse&rsquo; of the Uhlans and the incontestable excellence of the
+Prussian shells.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-199" name="linknoteref-199" id="linknoteref-199"><sup>[15]</sup></a> He rightly points to
+the immoral use made of the divinity by pious folk whose whole religion is
+utilitarian and materialistic. They do good only in order to get to heaven or
+escape hell,<a href="#linknote-200" name="linknoteref-200" id="linknoteref-200"><sup>[16]</sup></a> and believe in God because
+it is necessary for them to have a confidant and sonsoler, to whom they may cry
+in time of trouble, and to whose will they may resignedly impute the evil
+chastisement which their own errors have brought upon them individually or
+collectively. But, he rightly claims, it is only where utilitarian calculations
+and self-interest end, that religion begins with the sense of the Infinite and
+of the Ideal Goodness and Beauty and Love.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-199" id="linknote-199"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-199">[15]</a>
+<i>Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques</i>, p. ix.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-200" id="linknote-200"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-200">[16]</a>
+One pious individual thought to convert Renan
+himself by writing him every month, quite briefly, to this effect &ldquo;There is a
+hell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He endeavours in his <i>Examen de Conscience philosophique</i> (1888) to sum up
+his attitude upon this question. There he affirms that it is beyond dispute or
+doubt that we have no evidence whatever of the action in the universe of one or
+of several wills superior to that of man. The actual state of this universe
+gives no sign of any external intervention, and we know nothing of its
+beginning. No beneficent interfering power, a <i>deus ex machinâ</i>,
+corrects or directs the operation of blind forces, enlightens man or improves
+his lot. No God appears miraculously to prevent evils, to crush disease, stop
+wars, or save his children from peril. No end or purpose is visible to us. God
+in the popular sense, living and acting as a Divine Providence, is not to be
+seen in our universe. The question is, however, whether this universe of ours
+is the totality of existence. Doubt comes into play here, and if our universe
+is not this totality, then God, although absent from his world, might still
+exist outside it. Our finite world is little in relation to the Infinite, it is
+a mere speck in the universe we know, and its duration to a divine Being might
+be only a day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Infinite, continues Renan, surrounds our finite world above and below. It
+stretches on the one hand to the infinitely large concourse of worlds and
+systems, and, on the other, to the infinitely little as atoms, microbes and the
+germs by which human life itself is passed on from one generation to another.
+The prospect of the world we know involves logically and fatally, says Renan,
+atheism. But this atheism, he adds, may be due to the fact that we cannot see
+far enough. Our universe is a phenomenon which has had a beginning and will
+have an end. That which has had no beginning and will have no end is the
+Absolute All, or God. Metaphysics has always been a science proceeding upon
+this assumption, &ldquo;Something exists, therefore something has existed from all
+eternity.&rdquo; which is akin to the scientific principle, &ldquo;No effect with- out a
+cause.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-201" name="linknoteref-201" id="linknoteref-201"><sup>[17]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-201" id="linknote-201"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-201">[17]</a>
+<i>Examen de Conscience philosophique</i>, p. 412 of the
+volume <i>Feuilles détachées</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We must not allow ourselves to be misled too far by the constructions or
+inductions about the uniformity and immutability of the laws of nature. &ldquo;A God
+may reveal himself, perhaps, one day.&rdquo; The infinite may dispose of our finite
+world, use it for its own ends. The expression, &ldquo;Nature and its author,&rdquo; may
+not be so absurd as some seem to think it. It is true that our experience
+presents no reason for forming such an hypothesis, but we must keep our sense
+of the infinite. &ldquo;Everything is possible, even God,&rdquo; and Renan adds, &ldquo;If God
+exists, he must be good, and he will finish by being just.&rdquo; It is as foolish to
+deny as to assert his existence in a dogmatic and thoughtless manner. It is
+upon this sense of the infinite and upon the ideals of Goodness, Beauty and
+Love that true faith or piety reposes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love, declares Renan, is one of the principal revelations of the divine, and he
+laments the neglect of it by philosophy. It runs in a certain sense through all
+living beings, and in man has been the school of gentleness and
+courtesy&mdash;nay more, of morals and of religion. Love, understood in the
+high sense, is a sacred, religious thing, or rather is a part of religion
+itself. In a tone which recalls that of the New Testament and Tolstoi, Renan
+beseeches us to remember that God <i>is</i> Love, and that where Love is there
+God is. In loving, man is at his best; he goes out of himself and feels himself
+in contact with the infinite. The very act of love is veritably sacred and
+divine, the union of body and soul with another is a holy communion with the
+infinite. He remarks in his <i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i>,
+doubtless remembering the simple purity and piety of his mother and sister,
+that when reflection has brought us to doubt, and even to a scepticism
+regarding goodness, then the spontaneous affirmation of goodness and beauty
+which exists in a noble and virtuous woman saves us from cynicism and restores
+us to communication with the eternal spring in which God reflects himself.
+Love, which Renan with reason laments as having been neglected on its most
+serious side and looked upon as mere sentimentality, offers the highest proof
+of God. In it lies our umbilical link with nature, but at the same time our
+communion with the infinite. He recalls some of Browning&rsquo;s views in his
+attitude to love as a redeeming power. The most wretched criminal still has
+something good in him, a divine spark, if he be capable of loving.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the spirit of love and goodness which Renan admires in the simple faith
+of those separated far from him in their theological ideas. &ldquo;God forbid,&rdquo; he
+says,<a href="#linknote-202" name="linknoteref-202" id="linknoteref-202"><sup>[18]</sup></a> &ldquo;that I should speak slightingly of
+those who, devoid of the critical sense, and impelled by very pure and powerful
+religious motives, are attached to one or other of the great established
+systems of faith. I love the simple faith of the peasant, the serious
+conviction of the priest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-202" id="linknote-202"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-202">[18]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>, pp. 436, 437; Eng. trans., p. 410.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Supprimer Dieu, serait-ce amoindrir l&rsquo;univers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+asks Guyau in one of his <i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i>.&rsquo;<a href="#linknote-203" name="linknoteref-203" id="linknoteref-203"><sup>[19]</sup></a> Renan observes that if we tell the simple
+to live by aspiration after truth and beauty, these words would have no meaning
+for them. &ldquo;Tell them to love God, not to offend God, they will understand you
+perfectly. God, Providence, soul, good old words, rather heavy, but expressive
+and respectable which science will explain, but will never replace with
+advantage. What is God for humanity if not the category of the
+<i>ideal</i>?&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-204" name="linknoteref-204" id="linknoteref-204"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-203" id="linknote-203"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-203">[19]</a>
+<i>&ldquo;Question,&rdquo; Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i>, p. 65.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-204" id="linknote-204"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-204">[20]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>,&rdquo; p. 476; Eng. trans., p. 445.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the point upon which Vacherot insisted in his treatment of religion. He
+claimed that the conception of God arises in the human consciousness from a
+combination of two separate ideas. The first is the notion of the Infinite
+which Science itself approves, the second the notion of perfection which
+Science is unable to show us anywhere unless it be found in the human
+consciousness and its thoughts, where it abides as the magnetic force ever
+drawing us onward and acts at the same time as a dynamic, giving power to every
+progressive movement, being &ldquo;the Ideal&rdquo; in the mind and heart of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Similar was the doctrine of Taine, who saw in Reason the ideal which would
+produce in mankind a new religion, which would be that of Science and
+Philosophy demanding from art forms of expression in harmony with themselves.
+This religion would be free in doctrine. Taine himself looked upon religion as
+&ldquo;a metaphysical poem accompanied by belief,&rdquo; and he approached to the
+conception of Spinoza of a contemplation which may well be called an
+&ldquo;intellectual love of God.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>
+Like Renan, Renouvier was keenly interested in religion and its problems; he
+was also a keen opponent of the Roman Catholic Church and faith, against which
+he brought his influence into play in two ways&mdash;by his
+<i>néo-criticisme</i> as expressed in his written volumes and by his energetic
+editing of the two periodicals <i>La Critique philosophique</i> and <i>La
+Critique religieuse</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In undertaking the publication of these periodicals Renouvier&rsquo;s confessed aim
+was that of a definite propaganda. While the Roman Church profited by the
+feelings of disappointment and demoralisation which followed the
+Franco-Prussian War, and strove to shepherd wavering souls again into its fold,
+to find there a peace which evidently the world could not give, Renouvier
+(together with his friend Pillon) endeavoured to rally his countrymen by urging
+the importance, and, if possible, the acceptance of his own political and
+religious convictions arising out of his philosophy. The <i>Critique
+philosophique</i> appeared weekly from its commencement in 1872 until 1884,
+thereafter as a monthly until 1889. Among its contributors, whose names are of
+religious significance, were A. Sabatier, L. Dauriac, R. Allier<a href="#linknote-205" name="linknoteref-205" id="linknoteref-205"><sup>[21]</sup></a> and William James.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-205" id="linknote-205"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-205">[21]</a>
+Now Dean of the Protestant Faculty of Theology in Paris.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s great enthusiasm for his periodical is the main feature of this
+period of his life, although, owing to his tremendous energy, it does not seem
+to have interfered with the publication of his more permanent works. The
+political and general policy of this journal may be summed up in a sentence
+from the last year&rsquo;s issue,<a href="#linknote-206" name="linknoteref-206" id="linknoteref-206"><sup>[22]</sup></a> where we
+find Renouvier remarking that it had been his aim throughout &ldquo;to uphold
+strictly republican principles and to fight all that savoured of Caesar, or
+imperialism.&rdquo; The declared foe of monarchy in politics, he was equally the
+declared foe of the Pope in the religious realm. His attitude was one of very
+marked hostility to the power of the Vatican, which he realised to be
+increasing within the Roman Church, and one of keen opposition to the general
+power of that Church and her clergy in France. Renouvier&rsquo;s paper was quite
+definitely and aggressively anti-Catholic. He urged all Catholic readers of his
+paper who professed loyalty to the Republic to quit the Roman Church and to
+affiliate themselves to the Protestant body.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-206" id="linknote-206"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-206">[22]</a>
+<i>La Critique philosophique</i>, 1889, tome ii., p. 403.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was with this precise object in view that, in 1878, he added to his
+<i>Critique philosophique</i> a supplement which he entitled <i>La Critique
+religieuse</i>, a quarterly intended purely for propaganda purposes.
+&ldquo;Criticism,&rdquo; he had said, &ldquo;is in philosophy what Protestantism is in
+religion.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-207" name="linknoteref-207" id="linknoteref-207"><sup>[23]</sup></a> As certitude is, according
+to Renouvier&rsquo;s doctrines, the fruit of intelligence, heart and will, it can
+never be obtained by the coercion of authority or by obedience such as the
+Roman Church demands. He appealed to the testimony of history, as a witness to
+the conflict between authority and the individual conscience. Jesus, whom the
+Church adores, was himself a superb example of such revolt. History, however,
+shows us, says Renouvier, the gradual decay of authority in such matters.
+Thought, if it is really to be thought in its sincerity, must be free. This
+Renouvier realised, and in this freedom he saw the characteristic of the future
+development of religion, and shows himself, in this connection, in substantial
+agreement with Renan and Guyau.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-207" id="linknote-207"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-207">[23]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., 1873, pp. 145-146.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s interest in theology and religion, and in the theological
+implications of all philosophical thought, was not due merely to a purely
+speculative impulse, but to a very practical desire to initiate a rational
+restatement of religious conceptions, which he considered to be an urgent need
+of his time. He lamented the influence of the Roman Church over the minds of
+the youth of his country, and realised the vital importance of the controversy
+between Church and State regarding secular education. Renouvier was a keen
+supporter of the secular schools (<i>écoles laïques</i>). In 1879, when
+the educational controversy was at its height, he issued a little book on
+ethics for these institutions (<i>Petit Traité de Morale pour les Ecoles
+laïques</i>), which was republished in an enlarged form in 1882, when the
+secular party, ably led by Jules Ferry, triumphed in the establishment of
+compulsory, free, secular education. That great achievement, however, did not
+solve all the difficulties presented by the Church in its educational attitude,
+and even now the influence of clericalism is dreaded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier realised all the dangers, but he was forced also to realise that his
+enthusiastic and energetic campaign against the power of the Church had failed
+to achieve what he had desired. He complained of receiving insufficient support
+from quarters where he might well have expected it. His failure is a fairly
+conclusive proof that Protestantism has no future in France: it is a stubborn
+survival, rather than a growing influence. With the decline in the power and
+appeal of the Roman Catholic Church will come the decline of religion of a
+dogmatic and organised kind. Renouvier probably had an influence in hastening
+the day of the official severance of Church and State, an event which he did
+not live long enough to see.<a href="#linknote-208" name="linknoteref-208" id="linknoteref-208"><sup>[24]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-208" id="linknote-208"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-208">[24]</a>
+It occurred, however, only two years after his death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having become somewhat discouraged, Renouvier stopped the publication of his
+religious quarterly in 1885 and made the <i>Critique philosophique</i> a
+monthly instead of a weekly Journal. It ceased in 1889, but the following year
+Renouvier&rsquo;s friend, Pillon, began a new periodical, which bore the same name as
+the one which had ceased with the outbreak of the war in 1870. This was
+<i>L&rsquo;Année philosophique</i>, to which Renouvier contributed articles from time
+to time on religious topics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some writers are of the opinion that Renouvier&rsquo;s attacks on the Roman Catholic
+Church and faith, so far from strengthening the Protestant party in France,
+tended rather to increase the hostility to the Christian religion generally or,
+indeed, to any religious view of the universe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s own statements in his philosophy, in so far as these concern
+religion and theology, are in harmony with his rejection of the Absolute in
+philosophy and the Absolute in politics. His criticism of the idea of God, the
+central point in any philosophy of religion, is in terms similar to his
+critique of the worship of the Absolute or the deification of the State.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In dealing with the question of a &ldquo;Total Synthesis&rdquo; Renouvier indicated his
+objections to the metaphysical doctrine of an Absolute, which is diametrically
+opposed to his general doctrine of relativity. He is violently in conflict with
+all religious conceptions which savour of this Absolute or have a pantheistic
+emphasis, which would diminish the value and significance of relativity and of
+personality. The &ldquo;All-in-All&rdquo; conception of God, which represents the
+pantheistic elements in many theologies and religions, both Christian and
+other, is not really a consciousness, he shows, for consciousness itself
+implies a relation, a union of the self and non-self. In such a conception
+actor, play and theatre all blend into one, God alone is real, and he is
+unconscious, for there is, according to this hypothesis, nothing outside
+himself which he can know. Renouvier realises that he is faced with the ancient
+problem of the One and the Many, with the alternative of unity or plurality.
+With his usual logical decisiveness Renouvier posits plurality. He does not
+attempt to reconcile the two opposites, and he deals with the problem in the
+manner in which he faced the antinomies of Kant. Both cannot be true, and the
+enemy of pantheism and absolutism acclaims pluralism, both for logical reasons
+and in order to safeguard the significance of personality. In particular he
+directly criticises the philosophy of Spinoza in which he sees the supreme
+statement of this philosophy of the eternal, the perfect, necessary, unchanging
+One, who is the same yesterday, to-day and forever. He admits that the idea of
+law or a system of laws leads to the introduction of something approaching the
+hypothesis of unity, but he is careful to show by his doctrine of freedom and
+personality that this is only a limited unity and that, considered even from a
+scientific standpoint, a Total Synthesis, which is the logical outcome of such
+an hypothesis, is ultimately untenable. He overthrows the idols of Spinoza and
+Hegel. Such absolutes, infinite and eternal, whether described as an infinite
+love which loves itself or a thought thinking thought, are nothing more to
+Renouvier than vain words, which it is absurd to offer as &ldquo;The Living God.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Against these metaphysical erections Renouvier opposes his doctrines of
+freedom, of personality, relativity and pluralism. He offers in contrast the
+conception of God as a Person, not an Absolute, but relative, not infinite, but
+finite, limited by man&rsquo;s freedom and by contingency in the world of creatures.
+God, in his view, is not a Being who is omnipotent, or omniscient. He is a
+Person of whom man is a type, certainly a degraded type, but man is made in the
+image of the divine personality. Our notion of God, Renouvier reminds us, must
+be consistent with the doctrine of freedom, hence we must conceive of him not
+merely as a creator of creatures or subjects, but of creative power itself in
+those creatures. The relation of God to man is more complex than that of simple
+&ldquo;creation&rdquo; as this word is usually comprehended, &ldquo;It is a creation of
+creation,&rdquo; says Renouvier,<a href="#linknote-209" name="linknoteref-209" id="linknoteref-209"><sup>[25]</sup></a> a remark which is
+parallel to the view expressed by Bergson, to the effect that, we must conceive
+of God as a &ldquo;creator of creators.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-210" name="linknoteref-210" id="linknoteref-210"><sup>[26]</sup></a> The
+existence of this Creative Person must be conceived, Renouvier insists, as
+indissolubly bound up with his work, and it is unintelligible otherwise. That
+work is one of creation and not emanation&mdash;it involves more than mere
+power and transcendence. God is immanent in the universe.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-209" id="linknote-209"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-209">[25]</a>
+<i>Psychologie ralionnelle</i>, vol. 2, p. 104.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-210" id="linknote-210"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-210">[26]</a>
+In his address to the Edinburgh Philosophical Society, 1914.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theology has wavered between the two views&mdash;that of absolute transcendence
+and omnipotence and that of immanence based on freedom and limitation. In the
+first, every single thing depends upon the operation of God, whose Providence
+rules all. This is pure determinism of a theological character. In the other
+view man&rsquo;s free personality is recognised; part of the creation is looked upon
+as partaking of freedom and contingency, therefore the divinity is conceived as
+limited and finite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier insists that this view of God as finite is the only tenable one, for
+it is the only one which gives a rational and moral explanation of evil. In the
+first view God is responsible for all things, evil included, and man is
+therefore much superior to him from a moral standpoint. The idea of God must be
+ethically acceptable, and it is unfortunate that this idea, so central to
+religion, is the least susceptible to modification in harmony with man&rsquo;s
+ethical development. We already have noticed Guyau&rsquo;s stress upon this point in
+our discussion of ethics. Our conception of God must, Renouvier claims, be the
+affirmation of our highest category, Personality, and must express the best
+ethical ideals of mankind. Society suffers for its immoral and primitive view
+of God, which gives to its religion a barbarous character which is disgraceful
+and revolting to finer or more thoughtful minds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is true that the acceptance of the second view, which carries with it the
+complete rejection of the ideas of omnipotence and omniscience, modifies
+profoundly many of the old and primitive views of God. Renouvier recognises
+this, and wishes his readers also to grasp this point, for only so is religion
+to be brought forward in a development harmonious with the growth of man&rsquo;s mind
+in other spheres. Man should not profess the results of elaborate culture in
+science while he professes at the same time doctrines of God which are not
+above those of a savage or primitive people. This is the chief mischief which
+the influence of the Hebrew writings of the Old Testament has had upon the
+Christian religion. The moral conscience now demands their rejection, for to
+those who value religion they can only appear as being of pure blasphemy. God
+is neither omnipotent nor omniscient, consequently many things must be unknown
+to him until they happen. Foreknowledge and predetermination on his part are
+impossible, according to Renouvier. God is not to be conceived as a
+consciousness enveloping the entire universe, past, present and future, in a
+total synthesis. Such a belief is mischievous to humanity because of its
+fatalism, in spite of the comfortable consolation it offers to pious souls.
+Moreover, it presents the absurd view of God working often against himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of God, Renouvier shows, arises out of the discussions of the nature
+of the universal laws of the universe and from the progress of personalities.
+The plausible conceptions of God based on causality and on &ldquo;necessary essence&rdquo;
+have not survived the onslaughts of Criticism. The personality of God seems to
+us, says Renouvier, indicated as the conclusion and the almost necessary
+culmination of the consideration of the probabilities laid down by the
+practical reason or moral law. The primary, though not primitive, evidence for
+the existence of God is contained in, and results from, the generalisation of
+the idea of &ldquo;ends&rdquo; in the universe. We must not go bevond phenomena or seek
+evidence in some fictitious sphere outside of our experience. In its most
+general and abstract sense the idea of God arises from the conception of moral
+order, immortality, or the accord of happiness and goodness. We cannot deny the
+existence of a morality in the order and movements of the world, a physical
+sanction to the moral laws of virtue and of progress, an external reality of
+good, a supremacy of good, a witness of the Good itself. Renouvier does not
+think that any man, having sufficiently developed his thought, would refuse to
+give the name God to the object of this supreme conception, which at first may
+seem abstract because it is not in any way crude, many of its intrinsic
+elements remaining undetermined in face of our ignorance, but which,
+nevertheless, or just for that very reason, is essentially practical and moral,
+representing the most notable fact of all those included in our belief. This
+method of approaching the problem of God is, he thinks, both simple and grand.
+It is a noble contrast to the scholastic edifice built up on the metaphysical
+perfection of being, called the Absolute. In this conception all attributes of
+personality are replaced by an accumulation of metaphysical properties,
+contradictory in themselves and quite incompatible with one another. This
+Absolute is a pure chimerical abstraction; its pure being and pure essence are
+equivalent to pure nothing or pure nonsense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fetish of pure substance, substantial cause, absolute being, whatever it be
+called, is vicious at all times, but particularly when we are dealing with the
+fundamental problems of science. It would be advisable here that the only
+method of investigation be that of atheism, for scientific investigation should
+not be tainted by any prejudices or preconceived ideas upon the nature of the
+divinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What really is Atheism? The answer to this query, says Renouvier, is clear. The
+idea of God is essentially a product of the moral law or conscience. An atheist
+is, strictly speaking, one who does not admit the reality of this moral order
+of ends and of persons as valuable in themselves. Verily, he himself may
+personally lead a much more upright life than the loud champions of theism, but
+he denies the general moral order, which is God. With the epithet of atheist as
+commonly used for those who merelv have a conception of God which differs from
+the orthodox view, we are not here concerned. That may be dismissed as a misuse
+of the word due to religious bigotry. The fruits of true atheism are
+materialism, pantheism and fatalism. Indeed any doctrine, even a theological
+doctrine, which debases and destroys the inherent value of the human
+consciousness and personality, is rightly to be regarded, whatever it may
+<i>say</i> about God, however it may repeat his name (and two of these
+doctrines are very fond of this repetition, but this must not blind us to the
+real issue)&mdash;that doctrine is atheistic. The most resolute materialists,
+the most high-minded worshippers of Providence and the great philosophers of
+the Absolute, find themselves united here in atheism. God is not a mere
+totality of laws operating in the universe. Such a theism is but a form of real
+atheism. We must, insists Renouvier, abandon views of this type, with all that
+savours of an Absolute, a Perfect Infinite, and affirm our belief in the
+existence of an order of Goodness which gives value to human personality and
+assures ultimate victory to Justice. This is to believe in God. We arrive at
+this belief rationally and after consideration of the world and of the moral
+law of persons. Through these we come to God. We do not begin with him and
+pretend to deduce these from his nature by some incomprehensible <i>a
+priori</i> propositions. The methods of the old dogmatic theology are reversed.
+Instead of beginning with a Being of whom we know nothing and can obviously
+deduce nothing, let us proceed inductively, and by careful consideration of the
+revelation we have before us in the world and in humanity let us build up our
+idea of God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier is anxious that we should examine the data upon which we may found
+&ldquo;rational hypotheses&rdquo; as to the nature of God. The Critical Philosophy has
+upset the demonstrations of the existence of God, which were based upon
+causality and upon necessary existence (the cosmological and ontological
+proofs). Neo-criticism not only establishes the existence of God as a rational
+hypothesis, but &ldquo;this point of view of the divine problem is the most
+favourable to the notion of the personality of God. The personality of God
+seems to us to be indicated as the looked-for conclusion and almost necessary
+consummation of the probabilities of practical reason.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-211" name="linknoteref-211" id="linknoteref-211"><sup>[27]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-211" id="linknote-211"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-211">[27]</a>
+<i>Psychologie rationnelle</i>, vol. 2, p. 300.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The admission of ends, of finality, or purpose in the universe is frequently
+given as involving a supreme consciousness embracing this teleology. Also it is
+argued that Good could not exist in its generality save in an external
+consciousness&mdash;that is, a divine mind. By recalling the objections to a
+total synthesis of phenomena, Renouvier refutes both these arguments which rest
+upon erroneous methods in ontology and in theology. The explanation of the
+world by God, as in the cosmological argument, is fanciful, while the
+ontological argument leads us to erect an unintelligible and illogical
+absolute. Renouvier regards God as existing as a general consciousness
+corresponding to the generality of ends which man himself finds before him,
+finite, limited in power and in knowledge. But in avowing this God, Renouvier
+points him out to us as the first of all beings, a being like them, not an
+absolute, but a personality, possessing (and this is important) the perfection
+of morality, goodness and justice. He is the supreme personality in action, and
+as a perfect person he respects the personality of others and operates on our
+world only in the degree which the freedom and individuality of persons who are
+not himself can permit him, and within the limits of the general laws under
+which he represents to himself his own enveloped existence. This is the
+hypothesis of unity rendered intelligible, and as such Renouvier claims that it
+bridges in a marvellous manner the gap always deemed to exist between
+monotheism and polytheism&mdash;the two great currents of religious thought in
+humanity. The monotheists have appeared intolerant and fanatical in their
+religion and in their deity (not in so far as it was manifest in the thoughts
+of the simple, who professed a faith of the heart, but as shown in the
+ambitious theology of books and of schools), bearing on their banner the signs
+of a jealous deity, wishing no other gods but himself, declaring to his awed
+worshippers: &ldquo;I am that I am; have no other gods but me!&rdquo; On the other hand,
+the polytheistic peoples have been worshippers of beauty and goodness in all
+things, and where they saw these things they created a deity. They were more
+concerned with the immortality of good souls than the eternal existence of one
+supreme being; they were free-thinkers, creators of beauty and seekers after
+truth, and believers in freedom. The humanism of Greece stands in contrast to
+the idolatrous theocracy of the Hebrews.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The unity of God previously mentioned does not exclude the possibility of a
+plurality of divine persons. God the one would be the first and foremost,
+<i>rex hominum deorumque</i>. Some there may be that rise through saintliness
+to divinity, Sons of God, persons surpassing man in intelligence, power and
+morality. To take sides in this matter is equivalent to professing a particular
+religion. We must avoid the absolutist spirit in religion no less than in
+philosophy. By this Renouvier means that brutal fanaticism which prohibits the
+Gods of other people by passion and hatred, which aims at establishing and
+imposing its own God (which is, after all, but its own idea of God) as the
+imperialist plants his flag, his kind and his customs in new territory, in the
+spirit of war and conquest. Such a &ldquo;holy war&rdquo; is an outrage, based not upon
+real religion, but on intolerant fanaticism in which freedom and the
+inherent rights of personality to construct its own particular faith are
+denied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier finds a parallelism between the worship of the State in politics and
+of the One God in religion. The systems in which unity or plurality of divine
+personality appears differ from one another in the same way in which monarchal
+and republican ideas differ. Monarchy in religion offers the same obstacles to
+progress as it has done in politics. It involves a parallel enslavement of
+one&rsquo;s entire self and goods, a conscription which is hateful to freedom and
+detrimental to personality. To this supreme and regal Providence all is due; it
+alone in any real sense exists. Persons are shadows, of no reality, serfs less
+than the dust, to whom a miserable dole is given called grace, for which prayer
+and sacrifice are to be unceasingly made or chastisements from the Almighty
+will follow. This notion is the product of monarchy in politics, and with
+monarchy it will perish. The two are bound up, for &ldquo;by the grace of God&rdquo; we are
+told monarchs hold their thrones, by his favour their sceptre sways and their
+battalions move on to victory. This monarchal God, this King of kings and Lord
+of hosts, ruler of heaven and earth, is the last refuge of monarchs on the
+earth. Confidence in both has been shaken, and both, Renouvier asserts, will
+disappear and give place to a real democracy, not only to republics on earth,
+but to the conception of the whole universe as a republic. Men raise up saints
+and intercessors to bridge the gulf between the divine Monarch and his slaves.
+They conceive angels as doing his work in heaven; they tolerate priests to
+bring down grace to them here and now. The doctrine of unity thus gives rise to
+fanatical religious devotion or philosophical belief in the absolute, which
+stifles religion and perishes in its own turn. The doctrine of immortality,
+based on the belief in the value of human personality, leads us away from
+monarchy to a republic of free spirits. A democratic religion in this sense
+will display human nature raised to its highest dignity by virtue of an
+energetic affirmation of personal liberty, tolerance, mutual respect and
+liberty of faith&mdash;a free religion without priests or clericalism, not in
+conflict with science and philosophy, but encouraging these pursuits and in
+turn encouraged by them.<a href="#linknote-212" name="linknoteref-212" id="linknoteref-212"><sup>[28]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-212" id="linknote-212"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-212">[28]</a>
+The fullest treatment of this is the large section in the
+conclusion to the <i>Philosophie analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire</i> (tome iv.).
+<i>Cf</i>. also the discussion of the influence of religious beliefs on
+societies in the last chapter of <i>La Nouvelle Monadologie</i>.
+</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>
+Ravaisson, in founding the new spiritual philosophy, professed certain
+doctrines which were a blending of Hellenism and Christianity. In the midst of
+thought which was dominated by positivism, naturalism or materialism, or by a
+shallow eclecticism, wherein religious ideas were rather held in contempt, he
+issued a challenge on behalf of spiritual values and ideals. Beauty, love and
+goodness, he declared, were divine. God himself is these things, said
+Ravaisson, and the divinity is &ldquo;not far from any of us.&rdquo; In so far as we
+manifest these qualities we approach the perfect personality of God himself. In
+the infinite, in God, will is identical with love, which itself is not
+distinguished from the absolutely good and the absolutely beautiful. This love
+can govern our wills; the love of the beautiful and the good can operate in our
+lives. In so far as this is so, we participate in the love and the life of God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Boutroux agrees substantially with Ravaisson, but he lays more stress upon the
+free creative power of the deity as immanent. &ldquo;God,&rdquo; he remarks in his thesis,
+&ldquo;is not only the creator of the world, he is also its Providence, and watches
+over the details as well as over the whole.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-213" name="linknoteref-213" id="linknoteref-213"><sup>[29]</sup></a> God is thus an immanent and creative power
+in his world as well as the perfect being of supreme goodness and beauty.
+Boutroux here finds this problem of divine immanence and transcendence as
+important as does Blondel, and his attitude is like that of Blondel, midway
+between that of Ravaisson and Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-213" id="linknote-213"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-213">[29]</a>
+<i>La Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i>, p.
+150.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Religion, Boutroux urges, must show man that the supreme ideal for him is to
+realise in his own nature this idea of God. There is an obligation upon man to
+pursue after these things-goodness, truth, beauty and love&mdash;for they are
+his good, they are the Good; they are, indeed, God. In them is a harmony which
+satisfies his whole nature, and which does not neglect or crush any aspect of
+character, as narrow conceptions of religion inevitably do. Boutroux insists
+upon the necessity for intellectual satisfaction, and opposes the &ldquo;philosophy
+of action&rdquo; in ils doctrine of &ldquo;faith for faith&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo; At the same time he
+conceives Reason as a harmony, not merely a coldly logical thing. Feeling and
+will must be satisfied also.<a href="#linknote-214" name="linknoteref-214" id="linknoteref-214"><sup>[30]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-214" id="linknote-214"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-214">[30]</a>
+Boutroux has in his volume, <i>Science et Religion dans la
+Philosophie contemporaine</i>, contributed a luminous and penetrating
+discussion of various religious doctrines from Comte to William James. This was
+published in 1908.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have observed already how Fouillée claimed that the ethics of his
+<i>idées-forces</i> contained the gist of what was valuable in the world
+religions. He claims that philosophy includes under the form of rational belief
+or thought what the religions include as instinctive belief. In religion he
+sees a spontaneous type of metaphysic, while metaphysic or philosophy is a
+rationalised religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing in this connection is more important than a rational and harmonious
+view of God. This he insists upon in his thesis and in his <i>Sketch of the
+Future of a Metaphysic founded on Experience</i>. The old idea of God was that
+of a monarch governing the world as a despot governs his subjects. The
+government of the universe may still be held to be a monarchy, but modern
+science is careful to assure us that it must be regarded as an absolutely
+constitutional monarchy. The monarch, if there be one, acts in accordance with
+the laws and respects the established constitution. Reason obliges us to
+conceive of the sovereign: experience enlightens us as to the constitution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There can be little doubt that one of the world&rsquo;s greatest books upon religion
+is the work of Guyau, which appeared in 1886, bearing the arresting title,
+<i>L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>. Its sub-title describes it as an Etude
+sociologique, and it is this treatment of the subject from the standpoint of
+sociology which is such a distinctive feature of the book. The notion of a
+<i>social bond</i> between man and the powers superior to him, but resembling
+him, is, claims Guyau, a point of unity in which all religions are at one. The
+foundation of the religious sentiment lies in sociality, and the religious man
+is just the man who is disposed to be sociable, not only with all living beings
+whom he meets, but with those whom he imaginatively creates as gods. Guyau&rsquo;s
+thesis, briefly put, is that religion is a manifestation of life (again he
+insists on &ldquo;Life,&rdquo; as in his Ethics, as a central conception), becoming
+self-conscious and seeking the explanation of things by analogies drawn from
+human society. Religion is &ldquo;sociomorphic&rdquo; rather than merely anthropomorphic;
+it is, indeed, a universal sociological hypothesis, mythical in form.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The religious sentiment expresses a consciousness of dependence, and in
+addition, adds Guyau, it expresses the need of affection, tenderness and
+love&mdash;that is to say, the &ldquo;social&rdquo; side of man&rsquo;s nature. In the conception
+of the Great Companion or Loving Father, humanity finds consolation and hope.
+Children and women readily turn to such an ideal, and primitive peoples, who
+are just like children, conceive of the deity as severe and all- powerful. To
+this conception moral attributes were subsequently added, as man&rsquo;s own moral
+conscience developed, and it now issues in a doctrine of God as Love. All this
+development is, together with that of esthetics and ethics, a manifestation of
+life in its individual and more especially social manifestations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the purpose of Guyau&rsquo;s book not only to present a study of the evolution
+of religion in this manner, from a sociological point of view, but to indicate
+a further development of which the beginnings are already
+manifest&mdash;namely, a decomposition of all systems of dogmatic religion. It
+is primarily the decay of dogma and ecclesiasticism which he intends to
+indicate by the French term <i>irréligion</i>. The English translation of his
+work bears the title <i>The Non-religion of the Future</i>. Had Guyau been
+writing and living in another country it is undoubtedly true that his work
+would probably have been entitled <i>The Religion of the Future</i>. Owing to
+the Roman Catholic environment and the conception of religion in his own land,
+he was, however, obliged to abandon the use of the word religion altogether. In
+order to avoid misunderstanding, we must examine the sense he gives to this
+word, and shall see then that his title is not meant to convey the impression
+of being anti-religious in the widest sense, nor is it irreligious in the
+English meaning of that word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau considers every positive and historical religion to present three
+distinct and essential elements:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An attempt at a mythical and non-scientific explanation of (<i>a</i>) natural
+phenomena&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, intervention, miracles, efficacious prayer;
+(<i>b</i>) historical facts&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, incarnation of Buddha or Jesus.
+
+A system of dogmas&mdash;that is to say, symbolic ideas or imaginative
+beliefs&mdash;forcibly imposed upon one&rsquo;s faith as absolute verities, even
+though they are susceptible to no scientific demonstration or philosophical
+justification.
+
+A cult and a system of rites or of worship, made up of more or less immutable
+practices which are looked upon as possessing a marvellous efficacy upon the
+course of things, a propitiatory virtue.<a href="#linknote-215" name="linknoteref-215" id="linknoteref-215"><sup>[31]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-215" id="linknote-215"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-215">[31]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Irréligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>, p. xiii; Eng. trans., p. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By these three different and really organic elements, religion is clearly
+marked off from philosophy. Owing to the stability of these elements religion
+is apt to be centuries behind science and philosophy, and consequently
+reconciliation is only effected by a subtle process which, while maintaining
+the traditional dogmas and phrases, evolves a new interpretation of them
+sufficiently modern to harmonise a little more with the advance in thought, but
+which presents a false appearance of stability and consistency, disguising the
+real change of meaning, of view-point and of doctrine. Of this effort we shall
+see the most notable instance is that of the &ldquo;Modernists&rdquo; or Neo-Catholics in
+France and Italy, and the Liberal Christians in England and America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guyau claims that these newer interpretations, subtle and useful as they are,
+and frequently the assertions of minds who desire sincerely to adapt the
+ancient traditions to modern needs, are in themselves hypocritical, and the
+Church in a sense does right to oppose them. Guyau cannot see any
+satisfactoriness in these compromises and adaptations which lack the clearness
+of the old teaching, which they in a sense betray, while they do not
+sufficiently satisfy the demands of modern thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the decay of the dogmatic religion of Christendom which is supremely
+stated in the faith of the Roman Catholic Church, there must follow the
+non-religion of the future, which may well preserve, he points out, all that is
+pure in the religious sentiment and carry with it an admiration for the cosmos
+and for the infinite powers which are there displayed. It will be a search for,
+and a belief in, an ideal not only individual, but social and even cosmic,
+which shall pass the limits of actual reality. Hence it appears that
+&ldquo;non-religion&rdquo; or &ldquo;a-religion,&rdquo; which is for Guyau simply &ldquo;the negation of all
+dogma, of all traditional and supernatural authority, of all revelation, of all
+miracle, of all myth, of all rite erected into a duty,&rdquo; is most certainly not a
+synonym for irreligion or impiety, nor does it involve any contempt for the
+moral and metaphysical doctrines expressed by the ancient religions of the
+world. The non-religious man in Guyau&rsquo;s sense of the term is simply the man
+without a religion, as he has defined it above, and he may quite well admire
+and sympathise with the great founders of religion, not only in that they were
+thinkers, metaphysicians, moralists and philanthropists, but in that they were
+reformers of established belief, more or less avowed enemies of religious
+authority and of every affirmation laid down by an ecclesiastical body in order
+to bind the intellectual freedom of individuals. Guyau&rsquo;s remarks in this
+connection agree with the tone in which Renan spoke of his leaving the Church
+because of a feeling of respect and loyalty to its Founder. Guyau points out
+that there exists in the bosom of every great religion a dissolving
+force&mdash;namely, the very force which in the beginning served to constitute
+it and to establish its triumphant revolt over its predecessor. That force is
+the absolute right of private judgment, the free factor of the personal
+conscience, which no external authority can succeed, ultimately, in coercing or
+silencing. The Roman Church, and almost every other organised branch of the
+Christian religion, forgets, when faced with a spirit which will not conform,
+that it is precisely to this spirit that it owes its own foundation and also
+the best years of its existence. Guyau has little difficulty in pressing the
+conclusions which follow from the recognition of this vital point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Briefly, it follows that the hope of a world-religion is an illusion, whether
+it be the dream of a perfect and world-wide Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, or
+Mohammedanism. The sole authority in religious matters, that of the individual
+conscience, prevents any such consummation, which, even if it could be
+achieved, would be mischievous. The future will display a variety of beliefs
+and religions, as it does now. This need not discourage us, for therein is a
+sign of vitality or spiritual life, of which the world-religions are examples,
+marred, however, by their profession of universality, an ideal which they do
+not and never will realise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The notion of a Catholic Church or a great world- religion is really contrary
+to the duty of personal thought and reflection, which must inevitably (unless
+they give way to mere lazy repetition of other people&rsquo;s thoughts) lead to
+differences. The tendency is for humanity to move away from dogmatic religion,
+with its pretensions to universality, catholicity, and monarchy (of which, says
+Guyau, the most curious type has just recently been achieved in our own day, by
+the Pope&rsquo;s proclamation of the dogma of papal infallibility), towards religious
+individualism and to a plurality of religions. There may, of course, be
+religious associations or federations, but these will be free, and will not
+demand the adherence to any dogma as such.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the decay of dogmatic religion the best elements of religious life will
+have freer scope to develop themselves, and will grow both in intensity and in
+extent. &ldquo;He alone is religious, in the philosophical sense of the word, who
+researches for, who thinks about, who loves, truth.&rdquo; Such inquiry or search
+involves freedom, it involves conflict, but the conflict of ideas, which is
+perfectly compatible with toleration in a political sense, and is the essence
+of the spirit of the great world teachers. This is what Jesus foresaw when he
+remarked: &ldquo;I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.&rdquo; More fully, he might
+have put it, Guyau suggests: &ldquo;I came not to bring peace into human thought, but
+an incessant battle of ideas; not repose, but movement and progress of spirit;
+not universal dogma, but liberty of belief, which is the first condition of
+growth.&rdquo; Well might Renan remark that it was loyalty to such a spirit which
+caused him to break with the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While attacking religious orthodoxy in this manner, Guyau is careful to point
+out that if religious fanaticism ls bad, anti-religious fanaticism is equally
+mischievous, wicked and foolish.<a href="#linknote-216" name="linknoteref-216" id="linknoteref-216"><sup>[32]</sup></a> While the
+eighteenth century could only scoff at religion, the nineteenth realised the
+absurdity of such raillery. We have come to see that even although a belief may
+be irrational and even erroneous, it may still survive, and it may console
+multitudes whose minds would be lost on the stormy sea of life without such an
+anchor. While dogmatic or positive religions do exist they will do so, Guyau
+reminds us, for quite definite and adequate reasons, chiefly because there are
+people who believe them, to whom they mean something and often a great deal.
+These reasons certainly do diminish daily, and the number of adherents, too,
+but we must refrain from all that savours of anti- religious fanaticism.<a href="#linknote-217" name="linknoteref-217" id="linknoteref-217"><sup>[33]</sup></a> He himself speaks with great respect of a
+Christian missionary. Are we not, he asks, both brothers and humble
+collaborators in the work and advance of humanity? He sees no real
+inconsistency between his own dislike of orthodoxy and dogma and the
+missionary&rsquo;s work of raising the ignorant to a better life by those very
+dogmas. It is a case of relative advance and mental progress.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-216" id="linknote-216"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-216">[32]</a>
+He cites a curious case of anti-religious fanaticism at
+Marseilles in 1885, when all texts and scripture pictures were removed fromthe
+schools.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-217" id="linknote-217"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-217">[33]</a>
+Guyau&rsquo;s book abounds in illustrations. He mentions
+here Huss&rsquo;s approval of the sincerity of one man who brought straw from his own
+house to burn him. Huss admired this act of a man in whom he saw a brother in
+sincerity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is with great wealth of discussion that Guyau recounts the genesis of
+religions in primitive societies to indicate the sociological basis of
+religion. More important are his chapters on the dissolution of religions in
+existing societies, in which he shows the unsatisfactoriness of the dogmas of
+orthodox Protestantism equally with those of the Catholic Church. As
+mischievous as the notion of an infallible Church is that of an infallible
+book, literally&mdash;that is to say, foolishly-interpreted. He recognises that
+for a literal explanation of the Bible must be substituted, and is, indeed,
+being substituted, a literary explanation. Like Renan, he criticises the vulgar
+conception of prayer and of religious morality which promotes goodness by
+promise of paradise or fear of hell. He urges in this connection the futility
+of the effort made by Michelet, Quinet and, more especially, by Renouvier and
+Pillon to &ldquo;Protestantise&rdquo; France. While admitting a certain intellectual, moral
+and political superiority to it, Guyau claims that for the promotion of
+morality there is little use in substituting Protestantism for Catholicism. He
+forecasts the limitation of the power of priests and other religious teachers
+over the minds of young children. Protestant clergymen in England and America
+he considers to be no more tolerant in regard to the educational problem than
+the priests. Guyau urges the importance of an elementary education being free
+from religious propaganda. He was writing in 1886, some years after the secular
+education law had been carried. There is, however, more to be done, and he
+points out &ldquo;how strange it is that a society should not do its best to form
+those whose function it is to form it.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-218" name="linknoteref-218" id="linknoteref-218"><sup>[34]</sup></a> In
+higher education some attention should be given to the comparative study of
+religions. &ldquo;Even from the point of view of philosophy, Buddha and Jesus are
+more important than Anaximander or Thales.&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-219" name="linknoteref-219" id="linknoteref-219"><sup>[35]</sup></a> It is a pity, he thinks, that there is not a
+little more done to acquaint the young with the ideas for which the great
+world-teachers, Confucius, Zoroaster, Buddha, Socrates, Mohammed, stood,
+instead of cramming a few additional obscure names from early national history.
+It would give children at least a notion that history had a wider range than
+their own country, a realisation of the fact that humanity was already old when
+Christ appeared, and that there are great religions other than Christianity,
+religions whose followers are not poor ignorant savages or heathen, but
+intelligent beings, from whom even Christians may learn much. It is thoroughly
+mischievous, he aptly adds, to bring up children in such a narrow mental
+atmosphere that the rest of their life is one long disillusionment.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-218" id="linknote-218"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-218">[34]</a>
+<i>L&rsquo;Irréligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>, p. 232; Eng. trans., p. 278.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-219" id="linknote-219"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-219">[35]</a>
+<i>Ibid</i>., p. 236; Eng. trans., p. 283.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With particular reference to his own country, Guyau criticises the religious
+education of women, the question of &ldquo;mixed marriages,&rdquo; the celibacy of the
+Roman Catholic clergy, and the influence of religious beliefs upon the
+limitation or increase of the family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After having summed up the tendency of dogmatic religion to decay, he asks if
+any unification of the great religions is to-day possible, or whether any new
+religion may be expected? The answer he gives to both these questions is
+negative, and he produces a wealth of very valid reasons in support of his
+finding. He is, of course, here using the term religion as he has himself
+defined it. The claim to universality by all world-religions, the insistence by
+each that it alone is the really best or true religion, precludes any question
+of unity. As well might we imagine unity between Protestantism and the Roman
+Catholic Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the &ldquo;non-religious&rdquo; state, dogma will be replaced by individual
+constructions. Religion will be a free, personal affair, in which the great
+philosophical hypotheses (<i>e.g.</i>, Theism and Pantheism) will be to a large
+extent utilised. They will, however, be regarded as such by all, as rational
+hypotheses, which some individuals will accept, others will reject. Certain
+doctrines will appeal to some, not to others. The evidence for a certain type
+of theism will seem adequate to some, not to others. There will be no endeavour
+to impose corporately or singly the acceptance of any creed upon others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With Guyau&rsquo;s conception of the future of religion or non-religion, whichever we
+care to call it, we may well close this survey of the religious ideas in modern
+France. In the Roman Church on the one hand, and, on the other, in the thought
+of Renan, Renouvier and Guyau, together with the multitude of thinking men and
+women they represent, may be seen the two tendencies&mdash;one conservative,
+strengthening its internal organisation and authority, in defiance of all the
+influences of modern thought, the other a free and personal effort, issuing in
+a genuine humanising of religion and freeing it from ecclesiasticism and dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A word may be said here, however, with reference to the &ldquo;Modernists.&rdquo; The
+Modernist movement is a French product, the result of the interaction of modern
+philosophical and scientific ideas upon the teaching of the Roman Church. It
+has produced a philosophical religion which owes much to Ollé-Laprune and
+Blondel, and is in reality modern science with a veneer of religious idealism
+or platonism. It is a theological compromise, and has no affinities with the
+efforts of Lamennais. As a compromise it was really opposed to the traditions
+of the French, to whose love of sharp and clear thinking such general and
+rather vague syntheses are unacceptable. It must be admitted, however, that
+there is a concreteness, a nearness to reality and life, which separates it
+profoundly from the highly abstract theology of Germany, as seen in Ritschl and
+Harnack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Abbé Marat of the Theological School at the Sorbonne and Father Gratry of
+the Ecole Normale were the initiators of this movement, as far back as the
+Second Empire. &ldquo;Modernism&rdquo; was never a school of thought, philosophical or
+religious, and it showed itself in a freedom and life, a spirit rather than in
+any formula;. As Sorel&rsquo;s syndicalism is an application of the Bergsonian and
+kindred doctrines to the left wings, and issues in a social theory of &ldquo;action,&rdquo;
+so Modernism is an attempt to apply them to the right and issues in a religion
+founded on action rather than theology. The writings of the Modernists are
+extensive, but we mention the names of the chief thinkers. There is the noted
+exegetist Loisy, who was dismissed in 1894 from the Catholic Institute of Paris
+and now holds the chair of the History of Religions at the College de
+France. His friend, the Abbé Bourier, maintained the doctrine, &ldquo; Where Christ
+is there is the Church,&rdquo; with a view to insisting upon the importance of being
+a Christian rather than a Catholic or a Protestant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The importance of the Catholic thinker, Blondel, both for religion and for
+philosophy, has already been indicated at an earlier stage in this book. His
+work inspires most.Modernist thought. Blondel preaches, with great wealth of
+philosophical and psychological argument, the great Catholic doctrine of the
+collaboration of God with man and of man with God. Man at one with himself
+realises his highest aspirations. Divine transcendence and divine immanence in
+man are reconciled. God and man, in this teaching, are brought together, and
+the stern realism of every-day life and the idealism of religion unite in a
+sacramental union. The supreme principle in this union Laberthonnière shows to
+be Love. He is at pains to make clear, however, that belief in Love as the
+ultimate reality is no mere sentimentality, no mere assertion of the
+will-to-believe. For him the intellect must play its part in the religious life
+and in the expression of faith. No profounder intellectual judgment exists than
+just the one which asserts &ldquo;God is Love,&rdquo; when this statement is properly
+apprehended and its momentous significance clearly realised. We cannot but
+lament, with Laberthonnière, the abuse of this proposition and its subsequent
+loss of both appeal and meaning through a shallow familiarity. The reiteration
+of great conceptions, which is the method by which the great dogmas have been
+handed down from generations, tends to blurr their real significance. They
+become stereotyped and empty of life. It is for this reason that Le Roy in
+<i>Dogme et Critique</i> (1907) insisted upon the advisability of regarding all
+dogmas as expressions of practical value in and for action, rather than as
+intellectual propositions of a purely &ldquo;religious&rdquo; or ecclesiastical type,
+belonging solely to the creeds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Blondel, Laberthonnière, and Le Roy can be added the names of Fonsegrive,
+Sertillanges, Loyson and Houtin, the last two of whom ultimately left the
+Church, for the Church made up its mind to crush Modernism. The Pope had
+intimated in 1879 that the thirteenth-century philosophy of Aquinas was to be
+recognised as the only official philosophy.<a href="#linknote-220" name="linknoteref-220" id="linknoteref-220"><sup>[36]</sup></a>
+Finally, Modernism was condemned in a Vatican encyclical (<i>Pascendi Dominici
+Gregis</i>) in 1907, as was also the social and educational effort, <i>Le
+Sillon</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-220" id="linknote-220"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-220">[36]</a>
+This led to revival of the study of the <i>Summa
+Theologiæ</i> and to the commencement of the review of Catholic philosophy,
+<i>Revue Thomiste</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such has been Rome&rsquo;s last word, and it is not surprising, therefore, that
+France is the most ardent home of free thought upon religious matters, that the
+French people display a spirit which is unable to stop at Protestantism, but
+which heralds the religion or the <i>non-religion</i> of the future to which
+Guyau has so powerfully indicated the tendencies and has by so doing helped, in
+conjunction with Renan and Renouvier, to hasten its realisation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A parallel to the &ldquo;modernist&rdquo; theology of the Catholic thinkers was indicated
+on the Protestant side by the theology of Auguste Sabatier, whose <i>Esquisse
+d&rsquo;une Philosophie de la Religion d&rsquo;après la Psychologie et l&rsquo;Histoire</i>
+appeared in 1897<a href="#linknote-221" name="linknoteref-221" id="linknoteref-221"><sup>[37]</sup></a> and of Menegoz,<a href="#linknote-222" name="linknoteref-222" id="linknoteref-222"><sup>[38]</sup></a> whose <i>Publications diverges sur le
+Fidéisme et son Application a l&rsquo;Enseignement chrétien traditionnel</i> were
+issued in 1900. Sabatier assigns the beginning of religion to man&rsquo;s trouble and
+distress of heart caused by his aspirations, his belief in ideals and higher
+values, being at variance with his actual condition. Religion arises from this
+conflict of real and ideal in the soul of man. This is the essence of religion
+which finds its expression in the life of faith rather than in the formation of
+beliefs which are themselves accidental and transitory, arising from
+environment and education, changing in form from aee to age both in the
+individual and the race. While LeRoy on the Catholic side, maintained that
+dogmas were valuable for their practical significance, Sabatier and Ménégoz
+claimed that all religious knowledge is symbolical. Dogmas are but symbols,
+which inadequately attempt to reveal their object. That object can only be
+grasped by &ldquo;faith&rdquo; as distinct from &ldquo;belief&rdquo;&mdash;that is to say, by an
+attitude in which passion, instinct and intuition blend and not by an attitude
+which is purely one of intellectual conviction. This doctrine of &ldquo;salvation by
+faith independently of beliefs&rdquo; has a marked relationship not only to
+pragmatism and the philosophy of action, but to the philosophy of intuition. A
+similar anti-intellectualism colours the &ldquo;symbolo-fidéist&rdquo; currents within
+Catholicism, which manifest a more extreme character. A plea voiced against all
+such tendencies is to be found in Bois&rsquo; book, <i>De la Connaissance
+religieuse</i> (1894), where an endeavour is made to retain a more intellectual
+attitude, and it again found expression in the volume by Boutroux, written as
+late as 1908, which deals with the religious problem in our period.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-221" id="linknote-221"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-221">[37]</a>
+It was followed after his death in 1901 by the
+volume <i>Les Religions d&rsquo;Authorité et la Religion de l&rsquo;Esprit</i>, 1904.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-222" id="linknote-222"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-222">[38]</a>
+This is the late Eugene Ménégoz, Professor of
+Theology in Paris, not Ferdinand Ménégoz, his nephew, who is also a Professor
+of Theology now at Strasbourg.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quoting Boehme in the interesting conclusion to this book on <i>Science and
+Religion in Contemporary Philosophy</i> (1908) Boutroux sums up in the words of
+the old German mystic his attitude to the diversity of religious opinions.
+&ldquo;Consider the birds in our forests, they praise God each in his own way, in
+diverse tones and fashions. Think you God is vexed by this diversity and
+desires to silence discordant voices? All the forms of being are dear to the
+infinite Being himself!&rdquo;<a href="#linknote-223" name="linknoteref-223" id="linknoteref-223"><sup>[39]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-223" id="linknote-223"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-223">[39]</a>
+It is interesting to compare with the above the sentiments
+expressed in Matthew Arnold&rsquo;s poem, entitled Progress:<br/>
+<br/>
+&ldquo;Children of men! the unseen Power, whose eye<br/>
+For ever doth accompany mankind,<br/>
+Hath look&rsquo;d on no religion scornfully<br/>
+That men did ever find.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This survey of the general attitude adopted towards religion and the problems
+which it presents only serves to emphasise more clearly those tendencies which
+we have already denoted in previous chapters. As the discussion of progress was
+radically altered by the admission of the principle of freedom, and the
+discussion of ethics passes bevond rigid formulae to a freer conception of
+morality, so here in religion the insistence upon freedom and that recognition
+of personality which accompanies it, colours the whole religious outlook.
+Renan, Renouvier and Guyau, the three thinkers who have most fully discussed
+religion in our period, join in proclaiming the importance of the personal
+factor in religious belief, and in valiant opposition to that Church which is
+the declared enemy of freedom, they urge that in freedom of thought lies the
+course of all religious development in the future, for only thus can be
+expressed the noblest and highest aspirations of man&rsquo;s spirit.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CONCLUSION</h2>
+
+<p>
+The foregoing pages have been devoted to a history of ideas rather than to the
+maintenance of any special thesis or particular argument. Consequently it does
+not remain for us to draw any definitely logical conclusions from the preceding
+chapters. The opportunity may be justly taken, however, of summing up the
+general features of the development.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Few periods in the history of human thought can rival in interest that of the
+second half of the nineteenth century in France. The discussion covers the
+principal problems with which man&rsquo;s mind is occupied in modern times and
+presents these in a manner which is distinctly human and not merely national.
+This alone would give value to the study of such a period. There is, however,
+to be added the more striking fact that there is a complete &ldquo;turning of the
+tide&rdquo; manifested during these fifty years in the attitude to most of the
+problems. Beginning with an overweening confidence in science and a belief in
+determinism and in a destined progress, the century closed with a complete
+reversal of these conceptions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Materialism and naturalism are both recognised as inadequate, a reaction sets
+in against positivism and culminates in the triumph of spiritualism or
+idealism. This idealism is free from the cruder aspects of the Kantian or
+Hegelian philosophy. The Thing-in-itself and the Absolute are abandoned;
+relativity is proclaimed in knowledge, and freedom in the world of action.
+Thoughts or ideas show themselves as forces operating in the evolution of
+history. This is maintained in opposition to the Marxian doctrine of the purely
+economic or materialistic determination of history. A marked tendency, however,
+is manifested to regard all problems from a social stand point. The dogmatic
+confidence in science gives way to a more philosophical attitude, while the
+conflict of science and religion resolves itself into a decay of dogma and the
+conception of a free religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have indicated the problem presented by &ldquo;<i>science et conscience</i>,&rdquo; and
+in so far as we have laid down any thesis or argument in these pages, as
+distinct from an historical account of the development, that thesis has been,
+that the central problem in the period was that of freedom. It was to this
+point which the consideration of science, or rather of the sciences, led us. We
+have observed the importance of the sciences for philosophy, and it is clear
+that, so far from presenting any real hostility to philosophy, it can acclaim
+their autonomy and freedom, without attempting by abstract methods to absorb
+them into itself. They are equally a concrete part of human thought, and in a
+deep and real sense a manifestation of the same spirit which animates
+philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By recognising the sciences philosophy can avoid the fallacy of ideology on the
+one hand and naturalism on the other. Unlike the old eclecticism, the new
+thought is able to take account of science and to criticise its assertions. We
+have seen how this has been accomplished, and the rigidly mechanical view of
+the world abandoned for one into which human freedom enters as a real factor.
+This transforms the view of history and shows us human beings creating that
+history and not merely being its blind puppets. History offers no cheerful
+outlook for the easy-going optimist; it is not any more to be regarded as mere
+data for pessimistic reflections, but rather a record which prompts a feeling
+of responsibility. The world is not ready-made, and if there is to be progress
+it must be willed by us and achieved by our struggle and labour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctrine of immanence upon which the modern tendency is to insist, in place
+of the older idea of transcendence, makes us feel, not only that we are free,
+but that our freedom is not in opposition to, or in spite of, the divine
+spirit, but is precisely an expression of divine immanence. Instead of the
+gloomy conception of a whole which determines itself apart from us, we feel
+ourselves part, and a very responsible part, of a reality which determines
+itself collectively and creatively by its own action, by its own ideals, which
+it has itself created. This freedom must extend not only to our conceptions of
+history but also to those of ethics and of religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;English philosophy ends in considering nature as an assemblage of facts;
+German philosophy looks upon it chiefly as a system of laws. If there is a
+place midway between the two nations it belongs to us Frenchmen. We applied the
+English ideas in the eighteenth century; we can in the nineteenth give
+precision to the German ideas. What we have to do is to temper, amend and
+complete the two spirits, one by the other, to fuse them into one, to express
+them in a style that shall be intelligible to everybody and thus to make of
+them the universal spirit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was Taine&rsquo;s attitude, and it indicates clearly the precise position of
+French thought. We are apt to consider Taine purely as an empiricist, but we
+must remember that he disagreed with the radical empiricism of John Stuart
+Mill. His own attitude was largely that of a reaction against the vague
+spiritualism of the Eclectic School, especially Cousin&rsquo;s eclecticism, a foreign
+growth on French soil, due to German influence. The purely <i>a priori</i>
+constructions of the older spiritualism could find no room, and allowed none,
+for the sciences. This was sufficient to doom it, and to lead naturally to a
+reaction of a positive kind, revolting from all <i>a priori</i> constructions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was to combat the excessive positive reaction against metaphysics that
+Renouvier devoted his energies, but while professing to modernise Kant and to
+follow out the general principles of his Critical Philosophy, Renouvier was
+further removed from the German thinker than he at times seems to have
+observed. Renouvier must undoubtedly share with Comte the honours of the
+century in French Philosophy. Many influences, however, prevented the general
+or speedy acceptance of Renouvier&rsquo;s doctrines. The University was closed
+against him, as against Comte. He worked in isolation and his style of
+presentation, which is heavy and laborious, does not appeal to the
+<i>esprit</i> of the French mind. Probably, too, his countrymen&rsquo;s ignorance of
+Kant at the time Renouvier wrote his <i>Essais de Critique générale</i>
+prevented an understanding and appreciation of the neo-critical advance on
+Criticism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Renouvier commands respect, but he does not appear to be in the line of
+development which manifests so essentially the character of French thought.
+This is to be found rather in that spiritualism, which, unlike the old, does
+not exclude science, but welcomes it, finds a place for it, although not by any
+means an exclusive place. The new spiritualists did not draw their inspiration,
+as did Cousin, from any German source, their initial impulse is derived from a
+purely French thinker, Maine de Biran, who, long neglected, came to recognition
+in the work of Ravaisson and those subsequent thinkers of this group, right up
+to Bergson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This current of thought is marked by a vitality and a concreteness which are a
+striking contrast to the older eclectic spiritualism. Having submitted itself
+to the discipline of the sciences, it is acquainted with their methods and data
+in a manner which enables it to oppose the dogmatism of science, and to acclaim
+the reality of values other than those which are purely scientific. Ignoring
+<i>a priori</i> construction, or eclectic applications of doctrines, it
+investigates the outer world of nature and the inner life of the spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have said that these ideas are presented, not merely from a national
+standpoint, but from one which is deeply human and universal. &ldquo;<i>La
+Science</i>,&rdquo; re-marked Pasteur, &ldquo;<i>n&rsquo;a pas de patrie</i>.&rdquo; We may add that
+philosophy, too, owns no special fatherland. There is not in philosophy, any
+more than in religion, &ldquo;a chosen people,&rdquo; even although the Jews of old thought
+themselves such, and among moderns the Germans have had this conceit about
+their <i>Kultur</i>. In so far as philosophy aims at the elucidation of a true
+view of the universe, it thereby tends inevitably to universality. But just as
+a conception of internationalism, which should fail to take into account the
+factors of nationality, would be futile and disastrous, so a conception of the
+evolution of thought must likewise estimate the characteristics which
+nationality produces even in the philosophical field.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such characteristics, it will be found, are not definite doctrines, for these
+may be transferred, as are scientific discoveries, from one nation to another,
+and absorbed in such a manner that they become part of the general
+consciousness of mankind. They are rather differences of tone and colour, form
+or expression, which express the vital genius of the nation. There are features
+which serve to distinguish French philosophy from the development which has
+occurred in Germany, Italy, England and America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Modern French thought does not deliberately profess to maintain allegiance to
+any past traditions, for it realises that such a procedure would be
+inconsistent with that freedom of thought which is bound up with the spirit of
+philosophy. It does, however, betray certain national features, which are
+characteristic of the great French thinkers from Descartes, Pascal and
+Malebranche onwards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the most remarkable points about these thinkers was their intimacy with
+the sciences. Descartes, while founding modern philosophy, also gave the world
+analytic geometry; Pascal made certain physical discoveries and was an eminent
+mathematician. Malebranche, too, was keenly interested in science. In the
+following century the Encyclopaedists displayed their wealth of scientific
+knowledge, and in the nineteenth century we have seen the work of Comte based
+on science, the ability of Cournot and Renouvier in mathematics, while men like
+Boutroux, Hergson and Le Roy possess a thorough acquaintance with modern
+science.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These facts have marked results, and distinguish French philosophy from that of
+Germany, where the majority of philosophers appear to haye been theological
+students in their youth and to have suffered from the effects of their subject
+for the remainder of their lives. Theological study does not produce clearness;
+it does not tend to cultivate a spirit of precision, but rather one of
+vagueness, of which much German philosophy is the product. On the other hand,
+mathematics is a study which demands clearness and which in turn increases the
+spirit of clarity and precision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is to be seen in our period a strong tendency to adhere to this feature
+of clearness. Modern French philosophy is remarkably lucid. Indeed, it is
+claimed that there is no notion, however profound it may be, or however based
+on technical research it may be, which cannot be conveyed in the language of
+every day. French philosophy does not invent a highly technical vocabulary in
+order to give itself airs in the eyes of the multitude, on the plea that
+obscurity is a sign of erudition and learning. On the contrary, it remembers
+Descartes&rsquo; intimate association of clearness with truth, remembers, too, his
+clear and simple French which he preferred to the scholastic Latin. It knows
+that to convince others of truth one must be at least clear to them and, what
+is equally important, one must be clear in one&rsquo;s own mind first. Clarity does
+not mean shallowness but rather the reverse, because it is due to keen
+perceptive power, to a seeing further into the heart of things, involving an
+intimate contact with reality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+French thought has always remained true to a certain &ldquo;common sense.&rdquo; This is a
+dangerous and ambiguous term. In its true meaning it signifies the general and
+sane mind of man free from all that prejudice or dogma or tradition, upon
+which, of course, &ldquo;common sense&rdquo; in the popular meaning is usually based. A
+genuine &ldquo;common sense&rdquo; is merely &ldquo;<i>liberté</i>&rdquo; for the operation of that
+general reason which makes man what he is. It must be admitted that, owing to
+the fact that philosophy is taught in the <i>lycées</i>, the French are the
+best educated of any nation in philosophical ideas and have a finer general
+sense of that spirit of criticism and appreciation which is the essence of
+philosophy, than has any other modern nation. Philosophy in France is not
+written in order to appeal to any school or class. Not limited to an academic
+circle only, it makes its pronouncements to humanity and thus embodies in a
+real form the principles of <i>egalité</i> and <i>fraternité</i>. It makes a
+democratic appeal both by its <i>clarté</i> and its belief that <i>la raison
+commune</i> is in some degree present in every human being.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not only was clearness a strong point in the philosophy of Descartes, but there
+was also an insistence upon method. Since the time of his famous <i>Discours de
+la Méthode</i> there has always been a unique value placed upon method in
+French thought, and this again serves to distinguish it profoundly from German
+philosophy, which is, in general, concerned with the conception and production
+of entire systems. The idea of an individual and systematic construction is an
+ambitious conceit which is not in harmony with the principles of
+<i>liberté</i>, <i>egalité</i>, <i>fraternité</i>. Such a view of philosophical
+work is not a sociable one, from a human standpoint, and tends to give rise to
+a spirit of authority and tradition. Apart from this aspect of it, there is a
+more important consideration. All those systems take one idea as their
+starting-point and build up an immense construction <i>a priori</i>. But
+another idea may be taken and opposed to that. There is thus an immense wastage
+of labour, and the individual effort is never transcended. Yet an idea is only
+a portion of our intelligence, and that intelligence itself is, in turn, only a
+portion of reality. A wider conception of philosophy must be aimed at, one in
+which the <i>vue d&rsquo;ensemble</i> is not the effort of one mind, but of many,
+each contributing its share to a harmonious conception, systematic in a sense,
+but not in the German sense. Modern French thought has a dislike of system of
+the individualistic type; it realises that reality is too rich and complex for
+such a rapid construction to grasp it. It is opposed to systems, for the French
+mind looks upon philosophy as a manifestation of life itself&mdash;life
+blossoming to self-consciousness, striving ever to unfold itself more
+explicitly and more clearly, endeavouring to become more harmonious, more
+beautiful, and more noble. The real victories of philosophical thought are not
+indicated by the production of systems but by the discovery or creation of
+ideas. Often these ideas have been single and simple, but they have become
+veritable forces, in the life of mankind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+French thinkers prefer to work collectively at particular problems rather than
+at systems. Hence the aim and tone of their work is more universal and human,
+and being more general is apt to be more generous. This again is the expression
+of <i>liberte</i>, <i>égalité</i> and <i>fraternité</i> in a true sense. The
+French prefer, as it were, in their philosophical campaign for the intellectual
+conquest of reality diverse batteries of <i>soixante-quinze</i> acting with
+precision and alertness to the clumsy production of a &ldquo;Big Bertha.&rdquo; The
+production of ambitious systems, each professing to be the final word in the
+presentation of reality, has not attracted the French spirit. It looks at
+reality differently and prefers to deal with problems in a clear way, thereby
+indicating a method which may be applied to the solution of others as they
+present themselves. This is infinitely preferable to an ambitious unification,
+which can only be obtained at the sacrifice of clearness or meaning, and it
+arises from that keen contact with life, which keeps the mind from dwelling too
+much in the slough of abstraction, from which some of the German philosophers
+never succeed in escaping. Their pilgrimage to the Celestial City ends there,
+and consequently the account of their itinerary cannot be of much use to other
+pilgrims.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another feature of modern French thought is the intimacy of the connection
+between psychology and metaphysics, and the intensive interest in psychology,
+which is but the imestigation of the inner life of man. While in the early
+beginnings of ancient Greek philosophy some time was spent in examining the
+outer world before man gave his attention to the world within, we find
+Descartes, at the beginning of modern philosophy, making his own consciousness
+of his own existence his starting-point. Introspection has always played a
+prominent part in French philosophy. Pascal was equally interested in the outer
+and the inner world. Through Maine de Biran this feature has come down to the
+new spiritualists and culminates in Bergson&rsquo;s thought, in which psychological
+considerations hold first rank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The social feature of modern French thought should not be omitted. In Germany
+subsequent thought has been coloured by the Reformation and the particular
+aspects of that movement. In France one may well say that subsequent thought
+has been marked by the Revolution. There is a theological flavour about most
+German philosophy, while France, a seething centre of political and social
+thought, has given to her philosophy a more sociological trend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French spirit in philosophy stands for clearness, concreteness and
+vitality. Consequently it presents a far greater brilliance, richness and
+variety than German philosophy displays.<a href="#linknote-224" name="linknoteref-224" id="linknoteref-224"><sup>[1]</sup></a> This
+vitality and even exuberance, which are those of the spirit of youth
+manifesting a <i>joie de vivre</i> or an <i>élan vital</i>, have been very
+strongly marked since the year 1880, and have placed French philosophy in the
+van of human thought.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-224" id="linknote-224"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-224">[1]</a>
+It is, therefore to be lamented that French thought has
+not received the attention which it deseives. In England far more attention has
+been given to the nineteenth-century German philosophy, while the history of
+thought in France, especially in the period between Comte and Bergson, has
+remained in sad neglect. This can and should be speedily remedied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would be vain to ask whither its advance will lead. Even its own principles
+prevent any such forecast; its creative richness may blossom forth to-morrow in
+forms entirely new, for such is the characteristic of life itself, especially
+the life of the spirit, upon which so much stress is laid in modern French
+philosophy. The New Idealism lays great stress upon dynamism, voluntarism or
+action. Freedom and creative activity are its keynotes, and life, ever fuller
+and richer, is its aspiration. <i>La Vie</i>, of which France (and its centre,
+Paris) is such an expression, finds formulation in the philosophy of
+contemporary thinkers.<a href="#linknote-225" name="linknoteref-225" id="linknoteref-225"><sup>[2]</sup></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-225" id="linknote-225"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-225">[2]</a>
+The student of comparative thought will find it both
+interesting and profitable to compare the work done recently in Italy by Croce
+and Gentile. The intellectual kinship of Croce and Bergson has frequently been
+pointed out, but Gentile&rsquo;s work comes very close to the philosophy of action
+and to the whole positive-idealistic tendency of contemporary French thought.
+This is particularly to be seen in <i>L&rsquo;atto del pensare come atto puro</i>
+(1912), and in <i>Teoria generalo dello spirito come atto puro</i> (1916).
+Professor Carr, the well-known exponent of Bergson&rsquo;s philosophy, remarks in his
+introduction to the English edition of Gentile&rsquo;s book, &ldquo;We may individualise
+the mind as a natural thing-object person. . . . Yet our power to think the
+mind in this way would be impossible were not the mind with and by which we
+think it, itself not a thing, not a <i>fact</i>, but <i>act</i>; . . . never
+<i>factum</i>, but always <i>fieri</i>.&rdquo; This quotation is from p. xv of the
+<i>Theory of Mind as Pure Act</i>. With one other quotation direct from Gentile
+we must close this reference to Italian neo-idealism. &ldquo;In so far as the subject
+is constituted a subject by its own act it constitutes the object. . . . Mind
+is the transcendental activity productive of the objective world of experience&rdquo;
+(pp. 18, 43). Compare with this our quotation from Ravaisson, given on p. 75 of
+this work, and the statement by Lachelier on p. 122, both essential principles
+of the French New Idealism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One word of warning must be uttered against those who declare that the tendency
+of French thought is in the direction of anti-intellectualism. Such a
+declaration rests on a misunderstanding, which we have endeavoured in our pages
+to disclose It is based essentially upon a doctrine of Reason which belongs to
+the eighteenth century. The severe rationalism of that period was mischievous
+in that it rested upon a one-sided view of human nature, on a narrow
+interpretation of &ldquo;Reason&rdquo; which gave it only a logical and almost mathematical
+significance. To the Greeks, whom the French represent in the modern world, the
+term &ldquo;NOUS&rdquo; meant more than this&mdash;it meant an intelligible harmony. We
+would do wrong to look upon the most recent developments in France as being
+anti-rational, they are but a revolt against the narrow view of Reason, and
+they constitute an attempt to present to the modern world a conception akin to
+that of the Greeks. Human reason is much more than a purely logical faculty,
+and it is this endeavour to relate all problems to life itself with its pulsing
+throb, which represents the real attitude of the French mind. There is a
+realisation expressed throughout that thought, that life is more than logic.
+The clearness of geometry showed Descartes that geometry is not all-embracing.
+Pascal found that to the logic of geometry must be added a spirit of
+appreciation which is not logical in its nature, but expresses another side of
+man&rsquo;s mind. To-day France sees that, although a philosophy must endeavour to
+satisfy the human intelligence, a merely intellectual satisfaction is not
+enough. The will and the feelings play their part, and it was the gteat fault
+of the eighteenth century to misunderstand this The search to-day is for a
+system of values and of truth in action as well as a doctrine about things in
+their purely theoretical aspects.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is a serious demand, and it is one which philosophy must endeavour to
+appreciate Salvation will not be found in a mere dilettantism which can only
+express ieal indifference, nor in a dogmatism which results in bigotry and
+pride. Criticism is required, but not a purely destructive criticism, rather
+one which will offer some acceptable view of the universe. Such a view must
+combine true positivism or realism with a true idealism, by uniting fact and
+spirit, things and ideas. Its achievement can only be possible to minds
+possessing some creative and constructive power, yet minds who have been
+schooled in the college of reality. This is the task of philosophy in France
+and in other lands. That task consists not only in finding values and in
+defining them but in expressing them actively, and in endeavouring to realise
+them in the common life.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
+
+<p>
+I. Works of the Period classified under Authors. (The more important monographs
+are cited.) Names of philosophical journals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+II. Books on the Period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+III. Comparative Table showing contemporary German and Anglo-American Works from
+1851 to 1921.
+</p>
+
+<h3>I<br/>
+WORKS OF THE PERIOD CLASSIFIED UNDER AUTHORS.</h3>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr>
+<td>BERGSON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Les Données immédiates de la Conscience</i>. 1889. English Translation&mdash;<i>Time and Free-Will.</i> 1910.<br/>
+<i>Matière et Mémoire</i>. 1896. (E.T.<a href="#linknote-226" name="linknoteref-226" id="linknoteref-226"><sup>[1]</sup></a> 1911.)<br/>
+<i>Le Rire</i>. 1901. (E.T. 1911.)<br/>
+<i>Introduction a la Métaphysique</i>. 1903. <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>. (E.T. 1913.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Evolution créatrice</i>. 1907. (E.T. 1911.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Energie spirituelle</i>. 1919. (E.T. 1920.)<br/>
+Some monographs on Bergson: Le Roy (1912), Maritain (1914) in France, Meckauer (1917) in Germany, and for the English reader Lindsay (1911), Stewart (1911), Carr (1912), Cunningham (1916), and Gunn (1920).
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BERNARD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Introduction a l&rsquo;Etude de la Médecine expérimental</i>. 1865.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BERTHELOT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Science et Philosophie</i>. 1886.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BINET:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Magnétisme animal</i>. 1886.<br/>
+<i>Les Altérations de la Personnalité</i>. 1892.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Introduction à la Psychologie expérimental</i>. 1894.<br/>
+(Founded the <i>Année psychologique</i> in 1895.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BLONDEL:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Action, Essai d&rsquo;une Critique de la Vie et d&rsquo;une Science de la Pratique</i>. 1893.<br/>
+<i>Histoire et Dogme</i>. 1904.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BOIRAC:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Idée du Phénomène</i>. 1894.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BOIS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>De la Connaissance religieuse</i>. 1894.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BOURGEOIS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Solidarité</i>. 1896.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BOUTROUX (EMILE):</td>
+<td>
+<i>De la Contingence des Lois de la Nature</i> 1874. (E.T. 1916.)<br/>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Idée de Loi naturelle dans la Science et la Philosophie contemporaines</i>. 1895. (E.T. 1914.)<br/>
+<i>Questions de Morale et d&rsquo;Education</i>. 1895. (E.T. 1913.)<br/>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Influence de la Philosophie écossaise sur la Philosophie française</i>. 1897.<br/>
+<i>La Science et la Religion dans la Philosophie contemporaine</i>. 1908. (E.T. 1909.)<br/>
+<i>Rapport sur la Philosophie en France depuis</i> 1867. Paper read to Third Congress of Philosophy at Heidelberg in 1908.<br/> <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>. Nov., 1908.<br/>
+<i>Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire de la Philosophie</i>. (E.T. 1912.)<br/>
+<i>The Beyond that is Within</i>. E.T. 1912. (Addresses.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BROCHARD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>De la Responsabilité morale</i>. 1874.<br/>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Universalité des Notions morales</i>. 1876.<br/>
+<i>De L&rsquo;Erreur</i>. 1879.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BRUNSCHWICG:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Modalité du jugement</i>. 1897.<br/>
+<i>La Vie de l&rsquo;Esprit</i>. 1900.<br/>
+<i>Les Etapes de la Philosophie mathématique</i>. 1912.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BUREAU:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Crise morale des Temps nouveau</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>CARO:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Matérialisme et la Science</i>. 1868.<br/>
+<i>Problèmes de Morale sociale</i>. 1876.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>COMTE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Cours de Philosophie positive</i>. 6 vols. 1830-42.<br/>
+<i>Discours sur l&rsquo;Esprit positive</i>. 1844.<br/>
+<i>Système de Politique positive</i>. 4 vols. 1851-4.<br/>
+<i>Catéchisme positiviste.</i>
+<i>Synthèse subjective</i> (vol. i.). 1856.<br/>
+<i>Note</i>.&mdash;The Free and Condensed Translation of Comte&rsquo;s Positive Philosophy in English by Miss Martineau, appeared in two volumes in 1853. Monograph by Lévy-Bruhl.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>COURNOT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances et sur les Caractères de la Critique philosophique</i> (2 vols.). 1851.<br/>
+<i>Traité de l&rsquo;Enchaînement des Idées fondamentales dans les Sciences et dans l&rsquo;Histoire</i> (2 vols.). 1861.<br/>
+<i>Considérations sur la Marche des Idées et des Evénements dans les Temps modernes</i> (2 vols.). 1872.<br/>
+<i>Matérialisme, Vitalisme, Rationalisine: Etude sur l&rsquo;Emploi des Données de la Science en Philosophie</i>. 1875.<br/>
+<i>Note</i>.&mdash;A number of the <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i> was devoted to Cournot in 1905. See also the Monograph by Bottinelli and his <i>Souvenirs de Cournot</i>. 1913.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>COUTURAT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Infini mathématique</i>.<br/>
+<i>Les Principes des Mathématiques</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>CRESSON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Malaise de la pensée philosophique contemporaine</i>. 1905.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DAURIAC:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Croyance et Realité</i>. 1889.<br/>
+<i>Motions de Matière et de Force</i>. 1878.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DELBOS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Esprit philosophique de l&rsquo;Allemagne et la Pensée française</i>. 1915.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DUHEM:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Théorie physique</i>. 1906.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DUNAN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Les deux Idéalismes</i>. 1911.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DURKHEIM:</td>
+<td>
+<i>De la Division du Travail social</i>. 1893.<br/>
+<i>Les Regles de la Méthode sociologique</i>. 1894.<br/>
+<i>Le Suicide</i>. 1897.<br/>
+<i>Les Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse</i>. 1912. (E. T.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>ESPINAS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Societés animales</i>. 1876.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>EVELLlN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Raison pure et les Antinomies</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FONSEGRIVE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Morale et Société</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLÉE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Philosophie de Platon 2 vols</i>. 1869. Prize for competition in 1867, on the. Theory of Ideas, offered by the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques. &ldquo;Crowned&rdquo; after publication by the Académie française. 1871. Second Edition, revised, and enlarged to four volumes. 1888-9.<br/>
+<i>La Liberté et le Determinisme</i>. 1872. (Doctorate Thesis)<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie de Socrate</i>. 2 vols 1874. Prize in 1868, Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.<br/>
+<i>Histoire générale de la Philosophie</i>. 1875. New Edition revised and augmented, 1910.<br/>
+<i>Extraits des grands Philosophes</i>. 1877.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Idée moderne du Droit en Allemagne, en Ingleterre et en France</i>. 1878.<br/>
+<i>La Science sociale contemporaine</i>. 1880.<br/>
+<i>Critique des Systèmes contemporains</i>. 1883.<br/>
+<i>La Propriété sociale et la Démocratie</i>. 1884.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Métaphysique fondée sur l&rsquo;Expérience</i>. 1889.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Evolutionisme des Idées-forces</i>. 1890.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Enseignement au Point de Vue national</i>. 1891 (E. T. 1892.)<br/>
+<i>La Psychologie des Idées-forces</i>. 2 vols. 1893.<br/>
+<i>Tempérament et Caractère selon les Individus, les Sexes et les Races</i>. 1895.<br/>
+<i>Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la Science positive</i>. 1895.<br/>
+<i>Le Mouvement positiviste et la Conception sociologique du Monde</i>. 1896.<br/>
+<i>Psychologie du Peuple français</i>. 1898.<br/>
+<i>Les Etudes classiques et la Démocratie</i>. 1898.<br/>
+<i>La France au Point de Vue moral</i>. 1900.<br/>
+<i>La Reforme de l&rsquo;Enseignement par la Philosophie</i>. 1901.<br/>
+<i>La Conception morale et civique de L&rsquo;Enseignement</i>.<br/>
+<i>Nietzsche et l&rsquo;Immoralisme</i>. 1904.<br/>
+<i>Esquisse psychologique des Peuples européens</i>. 1903.<br/>
+<i>Le Moralisme de Kant et l&rsquo;Amoralisme contemporain</i>. 1905.<br/>
+<i>Les Elements sociologiques de la Morale</i>. 1905.<br/>
+<i>La Morale des Idées-forces</i>. 1907.<br/>
+<i>Le Socialisme et la Sociologie réformiste</i>. 1909.<br/>
+<i>La Démocratie politique et sociale en France</i>. 1911.<br/>
+<i>La Pensée et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intéllectualistes</i>. 1912.<br/>
+Posthumous: <i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Interprétation du Monde</i>.<br/>
+<i>Humanitaires et Libertaires</i>. 1914.<br/>
+<i>Equivalents philosophiques des Religions</i>.<br/>
+On Fouillée, monograph by Augustin Guyau, son of J. M. Guyau.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>GOBLOT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Traité de Logique</i>. 1918.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>GOURD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Phénomène</i>. 1888.<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie de la Religion</i>. 1911.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>GUYAU:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Morale d&rsquo;Epicure et ses Rapports avec les Doctrines contemporaines</i>. 1878. &ldquo;Crowned&rdquo; four years before by the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.<br/>
+<i>La Morale anglaise contemporaine</i>. 1879. An extension of the Prize Essay (Second Part).<br/>
+<i>Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe</i>. 1881.<br/>
+<i>Problèmes de l&rsquo;Esthétique contemporaine</i>. 1884.<br/>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction</i>. 1885. (E.T. 1898.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Irréligion de l&rsquo;Avenir</i>. 1887. (E.T. 1897.)<br/>
+Posthumous: <i>Education et Hérédité</i>. (E.T. 1891.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Art au Point de Vue sociologique</i>.<br/>
+<i>La Genèse de l&rsquo;Idée de Temps</i>. 1890.<br/>
+There is a monograph on Guyau by Fouillée.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>HAMELIN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Essai sur les Eléments principaux de la Représentation</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>HANNEQUIN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Essai critique sur l&rsquo;Hypothèse des Atomes</i>. 1896.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>IZOULET:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Cité moderne</i>. 1894.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JANET (PAUL):</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Famille</i>. 1855.<br/>
+<i>Histoire de la Philosophie morale et politique dans L&rsquo;Antiquité et dans les Temps modernes.</i> 2 vols. 1858. Republished as <i>Histoire de la Science politique dans ses Rapports avec la Morale</i>. 1872.<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie du Bonheur</i>. 1862.<br/>
+<i>La Crise philosophique</i>. 1865.<br/>
+<i>Le Cerveau et la Pensée</i>. 1867.<br/>
+<i>Eléments de Morale</i>. 1869.<br/>
+<i>Les Problèmes du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1872.<br/>
+<i>La Morale</i>. 1874 (E T. 1884.)<br/>
+<i>Philosophie de la Révolution française</i>. 1875.<br/>
+<i>Les Causes finales</i>. 1876. (E.T. 1878.)<br/>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JANET (PIERRE):</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Automatisme psychologique</i>. 1889<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Etat mental des Hystériques</i>. 1894.<br/>
+<i>Névroses et Idées-fixes</i>. 1898.<br/>
+(Janet founded the <i>Journal de Psychologie</i>. 1904).
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JAVARY:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Idée du Progrès</i>. 1850.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LABERTHONNIÈRE.</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Dogmatisme morale</i>. 1898.<br/>
+<i>Essais de Philosophie religieuse</i>. 1901.<br/>
+<i>Le Réalisme chrétien et l&rsquo;Idéalisme grec</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LACHELIER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Du Fondement de l&rsquo;Induction</i>. 1871.<br/>
+<i>Psychologie et Métaphysique</i>. 1885. Article in <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>, now published with the above.<br/>
+<i>Etude sur le Syllogisme</i>. 1907.<br/>
+Monograph by Séailles, article by Noël.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LACOMBE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Histoire considérée comme Science</i>. 1894.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LALANDE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Dissolution opposée à l&rsquo;Evolution, dans les Sciences physiques et morales</i>. 1899.<br/>
+<i>Précis raisonné de Morale pratique par Questions et Réponses</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LAPIE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Logique de la Volonté</i>. 1902.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LE BON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Lois psychologiques de l&rsquo;Evolution des Peuples</i>.<br/>
+<i>Les Opinions et les Croyances.</i> 1911.<br/>
+<i>Psychologie du Socialisme</i>. 1899.<br/>
+<i>Psychologie des Foules.</i> (E.T.)<br/>
+<i>La Vie des Vérités</i>. 1914.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LEQUIER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Recherche d&rsquo;une Première Vérité (Fragments posthumes)</i>. 1865.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LE ROY:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Dogme et Critique</i>. 1907.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LIARD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Des Définitions géometriques et des Définitions empiriques</i>. 1873.<br/>
+<i>La Science positive et la Métaphysique</i>. 1879.<br/>
+<i>Morale et Enseignement civique</i>. 1883.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Enseignement supérieure en France</i>, 1789 à 1889. 1889.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LOISY:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Evangile et l&rsquo;Eglise</i>. (E.T.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MARION:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Solidarité morale</i>. 1880.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MÉNÉGOZ:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Publications diverses sur le Fidéisme et son Application à l&rsquo;Enseignement chrétien traditionnel</i>. 1900. Two additional volumes later.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MEYERSON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Identité et Réalité</i>. 1907
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MICHELET:</td>
+<td>
+<i>L&rsquo;Amour</i>. 1858<br/>
+<i>Le Prêtre la Femme et la Famille</i>. 1859.<br/>
+<i>La Bible de l&rsquo;Humanité.</i> 1864<br/>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MILHAUD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Essai sur les Conditions et les Limites de la Certitude logique.</i> 1894<br/>
+<i>Le Rationnel</i>. 1898.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>OLLÉ-LAPRUNE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Certitude morale</i>. 1880.<br/>
+<i>Le Prix de la Vie</i>. 1885<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie et le Temps présent</i>. 1895.<br/>
+<i>La Raison et le Rationalisme</i>. 1906.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PARODI:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Problème morale et la Pensée contemporaine</i>. 1910.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PASTEUR:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Budget de la Science</i>. 1868
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PAULHAN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Phénomènes affectifs</i>.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Activité mentale</i>. 1889
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PAYOT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Croyance</i>. 1896.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PELLETAN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Profession da Foi du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1852.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>POINCAIRÉ:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Science et l&rsquo;Hypothèse</i>. 1902. (E.T. 1905.)<br/>
+<i>La Valeur de la Science</i>. 1905.<br/>
+<i>Science et Méthode</i>. 1909<br/>
+<i>Dernières pensées</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PROUDHON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Qu&rsquo;est-ce que la Propriété?</i> 1840<br/>
+<i>Système des Contradictions économiques</i>. 1846<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie du Progrès</i>. 1851.<br/>
+<i>De la Justice</i>. 1858.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RAUH:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Psychologie appliquée à la Morale et à l&rsquo;Education</i>.<br/>
+<i>De la Méthode dans la Psychologie des Sentiments</i>.<br/>
+<i>Essai sur le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale</i>. 1890.<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Expérience morale</i>. 1903.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RAVAISSON-MOLLIEN (1813-1900):</td>
+<td>
+<i>Habitude</i>. 1838. (Thesis.) Reprinted 1894 in <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>.<br/>
+<i>Aristote</i>. 1837. Vol. I. Vol. II. in 1846. Development of work crowned by Académie des Sciences morales et politiques in 1833, when the author was twenty.<br/>
+<i>Rapport sur la Philosophie en France au XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1867.<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie de Pascal (Revue des Deux Mondes</i>. 1887)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Education (Revue bleue</i>. 1887).<br/>
+<i>Métaphysique et Morale (Revue des Deux Mondes</i>. 1893).<br/>
+<i>Le Testament philosophique (Revue des Deux Mondes</i>. 1901).<br/>
+<i>Cf</i>. Boutroux on Ravaisson (<i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>. 1900).<br/>
+Bergson : <i>Discours à l&rsquo;Académie des Sciences morales et politiques</i>. 1904.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENAN:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Averroès et l&rsquo;Averroisme</i>. 1852.<br/>
+<i>Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire religieuse</i>. 1857.<br/>
+<i>Essais de Morale et de Critique</i>. 1851).<br/>
+<i>Les Origines du Christianisme</i>. 1863-83. 8 vols., of which: <i>Vie de Jésus</i>. 1863. (E.T.)<br/>
+<i>Questions contemporaines</i>. 1868.<br/>
+<i>La Réforme intellectual et morale</i>. 1871.<br/>
+<i>Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques</i>. 1870. (E.T. 1883.)<br/>
+<i>Drames philosophiques</i>.<br/>
+<i>Souvenirs d&rsquo;Enfance et de Jeunesse</i>. 1883. (E.T. 1883.)<br/>
+<i>Nouvelles Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire religieuse</i>. 1884. (E.T. 1886.)<br/>
+<i>Histoire du Peuple d&rsquo;Israël</i>. 5 vols. 1887-04. (E.T. 1888-91. 3 vols.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science</i>. 1890. Written 1848-9. (E.T.)<br/>
+<i>Feuilles détachées</i>. 1802.<br/>
+For monographs on Renan: Allier: <i>La Philosophie de Renan</i>. 1895.<br/>
+Monod: <i>Renan, Taine, Michelet</i>. 1894.<br/>
+Séailles: <i>Renan</i>. 1894*.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Manuel de Philosophie moderne</i>. 1842.<br/>
+<i>Manuel de Philosophie ancienne</i>. 1844.<br/>
+<i>Manuel républicaine de l&rsquo;Homme et du Citoyen</i>. 1848.<br/>
+<i>Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale et centrale de la République</i>. 1851.<br/>
+<i>Essais de Critique générale</i>. 4 vols. 1854, 1859, 1864, 1864. (On revision these four became thirteen vols.)<br/>
+<i>La Science de la Morale</i>. 2 vols. 1869.<br/>
+<i>1<sup>er</sup> Essai</i>, revised: <i>Traité de Logique général et de Logique formelle</i>. 3 vols. 1875.<br/>
+<i>2<sup>e</sup> Essai</i>, revised: <i>Traité de Psychologie rationnelle</i>. 3 vols. 1875.<br/>
+<i>Uchronie (L&rsquo;Utopie dans l&rsquo;Histoire), Esquisse historique du Développement de la Civilisation européenne, tel qu&rsquo;il n&rsquo;a pas été, tel qu&rsquo;il aurait pu être</i>. 1876.<br/>
+<i>Petit Traité de Morale pour les Ecoles laïques</i>. 1879.<br/>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Classification systématique des Doctrines philosophiques</i>. 2 vols. 1886.<br/>
+<i>3<sup>e</sup> Essai</i>, revised: <i>Les Principes de la Nature</i>. 1892.<br/>
+<i>Victor Hugo, le Poète</i>. 1893.<br/>
+<i>4<sup>e</sup> Essai</i>, revised: <i>L&rsquo;lntroduction à la Philosophie analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 1896.<br/>
+<i>5<sup>e</sup> Essai</i>, new: <i>La Philosophie analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 4 vols. I. and II. 1806. III. and IV. 1897. (This brought the Essais up to thirteen volumes.)<br/>
+<i>La Nouvelle Monadologie</i>. 1891). (With L. Prat.) (&ldquo;Crowned&rdquo; by the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.)<br/>
+<i>Victor Hugo, le Philosophe</i>. 1900.<br/>
+<i>Les Dilemmes de la Métaphysique pure</i>. 1901.<br/>
+<i>Histoire et Solution des Problèmes métaphysiques</i>. 1901.<br/>
+<i>Le Personnalisme, suivi d&rsquo;une Etude sur la Perception externe et sur la Force</i> 1903.<br/>
+Posthumous:<br/>
+<i>Derniers entretiens</i>. 1905.<br/>
+<i>Doctrine de Kant</i>. 1906.<br/>
+For his two journals, see under &ldquo;Periodicals.&rdquo;<br/>
+In the latest edition the complete <i>Essais de Critique générale</i> are only ten volumes, as follows: <i>Logic</i>, 2; <i>Psychology</i>, 2; <i>Principles of Nature</i>, 1; <i>Introduction to Philosophy of History</i>, 1; <i>and the Philosophy of History</i>, 4.<br/>
+The best monograph is that of Séailles, 1905.<br/>
+Renouvier&rsquo;s Correspondence with the Swiss Philosopher, Sécretan, has been published; <i>cf</i>. also <i>The Letters of William James</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>REYNAUD:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Philosophie religieuse</i>. 1858. (Third Edition.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RIBOT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Psychologie anglaise contemporaine</i>. 1870. (E.T. 1873.)<br/>
+<i>Hérédité, Etude psychologique</i>. 1873. (E.T. 1875.)<br/>
+<i>La Psychologie allemande contemporaine</i>. 1879. (E.T. 1886.)<br/>
+<i>Les Maladies de la Mémoire, Essai dans la Psychologie positive</i>. 1881. (E.T. 1882.)<br/>
+<i>Les Maladies de la Volonté</i>. 1883. (E.T. 1884.)<br/>
+<i>Les Maladies de la Personnalité</i>. 1885. (E.T. 1895.)<br/>
+<i>La Psychologie de l&rsquo;Attention</i>. 1889. (E.T. 1890.)<br/>
+<i>La Psychologie des Sentiments.</i> 1896. (E.T. 1897.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Evolution des Idées générales.</i> 1897. (E.T. 1899.)<br/>
+<i>Essai sur l&rsquo;Imagination créatrice</i>. 1900.<br/>
+<i>La Logique des Sentiments</i>. 1904.<br/>
+<i>Essai sur les Passions</i>. 1906.<br/>
+<i>La Vie inconsciente et les Mouvements</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SABATIER (AUGUSTE):</td>
+<td>
+<i>Esquisse d&rsquo;une Philosophie de Religion d&rsquo;après la Psychologie et l&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 1897.<br/>
+<i>Les Religions d&rsquo;Autorité et la Religion de l&rsquo;Esprit</i>. 1904. (E.T.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SABATIER (PAUL):</td>
+<td>
+<i>A propos de la Séparation des Eglises de l&rsquo;Etat</i>. 1905. E.T., Robert Dell, 1906 (with Text of the Law).
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SÉAILLES:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Affirmations de la Conscience moderne</i>. 1903.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SIMON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Liberté de Conscience</i>. 1859.<br/>
+<i>Dieu, Patrie, Liberté</i>. 1883.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SOREL:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Reflexions sur la Violence</i>. 1907. (E.T 1916.)<br/>
+<i>Illusions du Progrès</i>. 1911.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>TAINE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Les Philosophes français au XIX<sup>e</sup> Siecle</i>. 1857.<br/>
+<i>Essais de Critique et d&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 1858.<br/>
+<i>Philosophie de l&rsquo;Art</i>. 2 vols. 1865. (E.T. 1865.)<br/>
+<i>Nouveaux Essais de Critique et d&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 1865.<br/>
+<i>De l&rsquo;Intélligence</i>. 2 vols. 1870. (E T. 1871.)<br/>
+The work <i>Origines de la France contemporaine</i> in 5 vols, 1876-93. <i>Histoire de la Littérature anglaise</i>. 5 vols. 1863. (E.T. by Van Laun. 1887.)<br/>
+Monographs: De Margerie: <i>Taine</i>. 1894.<br/>
+Monod: <i>Renan, Taine, et Michelet</i>. 1894.<br/>
+Barzellotti: <i>La Philosophie de Taine.</i><br/>
+Boutmy: <i>H. Taine</i>. 1897.<br/>
+Giraud: <i>Essai sur Taine</i>. 1901.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>TARDE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Criminalité comparée</i>. 1898.<br/>
+<i>Les Lois de l&rsquo;Imitation</i>. 1900.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>VACHEROT:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Histoire de l&rsquo;Ecole d&rsquo;Alexandrie</i>. 1846-51.<br/>
+<i>La Métaphysique et la Science</i>. 3 vols. 1858.<br/>
+<i>La Démocratie</i>. 1860.<br/>
+<i>Essais de Philosophie critique</i>. 1864.<br/>
+<i>La Religion</i>. 1868.<br/>
+<i>La Science et la Conscience</i>. 1870.<br/>
+<i>Le Nouveau Spiritualisme</i>. 1884.<br/>
+<i>Cf</i>. Parodi on Vacherot, <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>. 1899.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>WEBER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Le Rythme du Progrès</i>.<br/>
+<i>Vers le Positivisme absolu par l&rsquo;Idéalisme</i>. 1903.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>WlLBOIS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Devoir et Durée: Essai de Morale sociale</i>. 1912.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>XÉNOPOL:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Principes fondamentaux de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>. 1899. Revised and reissued in larger form in 1905 as <i>La Théorie de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>.
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="linknote-226" id="linknote-226"></a> <a href="#linknoteref-226">[1]</a>
+This abbreviation is used throughout for &ldquo;English Translation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h4>PERIODICALS</h4>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;LA CRITIQUE PHILOSOPHIQUE,&rdquo; of Renouvier and Pillon, 1872. to 1884, weekly; monthly from 1885 to 1889.<br/>
+&ldquo;LA CRITIQUE RELIGIEUSE,&rdquo; 1878-1884 (quarterly). Renouvier.<br/>
+&ldquo;REVUE PHILOSOPHIQUE DE LA FRANCE ET DE L&rsquo;ÉTRANGER,&rdquo; founded by Ribot in 1876.<br/>
+&ldquo;L&rsquo;ANNÉE PHILOSOPHIQUE.&rdquo; 1867-1869. Renouvier and Pillon, refounded in 1890 by Pillon.<br/>
+&ldquo;REVUE DE MÉTAPHYSIQUE ET DE MORALE,&rdquo; founded by Xavier Leon in 1893. &ldquo;Crowned&rdquo; by Académie des Sciences morales et politiques, 1921.<br/>
+&ldquo;ANNÉE PSYCHOLOGIQUE,&rdquo; founded by Beaunet and Binet, 1895.<br/>
+&ldquo;REVUE DE PHILOSOPHIE,&rdquo; founded by Peillaube, 1900.<br/>
+&ldquo;REVUE THOMISTE.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;ANNALES DE PHILOSOPHIE CHRÉTIENNE.&rdquo; Laberthonnière.<br/>
+&ldquo;ANNÉE SOCIOLOGIQUE.&rdquo; 1896-1912. Durkheim.<br/>
+&ldquo;JOURNAL DE PSYCHOLOGIE NORMALE ET PATHOLOGIQUE.&rdquo; Founded 1904 by Janet and Dumas.<br/>
+&ldquo;BULLETIN DE LA SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE DE PHILOSOPHIE.&rdquo; From 1901.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<h3>II<br/>
+GENERAL BOOKS ON THE PERIOD.</h3>
+
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>ALIOTTA:</td>
+<td>
+<i>The Idealistic Reaction against Science</i>. (E.T. from Italian. 1914.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BARTH:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Die Philosophie der Geschichte als Sociologie</i>. 1897.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BERGSON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Philosophie française</i>. 1915.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BOUTROUX:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Philosophie en France depuis</i> 1867. Report to Congress of Philosophy given in the <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>. 1908.<br/>
+<i>La Philosophie</i>: an Essay in the volume of collected Essays entitled: <i>Un Demi-Siècle de la Civilisation française</i>. 1870- 1915. Pp. 25-48. (Paris: Hachette. 1916.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DWELSHAUVERS:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Psychologie française contemporaine</i>. 1920.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FAGUET:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Dix-Neuvième Siècle</i>. 1887.<br/>
+<i>Politiques et Moralistes du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1881.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FERRAZ:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Etudes sur la Philosophie en France au XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 3 vols. 1882-9.<br/>
+It is interesting to notice the triple division adopted by Ferraz:
+<p>
+Socialism (under which heading he also groups Naturalism and Positivism).
+Traditionalism (Ultramontanism).
+Spiritualism (together with Liberalism).
+</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FISCHER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Geschichte der neuern Philosophie</i>. 9 vols.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLÉE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Histoire de la Philosophie</i>, Latest Edition, last Chapter.<br/>
+<i>Le Mouvement idéaliste et la Réaction contre la Science positive.</i> 1896.<br/>
+<i>La Pensée et les nouvelles Ecoles anti-intellectualistes</i>. 1912.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>HÖFFDING:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Modern Philosophers.</i> (E.T. from Danish. 1915.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LÉVY-BRUHL:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Modern Philosophy in France</i>. Chicago, 1899.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MERZ:</td>
+<td>
+<i>History of European Thought in the Nineteenth Century</i>. 4 vols.<br/>
+A great work. Very comprehensive, particularly for German and British thought.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PARODI:</td>
+<td>
+<i>La Philosophie contemporaine en France</i>. 1919.<br/>
+An excellent treatment of the development from 1890 onwards by a French thinker. (&ldquo;Crowned&rdquo; by Académie.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RAVAISSON:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Rapport sur la Philosophie en France au XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1867. (Second Edition, 1889.)<br/>
+This has become an acknowledged classic.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Philosophie analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire</i>. (Vol. IV. latest sections.) 1897.<br/>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RUGGIERO:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Modern Philosophy</i>. 1912. (E.T. from Italian. 1921.)<br/>
+Gives a stimulating account of German, French, Anglo- American and Italian thought.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>STEBBING:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Pragmatism and French Voluntarism</i>. 1914.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>TAINE:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Les Philosophes français du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>. 1857.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>TURQUET-MILNES, G.:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Some Modern French Writers: A Study in Bergsonism</i>. 1921.<br/>
+Deals mainly with literary figures-e.g., Barres, Péguy, France, Bourget, Claudel.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>VILLA:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Contemporary Psychology</i>. (E.T. from Italian. 1903.)<br/>
+<i>L&rsquo;Idealismo moderno</i>. 1905.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>WEBER:</td>
+<td>
+<i>Histoire de la Philosophie européenne</i>. (Eighth Edition, 1914.)
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+
+<p>The article contributed by Ribot to <i>Mind</i> in 1877 is worthy of notice, while much light is thrown on the historical development by articles in the current periodicals cited on p. 338, especially in the <i>Revue philosophique</i> and the <i>Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale</i>.</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3><a name="chap10"></a>IIII<br/>
+COMPARATIVE TABLE</h3>
+
+<p class="center">
+THE CHIEF PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS IN FRANCE, GERMANY, ENGLAND AND AMERICA FROM 1851 TO 1921.</p>
+
+<table summary="" border="1" cellspacing="0">
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><i>FRANCE.</i></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><i>GERMANY.</i></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><i>ENGLAND AND AMERICA.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">l851</td>
+<td>COURNOT: &ldquo;Essai sur les Fondements de nos Connaissances.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1851</td>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Zend Avesta.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1851</td>
+<td>MANSEL: &ldquo;Prolegomena to Logic.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Gouvernement direct et Organisation communale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PROUDHON: &ldquo;La Philosophie du Progrès.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1852</td>
+<td>MOLESCHOTT: &ldquo;Der Kreislauf des Lebens.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LOTZE: &ldquo;Medizinische Psychologie oder Physiologie der Seele.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1854</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Essai de Critique générale&rdquo;(I<sup>er</sup> Essai).</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>1854</td>
+<td>FERRIER: &ldquo;Institutes of Metaphysic.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>COMTE completes &ldquo;Systeme de Politique positive.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3">1855</td>
+<td>BÜCHNER: &ldquo;Kraft und Stoff.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1855</td>
+<td>BAIN: &ldquo;The Senses and the Intellect.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Uber die physikalische und die philosophische Atomlehre.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>SPENCER: &ldquo;Principles of Psychology.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>CZOLBE: &ldquo;Neue Darstellung des Sensualismus.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1856</td>
+<td>COMTE: &ldquo;Synthèse subjective,&rdquo; vol. i.</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1856</td>
+<td>LOTZE: &ldquo;Mikrokosmos&rdquo; (1856-1864).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>CZOLBE: &ldquo;Die Enstehung des Selbstbewusstseins.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1857</td>
+<td>TAINE: &ldquo;Philosophes rançais du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siecle.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1857</td>
+<td>BUCKLE: &ldquo;History of Civilization in England&rdquo; (vol. i.).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENAN: &ldquo;Etudes d&rsquo;Histoire religieuse.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>MANSEL: &ldquo;The Limits of Religious Thought.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1858</td>
+<td>VACHEROT: &ldquo;La Métaphysique et la Science.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1858</td>
+<td>HAMILTON: &ldquo;Lectures&rdquo; (1858-1860).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1859</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Deuxième Essai de Critique generale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>I859</td>
+<td>DARWIN: &ldquo;Origin of Species.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1860</td>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Elemente der Psychophysik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1861</td>
+<td>COURNOT: &ldquo;Traité de l&rsquo;Enchaînement des Idees.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1861</td>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Uber die Seelenfrage.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1862</td>
+<td>HÄCKEL: &ldquo;Generalle Morphologie&rdquo; (1862-1866).</td>
+<td>1862</td>
+<td>SPENCER: &ldquo;First Principles.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1863</td>
+<td>RENAN: &ldquo;Vie de Jésus.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1863</td>
+<td>VOGT: &ldquo;Vorlesungen iiber den Menschen.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1863</td>
+<td>MILL (J. S.): &ldquo;Utilitarianism.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Die Drei Motive des Glaubens.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1864</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Troisième Essai de Critique générale&rdquo;; &ldquo;Quatrième Essai de Critique générale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1865</td>
+<td>BERNARD: &ldquo;Introduction à l&rsquo;Etude de la Médecine expérimentale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1865</td>
+<td>DÜHRING: &ldquo;Der Wert des Lebens.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="4">1865</td>
+<td>HODGSON: &ldquo;Time and Space.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td>CZOLBE: &ldquo;Die Grenzen und der Ursprung der Menschlichen Erkenntnis.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>MILL (J. S): &ldquo;Examination of Sir William Hamilton&rsquo;s Philosophy.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>HAMILTON: &ldquo;Lectures on Metaphysics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>STIRLING: &ldquo;Secret of Hegel.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1866</td>
+<td>LANGE: &ldquo;Geschichte des Materialismus.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1867</td>
+<td>RAVAISSON: &ldquo;Rapport sur la Philosophie en France au XIX<sup>e</sup> Siecle.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1867</td>
+<td>MARX: &ldquo;Das Kapital.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1867</td>
+<td>BUCKLE: &ldquo;History of Civilization in England&rdquo; ( vol. ii.).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1868</td>
+<td>RENAN: &ldquo;Questions contemporaines.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1868</td>
+<td>LOTZE: &ldquo;Geschichte der Asthetik in Deutschland.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>HÄCKEL: &ldquo;Natürliche Schöpftungsgeschichte</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1869</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Science deU Morale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1869</td>
+<td>HARTMANN: &ldquo;Philosophic des Unbewussten.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1870</td>
+<td>TAINE: &ldquo;De l&rsquo;Intelligence.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1870</td>
+<td>RITSCHL: &ldquo;Lehre von der Rechfertigung&rdquo;(1870-1874).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1871</td>
+<td>LACHELIER: &ldquo;Du Fondement de l&rsquo;Induction.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">1872</td>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;La LibertcS et la Determinisme,&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1872</td>
+<td>STRAUSS: &ldquo;Der Alte und der neue Glaube.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1872</td>
+<td>MAURICE: &ldquo;Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JANET: &ldquo;Problemes du XIX<sup>e</sup> Siecle.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Die Geburt der Tragödie&rdquo;</td>
+<td>WALLACE: &ldquo;Logic of Hegel.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>COURNOT: &ldquo;Considerations sur la Marche des Idees.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1873</td>
+<td>RIBOT: &ldquo;IWredite.&rdquo; 1873</td>
+<td>1973</td>
+<td>SIGWART: &ldquo;Logik&rdquo; (1873-1878). 1873</td>
+<td>1973</td>
+<td>STEPHEN (J. F.): &ldquo;Liberty, Equality,Fraternity.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1874</td>
+<td>BOUTROUX: &ldquo;La Contingence des Lois de la Nature.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1874</td>
+<td>LOTZE: &ldquo;Drei Bucher der Logik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1874</td>
+<td>SIDGWICK: &ldquo;Method of Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>WUNDT: &ldquo;Physiologische Psychologie.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BRENTANO: &ldquo;Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1875</td>
+<td>COURNOT: &ldquo;Materialisme, Vitalisme,Rationalisme.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER: Revises first and second &ldquo;Essais.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1876</td>
+<td>RENAN: &ldquo;Dialogues et Fragments philosophiques.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1876</td>
+<td>FECHNER: &ldquo;Vorschule der Asthetik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1876</td>
+<td>BRADLEY: &ldquo;Ethical Studies.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JANET: &ldquo;Les Causes finales.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>GROTE: &ldquo;Moral Ideals.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1877</td>
+<td>FLINT: &ldquo;Theism.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1878</td>
+<td>FOUILLEE: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Idee du Droit.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1878</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Menschliches Allzumenschhches &ldquo;(1878-1880).</td>
+<td>1878</td>
+<td>HODGSON: &ldquo;Philosophy of Reflection.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1879</td>
+<td>BROCHARD: &ldquo;De l&rsquo;Erreur.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1879</td>
+<td>LOTZE: &ldquo;Drei Bucher der Metaphysik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1879</td>
+<td>SPENCER: &ldquo;Data of Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>HARTMANN: &ldquo;Phanomenologie des sittlichen Bewusstseins.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>BALFOUR: &ldquo;Defence of Philosophic Doubt.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1880</td>
+<td>AVENARIUS: &ldquo;Kritik der reinen Erfahrung&rdquo;(1880-1890)</td>
+<td>1880</td>
+<td>CAIRD: &ldquo;Philosophy ol Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1881</td>
+<td>GUYAU: &ldquo;Vers d&rsquo;un Philosophe.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1881</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Morgenrote.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td>1882</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Die frohliche Wissenschaft.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1882</td>
+<td>STEPHEN (L.): &ldquo;Science of Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="4">1883</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Also sprach Zarathustra&rdquo;(1883-1891)</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1883</td>
+<td>GREEN: &ldquo;Prolegomena to Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DUHRING: &ldquo;Der Ersatz der Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>BRADLEY: &ldquo;Principles of Logic.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>WUNDT: &ldquo;Logik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MACH: &ldquo;Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwicklung.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1885</td>
+<td>GUYAU: &ldquo;Esquisse d&rsquo;une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1885</td>
+<td>MARTINEAU: &ldquo;Types o. Ethical Theory.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LACHELIER: &ldquo;Psychologic et Métaphysique.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>BOSANQUET: &ldquo;Knowledge and Reality.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1886</td>
+<td>GUYAU: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Irreligion de l&rsquo;Avenir.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1886</td>
+<td>MACH: &ldquo;Analyse der Empfindungen.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1886</td>
+<td>WARD: &ldquo;Psychology&rdquo; (article).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td>WUNDT: &ldquo;Ethik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Jenseits von Gut und Böse.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1887</td>
+<td>NIETZSCHE: &ldquo;Zur Genealogie der Moral.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1887</td>
+<td>SETH (Pringle-Pattison): &ldquo;Hegelianism and Personality.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1888</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Die Einheit des Geisteslebens.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1888</td>
+<td>BOSANQUKT: &ldquo;Logic.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="4">1889</td>
+<td>BERGSON: &ldquo;Les Donnees immediates de la Conscience.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1889</td>
+<td>WUNDT: &ldquo;System der Philosophie.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1889</td>
+<td>MARTINEAU: &ldquo;Study of Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLEE: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Avenir de la Metaphysique.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>LIPPS: &ldquo;Grundthatsachen des Seelenlebens.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>ALEXANDER: &ldquo;Moral Order and Progress.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>JANET (Pierre): &ldquo;L&rsquo;Automatisme psychologique.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>PAULHAN: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Activité mentale.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">1890</td>
+<td>RENAN: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Avenir de la Science.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1890</td>
+<td>JAMES: &ldquo;Principles of Psychology.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Evolutionnisme des Idées-forces.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="4"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RAUH: &ldquo;Le Fondement métaphysique de la Morale&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1891</td>
+<td>SIMMEL: &ldquo;Moralwissenschaft.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>AVENARIUS: &ldquo;Der menschliche Weltbegriff.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1892</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER Revises third &ldquo;Essai.&rdquo; </td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="5"><br/></td>
+<td>1892</td>
+<td>PEARSON: &ldquo;Grammar Of Science.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENAN &ldquo;Feuilles détachées.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">1893</td>
+<td>DURKHEIM: &ldquo;De la Division du Travail social.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1893</td>
+<td>HUXLEY: &ldquo;Evolution and Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BLONDEL: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Action.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>CAIRD: &ldquo;Evolution of Religion&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;Psychologie des Idées-forces.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>BRADLEY: &ldquo;Appearance and Reality.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1894</td>
+<td>MEINONG: &ldquo;Werththeorie&rdquo; (Psychologisch-ethische Untersuchungen).</td>
+<td>1894</td>
+<td>FRASER: &ldquo;Philosophy of Theism&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>HERTZ: &ldquo;Prinzipien der Mechanik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1895</td>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;Le Mouvement idéaliste.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1895</td>
+<td>BALFOUR: &ldquo;Foundations of Belief.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">1896</td>
+<td>BERGSON: &ldquo;Matière et Mémoire&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1896</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Der Kampf um einen geistigen Lebensinhalt.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="4">1896</td>
+<td>STOUT: &ldquo;Analytic Psychology.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER: Revises fourth &ldquo;Essai.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td>HOBHOUSE: &ldquo;Theory of Knowledge.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER: Publishes fifth &ldquo;Essai&rdquo; (La Philosophie analytique de l&rsquo;Histoire), vols. 1 and 2.</td>
+<td>MERZ: &ldquo;History of Thought in the Nineteenth Century&rdquo; (1896-1914).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>MACTAGGART: &ldquo;Hegelian Dialectic.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1897</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER: Ditto, vols. 3 and 4.</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1897</td>
+<td>HARTMANN: &ldquo;Kategorienlehre.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1897</td>
+<td>JAMES: &ldquo;The Will to Believe</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>SABATIER: &ldquo;Esquisse d&rsquo;une Philosophie de Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>DREWS: &ldquo;Das Ich als Grundproblem der Metaphysik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>EHRENFELS: &ldquo;System der Werttheorie&rdquo; (1897-1898).</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1898</td>
+<td>WALLACE: &ldquo;Natural Theology and Ethics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1899</td>
+<td>RENOUVIER (and Prat): &ldquo;La Nouvelle Monadologie.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1899</td>
+<td>MEINONG: &ldquo;Uber gegenstände höheren Ordnung.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1899</td>
+<td>WARD: &ldquo;Naturalism and Agnosticism.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>BOSANQUET: &ldquo;Philosophical Theory of the State.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>HODGSON: &ldquo;Metaphysic of Experience.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1900</td>
+<td>TARDE: &ldquo;Les Lois de l&rsquo;Imitation.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1900</td>
+<td>PETZOLDT: &ldquo;Die Philosophie der reinen Erfahrung.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1900</td>
+<td>ROYCE: &ldquo;The World and the Individual.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BRUNSCHWICG: &ldquo;La Vie de l&rsquo;Esprit.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2">1901</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Das Wesen der Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Das Wahrheitsgehalt der Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1902</td>
+<td>POINCARÉ</td>
+<td>1902</td>
+<td>COHEN: &ldquo;System der Philosophie: Logik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1902</td>
+<td>JAMES: &ldquo;Varieties of Religious Experience.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>CLIFFORD: &ldquo;Essays and Lectures.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3">1903</td>
+<td>WEBER: &ldquo;Vers le Positivisme absolu par l&rsquo;Idéalisme.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1903</td>
+<td>BERGMANN: &ldquo;System des objectiven Idealismus.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1903</td>
+<td>RUSSELL: &ldquo;Principles of Mathematics.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RAUH: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Expérience morale.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>SCHILLER: &ldquo;Humanism.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>RENOUVIER: &ldquo;Le Personnalisme.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1904</td>
+<td>COHEN: &ldquo;System der Philosophie: Ethik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1904</td>
+<td>MACTAGGART: &ldquo;Hegelian Cosmology.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1905</td>
+<td>POINCARÉ: &ldquo;Valeur de la Science.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1905</td>
+<td>MACH: Erkenntnis und Irrtum.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1906</td>
+<td>OLLÉ-LAPRUNE: &ldquo;La Raison et le Rationalisme.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1906</td>
+<td>MEINONG: &ldquo;Die Stellung der Gegenstandtheorie ein System der Wissenschaften.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1906</td>
+<td>BAILLIE: &ldquo;Idealistic Construction of Experience.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DUHEM: &ldquo;La Théorie physique.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>BALDWIN: &ldquo;Thought and Things.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="5">1907</td>
+<td>HAMELIN: &ldquo;Les Eléments principaux de la Répresentation.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1907</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Grundlinien einer neuen Lebensauschauung.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1907</td>
+<td>SCHILLER: &ldquo;Studies in Humanism.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>BERGSON: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Evolution créatrice.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Hauptprobleme der Religionsphilosophie.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="7"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="7"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>EVELLIN: &ldquo;La Raison pure et les Antinomies.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>LALANDEL &ldquo;Précis de Morale.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;Morale des Idées-forces.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1908</td>
+<td>BOUTROUX: &ldquo;Science et Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3">1908</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Sinn und Wertdes Lebens.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="2"><br/></td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Philosophie des Geisteslebens.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MÜNSTERBERG: &ldquo;Philosophie der Werte.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1909</td>
+<td>POINCARÉ: &ldquo;Science et Méthode.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1909</td>
+<td>DEWEY: &ldquo;Logical Theory.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1910</td>
+<td>REMKHE: &ldquo;Philosophie als Grundwissenschaft&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1911</td>
+<td>DUNAN: &ldquo;Les Deux Idéalismes.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1911</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Konnen wir noch Christen sein?&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1911</td>
+<td>WARD: &ldquo;Realm of Ends.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1912</td>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;La Pensée.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="2">1912</td>
+<td>COHEN: &ldquo;System der Philosophie: &AElig;sthetik.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>1912</td>
+<td>BOSANQUET: &ldquo;Value and Destiny of the Individual&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>DURKHEIM: &ldquo;Formes élémentaires de la Vie religieuse.&rdquo;</td>
+<td>EUCKEN: &ldquo;Erkennen und Leben.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="9"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="9"><br/></td>
+<td>1913</td>
+<td>BOSANQUET: &ldquo;Value and Destiny of the Individual.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1914</td>
+<td>FOUILLÉE: &ldquo;Humanitaires et Libertaires.&rdquo;</td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td><br/></td>
+<td>1915</td>
+<td>SORLEY: &ldquo;Moral Values and the Idea of God.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1917</td>
+<td>LOISY: &ldquo;La Religion.&rdquo;</td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1918</td>
+<td>GOBLOT: &ldquo;Traité de Logique.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>1919</td>
+<td>BERGSON: &ldquo;L&rsquo;Energie spirituelle.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td rowspan="3"><br/></td>
+<td>1920</td>
+<td>ALEXANDER: &ldquo;Space, Time and Deity.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2">1921</td>
+<td>RUSSELL: &ldquo;Analysis of Mind.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>MACTAGGART: &ldquo;Nature of Existence.&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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