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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54938 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54938)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy of the Practical: Economic
-and Ethic, by Benedetto Croce
-
-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: The Philosophy of the Practical: Economic and Ethic
-
-Author: Benedetto Croce
-
-Translator: Douglas Ainslie
-
-Release Date: June 19, 2017 [EBook #54938]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (online soon
-in an extended version, also linking to free sources for
-education worldwide ... MOOC's, educational materials,...)
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-PHILOSOPHY OF THE
-
-PRACTICAL
-
-ECONOMIC AND ETHIC
-
-TRANSLATED FROM THE ITALIAN OF
-
-
-BENEDETTO CROCE
-
-
-BY
-
-DOUGLAS AINSLIE
-
-B.A. (OXON.), M.R.A.S.
-
-
-MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
-
-ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
-
-1913
-
-
-
-
-Benedetto Croce's Philosophy of the Spirit, in the English translation
-by Douglas Ainslie, consists of 4 volumes (which can be read separately):
-1. Aesthetic as science of expression and general linguistic. (Second augmented
- edition. A first ed. is also available at Project Gutenberg.)
-2. Philosophy of the practical: economic and ethic.
-3. Logic as the science of the pure concept.
-4. Theory and history of historiography.
---Transcriber's note.
-
-
-
-
-NOTE
-
-
-Certain chapters only of the third part of this book were anticipated
-in the study entitled _Reduction of the Philosophy of Law to the
-Philosophy of Economy,_ read before the Accademia Pontaniana of Naples
-at the sessions of April 21 and May 5, 1907 (_Acts,_ vol. xxxvii.);
-but I have remodelled them, amplifying certain pages and summarizing
-others. The concept of economic activity as an autonomous form of the
-spirit, which receives systematic treatment in the second part of the
-book, was first maintained in certain essays, composed from 1897 to
-1900, and afterwards collected in the volume _Historical Materialism
-and Marxist Economy_ (2nd edition, Palermo, Sandron, 1907).
-
-B. C.
-
-NAPLES,
-
-19_th April_ 1908.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE
-
-
-"A noi sembra che l' opera del Croce sia lo sforzo più potente che il
-pensiero italiano abbia compiuto negli ultimi anni."--G. DE RUGGIERO in
-_La Filosofia contemporanea,_ 1912.
-
-"Il sistema di Benedetto Croce rimane la più alta conquista del
-pensiero contemporaneo."--G. NATOLI in _La Voce,_ 19th December 1912.
-
-
-Those acquainted with my translation of Benedetto Croce's _Æsthetic
-as Science of Expression and General Linguistic_ will not need to be
-informed of the importance of this philosopher's thought, potent in its
-influence upon criticism, upon philosophy and upon life, and famous
-throughout Europe.
-
-In the Italian, this volume is the third and last of the _Philosophy
-of the Spirit, Logic as Science of the Pure Concept_ coming second in
-date of publication. But apart from the fact that philosophy is like
-a moving circle, which can be entered equally well at any point, I
-have preferred to place this volume before the _Logic_ in the hands of
-British readers. Great Britain has long been a country where moral
-values are highly esteemed; we are indeed experts in the practice,
-though perhaps not in the theory of morality, a lacuna which I believe
-this book will fill.
-
-In saying that we are experts in moral practice I do not, of course,
-refer to the narrow conventional morality, also common with us, which
-so often degenerates into hypocrisy, a legacy of Puritan origin; but
-apart from this, there has long existed in many millions of Britons a
-strong desire to live well, or, as they put it, cleanly and rightly,
-and achieved by many, independent of any close or profound examination
-of the logical foundation of this desire. Theology has for some
-taken the place of pure thought, while for others, early training
-on religious lines has been sufficiently strong to dominate other
-tendencies in practical life. Yet, as a speculative Scotsman, I am
-proud to think that we can claim divided honours with Germany in the
-production of Emmanuel Kant (or Cant).
-
-The latter half of the nineteenth century witnessed with us a great
-development of materialism in its various forms. The psychological,
-anti-historical speculation contained in the so-called Synthetic
-Philosophy (really psychology) of Herbert Spencer was but one of the
-many powerful influences abroad, tending to divert youthful minds
-from the true path of knowledge. This writer, indeed, made himself
-notorious by his attitude of contemptuous intolerance and ignorance
-of the work previously done in connection with subjects which he was
-investigating. He accepted little but the evidence of his own senses
-and judgment, as though he were the first philosopher. But time has
-now taken its revenge, and modern criticism has exposed the Synthetic
-Philosophy in all its barren and rigid inadequacy and ineffectuality.
-Spencer tries to force Life into a brass bottle of his own making, but
-the genius will not go into his bottle. The names and writings of J. S.
-Mill, of Huxley, and of Bain are, with many others of lesser calibre,
-a potent aid to the dissolving influence of Spencer. Thanks to their
-efforts, the spirit of man was lost sight of so completely that I
-can well remember hearing Kant's great discovery of the synthesis _a
-priori_ described as moonshine, and Kant himself, with his categoric
-imperative, as little better than a Prussian policeman. As for Hegel,
-the great completer and developer of Kantian thought, his philosophy
-was generally in even less esteem among the youth; and we find even the
-contemplative Walter Pater passing him by with a polite apology for
-shrinking from his chilly heights. I do not, of course, mean to suggest
-that estimable Kantians and Hegelians did not exist here and there
-throughout the kingdom in late Victorian days (the names of Stirling,
-of Caird, and of Green at once occur to the mind); but they had not
-sufficient genius to make their voices heard above the hubbub of the
-laboratory. We all believed that the natural scientists had taken the
-measure of the universe, could tot it up to a T--and consequently
-turned a deaf ear to other appeals.
-
-Elsewhere in Europe Hartmann, Haeckel, and others were busy measuring
-the imagination and putting fancy into the melting-pot--they offered
-us the chemical equivalent of the wings of Aurora. We believed them,
-believed those materialists, those treacherous neo-Kantians, perverters
-of their master's doctrine, who waited for guileless youth with mask
-and rapier at the corner of every thicket. Such as escaped this ambush
-were indeed fortunate if they shook themselves free of Schopenhauer,
-the (personally) comfortable philosopher of suicide and despair, and
-fell into the arms of the last and least of the Teutonic giants,
-Friedrich Nietzsche, whose spasmodic paragraphs, full of genius but
-often empty of philosophy, show him to have been far more of a poet
-than a philosopher. It was indeed a doleful period of transition for
-those unfortunate enough to have been born into it: we really did
-believe that life had little or nothing to offer, or that we were all
-Overmen (a mutually exclusive proposition!), and had only to assert
-ourselves in order to prove it.
-
-To the writings of Pater I have already referred, and of them it may
-justly be said that they are often supremely beautiful, with the
-quality and cadence of great verse, but mostly (save perhaps the volume
-on _Plato and Platonism,_ by which he told the present writer that he
-hoped to live) instinct with a profound scepticism, that revelled in
-the externals of Roman Catholicism, but refrained from crossing the
-threshold which leads to the penetralia of the creed.
-
-Ruskin also we knew, and he too has a beautiful and fresh vein of
-poetry, particularly where free from irrational dogmatism upon Ethic
-and Æsthetic. But we found him far inferior to Pater in depth and
-suggestiveness, and almost devoid of theoretical capacity. Sesame for
-all its Lilies is no Open Sesame to the secrets of the world. Thus,
-wandering in the obscure forest, it is little to be wondered that we
-did not anticipate the flood of light to be shed upon us as we crossed
-the threshold of the twentieth century.
-
-It was an accident that took me to Naples in 1909, and the accident
-of reading a number of _La Critica,_ as I have described in the
-introduction to the _Æsthetic,_ that brought me in contact with the
-thought of Benedetto Croce. But it was not only the _Æsthetic,_ it was
-also the purely critical work of the philosopher that appeared to me at
-once of so great importance. To read Hegel, for instance, after reading
-Croce's study of him, is a very different experience (at least so I
-found it) to reading him before so doing.
-
-Hegel is an author most deeply stimulative and suggestive, but any
-beginner is well to take advantage of all possible aid in the difficult
-study.
-
-To bring this thought of Hegel within the focus of the ordinary
-mind has never been an easy task (I know of no one else who has
-successfully accomplished it); and Croce's work, _What is living
-and what is dead of the Philosophy of Hegel,_ as one may render the
-Italian title of the book which I hope to translate, has enormously
-aided a just comprehension, both of the qualities and the defects of
-that philosopher. This work appeared in the Italian not long after the
-_Æsthetic,_ and has had an influence upon the minds of contemporary
-Italians, second only to the _Philosophy of the Spirit._ To clear away
-the débris of Hegel, his false conception of art and of religion, to
-demonstrate his erroneous application of his own great discovery of
-the dialectic to pseudo-concepts, and thus to reveal it in its full
-splendour, has been one of the most valuable of Croce's inestimable
-contributions to critical thought.
-
-I shall not pause here to dilate upon the immense achievement of Croce,
-the youngest of Italian senators, a recognition of his achievement
-by his King and country, but merely mention his numerous historical
-works, his illuminative study of Vico, which has at last revealed that
-philosopher as of like intellectual stature to Kant; the immense tonic
-and cultural influence of his review, _La Critica,_ and his general
-editorship of the great collection of _Scrittori d' Italia._ Freed
-at last from that hubbub of the laboratory, from the measures and
-microscopes of the natural scientists, excellent in their place, it is
-interesting to ask if any other contemporary philosopher has made a
-contribution to ethical theory in any way comparable to the _Philosophy
-of the Practical._ The names of Bergson and of Blondel at once occur to
-the mind, but the former admits that his complete ideas on ethics are
-not yet made known, and implies that he may never make them entirely
-known. The reader of the _Philosophy of the Practical_ will, I think,
-find that none of Bergson's explanations, "burdened," as he says, with
-"geometry," and as we may say with matter, from the obsession of which
-he never seems to shake himself altogether free, are comparable in
-depth or lucidity with the present treatise. The spirit is described by
-Bergson as memory, and matter as a succession of images. How does the
-one communicate with the other? The formula of the self-creative life
-process seems hardly sufficient to explain this, for if with Bergson we
-conceive of life as a torrent, there must be some reason why it should
-flow rather in one channel than in another. But life is supposed to
-create and to absorb matter in its progress; and here we seem to have
-entered a vicious circle, for the intuition presupposes, it does not
-create its object. As regards the will, too, the Bergsonian theory of
-the Ego as rarely (sometimes never once in life) fully manifesting
-itself, and our minor actions as under the control of matter, seems
-to lead to a deterministic conception and to be at variance with the
-thesis of the self-creation of life.
-
-As regards Blondel, the identification of thought and will in the
-philosophy of action leads him to the position that the infinite is not
-in the universal abstract, but in the single concrete. It is through
-matter that the divine truth reaches us, and God must pass through
-nature or matter, in order to reach us, and we must effect the contrary
-process to reach God. It is a beautiful conception; but, as de Ruggiero
-suggests, do we not thus return, by a devious and difficult path, to
-the pre-Hegelian, pre-Kantian, position of religious platonicism?[1]
-
-This, however, is not the place to discourse at length of other
-philosophies. What most impresses in the Crocean thought is its
-profundity, its clarity, and its _completeness,--totus teres atque
-rotundus._ Croce, indeed, alone of the brilliant army of philosophers
-and critics arisen in the new century, has found a complete formula for
-his thought, complete, that is, at a certain stage; for, as he says,
-the relative nature of all systems is apparent to all who have studied
-philosophy. He alone has defined and allocated the activities of the
-human spirit; he alone has plumbed and charted its ocean in all its
-depth and breadth.
-
-A system! The word will sound a mere tinkling of cymbals to many
-still aground in the abstract superficialities of nineteenth-century
-scepticism; but they are altogether mistaken. To construct a system
-is like building a house: it requires a good architect to build
-a good house, and where it is required to build a great palace it
-requires a great genius to build it successfully. Michael Angelo
-built the Vatican, welding together and condensing the works of many
-predecessors, ruthlessly eliminating what they contained of bad or of
-erroneous: Benedetto Croce has built the Philosophy of the Spirit.
-To say of either achievement that it will not last for ever, or that
-it will need repair from time to time, is perfectly true; but this
-criticism applies to all things human; and yet men continue to build
-houses--for God and for themselves. Croce is the first to admit the
-incompleteness, the lack of finality of all philosophical systems, for
-each one of them deals, as he says, with a certain group of problems
-only, which present themselves at a definite period of time. The
-solution of these leads to the posing of new problems, first caught
-sight of by the philosopher as he terminates his labours, to be solved
-by the same or by other thinkers.
-
-And here it may be well to state very briefly the basis on which rests
-the _Philosophy of the Spirit,_ without attempting to do anything more
-than to give its general outline. The reader should imagine himself
-standing, like bold Pizarro, on his "peak of Darien," surveying at a
-great distance the vast outline of a New World, which yet is as old as
-Asia.
-
-The Spirit is Reality, it is the whole of Reality, and it has two
-forms: the theoretic and the practical activities. Beyond or outside
-these _there are no other forms of any kind._ The theoretic activity
-has two forms, the intuitive and individual, and the intellectual or
-knowledge of the universal: the first of these produces images and is
-known as _Æsthetic,_ the second concepts and is known as _Logic._ The
-first of these activities is altogether independent, self-sufficient,
-autonomous: the second, on the other hand, has need of the first, ere
-it can exist. Their relation is therefore that of double degree. The
-practical activity is the _will,_ which is thought in activity, and
-this also has two forms, the economic or utilitarian, and the ethical
-or moral, the first autonomous and individual, the second universal,
-and this latter depends upon the first for its existence, in a manner
-analogous to _Logic_ and to _Æsthetic._
-
-With the theoretic activity, man understands the universe, with the
-practical, he changes it. There are no grades or degrees of the Spirit
-beyond these. All other forms are either without activity, or they are
-verbal variants of the above, or they are a mixture of these four in
-different proportions.
-
-Thus the Philosophy of the Spirit is divided into _Æsthetic, Logic,
-and Philosophy of the Practical_ (Economic and Ethic). In these it is
-complete, and embraces the whole of human activity.
-
-The discussion of determinism or free will is of course much more
-elaborated here than in the Æsthetic, where exigencies of space
-compelled the philosopher to offer it in a condensed form. His solution
-that the will is and must be free, but that it contains two moments,
-the first conditioned, and that the problem should be first stated in
-terms of the Hegelian dialectic, seems to be the only one consonant
-with facts. The conclusion that the will is autonomous and that
-therefore we can _never_ be obliged to do anything against our will may
-seem to be paradoxical, until the overwhelming argument in proof of
-this has been here carefully studied.
-
-Croce's division of the practical activity into the two grades of
-Economic and Ethic, to which Kant did not attain and Fichte failed
-fully to perceive, has for the first time rendered comprehensible much
-that was hitherto obscure in ancient history and contemporary history.
-The "merely economic man" will be recognised by all students of the
-_Philosophy of the Practical,_ where his characteristics are pointed
-out by the philosopher; and a few years hence, when Croce's philosophy
-will have filtered through fiction and journalism to the level of
-the general public, the phrase will be as common as is the "merely
-economic" person to-day.
-
-For indeed, all really new and great discoveries come from the
-philosophers, gradually filtering down through technical treatises and
-reviews, until they reach the level of prose fiction and of poetry,
-which, since the _Æsthetic,_ we know to be one and the same thing with
-different empirical manifestations. In truth, the philosophers alone
-go deeply enough into the essence of things to reach their roots. Thus
-some philosophy, generally in an extremely diluted form, becomes part
-of every one's mental furniture and thus the world makes progress and
-the general level of culture is raised. Thought is democratic in being
-open to all, aristocratic in being attained only by the few--and that
-is the only true aristocracy: to be on the same level as the best.
-
-Another discovery of Croce's, set forth in this volume for the first
-time in all the plenitude of its richness, is the theory of Error.
-The proof of the practical nature of error, of its necessity, and of
-the fact that we only err because we will to do so, is a marvel of
-acute and profound analysis. Readers unaccustomed to the dialectic may
-not at first be prepared to admit the necessary forms of error, that
-error is not distinct, but opposed to truth and as such its simple
-dialectic negation, and that truth is thought of truth, which develops
-by conquering error, which must always exist in every problem. The full
-understanding of the Crocean theory of error throws a flood of light
-on all philosophical problems, and has already formed the basis of at
-least one brilliant study of contemporary philosophy.
-
-To the reduction of the concept of law to an economic factor, which
-depends upon the priority and autonomy of Economic in relation to
-Ethic, is devoted a considerable portion of the latter part of the
-_Philosophy of the Practical,_ and it is easy to see that an elaborate
-treatment of this problem was necessary, owing to the confusion as
-to its true nature that has for so long existed in the minds of
-thinkers, owing to their failure to grasp the above distinction. In
-Great Britain indeed, where precedent counts for so much in law,
-the ethical element is very often so closely attached as to be
-practically indistinguishable from it, save by the light of the
-Crocean analysis. In the _Logic as Science of the Pure Concept_ will
-be found much to throw light upon the _Philosophy of the Practical,_
-where the foreshortening of certain proofs (due to concentration upon
-other problems) may appear to leave loopholes to objection. Thought
-will there be found to make use of language for expression, though
-not itself language; and it will be found useless to seek logic in
-words, which in themselves are always æsthetic. For there is a duality
-between intuition and concept, which form the two grades or degrees of
-theoretic knowledge, as described also in the _Æsthetic._ There are
-two types of concept, the _pure_ and the _false_ or _pseudo-concept,_
-as Croce calls it. This latter is also divided into two types of
-representation--those that are concrete without being universal (such
-as the cat, the rose), and those that are without a content that can
-be represented, or universal without being concrete, since they never
-exist in reality (such are the triangle, free motion). The first
-of these are called empirical pseudo-concepts, the second abstract
-pseudo-concepts: the first are represented by the natural, the second
-by the mathematical sciences.
-
-Of the _pure concept_ it is predicated that it is ineliminable, for
-while the pseudo-concepts in their multiplicity are abolished by
-thought as it proceeds, there will always remain one thought namely,
-that which thinks their abolition. This concept is opposed to the
-pseudo-concepts: it is ultra or omni-representative. I shall content
-myself with this brief mention of the contents of the _Philosophy of
-the Practical_ and of the _Logic_ upon which I am now working.
-
-Since the publication of _Æsthetic as Science of Expression and General
-Linguistic,_ there has been some movement in the direction of the study
-of Italian thought and culture, which I advocated in the Introduction
-to that work. But the Alps continue to be a barrier, and the thought of
-France and of Germany reaches us, as a rule, far more rapidly than that
-of the home of all the arts and of civilization, as we may call that
-Italy which contains within it the classical Greater Greece. A striking
-instance of this relatively more rapid distribution of French thought
-is afforded by the celebrated _Lundis_ of Sainte-Beuve, so familiar to
-many readers; yet a critic, greater in depth than Sainte-Beuve, was
-writing at the same period--greater in philosophical vision of the
-relations of things, for the vision of Sainte-Beuve rarely rose above
-the psychological plane. For one reader acquainted with the _History
-of Italian Literature_ of De Sanctis, a hundred are familiar with the
-_Lundis_ of Sainte-Beuve.
-
-At the present moment the hegemony of philosophical thought may be
-said to be divided between Italy and France, for neither Great Britain
-nor Germany has produced a philosophical mind of the first order.
-The interest in Continental idealism is becoming yearly more keen,
-since the publication of Bergson's and of Blondel's treatises, and of
-Croce's _Philosophy of the Spirit._ Mr. Arthur Balfour, being himself
-a philosopher, was one of the first to recognise the importance of
-the latter work, referring to its author in terms of high praise in
-his oration on Art delivered at Oxford in the Sheldonian Theatre. Mr.
-Saintsbury also has expressed his belief that with the _Æsthetic_ Croce
-has provided the first instrument for scientific (_i.e._ philosophical,
-not "natural" scientific) criticism of literature. This surely is well,
-and should lead to an era of more careful and less impartial, of more
-accurate because more scientific criticism of our art and poetry.
-
-I trust that a similar service may be rendered to Ethical theory and
-practice by the publication of the present translation, which I believe
-to be rich with great truths of the first importance to humanity,
-here clearly and explicitly stated for the first time and therefore
-(in Vico's sense of the word) "created," by his equal and compatriot,
-Benedetto Croce.
-
- Then leaning upon the arm of time came Truth, whose radiant face,
-
- Though never so late to the feast she go, hath aye the foremost place.
-
-DOUGLAS AINSLIE.
-
-ATHENAEUM CLUB, PALL MALL, _January_ 1913.
-
-
-[1] G. de Ruggiero, _La Filosofia contemporanea,_ Laterza, Bari, 1912.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-FIRST PART
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN GENERAL
-
-
-FIRST SECTION
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS RELATIONS
-
-
-I
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY AS A FORM OF THE SPIRIT 3
-
-Practical and theoretic life--Insufficiency of descriptive distinctions
---Insufficiency of the psychological method in philosophy--Necessity of
-the philosophical method--Constatation and deduction--Theories which
-deny the practical form of the spirit--The practical as an unconscious
-fact: critique--Nature and practical activity--Reduction of the
-practical form to the theoretical: critique--The practical as thought
-in action--Recognition of its autonomy.
-
-II
-
-NEGATION OF THE SPIRITUAL FORM OF FEELING 21
-
-The practical and the so-called third spiritual form: feeling--Various
-meanings of the word: feeling, a psychological class--Feeling as a
-state of the spirit--Function of the concept of feeling in the History
-of philosophy: the indeterminate--Feeling as forerunner of the æsthetic
-form--In Historic: preannouncement of the intuitive element--In
-philosophical Logic: pre-announcement of the pure concept--Analogous
-function in the Philosophy of the practical--Negation of
-feeling--Deductive exclusion of it.
-
-III
-
-RELATION OF THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY WITH THE THEORETICAL 33
-
-Precedence of the theoretical over the practical--The unity of
-the spirit and the co-presence of the practical--Critique of
-pragmatism--Critique of psychological objections--Nature of theoretic
-precedence over the practical: historical knowledge--Its continual
-mutability--No other theoretic precedent--Critique of practical
-concepts and judgments--Posteriority of judgments to the practical
-act--Posteriority of practical concepts--Origin of intellectualistic
-and sentimentalistic doctrines--The concepts of end and means--Critique
-of the end as plan or fixed design--Volition and the unknown--Critique
-of the concept of practical sciences and of a practical Philosophy.
-
-IV
-
-INSEPARABILITY OF ACTION FROM ITS REAL BASE AND PRACTICAL NATURE OF THE
-THEORETIC ERROR 53
-
-Coincidence of intention and volition--Volition in the abstract
-and in the concrete: critique--Volition thought and real volition:
-critique--Critique of volition with unknown or ill-known base
---Illusions in the instances adduced--Impossibility of volition with
-erroneous theoretical base--Forms of the theoretic error and problem
-as to its nature--Distinction between ignorance and error: practical
-origin of latter--Confirmations and proofs--Justification of the
-practical repression of error--Empirical distinctions of errors and the
-philosophic distinction.
-
-V
-
-IDENTITY OF VOLITION AND ACTION AND DISTINCTION BETWEEN VOLITION AND
-EVENT 73
-
-Volition and action: intuition and expression--Spirit
-and nature--Inexistence of volitions without action and
-inversely--Illusions as to the distinctions between these
-terms--Distinction between action and succession or event--Volition
-and event--Successful and unsuccessful actions: critique--Acting
-and foreseeing: critique--Confirmation of the inderivability of the
-value of action from success--Explanation of facts that seem to be at
-variance.
-
-VI
-
-THE PRACTICAL JUDGMENT, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL 86
-
-Practical taste and judgment--Practical judgment as historical
-judgment--Its Logic--Importance of the practical judgment--Difference
-between practical judgment and judgment of event--Progress in action
-and progress in Reality--Precedence of the Philosophy of the practical
-over the practical judgment--Confirmation of the philosophic incapacity
-of the psychological method.
-
-VII
-
-PRACTICAL DESCRIPTION, RULES AND CASUISTIC 103
-
-Justification of the psychological method and of empirical and
-descriptive disciplines--Practical Description and its literature
---Extension of practical description--Normative knowledge or
-rules: their nature--Utility of rules--The literature of rules and
-its apparent decadence--Relation between the arts (collections
-of rules) and philosophic doctrines--Casuistic: its nature and
-utility--Jurisprudence as casuistic.
-
-VIII
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE INVASIONS OF PHILOSOPHY INTO PRACTICAL DESCRIPTION AND
-INTO ITS DERIVATIVES 121
-
-First form: tendency to generalize--Historical elements that
-persist in the generalizations--Second form: literary union of
-philosophy and empiria--Third form: attempt to put them in close
-connection--Science of the practical, and Metaphysic: various
-meanings--Injurious consequences of the invasions--1st, Dissolution of
-empirical concepts--Examples: war and peace, property and communism,
-and the like--Other examples--Misunderstandings on the part of the
-philosophers--Historical significance of such questions--2nd, False
-deduction of the empirical from the philosophic--Affirmations as to
-the contingent changed into philosophemes--Reasons for the rebellion
-against rules--Limits between philosophy and empiria.
-
-IX
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES 144
-
-I. Distinction between history of the practical principle and history
-of liberation from the transcendental--II. Distinction of the practical
-from the theoretical--III. Minglings of the Philosophy of the
-practical with Description--Vain attempts at a definition of empirical
-concepts--Attempts at deduction--IV. Various questions--Practical
-nature of error--Practical taste--V. Doctrines of feeling--The
-Wolfians--Jacobi and Schleiermacher--Kant--Hegel--Opponents of the
-doctrine of the three faculties. Krug--Brentano.
-
-
-SECOND SECTION
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS DIALECTIC
-
-
-I
-
-NECESSITY AND FREEDOM IN THE VOLITIONAL ACT 173
-
-The problem of freedom--Freedom of willing and freedom of action:
-critique of such distinction--The volitional act, both necessary and
-free--Comparison with the æsthetic activity--Critique of determinism
-and arbitrarism--General form of this antithesis: materialism and
-mysticism--Materialistic sophisms of determinism--Mysticism of doctrine
-of free will--Doctrine of necessity-liberty and idealism--Doctrine
-of double causality; of dualism and agnosticism--Its character of
-transaction and transition.
-
-II
-
-FREEDOM AND ITS OPPOSITE. GOOD AND EVIL 192
-
-Freedom of action as reality of action--Inconceivability of
-the absolute absence of action--Non-freedom as antithesis and
-contrariety--Nothingness and arbitrariness of non-liberty--Good as
-freedom and reality, and evil as its opposite--Critique of abstract
-monism and of dualism of values--Objections to the irreality of
-evil--Evil in synthesis and out of synthesis--Affirmative judgments
-of evil as negative judgments--Confirmations of the doctrine--The
-poles of feeling (pleasure and pain); and their identity with the
-practical opposites--Doctrine relating to pleasure and happiness:
-critique--Empirical concepts relating to good and evil--To have to
-be, ideal, inhibitive, imperative power--Evil, remorse, etc.; good,
-satisfaction, etc.--Their incapacity for serving as practical
-principles--Their character.
-
-III
-
-THE VOLITIONAL ACT AND THE PASSIONS 215
-
-The multiplicity of volitions and the struggle for unity--Multiplicity
-and unity as good and evil--Excluded volitions and passions or
-desires--Passions and desires as possible volitions--Volition as
-struggle with the passions--Critique of the freedom of choice--Meaning
-of the so-called precedence of feeling over the volitional
-act--Polipathicism and apathicism--Erroneity of both the opposed
-theses--Historical and contingent meaning of these--The domination of
-the passions, and the will.
-
-IV
-
-VOLITIONAL HABITS AND INDIVIDUALITY 229
-
-Passions and states of the soul--Passions understood as volitional
-habits--Importance and nature of these--Domination of the passions
-in so far as they are volitional habits--Difficulty and reality of
-dominating them--Volitional habits and individuality--Negations of
-individuality for uniformity and criticism of them--Temperament
-and character--Indifference of temperament--Discovery of one's
-own being--The idea of "vocation"--Misunderstanding of the right
-of individuality--Wicked individuality--False doctrines as to the
-connection between virtues and vices--The universal in the individual,
-and education.
-
-V
-
-DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS 246
-
-Multiplicity and unity: development--Becoming as synthesis of
-being and not-being--Nature as becoming. Its resolution in the
-Spirit--Optimism and pessimism: critique--Dialectic optimism--Concept
-of cosmic progress--Objections and critique--Individuals and
-History--Fate, Fortune, and Providence--The infinity of progress
-and mystery--Confirmation of the impossibility of a Philosophy of
-history--Illegitimate transference of the concept of mystery from
-History to Philosophy.
-
-VI
-
-TWO EXPLANATIONS RELATING TO HISTORIC AND ÆSTHETIC 262
-
-Relation between desires and actions; and two problems of Historic
-and Æsthetic--History and art--The concept of existentiality in
-history--Its origin in the Philosophy of the practical: action and
-the existing, desires and the non-existent--History as distinction
-between actions and desires, and art as indistinction--Pure fancy and
-imagination--Art as lyrical or representation of feelings--Identity
-of ingenuous reality and feeling--Artists and the will--Actions and
-myths--Art as pure representation of becoming, and the artistic form of
-thought.
-
-VII
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES 273
-
-I. The problem of freedom--II. The doctrine of evil--III. Will
-and freedom--Conscience and responsibility--IV. The concept of
-duty--Repentance and remorse--The doctrine of the passions--Virtues
-and vices--V. The doctrine of individuality: Schleiermacher--Romantic
-theories and most modern theories--VI. The concept of development and
-progress.
-
-
-THIRD SECTION
-
-UNITY OF THE THEORETICAL AND THE PRACTICAL
-
-Double result: precedence of the theoretical over the practical, and
-of the practical over the theoretical--Errors of those who maintain
-the exclusive precedence of the one or the other--Problem of the
-unity of this duality--Not a duality of opposites--Not a duality of
-finite and infinite--Perfect analogy of the two forms: theoretic and
-practical--Not a parallelism, but a circle--The circle of Reality:
-thought and being, subject and object--Critique of the theories as
-to the primacy of the theoretical or of the practical reason--New
-pragmatism: Life conditioning Philosophy--Deductive confirmation of the
-two forms, and deductive exclusion of the third (feeling).
-
-
-SECOND PART
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS SPECIAL FORMS
-
-
-FIRST SECTION
-
-THE TWO PRACTICAL FORMS: ECONOMIC AND ETHIC
-
-
-I
-
-DISTINCTION OF THE TWO FORMS IN THE PRACTICAL CONSCIOUSNESS 309
-
-The utilitarian or economic form, and the moral or ethical
-form--Insufficiency of the descriptive and psychological
-distinction--Deduction and necessity of integrating it with
-induction--The two forms as a fact of consciousness--The
-economic form--The ethical form--Impossibility of eliminating
-them--Confirmations in fact.
-
-II
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ETHICAL FORM 323
-
-Exclusion of materialistic and intellectualistic criticisms--The
-two possible negations--The thesis of utilitarianism against the
-existence of moral acts--Difficulty arising from the presence of
-these--Attempt to explain them as quantitative distinctions--Criticism
-of it--Attempt to explain them as facts, either extraneous to the
-practical or irrational, and stupid--Associationism and evolutionism.
-Critique--Desperate attempt: theological utilitarianism and mystery.
-
-III
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ECONOMIC FORM 337
-
-The thesis of moral abstractionism against the concept of the
-useful--The useful as means, or as theoretic fact--Technical and
-hypothetical imperatives--Critique: the useful is a practical fact
---The useful as the egoistic or the immoral--Critique: the useful
-is amoral--The useful as ethical minimum--Critique: the useful
-is premoral--Desperate attempt: the useful as inferior practical
-conscience--Confirmation of the autonomy of the useful.
-
-IV
-
-RELATION BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND ETHICAL FORMS 348
-
-Economic and ethic as double degree of the practical--Errors
-arising from conceiving them as co-ordinated--Disinterested
-actions: critique--Vain polemic conducted with such Supposition
-against utilitarianism--Actions morally indifferent, obligatory,
-supererogatory, etc. Critique--Comparison with the relation between
-art and philosophy--Other erroneous conceptions of modes of
-action--Pleasure and economic activity, happiness and virtue--Pleasure
-and pain and feeling--Coincidence of duty with pleasure--Critique of
-rigorism or asceticism--Relation of happiness and virtue--Critique of
-the subordination of pleasure to morality--No empire of morality over
-the forms of the spirit--Non-existence of other practical forms; and
-impossibility of subdivision of the two established.
-
-V
-
-THE PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMY AND THE SO-CALLED SCIENCE OF ECONOMY 364
-
-Problem of the relations between Philosophy and Science of economy
---Unreality of the laws and concepts of economic Science--Economic
-Science founded on empirical concepts but not empirical or
-descriptive--Absoluteness of its laws--Their mathematical
-nature--Its principles and their character of arbitrary postulates
-and definitions--Its utility--Comparison of Economy with Mechanic,
-and reason for its exclusion from ethical, æsthetic, and logical
-facts--Errors of philosophism and historicism in Economy--The
-two degenerations: extreme abstractism and empiristical
-disaggregation--Glance at the history of the various directions of
-Economy--Meaning of the judgment of Hegel as to economic Science.
-
-VI
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE CONFUSIONS BETWEEN ECONOMIC SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY OF
-ECONOMY 382
-
-Adoption of the economic method and formulæ on the part of
-Philosophy--Errors that derive from it--1st, Negation of philosophy
-for economy--2nd, Universal value attributed to empirical concepts.
-Example: free trade and protectionism--3rd, Transformation of the
-functions of calculation into reality--The pretended calculus of
-pleasures and pains; and doctrines of optimism and pessimism.
-
-VII
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES 391
-
-I. Greek Ethic and its ingenuousness--II. Importance of Christianity
-for Ethic--The three tendencies that result from it: utilitarianism,
-rigorism, and psychologism--Hobbes, Spinoza--English Ethic--Idealistic
-Philosophy--III. E. Kant and his affirmation of the ethical
-principle--Contradictions of Kant as to the concept of the useful,
-of prudence, of happiness, etc.--Errors that derive from it in
-his Ethic--IV. Points for a Philosophy of Economy--The inferior
-appetitive faculty--Problem of politics and Machiavellism--Doctrine
-of the passions--Hegel and the concept of the useful--Fichte and the
-elaboration of the Kantian Ethic--V. The problem of the useful and of
-morality in the thinkers of the nineteenth century--Extrinsic union
-of Ethic and of economic Science, from antiquity to the nineteenth
-century--Philosophic questions arising from a more intimate contact
-between the two--VII. Theories of the hedonistic calculus: from
-Maupertuis to Hartmann.
-
-
-SECOND SECTION
-
-THE ETHICAL PRINCIPLE
-
-
-I
-
-CRITIQUE OF MATERIALISTIC AND OF FORMALISTIC ETHIC 425
-
-Various meanings of "formal" and "material"--The ethical principle
-as formal (universal) and not material (contingent)--Reduction
-of material Ethic to utilitarian Ethic--Expulsion of material
-principles--Benevolence, love, altruism, etc.; and critique of
-them--Social organism, State, interest of the species, etc. Critique
-of them--Material religious principles. Critique of them--"Formal" as
-statement of a merely logical demand--Critique of a formal Ethic with
-this meaning: tautologism--Tautological principles: ideal, chief good,
-duty, etc. Critique of them--Tautological significance of certain
-formulæ, material in appearance--Conversion of tautological Ethic into
-material and utilitarian Ethic--In what sense Ethic should be formal;
-and in what other sense material.
-
-
-II
-
-THE ETHICAL FORM AS ACTUALIZATION OF THE SPIRIT IN UNIVERSAL 440
-
-Tautological Ethic, and its partial or discontinuous connection with
-Philosophy--Rejection of both these conceptions--The ethical form
-as volition of the universal--The universal as the Spirit (Reality,
-Liberty, etc.)--Moral actions as volitions of the Spirit--Critique of
-antimoralism--Confused tendency of tautological, material, religious
-formulæ in relation to the Ethic of the Spirit--The Ethic of the Spirit
-and religious Ethic.
-
-III
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES 452
-
-I. Merit of the Kantian Ethic--The predecessors of Kant--Defect of
-that Ethic: agnosticism--Critique of Hegel and of others--Kant and the
-concept of freedom--Fichte and Hegel--Ethic in the nineteenth century.
-
-
-THIRD PART
-
-LAWS
-
-
-I
-
-LAWS AS PRODUCTS OF THE INDIVIDUAL 465
-
-Definition of law--Philosophical and empirical concept of society--Laws
-as individual product: programmes of individual life--Exclusion of
-the character of constriction: critique of this concept--Identical
-characters of individual and social laws--Individual laws as the sole
-real in ultimate analysis--Critique of the division of laws into
-judicial and social, and into the sub-classes of these. Empiricity of
-every division of laws--Extension of the concept of laws.
-
-II
-
-THE CONSTITUTIVE ELEMENTS OF LAWS. CRITIQUE OF PERMISSIVE LAWS AND OF
-NATURAL LAW 481
-
-The volitional character and the character of class--Distinction of
-laws from the so-called laws of nature--Implication of the second
-in the first--Distinction of laws from practical principles--Laws
-and single acts--Identity of imperative, prohibitive, and permissive
-laws--Permissive character of every law and impermissive character
-of every principle--Changeability of laws--Empirical considerations
-as to modes of change--Critique of the eternal Code or natural
-right--Natural right as the new right--Natural right as Philosophy
-of the practical--Critique of natural right--Theory of natural right
-persisting in judicial judgments and problems.
-
-III
-
-UNREALITY OF LAW AND REALITY OF EXECUTION. FUNCTION OF LAW IN THE
-PRACTICAL SPIRIT 497
-
-Law as abstract and unreal volition--Ineffectually of laws
-and effectuality of practical principles--Exemplificatory
-explanation--Doctrines against the utility of laws--Their
-unmaintainability--Unmaintainability of confutations of them--Empirical
-meaning of these controversies--Necessity of laws--Laws as preparation
-for action--Analogy between practical and theoretical Spirit: practical
-laws and empirical concepts--The promotion of order in reality and in
-representation--Origin of the concept of plan or design.
-
-IV
-
-CONFUSION BETWEEN LAWS AND PRACTICAL PRINCIPLES. CRITIQUE OF PRACTICAL
-LEGALISM AND OF JESUITIC MORALITY 511
-
-Transformation of principles into practical laws: legalism--Genesis
-of the concept of the practically licit and indifferent--Its
-consequence: the arbitrary--Ethical legalism as a simple special case
-of the practical--Critique of the practically indifferent--Contests
-of rigorists and of latitudinarians and their common error--Jesuitic
-morality as doctrine of fraud on moral law--Concept of legal
-fraud--Absurdity of fraud against oneself and against the
-moral conscience--Jesuitic morality not explainable by mere
-legalism--Jesuitic morality as alliance of legalism with theological
-utilitarianism--Distinction between Jesuitic practice and doctrine.
-
-V
-
-JUDICIAL ACTIVITY AS GENERICALLY PRACTICAL ACTIVITY (ECONOMIC) 526
-
-Legislative activity as generically practical--Vanity of disputes as to
-the character of institutions, whether economic or ethical: punishment,
-marriage, State, etc.--Legislative activity as economic--Judicial
-activity: its economic character: its consequent identity with economic
-activity--Non-recognition of economic form, and meaning of the problem
-as to distinction between morality and rights--Theories of co-action
-and of exteriority, as distinctive characteristics: critique of
-them--Moralistic theories of rights: critique--Duality of positive and
-ideal rights, historical and natural rights, etc.; absurd attempts at
-unification and co-ordination--Value of all these attempts as confused
-glimpse of amoral character of rights--Confirmations of this character
-in ingenuous conscience--Comparison between rights and language.
-Grammar and codes--Logic and language; morality and rights--History
-of language as literary and artistic history--History of rights as
-political and social history.
-
-VI
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES 543
-
-I. Distinction between morality and rights, and its importance
-for the history of the economic principle--Indistinction
-lasting till Tomasio--II. Tomasio and followers--Kant and
-Fichte--Hegel--Herbart and Schopenhauer--Rosmini and others--III.
-Stahl, Ahrens, Trendelenburg--Utilitarians--IV. Recent writers
-of treatises--Strident contradictions. Stammler--V. Value of
-law--In antiquity--Diderot--Romanticism--Jacobi--Hegel--Recent
-doctrines--VI. Natural rights and their dissolution--Historical
-school of rights--Comparison between rights and language--VII.
-Concept of law, and studies of comparative rights and of the general
-Doctrine of law--VIII. Legalism and moral casuistic--Probabilitism
-and Jesuitic morality--Critique of the concept of the
-licit--Fichte--Schleiermacher--Rosmini.
-
-
-CONCLUSION 586
-
-The Philosophy of the Spirit as the whole of Philosophy--Correspondence
-between Logic and System--Dissatisfaction at the end of every system
-and its irrational motive--Rational motive: inexhaustibility of Life
-and of Philosophy.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSLATOR'S NOTE
-
-This translation of Benedetto Croce's _Philosophy of the Practical_
-(Economic and Ethic) is complete.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST PART
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN GENERAL
-
-
-
-
-FIRST SECTION
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS RELATIONS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY AS A FORM OF THE SPIRIT
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Practical and theoretic life._]
-
-A glance at the life that surrounds us would seem more than sufficient
-to establish, without the necessity of special demonstration, the
-existence of a circle of practical activity side by side with the
-theoretical. We see in life men of thought and men of action, men of
-contemplation and of action, materially distinct, as it were, from one
-another: here, lofty brows and slow dreamy eyes; there, narrow brows,
-eyes vigilant and mobile; poets and philosophers on the one side; on
-the other, captains and soldiers of industry, commerce, politics, the
-army, and the church. Their work seems to differ as do the men. While
-we are intent upon some discovery just announced, in chemistry or
-in physic, or upon some philosophy that comes to shake old beliefs,
-upon a drama or a romance that revives an artist's dream, we are
-suddenly interrupted and our attention is called to spectacles of an
-altogether different nature, such as a war between two states, fought
-with cannon or with custom-house tariffs; or to a colossal strike, in
-which thousands upon thousands of workmen make the rest of society feel
-the power of their numbers and of their strength, and the importance
-of their work in the general total; or a potent organization which
-collects and binds together the forces of conservative resistance,
-employing interests and passions, hopes and fears, vices and virtues,
-as the painter his colours, or the poet his words, sometimes making
-like them a masterpiece, but of a practical nature. The man of action
-is from time to time assailed as it were with nausea at his orgies of
-volitional effort and eyes with envy the artist or the man of science
-in the same way as polite society used to look upon the monks who had
-known how to select the best and most tranquil lot in life. But as a
-general rule they do not go beyond this fleeting feeling, or if they
-do resolve to cease their business on the Ides, they return to it on
-the Kalends. But the contemplative man in his turn also sometimes
-experiences this same nausea and this same aspiration; he seems to
-himself to be idle where so many are working and bleeding, and he cries
-to the combatants: "Arms, give me arms,"[1] for he too would be a miner
-with the miners, would navigate with the navigators, be an emperor
-among the kings of coal. However, as a general rule, he does not make
-more out of this than a song or a book. Nobody, whatever his efforts,
-can issue from his own circle. It would seem that nature supplies men
-made precisely for the one or for the other form of activity, in the
-same way as she makes males and females for the preservation of the
-species.
-
-[Sidenote: _Insufficiency of descriptive distinctions._]
-
-But this mode of existence with which the practical activity manifests
-itself in life, as though physically limited, has no certainty, when
-separated from the theoretical life, nor is it, as might be believed,
-a fact that imposes itself. Facts never impose themselves, save
-metaphorically: it is only our thought which _imposes_ them upon
-_itself,_ when it has criticized them and has recognized their reality.
-That existence and that distinction, which seem so obvious that one
-can touch them with one's hand, are at bottom nothing but the result
-of primary and superficial philosophic reflection, which posits as
-essentially distinct that which is so only at a first glance and in
-the mass. Indeed, if we continue to meditate with the same method and
-assumptions as in the first instance, we shall find that those very
-distinctions, which reflection had established, are by reflection
-annulled. It is not true that men are practical or theoretical.
-
-The theoretical man is also practical; he lives, he wills, he acts
-like all the others. The so-called practical man is also theoretical;
-he contemplates, believes, thinks, reads, writes, loves music and the
-other arts. Those works that had been looked upon as inspired entirely
-by the practical spirit, when examined more closely, are found to
-be exceedingly complex and rich in theoretic elements--meditations,
-reasonings, historical research, ideal contemplations. Those works
-on the other hand that had been assumed to be manifestations of the
-purely artistic or philosophic spirit, are also products of the will,
-for without the will nothing can be done; the artist cannot prepare
-himself for his masterpiece for years and years, nor the thinker bring
-to completion his system. Was not the battle of Austerlitz also a
-work of thought and the _Divine Comedy_ also a work of will? From
-such reflections as these, which might be easily multiplied, arises
-a mistrust, not only of the statement first made, but also of the
-inquiry that has been undertaken. It is as though one had filled a
-vessel with much difficulty and were then obliged to empty it anew
-with a like effort, to find oneself again facing the vessel, empty as
-before. Or one adheres to the conclusion that neither the theoretic
-nor the practical exists as distinct, but that they are one single
-fact, which is one or other of the two, or a third to be determined,
-manifesting itself concretely in infinite shades and gradations, which
-we arbitrarily attempt to reduce to one or more classes, separating and
-denominating them as distinct in a not less arbitrary manner.
-
-[Sidenote: _Insufficiency of the psychological method in philosophy._]
-
-By describing this process of ordinary reflection, in relation to
-reality and by demonstrating its philosophic impotence, has at the
-same time been demonstrated the nature and the _impotence_ of the
-_psychological method,_ applied to philosophical problems. For
-psychological philosophy, though contained in ponderous treatises
-and in solemn academical lectures, does not really achieve more than
-ordinary reflection, or rather, is nothing but ordinary reflection.
-Having classified the images of the infinite manifestations of human
-activity, placing, for instance, will and action side, by side with
-thought and imagination, it looks upon this classification as reality.
-But classes are classes and not philosophical distinctions: whoever
-takes them too seriously, and understands them in this second sense,
-finds himself eventually obliged to admit that they possess no reality.
-Thereupon he declares with shouts and protestations the non-existence
-of the _faculties of the soul,_ or rather their existence as a mere
-mental artifice, without relation to reality. He may do more than this
-and throw overboard the criterion or distinction itself, together with
-those false distinctions, proclaiming that all spiritual manifestations
-are reducible to a single element. This element turns out in the end
-to be precisely one of the rejected classes; hence the attempt to show
-that facts of volition are nothing but facts of _representation,_ or
-that those of representation are nothing but facts of _volition,_ or
-that both are nothing but facts of _feeling,_ and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Necessity of the philosophical method._]
-
-We must then remain perfectly indifferent to the affirmations or
-negations of this psychological philosophy. If it affirm the existence
-of the practical activity, we must not put faith in it until we have
-recognized its existence by the philosophical method, and equally
-so in case it should deny it. The philosophical method demands
-complete abstraction from empirical data and from their classes, and
-a withdrawal into the recesses of the consciousness, in order to fix
-upon it alone the eye of the mind. It has been affirmed that by this
-method the individual consciousness is made the type and measure of
-universal reality, and it has been suggested, with a view to obviate
-this restriction and danger, that we should extend observations, so
-as to include the soul of other individuals, of the present and of
-the past, of our own and of other civilizations, thus completing (in
-the accustomed phrase) the psychological with the historical and the
-ethnographical methods. But there is no need to fear, because the
-consciousness which is the object of the philosophical inquiry is not
-that of the individual as individual, but the universal consciousness,
-which is in every individual the basis of his individual consciousness
-and of that of other individuals. The philosopher who withdraws into
-himself is not seeking his own empirical self: Plato did not seek the
-son of Aristo and of Perictione, nor Baruch Spinoza the poor sickly
-Jew; they sought that Plato and that Spinoza, who are not Plato or
-Spinoza, but man, the spirit, universal being. The remedy proposed
-will therefore seem not only useless, but actually harmful; for in
-an inquiry whose very object is to surpass the empirical itself, is
-offered the aid of a multiplicity of selves, thus increasing the tumult
-and the confusion, where there should be peace and silence; offering,
-in exchange for the universal that was sought, something worse than the
-individual, namely, the _general,_ which is an arbitrary complex of
-mutilated individualities.
-
-[Sidenote: _Constatation and deduction._]
-
-It may seem, however, that the result of such an inquiry as to the form
-and the universality of consciousness would merely possess the value of
-a statement of fact, not different from any other statement, as when
-we say, for instance, that the weather is rainy, or that Tizio has
-married. If these two last facts be indubitable, because well observed,
-in like manner indubitable, because likewise well observed, will be
-an affirmation concerning the universal consciousness. And since both
-affirmations are true, there is certainly no difference between them,
-or between truth and truth, considered as such. But since single and
-contingent facts, like the two adduced in the example, are single
-and contingent, precisely because they have not their own reason in
-themselves, and because the universal is the universal, precisely
-because it is a sufficient reason to itself, it clearly results that
-we cannot assume that truth has been definitely established from the
-universal standpoint of consciousness, save when the reason for this
-also has been seen, that is to say until that aspect has been simply
-enunciated and asserted, as in the case of a single fact. To affirm
-the existence of the practical form of activity, side by side with the
-theoretical, means to deduce the one from the other, and both from
-the unity of the spirit and of the real. We do not intend to withdraw
-ourselves from this duty and exigency; and if we limit ourselves
-here at the beginning to the assertion of its existence and to the
-demonstration that the arguments brought against it are unfounded, we
-do so for didascalic reasons, certain that in due course we shall be
-able to free this assertion from what it may contain of provisional,
-that is to say, from the character itself of assertion.
-
-[Sidenote: _Theories which deny the practical form of the spirit._]
-
-The doctrines which deny the practical form of the spirit are and
-cannot but be of two fundamental kinds, according to the double
-possibility offered by the proposition itself which they propose to
-refute. The first doctrine affirms that _the practical form is not
-spiritual activity,_ the second that although it be spiritual activity,
-_yet it is not in any way distinguishable from the already recognized
-theoretic form of the spirit._ The second, so to speak, denies to it
-specific, the first generic character.
-
-[Sidenote: _The practical as a fact of unconsciousness._]
-
-Those who maintain the first of these theses say:--We are unconscious
-of the will at the moment of willing and during its real development.
-This consciousness is only attained after one has willed, that is to
-say, after the volitional act has been developed. Even then, we are not
-conscious of the will itself, but of our representation of the will.
-Therefore the will, that is to say the practical activity, is not an
-activity of the spirit. Since it is unconscious, it is nature and not
-spirit. The theoretic activity which follows it is alone spiritual.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique._]
-
-Were we, however, to allow this argument to pass, the result would be
-that none of the activities of the spirit would belong to the spirit,
-that they would all be unconscious and all, therefore, nature. Indeed,
-the activity of the artist, at the moment when he is really so, that
-is to say in what is called the moment of artistic creation, is not
-conscious of itself: it becomes conscious only afterwards, either in
-the mind of the critic or of the artist who becomes critic of himself.
-And it has also often been said of the activity of the artist, that it
-is unconscious; that it is a natural force, or madness, fury, divine
-inspiration. _Est Deus in nobis_; and we only become conscious of the
-divinity that burns and agitates us when the agitation is ceasing and
-cooling begun. But what of the activity of the philosopher? It may
-seem strange, but it is precisely the same with the philosopher. At
-the moment in which he is philosophizing, he is unconscious of his
-work; in him is God, or nature; he does not reflect upon his thought,
-but thinks; or rather the thing thinks itself in him, as a microbe
-living in us nourishes itself, reproduces itself and dies: so that
-sometimes the philosopher has also seemed to be seized with madness.
-The consciousness of his philosophy is not in him at that moment; but
-it is in the critic and in the historian, or indeed in himself a moment
-after, in so far as he is critic and historian of himself. And will the
-critic or the historian at least be conscious? No, he will not be so
-either, because he who will afterwards criticize the historico-critical
-work is conscious of it, or he himself, in so far as he criticizes
-himself, and by objectifying himself occupies a place in the history of
-criticism and of historiography. In short, we should never be conscious
-in any form of the spiritual activity.
-
-But this negation is founded on a false idea of consciousness:
-spontaneous is confused with reflex consciousness, or that which is
-intrinsic to one activity with that which is intrinsic to another,
-which surpasses the first and makes of it its object. In such a
-sense we can certainly not be conscious of the will, save in the
-representation which follows it, as we are not conscious of a poem,
-save at the moment of criticizing it. But there is also consciousness
-in the act itself of him who reads or composes a poem, and he "is
-conscious" (there is no other expression) of its beauty and of its
-ugliness, of how the poem should and of how it should not be. This
-consciousness is not critical, but is not therefore less real and
-efficacious, and without it internal control would be wanting to the
-formative act of the poet. Thus also there is consciousness in the
-volitional and practical act as such: we are not aware of this act
-in a reflex manner, but we feel, or, if you will, we possess it.
-Without it there would be no result. It is therefore developed in
-moments or alternatives of happiness and of unhappiness, of well-being
-and of malaise, of satisfaction and of remorse, of pleasure and of
-pain. If this be unconsciousness, we must say that unconsciousness is
-consciousness itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Nature and practical activity._]
-
-The practical activity may appear to be nature in respect of the
-theoretical, but not as something without the spirit and opposed to
-it, but as a form of the spirit opposed to another form, esthetic
-contemplation has in like manner, as has already been mentioned,
-appeared to be a natural force creating the world of intuition, which
-the philosophical activity of man afterwards understands and recreates
-logically. Hence art can be called nature (and has indeed been so
-called), and conversely philosophy has been called spirituality. This
-gives rise to the further problem: whether it be correct to consider
-nature (it is convenient so to call it) that which has afterwards
-been recognized in substance as spiritual activity; or whether the
-concept and the name of spirit should not be reserved for that which
-is truly altogether outside the spirit, and whether this something
-placed altogether outside the spirit truly exists. This point does
-not concern us here, although we are much disposed to admit that
-one of the mainstays of that absurd conception of nature as of the
-extra-spiritual is precisely the practical or volitional form of the
-spirit, so conspicuously different from the theoretical form and from
-the sub-forms of the same. We do not therefore hold those philosophers
-to have been so completely in the wrong, who have identified nature and
-will, for they have thus at any rate discovered one aspect of the truth.
-
-[Sidenote: _Reduction of the practical form to the theoretical._]
-
-Passing to the second thesis, which does not place the will outside
-the spirit, but denies to it the distinction between practical and
-the theoretical forms and affirms that the will is thought, there is
-nothing to be objected to it, provided that, as is often the case,
-"thought" be taken as synonymous with "spirit." In this case, as in
-that where it is affirmed that art is thought, we need only inquire,
-what form of thought is the will, as in the other what form of thought
-is art. It is not, for instance, logical or historical thought, and
-the will is neither imaginative, logical nor historical thought: if
-anything, it must be _volitional thought._
-
-But we have the genuine form of this thesis in the affirmation that
-the will is the intelligence itself, that to will is to know, and that
-action practically well conducted is truth. This thesis would not have
-arisen, had it not found support in the real situation of things (and
-what this support is will be seen when studying the relation of the
-practical with the theoretic activity, and the complicated process of
-deliberation). But, when tested here independently, it proves to be
-unsustainable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique._]
-
-We must not oppose to it the usual observations as to the lack of
-connection between great intellectual and great volitional development,
-or the cases of those theoreticians who are practically quite
-ineffectual, of philosophers who are bad governors of States, of the
-"very learned" who are not "men" and the like; for the reason already
-given, that an observation is not a philosophical argument, but a
-fact which itself has need of an explanation, and when this has been
-done, it may serve as proof of the philosophical theory, but can never
-be substituted for it. But it is well to recall to memory the quite
-peculiar character of the will and the practical activity in respect
-of knowledge, intellectual light is cold, the will is hot. When we
-pass from theoretic contemplation to action and to the practical, we
-have almost the feeling of generating, and sons are not made with
-thoughts and words. With the greatest intellectual clearness, we yet
-remain inert, if something does not intervene that rouses to action,
-something analogous to the inspiration that makes run a shiver of joy
-and of voluptuousness through the veins of the artist. If the will
-be not engaged, every argument, however plausible it may seem, every
-situation, however clear, remains mere theory.
-
-The education of the will is not effected with theories or definitions,
-æsthetic or historical culture, but with the exercise of the will
-itself. We teach how to will as we teach how to think, by fortifying
-and intensifying natural dispositions, by example, which suggests
-imitation, by difficulties to be solved (practical problems), by
-rousing energetic initiative and by disciplining it to persist. When
-an act of will has taken place, no argument will extinguish it. As an
-illness is not to be cured with reasons, so an affective and volitional
-state cannot be altered by these means. Reasoning and knowledge may
-and certainly do assist, but they do not constitute the ultimate and
-determining moment. The will alone acts upon the will, not in the sense
-that the will of one individual can act upon that of another (which
-is merely a fact among the facts perceived by him), but in the sense
-that the will of the individual himself, causing the previous volition
-to enter upon a crisis, dissolves it and substitutes for it a new
-practical synthesis, with a new volition.
-
-[Sidenote: _The practical as thought which realizes itself. Recognition
-of its autonomy._]
-
-The evident paradox of the thesis which identifies without any
-distinction thought and will, theory and practice, has caused it to
-be modified and to be produced in another form, expressed in the
-definition; that the will is thought in so far as it _is translated
-into act,_ thought in so far as it is _imprinted_ upon nature, thought
-when _held_ so _firmly_ before the mind as to _become action,_ and
-so on. Now it remains to determine what may be the relation between
-thought and will, and when this has been done, we shall see what
-is exact and what inexact in the above formulæ, of translating,
-imprinting, and holding fast. These formulæ are all logically vague,
-however imaginative they may be. But what is important to note here is
-that with the new turn given to the thesis that denies the peculiarity
-of the practical activity, this same peculiarity is unconsciously
-affirmed, because that transforming, that imprinting, that holding
-fast, which did not exist in the simple theory, conceal precisely the
-will. Thus the ultimate form of the negation comes to join hands with
-that of the affirmation, and we can consider undisputed the existence
-of a particular form of the spirit, which is the practical activity. We
-must now examine the relation of this form with the other from which it
-has been distinguished.
-
-
-[1] Allusion to a verse of Leopardi in _Canzone all' Italia._
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-NEGATION OF THE SPIRITUAL FORM OF FEELING
-
-[_Sidenote: The practical activity and the so-called third spiritual
-form: feeling._]
-
-In affirming the existence of the practical form of activity, we have
-had in view only the theoretical form and have demonstrated that
-the one cannot be absorbed and confused in the other, and we have
-referred only to the theoretic form, when announcing our intention of
-determining the relations of the practical with the other forms of the
-spirit. This seems but little correct, and in any case not exhaustive,
-because there are or may be other non-theoretical forms of the spirit,
-into which the practical form could be resolved. Of these it would be
-necessary to take account. And not to beat too long about the bush,
-that of which in this case it is question, is the form of _feeling,_
-the last or intermediary of the three forms into which it is customary
-to divide the spiritual activity: representation, feeling, tendency;
-thought, feeling, will. Attempts have not been wanting to reduce
-tendency or will to feeling, or, as is said, to a sentimental reaction
-from perceptions and thoughts. In fact there is hardly a treatise
-of philosophy of the practical without a preliminary study of the
-relations between the will and feeling. We cannot, then, escape from
-the dilemma; either we must recognize the omission into which we have
-fallen and hasten to correct it, or else make explicit the supposition
-that may be contained in that omission (which would thus be intentional
-and conscious), that _a third general form of the spirit, or a form of
-feeling, does not exist._ We have adopted precisely this last position,
-and it therefore becomes incumbent upon us briefly to expose the
-reasons for which we hold that the concept of feeling must disappear
-from the system of the spiritual forms or activities.
-
-[Sidenote: _Various meanings of the word feeling, as a psychological
-class._]
-
-Feeling may and has been understood in various ways, some of which do
-not at all concern our thesis. In the first place, the word "feeling"
-has been used to designate a class of psychical facts constructed
-according to the psychological and naturalistic method. Thus it
-has happened that, with various times and authors, all the most
-rudimentary, tenuous, and evanescent manifestations of the spirit have
-been called "feelings," slight intuitions (or sensations as they are
-called), not yet transformed into perceptions, slight perceptions,
-slight tendencies and appetites, in fact all that forms, as it were,
-the base of the life of the spirit. The name has thus, on the other
-hand, also been given to psychical processes and conditions, in which
-various forms follow one another or alternate in relation to a material
-empirically limited. Such are what are called feelings of "fatherland,"
-"love," "nature," "the divine." Nothing forbids the formation of such
-classes and the use of that denomination, but as has already been
-declared in relation to the psychological method, they are of no use
-to philosophy, which not only does not receive them within its limits,
-but does not occupy itself with them at all, save to reject them when
-they present themselves, as philosophical psychology or psychological
-philosophy. To classify is not to think philosophically, and philosophy
-on the one hand does not recognize criteria of small and great, of
-weak and strong, of more and of less, and a small or smallest thought,
-a small or smallest tendency, is for it thought and tendency and not
-feeling at all; on the other, it does not admit complicated processes
-without resolving these into their simple components. Thus the feeling
-of love or of patriotism, and the others made use of in the example,
-are revealed to philosophy as series of acts of thought and of will,
-variously interlaced. Let the psychologists, then, keep their classes
-and sub-classes of feeling. We, for our part, not only do not dream of
-di-possessing them of such a treasure, but shall continue to draw from
-it, when necessary, the small change of ordinary conversation.
-
-[Sidenote: _Feeling as a state of the spirit._]
-
-There also exists another meaning of the word "feeling," of which,
-at present at any rate, we do not take account. This appears when
-the word is used to designate _the state_ of the spirit or of one of
-the special forms of the spirit; we should indeed term these more
-correctly the _states,_ since the spirit in this case, as is known,
-is polarized in two opposite terms, usually denominated _pleasure and
-pain._ Indubitably these two terms can also be taken as psychological
-(and are thus included in the preceding case). Hence it results that
-pleasure and pain are represented by psychologists as the two extremes
-of a continuous series, in which there is a passage from the one to
-the other term by insensible increases and gradations. But we must
-also recognize that this psychological representation is not the only
-one possible, and indeed is not truly the real one, and that the two
-terms have their place and their proper meaning in the philosophy
-of the spirit. They are, as has been said, _opposites;_ and are
-differentiated, not only by a more and a less, by a greatest and a
-least, but also by the special character of distinction that opposites
-possess. The doctrine of opposites and of opposites in the practical
-activity of the spirit does not, however, appertain to this part of our
-exposition. In denying feeling, we do not here deny the doctrine of
-opposites, and that psychology of the _states_ of the spirit which is
-founded upon it, but the doctrine of feeling considered as a particular
-_form_ of _activity._
-
-[Sidenote: _Function of the concept of feeling in the History of
-philosophy; the indeterminate._]
-
-The conception of feeling as a spiritual activity has answered to a
-want of research, which may be described as _provisional excogitation._
-Whenever thought has found itself face to face with a form or subform
-of spiritual activity, which it was not possible either to eliminate
-or to absorb in forms already recognized, the problem to be solved
-has been endorsed with that word "feeling." With many this has passed
-for a solution. Feeling, in fact, has been the indeterminate in the
-history of philosophy, or rather the not yet fully determined, the
-_half-determined._
-
-Hence its great importance as an expedient for the indication of
-new territories to conquer, and as a stimulus against remaining
-obstinately shut up in old and insufficient formulæ. But hence also
-its fate: the problem must not be exchanged for its solution, the
-indeterminate or semi-determinate must be determined. Whenever the
-determination of the forms and sub-forms of the spirit has not been
-given in a complete manner, the category of feeling will reappear (and
-it will be beneficial); but at the same time will reappear the duty of
-exploring it and of understanding what is concealed beneath it, or at
-least what unsolved difficulty has caused it to reappear afresh.
-
-Now we have already met with the concept of feeling on more than one
-occasion, when investigating the philosophy of the theoretic spirit,
-as something supplying a theoretical need outside the theoretic forms
-generally admitted, or as a special form of theoretic activity. Every
-time that we have done this, an attentive examination has caused it
-to disappear before our eyes, and has generally helped us, either to
-discover something previously unknown, or to confirm the necessity of
-contested categories.
-
-[Sidenote: _Feeling as herald of the æsthetic form;_]
-
-Thus it happened that when a special _æsthetic_ function was
-not recognized and it was attempted to explain it, either
-intellectualistically, as nothing but an inferior form of philosophy,
-or historically, as a reproduction of the historical and natural datum,
-or almost as the satisfaction of certain volitional wants (hedonistic
-theory), the view of art as neither a form of the intellect nor of
-perception nor of will, but of _feeling,_ was an advance, as also
-was the appeal to men of _feeling_ to recognize and to judge it.
-As a result of this insistence, it was eventually discovered that
-art possessed an absolutely simple and ingenuous theoretic form,
-without either intellectual or historical contents, the form of the
-pure intuition which is that of the æsthetic and artistic activity.
-Whoever returns to treat of art as a product of feeling, after this
-discovery of the pure intuition, falls back from the determinate to the
-semi-determinate, and is at the mercy of all the dangers which arise
-from it.
-
-[Sidenote: _As herald of the intuitive element in Historiography._]
-
-The theory of historiography owes its progress in like manner to the
-demonstration that it is impossible to deduce the historical statement
-from concepts, but that we must deduce it in final analysis from an
-immediate _feeling_ of the real, that is to say, from the _intuitive_
-element, which inevitably exists in every historical reconstruction,
-as in every perception. On the other hand, and in altogether another
-sense, reacting against the false idea of an extra--subjective
-historical objectivity, to be found in the mere reproduction of the
-datum, it was made evident that no historical narration is possible
-without the _reaction of feeling_ in respect to the datum. Thus was
-discovered the indispensability of the _intellective_ element in the
-historical affirmation. Whoever has recourse to feeling as a factor
-in historiography, after this complete constitution of the historical
-judgment, returns from the clear to the confused, from light, if not to
-darkness, then to twilight.
-
-[Sidenote: _Feeling as herald of the pure concept in philosophical
-Logic._]
-
-The concept of feeling has also been of capital importance in the
-progress of the Logic of philosophy. For how could we begin to explain
-that philosophy is constructed with a method altogether different from
-that of the exact disciplines (natural sciences and mathematics),
-without denying to those sciences the capacity of conquering the
-supreme truth, the true truth, full reality, and recognizing such
-capacity on the other hand to a special function called _feeling_
-or _immediate_ knowledge? That function was void, that is to say,
-undetermined, because defined in a negative and not in a positive
-manner: feeling was something different from the abstract and arbitrary
-procedure of the exact sciences, from the abstract intellect, but its
-true nature was unknown. When this was at last known it was discovered
-that it was not a question of "feeling" or of "immediate knowledge,"
-but of the intellect itself, in its genuine and uncontaminated nature,
-its pure and free activity, of intellect as _reason,_ of thought as
-_speculative_ thought, of that "immediate knowledge," which is true,
-intrinsic, perpetual _mediation._ Whoever henceforth returns to
-feeling, after the discovery of the pure or speculative concept, and
-believes it to be the creator of philosophy and of religion, fighting
-with it against the natural and mathematical sciences, behaves as he
-who should wish to return to-day to the flint-lock, for the excellent
-reason that it was an advance upon the bow and the catapult. Thus those
-who invoke feeling in philosophy are henceforth a little ridiculous.
-This does not imply that they were not at one time to be taken
-seriously, for this concept has been of great provisional assistance
-and has been as it were the compass of the new idea of philosophy.
-
-[Sidenote: _Analogous function in the Philosophy of the practical._]
-
-The same will be the case in the investigation that we have begun of
-the practical form of the spirit and of the problems to which it gives
-rise. This concept of feeling has been mingled with them all, and
-propositions have been formed, of which we shall indicate the true
-significance in the proper places. Beginning at once and limiting
-ourselves solely to the question of the existence of a peculiar
-practical form, it is easy to understand why it has so often been
-maintained against the intellectual and theoretical exclusivists, that
-the will consists, not of knowledge, but of feeling; that the principle
-of action, far from being an intellectual principle, is sentimental
-emotion; that in order to produce a volition, reason, ideas, and facts
-perceived do not suffice, but that it is necessary that all these
-things be transformed into feelings, which must take possession of the
-soul; that the base of life lived, that is, of practical life, is not
-thought, but feeling, and so on. With these formulæ was recognized
-the peculiarity of the practical activity. The theory of feeling in
-respect of the practical represents progress as compared with the
-intellectualistic theory, because the appearance of indeterminateness
-is progress as compared with bad determinateness, and contains in
-itself the new and more complete determinateness.
-
-[Sidenote: _Negation of feeling._]
-
-But in this very way of ours of understanding the value of these
-formulæ, is implied their resolute negation, when they tend to
-persist, after having accomplished their function, and to maintain
-side by side with the theory of the practical a third general form
-of the spirit, namely feeling. No spiritual fact or manifestation of
-activity can be adduced, which, examined without superficiality, is
-not reducible to an act of fancy, intellect and perception, that is,
-of theory (when it is not at once revealed as an abstraction or as a
-merely psychological class of these acts); or to an act of utilitarian
-or ethical volition (when it is not here too a psychological class,
-variously designated as aspirations, passions, affections, and the
-like). Let him who will search his spirit and attempt to indicate one
-single act, differing from the above, as something new and original and
-deserving of the special denomination of feeling.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its deductive exclusion._]
-
-This constatation of fact (we repeat the warning) is but the first
-step in the complete philosophical demonstration, which demands that
-we show not only that a third form does not exist, but that _it cannot
-exist._ This demonstration will be given further on, and will coincide
-with that of the demonstration of the necessity of the two forms,
-theoretical and practical; a duality that is unity and a unity that is
-duality. Recognizing the legitimacy of the demand for a philosophical
-deduction of the forms of the spirit, and therefore of a deductive
-exclusion of those that are spurious and wrongly adopted, it seems that
-if it be somewhat delayed, such a mode of exclusion will also yield
-clearer results.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-RELATION OF THE PRACTICAL TO THE THEORETIC ACTIVITY
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Precedence of the theoretical activity._]
-
-Freed from the equivocal third term, which is feeling, and now passing
-to the problem of the relation between the theoretical and the
-practical activity enunciated, we must in the first place declare the
-thesis that _the practical activity presupposes the theoretical._ Will
-is impossible without knowledge; as is knowledge, so is will.
-
-[Sidenote: _The unity of the spirit and the co-presence of the
-practical._]
-
-In recognizing this precedence of knowledge to will, we do not wish to
-posit as thinkable a theoretical man or a theoretical moment altogether
-deprived of will. This would be an unreal abstraction, inadmissible
-in philosophy, which operates solely with real abstractions, that is,
-with universal concretes. The forms of the spirit are distinct and
-not separate, rand when the spirit is found in one of its forms, or
-is _explicit_ in it, the other forms are also in it, but _implicit,_
-or, as is also said, _concomitant._ If theoretical and cognoscitive
-man were not at the same time volitional, he would not even be able to
-stand on his feet and look at the sky, and, literally speaking, if he
-were not alive, he would not be able to think (and thinking is both
-an act of life and an act of will, which is called _attention)._ Were
-he not to will, he would be unable to pass from waking to sleep and
-from sleep to waking. Thus in order to be purely theoretical, it is
-necessary to be at the same time in some degree practical; the energy
-of pure fancy and of pure thought springs from the trunk of volition.
-Hence the importance of the will for the æsthetic and intellectual
-life; the will is not theory, nor is it the force that makes grain to
-grow or guides the course of rivers, but as it assists the culture of
-grain or restrains the destructive impetus of rivers, so it assists and
-restrains the force of fancy and of thought, causing them to act in
-the best way, that is, to be as they really ought to be, namely, fancy
-and thought in their purest manifestation. The practical activity,
-therefore, acts in this way, and as it drags the man of science from
-his study and the artist from his studio, if it be necessary to defend
-his country or to watch at the bedside of his sick father, so it
-commands the artist and the man of science to fulfil their special
-mission and to be themselves in an eminent degree.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of pragmatism._]
-
-All the arguments that have been used in the past and that are used in
-the present, to maintain the dependence of the theoretical upon the
-practical activity, are of value for what of truth they contain, that
-is, only to demonstrate this unity of the spiritual functions that
-we have recognized, and the indispensability of the volitional force
-for the health of the cognoscitive spirit. But the passage from this
-thesis to the other, that the true is the production of the will, is
-nothing but a sophism, founded on the double signification of the word
-"production." It should be clear that to _assist_ the work of thought
-with the will is one thing and that to _substitute_ the will for the
-work of thought is another. To claim to substitute the will for the
-work of thought, is equivalent to the negation of that force that
-should be assisted; it is the most open proclamation of scepticism,
-the most complete distrust of the true and of the possibility of
-attaining to it. This attempt is now called _pragmatism,_ or is at
-any rate one of the meanings of the word, with which the school of
-the greatest confusion that has ever appeared in philosophy adorns
-itself in our day. This school mixes together the most divergent
-theses--that of the stimulating effect that the will has upon thought,
-that other of the volitional or arbitrary moment, by means of which
-perceptions and historical data are reduced to abstract types in the
-natural disciplines, or postulates laid down for the construction
-of mathematical classes. The third form, which might be called the
-Baconian prejudice, maintains the exclusive utility of the natural
-sciences and mathematics for the well-being of life. The fourth
-thesis is positivistic: here it is maintained that we cannot know
-anything save what we ourselves arbitrarily compress into the formula
-and classes of mathematics and of naturalism. The fifth thesis is
-a romantic exaggeration of the principle of creative power in man,
-substituting the caprice of the individual for the universal spirit.
-The sixth, something between silliness and Jesuistry, recommends
-the utility of making one's illusions and believing them to be
-true. The seventh is superstitious, occultist and spiritistic--and
-there are others that we omit. If pragmatism has had and preserves
-any attraction, it owes this to the truth of its first and second
-theses and to the half truth of the fifth. All the three are however
-heterogeneous in themselves and unreconcilable with the others, which
-are most fallacious. But we repeat with the old philosophers that
-whoever in thinking says, "Thus I will it," is lost for truth.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of psychological objections._]
-
-Certain reservations that are made to the above truth from the point
-of view of that philosophy, which we have called psychological, are
-scarcely deserving of brief mention. We find in treatises of Psychology
-that knowledge does precede the practical act, but only in the higher
-forms of volition, whereas in its lower forms are found only impulses,
-tendencies, appetites, altogether blind of any knowledge. Thus they
-are able to talk of involuntary forms of the practical activity, of
-a will that is not a will, when once the true will has been defined,
-as precisely appetition illumined by previous knowledge. The _blind
-will_ of certain metaphysicians is derived from such excogitations of
-psychologists, who make of it a practical act without intelligence.
-They have here attributed the value of reality to a crude concept of
-class, a thing that happens not infrequently. A blind will is however
-unthinkable. Every form of the practical activity, be it as poor and
-rudimentary as you like (and let as many classes and gradations as you
-will be formed), presupposes knowledge of some sort. In animals too?
-will be asked. In animals too, provided they be, and in so far as they
-are centres of life, and so of perceptions and of will. This is also
-true of vegetables and of minerals, always with the above hypothesis.
-We must banish every form of _aristocracy_ from the Philosophy of the
-practical, as we have banished it from Æsthetic, from Logic, from
-Historic, esteeming it most harmful to the proper understanding of
-those activities. The aristocratic illusion is closely allied to that
-one which makes us believe that we, shut up in the egotism of our
-empirical individuality, are alone aware of the truth, that we alone
-feel the beautiful, that we alone know how to love, and so on. But
-reality is democratic.
-
-From the psychological point of view yet another objection has been
-raised. Knowledge (it is affirmed) cannot be the indispensable base of
-the will, if, as is the case, the ignorant are often far more effective
-than many learned men and philosophers. These latter, they say,
-although possessing very great knowledge, and no less a stock of good
-intentions, yet do not know how to direct their lives successfully.
-But it is evident that in these cases the so-called ignorant possess
-just that knowledge which is necessary for the purpose and is lacking
-to the learned and to the philosopher, who would themselves be the
-ignorant in such a case. Nicholas Macchiavelli was ignorant as compared
-with Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, when he kept the spectators waiting two
-hours in the sun, while he was attempting to dispose three thousand
-infantry according to the directions that he had written. This he would
-never have succeeded in doing, had not Signor Giovanni, with the help
-of drummers and in the twinkling of an eye caused them to execute the
-various manœuvres and afterwards carried Master Nicholas to dine, who,
-save for him, would not have dined at all that day.[1]
-
-[Sidenote: _Nature of the theoretical precedence of the practical:
-historical knowledge._]
-
-The knowledge required for the practical act is not that of the artist,
-nor of the philosopher, or rather, it is these two also, but only in so
-far as both are to be found as elements co-operating in that ultimate
-and complete knowledge which is _historical._ If the first be called
-intuition, the second concept, and the third perception, and the third
-be looked upon as the result of the two preceding, it will be said
-that the knowledge required for the practical act is _perceptive._
-Hence the common saying that praises the sure eye of the practical man;
-hence, too, the close bond between historical sense and practical and
-political sense; hence, too, the justifiable diffidence of those who,
-unable to grasp effectual reality, hope to attain to it by force of
-mere syllogisms and abstractions, or believe that they have attained to
-it, when they have erected an imaginary edifice. They prove by so doing
-that they can never be practical men, at least in the sphere of action
-at which they are then aiming.
-
-Such knowledge is not of itself the practical act. The historian as
-such is a contemplative, not a practical man or politician. If that
-spark which is volition, do not spring forth, the material of knowledge
-does not catch fire and is not transformed into the material of the
-practical. But that knowledge is the condition, and if the condition
-be not the conditioned, yet one cannot have the conditioned without
-the condition. In this last signification, it is true that action
-is knowledge, will, and wisdom, that is to say, in the sense that
-willing and acting presuppose knowledge and wisdom. In this sense, and
-considered solely in the stage of the cognoscitive investigation which
-will form the base of action, the deliberation is a theoretical fact.
-The customary expressions of logical, rational, judicious actions,
-are metaphors, because action may be weak or energetic, coherent or
-incoherent; but it will not have those predicates which are proper to
-theoretical acts that precede actions, on which the metaphors aforesaid
-are founded. As are these acts, so originate the practical act, will,
-and action. We can act in so far as we have knowledge. Volition is not
-the surrounding world which the spirit perceives; it is a beginning,
-a new fact. But this fact has its roots in the surrounding world,
-this beginning is irradiated with the colours of things that man has
-perceived as a theoretical spirit, before he took action as a practical
-spirit.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its continual changeability._]
-
-It is important to observe, as much to prevent an equivoke into which
-many fall, as because of the consequences that will follow from holding
-it, that we must not look upon the perceptive knowledge of reality
-that surrounds us as a firm basis, upon which we act, by translating
-the formed volition into act. For were this so, we should have to
-assume that the surrounding world, perceived by the spirit, stops after
-the perceptive act, which is not the case. That world changes every
-second, the perceptive act perceives the new and the different, and the
-volitional act changes according to that real and perceived change.
-Perception and volition alternate every instant; in order to will, we
-must touch the earth at every instant, in order to resume force and
-direction.
-
-[Sidenote: _No other theoretic precedent._]
-
-Continuous perception and continuous change, that is the necessary
-theoretic condition of volition. It is necessary and unique. No other
-theoretical element is needed, because every other is contained in it,
-and beyond it no other is thinkable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of concepts and practical judgments._]
-
-But if this be true and no other theoretic element save that precede
-the volition, then we find in the aforesaid theory the criticism of a
-series of other theories, generally admitted in the Philosophy of the
-practical, not less than in ordinary thought, none of which can be
-retained without alterations and corrections.
-
-Or better, there are not so many various theories to criticize; there
-is rather one theory, which presents itself under different aspects and
-assumes various names. This theory consists substantially in affirming
-that with the complex of cognitions, of which we have hitherto treated
-(all of which are summed up in the historical judgment), we do not
-yet possess that one which is necessary, before we can proceed to
-volition and action. A special form of concepts and judgments which
-can be called _practical,_ must, it is said, appear; these render
-the will possible, by interposing themselves between the previous
-merely historical judgment and the will. Is it not indubitable that we
-possess practical concepts, that is, concepts of classes of action or
-of supreme guides to action, concepts of things _good, of ideals, of
-ends,_ and that we effect _judgments_ of value by the application of
-those concepts to the image of given actions? Is it not indubitable
-that those judgments and those concepts refer, not to the simple
-present fact, but to the future? How could we will, if we did not know
-what is good to will, and that a given possible action corresponds to
-that concept of good?
-
-[Sidenote: _Posteriority of judgments to the practical act._]
-
-Now it is undeniable that we in fact possess the above-mentioned
-concepts and judgments. But what we must absolutely deny is that they
-differ in any respect from other concepts and theoretical judgments,
-and that they deserve to be distinguished from these as practical and
-that they have the future for their object. The future, that which
-is not, is not an object of knowledge; the material of the judgment,
-whether it concern actions or thoughts, does not alter its logical and
-theoretical character; the concepts of modes of action are concepts
-neither more nor less than those of modes of thought. With this
-negation we at the same time deny the possibility of their interposing
-themselves between knowledge and will. Those judgments, far from being
-anterior to the will, are posterior to it.
-
-Let us state a simple case and observe the course of analysis on
-the lines of the theory here criticized. It is winter-time; I am
-cold; there is a wood close by, and I know that by cutting wood one
-can light a fire and that fire gives heat: I therefore resolve to
-cut wood. According to that theory, the spiritual process would be
-expressed in the following chain of propositions: I know the actual
-situation, that is to say, that I am cold, that wood gives fire and
-fire heat, and that there exists wood that can be cut; I possess the
-concept that it is a good thing to provide for the health of the body;
-I judge that with heat I shall procure health during the winter, and
-that in consequence heat is a good thing and the cutting of wood,
-without which I cannot procure heat, is also good. Having made all
-these constatations, I set in motion the spring of my will, and I
-_will_ to cut the wood.--The process as above described seems real
-and controllable by every one; but it is, on the contrary, illusory.
-The practical judgment: "I shall act well in cutting the wood" really
-means, "I will to cut the wood;" "this is a good thing" really means,
-"I will this." I may change my will a moment after, substituting for
-this volition one that is different or contrary, that does not matter.
-At the moment that I formed that judgment, I must have seen myself
-in the volitional attitude of a man cutting wood; the will must have
-come first. Otherwise the judgment would never have existed. Given the
-first actual situation and its complete expression in the judgment, no
-other judgment can arise, if the actual situation do not change and
-nothing new supervene. This new thing is always my will, which, when
-the situation changes (as in the example, if I walk from the house to
-the tree, or if I simply move my body in an imperceptible, manner in
-the direction of the action willed), by adding to the actual reality
-something that was not there before, provides material for a new
-judgment. This judgment is called practical, but it is theoretical,
-like the others that precede it; a judgment believed to precede the
-volition, whereas in reality it follows it; a judgment believed to
-condition a future act of will, whereas it is in reality the past act
-of will looking at itself in the glass; a judgment that is not really
-practical but _historical._
-
-The illusion that things happen differently is caused by the fact
-that we possess judgments concerning our past volitions, which are
-afterwards collected into abstract formulæ, such as that "it is well
-to cut wood." But, on the one hand, those formulæ and judgments are
-in their turn formed from previous volitions, and on the other, those
-formulæ do not possess any absolute value in the single and concrete
-situation, so that they can be modified and substituted for others that
-affirm the opposite. The question is not whether cutting wood has been
-as a rule a good thing for me in the past, nor whether I have generally
-willed it in the past: the question is to will it at this moment, that
-is, to posit the cutting of wood at this moment as a good thing.
-
-[Sidenote: _Posteriority of the practical concepts._]
-
-As is the case with the pretended practical judgments and concepts of
-classes formed upon them, so the concepts that they imply, of _things
-good, of ideals, of ends, of actions worthy of being willed,_ and so
-on, do not precede, but follow the volition that has taken place. These
-concepts are the incipient reflection, scientific and philosophical,
-upon the spontaneous acts of the will, and we cannot practise science
-nor philosophize save about facts that have already taken place: if
-the fact do not precede, there can be no theory. Certainly theory
-does not do other than seek out the already created and give the
-real principles of actions in the form of thought principles, in
-the same manner as Logic discovers those principles that live and
-operate in logical thought. But since the formula of the principle of
-contradiction is not necessary for thinking without contradiction, but
-presupposes it, so the concepts of ends, of things good, and of ideals
-are not necessary for volitions, but presuppose them.
-
-[Sidenote: _Origin of intellectualist and sentimentalist doctrines._]
-
-The thesis of the will as knowledge draws support from the mistaken
-belief in the practical principles and judgments that precede volition,
-as also does the proposition that he who knows what is good for him
-also wishes it, and that he who does not wish it does not know it.
-This thesis is to be inverted, because to know what is good for one
-means that one has willed it. From the opposite point of view, the
-other thesis, of the impossibility of volition unless _feeling_ be
-interposed between what is known and the will, is to be attributed to a
-like mistaken belief. Feeling is held to give, as it were, a particular
-value to facts, and to cause them to be felt as they should be felt, or
-to be changed. The customary merit possessed by theories of feeling is
-to be recognized in this thesis: that is to say, it has awakened or
-reawakened consciousness of the peculiarity of the practical act in
-respect to intellectualistic reductions and identifications. This merit
-is not altogether lacking to the general theory of practical judgments
-itself. These, although called judgments, were classified differently
-to all the others, precisely because they were _practical._
-
-[Sidenote: _The concepts of end and means._]
-
-Having thus shown that it is not true that man first knows the end
-and then wills it, it is possible to establish with greater precision
-what is to be understood by _end._ The end, then, in universal, is the
-concept itself of will. Considered in the single act, as this or that
-end, it is nothing but this or that determinate volition. Hence is
-also to be derived a better definition of its relation to the _means,_
-which it is usual to conceive empirically and erroneously as a part of
-volition and action at the service of another part. An act of will is
-an infrangible unity and can be taken as divided only for practical
-convenience. In the volitional act, all is volition; nothing is means,
-and all is end. The means is nothing but the actual situation, from
-which the volitional act takes its start, and is in that way really
-distinguished from the end. Distinction and unification take place
-together, because, as has been remarked, the volition is not the
-situation, yet, on the other hand, as the volition, so the situation:
-the one varies as a function of the other. Hence the absurdity of
-the maxim, that _the end justifies the means._ This maxim is of an
-empirical character and has sometimes been employed to justify actions
-erroneously held to be unjustifiable, and more often to make pass as
-just actions that were unjustifiable. As the end, so the means, but the
-means is what is given and has no need of justification. The end is
-what has been willed and must be justified in itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the end as flan or as fixed design._]
-
-The idea that we generally have of finality is to be eliminated, owing
-to the continual changeability of the means, that is, of the actual
-situation, which would posit the end as something fixed, as a _plan_
-to be carried out. The difference between the finality of man and that
-of nature has recently been made to reside in nature: which has seemed
-to act upon a plan which she changes, remakes, and accommodates at
-every moment, according to contingencies, so that the point of arrival
-is not for her predetermined or predeterminable. But the same can be
-said of the human will and of its finality. The will too changes at
-every moment, as the movement of a swimmer or of an athlete changes
-at every moment, according to the motion of the sea or of the rival
-athlete, and according to the varying measure or quality of his own
-strength in the course of the volitional process. Man acts, case for
-case and from instant to instant, realizing his will of every instant,
-not that abstract conception which is called a plan. Hence also arises
-the confirmation of the belief that there do not exist fixed types and
-models of actions. He who seeks and awaits such models and types does
-not know how to will. He is without that initiative, that creativeness,
-that genius, which is not less indispensable to the practical activity
-than to art and philosophy.
-
-[Sidenote: _The will and the unknown._]
-
-It will seem that the will thus becomes will of the unknown and is
-at variance in too paradoxical a manner with the sayings, so clearly
-evident, that _voluntas quae non fertur in incognitum_ and _ignoti
-nulla cupido._ But those sayings are true only so far as they confirm
-the fact that without the precedence of the theoretical act, the
-practical act does not take place. Apart from this signification, it
-should rather be maintained that _noti nulla cupido_ and that _voluntas
-non fertur in cognitum._ What is known exists, and it is not possible
-to _will the existence_ of what _exists_: the past is not a content
-of volition. The will is the will of the unknown, that is to say,
-is itself, which, in so far as it wills, does not know itself, and
-knows itself only when it has ceased to will. Our surprise when we
-come to understand the actions that we have accomplished, is often
-not small; we realize that we have not done what we thought we had
-done, and have on the contrary done what we had not foreseen. Hence
-also the fallacy of the explanations that present volitional man as
-surrounded with things that he does or does not will; whereas things,
-or rather facts are the mere object of knowledge and cannot be willed
-or not willed, as it is unthinkable to will that Alexander the Great
-had not existed, or that Babylon had not been conquered. That which is
-willed is not _things_ but _changes_ in things, that is to say, the
-volitions themselves. This fallacious conception also arises from the
-substitution of abstractions and classes of volitions for the real will.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the concept of practical sciences and of a
-practical philosophy._]
-
-It is to be observed, finally, that the erroneous concept of a form
-of science called the _practical_ or _normative_ has its roots in the
-concept of _the end, of the good, of concepts and judgments of value_
-as original facts. When practical concepts and judgments, as a special
-category of concepts and judgments, have been destroyed, the idea
-of a practical and normative science has also been destroyed. For
-this reason, the _Philosophy of the practical_ cannot be _practical
-philosophy,_ and if it has appeared to constitute an exception
-among all philosophies and that above all others it should preserve
-a practical and normative function, this has arisen from a verbal
-misunderstanding that is most ingenuous and most destructive. For
-our part we have striven to dissipate it, even in the title of our
-treatise, which, contrary to the usual custom, we have-entitled not
-_practical,_ but _of the practical._
-
-
-[1] Bandello, _Novelle,_ i. 40, intro.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-INSEPARABILITY OF ACTION FROM ITS REAL BASE AND PRACTICAL NATURE OF THE
-THEORETICAL ERROR
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Coincidence of intention and volition._]
-
-
-The connection between the actual situation and will, means and
-end having been made clear, no distinction that it may be desired
-to establish between general and concrete volition, ideal and real
-volition, that is to say between _intention and volition,_ is
-acceptable. Intention and volition coincide completely, and that
-distinction, generally suggested with the object of justifying the
-unjustifiable, is altogether arbitrary in both the forms that it
-assumes.
-
-[Sidenote: _Volition in the abstract and in the concrete: critique._]
-
-The first form is that of the distinction between abstract and
-concrete, or better, between general and particular. It is maintained,
-that we can will the good in the abstract and yet be unable to will
-it in the concrete, that we may have good intentions and yet behave
-badly. But by our reduction of the thing willed to the volition,
-to will the abstract is tantamount to _willing abstractly._ And to
-will abstractly is tantamount to _not willing,_ if volition imply a
-situation historically determined, from which it arises as an act
-equally determined and concrete. Hence, of the two terms of the
-pretended distinction, the first, volition of the abstract, disappears,
-and the second, concrete volition, which is the true and real volition
-and intention, alone remains.
-
-[Sidenote: _Thought volition and real volition: critique._]
-
-The second form abandons, it is true, the abstract for the concrete,
-but assumes two different volitional acts in the same concrete: the
-one real, arising from the actual situation, the other, thought or
-imagined, side by side with the former: this would be the volition,
-that the intention. According to such a theory, it is always possible
-to _direct the intention,_ that is, the real volition can always join
-with the volitional act imagined and produce a nexus, in which the
-volition exists in one way, the intention in another; the first bad
-and the second good, or the first good and the second bad. Thus the
-honourable man approved by the Jesuit, of whom Pascal speaks, although
-he desire the death of him from whom he expects an inheritance and
-rejoice when it takes place, yet endows his desire with a special
-character, believing that what he wishes to attain is the prosperity
-of his affairs, not the death of his fellow-creature. Or the same man
-may kill the man who has given him a blow; but in so doing he will fix
-his thought upon the defence of his honour, not upon the homicide.
-Since he is not able to abstain from the action, he at least (they say)
-purines the intention. The worst of this is that the real situation,
-the only one of which we can take account, is the historical, not the
-imaginary situation. In the reality of the consequent volition, it is
-not a question of his own prosperity and nothing more, but of his own
-prosperity coupled with the death of another, or of false prosperity.
-It is not a question of his own honour and nothing more, but of his own
-honour in conjunction with the violation of the life of another, that
-is, of false honour. Thus the asserted fact of prosperity and honour
-is changed into two qualified bad actions, and what was honourable
-in the imaginary case, becomes dishonourable in the real case, which
-is indeed the only one of which it is question. It is of no use to
-imagine a situation that differs from reality, because it is to the
-real situation that the intention is directed, not to the other, and
-therefore it is not possible to direct, that is to say, to change the
-intention, if the actual situation do not change.
-
-The antipathy that has been shown for good-hearted and well-intentioned
-men in recent centuries, and for practical doctrines with intention
-as their principle (the morality of intention, etc.), arises from the
-sophisms that we have here criticized. But since it is henceforward
-clear to us that those so-called well-intentioned and good-hearted
-people have neither good hearts nor good intentions and are nothing
-but hypocrites, and because we do not admit any distinction between
-intention and will, we are without fear or antipathy in respect to
-the use of the word "intention," understanding it as a synonym for
-"volition."
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of volition with base either unknown or
-imperfectly known._]
-
-But it will be said that we have here considered the case, in which,
-while the real situation is known, there is a hypocritical pretence
-of not knowing it, in order to deceive others and maybe oneself, and
-that we have justly here declared that in such a case the will and
-the intention were inseparable. But there is another case, in which,
-though the situation of affairs be not known, yet it is necessary both
-to will and to act at once. Here the concrete will is separated at
-the beginning from the intention: the will is what it _can_ be, the
-intention is as the action _would wish_ to be.
-
-But this instance is equally or even more inconceivable than the
-preceding. It has been clearly established that if we do not know, we
-cannot will. Before arriving at a resolution, man tries to see clearly
-in and about him, and so long as the search continues, so long as the
-doubt is not dissipated, the will remains in suspense. Nothing can
-make him resolve, where the elements for coming to a resolution are
-wanting; nothing can make him say to himself "I know," when he does not
-know; nothing can make him say "it will be as if I knew," because that
-"as if I knew" would introduce the arbitrary method into the whole of
-knowledge, and would cause universal doubt to take the place of doubt
-circumscribed. This would disturb the function of knowledge itself,
-against which an act of real felony would be committed. From nothing
-nothing is born.
-
-[Sidenote: _Illusions among the cases that are cited._]
-
-There are no exceptions to this law, and those that are adduced can be
-only apparent. A man is cautiously descending the dangerous side of
-a mountain, covered with ice: will he or will he not place his foot
-on that surface, of which he does not and cannot know the resistance?
-However, there is no time to be lost: he must go on and take the risk.
-It seems evident that in a case like this he wills and operates without
-complete knowledge. But the case is not indeed unique or of a special
-order: every act of life implies risk of the unknown, and if there were
-not in us (as they say) _potestas voluntatem nostram extra limites
-intellectus nostri extendendi,_ it would be impossible to move a step,
-to lift an arm, or to put into one's mouth a morsel of bread, since
-_omnia incerta ac periculis sunt plena._ What must be known in order
-to form the volition is not that which we should know if we were in a
-situation different from that in which we are (in which case, also,
-the volition would be different), but that which we can know in the
-situation in which we really find ourselves. The man on the glacier has
-neither time nor means to verify the resistance of the surface of the
-ice; but since he is obliged to proceed further, he does not act in a
-rash, but in a very prudent manner, in putting his foot trustfully on
-the ice that may be unfaithful to him. He would be acting rashly if,
-having the means and the time, he failed to investigate its resistance,
-that is to say, if he were in _another and imaginary situation,_ not
-in that real and present situation, in which he finds himself. If I
-knew the cards of my adversary, as the cheat knows them, I should
-play differently, but it cannot be argued that because, as an honest
-player, I know only my own, I am therefore playing inconsiderately: I
-am playing as I ought, with the knowledge that I possess, that is, with
-full knowledge of the real situation in which I find myself.
-
-With this very simple observation is also solved an old puzzle of
-the theory of volition. How does it happen that a man can choose
-between two dishes of food at an equal distance and moving in the
-same manner,[1] or between two objects altogether identical, offered
-for sale to him at the same time, at the same price, by the same
-individual? First, we must correct the hypothesis, for as two identical
-things do not exist in nature, so the two objects in question and the
-two possible actions of the example are not identical.
-
-[1] This was an example used by the Schoolmen and by Dante.
-
-Indeed the refined connoisseur always discovers some difference between
-two objects, which to the ignorant, the absent-minded, and the hasty
-seem to be the same. The question, then, is not of identical objects
-and actions, but of those as in which there is neither time nor mode
-(_majora premunt_) of recognizing the difference. For this reason,
-therefore, we take no account of this difference, or, as is said,
-they are looked upon as equal in this respect. But the _adiophora,_
-the indifferent, do not exist, and owing to that abstraction, we do
-not take account of other differences that always exist in the real
-situation, owing to which my volition becomes concrete in a movement
-that causes me to take the object on my right, because (let us suppose)
-I am wont to turn to the right, or because, owing to a superstition
-that is not less a matter of habit, I prefer the right to the left,
-or because, through sympathy due to dignity, I prefer the object that
-is offered to me with the right hand to a similar object offered with
-the left, which, if only for this reason, is, strictly speaking, not
-the same, but different, and so on. These minute circumstances are
-absent from consciousness and are not felt by the will, not because
-they escape as a rule reflection. If we neglect them in analysis as
-non-existent, this always occurs, because we substitute for the real
-situation another unreal situation imagined by ourselves. Thus it has
-also been remarked, as a proof of the irrationality believed to exist
-in our volitions and to be the cause of our acting without precise
-knowledge, that no reason nor any theoretic precedent can be adduced
-as to why, when fixing legal punishments, or in the application of
-sentences, we give forty and not forty-one days' imprisonment, a
-hundred lire fine instead of a hundred and one. But here, too, it is
-clear that the detailed facts are not wanting, the knowledge of which
-causes us to will the punishment to be so and so. This knowledge is
-to be found in traditions, in the sympathy that we have for certain
-numbers, in the ease with which they can be remembered or calculated,
-and so on.--To sum up, man forms the volitional act, not because he
-possesses some portentous faculty of extending his will outside the
-limits of the intellect, but, on the contrary, because he possesses the
-faculty of circumscribing himself within the limits of his intellect
-on each occasion and of willing on that basis and within those limits.
-That he wills, knowing some things and ignorant of infinite other
-things, is indubitable. But this means that he is man and not God,
-that he is a finite and not an infinite being, and that the sum of his
-historical knowledge is on each occasion human and finite, as is on
-each occasion the act of will which he forms upon it. Psychologists
-would say that this arises from _narrowness_ of consciousness, but
-Goethe, on the contrary, remarked with metaphor more apt and thought
-more profound, that the true artist is revealed in _knowing how to
-limit himself._ God himself, as it seems, cannot act, save by limiting
-himself in finite beings.
-
-[Sidenote: _Impossibility of volition with a false theoretic base._]
-
-If the intention cannot be separated from the volition, because this
-belongs to the real and not to the imaginary, and proceeds from
-the known and never from the unknown, there yet remains a third
-possibility, which is, that the will results differently from the
-intention, owing to a _theoretical error_; as when we are said to
-err _in good faith_ as to the actual situation, that is, we do not
-indeed substitute the unknown for the known, nor do we substitute the
-imaginary for the known, but we simply make a mistake in enunciating
-the historical judgment to ourselves: intending to perform one action,
-we perform on the contrary another.
-
-This third possibility is also an impossibility, because it contradicts
-the nature of the theoretical error, which, precisely because it is a
-question of error and not of truth, cannot be in its turn theoretical
-and must be and is practical, conformably to a theory of error of which
-many great thinkers have seen or caught sight and which it is now
-fitting to restore and to make clear.
-
-[Sidenote: _Forms of the theoretical error and problem concerning its
-nature._]
-
-We have elsewhere amply demonstrated how theoretical errors arise
-from the undue transference of one theoretical form to another, or
-of one theoretical product into another distinct from it. Thus, the
-artist who substitutes for the representation of the affections,
-reasoning on the affections, mingling art and philosophy, or he who
-in the composition of a work, fills the voids that his fancy has left
-in the composition, with unsuitable elements taken from other works,
-commits the artistic error, ugliness. Thus too, the philosopher, who
-solves a philosophical problem in a fantastic way, as would an artist,
-or, instead of a philosopheme, employs the historical, naturalistic
-or mathematical method, and so produces a myth, or a contingent fact
-universalized, or an abstraction in place of concreteness, that is
-to say, a philosophical error. It is also a philosophical error to
-transport philosophical concepts from one order to another and to
-treat art as though it were philosophy or morality as though it were
-economy. This also happens in an analogous manner with the historian,
-the natural scientist, and the mathematician, all of whom are wrong, if
-they interweave extraneous methods with those that are their own, and
-with the views, conceptions, and classification of one order, those of
-another.--But if this be the way in which particular errors and general
-forms of theoretical error arise, what is the origin of the theoretical
-error in universal? We have not asked this question explicitly
-elsewhere, because only now can it receive the most effective reply.
-
-[Sidenote: _Distinction between ignorance and error: practical genesis
-of the latter._]
-
-Error is not ignorance, lack of knowledge, obscurity or doubt. An error
-of which we are altogether without consciousness is not error at all,
-but that inexhaustible field which the spiritual activity continues to
-fill to infinity. True and proper error is the affirmation of knowing
-what we do not know, the substitution of a representation for that
-which we do not possess, an extraneous conception for the one that
-is wanting. Now affirmation is thought itself, it is truth itself.
-When an inquiry has been completed, a process of cogitation closed,
-the result is the affirmation that a man makes to himself, not with
-a new act added to the foregoing, but with the act itself of thought
-that has thought. It is therefore impossible that in the circle of the
-pure theoretical spirit error should ever arise. Man has in himself
-the fountain of truth. If it be true that on the death-bed there is
-no lying, because man transcends the finite and communicates with
-the infinite, then man who thinks is always on his bed of death, the
-death-bed of the finite, in contact with the infinite. We may know that
-we are ignorant, but this consciousness of ignorance is the cogitative
-process in its _fieri,_ not yet having attained to its end, certainly
-not (as has been said) error. Before this last can appear, before
-we can affirm that we have reached a result, which the testimony of
-the conscience says has not been reached, something extraneous to
-the theoretical spirit must intervene, that is to say, a practical
-act which simulates the theoretical. And it simulates it, not indeed
-intrinsically (one does not lie with the depth of oneself or on one's
-death-bed), but in taking hold of the external means of communication,
-of the word or expression as sound and physical fact, and diverting
-it to mean what, in the given circumstances, it could not mean. The
-erroneous affirmation has been rendered possible, because something
-else has followed the true affirmation, which is purely theoretical,
-something that is improperly called affirmation in the practical sense,
-whereas it is only _communication,_ which can be substituted in a
-greater or less degree for the truth and falsely represent it. Thus the
-theoretical error _in general_ arises, as do its particular forms and
-manifestations, from the substitution for, or the illegitimate mating
-of two forms of the spirit. These cannot be both theoretical here, but
-must be the theoretical and the practical forms, precisely because we
-are here in the field of the spirit in general and of the fundamental
-forms of its activity. We are ignorant, then, because it is necessary
-to be ignorant and to feel oneself ignorant, in order to attain to
-truth; but we err only because _we wish to err._
-
-[Sidenote: _Proofs and confirmation._]
-
-Like all true doctrines, this of the practical nature of the
-theoretical error, which at first sight seems most strange (especially
-to professed philosophers), is yet found to be constantly confirmed
-in ordinary thought. For all know and all continually repeat that
-(immoderate) passions and (illegitimate) interests lead insidiously
-into error, that we err, to be quick and finish or to obtain for
-ourselves undeserved repose, that we err by acquiescence in old ideas,
-that is to say, in order not to allow ourselves to be disturbed in our
-repose that has been unduly prolonged, and so on. We do not mention
-those cases in which it is a question of solemn and evident lies,
-the brazen-faced manifestation of interests openly illegitimate. Let
-us limit ourselves to the modest forms of error, to the venial sins,
-because if these be proved to be the result of will, by so much the
-more will this be proved of the shameless forms, the deadly sins. It is
-also said that we err in _deafening_ ourselves and others with words,
-with the verse that sounds and does not create, with the brush that
-charms but does not express, with the formulæ that seem to contain a
-thought but contain the void. In this way we come to recognize that
-will has been rendered possible, owing to the communication being a
-practical fact, of which a bad use can be made by means of a volitional
-act. For the rest, if this were not so, what guarantee would truth
-ever possess? If it were possible to err even once in perfect good
-faith and that the mind should confuse true and false, embracing the
-false as true, how could we any longer distinguish the one from the
-other? Thought would be radically corrupt, whereas it is incorrupt and
-incorruptible.
-
-It is vain, therefore, to except the existence or the possibility of
-errors of good faith, because truth alone is of good faith, and error
-is always in a greater or less or least degree, of bad faith. Were
-this not so, it would be incorrigible, whereas it is by definition
-corrigible. Consequently, the last attempt to differentiate intention
-from volition fails, since it posits an intention that is frustrated in
-the volition, as the effect of a theoretical error, a good intention
-that becomes, through no fault of its own, a bad volition. The
-intention, being volition, takes possession of the whole volitional
-man, causing the intellect to be attentive and indefatigable in the
-search for truth, the soul ready to accept it, whatever it be, pure of
-every passion that is not the passion for truth itself, and eliminates
-the possibility, or assumes the responsibility of error.
-
-A proof of this is afforded by the fact that to exquisite and delicate
-souls, to consciences pure and dignified, even what are called their
-theoretical errors are a biting bitterness, and they blame themselves
-with them. On the other hand, in the presence of the foolish and the
-wicked, one is often in doubt as to whether their folly and wickedness
-come from the head or from the heart, whether it be madness rather
-than set purpose. The truth is that all this evil, which seems to
-arise from defective vision, comes really from the heart, for they
-have themselves forged those false views with their sophisms, their
-illegitimate internal affirmations and suggestions, that they may be
-more free in their evil inclinations, thus obtaining for themselves
-and for others a false moral _alibi._ We must applaud the former and
-exhort them to continue to persevere in their scruple, the condition
-of theoretical and practical health: we must inculcate to the second
-a return to themselves and the removal of the mask that they have
-assumed' as a disguise from themselves, before assuming it towards
-others.
-
-[Sidenote: _Justification of the practical repression of error._]
-
-A consequence of the principle established is the justification of the
-use of practical measures to induce those who err theoretically to
-correct themselves, castigating them, when this is of assistance, for
-admonition and example. It will be replied that these are measures of
-other times, and that we are now in an epoch of liberty, when their
-use is no longer permissible, and that we should now employ only the
-persuasive power of truth. But those who say this are without eyes to
-look within upon themselves. The Holy Inquisition is truly _holy_ and
-lives for that reason in its _eternal_ idea. The Inquisition that is
-dead was nothing but one of its contingent historical incarnations.
-And the Inquisition must have been justified and beneficial, if whole
-peoples invoked and defended it, if men of the loftiest souls founded
-and created it severely and impartially, and its very adversaries
-applied it on their own account, pyre answering to pyre. Thus Christian
-Rome persecuted heretics as Imperial Rome had persecuted Christians,
-and Protestants burned Catholics as Catholics had burned Protestants.
-If certain ferocious practices are now abandoned (are they definitely
-abandoned, or do they not persist in a different form?), we do not for
-that reason cease from practically oppressing those who promulgate
-errors. No society can dispense with this discipline, although the
-mode of its application is subject to practical, utilitarian and moral
-deliberation. We begin with man as a child, whose mental education is
-at once and above all practical and moral education, education for
-work and for sincerity (and no one has ever been seriously educated
-who has not received at the least a provident slap or two or had his
-ears pulled). This education is continued with the punishments for
-culpable negligence and ignorance threatened in the laws, and so on
-until we reach the spontaneous discipline of society, by means of which
-the artist who produces the ugly and the man of science who teaches
-the false are rebuked by the intelligent, or fall into discredit with
-them. Such illegitimate and transitory applause as they may sometimes
-obtain at the hands of the unintelligent and of the multitude is but
-a poor and precarious recompense for them. Literary and artistic
-criticism always has of necessity, and the more so the better it
-understands its office, a practical and moral aspect reconcilable with
-the purest æstheticity and theoreticity in the intrinsic examination of
-works.
-
-[Sidenote: _Empirical distinctions of errors and philosophical
-distinctions._]
-
-We certainly have good empirical reasons for distinguishing between
-errors of bad faith and errors of good faith, errors that are avoidable
-and errors that are unavoidable, pardonable and unpardonable,
-mortal and venial. No one would wish to deny that there is a wide
-difference between a slight distraction that leads to a wide erroneous
-affirmation, and such malice as gives rise to a small and almost
-imperceptible error, to a lie, which, externally considered, is almost
-harmless. We should be as indulgent in respect to the former as we are
-severe in respect to the latter. And from the empirical standpoint
-we should recommend in certain cases tolerance and indulgence in
-respect to the theoretical error, which should be looked upon rather
-as ignorance than as sin. We cannot but take count of all those
-affirmations, which, while they do not represent the firm security
-of the true, are yet offered as points of support, or as provisional
-affirmations, like those _tibicines,_ props or stakes, those bad verses
-that Virgil allowed to remain in the _Aeneid,_ with the intention of
-returning to them again. But it was needful to record the true bases
-of the theory of error against the illusions arising from empiricism,
-the more so since the general tendency of our times (for reasons that
-we need not here inquire into) has led to their not being recognized.
-Those bases are in the practical spirit, and the practical theory of
-error is one of the justified forms of pragmatism, although perhaps it
-be that very truth against which the pragmatists sin.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-IDENTITY OF VOLITION AND ACTION AND DISTINCTION BETWEEN VOLITION AND
-EVENT
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Volition and action: intuition and expression._]
-
-Such are the relations between the practical activity and the
-theoretical, which precedes and conditions it.
-
-Asking ourselves now, what are the relations of this same activity with
-that which seems to follow it and to be outside the spirit, in company
-with corporeality, naturality, physic and matter (or however else it
-may be called)? we find ourselves face to face with a problem which
-we have already treated and solved in another part of the system of
-the spirit, and which we shall solve here in an analogous manner. What
-we may now designate as the problem of the relation between _volition
-and action,_ formerly appeared in the theoretical philosophy as the
-problem of the relation between _intuition_ and _expression._--Are then
-volitions and actions two distinct terms that may appear now together,
-now separate? Can volition remain for its part isolated from action,
-whereas action is not able to separate itself from volition, or is the
-opposite true?--We reply, as we did on the former occasion, by denying
-the problem itself and by identifying intuition with expression,
-in such a manner that effective intuition became at the same time
-expression, and it was declared that a so-called expression, which was
-not at the same time intuition, was declared to be non-existent.--We
-reply in like manner on this occasion, that _volition and action_ are
-_one,_ and that volition without action or action without volition is
-inconceivable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Spirit and nature._]
-
-Indeed, the relation between spirit and nature (which is a general
-relation, including the other particulars between intuition and
-expression, or between volition and action), understood in the way
-that it is here, is a relation, not between two entities, but only
-between two different methods of elaborating one unique reality,
-which is spiritual reality: thus it is not truly a relation. Nor are
-the two modes of elaboration two co-ordinated modes of knowledge,
-for that would lead back to a duplicity of objects, but the first is
-cognoscitive elaboration and true science, or philosophy, in which
-reality is revealed as activity and spirituality, while the other is an
-abstract elaboration for practical convenience, without cognoscitive
-character. When this has been posited, the spiritual act of volition
-has not another reality face to face with it, with which it must join
-or combine, in order to become concrete, but is itself full reality.
-That which is called matter, movement, and material modification from
-the naturalistic point of view, is already included in the volitional
-spiritual act, of which it might be said without difficulty (as was
-once said amid much scandal of the Ego) that it is heavy, round,
-square, white, red, sonorous, and, therefore, physically determinable.
-The volition is not followed by a movement of the legs or arms; it
-is those movements themselves that are material for the physical,
-spiritual for the philosopher, extrinsic for the former, at once
-intrinsic and extrinsic for the latter, or better, neither extrinsic
-nor intrinsic (an arbitrary division). As poetry lives in speech and
-painting in colours, so the will lives in actions, not because the one
-is in the other as in an envelope, but because the one is the other and
-without the other would be mutilated and indeed inconceivable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Inexistence of volitions without actions and vice versa._]
-
-We cannot affirm the distinction between volition and action, save in
-force and as a proof of a dualistic metaphysical view, of an abstract
-spiritualism, with matter as being and substance for correlative
-term. But this point of view is eliminated by the idealist view,
-which recognizes only one unique substance, and that as spirituality
-and subjectivity. Without, however, now basing ourselves upon such
-considerations, and according to the order that we follow, applying
-ourselves to the examination of the facts of consciousness, we affirm
-that it would be impossible to adduce one volitional fact that should
-not be also a movement called physical. Those volitional acts, which
-according to some philosophers are consumed within the will and are
-in that way distinguished from external facts, are a phantasm. Every
-volition, be it never so small, sets the organism in motion and
-produces what are called external facts. The purpose is already an
-effectuation, a beginning of combat; indeed, simple desire is not
-without effects, if it be possible to destroy oneself with desires,
-as is in effect maintained On the other hand, it is not possible to
-indicate actions without volitions. Instinctive or habitual acts that
-have become instinctive are adduced; but these too are not set in
-motion, save by the will, not one by one, in their particulars, but
-as a whole, in the same way as a single hand sets in motion a most
-complicated machine which a thousand hands have previously constructed.
-There cannot then be volition without action, nor action without
-volition, as there cannot be intuition without expression or expression
-without intuition.
-
-[Sidenote: _Illusions as to the distinction between these terms._]
-
-It is well, however, to indicate one among the many sources from which
-is derived the illusion of this distinction and separation, effectively
-inexistent. A volitional act, which is a process of some duration,
-may be interrupted and substituted for other volitional acts; it may
-declare itself again and again begin its work (although this will
-always be more or less modified), and this may give occasion to new
-interruptions and new beginnings. It seems that in this way the will
-stands on one side, as something formed and definite, and that on the
-other execution pursues its way and is subject to the most varied
-accidents. But volition and execution proceed with equal and indeed
-with one single step. What we will we execute; the volition changes as
-the execution changes. In the same way, when we are engaged upon a work
-of art, on a long poem for instance, the illusion arises of an abstract
-conception or plan, which the poet carries out as he versifies. But
-every poet knows that a poem is not created from an abstract plan, that
-the initial poetical image is not without rhythm and verse, and that
-it does not need rhythm and verse applied to it afterwards. He knows
-that it is in reality a primitive intuition-expression, in which all
-is determined and nothing is determined, and what has been already
-intuified is already expressed, and what will afterwards be expressed
-will only afterwards be intuified. The initial intuition is certainly
-not an abstract plan, but a living and vital germ; and so is the
-volitional act.
-
-[Sidenote: _Distinction between action and succession or event._]
-
-When, therefore, it is affirmed that a volition is truly such, only
-when it produces effects, or that a volition is to be judged by
-its results, it is impossible not to assent, as we assent that an
-unexpressed expression or an unversified verse is neither an expression
-nor a verse. But in this signification only, because those propositions
-have sometimes assumed another, which on the contrary it is needful
-resolutely to reject. This is that in them action (will-action) has
-been confused with _succession or event._ Now, if volition coincide
-with action, it does not and cannot coincide with _event._
-
-[Sidenote: _Volition and event._]
-
-It cannot coincide, because what is action and what is event? Action
-is the act of the one; event, is the act of the whole: will is of man,
-event of God. Or, to put this proposition in a less imaginary form,
-the volition of the individual is as it were the contribution that he
-brings to the volitions of all the other beings in the universe, event
-the aggregate of all the wills and the answer to all the questions. In
-this answer is included and absorbed the will itself of the individual,
-which we have taken and contemplated alone. If, then, we wished to make
-the volition depend upon event, action upon succession, we should be
-undertaking to make one fact depend upon another fact, of which the
-first is a constituent part, placing among the antecedents of action
-what is its consequence, among things given those to be created, the
-unknown with the known, the future in the past.
-
-[Sidenote: _Successful and unsuccessful actions: criticism._]
-
-The concepts of actions that are successful and of those that are
-unsuccessful, of actions that become fully concrete in the fact, and of
-those that become concrete only in part or not at all, are therefore
-inexact. No action (not even those that are empirically said to be most
-successful, not even the most obvious and ordinary) succeeds fully, in
-the sense that it alone constitutes the fact: every action diverges by
-necessity and by definition from succession or happening. If I return
-home every day by the usual road, my return home is every day new and
-different from that which might have been, imagined. This often amounts
-to a diversity of particulars which we may call of least importance,
-but which yet are not for that reason the less real. On the other hand,
-no action, however vain it be held (if it be action and not velleity of
-action and intrinsic contradiction, or by as much as it is action and
-not imagination and contradiction), passes without trace and without
-result.
-
-If any action could be rendered altogether vain, this same rendering
-vain would invade all other actions and no fact would happen.
-
-[Sidenote: _Action and foresight: critique._]
-
-The current proposition that we cannot act without _foreseeing_ is
-also incorrect. Since the conception of foreseeing is contradictory,
-and since we cannot know a fact if it be not first a fact, that is, if
-it have not happened; if the contradictory hypothesis held, it would
-be impossible to act. But the truth is that what is called foreseeing
-is nothing but seeing; it is to know the given facts and to reason
-upon them with the universals. That is to say, it is the invariable
-theoretical base of action, already illustrated. When we will and act,
-what we will and do is _our own action_ itself, not that of others or
-of all the others, and so is the resulting event. _Voluntas fertur in
-incognitum,_ but the all intent upon itself does not take count of the
-unknown, which is in this case relatively unknowable and, therefore,
-relatively non-existent. The individual is aware that when he acts, he
-does not aim at anything but the placing of new elements in universal
-reality. He takes care that they shall be energetic and vital, without
-nourishing the foolish illusion that they must be the only ones, or
-that they alone produce reality. A popular little tale tells how
-God, who had at first granted to men to know their future lives and
-the day of their death, afterwards withdrew this knowledge from them
-altogether, because He perceived from experience that such knowledge
-made them lazy and inert. The new ignorance, on the other hand, revived
-and impelled them to vie with one another in activity, as though it
-had been granted them to obtain and to enjoy everything.[1] How can we
-doubt that our good and energetic work can ever be rendered nugatory
-in the event? That is unthinkable, and the saying _fiat justitia et
-pereat mundus_ is rectified by that other saying: _fiat justitia ne
-pereat mundus._ Bad is not born from good, nor inaction from action.
-Every volitional man, every man active in goodness, is a contradiction
-to that one-sided attitude in which the will is suppressed to give
-place to happening, a world unmade is believed to be already made,
-arms are crossed or the field deserted. But it also contradicts the
-fatuous security that the future world will conform to the ends of our
-individual actions taken in isolation; saying with the good sense of
-the Florentine statesman, that we ourselves control one half of our
-actions, or little less, Fortune the other half. Hence our trust in our
-own strength; hence, too, our apprehension of the pitfalls of Fortune,
-continually arising and continually to be conquered. This constitutes
-the interior drama of true men of action, of the political geniuses
-who have guided the destinies of man. While the unfit is all anxiety,
-or bewilderment and depression, the fatuous is all over-confidence or
-expectation of the impossible, also losing himself in bewilderment when
-he finally discovers that the reality is not what he imagined. Hence
-also the serenity of the sage, who knows that whatever happen there
-will always be opportunity for good conduct. _Si fractus illabatur
-orbis,_ there will always be a better world to construct. Hope and fear
-are related to action itself in its becoming, not to its result and
-succession.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmation of the inderivability of the value of action
-from its success._]
-
-We can illustrate the fact that no one seriously thinks of valuing
-an action according to its success, but that all value it at its
-intrinsic value as action, from the circumstance that no one recognizes
-any merit to the action of a marks-man who hits the bull's-eye, when
-shooting at the target with closed eyes; whereas no little merit is
-recognized to him who, after having taken careful aim, does not hit
-the mark but goes very near it. We are certainly often deceived in our
-practical judgments, and fortunate men are continually praised to the
-skies as men of great practical capacity, while the unfortunate are
-hurled into the mire as incompetent; for we do not distinguish exactly
-between action and success. This is not only so as to judgments of the
-present life: it is also true of the life of the past, of the pages of
-history, where imbeciles are made heroes and heroes calumniated; to
-the worst of leaders is attributed the honour of victories, ridiculous
-statesmen credited with ability. On the other hand, the sins of madmen
-are attributed to the wise, or they are accused of faults that are
-nobody's fault, but the result of circumstances. In vain will the
-Pericleses of all time ask, as did the ancient Pericles of the people
-of Athens, that the unforeseen misfortunes of the Peloponnesian war
-should be attributed to him, provided that by way of compensation he
-might have praise for all the fortunate things that should also happen
-παρὰ λόγον.[2] All this depends upon an imperfect knowledge of facts
-more than upon anything else: hence the necessity of criticism. Just as
-the work of the poet and of the painter is not materially to be laid
-hold of in the poem or in the picture, but requires a re-evocation that
-is often very difficult, so the work of the man of action, which is in
-part fused in events and partly contained in them, as a bud that will
-open in the future, asks a keen eye and the greatest care in valuation.
-The history of men of action and of their deeds is easily changed
-into _legend,_ and legends are never altogether eliminable, because
-misunderstanding or error is never altogether eliminable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Explanation of apparently conflicting facts._]
-
-On the other hand, certain commonplaces seem to be in opposition to
-the criterion itself: for example, that men are judged by success and
-that it matters little what we have willed and done, when the result
-is not satisfactory. There are also certain popular customs that make
-individuals responsible for what happens outside their own spheres
-of action, not to mention the well-known historical examples of
-unfortunate leaders crucified at Carthage and guillotined at Paris, for
-no other cause in reality than that of not having won the victory. And
-there is also the insistence of certain thinkers upon the necessity of
-never distinguishing the judgment of the act from that of the fact. But
-such insistence is nothing but a new aspect of the implacable struggle
-that it has been necessary to conduct against the morality of the mere
-intention and against the sophisms and the subterfuges that arise from
-it; an insistence that has expressed itself in paradoxical formulæ,
-as are also paradoxical the trivial remarks of ordinary life that
-have been mentioned. As to the customs and condemnations narrated by
-history, these were without doubt extraordinary expedients in desperate
-cases, in which people had placed themselves in such a position that it
-was impossible or most difficult to verify intentions and actions, and
-to distinguish misfortunes from betrayals; and as all expedients born
-of like situations sometimes hit the mark, that is to say, punish bad
-faith, so will others increase with irrationality the evil that they
-would have wished to diminish, since in those cases there has not been
-any bad faith to punish and to correct.
-
-
-[1] _Arch. p. lo st. d. trad, pop.,_ of Pitré (1882), pp. 70-72.
-
-[2] Thuc. ii. 64.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL JUDGMENT, THE HISTORY AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL
-
-
-With these last considerations, we are conducted to the theory of
-practical judgments, that is, to those judgments of which we have
-demonstrated the impossibility, when their precedence to the volitional
-act was asserted; but their conceivability as following it, indeed
-their necessity, is clear, by the intrinsic law of the Spirit; which
-consists in always preserving or in continually attaining to full
-possession of itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Practical taste and judgment._]
-
-But we must not confound the practical judgment with what has been
-called _practical taste, or the immediate consciousness of value, or
-the feeling_ of the value of the volitional act. None can doubt that
-such a taste, consciousness, or feeling is a real fact. The practical
-act brings with it approbation and disapprobation, joy and sorrow,
-and like facts of consciousness that are altogether unreflective. By
-these we explain the immediate sympathy that certain actions afford
-us, and the enthusiasms that are often spread through wide circles of
-society, and the force of example, which is most successful in arousing
-imitative efforts. Thus at certain moments the soul of all seems to
-vibrate in unison with the soul of one, and the actions of many to be
-prepared and carried out, as though with one accord, without its being
-possible to say at those moments what is willed, what abhorred and what
-admired. That taste, or consciousness, or feeling is not, however,
-distinct from the volitional act, and is, indeed, the volitional act
-itself. It is that internal control of which we have already spoken,
-that immediate feeling of oneself, that immediate consciousness, which
-makes of it a spiritual act. Abstract it from the volitional act and
-the volitional act itself disappears from before you.
-
-If it can take place, not only in the individual who is acting, but
-also in him who contemplates the action, that is because the individual
-who contemplates becomes unified in that moment with the individual
-who acts, he wills imitatively with him, with him suffers and enjoys,
-as the disc-thrower watches with his eye and with his whole person
-the disc that has been thrown, follows its rapid and direct course
-and the dangers in the form of obstacles that it seems to be about to
-strike, its turns and deviations, and seems to become himself a running
-turning disc. The denomination "practical taste" is very well chosen,
-because the analogy with the theoretic activity and with æsthetic taste
-is here most full. But since æsthetic taste is not æsthetic judgment,
-as the mere reproduction of the æsthetic act is not the criticism of
-it, as the listener to a poem who sings within himself with the poet,
-must not be confused with the critic, who analyses and understands
-it, any more than the contemplator of a picture, of a statue, or of a
-piece of architecture, who paints with the painter, sculptures with
-the sculptor, or ideally raises airy masses with the architect; so we
-must distinguish practical taste and sympathy (or antipathy) from the
-practical judgment. Without taste (æsthetic or practical), judgment
-(æsthetic or practical) is not possible; but taste is not judgment,
-which demands a further act of the spirit.
-
-[Sidenote: _The practical judgment as historical judgment._]
-
-The practical judgment is, as has already been observed, a _historical_
-judgment; so that to judge practical acts and to give their history
-is really the same thing. What occurs here is analogous to what was
-demonstrated of the theoretic and æsthetic act, when we illustrated
-the coincidence of literary and artistic criticism with literary and
-artistic history. Criticism, be it practical or theoretic, cannot
-consist of anything but determining whether a spiritual act has taken
-place and what it has been. The differences between the one and the
-other criticism arise only from the diversity of content present
-in each case, asking different categories of judgment, but not of
-logical procedure, which is in both cases the same. Every other
-conception of the judgment, which should make it consist, not of a
-historical judgment, but of heaven knows what sort of measurement upon
-transcendental models, separated from the real world by a measurement
-of which the measure is extraneous to the measured, indeed (as though
-it were something of the other world) extraneous to the real itself,
-runs against insuperable contradictions, and makes judgment arbitrary
-and history grotesque; history would thus have value, not in itself,
-but outside itself, enjoying it as a loan from others, a gracious
-concession. But even these contradictions cannot appear in all their
-crudity, nor the opposite theory in all its unshakable truth, save from
-what will be seen further on, and we must here be satisfied with the
-enunciation.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its logic._]
-
-In order to avoid repetition, we must refer to the analysis of the
-single or historical judgment already given and assume its result,
-namely, that it is the only judgment in which there is a true and
-proper distinction between subject and predicate, and that it is
-composed of an intuitive element (subject) and of an intellectual
-element (predicate). In like manner the practical judgment is not
-possible without a clear representation of the act to be judged and
-a conception not less clear of what the practical act is in its
-universality and in its particular forms, and so on, specifying in its
-various sub-forms and possibilities of individuation. The judgment is
-the compenetration of the two elements, the historical synthesis which
-establishes: Peter has accomplished a useful act in tilling a piece
-of land of such and such dimensions; Paul has accomplished an action
-that is not useful in opening a new manufactory of boots, more costly
-and not better than those already on the market; -Pope Leo III. acted
-wisely, as custodian of the universal character of the Church of Rome,
-in consecrating Charles the Frank emperor, thus restoring the empire of
-the West;--Louis XVI. acted foolishly in not deciding upon a prompt and
-profound change of the French political constitution, and in allowing
-himself to be afterwards dragged unwilling whither he had not known
-how to go of his own will. And so on. There are therefore two ways of
-sinning against the exactitude of the practical judgment: either by not
-having exact information as to the content of the volitional act to be
-judged and understood, or by not having an exact criterion of judgment.
-The first of these errors can be exemplified by those judgments that
-are so frequently pronounced, without knowledge as to the true sequence
-of events or without placing oneself in the precise conditions in
-which the person to be judged found himself. Hence it happens not less
-often, that when the facts are really known, the precise conditions
-understood, and the defence of the accused has been heard, the judgment
-must be altered. A cause of the second error is the substitution
-(likewise a very common occurrence) of one category of judgment for the
-other, as when a moral act is praised and admired for its cleverness,
-or the gestures and the felicitous utterance of a practical man are
-praised, as though it were a question of judging an actor or reciter.
-As in art, so in life, differences of judgment arise, not so much from
-difference of understanding, as from these oscillations and undue
-transpositions of judgments and concepts.
-
-It is likewise superfluous to enter into disputes as to the
-absoluteness or relativity of the practical judgment, because these
-have been superseded by the concept of the historical judgment, which
-is _both absolute and relative:_ absolute for the categories that it
-applies, relative for the matter, always new, to which it applies them.
-
-[Sidenote: _Importance of the practical judgment._]
-
-The importance of the practical judgment for practical life is of the
-greatest, and when we are warned: _nolite judicare_ or _noli nimium
-judicare,_ what are meant are not true acts of judgment, but certain
-psychical conditions, which reveal slight spiritual seriousness.
-And the importance is of the greatest, precisely because the nature
-of the judgment is historical, and as we know already, historical
-knowledge, knowledge, that is, of actual situations, is the basis of
-future actions. For this reason every man who is strongly volitional is
-continually submitting himself and others to judgment; for this reason
-we feel the need of talking to others about our own actions, in order
-to be upheld by the spirit of others in forming a just judgment. This
-is the origin of such social institutions as the confessional, or of
-poems such as the _Divina Commedia._ The only judgment without meaning
-is that _final judgment_ made in the valley Jehoshaphat, because what
-object can there be in giving oneself the trouble of judging a world
-looked upon as ended? We judge in order to continue to act, that is,
-to live, and when universal life is at an end, judgment is vain (vain
-praise or paradise, vain cruelty or hell).
-
-[Sidenote: _Difference between the practical judgment and the judgment
-of the event._]
-
-The value of the volitional act is therefore, as has been demonstrated,
-in the act itself, and we must not expect and derive it from succession
-or event. The practical judgment always concerns the volitional act,
-the intention, the action (which are all one), and never the result or
-happening. With this distinction we annul one of the most disputed,
-intricate, and difficult questions: if it be possible to judge, or
-as they say, to try history. Since we know well that judgment and
-historical narrative coincide, we must reply in general, as we have
-replied, in the affirmative. We must in consequence deny all the absurd
-claims of an objectivity, which is the irrealizable aspiration to the
-abstention from thought and from history itself. We must also deny to
-the historian that frivolous privilege by which he is allowed to judge,
-almost tolerating in him an original sin or an incorrigible vice,
-provided he clearly distinguish between the serious and the facetious,
-between the narrative and the judgment, as though the distinction were
-ever possible. But the prejudice against those who make out a case
-against history on the ground that it should have happened in a manner
-different from what actually took place, and describe how this should
-have been, is well justified. Whoever possesses historical sense,
-or even simple good sense, cannot but agree to this. The question
-should in reality be asked differently, and in this manner: Is it
-correct to apply to history the categories of judgment that we apply
-to volitions and single acts? Is it correct to judge in a utilitarian
-or moral manner historical events and the whole course of history?
-Rectified in these terms, the question becomes clear, and requires a
-negative answer. When we narrate artistic or philosophical, economic
-or ethical history, we place ourselves at the point of view of the
-individual activity. As we expose æsthetic or philosophical products,
-useful or moral actions, we judge them at the same time æsthetically,
-philosophically, economically, morally, and we know in every case if
-the action has been such as it ought. Who would hesitate to affirm that
-(at least, as an affirmative method) the _Africa_ of Petrarch was not
-what he wished it to be, a poetic work; or that Emmanuel Kant did not
-succeed in establishing from his practical postulates, according to his
-intention, the existence of a personal God and the immortality of the
-soul; or that Themistocles behaved in an undecided manner as regards
-Xerxes, not knowing how to resolve to sacrifice his ambitions to the
-safety of Greece, nor to inflict a grave loss upon his country, in
-order to satisfy his desire for vengeance; or that Napoleon ignored the
-rights of man, and behaved as one without scruples, when he ordered the
-arrest and shooting of the Duc d'Enghien? But what can be the advantage
-of asking if the arrest of the Persian expansion in Europe were a bad
-thing or a good? if the creation of the Roman Empire deserve blame?
-if the Catholic Church were wrong in concentrating Western religion
-in herself? if the English revolution of the seventeenth century, the
-French of the eighteenth, or the Italian of the nineteenth, could have
-been avoided? if Dante could have been born in our day and have sung
-the Kantian rather than the Thomist philosophy? if Michael Angelo
-might have painted the victories of the modern industrial world, which
-Manzotti has made into a ballet in his _Excelsior,_ instead of the
-visions of the Last Judgment? Here we have before us, not individual
-spirits, whose work we examine in given circumstances, but facts that
-have happened, and these are the work, not of the individual, but of
-the Whole. They are (as has already been said) the work of God, and God
-is not to be judged, or rather He is to be judged, but not from the
-visual angle at which individual works and actions are to be judged. He
-is not to be judged as a poet or as a philosopher, as a statesman or
-a hero, as a finite being working in the infinite. The contemplation
-of His work is at the same time judgment. _Die Weltgeschichte das
-Weltgericht_: the history itself of the world is the judgment of the
-world, and in recounting the course of history, while not applying the
-judgment of the categories above indicated, which are inapplicable, we
-do, however, apply a judgment, which is that of necessity and reality.
-That which has been had to be; and that which is truly real is truly
-rational.
-
-But we cannot give the justification of this supreme judgment, of this
-world-embracing judgment (we repeat the refrain), until further on. Let
-it suffice for the present that in discussing the practical judgment
-we have limited it to all that part of history which contemplates
-actions, that is, to individual activity, to biography and to the
-biographical element, which is the material of all history. In it,
-the practical judgment is active and energetic, but is silent before
-the event, and every history is like an impetuous river of individual
-works, which flows into a sea, where it is immediately restored to calm
-serene. The rush of actions and of their vicissitudes, of victory and
-of defeat, of wisdom and of folly, of life and of death, are set at
-rest in the solemn peace of the "historical event."
-
-[Sidenote: _Progress of action and progress of Reality._]
-
-As we have distinguished the practical judgment from the judgment of
-the event, the historical-individual from the historical-cosmic, so we
-must distinguish the concept of progress, as the progress which belongs
-to the volitional act and that which belongs to the event. The concept
-of progress (according to the explanations given elsewhere) coincides
-with the concept of activity. There is progress whenever an activity
-declares itself, whenever (not to leave the circle of the practical) we
-pass from irresolution to resolution, from conflict to the volitional
-synthesis, from suspense to action. But the event, which is no longer
-action but result, that is to say, is action, not of the individual
-but of the Whole, is not to be judged with that concept of progress,
-and in it progress coincides with the fact. That which follows
-chronologically, if it be truly real, represents a progress upon what
-precedes. Even illness is progress, if there were a latent crisis of
-health, and getting over it gives rise to more vigorous health. Even
-apparent regression (invasion of barbarians) is progress, if it lead to
-the ripening of a wider civilization. What is death for the individual
-is life for the Whole.--Hence the insipidity of the question, often
-proposed and still discussed by writers of treatises, whether there be
-practical progress, or as is said when limiting the question, moral
-progress.
-
-From the individual point of view, at every new volitional act,
-practicality and the relative impulse of progress are once more born,
-and they are extinguished with that act, to be born again in a new
-one, and so on in a circle of infinite changes. As to cosmic reality,
-we must declare, as in the previous example of the course of history,
-that it is itself progress (which is also confirmed by the positivist
-philosophy, when it declares that reality is evolved), but this is
-progress of reality and therefore progress without adjective, or at
-least without practical or moral adjective.
-
-[Sidenote: _Precedence of the philosophy of the practical over the
-practical judgment._]
-
-The intellectual element, which is constitutive in the practical
-judgment as in every other historical judgment, can also be called
-the philosophical element. Hence the consequence that a philosophy of
-the practical activity is a necessary condition of every practical
-judgment. This is another thesis of paradoxical appearance, which,
-however, it is not difficult to make plausible with suitable
-reflections, plausible at least to those who do not refuse to reflect.
-For what is philosophy but the thinking of the concept, and in this
-case the concept of the practical? The conclusion, then, that a
-philosophy is necessary for a judgment is irrefutable. The difficulty
-in admitting it comes from the false association of ideas, for which
-the sound of the word "philosophy" suggests the disputes of the
-schools, the treatise, the manual, or the academic lecture whereas
-we should think of philosophy in all its extension and profundity,
-inborn in the human spirit (we have elsewhere called this _ingenuous
-philosophy_) before its more complicated forms Every man has his
-own philosophy, more or less developed or rudimentary, more or less
-defective no one is without any philosophy. The first judgment on the
-practical activity is already guided by the light of a philosophical
-concept which, if it does not give a light, gives at least a glimmer,
-if not straight and certain, at the least undulating and tremulous,
-producing therefore tremulous and undulating judgments. Ingenuous
-philosophy and philosophy in the specific sense are not, therefore,
-separable from one another, with a clear-cut distinction, and if there
-exist a disability in pronouncing a judgment as to many people and
-to many actions, that arises from difficulties consequent upon the
-philosophy of the time, which must first of all be solved, before
-passing to the effective judgment. Hence long researches into doctrine
-are sometimes necessary. Thus it is difficult to do justice to the
-work of a rebel or of a revolutionary, without first clearing away
-prejudices and understanding what a revolution is, and the relative
-value of what is called obedience to the existing order of things.
-Thus it would be naive to condemn as faithless the Saxon regiments
-which deserted Napoleon on the field of Leipzig, or Marshal Ney, who
-returned to the service of Napoleon from that of Louis XVIII., unless
-we previously make clear the meaning and the limits of the political
-treaty and of the military oath, which cannot be the only unconditioned
-things in a world where nothing is unconditioned save the world itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmation of the philosophical incapacity of the
-psychological method._]
-
-From the recognized precedence of philosophy over the practical
-judgment arises the confirmation of the impossibility of the
-psychological method as the foundation of a Philosophy of the
-practical. Descriptive psychology is based upon practical facts
-historically ascertained, or upon practical judgments. Hence, by
-proceeding from particular to particular, it is not only incapable of
-exhausting the infinite and of attaining to the real universal, but by
-the very choice of particular examples, which should be the foundation
-of philosophical research relating to the practical, it is under the
-necessity of first possessing a concept of the practical. Hence it
-stands between Scylla and Charybdis, between a vicious _progressus ad
-infinitum_ and a not less vicious circle.
-
-In this way is eliminated the problem, monstrous from whatever point
-of view it may arise, as to the historical origin of the practical
-activity (economy or morality). If these activities be categories,
-which constitute fact and judge it reflected in the spirit, they
-cannot have arisen historically, as contingent facts. When we prove
-the historical origin of anything, with that very proof we destroy
-its universal value. The fears of certain moralists lest, with the
-indication of the historical origin of morality, its value should
-come to be denied, have therefore been wrongly mocked. Certainly, if
-morality had a historical origin, it would also have an end, like all
-historical formations, even the most grandiose, the Empire of the
-East or the Empire of the West, the Hunnish Empire of Attila or the
-Mongolian Empire of Gengiskhan. The fear manifested by the moralists
-in question was then an instinctive horror of the incorrect method
-of philosophical psychology, which now presupposes, now destroys the
-categories that it would wish to establish.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL METHOD, RULES AND CASUISTRY
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Justification of the psychological method and of empirical
-and descriptive disciplines._]
-
-
-In repeatedly rejecting the psychological method, as at the end
-of the last chapter, we have been very careful to make use of a
-cautious phraseology. Thus we have employed such expressions as
-"psycho-philosophical method," "speculative-descriptive method,"
-and the like, in order to make it quite clear that our hostility is
-directed against that mixture, or rather against its introduction into
-Philosophy, but is not directed against Psychology itself, that is,
-descriptive psychology. This psychology has always been practised,
-since the world was world, and we all practise it at every instant, and
-could not propose to banish it from the spirit, save at the risk of
-going mad.
-
-If indeed we know that the true and proper knowledge of theoretical
-philosophy is resolved into the cycle of art, philosophy, and history,
-and that we possess no other means of knowing the individual, both
-ingenuous and reflective, outside the knowledge of the universal given
-by philosophy, then we also know that the spirit needs to arrange and
-to classify the infinite intuitions and perceptions given to it by art
-and history, and to reduce them to classes, the better to possess and
-to manipulate them. We also know that the method called _naturalistic
-or positive_ performs this function, and that hence arise natural
-disciplines or sciences. These do not, as is the popular belief,
-deal only with so-called inferior reality (minerals, vegetables, and
-animals), but with all manifestations of reality, including those most
-strictly termed spiritual.
-
-Thus we can at this point reduce to a more correct meaning a claim
-that has been usually maintained by those who have treated of the
-Practical and of the Ethical in our day. They demand that a science of
-the practical and of morality should be preceded by a wide historical
-inquiry and have a great mass of facts as its foundation. If such
-science be understood as a Philosophy of the practical and as an Ethic,
-such a demand is an irrational pretension, because the true relation is
-exactly the opposite: from philosophy to history, not from history to
-philosophy. But if, on the other hand, this science be understood as a
-naturalistic and empirical discipline, the claim is rational, because
-it is not possible to construct a discipline of that sort, save with
-material that has been historically-verified.
-
-Sidenote: _Practical description and its literature._
-
-The practical discipline that arranges in groups and classifies the
-spiritual facts concerning man, is _Psychology._ But the writer or the
-professor is not the only psychologist. Man himself is a psychologist;
-even the savage constructs in some sort of way his psychology of types
-and classes. And to remain within the circle of volitional acts, their
-psychology or description by types has always existed. A conspicuous
-example of this was the Comedy of Menander or the New Comedy in Greece.
-This partly received and gave artistic form to the results of the
-observations of the moralists and partly served as material for the
-elaboration of treatises, to such an extent that the _Characters_
-of Theophrastus have been looked upon as a repertory or summary of
-theatrical types. In the _Rhetoric_ of Aristotle, a whole book is
-devoted to a description of affections, passions, and habits. In modern
-times, Descartes lamented the insufficiency of ancient treatises on the
-subject, and presented as quite a new thing his _Traité des passions._
-In this treatise, six _primitive_ passions being distinguished
-(admiration, love, hate, desire, joy, and sadness), he maintained that
-all the others were derived from them: esteem, contempt, generosity,
-pride, humility, baseness, veneration, disdain, hope, fear, jealousy,
-certainty, desperation, irresolution, courage, hardihood, emulation,
-cowardice, terror, remorse, mockery, piety, satisfaction, repentance,
-favour, gratitude, indignation, anger, glory, shame, and so on.
-Spinoza, following the example of Descartes and correcting his
-theories, devoted the third part of his _Ethic_ to the affections or
-passions, considering them _perinde ac si quaestio de lineis planis aut
-de corporibus esset._ Let it suffice to mention the _Anthropologia_ of
-Kant among the other most celebrated treatises upon the argument.
-
-[Sidenote: _Extension of practical description._]
-
-But although we have recorded as examples these general treatises on
-the passions, it would be impossible to continue the enumeration,
-because descriptive psychology is carried out, so to speak, with
-the widest divergences and is infinitely subdivided. An ample
-bibliography would not suffice to catalogue all the books dealing
-with this discipline. These are sometimes arranged in chronological
-divisions (Psychology of the Renaissance, of the eighteenth century,
-of the Middle Ages, even including prehistoric man!). Sometimes
-they contain geographical divisions (Psychology of the Englishman,
-of the Frenchman, of the Russian, of the Japanese, and so on),
-with subdivisions according to regions. Sometimes they combine the
-two methods (Psychology of the ancient Greek, of the Roman of the
-Decadence), and sometimes according to their psychical content
-(Psychology of the priest, of the soldier, of the politician, of the
-poet, of the man of science), and so on. And when the treatises that
-bear a title of the kind above mentioned had been catalogued, it would
-be also necessary to trace a great mass of descriptive psychology
-(and of the best sort) in the books of historians, novelists,
-dramatists, in memoirs and confessions, in maxims and advice for the
-conduct of life in the sketches of satirists and caricaturists. And
-when all these had been catalogued (a very difficult task), it would
-be necessary to take account of all the other psychology, which,
-formed in the spirit of individuals who are not writers, is poured
-forth in speech. This is found, but in small part, in collections of
-proverbs. It would also be necessary not to neglect (an altogether
-desperate enterprize) everything that each one of us does and forgets
-and substitutes continually in life, according to his own needs and
-experiences. _Tantae molis_ would be a complete account, precisely
-because psychological construction, having for its object actions and
-individuals in action, is of such common use.
-
-[Sidenote: _Normative knowledge or rules: their nature._]
-
-There is another class of mental forms intimately connected with
-Psychology, and of this also we have denied the justification in the
-foregoing chapters, but only in the philosophical field, and not at
-all outside it. These are the _norms,_ or _normative_ knowledge and
-science, _maxims, rules, and precepts._ In truth, if philosophy,
-which commands and wills and judges, when its task is on the contrary
-to understand willing and commanding, and to make possible correct
-judgment--if such a philosophy be a contradiction in terms, there
-is yet nothing to prevent our taking the psychological classes, of
-which we have indicated the formation, and separating them from one
-another, according as they do or do not lead to certain other classes,
-which are called _ends_ and are _abstract ends._ This is done when
-those classes are selected which are more efficacious for practical
-action. Psychological classes and rules are therefore the same, save
-that in the second the character possessed by knowledge as prior to
-action is placed in relief, that is to say, its _technical_ character.
-This is proved by the easy convertibility of rules into psychological
-observations, and of the latter into the former. It suffices to add
-the imperative to the first and to remove it from the second. "Do
-everything so as to seem good, for that helps in many things; but since
-false opinions do not last, you will have difficulty in seeming good
-for a long period, if you are not so in reality." That is a rule of
-Francesco Guicciardini[1] (or rather of the father of Guicciardini,
-quoted by him). Now if we transfer this proposition from the imperative
-to the indicative mood and remove the predicate of exhortation, we
-have a mere psychological observation: "To seem good helps in an
-infinite number of things; but since false opinions do not last, it is
-difficult to seem good for long, unless one really be so." Here is a
-psychological observation of Vico upon seeming and being: "It happens
-naturally that man speaks of nothing but what he affects to be and is
-not."[2] This can be turned into a maxim: "Watch yourselves, in order
-that by talking too much of a given advantage, you may not let it be
-seen clearly that you do hot possess it." Or in relation to moral
-classes it can be turned thus: "Try to be that which you would like to
-appear to others," and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Usefulness of rules._]
-
-Of rules it can be said that they do not possess absolute value. This
-is to be found written at the beginning of one of the best books of
-rules: _Peu de maximes sont vraies à tous égards_ (Vauvenargues),
-and he might have said, "no maxim"; for if it were ever possible
-to produce one that was absolutely true, by that alone would it be
-demonstrated not to be a true maxim. But criticism prevails against
-the distortion of empirical rules into philosophical principles, or
-against the confusion between, the psychological and the speculative
-methods, to which attention has already been drawn. If this distortion
-be not committed, then rules are altogether innocuous. Not only are
-they innocuous, they are indispensable. Each of us is constantly
-making them for use in his own life. To live without rules would be
-impossible. Certainly, the man of action makes no practical rule, nor
-does he indicate how we should will and act in definite circumstances,
-nor does the poet make any rule of Poetic. Guicciardini himself,
-whom we have just quoted, and who formulated stupendous maxims, warns
-us: "These memories are rules that can be written down in books;
-but special cases, which, since they have a different cause, ask a
-different treatment, can ill be written down _elsewhere than in the
-book of discretion._" Action depends upon the quickness of the eye,
-upon the perception of the situation historically given, which has
-never occurred before, and never will occur again, precisely identical.
-But it is useful to possess these types of actions to encourage and
-of actions to avoid, in order to sharpen the attention and to find
-one's way in the world of action, to facilitate and to discipline the
-examination of the concrete fact. If, therefore, individual rules are
-more or less transitory, the formation of rules is immortal.
-
-[Sidenote: _The literature of rules and its apparent decadence._]
-
-The condition of literature in recent times would seem to be in
-disagreement with this affirmation, since as a fact there is a great
-falling off in the appearance of books of rules, compared with the
-enormous mass that remains in our libraries as an inheritance of the
-past. At one time rules of conduct were compiled for everything, not
-only for the moral life, in the multiplication of treatises relating
-to vice and virtue, to merits and to sins, to things good and evil,
-to duties and to rights, dividing these and entering into minutiae,
-and again, summaries, catechisms, and various "decalogues," relating
-to every part of life. The literature of the Cinquecento gives rules
-even for the procuress and the courtesan, in most elegant little
-books, which bear the names of Piccolomini and of Aretino. In this
-same century, too, Ignatius of Loyola formulated rules for "tying up"
-the will, and for the reduction of the docile individual _perinde ac
-cadaver,_ for the ends of "sanctity." We must further remark that
-all rules, including those on poetry and the arts, have at bottom a
-practical--character. That is to say, they are directed to the will, if
-only as intermediary. Thus it is necessary to add to the great mass of
-practical rules the unnumbered and innumerable treatises of Grammar,
-Rhetoric, Poetry of the figurative arts, of music, of dancing, and so
-on. But it is a fact that there are now hardly any treatises containing
-rules, either for morality, politics, or for the arts. Has the world by
-chance become learned on the subject, through inherited aptitude, or
-rather has the inutility of rules been discovered?
-
-Neither the one nor the other. The rules still live in books and
-treatises; they have only changed their literary form. In literature
-they have reabsorbed that imperative which they used at first to
-display and to boast of, not only mentally but literally. That has
-been made possible by the already established convertibility of rules
-into psychological classes. Hence in modern times the literary form
-of the psychological observation is preferred to that of rules. This
-was indeed redundant, pedantic, and at the same time ingenuous, as
-for instance in the Italian Seicento. It is difficult to restrain
-a smile when reading the many books on what was called the _reason
-of State,_ elaborated by the Italians of that day and imitated by
-foreigners, especially Spaniards and Germans. Those _arcana imperii,_
-those "secret strokes," those impostures, mysteriously inculcated on
-the printed page, are a true and real æsthetic contradiction. The
-eighteenth century therefore began to give up this form of treatise,
-and as it happens that men are accustomed to attribute to moral virtue
-that which is necessity or virtue of another kind, the writers of that
-century boasted of the moral progress which had set them free from the
-pernicious and immodest maxims of the "reason of State."
-
-It is very amusing to assist at the acts of repulsion and of exorcism,
-which a man like the Abbé Galiani believes himself obliged to make in
-his treatise _Dei doveri dei principi neutrali_ (1782). When, having
-amply discussed this matter from the point of view of morality, he goes
-on to discuss it from the point of view of politics and of the reason
-of State, he despatches it in a few pages, abhorring, as he says,
-that "insidious and wicked science" which formed "the delight, first
-of Italian and then of almost all European minds of the fifteenth and
-seventeenth centuries." He protests at every step that he is "tired
-of repeating and of developing teachings of cunning and wickedness."
-But what the Abbot Galiani really abhorred was the robed scholastic
-treatment of a matter that he who was termed _Machiavellino_ by his
-French friends, and declared that he did not admit in politics anything
-but _le machiavélisme pur, sans mélange, cru, vert, dans toute son
-âpreté,_[3] handled with very different ability and elegance in his
-conversations in Parisian _salons_ and in his witty letters to Madame
-d'Épinay. The rules of the eighteenth century are to be sought in
-the speeches, essays, political opuscules, tragedies, plays dealing
-with the life of citizens, fiction, history, and books of memoirs. If
-Aretino and Piccolomini provided for the necessities of the respectable
-courtesans and procuresses of the Cinquecento, in the Settecento,
-Giacomo Casanova constructed the type of the perfect adventurer. He
-began with the rules to be followed as a system of life, the _se
-laisser aller au gré du vent qui pousse,_ and passed to those that
-were more special and yet fundamental, such as that one should have no
-scruples _de tromper des étourdis, des fripons et des sots,_ because
-they _défient l'esprit_ and _on venge l'esprit quand on trompe un
-sot._ There should be still less scruple in deception in affairs of
-love, for, _pour ce qui regarde les femmes, ce sont des tromperies
-réciproques, qu'on ne met pas en ligne de compte; car, quand l'amour
-s'en mêle, on est ordinairement dupe de part et d'autre_.[4] Let us
-leave to the reader to investigate, if he please, the rules of life
-that are concealed beneath the most modern forms of literature; these
-are a continuous, if not always beneficent, guide for daily life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Relation between the arts (collections of rules) and
-philosophical doctrines._]
-
-Another circumstance that has led to the belief in the disappearance
-of books of rules is the observation that from those books dealing
-with the so-called _arts,_ there has come to be a treatment of the
-philosophy of their subject-matter, in which those treatises have been
-dissolved. Thus from Poetics and Rhetorics has come Æsthetic, from
-Grammatic the Philosophy of language, from the Art of teaching and of
-reasoning Logic and Gnoseology, from the historical Art, Historic,
-from the Arts of economic government, the Science of Economy, from the
-treatises on Natural Law, the Philosophy of Law.
-
-When such philosophies, then, had appeared, treatises upon the Arts
-seemed to have become superfluous, and to this is attributed the cause
-of their diminution or disappearance. But although it be impossible not
-to recognize the historical process above described from books on the
-arts to books of systems, it is necessary to be careful to interpret
-it exactly and not to confuse it with a passing from empiria to
-philosophy. Thus it will be seen that the part absorbed and dissolved
-in philosophy has been precisely those philosophical attempts that
-were mingled with such collections of rules and precepts. For it was
-very natural that the writers who put them together and had ideas as
-to what should be done and what avoided, were often led to investigate
-the principles from which sprung the particular rules. Believing
-that they were strengthening, they really came to surpass them, that
-is, they passed unwittingly from one form of treatment to another,
-from Psychology to Philosophy. But not even here has empiricism been
-refined into philosophy (a refinement which, strictly speaking, is
-impossible), but a more perfect philosophy has been substituted for one
-less perfect. The dissolution, then, has not been of the rules, but of
-that imperfect philosophy, a chemical process which has left the rules
-in what they possess of original as residuum. Hence their persistence,
-and indeed the impossibility that they should not persist, side by side
-with the most pure and perfect of philosophies.
-
-[Sidenote: _Casuistic: its nature and utility._]
-
-_Casuistic_ has had the same fate as the rules, and was also at one
-time responsible for a very copious literary production. Now it is
-cultivated as literature only by a few Jesuits, who carry on the
-glories of Escobar and of Sanchez, read only by priests preparing
-themselves for the post of confessor, whose studies are based for
-the most part upon old books (such as the _Theologia moralis_ of the
-Neapolitan Sant' Alfonso de' Liguori). At one time Casuistic was
-not confined only to profane or theological morality, to the _casus
-conscientiae. _ There were also books of casuistry composed for all
-aspects of life, for politics, for the life of the courtier ("the
-Wise Man at Court"), for the art of love. When the literary form of
-rules fell into discredit, that of Casuistic fell with it. But this
-does not mean that it is dead; it lives and will live as long as rules
-live. For Casuistic is nothing but the process of reasoning by which
-rules are made always more precise, passing from more general cases to
-those more particular, so that no one will ever be able to do without
-them.--If we take for rule of life this maxim: to avoid scientific
-polemics, because they constitute a waste of time, adding little to the
-progress of knowledge; in what way must we behave if a polemic be such
-that it enables us to gain on the one hand the time it makes us lose
-on the other? Shall we maintain the general rule, or shall we waive
-it on this occasion, if for no other reason than to give variety to
-our occupations? And how shall we behave if not only we retrieve the
-time lost but avoid losing more time in the future? Shall we wish to
-enter upon the polemic at once? But if our future be looked upon as
-uncertain, if we be far advanced in years or in bad health, will it not
-be better to renounce the uncertain gain of the future for the certain
-gain of the present?--This is a very simple example of Casuistic,
-which a critic and writer (let us suppose that he is the writer of
-these pages) is obliged to propose to himself and to solve. Naturally,
-no Casuistic will ever furnish the concrete solution (which is the only
-one that counts), since, as has been said, no rule can ever furnish
-it. Rules and casuistry do not reach the individuality _omnimodo
-determinata,_ which is the historical situation; yet if Casuistic
-aid my action, this will always differ from that, as concrete from
-abstract; or better, my action will always truly possess the form, the
-definiteness that abstract casuistry cannot possess. Woe to practical
-men who rely upon collections of maxims and casuistical reasonings,
-and woe to those who rely upon them. Those who argue at length upon
-practical matters and draw subtle distinctions, are to be avoided in
-the world of affairs and in the world of action. If they have not yet
-provoked some disaster, they are on the road to doing so now. This, at
-least, is a good rule; like the supreme rule (which is not a rule but
-philosophical truth), namely, that we must abandon rules, that is, face
-the individual case, which, as such, is always irregular.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jurisprudence as casuistry._]
-
-But if a further proof be wanted of the necessity and perpetuity of
-maxims and of casuistry, observe how these also persist in literary
-form, as laws, where this form is not eliminable. _Laws,_ as we have
-seen, are not simple rules, but are based upon _formulæ of rules,_
-and must of necessity make explicit in them decisions as to doing and
-not doing. Jurisprudence is the Casuistic of law, or all the labour
-of so-called interpretation, which is at bottom the excogitation of
-new rules. All know that not only is Jurisprudence not of itself
-legislative, but that it cannot even determine the volitional act of
-the Statesman, nor the sentence, or decision upon the particular case,
-a decision which the judge creates upon each occasion. But no one would
-seriously think of suppressing the work and the function of those
-_casuists,_ or judicial experts, a function which, since it has always
-existed and continues to exist, cannot but answer to a social need.
-It is possible to predict a form of social life, less complicated and
-weighty, in which that function would have less scope, but whatever be
-the case as regards this prediction, the casuistry of judicial experts
-will continue so long as there are laws and rules, that is to say,
-always.
-
-
-[1] _Ricordi politici e civili,_ n. xliv. (in _Opere inedite_(2),
-Firenze, 1857; p. 97).
-
-[2] _Scritti inediti,_ ed. Del Giudice, Napoli, 1862, p. 12.
-
-[3] Letter to the d'Épinay, 5th September 1772.
-
-[4] _Mémoires,_ ed. Paris, Gamier, s.a., i pp. 3-4.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE INVASIONS BY PHILOSOPHY OF THE DOMAIN OF PRACTICAL
-DESCRIPTION AND OF ITS DERIVATIVES
-
-
-In demonstrating the legitimacy and necessity of practical description
-and of its derivatives, Regolistic and Casuistic, we have not
-fulfilled, as it were, our whole knightly duty, which binds us to that
-discipline, which we have been obliged to maltreat so exceedingly,
-and shall further maltreat, when it has been or shall be presented as
-a philosophical method. It is now necessary to defend its existence
-against the invasion of philosophy, or rather of philosophers. We must
-make it obvious that if the empiricists and psychologists, who swell
-themselves out to philosophers, are bunglers, those too are bunglers
-who claim to solve empirical questions philosophically. Perhaps they
-are bunglers less worthy of pardon, because it is part of philosophy to
-know itself clearly, and consequently its own limits.
-
-[Sidenote: _First form: tendency to generalize._]
-
-The first bad effect that philosophy has upon practical description
-is the tendency to change it from description and collection of
-particular descriptions into something that has the air of generality
-and comprehensiveness. Because, if practical description be closely
-connected with the historical conditions of definite individuals and
-societies and with their wants, the more specific and near to the
-concrete it is, the better it will be, and the more useless by as much
-as it goes wandering toward the general. We owe to the evil influence
-of philosophy those verbose treatises upon psychological classes, such
-as virtue, duties, things good, affections, passions, and human types,
-to read which nourishes less than fresh water, which at least refreshes.
-
-Let him who wishes to be convinced compare the books of rules and
-observations that we owe to men of experience and to men of the
-world, such as the _Ricordi_ of Guicciardini, the _Maximes_ of
-Larochefoucauld, and the _Oraculo Manual_ of Balthazar Gracian,
-with the _Traité des passions_ of Descartes, with that section
-of the _Ethica_ of Spinoza that relates to this matter, with the
-_Anthropologia_ and the _Doctrine of Virtue_ of Kant (we prefer to
-record great names). He will then see on whose side is the advantage,
-an advantage of originality, of importance, and even of style, which
-is in this case a revelation. Those books by philosophers contain for
-the most part definitions of vocabulary and of words which there is no
-need to define, because everybody knows them to such an extent that the
-definitions, rather than make them more clear, make them obscure. Who,
-for example, can resist the philosophical triviality of the _Aphorisms
-for the Wisdom of Life_ of Arthur Schopenhauer? Take the trouble to
-open a book to learn that good things are to be divided into personal,
-wealth and imagination, or reputation, and that the first (such as
-good health and a gay temperament) are pre-eminent over the others.
-Do we not learn more and with greater rapidity and efficacy from such
-proverbs as "God helps the merry man"? It is superfluous to observe
-that those books, in so far as they generalize, can never attain to
-philosophy. They remain at bottom more or less historical.
-
-[Sidenote: _Historical elements persisting in generalizations._]
-
-The good and generous wine of the born psychologists and precept-makers
-is diluted in a great deal of water, but that water, however much
-there be of it, never becomes pure and is always discoloured and of an
-unpleasant taste. Thus in classifications of ancient Ethic the idea of
-"virtue" or of "good" was announced as the most important, in Christian
-Ethic that of "duty," in the same way as in ancient Ethic the political
-character was dominant, in the modern the individualistic, according to
-the different character of the corresponding civilizations. Historical
-elements differentiate the Ethic of Aristotle, impregnated with sane
-Greek life, from that of the Stoics, in which is foretold the decadence
-of the antique world and the germs of the future discovered (for
-instance, cosmopolitanism, which precedes the Christian idea of the
-unity of the human race). The four Platonic virtues retain the name,
-but are filled with a new content, in the four cardinal virtues of the
-Christian Ethic; the seven deadly sins are not to be explained in all
-their settemplicity without the ascetic ideal of the Middle Ages.
-
-Among the various writers of treatises, the foreground is filled, now
-with the idea of effort or of duty, now with that of enjoyment and
-satisfaction; ideas are now despotic masters, now smiling friends;
-the dominant idea is in turn that of justice, of benevolence, of
-enthusiasm, and so on. In the systems of Catholic Ethic are reflected
-political absolutism and semi-feudal economy; in those of Protestant
-Ethic, constitutionalism, liberalism, the industrial and capitalistic
-world; a strict probity, not indeed without utilitarianism, and
-a hardness of heart, not indeed without austerity. Modern Ethic
-is concerned with property, with the struggle of classes, with
-proletarianism and communism. These are all historical facts and as
-such most worthy of attention, but for that very reason they should
-be examined in all their force and value and not through the medium
-of the pale categories of a universal doctrine, which they disturb
-and falsify and by which they are very often disturbed and falsified.
-Whoever undertakes to write general treatises upon the passions, upon
-the virtues, and upon the other practical classes, will always show the
-signs of his time in the categories that he establishes, and the result
-will be at once banal and empirical, that is to say, badly empirical.
-
-[Sidenote: _Second form: literary union of philosophy and empiria._]
-
-But hitherto the chief ill has been that useless and tiresome books are
-written. Matters begin to look graver when an approach is attempted
-between philosophical theories and empirical classifications and they
-are united in one treatise, as the _general_ part and the _particular_
-part, the _abstract_ and the _concrete_ part, the _theoretical_ and
-the _historical_ part. We do not wish to refuse recognition to an
-occasionally just sense of the intimate relations between philosophy
-and history as among the motives that lead to such unions, the first of
-which flows into the second, revives it and is by it in turn revived.
-But the history, to which philosophy applies the torch, is all history
-in its palpitating reality; it is history represented by all histories
-that historians have written and will write, and also by those that
-they have not written and will not write. The history offered by these
-empirical descriptions is only a very small part of history and (what
-is worse) abstract and mutilated. This would, however, be an injury of
-not too grave a nature, even at this point, provided the incongruity
-were limited to literary unfitness; in which case, it is true, would be
-added to inutility the ugliness of a union capricious and artificial,
-but fortunately extrinsic. But by means of that extrinsic approach,
-the way is opened to the attempt at an intrinsic approach, and thus
-to the third form of the undue invasion of practical description by
-philosophy, which constitutes the _morbus philosophico-empiricus_ in
-all its harm fulness.
-
-[Sidenote: _Third form: attempt to place them in intimate connexion._]
-
-The attempt at intrinsic approach takes place when empirical
-classes are placed in connection with the philosophical concepts or
-categories, with pure thought. Nearly all philosophers have fallen
-into this error, since it is very natural that they should not have
-wished to leave a _hiatus_ between the first and second parts of
-their books of Philosophy of the practical, between the general and
-particular parts, and that they should have striven to connect the
-one with the other by passing logically from the concepts of the
-first to those of the second. The mistake was indubitably increased
-owing to their small degree of clearness as to the logical nature of
-the two orders of concepts (concepts and pseudo-concepts), which is
-fundamentally diverse, and we shall not further insist upon this matter.
-
-[Sidenote: _Science of the practical and Metaphysic: various
-significations._]
-
-Rather let us note that sometimes there has been something rational
-in the minds of those who have required the Science of the practical
-or Ethic to be constructed independently of all Metaphysic. In truth,
-that programme of the independence of the Science of the practical
-or Ethic of Metaphysic has had various meanings that it will be well
-to enumerate briefly. The first meaning was that the Science of the
-practical, in so far as it was philosophy, should be independent of
-the _aggregate_ of the philosophical system (Metaphysic). In this
-case the claim was not acceptable, as we shall see, because it was
-at variance with the nature itself of philosophy, which is unity. The
-second meaning was that the Practical, as science, should be kept
-remote from every form of faith, or feeling or fancifulness (which has
-sometimes been called "Metaphysic"); and in this case the proposition
-was inexpugnable, however contestable may have seemed the opportuneity
-of the meaning given to that word. The third meaning was that the
-Science of the practical, in so far as it was descriptive, should stand
-by itself, in order to afford a base for philosophical induction. Use
-was here made of the erroneous idea, already rejected several times,
-of philosophy as an intensification of the psychological method, or
-as a carrying of it on. But in a fourth sense, it was desired finally
-to withdraw practical description from the perilous care of the
-philosophers, and it seems to us that with this fourth meaning was
-expressed a very just demand.
-
-[Sidenote: _Damaging consequences of the invasions._]
-
-What are, in fact, the consequences of the care that philosophers
-have bestowed upon practical description? We would not wish to use an
-over-coloured simile, but what happens is very much what would happen
-if a man were given a baby to suckle. He would press it violently
-against his dry and arid breast, incapable of nourishing, but well
-capable of tormenting it. Philosophy, when it approaches the empirical
-classes, will either begin to criticize their distinctions and abolish
-them, reducing several classes to one, and then reducing the reduced
-classes in their turn to a less number, until none are left at all and
-it finds itself in company with the universal philosophical principle
-alone, or alone with itself;--or it will contrive to preserve them
-as classes, deducing them philosophically, and will thus make them
-rigid and absolute, removing from them that elasticity and fluidity
-which they derive from their historical character, and converting them
-from useful classes that they were, into bad philosophemes, concepts
-contradictory in themselves.
-
-[Sidenote: _1a. Dissolution of the empirical concepts._]
-
-Both these consequences have occurred, for the books of philosophers
-are full of examples, now of destruction, now of corruption of the
-empirical classes of the Practical. The treatment of the doctrine
-of the virtues or of so-called natural rights affords examples of
-destruction. Striving to distinguish courage from prudence, or justice
-from benevolence, or on the other hand, egotism from wickedness, they
-ended by recognizing that true courage is prudence, true prudence
-courage; that benevolence is justice, justice benevolence; that egotism
-is wickedness, wickedness egotism, and so on. In this way, all the
-virtues became one, the virtue of being virtuous, the will for the
-good, duty. In like manner, by giving philosophical form to the natural
-rights of life, of liberty, of culture, of property, and so on, they
-ended by recognizing that all rights merge in one single right, which
-is that of existence; which latter, indeed, is not a right, but a fact.
-The passions were reduced from seventy or eighty classes to six or
-seven fundamental, but these six or seven were in their turn reduced
-to two only, pleasure and pain, and of these two; it was finally
-discovered that they constituted one only--life, which is pleasure
-and pain together. But virtues, rights, passions, possess value in
-practical description only in so far as they are multiplicity--their
-value is always plural, never singular. To reduce them to a single
-class signifies to annul them, as to blow upon a candle signifies to
-extinguish it and to remain in darkness; darkness is to be understood
-as without empirical light. Now the philosopher should certainly
-destroy empirical ideas, but only in so far as they present themselves
-as philosophical distinctions, that is, in so far as they are empirico
-philosophical: and in that case it suffices him to show that they are
-empirical, without pretending to annul them in their own domain also:
-_debellare superbos,_ but _parcere subjectis;_ that is, he should spare
-strangers who remain quietly in their own house.
-
-[Sidenote: _Examples: war and peace, property and communism, and the
-like._]
-
-It might seem desirable to pass in review all these empirical
-distinctions and questions which the philosophers have thought that
-they had satisfactorily solved, when they had, on the contrary, passed
-beyond them. But the theme is inexhaustible, and we cannot here give
-even a rich selection, comprising the most frequent and important
-cases. We must limit ourselves to brief mention.--People discuss every
-day: whether war be an evil, and if it be possible to abolish it;
-if community of goods should take the place of private property; if
-rational government be that of liberty or of authority, of democracy
-or aristocracy, of anarchism or state organization; whether the State
-should be in the Church or the Church in the State, or side by side and
-independent; if freedom of thought should be admitted or restrained;
-if instruction should be free or undertaken by the State; and other
-similar problems. Now behold the philosopher applying himself to the
-study of these ideas. Having tested them, he is astonished that people
-can find in them opposing terms, and make them argument for dispute.
-In truth (he says), war is intrinsic to reality, and peace is peace in
-so far as by making an end of one war it prepares another; as Socrates
-demonstrated in the _Phaedo,_ when, scratching his leg in the place
-where it had been pressed by the chain, he realized that he could not
-have experienced that pleasure had he not previously experienced the
-pain. Nor is property different from communism: the individual declares
-himself by an individual taking possession of things and becoming their
-owner; but by so doing he enters into relations and into communion with
-other individuals, and does business with them. And liberty excludes
-subjection the less, since _sub lege libertas;_ nor does aristocracy
-exclude democracy, since the true aristocrat is the bearer of those
-universal values that are the substance of democracy; hence the more we
-are aristocratic the more we are democratic, and inversely. Nor does
-anarchism exclude State organization, because a collection of men,
-however free we suppose it to be, must nevertheless govern itself
-according to some laws, and these laws are the State. Then, the ideal
-State, being the best government of men for their perfectionment, both
-material and spiritual, accomplishes the work of the Church itself,
-which is neither above, nor below, nor beside the State, because it is
-the State. Thus in like manner, no one can grant or abolish freedom of
-thought, since thought is by definition freedom, and the restraint is
-thought itself, because liberty coincides with necessity. And finally
-State instruction cannot but correspond with rational demands, and the
-free instruction of citizens, if it be really so and not arbitrary and
-capricious, will be the same as that of the State, or will be changed
-into the instruction of the State.
-
-[Sidenote: _Other examples._]
-
-Passing to other orders of fact that are less political, but are also
-argument for practical discussions, we shall refer to the so-called
-conflicts between duty or interest, as symbolized in the legendary
-Titus Manlius, when offered the alternative _aut reipublicae aut sui
-suorumque obliviscendi_;--or to the so-called question of the two
-moralities, private and public, in support of which the not legendary
-Camillo Cavour said in 1860, that if he had done in his private
-interest what he had done for Italy, he would have deserved the
-galleys;--or we can refer to questions of classification, and ask
-whether the kind of man who is socially harmless should be placed side
-by side with the criminal;--or to those others, famous in Casuistic,
-relating to capital punishment, homicide, suicide, lies, whether and
-when they should be permitted, and other similar questions. Here, too,
-the philosopher will smilingly observe that duties and interests can
-never be in conflict, because in every given case duty is always one
-only, and interest is always one only, that of the given case;--he
-will deny that there is one public and one private morality, because
-in man, the private person and the citizen, family relations, or
-those of friendship, and those of political life, are inseparable and
-indistinguishable;--that every man is bad and good, inoffensive and
-criminal, and that in the so-called criminal there must also be the
-non-criminal, if he be given the name of man;--that every punishment is
-a punishment of death, that is, it causes something to die, and that it
-is impossible to find a clear distinction between shutting a man up in
-prison and thus taking from him a more or less large slice of physical
-life, and taking it from him altogether by hanging or shooting
-him;--that homicide, as such, is so little a crime that in war it is a
-duty to commit it;--that a lie, which is silence as to what one knows,
-is in itself so innocent that no one in the world, save a foolish
-prater, tells all he knows, and that if it be admitted that one can
-and should be silent, that is to say, let others be deceived by our
-silence (though this is eloquent), there is no reason for not admitting
-that we can also betray them with speech (often less eloquent), as is
-done with children in order to send them to bed, and with sick persons
-in order to comfort them;--that, finally, culpable suicide is not
-the material act of depriving oneself of physical life (a thing done
-without incurring blame, and indeed with praise and glory, by those who
-sacrifice themselves for others in war, in epidemics, in dangers of all
-sorts, and by every one who consumes his own vital strength in a worthy
-cause), but the killing of the moral life in oneself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Misunderstanding on the part of philosophers._]
-
-In all these answers to questions, we have not made our imaginary
-philosopher commit any blunder; we have indeed put into his mouth
-things that we believe to be all of them most true and irrefutable,
-because we believe them ourselves. And we hold that it is necessary to
-profess them against those who arbitrarily make questions philosophical
-whose terms are not philosophical. But when the philosopher offers
-those solutions to the empirical disputants, he behaves like him who,
-hearing a speech in a language of which he knows little, makes a reply
-that is in itself most reasonable, but without relation to the previous
-speech. The empiricist, if he have studied philosophy, will be able
-to reply, as did King Theodore, worn with misery, in the old _opéra
-bouffe_ of the Abbé Casti, to him who recalls to him the miseries
-suffered by Marius, Themistocles, and Darius:--
-
- Good my son, I know them well,
- For I have heard these tales before;
- But just at present, truth to tell,
- 'Tis money interests me more.
-
-[Sidenote: _Historical significance of the aforesaid questions._]
-
-Money, that is, ready money to spend in definite situations
-historically given, in order to find one's way in them; for all those
-questions are without universal signification, but have arisen from
-political and individual problems, to which they do and must belong.
-Certainly they are insoluble in the abstract, and this is the defect,
-or rather the nature of empirical questions, which, if they admitted
-of rigorous solution, would not be any longer empirical. Therefore it
-is a foolish thing to discuss them philosophically, as is seen in the
-conspicuous example of certain casuistical enquiries (the homicide of
-the unjust aggressor, the lie, incest, etc.) which have been treated by
-nearly all philosophers and have been dragged about for centuries in
-discussions on Ethic, although every century has left them at the same
-point as they were in the one preceding.
-
-But if it be not possible to solve, we can at least _state_ them
-in abstract terms, in the same way as drill and the sham-fight are
-abstract, though certainly of use when the battle is really fought. We
-can and we should bear in mind these abstract solutions, in order that
-we may be the better able to solve a series of concrete cases, which
-are not identical, certainly, because identical cases do not exist, but
-more or less similar, and therefore require solutions that are more or
-less similar.--Can war be done away with? This question refers not to
-the elimination' of the category "war," but to the possibility or the
-reverse of avoiding in the twentieth century and in European countries
-that empirical war which is waged with cannons and cruisers, that
-costs milliards when it is not waged, and tens of milliards when it
-is waged, and out of which the conqueror comes conquered. It is well
-understood that some form of war will always continue, because war is
-inherent to life.--Can private property be done away with? This does
-not mean to ask if it be possible to prevent man from taking possession
-of things, of his food, or of the material that he requires for dress,
-or from inhabiting a house; but whether it be possible to alter, to
-the advantage of mankind, the proportion that now obtains between
-production with private capital and production with collective capital,
-giving the preference to the latter.
-
-And so on, for it would be tiresome to continue to state the historical
-problems that are grouped beneath each of the recorded formulæ, which
-indeed are easily to be found. Thus when we absolutely forbid the
-telling of lies, as indecorous and degrading, as that which severs the
-ties of human community and of reciprocal faith, as the vice (said
-Herbart) that has the special faculty of stirring up against it all
-the five moral ideas--justice, benevolence, equity, perfection, and
-internal liberty--the intention is to forbid what is usually called
-lying; but it is certainly not intended to institute a speculative
-enquiry as to the relation between knowing and making known, between
-the theoretic act of thought and the practical act of its communication
-to other individuals. Thus again, the prohibition of suicide has in
-view suicide through egoism, which is the most frequent form, and it is
-therefore useless to identify this with the universal relation between
-death and life, and with the proposition that life is preserved by
-means of death. Thus too, finally, the conception of the delinquent
-has been a beneficent rectification of common prejudices relating to
-the efficacy of certain laws and penalties applied to certain classes
-of individuals who are led to crime as though through unrestrainable
-natural tendency. For the rest, the wisdom of life teaches us usually
-to take individuals as we find them, with their virtues and vices, and
-without claiming to set them violently right, and to remake them from
-top to bottom. We should rather adapt them in the best way possible
-for our own ends, or for those of society. This does not, however,
-imply that they are fixed beings, and that each of those classes is
-heterogeneous in respect of the others. If, with the help of a foolish
-positivist philosophy, we make of the idea of the delinquent something
-necessary, a natural being, as it is called, confounding naturalistic
-with natural and incorrectly hypostasizing gnoseological procedure,
-then, and then alone, are we right in reacting and in denying.
-
-[Sidenote: _2a. False deduction of the empirical from the
-philosophical._]
-
-And yet those solutions of philosophers, who think that they are
-solving empirical questions by annulling or ignoring them, do not yet
-represent the worst that happens when philosophy usurps the function
-of empiria. Such misunderstanding, such hardness of hearing, may be
-proof of a spirit so energetically directed to universale that it is
-unable to see anything else, and may even for that reason possess
-some sympathetic quality. The worst of the worst is the entering upon
-empirical questions, not in order to annul, but to take sides in them
-and to solve them philosophically.
-
-[Sidenote: _Affirmations relating to the contingent changed into
-philosophemes._]
-
-This cannot be done, save by supporting empirical concepts with
-rigorous and philosophical concepts, confounding the one with the other
-by a trick of thought, and sometimes of words, making use of synonyms
-and homonyms, and pronouncing in the name of philosophy arbitrary
-solutions suggested only by caprice or self-interest. This is the
-complete corruption, alike of philosophy and of empiria. Not satisfied
-with making practical classes follow philosophical concepts of the
-practical, it is then sought to deduce the former from the latter,
-and behold them now deriving virtues and duties from the universal
-concept of practical moral activity, by means of the divisions of
-internal and external, of part and whole, of individual and society.
-These are concepts of relations, not susceptible of division, and
-therefore incapable of serving as base for empirical divisions. Or
-they have recourse to the triad of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis,
-which is the universal concrete itself, constituting unity, and
-therefore incapable of serving as basis for division. Or they will
-deduce the moral virtues according to the three faculties, as virtues
-of representation, feeling and thought, or according to the two of the
-will and the intellect, as dianoetic and ethical virtues; as though the
-base of the division of the _practical_ could be that of _theoretical_
-and _practical._ Empirical concepts become in this way all false,
-whereas, in their real nature, they are neither false nor true.
-
-There is no thesis, however absurd, which cannot be defended with
-such a method. All know that there are aristocratic and democratic
-philosophers, libertarian and authoritarian, anarchical and
-organicist, socialistic and anti-socialistic, bellicose and pacific,
-feminist and antifeminist; and there are others who maintain the
-right to lie, the right to suicide, the right to prostitution, the
-right to incest, to making of themselves caterers for the scaffold,
-the right to the penalty of death. These solutions can be morally and
-politically justified in certain definite and particular cases. There
-are other solutions rationally unjustifiable in the individual case
-and put forward only through passion, wickedness, or prejudice, but in
-both hypotheses, they are outside philosophy and within it so false as
-to be odious, as that is odious which is maintained, not by means of
-intrinsic reason, but by imposition altogether extrinsic and external.
-
-[Sidenote: _Reason of the rebellion against rules._]
-
-Such hatefulness explains the rebellion against moral rules and
-concepts that has often taken place. This, together with that against
-literary classes and rules and others of the same sort, forms part
-of the vast movement of rebellion against empirical or empiricized
-philosophy. In truth, when those rules and ideas are taken by
-themselves, no rebellion is possible, because they do not exert any
-pressure and obey the orders of the man who has made them. But it
-happens otherwise, when they become rigid and philosophical, and
-as is said, absolute, claiming to substitute themselves as such for
-philosophy and to provide a base for judgments. In addition to this,
-from the enforced union of philosophemes with rules, has arisen the
-false idea of philosophizing about the practical (about an Ethic,
-for example), which showed itself to be _practical,_ or, as is said,
-_normative._
-
-[Sidenote: _Limits between philosophy and empiria._]
-
-Philosophy, by taking part in empirical questions, ruins both itself
-and them, because it loses the serenity, the dignity, and the utility
-that are intrinsic to it. In like manner, the empirical disciplines
-ruin themselves and philosophy when they claim to philosophize with
-their classes, which are not categories, with their pseudo-concepts,
-which are not concepts, with their _generalia,_ which are not
-_universalia._ Here too, safety lies in distinction: the observation of
-distinction alone makes possible beneficent co-operation.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS
-
-
-A history of the general theories relating to the practical activity
-is still to write, although we have several relating to particular
-theories of Ethic. The mode in which such a historical narration should
-be conducted results from the historical explanations themselves,
-which we have exposed and shall continue to expose. Here we cannot
-even offer a rapid summary. We shall limit ourselves to making a--few
-remarks on the subject, and we shall give some historical account of
-certain problems of the philosophy of the practical, that have had, to
-some extent, profound treatment, or have at least been sufficiently
-discussed (for not a few others are virgin, or almost so), with the
-sole object of serving as a guide.
-
-[Sidenote: _I. Distinction between history of the practiced principle
-and history of the liberation from the transcendental._]
-
-I. A first warning to bear in mind concerns the historical inquiry as
-to the varying _recognition of, or failure to recognize_ the _practical
-reason_ in respect to the other forms of the spirit. This series of
-thoughts is not to be confounded with that _other historical process,_
-so long and so intricate, which had its origin in the debate between
-St. Augustine and Pelagius (or perhaps rather in the opposition between
-Platonic mysticism and Aristotelian humanism), and through analogous
-debates, arising afresh during the Middle Ages and onward to modern
-times, culminating in the strife for the independence of morality and
-the practical reason in general from religion, which took place in
-the seventeenth century. The account of the various incidents of that
-debate perhaps occupies a larger space and a different place in the
-special histories of Ethic than it deserves. For it is not concerned
-with an entirely ethical or practical problem, but with that general
-philosophical movement which produced the progressive elimination of
-the transcendental and founded the immanentistic consideration of
-the real: a necessary condition for the conceivability of philosophy
-itself. In this lay the great importance of the affirmation that the
-practical and the moral spirit of man reveals itself as constant in the
-midst of the most various and opposed religious beliefs. This amounts
-to saying that it is independent of religion and knowable naturally and
-humanly, without the necessity of having recourse to the authority of
-revelation and of making shipwreck in mystery. It is customary to say
-that in the seventeenth century free-thought definitely won the victory
-upon the point most ardently contested, and in this connection are
-recorded the names of Charron, Grotius, Spinoza, and Pierre Bayle. To
-these could be added that of G. B. Vico, who conceived of Providence
-as immanent and considered that morality arose from "a sense common to
-all men," from a judgment "without any sort of reflection," foundation
-of the natural rights of man. But should the word "definite" be really
-used here? Whenever the idea of the transcendental reappears, even in
-the timid form of agnosticism, the autonomy of the practical reason is
-denied, or at least again put in doubt (and with it that of the whole
-human spirit).
-
-Two examples only of this must suffice, but they are conspicuous.
-Emmanuel Kant, not having been able to surpass the mystery that he
-had formulated--the principle of the practical reason--the categoric
-imperative remained suspended in the void, and in that void it invokes
-in relation to itself faith in a personal God and in a transcendental
-future life, which shall conciliate virtue and happiness, at variance
-in the life lived upon earth. This scrap of mystery which Kant
-allowed to remain in his system, suffices to obscure that autonomy
-of the practical reason and that concept of spiritual productivity
-which he had affirmed with so much energy. Another example, perhaps
-even more characteristic, is furnished by the Ethic that was prevalent
-for three centuries in the English School. It was a utilitarian Ethic
-and therefore incapable of truly founding moral reason. What was the
-consequence of that incapacity when recognized as such? Nothing but
-the renewed introduction of mystery, the explanation obtained by means
-of the idea of a personal God, assuming that most extravagant form
-known as "theological utilitarianism." By this theory, moral actions
-that in this life do not receive adequate recompense and seem to be
-unjustified from the utilitarian point of view, are rewarded by God
-in another life, thus finding their economic motive for being carried
-out in the present life. In our theoretic treatment of the subject, we
-do not concern ourselves with the controversy, already mooted in the
-_Eutyphron,_ as to whether sanctity be loved by the gods as sanctity,
-or whether it be sanctity because it is beloved by the gods[1]--a
-question that in the Middle Ages was transformed into that other one,
-differently solved by Abélard, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus: whether the
-moral law be given by divine decree, or whether the idea of God does
-not of necessity coincide with the idea of moral law. We do not treat
-of this, since we are occupied with the practical, not with theology
-or antitheology, and consider that the contest between philosophy
-and theology has been already solved and surpassed in the theory of
-knowledge. For the same reason, it seems to us that we should not trace
-its history in the History of the Philosophy of the Practical.[2]
-
-[Sidenote: _II. The distinction of the practical from the theoretical._]
-
-II. The true and proper history of the practical principle, conceived
-as autonomous, and of the problem concerning the identity or the
-distinction of the practical from theory, has a different line of
-development. As a rule this problem is referred back to the celebrated
-sayings of Socrates, that virtue is knowledge and vice ignorance, and
-to the corrections that Aristotle, while accepting, proposes in them,
-when he takes note of the part that belongs to the non-cognoscitive
-element. But, as often happens, those sayings and those corrections
-have been taken as being more profound than they genuinely were and
-could be. This, if it have not aided the exactness of historical
-interpretation, has nevertheless stimulated and fecundated thought.
-On reading without prejudice the parts of the _Memorabilia,_ of the
-Platonic dialogues, of the _Nicomachean Ethics,_ and of the _Magna
-Moralia_ that relate to it, it appears evident that what is treated
-of in them is the altogether empirical question of the importance
-that mental development has for practical life, and whether knowledge
-suffices for this, or natural dispositions and discipline of the
-passions be not also necessary. Aristotle replied to Socrates, who had
-insisted upon the element of knowing, conceiving virtue as knowledge
-(λόγος), by modifying the statement with the assertion that virtue is
-not indeed simply knowledge, but is _with_ knowledge (μετὰ λόγου).
-In these very ingenuous considerations is to be found at the most
-implicitly, but certainly not explicitly, the problem that was only
-stated later on; and it would be rash to classify Socrates as an
-intellectualist and Aristotle as a voluntarist. It is certain that the
-Aristotelian philosophy, in accordance with good sense, preserved the
-distinction between the two forms of the spirit, the theoretical and
-the practical, the reason and the will, a distinction that has also
-passed into the scholastic philosophy (_ratio cognoscibilis, ratio
-appetibilis_) and into that of the Renaissance. But it remained always
-vague, sometimes brought into prominence, sometimes, on the other hand,
-attenuated. Almost dissipated in those who conceive the principles of
-the practical as something similar or analogous to mathematical truths
-(Cudworth, Clarke, Wollaston, etc.), it always reaffirms itself when
-importance is given to the affections and passions, as is the case with
-many thinkers of the seventeenth century (Bacon, Descartes, Spinoza,
-Vico); and the doctrines of the Scottish school of sensationalists
-contributed not a little to keep it alive.
-
-It seems indubitable that Emmanuel Kant is to be connected to
-some extent rather with this last tradition than with that of the
-intellectualists: with Kant the practical reason possessed a domain of
-its own altogether distinct from and almost antithetical to the domain
-of the theoretical. But it is erroneous to present the successors
-of Kant as forgetful of the practical reason and as resolving every
-spiritual manifestation in the theoretical form of the spirit.
-For instance, Fichte, who had a very strong consciousness of the
-peculiarity of the practical activity, did not do this, nor did Hegel,
-though as commonly as unjustly accused of being a cold intellectualist.
-It should suffice to recall how Hegel always opposed that view of
-Plato and of other thinkers (for example Campanella) who assigned the
-government of the State to philosophers, a view in which the resolution
-of the practical into the theoretical spirit and of the will into
-knowledge seemed to become concrete. For Hegel, on the contrary, the
-domain of _history_ is different from that of _philosophy;_ history
-is indeed the idea, but the idea that shows itself in a _natural and
-unconscious_ manner, and _philosophical_ genius is not _political_
-genius. Nor must we forget the importance that he accorded to passion,
-to custom, to what is called the heart and is wont to be opposed to
-the brain and to argument. For Hegel, the will is not thought, but
-a special kind of thought, that is to say, thought which translates
-itself into existence, the impulse to give oneself existence. Whereas
-in the theoretical process, the spirit takes possession of the object
-and makes it its own by thinking, that is by universalizing it, in
-the practical process a difference is also stated and determined,
-which on the other hand consists of its own determinations and ends.
-The theoretical is contained in the practical, since there cannot be
-will without intelligence; but, on the other hand, the theoretical
-contains the practical, since to think is also to act. Hegel, in short,
-distinguishes the practical from the theoretical and unifies them,
-while retaining the distinction.[3] What is not perhaps altogether
-clear to him, notwithstanding his view that history is the idea in a
-natural and unconscious mode, is the unreflective character of willing.
-To have given relief to this character, although in the exaggerated and
-inacceptable form of the will as blind and unconscious, is the merit of
-Arthur Schopenhauer, who is indeed far from standing alone in assigning
-an eminent place to the will, but connects himself with all the Kantian
-and post-Kantian philosophy, and in the first place with Fichte and
-Schelling.
-
-[Sidenote: _III. The mixtures of philosophy of the practical and
-description._]
-
-III. The mixture of philosophical concepts with empirical concepts and
-with rules is a vice common to nearly all treatises of the Philosophy
-of the practical, beginning with the _Nicomachean Ethic,_ which,
-although in certain places loftily philosophical, should be placed in
-greater part rather at the head of the history of the works of the
-moralists and of writers on the practical, than of Ethic. The author
-himself recognized this practical character when he wrote, _πάς ὁ περὶ
-τῶν πρακτῶν λόγος τύπῳ καὶ οὐκ ἀκριβῶς ὀφείλει λέγεσθαι.[4]_ And in
-this appears the prejudice that practical philosophy should be occupied
-with the practical: ἐπεὶ οὖν ἡ παροῦσα πραγματεία οὐ θεωρίας ἕνεκά
-ἐστιν ὥσπερ αἱ ἅλλαι (οὐ γὰρ ἵνα εἰδῶμεν τί εστιν ἡ ἀρετὴ σκεπτόμεθα
-άλλ' ἵν' ἀγαθοὶ ηινώμεθα, ἐπεὶ ούδὲν ἃν ἧν ὄφελος αὐτῆς), κτλ.[5]
-Even the greatest thinkers of modern times are not exempt from that
-characteristic. Emmanuel Kant, while recognizing that the division and
-treatment of duties do not belong to the Critique of the Sciences (he
-should therefore have excluded them from philosophy, which is always
-_criticism),_ finally relegates them to what he calls the "system"
-(and is in truth the anti-systematic)[6] and writes the _Metaphysic of
-Customs,_ divided into the doctrines of law and of the virtues. Fichte,
-in his _System of Ethic,_ makes the applied follow the theoretical
-part. Hegel gives the doctrine of duties in the third part of his
-_Philosophy of Law,_ which is entitled Of Ethicity (_Sittlichkeit_.)
-The Ethic of Herbart is intrinsically descriptive, for the author
-himself professed to wish simply "to describe the ideal of virtue,"[7]
-and the five practical ideas that he takes as principles were at bottom
-nothing but classes of virtue refined into ideas. Treatises of to-day
-are overflowing with empirical elements, as can be seen from those in
-English by Ladd and Seth, and by those in German of Paulsen, Wundt, and
-Cathrein. Sometimes a more concrete historical element is coupled in
-those treatises with the empirical classification of practical examples
-and institutions: as, for instance, in Cathrein, a modernized Jesuit,
-who exposes at length the moral views, not only of civilized people,
-ancient and modern, but also of the savages of Oceania, of Asia, of
-Cochin China, of the Hottentots and Boschimans, of the Botocudis, and
-so on. Questions of casuistry also survive in these treatises, such as
-whether and on what occasions it is permissible to tell a lie; this
-question is notably represented in the history of ideas, from the
-Socrates of the _Memorabilia_ to Kant and Schopenhauer.[8] Kant added
-questions of casuistry to the various sections of the _Metaphysic of
-Customs,_ as scholia to the system and examples of the way in which the
-truth of particular questions should be sought.[9]
-
-[Sidenote: _Vain attempts at definitions of empirical concepts._]
-
-But the efforts of ancient and modern philosophers rigorously to
-define empirical concepts afford more interest than the external form
-of treatment, as do their efforts to modify or to simplify, or indeed
-finally to deduce them rationally. The Platonic dialogues, such as the
-_Charmides,_ the _Lachetes,_ the _Protagoras,_ are most instructive
-in this respect. Here it is sought to define sophrosune, andreia and
-the other virtues, without arriving at any precise result, or rather
-arriving at the contradictory one, that each of these virtues is _the
-whole of virtue,_ whereas it should only be a _part_ of it. In the
-_Republic_ is sought the relation of the four virtues, or rather of
-three of them, prudence, temperance, and fortitude, with justice, which
-forms as it were the foundation and unity of the whole. From such
-discussions arose the affirmation, to be found also in Cicero, that
-the virtues are inseparable from one another: _virtutes ita copulatae
-connexaeque sunt, ut omnes participes sint, nec alia ab alia possit
-separari._[10] The difficulty of the Platonic inquiry is renewed with
-all those who have given definitions of the virtues and of the other
-empirical concepts, because, when they have achieved with much labour
-a definition which appears satisfactory, it is afterwards always found
-to be too narrow or too wide. Thus the definition given by Kant and by
-others (Fichte, Schopenhauer) of egoism, consisting in their view, of
-considering other individuals as means and not ends, is the definition,
-not of egoism, but of any form of immorality which debases the Spirit
-that should be the end, by means of its own caprices. The same is to
-be said of the definitions given by Fichte as to the duties inherent
-to this or that condition and state: the duties, for instance, of the
-learned, who should love truth, communicate it to others, rectify
-errors, promote culture,[11] and so on. These are all things that
-form part of the duty, not only of the learned, but of every man. The
-simplifiers are not more fortunate in their attempts to reduce the
-number of empirical concepts, for the concepts excluded by them have
-neither more nor less right to recognition than the others that they
-have accepted. Schopenhauer, for instance, when he rejects the class
-of duties toward oneself,[12] should also reject that of duties toward
-others. For others and ourselves are correlative terms, and we cannot
-be benevolent to others and malevolent to ourselves, just to others
-and unjust to ourselves. If this be met with the objection that the
-empirical self is not the object of duties, we must reply that neither
-are the empirical "others," but only that Spirit which is in all and
-constitutes all. In reacting against these unifiers and simplifiers,
-other philosophers (as for example Herbart) have maintained the
-indeducibility of the virtues or duties from a single principle, which
-means that they have received those concepts into their philosophy
-atomistically, and left them there as something not digested and not
-digestible, an extraneous element. If they had openly admitted this and
-drawn from it the legitimate consequence, and for that reason excluded
-those concepts from philosophy, they would really have contributed
-toward simplifying and unifying, by making it homogeneous. But Herbart,
-if he have no other merit, has at any rate declared that the Philosophy
-of the practical is not capable of solving all the problems that occur
-in life, and that we must always rely upon the answer of the heart,
-upon the delicacy of individual tact. And, therefore, while Kant still
-preserved casuistic questions in Ethic and professed to solve them
-rationally, Herbart showed that they lack the determinations that are
-of true importance in real cases, and that such questions are therefore
-as a rule either without meaning or insoluble (_entweder gar keiner
-Fragen, oder im Allgemein unauflöslich_).[13]
-
-[Sidenote: _Attempts at eduction._]
-
-As concerns the attempt to connect and to deduct the empirical part of
-treatises from the philosophical, the first example is the Aristotelian
-division of the virtues into the dianoetic and ethic, with their
-consequent determination by means of the concept of mediacy (μεσότης)
-between two extremes. But this Aristotelian method, which was continued
-by the Scholastics, seemed to others (as for example Schleiermacher)
-nothing but "a heap of virtues," without any rule and without any
-certainty; hence he made constant attempts at new classifications and
-new deductions. Kant recognized that the ethical obligation, that is,
-respect for the law, is something unique and indivisible, and that to
-attain from that to duties or _ethica officia,_ which are many, it
-is necessary to introduce the consideration of objects.[14] Here he
-should have stopped, because objects have infinite determinations, are
-infinite. Hence the enumeration, division and deduction of duties,
-should be simply pronounced impossible. Instead of doing this, he
-passed at a bound, how far logical we know not, from the general
-ethical obligation, to the division of duties into two great classes:
-of man toward man, and of man toward beings that are not human. He
-divided the first into duties toward oneself and duties toward other
-men, the second into that of the duties toward beings beneath man
-(animals) and those toward beings above him (God).[15] The strangeness
-of these divisions, which sometimes verge on the comic, can already
-be seen, though abridged, in the first class of the duties toward
-oneself, subdivided in its turn into duties toward oneself as an animal
-or physical being, and duties toward oneself as a moral being; as
-though human duties are not always to be referred to spirituality and
-can ever concern physicality or animality. In their first aspect they
-receive a tripartite division, into the duty of self-preservation,
-which is violated by suicide, by allowing oneself to be castrated (in
-order to sing soprano, as used to be done at that time at the San Carlo
-of Naples and at the Opera of Berlin), by allowing a healthy tooth
-to be pulled out in order to sell it (as does poor Fantine in the
-story of the _Misérables_); into the duty of preserving the species
-(violation: unnatural use of the sexual impulse);--into the duty of
-preserving the use of one's own strength (violation: gluttony). The
-duty of preserving the dignity of man is contained beneath the second
-heading (violation, lying, covetousness, abjection, etc.[16]). The
-fact is that the duty of preserving the dignity of man comprises
-in itself, not only the class that stands first, of duties toward
-oneself, but also all the other duties toward men, animals, or gods.
-Fichte feels the difficulty, because he sees that conscience is that
-which determines our duty on each occasion; but he adds: "This is not
-enough for science: either we must be able to determine _a priori_
-that which our conscience will affirm in universal, or we must admit
-that an Ethic, as a pure applied science, is impossible."[17] The
-second horn of the dilemma was precisely that of the truth, but
-Fichte, like Kant, bowed to the supreme power of tradition and clung
-to the first. He divides duties into mediate and conditioned (toward
-oneself) and immediate and unconditioned (toward others), and into
-general and special (those of various states and conditions), deducing
-from this the fourfold division, resulting from the meeting of general
-conditioned duties, particular conditioned, general unconditioned,
-and particular unconditioned. Hegel, who in his youthful writings had
-denied absolute value to the virtues, and consequently the possibility
-of collisions between the virtues (for example, in the _Life of Jesus,_
-recently published), well defines the altogether empirical character
-of that treatise, calling it, by reason of its natural element and of
-the quantitive considerations upon which it is founded, "a natural
-history of the spiritual world" (_eine geistige Naturgeschichte_); but
-since he did not perceive the identity of the concept of duty with that
-of virtue, he believes in the possibility of a philosophical theory
-of duties.[18] This is developed by him, as has been said, in the
-section of Ethicity, applying to it the dialectical rhythm proper to
-the philosophical universal, and distinguishing in it three moments: of
-the immediate natural spirit, which is the family, of the dissension
-from which arises civil society, and of conciliation, whence arises
-the State. But notwithstanding the external dialectical form, there
-is to be found in all this section of the Ethicity at every point,
-not so much the philosopher properly so-called, as the historian who
-describes and narrates, the acute and well-balanced politician and
-moralist. The merit of such a treatise resides precisely, therefore,
-in the abhorrence of a sham philosophy; with but slight modifications
-of literary form, it could be developed into a series of excellent
-historico-political essays. Certain of the propositions of the writing
-on _Natural Law_ (1802-3)[19] would tend to show that Hegel inclined
-to look upon the treatment of duties and institutions as nothing
-more than a provisional classification of historical and changeable
-material, a thought that is in any case suggested by his whole system.
-Schleiermacher was among the philosophers of that time who laboured,
-perhaps, with the greatest tenacity upon the empirical classes, with
-a view to reducing them to philosophical form; but the results were
-unhappy, only revealing, by their contradictions persisting after
-such efforts, the impossibility of the task. In fact, Schleiermacher
-sees and does not see the unity of the three spheres of things good,
-of duties, and of virtues; hence they appeared to him to be three
-aspects of the same object, and he strangely placed them in analogical
-connection with three spheres of the natural world, the mechanical, the
-chemical, and the organic. He, too, starting from a double division and
-a double antithesis, ideal and temporal, of knowledge and exposition
-(_Darstellen,_) arrived at a quadruple division of the virtues, into
-wisdom and love, discretion and perseverance, which seemed to him to
-coincide with the four Platonic virtues, of φρόνησις, δικαιοσύνη,
-σωφροσύνη, and ἀνδρeίa, or with the four cardinal virtues derived from
-them, to which would correspond the four duties: of right, of vocation,
-of love, and of conscience.[20] After this, it would be superfluous to
-proceed to enumerate the ethical systems of contemporary philosophy,
-noteworthy neither for the ingenuity of their artificial deductions nor
-for the grandeur of their paradoxes.[21]
-
-[Sidenote: _IV. Various questions._]
-
-IV. The very copious empirical element that fills the books on
-the Philosophy of the practical and the attempt to treat it
-philosophically have also had the injurious effect of distracting
-their authors from entering deeply into the problems of true and
-proper philosophy, to which the practical activity gives rise. Thus
-a history of the aforesaid aberrations would be as rich as a history
-of the speculation as to the will would be poor. The problem of the
-theoretic element in the volitional act, or of the theoretic phase
-of deliberation, has not been developed as it deserved, and as
-the important pages of the third and seventh books of the _Ethica
-Nicomachea_ seemed to augur. The question, too, of the priority of
-the will over the concepts of the useful and of the good and of the
-practical judgments, is hardly touched by a philosopher here and there,
-and the Herbartian theory of practical judgments failed to excite
-any fervour of examination, criticism, or opposition. The concept
-of good will and of good intention, to which Kant gave a prominent
-place, is not discussed profoundly, save by Hegel, who goes deeply
-into the difficult problems of abstract and concrete intention in the
-introduction and in the second section of the _Philosophy of Law._
-The other problem, as to the possibility or impossibility of willing
-without full knowledge, was not adequately treated after Descartes and
-Spinoza.
-
-[Sidenote: _The practical nature of error._]
-
-In Descartes are also to be found the most acute observations as to the
-practical nature of error. After having stated that it is impossible
-that God should have given to man any faculty that was not perfect of
-its kind, he asks himself: "_D'où est-ce donc que naissent mes erreurs?
-C'est à savoir, de cela seul que la volonté, étant beaucoup plus ample
-et plus étendue que l'entendement, je ne la contiens pas dans les mêmes
-limites, mais que je l'étends aussi aux choses que je n'entends pas;
-auxquelles étant de soi indifférente, elle s'égare fort aisément, et
-choisit le faux pour le vrai et le mal pour le bien: ce qui fait que
-je me trompe et je pèche._" Errors arise from the concourse of two
-causes, the faculty of knowing and the faculty of choice: "_car pour
-l'entendement seul je n'assure ni ne nie aucune chose, mais je conçois
-seulement les idées des choses que je puis assurer ou nier._"[22] For
-Descartes the affirmation was an act of the will, and here perhaps lies
-his mistake and the mistake of those who have followed him in this
-theory (Rosmini for example); that is to say, they have _mistaken_
-the _affirmation,_ which is theoretical, for the _communication,_
-which is practical, or they have taken as being of the same degree the
-general will that is in affirmation through the unity of the spirit,
-and the particular will that is in error. Spinoza opposes Descartes'
-theory of error, but in conformity with the deterministic nature of
-his philosophy, his criticism relates only to the point as to whether
-the will can be the cause of error when it is not more than a mere
-abstraction or _ens rationis;_ hence errors or the _particulares
-volitiones_ can be determined, not indeed by the will and by liberty,
-but _a causis externis_[23] The consciousness of the introduction of
-the will into the theoretical spirit as production of error has been
-affirmed by Schleiermacher as well as by Rosmini:[24] "It is the will
-(he writes) that conceals men from themselves: the judgment cannot err
-if it turn its gaze really upon itself."[25] Baader frankly reduced
-incredulity to ill-will and moral corruption.[26]
-
-[Sidenote: _Practical taste._]
-
-As to the concept of an immediate form of practical discrimination,
-independent of the intellectual judgment, it is to be remarked
-that the faculty of _taste_ in Gracian and in other thinkers of the
-seventeenth century[27] has a practical rather than a theoretical
-origin, and that the sentimentalists of Ethic (Shaftesbury, Hutcheson
-and others) were led to posit a moral tact sense. Before Herbart talked
-of a _moral taste (sittlicher Geschmack[28])_ Jacobi, who saw better
-than others the analogy between practical and æsthetic facts, had
-written: "The science of the good, like the science of the beautiful,
-is subject to the condition of _taste,_ without which nothing can be
-decided, and beyond which nothing can be carried. The taste for the
-good, like that for the beautiful, is formed by means of models of
-excellence, and original acts are always the work of genius. By means
-of genius, nature gives laws to art, both as regards the good and the
-beautiful. Both are _liberal_ arts; they do not allow themselves to be
-lowered to the level of mechanical arts and placed at the service of
-industry."[29]
-
-[Sidenote: _V. The doctrines of feeling._]
-
-V. With the mention of a few facts and names, it can be proved that
-the function of the term "feeling" in the history of philosophy has
-been as shown above. We have already said that the peculiarity of the
-practical form has been asserted by the use of the word "feeling" or
-similar denominations ("moral sense," "conscience," and the like),
-especially by the Scottish School, in opposition to intellectualist
-reductions. Jacobi appealed to the feeling of duty (_Gefühl der
-Pflicht_) or conscience in his ethical discussions. In our day, too, it
-has been affirmed (by Simmel[30] and others), in opposition to abstract
-and imperative Ethics, that the practical decision is the product of
-feeling and is not definable by theoreticians. But the principal cause
-of the importance attached to feeling in the eighteenth century was
-the æsthetic problem. This is seen in Dubos's book, in the English
-sentimentalists (who approach the ideas of virtue and of beauty,
-treating of the moral sense and of the beautiful), and, finally, in
-the doctrines of Leibnitz himself and of his school, as to _confused
-cognition,_ which led to the _Aesthetica_ of Baumgarten.
-
-[Sidenote: _The Wolfians._]
-
-We owe the word and the concept of _feeling_ (_Gefühl_ and sometimes
-also _Empfindung_) principally to the Leibnitzian-Wolfians and to
-the German thinkers under the influence of Wolff (Mendelssohn,
-Tetens, Sulzer, Riedel).
-
-[Sidenote: _Jacobi and Schleiermacher._]
-
-By means of the speculation of Jacobi, on the other hand, feeling
-was called upon to fulfil the functions of a true and proper
-metaphysical organ. He had demonstrated in a rigorous and irrefutable
-manner that the form of the empirical sciences and of the abstract
-intellect, since it proceeds by nexus of cause and effect, is incapable
-of attaining to the infinite, and had assigned the affirmation of
-God to the "sense of the supersensible," to "immediate knowledge,"
-and to "feeling." After Jacobi, the same position was assumed by
-Schleiermacher, who maintained that it was impossible to know God by
-means of the intellect and to treat Him as an object, since He is
-indifference of thought and being. He can be known only by feeling,
-which is indifference of all determinate functions of ideal and real,
-of thought and being. The neocriticists and agnostics of to-day, with
-their appeal to feeling in all truly philosophical questions, are
-followers, often unconscious and certainly less coherent, of Jacobi and
-Schleiermacher.
-
-The concept of feeling in the Kantian philosophy can be said to derive
-its importance from the meeting of two unsatisfied wants, namely,
-that which sought a concept for the æsthetic activity and that which
-sought a _forma mentis_ proper to philosophy. Indeed, the _Critique
-of Judgment_ corresponds to feeling, the first part of which consists
-of an inquiry into the nature of the beautiful and of art. The second
-part (critique of the theological judgment) is an anticipation of the
-_concrete concept,_ or of that organ of speculative thought which the
-_Critique of Pure Reason_ had not discovered.
-
-[Sidenote: _Hegel._]
-
-Feeling, therefore, cannot but lose importance in the Hegelian
-philosophy, which makes of art a form of knowledge, and of the
-teleological judgment the logic of the idea or philosophical logic,
-resolving also in it the demand of Jacobi, whose feeling or immediate
-knowledge is shown to be logical knowledge and supreme mediation. In
-Hegel feeling is nothing but a class of spiritual facts, the lowest
-of all, that in which theory and practice are still indistinct.
-But this class has a merely psychological value in his system, not
-philosophical and real (which is not clearly recognised by him).
-Indeed, feeling, which was absolute knowledge for Jacobi and for
-Schleiermacher, is placed, not in the sphere of the absolute spirit,
-nor in that of the objective or practical spirit, but in the subjective
-spirit, or Psychology. The "doctrine of the three faculties"
-(_Dreivermögenslehre_), as was called that elaborated from Mendelssohn
-to Kant and promulgated in the Kantian philosophy, did not, however,
-remain without opponents in the nineteenth century; from Krug (1823) to
-the youthful Fichte, and in more recent times Brentano (1874).
-
-[Sidenote: _Opponents of the doctrine of the three faculties. Krug._]
-
-Krugs confutation is wrongly combated by Hamilton and discredited by
-Brentano, for it proceeds with perfect correctness, and is founded on
-the correct philosophical principle that' there are no other activities
-of the spirit conceivable, save those directed either inwardly or
-outwardly (immanent or theoretical and transcendent or practical),
-and that therefore there is no place for feeling, which would be a
-mixture of the two activities, and consequently a failure of direction
-or inactivity, nothing, therefore, but a poor, rudimentary knowing or
-willing, that is, a psychological class, not a philosophical category.
-
-[Sidenote: _Brentano._]
-
-Brentano, returning in a measure to Descartes, constructs the
-doctrine of the three faculties in a different way, determining them
-as representation (to which he makes art and the æsthetic activity
-correspond), judgment (to which corresponds science), and love and
-hate (to which corresponds the practical). Feeling, therefore, does
-not find a place of its own in the psyche, and that which is wont to
-be called feeling is either representation, or love and hate. Brentano
-shows himself inferior to Krug in the philosophical demonstration of
-the inconceivability of this form of the spirit, but he has the merit
-of having substituted certain positive elements for the indeterminate
-word "feeling," although the function exercised by feeling in the
-development of philosophical thought is more important than Brentano
-succeeds in perceiving, for among other things he ignores and fails
-to recognize the relation of the concept of feeling to the demands of
-speculative thought.[31]
-
-
-
-[1] _Eutyphron,_ 10.
-
-[2] The history of the enfranchising of Ethic from Religion has
-been done with especial care by Jodl, _Gesch. d. Ethik als philos.
-Wissensch._ vol. I². (Stuttgart--Berlin, 1906). For Vico, cf. my book,
-_The Philosophy of G. B. Vico_ (Bari, 1911).
-
-[3] _Phil. d. Rechts,_ § 4, Zus.; _Gesch. d. Philos._ ii. pp. 66, 169.
-
-[4] _Eth. Nicom._ 1103.
-
-[5] See above.
-
-[6] _Kritik d. prakt. Vern.,_ ed. Kirchmann, pp. 7-8.
-
-[7] _Allg. prakt. Phil.,_ ed. Hartenstein, p. 107.
-
-[8] _Memor._ iv., c. 2, §§ 14-16. Schopenhauer also exhaustively,
-_Gründl. d. Moral,_ in _Werke,_ ed. Grisebach, iii. pp. 603-607.
-
-[9] _Metaphys. d. Sitten,_ ed. Kirchmann, p. 248.
-
-[10] _De Finibus,_ v, c. 23.
-
-[11] _System der Sittenlehre,_ § 29, in _Werke,_ iv. 346-347.
-
-[12] _Gründl. d. Moral,_ ed., cit., iii. pp. 506-508.
-
-[13] _Allg. prakt. Philos.,_ ed. Hartenstein, pp. 29-30.
-
-[14] _Metaphys. d. Sitten,_ pp. 247-248.
-
-[15] _Op. cit._ p. 251.
-
-[16] _Metaphys. d. Sitten,_ p. 255 _sqq._
-
-[17] _System d. Sittenlehre,_ pp. 208.
-
-[18] _Philos. d. Rechts,_ §§ 148, 150.
-
-[19] _Werke,_ i. 323-423.
-
-[20] In the _Entwurf e. Systems d. Sittenlehre_ (in _Werke,_ sec. iii.
-vol. v.), and cf. the collected writings in _Werke,_ iii. I.
-
-[21] For example, F. Paulsen, _System der Ethik,_ Leipzig, 1906.
-
-[22] _Médit._ iv.; and _Réponses aux 3mes et aux 3mes object_.
-
-[23] Epist. in _Opera,_ ed. Gfrörer, p. 523.
-
-[24] Cf., among other places, _Logica,_ §§ p. 278 _sq.; Fil. d.
-diritto_ (Napoli, 1844), I. p. 50.
-
-[25] _Monologen,_ in _Werke,_ i. 363.
-
-[26] Cf. Jodl, _Gesch. d. Eth._ ii. pp. 131-132.
-
-[27] _Estetica_ 4, p. 222.
-
-[28] _Allg. pract. Phil._ pp. 9-22.
-
-[29] _Woldemar_(1779, 1794-95), in _Werke,_ v. p. 78.
-
-[30] _Einleitung in die Moralwissenschaft,_ Berlin, 1892-93.
-
-
-[31] For the doctrine of feeling see, chiefly, Volkmann, _Lehrb. d.
-Psychol._ (Cothen, 1885), ii. pp. 301-311; F. Brentano, _Psychol._
-(Leipzig, 1874), 1., ii. c. 5; cf. _Ursprung sitt. Erkennt._ (Leipzig,
-1889) pp. 51-55; A. Palme, _Sulzer's Psychol, u. d. Anfänge d.
-Dreivermögenslehre_ (Berlin, 1905). Cf. also Croce, _Estetica,_ pp.
-226-228, 4th ed.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND SECTION
-
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS DIALECTIC
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-NECESSITY AND LIBERTY OF THE VOLITIONAL ACT
-
-
-The relations of the practical form with the other forms of the spirit
-having been examined, it is now necessary to re-enter, so to speak, the
-interior of the volitional activity, and enclose ourselves within it,
-that we may study its mode of development, its rhythm, its dialectic.
-We shall no longer ask, therefore, whether the practical activity
-precede or follow knowledge, or exactly what knowledge it follows and
-what it precedes, what the volition is in relation to events, what the
-practical concept or judgment, and the like. But we shall ask what are
-good and evil, the passions and the forces that dominate them, desires
-and aspirations; and in the first place (this being the problem that
-opens the series and gives the key for the solution of the others) what
-are the _freedom and necessity_ of the volitional act.
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The problem of freedom._]
-
-This problem of freedom and necessity (that is to say, whether the will
-be free or determined) has seemed to be and is, from a certain point of
-view, most weighty and complicated, and we shall soon see why this is
-so. But at this point, owing to the premises that we have already laid
-down in our preceding treatises, and also in the part of the present
-treatise that has already been developed, it will be convenient to
-solve it with relative expedition.
-
-[Sidenote: _Freedom of willing and freedom of action: criticism of such
-distinction._]
-
-First of all, we have been able to eliminate the distinction that is
-wont to be made between freedom of willing and freedom of action,
-with the duplicity of the problem thus entailed. Indeed we know that
-volition and action coincide, and that it is impossible to conceive
-either a volition which is not at the same time action, or an action
-which is not at the same time volition, and that in consequence there
-cannot be freedom of willing on the one hand and freedom of action
-on the other. All the instances of the one that are brought forward
-can be reduced to the other, provided that the word "freedom" be not
-used in an improper and metaphorical manner. For example, a paralytic
-(they say) wills to get up and run; his spirit is free, but his
-action is restrained; he has freedom of willing, but not of action.
-But in reality the paralytic does not seriously will to get up and
-run; that is, he does not really will anything at all. Were he really
-and seriously to will, that might happen to him which happened to a
-paralytic gentleman in the Neapolitan revolt of 1547. This gentleman
-had himself carried into the square on the arms of his servants, but he
-was found, after the tumult, to the great astonishment of all, on the
-top of the campanile of San Lorenzo, whither he had climbed with his
-own legs; such had been his terror and such his will to be saved.[1]
-As a rule, on the other hand, the paralytic does not will, because he
-knows that he cannot; at the most, he _would wish_ or desire to find
-himself in different conditions to those in which he finds himself, in
-order that he may be able to will otherwise than he does now, which is
-to remain quiet. This confirms the identity of volition and action,
-and proves that the two supposed freedoms are one only. Thus, he who
-is threatened and yields to the threat declares that he is deprived of
-freedom of action, but that this is not exact is already affirmed in
-the formula: _coacti tamen volunt._ Enforced actions not only do not
-exist, but are not even conceivable. The demand for greater freedom of
-action, such as new political liberties, is nothing but the demand for
-certain _new conditions of fact_ for future volitions and actions. But
-it is a question of more or less, since, as we know, no countenance of
-imminent tyrant can extinguish the freedom of the soul; no ruler, be he
-ever so strong and violent, can prevent a rebellion, or, when all else
-fails, a fine death that affirms externally the freedom within. "The
-will that wills not cannot be subdued."[2]
-
-[Sidenote: _The volitional act: both free and necessary._]
-
-The question that we have here to treat is, then, single, and concerns
-only the will, which, as such, includes in itself action. In replying,
-however, we cannot accept the dilemma, that the volitional act must
-be free or determined, and cling to one of the two horns: we must on
-the contrary deny the form of the question itself and say that the
-volitional act is _at once free and determined._
-
-Volition, in fact, as has been seen, does not arise in the void, but
-in a definite situation, in unchangeable historical conditions, in
-relation to an event, which, if it be, is necessary. The volition
-corresponds to that situation and it is impossible to separate it: when
-the situation changes, the volition changes; as the situation, so the
-volition. This amounts to saying, that it is _necessitated_ or always
-conditioned by a situation, and precisely by that situation in which it
-arises.
-
-But this also means that the volition is free. Because if the actual
-situation be its condition, the volition is not the condition, but the
-conditioned, for it does not remain fixed in the actual situation,
-nor repeats and makes a duplicate of it, which would be superfluous
-and therefore impossible in the effective development of the real,
-which does not allow of superfluity. The volition produces something
-different, that is, something new, something that did not exist
-previously and that now comes into existence: it is initiative,
-creation, and therefore act of _freedom._ Were this not so, volition
-would not be volition, and reality would not change, would not become,
-would not grow upon itself.
-
-And since without necessity there cannot be liberty, because without
-an actual situation there cannot be volition, so without liberty there
-cannot be necessity, the actual situations are not formed, which are
-always new and always necessary in respect to the new volitions. Actual
-situations are events, and events are the result of the concourse of
-individual volitions. The two terms cannot be separated, for if one
-be removed, so is the other; but neither can they be looked upon as
-identical or synonymous. They are the two moments of the volitional
-act, distinct and united, which act is the _unity_ of both, and
-therefore, as was said, is at once free and determined.
-
-This consciousness of necessity and liberty inseparably united is found
-in all men of action, in all political geniuses, who are never inert or
-reckless: they feel themselves at once bound and unbound; they always
-conform to facts, but always to surpass them. The fatuous, on the other
-hand, oscillate between the passivity of the given situation and the
-sterile attempt to overleap it, that is, to leap over their own shadow.
-They are consequently now inert, now forward. They do not therefore fix
-or conclude anything, they do not act; or, if they do, it is always
-according to what of the actual situation they have understood, and
-what of initiative they have displayed.
-
-[Sidenote: _Comparison with the æsthetic activity._]
-
-The best comparison is afforded on this occasion also by the æsthetic
-activity. No poet creates his poem outside definite conditions of
-space and time, and even when he appears to be and is proclaimed "a
-soul of other times," he belongs to his own time. The historical
-situation is given to him. The world of his perceptions is such, with
-those men, those customs, those thoughts, those works of art. But
-when the new poem has appeared, there is in the world of reality (in
-the contemplation of reality) something that was not there before,
-which, although connected with the previous situation, yet is not
-identical with it, is indeed a new form, and therefore a new content,
-and so the revelation of a truth previously unknown. So true is this,
-that in its turn the new poem conditions a spiritual and practical
-movement, becomes part of the situation given for future actions and
-for future poems. He is a true poet who feels himself at once bound
-to his predecessors and free, conservative and revolutionary, like
-Homer, Dante, and Shakespeare, who receive into themselves centuries of
-history, of thought and of poetry, and add to those centuries something
-that is the present and will be the future: _chargés du passé, gros de
-l'avenir._ The false poet, on the other hand, is now a blind follower
-of tradition and imitator, now a charlatanesque innovator, and if in
-the vacuity in which he labours he sometimes does produce a fragment of
-poetry, this happens only when he is made to look into himself and to
-have a vision, be it great or small, of a world that arises.--But the
-comparison instituted is rather an analogy than a comparison, for that
-which happens in the practical sphere happens in that of poetry and in
-all the other spheres of the spiritual activity. The Spirit is freedom,
-and in order to be so, not in the abstract, but in the concrete, it
-must also be necessity.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of determinism and of arbitrarism._]
-
-This indissoluble connection of necessity and liberty confutes both the
-partial theories which dispute the field in the problem of freedom:
-the _deterministic_ theory and that of _free will._ The determinists
-do not see in the volitional act anything but the actual situation;
-the followers of the theory of free will see nothing but the moment of
-freedom. These conceive a volition that is as it were a duplication,
-triplication, quadruplication of the given fact, and so on to the
-infinite; those a volition that bursts forth from nothing, or rains
-down from above and then inserts itself, no one knows how, into the
-course of the real. Both exaggerate, and since exaggerations are called
-in science errors in sense, both err, and being one-sided are proved
-false. But since, on the other hand, it is a quality of errors opposed
-to one another, to become identified and to pass, the one into the
-other, it is given to us to assist at a like spectacle in this case
-also, and to see the determinists change into arbitrarists and the
-believers in free will into determinists. The first, in fact, passing
-from cause to cause, abandon the concept of cause at the end of the
-chain, as though (to use the expression of Schopenhauer), they were
-dismissing the hired carriage, made use of during the day for their own
-affairs, and return to free will. The others, being unable to justify
-freedom in the world of reality and of experience, justify it in a
-transcendental way, as the effect of a divine cause, which excludes
-free will, and excludes it also when it concedes it; for by the very
-fact of conceding, it determines, limits, and produces it.
-
-[Sidenote: _General form of this antithesis: materialism and
-mysticism._]
-
-But with this explanation of our thesis, and of the two theses opposing
-it, we are transported into the heart of one of the greatest problems
-of Gnoseology, so great in fact as to appear to contain in it the whole
-problem of philosophy. In fact, that which is called determinism and
-free will in the Philosophy of the practical is the same antithesis
-that in Gnoseology is called _materialism and mysticism._ And that
-which we here oppose to the two one-sided theses, as theory of that
-liberty which is also necessity, is called in Gnoseology, _idealism._
-The thesis and antithesis are therefore to be found in all the
-particular problems of philosophy, since they concern the logical form
-in universal. This, then, is the reason why the question of freedom of
-willing has become so grave and complicated as to appear insoluble. To
-obtain a solution, it was necessary to construct a Logic of philosophy,
-and intrinsically necessary to renew the whole system of philosophy.
-Herbart wisely counselled never to discuss the freedom of the will with
-the laity, in order not to be misunderstood.[3]
-
-Had this advice been followed, we should not have seen both determinism
-and free will torn asunder by advocates in the law courts, dragging
-in the one or the other to suit their purposes, and thus insulting
-good sense, which should alone rule in those places. The freedom of
-the will is doubted and discussed among philosophers, as the reality
-of the external world is doubted and discussed, but this is not done
-because it is wished to set in doubt the existence of the boots of
-this gentleman or of that gentleman's overcoat. If a confirmation be
-sought that the question of the freedom of willing is, as was said, the
-universal gnoseological or metaphysical question, let it be observed
-how the determinists and the advocates of free will affirm or deny the
-freedom of willing, not only in that field, but in all fields. Indeed,
-whoever, for instance, should admit spiritual activity to knowledge and
-deny it to the will, would not, properly speaking, be a determinist,
-but an intellectualist or an æsthetician. That is to say, he would be
-a theoretician, who, in denying the freedom of the will, would simply
-mean to deny the existence of a practical activity side by side with
-the theoretic; for freedom is the very essence of every spiritual form,
-and with the denial of the freedom of that form is denied the form
-itself. Determinism, arbitrarism, libertarianism reflect, then, the
-universal gnoseological thesis of naturalism and mechanicism in the
-special practical field.
-
-[Sidenote: _The materialistic sophisms of determinism._]
-
-Determinism of the will, like materialism and mechanicism in general,
-consists in nothing but the transference to philosophical speculation
-of the form proper to the physical disciplines. By dint of classifying
-practical facts and presenting them as empirical concepts, and thus
-as merely related by cause and effect, they end by forgetting that
-those formulæ are not thoughts and that their content is not real
-reality; and causes or motives (abstractive transformation of the
-actual situation) are given as agents of the will, and thus the agent
-is destroyed for the cause, the form for the abstract material. Hence
-these timid phrases that on close inspection turn out to be tautologies
-or mistakes: "Freedom is an illusion; what prevails is always the
-strongest motive." But if we ask what is the strongest motive, we are
-told (and no other reply is possible) it is _that which prevails._
-This, translated into our language, amounts to saying that the actual
-situation is the actual situation, and conditions the will, which is
-what it is and can be no other than it is.--Virtue is a mere product,
-like vitriol. Certainly, vitriol is also in its way a creation, a
-manifestation of the spirit, as is virtue, and if it be permitted to
-falsify vitriol by changing it into something material and mechanical,
-nothing forbids doing the same for virtue. Virtue, too, can be produced
-just like vitriol, that is to say, by setting in motion the spontaneous
-forces of the spirit and of so-called nature, which itself is also
-spirit, and nothing forbids endowing educators with the title of
-chemists and apothecaries of virtue.
-
-But metaphors are not arguments--Statistics prove the determinism of
-human actions, which always reappear in the same way and in the same
-quantity whenever certain actual circumstances appear.--But Statistics,
-if they collect and simplify facts and construct views and tables
-that are more or less useful, do not thus prove anything; for neither
-are the instances that they give as equivalent, really so, nor the
-relation that they declare between certain facts a real relation.
-If we turn from artificial formulæ to the immediate observation of
-the real, we find ourselves confronted with nothing but individuated
-volitional acts, resulting from necessity and liberty.--The individual
-has a constant character, of which action is the consequence: _operari
-sequitur esse._--But the constant character is nothing but the
-abstraction of the single acts done by the individual. It is therefore
-natural that the actions should appear to be referable to the character
-which is derived from them; but it is not correct to say that there
-is equivalence, for abstraction is not equivalent to concretion.--The
-individual, even if he can be conceived as free in respect to his
-external environment, would be always subject to the law of his own
-nature.--But the law of his own nature is not a contingent thing, but
-the law itself of the Spirit, or, precisely, freedom, and it is quite
-clear that freedom is not free not to be free.--The social organism
-has its natural laws, which govern the action of the individual.--The
-social organism is also an abstraction, which is turned into a being
-only by the false interpretation of a metaphor. In all these examples,
-and in the many others that could be brought forward, the error is
-always the same as has been said: the substitution of the naturalistic
-for the speculative construction, Physic for Metaphysic. And since
-physical or naturalistic construction has no material other than given
-historical facts, the doctrines above mentioned, when they are not
-false, are always tautological and lead to the affirmation that the
-volitional fact is a fact, or that in it is the moment of necessity.
-
-[Sidenote: _The mysticism of arbitrarism._]
-
-Arbitrarism, on the other hand, arises in the same way as mysticism,
-from distrust of thought; being unable to dominate the fact that should
-be explained, recourse is had to the inconceivable, to the absurd, to
-miracle; subjective and individual ignorance is hypostasized and of
-it is made a metaphysical reality. Arbitrarism, like mysticism, has
-its element of truth, in the negation of determinism, that is, in the
-recognition of the impotence of the naturalistic method and in the
-affirmation that the truth lies beyond that method, in the concept of
-creation and of freedom. But freedom separated from its logical and
-necessary moment becomes transformed into will, just as in mysticism
-in general God is transformed into the mystery, ready to receive all
-individual caprices into himself, and to confer upon them an appearance
-of truth.
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of necessity-liberty, and idealism._]
-
-The concept of freedom (necessity-liberty), which is at once scientific
-and not mechanical, and if it surpass the categories of Physic, does
-not surpass those of Metaphysic, is opposed to both these views. As
-idealist philosophy, it tends in general to conciliate the ideal with
-the actual, thought with complete reality, philosophy with the whole of
-experience. With the concept of freedom is eliminated the inertia of
-determinism, and the unstable springing about of arbitrarism. The gross
-material conception of the real disappears, because that which seems to
-be matter is revealed as spirit, the fact as creation, necessity as the
-product of liberty. But miracle disappears with them. For if the spirit
-be the eternal, omnipresent, continuous miracle, unattainable by the
-physical method,-a continual miracle, omnipresent and eternal, is no
-longer a miracle, but the same simple and ordinary reality, which each
-one of us contributes to create and each one of us can and does think.
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of double causality; dualism and agnosticism._]
-
-Strict determinism and strict arbitrarism are not, however, the
-sole adversaries of the concept of liberty-necessity, as rigorous
-materialism and mysticism are not the only adversaries of idealism.
-There exists another which must be called more dangerous (if
-misunderstanding be more dangerous than error). This doctrine, since
-it goes by the name of dualism, spiritualism, and neocriticism in
-general philosophy, could be called the doctrine _of double practical
-causality,_ in the field of the practical problem. The supporters
-of this line of thought, despite many individual differences, are
-all agreed in positing two distinct series of facts: one which obeys
-mechanical causality, another which is initiative and creation, or (as
-they say) obeys causality through freedom. There are thus two series
-that interpenetrate one another or alternate at every instant and
-are mutually blended, the one in the other. Hence there is something
-of each in the volitional act, something of the strongest motive and
-something of free choice. Such a solution has some external resemblance
-with that which we maintain, but is intrinsically most different.
-Our solution is _fusion_ of liberty and necessity, while this is
-_juxtaposition;_ our solution is _conciliation,_ this _transaction._
-Like every juxtaposition and transaction it displeases both the
-contending parties, and falls into the power, now of the one, now of
-the other. Thus, if, according to the theories of that tendency, it
-be maintained that freedom exists, but that there are also causes
-tending to diminish it, or that there exist volitional acts, but that
-involuntary acts also exist, one does not understand how a series of
-facts that has its own law in itself (freedom, the will) can ever be
-subordinated to facts that obey a different law (diminution of freedom,
-involuntariness of acts). If this happen sometimes or many times, we
-must suspect that it happens always, and that the surviving freedom is
-a mask of freedom, illusion. Thus, if it be affirmed that side by side
-with causality, with equivalence of causes and effects, or with the
-possibility of foreseeing the effect by means of the cause, there is
-another causality, in which the effect is not equivalent to the cause,
-and that not only is it not to be foreseen, but is such that only after
-it has happened does it allow its cause to be discovered; then the
-doubt arises that one of the two causalities does not exist, because
-either the effect is equivalent to the cause, and so it must always be,
-or it is not equivalent to it, and so it will never be; or it can be
-foreseen by means of the cause, and so it will always be, or it cannot
-be foreseen, and never will be foreseen. The strict determinists and
-arbitrarists have the loyalty of error, and they are rare, because
-energetic spirits are rare, but the doctrine of double causality is
-tinged with some of the rouge of truth, and thus seduces the many,
-and is proper to weak and irresolute spirits, as indeed are dualism,
-spiritualism, agnosticism, neocriticism, of which this doctrine forms a
-particular case. When the absurdity of determinism and of arbitrarism
-has been recognized (and their very presence is an autocriticism), it
-is necessary to satisfy with a new and single concept the claim that
-they represent, certainly not with _the sum of two errors,_ and the new
-single concept is that of true freedom.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its character of transaction and transition._]
-
-The doctrine of double causality has had its historical importance, not
-because it is a _transaction,_ but rather because it is a _transition;_
-that is, a gradual approximation to the true concept, with the
-introduction into the naturalistic concept of an element of ferment and
-dissolution: the concept of a causality by means of freedom, that is,
-of a causality that is so only in name. The concept of freedom cannot
-tolerate that of causality at its side, and of the two series posited,
-one of the two is not real in itself, but simply a particular product
-of the other: mechanical causality is not a fact, nor a conception, but
-an instrument created for its own ends by spiritual freedom itself.
-And only in this sense can it be admitted that freedom avails itself
-of causality for its effectuation, and the truth of the observation be
-realized, that the classifying of the perceptions in series of cause
-and effect becomes itself also a presupposition of will and action.
-The historical knowledge as to the actual situation that precedes the
-volition, since it includes of necessity philosophical universal in
-itself, so it can also include empirical universals, concepts, and
-pseudo--concepts: the consciousness of the productivity of the spirit
-and the mnemonic formulæ in which this productivity is fixed, and
-for which it certainly appears to be mechanical, but only to him who
-forgets that the formulæ themselves are mechanical.
-
-
-
-[1] Summonte, _Historia di Napoli,_ ed. 1675, iv. 205, "Miracle caused
-by fear."
-
-[2] Dante, _Parad._ iv. 76.
-
-[3] _Einleit. in die Phil._ § 128, trad. Vidossich, p. 169.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-FREEDOM AND ITS OPPOSITE. GOOD AND EVIL
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Freedom of action as reality of action._]
-
-
-Since, then, the volitional act is freedom, the question as to whether
-in a given case an individual has or has not been free, is equivalent
-to this other question: _Has there really been volition_ (action) in
-that case? This question can have and has (as any one who lends an
-ear to such discussions as are frequently heard can verify) but two
-meanings. The first is, whether the case under discussion be _action_
-or _event,_ and, therefore, if it be or be not accurate to present it
-as an individual act. For example:--Was Jacobinism the crime or the
-glory of Voltaire and Rousseau? Was the defeat of Waterloo the fault of
-Marshal Grouchy? The second is, if it be really a question of _action,_
-what, _precisely,_ has that action been? For example:--What were the
-respective parts of Voltaire and of Rousseau in the propaganda of the
-revolutionary spirit and of the Jacobin mode of thought? What did
-Marshal Grouchy really know and will when, instead of listening to
-Exelmans and to others of his generals and marching whither the cannon
-was thundering, he obeyed to the letter the order he had received and
-attacked the Prussian army corps of Thielman?
-
-[Sidenote: _Inconceivability of the absolute absence of action._]
-
-There is a third meaning that is to be excluded: namely, as to whether
-at a given moment of time there has been any sort of action or, on
-the contrary, a void and total absence of action. For the only case
-in which the individual does not act is that in which he is dead or
-partially dead, be the death physiological or spiritual, that of a
-corpse or of a madman. The glory of putting poor madmen on a level
-with the guilty and the delinquent is to be left to the thinkers of
-the "new school of penal law." In every other case, man always acts,
-always wills, and is always responsible and free, because life, so long
-as it lasts, is nothing but a web of volitions and therefore of free
-acts. He is also responsible for the acts that contribute to put man
-in such conditions as amount to madness more or less transitory, and
-so of irresponsibility: such is the case of drunkenness and of moral
-dangers imprudently sought, and so on. At no point of life does the
-_practically indifferent_ exist.
-
-Those actions, too, that appear to be neither willed nor free,
-because they have become habitual, mechanicized, instinctive, are
-willed and free, not indeed because (though this be true enough in
-itself) habitual acts were once acts of will, but because (as we have
-already had occasion to remark), although they have become facts
-almost external to the individual willing, yet it is always the will
-that permits them to act and can always arrest their action: they
-are therefore to be looked upon as conditions of fact that every new
-volition modifies, even when it accepts them. A machine is not the
-work of the arm that moves it, but of hundreds and thousands of other
-arms that were previously moved in order to construct it. But once
-constructed, that which sets in motion the machinery is always the
-work of one arm, an act of will, just as an act of will can stop its
-movement and finally cause its disaggregation and destruction.
-
-[Sidenote: _Non-freedom as antithesis and contrariety._]
-
-But excluding the absolute absence of freedom of action (and of
-existence in so far as it is action), and on the other hand the
-presence of something different from it called causality having been
-previously excluded from the idea of freedom, it remains nevertheless
-indubitable that in the very bosom of freedom, there is _non-freedom.
-_ Every volition is at the same time nolition, as every affirmation
-is negation. Volition is love, nolition hate; and, as we know, every
-love is hate, and the more we love, the more we hate. Antigone was
-born to love intensely, and for that very reason, to hate profoundly.
-What can be that which we hate in love and abhor in volition? What can
-this internal enemy be, which does not consist either in the absence
-of volition or in the presence of an extraneous and indifferent
-element?--Since it is neither absent nor indifferent, it cannot be
-anything but the _opposite or contrary_ of freedom, anti-freedom, which
-constitutes the contradiction in its effective concretion.
-
-[Sidenote: _Nullity and arbitrariness of non-freedom._]
-
-Freedom is an indissoluble nexus of necessity and freedom: the force
-that tends to annul it is anti-freedom, the scission of that nexus, the
-analysis of that synthesis. On the one hand it aims at making liberty
-fall into nothingness, by compelling it to the inertia of the fact,
-and on the other, to make a leap into the void, by impelling it to
-will, a sterile endeavour--two movements that are one-sided and absurd,
-and become identified through the considerations already established
-in relation to determinism and arbitrarism. Therefore the opposite
-of freedom is qualified indifferently, either as the _passive,_
-taken by itself, opposed to the active, the fact that resists the new
-creation, or as the _active,_ taken by itself and abstract, opposed
-to the passive: will opposed to liberty. Anti-freedom is either the
-material fact or arbitrary choice, but the first is resolved into will,
-the second into material fact. Only by an act of will can the fact
-that should continue to develop be fixed as a fact and so appear as a
-material fact, and only by a persistence in that fact, which should
-be surpassed, can will give itself the appearance of a content. The
-undertaking is contradictory, and the solution, the absence of freedom,
-is a contradiction.
-
-[Sidenote: _Good as freedom and reality, and evil as its opposite._]
-
-Freedom and its opposite, freedom and its internal contradiction,
-freedom and will, are what is designated by the terms _good and evil._
-With us these terms are given an altogether generic meaning, as they
-are taken as the representatives of all the other couples of opposites
-that are wont to be enunciated in the field of practical activity,
-as helpful and harmful, useful and useless, honest and dishonest,
-meritorious and blameworthy, pious and impious, lawful and sinful, and
-so on. All these formulæ either answer to the sub-distinctions of the
-practical activity (which we shall study further on), or are the same
-distinction, variously formulated, with reference to psychological
-classes. But all are to be reduced to those of good and evil for
-the purposes of the philosophical study of the practical activity
-in general, without ulterior determinations of them as moral or
-utilitarian good, moral or utilitarian evil, or any other form there
-may be, and without regard to the various empirical material, with
-which they may be filled.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of abstract monism and of the dualism of values._]
-
-That practical good and evil are to be conceived as will and anti-will,
-and the good, therefore, as the reality and the bad as the irreality
-of the will, the good as something positive and the bad as something
-negative,--is the solution imposed by the impossibility of thinking
-the two others that differ from it: namely, that which considers the
-distinction between good and bad as inexistent (abstract monism of
-values), and that which considers the good as transcendent in respect
-of reality, which is always evil, unless the good deign to descend
-and modify it (abstract dualism of values). For the criticism of
-the abstract monistic view, it is necessary to distinguish between
-those doctrines that deny, not only the distinction between good
-and evil, but also all the analogous distinctions in every field of
-activity, including that of thought, and the doctrines that allow
-the distinction to subsist in other fields, but deny it in that of
-the practical. The first, which deny the distinction between true
-and false, are the suicide of Philosophy, the second, which deny it
-only between good and evil, are the suicide of the Philosophy of the
-practical: that is to say, both are founded upon errors that we have
-already criticized and surpassed, and upon which it would therefore
-be otiose to insist. As to the dualistic view (still common among
-right-thinking professors of philosophy, that is, among the lazy and
-the most lazy) it will be requisite to discuss this point seriously,
-when it has been demonstrated in what way Reality can place itself
-beneath the yoke of Value and of Goodness, which would be inferior
-to it by hypothesis, through the very fact that they were _unreal._
-Reality living, these others dead; Reality like "the four bedevilled"
-of Giusti bent upon _doing so,_ they, like the "two hundred simpletons"
-of the same poet, bent upon _saying_ no. For if Value and Goodness be
-real, they will be the true Reality; and that which was first called
-by the name will be feigned reality, altogether identical with what we
-have indicated as the moment of contradiction and of will, arising in
-the very bosom of the practical activity.
-
-[Sidenote: _Objections to the reality of evil._]
-
-An instance that is always formidable has certainly been cited against
-the thesis of evil as something negative and unreal, and of good as
-itself the only positive and real: it has actually been affirmed that
-this thesis offends against good sense. What? Is evil unreal? Is it
-nothing? Unreality and nothingness are then the knavish trick of some
-wicked person who starts a calumny, which, being received and believed,
-injures an honest man? Unreality and nothing, the passion that drags
-the gambler into economic ruin and moral abjection? So the world is all
-good, all rose-coloured, all sweet; and crimes, cowardice, foolishness,
-and baseness are illusions, and there is no reason to lament; so the
-feeling of life should be expressed with a perpetual smile, like that
-upon the lips of the wounded warriors in the marbles of Aegina? -But
-let good sense and its advocates remain tranquil. If evil be a nothing,
-that does not mean that it is nothing; if the vanity that seems to be
-a person, be vanity and not a person, that does not mean that it has
-not really the appearance of a person and should not be really combated
-and dissipated. The wise, who having defined evil, deny toothache,
-or like the stoical Posidonio forget the gout that transfixes them,
-need Giambattista Vico to remind them how no philosophy is able to
-save them from anxiety on behalf of "their wives in childbirth" and
-of "their sons who languish in disease"! The world is precisely that
-mixture of good and evil, which good sense says it is, and the sweet
-is always tempered with the _amari aliquid._ It cannot be adequately
-expressed either with lamentations only, or only with laughter. The
-thesis that we have enunciated wishes to abolish, not the consciousness
-of evil, but the false belief that this is something substantial, and
-thus prevent one evil from being increased by another, evil by error,
-_moral_ trouble by _mental_ confusion.
-
-[Sidenote: _Evil within and without synthesis._]
-
-Evil is either felt as evil, and in this case it means that it is not
-realized, but that in its place is realized the good. The gambler of
-the example, at the moment he knows he is doing himself economic harm,
-does not play; his hand is held; and it is held, because to _know,_
-in the practical sense, equals to _will_; and to know the harm of
-gambling means to know it as harm, and so to dislike gambling. If he
-take to dice or cards again, this arises because that knowledge is
-obliterated in him, that is, because he changes his mind; and in this
-case play is not looked upon any longer as harmful; it is willed,
-and so at that instant again becomes the good for him, because it
-satisfies one of his wants. The calumniator, if he understand the
-idea that is passing through his mind, or rather the impulse that has
-seized him, as calumny, is for that very reason repugnant to it and
-does not pronounce those evil words: in that case indeed he is not
-a calumniator, but an honest man who resists a temptation (and no
-other definition of an honest man can be given). But if he pronounce
-them, this means that the opposing repugnance was not present or is
-no longer present: and therefore those words are no longer for him a
-wicked act of calumny, but a simple satisfaction of a desire to amuse
-himself, or to reject the evil that has been done to him, and therefore
-a good. In the same way, he who asserts what is false, he who renders
-himself guilty of error, if he be aware of himself as frivolous or a
-charlatan or disloyal, would be silent: if he talk and write and print
-false insinuations, this happens either because the will for truth
-does not exist in him, or is for the time being suppressed, and with
-it the desire to seek it out and to diffuse it; that is to say, for
-that will has been substituted the other of withdrawing from a painful
-labour, or of obtaining easy praise and gain; so, for one good has been
-substituted another. As a rule, it is admitted that we will the good
-and do evil. "I do not do the good that I will, and I do the evil
-that I do not will" (οὐ γὰρ ὂ θέλω ποιῶ ἀγαθόν, ἀλλὰ ὂ οὐ θέλω κακὸν
-τοῦτο πράσσω), said St. Paul.[1] But it is a question of psychological
-confusion, owing to which a series of moments and alternatives is
-simplified into one single act, inexistent because contradictory.
-
-[Sidenote: _Affirmative judgments of evil as negative judgments._]
-
-Thus evil, when real, does not exist save in the good, which opposes
-and conquers it, and therefore does not exist as a positive fact. When
-on the contrary it exists as a positive fact, it is not evil, but
-good (and in its turn has for shadow an evil, with which it strives
-and conquers). The judgments that we give when we judge an action to
-be foolish or wicked, a statement false, a work of art ugly, are all
-metaphorical. In delivering them we do not mean to say that there is an
-_existence_ called error, ugliness, foolishness, but only that there is
-a given existence and that another is wanting. He who has launched a
-calumny, dissipated his property, soiled a canvas, printed a worthless
-book, does not, strictly speaking, deserve negative denominations,
-because to judge means to place oneself in the conditions of the person
-judged, and in those conditions there was neither evil nor ugliness
-nor error nor folly; otherwise the acts that are the objects of the
-judgment would not have been accomplished, and in so far as they are
-accomplished they deserve positive judgment. But what is meant by the
-negative form of those judgments is that such an act is this and not
-another, that it is utilitarian and not moral, a commercial and not a
-literary or scientific fact, and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmations of the doctrine._]
-
-There is a very ancient saying to the effect that every one seeks
-his own good and that no one deliberately wills his own evil, and,
-therefore, that if the practically good man be the wise, then the
-bad man can but be the ignorant. Now if we remove from the thesis
-its intellectualist veneer, and translate wisdom and ignorance into
-practical terms, we see that wickedness is here looked upon as a limit,
-as a tendency toward the good, that has failed, not as the will for an
-evil. The dispute as to who sins the more, he who is conscious of the
-evil, or he who has no consciousness of it, is also illumined by the
-theory that we have here exposed, which declares that both parties to
-the dispute are right and wrong. For instance, he who is completely
-without moral consciousness, is morally innocent, whereas he who is
-more or less possessed of one, is also more or less of a sinner, for
-the law itself makes him so (τὴν ἀμαρτίαν οὐκ ἔγνων εἰ μὴ διὰ νόμου,
-also said St. Paul[2]). But with this saying it is not desired to put
-the innocent above the sinner, but the contrary. That declaration of
-ignorance is the gravest condemnation, for it is thus recognized that
-the individual in question is unable to sin, and therefore unable to do
-right, since the possibility of sinning is all one with that of doing
-right. The poet inspires admiration, but he who does not know how to
-be anything but a poet, and is therefore unable to reason and to act,
-is deficient. The shrewd man is praised, but he who is _only_ shrewd
-cannot be praised. The animal is a being, worthy of all esteem, but to
-call a man an animal, that is, to tell him that he is nothing but an
-animal, is to do him a great injury. In other words, while we recognize
-as good all that a man effectively does, we do not intend to cancel
-the distinction between one form and another of human activity, and
-between one act and another, between the utilitarian and the moral man,
-between fanciful and logical production, between animal and man. Nor
-do we mean that those emphatic expressions of negative character that
-we continually utter to one another and to ourselves, and by means of
-which we urge ourselves and others to more lofty modes of existence,
-are to be abandoned.
-
-[Sidenote: _The poles of feeling (pleasure and pain) and their identity
-with their practical opposites._]
-
-Here occurs an opportunity of tying a thread that we had left loose
-when discussing the theory of feeling, or rather the distinction of
-feeling into the two poles of _pleasure and pain,_ understood, not as
-a psychological distinction of greater or less, or of _mixed states,_
-but as a philosophical distinction of _pure states,_ or of terms that
-are truly opposed. When the vague and indeterminate term of "feeling"
-is directed toward theoretical facts and is determined by theoretical
-philosophy as æsthetic activity or speculative thought, or in some
-other way, the terms of pleasure and pain are, strictly speaking, not
-applicable to it. The pure theoretic activity considered in itself,
-cannot be polarized, as has been seen; it will always attain to the
-beautiful, always to the true. Only in so far as the theoretic activity
-is also practical activity, by the law of the unity of the spirit,
-will the polarization of good and evil, which in that case are called
-beautiful and ugly, true and false, take place through it if not in it.
-If the term "feeling" be on the contrary directed to practical facts,
-and its synonymity with the practical activity (of which feeling would
-be a distinguishing characteristic) made clear by the Philosophy of
-the practical, it is clear that to it belongs immediately and no longer
-mediately that polarity of good and evil. Good and evil then become
-what theoreticians of feeling _call pleasure and pain._ These terms are
-identical with the preceding, as feeling is a fact identical with the
-practical activity, generically considered.
-
-[Sidenote: _Doctrines concerning pleasure and happiness: critique._]
-
-This theory of pain and pleasure, as the synonyms of the practical
-positive and negative, helps to put an end to a long series of
-questions arising in connection with such concepts. Above all, the
-dispute as to whether pleasure be positive or negative will appear
-to be unfounded, and, therefore, whether pain have a positive or a
-negative value, or, finally, whether both be negative: unfounded,
-since "pleasure" means "positive" and "pain" "negative." At the most,
-it may be admitted that pain has also a positivity, which is however
-nothing but the positivity of the negative, that is the real existence
-of the negative pole.--The theory that man always proposes to himself
-pleasure as an end is, on the contrary, not only not unfounded, but of
-such evident truth as not to require enunciation, much less efforts
-to prove it. If pleasure be nothing but activity, it is natural that
-man should have no other end save pleasure, that is, activity, life
-itself. The correction that has been suggested by others, to the
-effect that man wills, not indeed pleasure, but activity, of which
-the outcome is pleasure, has but slight exactitude, for the two terms
-are not distinguishable, and the result is not separable from the
-activity; the pleasure of travelling is not separable from travelling.
-That polemic has value at the most against empiricism, which limits
-pleasure to an arbitrarily determined group of pleasurable facts, that
-is to say, circumscribes activity to certain particular manifestations
-of activity, collected in groups or classes, and substituted for
-the universal concept. Finally, by means of the identification
-of pleasure and pain with good and evil in general which we have
-given, all disputes as to the concept of _happiness_ disappear, as
-to whether it be or be not distinct from that of the good action,
-practically coherent, and if man propose to himself _happiness_ as an
-end. "Happiness" is equal to "pleasure," and "pleasure" is equal to
-"activity." To will the good (that is, to will well and energetically),
-and to be happy, are the same. The objection raised by some, that man
-does not will happiness, but a certain happiness, that he does not
-will pleasure, but a certain pleasure, not the good, but a certain
-good, is valid; but this only amounts to distinguishing volitional
-man in the act, from the theory of the will, constructed by the
-philosopher. If Tizio wishes at this moment to go to bed and Caio
-to take a moonlight walk, bed and walk are the affairs of Tizio and
-of Caio; for the philosopher there is no Tizio, no Caio, but man in
-universal; there is neither bed nor moon, but pleasure and the good.
-
-[Sidenote: _Empirical concepts relating to good and evil._]
-
-The practical activity, the will, which is also strife between good
-and evil, can be illuminated now from this side and now from that by
-that indivisible unity, according to the accidents of discourse and the
-varying situations of life. In this way arises a series of concepts
-which, in so far as they are unilateral, are empirical, and only
-become again philosophical in the thought of the unity of which they
-form part. Thus, to make use of a comparison, space in geometry can be
-analyzed and split up into a first, second, and third dimension; but
-as spatiality, it is a _unicum,_ which does not possess either one or
-two or three dimensions; and when in measuring or constructing plans
-of measurement, we proceed to think one of these dimensions, we become
-aware that we cannot think them, save all three together, or not as
-three, but as one. The empirical, practical concepts that arise upon
-the antithetical and dialectical nature of the will, have had much
-importance, and it is fitting, therefore, that we should mention and
-explain at least the principal among them.
-
-[Sidenote: _Duty of being, ideal, inhibitive, and imperative power._]
-
-If the situations of life lead to the directing of the attention
-chiefly to the aspect of the will striving against inaction and
-arbitrary choice, it is posited in this strife, in this becoming, as
-something that _is not_ but _must be,_ not as _real,_ but as _ideal._
-If the greatness of the ideal that is to be and to fill the soul with
-joy, be set in relief in this struggle, then the ideal appears sweet
-and smiling, as a _joy-bringing and beatific vision._ If, on the
-other hand, the effort of its becoming be set in relief, the ideal
-can be made into a metaphor, as will opposed to will, as legitimate
-against rebellious will; and then it assumes a sour, rough, and hard
-appearance, and the names of _inhibitive or imperative power,_ in so
-far as it impedes the will, or promotes liberty.
-
-There is no less opportunity and interest in making clear that
-relation, from the point of view of the negative term, or of evil.
-A series of descriptive concepts then appears, which present the
-consciousness of evil, now as obstinate _blindness (cor induratum),_
-now as _disquiet_ and _scruple,_ which induce vigilance and
-circumspection, now as _humility,_ which does not permit forgetting
-how easy it is to slip into evil. But it is worthy of note that the
-series of words and empirical concepts that serve to illuminate
-the _satisfaction_ of the good, the _victory_ won over oneself,
-_tranquillity_ of conscience, is far less rich. Perhaps this arises
-precisely because there is less practical interest in celebrating
-the pleasure of victory than in the inculcation of the necessity for
-strife and the abhorrence of evil. Why draw attention to joy and to
-repose when man is already too much inclined to allow himself joy and
-repose; does not Life allow them to itself and cause other problems
-to follow on each solution, new perils to follow perils overpast, and
-the necessity for new struggles? It is therefore of importance to
-direct the greater sum of attention to those aspects from which the eye
-is most frequently turned aside. Finally, these various aspects can
-be placed in relation with the greater or less frequency with which
-each appears in individuals, thus arriving at the construction of the
-concepts of _virtue and vice,_ and of the models of _the virtuous
-man, the honest man, the deliberate man, the clever man,_ and their
-opposites, _the vicious, the dishonest, the unreflective, the incapable
-man,_ and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Their incapacity for setting as practical principles._]
-
-The same thing happens with these empirical practical concepts as
-with all the other empirical concepts, of which we have spoken in
-general. They have been stiffened into philosophical concepts, for
-the hasty satisfaction of the philosophical need of man. Hence, among
-others, many of the disputes as to the principle of the Philosophy of
-the practical. Some indeed maintain that such a principle is to be
-found in _duty or the imperative; others in the idea or the ideal,
-others in the joy of good, others in the abhorrence of pain, others in
-virtue, others in enthusiasm,_ and so on. Each of the above-mentioned
-theoreticians has the sharpest eyes for the discovery of the defects in
-the theories of others, but is short-sighted as regards his own. Those
-who maintain the ideal satirize the form of the categoric imperative
-as suggestive of police or _gendarmerie;_ those of the imperative and
-of duty deride the quietist form and the insipid ecstasy proper to the
-contemplation of ideals; those of the avoidance of pain do not spare
-their sarcasms for the hunters of joy; those of joy call these plunged
-in sorrow hypocrites, who also obtain enjoyments for themselves, if in
-no other way, then secretly: _si non caste, caute._ The truth is that
-all are wrong as philosophers, because they all find the principle of
-the will, not in itself but in an empirical concept, which gives to it
-an abstract and mutilated appearance. And, on the other hand, all are
-right, because those aspects are all real, and in each one of them the
-others can be implicitly shown. The categoric imperative, for instance,
-contains in itself both the will, which, in so far as it commands
-itself, is the true will, the joy of being and the sorrow of not being
-what we wish to be, the ideal, and the necessity of self-realization,
-and so of entering into strife against irreality, thus becoming
-imperative, and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its characteristics._]
-
-If none of the formulæ given above, owing to their empirical character,
-be able to indicate with precision the principle of the Philosophy
-of the practical, and all are more or less convenient _synecdoches,_
-for this reason none of those concepts are to be treated as rigorous
-concepts. If they be so treated, there is not one of them, however
-justified it may seem to be, that is not able to cause rebellions and
-has not done so. The type of the dutiful man has been reproached with
-being so much preoccupied with duty that he does not really perform
-it, because he forgets the impulse of the heart; of the type of the
-virtuous man it is said that he, as it were, ceases from being so by
-the very fact that virtue becomes in him a profession; of the type of
-the honest man, that there is nothing more base than the race of honest
-men; of the type of the _pious Aeneas,_ that his piety is egoism; and
-in general of all these cases it has been recalled that a little vice
-is necessary for virtue, as alloy for metals. Repentance and remorse,
-too, although they be highly recommended as means of purification,
-have had their detractors; does it not suffice (they say) that an evil
-deed has been committed? Must the offence be aggravated by losing
-time over it, as though anything could be remedied with sorrowing and
-lamentation? But others have replied that, given human iniquity, it is
-better to exceed in the matter of remorse than to pass rapidly over
-it. Humility has been opposed with the _sume superbiam_ as being more
-virile, and with the _laudum immensa cupido_ as being more noble; the
-habit of self-tormenting with the _servite domino in laetitia,_ as, on
-the other hand, the over-confident has been admonished with that other
-not less biblical dictum: _beatus homo qui semper est pavidus._ These
-are objections and replies that may all of them have value for the
-empirical situations to which they refer; but they have neither truth
-nor value in philosophy, for which they are all of them false, because
-the distinctions from which they derive are not philosophical. Remorse,
-for instance, has a value, not in itself, but as a passage to activity,
-without which such passage would not take place; the virtuous habit has
-a value, not in itself, but in so far as it is practised and constantly
-preserved; duty cannot differ from the aspiration of the soul, and
-both cannot differ from the volitional act; confidence is at the same
-time trepidation, and humility must be one with the pride of merit. To
-sum up, for, the philosopher, the dialectic of the will is all in the
-concept of will, with its polarization of good and evil, which is the
-actuality and concreteness of that concept.
-
-
-
-[1] Rom. vii 19.
-
-[2] Rom. vii.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-THE VOLITIONAL ACT AND THE PASSIONS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The multiplicity of volitions and the struggle for unity._]
-
-If the volitions followed one another, so to speak monadistically,
-each one shut up in itself, simple, impenetrable, indecomposible, it
-would be impossible to understand the moment that there is in them
-of arbitrary choice, of evil, of contradiction. But it is not so.
-The individual is solicited simultaneously by many or, more exactly,
-by infinite volitions, because the individual is at every moment a
-microcosm and in him is reflected the whole cosmos, and he reacts
-against the whole cosmos by willing in all directions. This infinity of
-volitions that is in every individual, can be proved by a very obvious
-fact: by what occurs in the contemplation of works of art, in which
-the same individual is able to reconstruct in himself the most various
-actions and psychological situations, and to feel himself in turn
-mild and sanguinary, austere and voluptuous, Achilles and Thersites.
-This would not happen, had he not to some extent in himself the
-experience of all these various volitional attitudes. But even if we
-wish to restrict ourselves to those volitions that are the most closely
-connected with the historical situation, thus limited as well as may
-be (every historical situation is in reality a cosmic situation),
-restricting ourselves to what are called volitions of the moment, we
-have always, if not a chaos, certainly a multiplicity, or at the least
-a duality, of volitions. Were the individual to abandon himself to that
-chaos, to that multiplicity, to that duality, he would instantly be
-lacerated, broken in pieces, destroyed. But he does not abandon himself
-to it, for he is an individual, volitional and operating just because
-he renounces that feigned richness of the infinite and that pernicious
-richness of multiplicity or duality, limiting himself on each occasion
-to one single volition, which is the volition corresponding to the
-given situation.
-
-[Sidenote: _Multiplicity and unity as bad and good._]
-
-This volition is consequently the result of a struggle in which the
-individual drives back all the other infinite volitions, to attach
-himself to that one alone which the given situation must and does
-arouse in him. And when the given volition does not affirm itself fully
-in this struggle, he falls a victim to multiplicity, in which is found
-that arbitrary choice attached to a volition which is not the one
-that should be willed, which he feels he wills and that he does will
-in a way. Hence the will becomes split up in different directions and
-contradictory, action not positive but negative, not truly action, but
-rather passivity.
-
-The multiplicity of volitions explains then the moment of arbitrary
-choice, of evil, in the practical activity. This could be defined as
-the _volition that conquers the volitions,_ as its contrary arbitrary
-choice is _the contest of volitions with volition._
-
-[Sidenote: _Excluded volitions and the passions or desires._]
-
-The volitions that are driven back on every occasion and excluded, to
-make way for the volitional act, are variously denominated in ordinary
-speech and by psychologists as _appetites, tendencies, impulses,
-affections, wishes, velleities, desires, aspirations, passions._ But,
-as is usual with us, we do not intend to compose and defend such
-classes in a naturalistic and psychological sense, nor consequently
-to distinguish appetite from desire, or affection from passion, with
-boundaries that must of necessity be arbitrary and undulating. What is
-of real importance is only the distinction and the precise boundary,
-not arbitrary but real, between the volition and volitions, or, as we
-can now say, the relation between true and proper _volition_ and _the
-passions or desires._
-
-[Sidenote: _Passions and desires as possible volitions._]
-
-Passions or desires are and are not volitions: they are not volitions
-in respect to the volitional synthesis, which, by excluding, annuls
-them as such; they are on the other hand volitions, if considered in
-themselves, for they are capable of constituting the centre of new
-syntheses in changed conditions. It has been said that we cannot _will
-the impossible,_ but that we can perfectly well _desire it._ That is
-not exact, because the impossible, the contradictory, cannot even be
-the object of desire. No one wishes to find himself at the same moment
-in two different places, or to construct a triangle that should be at
-the same time a square: and even if such absurd wishes be manifested
-in words, the words will be absurd, but the desires will either be
-different from what is stated, or they will not exist even as desires.
-In a certain aspect all desires are desires of the impossible (and not
-only some of them), if, that is to say, we consider them as volitions
-that have not been realized and which cannot be realized at that
-moment: but from another point of view, they are all possible, and can
-indeed be precisely defined as _possible volitions._ This is proved by
-their becoming gradually actual as the actual situation changes. If (to
-choose a very simple illustration) an individual engaged in a certain
-work repel the desire for food and sleep with his volition and action,
-that desire is nothing at that point, as actual volition; but it does
-not for that reason lose its intrinsic volitional character, for
-when the hour for the repast or for sleep has struck, it passes from
-possibility to actuality and becomes the will for food and sleep. The
-sophism previously criticized, by means of which a bad and unsuccessful
-act, that is to say one that is dominated by passion and caprice, is
-justified by proving that it has had a legitimate motive and answers to
-a good intention, appeals to this character of possibility, possessed
-by all desires, and artfully changes it into a character of actuality,
-thus substituting for the given the imagined situation.
-
-[Sidenote: _Volition as conflict with the passions._]
-
-The relation that we have defined between volition and passions or
-desires explains why the will has often seemed to be nothing but
-a conflict with the passions, and life itself a battle (_vivere
-militare est,_) and at other times itself nothing but passions. The
-will is indeed homogeneous with the passions, and is opposed, not
-to the nature of the passions, which is its own nature, but to their
-multiplicity. For this reason, it has been said that only passion acts
-upon the passions: for the will is a passion among passions. Even
-the poet or the philosopher, who frees himself from the passions by
-objectifying them and making them material for æsthetic contemplation
-or for speculative research, succeeds in so doing, only because he is
-able to affirm the passion over the passions: the passion for poetry or
-for philosophy.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the freedom of choice._]
-
-We must however beware of enunciating this relation in a false form,
-as happens with the theory called _freedom of choice,_ where the will
-is conceived as the faculty that chooses one volition from among
-others and makes it its own. The will does not choose a volition
-(save metaphorically), but so to speak chooses the choice itself, or
-makes itself will among the desires which are not will. Nor should
-the possible actions that are excluded be looked upon as constituting
-a graduation in respect to the spirit, which should will _a_ and not
-_b, c, d, e,_ and so on, attributing to them, nevertheless, different
-values, which can be symbolized by the declining series of numbers,
-passing downward from the will which is 10, to 9, 8, 7, 6, and so on.
-In reality, the volitions that are excluded (_b, c, d, e_) have no
-actual value, for the very reason that they are excluded. They may
-acquire it in other situations different from the one analyzed, but it
-is not possible to present the various situations together in one, and
-far less to determine them quantitatively and numerically, otherwise
-than in a symbolical manner. The propositions that present the will
-sometimes as the _strongest_ volition in respect to the passions or
-desires, and sometimes as the _weakest_ in respect to the passions,
-which seem to be the strongest, that is, according as we consider the
-active or the passive moment of the will, its victory or defeat, are
-also metaphorical and symbolical.
-
-[Sidenote: _Significance of the so-called precedence of feeling over
-the volitional act._]
-
-The relation established receives further light from the generally
-admitted theory of the necessary precedence of the _feelings_ as
-condition for the volitional act. The volitional act is preceded by a
-jostling multiplicity of volitions, by a swarm of passions and desires,
-which it dominates; and therefore it may seem that it follows, not
-the volition, but something different from the volition, to be called
-_feeling._ It is certainly different, but only because it is the
-_plural_ of that _singular._ The nature of the passions and desires in
-respect to the volitional act has not been clearly elucidated, and
-this is another of the reasons that have caused the customary category
-of "feeling" to appear and to be retained.
-
-[Sidenote: _Polipathicism and apathicism._]
-
-Finally and always through the established relation, the two opposed
-theories concerning the passions are excluded: that which makes the
-efficacious explanation of practical life to consist in giving free
-course to the passions, holding them all to be sacred as such: this
-theory could be called _polipathicism_; the other, which makes it
-consist of the eradication and destruction of all the passions, in
-order to give place to the exclusive domination of reason, of rational
-will, or of the will that really is will, and could therefore be called
-_apathicism._
-
-Polipathicism has the defect of not taking account among the passions
-of that which is passion _par excellence,_ and which alone becomes
-actual, driving away the others: the will. Apathicism naturally
-possesses the opposite defect and takes account only of the will,
-and therefore not of that either, for the will becomes impotent when
-alone, just as in the other case it becomes a chaotic jumble of all the
-passions.
-
-[Sidenote: _Erroneousness of both opposed theses._]
-
-Such views as these are so openly unsustainable that they hardly appear
-at all in their strictness and purity, in the course of the history of
-philosophy, and then fugitively. But it is desirable to be attentive
-not to identify the theoretic formulæ given above with the programmes
-of certain groups, sects, associations, or individuals who have
-verbally proclaimed polipathicism and apathicism, whereas they have
-implied something very different, and could not have done otherwise.
-Complete polipathicism and complete apathicism could only be attained
-by the individual at the cost of disaggregation and annihilation. At
-the most, sects, groups, societies, and individuals have been able to
-conform to those formulæ as the simple expression of _tendencies;_
-or those formulæ are applicable to them by _hyperbole,_ in the
-condemnation that it has been held desirable to inflict upon certain
-unhealthy tendencies. Certainly there are individuals whose passions
-are in such slight control as to suggest the absence of will; they
-run after every one of their desires, or leave their soul open to the
-onset of the passions that devastate it as the wind and the hail do the
-fields. Lorenzo the Magnificent (symbolizing with his wonted finesse
-a profoundly philosophical conflict) said to his son Piero, who was
-addicted to every pleasure and caprice: "And I never have any wish but
-you realize it for yourself."[1] The young rake whose adventures were
-sung by De Musset may afford an example of the same disaggregation,
-composed of the most violent kind of passions:
-
- Ce n'était pas Rolla qui gouvernait sa vie:
- C'étaient ses passions; il les laissait aller,
- Comme un pâtre assoupi regarde l'eau couler....
-
-But even in these extreme and typical cases the will and the dominion
-of the passions are never altogether absent: otherwise it would be
-impossible to live, not only a lifetime, but a day, an hour, a minute.
-Thus too on the other hand, no individual, be he ever so apathetic
-and ascetic, ever frees himself altogether from the dominion of
-the passions and the desires. We read in the life of some saint or
-beatified personage, whose name escapes me, how he had attained to so
-great a degree of perfection that whatever food he put into his mouth,
-he tasted nothing but dry straw. Leaving to specialists the inquiry
-as to how a stomach of so slight a capacity for distinguishing one
-aliment from another could perform its function, and also as to the
-consequences for social productiveness of so strangely perfected an
-individual, it is certain that in order to nourish himself and live,
-the saint in question must have had the periodical appetite or desire
-of straw for his food, if for nothing else. Apathy too is often nothing
-but a most violent and tenacious, though disordered, passion for ease.
-Activity in any case reasserts itself with the dissolving of apathy,
-a state nigh to inertia and to death, when it dissolves _grata vice
-veris et Favoni,_ that is, with the appearance of the desires, of those
-"suave impulses," those "heart-beats," that pain, and that pleasure,
-which Giacomo Leopardi depicted in his _Risorgimento,_ overcome with
-astonishment, as though face to face with the mystery of life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Their historical and contingent meanings._]
-
-The formulæ of polipathicism and of apathicism have had other
-contingent and historical meanings, but of a positive nature, which
-it is fitting to examine, in order to prevent the usual passage, so
-fruitful of errors, from philosophical to empirical theses. The return
-to the world and to nature, which is one of the characteristics of the
-Renaissance and of the Reformation itself; the rights of the passions,
-which is one of the traits of Romanticism in its initial period;
-neo-paganism, which has given to the Italy of our day its most lofty
-poetry in the work of Giosuè Carducci, were each in their turn nothing
-but beneficial reactions against the lazy monastic life of the Middle
-Ages, against Protestant pedantry, against degenerate Romanticism,
-which despised the real world and dreamed of contradictory ideals.
-On the other hand, in different times and circumstances, Christian
-ascesis, Franciscan poverty, and Puritan strictness were beneficial
-reactions. So true is this, that we are wont to unite in our admiration
-heroes of abstinence and heroes of the passions, assertors of the
-spirit and assertors of the flesh, for all, in different ways, because
-in different historical situations, willed always the elevation of
-humanity. Every one of those historical manifestations can be and has
-been blamed and satirized, but only in its decadence, where it has
-exhausted its proper function, and is no longer truly itself, but its
-own mask.--The friars of the stories of the sixteenth century are not
-the companions of St. Francis, as the indecent Italians of the late
-Renaissance are not the active merchants, philologists, and artists who
-promoted it, nor is there a greater lack of historical sense than the
-transference of the characteristics of the one to the other, as is the
-way of vulgar detractors and apologists. One and the same historical
-fact (as has been brilliantly said) always shows itself twice: the
-first time as _tragedy,_ the second as _comedy._
-
-[Sidenote: _The domination of the passions and the will._]
-
-The cases that we have recorded, which have seemed to represent
-unbridled or exhausted passion, possess not a pathological but a
-physiological character, in so far as they really consist of a
-domination, a volitional synthesis, which conquers and contains
-divergent and ruinous passions. And with this we have answered the
-question as to whether or no the passions can be dominated, and whether
-man be slave or free. We can dominate them, and in that domination is
-life; if we do not dominate them, we advance to meet death; to dominate
-or not to dominate them are the very poles of the will, positive and
-negative, and we cannot think of the one as being abolished without
-thinking of the other as also abolished.
-
-But the labour of dominating them is hard, as all life, "sweet life,"
-is hard. The passions, driven back and restrained again and again by
-the will, yet rage within us, tumultuous, though conquered. We tear
-out the cumbersome plants, but not their roots and seeds. The man who
-considers himself hardened to the trials of life, still feels and
-suffers: the man who seems calm is yet always agitated within. As the
-labour that is called physical deposits poison at the base of the
-organism; so does the labour called spiritual in the depths of the
-soul. Hence the bitterness in those men who have willed and laboured
-much; hence their _cupio dissolvi,_ their aspiration for that bourne
-where all is peace. The poet sublimely imagines old Luther, after his
-victories, in the midst of the people awakened by him to a new life:
-
- Yet with a backward look, he sighed:
- Call me, O God, to thee, for I am tired,
- Nor without malediction can I pray!
-
-
-[1] L. Domenichi, _Della scelta de motti, burle et facetie_ (Firenze,
-1566), p. 14.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-VOLITIONAL HABITS AND THE INDIVIDUALITY
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Passions and states of the soul._]
-
-Just because the passions are possible volitions and therefore
-always have a definite content, it is no slight error on the part
-of writers of treatises, to consider joy and sorrow, enthusiasm and
-depression, content and discontent, tranquillity and remorse, and
-other antithetical couples, as passions. These couples are empirical
-concepts constructed upon the dialectical distinction of freedom and
-anti-freedom, of good and evil; but the groups of the passions must on
-the contrary be empirical concepts formed upon the basis of the varying
-determination of the volitional activity, according to _objects,_ that
-is to say, in its _particular_ determinations. Thus we can talk of the
-passion for celebrity, for science, for art, for politics, for riches,
-for luxury, for women, for the country, for the city, for sport, for
-fishing, and so on, with infinite subdivisions and complications.
-
-[Sidenote: _Passions understood as volitional habits._]
-
-The distinction usually drawn between the affections, the impulses,
-the desires on the one hand and the passions on the other, is on the
-contrary justified, though it always has an empirical character; these
-being considered, not as the single and instantaneous desire or impulse
-that prompts to a single action, but as an inclination or habit of
-wishing and of willing in a certain direction. In this sense, passion
-would be a generic concept (always empirical), which could be divided
-(empirically) into the classes of the virtues and vices; for virtue
-is nothing but the passion or habit of rational actions, and vice the
-contrary.
-
-[Sidenote: _Their importance._]
-
-These passions and volitional habits are not rigidly fixed, for nothing
-in the field of facts is rigidly fixed. As the bed of the river
-regulates the course of the river and is at the same time continuously
-modified by it, so is it with the passions and volitional acts, which
-reality keeps forming and modifying, and in modifying, forms anew
-and in forming modifies. For this reason there is always something
-arbitrary in defining habits as though they corresponded to a distinct
-and limited reality; and for this reason the concepts of them are
-arbitrary and empirical. Habits are not categories, nor do they give
-rise to distinct concepts; but they are the like in the unlike,
-unlike, itself also, in itself, although discernible in a certain way
-from other groups of dissimilar facts. Their importance is great,
-because they constitute, as it were, the bony structure of the body of
-reality. In them _individuality_ understood as an empirical concept,
-has its foundation, for which, if it be not substance, neither is it a
-complex of casually divergent states.
-
-[Sidenote: _The control of the passions in so far as they are
-volitional habits._]
-
-The nature of the passions as volitional habits to be both fixed and
-mobile, that is to say, only relatively fixed and relatively mobile,
-is the principle that aids the solution of several much-debated and
-certainly important questions of the Philosophy of the practical. And
-in the first place, the passions being understood as habits, the answer
-to the question as to whether or no they can be controlled, and if the
-answer be in the affirmative, then in what limits, receives a somewhat
-different meaning, which explains the interest which that question
-has always aroused. Nothing, in fact, removes our consciousness of
-freedom and personality in so brutal a manner and makes us feel our
-impotence and misery in so depressing a way, as to find ourselves with
-our good intention and action hardly begun, face to face with the
-unchained forces of our passions and of the habits that oppose it,
-which drown with their deafening clamour the weak and timid voice of
-the incipient action, vex it with their arrogance, and drag it along
-paths well known and abhorred. We fall then into mistrust and baseness,
-believe ourselves lost for ever; freedom and will seem to be fables
-for the adornment of sermons and the books of moralists. The sage who
-recalls to man the absolute empire that he possesses over his passions
-and exhorts him never to be troubled and to repeat the twenty or
-four-and-twenty letters of the alphabet, so that the spirit may have
-time to recuperate its strength, to resist and to conquer, seems to
-utter the insipid babble of one who has never truly loved and hated,
-and to measure the full and overflowing souls of others on the model of
-his own empty or almost empty soul. We laugh freely at the "short legs"
-of ideals and good intentions, and read again with satisfaction not
-undiluted with bitterness, some little story like Voltaire's _Memnon ou
-la sagesse humaine,_ which bears as motto the very appropriate epigraph:
-
- Nous tromper dans nos entreprises,
- C'est à quoi nous sommes sujets:
- Le matin je fais des projets,
- Et le long du jour des sottises;
-
-or at the most they conclude that there is no way to free oneself from
-a bad passion save with another one equally bad, from a vice with a
-vice, "as from a plank we pluck with nail a nail."
-
-[Sidenote: _Difficulty and reality of dominating them._]
-
-Nevertheless, he who torments himself and gets angry, or laughs and
-draws such conclusions as these, is not in the right. That is to say,
-he is right to laugh at ingenuous sages and at odious preachers and
-moralists, for their theories are certainly simplicist and false. But
-he is wrong in not understanding that his own theory is also simplicist
-and false, for it runs into the opposite extreme.--Habits and passions
-are habits and passions, because slowly formed: it is therefore a vain
-illusion to attempt to destroy them at a blow. Perhaps it is believed
-that the passions are tender flowerets or grasses that a child has
-attached to the surface of the soil? They are a rank growth, strong
-oaks whose roots dive deep into the earth!--That is most true, but it
-is not for this reason impossible to modify and destroy them. They are
-indeed actually modified, for that very pain, that very disappointment,
-are a beginning of modification; since we do not persist in what we
-abhor and follow, dragged along by force; and little by little we
-end by freeing ourselves. The process of freeing ourselves from
-the passions, or from vicious habits, then, is effective, but slow,
-as the formation of those habits has been slow. We do not cure an
-illness with a sudden act of will, but nevertheless the will guides
-and directs the process of healing, and can open or close the entrance
-to the medicinal forces of nature. Now the passions or vicious habits
-are maladies that must follow their course, which, in order to be
-beneficial, must coincide with the cure. The sages who give receipts
-for freeing ourselves from them immediately are the Dulcamaras of moral
-maladies; but the existence of the Dulcamaras should not impel us to
-deny the existence of doctors, and above all of ourselves as doctors
-of ourselves. And we should certainly adopt a very bad and illusory
-method of cure, were we to accept the method so often recommended, of
-destroying passion with passion, or vice with vice, thus adding vice to
-vice, as those who treat the illnesses of the body with narcotics or
-with stimulants often add malady to malady.
-
-[Sidenote: _Volitional habits and individuality._]
-
-Habits, then, not less than single volitional acts, of which they were
-and are composed, can be and are continually conquered and modified,
-in so far as they are opposed to the new volitional syntheses. This
-confirms what has already been said in criticizing the polipathetic
-view, which ignores the volition for the volitions, as the virtuous
-habit is ignored in favour of vicious habits. But the theory of
-apathicism is also to be found in this field, and it is needful
-to assert in opposition to it, the great importance proper to the
-volitional habits in giving concrete form to virtue. This second
-critical thesis is that which affirms the value of _individuality or
-peculiarity_ in the practical field.
-
-[Sidenote: _Negations of individuality for uniformity and their
-critique._]
-
-Every individual is furnished by mother nature with certain definite
-habits, according to the contingencies of reality among which he enters
-the world; and he acquires yet others in the course of life, owing
-to the actual conditions through which he passes and to the works
-that he accomplishes. Those habits which he has from birth are called
-aptitudes, dispositions, natural tendencies: the others acquired. The
-individual in his reality is, as has been said, nothing but these
-groups of habits and changes as they change. Now is it rational and
-possible (the two questions here form one) that the individual in his
-willing and acting should rid himself of such habits? Is it possible
-to consider them as things without value? Is it possible to establish
-an antithesis between individuality and rational action, as between
-good and evil?--The levellers who claim to impose the same task upon
-all and wish to make of the female a male, of the poet a reasoner,
-of the man of science a warrior, of the saint a man of business, and
-thus to give to every one a part of the task of others;--the dreamers
-of a future society, in which all this shall have been done, and the
-poet should attend to his poem, after having played the philosopher
-for a couple of hours, for another couple of hours the tailor, and for
-yet another two the waiter at an inn;--all the pedants of abstract
-regularity, whom we meet to our great annoyance in life;--behold the
-apathicists appear anew, for, as in the theory of the volitional act,
-they advocated an abstract action, conducted by the rational will
-alone in the void of the passions; so here, they advocate an abstract
-rational habit, in the theory of volitional habits, a model of human
-activity, to which all individuals would be obliged to conform. Perhaps
-some such sensible observation as this of Vauvenargues should suffice
-to confute them: _Il ne faut pas beaucoup de réflexion pour faire cuire
-un poulet; et, cependant, nous voyons des hommes qui sont toute leur
-vie mauvais rôtisseurs: tant il est nécessaire dans tous les métiers,
-d'y être appelé par un instinct particulier et comme indépendant de
-la raison._ But since it might be said that we wish to solve a grave
-question with a joke, we will recall that the volitional acts and the
-passions, volition and the volitions, are of the same nature (though
-the one is actual and the others only possible), and that the nature of
-willing implies actual definite situations, and that for this reason
-we never will in universal but always in particular. In the same way
-virtue, the virtuous habit of the will, is not of a different nature to
-the volitional habits in general, to the passions, but is particular
-and individual as they are. Those who make war upon individual habits
-never succeed in substituting for them a universal habit, which is
-inconceivable, but at the most other habits, equally particular and
-individual. The poet who will play the farmer, the tailor, and the
-waiter, in the imagined society of the future, will do all these things
-as a poet. This may perhaps be an advantage, but may also perhaps be
-the contrary, as future consumers of grain, of garments, and of repasts
-will become aware. For the rest, do we not even now see women devoting
-themselves to the severe studies of philology, of philosophy, and
-of mathematics? But with the rarest exceptions, they remain always
-women: their production, which is without originality, is not like
-that of man, done with the complete dedication of the whole being to
-the search for truth and of artistic perfection; and if in the midst
-of the most abstruse inquiry, the image of themselves as wife or
-mother pass through their minds, they desert, at the critical moment,
-the philosophical categories, the formulæ of flexions, the ruled or
-tangential spaces, and sigh for their unborn sons and for the husband
-that they have not found. Is this distortion of natural habits useful?
-Generally speaking, it is not. It is a doing and an undoing, a despisal
-of the riches wisely accumulated and capitalized by Reality in the
-course of its evolution.
-
-[Sidenote: _Temperament and character. Indifference of temperament._]
-
-Certainly the disposition natural or acquired is not virtue, and
-the _temperament_ (since temperament is nothing but the sum of
-habits and aptitudes) is not _character._ But virtue and character
-presuppose habits and passions, of which they give the rational and
-volitional synthesis: they are the form of that matter. And as matter
-considered in the abstract is neither good nor bad, so the habits and
-the passions (as has been very well observed) are not in themselves
-either virtues or vices: they are facts. And it is necessary to take
-account of facts; otherwise, they revenge themselves. On the other
-hand, habits and passions certainly change; but not all of a sudden
-and capriciously, rather, little by little, and always on the basis of
-existing habits and passions.
-
-[Sidenote: _The discovery of the proper self._]
-
-The first duty of every individual who wishes to act effectively,
-consists, therefore, in seeking for himself, in exploring his own
-dispositions, in establishing what aptitudes have been deposited in
-him by the course of reality, both at the moment of his birth, and
-during the development of his own individual life: in knowing, that
-is to say, his own habits and passions, not in order to make of them
-a _tabula rasa,_ but to use them. The search is not easy and the
-preparatory part of life, namely youth, is spent upon it. Few are the
-fortunate individuals who have at once a clear and certain knowledge
-of their own being and of their duty; the majority seek and find
-it after many wanderings; and if such wanderings sometimes (as is
-written in the dedication of the _Scienza nuova_) "seem misfortunes
-and are opportunities," at others they are but a fruitless moving to
-and fro; hence those that are undecided during the whole of their
-lives, the eternal youths, those who aspire to all or to many of the
-directions of human activity and are incapable in all. But when our own
-being unveils itself and we see our path clearly, then to disordered
-agitation succeeds the calm of sure and regular work, with its defeats
-and victories, its joys and sorrows, but with the constant vision of
-the Aim, that is, of the general direction to be followed. Vainly will
-he who is endowed and prepared for guiding mankind in political strife
-and has a clear and lively perception of human strength and weakness,
-of what can and of what cannot be done, and is furnished, so to speak,
-with practical sense (with the sense of complications and slight
-differences), will try (save in the rarest and most exceptional cases,
-and this reserve is to be understood in all that we are saying here) to
-acquire a place among those who cultivate the abstract and universal,
-operations demanding almost opposite aptitudes; vainly will he who was
-born to sing attempt to calculate; vainly will he whose mind and soul
-were made to accentuate dissensions in their bitter strife bend himself
-to be a conciliator and a peacemaker. It is worse than superfluous, it
-is stupid to weep over one's choleric or phlegmatic temperament. There
-have been choleric saints that have even used the stick, and phlegmatic
-saints who have succeeded admirably in patient persuasion: the mild
-Francis, "all seraphic in his ardour," and the impetuous Dominic "whose
-blows fell on the boughs of heresy." Reality is diversity and has need
-of both, and each is praiseworthy if he do that well to which he has
-been _called._
-
-[Sidenote: _The idea of "vocation."_]
-
-This concept of the _vocation_ has a mystical and religious origin and
-preserves that form; but it is clear that by means of the previous
-considerations we have divested it of that form and reduced it to a
-scientific concept. The individual is not a "monad" or a "real," he
-is not a "soul" created by a God all in a moment and all of a piece;
-the individual is the historical situation of the universal spirit at
-every instant of time, and, therefore, the sum of the habits due to
-the historical situations. Those modes of conceiving and talking of
-one _and the same_ individual in two _different_ situations, or of two
-_different_ individuals in the _same_ situation, are to be avoided,
-because individual and situation are all one. But when the individual
-has been thus defined, it remains none the less true that each
-individual must direct his life according to pre-existing habits and
-personal dispositions, and thus we discover the true meaning of the
-mythologies and religions that have been mentioned, and the struggles
-to find the suitable employment can be expressed with the words that
-religion has taught us when we were children: the "vocation" and the
-special "mission" that is allotted to us in life, until the last giving
-of accounts and the words of dismissal and repose: _Nunc dimitte servum
-tuum, Domine!_ We are the children of that Reality which generates us
-and knows more than we, the Reality of which religions have caught a
-glimpse and called it God, father, and eternal wisdom.
-
-[Sidenote: _Misunderstandings as to the rights of individuality. Evil
-individuality._]
-
-The affirmation of the rights that belong to individuality in the
-practical field has several times assumed and still assumes (in our
-time, more than in the past, owing to materialism and naturalism) a
-form, no longer symbolical and mystical, but wrong and irrational, that
-it is desirable to remark upon here, always in order to avoid possible
-equivoques. Indeed many look upon the respect due to their own beings
-as due to their caprice, that is to say, to what is on the contrary
-the negation of being: the right of the individual as the right to
-commit follies, or to a disaggregate individuality. The declared
-necessity of temperament for character is exchanged for admiration of
-temperament considered in itself, which, as such, is neither admirable
-nor blameworthy; but when separated from character becomes vice and
-folly. Hence the admiration that has even become a literary fashion,
-for the dissolute, for the violent, for homicides, for the criminals of
-the public prisons, illustrated by a few courageous and energetic souls
-among them, whereas they are as a rule weak, vile, and turbid.
-
-[Sidenote: _False doctrines as to the connection of virtues and vices._]
-
-Various theories are also erroneous, in which it has been sought to
-establish the relation between the passions and the will, temperament
-and character, passions and temperament being understood as vicious
-passions and evil temperament; that is, not in themselves, but in
-their antithesis to the rational will: hence the vain and paradoxical
-attempts to join together and harmonize virtue and vice. Thus it has
-been maintained that in certain vices are foreshadowed the virtues
-which will or can be developed from them; for instance, military
-valour in ferocity, industrial capacity in greed; whereas ferocity
-and greed are wilful acts and contradictions incapable of generating
-any virtue, as is seen in the customary cowardice of the ferocious
-and the ineptitude of the greedy and covetous. Such a connection of
-virtues and vices has on other occasions been presented as a mixture
-or co-temperament, and it has been affirmed that the vices enter into
-the composition of the virtues, as do poisons into the composition
-of medicines. Finally, virtue and vice have been placed in causal
-relation, and the causes of civil progress have been found in human
-vices. But the vices, as they are not the antecedents, so are they
-neither the ingredients nor the causes of the virtues. These are
-strength, those the lack of strength. It is generally affirmed that
-in every individual the virtues are accompanied by their correlative
-vices, but if this possess some approximate value as an empirical
-observation, strictly speaking it has none, because men can be
-conceived and are actually found, whose virtue, far from yielding to
-excesses and to vices, is eurythmic and temperate. But perhaps that
-common saying aims at something else that it fails of explaining
-well; namely, that every power has its impotence and every individual
-his limit; but this does not mean vice or defect; it is nothing but
-the tautological affirmation that the part is not the whole and the
-individual not the universal.
-
-[Sidenote: _The universal in the individual and education._]
-
-But if the individual do not exhaust the universal, the universal
-lives in individuals; Reality in each of its particular manifestations.
-Therefore the affirmation of the right of individuality does not deny
-the right of universality; or it denies it only in that abstract form
-in which, to tell the truth, it is by itself denied. The individual
-is under the obligation to seek himself, but in order to do this he
-has also the obligation of cultivating himself as man in universal. A
-school that represented simply a cultivation of individual aptitudes,
-would be a training, not an education, a manufactory of utensils, not
-a nursery of spiritual and creative activities. The true specialism
-is universalism, and inversely, which means that if the universal do
-not act without specializing itself, yet specialization is not really
-specialization if it do not contain universality. If the two terms that
-are by nature indissoluble be divided, there remains only fruitless
-generalization or stupid particularization, and if our times have
-sinned in this latter respect, other times have sinned in the opposite.
-He is well-balanced who between these two forms of degeneration both
-knows and fills his own proper and individual mission so perfectly
-that he fulfils at the same time with it and through it the universal
-mission of man.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-
-DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Multiplicity and unity: development._]
-
-The demonstration hitherto developed, that evil is negativity or
-contradiction, and that this contradiction takes place owing to the
-multiplicity of the desires in respect to the singleness of character
-of the volitional act, gives rise to the further question: Why should
-there be such a multiplicity, concurrent with the demand for unity, and
-thus be generated strife and contradiction? Here it would be fitting
-to observe that we must have filled our mouths very uselessly for a
-century with the word evolution, if such a question as this be renewed,
-or we remain bewildered and embarrassed before it. For the reason of
-that fact, which seems without a reason, is to be found precisely in
-the concept of _"evolution."_ This concept resumes most ancient views,
-and has been substituted in modern times for that of an immovable
-Reality, of a God who exists perfect and satisfied in himself, and
-creates a world for his own transitory pleasure; or for a complex of
-beings, eternally the same, with variations that are only apparent.
-The concept of evolution has entered so profoundly into the blood and
-bones of modern man that even those repeat it who would be incapable
-of analyzing and understanding it; even the least acute of all, the
-positivist philosophers who like to call themselves "philosophers of
-evolution."
-
-[Sidenote: _Becoming as synthesis of being and not-being._]
-
-But before it acquired, as a vague and confused formula, so great a
-publicity as quite to amount to popularity, a philosopher of genius had
-analyzed and synthetized it, induced and deduced it in an unsurpassable
-manner, with the speculative formula of reality as _becoming_; that
-is, as synthesis of being and not-being, being and not-being being
-thus unthinkable separately, and only thinkable in their living
-connection, which is becoming and _development_ (evolution). Reality is
-development, that is, infinite possibility that passes into infinite
-actuality and from the multiplicity of every instant takes refuge in
-the one, to break forth anew in the multiple and produce the new unity.
-The inquiry into the dialectic of the volitional act enters in this
-way into the very heart of reality. In order to deny multiplicity,
-contradiction, evil and not-being, it would be necessary to deny at
-the same time unity, coherence, good and being.
-
-[Sidenote: _Nature as becoming. Its resolution in the spirit._]
-
-But if by the theory that has been recorded we have explained the
-necessity of evil for good, or the necessity of the not necessary for
-the necessary in the volitional act of man, the identification of the
-volitional act, which is man's, with reality which is of the universal
-whole, might seem to be too audacious. For (it will be said) the
-complex of other beings, that we are wont to separate from the complex
-of human beings and to oppose to it as nature, either is motionless
-and does not develop, or develops without any consciousness of good
-and evil, of pleasure and pain, of value and disvalue. Both theses
-have been maintained and nature has been represented, now as _without
-history, now as developing itself in an unconscious or mechanical
-manner._ But the contradictions and absurdities of both theses have
-been together perceived. "Motionless beings" is a phrase without
-meaning, to such a degree that even empirical science has everywhere
-pushed its way into history, and has talked of the evolution of animals
-and vegetables, of the chemical elements, and even of a history of
-light and heat. The other expression, "unconscious beings," is not
-less empty, because being and activity are not otherwise conceivable
-save in the way that we know our being, which is consciousness;
-and although empirical science certainly points to more and more
-rudimentary and tenuous forms of consciousness in beings, always
-differently individualized, yet it has never been able to demonstrate
-the absolutely unconscious. If so-called nature be, it develops, and if
-it develop, cannot do so without some consciousness. This deduction is
-not a matter of conjecture, but a logical and irrefutable consequence.
-What is there, then, that persists in men's souls, as an obstacle to
-the acceptance of this consequence, in accordance with the profound
-belief of humanity in a community of all beings with one another and
-with the Whole, as manifested in philosophies and in religions, in
-the speculations of the learned and in ingenuous popular beliefs? A
-scholastic prejudice, an idol of the intellect, the hypostasis of
-that concept of "nature" that Logic has taught us is nothing but the
-abstract, mechanicizing, classifying function of the human spirit; a
-prejudice arising from the substitution of the naturalistic method for
-reality, by which a function is changed and materialized into a group
-of beings. Those idealists were also slaves of the error of a like
-hypostasis, who, though they thought everything as an activity of the
-spirit, yet stopped when face to face with _Nature,_ making of it an
-inferior grade of the Spirit, or, metaphorically, a spirit alienated
-from itself, an unconscious; consciousness, a petrified thought, and
-creating for it a special philosophy (as though all the other did
-not suffice), entitled precisely, _Philosophy of nature._ But modern
-thought knows henceforth how man creates for his use that skeleton or
-_mannequin_ of an immobile, external mechanical nature, and he is no
-longer permitted to fall back into equivoque and substitute this for
-entity or for a complex of entities. Nor should he find any difficulty
-in discovering everywhere activity, development, consciousness, with
-its antitheses of good and evil, of joy and sorrow. Certainly the stars
-do not smile, nor is the moon pale for sorrow: these are images of
-the poets. Certainly animals and trees do not reason like men; this,
-when it is not poetry, is gross anthropomorphism. But nature, in her
-intimate self, longs for the good and abhors the evil, she is all wet
-with tears and all a-shiver for joy; strife and victory is everywhere
-and in every moment of universal life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Optimism and pessimism; critique._]
-
-This conception of reality, which recognizes the indissoluble link
-between good and evil, is itself beyond good and evil, and consequently
-surpasses the visual angles of optimism and pessimism--of optimism
-that does not discover the evil in life and posits it as illusion, or
-only as a very small and contingent element, or hopes for a future
-life (on earth or in heaven) in which evil will be suppressed; and
-of pessimism, that sees nothing but evil and makes of the world an
-infinite and eternal spasm of pain, that rends itself internally and
-generates nothing. It confronts the first with the fact that evil is
-truly the original sin of reality, ineliminable so long as reality
-exists, and therefore absolutely ineliminable as a category: the
-second, with the other category the good, equally ineliminable, for
-without it evil could not be. And it is easy to show how the optimist
-declares himself a pessimist, the pessimist an optimist, out of
-their own mouths. The setting free from individuality and from will,
-which the pessimist proposes as a radical remedy, is the remedy that
-reality itself applies at every moment, for we free ourselves from the
-contradiction of individuality and of wilfulness by the affirmation
-of the rational will, with which the same pessimist cannot dispense,
-for the effectuation of his programme of ascesis or of suicide, which,
-according as it is understood, is either not a programme, or a
-programme altogether capricious and without universal value. In truth,
-there is no need to oppose a eulogy of Life with a eulogy of Death,
-since the eulogy of Life is also a eulogy of Death; for how could we
-live, if we did not die at every instant?
-
-[Sidenote: _Dialectic optimism._]
-
-The dialectic conception of reality as development, that is, as a
-synthesis of being and not-being, can certainly be termed optimistic,
-but in a very different signification to that of abstract optimism. The
-synthesis is the thesis enriched with its antithesis, and the thesis is
-the good, being, not the bad or not-being. But who will wish seriously
-to oppose this logical consequence? Is it not a fact that men hope and
-live, although in the midst of their sorrows? Is it not a fact that the
-world is not ended and does not appear to have any intention of ending?
-And how would that be possible, if the moment of the good did not
-prevail, just because the positive prevails upon the negative and Life
-constantly triumphs over Death?
-
-[Sidenote: _Concept of cosmic progress._]
-
-This continuous triumph of Life over Death constitutes _cosmic
-progress._ Progress, from the point of view whence we have hitherto
-regarded it, that of individualized activity, is identical with
-activity; it is the unfolding of this upon passivity. Every volitional
-act, like every theoretical act, is therefore to be considered in
-itself, that is, only in relation to the given situation from which it
-breaks forth. In every new situation the individual begins his life
-all over again. But from the cosmic point of view, at which we now
-place ourselves, reality shows itself as a continuous growing upon
-itself; nor is a real regress ever conceivable, because evil being
-that which is not, is irreal, and that which is is always and only the
-good. The real is always rational, and the rational is always real.
-Cosmic progress, then, is itself also the object of affirmation, not
-problematic, but apodictic.
-
-[Sidenote: _Objections and critique of them._]
-
-The difficulties that can be and are opposed to this thesis all arise
-from the confusion of the truly rational with that which is falsely so
-called, between the true real and that which improperly assumes this
-name, that is, between the real and the unreal. Thus will be remembered
-the instance of the end of the great Græco-Roman civilization, without
-adequate parallel in universal history, followed by the return of
-barbarism in the Middle Ages; or the common example of the shipwreck
-of noblest enterprises; or (to remain in the field that more nearly
-interests us) the philosophic decadence, owing to which, a mean
-positivism was able to follow the idealism of the beginning of the
-nineteenth century, which stands to the former as the eloquence of
-an Attic orator to the stuttering of an ignorant school-boy. Did the
-Middle Age, then, represent an advance upon that Rome, whose memory
-lingered in the fancy as an image of lost dignity during that same
-Middle Age? Was the victory of European reaction over the citizen
-civilization of the Revolution and of the Empire progress? and in
-Lombardy, the new Austrian domination following upon the Kingdom of
-Italy? or in the Neapolitan provinces the Bourbon restoration after the
-Republic of 1799 and the French Decanate? Was Comte an advance upon
-Kant, Herbert Spencer upon Hegel? But different points of view are
-confused under the same name in these questions, and, therefore, we do
-not succeed in immediately arranging those facts beneath the principle
-that has been established. It is therefore necessary to analyze. It
-will then be immediately seen that ancient civilization, in what it
-possessed of truly real, did not die, but was transmitted as thought,
-institutions, and even as acquired aptitudes; hence it kept reappearing
-in the course of the centuries and still keeps reappearing: it
-certainly died in what it had of unreal, that is to say, in its
-contradictions, for instance, in its incapacity to find political and
-economic forms answering to the changed conditions of spirits. In like
-manner, the Middle Age, which was evidently in part progress, because
-it solved problems left unsolved by the preceding civilization, posed
-others that it did not solve and that were solved in the succeeding
-centuries; but if the posing of these new problems, which, while
-destroying the old, failed to substitute provisionally anything, was
-apparently not progress, neither was it regress, but the beginning of
-new progress. The same is to be said of precursors, conquered in their
-time, but conquerors in history, of the restorations and reactions
-that are so only in name, because they contain in themselves that with
-which they contend, if for no other reason, then for the very reason
-that they contend: of heroes and initiators, who were conquered and
-martyrized, yet knew that they were triumphing and did triumph in
-dying; the cross and the pyre will become symbols of victory: _in hoc
-signo vinces._ And finally, if the positivism of the second half of the
-nineteenth century seem as a whole so greatly inferior to idealism,
-that comes from its not being philosophy at all, but a hybrid jumble
-of natural sciences and metaphysic, thus intensifying an error that
-already existed in germ in idealism, and fecundating the problem
-for a better solution. Many philosophers living to-day are inferior
-to Socrates, because they have not even risen to the knowledge of
-the concept; but those who in our day have attained to the level of
-Socrates, are superior to him, because besides his thought they contain
-in themselves something that Socrates had not; and those philosophers
-who are logically on a level with Protagoras, surpass him, just because
-they are the Protagorases of the twentieth century. There is therefore
-never real regression in history; but only contradictions that follow
-upon solutions given, and prepare new ones.
-
-[Sidenote: _Individuals and History._]
-
-The solutions, once attained, are acquired for ever; the problems that
-have once been solved, do not again occur, or, which is the same thing,
-they recur in a different way to those of the past. The web of History
-is composed of such labours, to which all individuals collaborate;
-but it is not the work and cannot be the purpose of any of them in
-particular, because each one is exclusively intent on his particular
-work, and only in _rem suam agere,_ does he also do the business of
-the world. History is happening, which, as has been seen, is not to
-be judged practically, because it always transcends individuals, and
-to these and not to history is the practical judgment applicable.
-The judgment of History is in the very fact of its existence: its
-rationality is in its reality.
-
-[Sidenote: _Fate, Fortune, and Providence._]
-
-This historical web, which is and is not the work of individuals,
-constitutes, as has been said, the work of the universal Spirit, of
-which individuals are manifestations and instruments. In this way are
-implicitly excluded those views which attribute the course of things
-to Fate, to Fortune, or to Chance, that is, to mechanism or caprice,
-both of them insufficient and one-sided, like determinism and free
-will, each one invoking the other when it becomes aware of its own
-impotence. The idea of mechanical origin, of an evolution that takes
-place by the addition of very minute elements, is now being abandoned,
-even for that fragment of history called _History of Nature_ (the
-only true and possible Philosophy of Nature), in which is beginning
-to reappear the theory of successive crises and revolution, and the
-idea of freedom, whose creations are not to be measured or limited
-mathematically. But the supreme rationality that guides the course of
-history, should not, on the other hand, be conceived as the work of a
-transcendent Intelligence or Providence, as is the case in religious
-and semi-fanciful thought, which does not possess other value than that
-of a confused presentiment of the truth. If History be rationality,
-then a Providence certainly directs it; but of such a kind as becomes
-actual in individuals, and acts, not on, but in them. This affirmation
-of Providence is not conjecture or faith, but evidence of reason.
-Who would feel in him the strength of life without such intimate
-persuasion? Whence could he draw resignation in sorrow, encouragement
-to endure? Surely what the religious man says, with the words "Let us
-leave it in God's hands," is said also by the man of reason with those
-other words: "Courage, and forward"?
-
-[Sidenote: _The infinity of progress and mystery._]
-
-The Spirit, which is infinite possibility passing into infinite
-actuality, has drawn and draws at every moment the cosmos from chaos,
-has collected diffused life into the concentrated life of the organ,
-has achieved the passage from animal to human life, has created and
-creates modes of life ever more lofty. The work of the Spirit is not
-finished and never will be finished. Our yearning for something higher
-is not vain. The very yearning, the infinity of our desire, is proof
-of the infinity of that progress. The plant dreams of the animal, the
-animal of man, man of superman; for this, too, is a reality, if it be
-reality that with every historical movement man surpasses himself. The
-time will come when the great deeds and the great works now our memory
-and our boast will be forgotten, as we have forgotten the works and the
-deeds, no less great, of those beings of supreme genius who created
-what we call human life and seem to us now to have been savages of
-the lowest grade, almost men-monkeys. They will be forgotten, for the
-documents of progress is in _forgetting_; that is, in the fact being
-entirely absorbed into the new fact, in which, and not in itself,
-it has value. But we cannot know what the future states of Reality
-will be, in their determined physiognomy and succession, owing to the
-"dignity" established in the Philosophy of the practical, by which the
-knowledge of the action and of the deed follows and does not precede
-the action and the deed. _Mystery_ is just _the infinity of evolution_:
-were this not so, that concept would not arise in the mind of man,
-nor would it be possible to abuse it, as it has been abused by being
-transported out of its place, that is to say, into the consciousness
-of itself, which the spiritual activity should have and has to the
-fullest degree, that is, the consciousness of its eternal categories.
-
-[Sidenote: _Illegitimate transportation of the concept of mystery from
-history to philosophy._]
-
-The neglect of the moment of mystery is the true reason of the error
-known as the _Philosophy of history,_ which undertakes to portray the
-plan of Providence and to determine the formula of progress. In this
-attempt (when it does not affirm mere philosophemes, as has very often
-happened), it makes the vain effort to enclose the infinite in the
-finite and capriciously to decree concluded that evolution which the
-universal Spirit itself cannot conclude, for it would thus come to deny
-itself. In Logic that error has been gnoseologically defined as the
-pretension of treating the individual as though it were the universal,
-making the universal individual; here it is to be defined in other
-words as the pretension of treating the finite as though it were the
-infinite, of making the infinite finite.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmation of the impossibility of a Philosophy of
-history._]
-
-But the unjustified transportation of the concept of mystery from
-history, where it indicates the future that the past prepares and does
-not know, into philosophy, causes to be posited as mysteries which
-give rise to probabilities and conjectures, problems that consist of
-philosophical terms, and should therefore be philosophically solved.
-But if the infinite progress and the infinite perfectibility of man
-is to be affirmed, although we do not know the concrete forms that
-progress and perfectibility will assume (not knowing them, because now
-it imports not to _know,_ but to _do_ them), then there is no meaning
-in positing as a mystery the immortality of the individual soul, or the
-existence of God; for these are not _facts_ that may or may not happen
-sooner or later, but _concepts_ that must be proved to be in themselves
-thinkable and not contradictory, or to determine in what form they are
-thinkable and not contradictory. Their thinkability will indeed be
-a mystery, but of the kind that it is a duty to make clear, because
-synonymous with obscurity or mental confusion. What has so far been
-demonstrated has been their unthinkability in the traditional form.
-Nor is it true that they correspond to profound demands of the human
-soul. Man does not seek a God external to himself and almost a despot,
-who commands and benefits him capriciously; nor does he aspire to an
-immortality of insipid ease: but he seeks for that God which he has in
-himself, and aspires to that activity, which is both Life and Death.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-TWO ELUCIDATIONS RELATING TO HISTORIC AND ÆSTHETIC
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The relation of desires and actions; and two problems of
-Historic and of Æsthetic._]
-
-From the consideration of the practical activity in its dialectic, and
-in particular from the theory relating to desire and to action, shines
-forth, if we mistake not, the full light that has hitherto perhaps been
-invoked in vain upon certain capital points of Historic and Æsthetic,
-which, when treating of those disciplines, we were obliged either
-hardly to touch upon, or to develop in a manner altogether inadequate.
-The reason of this was that an adequate development, to be convincing,
-demanded as presupposition, a minute exposition as to the nature, the
-relations and the constitution of the practical activity, all of them
-things that could not be treated incidentally.
-
-[Sidenote: _History and art._]
-
-History or historical narrative is, as we know, very closely related
-to art, in contradistinction to the abstract sciences, since both
-art and history do not construct concepts of class, but represent
-concrete and individuated facts. History, however, is not art pure and
-simple, but is distinguished from it, because artistic representation
-is in it continually illuminated with the critical distinction
-between the real and the possible, what has happened and what has
-been imagined, the existing and the inexisting, with the consequent
-determinations connected with them, as to this or that particular mode
-of reality, event, and existence, that have taken place. In every
-historical narrative are always to be found, understood or implied, the
-affirmations that the narrative is real, that a different narrative
-would be imaginary, that the reality of the event in question properly
-belongs to this or that concept of politics, rights, war, diplomacy,
-economy, and so on. All this is quite absent from art, which is by
-nature ingenuous and free of critical discernment; so much so, that
-hardly have its representations become objects of reflection, than they
-are dissolved as art, to reappear with a changed appearance (no longer
-youthful, but virile or senile), as history.
-
-[Sidenote: _The concept of existentiality in history._]
-
-But if this distinction between art and history be precisely determined
-gnoseologically, when it has been said that in history the predicate
-of existentiality is added to mere representation (and, therefore,
-all the other predicates connected with the case, referring to the
-various forms of existence), and that therefore, the representative
-and artistic form of history contains in itself rational and
-philosophical method as precedent, yet there always remains the
-ulterior philosophical problem: What is the origin of that predicate
-of reality or existentiality on which all the others lean? We have
-already demonstrated that it was altogether inadmissible to derive it
-from a mysterious faculty called _Faith,_ or to consider it as the
-apprehension of something extraneous to the spirit in universal, as _a
-datum or position._ And we also stated that if the spirit recognize
-its existence, yet it cannot attain to the criterion elsewhere than
-from itself; which criterion was nothing but the first reflection of
-the spirit upon the practical activity itself, giving rise to the
-duplication of reality that has happened and reality only desired, or
-of reality and irreality, of existing and inexisting.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its origin in the Philosophy of the practical: action and
-the existing, desires and the unexisting._]
-
-All this now becomes a simple consequence of the connection that
-has been made clear between desire and action. The cognoscitive
-spirit, when it apprehends and ideally remakes this connection, has,
-in enunciating it, also enunciated for the first time the couples
-of terms that we have already mentioned and that variously express
-the criterion of existence. To distinguish desires from actions is
-tantamount to distinguishing the unreal from the real, the existing
-from the unexisting, and to think the practical act is tantamount
-to thinking the concept of existence and of effectual reality. For
-the determination of the relation between desire and action, and
-only for that, the criterion of existence is not necessary, because
-that relation is itself that criterion. To say "this is a desire"
-means, "this does not exist"; to say "this is an action" means, "this
-exists." The desires are possibility; the resolutive and volitional
-act or action, is actuality. And it is also evident that existent
-and inexistent are not separable, as though the inexistent were
-heterogeneous to the existent; the inexistent exists in its way, as
-possibility is possible reality; the phantasm exists in the fancy and
-desire in the spirit that desires. Thus the posing of the one term is
-also the posing of the other, as correlative. What is repugnant and
-contradictory is the introduction of the one term into the other. This
-takes place, for instance, when in narrating the history, reality that
-has happened is mingled as one single thing with reality dreamed of or
-desired, and history is turned into _legend._
-
-[Sidenote: _History as distinction between actions and desires, and art
-as indistinction._]
-
-It can be said that history always represents actions, and in this is
-implicit that it represents at the same time also desires, but only in
-so far as it distinguishes them from actions: history, therefore, is
-perception and memory of perception, and in it fancies and imaginations
-are also perceived as such and arranged in their place. And it would
-also be possible to say that art represents only desires, and is
-therefore all fancy and never perception, all possible reality and
-never effectual reality. But since to art is wanting the distinctive
-criterion between desires and actions, it in truth represents actions
-as desires and desires as actions, the real as possible, and the
-possible as real; hence it would be more correct to say that art is
-on the near side of the possible and the real, it is pure of these
-distinctions, and is therefore pure imagination or _pure intuition._
-Desires and actions are, we know, of the same stuff, and art assumes
-that stuff just as it is, careless of the new elaboration that it will
-receive in an ulterior grade of the spirit, which is indeed impossible
-without that first and merely fantastic elaboration. Likewise when art
-takes possession of historical material, it removes from it just the
-historical character, the critical elements, and by this very fact
-reduces it once more to mere intuition.
-
-[Sidenote: _The purely fantastic and the imaginary._]
-
-It must further be noted that the purely fantastic, which is the
-representation of a desire, must not be confounded with the mechanical
-combination of images, that can be made idly, for amusement, or for
-practical ends. This operation (analogous to that of the intellect upon
-the pure concepts and representations, when it arbitrarily combines
-them in the pseudo-concepts), is secondary and derivative; and it
-presupposes the first, which provides it with the material that it cuts
-up and combines. Nothing is more extraneous and repugnant to poetry
-than this artificial _imagining,_ precisely because it is external and
-repugnant to reality. Hence his would be a vain objection who should
-coldly and capriciously combine the most different images and ask for
-an explanation of the whole, with desire as the fundamental principle.
-Such combinations as these, since they do not belong to poetry, are
-void of real psychical content.
-
-[Sidenote: _Art as lyrical or representation of feelings._]
-
-But if the relation between desire and action be the ultimate reason
-for the distinction between art and history, and this distinction be
-the theoretical reflection of that real relation, the conception of
-art as representation of volitional facts, taken in their quite general
-and indeterminate nature, in which desire is as action and action as
-desire, reveals why art affirms itself as _representation of feeling,_
-and why a work of art does not seem to possess and does not possess
-value, save from its _lyrical_ character and from the imprint of the
-artist's personality. The work of art that reasons or instructs as
-to things that have happened, and finds a substitute for intimate
-and lyrical connections in historical reasonings and connections, is
-justly and universally condemned as cold and ineffectual. We do not
-ask the artist for a philosophical system nor for a relation of facts
-(if all this is to be found in his work it is _per accidens),_ but
-for a dream of his own, for nothing but the expression of a world
-desired or abhorred, or partly desired and partly abhorred. If he
-make us live again in this dream the rapture of joy or the incubus of
-terror, in solemnity or in humility, in tragedy or in laughter, that
-suffices. Facts and concepts, and the question as to the metaphysical
-constitution of reality and how it has been developed in time, are all
-things that we shall ask of others.
-
-[Sidenote: _Identity of ingenuous reality and feeling._]
-
-It may seem that in this way the field of art has been much restricted
-and the ingenuous representation of the real excluded from it. But
-this ingenuous representation is just the representation of reality as
-dream. For reality is nothing (as we henceforth know) than becoming,
-possibility that passes into actuality, desire that becomes action,
-from which desire springs forth again unsatiated. The artist who
-represents it ingenuously, produces the lyric for this very reason. For
-him there is no necessity to reach it from without, as a new element:
-if he do this, he is a bad artist, and will be blamed as a hunter of
-emotions, emphatic, convulsive, wearisomely sentimental, forcedly
-jocose, an introducer of his own caprice into the coherence of the
-work, a confounder of his empirical with his artistic personality,
-which exists in the empirical individual, but is not equivalent to it.
-The feeling that the true artist portrays is that of things, _lacrymae
-rerum_; and by the identity of feeling and volition, of volition and
-reality already demonstrated in the Philosophy of the practical, things
-are themselves that feeling. The characteristic that Schelling and
-Schopenhauer noted in music, of reproducing, not indeed the ideas, but
-the ideal rhythm of the universe, and of objectifying the will itself,
-belongs equally to all the other forms of art, because it is the
-essence itself of Art, or of pure intuition.
-
-[Sidenote: _Artists and the will._]
-
-An obvious confirmation of this theory is also the empirical
-observation often made, that the men who lose themselves in desires
-are rather poets than men of action, dreamers rather than actors; and
-in respect to this, that poets who seem to have the soul overflowing
-with energetic plans, magnanimous loves, and fierce hatreds are the
-most incapable in the field of action, and the worst of captains in
-practical struggles; because those plans, those loves and hates, are
-not will, but desires, and desires already weakened as such, because
-they are no longer in process of volitional synthetization, but have
-become the objects of contemplation and of dream. He who reads the
-biographies of artists, or has dealings with artists in daily life,
-almost always has the impression that their gusts of passion are
-nothing but poetry _about to break forth,_ as a green bud that opens
-and breaks the brown sheath. And if this process be painful, that
-is because every travail of birth is painful. One sees, indeed, how
-everything generally ends _par des chansons._ A fine poem and the
-sufferer is calm again.
-
-[Sidenote: _Actions and myths._]
-
-This also explains why individual actions and practical collective
-movements are accompanied with hopes, beliefs, and _myths._ These have
-no logical or historical truth, but it is on the other hand impossible
-to criticize them, because they are not error, but fantastic projection
-of the state of soul of individuals and groups of individuals in
-action, and testify to the existence of desires ready to transform
-themselves into will and action. Utopias are poetry, they are not
-practical acts; but beneath that poetry there is always the reality
-of a desire that is a factor of future history. Hence it also happens
-that poets are thought of as _seers,_ when the utopia of to-day becomes
-the reality of the morrow. The Utopian and semi-poetic Address of the
-Italian patriots to the Directory of June 18, 1799,[1] the not less
-Utopian Proclamation of Rimini of 1815, the song of Manzoni, in which
-rang out the fateful verse,
-
- We shall not be free if we are not one,
-
-will become, for the Italians of 1860, effective action and _historical
-event._
-
-[Sidenote: _Art as the pure representation of becoming and the artistic
-form of thought._]
-
-Pure intuition, ingenuous representation of reality, representation
-of feeling, lyricism and personal intonation, are then all equivalent
-formulæ, all of them definitions of the æsthetic activity and of art.
-And it would be superfluous to repeat that art thus characterized
-remains the concrete form of the superior theoretical grades of the
-spirit. In fact, logical thought or concept is also volition, owing to
-the unity of the spirit, and the representation of such volition is the
-logos made flesh, the concept that incorporates itself in language,
-palpitating with the drama of its becoming. What word of man is there
-that is not personally and lyrically coloured, whether he communicate
-the truth of science or narrate the incidents of life? And how could we
-deny a place among the dramas that agitate human life and art portrays,
-to that drama of dramas, which is the drama of thought and of the
-historical comprehension of the real?
-
-
-[1] B. Croce, _Relazioni dei patrioti napoletani col Direttorio e col
-Consolato e l' idea dell' unità italiana,_ Napoli, 1902, pp. 69-73.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The problem of freedom._]
-
-I. For the reasons stated in their place, a history of the concept of
-freedom would end by becoming almost a general history of philosophy.
-Denied in different ways in the mechanistic and deterministic
-conceptions (from the Stoics to Spinoza), and in the theological and
-arbitraristic (from Epicurus to St. Augustine and the mystics), that
-concept afterwards continually assumed a more and more conciliatory
-form; an indication that the question must be put in an altogether
-different way. This movement culminated in the Kantian theory, in
-which freedom, defended against the psychologists, is withdrawn from
-natural causality and affirmed _a priori,_ as causality by means
-of freedom; but, at the same time, Kant did not succeed in fully
-justifying it, owing to his failure in the solution of the antitheses,
-the defect of the Kantian philosophy, which never really became a
-system. The embarrassments and absurdities to which the unsolved
-antithesis between liberty and causality gives rise, are sufficiently
-exemplified in a proposition to be found in the _Critique of Practical
-Reason_: "It would be possible to foresee what man will do in the
-future, if we possessed all the facts; yet he would be perfectly
-free."[1] But notwithstanding these contradictions and embarrassments,
-the energetic affirmation of the principle of freedom by Kant (which
-had an altogether special certitude in Kant, in respect to the other
-two postulates of the practical reason, God and immortality, from
-which in this respect it was distinguished) helped to make prevalent
-the conviction of the impossibility of eliminating that concept or
-of escaping from it, and made of it the field of battle, where the
-fortunes of philosophy were decided. The problem of the freedom of
-willing is really solved or near to a solution, in those philosophies
-which do not fatigue themselves with it as a particular problem, but
-treat of it as something to be understood of itself, provided there
-be a non-mechanistic conception of reality, such as would not need
-special defence. This happens, not only with sentimentalists and
-mystics such as Jacobi and Schleiermacher, but also and above all in
-the Hegelian philosophy. Perhaps no philosopher has been less occupied
-with the problem of liberty than Hegel, just because he was always
-occupied with it. The will is free (he contents himself with saying);
-freedom is the fundamental determination of the will, as gravity is
-of matter; thus as gravity is matter itself, so is freedom the will.
-Hegel consequently saw true in the contest between arbitrarism and
-determinism, recognizing in determinism the merit of having given
-its value to the content, the datum, in opposition to the certainty
-of abstract auto-determination, so that freedom understood as free
-will is considered to be illusion. Free will is both determined and
-indetermined.[2] But how Hegel could conciliate this theory of freedom
-with the mechanistic concept of nature that persists in him is another
-question. His failure to attain to this conciliation was perhaps among
-the reasons that made his profound solution of the antithesis between
-determinism and indeterminism seem a vain playing with words.
-
-After Hegel, a return was made to the Kantian doctrine, variously
-modified, in which is posited, now a double causality, now a
-composition of diverging forces, now a double point of view, now two
-worlds, the one included in the other and dominated, the one by the
-principle of the conservation of energy, the other by that of increase.
-Such contradictory doctrines are to be found for example in Lotze
-and Wundt, to the latter of whom belongs the formula that the causal
-explanation is certainly to be applied to spiritual facts, but _a parte
-post,_ not _a parte ante_[3] The philosophy of Bergson represents in a
-certain way a return to the sound idealistic view, which declares that
-the dilemma of determinism and indeterminism is surpassed.[4]
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of evil._]
-
-II. The conception of the relation between bad and good, as reality
-opposed to reality, is mythological and religious (Parseeism,
-Manichæism, Jewish-Christian doctrine of the devil, etc.). But evil had
-already begun to reveal itself to the philosophical reflection of the
-ancients as the unreal, the not being; and this is explicitly affirmed
-in Neoplatonism. It was not, however, possible to understand this
-function of unreality, real in its way, without a general dialectical
-conception, which became very slowly mature. Without a dialectic
-conception, evil, conceived as unreality, becomes mere illusion, not
-so much a moment of the real as an equivocation of man philosophizing.
-This is clearly to be seen in Spinoza, who opposes the full laws of
-reality to the narrow laws of human nature, saying: _Quidquid nobis
-in natura ridiculum, absurdum aut malum videtur, id inde venit quod
-res tantum ex parte novimus, totiusque naturae ordinem et cohaerentium
-maxima ex parte ignoramus, et quod omnia ex usu nostrae rationis
-dirigi volumus, cum tamen id, quod malum esse dictat, non malum sit
-respectu ordinis et legum universae naturae; sed tantum solius nostrae
-naturae legum respectu._ For indeed, if evil, error and wickedness
-were something that had essence, God, who is the cause of all that
-has essence (continues Spinoza), would also be the cause of evil, of
-error, and of wickedness. But this is not so, because evil is nothing
-real. _Neronis matricidium_ (he observes) _quatenus aliquid positivum
-comprehendebat, scelus non erat: nam facinus externum fecit, simulque
-intentionem ad trucidendam matrem Orestes habuit, et tamen, saltem ita
-uti Nero, non accusatur. Quodnam ergo Neronis scelus? Non aliud quam
-quod hoc facinore ostendit se ingratum, immisericordem ac inobedientem
-esse. Certum autem est, nihil horum aliquid essentiae exprimere, et
-idcirco Deum eorum non fuisse catisam, licet causa actus et intentionis
-Neronis fuerit_[5] But Spinoza was not able to determine in what sense
-Nero was really ungrateful, implacable, and disobedient, nor in what
-way such a judgment could be justified, owing to his idea of Substance,
-not as subject, spirit, activity, but as cause.
-
-Kant did not succeed in understanding the nature of evil; for him good
-and evil were "the categories of freedom,"[6] and the view of Fichte
-who makes the radical evil to be _vis inertiae,_ laziness (_Trägheit,_)
-which is in nature and in man as nature,[7] represents progress in
-respect to the Kantian position. But only with the Hegelian dialectical
-view of evil, understood as negation, is evil at the same time given
-its right place; and its unreality, contradiction, which is no longer
-the product of illusion of thought, but of things themselves, in
-intimate contradiction with one another, if it be a blemish, is shown
-to be the blemish, not of human thought, but of reality.[8]
-
-[Sidenote: _Decision and freedom._]
-
-III. Free will, too, is not considered as a quality and character of
-complete liberty, but as its negation, will as contradiction, in the
-Hegelian philosophy. It was preceded in this respect, not only by Kant,
-but also by Descartes. Descartes wrote of the decision of indifference:
-_Cette indifférence que je sens lorsque je ne suis point porté vers
-un côté plutôt que vers un autre par le poids d'aucune raison est
-le plus bas degré de ma liberté, et fait plutôt paraître un défaut
-dans la connaissance qu'une perfection dans la volonté: car si je
-connaissais toujours clairement ce qui est vrai et ce qui est bon, je
-ne serais jamais en peine de délibérer quel jugement et quel choix je
-devrais faire; et ainsi je serais entièrement libre, sans jamais être
-indifférent._[9]
-
-Among the false formulæ of the _freedom of choice_ can be mentioned
-that of Rosmini, who calls it _bilateral_ freedom, or that of
-performing or not performing a given action.[10] But since the spirit
-cannot be reduced to complete passivity, not to perform a given action
-is equivalent to performing a different one; and if this other action
-that presents itself before us be also not willed by us, then it will
-be another, and so on. Thus it is not a question of bilaterality, but
-of multiplicity of tendencies: not of the choice between two volitions,
-but of the synthesis of many appetites in one, which is the will or
-freedom.
-
-[Sidenote: _Conscience and responsibility_]
-
-We may mention the disputes that have been preserved in the
-_Memorabilia_ as to the greater responsibility of him who knows more
-(or wills more), as compared with him who knows less (or wills less),
-as to whether he that acts voluntarily be more unjust than he who
-acts involuntarily (ὁ ἑκὼν ἤ ὁ ἄκων). In this connection it is to
-be observed that he who voluntarily does not write or read well is
-certainly more grammatical than he who reads and writes ill through
-ignorance; and therefore that he who commits injustice while knowing
-what is just, is more just than he who commits it because he does not
-know what is just; and that he is better, who says what is false when
-he knows what is true, than he who says what is false, not knowing what
-is true. The dispute leads to the celebration of knowledge of self, or,
-as we should say, of knowing and possessing oneself.[11]
-
-These thoughts are discussed anew in the _Hippias minor,_ where
-the multiple difficulties are placed in relief and a conclusion
-reached that does not even satisfy those who propose it.[12] It is
-henceforward clear that the question must be solved in the sense that
-he who is conscious of sinning is certainly a sinner, whereas he who
-is not conscious of so doing, does not sin at all; but this being even
-incapable of sinning is in itself a sin, and places the man who is in
-such a condition yet a degree lower. In the polemic of Pascal with the
-Jesuits--who maintained that in order to sin it was necessary to be
-conscious of one's own infirmity and of the suitable remedy, the wish
-to be healed and to ask it of God--the Jesuits were theoretically on
-the side of reason. _Croira-t-on, sur votre parole_ (wrote Pascal),
-_que ceux qui sont plongés dans l'avarice, dans l'impudicité, dans
-les blasphèmes, dans le duel, dans la vengeance, dans les vols, dans
-les sacrilèges, aient véritablement le désir d'embrasser la chasteté,
-l'humilité et les autres vertus chrétiennes?_ Nevertheless, it is
-inevitably so, if those acts of theirs are to be judged to be vices
-(and if they really are so). Hegel places himself on the side of
-Pascal, who accepts and refers to the following argument and reduction
-to the absurd: _Ils seront tous damnés ces demi-pécheurs qui ont
-quelque amour pour la vertu. Mais pour ces francs-pécheurs, sans
-mélange, pleins et achevés, l'enfer ne les tient pas: ils ont trompé le
-diable à force de s'y abandonner._[13]
-
-A reduction to the absurd which is not such: because the formula given
-as absurd expresses at bottom a very simple truth, which Hegel too
-stated in his own way, when he said that it was necessary to prefer
-self-will, evil, the erring Spirit, to the innocence of plants and
-animals, or of Nature.[14]
-
-[Sidenote: _The concept of duty._]
-
-IV. A classical example of the disputes as to the principle of the
-Philosophy of the practical, arising from the consideration of this
-principle in its empirical formulations, can be furnished from the
-polemic of Herbart against Kant on the subject of _duty._ Herbart
-demonstrated that duty is not an original but a derived concept,
-and that it appears only when there is disagreement between the
-practical _ideas_ and the _will_.[15] But it would be possible to
-demonstrate with the same method that the practical ideas are derived
-concepts, because they do indeed presuppose the moral will, from the
-manifestations of which they are constituted by means of abstraction.
-Herbart was in the right against Kant, but he afterwards let the axe
-fall on his own feet. The hard formula of the imperative preferred by
-Kant had already been combated by Frederick Schiller, who accentuated
-the moment of pleasure, sympathy and enthusiasm in the good action.
-
-[Sidenote: _Repentance and remorse._]
-
-As to the other concepts and to the disputes to which they gave rise,
-it will be opportune to mention repentance and remorse. Spinoza does
-not see that it has value as a necessary negative moment, for he
-declared: _Poenitentia virtus non est, sive ex ratione non oritur; sed
-is qui facti poenitet bis miser, seu impotens est. Nam primo prava
-cupiditate, dein tristitia vinci se patitur;_ and he concludes by
-assigning to it value for altogether empirical motives. Men rarely
-live (he says) _ex dictamine rationis_; and yet repentance and other
-similar affections do more good than harm, and if it be necessary to
-sin _in istam partem potius peccandum. Terret vulgus, nisi metuat._[16]
-But it was Hegel who instituted a regular persecution of the concept
-of repentance and remorse. There are certain passages in his works
-that should be read in connection with this question, in order that
-we may clearly see how he had an eye to contingent and historical
-events in his criticism. "In the Christian world in general (he writes)
-there is in force an ideal of the perfect man, who cannot exist as
-multitude in a people; and if this ideal is found realized in monks,
-quakers, and such-like pious folk, it must be remarked that a mass of
-these sad creatures does not constitute a people, just as lice and
-parasitic plants cannot exist by themselves, but only on an organic
-body. In order to constitute a people, it would be above all desirable
-to destroy that lamblike gentleness of theirs, that vanity which is
-occupied solely with their own persons, the caring for them and holding
-them dear, and has always before it the image and consciousness of
-its own excellence. For life in the universal and for the universal
-demands, not such vile and listless gentleness, but an energetic
-gentleness, not a thinking of oneself and one's own sins, but of the
-universal and of what should be done for it. To him who nourishes so
-false an ideal, men must always appear to be affected with weakness
-and corruption, and that ideal to be so constituted that it can never
-be translated into reality. They attribute importance to trifles, to
-which no reasonable person pays special attention, and believe that
-such weaknesses and defects exist, even when they are not remarked.
-Nor should we admire their greatness of soul, but note rather that
-their corruption lies precisely in standing still and looking at that
-which they call weaknesses and errors, and in making out of nothing
-something that exists. A man with such weaknesses and defects is
-immediately quit of them, if he do not attach to them importance." The
-observations that Hegel makes in his _Æsthetic,_ regarding the type of
-the Magdalen in Italian art, are in this respect especially curious.
-"In Italian painting the Magdalen appears, both within and without,
-as the _beautiful sinner;_ sin in her is as seductive as conversion.
-But here neither sin nor sanctity are to be taken too seriously. She
-was pardoned, because she had loved much; she sinned through love and
-beauty; and the affecting element lies in this, that she has scruples
-about her love, and beautiful and sensible as she is, sheds torrents of
-tears. But her error is not that she has loved so much; her beautiful
-and moving error is precisely that she believes herself to be a sinner,
-whereas her sensitive beauty gives the impression that she could not
-have been otherwise than noble and of lofty senses in her love."[17]
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of the passions._]
-
-V. The relation between the passions or desires and the will has rather
-been studied at the moment of strife between the will and the passions,
-than for itself and within its two terms, although Aristotle had
-already begun an analysis as to the diversity of appetites or βούλησις
-in respect to the intention or προαίρεσις, observing that the intention
-relates only to what can be done, whereas the appetition relates also
-to things that are impossible.[18] The opposed schools of the Cynics
-and Cyrenaïcs, Stoics and Epicureans, and others such, were chiefly
-concerned with the antithesis of the passions and the rational will;
-but the formulæ of all these schools, if they have some empirical value
-as precepts of life more or less suitable for definite individuals,
-classes and times, possess none or very little for philosophy. Cynics
-and Cyrenaïcs, Stoics and Epicureans, they seem rather to be monks
-following this or that rule than philosophers. The question as to the
-mode of freeing oneself from the passions and of dominating them,
-which lingered till the treatises of Descartes and Spinoza, has
-also a chiefly empirical character. G. B. Vico took up a position
-opposed to the two opposed degenerations arising from those practical
-tendencies, that of "quenching the senses," and of "making a rule of
-them." He despised both Stoics and Epicureans as "monastic or solitary
-philosophers," and maintained as "a philosopher politician," that it is
-needful "not to tear away his own nature from man, nor to abandon him
-in his corruption," but "to moderate the human passions and to make of
-them human virtues."[19] Rarely has the defence of the passions enjoyed
-an equally limpid philosophical enunciation; as a rule, and even in
-Hegel, it has been directed chiefly against certain social tendencies,
-rather than against philosophical doctrines.[20] The absolute
-abandonment to the passions or their absolute destruction, are theories
-that have not had true and proper representatives.--The confusion
-between the various meanings of the word "passion," understood now
-as appetition, or concrete and actual passion, now as a state of the
-soul (joy and sorrow), now as volitional habit, is to be found in the
-various treatises that we have already had occasion to record. It is
-natural that their character of indifference when understood as habits
-should have often been observed. Thus for Descartes, _elles sont toutes
-bonnes de leur nature et nous n'avons rien à éviter que leurs mauvais
-usages ou leur excès._[21]
-
-[Sidenote: _Virtues and Vices._]
-
-On the other hand, the erroneous form of the defence of the passions,
-consisting of making them the preparation or cause of the virtues, is
-already to be found in the English philosophers of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries (More, Shaftesbury, etc.); and in the
-celebrated _Fable of the Bees_ of Mandeville, it assumes the aspect of
-a paradoxical theory, in which the vices are looked upon as promoters
-and factors of progress, morality as inefficacious and harmful for this
-purpose. And La Rochefoucauld had written: "_Les vices entrent dans
-la composition des vertus comme les poisons dans la composition des
-remèdes._"[22]
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of individuality: Schleiermacher._]
-
-All these are false or crude forms, in which is involved the doctrine
-of the right to individuality, and they have always constituted and
-still constitute its danger. This doctrine received its most energetic
-expression in the romantic and preromantic period, thanks above all to
-Schleiermacher, after it had been referred to in a rather vague way by
-Jacobi.[23]
-
-"For some time" (writes Schleiermacher in the _Monologues_) "I too was
-satisfied that I had discovered Reason; and venerating equality with
-the _Unique Being_ as that which is most lofty, I believed that there
-was one single measure for every case, that action should be in all of
-them the same, and that each one is distinguished from the other only
-in so far as it occupies a place of its own in space. I believed that
-humanity manifested itself differently only in the variety of external
-facts; but that the internal man, the individual, was not a being
-peculiarly (_eigenthümlich_) constructed, and that each was everywhere
-equal to the other." "But afterwards was revealed to me that which
-instantly raised me to a high state of exaltation: it became clear that
-every man must represent humanity in his own way, in an altogether
-individual combination of its elements, in order that it may manifest
-itself in every mode, and that everything most different may issue from
-its bosom and become effectual in the fulness of time and space....
-Owing to this thought, I felt myself to be a work individually willed
-and therefore elected by the Divinity and such that it must enjoy a
-particular form and culture; and the free act to which this thought
-belongs has collected and intimately joined together the elements of
-human nature in a peculiar existence."
-
-"While I now do whatever I do according to my spirit and sense,
-my fancy places before me as very clear proof of the internal
-determination, a thousand other modes, in which it would be possible to
-act otherwise without offending the laws of humanity: I rethink myself
-in a thousand different forms, in order to discover with the greater
-certainty that which is especially mine."[24]
-
-[Sidenote: _Romantic and very modern theories._]
-
-But this peculiarity (_Eigenthümlichkeit,_) opportunely placed in
-relief by Schleiermacher, and a thought much loved by the Romantics
-(Herder, Jacobi, G. Humboldt, the Schlegels, etc.), is often seen to
-degenerate into individual caprice, even in those times, as may be
-observed in the sort of caricature which Frederick Schlegel made of the
-Fichtian I, become the individual I, and in the notorious _Lucinde,_
-to which the same Schleiermacher inconsiderately devoted a series of
-letters of comment and defence. The last offshoots of the Romantics
-were Max Stirner and Frederick Nietzsche: in the former the value
-of individuality becomes changed into an affirmation of spasmodic
-egotism; in the second there is a continuous mixture of true and false,
-of good and of bad individuality, as is natural in a writer whose
-_Eigenthümlichkeit_ was rather that of a poet than of a thinker.
-
-[Sidenote: _The concept of development and progress._]
-
-VI. We have discussed elsewhere Hegel's concept of development, and
-his thought as synthesis of opposites, which essentially belongs to
-the Hegelian philosophy and has been superficially treated and adopted
-by other philosophical schools, and this is not the place either to
-retrace their history or to demonstrate into what errors Hegel fell
-through abusing the truth that he had discovered. Among the errors of
-that philosophy (as for that matter of all contemporary philosophies
-and of those that have followed one another down to our own day), is
-to be noted the persistence of the concept of Nature as a mode of
-reality opposed to the mode of the Spirit, whence came a dualism that
-was not effectually surpassed, save in appearance. The doctrine of
-development by opposites is to be understood as accepted and maintained
-here, with the correction of the concept of nature, and also the
-doctrine of the synthesis of opposites, free from the use or abuse
-of it by Hegel for distinct concepts (and worse still, for empirical
-concepts). As for the concept of Providence, which is neither Fate
-nor Fortune, nor the work of a transcendent God, this, in its modern
-form, goes back to the _Scienza nuova_ of Vico and is not to be
-confounded with the personal religious beliefs that Vico held and kept
-distinct from his philosophical concept as to immanent Providence.
-The same concept reappears in the Hegelian philosophy under the form
-of the Idea, or of the _astuteness of Reason,_ which avails itself
-of men as its instruments and managers of business.[25] Finally, the
-conception of cosmic progress was extraneous to the oriental world,
-to the Græco-Roman, and to the Christian worlds, prevailing in turn
-in the latter that of decadence from an original state of perfection
-and of circles or returns. In its modern form it takes its origin from
-thinkers free of these religious views, who merge in the philosophies
-of becoming and of evolution. But the concept of progress destroyed
-itself in many of these rationalistic philosophies, the "disappearance
-of evil" being posited as possible (Spencer), and a definite state
-of perfection conceived (though transferred from the past into the
-future), that is to say a Reality that should be Reality, indeed,
-perfect Reality having ceased to be development, that is to say, itself.
-
-
-
-[1] _Kr. d. prakt. Vern._ p. 119.
-
-[2] _Phil. d. Rechtes,_ §§ 4, 15.
-
-[3] Lotze, _Grundzüge der Ethik_ (Leipzig, 1884), pp. 26, 30-31; Wundt,
-_Ethik_² (Stuttgart, 1892), pp. 463-464.
-
-[4] _Essai sur les données immédiates de la conscience_ (Paris, 1898).
-
-[5] _Tract, theol.-pol._ vi. c. 6; _Ethica,_ p. iv. intr.; _Epist._36
-(_Opera,_ pp. 208, 378, 597).
-
-[6] _Kr. d. pr. Vernf._ p. 79.
-
-[7] _System der Sittenlehre,_ in _Werke,_ iv. pp. 198-205.
-
-[8] See my study: _Ciò che è vivo e ciò che è morto della filosofia di
-Hegel_ (Bari, 1907).
-
-[9] _Médit._ iv.
-
-[10] For example, _Compendio di Etica_ (Roma, 1907), p. 56.
-
-[11] _Mentor,_ iv. c. 2, § 19 _sqq._
-
-[12] _Hippias minor,_ 375.
-
-[13] Pascal, _Provine,_ i, iv.; Hegel, _Phil. d. Rechtes,_ § 40.
-
-[14] _Enc._§ 248.
-
-[15] _Allg. prakt. Phil._ pp. 121-122; _Einl. i. d. Phil._ (trad,
-ital.), pp. 118, 171, 224.
-
-[16] _Ethic,_ iv. prop. 54, p. 480.
-
-[17] _Gesch. d. Phil._ ii. 240-241; _Vorles. üb. Aesth._ ii. 162-163.
-
-[18] _Eth. Nicom._ Bk. iii. cc. 2-3, 1111-1113.
-
-[19] _Scienza nuova seconda,_ degn. 5.
-
-[20] _Phän. d. Geistes,_ pp. 484-486; _Encycl._ § 474; _Phil. d.
-Rechtes,_ § 124; _Phil. d. Gesch._ pp. 39-41.
-
-[21] _Traité des passions,_ iii. § 211.
-
-[22] _Maximes,_ n. 182 (Ed. Garnier, p. 43).
-
-[23] _Woldemar,_ pp. 112-113.
-
-[24] _Monologen,_ in _Werke,_ i. 366-368, 372.
-
-[25] See the study of Hegel mentioned.
-
-
-
-
-THIRD SECTION
-
-
-UNITY OF THE THEORETICAL AND THE PRACTICAL
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Double result; precedence of the theoretical over the
-practical and of the practical over the theoretical._]
-
-
-The study of the practical activity in its relations that we made in
-the first section has removed all doubt as to the thesis that the
-practical activity presupposes the theoretical, or that _knowledge is
-the necessary precedent of volition and action._[1] But the succeeding
-study of the practical activity in its dialectic having led to the
-result that the practical activity is reality itself in its immediacy,
-and that no other reality (or we may say _other nature_) is conceivable
-outside will-action, compels us also to affirm the opposite thesis,
-that the theoretic activity presupposes the practical, and that
-_the will is the necessary precedent of knowledge_.[2] And it is a
-precedent, not indeed in the sense admitted from the beginning, of
-the necessary implication of the will in every theoretical act, as
-will to know, by means of the unity of the Spirit[3] (for this will
-is subsidiary and not constitutive; but if it become constitutive it
-produces, as has been seen, wilfulness and the theoretical error[4]),
-but precisely in the sense of a constitutive will, without which no
-knowledge would be thinkable.
-
-Knowledge, indeed, is knowledge of something: it is the remaking of
-a fact, an ideal recreation of a real creation. If there have not
-previously been a desire, an aspiration, a nostalgia, there cannot be
-poetry; if there have not been an impulse or a heroic deed, the epic
-cannot arise; if the sun do not illumine a landscape, or a soul invoke
-a ray of sunlight upon the countryside, the picture of a luminous
-landscape cannot exist. And if there be not a world of reality that
-generates a world of representations, Philosophy, which is the search
-for the universal, is not conceivable, nor History, the understanding
-of the individual.
-
-[Sidenote: _Error of those who maintain the exclusive precedence of
-either._]
-
-The indubitability of this affirmation, which no force of sophistry
-can destroy, renders fallacious both the opposite theses, which have
-several times been variously proposed and maintained: the exclusive
-priority of the theoretic, and the exclusive priority of the practical.
-
-Those who maintain them enter into so desperate a contest with
-reality, that in order to issue from it without too much dishonour,
-they are finally compelled to call in the aid of a third term, which is
-in turn either thought that is not thought, or will that is not will,
-or something grey that contains in itself thought and will, without
-being either the one or the other, nor the unity of that duality. On
-the one hand is postulated a Logos, a thought _in se_ (one does not
-understand how this can ever think and be thought), and it is made to
-adopt the resolution (which one does not understand how it can ever
-adopt) of coming forth _from itself_ and creating a nature, in order
-to be able to return finally to itself, by means of this alienation,
-and to be henceforth _per se,_ that is to say, able to think and to
-will. The defect of this artificial construction, its mythological and
-religious origin, can be said to have been already revealed, in the
-comparison employed with reference to it by the author who maintained
-it (Hegel), to the effect that the Logos is God _before_ the creation
-of the world: a God, that is to say, altogether unreal and absurd.
-On the other hand, the excogitation of a _blind Will_ (Schelling,
-Schopenhauer) completely tallies with this Thought that does not think
-because it has not previously willed, and that does not truly will
-because it has not previously thought, and all of a sudden fashions
-for itself the instrument of knowledge, to succeed in surpassing
-itself in this alienation from itself, by means of liberation from
-willing obtained in the contemplation of the ideas and in asceticism.
-Here, too, we must repeat that the one error passes over and converts
-itself into the other, and this inevitable conversion causes the other
-secondary and hybrid forms of theory to have but slight interest, those
-in which the priority has been conceived as that of fancy, or feeling,
-or the unconscious, or the indifferentiated, and the like, all of which
-represent vain efforts to suppress one of the two fundamental forms of
-the spirit, or to derive them from a third, which consciousness does
-not reveal.
-
-[Sidenote: _Problem of the unity of this duality._]
-
-This however does not mean that the demand to conceive the link of that
-duality, or the unity of the theoretical and the practical, manifested
-in all these erroneous attempts, is not legitimate. But in order to
-conceive this, it is necessary to insist above all upon the reality of
-this duality, of which is sought the connection and the unity.
-
-[Sidenote: _Not the duality of opposites._]
-
-This connection cannot be the relation or synthesis of opposites. The
-theoretical is not the opposite of the practical, nor the practical
-the opposite of the theoretical: the opposite of the theoretical is
-error or the false, as the opposite of the practical is the volitional
-contradiction or evil. The theoretical, far from being negative, is
-positive, not less than the practical, and inversely. Neither form can
-therefore be in any way debased to a simple opposite. Opposition is
-intrinsic to the spirit and is to be found in each one of its forms:
-hence the general value of the spirit (activity against passivity,
-rationality and reality against irrationality and unreality, being
-against not-being) and that of its special forms (beautiful against
-ugly, true against false, useful against useless, good against evil).
-But precisely for this reason, it cannot constitute the character of
-one form in respect to the other: neither that of the true against the
-good, nor that of the beautiful against the useful, and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: _Not duality of finite and infinite._]
-
-Nor can the connection be thought as are thought the subdivisions of
-the theoretic and the practical forms, or according to the relations
-of individual to universal, of finite to infinite, the first of
-which terms conditions the second, but is conditioned by it only in
-an implicit manner. Of the two theoretical forms (and we shall see
-further on that the forms of the practical are also two), the æsthetic
-precedes the logical and is autonomous: a song, a story, a statue, do
-not express any concept; but the philosophy that gives the concept, is
-at the same time fancy, expression, word: the prose of the philosopher
-is his song. The æsthetic form is the knowledge of the individual;
-the logical that of the universal, which is also individual. But this
-relation that arises within the theoretic, as within the practical
-form, cannot be transported to the relation of the two forms without
-logical incoherence: the subdivision, so to speak, is not the
-division. Thought is not the finite in respect of willing, which is
-the infinite; nor is the will the finite in respect of thought, which
-is the infinite. Thought and will are both of them at once finite
-and infinite, individual and universal. He who passes from action to
-thought, does not limit his own being by becoming finite; nor does he
-limit it by passing from thought to action; or better, in both cases he
-makes himself finite to attain to the infinite; poet to open to himself
-the way to the thought of the eternally true; man of action, that he
-may dedicate his work to the eternal good.
-
-[Sidenote: _Perfect analogy of the two forms, theoretic and practical._]
-
-The two forms, theoretical and practical, both positive, both a
-connection of finite and infinite, correspond in everything, as has
-already appeared from our exposition, in which the appeal to the one
-from the problems of the other has always aided a better penetration
-of the nature of such problems and the finding of their solution.
-Thus in both there is genius and creation (geniuses of art and of
-thought, and geniuses of action); in both, reproduction and judgment
-take place in the same way (æsthetic taste, practical taste; history
-of art and history of philosophy, history of actions); in both arise
-representative concepts and empirical rules. The analogy will be
-better illustrated by what is to follow, when will be demonstrated the
-correspondence between art and economic, logical thought and ethicity,
-historical discrimination and ethical discrimination, empirical
-concepts and laws of action, and so on.
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Not a parallelism, but a circle._]
-
-If this analogy exclude the possibility of the two forms being
-_unequal,_ it must not, on the other hand, be perverted with the
-object of conceiving them _parallel,_ as would perhaps be pleasing
-to the parallelists of spirit and nature, soul and body; this is an
-expedient that is certainly easy, but certainly not satisfying. They
-are not parallel, but are on the contrary bound, the one to the
-other, in such a way that the one proceeds from the other. From the
-æsthetic apprehension of reality, from philosophical reflection upon
-it, from historical reconstruction, which is its result, is obtained
-that knowledge of the actual situation, on which alone is formed and
-can be formed the volitional and practical synthesis, the new action.
-And this new action is in its turn the material of the new æsthetic
-figuration, of the new philosophical reflection, of the new historical
-reconstruction. In short, knowledge and will, theory and practice,
-are not two parallels, but two lines, such that the head of the one
-is joined to the tail of the other; or, if a geometric symbol also be
-desired, such that they constitute, not a parallelism, but a _circle._
-
-[Sidenote: _The circle of Reality: thought and being, subject and
-object._]
-
-They constitute therefore the circle of reality and of life, which is
-duality-unity of thought and being, of subject and object, in such
-a way that to think the subject is the same as to think the subject
-of an object, and to think an object is the same as to think the
-object of a subject. In truth, it sometimes seems strange and almost
-impossible that such hard and difficult questions should have arisen
-as to the objectivity of knowledge, and as to whether thought attains
-to being, or whether there be a being beyond thought. Thought is such,
-precisely because it affirms being, and being is such, precisely
-because it is generated by a thought. It is only when we remember
-that in those questions were included others of a very difficult and
-intricate nature, concerning divine transcendency and the content of
-the concept of nature (gnoseological questions, which it is the glory
-of modern philosophy to have asked and solved);--it is only then that
-we understand how the relation of thought and being, of knowing and of
-willing, has also become obscure. Kant was forced to come to a stop
-before the mystery of reality, because he had not altogether conquered
-transcendency, nor altogether surpassed the false conception of nature
-as _ens,_ given by the naturalists. It revealed itself to him, not
-as a circle, but as an assemblage of lines diverging or joining to
-infinity. Hegel made two of will and nature, owing to the insufficiency
-of his gnoseological theory relating to the natural sciences, and was
-led to posit a Philosophy of nature in opposition to a Philosophy of
-the spirit, thus permitting to exist a form of non-mediate dualism,
-after he had destroyed so many, or making it mediate in the artificial
-manner to which we have referred. The shadows of that gnoseology having
-been dispersed, the relation between theory and practice, subject and
-object, appears in full light; and the answer becomes very simple to
-the question as to how, when everything is unconvertible relation of
-condition and conditioned, thought and being are reciprocally condition
-and conditioned, and as to how the vicious circle is avoided. The
-criticism of vicious circles includes in itself and affirms the idea
-of a circularity that is not vicious; thought and being are not a
-succession of two finites, but an absolute relation, that is, the
-Absolute itself. To express ourselves mythologically, if the creation
-of the world be the passage from chaos to cosmos, from not-being to
-being, this passage does not begin either with the theoretic or with
-the practical, with the subject, or with the object, but with the
-Absolute, which is the absolute relation of the two terms. _In the
-beginning was neither the Word nor the Act; but the Word of the Act and
-the Act of the Word._
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the theories as to the primacy of theoretical
-or of practical reason._]
-
-It is well to state again that in consequence of the relation and
-correlation established, all the questions as to the primacy of
-thought or will, of the contemplative or active life, and speaking
-more empirically, of the thinker or the man of action, disappear.
-To pose such problems is as though one were to ask which of the two
-semicircles of a circle has precedence. Similar questions, always
-insoluble or badly solved, have their origin in internal obscurity as
-to the fundamental correlation. When man has attained to the summit of
-knowledge (a summit that is certainly not Art; nor, strictly speaking,
-Philosophy, but History, the knowledge of the concrete real, that
-is, the actuality of philosophy), when he has completely penetrated
-the actual situation, can he perhaps stop at this point and say _hic
-manebimus optime?_ Can he arrest life which is raging and demanding
-to be continued? And if he succeed in suspending it for an instant in
-thought, why has he suspended, if not to continue it? Knowledge is
-not an end, but an instrument of life: knowledge that did not serve
-life would be superfluous and harmful.--On the other hand, when a man
-has willed and has thrown himself into action, when he has produced
-another piece of life, can he blindly continue to produce life for
-ever? Would not blindness impede the production itself? Therefore he
-must rise from life to knowing, if he wish to look in the face the
-product that he has lived, and surpass it with thought, for which life
-is now means and instrument. Knowledge serves life and life serves
-knowledge; the contemplative life, if it do not wish to become insipid
-ease, must lead to activity, and that activity, if it do not wish to
-become an irrational and sterile tumult, must lead to contemplation.
-Reality, in specifying aptitudes, has formed men of thought and men
-of action, or of prevailing thought or prevailing action, these not
-superior to those, for they are collaborators.--Thus the discussions
-as to whether human progress be moral or intellectual, or whether the
-propelling force be the practical and economic activity, or philosophy,
-or religion (Buckle, Kidd, etc.), are shown to be vain.
-
-[Sidenote: _New pragmatism: life conditioning Philosophy._]
-
-It is rather to be considered that from this bond between theory
-and practice is obtained a pragmatism of a new sort, of which the
-pragmatists have never thought, or at least have not been able to
-distinguish from the others and to give it value. If Life condition
-Thought, we have in this the apodictic demonstration of the always
-historically conditioned form of every thought; not only of Art, which
-is always the art of a time, of a soul, of a moment; but also of
-Philosophy which can solve only those problems presented by Life. Every
-philosophy reflects and cannot but reflect the preoccupations, as
-they are called, of a definite historical moment; and this, not in the
-quality of its _solutions_ (in which case it would be and is indeed bad
-philosophy), but in the quality of its _problems._ Thus it is at once
-contingent and eternal, mortal and immortal, extratemporal and living
-only in time and history.
-
-[Sidenote: _Deductive confirmation of the two forms and deductive
-exclusion of the third feeling._]
-
-Finally, with the establishment of the duality-unity of the theoretical
-and the practical, we have demonstrated that which at the beginning
-of the exposition had only been asserted and presupposed: namely,
-why a _practical_ form of the spirit must be placed beside the
-theoretical,[5] and why there is no _third_ form beyond these, whether
-it be called _feeling_ or by any other name.[6] The theoretical form
-postulates the practical, because the subject postulates the object;
-but the spirit does not postulate a third form intermediate between the
-two, or unity of the two, because it is itself precisely mediator and
-unity of itself, _subject-object._
-
-
-
-[1] Section I.
-
-[2] Section II.
-
-[3] Section I. c. 3.
-
-[4] Section I. c. 4.
-
-[5] Section I. c. 1.
-
-[6] Section I. c. 2.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND PART
-
-THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS SPECIAL FORMS
-
-
-
-
-FIRST SECTION
-
-
-THE TWO PRACTICAL FORMS: ECONOMIC AND ETHIC
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-DISTINCTION OF THE TWO FORMS IN THE PRACTICAL CONSCIOUSNESS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The utilitarian or economic form, and the moral or ethical
-form._]
-
-All that has been developed in the preceding book concerns the
-practical activity _in general:_ therefore no account has been taken of
-the special distinctions of the practical forms, as though there were
-none, or they have only been alluded to as something problematical;
-and when exemplifications have been given, recourse has been had
-indifferently to one or to the other of the forms commonly admitted,
-whether or no they are to be held philosophically distinguishable.
-Now, on the contrary, we affirm in an explicit manner that the spirit,
-which we have seen distinguished as theoretical and practical, is
-sub-distinguished as practical spirit, into two forms, of which the
-first may be called utilitarian or _economic,_ the second moral or
-_ethical._
-
-[Sidenote: _Insufficiency of the descriptive and psychological
-distinction._]
-
-In affirming this sub-distinction, we are obliged to renounce (as we
-have already done for the practical in respect to the theoretical) a
-demonstration by the psychological method, which has already shown
-itself to be vicious. If indeed it were applicable in this field, we
-should doubtless be able to strike the intellect and persuade the soul
-for a moment, by pointing to the spectacle of life as a demonstration
-of the two forms, economic and ethic, showing on the one hand, farmers,
-commercial men, speculators, conquerors of men and of territories,
-wielders of the word or of the sword as instrument of dominion;
-and, on the other hand, educators, benefactors, disinterested and
-self-sacrificing men, martyrs and heroes; on the one hand, economic
-institutions (manufactories, mines, exchanges, exploration companies),
-and on the other moral institutions (educators and schools, charitable
-societies, orders of Sisters of Charity, or red, white, or blue Cross
-Companies, and so on). What can be better proof of the reality of the
-bipartition enunciated? Cannot we touch it, as with the hand? However
-(as already in the case of the distinction between the theoretical
-and the practical), what is touched with the hand is not on that
-account seized by the intellect, and indeed in a little while it also
-escapes the hand which had thought to be its master. For when we better
-observe the individuals who seemed to be merely economic, they seem to
-be also moral, and inversely;--moral institutions are also economic,
-and economic moral The benefactor calculates and wishes to attain his
-object with the same _cupiditas_ as the peasant, all intent upon gain;
-and the peasant in his turn is ennobled in his chase after lucre by
-the dignity of labour and by the moral impulses that sustain it;--all
-charitable institutions are economic undertakings, and economic
-undertakings are subject to moral laws, so that in drawing up accounts
-there is no knowing where is that material distinction between the
-economic and the ethical activities. The truth is that here too it is
-not possible to start from contingent facts and from their classes
-with empirical limitations, to attain to philosophical distinctions,
-but that it is necessary to start from these, in order to interpret
-contingent facts, and finally to understand also the mode of formation
-of empirical classes. For this reason the psychological method revolves
-in a circle that is effectively vicious.
-
-[Sidenote: _Deduction and the necessity of integrating it with
-induction._]
-
-Neither is it possible to proceed with the method that we shall call
-deductive solely; that is, we see the necessity of the two sub-forms
-of the practical activity, which, being the object of the subject and
-therefore in every way analogous to the activity of the subject, that
-is, to the theoretical, must have a duplication of forms answering
-to the duplication of the theoretical activity into æsthetic and
-logical, and cannot posit the universal practical without positing the
-individual that shall be its vehicle. This deduction, although in every
-way correct and rigorous, cannot be convincing, save when it is also
-demonstrated that it responds to fact as revealed by observation, that
-is, when deduction is also induction, as the speculative method demands.
-
-[Sidenote: _The two forms as a fact of consciousness._]
-
-Leaving, therefore, on this occasion also, the deductive proof to the
-complete development of the theory, we shall begin by appealing to
-observation of self, in order that every one may verify in himself
-the existence of the two different forms of volitional acts, termed
-by us economic and ethic. The economic activity is that which wills
-and effects only what corresponds to the conditions of fact in which
-a man finds himself; the ethical activity is that which, although
-it correspond to these conditions, also refers to something that
-transcends them. To the first correspond what are called individual
-ends, to the second universal ends; the one gives rise to the judgment
-concerning the greater or less coherence of the action taken in itself,
-the other to that concerning its greater or less coherence in respect
-to the universal end, which transcends the individual.
-
-[Sidenote: _The economic form._]
-
-If we wish to recognize only the moral form of activity, we soon
-perceive that it draws with it the other, from which it is distinct;
-for our action, although universal in its meaning, cannot but be
-something concrete and individually determined. What is put in practice
-is not morality in universal, but always a determinate moral volition:
-as Hegel remarked in a different connection, we do not eat fruit in
-general, but cherries, pears, plums, or, these cherries, these pears,
-these plums; we hasten to comfort in this or that way an individual,
-made in this or that way, who finds himself in this or that state of
-misfortune; we do justice at this or that point of time and space to
-individual beings on a definite matter. If a good action be not solely
-our individual pleasure, it must become so: otherwise, how could we
-carry it out? Thus, by closer examination, we realize that our action
-always obeys a rational law, even when its moral law is suppressed, so
-that, when every inclination that transcends the individual has been
-set aside, we do not on that account remain the prey of caprice. We
-shall desire only our own will, we shall follow only our own individual
-inclination; but, even so, it is necessary to will this will and this
-inclination coherently, not to undulate between two or more volitions
-at the same time. And if we succeed in really obtaining our desire,
-if, while the moral conscience is for a moment suspended within us,
-we abandon ourselves to the execution of a project of vengeance and
-attain to it in spite of many obstacles, thus executing a masterpiece
-of ability, a practical masterpiece; even when, in this case, _populus
-non plaudit,_ we for our part certainly _nos nobis plaudimus,_ and feel
-most satisfied, at least so long as lasts the suspension of the moral
-consciousness; for we have done what we willed to do, we have tasted,
-though but for a little while, the pleasure of the gods. Whereas if,
-although we follow our desire, we do something different from it, or
-mingle several mutually exclusive desires with one, and having decided
-not to drink wine, for example, in order to obey the advice of the
-doctor and to remain in good health, we yet yield to the wish to drink
-it, that pleasure is, so to say, poisoned by preoccupation, the taste
-is at the same time distaste, unless we succeed in forgetting for some
-moments the advice of the doctor, or think that very possibly he does
-not know what he is saying. We continually apply the same criterion
-to the incidents of life; actions and individuals, of whom we cannot
-morally approve, drag from us sometimes cries of admiration for the
-ability with which they have conducted themselves, for the firmness
-that they display, worthy (as is said) of a better cause. The Epicurean
-Farinata, who raised himself erect on his red-hot bed, or the impious
-Capaneus who cursed Jove beneath the rain of punishing fire, obtain
-from us that esteem which we refuse to those sad souls who lived
-without infamy and without praise. Art has celebrated in tragedies and
-poems the strong characters of great criminals, but it has turned to
-ridicule in comedies little criminals, the violent who show themselves
-timid, the astute who let themselves be cheated.
-
-[Sidenote: _The ethical form._]
-
-As we cannot fail to recognize this form of the practical activity,
-quite individual, hedonistic, utilitarian, and economic, and the
-importance that it possesses, joined to or separated from morality,
-as the case may be, and the special practical judgments that have
-their origin in it (the judgment of convenience, whether it be called
-utilitarian or economic), so it would be impossible not to recognize
-the moral form. Yes, the volitional act satisfies us as individuals
-occupying a definite point of time and space, but if it fail to
-satisfy us at the same time as beings transcending time and space,
-our satisfaction will be ephemeral and will rapidly be changed into
-dissatisfaction. To one desire succeeds another, and to this another,
-and so on to infinity; but the one is different from the other, and
-the new either condemns the old or is by it condemned. If we succeed
-in arranging our pleasures in series and classes, and in subordinating
-and connecting them, certainly there will be some gain; but the gain
-will not have been a true one on this occasion either. We shall at
-the most be able to guide our life according to some plan, and for a
-certain time that has not the exactitude of the moment; instead of the
-instantaneous will to which succeeds a different will, we shall have
-general ends for which we shall work. We shall propose, for instance,
-to do certain work and to abstain from doing certain other work, in
-order to marry a loved one, to win a seat in Parliament, or to obtain
-literary fame. But those ends are also merely contingent (they are
-general, not universal), and consequently cannot assuage our thirst.
-When we all have attained to them, we shall experience _le déboire_
-that _la cueillaison d'un rêve au cœur qui l'a cueilli_ always leaves
-behind. The company of the fair beloved will weary, the political
-ambition realized will leave the soul empty, literary fame will seem
-the shadow of vanity. Perhaps too, we shall change our side, like
-the sick man who cannot rest on his bed of feathers, and begin to
-follow other ends; the lover deluded with matrimony will turn to other
-loves; the ambitious man, weary of political life, will think of new
-ambitions, or of that of not having any, and of retiring to so-called
-domestic peace; the seeker for literary fame will long for ease,
-silence, and forgetting. But in vain: dissatisfaction persists. And it
-will always persist, and pallid Care will always sit behind us, on the
-croup of our horse, if we are not able to tear from the contingent its
-character of contingent, breaking its spell, and bringing ourselves to
-a full stop in that _progressus ad infinitum_ from thing to thing, from
-pleasure to pleasure, to which it impels us, if we be not able to place
-the eternal in the contingent, the universal in the individual, duty
-in desire. Then only do we acquire that internal peace, which is not
-in the future, but in the present, because eternity is in the moment,
-for him who knows how to place it there. Our actions will always be
-new, because reality always places new problems before us, but if we
-accomplish them with lofty souls, and with purity of heart, seeking in
-them that which surpasses them, we shall on every occasion possess the
-Whole. Such is the character of the moral action, which satisfies us,
-not as individuals, but as men, and as individuals only in so far as
-we are men; and in so far as we are men, only by means of individual
-satisfaction.
-
-[Sidenote: _Impossibility of eliminating it._]
-
-Those men in whom the moral consciousness is wanting, or is confused
-and intermittent, make us fearful--fearful for ourselves, obliged to be
-on our guard against them and to ward off their snares and injuries,
-and fearful for them, for if they have not already fallen the prey to
-the most terrible torments, they certainly will do so. They are like
-people dancing unconsciously upon ground that has been mined; the
-conscious spectator trembles for them, they do not; but if by chance
-they escape the danger, they will be retrospectively horrified when
-they look back. The inebriation evaporates and the clear outlines of
-reality reappear, but that which restores form to those outlines is
-the eternal, not the contingent, morality, not desire. We see this take
-place in an intense form in what are called _conversions,_ followed by
-the intention of leaving the world and its false joys and retiring to a
-cloister; or, without metaphor, of becoming regenerated, of beginning
-a new life with new ideal presuppositions. But intensive conversions
-are catastrophes which occur, like popular revolutions, when continuous
-evolution is impeded. The wise man is converted and renewed at every
-moment, without the solemnity of a conversion, and with the _memorare
-novissima_ he retains in the contingent, his contact with the eternal.
-He knows that he must love things and creatures one by one, each in
-its individuality, for he who does not love thus is neither good nor
-bad, not even being a man. He will wish for literary fame, political
-power, matrimony, according to his aptitudes and to the conditions in
-which he finds himself; but he will wish for all these things without
-wishing for them; he will wish for them, not for themselves, but for
-that which they contain of universal and constant; he will love them
-in God, ready to abandon them immediately their ideal content shall
-have left them; he will seriously desire them with all ardour for
-themselves, but only when their self is also "his other self." No
-thing, no creature possesses unconditioned value, which belongs only to
-that which is neither thing nor creature. The value of our individual
-life is conditioned for each of us, and we must guarantee and defend
-it as vehicle of the universal, and we must be ready to throw it
-away, as a useless and pernicious thing, when it does not serve this
-end, or rebels. But the value of every being dear to us is not less
-conditioned, and Jesus said with reason, when preparing himself for
-his divine mission, that he had come to separate men from their wives,
-their sons, their friends, and from their native land. That separation
-in union, that union in separation, is the moral activity, individual
-and universal.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmed by facts._]
-
-Thus it happens that art, which has celebrated strong characters, able
-men and affairs well conducted, has also celebrated, and with greater
-liveliness, those strong men who have placed their strength at the
-service of that other strength which surpasses them and makes them
-eternal. For this reason, no embittered soul, no sceptic and pessimist
-remains long firm in his negation of all moral light; such negations
-are indeed as a rule true _amantium irae. _ The singer of the lesser
-Brutus who had thus ferociously imprecated:
-
- Foolish Virtue, hollow mists and fields
- Of restless ghosts
- Are thy schools, and Repentance turns her back upon
- thee,...
-
-is the same who, on witnessing a slight act of generosity, exclaims
-with emotion:
-
- Fair Virtue, when my spirit becomes aware of thee,
- It exults, as at a joyous event....
-
-The coldest and most self-contained philosophers, when they speak of
-it, find themselves sometimes impelled to adopt a poetic tone, and
-Aristotle will say of Justice that it is "a more wonderful thing than
-Hesperus or the Morning Star,"[1] and Emmanuel Kant will compose an
-apostrophe to Duty, and will write at the end of the _Critique of
-Practical Reason_: "Two things fill the soul with ever new and ever
-increasing veneration and admiration the more often and the longer
-reflection is occupied with them: _the starry heaven_ above me, and
-_the moral law_ within me." And even the great mass of rhetoric that
-has for its object virtue or the moral law is a homage rendered to this
-supreme force of life, reality of reality.
-
-The impossibility of suppressing the economic or the moral form of the
-activity in our practical consciousness, the continual appeal that the
-one makes to the other, the revolving of our practical judgment about
-the two aspects, both of them necessary, of the useful and the honest,
-energy and goodness, pleasure and duty, explain why the Psychology
-and the Description of practical life have constituted the two kinds
-of types and classes, of economic and of moral men, of economic and
-of moral institutions. Such rough and approximate distinctions have
-however at bottom, in this as in other cases, an intimate and rigorous
-distinction, which every one will find evident in himself, if he look
-inward upon himself and fix his gaze persistently on the universal
-forms of the spirit that acts within him.
-
-
-
-[1] _Eth. Nicom._1. v. c. i, 1129 b.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ETHICAL FORM
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Exclusion of materialistic and of intellectualistic
-criticisms._]
-
-The distinction of the two forms, well known to the inner
-consciousness, will appear more clearly when we examine the reasons
-for which the one or the other of them has been denied. We say the one
-or the other, because we have now freed ourselves from the obligation
-of refuting the theses that have their origin in presuppositions,
-both materialistic and intellectualiste, and therefore deny the moral
-and economic activities, either because they do not admit the concept
-of spiritual activity itself, or because they do not admit the more
-special conception of practical activity. The greater number of
-those who deny morality are nothing but mechanicists, empiricists,
-materialists, and positivists, to whose brains not only do economy and
-morality appear inconceivable, but also art and science and, in short,
-every spiritual value. They ask: Where is this moral principle of which
-you discourse? Point it out to us with your finger. But they also ask:
-Where are the categories or the pure concept? Where is the æsthetic
-synthesis and the pure intuition? Where is the _a priori_ of perception
-and of history? Where are all these fine things you talk of as though
-they existed, and that we neither see nor touch?--And for our part, we
-can henceforth let them say what they will, only praying in our hearts
-that God may illuminate them and make them discover (at least when they
-are near to death and the dense veil of their bodies has become more
-thin) that if the universals were _things_ that it was possible to
-perceive as we do individual things, they would not be universals.
-
-[Sidenote: _The two possible negations._]
-
-When the double assumption of a spiritual activity and of a practical
-form of it has been admitted, it is not possible to do otherwise
-than either to deny the economic for the moral form, or the moral
-for the economic. What might seem to be a third possibility, that of
-denying the two forms, is reducible to the first, because, when the
-distinction of the terms has been suppressed, there remains nothing
-but the practical activity considered in general, which coincides with
-the individual and economic activity. We shall begin then with the
-examination of the negation of morality for economy, which is the
-thesis of _utilitarianism._ Those same materialists have recourse to
-utilitarianism when they wish to present some sort of a Philosophy
-of the practical, but with what little right they avail themselves
-of such aid, is clear from what has already been said: the useful is
-always value and teleology, and materialism, in all its sub-forms and
-varieties, is incapable of positing the smallest concept of value and
-finality.
-
-[Sidenote: _The thesis of utilitarianism against the existence of moral
-acts._]
-
-Utilitarianism affirms that no other volition exists save that
-which answers to the merely individual determination, or, as it is
-also expressed, to the pleasure of the individual, understanding
-by pleasure, not the generic pleasure that also accompanies moral
-satisfaction in the individual, but that which is exclusively
-individual. Actions, therefore, as it says, are what concern it, not
-their motives, that is, the motive of the individuality of the act
-abstractly conceived, not that of the spirit become concrete in it;
-thus, not killing for fear of punishment and not killing because
-repugnant to one's own conscience, become the same thing. They are the
-consequences of different conditions, but in both cases of the same
-motive, which is personal convenience. And as there does not exist
-a pleasure that cannot be and is not substituted for a different
-pleasure, so there is not an action, however moral it be called, that
-cannot be interrupted and changed, when different conditions present
-themselves. Every action, every man has his price: it is all a matter
-of discovering what that price is. He who seems to place the glory
-of his country above all other aspirations, although he cannot, for
-example, be corrupted by money, by vanity, or by pleasure, will yet
-always have in him some weak point that a more expert corrupter will
-discover or be able to discover; and when the discovery has been made
-and the suitable transaction proposed, the glory of his country will be
-abandoned, because it has been well compensated for by something else.
-This way of looking upon human actions has appeared to be concrete,
-exact, rational; and the utilitarian theory, if it have often been
-called _hedonistic,_ and sometimes even _æsthetic_ (understanding by
-æsthetic, individual pleasure), is also wont to be decorated with the
-name of ethical or practical _rationalism, rational morality._
-
-[Sidenote: _Difficulties arising from the presence of these._]
-
-All would go very well, and the practical activity would in this way be
-entirely explained and unified, if we did not at every moment of life
-run against the distinction between mere pleasure and duty, between
-the useful and the honest action, and if there did not arise in our
-conscience an invincible distinction between the things that have a
-price and those that have none, and if an abyss did not differentiate
-among apparently similar actions that which has a merely utilitarian
-from that which has a moral motive. The utilitarians even (who,
-although bad philosophers, are men, and as such carry at the bottom of
-their souls a far better philosophy than they profess in books and in
-the schools) are not able to suppress that distinction in themselves
-and to deny all recognition to the power of morality, to which, as men,
-they submit at every moment. How then are they to behave? How are they
-to explain the genesis of that distinction which, by the premises that
-they have posited, cannot be other than illusion? What is there that
-gives effective existence to the fallacious category of morality, side
-by side with the veracious one of utility?
-
-[Sidenote: _Attempt to explain them as quantitative distinctions._]
-
-There have been several attempts to solve that hard resisting term
-of morality. The first, which was logically bound to present itself,
-was that of considering facts called moral as nothing but empirical
-groups of utilitarian facts, and of explaining the false category as
-an hypostasis of those empirical groups, arbitrarily reduced to a
-rigorous and philosophical concept. Banking, usury, commerce, industry,
-agriculture, and labour are empirically distinguished, yet are all
-economic facts. Courage, prudence, temperance, chastity, justice,
-modesty are empirically distinguished, yet are all moral facts. Why
-not unite the two series, and recognize the unity and continuity of
-nature by the insertion among them of other types and terms? Morality
-is also utility, but the utility of the _greater number_; interest is
-interest, but _well understood_; pleasure is pleasure, but pleasure of
-_greater duration and quantity,_ preferred to another less intense, or
-more fugitive; egoism, egoism of family, of race, of human race, egoism
-of _species,_ altruism; eudemonism, but _social_ eudemonism, enjoyment,
-but enjoyment of _sympathy,_ utility, but utility of conforming, not
-to one's own individual judgment, but to that of _public opinion._
-Thus are moral facts included in utilitarian, in the same way as the
-number a hundred thousand is not less a number than two or three and
-the others inferior to it, because it is composed of three and of two
-and of other numbers less than itself. Cæsar Borgia murders his brother
-and thus gets rid of a rival both in love and in politics, that is, he
-seeks his advantage; but Giordano Bruno also seeks his own advantage,
-and nothing else, when he allows himself to be burned in order to
-assert his philosophy, because, for one constituted as he, with that
-demoniacal fury of his for philosophical truth, the pyre must have
-seemed a very miserable and negligible thing, just as his brother's
-blood seemed to Cæsar Borgia. Call the one of these actions utility
-of a complexity of ten and the other utility of a complexity of a
-hundred, or give to the complexity a hundred the name of morality, of
-well-understood self-interest, of sympathy, of altruism, and so on, and
-to the complexity of ten that of utility, of individual interest, of
-egoism: the two actions will not thus have been declared of a different
-nature.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique._]
-
-But the fact is that they have already been declared of a _different
-nature_ by the utilitarians themselves. No one, indeed, will have been
-deceived with the ingenious phraseology excogitated: _well-understood_
-interest is no longer mere self-interest; the egoism of _species_ is
-not egoism, _durable_ pleasure is not mere pleasure. The difference
-between the one term and the other is not quantitative, and even where
-a _greater_ quantity is talked of, a _greater_ duration, a _greater_
-number, arithmetical definitions are not posited, but symbols pointing
-to qualitative differences. There is a difference, not of complexity
-but of nature, between the action of Cæsar Borgia and that of Giordano
-Bruno; there is no common measure between baseness and moral elevation
-as there is between undulating plains and mountains. The two series, of
-empirical utilitarian concepts and of empirical moral concepts, are not
-only irreducible to a single series, but remain obstinately distinct
-and irreducible. All that can be done, and has been done, is to unify
-them verbally; and in this the utilitarians have shown themselves as
-bold as it was possible to be in so miserable an enterprise. But the
-identity or similarity of words does not suffice to cancel the profound
-distinctions of things.
-
-[Sidenote: _Attempt to explain them as facts either extraneous to the
-practical or irrational and stupid._]
-
-There would have been an immediate passage from the consciousness
-of the puerility of such identifications to the recognition of
-a distinct ethical form, if purpose and prejudice had not made
-resistance, prompting, on the contrary, the search for new expedients
-for setting themselves free in theory from the tedious and recurring
-phantom of morality. On this occasion also these expedients must have
-been just two: that is, to declare morality or concept _extraneous_
-to the practical, or intrinsic to it indeed, but _contrary._ The
-first was attempted, but feebly, when morality was spoken of as the
-fantasticality of poets, as the dream or rosy illusion caressed in
-life. No attention was paid to the fact that what the poet imagines
-cannot be contradictory and absurd, but must indeed be founded in the
-reality of life and in the nature of things; and that morality is
-not the æsthetic form in which it is reproduced and represented, but
-practical form or action. But the unmaintainability of this attempt
-was too evident for its success. The other expedient, on the contrary,
-has always had and still has great success. This turns morality into
-a practical contradictory concept, that is, into something certainly
-practical, but without motive, incoherent, and in contradiction to the
-healthy development of the practical. It is true that it is usually
-enunciated in very different words from those used by us. They speak
-as follows: What is called a good and virtuous action is nothing but
-the product of the association between certain acts that are for us
-the means to a pleasure, and that pleasure itself; so that gradually,
-even where the primitive pleasure is absent, those acts are sought
-and repeated for themselves, as though in themselves pleasurable.
-The savage fought against the enemies who assailed his tribe, that
-he might not be made a slave or sacrificed to the idol of another
-tribe, that is to say, in order to defend his personal liberty or his
-life; but later on, man, forgetting that the tribe or the city or the
-State were simple means for protecting life and goods, defends them
-for themselves and allows himself to be despoiled and slain for his
-country. In the same way (to employ the classical example), money
-is first sought as a means to enjoyment, and to form a supply for
-procuring a life more comfortable and secure; but by degrees he who
-amasses money turns in his soul the means into the end, and becomes
-avaricious, that is, he finds delight in the mere possession of money,
-and sacrifices for that all his other joys, even an easy life, food,
-house and sleep, which he originally intended that money should obtain
-for him. Morality arises entirely from a similar process of association
-between means and end, and the case of the miser explains by analogy
-every act of virtue that cannot be directly reduced to simple pleasure
-and individual utility.
-
-[Sidenote: _Associationism and evolutionism. Critique._]
-
-Now the association here discussed is neither that of logic nor
-of æsthetic, nor valid association, synthesis, but irrational and
-fallacious association. It is only possible to exchange means for end
-as the result of a bad association of ideas: therefore that association
-is folly and stupidity, as the miser adduced as an example is stupid
-and foolish, being called "miser" precisely for this reason, with the
-intention of blaming him (for this word does not mean "economic" or
-"provident"). And behold! morality should be defined as that which
-is practically irrational, foolish, stupid, the product of illusion
-and confusion, or the _contrary_ of the practical activity, which is
-clear-sightedness, rationality, wisdom. Thus defined, it is at the
-same time annulled. Indeed, irrationality is that which is condemned
-to be perpetually subjected to the rational; and what is called the
-moral man, if he were nothing but a false associator of ideas, would be
-constantly confuted by the man of good sense, by the utilitarian, who
-would prevent him from committing the stupidity of sacrificing himself
-for his children, for his country, or for knowledge; or, were he to
-persist, would cover him with contempt and ridicule. The fear that to
-discover its origin would be tantamount to abolishing morality would
-therefore be perfectly justified in this new sense also; or better,
-it would not be a question of a fear, but of a fact: morality would
-be in a state of progressive annulment, as the effect of increasing
-instruction, both in the individual and in society. It has been replied
-that neither this fear nor this fact arises, because that false
-association is _indissoluble,_ being a product of _heredity,_ or, to
-speak of it in proper terms, it is hereditary stupidity (evolutionistic
-utilitarianism). But whether inherited or acquired, it is so dissoluble
-as to be dissolved in the theory proposed: _lux facta est,_ and no
-one succeeds in obscuring it any longer. If, notwithstanding that
-pretended light, morality be not dissipated, if recourse be had to the
-miserable subterfuge of insuperable heredity (which is surpassed at
-the very moment in which its origin is made clear), this means to say
-that, for the moralist himself, morality is not the irrational, but
-something very rational. He does not succeed in identifying it with the
-merely individually useful, but neither can he reject it as the pure
-and simple negative of this. And since he does not wish to abandon the
-utilitaristic hypothesis, there is no other path open to him but that
-of recourse to _mystery._
-
-[Sidenote: _A desperate attempt: theological utilitarianism and
-mystery._]
-
-This is precisely what happens in the last form of utilitarianism,
-which has seemed to be capricious and extravagant, but is on the
-contrary profoundly auto-critical, since it reveals the ultimate
-essence and defect of the doctrine: what is known as _theological
-utilitarianism._ Human actions are always inspired by what is merely
-useful to the individual, and if a number of these seems to diverge
-from this criterion, this happens because account is not taken of
-an actual fact, by means of which even the actions which seem to be
-divergent are reduced to the common measure. This given fact is the
-life beyond this world, in which God rewards or punishes him who has
-obeyed or disobeyed his will, in the life of this world. He who in this
-life seems to resist the impulse of his personal advantage and performs
-sacrifices of every sort, even to that of his own life, follows equally
-with the others his personal advantage; and believing in God, in the
-immortality of the soul, and in the reward and the punishment that
-await him, he regulates his action according to these actual facts.
-_Intuitionistic_ Ethic, which places a moral duty at the side of
-individual pleasure, but indeducible from it, is in reality deduced
-from individual pleasure, and is likewise turned into _rational_ or
-utilitarian Ethic by means of the transcendental datum. In this way the
-solution makes shipwreck in mystery; since God, immortality, the other
-life, the divine command, punishments and rewards, cannot be defined
-and justified by means of thought and concept. When utilitarianism
-becomes theological, it abandons the philosophical field, confessing by
-so doing its philosophical defeat. And to philosophical consideration
-the distinction between the individually useful and that which is
-also superindividual shines out ever more clearly after the many vain
-attacks of utilitarianism, the affirmation of the moral form, as united
-and distinct from the utilitarian; the _autonomy_ of Ethic against
-every form of _utilitarianism_ and every _heteronomous Ethic._
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ECONOMIC FORM
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The thesis of moral abstracticism against the concept of
-the useful._]
-
-If in the course of philosophical history, the theory of utility has
-sought to cause the disappearance of the other practical term, which
-is morality, by swallowing it up, we are not to believe that morality
-has been for its part more modest and discreet and has not in its
-turn attempted to devour its companion. One exaggeration has been met
-with another; to utilitarianism has been opposed that error which may
-be called _moral abstracticism,_ by means of which is refused to the
-concept of utility the place that belongs to it in the organism of the
-spirit.
-
-Such a refusal (analogous to our analysis of the utilitarian theory)
-cannot take place, save in three ways: that is, in so far as value is
-denied to the useful, either as _practical_ concept, or as _positive_
-concept, or as _philosophical_ concept. Here too we naturally
-do not take count of the theses of the materialists or of the
-intellectualists, which (especially those of the former) have raged in
-the field of Economy not less than in that of Ethic, giving rise to
-insane attempts to explain the useful on mechanical principles, or with
-the contingencies of historical evolution.
-
-[Sidenote: _The useful as the means or as theoretical fact._]
-
-The useful (it has been said) is nothing but the _means_ to obtain a
-certain end. For example, if I take a walk every day with a view to
-keeping myself in good health, the daily walk is the suitable means and
-is therefore useful; if, on the contrary, I find that it makes me ill,
-this means that it is not the suitable means and it would be, and I
-should declare it to be, useless or harmful. Now by the demonstration
-given above, it is known that means and end are indistinguishable in
-the _practical,_ for what is called means is nothing but the actual
-situation (and the knowledge of it), from which arises the practical
-act, and to which that act corresponds. Thus it is most possible to
-separate the means from the end; but in so doing, the consideration of
-the practical act is abandoned, and we pass to that of its theoretical
-antecedent; and if the mere theoretical antecedent be called "useful"
-or "practical" in ordinary speech (remembering the practical act,
-to which it has been or it is presumed that it may be united) then a
-metaphor is employed, against which there is nothing to be said. Those,
-then, who define the useful as the means should once for all realize
-that with such a definition they remove that concept from the circle
-of the Philosophy of the practical and transport it into Logic, where
-the relation of means and end is the very same as that of cause and
-effect, and it again becomes part of the theory of empirical concepts,
-in which cause and effect are wont to be posited as terms separately
-conceivable. This has been more or less consciously recognized, when
-the useful has been defined as the _technical,_ for we know that the
-technical is nothing but knowledge thus made into a metaphor, owing to
-the relation that it has or is presumed to be capable of having, with
-an action that has been done or is about to be done.
-
-[Sidenote: _Technical and hypothetical imperatives._]
-
-The theoretical character of the technical has, on the contrary,
-been obscured, when technical knowledge has received the name
-of _hypothetical imperatives,_ distinct and ranged beside the
-_categorical._ The imperative is will, and is therefore always both
-categoric and imperative: _a_ is willed (categorically), but _a_ would
-not be willed if the condition of fact and situation _b_ did not exist
-(hypothetically). The merely hypothetical imperative is the knowledge,
-that remains when abstraction is made of the practical act or of the
-will; and is no longer an imperative, but a theoretic affirmation.
-Where effective will is not, imperatives cannot be talked of.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique: the useful is a practical fact._]
-
-Having made clear that the definition of the useful as _means_ implies
-the negation of the useful as a practical fact and its reduction to a
-theoretical category already known, we must exclude the possibility
-of such a reduction, for in the useful, the practical character, the
-effectivity of the will, is ineliminable. "It is useful for me to take
-a walk" means, "It pleases me to take a walk," "I will to do it." It
-is a question, not of contemplation or of reasoning, but of volitional
-movement. The knowledge that precedes the utilitarian act is one thing,
-the act itself is another. The old man has the same knowledge as the
-young man, he has indeed much more (_si jeunesse savait, si vieillesse
-pouvait!_), but he does not will what the young man wills: he knows
-that by traversing so many kilometers he will arrive at a certain
-definite point; but it is not useful for him to go there, because it is
-not useful for him to traverse those kilometers, or to submit to that
-exertion at the risk of an illness. The utilitarian will is expressed,
-not in merely hypothetical imperatives, but in those categoric
-imperatives that are at the same time hypothetical. The general formula
-is "will!" or "will that you will!" or "be coherent in your willing!"
-as the individuated forms are those that we are continually repeating
-to ourselves, "now, to bed!" "now, up you get!" and the like; which,
-when developed, mean: "go to bed" (if you wish to rest yourself), "get
-up" (if you wish to work), and so on. The distinction between the
-cognoscitive and the volitional theses is here evident.
-
-[Sidenote: _The useful as the egoistic or immoral._]
-
-Since then, owing to the unalterably practical character of the
-utilitarian fact, it was not possible to insist upon its reduction to
-the technical, and since, on the other hand, it was not desired to
-recognize it as a practical category side by side with the practical
-category of morality, they have tried to think of it as something
-certainly practical, but at the same time of little value, to beware
-of it, to combat it, to free ourselves from it. "Useful" has in this
-way become synonymous with wilfulness, with individual caprice, with
-will more or less perverted, and (looking upon immorality as the
-individual I, shut up in itself and rebelling against the universal)
-with _egoism._ This theory is supported by certain common modes of
-speech, in which the moral man is opposed to the man intent upon what
-is useful to him as an individual, the ethical to the economic life.
-But it is a question of phrases, true,' perhaps, in a certain sense,
-but inexact when understood or interpreted as affirmations of a contest
-between morality and utility.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique: the useful is amoral._]
-
-We discover at once that the contest is inexistent, by merely thinking
-of the case already mentioned, of the man in whom the moral conscience
-is not developed or has been suppressed, or of the case--limit
-called _innocence._ What is done in innocence responds, no doubt, to
-individual pleasure, and so to what is useful for the individual, as
-he feels it in the given circumstances: were this not so, what is done
-would not be done. But innocence is not immoral on this account. It
-will be _amoral,_ because it is merely individual volition deprived
-of the light of the eternal; it will never be _immoral._ Thus (to
-make use of the comparison and analogy of the theoretic activity) the
-images that the poet creates will be without philosophy, but will not
-for this reason be anti-philosophical. Because, were that so, they
-would have to be partially philosophical, that is to say, to enter into
-strife with philosophy; but there is no such strife, and, therefore,
-those images, although philosophically not true, are none the less not
-philosophically false. Yet they are theoretical acts, in the same way
-that philosophy is a theoretical act. The philosophical innocence of
-the poet does not change his intuitive knowledge into bad philosophical
-knowledge, into a negative of philosophy.--Further, the useful not
-only is not the negative of morality, but, as we know, is also a fact
-that unites itself very well with morality, as the word is joined to
-the thought, making it concrete and palpable, so much so that thought
-without words is impossible. What honourable man would tolerate being
-judged disuseful? What moral action would be truly moral, were it not
-at the same time useful? The good action is good, because it is not
-bad, that is, it absolutely excludes the bad at the point in which
-it becomes effective; but certainly it is not so, because disuseful;
-indeed, in being good, it is also useful, because it absolutely
-comprehends the useful in itself at the point in which it becomes
-effective. The union of morality with utility suffices to eliminate the
-concept of the useful as a negative. Certainly negative and positive
-do unite to give rise to becoming and to development; but their union
-is that of strife, not of concord.
-
-[Sidenote: _The useful as ethical minimum._]
-
-The third way of eliminating the concept of the useful from Philosophy,
-or from the Philosophy of the practical, is that which makes of it
-a concept of ethical description, or an empirical and psychological
-concept designating certain groups of very minute ethical facts, the
-rudimentary ethical consciousness. Hence the illusion of the existence
-of volitional acts indifferent in respect to morality. These acts are
-really indifferentiated for the mind that is examining them, which
-sometimes does not take the trouble to do so minutely, save when such
-an examination is seriously undertaken, and then they are always
-differentiated into good or bad. Thus it generally said that eating and
-sleeping, playing at cards or at billiards, are things that appertain,
-not to morality, but to individual utility, and that each one may
-conduct himself as he wills in respect to them, whereas individual
-choice is excluded when it is necessary to fulfil one's own obligations
-of social work or of respecting the life of one's neighbour. But if
-we observe attentively, we see that also in eating or in sleeping, in
-playing cards or billiards, one acts morally or immorally, since, for
-example, it is immoral to ruin one's health with eating too much,
-or with sleeping too little, or to corrupt soul and intellect with
-card-playing and dawdling in billiard-rooms, when one can do something
-better.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique: the useful is premoral._]
-
-But the useful is none of all these things; it is not the complex of
-ethical micro-organisms, in which we discover with the microscope the
-same facts of life and of death that we observe with the naked eye in
-macro-organisms. No microscope will ever discern in it the oppositions
-of moral good and evil, because these oppositions are not really there;
-there are only those of utilitarian or economic good and evil. For the
-useful is not the moral minimum, but the _premoral._ In this case it
-is a question, not of approximative, but of rigorous difference; not
-psychological, but philosophical.
-
-[Sidenote: _A desperate attempt: the useful as inferior practical
-conscience. Confirmation of the autonomy of the useful._]
-
-Finally, it is necessary to consider the attempt to present the
-utilitarian conscience as a moral conscience, _different and inferior_
-to another moral conscience placed over it, not as a new mode of
-eliminating the concept of the useful, by absorbing it in that of
-morality, but as a confession of the autonomy of that moment of the
-spirit. It would be moral, because there is no contradiction to be
-found in it that can cause it to be judged immoral, and if it be so
-judged, this happens because it is looked at from the point of view
-of the superior conscience, or because the superior conscience is
-erroneously transported into the inferior. But this has importance
-precisely because it is not moral, and because the value that it is
-admitted to possess, far from being morality, is spirituality; that
-is to say, it constitutes a peculiar spiritual value, different from
-morality. "Better a will of some sort than no will at all" is a common
-saying which means that prior to morality, there is another and more
-elementary spiritual demand. The distinction of the two consciences,
-then, is philosophical, not one of more or less, a distinction of
-degrees, but not of empirical degrees, which coincides with our
-conclusion. Thus, to return to the usual comparison, the poetical
-figuration is true, and can only be judged false by him who looks upon
-it from a philosophical point of view, or himself falsifies it by
-turning it into a bad philosopheme. But the truth of that figuration
-is not philosophical, and remains purely and simply poetical truth.
-It will be said that morality is implied in utilitarian volition,
-because, when the individually useful is posited, the universal, which
-will dominate and correct it, is promoted, in the same way as it has
-been said that philosophy is implied in the æsthetic intuition,
-since by positing the individual imagination is posited the claim of
-the universal, which surpasses and renders it untrue. But since the
-æsthetic conscience is distinguished from the philosophical, precisely
-because that which in the latter is _explicit_ is only _implicit_
-in the former, so, in like manner, the utilitarian conscience is
-distinguished from the moral conscience, because that morality which
-becomes explicit and effective in the second, is only implicit or
-actually inexistent in the first. The difference between _implicit_ and
-_explicit_ is another way of enunciating the distinction between the
-two consciousnesses or practical forms, the autonomy of both being thus
-recognized.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-RELATION BETWEEN THE ECONOMIC AND ETHICAL FORMS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Economic and ethic as the double degree of the practical._]
-
-
-The respective distinction and autonomy of the two forms, economic and
-ethic, as we have hitherto been expounding it, and as results from the
-words "inferior" and "superior" just now used, is that of two degrees,
-at once distinct and united, such that the first can stand without
-the second, but the second cannot stand without the first. The moment
-of distinction lies in that possibility of existence independent of
-the first; the moment of unity is in the impossibility of independent
-existence of the second. If the first were wanting, there would be
-identity; if the second, there would be abstract distinction or
-separation. For this reason we have insisted upon showing that there
-are actions without morality, yet which are perfectly economical,
-whereas moral actions that are not also perfectly useful or economical
-do not exist. Morality lives in concrete, in utility, the universal
-in the individual, the eternal in the contingent. Hence our reason
-for reducing the theses that denied the distinction between the two
-practical forms to an exclusive affirmation of the economic form, this
-latter being as it were the general form, which of itself involves both
-itself and the other.
-
-[Sidenote: _Errors arising from conceiving them as coordinated._]
-
-Even when both the practical forms, economic and ethic, utility and
-morality, are admitted, the gravest errors arise from failing to
-understand the connection of unity-distinction that exists between
-them, conceiving them as juxtaposed or parallel, and the respective
-concepts as coordinated.
-
-[Sidenote: _Disinterested actions. Critique._]
-
-In truth, if utility and morality were coordinate concepts, each
-included as species beneath the general concept of practical activity,
-the first consequence that could be drawn from this (and it has been
-drawn) is that morality is conceivable without utility. This has given
-rise to the absurd concept of _disinterested_ actions, that is, of
-those moral actions that should hold themselves aloof from any sort
-of impure contact with utility. But disinterested actions would be
-foolish actions, that is to say, wilful acts, caprices, non-actions.
-Every action is and must be interested; indeed, the more profoundly it
-is interested, so much the better. What interest is stronger and more
-personal than that which impels the man of science to the search for
-truth, which is his life? Morality requires that the individual should,
-in every case, make his individual interest that of the universal; and
-it reproves those who engage themselves in an insoluble contradiction
-between the individual interest of the universal and that which is
-merely individual. But it cannot claim to suppress the interest, that
-is, itself, in the same way that the volitional act dominates the
-passions, but cannot eradicate them without eradicating itself. Hence,
-as the volitional act triumphs over the passions as the _supreme
-passion,_ so morality triumphs over interests as the _supreme interest._
-
-[Sidenote: _Vain polemic conducted with such an assumption against
-utilitarianism._]
-
-The polemic of autonomous Ethic against the heteronomous Ethic of
-utilitarianism has had a false and fruitless beginning, owing to this
-fiction of disinterested actions. In the belief of conquering and more
-than conquering, it has been attempted to show that man accomplishes
-some actions without any personal interest, whereas on the contrary
-an easy victory has in this way been prepared for the adversary.
-Utilitarianism, in fact, has always been able triumphantly to make
-the counter-demonstration that there is no action, be it as lofty as
-you will, that does not answer to a personal end. It is evident that
-the hero has his personal interest in the _pro patria mori,_ just as
-the saint, who wishes to direct his soul toward humility, finds his
-own account in allowing himself to be abused, beaten and splashed
-with mud ("in this is perfect joy," said Francesco of Assisi to Frate
-Leone). Correct polemic should not enter upon the useless task of
-denying this evidence; it should on the contrary admit, as was admitted
-above, that there is no action which does not answer to an individual
-desire, since it is the individual that performs it, and the universal
-is always obliged to avail itself of individuals. But when this point
-has been conceded and admitted, it will prove, as was proved above,
-that the useful action can either remain merely personal or progress
-to the action that is universal-personal, ethical-useful. And the
-ethical-useful action itself is precisely the new spiritual category
-that the utilitarian does not see.
-
-[Sidenote: _Actions morally indifferent, obligatory, supererogatory,
-etc. Critique._]
-
-A second erroneous but unavoidable consequence of the conception of
-useful and moral as coordinated concepts is that while, according to
-that theory, there can be ethical actions economically disinterested
-or indifferent, so there can be actions that are useful and _morally
-indifferent._ The indifferent would not be those that are merely
-economic, and, therefore, neither moral nor immoral, which we have
-recognized as the necessary precedent of moral actions, reappearing
-always when a return is made to the state of innocence, or as soon
-as the moral conscience is abolished or suspended. They would on the
-contrary be economic actions that should persist as such, that is, as
-ingenuous and amoral, when the moral consciousness is already kindled,
-and consequently in the very circle of such a conscientiousness.
-They are altogether inadmissible when thus conceived, and to have
-admitted them is equivalent to annulling morality, as the recognition
-of the right of subjects to rebel at their pleasure would be to annul
-sovereignty, or a burlesque contract containing the clause that each
-party should be free not to observe the other clauses agreed upon, at
-his pleasure. Indifferent actions do not exist, either for economy
-or for morality, and those to which such a character is generally
-attributed are, as we know, indifferentiated, not indifferent, and
-always differentiable when more closely examined. Only he who places
-the useful and the moral, side by side with one another, separate
-and impenetrable, is of necessity led to conceive of useful actions
-morally indifferent, and as such _licit or permissible._ Hence it
-also happens that moral actions also seem to be _obligatory_ compared
-with the first; and that, in order to obtain equilibrium at the other
-extremity, ultramoral or more than moral actions, called _meritorious
-or supererogatory,_ are placed side by side with obligatory actions
-that hold the mean. But morality does not grant leave _not to do,_ nor
-prizes for _doing more than was required_; it simply imposes _doing,_
-doing always what is morally good, always realizing the universal, in
-ordinary as in extraordinary life, on the occasions that occur every
-day, every hour, every minute, as in those that occur every year, every
-ten years, every century. Nothing is indifferent to economy in its
-sphere and nothing to morality in its sphere: in it, economic actions
-with their premoral character do not persist, but only moral actions
-subsist. Economicity is certainly the concrete form of morality; but it
-is never an element that possesses a value of its own in the moral life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Comparison with the relation of art and philosophy._]
-
-A comparison with the theoretic activity will serve to make clearer
-this criticism of the _licit_ or morally indifferent. Artistic
-intuitions or expressions are neither true nor false philosophically,
-so much so that Philosophy, if it wish to exist, must also become
-concrete itself, as living speech, æsthetic form, intuition-expression,
-and place itself as an intuition among intuitions, though it be
-an intuition _portans mysteria,_ that is, enclosing in itself the
-universal. But the appearance of philosophy reacts upon the pure
-intuitions, or upon the poetic representation of the world, in which
-existent and inexistent were indistinct; and the world of intuition
-transforms itself into the world of perceptions, in which those that
-once were poetic intuitions, are now all of them critical or reflective
-images penetrated by the concepts, divided into images of existence
-and images of possibility. In the world of perception or of history,
-no poetical element can subsist as such; what was a bewitching truth
-in the field of art, were it introduced into history, would give rise
-to disharmony and become changed into a repugnant lie, as we see is
-actually the case in history mingled with inventions and fables.
-History too assumes artistic form; but it cannot tolerate in its bosom
-art as an element standing alone. Utilitarian or economic volitions and
-the moral-economic volitions (universal and historical perceptions
-or representations of the practical) proceed in a manner perfectly
-analogous (intuitions of the practical). Moral indifference belongs
-to the first, when they are on this side of the moral conscience,
-but within this conscience they lose the right to innocence, as in
-history the pure intuitions, when they have become perceptions, lose
-the privilege that they possessed as pure intuitions. The ethical
-discrimination of the economic volitions, which takes place through the
-moral conscience, is then in full correspondence with the historical
-discrimination of the æsthetic intuitions, which takes place through
-the logical conscience.
-
-[Sidenote: _Other erroneous conceptions of modes of action._]
-
-We owe to the false conception by coordination, not only the two
-monstrous little concepts of _disinterested actions_ and of those that
-are morally _indifferent, licit, or permissive,_ but others also, which
-have been deduced by means of a somewhat different casuistic from the
-same general hypothesis. Indeed, in the preceding case, useful and
-moral, posited as apart and parallel, were maintained one extraneous
-to the other and at peace between themselves. But nothing forbade that
-warlike plans should be attributed to those two entities, just as when
-two coordinate animal species are posited, we may suppose, either
-that the individuals of each one mind their own affairs and allow
-the individuals of the other species to live and to prosper in peace,
-or that the one takes to persecuting the other, sometimes injuring
-or destroying it and sometimes being by it injured or destroyed.
-Thus were and are obtained concepts of _moral anti-economic_ actions
-and of _anti-economic moral_ actions, of _immoral economic_ actions,
-and of _economic immoral_ actions, four concepts which are all four
-to be rejected. Moral action can never be accomplished at a loss:
-morality is for the moral man the supreme advantage in the situation
-in which he finds himself, and it would be erroneous to measure it
-by comparison with what an individual without morality would do in
-the same situation, for, as we know, individual and situation are
-all one, in such a way that a like comparison is impossible. In a
-similar manner, an anti-economic action can never be moral; at the
-most it will not even be amoral, or will not even posit the primary
-and generic condition of morality, that is, it will not be action,
-but inert contemplation. An immoral action can never be economic,
-because immorality implies internal disagreement and strife between
-one volition directed to the universal and another directed to the
-merely individual, hence the result will be practical inconclusion
-and infecundity, dissatisfaction and remorse; that is to say, just
-the opposite of utility and economicity. In like manner, an economic
-action can never be immoral: at the most (when it is merely an economic
-action), it will be amoral.
-
-[Sidenote: Pleasure and the economic activity, happiness and virtue.]
-
-The bond of unity and distinction that exists between the concepts of
-the useful and the moral and the consequent negation of the formula of
-coordination, help to solve in a definite way the intricate questions
-relating to _pleasure and morality, happiness and virtue._
-
-[Sidenote: _Pleasure, pain and feeling._]
-
-First of all, we can here give yet another meaning to the indeterminate
-category of _feeling_ with its poles of pleasure and pain, for it is
-clear that when feeling was distinguished from moral activity and set
-at variance with it, we had in view nothing but the pure economic
-activity. And in truth, of all the tendencies included in that concept
-as sketched out, this of economicity seems on the whole to prevail
-over the others, so much so that we shall henceforth be disposed to
-give to the word "feeling" the name of economic activity. Thus it
-was reasonably maintained, with implied reference to this meaning,
-that pleasure and pain are _proper_ to feeling and _extraneous_ to
-the other spiritual forms, and that they only act in the others as
-_concomitants._ For if the theoretical forms give rise to the dialectic
-of true and false, in so far as the practical spirit can be introduced
-into them, it is clear that pleasure and pain come to those forms from
-the practical spirit, with which the theoretic spirit is always in
-unity. In the practical spirit too, the moral activity divides into
-pleasure and pain, in so far as it has concrete or economic form; and
-therefore in so far as it is economic, not in so far as it is moral.
-Pleasure and pain belong to feeling alone, because they belong to the
-economic activity alone, which is the practical in its general form,
-involving of itself all the other forms, practical and theoretic.
-
-[Sidenote: _Coincidence of duty with pleasure._]
-
-When this has been established, pleasure or economic feeling or
-economic activity as positive cannot be at strife with duty or with
-the moral activity in its positivity, for the two terms coincide.
-The divergence existed only when they were conceived, not in unity
-and distinction, but in coordination. When we speak of a good action
-accompanied with pain, we make an inexact statement, or better, we make
-use of a mode of expression that must be understood, not literally,
-but in its spirit. The good action, as such, always brings with it
-satisfaction and pleasure, and the pain said to accompany it, either
-shows that the action is not yet altogether good, because it has not
-been willed with complete internal accord, or that a new practical
-problem, still unsolved and therefore painful, lies beyond the
-pleasurable moral action.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of rigorism or asceticism._]
-
-The other false idea, of _rigoristic or ascetic_ Ethic, which makes war
-upon pleasure as such, derives from the plan of coordination, through
-the already mentioned casuistic of the conflict between the coordinated
-terms. Indeed, if it be legitimate to combat this or that pleasure,
-which enters into a contest with the moral act, it is not possible to
-abolish the category of pleasure, for the reason already given, that
-in this way the category itself of morality, which has its reality and
-concreteness in pleasure (in economicity), would be abolished: the
-concrete and real moral act is also pleasurable. The attempt to abolish
-pleasure is as insane as would be the wish to speak without words or
-any other form of expression, preserving thought pure of such sensual
-contacts, that is to say, producing an inexpressed and inexpressible
-thought. This last attempt has been made by _mysticism,_ which either
-does not give thoughts at all, or, contradicting itself, gives them
-expressed and logical, like those of all other doctrines. Asceticism
-provides a complete counterpart to this in the practical field, for it
-might be called _mysticism of the practical_ in the same way as the
-name of _asceticism of the theoretical_ would not be unsuitable to
-mysticism.
-
-[Sidenote: _Relation of happiness and virtue._]
-
-What has been said of the relation between pleasure and morality, is
-to be repeated of the other between happiness and virtue, a relation
-that is identical with the preceding, from which it diners only because
-expressed by means of empirical concepts of class. Happiness is not
-virtue, as pleasure is not morality, because there exist the pleasure
-of the innocent or of the mentally deficient, and the happiness of the
-child or the brute, who are without moral conscience. But virtue is
-always happiness, as morality is always pleasure. It will be said that
-a virtuous man may be unhappy, because he suffers atrocious physical
-pain or is in financial difficulties, and, therefore, that virtue and
-happiness do not coincide. But this is a vulgar sophism, because the
-virtuous man, who should be also happy, must be truly and altogether
-virtuous; that is to say, he must cure and conquer the ills of the body
-and of fortune with his energy, if he can, or, if it be impossible
-to conquer them, he must resign himself and take them into account
-and develop his own activity within the limits that they lay down.
-Every individual, not only the unfortunate individual of the example,
-has his limits; and everyone can transform his limits into pains by
-being dissatisfied with them, just as every one can, with resignation,
-transform his pains into limits and conditions of activity. It will be
-said that sometimes the evils that assail the virtuous man are not only
-incurable, but so intolerable as to render all resignation impossible.
-But he who does not effectively and absolutely resign himself, that is,
-does not accommodate himself to life, dies; and the occurrence of the
-death of the individual is neither happiness nor unhappiness: it is a
-fact or event.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the subordination of pleasure to morality._]
-
-Finally, the theory that _subordinates_ pleasure or happiness, utility
-or economy, to duty, to virtue, to moral activity, is to be rejected.
-The subordination of the one term to the other is not possible on this
-side of morality, because only one of the two terms is present; and
-in like manner it is impossible in the moral circle, because, though
-the terms are certainly two, they are two in one, not one above and
-the other below; that is to say, they are distinct terms that become
-unified. Morality has complete empire over life, and there is not an
-act of life, be it as small as you will, that morality does not or
-ought not to regulate. But morality has no _absolute empire over the
-forms or categories of the spirit,_ and as it cannot destroy or modify
-itself, so it cannot destroy or modify the other spiritual forms, which
-are its necessary support and presupposition.
-
-[Sidenote: _No empire of morality over the forms of the spirit._]
-
-Hence is apparent the remarkable fatuity of those who pretend to
-regulate morally the _function_ of art, of science, or of economy and
-profess _moralistic_ theories of art and philosophy and a _moralized_
-economic science. The poet, the man of science, the business man, must
-be as honest as others, but it is not given to them to tear in pieces
-the nature of poetry, of science and of industry, in the madness of
-honesty. Indeed, were this done or attempted, and the poet were to
-introduce extraneous elements into his work of art, through his failure
-to understand morality, or the philosopher to veil or alter the purity
-of truth, or the man of business foolishly to bring his own business
-to ruin, then and only then, would they be dishonest. To substitute
-the _single acts_ of life that appertain to morality, for _the
-universal forms of the spirit,_ and to predicate of these what should
-be predicated only of those, is so evident an absurdity that it could
-not be committed by anyone accustomed to philosophical distinctions.
-But what nonsense is so evident that idle babblers and elegant men of
-letters do not know how to cover with their ratiocinative and æsthetic
-flowers and to present to society or to the academic world as truth, or
-at least as a theory worthy of reflection and discussion?
-
-[Sidenote: _Inexistence of other practical forms and impossibility of
-subdivision of the two established._]
-
-Such, then, are the two forms of the practical activity, and such their
-relation; and as it is not possible to reduce them to one alone, so
-it is not possible to multiply them beyond the two, which altogether
-exhaust the nexus of finite and infinite. Hence, too, we perceive that
-the economic and also the ethic-economic activity do not each of them
-give rise to new subdivisions, because other terms of subdivision are
-not conceivable beyond the duality of finite and infinite. As there
-are no philosophical and ethical classes, nor categories of expression
-(rhetoric), nor categories of concepts (formalistic logic), so there
-are no economic categories and ethical categories beyond those that
-constitute utility (volition of the individual) and morality (volition
-of the universal).
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-THE PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMY AND THE SO-CALLED SCIENCE OF ECONOMY
-
-[Sidenote: _Problem of the relations between Philosophy and Science of
-Economy._]
-
-Internal observation, confirming at all points rational necessity,
-has rendered clear the existence of a special form of practical
-activity, the utilitarian or economic, and of a correlative Economic
-or Philosophy of economy. But however irrefutable may seem the
-demonstration that we have given, yet it will never be altogether
-satisfactory, while a very important point is left obscure: the
-relation between our _Philosophy of economy_ and the _Science of
-economy._
-
-This is a system of doctrine that takes various names and forms, and
-is presented in turn as political, national, pure, or mathematical
-Economy; it is a system of doctrines which, although not without
-precedents in antiquity, has been gradually formed, especially in
-recent centuries, and is now in fullest flower. A saying of Hegel is
-often recorded, not without satisfaction, for even in his time he
-praised Economy as "a science that does much honour to thought, because
-it extracts the laws from a mass of accidentally."[1]
-
-Has it the same object as our Philosophy of economy? If the reply be
-in the affirmative, how does it ever arrive at concepts altogether
-different? Or is it an empirical science, and if so, from what source
-does it derive the rigour and absoluteness by which it is removed
-from all empiricism and formulates truths of universal character? Two
-strict sciences with the same object are inconceivable; and yet as
-it seems, there must here be precisely two: hence the perplexity and
-disorientation that the affirmation of a Philosophy of economy must and
-does produce.
-
-[Sidenote: _Unreality of the laws and concepts of economic science._]
-
-If the economic actions of man be considered, in their uncontaminated
-and undiminished reality, with an eye free from all prejudice, it
-is never possible to establish even a _single one_ of the concepts
-and laws of economic science. Every individual is different at every
-moment of his life: he wills always in a new and different way, not
-comparable with the other modes of his or of others' willing. If A
-spent seven soldi to buy a loaf of bread yesterday, and to-day he
-spend the same amount in making the same purchase, the seven soldi of
-to-day are not for this reason those of yesterday, nor is the bread
-the same as that of yesterday, nor the want that A satisfies to-day
-the same as that of yesterday, nor is the effort that his action
-costs him identical with that of yesterday. If the individual B also
-spend seven soldi for a loaf of bread, the action of B is different
-from that of A, as that of the A of to-day was different from that
-of yesterday. If we lead the economist on to this ground of reality
-(or rather to the side of this Heraclitean river, in which it is not
-possible to dip the same hands twice in the same water), he will feel
-himself impotent, for he will not find any point of support for the
-edification of any of his theories.--The value of a piece of goods
-(says a theorem of Economy) depends upon the quantity of it and of all
-the other goods that are upon the market.--But what does "goods" mean?
-Bread, for example, or wine? In reality, abstract bread and wine do
-not exist, but a given piece of bread, a given glass of wine, with a
-given individual who will give a treasure or nothing in order to eat
-the one or to drink the other, according to the conditions in which he
-finds himself.--Any sort of enjoyment, when protracted, decreases and
-finally becomes extinguished.--That is the law of Gossen, one of the
-foundation--stones of economic theory. But what are these enjoyments
-that are protracted, decrease, and end by becoming extinguished? In
-reality there exist only actions, which assume different positions
-at every moment, owing to the continual changing of surrounding
-reality, in which the volitional individual operates. The difference
-is qualitative, not quantitative: if the individual A eat the bread
-that he has bought for seven soldi, when swallowing the second or the
-tenth or the last mouthful, he has a pleasure, not inferior to that
-which he had when swallowing the first, but different: the last was
-not less necessary for him, in its way, than the first; otherwise he
-would have remained unsatisfied in his normal want, in his habit, or in
-his caprice.--The economic man seeks the maximum of satisfaction with
-the least effort.--That is the very principle of Economy, but neither
-does this principle correspond with reality, most simple and general
-though it be. The individual A disputes for an-hour, in order to save
-two soldi in the purchase of an object, for which he has been asked
-ten lire, thus attaining the maximum satisfaction for himself with the
-least means that is naturally at his disposal on that occasion. The
-individual B, making boast of his magnificence, lights his cigarette
-with a banknote of a hundred lire, thus likewise attaining for himself
-the greatest satisfaction to which he aspired, with the least means
-that he possessed, namely, by burning that paper money. But if this
-be so, we have here a question, not of greatest and least, but of
-individual ends and of relative means adopted, or (owing to the unity
-of means and ends already noted), of actions individually different.
-
-[Sidenote: _Economic Science founded upon empirical concepts, but not
-empirical or descriptive._]
-
-Certainly, it is quite possible to abstract in a greater or less
-measure from the infinite variety of actions and to construct a
-series of types or concepts of classes and of empirical laws, thus
-rendering uniform the formless, within certain limits. Thus is
-obtained the concept of bread and of the consumption of bread, and
-of the various portions of bread and of other objects, for which a
-portion of bread can be exchanged, and so on. In this way are full
-philosophico-historical reality and the method of logical necessity
-and of realistic observation of facts abandoned for a feigned reality
-and for a method of arbitrary choice, which, as we know, has its good
-reasons for existing in the human spirit, and does great service by
-the swift recall and easy control of the requisite knowledge. And
-if Economy consisted in the establishment of a series of laws and
-examples in the above sense (or when understood in this way), it would
-join the number of the descriptive disciplines; and in that case there
-would be no necessity for us to speak of it further, for it would
-suffice to refer back to what has already been said of the relations of
-the Philosophy of the practical with practical Description, classes,
-rules, and casuistic. But economic Science is not descriptive, and is
-not developed according to the following formula: goods are divided
-into the classes _a, b, c, d, e,_ etc., and the class _a_ is exchanged
-with the class _b_ in the proportion of I to 3, the class _b_ with the
-class _c_ in the proportion of I to 5, etc. In such a formula is always
-understood the _up and down,_ the _for the most part,_ and _the very
-nearly:_ the classes _with their ups and downs_ are as stated; the
-exchanges take place _for the most part_ in the proportions stated; if
-things are to-day _very nearly_ thus, to-morrow they will be so _very
-nearly,_ in a different way.
-
-On the contrary, the propositions of the Science of Economy are
-rigorous and necessary. "Granted that soils of different degrees of
-fertility are cultivated, their possessors will all obtain, besides
-the absolute rent, a differential rent, with the exception of the
-possessor of the least fertile soil" (Ricardo's law). "Bad money drives
-out good" (Gresham's law). Now, it is not conceivable in any case that
-soils of different fertility, all of them cultivated, should not give
-a differential rent. It will be said that the State can confiscate the
-differential rent, or that the possessor, owing to his bad cultivation
-or to his bad administration, may lose it; but the proposition does
-not remain less sound on this account. Nor is it possible that, when
-an unchangeable paper money is in circulation, gold coins should also
-circulate indifferently and on a par with it, when the total of the
-money in circulation lowers the value of the monetary unit beneath
-the metallic value of the better money. A madman who might be in
-possession of a hoard of gold pieces at the time of the circulation of
-the declining paper money (which causes poverty) would perhaps give it
-in exchange for the inferior money; but the wise man will keep it in
-his safe. The economic proposition expresses the rational necessity,
-not the madness, which is irrational. Those propositions, like all the
-others of economic science, are therefore certainly not descriptions,
-but _theorems._
-
-[Sidenote: _Their mathematical nature._]
-
-The denomination "theorems" makes us think at once of the mathematical
-disciplines, among which alone can economic Science find a place.
-The propositions of that science being excluded from philosophical,
-historical, or naturalistic science, there remains nothing that they
-can be, save _mathematical._ Yes, they are mathematical, but not pure
-mathematics, for in that case they would be nothing but arithmetic,
-algebra, or the calculus, that is, they would belong to the kind of
-mathematical disciplines called _applied,_ because they introduce into
-the paradigms of the calculus certain data taken from reality, that is
-to say, taken from without the purely numerical conception. Economic
-Science, then, is a mathematic applied to the concept of human action
-and to its sub-species. It does not inquire what human action is; but
-having posited certain concepts of action, it creates formulæ for the
-prompt recognition of the necessary connections.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its principles; their character of arbitrary postulates and
-definitions. Their utility._]
-
-It is not surprising that such propositions examined in their truth
-appear in one respect arbitrary and in another tautological. But it is
-not thus that they are examined, and it is not thus that propositions
-of mathematics are ever examined, for their value lies solely in the
-service that they render. Certainly Ricardo's law relating to land of
-varying fertility is nothing but the definition of lands of various
-fertility, in the same way that Gresham's law relating to bad money is
-nothing but the definition of bad money. The same may be said of any
-other economic law, as, for example, that every protective tariff is
-destruction of riches, or that a demand for commodities is not a demand
-for labour, since these, like the preceding, are simply definitions
-of the protective tariff, of the demand for commodities, and of the
-demand for labour. And it could be proved of all of them that they are
-arbitrary, because the concepts of land, tariffs, commodities, money,
-and so on, are arbitrary, and because they become necessary only when
-that arbitrariness has been admitted as a postulate. But the same
-demonstration can be given of any theorem in Geometry; since it is not
-less arbitrary and tautological, that the measure of a quadrilateral
-should be equal to the base multiplied by the height, or that the
-sum of the squares of a cathetic should be equal to the square of
-the hypotenuse. This does not prevent Geometry from being Geometry,
-or negate the fact that without it we should not have been able to
-build the house in which we dwell, nor to measure this star upon which
-we live, nor the others that revolve around it or around which we
-revolve. Thus, it would be impossible to find one's way in empirical
-reality without these economic formulæ, and that would happen which
-happened when economic science was still in its infancy; namely, that
-by its means measures of government were adopted, which were admirably
-suited to produce in the highest degree those evils which it was
-thought could be avoided by its help, a misfortune of which the Spanish
-government in Lombardy or in the Province of Naples in the seventeenth
-century, with its _cries_ and its _pragmatics_ in economic and
-financial matters, has left most excellent examples. Or what happens
-now, when ignorance, or deceitful interest, which profits by ignorance,
-proposes or causes to be adopted ruinous measures under the appearance
-of _publica salus,_ arguing that they are good, or that they are good
-for different reasons than those for which they could be maintained.
-Such, for instance, would be the proposal for fresh expenditure on
-public works that are useless or of little use during a period of
-economic depression in a country, and instead of relieving, increase
-the general depression; or the increase of protective tariffs, when
-industrial progress is slow, which ought to encourage industry, but on
-the contrary produce an industry that is unstable and artificial, in
-place of one that is spontaneous and durable.
-
-[Sidenote: _Comparison of Economic with Mechanics, and reason for its
-exclusion from ethical, æsthetic and logical facts._]
-
-The special form of application of mathematics, which we find in
-economic Science, has been compared on several occasions with that
-which takes place in Mechanics. "The economic man" of the first has
-seemed to be altogether like the "material point" of the second, and
-Economy has been called "a sort of Mechanics," or simply "Mechanics."
-All this is very natural, for Mechanics are nothing but the complex
-of formulæ of calculation constructed on reality, which is Spirit and
-Becoming in Metaphysic, and may be abstracted and falsified in Science,
-so as to assume the aspect of Force or a system of forces, for the
-convenience of calculation. Economy does the same thing, when it cuts
-off from the volitional acts certain groups, which it simplifies and
-makes rigid with the definition of the "economic man," the laws of
-"least means," and the like. And owing precisely to this mechanicizing
-process of economic Science, it is ingenuous to ask oneself why
-ethical, logical, or æsthetic facts are not included in Economy, and
-in what way they can be included. Economic science is the sum of
-abstractive operations effected upon the concept of Will or Action,
-which is thus _quantified._ Now since moral facts are also will and
-action, and since economic Science is not occupied with qualitative
-distinctions, not even with the quality itself of that economic fact
-which it employs as its material, it is clear that Science cannot
-lay any stress upon moral distinguished from economic facts, nor can
-it receive them in a special class, because its assumption is the
-indistinction of the two orders of facts, and they are included in that
-indistinction. As to æsthetic or scientific facts, these, taken by
-themselves, are not facts, but representations and thoughts of facts,
-and as such escape economic calculation: considered in the unity of the
-spirit, they are certainly facts, that is to say, volitional products,
-but as such are already found included with these in the indistinction
-of economic Science.
-
-[Sidenote: _Errors of philosophism and historicism in Economy._]
-
-As a mathematical discipline, economic Science is ultimately
-_quantitative,_ and it remains so, even when it makes use of the
-smallest possible number of numerical and algebraical signs (even when
-it is not _mathematical Economy_ in the strict sense of the word). The
-attempts, both of philosophism and historicism, which claim to deny
-Economy, by criticizing its abstractness and its arbitrariness, and to
-make it philosophical (or as they say _psychological_) and historical
-are therefore to be reproved. If Economy do not give the universal
-truth of Philosophy, nor the particular truth of History, Philosophy
-and History are in their turn incapable of making the smallest
-calculation: if Economy have not eyes for the true, Philosophy and
-History have not arms to break and to dominate the waves of fact, which
-would oppress man with their importunity and finally prevent him from
-seeing. Hence the absurdity of _philosophism_ and _historicism_; hence
-too, the sound tendency of Economy to constitute itself _pure_ Economy,
-free of _practical_ questions, which are also, it is clear, historical,
-not abstract and scientific questions.
-
-[Sidenote: _The two degenerations: extreme abstracticism and
-empiristical disaggregation._]
-
-But economy has in itself other enemies besides these that are
-external, in so far as it is certainly a mathematical discipline, but
-an applied mathematic, that is to say, one that assumes empirical
-data. These empirical data can be infinitely multiplied, and hence
-result infinite economic propositions, each distinct from the other;
-and on the other hand, they can be regrouped, simplified and unified,
-so as finally to return to the indistinct _x._ If the first tendency
-prevail, we have what is called economic empiricism, a cumbrous
-mass of disaggregated propositions; if the second, a very general
-formula, which sometimes does not even preserve the smallest vestige
-of that concept of human action from which it started, and becomes
-altogether confounded with the formulæ of arithmetic, of algebra and
-of the calculus. Sound economic Science must be at once abstract and
-empirical, in accordance with its nature, connecting and unifying
-disaggregate propositions; but it must not allow distinction to be
-lost in unity, for the one is as necessary as the other. Those who
-are unacquainted with the generalities of Economic Science, and those
-acquainted only with its details, are alike incapable, though for
-different reasons, of calculating the economic consequences of a
-fact. The first see all the facts as one single fact, the second, all
-the facts as different, without any arrangement by similarities and
-hierarchies. The question as to the relative proportion of generalities
-and particulars to be given in treatises, is one that has been
-much discussed, but since this has only a didascalic and pedagogic
-importance, it is only possible to answer it, case for case, according
-to the nature of the various scholastic institutions that are held in
-view. To maintain that Economy must stop short at this or that degree
-of abstraction, and for example be limited to what are called external
-goods or riches, excluding services; or to capital, as a concept
-distinct from land and human labour, without striving to unify these
-three concepts, is altogether capricious. Every unification, like every
-specification, can be useful, and haters of abstracticism are also
-abstracticists, but only half so.
-
-[Sidenote: _dance at the History of the various tendencies of Economy._]
-
-All those acquainted with economic studies will have recognized in
-the concepts that we have explained, the _logical motives_ of the
-history of Economy, the divisions, the polemics, the defeats and the
-victories of this or that school and the progress of that branch of
-studies. The quantitative character of economic science already appears
-in its classics; in the inquiries of Aristotle as to prices and value
-(_Politic_ and _Nichomachean Ethic_); and this is apparent also in
-the rare mentions by Mediæval and Renaissance writers. Economists
-have always been mathematicians, even when they have not spoken of
-mathematical Economy. Our writers of the nineteenth century, Galiani,
-Genovesi and Verri, were mathematicians in their methods; Francesco
-Ferrara, the greatest Italian economist of the nineteenth century, was
-a mathematician. The economic principle, which is all one with the
-excogitation of the economic man, was formulated by the head of the
-physiocratic school, Quesnay; and if the title of _political Economy,_
-first given to the discipline by Montchrétien in 1615, prevailed,
-that of _social Arithmetic_ also sometimes made its appearance. Its
-progress has consisted, not only in the discovery of new economic
-theorems, but also in the connection and unification of those that had
-previously been posited in isolation, of material and immaterial goods,
-of the cost of production and of rarity, of gross and net produce, of
-agricultural rents and of all the others that are not agricultural, of
-the production, distribution and circulation of riches, of economic and
-financial laws, of social and isolated economy, of the value of utility
-and of the value of exchange. It has even been possible to unite with
-the body of admitted economic doctrines those of Marx, which seemed
-revolutionary, for these are only definitions of a particular casuistry
-founded upon the comparison of different types of economic constitution.
-
-But to conquer empiricism was not enough; economic Science was menaced
-in its existence by the so-called _historical School,_ which refused
-to recognize abstract definitions and set up against them the infinite
-variety of historical facts; hence the strife with historicism
-conducted by Menger and the Austrian school. A consequence of the
-struggle against the political degeneration of economic science was
-the constitution of Economy as a _pure_ science (Cairnes). This was
-all the more necessary, inasmuch as by confounding the abstract with
-the concrete, and in the concrete itself, Economy with Ethic, there
-was a desire manifested upon several occasions among German economists
-(ethical school), and among Catholics of all countries, for an economic
-Science that should have as its base Ethic. The conception of Economy
-as a science deduced from the _egoistic_ hypothesis, has been the
-extreme form of the reaction against ethicism (for example in the
-treatise of Pantaleoni). The dangers arising from philosophism have
-been less, because recent times, in which that discipline has most
-flourished, have not sinned through excessive philosophy.
-
-Of late, owing to the works of Jevons and of other Englishmen, of
-Gossen, of the Italians of the school of Ferrara, and of the Austrians,
-Economy has become at once more and more complicated and more simple,
-owing to the applications, extensions, and reductions that it has
-effected. But if with its progress it be able to become ever more exact
-and perspicuous, yet it will never for that reason become _organic;_
-its character of a quantitative discipline, of an applied mathematic,
-in which the atomism of the postulates and of the definitions is
-insuperable, does not allow of such metamorphoses.
-
-[Sidenote: _Signification of the judgment of Hegel upon the Science of
-Economy._]
-
-In this connection and as the seal upon what we have just been saying,
-it is fitting to observe that the phrase of Hegel referred to above
-can only have been interpreted as expressing admiration for the degree
-of truth attained by Economy, owing to the ignorance of Hegelian
-philosophy that has become usual; as though Hegel meant that Economic
-science did much honour to the _thought,_ that is, to the speculative
-reason. Hegel wished to say, on the contrary, that Economy does much
-honour to the intellect, that is, to the intellect alone, to that
-_abstractive_ and arbitrary _intellect_ which he hunted down in all
-his philosophy: that it is not indeed true and philosophical science,
-but a simple descriptive or quantitative discipline treated with much
-elegance. This praise also contained the demand for a delimitation,
-which, however, he did not expressly enunciate, develop and execute.
-
-
-[1] _Philos, d. Rechtes,_ § 189. _Zus._
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-CRITIQUE OF THE CONFUSIONS BETWEEN ECONOMIC SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY OF
-ECONOMY
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Adoption of the method and of definition of Economy by
-Philosophy._]
-
-There is no disagreement, then, between the Philosophy of Economy
-described by us and economic Science or Calculus, of which we have just
-defined the nature, since there cannot be any between two altogether
-heterogeneous forms, the one moving within the categories of truth, the
-other outside them, with objects of a practical order. This reciprocal
-tolerance can be disturbed only by Philosophy, when it compels itself,
-either to invade the field of economic Science, or to receive within
-itself, to a greater or less extent, the method and the formulæ
-proper to the latter. We have already referred to the first, when we
-noted the inadmissibility of the economic attempts of philosophism
-and historicism, and we will say no more on the subject. But it is
-opportune to draw attention to the fact that we must distinguish
-among these attempts those that we are accustomed to meet with in
-many treatises on economy, pure or political, and in the Science of
-finance (especially in the prologues), which labour to discover what
-economic action may be, and in what way it differs from morality, what
-are pleasure and pain, utility and value; whether the State be rational
-will that levies a portion of the riches of the citizens for the ends
-of civilization, or a simple fact resulting from general economic laws
-and the like. In all these efforts of the writers of treatises, we have
-an example of the gradual passage from empiria to philosophy, which is
-to be observed in all the other fields of knowledge, and if it be only
-possible to say in general that the Philosophy of Economy is derived
-from economic Science, it is certain, on the other hand, that it finds
-no small incentive in the philosophical doubts and discussions which
-economic Science supports. On the other hand, the claim to resolve
-philosophically and historically the economic Science or Calculus
-is, as we have seen, altogether sterile, or contradicts itself in
-development.
-
-[Sidenote: _Errors that derive from it._]
-
-From the second of the cases stated above, that is to say, from the
-mixture of economic with philosophic methods, arises a series of errors
-that are very common and very grave, and of which it is opportune to
-take some notice here.
-
-These errors can be divided into three groups, according as they
-consist of _(a)_ considering economic Science or Calculus as a method
-exclusive of every other, and alone capable of bestowing upon man all
-the truth that can ever be attained in the field of human actions;
-_(b)_ in attributing the value of universal thought to the empirical
-thoughts upon which economic calculation is based; _(c)_ in changing
-into reality the fictions excogitated for the establishment of the
-Calculus.
-
-[Sidenote: _1st. Negation of philosophy for economy._]
-
-Of the three groups, the first, which represents the most extended
-and radical form of the error, is, as usual, the least harmful, for
-the reason previously given, that the precise and loyal positions are
-those that are the most completely surpassed. Several cultivators
-of economic Science, among the most strict and mathematical, enter
-upon this desperate struggle against philosophy, which they ridicule
-as empty chatter and do not merely wish to subdue but altogether to
-destroy, substituting for it the methods of empirical observation and
-of mathematical construction, thus favouring a particular empirical and
-mathematical philosophy of their own, however much they may protest
-to the contrary. That the pretension is unsustainable, is to be seen,
-both from the contradictions in which they become entangled and from
-the very fury that animates them, which is, at bottom, vexation at not
-being able to free themselves from the contradictions in which they
-have become involved. For our part, we should like to say to those
-excellent economists, alike pure and mathematical, did this not appear
-to be pouring oil upon the flames:--Spare yourselves the trouble of
-philosophizing. Calculate, and do not think!
-
-[Sidenote: _2nd. Universal value attributed to empirical concepts.
-Example: protection and free trade._]
-
-The other group is represented by a particular case of the empiristical
-error that we have already several times criticized, and many
-propositions of the kind that one hears in ordinary conversation,
-against which simple good sense has often rebelled, are to be reduced
-to it. Thus the empirical consideration of certain human actions as
-constituting richness and happiness, causes those individuals and
-peoples who possess property of that sort to be called rich and happy;
-but to this is opposed, with evident truth, that every one is happy
-in his own way and that external conditions are not proof of internal
-satisfaction, which is alone real and effective. The great dispute on
-free trade is also to be reduced to the same misunderstanding, for when
-we undertake to demonstrate that wealth is destroyed by protection, the
-demonstration is efficacious only if the wealth, said to be destroyed,
-is precisely that of which it was desired to assure the increase by
-protection; but nothing has been proved if it be a different quality
-of wealth that it may be desirable to acquire, even with the loss
-and the destruction of the other. For example, a people may find it
-advantageous from a political and military point of view to maintain in
-its territories the cultivation of grain or the construction of ships,
-even if that were to cost more than to provide itself with grain and
-ships from abroad; in this case, we should, strictly speaking, talk,
-not of the destruction of wealth, but rather of the acquisition of
-wealth (presumed national security), paid for with dear grain and dear
-naval construction. When the empirical ideas of free trade were raised
-to the dignity of _laws of nature_ (reason), there was a rebellion
-against the economists, by which it was made clear that those laws
-of nature were laws, not absolute, but empirical, that is to say,
-historical and contingent facts, and that the economists who propounded
-them as absolute, were not at all men of science, but politicians,
-and represented (if not seriously, at least by unconscious suggestion,
-or, if it be preferred, by mere chance) the interests of certain
-definite classes or of certain definite peoples. And the rebellion was
-right, although it afterwards degenerated into the inconclusiveness
-of historicism, and absolutely denied to those false practical
-applications the formulæ and laws of Economy, which are _natural_ in
-quite another sense, as nominal and therefore irrefutable definitions.
-Abstract principles, which are always inadequate to grasp the richness
-of reality, supply with a simple instrument him who passes from them
-to historical and sociological observation, which requires altogether
-different methods. Hence, for instance, the meaning of the school of
-Le Play, which in studying concrete economic conditions took note of
-religion, of family and political feelings, and of all the other things
-connected with the first; hence the admitted necessity of completing
-the analytic method (as it is called) with the synthetic, or (as it
-would be preferable to say) of neglecting abstractions when dealing
-with the problems of life and of directly intuiting life itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _3rd. Transformation of the functions of the calculus into
-reality._]
-
-But what is particular to a philosophy that enters into hybrid wedlock
-with economic Science, is the transformation of those quantitative
-principles, of which we have seen the artificial origin, into effective
-reality. As a result, when this origin has not been observed, or has
-been forgotten, we may chance to hear the theories of Gossen on the
-decline of pleasures, as though they were "fundamental laws of human
-sensibility"; or that some _homo economicus_ has appeared, constructor
-of diagrams and calculator of degrees of utility and of curves of
-satisfaction, as though these were real things. Some false conceptions
-derive from economic principles transported into the philosophy of the
-practical, which we have already had occasion to refute, such as that
-of a _scale of values,_ which the volitional man is supposed to have
-before him whenever he deliberates, and that other of the embarrassment
-he experiences in choosing between _two equal goods;_ and finally the
-belief that man _wills things,_ whereas what he wills in reality is not
-things but actions.
-
-The comparisons, metaphors and symbols, taken from Economy and used
-in ordinary conversation, lead to the false belief that mathematical
-constructions and those of the economic calculus are the real processes
-of the psyche or of the Spirit.
-
-[Sidenote: _The pretended calculus of pleasures and pains, and the
-doctrines of optimism and pessimism._]
-
-The quantification of volitional acts, taken as a real fact and
-introduced into philosophy, has given origin to the idea of a _calculus
-of pleasures and pains and of a balance of life,_ to be established
-with the pleasures on the profit side of the account and the sorrows
-on the side of loss. And there have even been ravings about a double
-mensuration of pleasures, to be based upon their _intensity_ and
-_duration._ But the real man, at the moment he enjoys, has before him
-only his own enjoyment, and at the moment that he suffers, only his
-own sorrow: the past is past and life is not to be described like the
-profit and loss account of a business. The true economic man says to
-himself what Fra Jacopone sang in one of his lauds:
-
- So much is mine
- As enjoyed and bestowed for the love divine!
-
-The sophisms that assume consistency owing to this false conception,
-are most strange. Let the little dialogue of Leopardi with the seller
-of almanacs suffice for all. No one would wish to live his life again,
-not because the sorrows always exceed the pleasures, as that dialogue
-suggests, but rather because man is not, as he believes, a consumer
-of pleasures. He is a creator of life, and for this reason the idea
-of doing again what has already been done, of retreading the same
-path, of reliving the already past, is repugnant to him, even were it
-all made up of pleasures as suggested, because he aspires only and
-always to the future. _Optimism and pessimism,_ being each of them
-respectively unable altogether to deny pleasure and pain, are obliged
-to have recourse to these calculations and balances, in order to defend
-their preconceived conclusions: but in so doing they fall from Scylla
-into Charybdis and each reveals its own sophistical nature.
-
-Indeed, a philosophy that calculates is a philosophy that toys
-or dotes, and if we have certainly advised the economists and
-mathematicians to calculate and not to think, we must, on the contrary,
-cry to the philosopher:--Think, and do not calculate! _Qui incipit
-numerare, incipit errare!_
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS
-
-
-The concepts of the useful and of the moral and the various attempts
-either to absorb the one in the other or to distinguish them, while
-recognizing their relations, are the problem on which has laboured the
-Philosophy of the practical as Ethic and Economic. Has this problem
-ever been fully solved? It will be permissible to doubt it, when we
-observe that a philosophical concept of the useful has been wanting
-until our own days; and that in consequence one of morality must also,
-strictly speaking, have been wanting, for it could not have been
-understood in its fulness and purity, owing to the obscure position of
-the term with which it is united.
-
-[Sidenote: _Greek Ethic and its ingenuousness._]
-
-I. The utilitarian character of Greek Ethic has been affirmed on
-several occasions; but one experiences a certain repugnance in applying
-so precise a term to the documents of ancient thought that remain to
-us. Socrates, it is true, posited the useful as the supreme concept
-of morality, and identified the good life with eudæmonia; but for him
-that useful was nevertheless distinct from the merely pleasing, since
-it consisted in what is useful to man as man, and his eudæmonia bore
-much resemblance to the tranquil conscience of him who fulfils his
-proper duties. Plato (for example, in the _Protagoras_) expounds the
-doctrine that good things are nothing but pleasant things, and bad
-things painful; but this doctrine is enunciated in order to place in
-relief the thesis that man does not do wrong, save through ignorance,
-and because the bad seems to him to be the good; without saying that
-in other dialogues the distinction between pleasure and the good is
-recognized. Nor can the most systematic of the ancient philosophers,
-Aristotle, be called without reserve a hedonist, a eudæmonist, or a
-utilitarian, on the strength of his doctrine of happiness. Happiness
-is the supreme good, it is an end for itself; but virtue is already
-included for Aristotle in happiness, virtue which is found there, not
-as an adjunct, but intrinsic, for which exterior goods are indeed
-necessary, but only as instruments. The virtuous man must be a lover
-of himself (φίλαυτος), that is to say, just, temperate, liberal of his
-possessions, ready to yield honours and offices to his friends; lover
-of himself, then, in the lofty signification of the word (lover, not of
-the empirical, but of the metempirical ego), as opposed to the wicked
-man, who is his own enemy. Even Epicurus could not be included among
-the hedonists, since for him pleasure is not an end, but a means for
-_calm,_ which is the true good, and calm is tranquillity of the spirit,
-which only the virtuous man can enjoy.
-
-It is therefore more exact to consider Greek Ethic in its general
-character, not as eudæmonistic and utilitarian, but here also, in
-relation to the new problem that we now have before us (in the same
-way as was done above, in respect to practical intellectualism), as
-_ingenuous_; for in truth that problem did not constitute the centre
-of inquiries and discussions, as they present themselves in our times,
-nor were the different schools divided upon it. They were distinguished
-from one another (as has been already noted in respect to the doctrine
-of the passions), rather by the different rules of life respectively
-laid down by each as preferable. The antitheses of the Cynics and
-Cyrenaïcs, of the Epicureans and the Stoics, have but a superficial
-resemblance to those of the ethical rigorists or abstractionists,
-hedonists or utilitarians, which have appeared as the result of the
-antithesis between pleasure and pain explicitly stated in modern times.
-It would be difficult to point out ethical rigorists and utilitarians
-among thinkers truly and properly so called. In order to discover the
-utilitaristic attitude at that period of history, it would be necessary
-to have recourse to some rhetorician, such as Carneades, ready to
-maintain indifferently the most opposed paradoxes, or to Callicles and
-Thrasymachus, so magnificently portrayed in the Platonic dialogues.
-These were rather men of the world than philosophers, giving the
-immediate and violent impression of the struggle for life, and for this
-reason they were at conflict with Socrates, the philosopher, whom they
-sometimes treated as a clown and utterer of paradoxes, sometimes pitied
-as a child, a "suckling" child, and objected to him that philosophers
-do not understand one iota about politics (as often has been and often
-will be objected by politicians, not altogether without reason). If it
-be wished, all the same, to find a reference to later utilitarianism
-among the sophists, the hedonists and the Epicureans, or among the
-Stoics, with their conception of life as a war against the passions,
-something of future rigorism and asceticism, or in certain discussions
-among the Platonic dialogues as to the relation between pleasure and
-pain, a first trace of the discussions upon the same argument that have
-become most complicated in modern times, by all means let this be done,
-provided it be never forgotten that it is an affair of glimmers, rather
-than of vivid light, of antitheses hardly accentuated, not of those
-that are well defined and stand out clearly.
-
-[Sidenote: _Importance of Christianity for Ethic._]
-
-II. The precise and it may be said violent affirmation of the
-antithesis, was the work of Christianity, which, conceiving pleasure
-and duty, nature and morality to be heterogeneous elements, did
-great service, both to the progress of civilization in general and
-in particular to Ethic. It is necessary to insist upon this, for the
-modern world was bound afterwards to react against this antithesis,
-and necessarily to assume an Antichristian, even a pagan attitude,
-and modern art and poetry are often inspired with an abhorrence of
-the tenebrous Middle Ages and of sad Christianity, and give a sigh of
-regret for Greece as for a lost Paradise, or a shout of jubilation
-as for a Paradise regained. But reactions are reactions and poetry
-is poetry: humanity never retraces its footsteps, though it is often
-wont to adorn the future with memories of the past. The Greece of our
-hearts is a new Greece, profoundly modified by Christianity; the
-Greece of Goethe and of Hegel is no longer the Greece of Sophocles and
-of Aristotle, but a Greece far richer and more intense. Thought, like
-life, never turns back, and if it be necessary eventually to attain to
-a theoretic conciliation between pleasure and duty, between the useful
-and morality, such a conciliation will be very different from that of
-still ingenuous Greek Ethic.
-
-[Sidenote: _The three resulting directions: utilitarianism, rigorism,
-and psychologism._]
-
-The spectacle afforded by modern Ethic, from the Renaissance to the
-beginning of the nineteenth century, and also (with few exceptions) in
-the later periods is still altogether dominated by that antithesis, and
-therefore two currents are to be discerned in it: one that attaches
-itself to the first term of the antithesis, the useful, and denies the
-second, or resolves it in the first, the other, which denies the useful
-and retains moral duty as the exclusive form of the practical activity.
-This latter is _rigoristic_ Ethic, child of Christianity and of ascetic
-oriental sources, which flowed into it together by direct filiation;
-the other is _utilitarianism,_ child also, though illegitimate, of
-the distinction or rending asunder of the ancient unity of duty
-and pleasure, virtue and happiness, effected by Christianity. The
-antithesis sometimes seems to be solved and a Philosophy of the
-practical appears, which, without clinging exclusively to one term or
-the other, receives both into itself. But this philosophy, when it
-does not reveal itself at bottom (which generally happens), as masked
-utilitarianism, or (a less frequent case) rigorism attenuated in
-expression, has the defect of being, not philosophy, but an empirical
-description of the so-called principles of the practical, placed one
-beside the other, without a profound definition or deduction of either.
-This third direction may be called _intuitionism_ or _psychologism._
-
-[Sidenote: _Hobbes, Spinoza._]
-
-Utilitarianism is principally represented by English thought, to which
-belongs Hobbes, the greatest of all utilitarians, who proclaimed, _in
-statu naturae_ (that is to say, in genuine reality) _mensuram juris
-esse utilitatem._[1] Similar doctrines are to be found in Spinoza, who
-has also been looked upon and criticized as a pure utilitarian. But the
-matter is rather more complicated as regards Spinoza. Of him it should
-rather be said that he would have been the most resolute of ethical
-rigorists, had he ever been able to construct an Ethic. His determinism
-was an insuperable obstacle to this, for it does not admit distinctions
-of values, but considers the good. like being, in its abstractness,
-and therefore, the being of each one as _suum essere conservare_; hence
-the appearance of utilitarianism, assumed by the Ethic of Spinoza.
-
-[Sidenote: _English Ethic._]
-
-From Hobbes descend Locke, Hartley, Hume, Adam Smith, Warburton,
-Paley, and others such; they are all less courageous and less coherent
-philosophers than he. Indeed, if Hobbes himself could not but be
-incoherent and could not avoid causing a desire for and therefore
-a state of peace to arise from a state of nature or of war, whence
-is discovered to the mind a source of the practical, altogether
-different from that of the useful alone, which was presupposed; with
-the mean and sophistical efforts of his successors, the incoherence
-becomes altogether irritating. The aid sought from associationism
-is among these efforts, and the excogitation of the example of the
-miser (found for the first time in 1731, in a discourse of the Rev.
-John Gay),[2] and also the admission of the principle of sympathy
-beside that of egoism, a principle which with a cast of the dice is
-made to disappear again, and to become absorbed in egoism itself. The
-inanity of utilitarianism, which has already in Hobbes a tendency to
-disavow itself, by recognizing as true laws not those of nature, but
-those revealed by God (_in Scripturis sacris latae_),[3] and in Locke
-retained the divine side by side with the civil laws and those of
-public opinion,[4] became evident in the theological utilitarianism of
-Warburton and of Paley. As for intuitionists and psychologists, such as
-Shaftesbury, Hutcheson, Butler, these either left an unsolved dualism
-(as was above all the case with the last), or, although possessing the
-most lively consciousness of moral force, they yet strove to deduce
-it in some way from the egoistical and utilitarian principle. The
-French materialists of the eighteenth century, such as Helvétius and
-D'Holbach, though less subtle, are more consequent.
-
-[Sidenote: _Idealistic Philosophy._]
-
-Rigoristic Ethic displayed its strength against anti-ethical
-utilitarianism and anti-philosophical psychologism, not only in
-traditional scholastic, but also in the explicit polemic undertaken by
-Cudworth, Cumberland, Clarke and Price, against Hobbes, Locke, and the
-other utilitarians who followed them. The makers of great systems, too,
-attached themselves to ethical rigorism, Descartes (and in a certain
-sense Spinoza), Malebranche, Leibnitz, and the philosophy of the
-school of Leibnitz, as the moral consciousness declared itself in its
-true nature in Jean Jacques Rousseau against the French materialists.
-But rigorism also ended by contradicting itself in the same way as
-utilitarianism, owing to its one-sidedness, when it recognized a
-principle that was not merely utilitarian or that lost itself in
-mystery, either by reasoning with the utilitarian principle in the
-course of its development, or by receiving utilitarianism into itself,
-without any mediation, in the form of the morally indifferent. This is
-an old evil, which had already appeared in the _ἀδιάφορα_ of Stoicism,
-and in all those exceptions to the rigorous moral law, which ascetic
-Christianity had been obliged to allow, in order to exist side by side
-with the worldly life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Kant and his affirmation of the ethical principle._]
-
-III. The strength and the weakness of rigorism are to be clearly seen
-in the greatest ethical system to which it led: the moral doctrine of
-Emmanuel Kant. It was time that the principle of Christian Ethic should
-be reaffirmed, duty as clearly distinguished from pleasure, giving to
-it that relief which it had been without in the systems of Descartes
-and of Leibnitz, after the materialistic and utilitarian orgy that had
-lasted for more than a century, and after the equivocal attempts at an
-approach and fusion of the useful and the moral. Kant did not indeed in
-this respect oppose Wolffian Leibnitzianism; and although the ethical
-concept of _perfectio_ seemed to him to be empty and indeterminate, yet
-he was never able to prove that it was a eudæmonistic and utilitarian
-concept.[5] But that concept certainly had not the energy of duty and
-of the Kantian categoric imperative, which are true declarations of war
-against every heteronomous morality. This is the merit of Kant, after
-whom no serious philosopher can be anything but a Kantian in Ethic, as,
-after Christianity, to no one, not a wind-bag or an extravagant, is it
-given to be anything but a Christian. Moral action has no other motive
-than morality itself: to promote one's own happiness (said Kant) can
-never be _immediately_ duty, and even less the principle of all duties.
-
-[Sidenote: _Self-contradictions of Kant concerning the concept of the
-useful, of prudence, of happiness, etc._]
-
-But the mistake of Kant lies in not having well analyzed the concepts
-of pleasure, of happiness and of the useful, and in having thought that
-he could free himself from them, by placing them among another set of
-principles, which he called _hypothetical_ imperatives and opposed to
-the _categoric. _ We know that the imperative of those concepts is
-not less categoric than that of morality: it is a true imperative,
-not to be confounded with the knowledge of experience, metaphorically
-called imperative, because it assumes the appearance of a technique
-dealing with the practical. Kant was to some extent aware of this, for
-he sub-distinguishes the hypothetical imperatives into _problematical_
-and _assertorial._ The first of these are technical and give rise to
-maxims of _cleverness_ (_Geschicklichkeit_); the second are _pragmatic_
-and consist of maxims of _prudence._ Observe the difficulties in which
-he becomes involved, through not wishing to recognize the autonomous
-character of these imperatives compared with the moral imperatives,
-that is to say, the categoricity of both. The imperatives of prudence
-and of happiness are concerned (he says) "with an end which can be
-assumed as real among all rational beings (in so far as the imperatives
-can be applied to them in their quality of dependent beings); and,
-therefore, an intention, which not only they _may_ possess, but which
-it is assumed with certainty that they _do_ possess, according to a
-necessity of nature, which is the intention of happiness." We should
-therefore conclude that they are concerned with an end not less
-serious than that of morality. But Kant perceives the poison in the
-argument and strives to turn them again into imperatives concerning
-means: "ability" (he continues) "in the choice of the means of one's
-own well-being, may be called _prudence;_ therefore the imperative
-relating to the choice of the means for one's own happiness, namely the
-precept of prudence, is always hypothetical; the action is ordered, not
-absolutely, but only as means for another purpose." It is clear that to
-be able to call that knowledge or ability "prudence" is not sufficient
-to change the imperative of happiness into mere ability and knowledge.
-Kant perceives this also: "If it were easy to give a definite concept
-of happiness, the imperatives of prudence would altogether coincide
-with those of ability and would also be analytic. For it would be
-said in the one case as in the other, that he who wishes the end also
-wishes (necessarily, in conformity with reason) the only means for the
-purpose within his power. The concept of happiness is unfortunately
-so indeterminate, that although every one wishes to attain to it, he
-is nevertheless unable ever to say definitely and in accordance with
-himself exactly what he desires and wishes. The reason is that the
-elements which belong to the concept of happiness are all empirical
-and must therefore all be taken from experience; quired an absolute
-whole, a maximum of well-being in my present state and in every future
-state." In what shall happiness be placed? In riches? In knowledge? In
-long life? In good health? None of these things is without dangers. In
-short, it is impossible to determine with full certainty, according
-to any principle whatever, what would make man truly happy; therefore
-it is not possible to act according to a definite principle, but only
-according to empirical concepts; and the imperatives of prudence,
-strictly speaking, command nothing.--As we see, the only effective
-argument of Kant against the admission of the categoric imperatives of
-well-being, of utility, of happiness, is that he does not know exactly
-what they are. This did not authorize him to exclude those imperatives
-and reduce them to pseudo--imperatives, to hypothetic imperatives,
-or to empirical rules. In other passages of his works, Kant tends to
-the other solution of excluding the maxims of prudence from the pure
-practical reason, because they are maxims of self-love (_Selbstliebe,_)
-or of the practical reason empirically or _pathologically_
-conditioned, since for him every pleasure that precedes the moral law
-and is independent of it, is pathological, that is to say, it belongs
-to the senses, to the inferior appetitive faculty, not to that which
-is superior and to reason. Kant often returns to this point and always
-experiences the same embarrassments and contradictions, as is proved by
-the variety of the arguments to which he has recourse.[6]
-
-[Sidenote: _Errors derived from it in his Ethic._]
-
-But the unrecognized autonomy of the useful, of happiness, of
-well-being, generally revenges itself; because, surreptitiously
-introduced, it causes itself to be unduly recognized afterwards. Thus
-it comes about that Kant creates, on the one hand, the monster of
-disinterested actions, and on the other, does not altogether exclude
-the concept of actions morally indifferent or permissible.[7] Thus,
-too, it happens that owing to the discord that he preserves between
-virtue and happiness, thinking vain the pretence of the Stoics and
-Epicureans to reconcile them in this life, he is led to postulate
-the existence of God and of the immortality of the soul, and to
-make of virtue a means of rendering oneself worthy of happiness in
-another life. "The cold duty of Kant" (wrote Hegel) "is the last
-undigested morsel given by revelation to reason, and it weighs
-upon its stomach."[8] Consequently, the Ethic of Kant, although
-so different in tendencies and inspiration, yet joined hands with
-theological utilitarianism, ending at length by also declaring that
-moral obligation is inconceivable, without the idea of a God, who
-rewards and punishes in another life, and by declaring that God and the
-immortality of the soul cannot be otherwise affirmed than by means of
-moral exigencies. Moral rigorism, like utilitarianism, makes shipwreck
-in mystery.
-
-[Sidenote: _Occasions for a philosophy of economy._]
-
-IV. Occasions and opportunities for a philosophical concept of the
-useful were not, to tell the truth, wanting to the thought anterior
-to Kant; but Kant let them all slip. Without attributing too much
-suggestive power to certain classes of virtues, such as _fortitude_
-or _prudence_ (virtues that are generically economic, not exclusively
-moral), which had passed from the Greek into the Christian Ethic,
-nor to certain acute aphorisms of psychologists and moralists (for
-instance: _Il y a des héros en mal comme en bien;--Ce n'est pas
-assez d'avoir des grandes qualités, il en faut avoir l'économie;--La
-souveraine habilité consiste à bien connaître le prix des choses,
-etc.[9]),_ a first opportunity was certainly afforded by that inferior
-faculty of appetition, which the Wolffian philosophy had inherited
-from the Platonic, Aristotelian, and scholastic tradition.[10] That
-faculty was parallel with the inferior faculty of knowledge, which
-that same philosophy had with Baumgarten attempted to develop into an
-independent science, _Aesthetica,_ a development that should have led
-to the thought of an analogous transformation of the corresponding
-practical faculty, which might have become an _Oeconomica_ or _Ethica
-inferior,_ as from Æsthetic had been made a _Gnoseologia inferior._ But
-Kant also rejected Æsthetic, as science of a special theoretic form,
-science of intuition or fancy, conceiving instead, on the one hand
-a transcendental Æsthetic or doctrine of space and time, and on the
-other, a Critique of judgment, or doctrine of finality and morality,
-symbolized in nature;[11] thus he fell into other difficulties, when
-he wished to establish an analogy between the other forms of the
-practical reason and that of the theoretical.[12] Although he preserved
-the division of the faculty of appetition into inferior and superior
-(_untere und obere Begehrungsvermögen,_) he failed to realize, as we
-have seen, the true philosophical concept of the _inferior._
-
-[Sidenote: _The problem of politics and Machiavellism._]
-
-A second opportunity was presented by the series of treatises, which,
-from Machiavelli onward, had come to conceive of politics as a fact
-independent of morality, elaborating in particular those precepts and
-maxims of the "reason of state," of which we have already had occasion
-to expose the empirical character. But however empirical they were,
-those mental products gave rise to the problem of the relations between
-morals and politics, that is to say, as to whether the two terms could
-be considered as immediately identifiable. The thought of Machiavelli,
-in particular, constituted an enigma that all attempted to interpret
-in the most different ways, most by vituperating, some by defending it
-with strange reasons (Spinoza was among the defenders[13]), though they
-never succeeded in freeing themselves from its difficulties, for to
-that end would have been necessary the understanding of the spiritual
-value of the utilitarian will, even if amoral. It was only when this
-difficult concept was to some extent caught sight of (by De Sanctis)
-that Machiavelli appeared at once justified and criticized; but while
-that concept remained obscure, the point of view of Machiavelli was
-never attained and the work was condemned for reasons of a moralistic
-character (Villari).[14] Kant, too, in his work on _Perpetual Peace,_
-treated the problem of the relations between morality and politics,
-affirming that no disagreement is possible between them, unless by
-politics is meant a _doctrine_ of prudence, that is, "a theory of
-maxims for the selection of the means best adapted for the objects of
-individual advantage; that is, when the existence of morality is not
-altogether denied."[15] Here too, he was right, when he claimed that
-concrete political actions should be submitted to morality; but, on the
-other hand, he did not perceive that submission and identity presuppose
-a previous independence and distinction.
-
-[Sidenote: _The doctrine of the passions._]
-
-Finally, a third opportunity was offered, in the rehabilitation of the
-passions, begun by the philosophers of the seventeenth century and
-expressed, as has been said, in a notable manner by Vico. Now if the
-passions in general be the volitional activity itself, considered
-in its dialectic, they are also the soul turned to the particular,
-the useful in respect to the universal, which is sought by morality.
-This is to be seen especially in Vico and better still in Hegel, very
-similar to Vico in this respect; he admirably developed this moment
-of _particularity,_ which is passion, necessary for the concreteness
-of the universal. As the passions for Vico are human nature itself,
-which morality directs but does not destroy, and are neither good
-nor bad in themselves, and _utilitates ex se neque turpes neque
-honestae, sed earum inaequalitas est turpitudo, aequalitas autem
-honestas_[16]--so, for Hegel, "passion is neither good nor bad in its
-formal character and only expresses the fact that a subject has placed
-all the living interest of his spirit, of his talent, of his character,
-of his enjoyment, in a single content. Nothing great can or has been
-accomplished without passion. Only a morality that is dead and too
-often hypocritical can inveigh against the form of passion as such. ...
-Ethicity concerns the content, which, as such, is universal, something
-inactive, and has its active element in the subject: the fact that the
-content is immanent in it constitutes interest, and in so far as it
-dominates all the efficient subjectivity, passion."[17]
-
-[Sidenote: _Hegel and the concept of the useful._]
-
-The same Hegel once observed: "As for what concerns utility, morality
-must not play the disdainful towards it, for every good action is
-actually useful, that is to say, possesses reality and produces
-something good. A good action that were not useful would not be an
-action, would not possess reality. The inutility of the good in itself,
-as its unreality, is its abstractness. Not only is it possible to be
-conscious of utility, but we ought to be conscious of it, since it is
-true that it is useful to know the good: utility does not mean anything
-but that we are conscious of our own action. If this be blameworthy, it
-will also be blameworthy to know the goodness of one's own action."[18]
-
-Hegel thus discovered the function of the useful when rehabilitating
-the passions, though in a fugitive manner. But Kant had not attributed
-importance to the problem of the passions in Ethic, and had not
-therefore been in a position to avail himself of the suggestion
-contained in the doctrine of the passions.
-
-[Sidenote: _Fichte and the elaboration of the Kantian Ethic._]
-
-Fichte, in re-elaborating the Kantian philosophy, showed the relation
-between pleasure and duty in a manner that came very near to the
-truth. He gave precedence to what he called the _empirical_ over the
-moral man, the former corresponding entirely to the merely utilitarian
-or economic. What, asks Fichte, will be his maxim of action at this
-stage? "As there is no other impulse in his consciousness save the
-natural, and as this is directed only toward enjoyment and has pleasure
-for its motive, that maxim cannot but be to choose what promises the
-maximum of pleasure in intensity and extension; that is, the maxim
-of his own happiness. This may likewise be sought in the pleasure of
-others by means of the sympathetic impulses; but the ultimate scope
-of his action always remains the satisfaction of those impulses and
-pleasures which arise from it, and therefore, his own happiness. Man
-at this stage is an intelligent animal." "But," he continues, "it is a
-fault to remain here, and man must raise himself to a stage at which
-he enjoys an altogether different liberty; he must be free, not only
-_formaliter,_ but also _materialiter,_ that is, he must attain to the
-moral stage."[19] That first stage, then, is formal freedom, and is no
-longer considered a pathological condition of the spirit, or as that
-merely technical knowledge of which Kant speaks. This would constitute
-no small progress, if Fichte had been conscious of all the richness of
-the concept of which he had caught a glimpse, and had made it fructify.
-But it seems that he was not aware of this, and certainly he took no
-advantage of it whatever.
-
-[Sidenote: _The problem of the useful and of morality in the thinkers
-of the nineteenth century._]
-
-V. The inventive genius of modern Ethic is exhausted with these
-thinkers. Their successors have reproduced the old situations, one
-after the other. Some, while accepting the Kantian morality, wished
-to temper and correct its exaggerations, which was not possible,
-save by a more profound speculative vision of the relation between
-pleasure and good, the useful and the moral; whereas they believed that
-they could attain to it by _also_ taking account of pleasure and of
-happiness, and by conceiving a doctrine of happiness or eudæmonology
-side by side with Ethic, but subordinate to it (in Italy: Galluppi
-and Rosmini). Schiller had already recognized in Kant's time the
-unilaterality of Kant, and had made it the object of criticism and of
-epigram, which, however, does not mean that he had truly and properly
-corrected its errors. Others occupied themselves in various ways
-with the enumeration and juxtaposition of the principles: thus, for
-instance, Schopenhauer makes compassion arise beside egoism, which
-then divides into benevolence and justice; and Herbart, although he
-excludes the useful, because, according to him, "it refers to a point
-external to itself,"[20] enumerates five practical ideas that are not
-all truly moral. The affinity both of Herbart and of Schopenhauer,
-with Shaftesbury, Hutcheson and English and Scottish psychologism,
-is clear. The study of the practical ideas of Herbart is not without
-interest as an unconscious affirmation of the necessity of the
-economic principle. The first of these, indeed, _internal freedom,_
-consists in being able to achieve with our own strength the model
-that we propose to ourselves, and is liberty, but not yet moral
-liberty. "To be able to decide _according to motives_" (says Herbart
-on one occasion) "is already a sign of psychical health: to decide
-_according to the best motives_ is the condition of morality."[21]
-The second of the practical ideas, that of _perfection,_ is concerned
-precisely with the strength of the will, taken in itself, and resembles
-a combination of the Hellenic virtues of fortitude and temperance.
-Here willing is considered in itself, independently of its objects,
-and in this consideration there is no other difference, save their
-strength, between the various Willings: the greater this is, the more
-it is admired; weakness displeases and strength pleases the practical
-judgment, and this even when it is unjust, iniquitous and wicked, and
-notwithstanding such vices.[22] Lotze, following Herbart, determines
-as requisites of actions, that they must be possible, energetic,
-conscientious on the one hand, and on the other, consequent, habitual,
-individual, stating that these two series of predicates apply equally
-to moral and immoral actions.[23]--He does not think it worth while to
-take count of the English utilitarians and post-Kantian intuitionists,
-or of their French, Italian, and German imitators; because, just as the
-appearance of a Hobbes, of a Hume, or of a Shaftesbury, is important
-in their time, so the appearance of a Bentham or of a Spencer out of
-their time is insignificant, for these latter amuse themselves with
-the useful, with association and evolution (which according to them
-should become the socially useful), and with the double principle of
-egoism and of altruism. Stuart Mill alone can afford some interest,
-when he says (with that mental inconclusiveness which has seemed to
-many to be acuteness and equilibrium) that moral pleasures differ from
-the sensual, not only in degree, but also in genus and in quality (_in
-kind_); and that justice is a class of socially useful actions that
-arouses feelings themselves also different, not only in degree, but
-also in genus and in quality (_in kind_), from those caused by useful
-actions. In short, the philosophy of the nineteenth century has not
-only been unable to progress, but has not even been able to maintain
-itself on a level with the practical doctrines of Fichte and of Hegel,
-in which a glimpse was caught of the relation of first and second
-practical degree, and there was a tendency to reconcile passion and
-ethicity.
-
-[Sidenote: _Extrinsic union of Ethic and of economic Science, from
-antiquity to the nineteenth century._]
-
-VI. Certainly economic science, owing to its empirico-quantitative
-character, already noted, was not made to fill the void and to furnish
-a more positive and exact concept of the useful. The contact between
-Economy and Philosophy remained for a time extrinsic, since economic
-Science appeared in treatises upon the Philosophy of the practical,
-together with the other juridical and historical matter, which it was
-customary to include with it. The precedent for such a union could be
-found even in Aristotle's _Nichomachean Ethic,_ which supplies certain
-notions as to the concept of price and value. Considerations on the
-same argument abound in the Scholastics, especially in St. Thomas,
-whose _Oeconomica_ always forms part of his Ethic, as the doctrine for
-the government of the family. Finally, there is an ample discussion
-of the subject in the treatises of the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, which took the name of _natural Rights._ It happened that
-the English moralists of the eighteenth century were also led to
-occupy themselves with Economy and the economists with Ethic, owing
-to the juxtaposition of the two concepts for didascalic reasons and
-for University convenience. Thus Hutcheson developed Economy, in his
-_Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy_ (1747); and the _Essays_ of
-Hume are occupied with moral and economic questions; and Adam Smith
-is the author, not only of _The Wealth of Nations,_ but also of _The
-Theory of the Moral Feelings,_ almost two parts of a Philosophy of the
-practical. The importance of economic studies had become so palpable at
-that time, that toward the end of the century, Buhle was led to include
-them in the history of philosophy (and we believe that he was the
-first). He exposes at length in his work the ideas of Hume, of Smith,
-of Stewart, attributing it as a merit to the English writers to have
-reduced that material to philosophy by a method of treatment without
-example (he said) in previous centuries.[24] Finally, Hegel dedicated
-certain important paragraphs of his _Philosophy of Law,_ in the section
-dealing with civil society,[25] to the "system of wants," or Economy.
-The cult of Economy has rather increased than diminished in the
-nineteenth century and the much-discussed social problem (especially
-capitalism and socialism) has not been without a certain influence
-upon treatises of Ethic, where, if we rarely find statements that are
-strictly economic, there is always plenty of chatter about property and
-production and the relations between the working and capitalistic class.
-
-[Sidenote: _Philosophical questions arising from a more intimate
-contact between the two._]
-
-But a more intimate bond could not take place, save when attempts to
-understand the material of science and to place it in the system of
-the spirit were united with economic Science, properly so called. For
-since that science is occupied with human actions and appears to give
-advice as to conduct, in what relation can it possibly stand to Ethic,
-which is also occupied with actions and also gives advice?--Such a
-question was in a certain way already implied in the mediæval idea of
-a _justum pretium,_ to be placed beside the effective price, which is
-realized according to the knowledge and convenience of each; it forms
-the kernel of the debate between the _subjective and the objective_
-concept of value, that is, between the purely economic consideration
-and another resulting from moral exigencies, between the value that
-is, and that which in a certain way should be. It began to wax ardent,
-with the accusation, of being theoreticians of egoism, hurled at the
-great English economists, Smith and Ricardo; this accusation, taken
-up and modified by others, became accepted as the true and proper
-designation of the function of Economy, which should accordingly be
-that of studying human actions in their exclusively abstract, egoistic
-aspect. But, since abstraction is not full reality, the false task
-assigned to Economy called for the aid of the doctors. Such were
-the French economists, seized with the mania of teaching generosity
-to the cold Britons (Blanqui, etc.); such too were the Germans, who
-wished to induce Economy to mend its ways and to become conscious of
-its lofty duties towards the human race (Knies); such, finally, were
-the Christians and Catholics, who thought to purify or to exorcise
-that worldly and diabolical science by mingling with it ethical and
-economical considerations. It was rarely suspected that economic
-facts, as such, are neither egoistic nor altruistic, neither moral nor
-immoral; and when it was desired to philosophize the subject, some one
-got out of the difficulty by enumerating five groups of human actions,
-four egoistic and only one moral: the search for the satisfaction
-of one's own conscience, with the fear of blame attached (Wagner).
-The problem, especially in Austria, passed from the hands of the
-mathematicians into those of the psychologists. These have undertaken
-to seek out the resemblance and the difference between economic and
-ethical values. But on the psychological ground (as we have already
-remarked when discussing intuitionistic solutions), far from solving
-the antithesis, philosophy is dissolved. The mathematicians on the
-other hand, that is to say the economists, who employ the quantitative
-method, fascinated with the evidence of this procedure and failing
-to realize that it is empty evidence, instead of limiting themselves
-to the construction of their most useful formulæ, increase the
-confusion by beginning to philosophize in the strangest manner; as
-is to be observed in the case of Pareto, one of the most acute and
-learned of contemporary economists. In one of his recent writings he
-exposes the method of economic science with a string of propositions
-such as these: "_Il faut faire une opération de séparation.... Cette
-première opération accomplie, ... il est nécessaire de substituer par
-abstraction, des conceptions simples, au moins relativement, aux objets
-réels extrêmement complexes.... Mais la science n'est réellement liée
-à une abstraction plutôt qu'à une autre.... Pour peu qu'on y trouve un
-avantage.... Cela ne suffit pas encore: il faut continuer à séparer et
-à abstraire...._"
-
-And after having thus advised us to treat facts without pity,
-mutilating them, grinding them down, substituting for them names or
-abstractions, Pareto continues undisturbed, as though all this were
-nothing: these theories, "_telles, au moins que nous les concevons, se
-séparant des anciens en ce qu'elles s'attachent aux faits et non aux
-mots_"![26] If such be the facts, what will be the words?
-
-[Sidenote: _The theories of the hedonistic calculus: from Maupertuis to
-Hartmann._]
-
-VII. It is all the more necessary to understand the diversity
-between economic Science and the Philosophy of economy, between the
-quantitative and the qualitative processes, owing to the fact that
-since economic studies first flourished, in the eighteenth century,
-absurd ideas were introduced into the books of philosophers, as
-to the calculus of pleasures and the balance of life. Maupertuis'
-book, _Essai de philosophie morale_ (1749), had a great influence
-in this direction. Here, a balance is presented, showing a deficit
-on the side of pleasures; and, following this lead, many Italian
-philosopher-economists of the same period occupied themselves with such
-calculations and balances (Ortes, Verri, Briganti, etc.), arriving at
-results, now optimistic, now pessimistic.[27] Galluppi, too, accepted
-the method as a good one,[28] and it is no marvel that the poet
-Leopardi made it his, steeped as he was in the sensualistic philosophy
-of the preceding century. But not only are the trivial optimistic
-sophisms of the utilitarians founded upon it, but likewise many of the
-pessimistic arguments of Schopenhauer and especially of Hartmann, the
-latter quite unconscious (being in other respects closely connected
-with the German idealist tradition) that he was accepting an element
-of an altogether anti-idealistic, that is, of a mechanistic origin.
-
-For all these reasons, it is important to oppose the concept of the
-useful (which is not indeed a concept, but an abstraction), given by
-economic Science, with its philosophic concept. This we have attempted
-to do in the preceding theory of Economy, as at once distinct from
-and united with Ethic. In that theory, we have especially striven to
-collect stray threads of aphorisms and observations of good sense
-as to the value of the will, even when amoral; as to the doctrines
-of happiness and of pleasure, of the inferior appetitive faculty,
-of others dealing with politics and the arts of prudence, of the
-new conception of the passions, considered as the spirit in its
-individuality;--we have striven to attach to these that which is as
-it were the philosophical result drawn from economic Science, that
-is to say, the idea of a form of value that would be neither the
-intellectual, the æsthetic, nor the ethical, and cannot by any means
-be resolved into an ethical anti-value or egoism;--and finally, we
-have attempted to unite all these threads into one, in order to form
-the bond that ethical rigorism has hitherto been unable to place
-between itself and reality, between the universal and the practical
-individual, at the same time justifying utilitarian, activity in its
-autonomy. We believe that this historical sketch will have contributed
-to make clear the necessity of our attempt.
-
-
-[1] _De cive,_ c. i. § 10.
-
-[2] E. Albee, _A History of English Utilitarianism,_ London, 1902, pp.
-26-27.
-
-[3] _De cive,_ c. iii. § 33.
-
-[4] _Essay on Human Understanding,_ Book II. c. 28, § 7 _sqq._
-
-[5] _Gründl. d. Metaphys. d. Sitten,_ p. 70.
-
-[6] _Gründl,_ p. 36 _sq.; Kr. d. prakt. Vernft._ pp. 15, 21-28, 43,
-145; cf. _Metaph. d. Sitt._ pp. 208-209.
-
-[7] _Metaph. d. Sitt._ pp. 22, 23, 246.
-
-[8] _Gesch. d. Phil._ iii. p. 535.
-
-[9] La Rochefoucauld, _Maximes_ (ed. Gamier), nn. 159, 185, 224.
-
-[10] Wolf, _Psych, emp.,_ Frankfort and Leipzig, 1738, §§ 584, 880.
-
-[11] Croce, _Estetica,_ pp. 324-328.
-
-[12] _Kr. d. prakt. Vern._ pp. 79, 108.
-
-[13] _Tract. theol._ c. iv. § 7.
-
-[14] Cf. Croce, in De Sanctis, _Scritti vari_ (Napoli, 1898), i. pp.
-xiv-xvi, pref.
-
-[15] _Zum ewigen Friede,_ in _Werke_ (ed. Rosenkranz-Schubert), vol.
-vii. pt. i. p. 370.
-
-[16] _De uno univ. juris principio,_ § 46.
-
-[17] _Encykl._ § 474, and cf. other passages: _Phän. d. Geistes,_ pp.
-484-486; _Encykl._ § 474; _Phil. d. Rechtes,_ § 124; _Phil. d. Gesch._
-pp. 39-41.
-
-[18] _Gesch. d. Phil._ ii. pp. 405-6.
-
-[19] _System der Sittenlehre,_ p. 180 _sq._; cf. p. 15.
-
-[20] _Einleitung,_ § 82 (Italian transl. p. 102).
-
-[21] _Op. cit._ § 128 (It. tr. p. 172).
-
-[22] _Allg. prakt. Phil._ p. 35.
-
-[23] _Grundzüge der Ethik,_ §§ 12, 14.
-
-[24] _Gesch. d. neueren Philos._ (1796-1804), sect. iv. cap. 18 (Fr.
-tr., Paris, 1816, v. 432-753)
-
-[25] _Phil. d. Rechts,_ § 189 _sqq._
-
-[26] "L'Économie et la sociologie au point de vue scientifique" in
-_Rivistetele Scienza,_ i. (1907) 293, 312.
-
-[27] See M. Losacco, _Le dottrine edonistiche italiane del secolo
-XVIII_ (Napoli, 1902).
-
-[28] Galluppi, _Elementi di filosofia_ (Napoli, 1846), ii. 265-266, 406
-_sqq._
-
-
-
-
-SECOND SECTION
-
-
-THE ETHICAL PRINCIPLE
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-CRITIQUE OF MATERIAL AND OF FORMALISTIC ETHIC
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Various meanings of "formal" and "material."_]
-
-It is a much-disputed question whether the Principle of Ethic should be
-conceived as _formal_ or _material._ The question, already difficult in
-itself, has become yet more difficult, so as almost to cause despair
-of its solution, owing to the fact that those terms, "formal" and
-"material," are understood (as often happens in philosophy) in a double
-sense. Hence, those who win assent to their thesis as to the formality
-of the ethical principle are afterwards wont to avail themselves of
-this assent, in order stealthily to introduce another thesis, which,
-although it be also beneath the banner of the "formal," yet has nothing
-to do with the first and is as false as that is true. And since those
-who maintain the material principle do the same thing, both alike
-come to expose their flanks to one another's blows. In the process of
-unravelling this tangled skein, we shall begin by giving to those two
-words the meaning that they usually bear in philosophical terminology,
-meaning by "formal" the universal and by "material" the contingent. And
-in this signification we affirm, above all, that the principle of Ethic
-is _formal_ and certainly not _material._
-
-[Sidenote: _The ethical principle as formal (universal) and not
-material (contingent)._]
-
-Were it material, it would express itself by means of propositions
-indicating a single volition or a group of single volitions as the true
-and proper essence of the moral volition; and the moral activity would
-consist of a determinate action or of a determinate group of actions.
-But the moral act is always that which surpasses the single or the
-groups of singles: to will and to effect the single and the series of
-singles as such, does not appertain to the ethical, but to the merely
-economic form. He who loves things for things' sake (be they such, and
-as many as you will, of this or that kind, one, many, infinite) does
-not yet love the universal, which is everywhere, and is not exhausted
-in any particular thing, nor in any number of things, however immense.
-
-[Sidenote: _Reduction of material to utilitarian Ethic._]
-
-If we posit a material principle for Ethic, we relapse as a
-consequence into _utilitarianism,_ from which we thought we had
-escaped; because, after having asserted the universal, it is now
-determined, either as a single or (which amounts to the same thing) as
-a feigned universal, a simply general concept of group or series. This
-vicissitude, however, presents itself in every sphere of philosophy:
-when the universal and formal principle of that sphere is materialized,
-we return to the sphere immediately, below it. For example, an
-esthetic that posits as its principle certain single forms of art,
-thus substituting matter for form, relapses from art to life lived,
-which is the condition that precedes art and upon which art raises
-itself in order to intuite and to dominate life. Material Ethic has
-therefore been with reason discredited as heteronomous and utilitarian.
-Not indeed that it is so directly and admits itself so to be: on
-the contrary, it professes to be anti-utilitarian and does nothing
-directly, save to point to a given object as the true content of
-morality. But that object, being single, implies a merely utilitarian
-volition; and material Ethic is utilitarian, because, whatever it may
-do or say, it is logically reducible to utilitarianism.
-
-[Sidenote: _Rejection of material principles._]
-
-The rejection of all material character from the ethical principle
-is of the greatest importance, for it frees Ethic from a long series
-of concepts, each one of which has been proposed in turn as the true
-ethical principle, and several still find many supporters, both in
-ordinary thought and in treatises called scientific. For us, those
-concepts should not be examined comparatively, so as to arrive at
-preferring the one to the other, or a new one of the same type to all
-the concepts previously enunciated; but they are all false, for one and
-the same reason, as any other that may in future be excogitated will be
-false, if it contain in it anything material.
-
-[Sidenote: _Benevolence, love, altruism, etc.; and critique of them._]
-
-A first group of such material principles is found in relation to
-the general concept of an action, directed toward the welfare of
-individuals, other than the individual acting. Morality (they say)
-is _sacrifice of self, benevolence, love, altruism, compassion,
-humanitarianism,_ or simply _naturalism_ of the Franciscan sort,
-which commands us to respect, protect, and love the animals also,
-since they too are God's creatures (brother Wolf, sister Fox). Such
-formulæ, especially those of _benevolence and altruism,_ have been and
-continue to be successful; and hardly a doubt is harboured but that
-they determine in the most complete and satisfactory manner the proper
-principle of morality. But in truth _others,_ as individuals, have no
-rights that I too do not possess as an individual: I am another for
-the other, and he is an I for himself; and if each one provided for
-the good of others, neglecting and trampling upon his own good, the
-result would be perfectly identical to what would happen, were each one
-to provide for himself without concern for others. Morality demands
-the sacrifice of me for the universal end, but of me only in my merely
-individual ends; and, therefore, in this case, of me as of others. It
-has no particular animosity against me, so as to wish to sacrifice me
-at all costs to others. We must be severe, not only with ourselves, but
-with others also; exigent, not only with ourselves, but with others
-also; and so, on the contrary, benevolent not only toward others,
-but also toward ourselves; compassionate, not only toward others,
-but also towards this instrument of labour that we carry about with
-us and of which we sometimes demand too much; that is, our empirical
-individuality. Reality is neither democratic nor aristocratic, but
-both together; it abhors the privilege of some over others as much as
-that equality, according to which each one must have the same value
-as the other at every moment. All are in turn masters and servants;
-worthy of respect as bearers and representatives of good, worthy of
-punishment and reprehension as clouding and impeding the good. Morality
-never considers individuals in themselves, but always in their relation
-to the universal; and in this respect there is no one who does not
-deserve to be saved or to be suppressed; there is no animal or other
-being of any kind that should not now be favoured in its existence,
-now annihilated. No individual is treated as an _end,_ but all as
-_means_ for universal morality; and they only obtain the dignity of
-ends, in so far as they are means for universal morality. The rights of
-animals have been written for and against; but in truth, a lamb has now
-the duty of being slaughtered, now the right of being left in peace,
-according to circumstances; in the same way that a man has now the
-right to go for a walk with his friends and to sing serenades beneath
-the windows of fair ladies, now the duty of putting on a uniform and
-of betaking himself beneath the walls of a citadel, where he will be
-blown in pieces by the enemy's grape-shot. Altruism is as insipid as
-egoism, and is reducible at bottom to egoism; in much the same way as
-sensual love, which has justly been called "egoism for two." Indeed,
-why should we be ready to sacrifice ourselves for others, and to
-promote their desire in every case and in spite of everything? For what
-reason, save for the blind and irrational attachment to them which
-makes a man throw away his life or descend to abjection for a wicked
-woman furiously loved, suffer every shame and torment for an unworthy
-son, or yield to the impulses of sympathy inspired by an individual?
-This blind and irrational attachment to others is at bottom attachment
-to ourselves, to our nerves, to our fancies, to our convenience, to our
-habits. It is utility, not morality; for morality wills us to be ready
-to separate ourselves from others as from ourselves, when the occasion
-arises, to leave wives and sons and brothers, and follow duty which
-transcends them all. "Thou only, O ideal, art true,..." or rather, by
-means of the ideal and of the universal, all things are true; without
-the ideal, there is not one of them that does not become false, as
-there is not an organism that does not become vile clay, when abandoned
-by life.
-
-[Sidenote: _Social organism, State, interest of the race, etc. Critique
-of them._]
-
-There is another group of material principles which seems to surpass
-individuals, because it makes morality to consist of promoting either
-so-called _laws of nature_ or so-called _institutions._ Of such kind
-are those that place morality in the service of the _social organism
-and of the State, or of the interest of the Species and of Life_ (this
-being understood as animal life or very near to animality). But if it
-seem that contingent facts are thus escaped, that is not really so.
-For none of these concepts expresses the universality of the real, but
-this or that group of its particular manifestations: the life called
-social or political, this or that animal species, this or that vital
-manifestation. And none of these facts can be ethically willed without
-exceptions. The moral man sacrifices the State to the Church, or the
-Church to the State, atrophies certain organs and suppresses certain
-vital functions for universal ends, or for the ends of what is called
-civilization; he defends, preserves and increases certain aptitudes
-of the human race, but lets others disappear or modifies them, always
-adapting the interest of the species to that of the ideal. Were he to
-do otherwise, he would again be substituting utility for morality,
-his immediate affection for certain things or for certain single and
-individual facts, to the affection for them that should always be
-_mediated,_ that is to say, mediated by the universal.
-
-[Sidenote: _Material religious principles. Critique of them._]
-
-A third group of material principles, called religious, which make
-morality to consist of conforming to the will of God and of the
-gods, is not intrinsically different from these. Where the idea of
-the transcendental and of religious mystery is introduced, there is
-darkness; and anything can be put into darkness. In the first place,
-nothing but darkness itself can be put there, and in this case the
-religious solution is agnosticism, confession of ignorance, such as
-we have hitherto treated, in criticizing theological utilitarianism
-or abstract ethical rigorism, which, by means of its insoluble
-contradictions, also leads to the idea of God and of mystery. But one's
-own will, caprice and individual interests can also be put there;
-and then religion becomes attachment to a being or to an order of
-beings, which, though they be imaginary, are not for that reason less
-individual; attachment to them is love or fear, sympathy or fear of
-the evil they can do, and tendency to avoid it by propitiation with
-prayers, adulation, gifts, services, worship. Religious principles,
-then, understood as material principles, also become converted, as all
-know, and we may add, know all too well, into utilitarian principles;
-because, through intently fixing the gaze upon this aspect of religion,
-they have forgotten to look at others more important and certainly more
-noble.
-
-[Sidenote: _Formal principle as affirmation of a merely logical
-exigency._]
-
-The ethical principle is not adequately expressed, either by the
-_altruistic_ concept, or by that of _natural formations_ and of
-_institutions,_ or by that of the _gods;_ because all of these are
-general concepts, or sometimes merely individual representations; they
-are certainly not universal concepts. And by the necessity of the
-universal and the insufficiency of the merely general and individual,
-the ethical principle must be _formal_ and not _material._ However (and
-here we enter into the new meaning of this word and into the new debate
-announced), the formal ethical principle has likewise been understood
-as not susceptible of extension beyond the enunciation of the character
-of universality, which the principle itself should possess. Its formula
-has seemed to be nothing but that of a _universal law,_ to which all
-men can conform in complete harmony among themselves; of _respect
-towards all beings,_ in the degree that appertains to each, of that
-which satisfies _the exigencies of reason and of conscience,_ and so
-on. Now the formality claimed by this and similar formulæ has nothing
-to do with the formality first claimed; and since in the preceding
-debate we took the side of those who maintain formal as against
-material Ethic, so here we must defend material against formal Ethic;
-or better, an Ethic that is not material against an Ethic that is not
-formal, save in the pretentions of those who thus baptize it.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of a formal ethic in this sense: tautologism._]
-
-What does the formality of Ethic mean in the new sense? Nothing
-but this: that it is not necessary to inquire _what is the ethical
-principle,_ but that we must be satisfied with saying that _whatever
-it be, it must be universal._ But that it must be universal is a
-proposition which belongs, not to Ethic, but to Logic; the principles
-of all philosophical sciences must possess the character of
-universality, the logical as the æsthetic, the principle of Ethic as
-that of Economic, the moral categoric imperative as the utilitarian
-categoric. Thus the thesis of formality in the new meaning is reduced
-to placing at the head of Ethic, not the ethical principle, _but the
-logical exigency of the ethical principle,_ in the same way that a
-similar claim in Æsthetic would result in placing at the head of
-that science, not the formal æsthetic principle, as for example,
-Intuition-expression, but a formal æsthetic principle, the claim for
-a law, so made that no form of beauty could ever be excluded from
-it. Instead of constructing the science, the affirmation of logical
-necessity, which that construction must obey, is infinitely repeated;
-but the thesis of formality in the new sense would be better called the
-thesis of _tautologism._
-
-[Sidenote: _Tautological principles: ideal, chief good, duty, etc., and
-critique of them._]
-
-Besides the formulæ to which we have referred, namely those of the
-_categoric imperative, of the universal law, of the respect for being,
-of the rational and of conscience,_ the formulæ of the _chief good,
-of duty (or of law), of the ideal, of true pleasure, of constant
-pleasure, of spiritual pleasure, of personal dignity, of self-esteem,
-of the just mean, of harmony, of proportion, of justice, of perfection,
-of following nature,_ and so on, also belong to the tautological
-principles of Ethic; they are all tautologies, because they do not
-determine to what object those logical claims are applicable. To ask
-what is the form of will that produces a _constant, spiritual and
-true_ pleasure, which makes _perfect, gives self-esteem, satisfies our
-conscience, strikes the just mean,_ answers to what _ought_ to be done,
-attains to _the supreme good,_ and so on, is tantamount to asking,
-_What is the ethical form?_ This is precisely what must be answered,
-if we do not wish to fall into tautology, and the reply cannot be the
-question itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Tautological meaning of certain formulæ, material in
-appearance._]
-
-And it is convenient to note here that many of the formulæ that
-we have criticized as belonging to material Ethic, have also been
-frequently-employed as tautological formulæ, that is to say, as symbols
-and metaphors of the ethical truth to be determined. The _others,_ of
-which altruism speaks, are at bottom not others as physically distinct
-from us, but others in an ideal sense, that is, as duty surpassing
-the empirical ego; _God,_ of which religious Ethic speaks, is that
-indeterminate concept, that logical exigency, which is also called the
-_categoric imperative; the State or Life_ that one pledges oneself
-to serve is not this or that State, this or that particular form of
-life, but the symbol of the ideal; the _nature_ to be followed is that
-nature, or ethical principle within us, which the speculative reason
-must determine. Thus do material principles often progress, ceasing
-to be such, in order to become tautological, that is, abandoning the
-possession of undue determination, owing to the consciousness of a
-want, of a lacuna to be filled.
-
-[Sidenote: _Conversion of tautological Ethic into material and
-utilitarian Ethic._]
-
-The evil is that tautologism inevitably returns to that undue
-possession, because, imagining that it has established that ethical
-principle which it has not established at all, and that it has finally
-constructed Ethic, of which it has not even laid the foundations, it
-sets to work to explain moral and concrete facts by means of that
-empty form. The consequence of this is that utilitarian motives, as
-usual, fill the empty space. Why should we not violate a deposit that
-has been entrusted to us? Perhaps because (as they say) the moral law
-is a universal law? That does not suffice. Respect for the deposit
-cannot be deduced from this principle, for a universal law is equally
-thinkable, according to which is deduced in certain cases a respect for
-the deposit and in certain other cases the contrary. This then is the
-fact: that to restore a deposit confided to us may sometimes happen to
-be a bad action, as, for instance, to restore the weapon entrusted to
-us, when he who claims it intends to commit suicide or to assassinate.
-Thus it happens that not knowing how to put an end to the controversy
-in virtue of the true ethical principle, and wishing nevertheless in
-some way to use that empty formula, it comes to be filled with the only
-principle possessed, namely the utilitarian; and the reason given for
-respecting the deposit is said to be the desirability of respecting for
-engagements, for the ends of the individual, failing which (it will
-be said) no business would thenceforth be effected and the world of
-affairs would languish.
-
-[Sidenote: _In what sense Ethic should be formal and in what other
-sense material._]
-
-_Formal_ Ethic, in the new sense, or as it would be better called,
-tautological Ethic, might be called _formalistic,_ owing to its thus
-falling back into material, heteronomous and utilitarian Ethic, since
-_formalism_ here (as in Æsthetic and Logic) is the caricature of
-formality, and almost a sort of materiality. In maintaining _formal_
-Ethic we do not wish that it should be _formalistic_; that is, that it
-should be again covertly material. And we wish that formal Ethic should
-also be material, always understanding by this that it must give, not
-the mere logical condition of the ethical principle, but _this ethical
-principle itself_ in its concreteness, determining what moral volition
-is in its reality.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-THE ETHICAL FORM AS ACTUATION OF THE SPIRIT IN UNIVERSAL
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Tautological Ethic and its connection with Philosophy,
-either partial or discontinuous._]
-
-If the strange idea of an ethical principle that should be formal,
-in the sense of its not being known exactly what it is and how it is
-justified, has ever been able to arise, this is due to two erroneous
-philosophical conceptions, of which one can be called _partial,_ the
-other _discontinuous_ philosophy. According to the first conception,
-man is capable of knowing something of reality, certainly, but not
-all: he perceives and arranges the data of experience by means of the
-categories, but he is aware of the limitation of his thought and of the
-impossibility of attaining to the heart of the real, which he does, it
-is true, end by attaining in a certain way, but only with the heart,
-not with thought. This being stated, and coming to the case of Ethic,
-man hears the voice of conscience in himself, the command of the moral
-law; he cannot think of any sophism to escape it: but precisely what
-that law is, he is unable to say; the idea of a divine ordinance of
-the world which presents itself to his spirit, may also be affirmed by
-the heart, but never by thought. The second conception is confounded
-by some thinkers with the first and becomes partial philosophy or
-agnosticism; but if we observe closely, it is distinct from the other.
-For here it is not actually asserted that the foundation of morality
-is unknowable, but it is said to be unknowable in the circle of Ethic,
-or that such knowledge goes beyond that circle. Ethic establishes the
-moral law, deduces or arranges beneath it ethical precepts and by means
-of them judges single actions. Ethic is ignorant as to whether that
-law really exists, or what may be its precise universal content. It
-hands this problem over to Metaphysic, or to general Philosophy, which
-solves it in its own way, or is presumed to be capable of solving it.
-In this conception, then, there arises a question as to competence
-and hierarchy between thought and thought, between particular and
-general philosophy; whereas, in the former, is affirmed the absolute
-incompetence of thought.
-
-[Sidenote: _Rejection of both these conceptions._]
-
-But we do not run the risk of colliding with the obstacle placed
-before us with these philosophical views, because we have constantly
-rejected them both throughout the whole of our exposition of the
-Philosophy of the spirit and have demonstrated their falsity. Partial
-Philosophy is a contradictory concept: thought either thinks all
-or nothing; and if it had a limit it would have it as thought and
-therefore as surpassed. Whoso admits something unknowable, declares
-everything unknowable, and inevitably falls into total scepticism. Nor
-is the idea of a discontinuous philosophy divided into a whole and
-its parts, with the whole outside the parts and the parts outside the
-whole less inconceivable; so that, while Ethic is being studied, the
-whole (complete Philosophy) seems problematical; and a part (Ethic)
-can be known to some extent without knowing the whole (the whole
-of Philosophy). This is a false view, ultimately derived from the
-empirical sciences, in which it is possible to apprehend one order
-of phenomena independently of the others; and to apprehend phenomena
-without explicitly posing or by dismissing to another occasion the
-philosophical problem as to their truth. Philosophy is a circle and a
-unity and every point of it is intelligible only in relation to all the
-others. The didascalic convenience of exposing a group of philosophical
-problems separately from others--or also (if it please others, as
-it has not pleased us) of dividing the exposition into particular
-philosophical sciences, and into general Philosophy (also called
-Metaphysic)--should not lead to the misconception that the indivisible
-is really being divided. The whole of Philosophy is at once enunciated
-with the first philosophical proposition; and the others that come
-after will all be nothing but explanations of the first.
-
-[Sidenote: _The ethical form as volition of the universal._]
-
-Therefore, since we have never denied faith to thought, nor broken in
-pieces the unity of Philosophy, we have no secret to reveal at this
-point; not even a poor secret, like the exponents of discontinuous
-Philosophy, who solemnly make known at the end what they have assumed
-from the beginning. Our formal ethical principle is never empty form
-that must only now be filled with a content. It is full form, form
-in the philosophical and universal sense, which is also content and
-therefore universal content. We have not restricted ourselves to
-defining the ethical form as universal form, which would have resulted
-in tautologism; but we have defined it _volition of the universal,_
-thus distinguishing it from the economic form, which is simply volition
-of the individual. And if we now ask ourselves what is the universal,
-we must reply that the answer has already been given, and that whoever
-has not yet understood, whoever indeed has not understood it for some
-time, will never understand it. The universal has been the object of
-all our Philosophy of the Spirit, and we have always had to keep it
-before our eyes, in studying, not only the practical function, but
-any other function of the spirit; just as we cannot have the idea
-of the branch of a tree without the idea of the trunk from which it
-springs and without which there would not be the branch of a tree. That
-concept, then, is not a _deus ex machina_ to appear unexpectedly at the
-end of the play and hastily bring it to a conclusion, but the force
-that has animated it from the first to the last scene.
-
-[Sidenote: _The universal as the Spirit (Reality, Liberty, etc.)._]
-
-What is the universal? It is the Spirit, it is Reality, in so far as
-it is truly real, that is, in so far as it is unity of thought and
-willing; it is Life, in so far as realized in its profundity as this
-unity itself; it is Freedom, if a reality so conceived be perpetual
-development, creation, progress. Outside the Spirit nothing is
-thinkable in a truly universal form. Æsthetic, Logic, Historic, this
-very Philosophy of the practical, have demonstrated and confirmed
-this truth in every way. Every other concept brought forward reveals
-itself (and has revealed itself beneath our analysis), either as a
-feigned universal, or as something contingent that has been abstracted
-and generalized, or as the hypostasis of certain of our particular
-spiritual products, such as mathematical formulæ, or as the negation of
-the Spirit, on which is conferred positive value (first with metaphor
-and then with metaphysic).
-
-And the moral individual who wills the universal, or that which
-transcends him as an individual, turns precisely to the Spirit, to
-real Reality, to true Life, to Liberty. The universal is in concrete
-the universal individualized, and the individual is real in so far as
-he is also universal. He is not able to assert one part of himself
-without asserting the other (under the penalty of stopping half-way,
-_dimidiatus vir,_ and so of again becoming nothing). But in order to
-assert them both, he must first posit the one as explicit and the other
-as implicit, and then make the other also explicit. Man as economic
-individual, at the first moment (so to speak) of his revealing himself
-to life and to existence, cannot will, save individually: will his
-own individual existence. There is no man, however moral he be, who
-does not begin in this way. How could he ever surpass and finally
-deny his own individual life, if he had not first affirmed it and
-did not reaffirm it at every instant? But he who should stop at that
-affirmation of the individual, regarding the first stage of development
-as the resting-place, would enter into profound contradiction with
-himself. He should will, not only his own self individualized, but also
-that self, which, being in all selves, is their common Father. Thus he
-promotes the realization of the Real, lives a full life and makes his
-heart beat in harmony with the universe: _cor cordium._
-
-The moral individual has this consciousness of working for the Whole.
-Every action, however diverse, which conforms to ethical duty, conforms
-to Life; and if, instead of promoting Life, it should depress and
-mortify it, for that very reason it would be immoral. Where facts seem
-to demonstrate the contrary, the interpretation of facts is erroneous,
-since it affirms as a criterion of judgment a life which is not that
-true life, which, as we know, we serve even by dying--dying as an
-individual, as a collectivity, as a social class, or as a people. The
-most humble moral act can be resolved into this volition of the Spirit
-in universal. Thus it happens that the soul of a simple and ignorant
-man, altogether devoted to his rude duty, vibrates in unison with that
-of the philosopher, whose mind receives into it the universal Spirit:
-what the one thinks at that moment, the other does, thus attaining
-by his own path to that full satisfaction, that act of life, that
-fruitful conjunction with the Real, which the other has attained to by
-a different path. It may be said that the moral man is a _practical
-philosopher_ and the philosopher a _theoretic actor._
-
-[Sidenote: _Moral acts as volitions of the Spirit._]
-
-This criterion of the Spirit, of Progress, of Reality, is the intimate
-measure of our acts in the moral conscience, as it is the foundation,
-more or less clearly expressed, of our moral judgments. Why do we exalt
-Giordano Bruno, who allowed himself to be condemned to the stake for
-asserting his philosophy? Perhaps for the calmness with which he faced
-the torture? But many fanatics, even malefactors, are capable of this,
-and it may sometimes even be a simple sensual desire, of which we
-have seen examples in history and of which a modern Italian poet has
-lately sung, exalting the beauty of the flame and the voluptuousness of
-the pyre. By facing death and refusing to deny his philosophy, Bruno
-contributed to the creation of a larger form of civilization, and
-for this reason he is not only a victim, but also a _martyr,_ in the
-etymological sense of the word: witness and realizer of a demand of
-the Spirit in universal.--Why do we praise the charitable man? Perhaps
-because he yields to the emotion caused by the spectacle of suffering.
-But emotion in itself is neither moral nor immoral, and thus to yield
-to it materially is weakness, that is, immorality. The charitable man,
-when he removes or mitigates suffering, relights a life and reconquers
-a force for the common work, which both he and the person whom he has
-benefited, must serve.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of antimoralism._]
-
-There is indeed nothing more foolish than antimoralism, so much the
-fashion in our day; it is an ugly echo of unhealthy social conditions,
-of one-sided theories ill understood (Marxism, Nietzscheianism).
-Antimoralism is justified, in so far as it combats moral hypocrisy
-in favour of effective morality instead of that of mere words, but
-it loses all meaning when it inflates empty phrases or combines
-contradictory propositions and preaches against morality itself. By so
-doing, it thinks to celebrate strength, health and freedom, but on the
-contrary exalts servitude to unbridled passions, the apparent health of
-the invalid and the apparent strength of the maniac. Morality (begging
-pardon of literary immoralists), far from being a pedantic fiction or
-the consolation of the impotent, is _good blood against bad blood._
-
-[Sidenote: _Confused tendencies of tautological, material, religious
-formulæ, etc., toward the Ethic of the Spirit._]
-
-We must also declare that this truth concerning the ethical principle
-understood as will that has for its end the universal or the Spirit,
-is to some extent confirmed by several of the formulæ that we have
-criticized, which have erred only in defining it, either confusing
-altogether the universal and the contingent, or have fallen into
-tautologism. Those who posit Life, or the interest of the Species,
-Society or the State, as the end of morality, have in view that Life,
-that Species, that Society, or that ideal State, which is the Spirit
-in universal, although they are not able to define it clearly. The
-same may be said of other formulæ, which often have a better intention
-at starting than that realized in the development of the relative
-doctrines, or, on the contrary, a development superior to their bad
-initial intention.
-
-[Sidenote: _The Ethic of the Spirit and religious Ethic._]
-
-This function of symbol possessed by idealist Ethic, this
-affirmation that the moral act is love and volition of the Spirit
-in universal, is to be found above all in religious and Christian
-Ethic, in the Ethic of love and of the anxious search for the divine
-presence. This is the fundamental characteristic of religious Ethic,
-which remains unknown to vulgar rationalists and intellectualists, to
-so-called free-thinkers, and to frequenters of masonic lodges, owing to
-their narrow party passion or lack of mental subtlety. There is hardly
-an ethical truth (and we have already had occasion to refer to this
-matter) that cannot be expressed with the words that we have learned
-as children from traditional religion, and which rise spontaneously
-to the lips, as the most elevated, the most appropriate and the most
-beautiful; words which are certainly impregnated with mythology, but
-are also weighty with profound philosophical content. There is without
-doubt an exceedingly strong antithesis between the idealist philosopher
-and the religious individual, but it is not greater than that within
-ourselves, when, in the imminence of a crisis, we are divided in
-soul and yet very near to unity and to interior conciliation. If the
-religious man cannot but see in the philosopher his adversary, his
-mortal foe, the philosopher, on the other hand, sees in him his younger
-brother, his very self of a moment past. Hence he will feel himself
-more nearly allied to an austere, emotional, religious Ethic, troubled
-with phantoms, than to an Ethic that is superficially rationalistic:
-for this latter is only in appearance more philosophical than the
-other, since if it possess the merit of recognizing (verbally only, or
-with _psittacism,_ as Leibnitz would have said) the supreme rights of
-reason, yet in plucking thought from the soil in which it has grown and
-depriving it of vital sap, it exercises them very ill.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-HISTORICAL NOTES
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Merit of the Kantian Ethic._]
-
-I. It is the singular merit of Kant to have put an end, once for all,
-to every material Ethic, by proving its utilitarian character: a
-merit that is not cancelled by the lacunæ that exist in other parts
-of his thought, entangling him unawares in the materialism and in the
-utilitarianism that he had surpassed. It would be anti-historical to
-desire to judge a thinker by the contradictions into which he falls
-and so to declare his work to be a failure and of no importance, when
-it is only imperfect. There are errors in all the works of man, and
-error is always contradiction; but he who has the eye of the historian
-discovers where lies the true strength of a thought and does not deny
-the light, because of necessity accompanied with shadow. Before Kant,
-ethic was either openly utilitarian or such that although presenting
-itself in the deceitful form of Ethic of sympathy, or religious Ethic,
-was yet reducible to utilitarianism. Kant conducted an implacable and
-destructive war, not only against admitted utilitarian forms, but also
-against those that were masked and spurious, called by him material
-Ethic.
-
-[Sidenote: _The predecessors of Kant._]
-
-In this too, his predecessors are to be found in traditional philosophy
-of Christian origin, or, if it be preferred, Platonic (opposition
-of material to formal Ethic can already be observed in the attitude
-of Aristotle to Plato). If the fathers and the scholastics had been
-divided as to the question of the relation between moral laws and the
-divine will, and many of them, especially the mystics, had made that
-law to depend upon the divine will and upon nothing else, yet views
-had not been wanting, according to which the power of changing at
-will the moral laws, that is to say, of changing his own essence, was
-denied to God, since he could not be _supra se._ Religious Ethic was
-cleansed of every admixture of arbitrarism and utilitarianism by this
-solution, accepted by nearly all religious thinkers of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries (by Cudworth, by Malebranche, and finally by
-Leibnitz). On the other hand, we cannot but recognize that many other
-material formulæ used to be understood in an ideal, or, as we have
-said, in a symbolical manner; and certainly that very eudæmonism
-of Aristotle, toward which Kant showed himself too severe, was not
-the pleasure and happiness of the hedonists and utilitarians, and the
-mediety (μεσότης) proposed as the distinctive character of virtue,
-although without doubt empty and often incoherent, was already almost
-a formal principle. The same is to be said of the Stoic principle of
-_following nature_; and coming to the immediate predecessors of Kant,
-of that _perfectio_ already mentioned, which Kant, after wavering a
-little, reduced to happiness, not, however, without stating that it is
-a more indeterminate concept than any other. With Kant, however, the
-point was admitted, that the moral law is not to be expressed in any
-formula, which contains representative and contingent elements.
-
-[Sidenote: _Defect of that Ethic: agnosticism._]
-
-The defect of the Kantian Ethic is the defect of his whole philosophy:
-agnosticism, which prevents his truly surpassing either the phenomenon
-or the thing in itself, leading him, on the one hand, toward
-empiricism, on the other toward that transcendental metaphysic, which
-no one had done more to discredit than himself. He combated the concept
-of the good or supreme good as the principle of Ethic, and he was right
-in so far as he understood it as object of any sort, of "a good," as of
-a "thing." But this did not exempt him from the duty of defining the
-supreme good as that which is not exhausted in any particular object,
-or of determining the universal. Now his philosophy was incapable of
-attaining to the universal.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of Hegel and of others._]
-
-Hence the involuntary return to utilitarianism, clearly stated by Hegel
-in his youthful essay upon natural Right. The practical principle of
-Kant (remarked Hegel) is not a true but a negative absolute; hence
-with him the principle of morality becomes converted into immorality:
-since every fact can be thought in the form of universality, it is
-never known what fact should be received into the law. In the famous
-example of the deposit, Kant had said that it is necessary to keep
-faith as regards the deposit, otherwise there would no longer be
-deposits.[1] But if there were no more deposits, how would this
-constitute a contradiction to the form of the law? There would perhaps
-be contradiction and absurdity for material reasons, but it is already
-agreed that this is not to be brought up in the argument. Kant wishes
-to justify property, but he does not attain to more than the tautology,
-that property, if it be property, must be property, opening the way
-to the free choice of conceiving at will as duties these or those
-contingent definitions of property. The moral maxims of Kant, owing to
-the empirical determinations that they assume, are contradictory, not
-only of one another, but of themselves. This inevitable degeneration
-of the Kantian Ethic was called by Hegel _tautology and formalism_.[2]
-Other thinkers were also affected by the utilitarianism of the
-Kantian Ethic: Schopenhauer even declared that his doctrine has no
-other foundation than egoism, since it can be reduced to the concept
-of reciprocity, and he protested against the Kantian theory that we
-should be compassionate to animals, in order to exercize ourselves
-in the virtue of compassion, judging it to be the effect of the
-Judæo-Christian views of Kant.[3] Schopenhauer was in some respect
-right in these observations, although as regards animals we must note
-that the same attitude is found in Spinoza and in other thinkers and
-that it derives from material and utilitarian Ethic; and for the rest
-that it would be very unjust to see nothing but egoism in the categoric
-imperative of Kant, for this, we repeat, though it constitute its
-danger, does not constitute its essential character.
-
-[Sidenote: _Kant and the concept of freedom._]
-
-Nevertheless, in Kant himself, in this thinker, so rich in
-contradictions and suggestions, was indicated the concept which, when
-elaborated, was to constitute the principle, not merely of tautological
-and formalistic, but of concrete and formal Ethic, the concept of
-_freedom._ By means of this concept Kant enters into the heart of the
-real and reaches that region of which mysticism and religion had from
-time to time caught a glimpse and had here and there attained. As the
-origin of the rigid Kantian ethical conception and of his abhorrence
-for the material and mundane is to be found in Christianity (and in
-Paganism), so the origin of the concrete moral idea is to be sought in
-St. Augustine, and also in St. Paul, in the mystics and in the great
-French Christians of the seventeenth century; in that virtue of which
-Pascal wrote as _plus haute que celle des pharisiens et des plus sages
-du paganisme,_ and it operates with omnipotent hand, by means of which
-alone is it possible _dégager l'âme de l'amour du monde, la retirer
-de ce quelle a de plus cher, la faire mourir à soi-même, la porter et
-l'attacher uniquement et invariablement à Dieu._[4] The successors
-of Kant, especially Fichte and Hegel, closed the circle which he had
-left open, and altogether excluding transcendency, they made of God
-freedom and of freedom reality. Fichte, who expelled the phantom of the
-thing in itself from theoretical philosophy, removed from the categoric
-imperative the appearance of _qualitas occulta,_ which it had borne in
-the Philosophy of the practical, illuminating that tenebrous region,
-ready to receive any sort of phantasm or superstition, such as belief
-in a moral law arbitrarily imposed by the divinity.[5] Hegel does not
-recognize duty and the categoric imperative, but freedom only, and as
-he says, the free spirit is that in which subject and object coincide
-and freedom is freely willed.
-
-[Sidenote: _Ethic in the nineteenth century._]
-
-II. After the classical epoch of modern philosophy, in the general
-regression of Ethic, the concept of the concreteness and universality
-of the practical principle was also lost. Omitting the utilitarians,
-who no longer have a place here, it must suffice to record how there
-was a return either to the formalistic principles, which Hegel
-criticized in Kant (for instance the principle of the Ethic of Rosmini,
-the _respect for being,_ afterwards combated by Gioberti), or directly
-to those material principles which Kant had already excluded. Such
-are the _compassion_ of Schopenhauer, the _five practical ideas_ of
-Herbart, the love of Feuerbach, _benevolence_ as the supreme ethical
-idea of Lotze, the _theological_ morality of Baader, the _life_ of
-Nietzsche, and the like.
-
-The principles of the first were completed with a religious conception
-(here too Rosmini may afford an example), and those of the second, when
-they did not reveal themselves as utilitarian or tautological, showed
-an obscure tendency toward the Ethic of Freedom. This must not be
-overlooked in the Ethic of Nietzsche, which despite the rocks and mud
-that the thought of Nietzsche drags with it, is yet anti-hedonistic and
-anti-utilitarian and quite full of the sense of Life as activity and
-power. Positivistic evolutionism is also often unconscious idealism;
-and the moral actions, united to evolution, can be interpreted as
-those which correspond to the Spirit in universal. The concepts of the
-pessimists alone are altogether incapable of idealistic interpretation
-(for example, Schopenhauer), and those of the semi-pessimist and
-semi-idealist Hartmann are strangely contradictory. He makes morality
-to consist of the promotion of civilization, whence so lofty a
-condition of the spirit can be attained that it will be possible to
-decree universal suicide by means of the vote of all the world.
-
-The question asked after Kant, whether Ethic should be formal
-or material, is one that we have made more precise in the other
-form, whether Ethic should be abstract or concrete, full or empty,
-tautological or expressive--that is (with even greater precision),
-whether Ethic can be established before and without a philosophical
-system and even be reconciled with agnosticism, has no longer been
-understood, even by its pretended followers, the Neocriticists or
-Neokantians. These have either believed they had solved it by means of
-moderate utilitarianism, or by going outside it and denying the most
-secure result of the Kantian critique of Ethic; or they have discussed
-it tiresomely, without making a step in advance. Progress indeed was
-possible on one condition alone: that a philosophical system should
-be constructed not inferior to that of the postkantian idealists. But
-this would have been tantamount to demanding the death of neokantianism
-or neocriticism, which has not only not attempted to surpass the
-idealistic systems, but has even maintained that we should philosophize
-without a system, declaring that a system is altogether inconceivable.
-The Neokantians can thus be recognized as the descendants of Kant; but
-in the same way as the last descendant of the Hapsburgs in Spain,
-who was neither emperor, king, soldier, nor man, could be recognized
-as the descendant of Charles the Fifth, who was man, soldier, king,
-and emperor: because, like his great predecessor, he possessed the
-deformed, hanging lip of the Hapsburgs.
-
-
-[1] _Krit. d. prakt. Vern._ pp. 30-31.
-
-[2] _Ueb. d. wissensch. Behandlungsarten d. Naturrechts,_ in _Werke,_
-i. 353; cf. _Gesch. d. Phil._ iii. 533 sqq.
-
-[3] _Gründl, d. Moral,_ in _Werke,_ ed. cit., iii. 538, 542-543.
-
-[4] _Lettres prov._ 1. 5.
-
-[5] _System d. Sittenlehre,_ pp. 49-51.
-
-
-
-
-THIRD PART
-
-
-LAWS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-LAWS AS PRODUCTS OF THE INDIVIDUAL
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Definition of law._]
-
-_Law_ is a volitional act, which has for content a _series_ or _class_
-of actions.
-
-[Sidenote: _Philosophical and empirical concepts of society._]
-
-This definition excludes above all from the concept of law a
-determination that is generally considered essential to it, the
-determination of _society_; this amounts to saying that it also extends
-the concept of law to the case of the _isolated individual._ But in
-order that there may be no misunderstanding in relation to a point
-like this of the highest importance, it will be well to show that the
-word "society" has a double meaning, philosophical and empirical, and
-if we exclude its empirical sense from the concept of law, it would
-neither be possible nor our wish, to exclude its philosophical sense.
-Reality is unity and multiplicity together, and an individual is
-conceivable, in so far as he is compared with other individuals, and
-the process of reality is effective, in so far as individuals enter
-into relations with one another. Without multiplicity there would not
-be knowledge, action, art or thought, utility or morality; therefore
-the isolated individual, torn from the reality that constitutes him
-and that he constitutes, is something abstract and absurd. But he
-is no longer absurd, when understood in another way, with polemical
-intention against a false concept; as an individual not absolutely,
-but relatively isolated, in respect to certain contingent conditions
-which had wrongly been held essential: in which case the concept of
-society is conversely itself abstract and unreal. "Society," indeed,
-is also used to mean a multiplicity of beings of the same species, and
-it is evident that here an arbitrary element enters into the problem,
-for the naturalistic concept of sameness of species is arbitrary
-and approximative; hence the pretended sameness might fail and the
-society yet exist all the same. A man may not be able to find those
-who resemble him among a multitude of men and conduct himself as if
-they did not exist; but this does not prevent his living in the society
-of beings that are called natural, with his dog, his horse, with
-plants, with the earth, with the dead and with God. When he is placed
-in solitude or isolated from the other beings, said to belong to the
-same species as himself, that other society, or the communion with
-what remains to him of reality, will always continue, thus enabling
-him to continue his life of contemplation, of thought, of action and
-of morality. In order to understand the Spirit in its universality,
-we must separate it from contingencies, and society in the empirical
-sense is contingency, which the concept of the isolated individual
-(isolated from it and not from reality, from the _societas hominum,_
-not from the _societas entium_), enables us to surpass. The great
-services which this concept has rendered to Logic, to Æsthetic and
-especially to Economy, are known, for the latter only began to develop
-the philosophical spirit in itself, when it conceived economic facts
-as they take place in the individual, prior to what is called society,
-thus positing the concept of an isolated economy. Conversely, Economic,
-Æsthetic, Ethic and all philosophical problems and sciences lost their
-true nature and became bastardized, when gross _sociologism_ replaced
-among social contingencies those universals, which philosophers had
-with great labour removed from them and thought in their purity.
-Defining laws, then, as facts that occur, not only in society,
-but also in the isolated individual, our intention is simply to
-concentrate attention upon the concept of _true society,_ which is _all
-reality,_ and not allow it to be diverted and confused with accidental
-determinations, of the kind that may and may not be.
-
-[Sidenote: _Laws as individual product: programmes of individual life._]
-
-No great art is required to find instances of individuals who make
-laws for themselves, carry them out and change them, grant rewards to
-themselves and inflict upon themselves punishments; nor is there any
-need to incommode the worthy Robinson of the economists to this end.
-Without being obliged to make the effort of imagining ourselves cast
-upon a desert island and provided only with a sack of corn and the
-Bible, it suffices to have eyes and to observe our daily life, for
-numbers of examples of internal legislation to present themselves.
-Those laws, made for our use and consumption, are called _programmes
-of life._ Who can live without programmes? Who does not decide that he
-will desire certain actions and avoid certain others? From youth onward
-we begin to legislate in this way and this production of internal laws
-is interrupted only by death. We say, for instance:--"I shall devote
-my life to agriculture: I shall live in the country every year from
-June to November; from December to February I shall come to town,
-that I may not lose touch with political or social life; from March
-to May I shall travel, for pleasure and instruction." This programme
-is subdivided and completed with other programmes, according to the
-various conditions and possibilities taken into consideration; and laws
-are established as to the way one should conduct oneself in respect to
-religion, family, friends, the State, the Church and also in respect to
-this or that individual; for (as is observed by Logic) the individual
-conceived as a fixed being, also becomes a concept, abstraction, group,
-series, or class. He who wished it, would be able to establish a
-parallel between programmes or individual laws and laws that are called
-social: in the individual would be found fundamental statutes, laws,
-rules, ordinances, temporary arrangements, contracts, single laws and
-all the other legal forms found in societies. Now in what conceivable
-way do the programmes of the individual differ from those of society?
-Are not those laws _programmes,_ and are not those programmes _laws?_
-
-[Sidenote: _Exclusion of the character of compulsion and critique of
-this concept._]
-
-To this interrogation of ours, which does not express a doubt within
-us, but states what seems to be an undeniable fact, defying any sort
-of contradiction, may be objected (and it is a common objection)
-that there is a great difference between individual laws and those of
-society or of the State: these are compulsory, those are not; and for
-this reason these are true laws, while the others are mere programmes.
-But we cannot attach any importance to this objection, at least as thus
-formulated; because, having now traversed the whole of the Philosophy
-of the practical, general, and special, we have never met with what
-is called compulsion in the circle of willing and doing, save in the
-negative sense of deficiency of will and action. No action can ever
-be compulsory; every action is free, because the Spirit is freedom;
-there may not be action in a certain case, but a compulsory action
-is inconceivable, since it is a question of terms that exclude one
-another. Does the fact give the lie to our assertion? Let us examine
-the fact for a little, face to face and without preconceptions. Let us
-for this purpose take an extreme case: for instance, that of the law of
-a most powerful despot, who, being in command of police, should order a
-group of men to bring their first-born to sacrifice to the god in whom
-he believes, but they do not. Are the men who hear this manifestation
-of will constrained by it? What menace can make him who wishes to say
-no, say yes? That group of men will rebel, will take up arms, will
-rout the troops of the despot, will put him to death, or render him
-incapable of harming; and in this hypothesis the law will not reveal
-any character, of compulsion. But in the other hypothesis also, where
-they do not rebel and in the meantime bow to the will of the despot,
-either that they may not risk their own lives, or because they defer
-their rebellion to a more propitious moment and consign their sons
-to death; they will not have suffered any compulsion, but will have
-freely willed: they will have willed to preserve their own lives at
-the expense of their sons'; or to sacrifice some of them in order to
-have the time to put themselves into such a position that they may be
-able to rebel with the hope of victory. Thus we find in social laws,
-now observance, now inobservance of the law; but both occur in freedom.
-Inobservance may be followed by what is called punishment (that is to
-say, the legislator who has imposed a given class of actions, will
-adopt certain definite measures against those who do not obey them; to
-wit: he will will another class of actions, destined to render possible
-the first, because the punishment is a new condition of things set
-before the individual, according to which he must alter his previous
-mode of action); but the punishment always finds itself face to face
-with the freedom of the individual. He will be able freely to observe
-the law in order to avoid the punishment or its recurrence; but he will
-also be able freely to rebel against it, as in the instance adduced.
-
-[Sidenote: _Identical characteristics of individual and social laws._]
-
-If compulsion be wanting to individual laws, this is because it is
-also always wanting to social laws: while, on the contrary, what is
-really present in social laws is equally present in the observances and
-rebellions, rewards and punishments of individual laws.
-
-To return to the former example: the individual who has decided to
-devote himself to agriculture as programme of life, may be seized
-all of a sudden with a great desire to devote himself to painting or
-to music; and what had previously pleased may henceforward displease
-him: that intimacy with mother earth, with harvests and vintages,
-which seemed to be the very life for him, his true ideal, may come to
-seem to him tiresome and repugnant. But if he be a serious person,
-if he do not will and not will at every moment, if he do not present
-in his own individuality a complete resemblance to those peoples
-who change in mid-November the laws made in October and proceed
-from revolution to revolution, he will examine his situation and
-will recognize, for instance, that the desire arisen in his soul is
-a velleity that does not answer to his true vocation and that the
-first programme must remain intact; hence will take place in him a
-struggle between that programme and the new rebellious volition. It
-may happen that in this case the individual will sometimes neglect
-the programme traced, in order to abandon himself to the temptations
-of his pictorial or musical dilettanteism; but since this will happen
-against his individual law, and since force must remain on the side of
-law, this breach of observance will be followed by special measures,
-such as the throwing away of brushes and violin, or by his forbidding
-to himself those moments of recreation in such amusements, which he
-used to allow himself and which have now become dangerous. In other
-words, the individual inflicts punishments on himself in case of the
-non-observance of his law, and these punishments must be held to be
-such in the strictest sense of the term. And if we accept the other
-hypothesis, analogous to that made in the case of social laws, should
-the individual find himself possessed with so vehement a desire of
-becoming a painter or a musician, as to be compelled to believe that
-the original programme, the original law of his individuality, did
-not correspond, or no longer corresponded with his true temperament,
-he will rebel against the law and destroy it in himself, in the same
-manner as in the other example the people destroyed the law of the
-despot, by fighting with him, imprisoning, or slaying him.
-
-[Sidenote: _Individual laws as in ultimate analysis alone real._]
-
-Individual programmes or laws then are laws, and this concept includes
-the isolated individual as well as society; and therefore the character
-of sociality is not essential to the concept of law. Thus, to be more
-precise, the only laws that really exist are individual laws and it is
-not possible to conceive of social and individual laws as two forms
-of the general concept of laws; unless individual and society be both
-understood in the empirical sense, thus abandoning philosophical
-consideration. If the individual be understood in the philosophical
-sense, in which he is the Spirit concrete and individualized, it
-is clear that what are called social laws can also be reduced to
-individual laws; because, in order to observe a law, we must make
-it our own, that is to say, individualize it, and in order to rebel
-against it, we must expel it from our own personality, in which it
-wished unduly to remain or to introduce itself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the division of laws into judicial and social
-and into their sub-classes. Empiricity of every division of laws._]
-
-The exclusion of the character of sociality from the concept of law
-frees philosophy from a series of problems, grafted upon that pretended
-character. The principal of these was that of the distinction of social
-laws into political and judicial, on the one hand and merely social
-on the other; and the further distinction of judicial law into public
-and private, civil and penal, national and international, into laws
-properly so called and regulations, and so on. If the concept itself of
-social law be empirical, then all the distinctions and sub-distinctions
-of it proposed must also be empirical, and altogether without
-philosophical value. So true is this that it is impossible to decide
-for one distinction or definition against another, or to correct those
-hitherto given by proposing new ones. Whoever undertakes to examine
-any one of these distinctions, at once realizes the aphilosophical
-character affirmed of them _a priori._ Thus judicial or political laws
-have been distinguished from the merely social, with the affirmation
-that those are compulsory, these conventional; whereas compulsion is
-impossible in both cases, for the reasons given, and if by compulsion
-be meant the threat of a penalty, this is to be found in merely social
-laws, not less than in judicial. The law against the falsification
-of public money is usually described as judicial: he who falsifies
-it runs the risk of undergoing some years' imprisonment. It is a law
-called social that we must answer a salutation with a salutation: he
-who does not do this runs the risk of being held ill-bred and excluded
-from the society of the well-bred. What essential difference is there
-between the two laws? An attempt has been made to differentiate them by
-saying that the former has emanated from and is sustained by a _supreme
-power,_ vigilant as to its observance, the second from particular
-circles of individuals. But where is the seat of this supreme power?
-Certainly not in a superindividual, who dominates individuals, but in
-individuals themselves. And in this case its power and value correspond
-with the power of the individuals who compose it; that is to say,
-it is the law of a circle, empirically considered to be larger and
-stronger, but whose volitions are realized in so far as the individuals
-composing it spontaneously conform to them, because they recognize the
-convenience of doing so. Monarchs who believed themselves to be most
-powerful, have realized at certain moments that the power did not at
-all reside in their persons or title, but in a universal consensus
-of opinion, failing which their power vanished, or was reduced to a
-gesture of solitary command, not far removed from the ridiculous. Laws
-that seem to be excellent remain unapplied, because they meet with
-tacit general resistance, or as is said, do not accord with custom:
-this should suffice to enlighten the mind as to the inseverable unity
-of what is called the State and what is called society. The State
-is not a being, but a mobile complex of varied relations between
-individuals. It may be convenient to limit this complex as well as
-possible, to make a being of it to oppose other complexes: of this
-there can be no doubt; and let us leave to jurists the excogitation
-of these and other similar distinctions, fictitious but opportune;
-nor let us consider that their work should be declared in the least
-absurd. We only say that it must not be forgotten that the fictitious
-is fictitious, as is the claim made to reason about it as rational
-and philosophical, and to fill volumes and volumes with tiresome
-disquisitions, which are necessarily vain, though the distinctions that
-form their object are not vain in their circle. We who are not jurists
-but philosophers, and to whom it is therefore not permitted to produce
-and adopt practical distinctions, must conceive as laws and include
-equally in the same category, alike the English _Magna Charta_ and
-the statute of the Sicilian _Mafia,_ or of the Neapolitan _Camorra;_
-the _Regula monachorum_ of Saint Benedict and that of the _brigata
-spendereccia_ that was sung in sonnets by Folgore di San Geminiano and
-Cene della Chitarra and is recorded by Dante in the _Inferno;_ the
-canon law and the military code, and that _droit parisien,_ which a
-certain personage of Balzac had studied for three years in the blue
-boudoir of one lady and in the rosy drawing-room of another, and which,
-although no one ever speaks of it, yet constitutes (says the great
-novelist) _une haute jurisprudence sociale, qui, bien apprise et bien
-pratiquée, mène à tout._[1] What more can be said? Even those _literary
-and artistic laws are laws_ which express the will to produce works,
-possessing this or that other kind of argument and arrangement, as
-would be the law that drama should be divided into five or three acts
-or _days,_ and that romances must not exceed four or five hundred
-pages, 16mo, and that a monumental statue must be nude or heroically
-clad. It is evident that if anybody violate these laws, he may be
-excluded (and he was indeed excluded) from the academies of good
-taste, which did not prevent his being received for that very reason
-into the anti-academies of the independents: in just the same way as
-to have incurred punishments announced by the penal code is a title of
-admission to certain criminal societies.
-
-[Sidenote: _Extension of the concept of law._]
-
-These examples that we have selected among the most extraordinary
-and the most apt to scandalize, help to make it quite clear that the
-concept of law must be taken in its full logical extension, when
-we wish to philosophize about it. Among the many obstacles that
-philosophy meets with is a curious sort of false shame, which looks
-upon contact with certain arguments as injurious to the dignity of
-philosophy: a contact which is avoided by arbitrarily narrowing and
-therefore falsifying philosophical concepts. That of law especially
-has a tradition of _solemnity,_ and brings with it associations that
-must be broken in pieces. Otherwise it is impossible even to understand
-what are those _firm and unwritten laws_ of the gods, which Antigone
-opposed to the decrees of men and how they exercise their efficiency;
-or _the sayings of Lacedaemon,_ in obedience to which fell the three
-hundred at Thermopylae; or _the laws of the fatherland,_ which, with
-their irresistible authority, caused Socrates to remain at the moment
-when others counselled and facilitated his flight. Life is composed of
-big and little actions, of least and greatest, or better, of a very
-dense web of very diverse actions; and it is not a too brilliant idea
-to cut that web in pieces and to throw away some of the pieces as less
-beautiful, in order afterwards to contemplate in those pieces only that
-have been thus selected, cut out and disconnected, the web that no
-longer exists.
-
-
-[1] Balzac, _Le Père Goriot_ (ed. Paris, Calman Lévy, 1891), p. 85.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-THE CONSTITUTIVE ELEMENTS OF LAWS. CRITIQUE OF PERMISSIVE LAWS AND OF
-NATURAL LAW
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The volitional character and the character of class._]
-
-The undue restrictions and empirical divisions of the concept of
-laws having been destroyed, if our attention be now directed to the
-character that has been determined as properly belonging to them,
-we have the means of distinguishing them from the other spiritual
-forms with which they are often confused, partly as the result of the
-metaphors and homonyms usual in ordinary speech. Laws, as has been
-said, are _volitional acts_ concerning _classes_ of actions. Therefore,
-where the volitional element or the element of class is wanting, there
-cannot be law, save in name and by metaphor.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Distinction of laws from the so-called laws of nature.]
-
-So-called _laws of nature_ or _naturalistic laws_ are not laws,
-owing to the absence of the volitional element: they consist of
-simple enunciations of relations between empirical concepts, that
-is, of rules. This is an instance of what is called a natural law:
-platinum melts at a temperature of 1780 degrees; or this other of a
-grammatical law: that in the Greek language masculine nouns of the
-second declension have the genitive in _ου_(with exceptions, in this
-as in the other case). But they are laws in about the same way as
-the King of Cups is king; and indeed it is known historically that
-this denomination was transported by the Stoics from the domain of
-politics, where it had first appeared, to that of nature. Empirical
-concepts and rules may, as we know, assume an imperative literary form;
-hence it will be said: "If you wish to melt platinum, heat it to 1780
-degrees"; "If you wish to speak Greek, decline masculine nouns of the
-second declension with an _ου_ in the genitive." But the literary form
-does not change anything of their true nature: those imperatives are
-hypothetical imperatives, that is, false imperatives, improper laws.
-Grammatical and chemical laws will remain mere formulæ, instruments
-of knowledge, and not at all of action, until some one obliges me or
-I oblige myself to talk Greek, or to open a chemical laboratory where
-platinum is melted. The jurist who elaborates cases and rules is not
-the legislator: the latter alone (with a sword in one hand) can endow
-the excogitations cf the other with the character of law.
-
-[Sidenote: _Implication of the second in the first._]
-
-Certainly an act of will is necessary in order to construct empirical
-concepts, formulæ, and rules (as indeed we know), an act of will
-which is not that of the will implied in every act of thought, but
-is a special and explicit act which, by manipulating representations
-and concepts, makes a _quid medium,_ which is neither representation
-nor concept, and although altogether irrational from the theoretical
-point of view, is of use in the economy of the spirit. But the law in
-its true meaning is a volitional act, which _assumes_ that primary
-volitional act whence are formed the pseudo-concepts or concepts of
-class _as already completed;_ precisely because it is the will which
-has for its _object_ a _class_ of objects. It is not possible to
-impose speaking according to the rule of the Greek language, or to
-melt platinum according to its chemical formula, before these rules
-have been laid down. And here appears very clearly the difference
-between those two kinds of spiritual products, which the imperative
-literary form, given to classes and rules, darkens and confuses. This
-difference can be recognized in concrete cases by means of a most
-simple expedient: if the rule (as we have already had occasion to
-prove) can be converted into a statement of class, then the law is
-inconvertible. "If you wish to melt platinum, heat it to 1780 degrees"
-is a proposition that is exactly equal to "platinum melts at 1780
-degrees." But the law, "Let there be opened in every city a chemical
-laboratory where platinum is to be melted," is not to be converted from
-the imperative to the indicative, whatever efforts we make.
-
-[Sidenote: _Distinction of laws from practical principles._]
-
-If the volitional element be wanting to naturalistic laws, it is
-certainly present in other spiritual formations also denominated and
-considered as laws: but not that of _class,_ therefore neither are
-these laws. Such is the case with economic and moral law, and through
-them, with logical and æsthetic laws. The moral law says, "Will the
-universal"; that is to say, "Will the good, the useful, the true, the
-beautiful." Therefore (considered in reality and not in scientific
-theory, where it appears as the concept of itself) it is a volitional
-act. But this volitional act has the spirit itself for object, which
-is and exists, in so far as it wills and affirms itself; it has for
-object a form or a _universal,_ whereas laws have for object something
-material and at the same time not instantaneous, something more or less
-fixed, something _general:_ a _class,_ not an _idea._ Universal laws
-(that would better be called _principles_) are the Spirit or producer;
-true and proper laws are the special product of the spirit; therefore
-the first can certainly be called laws, but for an altogether different
-reason to the second.
-
-[Sidenote: _Laws and single acts._]
-
-Owing to the absence of the element of generality or of class, no
-one would describe a single individuated act as law. The resolution
-and action by which I do not rise from my seat at this moment and go
-eagerly to meet the friend whose coming at the wrong moment interrupts
-me at my work, is a volitional act, not a law; such as on the other
-hand would be the volitional act that I might form within myself,
-consisting in the intention or the programme of receiving my friends
-seated and in a lukewarm way, whenever they should come to visit me in
-the hours before noon, in order to make them understand by this act of
-mine that they disturb me at my work, and that they should abstain from
-their inopportune visits, unless they wish to submit to the penalty of
-meeting with anything but a cordial reception from their friend.
-
-[Sidenote: _Identity of imperative, prohibitive, and permissive laws._]
-
-From the general but not universal character that we must recognize
-to the content of laws, we have the solution of certain controversies
-of the greatest importance which have been and are much discussed,
-hitherto without a satisfactory or duly demonstrated conclusion. In
-the first place, we must mention the dispute as to whether or no there
-exist _permissive_ laws, and whether the formula that the law _aut
-jubet aut vetat aut permittit_ is to be accepted. It has generally been
-admitted that the law _aut jubet aut vetat,_ and that the permission
-is nothing but the removal of a previous inhibition, that is, the
-partial or total abrogation of a law. But in reality, the law, since it
-is a volitional act, _jubet_ only; to command is to will: to command
-that a chemical laboratory be opened in every city means to will that
-one should be opened. And since every willing is at the same time a
-not-willing, as every affirmation is at the same time a negation, every
-command is at the same time an inhibition, and every _jubeo_ is a
-_veto_ (whether the will be expressed in the literary form of positive
-or negative, of command or of inhibition, is here without importance).
-
-[Sidenote: _Permissive character of every law, and impermissive
-character of every principle._]
-
-As to permissive laws, these are inconceivable side by side with the
-imperative or prohibitive, not indeed because no law ever permits, but
-because by the very fact that those are imperative or prohibitive,
-they are at the same time permissive: every _jubeo_ or _veto_ is at
-the same time a _permitto._ Principles, as universal volitions, never
-permit, because nothing escapes their command; but a single volitional
-act, affirming itself, does not exclude for that reason the possibility
-that other volitional acts, indeed infinite acts, should be affirmed;
-for the singular never exhausts its universal. And laws are volitions
-of class, they impose groups of single acts--groups that are more or
-less rich, but always contingent: hence a law always leaves all the
-other actions and classes of action that can be the object of will
-unwilled (that is, neither commanded nor prohibited), and, therefore,
-_permitted._ And even if we take all the laws formulated up to a
-given moment, all together they do not exhaust the universal; and if
-new laws be accumulated, one upon the other, be divided and split up
-"with panting breath," to obtain complete exhaustion, a _progressus in
-infinitum_ will certainly be attained, but never exhaustion, which is
-unattainable. This amounts to saying that outside law or laws, there
-is always _the permitted, the lawful, the indifferent, the privilege,
-the right,_ or whatever be termed the concept correlative to that
-of command, veto, or duty, a duality of terms that expresses the
-_finitude_ of law; hence, when a determined privilege, a determined
-legal right, a determined right, has been annulled by a new law, when
-something previously indifferent has been differentiated, privilege,
-the permitted, the indifferent, right, always arise from the bosom of
-the new law.
-
-[Sidenote: _Mutability of laws._]
-
-Another contingent character of the content of laws is their
-_mutability._ Laws are changeable, whereas principles, or laws of
-the universal content, are unchangeable, and ready to give form to
-all the most various historical material. Since actual conditions
-are constantly changing, it is necessary to add new laws to the old,
-to retouch and correct these, or to abolish them altogether. This is
-to be seen equally in the programmes of individual lives, as in the
-programmes of social and political laws.
-
-[Sidenote: _Empirical concepts as to the modes of change._]
-
-The question as to the number of modes of changing that laws possess
-does not concern us, because, philosophically speaking, there is never
-but one mode: the free will that produces the new law in new conditions
-of fact. Involuntary changing can only be a formula for indicating
-certain changes, always voluntary, that occur in a less solemn way
-than others; but from these, can never be absent the solemnity of the
-human will that celebrates itself. Thus, in like manner, the question
-as to whether we should recognize conservation or revolution as the
-fundamental concept of practical life, does not concern us; for every
-conservative is at the same time a revolutionary, since he is always
-obliged to adapt the law that he wishes to preserve to the new facts;
-and every revolutionary is also a conservative, since he is obliged to
-start from certain laws that he preserves, at any rate provisionally,
-that he may change others and substitute for them new laws, which he
-in his turn intends to preserve. Revolution for revolution's sake, the
-cult of the Goddess Revolution, is an insane effort, which is so none
-the less because it has sometimes appeared in History and like all
-insane efforts it ends with suicide. Revolution revolutionizes itself
-and turns into reaction. Thus when revolutionaries and conservatives
-are distinguished and opposed to one another, an empirical distinction
-is made there also, the meaning of which is to be found in the
-historical circumstances among which it has arisen. Count Cavour was
-a conservative in respect to certain problems and revolutionary in
-respect to certain others, to such a degree that he seemed to the
-Mazzinians to be a conservative and to the clericals and legitimists
-a revolutionary. Robespierre, if he were a revolutionary for the
-Girondins and at last even for the neo-moderate Danton, yet to the eyes
-of Hébert and of Chaumette seemed to be a conservative, enemy of the
-free development of the rights of man.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the eternal Code or natural Right._]
-
-We should on the other hand be very careful as to the demand so
-often made and also so far as possible put into execution, for _an
-eternal code, a limit-legislation or model, a universal, rational, or
-natural_ justice, as it has been variously termed. Natural justice,
-universal legislation, eternal code, claim to fix the transitory
-and are therefore a contradictory concept: contradictory precisely
-to the principle of the mutability of laws, which is the necessary
-consequence of their contingent and historical character. Were natural
-Right permitted to do what it announces, were God to permit that the
-affairs of Reality should be carried on according to the ill-assorted
-ideas of writers and professors, we should witness with the formation
-and application of the eternal Code, the cessation _ipso facto_ of
-Development, the end of History, the death of Life and the dissolution
-of Reality.
-
-[Sidenote: _Natural justice as the new justice._]
-
-This world-ending does not take place, because, though it be possible
-to dwell in contradiction, it is impossible to make it concrete and
-actual: God, that is to say Reality, does not permit this. Thus it
-happens that under the name of natural justice, two sorts of products
-have existed in turn, or sometimes a mixture of those two different
-products, which have nothing to do with the programme announced. On the
-one hand, projects of new laws that seemed better than the old or good
-by comparison with these judged more or less bad, have been proposed
-as natural or rational justice, and precisely for this reason the old
-laws were called unnatural and irrational and the new _rational and
-natural._ Just as passionate and erotic temperaments, uninstructed by
-the experience of their past, swear with the utmost seriousness that
-their new love will be _constant, eternal and their last,_ so man, when
-he creates new laws, is often seized with the illusion that his laws
-will not change as did the old ones, forgetting that the old ones were
-once young and that they "satisfied divers" in their heyday, to express
-oneself in the words of the old carnavalesque song. Those natural
-laws are historical, those eternal laws are transitory, like all the
-others. All know how in certain times and places, religious tolerance,
-freedom of trade, private property, constitutional monarchy, have been
-proclaimed eternal; and in others, the extirpation of unbelievers,
-commercial protection, communism, the republic, and anarchy.
-
-[Sidenote: _Natural justice as philosophy of the practical._]
-
-Universal concepts, which were nothing but the Principles of the
-philosophy of the practical themselves, have on the other hand had a
-tendency to be classed as natural justice and to surpass the transitory
-and contingent. They are certainly eternal and unchangeable, but no
-longer laws, for they are formal and not material. Thus treatises of
-natural justice have sometimes become simply treatises (sometimes
-very valuable) of the Philosophy of the practical and especially of
-Ethic.--When (as to tell the truth has generally been the case) a
-practical description has accompanied a general treatment of Ethic,
-leading to a series of proposals for social, judicial or political
-reform, there has then occurred a _mingling_ of two different
-productions, which we have mentioned, philosophy and casuistic. But a
-natural justice has always remained unachieved, because unachievable
-and contradictory.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of natural justice._]
-
-In our times, owing to the increase of the historical sense, the
-constructions of natural justice and of the eternal Code have almost
-altogether lost the attraction they once exercized. But absurd problems
-having their origin in those contradictory concepts still persist
-and absurd methods of treating problems of similar origin legitimate
-when taken in their true terms. An example of the first of these two
-kinds of diseased residues is the treating of the _natural rights_ of
-man and the attempt to establish what rights belong to man by nature
-and what by historical contingencies. Among the first are enumerated
-the right to life, to liberty, to work, to the family and so on; and
-among the second, those that have their origin in the Italian State
-or in special contracts that have been concluded. But no right of any
-sort belongs to man outside society (which in this case means outside
-history), that is to say, considered as spirit in universal, save that
-of existing as spirit, which indeed is not a right, but necessary
-reality. Catalogues of natural rights are either tautologies, which
-repeat that man as spirit has the right (and therefore at the same
-time the duty) of developing himself as spirit (and he does develop
-in this manner, if he be man and be alive); or they are arbitrary
-rationalizations of historical contingencies, such as the right to
-work, which is nothing but the formula of the workpeople of the
-_ateliers nationaux_ in forty-eight, or of the insurgents of Lyons; or
-the right to private property, which was the formula of the burghers
-against the bonds of feudalism and is again their formula against the
-modern proletariat movement.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jusnaturalism persisting in judgments and juridical
-problems._]
-
-We must recognize examples of the second kind of error in the
-discussions constantly held as to social or political institutions,
-when instead of combating them as irrational, or of defending them as
-rational in historical circumstances, they are defended and combated
-because they differ from or conform to the true idea of right or to
-the true idea of those particular institutions, recourse being thus
-had to abstract reasons, as has very well been said. A reformer will
-maintain the recognition of the right of women to the administrative
-or political vote, because women also form part of the State and
-have general and particular interests, which they wish to guarantee
-directly, without the inter-position of men, whose interests are
-sometimes at variance with theirs: an argument that a conservative
-will deny altogether, making appeal to the function of woman, enclosed
-by eternal law in the circle of the family. A reformer will propose
-divorce as the natural complement to matrimony, because, where
-spiritual agreement ends, there too should end every other tie, whereas
-a conservative will oppose the argument as contradictory to the very
-essence of matrimony, comparing such a proposal with concubinage,
-or with what is called free love. And so on.--When such arguments
-are heard, it is remarked that natural rights are not dead. But
-the question as to the political vote for women may be serious or
-ridiculous, according to place and time; as divorce is loftily moral or
-profoundly immoral, according to time and place, and it is only mental
-narrowness or ignorance that can place outside humanity, or believe to
-be living or persisting in immorality, peoples that practise divorce
-or indissoluble matrimony, or those of to-day, who refuse the vote to
-women or those of the future who will recognize their right to it, if
-they do recognize it. But even polygamy or free love is not immoral,
-irrational and unnatural, once it has been an institution considered
-legitimate in certain times and places; nor even, we insist upon saying
-it (however repugnant to our hearts and to our stomachs of civilized
-Europeans), anthropophagy, for even among the anthropophagi were men
-(we hope it will be admitted), who felt themselves to be most virtuous
-in their clearest consciousness of self, and who nevertheless ate their
-like with the same tranquillity that we eat a roast chicken, without
-hatred of the chicken, but being quite well aware, for the moment
-at any rate, that we are not able to do otherwise. The unconscious
-reasoners on the basis of natural law must have forgotten that
-page of Cornelius Νepos, which, however, they must certainly have
-translated in their first years at the gymnasium: _Expertes literarum
-Graecarum nihil rectum nisi quod ipsorum moribus conveniat putabunt.
-Hi, si didicerint non eadem omnibus esse honesta atque turpia, SED
-OMNIA MAJORUM INSTITUTIS JUDICARI, non admirabuntur nos in Graiorum
-virtutibus exponendis mores eorum secutos. Neque enim Cimoni fuit turpe
-Atheniensium summo viro, sororem germanam habere in matrimonium: quippe
-quum ejus cives eodem uterentur instituto; at id quidem nostris moribus
-nefas habetur. Laudi in Graecia ducitur adolescentulis quam plurimos
-habere amatores. Nulla Lacedaemoni tam est nobilis vidua quae non ad
-scenam eat mercede conducta..._. And he continues to give further
-examples.[1] So ancient are the unreasonable tendency to be scandalized
-and the reasonable defence of the variety of customs made by good sense.
-
-[1] _Vitae excell. imper.,_ pref.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-UNREALITY OF THE LAW AND REALITY OF ITS EXECUTION. FUNCTION OF LAW IN
-THE PRACTICAL SPIRIT
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Law as abstract and unreal volition._]
-
-Since law is the volition of a class of actions, it is the volition
-of an _abstract._ But as we already know, to will an abstract is
-tantamount to willing abstractly. And to will abstractly is not truly
-to will, for we will only in concrete, that is, in a determined
-situation and with a volitional synthesis corresponding to that
-situation, such that it is immediately translated into action, or
-better, is at the same time effective action. Consequently it seems
-that we should declare the volition that is law to be a pretended
-volition: contradictory, because lacking a single, unique and
-determined situation; ineffectual, because springing from the insecure
-ground of an abstract concept; a volition, in fact, that is not willed;
-a volitional act, not real, but _unreal._
-
-[Sidenote: _Ineffectuality of laws and effectuality of practical
-principles._]
-
-Such indeed it is. What is really wanted is not the law, but the
-single act, done _under_ the law, as it is called, that is to say,
-the _execution_ of the law. The single volition is the only one that
-is carried out: the execution of the law is the only thing really
-and truly willed and done. When the law has been formulated, life
-continues ceaselessly to propound its problems, and these either do not
-enter into the provisions of the law and are solved simply and solely
-with universal practical principles (economic and ethic), or they do
-enter into them and then it is necessary _to apply_ the law, unless
-it be held to be more convenient to change it, or (this would be a
-pathological case) action be not taken against it, although there be
-consciousness that this is ill done.
-
-But even when we are in the situations foreseen by the law and act in
-accordance with it, or, as is said, _apply or carry out_ the law, we
-must not allow ourselves to be misled by all these metaphors; for we
-must consider that the single situations in which we will and act can
-never be foreseen by the law, nor is it possible to act in accordance
-with it, to follow it out and to apply it. Situations are not foreseen,
-because nothing is foreseen, and the real fact is always a surprise,
-something that happens once only and we can only know it as it is
-after it has happened. For the new fact a new measure is necessary;
-for the new body a new suit of clothes. The measure of the law, on the
-other hand, since it is abstract, hesitates between the universal and
-the individual and is without the strength of either. To carry out the
-law? But it is only the pedant of life who proposes to do such a thing,
-as it is only the pedant of art who attempts to apply the rules of art.
-The true artist follows the impulse of his æsthetic conscience, the
-practical man the initiative of his practical genius. What is called
-the single act, observance and execution of the law, obeys, not the
-law, but the ethical or practical principle, and obeys it individually.
-The man who has his head full of laws that he has made for himself or
-has accepted from others, makes a deep reverence to the Ladies' Law
-when the time comes for action, and proceeds on his own initiative.
-
-[Sidenote: _Exemplificatory clarification._]
-
-
-It is the law that at the age of twenty we must present ourselves in
-our district and do military service for a certain time. Let us for
-the moment set aside the case in which those called upon to serve
-rebel and, having seized the power of the government, abolish the law
-of conscription, and re-establish that of voluntary enlistment. And
-let us likewise set aside the other case, in which the conscripts
-violate the law by deserting and going abroad, or hide in a cave, like
-a hero of Padre Bresciani, or (like a good Tolstoian who applies the
-principle of non-resistance to evil) allow themselves to be put in
-prison rather than touch arms. Let us select the case of the peaceful
-burgess who becomes a warrior that he may not go to prison; or of the
-good citizen who recognizes his duty of serving his country and for
-that reason obeys the law. In presenting himself in his district and
-in the regiment, he has obeyed, not the voice of the law (which is a
-voice), but his moral conscience, or simply his economic conscience.
-This has already been demonstrated and we need not insist upon it.
-But how can he ever obey the law, which directs him to do military
-service of precisely this or that nature? Each individual has his own
-temperament, his own talent, his own particular physical strength, and
-each one will lend his services entirely in his own way, different from
-that of another. And (be it noted) he will not do so only more or less
-well or observing the law more or less, but really in a different way,
-even when all observe the law with equal diligence and scrupulosity.
-It may seem as if all carry out a military exercise at the same
-moment, but the fact is that each man moves in a different way to the
-others; or that in a parade march all walk in the same way, but, as a
-matter of fact, all (even in the Prussian army) walk in a different
-way. If we look at it as a whole and from a distance, there seems to
-be uniformity; if we look at it from near at hand we discover the
-difference. If we could make the experiment of comparing a regiment
-of fifty years before with one of fifty years after, leaving military
-regulations, arms, accoutrements, and everything else unaltered in
-the interval, the lack of uniformity of the apparent uniformity would
-leap to the eyes, a lack of uniformity that would have been rendered
-possible by the changes that had taken place in the surrounding life,
-in the culture, the moral education, the political conscience, the
-mode of nourishment, the dwellings, and so on. But the experiment is
-possible, if not in time, then in space, that is to say, by observing
-the application of the same military regulations upon two different
-populations. Thus one seems to have in hand one book written in two
-different languages; which is literally no longer the same book,
-but two different books. Giusti translated into Milanese and Porta
-translated into Florentine are no longer Porta or Giusti, but two new
-poets.
-
-[Sidenote: _Doctrines against the utility of laws. Their
-unmaintainability._]
-
-This indubitable truth, as to the impossibility of applying the law and
-of incorporating it in facts, and as to the necessity of acting in each
-case, according to historical exigencies, is the true reason for the
-turning of so many people's heads at different times and in different
-places, causing them to proclaim nothing less than the inutility
-of laws and to ask for their abolition. If it be necessary to come
-eventually to the individual action, and if deliberation and execution
-must be remitted to the action of the individual, what is the object of
-binding ourselves with bonds, which it is afterwards necessary to tear
-off and to break, that we may act? What is the object of laboriously
-constructing instruments, which we are obliged to throw away when we
-come to practical action, that we may use our naked hands? Owing to
-such ingenuous reasonings as these, people have come to long for a
-society without laws, in which each will do his own share of work, on
-account of its attractiveness alone, as we find among the Harmonicists
-of Fourier and in many other anarchical Utopias. Or they have sighed
-for the absolute paternal government of the good old days, for the
-geniality of a good-hearted tyrant, untrammelled with laws, who will
-be able to follow the best dictates of his heart. Or, to descend to
-less strange and more actual examples, it has been proposed that the
-judge should on each occasion create the law, according to the case
-before him; that is to say, that he should cease to be a judge (not
-having a law to apply, and properly speaking not being able to give
-judgment) and be a free decider of litigation and corrector of customs;
-or at least that he should free himself from _legal fictions_ and judge
-according to the individual reality of each individual case.
-
-[Sidenote: _Unsustainability of such confutations._]
-
-These theories are without doubt unsustainable, not excluding the last,
-which has the appearance of being moderate; because the so-called
-judicial fiction is intrinsic to the law and exists even when we
-think that it is not present, for it is always a fiction to place a
-concrete case in an abstract category. But defenders of the utility of
-law have met these erroneous doctrines with the bad argument that law
-does not admit of individual solutions, and demands strict obedience,
-because the moment of individuality, of inobservance, and of violation
-that may be called legitimate, does actually exist in the law and is
-intrinsic to its very nature. Both adversaries and defenders of law
-are therefore philosophically wrong, those who assert its inutility and
-those who claim for it an impossible utility.
-
-[Sidenote: _Empirical meanings of those controversies._]
-
-And we say "philosophically," for it is well known that in this case,
-as in so many other disputes of philosophic appearance, are often
-concealed disputes of a practical and political nature, in which right
-and wrong are divided and connected in an altogether different manner.
-The adversaries of laws are often nothing but adversaries of too many
-laws, or legitimately demand a less pedantic and mechanical office
-for the judge than that which he often has at present; whereas the
-maintainers of laws are opposed to revolutionaries, who would wish
-to abrogate the definite laws, on which civil progress rests, or to
-discredit all laws, and cause society to enter upon a terrible crisis
-that would not promise good results. But all this is extraneous to the
-philosophic problem.
-
-[Sidenote: _Necessity of laws._]
-
-If the defenders of the utility of laws had wished to make use of an
-argument of good sense against their adversaries, of the sort that
-imposes, even when it does not rigorously demonstrate their contention,
-they might have simply noted the demand for laws, for ordinances,
-for justice, for the State, which appears at all points of human
-history.--Better a bad government than no government at all; better
-laws that are mediocre, but stable, than the frantic pursuit for
-better and better laws, with the instability that is the inevitable
-consequence! And on the other hand, may God save us from genial
-despots, from inspired judges, from tribunals that dive into treasures
-of equity!--These are the utterances that we hear in history. Battles
-have been fought for _legality,_ and rivers of blood have been shed for
-it; for legality are faced the troubles of litigation, and energetic
-action is displayed, which only superficial intellects can consider
-a waste of time and trouble; for no trouble is superfluous when we
-are protecting our own rights, and none is more sacred, since it also
-guards the offended majesty of the law, the rights of all. Those who
-declaim against laws can well do so with a light heart, for the law
-surrounds, protects, and preserves their life for them. No sooner had
-all laws disappeared than they would lose the wish to declaim:
-
- In such wise as when sometimes in the wood
- The shepherd spies the wolf, and straight has lost
- Spirit and sense, and words die on his tongue;
-
-and he would be obliged to have speedy recourse to the remedy and make
-laws of some sort again, whatever they be, that he may again resume
-his calm, his work and his gossip.
-
-[Sidenote: _Laws as preparation for action._]
-
-Passing from consideration _ad oculos_ to the philosophical, it is to
-be said, on the other hand, that the utility of law does not at all
-reside in its effectuality, which is something impossible, since the
-single act of the individual is alone effectual; but in this, that in
-order to will and to carry out the single act, it is usually necessary
-to address oneself to the general, of which that individual is a single
-case; that is, to address oneself to the group, of which the individual
-is a component part, just as in aiming we generally begin by aiming at
-the region where is the point upon which the aim will be fixed. Law is
-not a real and effectual volition; it is without doubt an imperfect and
-contradictory volition, but for that very reason a preparation for the
-synthetic and perfect volition. Law, in short, since it is the volition
-of an abstract, is not a real volition, but an _aid_ to real volition;
-as (to employ the usual comparison) wooden bridges and scaffoldings are
-aids to the construction of a house and have not been useless, because
-they must be pulled down when the house has been built.
-
-[Sidenote: _Analogy between the practical and the theoretical spirit:
-practical laws and empirical concepts._]
-
-Here the analogy between the constitution of the practical and of the
-theoretical spirit is again shown to be most exact. We meet with
-theoretical forms in the latter also, which are not really so and are
-contradictory in themselves, positing representations that function as
-universals and universals that are representative: arbitrary forms,
-in which the will undertakes to command what it is not possible to
-command, that is to say, representations and concepts, things which
-precede and do not follow the volitional and practical form. But we
-know that those fictitious concepts, those formulæ, those laws that
-are not laws, those admitted falsities, which, therefore, are not
-falsities, serve as a help to memory, and assist thought in finding
-its way amid the multiform spectacle of the world, which it must
-penetrate for itself. We do not think them, but they help us to
-think; we do not imagine them, but they help us to imagine. Thus the
-philosopher generally fixes his mind upon the pseudo-concepts, that he
-may afterwards rise to the universals; and the artist also turns his
-attention to them that he may find beneath them the individual, the
-lively and ingenuous intuition that he seeks. The same pseudo-concepts,
-made the object of volition and changed from formulæ to laws, fulfil
-an analogous office in the practical spirit, making it possible for
-the will to will in a certain direction, where it afterwards meets the
-useful action, which is always individuated.
-
-[Sidenote: _The promotion of order in reality and representation._]
-
-Another aspect of the analogy is not less important. The
-pseudo-concepts would not be possible, if reality did not offer the
-like side by side with the unlike; which is not the universal and
-necessary, but the general, a contingent (so to speak) less contingent
-than others, a relatively constant variable. Pseudo-concepts are
-arbitrary, not because they posit the like where is the unlike, but
-because they make that variable rigid, which is only relatively
-constant, making of it something absolutely constant and changing
-the like into the identical. Now the practical spirit, which creates
-reality, has need to create not only the unlike, but also the like; not
-only that which lasts an instant, but also that which endures almost
-unchanged for a year, a century, a millennium, or a millennium of
-millenniums; not only the individual, but also the species, not only
-the great man, but also the people, not only the actions that do not
-occur again, but also those that return periodically, similar, though
-not identical. Laws fulfil this function, for they constitute what
-is called the _social,_ or _cosmic order._ This order, however, is
-always relative and includes instability in itself; it is a rectilinear
-figure, which, on being closely examined, reveals itself as also
-curvilinear. For this reason it is necessary to make laws, and it is
-necessary to violate, though obeying them in their execution.
-
-[Sidenote: _Origin of the concept of plan or design._]
-
-This function of law as an unreal volition, aiding nevertheless and
-preparing the real, throws light upon a concept that we have had to
-reject when exposing the nature and method of functioning of the
-volitional act; that is to say, on the concept of _plan or design or
-model,_ as proper to the practical activity, which is said to act by
-carrying out a pre-established _design._ We have already demonstrated
-that design and the execution of the design are in reality all one, and
-that man acts by changing his design at every instant, because reality,
-which is the basis of his action, changes. And as in the Philosophy
-of the practical in general, so in particular in Ethic, the concept
-of pre-established design has no place; because, if it be true than
-in ethicity the universal is distinguished from the merely individual
-action, it is also true that the universal does not exist in concrete,
-save incorporated and individualized as this or that good action. The
-universal of ethicity is not a design and cannot be willed for itself
-outside all individuation, in the same way as to fall in love is to
-fall in love with an individual and not with love. But that concept
-of design, proposed for action and carried out by its means, though
-erroneously adopted in Economy and in Ethic, must nevertheless have its
-legitimate meaning in some special order of facts; otherwise it would
-not be possible to make even erroneous use of it. This meaning is to be
-found, as has been seen, in the fact of laws.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-CONFUSION BETWEEN LAWS AND PRACTICAL PRINCIPLES. CRITIQUE OF PRACTICAL
-LEGALISM AND OF JESUITIC MORALITY
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Transformation of principles into practical laws:
-legalism._]
-
-Nothing perhaps better makes clear the true nature of laws than the
-examination of the very grave errors introduced by their means into
-the Philosophy of the practical: for, owing to the failure to perceive
-the character of mere _aid_ proper to their function, laws have been
-confused with practical principles, these being looked upon as laws and
-those as principles.
-
-[Sidenote: _Genesis of the concept of the practically licit and
-indifferent._]
-
-We always live surrounded by innumerable laws, although these are
-always finite in number. The Decalogue also admonishes: "Take not
-the name of God in vain"; "Honour thy father and thy, mother"; "Thou
-shalt not steal"; "Thou shalt commit no murder"; "Thou shalt not covet
-thy neighbour's house, nor his wife, nor his man-servant, nor his
-maid-servant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is his"; etc.
-The decalogue or hectalogue of prudence admonishes us: "Raise not up
-against thee too many enemies "; "Mind your own business"; "Conciliate
-him who is more powerful than thou"; "Hurt him who hurts thee"; etc.
-Those laws that are so many and so minute easily lead to the false
-belief that they suffice together to regulate our economic action and
-our moral life, and that practical principles can be substituted for
-and be fully represented by a Decalogue or code, which should be the
-true and proper regulator of human life.
-
-But the Decalogue, the code, the _Corpus juris,_ ample and minute
-though they be, are not, as we know, capable of exhausting the infinity
-of actions conditioned by the infinite variety of facts. Every law
-brings with it, as its necessary correlative, as the shadow of its
-light, actions that are indifferent and indifferentiable, the legally
-indifferent, the licit, the permissible, the right, the faculty of
-doing or of not doing. As an inevitable consequence of this, practical
-principles having been conceived as a series or complex of laws, the
-concept of the _practically indifferent_ must also be posited and the
-_licit_ changed from _legal_ to _practical._
-
-[Sidenote: _Consequence of this: the arbitrary._]
-
-And this is what happens. At every moment of life we find ourselves
-face to face with actual situations, to which the laws that we possess
-either do not apply at all, or apply only in the approximative way
-that we have seen; at every moment of life, we find ourselves without
-the guidance of the law, face to face with the indifferent and the
-indifferentiated. The practical man knows well that the laws were a
-mere help, merely a preparatory stage to action, and that he must in
-each case face the actual situation as it arises, intuite and perceive
-it in its originality, and perform his own action with originality.
-But he who has accepted the _legalitarian_ conception of the practical
-activity and has abandoned practical principles as useless or looked
-upon them as non-existent, now that he finds himself abandoned also by
-the laws, in which he had put too much trust, has no other guide on
-which to fall back save his own _will._
-
-And will is not a guide but _the lack of a guide_; it is not action
-but inaction, that is to say, contradictory action; not activity, but
-passivity, not prudence and good, but imprudence and evil.
-
-Thus the legalitarian conception of practical principles produces
-neither more nor less than the death of the practical, installing
-passivity in the place of activity, evil in the place of good.
-
-The legalitarian theory, which proposes to fix and to determine with
-precision the true concept of freedom, arrives at just the opposite
-result: the will.
-
-[Sidenote: _Ethical legalism as simply a particular case of practical
-legalism._]
-
-It is opportune to remark here that moral legalism, which has hitherto
-alone occupied the attention of critics, is nothing but a particular
-case of general practical legalism, and if the particular and not
-the general case has been observed, this has depended upon the
-failure to recognize the economic form in its autonomy, so common
-with philosophers. But from the examples that we have given, it has
-clearly resulted that legalism is an error which embraces alike
-Economy and Ethic, introducing into both the philosophic absurdity of
-the _practically indifferent._ Even a man without moral conscience,
-or one deprived of it for a moment, if he conceive the guidance of
-his utilitarian action in the form of laws, loses the compass of his
-utilitarianism and falls into the arbitrary, which is the ruin of his
-own individuality. If (to resume the usual example) I impose upon
-myself the not drinking of wine as a hygienic law, and it happen to me
-to find myself at a certain moment in such physiological conditions
-that a glass of wine can accelerate the beating of the heart and
-restore to me the strength of which I am in need; and if, through faith
-in the established law, I forget that the law is conditional and not
-absolute and that the only absolute law is to do at a given moment
-what is useful at that moment; it is evident that by so reasoning and
-acting, I am substituting superstition and therefore the arbitrary for
-prudence and that I am causing injury to myself.
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the practically indifferent._]
-
-It is necessary to maintain against the morally and practically
-indifferent, that it is a concept altogether external to Ethic and
-Economic and devastates it terribly whenever it penetrates into it,
-or (what is worse) subtly corrupts it. In Economic as in Ethic, in
-the true and proper practical field, there is no _faculty_ that is
-not also _obligation_; there is no _right_ that is not at the same
-time a _duty;_ there is nothing _licit_ that is not _forbidden;_ nor
-_permitted_ that is not turned into a _command._ πάντα ἔξεστιν, ἀλλ' οὐ
-πάντα συμφέρει, said St. Paul,[1] in obscure but suggestive language
-that has been much discussed--all is allowed to us but we do not allow
-anything--we should say in explanation; everything can and should be
-spiritually elaborated by the will and receive the form of freedom.
-But in order to destroy that paradoxical concept at the roots, it
-is necessary to reach the point underground where the concept of
-_practical legalism_ is to be found, and to show, as we have done, its
-origin, in the confusion between _principles and laws._
-
-[Sidenote: _Contests between rigorists and latitudinarians and their
-common error._]
-
-In vain have the _rigorists,_ becoming aware of the ruin that menaced
-the theory of Ethic, struggled against the theoreticians of the morally
-indifferent, or _latitudinarians._ So long as neither party left the
-legalitarian field, one side was right against the other and both were
-equally wrong, Pharisees and Sadducees, Jansenists and Molinists.
-The rigorists clung desperately to the law, refusing to admit that
-it could be _doubtful_ and give rise to the morally indifferent; the
-law was _certain._ But the law is never really either doubtful or
-certain: revolving upon empirical concepts, it never limits anything
-with precision and therefore is not certain; having for its object,
-not concrete action, but only preparation for it, does not propose to
-limit the illimitable and so is neither uncertain nor doubtful: it
-stands on this side or the other of such categories. Thus the rigorists
-also found themselves face to face with the morally indifferent, and
-had no way of vanquishing it. They could advise the choice of the
-most painful and repugnant action, self-denial, self-tormenting; but
-this too was a kind of wilfulness and evil. The latitudinarians, on
-the other hand, could enlarge the field of the morally indifferent
-at their pleasure, placing in evidence the dubiety of law and its
-consequent impotence as a practical principle; but since they did not
-recognize any practical principle outside the form of law, they were
-finally obliged to have recourse to it, that they might have some
-point of orientation in the guidance of their lives. And since they
-could not find it in the law itself, recognized as doubtful, they were
-obliged to place it in the authority of its interpreters; and when
-these authorities were at variance, in the adding up of authorities
-(just as is done for the Roman jurists in the law of citation made
-by Theodosius II.); and since, finally, two or three or four or a
-hundred authorities, when they are uncertain, are not of greater value
-than one who is equally uncertain, any sort of authority finally had
-to suffice them as justification for an action. _Probabilitism,_ far
-from being merely an illegitimate degeneration of legalism, is its
-logical consequence. Reduced as they were to authority, why should
-one be of more account than another, when all are estimable people
-worthy of credence? Why should the precedence be given to Papinian
-over Paul or over Ulpian? If Villalobos be of opinion that a priest
-who has committed a moral sin cannot say mass the same day, Sanchez,
-on the other hand, Jopines that he can: why, then, should a priest who
-finds himself in that case follow Villalobos rather than Sanchez? It
-is true that if he make a blind choice between Villalobos and Sanchez,
-he becomes the prey of self-will; but self-will and legalism are
-indissoluble, and the more carefully he tries to free himself from the
-bond, the more tightly it winds itself around him.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jesuitic morality as doctrine of fraud against the moral
-law._]
-
-Practical legalism can also give rise to a monstrously absurd theory,
-which we shall call _Jesuitic morality,_ not because it is peculiar
-to the Jesuits or to Catholicism, but as dutiful homage to the most
-conspicuous and likewise the most celebrated in literature of its
-historical incarnations. The theory of Jesuitic morality admits that we
-can rationally _defraud_ ethical law.
-
-[Sidenote: _Concept of legal fraud._]
-
-That the law is _defrauded or eluded_ every day, taken in itself, is
-neither moral nor immoral, since it is an expedient of social strife
-like another, and in certain cases may be a legitimate act of war and
-a fraud only in name. A law held to be iniquitous should be combated
-openly; but if the imposer of the iniquitous law, or he who wishes to
-profit by it, have committed a mistake in drafting it, so that it can
-be interpreted in such a way as to become good, or at least better, it
-is very natural that the adversary should profit by the mistake, if
-for no other reason than that he may discredit the law as equivocal
-and lacking in precision and compel society to discuss it again. Who
-does not applaud the fraud of Portia, when it is a question of saving
-the life of the noble Antonio from a Shylock? And if even the _ferox
-animus_ of Shylock has found defenders, as symbol of the tenacity with
-which we must make our own rights respected, yet Portia also will
-always find her supporters, as symbol of ingenious rebellion against an
-unjust law.
-
-[Sidenote: _Absurdity of the fraud against ones self and against the
-moral law._]
-
-But what is altogether irrational and yet seems to be admitted by
-Jesuitic morality, is _the fraud against oneself,_ and so against one's
-own moral conscience. To defraud one's own conscience, to rebel against
-it with violence or with artifice, is contradiction, wilfulness, evil.
-It sometimes happens that we exert ourselves to still what is called
-the internal voice of admonition, the Socratic demon, or the guardian
-angel. This happens in the utilitarian, not less than in the moral
-field; when, for instance, we yield to a pleasure which we know to be
-harmful and had intended to avoid for that reason, and when by dint of
-subtleties we try to persuade ourselves that it differs from that which
-we had recognized as harmful. We attempt, but we never really succeed;
-we may be able to obscure our conscience for an instant, but we can
-never permanently and altogether darken it; the effort itself calls for
-the light that we would avoid.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jesuitic morality not explainable as mere legalism._]
-
-But that pretension of Jesuitic morality cannot on the other hand
-derive from mere ethical legalism, because legalism produces the
-contradictions that we have already placed in relief; it generates the
-morally indifferent and at the same time suppresses it; and when it
-has suppressed again generates, in order again to suppress it; and so
-on to infinity, an anxious and sterile doing and undoing. But it never
-authorizes fraud. Simple legalism will never justify our pretending to
-ourselves when a definite action is willed or when we have a definite
-intention, that we will another action and have a different intention;
-or, as they say, _direction of the intention_: the intention is that
-which it is and it does not allow itself to be directed at will. To
-obey the letter of the law with the clear intention of breaking it in
-spirit will never be justified.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jesuitic morality as alliance between legalism and
-theological utilitarianism._]
-
-The pretension of Jesuitic morality becomes illuminated and transparent
-to the intellect, only when we make the hypothesis of an alliance
-between _practical legalism and theological utilitarianism_; that is
-to say, when not only do we conceive morality as a series or complex
-of legislative decisions, but when we likewise consider these to
-be nothing less than the product of the will of God. They are not
-in themselves moral as such, and to observe them does not arise of
-intrinsic necessity; but they are obeyed as the lesser evil, through
-fear of worse or in hope of future advantage. In this case there is a
-silent struggle between God the legislator and man, a struggle between
-the weak and the overbearing, in which the strength of the weak lies in
-ingenuity, their tactic in fraud. Hence the dominant concept of Jesuit
-morality: to get the better of the divine laws as far as possible, to
-do the least possible of what they command; and when called upon to
-give an account of one's own actions before the tribunal of confession,
-or before the universal judgment, so to subtilize upon the law, that
-from the interpretation thus put upon it, what has been done seems to
-belong to the licit and permissive. God forbids man to kill man; but
-does he intend to forbid this, when the motive for this killing is the
-glory of God himself? When the slayer acts as though he were the hand
-of God himself and is all one with him? Without doubt, no: so that
-it will be lawful for the Jesuit to kill or cause to be killed his
-Jansenist adversary, who injures divine interests by disclosing the
-defects of the holy Company, which is the image of God upon earth: that
-killing, then, is not only lawful, but ordained. But if he want to kill
-his adversary, not through zeal for the divine glory, but because of
-the injury that he causes to the personal and immoral interests of the
-Jesuit? This too is permitted, provided that when killing him, though
-animated with personal hate, he withdraw his regard from the real
-motive, and _directing_ his intention to the divine glory, thus justify
-the _means_ by the _end._
-
-[Sidenote: _Distinction between the doctrine and the practice of the
-Jesuits._]
-
-Such is the monstrous logical product, born of the union between
-_legalism_ and the theory of _theological utilitarianism_; such is
-the essence of Jesuitic morality, which has justly aroused horror and
-disgust. And we call it _logical_ (or illogical) product, because
-we wish to make it clear that here as elsewhere we are occupied with
-theories only and are criticizing them alone. In practical action
-Jesuitic morality was often better than the theory would imply; even
-the Padre Caramuel, who put the question as to the right possessed by
-the Jesuits of slaying the Jansenists, must have been at bottom a good
-man; because, having almost arrived at an affirmative conclusion to
-his inquiry by dint of perverting the moral law, he was seized by pity
-and defrauded his own fraud, concluding negatively that the Jansenists
-_occidi non possunt quia nocere non potuerunt,_ because (said he)
-they are poor devils, unable to obscure the glorious brilliance of
-the Company, as the owl does not conceal the light of the sun.[2] And
-Saint Alphonso dei Liguori, who is usually looked upon as an example
-of that lurid morality in our day, when he set to work to stir up
-afresh the ugliness of casuistic in connection with the sixth and ninth
-commandments, experienced all the repugnance of the gallant gentleman
-that he was, at such a task, imposed upon him by the traditional mode
-of treating Ethic, as is to be seen by his declarations, exclamations,
-and exhortations: _Nunc aegre materiam illam tractandam aggredimur,
-cujus vel solum nomen hominum mentes infidi. Det mihi veniam, quaeso,
-castus lector!... Ora studiosos ... ut ... eo tempore saepius mentem
-ad Deum elevent et Virgini immaculatae se commendent, ne dum aliorum
-animos Deo student acquirere, ipsi suarum detrimentum patiantur._[3]
-If Jesuitism were also moral corruption, this was not due to its
-abstract theories, but to the education that it practised, which was
-depressing, servile, and directed to mortify the strength of the will
-and of the intelligence, to reduce a man to be like _senis baculus,_
-a docile and passive instrument in the hands of others; and to the
-confusion in consciences as to the real motives of actions, which it
-not only preserved but increased, lulling souls to sleep with sophisms
-and allurements of devotion _aisées à pratiquer,_ by means of which the
-gates of Paradise could be unlocked, and with _chemins de velours_ on
-which one could mount to the sky with every indulgence. The rigorists
-and latitudinarians are philosophically equivalent; but it is a fact
-that in practice the rigorists were generally energetic and austere
-souls; which should not cause us to forget that the latitudinarians
-also, amid their distorted theories, sometimes had a lucid vision of
-the _complications_ of reality and felt the necessity of a morality
-less abstract and less disharmonic in relation to life, however
-incorrectly they may nevertheless have developed its theory.
-
-
-[1] 1 Cor. x. 23.
-
-[2] Pascal, _Prov._ 1. 7.
-
-[3] _Theol. moralis_ 7, Bassano, 1773, i. 168.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-JUDICIAL ACTIVITY AS AN ACTIVITY GENERICALLY PRACTICAL (ECONOMIC)
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Legislative activity, as generically practical._]
-
-The will that wills classes of actions, or the activity that makes
-laws and that we can henceforward term _legislative activity_ without
-fear of misunderstanding, is either moral or merely economic; and
-therefore, when dialecticized, is either moral or immoral, economic or
-anti-economic. It is true that this will is abstract and indeterminate;
-but that does not prevent it from being, and from being obliged to be,
-either moral or merely economic; and, therefore, abstractly moral and
-abstractly economic, and so also abstractly immoral and anti-economic.
-A programme of action will be conceived, as they say, wisely or
-foolishly, to a good or to a bad end, for mere reasons of utility, or
-with a lively desire for good. The legislator is a volitional man, and
-as such to be judged both utilitarianly and morally. The laws that
-are his volitional product are useful or injurious, good or bad. This
-judgment is also without doubt abstract, for it is necessary first to
-see the legislator engaged in the practical act of the application of
-his law, in order to recognize what he can do and who he is. We know
-many (others or ourselves?) who make plans for the most beautiful
-lives, legislating admirably for themselves and for others; yet these
-show themselves mean and bad in action: and we not infrequently find
-the opposite case of men who calumniate themselves and who, after they
-have declared the most dishonest, or at least the most amoralistic, of
-intentions, when they find themselves face to face with the bad action,
-ugly with the ugliness of sin, say, as the old man in the fable said to
-Death: "I have not called thee!"
-
-[Sidenote: _Vanity of disputes as to the character of institutions,
-economic or ethic: punishment, matrimony, the State, etc._]
-
-From these considerations, which seem to be most obvious, a not
-obvious consequence is to be drawn; namely, that it is perfectly vain
-to descant upon the utilitarian or moral character of laws, or of
-these or those laws; to ask oneself, for instance, whether the object
-of _punishment_ be _deterritio_ or _emendatio_; if _matrimony_ be an
-exchange of services or a sacrament, a union of interests or a society
-with moral ends; if the _State_ be the result of a contract or of a
-moral idea, and so on. These questions have an immense literature
-devoted to them, which has been accumulated for centuries, and although
-they be vain for us, yet they cannot be so for one who has not yet
-become clear as to the special forms of the practical activity and as
-to the nature of law. For him they are not vain, since they represent
-as it were in a concentrated form, the complete philosophical problem
-concerning the practical; although they must of necessity turn out
-to be insoluble. Punishment can be conceived and willed as a mere
-utilitarian menace, to prevent others from performing certain classes
-of actions, even if they be ethically of the highest value; or as
-moral solicitude for the amelioration of society and the individual
-himself who has erred, by obliging him to re-enter himself and change
-his mind. Even the pain of death can be directed to this end and death
-that has given or restored to the guilty a day, an hour, an instant
-of that human life, of that contact with the infinite, which he had
-lost, may be held not to have been in vain. Matrimony may be instituted
-for the more regular satisfaction of the sexual instinct and for
-other similar interests of utilitarian life; and also to secure, that
-interpénétration of souls, which is the great mover of the moral life.
-The State may arise from a mere contract which draws together isolated
-individuals and groups and unites them for defence and offence; and
-also form the profound moral aspiration of the individuals, who
-recognize the universal in themselves and are attentive to realize it
-in modes ever more rich and more lofty. All institutions, all laws may
-receive this double form; and although there be laws that are merely
-utilitarian, those that are moral are also, as is clear, utilitarian
-or economic, and therefore not useless but useful. An amoral man will
-make for himself amoral laws; and between an amoral man and an amoral
-woman no other marriage but that of interest is possible; and between
-a hundred amoral individuals, no other State is possible but that
-established by contract; and no other punishment will be applicable in
-such a State save that of mere _deterritio._ It will be objected that
-amoral individuals and multitudes do not exist, and it may be true that
-they do not exist in a continuous manner: but they do exist at certain
-moments; and this as we know, suffices to justify, indeed to prove
-necessary, our theory.
-
-[Sidenote: _Legislative activity as economic._]
-
-Thus no other answer is possible to the question asked as to whether
-the legislative activity be moral or merely economic, save that it may
-be the one or the other, and therefore, that it is not of necessity
-moral; thus, defining it in its full extension, it must be called
-_generically practical,_ or taken in itself, _merely economic._
-
-[Sidenote: _Juridical activity: its economic character._]
-
-Passing now from the legislative activity to that of him who realizes
-and executes the law (an activity that we may call _juridical,_ in
-order not to confound it with the other), and asking whether juridical
-activity be moral or distinct from morality and if distinct, what is
-its distinctive characteristic, the answer cannot but be most simple
-for us who have attained to our present position. So simple indeed,
-that to give it would seem to be almost superfluous. Not only must the
-activity of carrying out the law not be intrinsically diverse from the
-activity of legislating, but as has been seen, it obeys exclusively
-practical principles, economic and ethic. Hence the 'juridical activity
-can be merely economic and it can be moral; and seeing that economicity
-is the general form that of itself involves the other, the juridical
-activity is generically practical, or _economic. _ As such and in so
-far as it is such, it is at once distinct from and united with the
-moral form.
-
-[Sidenote: _Its consequent identity with the economic activity._]
-
-But juridical activity does not merely enter the economic activity;
-it is exactly identical with it: juridical activity and economic
-activity are _synonyms._ Legislative activity enters economy and
-nevertheless distinguishes itself from it, as volition of the abstract,
-indeterminate volition. The juridical activity is on the other hand
-concrete and determined, like the other, nor is it distinguished from
-it by any secondary character. It might be attempted to subdistinguish
-the economic and juridical activity, while admitting the generic
-identification, and to look upon the latter as such that although
-obeying the economic principle, it is yet developed _under the laws;_
-whereas the former would exist even where _laws were wanting._ But the
-distinction would be empirical, of undulating boundaries. Strictly
-speaking, man is surrounded with laws in all his actions, and he always
-acts under all the laws, and at the same time he effectually acts under
-none of them, save that of his own practical conscience.
-
-If the identity and synonymity of law, understood as juridical activity
-with economy, has not been discovered, that too is connected with the
-lack of recognition of the practical utilitarian category on the part
-of philosophers and with their considering it, as they erroneously
-did, either as egotism and immorality, or as an altogether empirical
-division, to which was added a concept, also empirical, of the
-juridical activity itself, which should be limited to what are called
-laws emanating from the State, sometimes graciously including in them
-social laws, and always altogether ignoring the fundamental form,
-individual laws.
-
-[Sidenote: _The failure to recognize the economic form and the meaning
-of the problem concerning the distinction between morality and law._]
-
-But this failure of recognition has not prevented the appearance and
-persistence of the problem of the _combined unity and distinction of
-law and morality,_ which has been the most frequent though the most
-complicated mode of affirming the claim of a special Philosophy of
-economy. A serious beginning of meditation upon law had hardly begun,
-when something was observed in it that it was impossible to resolve
-into the concepts of Ethic. Hence the generally admitted recognition
-of the distinction between law and morality and the many attempts
-at determining of what the peculiar character of the former exactly
-consisted.
-
-[Sidenote: _Theories of compulsion and exteriority, as distinctive
-characters: critique._]
-
-This character was placed most frequently and with greater insistence
-in the two determinations of _compulsion_ and of _exteriority._ And it
-was said that law is distinguished from morality because it is possible
-to exercize compulsion in the juridical, but not in the moral field;
-or that law deals with the field of external relations, morality with
-the internal; or that one is the _psychical,_ the other the _physical_
-side of action. But as to the first determination, we have already
-shown that it has no meaning at all when applied to the forms of the
-spiritual activity, where nothing is compulsory and everything is at
-once free and necessary: the juridical activity, if it be activity,
-must likewise always be determined by free agreement. The second, which
-is the determination of exteriority, is not less inconceivable; for it
-is not given to separate the external from the internal, since they are
-both one, nor the word from its meaning, nor the body from its spirit.
-Compulsion and exteriority, taken strictly as concepts, are therefore,
-in this case, void and contradictory formulæ. To fill them somehow with
-a thought, it would be necessary to understand as compulsion certain
-modes of action, as opposed to certain other modes; for instance,
-compulsion would be the action by which an accused person was conducted
-to prison by two policemen and non-compulsion that of him who should
-be induced to go and constitute himself a prisoner through the
-persuasion of others; and as exteriority, certain classes of actions
-opposed to certain others; so that, for example, the deportment of
-an individual as communal or provincial councillor would belong to
-external life, his relations with his confessor or with his Æsculapius
-to internal life. But compulsion and exteriority, reduced to these
-meanings, become gross and empirical concepts, of which no use can be
-made in philosophy and which therefore cannot be of the least value as
-qualifying and distinguishing law from morality.
-
-In the same way, no value is to be attached to such a distinction,
-when determined from what is licit to what is commanded, from rights
-to duties, from what is permitted to what is obligatory; because licit
-and commanded, rights and duties, from what is permitted to what is
-obligatory, are correlative concepts constituting an indissoluble nexus
-and it is not possible to separate and to oppose them to one another.
-
-[Sidenote: _Moralistic theories of rights: critique._]
-
-The difficulty of conveniently fixing the distinction with the
-characters indicated, leads one to think of a different sort of
-tentative, according to which rights would certainly be distinguished
-from ethicity, not placed above or beside it, but rather in the
-very sphere of morality itself, as the species in respect to the
-genus or the part in respect of the whole. Juridical action would be
-moral, but it would belong to the inferior levels of morality; it
-would be occupied with the execution of simple _justice,_ with the
-establishment of order, proportion, equality; whereas morality would
-represent _more than justice,_ and would upset the equilibrium of
-rights with benevolence, generosity, sacrifice, heroism. Rights (it
-is also said) are limited to the _ethical minimum,_ while morality
-strives for the _maximum;_ rights are concerned with strict rights or
-_perfect_ duties, morality with meritorious and supererogatory actions,
-_imperfect_ duties. But these determinations also pretend to separate
-the inseparable, by drawing an arbitrary line of division between small
-and great actions, between least and greatest, and they employ concepts
-that are altogether empirical, as, for instance, that of justice
-as distinct from benevolence, of the strictly obligatory from the
-meritorious and supererogatory; and worse still than this, metaphors
-and symbols, such as equality, order, regularity; or they operate
-directly with the arithmetical and geometrical proportion of actions.
-And consciously or unconsciously a return is made to Ethic pure and
-simple, with the theories that make juridical activity to consist of
-the recognition of others as _persons,_ or with the search for _general
-utility_ (superindividual). When we act in view of the _person_ in
-other individuals (or in oneself), or of the useful, which is not the
-useful for the individual, but although it comprehends, yet transcends
-it:--the merely juridical conscience has already been surpassed, it has
-been filled with a moral content, that is to say, an ethical form has
-been given to the practical activity. The double sense of the terms
-"rights" and "morality" is in this way preserved in words but denied in
-fact.
-
-[Sidenote: _Duality of positive and ideal, historical and natural
-rights, etc.; and absurd attempts at unification and co-ordination._]
-
-The dual sense of the terms is also affirmed by the very ancient
-distinction between _positive and ideal, historical_ and _natural_
-rights, _right_ and _justice,_ or, as it has also been formulated,
-between the _two different justices,_ realistic and idealistic,
-fruitful in conjunction. Natural rights, with their homonyms just
-stated, besides the generically practical significations that we have
-already examined, have also had the narrower one of ethical ideal or
-morality; and therefore it cannot cause astonishment that it should
-appear now conjoined with, now detached from positive rights. But how
-joined and disjoined? For us it is a question of degrees, whence the
-positivity of both forms is recognized: the second of these is included
-in the first: the ideal right or morality (if it be right, and not
-simply abstract excogitation willed by no one, or vague desire) is
-both positive and historical. But those who posited the distinction
-without being able to make it definite and so to dominate it were led
-to conceive one or the other term as negative; and therefore both as
-negative between themselves and existing only in a third: which meant
-to reannul the distinction by reducing it to abstract contradiction.
-If one of the two were conceived as negative, either the ideal justice
-(that is, the seriousness of moral strength) was denied and turned to
-ridicule, or positive justice, that is, the seriousness of volitional
-strength, was presented as something turbid and impure and at best
-as a human imperfection, to which it was advisable to resign oneself
-since it would disappear in a society of perfect men or in a future
-life of perfection. Juridical activity became something contingent
-and mortal. Matters were even worse, if it were found impossible to
-eliminate it with similar religious, apocalyptic, or millenary fancies.
-The negative was then conceived as positive or co-ordinated with the
-positive: hence incredible logical divisions of rights into forms or
-species of _moral_ and _immoral rights, of just_ and _unjust_ rights,
-in which the species has the function of _negation of the genus,_
-almost as though the race of horses were to be divided into two kinds:
-_dead_ and _living_ horses! Unjust or immoral rights are not rights,
-but a contradiction of them, and if we sometimes describe in this way
-a real and effective juridical act (an economic act), it is necessary
-to observe that the denomination is given from the point of view of a
-superior form of activity. Rights in themselves as rights, understood
-positively, are never immoral, but only _amoral._
-
-[Sidenote: _Value of all these theories as confused perception of the
-amoral character of justice._]
-
-All these errors, all these sterile tentatives have their origin, as
-has been said, in the lively consciousness of a distinction existing
-between right and morality and at the same time of the impossibility
-of determining this correctly, owing to lack of clarity as to the
-purely economic form of the practical activity. When the juridical
-activity has been identified with the economic and when juridical
-(economic) activity has in consequence been conceived as at once united
-with and distinct from morality, we are able to recognize that these
-attempts have nevertheless fulfilled a very useful function; that is
-to say, they have more or less energetically asserted and defended
-the position that there existed a characteristic distinction between
-right and morality and that it was necessary to seek for it. They are
-therefore far superior, notwithstanding their errors, to that confused
-ethical conception, which receives rights and morality indistinctly
-into its bosom, or to the utilitaristic conception, which arrives by a
-different route at the same indistinction. This merit belongs to the
-theories of the moral minimum, of justice, of the two justices and of
-the contest between positive and ideal rights; but in a much greater
-degree to that of compulsion, of exteriority, of the licit. With these
-last was almost unconsciously set in relief the fact that right obeys
-a law different from that of Ethic, and may be called _compelled and
-not free by comparison with it,_ because not founded upon the necessity
-of the universal; that in respect to the supreme _interiority_ of
-Ethic it can be considered as something _exterior;_ that in respect
-to the ethical imperative, it appears as something indifferentiated
-or _licit._ These are without doubt symbols, tautologies, vague and
-imprecise phrases, but efficacious in keeping the attention alert and
-in promoting doubt and research.
-
-[Sidenote: _Confirmations of this character in the ingenuous
-consciousness._]
-
-But the impossibility of absorbing rights into Ethic altogether and
-without leaving residues is proclaimed or confessed, not only in the
-theories of philosophers, but by simple thought, and especially by the
-consciousness we have of the real world being governed, not by abstract
-morality, but, as is said, by _force,_ or by the will in action.
-"Disarmed prophets" will be efficacious in poetry, but ridiculous in
-practical reality: _la force prime le droit,_ precedes it and is always
-of greater value than an unreal and contradictory ethical right and
-aspiration, afterwards dissolved in the empty and arbitrary. We will
-not recall proverbs, maxims, historical examples, though this would be
-easy; that little story of Franco Sacchetti which preserves "a fair
-speech" of Messer Ridolfo da Camerino, will suffice for all. One of his
-nephews had been at Bologna studying law for a good twelve years, and
-when, having become an excellent lawyer, he returned to Camerino, he
-went to pay a visit to Messer Ridolfo. When he paid the visit, Messer
-Ridolfo said, "And what didst thou do at Bologna?" He replied, "My
-Lord, I have learned _reason._" Said Messer Ridolfo, "Thou hast spent
-thy time ill." The young man replied that the saying seemed to him to
-be very strange. "Why was it ill spent, my Lord?" And Messer Ridolfo
-said, "_Because thou shouldst have learned force, which is worth two
-of the other._" The youth began to smile, and thinking it over again
-and again, both he and the others that heard, perceived that what
-Messer Ridolfo had said, was true.[1]
-
-[Sidenote: _Comparison between right and language. Grammars and codes._]
-
-And here too we are at last able to establish a parallel between
-the practical and theoretic activity, between the problems of the
-Philosophy of right and those of Logic and Æsthetic. The comparison of
-right and language has been several times attempted, with very great
-correction of thought, although necessarily defective execution, since
-it was customary to conceive both language and right in an abstract
-and empirical manner. Whoever should wish to take up the inquiry
-again would do great service, were he to insist upon the fact that
-since it has been impossible to understand what language really is,
-so long as grammars and vocabularies were taken as its reality, so it
-is impossible to understand anything of rights, so long as the eye is
-fixed upon laws and codes, or what is even worse, upon the commentaries
-of jurists, or upon the abstract volitional fact, or altogether upon
-what is not a true and proper volitional fact, but the elaboration of
-formulæ and of general concepts.
-
-[Sidenote: _Logic and language; morality and rights._]
-
-Only when rights appear as individual and continually new work of
-individuals, only when the attention is directed to the spectacle of
-real life and not to the abstractions of legislators and dispenses with
-the dissertations of jurists, is it possible to state the problem:
-how does this juridical work coincide with, and how does it differ
-from moral work? And here too the comparison with language is fitting,
-although language be not logicity, yet logical thought cannot become
-concrete, save in speaking; so moral activity cannot live, save by
-translating itself into laws and institutes, and in the realization of
-laws and institutes, that is, in the juridical and economic activity.
-
-Finally, just as the history of a language is always arbitrary and
-abstract, so long as it is considered alone, outside the works in which
-the language is incarnate and the true history of a language is its
-poetry and literature, so _the true history of the rights of a people_
-(of the rights that have really been executed and not merely formulated
-in laws and codes, be often proved to be a dead letter) cannot but be
-altogether one with _the social and political history of that people:_
-an altogether juridical or economic history; a history of _wants_ and
-of _labour._
-
-
-[1] Novelle, xl.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS
-
-
-[Sidenote: _Distinction between morality and rights, and its importance
-for the history of the economic principle._]
-
-I. The history of the distinction between morality and rights is very
-important, precisely because, as has been said, it is the manifestation
-of the very strongly--felt desire to posit in some way a philosophy of
-the aethical or amoral practical form: a manifestation which is the
-most conspicuous of all those that we have had occasion to note on the
-subject (theory of politics, theory of the inferior appetitive faculty,
-theory of the passions, etc.).[1] And owing to the impossibility of
-satisfying that exigency with the intellectual data possessed, the
-problem of the relation between rights and morality has become anything
-but an amusing puzzle, a theme for true vain eloquence.
-
-Emmanuel Kant in the _Critique of Pure Reason,_ wishing to give a
-characteristic example of the difficulty of definitions, found nothing
-better to record than that jurists were always seeking a definition
-of rights, but had never succeeded in finding one.[2] And a jurist
-philosopher of our times (Jhering) has called the definition of rights,
-in their difference from morality, the "Cape Horn," or the Cape of
-tempests (or shipwrecks?) of juridical science.
-
-[Sidenote: _Indistinction up to the time of Thomas._]
-
-The problem of that distinction is on the other hand relatively recent
-and therefore the history of the Philosophy of rights has rightly been
-placed not further back than the end of the seventeenth century, or not
-much beyond Christian Thomas.[3] Up to that time, it is not possible to
-speak strictly of a Philosophy of rights. Treatises of jurisprudence,
-of rights and of the State, in regard to what of philosophical they
-contained, were nothing but treatises of Ethic; not indeed because
-the two sciences were (as they were) materially united in the same
-books, but precisely because the two concepts were indistinct. The
-speculations of antiquity for this part also of the Philosophy of the
-practical have the character of ingenuousness already noted. It would
-be incorrect to reconstruct a moralistic philosophy from the rights
-of Plato, founding it, for example, upon the theory developed in the
-_Gorgias_ as to the eagerness to purge his punishment that should exist
-in the criminal, similar, in this respect, to the sick man, who knows
-that the medicine will free him from his disease.[4] The researches
-of Aristotle also as to justice (perhaps the best the classical world
-has left us on the subject), look upon justice in a narrow sense, as
-a virtue among virtues,[5] which should not intrinsically possess any
-greater reason for distinguishing itself from the other virtues than
-they for distinguishing among themselves. The pompous definitions
-of the Roman jurists, still the joy of schools of jurisprudence and
-of judges' rhetoric, have no philosophical weight and would in any
-case confirm the identity of rights with Ethicity, if not absolutely
-with the entire knowable and practical universe. There is hardly a
-ray of the distinction to be traced in the discussions as to whether
-rights exist by nature or by convention and in the concept of a _ἁπλῶς
-δίκαιον,_ opposed to that of _πολιτικὸν δίκαιον_ found in Plato, and
-more explicitly in Aristotle,[6] and rendered popular by Cicero when
-speaking of the _recta ratio, naturae congruens, diffusa in omnes,
-constans, sempiterna_; of rights not drawn from the Twelve Tables or
-from the pretorian Edict, but _ex intima philosophia_; and of rights
-that on the other hand are _varie et ad tempus descriptae populis,_
-whence they have the name of laws _favore magis quam re._[7]
-
-This rough distinction between natural and positive, absolute and
-relative rights; this concept of an ideal right placed face to face
-with real rights, or of which the real should be an imperfect and
-partial translation, also reappears in St. Thomas Aquinas and in other
-scholastics. And there is nothing more than this in those thinkers who
-founded what was called natural rights in the seventeenth century,
-such as Grotius and his followers. It is true that the boast of having
-distinguished rights from morality and religion has usually been
-attributed to that historical period. But it is hardly necessary to
-repeat that what was meant by these formulæ were the great social and
-political questions which took the form of wars of religion in the
-Europe of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; that so-called
-distinction, therefore, the result of long strife, though it have great
-practical value as a sign of social transformation, has no doctrinal
-value. The idea of autonomy, proper to the juridical activity, is
-absent even in the profound treatise of Vico on universal rights, for
-this contains only an altogether empirical distinction between _virtus_
-and _justitia_; of these the first _cum cupiditate pugnai,_ and the
-second _utilitates dirigit et exaequat;_ and both derive their origin
-from the _vis veri_ or _ratio humana;_ and as all the virtues are
-connected and none of them can exist alone (_nulla virtus solitaria_),
-so _virtus_ and _justitia_ are at bottom one.[8] The work of Vico,
-which gives a new conception of the relation between ideal and history
-and most original applications of Roman history, turns out to be
-nothing but Ethic, when considered beneath the aspect of Philosophy of
-Rights. Nor on the other hand could the problem of the nature of rights
-truly form the object of enquiry on the part of utilitarians (Hobbes
-and others); with whom, if the absorption of rights in morality was not
-found, this did not arise because the one was distinguished from the
-other, but because morality itself was denied in what was proper to
-itself: the problem of the distinction disappeared, because its terms
-disappeared.
-
-[Sidenote: _Thomas and his followers._]
-
-II. Thomas provided the apple of discord, or as might also be said,
-cast the leaven of progress into the treatment of rights, when
-he distinguished three forms of the _rectum_: the _justum,_ the
-_honestum,_ the _decorum,_ placing the first in opposition to the other
-two, the _forum externum_ to the _internum,_ and attributing to rights
-and justice the character of coercibility.[9] The formula had a rapid
-and unsuspected fortune, and became current in the schools. Gundling,
-for instance, defined right as the "ordering of external relations."[10]
-
-[Sidenote: _Kant and Fichte._]
-
-It was completely developed and reasoned out, with all the strictness
-that its erroneity permitted, in the doctrines of Kant and Fichte, who
-were the greatest of Thomas's scholars for this part of the study.
-Kant opposed _legality_ to morality; the juridical imperative is
-expressed with the formula, "act externally" (_handle äusserlich_);
-right is conjoined with the faculty of compulsion (_zwingen._) Hence
-his doctrines are often amoralistic or economic as regards individual
-juridical institutions, and this is especially the case when he deals
-with the State, with matrimony, and with punishment; these were
-followed by Fichte, who made some reservations for matrimony alone,
-considering it an institution not only juridical, but also natural
-and moral.[11] On the other hand rights were for Kant something that
-surpassed the individual will and utility; it was the sum of the
-conditions by means of which the will of the one can be united with
-the will of another, according to a universal law of liberty.[12]
-Fichte in like manner conceived of rights as altogether free of every
-admixture of morality; as an objective order, arising from the fact
-of the individual who coherently affirms himself and his own liberty,
-thus also affirming other individuals and their liberty.[13] Both
-philosophers thus preserve the moralistic concept of the legal and
-the _justum_; rights, although armed with compelling power, are never
-force alone, but the external ordering of freedom, namely, justice.
-For this reason, Kant explicitly excludes force, in so far as it is
-constitutive of rights and speaks of a "force without law"; and both
-he and Fichte make coercibility to flow, not from the nature of the
-volitional force itself, but from the violation of order. It is just,
-says Kant, to repel force with force, when it would interfere with
-liberty. The right of coercion (repeats Fichte) is founded solely upon
-the violation of the original right. But it remains obscure what this
-poor legality, justice, coexistence, and harmony of wills may be;
-what force may be and why and how it is connected with the preceding
-definition is not investigated. The distinction of the juridical from
-the moral sphere is announced and proclaimed more loudly than perhaps
-was ever done before or since; but to announce and to proclaim is not
-to carry out. If rights be changed into an ordinance more or less
-rational, to be identified with the concept of justice, one does not
-see how they can exist independently of morality. Kant and Fichte
-were prevented from conceiving the juridical function free from every
-element of morality or immorality, by the function which they assigned
-to compulsion (symbol of law), submitting it to ethical exigencies.
-In this uncertainty, there cannot be wanting and there is not wanting
-the thought that rights are not indeed an eternal category, but a
-historical and transitory fact; and as Spinoza had already said, _si
-cum humana natura ita comparatum esset ut homines id quod maxime utile
-est maxime cuperent, nulla esset opus arte ad concordiam et fidem_;
-Fichte thus looked upon the juridical State simply as a _State of
-necessity_ opposed to the _State of reason_: and when perfection has
-been attained and there is complete accord of all in the common end,
-"the State" (he said) "disappears as a legislative and compulsive
-force."[14]
-
-In the ulterior phase of his thought, Fichte _Hegel_ afterwards took
-further steps toward a closer union between morality and rights. But
-the complete resolution of the first in the second is effected in the
-system of Hegel, though it is customary to blame this philosopher for
-the opposite fault, namely, that he resolves morality in right. Above
-all, Hegel would hear nothing of the concept of force in right: facts
-of force and of violence, as, for instance, the relation between a
-slave and his master, appertain, according to him, to a circle, which
-lies on this side of right, to the subjective spirit, to a world in
-which wrong can still be right. The fact that violence and tyranny are
-met with in positive rights is an accidental thing and does not affect
-its real nature. For Hegel, as for his predecessors, co-operation
-arises only as reaction from the violation of what is just, and is
-violence preservative of liberty, suppression of the previous violence.
-"To define abstract and rigorous rights as law which we can be
-compelled to obey, means" (writes Hegel) "to see them as a consequence
-of what takes place only by the cross road of wrong." But there is
-more: abstract rights, which form the first moment of the Philosophy
-of the practical in Hegel, are unreal; he opposes to them the second
-moment, morality, which also is abstract and unreal, consisting of the
-good intention, which has not yet been incorporated in action and life:
-thus concrete reality is realized only in the third moment, in the
-ethos, which synthetizes the abstract rights and the abstract morality
-of the intention in social life.[15] From this it is clear that the
-purely juridical moment does not possess effective spiritual autonomy
-for Hegel; _so_ much so, that it is placed by him upon the same plane
-as abstract and unreal morality. In consequence of his identification
-of rights with ethicity, Hegel is opposed to Kant and Fichte in his
-definitions of single rights; he rejects the compulsory and contractual
-theory of the State and (the Kantian) theory of matrimony as a strict
-contract made between individuals as to the reciprocal use of their
-bodies.[16] The compulsory theory of punishment seemed to him to reduce
-the latter to a mere economic fact, by means of which "the State as
-judging power, opens a business with goods called crimes exchangeable
-for other goods, and the code is _the list of prices._"[17]
-
-[Sidenote: _Herbart and Schopenhauer._]
-
-Herbart too denies the originality of the character of compulsion
-in the idea of rights, and this is one of his five practical ideas,
-or, "the agreement of many wills, thought as a rule that eliminates
-strife." But even in this superficial moralistic reduction, force
-reappears all of a sudden, one knows not how: society has need of an
-external bond, in order to subsist; force and power (_Macht_) are
-added to society and _the State_ arises.[18] The same contradictions
-are to be found in Schopenhauer: after he has posited the two virtues
-of justice and benevolence, he makes a chapter of morality out of the
-pure doctrine of law. The science of rights in the specific sense
-borrows this chapter in order to study its opposite: all the limits
-that morality looks upon as not to be passed without intention of
-wrong-doing, on the contrary are considered by the science of rights
-as limits, of which violation by others is not to be tolerated and
-from which one has the right to expel others. Thus the distinction
-between internal and external is in this way reproduced in all
-its unmaintainability under the denomination of _rights and their
-opposite._ But the bridge of asses is always the junction of rights
-with force, that is to say, with the element extraneous to Ethic; and
-in this connection Schopenhauer has nothing better to offer than a
-comparison. "As there are certain chemical substances never to be found
-pure and isolated, but always in some sort of combination with another
-element, which gives to them the necessary consistency; so rights, when
-they must set foot in the real world and dominate it, have need of a
-small adjunct of will and force, in order to be able (notwithstanding
-its nature, which is really ideal and therefore ethereal) to operate
-and persist in this real and material world, without evaporating and
-flying to heaven, as was the case with Hesiod."[19]
-
-[Sidenote: _Rosmini and others._]
-
-Rosmini presents the two elements not well harmonized, as the
-eudæmonological and the ethical. Rights for him are not mere
-eudæmonism, but a eudæmonistic fact, produced by moral right and
-receiving form from it; hence the science of rights "stands between
-Eudæmonology and Ethic, so that one of its ends extends to the one
-and the other to the other." It would not be easy to explain and to
-justify what he calls a mediate science, composed of Eudæmonology
-and Ethic; and it would be far less easy to explain how this science
-comes to be "completely distinct" as regards its components. If rights
-have a moral form, they are moral and not eudæmonological. Owing to
-this difficulty Rosmini was led to introduce the concept of the licit
-as criterion of differentiation, defining right as "a personal faculty
-and power of enjoying, acting and being able to act, a lawful good
-that must not be impeded by others."[20] Juridically understood this
-constitutes a tautology, ethically something worse. Other Catholic
-authors (Taparelli, for example) deplore the separation of _ethos_ from
-_jus,_ introduced (they say) by Protestant doctrines and the limitation
-of right to what a man can externally exact from others according to
-law; "whence it happens that in the enumeration of laws, actions are
-sometimes posited that are real moral faults in the agent"; maintaining
-on the contrary the necessity of treating morality and rights together,
-"for rights are part of morality in the same way that trigonometry and
-conic sections are a part of geometric theories."[21]
-
-[Sidenote: _Stahl, Ahrens, Trendelenburg._]
-
-III. If Catholic doctrines deserve mention for their conservativism, it
-is necessary to record the names of Stahl, Ahrens, and Trendelenburg,
-for no other reason than the great popularity that they enjoyed in
-the schools. Stahl divides the ethical action of man into two domains,
-differing in content and character. This dualism is founded upon the
-double relation of human existence, individual and social, which gives
-rise to two forms of imperatives: to the imperative of the individual
-will, of religion, and of morality, and to that which aims at moulding
-social life and is the imperative of rights. This theory, which has
-a varied terminology, can be reduced to the theory of exteriority
-(sociality, rights), and interiority (individuality, morality). In
-a very similar way Ahrens includes law in the science of the good
-or Ethic--the fundamental science. He remarks that good intention,
-virtue, are not sufficient to secure to man that complex of material
-and spiritual goods of which he has need, and therefore there must be
-a second mode of effecting in the good, which what is of importance
-would be, not the motives of the will, but the pursuit of the good and
-its real existence in life. Trendelenburg (who regrets the classical
-concept of the identity of Ethic and Law and looks upon the time
-when they began to be distinguished as a beginning of degeneration)
-discovers three sides to rights: the _logical,_ the _ethical,_ and
-the _physical_ (compulsion),[22] of which none, as we see, is truly
-judicial.
-
-[Sidenote: _Utilitarians._]
-
-For the reasons already indicated, it is not necessary to pause
-over the juridical ideas of the utilitarians of the eighteenth and
-nineteenth centuries, whose last celebrated representatives were,
-in England, Bentham, Austin and Spencer. The German Kirchmann is to
-be identified with the utilitarian tendency. He reduces morality to
-the _respect_ inspired, not by the law, but by the _person_ of the
-legislator, a respect afterwards converted into respect for the law
-"owing to a peculiarity of human nature, as the result of long custom
-and exercise." According to this view, rights are defined as "a union
-of pleasure and morality, whether the first calls the second to its
-aid or the second the first, in cases when the isolated efficacy of
-either should prove insufficient." Thus rights are declared to be, not
-an original principle, but the simple union of two different elements.
-Jhering failed to surpass utilitarianism, notwithstanding his profound
-juridical knowledge and his lively intellect. He attempted to impart
-an original character to his utilitarian theory, by declaring that it
-was _objective_ in respect to the usual utilitarian theories, but
-he always remained under the obligation that he had undertaken, of
-showing how the purest ideality of Ethic could be fortified with such,
-a conception. The distinctions drawn by Jhering between recompense,
-compulsion, duty, and love, since they lack a foundation, vacillate and
-prove but little convincing.[23]
-
-[Sidenote: _Recent writers of treatises._]
-
-IV. Running rapidly through other recent philosophers of Rights, we
-do not meet with original thoughts that compare with those of Kant,
-of Fichte, and of Hegel. Lasson conceives of the philosophy of Rights
-as a part of Ethic and co-ordinates with it three other parts--the
-philosophy of custom, of morality or doctrine of the virtues and the
-doctrine of the ethos or of the ethical personality. Rights are the
-first of these three ethical moments and is concerned with the willing
-of man as a willing still essentially natural; reason joins it as a
-force essentially determining and limiting, at first only external; the
-object of rights is to guarantee the conditions of the common life, in
-so far as it is the condition for all human ends.--Steinthal recognizes
-that rights undoubtedly "possess an exteriority altogether opposed to
-the interiority of Ethic; hence, if they be not apprehended in their
-profound nature, they may easily be repugnant to moral feeling": they
-are "the system of modes of compulsion, by means of which are secured
-social ethical ends." But (we repeat) since the external cannot be
-separated from the internal, we do not see in what way ethical ends can
-be distinguished from their modes of realization. Steinthal also says
-that "Ethic is like a river and Rights like the bed of the river": a
-comparison that can be variously interpreted, like all comparisons and
-which for our part we should be disposed to find excellent, were it
-admitted that as the bed of the river, when it runs dry, yet remains
-always the bed of a possible river, so Rights can remain without Ethic
-and yet be always Rights. But the signification in which Steinthal
-employs that comparison is simply the same as the diad of external and
-internal; that is to say, he in his turn wishes to distinguish the
-indistinguishable, so that it would on the contrary be necessary to
-reply that the bed of the river and the river are not two things but
-one, because a river without a bed cannot exist and a bed without a
-river is not the bed of a river.--Schuppe denies that Rights and the
-State can claim what is immoral, but affirms that all the same they
-are inferior to the exigencies of morality, because Rights and the
-State concern individuals in their spatial-temporal concretion, but
-do not attain to the profundity afforded by conscience in universal.
-The ethical concept of rights preponderates in Wundt, for he does not
-conceive of any other object of rights, subjective and objective, save
-morality. Cohen, in like manner, does not admit other independence
-to the science of rights save that, of writing in concepts, and of
-organizing as a system of concepts the rights that is eternally
-unwritten, the moral law.[24]
-
-As we see, if the names of the writers and sometimes their phraseology
-change, the thoughts that alternate or combine are always the same.
-Rümelin, who undertook to criticize a series of definitions of rights,
-from that of Kant onwards, reproved Kant for having drawn too great a
-distinction between rights and morality, and others (Ahrens, Stahl,
-Trendelenburg) for having drawn too little. Finally, he gives his
-definition in a provisional and tentative manner: "juridical ordinance
-has the task of assuring to a people that part of the good adapted
-for realization by a social force, according to universal norms."
-Jellinek distinguishes the norms of rights from those of religion, of
-ethicity and of custom, by a triple character: _(a)_ because they are
-norms for the external conduct of men among themselves; _(b)_ because
-they derive from a recognized external authority; _(c)_ because their
-obligatoriness is guaranteed by external powers.--Stammler attaches
-secondary importance to the element of compulsion, and although he does
-not explicitly identify justice and morality, assigns to them the same
-territory, where they should act with different methods, since the
-perfectionment of the soul, the character and the thought are distinct
-from right behaviour. And adopting the turn of phrase of a famous
-proposition of the _Critique of Pure Reason,_ he ends by formulating
-the following statement: "Justice without love is empty; compassion
-without a right rule is blind." The Frenchman Duguit transports with
-greater frankness the centre of rights into morality: he conceives of
-rights as altogether different from force; not as _political,_ but
-as _limit_ of force; as consciousness of human solidarity, beneath
-whose rule we are all placed, State and individual, strong and weak,
-governors and governed. French philosophers of rights generally oppose
-the German school, in which the character of force is prominent, so
-that French juridical philosophy sometimes assumes (for example, in
-Fouillée) an attitude analogous to that assumed, as we know, by the
-"generous" French economic school toward the English economists. And
-merely that some Italian name should not be absent from this review of
-recent writers, we will record Miraglia, who repeats the old Kantian
-division, making it yet more empirical: "Morality and rights are part
-of Ethic, because the good can be chiefly developed in the intimate
-relations of the conscience, or on the contrary can be developed
-by preference in the external relations between man and man and
-between man and thing";--and Vanni, who mixes a little positivistic
-evolutionism with this empirical reduction, affirming that rights are
-not originally distinct from morality, but that afterwards they were
-gradually differentiated, and rights now have the special function of
-guardianship and guarantee: "that is to say, the ethical minimum alone
-has been guaranteed, that much of the ethical field as is most directly
-necessary for the maintenance of life in common, leaving to other
-forces the task of regulating what is most individual in life." And so
-on, though it seems that this is enough.[25]
-
-[Sidenote: _Strident contradictions. Stammler._]
-
-Such are the contradictions in which the Philosophy of rights has
-struggled for about two centuries. Rights do not seem to be identical
-with Ethic, but they also do not seem to be simply different; they
-seem to be at once identical and different, but yet it has been found
-impossible to fix the element of difference with the concepts of
-external, of compulsion and others such. The thought of a difference
-between the two forms of activity has not been further eliminated;
-but neither has it been transformed and absorbed. This is a morbid
-condition, of which the gravest symptom is the logical absurdity of
-the aforesaid two rights and two justices. Rümelin talks of the pure
-ideal justice, which selects from the evidence and judges on the basis
-of immediate impressions of feeling; and of a realistic, rational,
-empirical, disciplined and developed justice: two justices that must
-however act together.[26] Others, seeking relations between those two
-concepts from a single fact and failing to conquer the difficulty,
-force logic by distinguishing between _concept_ and _ideal_ of rights,
-or (as Vanni said) between _logical_ concept and concept of the
-_rational exigencies_ of rights: as though a concept could be truly
-logical, if it do not derive from rational exigencies, and as if these
-can be valid, if they be not the concept itself. Worse still, Stammler
-affirms the identity of rights with moral rights, and of rights alone
-with immoral rights, arriving at the already criticized division of
-effective rights (_Gesetzes_) into two classes. It "is either right
-rights (_richtiges Recht_) or not; and right rights are effective,
-whose content of will possesses the property of being _right._ Hence,
-right rights stand to effective rights as _species to genus._"[27]
-To meditate upon this plan of division is more than sufficient to
-produce the conviction of the failure of the Philosophy of rights, as
-it has been developed and as it could be developed with the practical
-presuppositions hitherto admitted. As the result of the direction of
-studies, from Thomas to the most recent, there remains nothing but
-the problem itself, as originated by the definitions of Thomas, and
-become certainly more acute and difficult, owing to later disputes and
-inquiries, but never solved.
-
-[Sidenote: _The value of law._]
-
-V. Less attention has been bestowed upon the concept of _law,_ upon
-which it was impossible to obtain full light, on the one hand before
-the theory of abstract concepts had been developed (representative of
-class) in their difference from the universal, and on the other before
-preconceptions as to the necessary social and political character of
-laws had been discarded.
-
-[Sidenote: _In antiquity._]
-
-But the difficulties contained in that concept had several times been
-observed in antiquity. In a dialogue between Alcibiades and Pericles,
-preserved in the _Memorabilia,_ it is asked if all laws be laws, or
-only those that are just; and it is shown that it does not suffice
-that a law should be a law, in order to ensure its observance.[28]
-No true solution, however, was reached in this, as in many questions
-discussed at this period by Greek philosophy. The _Crito_ is rather a
-stupendous work of art than a philosophical thesis, for it shows to
-the life the state of soul of Socrates, and the importance that he
-attributed to the laws and to the social order: the reason alleged for
-obedience to them, being placed in the fact that we have tacitly or
-explicitly agreed to remain within the boundaries of a given state,
-has in it something of the sophistical. Even in antiquity was seen the
-necessity of tempering the rigidity of laws by means of the equable,
-το ἐπιεικέç, which Aristotle defined as the correction of the law
-where it sins through its character of generality (ἐπανόρθωμα νόμου ᾗ
-ἐλλείπει διὰ τὸ καθόλου).[29] But it was not possible to escape from
-empiricism by means of the concept of equity. The law sins, not once,
-but always, through abstractness, or better, it never sins at all,
-because its function resides precisely in that abstractness.--In modern
-times Diderot felt and expressed all the gravity of the conflicts that
-arise, alike from the observance and from the inobservance of the law,
-and he expresses this in his _Entretien d'un père avec ses enfants sur
-le danger de se mettre au-dessus des lois. "Mon père_ (remarks one
-of the sons at the end of the dialogue), _c'est qu'à la rigueur il
-n'y a pas de lois pour le sage.... Parlez plus bas.... Toutes étant
-sujettes à des exceptions, c'est à lui qu'il appartient de juger des
-cas où il faut s'y soumettre ou s'en affranchir.--Je ne serais pas trop
-fâché_ (concludes the father), _qu'il y eût dans la ville un ou deux
-citoyens, comme toi; mais je n'y habiterais pas, s'ils pensaient tous
-de même._"[30]
-
-[Sidenote: _Romanticism._]
-
-The attitude of rebellion to the laws showed itself in German thought
-and literature in the preromanticism of the _Sturm und Drang_ (for
-instance in the _Räuber_ of Schiller), and in Romanticism properly
-so called, when among others appeared the theories that limited the
-State, such as those of Wilhelm von Humboldt, and theories of sexual
-relations, such as those of Friedrich Schlegel. In the _Lucinde_ is
-displayed great horror for _bourgeois_ customs and for every sort of
-constraint, sexual relations being advocated with woman, family, love
-and fidelity, but without matrimony.
-
-[Sidenote: _Jacobi._]
-
-Jacobi represents this attitude in several of his writings, with great
-elevation of soul, and especially in the _Woldemar_ (1779, 1794-96),
-the most lively protest that has ever been made against law in the name
-of the individual. Here the question treated is precisely whether we
-should follow the inspirations of our own conscience or the laws of
-our own people. Sides are taken against "the compulsion and violence
-exercised by usages, customs, habits, and against those who do not
-think, save by means of those laws, holding them sacred, with resolute
-soul and mind inert"; and "that audacious heroic spirit is celebrated,
-which raises itself above the laws and common morality that it may
-produce a new order of things." "His heart alone tells man immediately
-what is good; his heart alone, his instincts only, can tell him
-immediately: to love it is his life. Reflection teaches him to know and
-to practise what leads to good. Habit assures and makes his the wisdom
-that he has acquired." "But this individual initiative," he observes,
-"may be the cause of abuse and misunderstandings." "Without doubt,"
-replied Jacobi, "but what cannot be misunderstood has little meaning,
-and what cannot be abused has but little force in use." Men may be
-divided into two classes; the one exaggerates fear, the other hope and
-courage. The former are circumspect, always in doubt, they fear the
-truth because it may be misunderstood, they fear great qualities, lofty
-virtue, because of the aberrations to which it may give rise; and they
-have evil always before their eyes. The latter are the bold (who could
-be called the irreflective in the Platonic sense) and they behave with
-less exactitude; they are not so perplexed, they trust rather to the
-voice of their heart than to any word from without; they build rather
-upon courage than upon virtue, which generally keeps them waiting too
-long. They sometimes ask themselves with Young: Is virtue then alone
-baptized and are the passions pagan? "If," says Jacobi, "I must keep
-to one of these classes, I choose the second." "Yes," he exclaims
-elsewhere, opposing the abstractness of Kant,--"yes, I am atheist and
-impious, yes, I will to lie, in opposition to the will that wills
-nothing, as Desdemona lied when dying, I will to lie and to deceive
-like Pylades, when he slew himself for the sake of Orestes; I will to
-slay like Timoleon; to break laws and oaths like Epaminondas and John
-de Witt; to commit suicide like Otho; to despoil the temple like David;
-to pluck ears of corn on the Sabbath day, if only because I am hungry
-and the law is made for man, not man for the law. By the sacrosanct
-conscience that I have within me, I know that the _privilegium
-aggratiandi_ for such crimes against the pure letter of the law,
-rational, absolute and universal, is the sovran right of man himself,
-the seal of his dignity, of his divine nature."[31] But it must be
-remarked upon reading these effusions (most sincere, as all that came
-from the pen of Jacobi), that they are rather manifestations of states
-of the soul than theories, and therefore, strictly speaking, not to be
-theoretically censured, as is the case with all affirmations that place
-in relief one side of reality, without denying the others by doing so.
-
-[Sidenote: _Hegel._]
-
-Hegel discovered this, observing in relation to our last extract:
-"Neither of the two sides can be wanting to moral beauty, neither
-its liveliness as individuality, by which it does not obey the
-dead concept, nor the form of concept and of law, universality and
-objectivity, which is the side exclusively considered by Kant, by means
-of the absolute abstraction to which he submitted liveliness, thereby
-suffocating it. The passage cited as to the liveliness and freedom
-of the moral life does not exclude objectivity, but does not express
-it either." Hence the danger of the romantic attitude, which had no
-need of exhortations such as those of Jacobi, for it already too much
-preferred _magnanimous_ to _honest, noble_ to _moral_ action; and was
-much inclined to free itself of the law itself under the pretext of
-freeing itself from the _letter_ of the law. Meeting empirical with
-empirical observations, Hegel also remarked that the examples of the
-violation of laws due to the divine majesty of man, adduced by Jacobi,
-were conditioned by the natural temperament, by actual situations, and
-especially by circumstances of supreme misfortune, of supreme and rare
-necessity, in which few individuals find themselves. "It would be very
-sad for liberty if it could only prove its majesty and become actual
-in extraordinary cases of cruel laceration of the moral and natural
-life and in extraordinary individuals. The ancients, on the other hand,
-found the highest morality in the life of a well-ordered State." Hegel
-admitted that the affirmation of Jacobi, "The law is made for man, not
-man for the law," contained a great truth, when it was intended to
-allude in this way to the positive or statutory law. But the opposite
-was also true, when the allusion was to the moral law, taken as
-universal, outside of which, when the individual was separated from it,
-there was nothing but appetites and sensible impulses, which can only
-be means for the law.[32]
-
-But we must not fail to recognize that Hegel does not avail himself of
-this most exact distinction in his philosophy, for there the dominating
-motive is respect for the laws and the tendency to attack individual
-initiative. Hegel repeats many times with complacency the saying of
-the Pythagorean, that the best way of educating a young man is to
-make him citizen of a State ruled by good laws; and he remarks that
-Herculeses belong to primitive and barbarous times, and that individual
-valour has but a small field in times of culture. He was most averse
-to criticism of and rebellion against the authority of the State; for
-these did not seem to him to correspond to the reality of the spirit.
-That surface is not the reality; at bottom all desire order; and it is
-necessary to distinguish apparent political sentiment from that which
-men really will, for within them they will the thing, but hesitate as
-to particulars, and enjoy the vanity of censuring.[33] Men believe
-that the State exists and that in it alone are particular interests
-realized; but habit makes invisible to them that upon which our entire
-existence depends. There is in short in Hegel, besides the philosopher,
-a politician and moralist regretful of the excesses of revolutionaries
-and of unbridled romanticism; and there is also in him the desire for
-an exact inquiry into the function and limits of positive law.[34]
-
-[Sidenote: _Recent doctrines._]
-
-In recent times there have been many and very various manifestations
-connected with the concept of this function and of its limits, and
-it would occupy much space to enumerate and to illustrate them all.
-We shall mention three, very distant and different. The first, which
-belongs to the political and social field, is the doctrine of anarchy
-and is opposed to laws of all sorts; it is a not purely philosophical
-doctrine, though it involves philosophical questions.[35] The other
-two, which more properly belong to the juridical field, are, the
-assertion of the importance of laws and of the duty of defending their
-existence, even where their violation by others does not interfere
-with our individual interests, or when their defence costs individual
-sacrifices (this was the argument of a vigorous little book by
-Jhering);[36]--and by way of contrast the demand for a free creation of
-the law by the judge (_die freie Rechtsfindung,_) which has given rise
-to discussions that are yet burning, more directly provoked by a little
-book of Kantorowicz (Gnaeus Flavius).[37]
-
-[Sidenote: _Natural rights and their dissolution. The historical school
-of rights._]
-
-VI. If then there has not been a great gain in clearness of
-fundamental concepts, as regards this part of the subject, there has on
-the contrary been an indubitable advance in consciousness acquired as
-to the mutability of laws and as to the consequent contradictoriness of
-the idea of natural Rights. This, with its complement, the catalogue
-of innate natural and inalienable rights of man, had great success in
-the seventeenth century for political and social reasons, attaining
-its highest development in the century following. But it may be said
-that the doctrine of innate rights was liquidated by Kant in the
-_Metaphysic of Custom,_ when he wrote the proposition that liberty is
-the only original and innate rights, which belong to man through his
-very humanity,[38] at the very moment when it was most energetically
-affirmed in a practical form in the _Declaration of the Rights of
-Man._ In the system of Hegel the constructions of natural rights began
-to lose their rigidity; becoming indeed historical categories of
-Ethicity or _Sittlichkeit,_ determinations of the spirits of various
-peoples (_Volksgeister,_) which are in their turn determinations of
-the Absolute or of the Idea. Owing to this view (without taking into
-account his error of wishing to philosophize and to make dialectical
-what is historical and empirical), Hegel connected himself closely
-with the historical school of rights (Hugo, Savigny, etc.). This,
-notwithstanding the exaggeration by which he seemed to deny the value
-of the ideal demands made of rights, had the merit of shaking the old
-conception of natural rights. This has retained its place in treatises
-from that time onward in a more or less worm-eaten and unstable
-condition by the force of inertia; or it has been preserved by Catholic
-writers (by Rosmini not less than by the Padre Taparelli), whose
-conception is of necessity but little historical; or it has reappeared
-in those curious Catholics and anti-historians, the positivists
-(Spencer, Ardigò). But that natural rights are nothing but _new_
-historical rights in the struggle of their becoming, is a conviction
-that has penetrated the general consciousness.
-
-[Sidenote: _The comparison between rights and language._]
-
-We also owe to the historical school the comparison between the
-life of rights and the life of language; this was prepared by the
-discoveries of comparative linguistic, which although substantially
-correct, yet had, as we have observed, the defect of limiting itself
-to the _grammatical_ form of both facts, not to their genuine and
-direct reality. Jacobi, in the already quoted effusions of _Woldemar,_
-had recourse to the same comparison, for other reasons and with a
-more exact understanding of its terms; speaking there of the moral
-infraction of laws, he wrote: "For such exceptions, for such _licences
-of lofty poetry,_ the grammar of virtue has no definite rules and
-therefore does not mention them No grammar, least of all the general
-and philosophical, could contain in itself all that appertains to a
-living language, and teach how, in every epoch, every dialect must be
-formed. But it would be unwise to affirm that every one may speak as
-they feel inclined." And again, "Virtue is free art; and as artistic
-genius gives laws to art by its creations, so moral genius gives laws
-to human conduct: just, good, noble, excellent, is what the just, good,
-noble, and excellent man practises, achieves and produces in conformity
-with his character; he _invents virtue,_ procures and generates
-adequate expression for human dignity."[39]
-
-[Sidenote: _The concept of law, and the studies of comparative Rights
-and of the general Doctrine of Rights._]
-
-VII. The study of the concept of law is also progressing, and
-henceforth is not confined to so-called juridical laws and to
-legislations and codes. Researches into primitive rights and into
-those of savage and barbarous peoples, known as juridical Ethnography
-or comparative rights, have greatly contributed to destroy many
-prejudices; as also the attention that has been directed to facts
-called social, that is to say, not strictly political. A school that
-has had independent yet partly similar manifestations in England
-(Austin, Sumner Maine, etc.) and in Germany, where it has taken
-the name of school of _the general Doctrine of Rights (allgemeine
-Rechtslehre,_ according to the denomination given to it by Adolph
-Merkel), studies in particular the concept of law in its various
-classes and subclasses; and from it there cannot but issue a more
-correct understanding of the concept of law, as from the refinement
-of political Economy into pure Economy has come, first Psychology and
-then the Philosophy of economy. Meanwhile (and as far as we know)
-the literature of the school, dominated as it is by the needs of
-jurisprudence, maintains an empirical or _intellectualistic_ character;
-and jurists, rather than philosophers themselves, are those that most
-cultivate it. The distinctions and sub-distinctions of the laws are
-conducted with subtlety, but are without solid foundation, because the
-concept posited as basis of law is uncertain and arbitrary. Limiting
-ourselves to a single example, let us mention Bierling, perhaps the
-most philosophical of those various writers. Bierling first of all
-excludes from the concept of law the modes of man's conduct toward
-God, toward himself, and toward animals; but he gives no serious
-reason for this. He then arrives, by a mere arbitrary act, at the
-limiting of the concept of law to the manner of men's conduct among
-themselves, and defines rights in the juridical sense (as he calls it:
-"in general, all that men living together in any sort of community
-reciprocally recognize as a norm and rule of this living together"). He
-then introduces into the concept thus defined, not by deduction, but
-as the result of a second arbitrary act, the concept of exteriority,
-adding that, "the object of law is a definite _external_ procedure
-of man toward man."[40] In all this is evident the bad influence of
-jurisprudence and of its empirical preoccupations.
-
-[Sidenote: _legalism and moral casuistic._]
-
-VIII. Ethical legalism became a bitter question for Christianity,
-precisely because of the contest between lofty Christian morality and
-its legalitarian form, chiefly inherited from Judaism. In the ancient
-world there is almost no trace of the question, just because the
-struggle was never acute.[41] Hence the difficulties debated among the
-patristics and the scholastics as to derogability from divine laws
-and the consequent distinctions between a perfect and an imperfect
-moral life, between precepts and counsels; and as recourse is had to
-precedents in judicial questions, so here with these ethical problems
-concerning exceptions made by God to the moral law, to the precepts
-of the Bible (where some were not beautiful).[42] The practical needs
-of confession give origin to books on casuistic, of which collections
-exist dating from the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The
-Reformation manifested aversion to these treatises: Luther said that
-moral theologians had first extinguished in men the fear of God and had
-then placed soft cushions beneath their hands and feet; and Melanchthon
-lamented that the Christian Republic was honoured _theologastrorum
-sententiis de conscientiae casiobus, inestricabilibus, ubi nunquam
-non ex quaestione quaestio nascitur,_ and called them _conscientiarum
-cauteria._[43]
-
-[Sidenote: _Probabilitism and Jesuitic morality._]
-
-The inconclusiveness of legalism was converted into a most powerful
-poison by the Jesuits, with their _probabilitism,_ of which precursors
-were not wanting in the Middle Ages, but it received definite form
-from the Dominican Bartolomeo Medina in 1577. From that time onward
-probabilitism began to be surrounded with a copious literature, which
-continually increased in the course of the seventeenth century, to
-decline in the century following. The opposition originated by the
-Jansenists, whose capital literary document, the _Provinciales_ of
-Pascal also dates from the seventeenth century (1656), was the period
-of the greatest vigour of the doctrine. But if the most perfect
-and most Christian moral conscience dwelt in the Jansenists and in
-Pascal and if the absurd consequences to which probabilitism led
-became clearly evident in that polemic, yet it cannot be said that
-philosophically the error was finally superseded. Ere this could have
-happened, it would have been necessary, on the one hand to destroy
-all possibility of theological utilitarianism (which was impossible
-to carry out in a religious and transcendental Ethic, owing to its
-mystical and irrationalistic character) and on the other to destroy
-legalism. Pascal himself (and St. Augustine, to whom he appeals) was
-always confined in the legislative conception of morality; hence
-he speaks of the laws of "not slaying," which it was necessary to
-obey strictly, save in the cases established by God or when he gives
-particular orders to put certain persons to death. The Catholic
-Church, always astutely political, condemned without hesitation the
-extreme _rigorists,_ who wish that the law should always be followed
-and the extreme _latitudinarians,_ who think that any sort of
-reasons, however slight and improbable, suffice for not observing the
-law; allowing intermediate sects to discuss among themselves until
-they were out of breath, that is to say, _the moderate rigorists,
-the probabiliorists or tutiorists, the equiprobabilitists and the
-probabilitists._ Sant Alfonso dei Liguori adhered to these last, who
-were of opinion that it is always permissible to do what we wish,
-provided always that there be probable reasons, though less probable
-than those that militate in favour of the law. In his _Dissertatio de
-usu moderato opinionis probabilis,_[44] he thus exposed the principal
-argument of his thesis: _Peto ab adversariis ut indicent (si possunt)
-tibinam legem hanc esse scriptam invenerint, quod teneamur inter
-opiniones probabiles probabiliores sequi? Haec lex quidem, prout
-universalis, deberet omnibus esse nota et certa: at quomodo ista lex
-certa dici potest, cum communis sententia doctorum, saltem longe major
-illorum pars, post tantum discrimen absolute asserant, hanc legem non
-adesse? Usque dum igitur de tali lege dubitatum, opinio quod adsit haec
-lex sequendi probabiliora, quamvis alicui videatur probabilior, nunquam
-tamen lex dici potest, sed appellanda erit mera opinio, utpote ex
-fallibili motivo deducta, quae vim nequaquam habet, ut lex, obligandi._
-This doctrine still retains in our day very firm supporters among the
-Jesuits (Cathrein,[45] Lehmkuhl,[46] etc.).
-
-[Sidenote: _Critique of the concept of the licit._]
-
-But if the destruction of theological utilitarianism has been brought
-about by the criticism of the transcendental and by idealistic Ethic,
-that of legalism, with its expression as the licit, the permissible,
-or morally indifferent, appears in Fichte and in Schleiermacher. Kant
-did not treat the question explicitly and, as observed, we can deduce
-from certain of his utterances that he did not altogether abandon the
-concept of the licit.[47]
-
-[Sidenote: _Fichte._]
-
-But Fichte, in a note to his _Natural Rights,_ wrote: "A right is
-evidently something of which a man can avail himself or not; and
-is therefore the result of a law that is merely permissive. ...
-The permission is not expressly given by the law and is deduced by
-interpretation from its limitation. And the limitation of a law
-is shown by the fact of its being something conditioned. It is not
-absolutely apparent, therefore, that a permissive law which commands in
-an unconditioned manner and therefore extends to all, can be deduced
-from the moral law."[48]
-
-[Sidenote: _Schleiermacher._]
-
-What was a mere mention in Fichte became an ample demonstration in the
-celebrated memoir of Schleiermacher, _On the Concept of the Licit_
-(1826), which resolutely drove the licit out of the field of Ethic,
-by demonstrating its altogether juridical nature: "The original seat
-of this concept cannot be the domain of Ethic, in which it is not
-admissible: it appertains to the domain of law and of positive law; and
-there is something originally licit in civil life, precisely in this
-sense that there is something half-way between what is commanded and
-what is forbidden, the proper object of law."[49]
-
-[Sidenote: _Rosmini._]
-
-Rosmini, owing to having ignored this origin of the lawful, proceeded
-to divide human actions into four classes: the prohibited, the
-licit, the commanded, and the superogatory; the last three were all
-innocent, but the licit was simply innocent, while the commanded and
-the superogatory were also furnished with moral value. Hence arose
-grave errors in his Ethic and in his Philosophy of law and definitions
-that it is impossible to grasp, such as the following relating to
-superogatory actions: "The obligatory consists in preserving the moral
-order, but the superogatory consists in preserving the said order in
-a more excellent and perfect manner, with fuller, more frequent, and
-more ardent acts of the will. These second not only preserve the moral
-order, but augment it, almost creating a part of it themselves with
-their activity; they make themselves not only followers of the good,
-but authors of the good itself." Rosmini also considered that the
-posing of the question of probabilitism represented progress in Ethic;
-that is, upon "what man should do, if he found himself in doubt as
-to performing or omitting to perform an action." But the solution of
-the question that he gave on his account amounted (be it said to his
-honour) to the annihilation of legalism, since for him a doubtful law
-does not oblige when it is positive Rights, but it does oblige when
-it is moral law, that is, when there is a fear of offending against
-the supreme and necessary law, which wills absolutely to be always
-fulfilled.[50] In other terms, the true practical law is never (even
-when it appears to be so) positive law; and the concept of law, which
-always has a positive meaning, is extraneous to Ethic and to the
-Philosophy of the practical: a result to which Rosmini does not attain,
-or at least is not conscious of attaining.
-
-
-
-[1] See above, pp. 286, 287.
-
-[2] _Krit. d. rein. Vern._ (ed. Kirchmann), p. 572.
-
-[3] Lasson, _System der Rechtsphilosophie_ (Berlin, 1882), p. 2.
-
-[4] _Gorgias,_ 476-478.
-
-[5] _Eth. Nicom._ 3, v. c. 1-2.
-
-[6] _Ibid._ v. c. 7, 9; _Magna Moralia,_ i. c. 34.
-
-[7] _De repudi,_ iii. c. 22; _De legibus,_ ii. c. 5.
-
-[8] _De imo univ. jur. princ._ §§41, 43, 86.
-
-[9] _Fundamenta juris nat. et gentium_ (1705).
-
-[10] Windelband, _Geschichte d. Phil._ p. 424.
-
-[11] _Gründl. d. Naturr._ (1796), append., sect. I.
-
-[12] _Metaphys. d. Sitten,_ 1797 (ed. Kirchmann), pp. 31-35.
-
-[13] _Gründl, d. Naturr._ pt. i. sect. 1.
-
-[14] Spinoza, _Tract, pol._ c. 6, § 3; Fichte, _System d. Sittenlehre,_
-§ 18 _in fine._
-
-[15] _Phil. d. Rechts,_ passim, concerning force and violence, §§ 3,
-57, 94.
-
-[16] _Op. cit._§ 158, _sqq._ 161, 258.
-
-[17] _Werke,_ I., p. 371.
-
-[18] _Allg. prakt. Phil._ pp. 48, 126-128.
-
-[19] _Werke,_ i. 441-445; cf. v. 259-260.
-
-[20] _Fil. d. diritto_ (Napoli, 1844), i. 20-21, 88-89, 94-97.
-
-[21] _Saggio teor. d. dir. nat._ (Palermo, 1857), _in princ._
-
-[22] Stahl, _Rechts-u. Staatslehre_² (Heidelberg, 1845), b. ii. ch. I;
-Ahrens, _Naturr._ (It. tr., Napoli, 1860), i. 219 _sq._; Trendelenburg,
-_Naturrecht auf d. Grunde d. Ethik_ (Leipzig, 1860).
-
-[23] Kirchmann, _Begr. d. Rechtes u. d. Moral_² (Berlin, 1873), pp.
-107114; see Jhering, _Der Zweck i. Reckt_ (i.2, 1883; ii.3, 1886).
-
-[24] Lasson, _op. cit.;_ Steinthal, _Allg. Ethik_ (Berlin, 1885), pp.
-135-8; Schuppe, _Ethik u. Rechtsphil._ (Breslau, 1881), pp. 283-4;
-Wundt, _Ethik_² (Stuttgart, 1892),.p. 565 _sq._; Cohen, _Ethik d.
-reinen Willens_ (Berlin, 1904), p. 567.
-
-[25] Rümelin, _Reden u. Aufsätze,_ new series (Freiburg i. B., 1881),
-p. 342; Jellinek, _Allgemeine Staatslehre_ (Berlin, 1900), p. 302
-_sq.;_ Stammler, _Lehre v. richtig. Rechte_ (Berlin, 1902); Duguit,
-_L'État, le droit objectif et la loi positive_ (Paris, 1901); Fouillée,
-_L'Idée moderne du droit en Allem., en Angl. et en France_ (Paris,
-1876); Miraglia, _Fil. d. dir._ (Napoli, 1903), p. 80; Vanni, _Lez. d.
-fil. d. dir._ (Bologna, 1904), pp. 113-114.
-
-[26] Rümelin, _op. cit._ pp. 176-202. Cp. Lasson, p. 215 _sq._
-
-[27] _Op. cit._ p. 22. Cf. Bergbohm, _Jurisprudenz u.
-Rechtsphilosophie_ (Leipzig, 1892), i. 141-147 _n._
-
-[28] _Mem._ i. 2. 40 _sq._
-
-[29] _Eth. Nicom._ Bk. v, c. II.
-
-[30] _Œuvres,_ edit. Assézat et Tourneux, v. (Paris, Gamier, 1875), pp.
-307-8.
-
-[31] _Woldemar,_ passim.
-
-[32] _Werke,_ i. 52 _sq.;_ xvi. 21 _sq._
-
-[33] _Phil. d. Rechts,_ sect. II. _passim;_ cf. pp. 150, 153.
-
-[34] _Op. cit._ § 268, _Zus._
-
-[35] An ample exposition of such doctrines is to be found in E.
-Zoccoli, _De Anarchia,_ Turin, 1907.
-
-[36] _La Lotta pel diritto,_ It. tr., Milan, 1875.
-
-[37] _La Lotta per la scienza del diritto_ (It. tr., Palermo, 1908);
-cf. _Critica,_ vi. pp. 199-201.
-
-[38] _Metaphys. d. Sitt._ p. 40.
-
-[39] _Woldemar,_ pp. in, 416, and _passim._
-
-[40] Bierling, _Juristische Prinzipienlehre_ (Freiburg i. B., 1894-98,
-2 vols.).
-
-[41] Sidgwick, _History of Ethics,_ London, 1892, p. III _sq._
-
-[42] A. Bonucci, _La derogabilità del diritto naturale nella
-Scolastica,_ Perugia, 1906.
-
-[43] Hist. remarks in dissert., _De casuisticae theologiae originibus,
-locis atque praestantia_ (together with De Ligorio, _Theol. mor.,_ ed.
-cit., pp. xxiv-lxxvi).
-
-[44] In _Theol. mor._ i. 10-24.
-
-[45] Cathrein, _Moralphilosophie, 4_ i. 428-437.
-
-[46] _Probabilismus vindicatus_ (Freiburg, Bk. i., 1906).
-
-[47] See above, p. 405; cf. also _Krit. d. rein. Vern._ pp. 10-11 _n._
-
-[48] _Gründl. d. Naturr._ introd. § iii. _n._
-
-[49] _Werke,_ sect, iii., vol. ii., pp. 418-445; cf. G. Mayer, _Die
-Lehre vom Erlaubten in der Gesch. d. Ethik seit Schleiermacher,_
-Leipzig, 1899.
-
-
-[50] _Compendio di Etica,_ pp. 48, 96, 284-285.
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION
-
-
-[Sidenote: _The Philosophy of the Spirit as the whole of Philosophy._]
-
-With the Philosophy of the practical terminates the exposition that
-we had proposed to give of the Philosophy of the Spirit; and the
-exposition of the whole of Philosophy also terminates, because the
-Spirit is the whole of Reality.
-
-Here at the end, this proposition has no need of such proof or
-verification as is customary in calculation. Because the proof
-of Philosophy is intrinsic to it and consists of the reciprocal
-confronting of the development of thought and its demands, between
-the System and Logic. And Logic, as we know, if it be in a certain
-sense the whole of Philosophy (philosophy in brief or in idea or in
-potentiality), is also a part among the parts of the philosophical
-system; so that the confrontation of the System and of Logic, of
-thought in act and thought in idea, between thought and the thought
-of thought, has been continuously present and active in the course of
-the exposition, and the coincidence of the two processes and their
-confluence into one has been clearly demonstrated.
-
-[Sidenote: _Correspondence between Logic and System._]
-
-Logic affirms the thinkability of the real and the inconceivability
-of any limit that could be put to thought, of every excogitation of
-the unknowable. And Philosophy, examining every part of the real,
-has not found any place in which to lodge the unknowable in thought.
-Logic posits as the ideal of the concept, that it should be universal
-and not general, concrete and not abstract; that it should be pure
-of intuitions such as those of mathematics and differ from them in
-being necessary and not conventional; fruitful in intuitions like
-those of the empirical sciences, but differing from them by its
-infinite fecundity which dominates every possible manifestation of
-the real. And the system has effectively shown that this desideratum
-of Logic is not a chimæra and that the Spirit is indeed that concept
-which corresponds to the ideal of the concept: there is nothing that
-is not a manifestation of the Spirit (an effectual manifestation,
-not conventional or metaphorical). Logic, rejecting all dualism or
-pluralism, wills that the philosophical concept shall be a unique
-concept or of the One, and does not suffer heterogeneous concepts
-at its side. And the system has confirmed that the concept of the
-Spirit alone fulfils the logical condition of the concept; and that
-the concept of Nature, far from being a concept of something real, is
-the hypostasis of a manner of elaborating reality, not philosophical
-but practical; thus the concept itself of Nature, in so far as it is
-effectual, is nothing but the product of a function of the Spirit.
-
-On the other hand, the Logic of the idea of the concept deduces
-that it must be a synthesis of itself and of its opposite. For its
-opposite, far from being heterogeneous and different, is flesh of the
-flesh and blood of the blood of the concept itself, as negation is of
-affirmation. And the system has led us before the Spirit or Reality as
-development, which is the true reality of the real and synthesis of
-opposites. Logic deduces that the concept is synthesis of itself and
-of the distinct from itself, of the universal and of the individual,
-and that therefore Philosophy must flow into History, and mediate its
-comprehension. And the system shows the capacity of its principles for
-interpreting the complex reality of History, and above all the history
-of philosophy itself, by solving its problems. Logic does not admit
-other distinctions of the concept than those that are the outcome
-of its own nature, such as the relations of subject-object and of
-individual-universal; and the system has confirmed these distinctions,
-duplicating itself as Philosophy of knowledge and Philosophy of action,
-of theory and of practice; subdividing itself as to the first, into
-Æsthetic and Logic; as to the second, into Economic and Ethic. And
-since the demand of the concept has been entirely satisfied, when these
-divisions have been exhausted, we have not found the possibility of new
-subdivisions, for example into various æsthetic or into various ethical
-categories among the particular sub-forms of the Spirit.
-
-[Sidenote: _Dissatisfaction at the end of every system, and its
-irrational motive._]
-
-Some are seized as with a sense of dissatisfaction and delusion when
-they arrive at the end of the philosophical system and at the result
-that there is no reality save the Spirit and no other Philosophy save
-the Philosophy of the Spirit; and they do not wish to resign themselves
-to accepting that and nothing else as Reality, although obliged to do
-so by logical necessity. A world beyond which there is no other seems
-to them poor indeed; an immanent Spirit, trammelled and far inferior
-by comparison with a transcendental Spirit, an omnipotent God outside
-the world; a Reality penetrable by thought, less poetical than one
-surrounded with mystery; the vague and indeterminate, more beautiful
-than the precise and determined. But we know that they are involved in
-a psychological illusion, similar to his who should dream of an art
-so sublime that every work of art really existing would by comparison
-appear contemptible; and the dreamer of this turbid dream, should not
-succeed in achieving a single verse. Impotent are those poets most
-refined; impotent those insatiable philosophers.
-
-[Sidenote: _Rational motive: the inexhaustibility of Life and of
-Philosophy._]
-
-But precisely because we know the genesis of their psychological
-illusion, we know that there is in it (and there could not fail to be)
-an element of truth. The infinite, inexhaustible by the thought of
-the individual, is Reality itself, which ever creates new forms; Life
-is the true mystery, not because impenetrable by thought, but because
-thought penetrates it to the infinite with power equal to its own. And
-since every moment, however beautiful, would become ugly, were we to
-dwell in it, so would life become ugly, were it ever to linger in one
-of its contingent forms. And because Philosophy, not less than Art, is
-conditioned by Life, so no particular philosophical system can ever
-contain in itself all the philosophable; no philosophical system is
-_definite,_ because Life itself is never _definite._ A philosophical
-system solves a group of problems historically given and prepares the
-conditions for the posing of other problems, that is, of new systems.
-Thus it has always been and thus it will always be.
-
-In such a sense, Truth is always surrounded with mystery, an ascending
-to ever higher heights, which are without a summit, as Life is without
-a summit. At the end of one of his researches every philosopher just
-perceives the uncertain outlines of another, which he himself, or he
-who comes after him, will achieve. And with this _modesty,_ which is of
-the nature of things themselves, not my personal sentiment; with this
-modesty, which is also confidence that I have not thought in vain, I
-bring my work to a conclusion, offering it to the well disposed as an
-_instrument of labour._
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy of the Practical:
-Economic and Ethic, by Benedetto Croce
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philosophy of the Practical: Economic
-and Ethic, by Benedetto Croce
-
-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: The Philosophy of the Practical: Economic and Ethic
-
-Author: Benedetto Croce
-
-Translator: Douglas Ainslie
-
-Release Date: June 19, 2017 [EBook #54938]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (online soon
-in an extended version, also linking to free sources for
-education worldwide ... MOOC's, educational materials,...)
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 501px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="501" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h1>PHILOSOPHY OF THE</h1>
-
-<h1>PRACTICAL</h1>
-
-<h1>ECONOMIC AND ETHIC</h1>
-
-<h4>TRANSLATED FROM THE ITALIAN OF</h4>
-
-
-<h2>BENEDETTO CROCE</h2>
-
-<h4>BY</h4>
-
-<h4>DOUGLAS AINSLIE</h4>
-
-<h4>B.A. (OXON.), M.R.A.S.</h4>
-
-<h5>MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED</h5>
-
-<h5>ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON</h5>
-
-<h5>1913</h5>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="transnote">Benedetto Croce's Philosophy of the Spirit, in the English translation
-by Douglas Ainslie, consists of 4 volumes (which can be read separately):<br />
-1. Aesthetic as science of expression and general linguistic. (Second augmented
- edition. A first ed. is also available at Project Gutenberg.)<br />
-2. Philosophy of the practical: economic and ethic.<br />
-3. Logic as the science of the pure concept.<br />
-4. Theory and history of historiography.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 60%;">Transcriber's note.</span></p>
-<p><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents</a></p>
-
-<h5><a name="NOTE" id="NOTE">NOTE</a></h5>
-
-
-<p>Certain chapters only of the third part of this book were anticipated
-in the study entitled <i>Reduction of the Philosophy of Law to the
-Philosophy of Economy,</i> read before the Accademia Pontaniana of Naples
-at the sessions of April 21 and May 5, 1907 (<i>Acts,</i> vol. xxxvii.);
-but I have remodelled them, amplifying certain pages and summarizing
-others. The concept of economic activity as an autonomous form of the
-spirit, which receives systematic treatment in the second part of the
-book, was first maintained in certain essays, composed from 1897 to
-1900, and afterwards collected in the volume <i>Historical Materialism
-and Marxist Economy</i> (2nd edition, Palermo, Sandron, 1907).</p>
-
-<p style="text-align: right; font-size: 0.8em;">B. C.</p>
-
-<p style="font-size: 0.8em;">NAPLES,</p>
-
-<p>19<i>th April</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="TRANSLATORS_PREFACE" id="TRANSLATORS_PREFACE">TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE</a></h4>
-
-
-<p>"A noi sembra che l' opera del Croce sia lo sforzo più potente che il
-pensiero italiano abbia compiuto negli ultimi anni."&mdash;<span class="smcap">G. de Ruggiero</span> in
-<i>La Filosofia contemporanea,</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>"Il sistema di Benedetto Croce rimane la più alta conquista del
-pensiero contemporaneo."&mdash;<span class="smcap">G. Natoli</span> in <i>La Voce,</i> 19th December 1912.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Those acquainted with my translation of Benedetto Croce's <i>Æsthetic
-as Science of Expression and General Linguistic</i> will not need to be
-informed of the importance of this philosopher's thought, potent in its
-influence upon criticism, upon philosophy and upon life, and famous
-throughout Europe.</p>
-
-<p>In the Italian, this volume is the third and last of the <i>Philosophy
-of the Spirit, Logic as Science of the Pure Concept</i> coming second in
-date of publication. But apart from the fact that philosophy is like
-a moving circle, which can be entered equally well at any point, I
-have preferred to place this volume before the <i>Logic</i> in the hands of
-British readers. Great Britain has long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span> been a country where moral
-values are highly esteemed; we are indeed experts in the practice,
-though perhaps not in the theory of morality, a lacuna which I believe
-this book will fill.</p>
-
-<p>In saying that we are experts in moral practice I do not, of course,
-refer to the narrow conventional morality, also common with us, which
-so often degenerates into hypocrisy, a legacy of Puritan origin; but
-apart from this, there has long existed in many millions of Britons a
-strong desire to live well, or, as they put it, cleanly and rightly,
-and achieved by many, independent of any close or profound examination
-of the logical foundation of this desire. Theology has for some
-taken the place of pure thought, while for others, early training
-on religious lines has been sufficiently strong to dominate other
-tendencies in practical life. Yet, as a speculative Scotsman, I am
-proud to think that we can claim divided honours with Germany in the
-production of Emmanuel Kant (or Cant).</p>
-
-<p>The latter half of the nineteenth century witnessed with us a great
-development of materialism in its various forms. The psychological,
-anti-historical speculation contained in the so-called Synthetic
-Philosophy (really psychology) of Herbert Spencer was but one of the
-many powerful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span> influences abroad, tending to divert youthful minds
-from the true path of knowledge. This writer, indeed, made himself
-notorious by his attitude of contemptuous intolerance and ignorance
-of the work previously done in connection with subjects which he was
-investigating. He accepted little but the evidence of his own senses
-and judgment, as though he were the first philosopher. But time has
-now taken its revenge, and modern criticism has exposed the Synthetic
-Philosophy in all its barren and rigid inadequacy and ineffectuality.
-Spencer tries to force Life into a brass bottle of his own making, but
-the genius will not go into his bottle. The names and writings of J. S.
-Mill, of Huxley, and of Bain are, with many others of lesser calibre,
-a potent aid to the dissolving influence of Spencer. Thanks to their
-efforts, the spirit of man was lost sight of so completely that I
-can well remember hearing Kant's great discovery of the synthesis <i>a
-priori</i> described as moonshine, and Kant himself, with his categoric
-imperative, as little better than a Prussian policeman. As for Hegel,
-the great completer and developer of Kantian thought, his philosophy
-was generally in even less esteem among the youth; and we find even the
-contemplative Walter Pater passing him by with a polite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> apology for
-shrinking from his chilly heights. I do not, of course, mean to suggest
-that estimable Kantians and Hegelians did not exist here and there
-throughout the kingdom in late Victorian days (the names of Stirling,
-of Caird, and of Green at once occur to the mind); but they had not
-sufficient genius to make their voices heard above the hubbub of the
-laboratory. We all believed that the natural scientists had taken the
-measure of the universe, could tot it up to a T&mdash;and consequently
-turned a deaf ear to other appeals.</p>
-
-<p>Elsewhere in Europe Hartmann, Haeckel, and others were busy measuring
-the imagination and putting fancy into the melting-pot&mdash;they offered
-us the chemical equivalent of the wings of Aurora. We believed them,
-believed those materialists, those treacherous neo-Kantians, perverters
-of their master's doctrine, who waited for guileless youth with mask
-and rapier at the corner of every thicket. Such as escaped this ambush
-were indeed fortunate if they shook themselves free of Schopenhauer,
-the (personally) comfortable philosopher of suicide and despair, and
-fell into the arms of the last and least of the Teutonic giants,
-Friedrich Nietzsche, whose spasmodic paragraphs, full of genius but
-often empty of philosophy, show him to have been far more of a poet
-than a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> philosopher. It was indeed a doleful period of transition for
-those unfortunate enough to have been born into it: we really did
-believe that life had little or nothing to offer, or that we were all
-Overmen (a mutually exclusive proposition!), and had only to assert
-ourselves in order to prove it.</p>
-
-<p>To the writings of Pater I have already referred, and of them it may
-justly be said that they are often supremely beautiful, with the
-quality and cadence of great verse, but mostly (save perhaps the volume
-on <i>Plato and Platonism,</i> by which he told the present writer that he
-hoped to live) instinct with a profound scepticism, that revelled in
-the externals of Roman Catholicism, but refrained from crossing the
-threshold which leads to the penetralia of the creed.</p>
-
-<p>Ruskin also we knew, and he too has a beautiful and fresh vein of
-poetry, particularly where free from irrational dogmatism upon Ethic
-and Æsthetic. But we found him far inferior to Pater in depth and
-suggestiveness, and almost devoid of theoretical capacity. Sesame for
-all its Lilies is no Open Sesame to the secrets of the world. Thus,
-wandering in the obscure forest, it is little to be wondered that we
-did not anticipate the flood of light to be shed upon us as we crossed
-the threshold of the twentieth century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was an accident that took me to Naples in 1909, and the accident
-of reading a number of <i>La Critica,</i> as I have described in the
-introduction to the <i>Æsthetic,</i> that brought me in contact with the
-thought of Benedetto Croce. But it was not only the <i>Æsthetic,</i> it was
-also the purely critical work of the philosopher that appeared to me at
-once of so great importance. To read Hegel, for instance, after reading
-Croce's study of him, is a very different experience (at least so I
-found it) to reading him before so doing.</p>
-
-<p>Hegel is an author most deeply stimulative and suggestive, but any
-beginner is well to take advantage of all possible aid in the difficult
-study.</p>
-
-<p>To bring this thought of Hegel within the focus of the ordinary
-mind has never been an easy task (I know of no one else who has
-successfully accomplished it); and Croce's work, <i>What is living
-and what is dead of the Philosophy of Hegel,</i> as one may render the
-Italian title of the book which I hope to translate, has enormously
-aided a just comprehension, both of the qualities and the defects of
-that philosopher. This work appeared in the Italian not long after the
-<i>Æsthetic,</i> and has had an influence upon the minds of contemporary
-Italians, second only to the <i>Philosophy of the Spirit.</i> To clear away
-the débris of Hegel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> his false conception of art and of religion, to
-demonstrate his erroneous application of his own great discovery of
-the dialectic to pseudo-concepts, and thus to reveal it in its full
-splendour, has been one of the most valuable of Croce's inestimable
-contributions to critical thought.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not pause here to dilate upon the immense achievement of Croce,
-the youngest of Italian senators, a recognition of his achievement
-by his King and country, but merely mention his numerous historical
-works, his illuminative study of Vico, which has at last revealed that
-philosopher as of like intellectual stature to Kant; the immense tonic
-and cultural influence of his review, <i>La Critica,</i> and his general
-editorship of the great collection of <i>Scrittori d' Italia.</i> Freed
-at last from that hubbub of the laboratory, from the measures and
-microscopes of the natural scientists, excellent in their place, it is
-interesting to ask if any other contemporary philosopher has made a
-contribution to ethical theory in any way comparable to the <i>Philosophy
-of the Practical.</i> The names of Bergson and of Blondel at once occur to
-the mind, but the former admits that his complete ideas on ethics are
-not yet made known, and implies that he may never make them entirely
-known. The reader of the <i>Philosophy of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span> Practical</i> will, I think,
-find that none of Bergson's explanations, "burdened," as he says, with
-"geometry," and as we may say with matter, from the obsession of which
-he never seems to shake himself altogether free, are comparable in
-depth or lucidity with the present treatise. The spirit is described by
-Bergson as memory, and matter as a succession of images. How does the
-one communicate with the other? The formula of the self-creative life
-process seems hardly sufficient to explain this, for if with Bergson we
-conceive of life as a torrent, there must be some reason why it should
-flow rather in one channel than in another. But life is supposed to
-create and to absorb matter in its progress; and here we seem to have
-entered a vicious circle, for the intuition presupposes, it does not
-create its object. As regards the will, too, the Bergsonian theory of
-the Ego as rarely (sometimes never once in life) fully manifesting
-itself, and our minor actions as under the control of matter, seems
-to lead to a deterministic conception and to be at variance with the
-thesis of the self-creation of life.</p>
-
-<p>As regards Blondel, the identification of thought and will in the
-philosophy of action leads him to the position that the infinite is not
-in the universal abstract, but in the single concrete. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span> is through
-matter that the divine truth reaches us, and God must pass through
-nature or matter, in order to reach us, and we must effect the contrary
-process to reach God. It is a beautiful conception; but, as de Ruggiero
-suggests, do we not thus return, by a devious and difficult path, to
-the pre-Hegelian, pre-Kantian, position of religious platonicism?<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>This, however, is not the place to discourse at length of other
-philosophies. What most impresses in the Crocean thought is its
-profundity, its clarity, and its <i>completeness,&mdash;totus teres atque
-rotundus.</i> Croce, indeed, alone of the brilliant army of philosophers
-and critics arisen in the new century, has found a complete formula for
-his thought, complete, that is, at a certain stage; for, as he says,
-the relative nature of all systems is apparent to all who have studied
-philosophy. He alone has defined and allocated the activities of the
-human spirit; he alone has plumbed and charted its ocean in all its
-depth and breadth.</p>
-
-<p>A system! The word will sound a mere tinkling of cymbals to many
-still aground in the abstract superficialities of nineteenth-century
-scepticism; but they are altogether mistaken. To construct a system
-is like building a house: it requires a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span> good architect to build
-a good house, and where it is required to build a great palace it
-requires a great genius to build it successfully. Michael Angelo
-built the Vatican, welding together and condensing the works of many
-predecessors, ruthlessly eliminating what they contained of bad or of
-erroneous: Benedetto Croce has built the Philosophy of the Spirit.
-To say of either achievement that it will not last for ever, or that
-it will need repair from time to time, is perfectly true; but this
-criticism applies to all things human; and yet men continue to build
-houses&mdash;for God and for themselves. Croce is the first to admit the
-incompleteness, the lack of finality of all philosophical systems, for
-each one of them deals, as he says, with a certain group of problems
-only, which present themselves at a definite period of time. The
-solution of these leads to the posing of new problems, first caught
-sight of by the philosopher as he terminates his labours, to be solved
-by the same or by other thinkers.</p>
-
-<p>And here it may be well to state very briefly the basis on which rests
-the <i>Philosophy of the Spirit,</i> without attempting to do anything more
-than to give its general outline. The reader should imagine himself
-standing, like bold Pizarro, on his "peak of Darien," surveying at a
-great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span> distance the vast outline of a New World, which yet is as old as
-Asia.</p>
-
-<p>The Spirit is Reality, it is the whole of Reality, and it has two
-forms: the theoretic and the practical activities. Beyond or outside
-these <i>there are no other forms of any kind.</i> The theoretic activity
-has two forms, the intuitive and individual, and the intellectual or
-knowledge of the universal: the first of these produces images and is
-known as <i>Æsthetic,</i> the second concepts and is known as <i>Logic.</i> The
-first of these activities is altogether independent, self-sufficient,
-autonomous: the second, on the other hand, has need of the first, ere
-it can exist. Their relation is therefore that of double degree. The
-practical activity is the <i>will,</i> which is thought in activity, and
-this also has two forms, the economic or utilitarian, and the ethical
-or moral, the first autonomous and individual, the second universal,
-and this latter depends upon the first for its existence, in a manner
-analogous to <i>Logic</i> and to <i>Æsthetic.</i></p>
-
-<p>With the theoretic activity, man understands the universe, with the
-practical, he changes it. There are no grades or degrees of the Spirit
-beyond these. All other forms are either without activity, or they are
-verbal variants of the above,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span> or they are a mixture of these four in
-different proportions.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Philosophy of the Spirit is divided into <i>Æsthetic, Logic,
-and Philosophy of the Practical</i> (Economic and Ethic). In these it is
-complete, and embraces the whole of human activity.</p>
-
-<p>The discussion of determinism or free will is of course much more
-elaborated here than in the Æsthetic, where exigencies of space
-compelled the philosopher to offer it in a condensed form. His solution
-that the will is and must be free, but that it contains two moments,
-the first conditioned, and that the problem should be first stated in
-terms of the Hegelian dialectic, seems to be the only one consonant
-with facts. The conclusion that the will is autonomous and that
-therefore we can <i>never</i> be obliged to do anything against our will may
-seem to be paradoxical, until the overwhelming argument in proof of
-this has been here carefully studied.</p>
-
-<p>Croce's division of the practical activity into the two grades of
-Economic and Ethic, to which Kant did not attain and Fichte failed
-fully to perceive, has for the first time rendered comprehensible much
-that was hitherto obscure in ancient history and contemporary history.
-The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span> "merely economic man" will be recognised by all students of the
-<i>Philosophy of the Practical,</i> where his characteristics are pointed
-out by the philosopher; and a few years hence, when Croce's philosophy
-will have filtered through fiction and journalism to the level of
-the general public, the phrase will be as common as is the "merely
-economic" person to-day.</p>
-
-<p>For indeed, all really new and great discoveries come from the
-philosophers, gradually filtering down through technical treatises and
-reviews, until they reach the level of prose fiction and of poetry,
-which, since the <i>Æsthetic,</i> we know to be one and the same thing with
-different empirical manifestations. In truth, the philosophers alone
-go deeply enough into the essence of things to reach their roots. Thus
-some philosophy, generally in an extremely diluted form, becomes part
-of every one's mental furniture and thus the world makes progress and
-the general level of culture is raised. Thought is democratic in being
-open to all, aristocratic in being attained only by the few&mdash;and that
-is the only true aristocracy: to be on the same level as the best.</p>
-
-<p>Another discovery of Croce's, set forth in this volume for the first
-time in all the plenitude of its richness, is the theory of Error.
-The proof<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span> of the practical nature of error, of its necessity, and of
-the fact that we only err because we will to do so, is a marvel of
-acute and profound analysis. Readers unaccustomed to the dialectic may
-not at first be prepared to admit the necessary forms of error, that
-error is not distinct, but opposed to truth and as such its simple
-dialectic negation, and that truth is thought of truth, which develops
-by conquering error, which must always exist in every problem. The full
-understanding of the Crocean theory of error throws a flood of light
-on all philosophical problems, and has already formed the basis of at
-least one brilliant study of contemporary philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>To the reduction of the concept of law to an economic factor, which
-depends upon the priority and autonomy of Economic in relation to
-Ethic, is devoted a considerable portion of the latter part of the
-<i>Philosophy of the Practical,</i> and it is easy to see that an elaborate
-treatment of this problem was necessary, owing to the confusion as
-to its true nature that has for so long existed in the minds of
-thinkers, owing to their failure to grasp the above distinction. In
-Great Britain indeed, where precedent counts for so much in law,
-the ethical element is very often so closely attached as to be
-practically indistinguishable from it, save<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span> by the light of the
-Crocean analysis. In the <i>Logic as Science of the Pure Concept</i> will
-be found much to throw light upon the <i>Philosophy of the Practical,</i>
-where the foreshortening of certain proofs (due to concentration upon
-other problems) may appear to leave loopholes to objection. Thought
-will there be found to make use of language for expression, though
-not itself language; and it will be found useless to seek logic in
-words, which in themselves are always æsthetic. For there is a duality
-between intuition and concept, which form the two grades or degrees of
-theoretic knowledge, as described also in the <i>Æsthetic.</i> There are
-two types of concept, the <i>pure</i> and the <i>false</i> or <i>pseudo-concept,</i>
-as Croce calls it. This latter is also divided into two types of
-representation&mdash;those that are concrete without being universal (such
-as the cat, the rose), and those that are without a content that can
-be represented, or universal without being concrete, since they never
-exist in reality (such are the triangle, free motion). The first
-of these are called empirical pseudo-concepts, the second abstract
-pseudo-concepts: the first are represented by the natural, the second
-by the mathematical sciences.</p>
-
-<p>Of the <i>pure concept</i> it is predicated that it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[Pg xxii]</a></span> ineliminable, for
-while the pseudo-concepts in their multiplicity are abolished by
-thought as it proceeds, there will always remain one thought namely,
-that which thinks their abolition. This concept is opposed to the
-pseudo-concepts: it is ultra or omni-representative. I shall content
-myself with this brief mention of the contents of the <i>Philosophy of
-the Practical</i> and of the <i>Logic</i> upon which I am now working.</p>
-
-<p>Since the publication of <i>Æsthetic as Science of Expression and General
-Linguistic,</i> there has been some movement in the direction of the study
-of Italian thought and culture, which I advocated in the Introduction
-to that work. But the Alps continue to be a barrier, and the thought of
-France and of Germany reaches us, as a rule, far more rapidly than that
-of the home of all the arts and of civilization, as we may call that
-Italy which contains within it the classical Greater Greece. A striking
-instance of this relatively more rapid distribution of French thought
-is afforded by the celebrated <i>Lundis</i> of Sainte-Beuve, so familiar to
-many readers; yet a critic, greater in depth than Sainte-Beuve, was
-writing at the same period&mdash;greater in philosophical vision of the
-relations of things, for the vision of Sainte-Beuve rarely rose above
-the psychological plane. For one reader<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[Pg xxiii]</a></span> acquainted with the <i>History
-of Italian Literature</i> of De Sanctis, a hundred are familiar with the
-<i>Lundis</i> of Sainte-Beuve.</p>
-
-<p>At the present moment the hegemony of philosophical thought may be
-said to be divided between Italy and France, for neither Great Britain
-nor Germany has produced a philosophical mind of the first order.
-The interest in Continental idealism is becoming yearly more keen,
-since the publication of Bergson's and of Blondel's treatises, and of
-Croce's <i>Philosophy of the Spirit.</i> Mr. Arthur Balfour, being himself
-a philosopher, was one of the first to recognise the importance of
-the latter work, referring to its author in terms of high praise in
-his oration on Art delivered at Oxford in the Sheldonian Theatre. Mr.
-Saintsbury also has expressed his belief that with the <i>Æsthetic</i> Croce
-has provided the first instrument for scientific (<i>i.e.</i> philosophical,
-not "natural" scientific) criticism of literature. This surely is well,
-and should lead to an era of more careful and less impartial, of more
-accurate because more scientific criticism of our art and poetry.</p>
-
-<p>I trust that a similar service may be rendered to Ethical theory and
-practice by the publication of the present translation, which I believe
-to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[Pg xxiv]</a></span> rich with great truths of the first importance to humanity,
-here clearly and explicitly stated for the first time and therefore
-(in Vico's sense of the word) "created," by his equal and compatriot,
-Benedetto Croce.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Then leaning upon the arm of time came Truth, whose radiant face,</p>
-
-<p>Though never so late to the feast she go, hath aye the foremost place.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p style="text-align: right; font-size: 0.8em;">DOUGLAS AINSLIE.</p>
-
-<p><span style="font-size: 0.8em;">ATHENAEUM CLUB, PALL MALL,</span><br />
-<i>January</i> 1913.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> G. de Ruggiero, <i>La Filosofia contemporanea,</i> Laterza,
-Bari, 1912.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">[Pg xxv]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a></h4>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#TRANSLATORS_PREFACE">Translator's Preface</a></p>
-
-<p class="center">FIRST PART</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN GENERAL</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">FIRST SECTION</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS RELATIONS</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_3">I</a> <span class="linenum">3</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY AS A FORM OF THE SPIRIT</p>
-
-<p>Practical and theoretic life&mdash;Insufficiency of descriptive distinctions
-&mdash;Insufficiency of the psychological method in philosophy&mdash;Necessity of
-the philosophical method&mdash;Constatation and deduction&mdash;Theories which
-deny the practical form of the spirit&mdash;The practical as an unconscious
-fact: critique&mdash;Nature and practical activity&mdash;Reduction of the
-practical form to the theoretical: critique&mdash;The practical as thought
-in action&mdash;Recognition of its autonomy.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_21">II</a> <span class="linenum">21</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">NEGATION OF THE SPIRITUAL FORM OF FEELING</p>
-
-<p>The practical and the so-called third spiritual form: feeling&mdash;Various
-meanings of the word: feeling, a psychological class&mdash;Feeling as a
-state of the spirit&mdash;Function of the concept of feeling in the History
-of philosophy: the indeterminate&mdash;Feeling as forerunner of the æsthetic
-form&mdash;In Historic: preannouncement of the intuitive element&mdash;In
-philosophical Logic:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">[Pg xxvi]</a></span> pre-announcement of the pure concept&mdash;Analogous
-function in the Philosophy of the practical&mdash;Negation of
-feeling&mdash;Deductive exclusion of it.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_33">III</a> <span class="linenum">33</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">RELATION OF THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY WITH THE THEORETICAL</p>
-
-<p>Precedence of the theoretical over the practical&mdash;The unity of
-the spirit and the co-presence of the practical&mdash;Critique of
-pragmatism&mdash;Critique of psychological objections&mdash;Nature of theoretic
-precedence over the practical: historical knowledge&mdash;Its continual
-mutability&mdash;No other theoretic precedent&mdash;Critique of practical
-concepts and judgments&mdash;Posteriority of judgments to the practical
-act&mdash;Posteriority of practical concepts&mdash;Origin of intellectualistic
-and sentimentalistic doctrines&mdash;The concepts of end and means&mdash;Critique
-of the end as plan or fixed design&mdash;Volition and the unknown&mdash;Critique
-of the concept of practical sciences and of a practical Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_53">IV</a> <span class="linenum">53</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">INSEPARABILITY OF ACTION FROM ITS REAL BASE AND PRACTICAL NATURE OF THE
-THEORETIC ERROR</p>
-
-<p>Coincidence of intention and volition&mdash;Volition in the abstract
-and in the concrete: critique&mdash;Volition thought and real volition:
-critique&mdash;Critique of volition with unknown or ill-known base
-&mdash;Illusions in the instances adduced&mdash;Impossibility of volition with
-erroneous theoretical base&mdash;Forms of the theoretic error and problem
-as to its nature&mdash;Distinction between ignorance and error: practical
-origin of latter&mdash;Confirmations and proofs&mdash;Justification of the
-practical repression of error&mdash;Empirical distinctions of errors and the
-philosophic distinction.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_73">V</a> <span class="linenum">73</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">IDENTITY OF VOLITION AND ACTION AND DISTINCTION BETWEEN VOLITION AND
-EVENT</p>
-
-<p>Volition and action: intuition and expression&mdash;Spirit
-and nature&mdash;Inexistence of volitions without action and
-inversely&mdash;Illusions as to the distinctions between these
-terms&mdash;Distinction between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">[Pg xxvii]</a></span> action and succession or event&mdash;Volition
-and event&mdash;Successful and unsuccessful actions: critique&mdash;Acting
-and foreseeing: critique&mdash;Confirmation of the inderivability of the
-value of action from success&mdash;Explanation of facts that seem to be at
-variance.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_86">VI</a> <span class="linenum">86</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE PRACTICAL JUDGMENT, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL</p>
-
-<p>Practical taste and judgment&mdash;Practical judgment as historical
-judgment&mdash;Its Logic&mdash;Importance of the practical judgment&mdash;Difference
-between practical judgment and judgment of event&mdash;Progress in action
-and progress in Reality&mdash;Precedence of the Philosophy of the practical
-over the practical judgment&mdash;Confirmation of the philosophic incapacity
-of the psychological method.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_103">VII</a> <span class="linenum">103</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">PRACTICAL DESCRIPTION, RULES AND CASUISTIC</p>
-
-<p>Justification of the psychological method and of empirical and
-descriptive disciplines&mdash;Practical Description and its literature
-&mdash;Extension of practical description&mdash;Normative knowledge or
-rules: their nature&mdash;Utility of rules&mdash;The literature of rules and
-its apparent decadence&mdash;Relation between the arts (collections
-of rules) and philosophic doctrines&mdash;Casuistic: its nature and
-utility&mdash;Jurisprudence as casuistic.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_121">VIII</a> <span class="linenum">121</span></p>
-
-<p style="font-size: 0.8em;">CRITIQUE OF THE INVASIONS OF PHILOSOPHY INTO PRACTICAL DESCRIPTION AND
-INTO ITS DERIVATIVES</p>
-
-<p>First form: tendency to generalize&mdash;Historical elements that
-persist in the generalizations&mdash;Second form: literary union of
-philosophy and empiria&mdash;Third form: attempt to put them in close
-connection&mdash;Science of the practical, and Metaphysic: various
-meanings&mdash;Injurious consequences of the invasions&mdash;1st, Dissolution of
-empirical concepts&mdash;Examples: war and peace, property and communism,
-and the like&mdash;Other examples&mdash;Misunderstandings on the part of the
-philosophers&mdash;Historical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">[Pg xxviii]</a></span> significance of such questions&mdash;2nd, False
-deduction of the empirical from the philosophic&mdash;Affirmations as to
-the contingent changed into philosophemes&mdash;Reasons for the rebellion
-against rules&mdash;Limits between philosophy and empiria.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_144">IX</a> <span class="linenum">144</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">HISTORICAL NOTES</p>
-
-<p>I. Distinction between history of the practical principle and history
-of liberation from the transcendental&mdash;II. Distinction of the practical
-from the theoretical&mdash;III. Minglings of the Philosophy of the
-practical with Description&mdash;Vain attempts at a definition of empirical
-concepts&mdash;Attempts at deduction&mdash;IV. Various questions&mdash;Practical
-nature of error&mdash;Practical taste&mdash;V. Doctrines of feeling&mdash;The
-Wolfians&mdash;Jacobi and Schleiermacher&mdash;Kant&mdash;Hegel&mdash;Opponents of the
-doctrine of the three faculties. Krug&mdash;Brentano.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">SECOND SECTION</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS DIALECTIC</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_173">I</a> <span class="linenum">173</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">NECESSITY AND FREEDOM IN THE VOLITIONAL ACT</p>
-
-<p>The problem of freedom&mdash;Freedom of willing and freedom of action:
-critique of such distinction&mdash;The volitional act, both necessary and
-free&mdash;Comparison with the æsthetic activity&mdash;Critique of determinism
-and arbitrarism&mdash;General form of this antithesis: materialism and
-mysticism&mdash;Materialistic sophisms of determinism&mdash;Mysticism of doctrine
-of free will&mdash;Doctrine of necessity-liberty and idealism&mdash;Doctrine
-of double causality; of dualism and agnosticism&mdash;Its character of
-transaction and transition.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_192">II</a> <span class="linenum">192</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">FREEDOM AND ITS OPPOSITE. GOOD AND EVIL</p>
-
-<p>Freedom of action as reality of action&mdash;Inconceivability of
-the absolute absence of action&mdash;Non-freedom as antithesis and
-contrariety&mdash;Nothingness and arbitrariness of non-liberty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">[Pg xxix]</a></span>&mdash;Good as
-freedom and reality, and evil as its opposite&mdash;Critique of abstract
-monism and of dualism of values&mdash;Objections to the irreality of
-evil&mdash;Evil in synthesis and out of synthesis&mdash;Affirmative judgments
-of evil as negative judgments&mdash;Confirmations of the doctrine&mdash;The
-poles of feeling (pleasure and pain); and their identity with the
-practical opposites&mdash;Doctrine relating to pleasure and happiness:
-critique&mdash;Empirical concepts relating to good and evil&mdash;To have to
-be, ideal, inhibitive, imperative power&mdash;Evil, remorse, etc.; good,
-satisfaction, etc.&mdash;Their incapacity for serving as practical
-principles&mdash;Their character.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_215">III</a> <span class="linenum">215</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE VOLITIONAL ACT AND THE PASSIONS</p>
-
-<p>The multiplicity of volitions and the struggle for unity&mdash;Multiplicity
-and unity as good and evil&mdash;Excluded volitions and passions or
-desires&mdash;Passions and desires as possible volitions&mdash;Volition as
-struggle with the passions&mdash;Critique of the freedom of choice&mdash;Meaning
-of the so-called precedence of feeling over the volitional
-act&mdash;Polipathicism and apathicism&mdash;Erroneity of both the opposed
-theses&mdash;Historical and contingent meaning of these&mdash;The domination of
-the passions, and the will.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_229">IV</a> <span class="linenum">229</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">VOLITIONAL HABITS AND INDIVIDUALITY</p>
-
-<p>Passions and states of the soul&mdash;Passions understood as volitional
-habits&mdash;Importance and nature of these&mdash;Domination of the passions
-in so far as they are volitional habits&mdash;Difficulty and reality of
-dominating them&mdash;Volitional habits and individuality&mdash;Negations of
-individuality for uniformity and criticism of them&mdash;Temperament
-and character&mdash;Indifference of temperament&mdash;Discovery of one's
-own being&mdash;The idea of "vocation"&mdash;Misunderstanding of the right
-of individuality&mdash;Wicked individuality&mdash;False doctrines as to the
-connection between virtues and vices&mdash;The universal in the individual,
-and education.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_246">V</a> <span class="linenum">246</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS</p>
-
-<p>Multiplicity and unity: development&mdash;Becoming as synthesis of
-being and not-being&mdash;Nature as becoming. Its resolution in the
-Spirit&mdash;Optimism and pessimism: critique&mdash;Dialectic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxx" id="Page_xxx">[Pg xxx]</a></span> optimism&mdash;Concept
-of cosmic progress&mdash;Objections and critique&mdash;Individuals and
-History&mdash;Fate, Fortune, and Providence&mdash;The infinity of progress
-and mystery&mdash;Confirmation of the impossibility of a Philosophy of
-history&mdash;Illegitimate transference of the concept of mystery from
-History to Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_262">VI</a> <span class="linenum">262</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">TWO EXPLANATIONS RELATING TO HISTORIC AND ÆSTHETIC</p>
-
-<p>Relation between desires and actions; and two problems of Historic
-and Æsthetic&mdash;History and art&mdash;The concept of existentiality in
-history&mdash;Its origin in the Philosophy of the practical: action and
-the existing, desires and the non-existent&mdash;History as distinction
-between actions and desires, and art as indistinction&mdash;Pure fancy and
-imagination&mdash;Art as lyrical or representation of feelings&mdash;Identity
-of ingenuous reality and feeling&mdash;Artists and the will&mdash;Actions and
-myths&mdash;Art as pure representation of becoming, and the artistic form of
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_273">VII</a> <span class="linenum">273</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">HISTORICAL NOTES</p>
-
-<p>I. The problem of freedom&mdash;II. The doctrine of evil&mdash;III. Will
-and freedom&mdash;Conscience and responsibility&mdash;IV. The concept of
-duty&mdash;Repentance and remorse&mdash;The doctrine of the passions&mdash;Virtues
-and vices&mdash;V. The doctrine of individuality: Schleiermacher&mdash;Romantic
-theories and most modern theories&mdash;VI. The concept of development and
-progress.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">THIRD SECTION</p>
-
-<p class="center">UNITY OF THE THEORETICAL AND THE PRACTICAL</p>
-
-<p>Double result: precedence of the theoretical over the practical, and
-of the practical over the theoretical&mdash;Errors of those who maintain
-the exclusive precedence of the one or the other&mdash;Problem of the
-unity of this duality&mdash;Not a duality of opposites&mdash;Not a duality of
-finite and infinite&mdash;Perfect analogy of the two forms: theoretic and
-practical&mdash;Not a parallelism, but a circle&mdash;The circle of Reality:
-thought and being, subject and object&mdash;Critique of the theories as
-to the primacy of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxi" id="Page_xxxi">[Pg xxxi]</a></span> theoretical or of the practical reason&mdash;New
-pragmatism: Life conditioning Philosophy&mdash;Deductive confirmation of the
-two forms, and deductive exclusion of the third (feeling).</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="center">SECOND PART</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS SPECIAL FORMS</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">FIRST SECTION</p>
-
-<p>THE TWO PRACTICAL FORMS: ECONOMIC AND ETHIC</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_309">I</a> <span class="linenum">309</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">DISTINCTION OF THE TWO FORMS IN THE PRACTICAL CONSCIOUSNESS</p>
-
-<p>The utilitarian or economic form, and the moral or ethical
-form&mdash;Insufficiency of the descriptive and psychological
-distinction&mdash;Deduction and necessity of integrating it with
-induction&mdash;The two forms as a fact of consciousness&mdash;The
-economic form&mdash;The ethical form&mdash;Impossibility of eliminating
-them&mdash;Confirmations in fact.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_323">II</a> <span class="linenum">323</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ETHICAL FORM</p>
-
-<p>Exclusion of materialistic and intellectualistic criticisms&mdash;The
-two possible negations&mdash;The thesis of utilitarianism against the
-existence of moral acts&mdash;Difficulty arising from the presence of
-these&mdash;Attempt to explain them as quantitative distinctions&mdash;Criticism
-of it&mdash;Attempt to explain them as facts, either extraneous to the
-practical or irrational, and stupid&mdash;Associationism and evolutionism.
-Critique&mdash;Desperate attempt: theological utilitarianism and mystery.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_337">III</a> <span class="linenum">337</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ECONOMIC FORM</p>
-
-<p>The thesis of moral abstractionism against the concept of the
-useful&mdash;The useful as means, or as theoretic fact&mdash;Technical and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxii" id="Page_xxxii">[Pg xxxii]</a></span>
-hypothetical imperatives&mdash;Critique: the useful is a practical fact
-&mdash;The useful as the egoistic or the immoral&mdash;Critique: the useful
-is amoral&mdash;The useful as ethical minimum&mdash;Critique: the useful
-is premoral&mdash;Desperate attempt: the useful as inferior practical
-conscience&mdash;Confirmation of the autonomy of the useful.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_348">IV</a> <span class="linenum">348</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">RELATION BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND ETHICAL FORMS</p>
-
-<p>Economic and ethic as double degree of the practical&mdash;Errors
-arising from conceiving them as co-ordinated&mdash;Disinterested
-actions: critique&mdash;Vain polemic conducted with such Supposition
-against utilitarianism&mdash;Actions morally indifferent, obligatory,
-supererogatory, etc. Critique&mdash;Comparison with the relation between
-art and philosophy&mdash;Other erroneous conceptions of modes of
-action&mdash;Pleasure and economic activity, happiness and virtue&mdash;Pleasure
-and pain and feeling&mdash;Coincidence of duty with pleasure&mdash;Critique of
-rigorism or asceticism&mdash;Relation of happiness and virtue&mdash;Critique of
-the subordination of pleasure to morality&mdash;No empire of morality over
-the forms of the spirit&mdash;Non-existence of other practical forms; and
-impossibility of subdivision of the two established.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_364">V</a> <span class="linenum">364</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMY AND THE SO-CALLED SCIENCE OF ECONOMY</p>
-
-<p>Problem of the relations between Philosophy and Science of economy
-&mdash;Unreality of the laws and concepts of economic Science&mdash;Economic
-Science founded on empirical concepts but not empirical or
-descriptive&mdash;Absoluteness of its laws&mdash;Their mathematical
-nature&mdash;Its principles and their character of arbitrary postulates
-and definitions&mdash;Its utility&mdash;Comparison of Economy with Mechanic,
-and reason for its exclusion from ethical, æsthetic, and logical
-facts&mdash;Errors of philosophism and historicism in Economy&mdash;The
-two degenerations: extreme abstractism and empiristical
-disaggregation&mdash;Glance at the history of the various directions of
-Economy&mdash;Meaning of the judgment of Hegel as to economic Science.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiii" id="Page_xxxiii">[Pg xxxiii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_382">VI</a> <span class="linenum">382</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">CRITIQUE OF THE CONFUSIONS BETWEEN ECONOMIC SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY OF
-ECONOMY</p>
-
-<p>Adoption of the economic method and formulæ on the part of
-Philosophy&mdash;Errors that derive from it&mdash;1st, Negation of philosophy
-for economy&mdash;2nd, Universal value attributed to empirical concepts.
-Example: free trade and protectionism&mdash;3rd, Transformation of the
-functions of calculation into reality&mdash;The pretended calculus of
-pleasures and pains; and doctrines of optimism and pessimism.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_391">VII</a> <span class="linenum">391</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">HISTORICAL NOTES</p>
-
-<p>I. Greek Ethic and its ingenuousness&mdash;II. Importance of Christianity
-for Ethic&mdash;The three tendencies that result from it: utilitarianism,
-rigorism, and psychologism&mdash;Hobbes, Spinoza&mdash;English Ethic&mdash;Idealistic
-Philosophy&mdash;III. E. Kant and his affirmation of the ethical
-principle&mdash;Contradictions of Kant as to the concept of the useful,
-of prudence, of happiness, etc.&mdash;Errors that derive from it in
-his Ethic&mdash;IV. Points for a Philosophy of Economy&mdash;The inferior
-appetitive faculty&mdash;Problem of politics and Machiavellism&mdash;Doctrine
-of the passions&mdash;Hegel and the concept of the useful&mdash;Fichte and the
-elaboration of the Kantian Ethic&mdash;V. The problem of the useful and of
-morality in the thinkers of the nineteenth century&mdash;Extrinsic union
-of Ethic and of economic Science, from antiquity to the nineteenth
-century&mdash;Philosophic questions arising from a more intimate contact
-between the two&mdash;VII. Theories of the hedonistic calculus: from
-Maupertuis to Hartmann.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">SECOND SECTION</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE ETHICAL PRINCIPLE</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_425">I</a> <span class="linenum">425</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">CRITIQUE OF MATERIALISTIC AND OF FORMALISTIC ETHIC</p>
-
-<p>Various meanings of "formal" and "material"&mdash;The ethical principle
-as formal (universal) and not material (contingent)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiv" id="Page_xxxiv">[Pg xxxiv]</a></span>&mdash;Reduction
-of material Ethic to utilitarian Ethic&mdash;Expulsion of material
-principles&mdash;Benevolence, love, altruism, etc.; and critique of
-them&mdash;Social organism, State, interest of the species, etc. Critique
-of them&mdash;Material religious principles. Critique of them&mdash;"Formal" as
-statement of a merely logical demand&mdash;Critique of a formal Ethic with
-this meaning: tautologism&mdash;Tautological principles: ideal, chief good,
-duty, etc. Critique of them&mdash;Tautological significance of certain
-formulæ, material in appearance&mdash;Conversion of tautological Ethic into
-material and utilitarian Ethic&mdash;In what sense Ethic should be formal;
-and in what other sense material.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_440">II</a> <span class="linenum">440</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE ETHICAL FORM AS ACTUALIZATION OF THE SPIRIT IN UNIVERSAL</p>
-
-<p>Tautological Ethic, and its partial or discontinuous connection with
-Philosophy&mdash;Rejection of both these conceptions&mdash;The ethical form
-as volition of the universal&mdash;The universal as the Spirit (Reality,
-Liberty, etc.)&mdash;Moral actions as volitions of the Spirit&mdash;Critique of
-antimoralism&mdash;Confused tendency of tautological, material, religious
-formulæ in relation to the Ethic of the Spirit&mdash;The Ethic of the Spirit
-and religious Ethic.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_452">III</a> <span class="linenum">452</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">HISTORICAL NOTES</p>
-
-<p>I. Merit of the Kantian Ethic&mdash;The predecessors of Kant&mdash;Defect of
-that Ethic: agnosticism&mdash;Critique of Hegel and of others&mdash;Kant and the
-concept of freedom&mdash;Fichte and Hegel&mdash;Ethic in the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="center">THIRD PART</p>
-
-<p class="center">LAWS</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_465">I</a> <span class="linenum">465</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">LAWS AS PRODUCTS OF THE INDIVIDUAL</p>
-
-<p>Definition of law&mdash;Philosophical and empirical concept of society&mdash;Laws
-as individual product: programmes of individual life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxv" id="Page_xxxv">[Pg xxxv]</a></span>&mdash;Exclusion of
-the character of constriction: critique of this concept&mdash;Identical
-characters of individual and social laws&mdash;Individual laws as the sole
-real in ultimate analysis&mdash;Critique of the division of laws into
-judicial and social, and into the sub-classes of these. Empiricity of
-every division of laws&mdash;Extension of the concept of laws.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_481">II</a> <span class="linenum">481</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE CONSTITUTIVE ELEMENTS OF LAWS. CRITIQUE OF PERMISSIVE LAWS AND OF
-NATURAL LAW</p>
-
-<p>The volitional character and the character of class&mdash;Distinction of
-laws from the so-called laws of nature&mdash;Implication of the second
-in the first&mdash;Distinction of laws from practical principles&mdash;Laws
-and single acts&mdash;Identity of imperative, prohibitive, and permissive
-laws&mdash;Permissive character of every law and impermissive character
-of every principle&mdash;Changeability of laws&mdash;Empirical considerations
-as to modes of change&mdash;Critique of the eternal Code or natural
-right&mdash;Natural right as the new right&mdash;Natural right as Philosophy
-of the practical&mdash;Critique of natural right&mdash;Theory of natural right
-persisting in judicial judgments and problems.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_497">III</a> <span class="linenum">497</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">UNREALITY OF LAW AND REALITY OF EXECUTION. FUNCTION OF LAW IN THE
-PRACTICAL SPIRIT</p>
-
-<p>Law as abstract and unreal volition&mdash;Ineffectually of laws
-and effectuality of practical principles&mdash;Exemplificatory
-explanation&mdash;Doctrines against the utility of laws&mdash;Their
-unmaintainability&mdash;Unmaintainability of confutations of them&mdash;Empirical
-meaning of these controversies&mdash;Necessity of laws&mdash;Laws as preparation
-for action&mdash;Analogy between practical and theoretical Spirit: practical
-laws and empirical concepts&mdash;The promotion of order in reality and in
-representation&mdash;Origin of the concept of plan or design.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_511">IV</a> <span class="linenum">511</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">CONFUSION BETWEEN LAWS AND PRACTICAL PRINCIPLES. CRITIQUE OF PRACTICAL
-LEGALISM AND OF JESUITIC MORALITY</p>
-
-<p>Transformation of principles into practical laws: legalism&mdash;Genesis
-of the concept of the practically licit and indifferent&mdash;Its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxvi" id="Page_xxxvi">[Pg xxxvi]</a></span>
-consequence: the arbitrary&mdash;Ethical legalism as a simple special case
-of the practical&mdash;Critique of the practically indifferent&mdash;Contests
-of rigorists and of latitudinarians and their common error&mdash;Jesuitic
-morality as doctrine of fraud on moral law&mdash;Concept of legal
-fraud&mdash;Absurdity of fraud against oneself and against the
-moral conscience&mdash;Jesuitic morality not explainable by mere
-legalism&mdash;Jesuitic morality as alliance of legalism with theological
-utilitarianism&mdash;Distinction between Jesuitic practice and doctrine.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_526">V</a> <span class="linenum">526</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">JUDICIAL ACTIVITY AS GENERICALLY PRACTICAL ACTIVITY (ECONOMIC)</p>
-
-<p>Legislative activity as generically practical&mdash;Vanity of disputes as to
-the character of institutions, whether economic or ethical: punishment,
-marriage, State, etc.&mdash;Legislative activity as economic&mdash;Judicial
-activity: its economic character: its consequent identity with economic
-activity&mdash;Non-recognition of economic form, and meaning of the problem
-as to distinction between morality and rights&mdash;Theories of co-action
-and of exteriority, as distinctive characteristics: critique of
-them&mdash;Moralistic theories of rights: critique&mdash;Duality of positive and
-ideal rights, historical and natural rights, etc.; absurd attempts at
-unification and co-ordination&mdash;Value of all these attempts as confused
-glimpse of amoral character of rights&mdash;Confirmations of this character
-in ingenuous conscience&mdash;Comparison between rights and language.
-Grammar and codes&mdash;Logic and language; morality and rights&mdash;History
-of language as literary and artistic history&mdash;History of rights as
-political and social history.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_543">VI</a> <span class="linenum">543</span></p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">HISTORICAL NOTES</p>
-
-<p>I. Distinction between morality and rights, and its importance
-for the history of the economic principle&mdash;Indistinction
-lasting till Tomasio&mdash;II. Tomasio and followers&mdash;Kant and
-Fichte&mdash;Hegel&mdash;Herbart and Schopenhauer&mdash;Rosmini and others&mdash;III.
-Stahl, Ahrens, Trendelenburg&mdash;Utilitarians&mdash;IV. Recent writers
-of treatises&mdash;Strident contradictions. Stammler&mdash;V. Value of
-law&mdash;In antiquity&mdash;Diderot&mdash;Romanticism&mdash;Jacobi&mdash;Hegel&mdash;Recent
-doctrines&mdash;VI. Natural rights and their dissolution&mdash;Historical
-school of rights&mdash;Comparison between rights and language&mdash;VII.
-Concept of law, and studies of comparative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxvii" id="Page_xxxvii">[Pg xxxvii]</a></span> rights and of the general
-Doctrine of law&mdash;VIII. Legalism and moral casuistic&mdash;Probabilitism
-and Jesuitic morality&mdash;Critique of the concept of the
-licit&mdash;Fichte&mdash;Schleiermacher&mdash;Rosmini.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center"><a href="#Page_586">CONCLUSION</a> <span class="linenum">586</span></p>
-
-<p>The Philosophy of the Spirit as the whole of Philosophy&mdash;Correspondence
-between Logic and System&mdash;Dissatisfaction at the end of every system
-and its irrational motive&mdash;Rational motive: inexhaustibility of Life
-and of Philosophy.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxviii" id="Page_xxxviii">[Pg xxxviii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="TRANSLATORS_NOTE" id="TRANSLATORS_NOTE">TRANSLATOR'S NOTE</a></h4>
-
-<p>This translation of Benedetto Croce's <i>Philosophy of the Practical</i>
-(Economic and Ethic) is complete.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxix" id="Page_xxxix">[Pg xxxix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="FIRST_PART" id="FIRST_PART">FIRST PART</a></h4>
-
-
-<h3>THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN GENERAL</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="FIRST_SECTION" id="FIRST_SECTION">FIRST SECTION</a></h5>
-
-
-<h4>THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS RELATIONS</h4>
-
-
-
-<hr />
-<h4>I</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY AS A FORM OF THE SPIRIT</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Practical and theoretic life.</i></div>
-
-<p>A glance at the life that surrounds us would seem more than sufficient
-to establish, without the necessity of special demonstration, the
-existence of a circle of practical activity side by side with the
-theoretical. We see in life men of thought and men of action, men of
-contemplation and of action, materially distinct, as it were, from one
-another: here, lofty brows and slow dreamy eyes; there, narrow brows,
-eyes vigilant and mobile; poets and philosophers on the one side; on
-the other, captains and soldiers of industry, commerce, politics, the
-army, and the church. Their work seems to differ as do the men. While
-we are intent upon some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> discovery just announced, in chemistry or
-in physic, or upon some philosophy that comes to shake old beliefs,
-upon a drama or a romance that revives an artist's dream, we are
-suddenly interrupted and our attention is called to spectacles of an
-altogether different nature, such as a war between two states, fought
-with cannon or with custom-house tariffs; or to a colossal strike, in
-which thousands upon thousands of workmen make the rest of society feel
-the power of their numbers and of their strength, and the importance
-of their work in the general total; or a potent organization which
-collects and binds together the forces of conservative resistance,
-employing interests and passions, hopes and fears, vices and virtues,
-as the painter his colours, or the poet his words, sometimes making
-like them a masterpiece, but of a practical nature. The man of action
-is from time to time assailed as it were with nausea at his orgies of
-volitional effort and eyes with envy the artist or the man of science
-in the same way as polite society used to look upon the monks who had
-known how to select the best and most tranquil lot in life. But as a
-general rule they do not go beyond this fleeting feeling, or if they
-do resolve to cease their business on the Ides, they return to it on
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> Kalends. But the contemplative man in his turn also sometimes
-experiences this same nausea and this same aspiration; he seems to
-himself to be idle where so many are working and bleeding, and he cries
-to the combatants: "Arms, give me arms,"<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> for he too would be a miner
-with the miners, would navigate with the navigators, be an emperor
-among the kings of coal. However, as a general rule, he does not make
-more out of this than a song or a book. Nobody, whatever his efforts,
-can issue from his own circle. It would seem that nature supplies men
-made precisely for the one or for the other form of activity, in the
-same way as she makes males and females for the preservation of the
-species.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Insufficiency of descriptive distinctions.</i></div>
-
-<p>But this mode of existence with which the practical activity manifests
-itself in life, as though physically limited, has no certainty, when
-separated from the theoretical life, nor is it, as might be believed,
-a fact that imposes itself. Facts never impose themselves, save
-metaphorically: it is only our thought which <i>imposes</i> them upon
-<i>itself,</i> when it has criticized them and has recognized their reality.
-That existence and that distinction, which seem so obvious that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> one
-can touch them with one's hand, are at bottom nothing but the result
-of primary and superficial philosophic reflection, which posits as
-essentially distinct that which is so only at a first glance and in
-the mass. Indeed, if we continue to meditate with the same method and
-assumptions as in the first instance, we shall find that those very
-distinctions, which reflection had established, are by reflection
-annulled. It is not true that men are practical or theoretical.</p>
-
-<p>The theoretical man is also practical; he lives, he wills, he acts
-like all the others. The so-called practical man is also theoretical;
-he contemplates, believes, thinks, reads, writes, loves music and the
-other arts. Those works that had been looked upon as inspired entirely
-by the practical spirit, when examined more closely, are found to
-be exceedingly complex and rich in theoretic elements&mdash;meditations,
-reasonings, historical research, ideal contemplations. Those works
-on the other hand that had been assumed to be manifestations of the
-purely artistic or philosophic spirit, are also products of the will,
-for without the will nothing can be done; the artist cannot prepare
-himself for his masterpiece for years and years, nor the thinker bring
-to completion his system. Was not the battle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> Austerlitz also a
-work of thought and the <i>Divine Comedy</i> also a work of will? From
-such reflections as these, which might be easily multiplied, arises
-a mistrust, not only of the statement first made, but also of the
-inquiry that has been undertaken. It is as though one had filled a
-vessel with much difficulty and were then obliged to empty it anew
-with a like effort, to find oneself again facing the vessel, empty as
-before. Or one adheres to the conclusion that neither the theoretic
-nor the practical exists as distinct, but that they are one single
-fact, which is one or other of the two, or a third to be determined,
-manifesting itself concretely in infinite shades and gradations, which
-we arbitrarily attempt to reduce to one or more classes, separating and
-denominating them as distinct in a not less arbitrary manner.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Insufficiency of the psychological method in philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>By describing this process of ordinary reflection, in relation to
-reality and by demonstrating its philosophic impotence, has at the
-same time been demonstrated the nature and the <i>impotence</i> of the
-<i>psychological method,</i> applied to philosophical problems. For
-psychological philosophy, though contained in ponderous treatises
-and in solemn academical lectures, does not really achieve more than
-ordinary reflection, or rather, is nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> but ordinary reflection.
-Having classified the images of the infinite manifestations of human
-activity, placing, for instance, will and action side, by side with
-thought and imagination, it looks upon this classification as reality.
-But classes are classes and not philosophical distinctions: whoever
-takes them too seriously, and understands them in this second sense,
-finds himself eventually obliged to admit that they possess no reality.
-Thereupon he declares with shouts and protestations the non-existence
-of the <i>faculties of the soul,</i> or rather their existence as a mere
-mental artifice, without relation to reality. He may do more than this
-and throw overboard the criterion or distinction itself, together with
-those false distinctions, proclaiming that all spiritual manifestations
-are reducible to a single element. This element turns out in the end
-to be precisely one of the rejected classes; hence the attempt to show
-that facts of volition are nothing but facts of <i>representation,</i> or
-that those of representation are nothing but facts of <i>volition,</i> or
-that both are nothing but facts of <i>feeling,</i> and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Necessity of the philosophical method.</i></div>
-
-<p>We must then remain perfectly indifferent to the affirmations or
-negations of this psychological philosophy. If it affirm the existence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-of the practical activity, we must not put faith in it until we have
-recognized its existence by the philosophical method, and equally
-so in case it should deny it. The philosophical method demands
-complete abstraction from empirical data and from their classes, and
-a withdrawal into the recesses of the consciousness, in order to fix
-upon it alone the eye of the mind. It has been affirmed that by this
-method the individual consciousness is made the type and measure of
-universal reality, and it has been suggested, with a view to obviate
-this restriction and danger, that we should extend observations, so
-as to include the soul of other individuals, of the present and of
-the past, of our own and of other civilizations, thus completing (in
-the accustomed phrase) the psychological with the historical and the
-ethnographical methods. But there is no need to fear, because the
-consciousness which is the object of the philosophical inquiry is not
-that of the individual as individual, but the universal consciousness,
-which is in every individual the basis of his individual consciousness
-and of that of other individuals. The philosopher who withdraws into
-himself is not seeking his own empirical self: Plato did not seek the
-son of Aristo and of Perictione, nor Baruch Spinoza<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> the poor sickly
-Jew; they sought that Plato and that Spinoza, who are not Plato or
-Spinoza, but man, the spirit, universal being. The remedy proposed
-will therefore seem not only useless, but actually harmful; for in
-an inquiry whose very object is to surpass the empirical itself, is
-offered the aid of a multiplicity of selves, thus increasing the tumult
-and the confusion, where there should be peace and silence; offering,
-in exchange for the universal that was sought, something worse than the
-individual, namely, the <i>general,</i> which is an arbitrary complex of
-mutilated individualities.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Constatation and deduction.</i></div>
-
-<p>It may seem, however, that the result of such an inquiry as to the form
-and the universality of consciousness would merely possess the value of
-a statement of fact, not different from any other statement, as when
-we say, for instance, that the weather is rainy, or that Tizio has
-married. If these two last facts be indubitable, because well observed,
-in like manner indubitable, because likewise well observed, will be
-an affirmation concerning the universal consciousness. And since both
-affirmations are true, there is certainly no difference between them,
-or between truth and truth, considered as such. But since single and
-contingent facts, like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> two adduced in the example, are single
-and contingent, precisely because they have not their own reason in
-themselves, and because the universal is the universal, precisely
-because it is a sufficient reason to itself, it clearly results that
-we cannot assume that truth has been definitely established from the
-universal standpoint of consciousness, save when the reason for this
-also has been seen, that is to say until that aspect has been simply
-enunciated and asserted, as in the case of a single fact. To affirm
-the existence of the practical form of activity, side by side with the
-theoretical, means to deduce the one from the other, and both from
-the unity of the spirit and of the real. We do not intend to withdraw
-ourselves from this duty and exigency; and if we limit ourselves
-here at the beginning to the assertion of its existence and to the
-demonstration that the arguments brought against it are unfounded, we
-do so for didascalic reasons, certain that in due course we shall be
-able to free this assertion from what it may contain of provisional,
-that is to say, from the character itself of assertion.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Theories which deny the practical form of the spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>The doctrines which deny the practical form of the spirit are and
-cannot but be of two fundamental kinds, according to the double<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-possibility offered by the proposition itself which they propose to
-refute. The first doctrine affirms that <i>the practical form is not
-spiritual activity,</i> the second that although it be spiritual activity,
-<i>yet it is not in any way distinguishable from the already recognized
-theoretic form of the spirit.</i> The second, so to speak, denies to it
-specific, the first generic character.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The practical as a fact of unconsciousness.</i></div>
-
-<p>Those who maintain the first of these theses say:&mdash;We are unconscious
-of the will at the moment of willing and during its real development.
-This consciousness is only attained after one has willed, that is to
-say, after the volitional act has been developed. Even then, we are not
-conscious of the will itself, but of our representation of the will.
-Therefore the will, that is to say the practical activity, is not an
-activity of the spirit. Since it is unconscious, it is nature and not
-spirit. The theoretic activity which follows it is alone spiritual.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>Were we, however, to allow this argument to pass, the result would be
-that none of the activities of the spirit would belong to the spirit,
-that they would all be unconscious and all, therefore, nature. Indeed,
-the activity of the artist, at the moment when he is really so, that
-is to say in what is called the moment of artistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> creation, is not
-conscious of itself: it becomes conscious only afterwards, either in
-the mind of the critic or of the artist who becomes critic of himself.
-And it has also often been said of the activity of the artist, that it
-is unconscious; that it is a natural force, or madness, fury, divine
-inspiration. <i>Est Deus in nobis</i>; and we only become conscious of the
-divinity that burns and agitates us when the agitation is ceasing and
-cooling begun. But what of the activity of the philosopher? It may
-seem strange, but it is precisely the same with the philosopher. At
-the moment in which he is philosophizing, he is unconscious of his
-work; in him is God, or nature; he does not reflect upon his thought,
-but thinks; or rather the thing thinks itself in him, as a microbe
-living in us nourishes itself, reproduces itself and dies: so that
-sometimes the philosopher has also seemed to be seized with madness.
-The consciousness of his philosophy is not in him at that moment; but
-it is in the critic and in the historian, or indeed in himself a moment
-after, in so far as he is critic and historian of himself. And will the
-critic or the historian at least be conscious? No, he will not be so
-either, because he who will afterwards criticize the historico-critical
-work is conscious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> of it, or he himself, in so far as he criticizes
-himself, and by objectifying himself occupies a place in the history of
-criticism and of historiography. In short, we should never be conscious
-in any form of the spiritual activity.</p>
-
-<p>But this negation is founded on a false idea of consciousness:
-spontaneous is confused with reflex consciousness, or that which is
-intrinsic to one activity with that which is intrinsic to another,
-which surpasses the first and makes of it its object. In such a
-sense we can certainly not be conscious of the will, save in the
-representation which follows it, as we are not conscious of a poem,
-save at the moment of criticizing it. But there is also consciousness
-in the act itself of him who reads or composes a poem, and he "is
-conscious" (there is no other expression) of its beauty and of its
-ugliness, of how the poem should and of how it should not be. This
-consciousness is not critical, but is not therefore less real and
-efficacious, and without it internal control would be wanting to the
-formative act of the poet. Thus also there is consciousness in the
-volitional and practical act as such: we are not aware of this act
-in a reflex manner, but we feel, or, if you will, we possess it.
-Without it there would be no result. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> therefore developed in
-moments or alternatives of happiness and of unhappiness, of well-being
-and of malaise, of satisfaction and of remorse, of pleasure and of
-pain. If this be unconsciousness, we must say that unconsciousness is
-consciousness itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Nature and practical activity.</i></div>
-
-<p>The practical activity may appear to be nature in respect of the
-theoretical, but not as something without the spirit and opposed to
-it, but as a form of the spirit opposed to another form, esthetic
-contemplation has in like manner, as has already been mentioned,
-appeared to be a natural force creating the world of intuition, which
-the philosophical activity of man afterwards understands and recreates
-logically. Hence art can be called nature (and has indeed been so
-called), and conversely philosophy has been called spirituality. This
-gives rise to the further problem: whether it be correct to consider
-nature (it is convenient so to call it) that which has afterwards
-been recognized in substance as spiritual activity; or whether the
-concept and the name of spirit should not be reserved for that which
-is truly altogether outside the spirit, and whether this something
-placed altogether outside the spirit truly exists. This point does
-not concern us here, although we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> are much disposed to admit that
-one of the mainstays of that absurd conception of nature as of the
-extra-spiritual is precisely the practical or volitional form of the
-spirit, so conspicuously different from the theoretical form and from
-the sub-forms of the same. We do not therefore hold those philosophers
-to have been so completely in the wrong, who have identified nature and
-will, for they have thus at any rate discovered one aspect of the truth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Reduction of the practical form to the theoretical.</i></div>
-
-<p>Passing to the second thesis, which does not place the will outside
-the spirit, but denies to it the distinction between practical and
-the theoretical forms and affirms that the will is thought, there is
-nothing to be objected to it, provided that, as is often the case,
-"thought" be taken as synonymous with "spirit." In this case, as in
-that where it is affirmed that art is thought, we need only inquire,
-what form of thought is the will, as in the other what form of thought
-is art. It is not, for instance, logical or historical thought, and
-the will is neither imaginative, logical nor historical thought: if
-anything, it must be <i>volitional thought.</i></p>
-
-<p>But we have the genuine form of this thesis in the affirmation that
-the will is the intelligence itself, that to will is to know, and that
-action<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> practically well conducted is truth. This thesis would not have
-arisen, had it not found support in the real situation of things (and
-what this support is will be seen when studying the relation of the
-practical with the theoretic activity, and the complicated process of
-deliberation). But, when tested here independently, it proves to be
-unsustainable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>We must not oppose to it the usual observations as to the lack of
-connection between great intellectual and great volitional development,
-or the cases of those theoreticians who are practically quite
-ineffectual, of philosophers who are bad governors of States, of the
-"very learned" who are not "men" and the like; for the reason already
-given, that an observation is not a philosophical argument, but a
-fact which itself has need of an explanation, and when this has been
-done, it may serve as proof of the philosophical theory, but can never
-be substituted for it. But it is well to recall to memory the quite
-peculiar character of the will and the practical activity in respect
-of knowledge, intellectual light is cold, the will is hot. When we
-pass from theoretic contemplation to action and to the practical, we
-have almost the feeling of generating, and sons are not made with
-thoughts and words. With<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> the greatest intellectual clearness, we yet
-remain inert, if something does not intervene that rouses to action,
-something analogous to the inspiration that makes run a shiver of joy
-and of voluptuousness through the veins of the artist. If the will
-be not engaged, every argument, however plausible it may seem, every
-situation, however clear, remains mere theory.</p>
-
-<p>The education of the will is not effected with theories or definitions,
-æsthetic or historical culture, but with the exercise of the will
-itself. We teach how to will as we teach how to think, by fortifying
-and intensifying natural dispositions, by example, which suggests
-imitation, by difficulties to be solved (practical problems), by
-rousing energetic initiative and by disciplining it to persist. When
-an act of will has taken place, no argument will extinguish it. As an
-illness is not to be cured with reasons, so an affective and volitional
-state cannot be altered by these means. Reasoning and knowledge may
-and certainly do assist, but they do not constitute the ultimate and
-determining moment. The will alone acts upon the will, not in the sense
-that the will of one individual can act upon that of another (which
-is merely a fact among the facts perceived by him), but in the sense
-that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> the will of the individual himself, causing the previous volition
-to enter upon a crisis, dissolves it and substitutes for it a new
-practical synthesis, with a new volition.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The practical as thought which realizes itself. Recognition
-of its autonomy.</i></div>
-
-<p>The evident paradox of the thesis which identifies without any
-distinction thought and will, theory and practice, has caused it to
-be modified and to be produced in another form, expressed in the
-definition; that the will is thought in so far as it <i>is translated
-into act,</i> thought in so far as it is <i>imprinted</i> upon nature, thought
-when <i>held</i> so <i>firmly</i> before the mind as to <i>become action,</i> and
-so on. Now it remains to determine what may be the relation between
-thought and will, and when this has been done, we shall see what
-is exact and what inexact in the above formulæ, of translating,
-imprinting, and holding fast. These formulæ are all logically vague,
-however imaginative they may be. But what is important to note here is
-that with the new turn given to the thesis that denies the peculiarity
-of the practical activity, this same peculiarity is unconsciously
-affirmed, because that transforming, that imprinting, that holding
-fast, which did not exist in the simple theory, conceal precisely the
-will. Thus the ultimate form of the negation comes to join hands with
-that of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> affirmation, and we can consider undisputed the existence
-of a particular form of the spirit, which is the practical activity. We
-must now examine the relation of this form with the other from which it
-has been distinguished.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Allusion to a verse of Leopardi in <i>Canzone all' Italia.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="II" id="II">II</a></h4>
-
-
-<h4>NEGATION OF THE SPIRITUAL FORM OF FEELING</h4>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The practical activity and the so-called third spiritual
-form: feeling.</i>]</div>
-
-<p>In affirming the existence of the practical form of activity, we have
-had in view only the theoretical form and have demonstrated that
-the one cannot be absorbed and confused in the other, and we have
-referred only to the theoretic form, when announcing our intention of
-determining the relations of the practical with the other forms of the
-spirit. This seems but little correct, and in any case not exhaustive,
-because there are or may be other non-theoretical forms of the spirit,
-into which the practical form could be resolved. Of these it would be
-necessary to take account. And not to beat too long about the bush,
-that of which in this case it is question, is the form of <i>feeling,</i>
-the last or intermediary of the three forms into which it is customary
-to divide the spiritual activity: representation, feeling, tendency;
-thought, feeling, will. Attempts have not been wanting to reduce
-tendency or will to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> feeling, or, as is said, to a sentimental reaction
-from perceptions and thoughts. In fact there is hardly a treatise
-of philosophy of the practical without a preliminary study of the
-relations between the will and feeling. We cannot, then, escape from
-the dilemma; either we must recognize the omission into which we have
-fallen and hasten to correct it, or else make explicit the supposition
-that may be contained in that omission (which would thus be intentional
-and conscious), that <i>a third general form of the spirit, or a form of
-feeling, does not exist.</i> We have adopted precisely this last position,
-and it therefore becomes incumbent upon us briefly to expose the
-reasons for which we hold that the concept of feeling must disappear
-from the system of the spiritual forms or activities.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Various meanings of the word feeling, as a psychological
-class.</i></div>
-
-<p>Feeling may and has been understood in various ways, some of which do
-not at all concern our thesis. In the first place, the word "feeling"
-has been used to designate a class of psychical facts constructed
-according to the psychological and naturalistic method. Thus it
-has happened that, with various times and authors, all the most
-rudimentary, tenuous, and evanescent manifestations of the spirit have
-been called "feelings," slight intuitions (or sensations as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> they are
-called), not yet transformed into perceptions, slight perceptions,
-slight tendencies and appetites, in fact all that forms, as it were,
-the base of the life of the spirit. The name has thus, on the other
-hand, also been given to psychical processes and conditions, in which
-various forms follow one another or alternate in relation to a material
-empirically limited. Such are what are called feelings of "fatherland,"
-"love," "nature," "the divine." Nothing forbids the formation of such
-classes and the use of that denomination, but as has already been
-declared in relation to the psychological method, they are of no use
-to philosophy, which not only does not receive them within its limits,
-but does not occupy itself with them at all, save to reject them when
-they present themselves, as philosophical psychology or psychological
-philosophy. To classify is not to think philosophically, and philosophy
-on the one hand does not recognize criteria of small and great, of
-weak and strong, of more and of less, and a small or smallest thought,
-a small or smallest tendency, is for it thought and tendency and not
-feeling at all; on the other, it does not admit complicated processes
-without resolving these into their simple components. Thus the feeling
-of love or of patriotism, and the others<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> made use of in the example,
-are revealed to philosophy as series of acts of thought and of will,
-variously interlaced. Let the psychologists, then, keep their classes
-and sub-classes of feeling. We, for our part, not only do not dream of
-di-possessing them of such a treasure, but shall continue to draw from
-it, when necessary, the small change of ordinary conversation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Feeling as a state of the spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>There also exists another meaning of the word "feeling," of which,
-at present at any rate, we do not take account. This appears when
-the word is used to designate <i>the state</i> of the spirit or of one of
-the special forms of the spirit; we should indeed term these more
-correctly the <i>states,</i> since the spirit in this case, as is known,
-is polarized in two opposite terms, usually denominated <i>pleasure and
-pain.</i> Indubitably these two terms can also be taken as psychological
-(and are thus included in the preceding case). Hence it results that
-pleasure and pain are represented by psychologists as the two extremes
-of a continuous series, in which there is a passage from the one to
-the other term by insensible increases and gradations. But we must
-also recognize that this psychological representation is not the only
-one possible, and indeed is not truly the real one, and that the two
-terms have their place and their proper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> meaning in the philosophy
-of the spirit. They are, as has been said, <i>opposites;</i> and are
-differentiated, not only by a more and a less, by a greatest and a
-least, but also by the special character of distinction that opposites
-possess. The doctrine of opposites and of opposites in the practical
-activity of the spirit does not, however, appertain to this part of our
-exposition. In denying feeling, we do not here deny the doctrine of
-opposites, and that psychology of the <i>states</i> of the spirit which is
-founded upon it, but the doctrine of feeling considered as a particular
-<i>form</i> of <i>activity.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Function of the concept of feeling in the History of
-philosophy; the indeterminate.</i></div>
-
-<p>The conception of feeling as a spiritual activity has answered to a
-want of research, which may be described as <i>provisional excogitation.</i>
-Whenever thought has found itself face to face with a form or subform
-of spiritual activity, which it was not possible either to eliminate
-or to absorb in forms already recognized, the problem to be solved
-has been endorsed with that word "feeling." With many this has passed
-for a solution. Feeling, in fact, has been the indeterminate in the
-history of philosophy, or rather the not yet fully determined, the
-<i>half-determined.</i></p>
-
-<p>Hence its great importance as an expedient for the indication of
-new territories to conquer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> and as a stimulus against remaining
-obstinately shut up in old and insufficient formulæ. But hence also
-its fate: the problem must not be exchanged for its solution, the
-indeterminate or semi-determinate must be determined. Whenever the
-determination of the forms and sub-forms of the spirit has not been
-given in a complete manner, the category of feeling will reappear (and
-it will be beneficial); but at the same time will reappear the duty of
-exploring it and of understanding what is concealed beneath it, or at
-least what unsolved difficulty has caused it to reappear afresh.</p>
-
-<p>Now we have already met with the concept of feeling on more than one
-occasion, when investigating the philosophy of the theoretic spirit,
-as something supplying a theoretical need outside the theoretic forms
-generally admitted, or as a special form of theoretic activity. Every
-time that we have done this, an attentive examination has caused it
-to disappear before our eyes, and has generally helped us, either to
-discover something previously unknown, or to confirm the necessity of
-contested categories.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Feeling as herald of the æsthetic form;</i></div>
-
-<p>Thus it happened that when a special <i>æsthetic</i> function was
-not recognized and it was attempted to explain it, either
-intellectualistically, as nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> but an inferior form of philosophy,
-or historically, as a reproduction of the historical and natural datum,
-or almost as the satisfaction of certain volitional wants (hedonistic
-theory), the view of art as neither a form of the intellect nor of
-perception nor of will, but of <i>feeling,</i> was an advance, as also
-was the appeal to men of <i>feeling</i> to recognize and to judge it.
-As a result of this insistence, it was eventually discovered that
-art possessed an absolutely simple and ingenuous theoretic form,
-without either intellectual or historical contents, the form of the
-pure intuition which is that of the æsthetic and artistic activity.
-Whoever returns to treat of art as a product of feeling, after this
-discovery of the pure intuition, falls back from the determinate to the
-semi-determinate, and is at the mercy of all the dangers which arise
-from it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>As herald of the intuitive element in Historiography.</i></div>
-
-<p>The theory of historiography owes its progress in like manner to the
-demonstration that it is impossible to deduce the historical statement
-from concepts, but that we must deduce it in final analysis from an
-immediate <i>feeling</i> of the real, that is to say, from the <i>intuitive</i>
-element, which inevitably exists in every historical reconstruction,
-as in every perception. On the other hand, and in altogether another
-sense, reacting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> against the false idea of an extra&mdash;subjective
-historical objectivity, to be found in the mere reproduction of the
-datum, it was made evident that no historical narration is possible
-without the <i>reaction of feeling</i> in respect to the datum. Thus was
-discovered the indispensability of the <i>intellective</i> element in the
-historical affirmation. Whoever has recourse to feeling as a factor
-in historiography, after this complete constitution of the historical
-judgment, returns from the clear to the confused, from light, if not to
-darkness, then to twilight.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Feeling as herald of the pure concept in philosophical
-Logic.</i></div>
-
-<p>The concept of feeling has also been of capital importance in the
-progress of the Logic of philosophy. For how could we begin to explain
-that philosophy is constructed with a method altogether different from
-that of the exact disciplines (natural sciences and mathematics),
-without denying to those sciences the capacity of conquering the
-supreme truth, the true truth, full reality, and recognizing such
-capacity on the other hand to a special function called <i>feeling</i>
-or <i>immediate</i> knowledge? That function was void, that is to say,
-undetermined, because defined in a negative and not in a positive
-manner: feeling was something different from the abstract and arbitrary
-procedure of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> exact sciences, from the abstract intellect, but its
-true nature was unknown. When this was at last known it was discovered
-that it was not a question of "feeling" or of "immediate knowledge,"
-but of the intellect itself, in its genuine and uncontaminated nature,
-its pure and free activity, of intellect as <i>reason,</i> of thought as
-<i>speculative</i> thought, of that "immediate knowledge," which is true,
-intrinsic, perpetual <i>mediation.</i> Whoever henceforth returns to
-feeling, after the discovery of the pure or speculative concept, and
-believes it to be the creator of philosophy and of religion, fighting
-with it against the natural and mathematical sciences, behaves as he
-who should wish to return to-day to the flint-lock, for the excellent
-reason that it was an advance upon the bow and the catapult. Thus those
-who invoke feeling in philosophy are henceforth a little ridiculous.
-This does not imply that they were not at one time to be taken
-seriously, for this concept has been of great provisional assistance
-and has been as it were the compass of the new idea of philosophy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Analogous function in the Philosophy of the practical.</i></div>
-
-<p>The same will be the case in the investigation that we have begun of
-the practical form of the spirit and of the problems to which it gives
-rise. This concept of feeling has been mingled with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> them all, and
-propositions have been formed, of which we shall indicate the true
-significance in the proper places. Beginning at once and limiting
-ourselves solely to the question of the existence of a peculiar
-practical form, it is easy to understand why it has so often been
-maintained against the intellectual and theoretical exclusivists, that
-the will consists, not of knowledge, but of feeling; that the principle
-of action, far from being an intellectual principle, is sentimental
-emotion; that in order to produce a volition, reason, ideas, and facts
-perceived do not suffice, but that it is necessary that all these
-things be transformed into feelings, which must take possession of the
-soul; that the base of life lived, that is, of practical life, is not
-thought, but feeling, and so on. With these formulæ was recognized
-the peculiarity of the practical activity. The theory of feeling in
-respect of the practical represents progress as compared with the
-intellectualistic theory, because the appearance of indeterminateness
-is progress as compared with bad determinateness, and contains in
-itself the new and more complete determinateness.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Negation of feeling.</i></div>
-
-<p>But in this very way of ours of understanding the value of these
-formulæ, is implied their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> resolute negation, when they tend to
-persist, after having accomplished their function, and to maintain
-side by side with the theory of the practical a third general form
-of the spirit, namely feeling. No spiritual fact or manifestation of
-activity can be adduced, which, examined without superficiality, is
-not reducible to an act of fancy, intellect and perception, that is,
-of theory (when it is not at once revealed as an abstraction or as a
-merely psychological class of these acts); or to an act of utilitarian
-or ethical volition (when it is not here too a psychological class,
-variously designated as aspirations, passions, affections, and the
-like). Let him who will search his spirit and attempt to indicate one
-single act, differing from the above, as something new and original and
-deserving of the special denomination of feeling.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its deductive exclusion.</i></div>
-
-<p>This constatation of fact (we repeat the warning) is but the first
-step in the complete philosophical demonstration, which demands that
-we show not only that a third form does not exist, but that <i>it cannot
-exist.</i> This demonstration will be given further on, and will coincide
-with that of the demonstration of the necessity of the two forms,
-theoretical and practical; a duality that is unity and a unity that is
-duality.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> Recognizing the legitimacy of the demand for a philosophical
-deduction of the forms of the spirit, and therefore of a deductive
-exclusion of those that are spurious and wrongly adopted, it seems that
-if it be somewhat delayed, such a mode of exclusion will also yield
-clearer results.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>III</h4>
-
-
-<h4>RELATION OF THE PRACTICAL TO THE THEORETIC ACTIVITY</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Precedence of the theoretical activity.</i></div>
-
-<p>Freed from the equivocal third term, which is feeling, and now passing
-to the problem of the relation between the theoretical and the
-practical activity enunciated, we must in the first place declare the
-thesis that <i>the practical activity presupposes the theoretical.</i> Will
-is impossible without knowledge; as is knowledge, so is will.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The unity of the spirit and the co-presence of the
-practical.</i></div>
-
-<p>In recognizing this precedence of knowledge to will, we do not wish to
-posit as thinkable a theoretical man or a theoretical moment altogether
-deprived of will. This would be an unreal abstraction, inadmissible
-in philosophy, which operates solely with real abstractions, that is,
-with universal concretes. The forms of the spirit are distinct and
-not separate, rand when the spirit is found in one of its forms, or
-is <i>explicit</i> in it, the other forms are also in it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> but <i>implicit,</i>
-or, as is also said, <i>concomitant.</i> If theoretical and cognoscitive
-man were not at the same time volitional, he would not even be able to
-stand on his feet and look at the sky, and, literally speaking, if he
-were not alive, he would not be able to think (and thinking is both
-an act of life and an act of will, which is called <i>attention).</i> Were
-he not to will, he would be unable to pass from waking to sleep and
-from sleep to waking. Thus in order to be purely theoretical, it is
-necessary to be at the same time in some degree practical; the energy
-of pure fancy and of pure thought springs from the trunk of volition.
-Hence the importance of the will for the æsthetic and intellectual
-life; the will is not theory, nor is it the force that makes grain to
-grow or guides the course of rivers, but as it assists the culture of
-grain or restrains the destructive impetus of rivers, so it assists and
-restrains the force of fancy and of thought, causing them to act in
-the best way, that is, to be as they really ought to be, namely, fancy
-and thought in their purest manifestation. The practical activity,
-therefore, acts in this way, and as it drags the man of science from
-his study and the artist from his studio, if it be necessary to defend
-his country or to watch at the bedside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> of his sick father, so it
-commands the artist and the man of science to fulfil their special
-mission and to be themselves in an eminent degree.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of pragmatism.</i></div>
-
-<p>All the arguments that have been used in the past and that are used in
-the present, to maintain the dependence of the theoretical upon the
-practical activity, are of value for what of truth they contain, that
-is, only to demonstrate this unity of the spiritual functions that
-we have recognized, and the indispensability of the volitional force
-for the health of the cognoscitive spirit. But the passage from this
-thesis to the other, that the true is the production of the will, is
-nothing but a sophism, founded on the double signification of the word
-"production." It should be clear that to <i>assist</i> the work of thought
-with the will is one thing and that to <i>substitute</i> the will for the
-work of thought is another. To claim to substitute the will for the
-work of thought, is equivalent to the negation of that force that
-should be assisted; it is the most open proclamation of scepticism,
-the most complete distrust of the true and of the possibility of
-attaining to it. This attempt is now called <i>pragmatism,</i> or is at
-any rate one of the meanings of the word, with which the school of
-the greatest confusion that has ever appeared in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> philosophy adorns
-itself in our day. This school mixes together the most divergent
-theses&mdash;that of the stimulating effect that the will has upon thought,
-that other of the volitional or arbitrary moment, by means of which
-perceptions and historical data are reduced to abstract types in the
-natural disciplines, or postulates laid down for the construction
-of mathematical classes. The third form, which might be called the
-Baconian prejudice, maintains the exclusive utility of the natural
-sciences and mathematics for the well-being of life. The fourth
-thesis is positivistic: here it is maintained that we cannot know
-anything save what we ourselves arbitrarily compress into the formula
-and classes of mathematics and of naturalism. The fifth thesis is
-a romantic exaggeration of the principle of creative power in man,
-substituting the caprice of the individual for the universal spirit.
-The sixth, something between silliness and Jesuistry, recommends
-the utility of making one's illusions and believing them to be
-true. The seventh is superstitious, occultist and spiritistic&mdash;and
-there are others that we omit. If pragmatism has had and preserves
-any attraction, it owes this to the truth of its first and second
-theses and to the half truth of the fifth. All the three are however
-heterogeneous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> in themselves and unreconcilable with the others, which
-are most fallacious. But we repeat with the old philosophers that
-whoever in thinking says, "Thus I will it," is lost for truth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of psychological objections.</i></div>
-
-<p>Certain reservations that are made to the above truth from the point
-of view of that philosophy, which we have called psychological, are
-scarcely deserving of brief mention. We find in treatises of Psychology
-that knowledge does precede the practical act, but only in the higher
-forms of volition, whereas in its lower forms are found only impulses,
-tendencies, appetites, altogether blind of any knowledge. Thus they
-are able to talk of involuntary forms of the practical activity, of
-a will that is not a will, when once the true will has been defined,
-as precisely appetition illumined by previous knowledge. The <i>blind
-will</i> of certain metaphysicians is derived from such excogitations of
-psychologists, who make of it a practical act without intelligence.
-They have here attributed the value of reality to a crude concept of
-class, a thing that happens not infrequently. A blind will is however
-unthinkable. Every form of the practical activity, be it as poor and
-rudimentary as you like (and let as many classes and gradations as you
-will be formed), presupposes knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> of some sort. In animals too?
-will be asked. In animals too, provided they be, and in so far as they
-are centres of life, and so of perceptions and of will. This is also
-true of vegetables and of minerals, always with the above hypothesis.
-We must banish every form of <i>aristocracy</i> from the Philosophy of the
-practical, as we have banished it from Æsthetic, from Logic, from
-Historic, esteeming it most harmful to the proper understanding of
-those activities. The aristocratic illusion is closely allied to that
-one which makes us believe that we, shut up in the egotism of our
-empirical individuality, are alone aware of the truth, that we alone
-feel the beautiful, that we alone know how to love, and so on. But
-reality is democratic.</p>
-
-<p>From the psychological point of view yet another objection has been
-raised. Knowledge (it is affirmed) cannot be the indispensable base of
-the will, if, as is the case, the ignorant are often far more effective
-than many learned men and philosophers. These latter, they say,
-although possessing very great knowledge, and no less a stock of good
-intentions, yet do not know how to direct their lives successfully.
-But it is evident that in these cases the so-called ignorant possess
-just that knowledge which is necessary for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> purpose and is lacking
-to the learned and to the philosopher, who would themselves be the
-ignorant in such a case. Nicholas Macchiavelli was ignorant as compared
-with Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, when he kept the spectators waiting two
-hours in the sun, while he was attempting to dispose three thousand
-infantry according to the directions that he had written. This he would
-never have succeeded in doing, had not Signor Giovanni, with the help
-of drummers and in the twinkling of an eye caused them to execute the
-various manœuvres and afterwards carried Master Nicholas to dine, who,
-save for him, would not have dined at all that day.<a name="FNanchor_1_3" id="FNanchor_1_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_3" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Nature of the theoretical precedence of the practical:
-historical knowledge.</i></div>
-
-<p>The knowledge required for the practical act is not that of the artist,
-nor of the philosopher, or rather, it is these two also, but only in so
-far as both are to be found as elements co-operating in that ultimate
-and complete knowledge which is <i>historical.</i> If the first be called
-intuition, the second concept, and the third perception, and the third
-be looked upon as the result of the two preceding, it will be said
-that the knowledge required for the practical act is <i>perceptive.</i>
-Hence the common saying that praises the sure eye of the practical man;
-hence, too, the close bond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> between historical sense and practical and
-political sense; hence, too, the justifiable diffidence of those who,
-unable to grasp effectual reality, hope to attain to it by force of
-mere syllogisms and abstractions, or believe that they have attained to
-it, when they have erected an imaginary edifice. They prove by so doing
-that they can never be practical men, at least in the sphere of action
-at which they are then aiming.</p>
-
-<p>Such knowledge is not of itself the practical act. The historian as
-such is a contemplative, not a practical man or politician. If that
-spark which is volition, do not spring forth, the material of knowledge
-does not catch fire and is not transformed into the material of the
-practical. But that knowledge is the condition, and if the condition
-be not the conditioned, yet one cannot have the conditioned without
-the condition. In this last signification, it is true that action
-is knowledge, will, and wisdom, that is to say, in the sense that
-willing and acting presuppose knowledge and wisdom. In this sense, and
-considered solely in the stage of the cognoscitive investigation which
-will form the base of action, the deliberation is a theoretical fact.
-The customary expressions of logical, rational, judicious actions,
-are metaphors, because action<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> may be weak or energetic, coherent or
-incoherent; but it will not have those predicates which are proper to
-theoretical acts that precede actions, on which the metaphors aforesaid
-are founded. As are these acts, so originate the practical act, will,
-and action. We can act in so far as we have knowledge. Volition is not
-the surrounding world which the spirit perceives; it is a beginning,
-a new fact. But this fact has its roots in the surrounding world,
-this beginning is irradiated with the colours of things that man has
-perceived as a theoretical spirit, before he took action as a practical
-spirit.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its continual changeability.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is important to observe, as much to prevent an equivoke into which
-many fall, as because of the consequences that will follow from holding
-it, that we must not look upon the perceptive knowledge of reality
-that surrounds us as a firm basis, upon which we act, by translating
-the formed volition into act. For were this so, we should have to
-assume that the surrounding world, perceived by the spirit, stops after
-the perceptive act, which is not the case. That world changes every
-second, the perceptive act perceives the new and the different, and the
-volitional act changes according to that real and perceived change.
-Perception and volition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> alternate every instant; in order to will, we
-must touch the earth at every instant, in order to resume force and
-direction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>No other theoretic precedent.</i></div>
-
-<p>Continuous perception and continuous change, that is the necessary
-theoretic condition of volition. It is necessary and unique. No other
-theoretical element is needed, because every other is contained in it,
-and beyond it no other is thinkable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of concepts and practical judgments.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if this be true and no other theoretic element save that precede
-the volition, then we find in the aforesaid theory the criticism of a
-series of other theories, generally admitted in the Philosophy of the
-practical, not less than in ordinary thought, none of which can be
-retained without alterations and corrections.</p>
-
-<p>Or better, there are not so many various theories to criticize; there
-is rather one theory, which presents itself under different aspects and
-assumes various names. This theory consists substantially in affirming
-that with the complex of cognitions, of which we have hitherto treated
-(all of which are summed up in the historical judgment), we do not
-yet possess that one which is necessary, before we can proceed to
-volition and action. A special form of concepts and judgments which
-can be called <i>practical,</i> must, it is said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> appear; these render
-the will possible, by interposing themselves between the previous
-merely historical judgment and the will. Is it not indubitable that we
-possess practical concepts, that is, concepts of classes of action or
-of supreme guides to action, concepts of things <i>good, of ideals, of
-ends,</i> and that we effect <i>judgments</i> of value by the application of
-those concepts to the image of given actions? Is it not indubitable
-that those judgments and those concepts refer, not to the simple
-present fact, but to the future? How could we will, if we did not know
-what is good to will, and that a given possible action corresponds to
-that concept of good?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Posteriority of judgments to the practical act.</i></div>
-
-<p>Now it is undeniable that we in fact possess the above-mentioned
-concepts and judgments. But what we must absolutely deny is that they
-differ in any respect from other concepts and theoretical judgments,
-and that they deserve to be distinguished from these as practical and
-that they have the future for their object. The future, that which
-is not, is not an object of knowledge; the material of the judgment,
-whether it concern actions or thoughts, does not alter its logical and
-theoretical character; the concepts of modes of action are concepts
-neither more nor less than those of modes of thought. With this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-negation we at the same time deny the possibility of their interposing
-themselves between knowledge and will. Those judgments, far from being
-anterior to the will, are posterior to it.</p>
-
-<p>Let us state a simple case and observe the course of analysis on
-the lines of the theory here criticized. It is winter-time; I am
-cold; there is a wood close by, and I know that by cutting wood one
-can light a fire and that fire gives heat: I therefore resolve to
-cut wood. According to that theory, the spiritual process would be
-expressed in the following chain of propositions: I know the actual
-situation, that is to say, that I am cold, that wood gives fire and
-fire heat, and that there exists wood that can be cut; I possess the
-concept that it is a good thing to provide for the health of the body;
-I judge that with heat I shall procure health during the winter, and
-that in consequence heat is a good thing and the cutting of wood,
-without which I cannot procure heat, is also good. Having made all
-these constatations, I set in motion the spring of my will, and I
-<i>will</i> to cut the wood.&mdash;The process as above described seems real
-and controllable by every one; but it is, on the contrary, illusory.
-The practical judgment: "I shall act well in cutting the wood" really
-means, "I will to cut the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> wood;" "this is a good thing" really means,
-"I will this." I may change my will a moment after, substituting for
-this volition one that is different or contrary, that does not matter.
-At the moment that I formed that judgment, I must have seen myself
-in the volitional attitude of a man cutting wood; the will must have
-come first. Otherwise the judgment would never have existed. Given the
-first actual situation and its complete expression in the judgment, no
-other judgment can arise, if the actual situation do not change and
-nothing new supervene. This new thing is always my will, which, when
-the situation changes (as in the example, if I walk from the house to
-the tree, or if I simply move my body in an imperceptible, manner in
-the direction of the action willed), by adding to the actual reality
-something that was not there before, provides material for a new
-judgment. This judgment is called practical, but it is theoretical,
-like the others that precede it; a judgment believed to precede the
-volition, whereas in reality it follows it; a judgment believed to
-condition a future act of will, whereas it is in reality the past act
-of will looking at itself in the glass; a judgment that is not really
-practical but <i>historical.</i></p>
-
-<p>The illusion that things happen differently is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> caused by the fact
-that we possess judgments concerning our past volitions, which are
-afterwards collected into abstract formulæ, such as that "it is well
-to cut wood." But, on the one hand, those formulæ and judgments are
-in their turn formed from previous volitions, and on the other, those
-formulæ do not possess any absolute value in the single and concrete
-situation, so that they can be modified and substituted for others that
-affirm the opposite. The question is not whether cutting wood has been
-as a rule a good thing for me in the past, nor whether I have generally
-willed it in the past: the question is to will it at this moment, that
-is, to posit the cutting of wood at this moment as a good thing.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Posteriority of the practical concepts.</i></div>
-
-<p>As is the case with the pretended practical judgments and concepts of
-classes formed upon them, so the concepts that they imply, of <i>things
-good, of ideals, of ends, of actions worthy of being willed,</i> and so
-on, do not precede, but follow the volition that has taken place. These
-concepts are the incipient reflection, scientific and philosophical,
-upon the spontaneous acts of the will, and we cannot practise science
-nor philosophize save about facts that have already taken place: if
-the fact do not precede, there can be no theory. Certainly theory
-does not do other than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> seek out the already created and give the
-real principles of actions in the form of thought principles, in
-the same manner as Logic discovers those principles that live and
-operate in logical thought. But since the formula of the principle of
-contradiction is not necessary for thinking without contradiction, but
-presupposes it, so the concepts of ends, of things good, and of ideals
-are not necessary for volitions, but presuppose them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Origin of intellectualist and sentimentalist doctrines.</i></div>
-
-<p>The thesis of the will as knowledge draws support from the mistaken
-belief in the practical principles and judgments that precede volition,
-as also does the proposition that he who knows what is good for him
-also wishes it, and that he who does not wish it does not know it.
-This thesis is to be inverted, because to know what is good for one
-means that one has willed it. From the opposite point of view, the
-other thesis, of the impossibility of volition unless <i>feeling</i> be
-interposed between what is known and the will, is to be attributed to a
-like mistaken belief. Feeling is held to give, as it were, a particular
-value to facts, and to cause them to be felt as they should be felt, or
-to be changed. The customary merit possessed by theories of feeling is
-to be recognized in this thesis: that is to say, it has awakened or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-reawakened consciousness of the peculiarity of the practical act in
-respect to intellectualistic reductions and identifications. This merit
-is not altogether lacking to the general theory of practical judgments
-itself. These, although called judgments, were classified differently
-to all the others, precisely because they were <i>practical.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The concepts of end and means.</i></div>
-
-<p>Having thus shown that it is not true that man first knows the end
-and then wills it, it is possible to establish with greater precision
-what is to be understood by <i>end.</i> The end, then, in universal, is the
-concept itself of will. Considered in the single act, as this or that
-end, it is nothing but this or that determinate volition. Hence is
-also to be derived a better definition of its relation to the <i>means,</i>
-which it is usual to conceive empirically and erroneously as a part of
-volition and action at the service of another part. An act of will is
-an infrangible unity and can be taken as divided only for practical
-convenience. In the volitional act, all is volition; nothing is means,
-and all is end. The means is nothing but the actual situation, from
-which the volitional act takes its start, and is in that way really
-distinguished from the end. Distinction and unification take place
-together, because, as has been remarked, the volition is not the
-situation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> yet, on the other hand, as the volition, so the situation:
-the one varies as a function of the other. Hence the absurdity of
-the maxim, that <i>the end justifies the means.</i> This maxim is of an
-empirical character and has sometimes been employed to justify actions
-erroneously held to be unjustifiable, and more often to make pass as
-just actions that were unjustifiable. As the end, so the means, but the
-means is what is given and has no need of justification. The end is
-what has been willed and must be justified in itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the end as flan or as fixed design.</i></div>
-
-<p>The idea that we generally have of finality is to be eliminated, owing
-to the continual changeability of the means, that is, of the actual
-situation, which would posit the end as something fixed, as a <i>plan</i>
-to be carried out. The difference between the finality of man and that
-of nature has recently been made to reside in nature: which has seemed
-to act upon a plan which she changes, remakes, and accommodates at
-every moment, according to contingencies, so that the point of arrival
-is not for her predetermined or predeterminable. But the same can be
-said of the human will and of its finality. The will too changes at
-every moment, as the movement of a swimmer or of an athlete changes
-at every moment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> according to the motion of the sea or of the rival
-athlete, and according to the varying measure or quality of his own
-strength in the course of the volitional process. Man acts, case for
-case and from instant to instant, realizing his will of every instant,
-not that abstract conception which is called a plan. Hence also arises
-the confirmation of the belief that there do not exist fixed types and
-models of actions. He who seeks and awaits such models and types does
-not know how to will. He is without that initiative, that creativeness,
-that genius, which is not less indispensable to the practical activity
-than to art and philosophy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The will and the unknown.</i></div>
-
-<p>It will seem that the will thus becomes will of the unknown and is
-at variance in too paradoxical a manner with the sayings, so clearly
-evident, that <i>voluntas quae non fertur in incognitum</i> and <i>ignoti
-nulla cupido.</i> But those sayings are true only so far as they confirm
-the fact that without the precedence of the theoretical act, the
-practical act does not take place. Apart from this signification, it
-should rather be maintained that <i>noti nulla cupido</i> and that <i>voluntas
-non fertur in cognitum.</i> What is known exists, and it is not possible
-to <i>will the existence</i> of what <i>exists</i>: the past is not a content
-of volition. The will is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> will of the unknown, that is to say,
-is itself, which, in so far as it wills, does not know itself, and
-knows itself only when it has ceased to will. Our surprise when we
-come to understand the actions that we have accomplished, is often
-not small; we realize that we have not done what we thought we had
-done, and have on the contrary done what we had not foreseen. Hence
-also the fallacy of the explanations that present volitional man as
-surrounded with things that he does or does not will; whereas things,
-or rather facts are the mere object of knowledge and cannot be willed
-or not willed, as it is unthinkable to will that Alexander the Great
-had not existed, or that Babylon had not been conquered. That which is
-willed is not <i>things</i> but <i>changes</i> in things, that is to say, the
-volitions themselves. This fallacious conception also arises from the
-substitution of abstractions and classes of volitions for the real will.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the concept of practical sciences and of a
-practical philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is to be observed, finally, that the erroneous concept of a form
-of science called the <i>practical</i> or <i>normative</i> has its roots in the
-concept of <i>the end, of the good, of concepts and judgments of value</i>
-as original facts. When practical concepts and judgments, as a special
-category of concepts and judgments, have been destroyed, the idea
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> a practical and normative science has also been destroyed. For
-this reason, the <i>Philosophy of the practical</i> cannot be <i>practical
-philosophy,</i> and if it has appeared to constitute an exception
-among all philosophies and that above all others it should preserve
-a practical and normative function, this has arisen from a verbal
-misunderstanding that is most ingenuous and most destructive. For
-our part we have striven to dissipate it, even in the title of our
-treatise, which, contrary to the usual custom, we have-entitled not
-<i>practical,</i> but <i>of the practical.</i></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_3" id="Footnote_1_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_3"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Bandello, <i>Novelle,</i> i. 40, intro.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>IV</h4>
-
-
-<h4>INSEPARABILITY OF ACTION FROM ITS REAL BASE AND PRACTICAL NATURE OF THE
-THEORETICAL ERROR</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Coincidence of intention and volition.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>The connection between the actual situation and will, means and
-end having been made clear, no distinction that it may be desired
-to establish between general and concrete volition, ideal and real
-volition, that is to say between <i>intention and volition,</i> is
-acceptable. Intention and volition coincide completely, and that
-distinction, generally suggested with the object of justifying the
-unjustifiable, is altogether arbitrary in both the forms that it
-assumes.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Volition in the abstract and in the concrete: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>The first form is that of the distinction between abstract and
-concrete, or better, between general and particular. It is maintained,
-that we can will the good in the abstract and yet be unable to will
-it in the concrete, that we may have good intentions and yet behave
-badly. But by our reduction of the thing willed to the volition,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-to will the abstract is tantamount to <i>willing abstractly.</i> And to
-will abstractly is tantamount to <i>not willing,</i> if volition imply a
-situation historically determined, from which it arises as an act
-equally determined and concrete. Hence, of the two terms of the
-pretended distinction, the first, volition of the abstract, disappears,
-and the second, concrete volition, which is the true and real volition
-and intention, alone remains.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Thought volition and real volition: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>The second form abandons, it is true, the abstract for the concrete,
-but assumes two different volitional acts in the same concrete: the
-one real, arising from the actual situation, the other, thought or
-imagined, side by side with the former: this would be the volition,
-that the intention. According to such a theory, it is always possible
-to <i>direct the intention,</i> that is, the real volition can always join
-with the volitional act imagined and produce a nexus, in which the
-volition exists in one way, the intention in another; the first bad
-and the second good, or the first good and the second bad. Thus the
-honourable man approved by the Jesuit, of whom Pascal speaks, although
-he desire the death of him from whom he expects an inheritance and
-rejoice when it takes place, yet endows his desire with a special
-character, believing that what he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> wishes to attain is the prosperity
-of his affairs, not the death of his fellow-creature. Or the same man
-may kill the man who has given him a blow; but in so doing he will fix
-his thought upon the defence of his honour, not upon the homicide.
-Since he is not able to abstain from the action, he at least (they say)
-purines the intention. The worst of this is that the real situation,
-the only one of which we can take account, is the historical, not the
-imaginary situation. In the reality of the consequent volition, it is
-not a question of his own prosperity and nothing more, but of his own
-prosperity coupled with the death of another, or of false prosperity.
-It is not a question of his own honour and nothing more, but of his own
-honour in conjunction with the violation of the life of another, that
-is, of false honour. Thus the asserted fact of prosperity and honour
-is changed into two qualified bad actions, and what was honourable
-in the imaginary case, becomes dishonourable in the real case, which
-is indeed the only one of which it is question. It is of no use to
-imagine a situation that differs from reality, because it is to the
-real situation that the intention is directed, not to the other, and
-therefore it is not possible to direct, that is to say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> to change the
-intention, if the actual situation do not change.</p>
-
-<p>The antipathy that has been shown for good-hearted and well-intentioned
-men in recent centuries, and for practical doctrines with intention
-as their principle (the morality of intention, etc.), arises from the
-sophisms that we have here criticized. But since it is henceforward
-clear to us that those so-called well-intentioned and good-hearted
-people have neither good hearts nor good intentions and are nothing
-but hypocrites, and because we do not admit any distinction between
-intention and will, we are without fear or antipathy in respect to
-the use of the word "intention," understanding it as a synonym for
-"volition."</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of volition with base either unknown or
-imperfectly known.</i></div>
-
-<p>But it will be said that we have here considered the case, in which,
-while the real situation is known, there is a hypocritical pretence
-of not knowing it, in order to deceive others and maybe oneself, and
-that we have justly here declared that in such a case the will and
-the intention were inseparable. But there is another case, in which,
-though the situation of affairs be not known, yet it is necessary both
-to will and to act at once. Here the concrete will is separated at
-the beginning from the intention: the will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> is what it <i>can</i> be, the
-intention is as the action <i>would wish</i> to be.</p>
-
-<p>But this instance is equally or even more inconceivable than the
-preceding. It has been clearly established that if we do not know, we
-cannot will. Before arriving at a resolution, man tries to see clearly
-in and about him, and so long as the search continues, so long as the
-doubt is not dissipated, the will remains in suspense. Nothing can
-make him resolve, where the elements for coming to a resolution are
-wanting; nothing can make him say to himself "I know," when he does not
-know; nothing can make him say "it will be as if I knew," because that
-"as if I knew" would introduce the arbitrary method into the whole of
-knowledge, and would cause universal doubt to take the place of doubt
-circumscribed. This would disturb the function of knowledge itself,
-against which an act of real felony would be committed. From nothing
-nothing is born.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Illusions among the cases that are cited.</i></div>
-
-<p>There are no exceptions to this law, and those that are adduced can be
-only apparent. A man is cautiously descending the dangerous side of
-a mountain, covered with ice: will he or will he not place his foot
-on that surface, of which he does not and cannot know the resistance?
-How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>ever, there is no time to be lost: he must go on and take the risk.
-It seems evident that in a case like this he wills and operates without
-complete knowledge. But the case is not indeed unique or of a special
-order: every act of life implies risk of the unknown, and if there were
-not in us (as they say) <i>potestas voluntatem nostram extra limites
-intellectus nostri extendendi,</i> it would be impossible to move a step,
-to lift an arm, or to put into one's mouth a morsel of bread, since
-<i>omnia incerta ac periculis sunt plena.</i> What must be known in order
-to form the volition is not that which we should know if we were in a
-situation different from that in which we are (in which case, also,
-the volition would be different), but that which we can know in the
-situation in which we really find ourselves. The man on the glacier has
-neither time nor means to verify the resistance of the surface of the
-ice; but since he is obliged to proceed further, he does not act in a
-rash, but in a very prudent manner, in putting his foot trustfully on
-the ice that may be unfaithful to him. He would be acting rashly if,
-having the means and the time, he failed to investigate its resistance,
-that is to say, if he were in <i>another and imaginary situation,</i> not
-in that real and present situation, in which he finds himself. If I
-knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> the cards of my adversary, as the cheat knows them, I should
-play differently, but it cannot be argued that because, as an honest
-player, I know only my own, I am therefore playing inconsiderately: I
-am playing as I ought, with the knowledge that I possess, that is, with
-full knowledge of the real situation in which I find myself.</p>
-
-<p>With this very simple observation is also solved an old puzzle of
-the theory of volition. How does it happen that a man can choose
-between two dishes of food at an equal distance and moving in the
-same manner,<a name="FNanchor_1_4" id="FNanchor_1_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_4" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> or between two objects altogether identical, offered
-for sale to him at the same time, at the same price, by the same
-individual? First, we must correct the hypothesis, for as two identical
-things do not exist in nature, so the two objects in question and the
-two possible actions of the example are not identical.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_4" id="Footnote_1_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_4"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This was an example used by the Schoolmen and by Dante.</p></div>
-
-<p>Indeed the refined connoisseur always discovers some difference between
-two objects, which to the ignorant, the absent-minded, and the hasty
-seem to be the same. The question, then, is not of identical objects
-and actions, but of those as in which there is neither time nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> mode
-(<i>majora premunt</i>) of recognizing the difference. For this reason,
-therefore, we take no account of this difference, or, as is said,
-they are looked upon as equal in this respect. But the <i>adiophora,</i>
-the indifferent, do not exist, and owing to that abstraction, we do
-not take account of other differences that always exist in the real
-situation, owing to which my volition becomes concrete in a movement
-that causes me to take the object on my right, because (let us suppose)
-I am wont to turn to the right, or because, owing to a superstition
-that is not less a matter of habit, I prefer the right to the left,
-or because, through sympathy due to dignity, I prefer the object that
-is offered to me with the right hand to a similar object offered with
-the left, which, if only for this reason, is, strictly speaking, not
-the same, but different, and so on. These minute circumstances are
-absent from consciousness and are not felt by the will, not because
-they escape as a rule reflection. If we neglect them in analysis as
-non-existent, this always occurs, because we substitute for the real
-situation another unreal situation imagined by ourselves. Thus it has
-also been remarked, as a proof of the irrationality believed to exist
-in our volitions and to be the cause of our acting without precise
-knowledge, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> no reason nor any theoretic precedent can be adduced
-as to why, when fixing legal punishments, or in the application of
-sentences, we give forty and not forty-one days' imprisonment, a
-hundred lire fine instead of a hundred and one. But here, too, it is
-clear that the detailed facts are not wanting, the knowledge of which
-causes us to will the punishment to be so and so. This knowledge is
-to be found in traditions, in the sympathy that we have for certain
-numbers, in the ease with which they can be remembered or calculated,
-and so on.&mdash;To sum up, man forms the volitional act, not because he
-possesses some portentous faculty of extending his will outside the
-limits of the intellect, but, on the contrary, because he possesses the
-faculty of circumscribing himself within the limits of his intellect
-on each occasion and of willing on that basis and within those limits.
-That he wills, knowing some things and ignorant of infinite other
-things, is indubitable. But this means that he is man and not God,
-that he is a finite and not an infinite being, and that the sum of his
-historical knowledge is on each occasion human and finite, as is on
-each occasion the act of will which he forms upon it. Psychologists
-would say that this arises from <i>narrowness</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> of consciousness, but
-Goethe, on the contrary, remarked with metaphor more apt and thought
-more profound, that the true artist is revealed in <i>knowing how to
-limit himself.</i> God himself, as it seems, cannot act, save by limiting
-himself in finite beings.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Impossibility of volition with a false theoretic base.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the intention cannot be separated from the volition, because this
-belongs to the real and not to the imaginary, and proceeds from
-the known and never from the unknown, there yet remains a third
-possibility, which is, that the will results differently from the
-intention, owing to a <i>theoretical error</i>; as when we are said to
-err <i>in good faith</i> as to the actual situation, that is, we do not
-indeed substitute the unknown for the known, nor do we substitute the
-imaginary for the known, but we simply make a mistake in enunciating
-the historical judgment to ourselves: intending to perform one action,
-we perform on the contrary another.</p>
-
-<p>This third possibility is also an impossibility, because it contradicts
-the nature of the theoretical error, which, precisely because it is a
-question of error and not of truth, cannot be in its turn theoretical
-and must be and is practical, conformably to a theory of error of which
-many great thinkers have seen or caught<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> sight and which it is now
-fitting to restore and to make clear.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Forms of the theoretical error and problem concerning its
-nature.</i></div>
-
-<p>We have elsewhere amply demonstrated how theoretical errors arise
-from the undue transference of one theoretical form to another, or
-of one theoretical product into another distinct from it. Thus, the
-artist who substitutes for the representation of the affections,
-reasoning on the affections, mingling art and philosophy, or he who
-in the composition of a work, fills the voids that his fancy has left
-in the composition, with unsuitable elements taken from other works,
-commits the artistic error, ugliness. Thus too, the philosopher, who
-solves a philosophical problem in a fantastic way, as would an artist,
-or, instead of a philosopheme, employs the historical, naturalistic
-or mathematical method, and so produces a myth, or a contingent fact
-universalized, or an abstraction in place of concreteness, that is
-to say, a philosophical error. It is also a philosophical error to
-transport philosophical concepts from one order to another and to
-treat art as though it were philosophy or morality as though it were
-economy. This also happens in an analogous manner with the historian,
-the natural scientist, and the mathematician, all of whom are wrong, if
-they interweave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> extraneous methods with those that are their own, and
-with the views, conceptions, and classification of one order, those of
-another.&mdash;But if this be the way in which particular errors and general
-forms of theoretical error arise, what is the origin of the theoretical
-error in universal? We have not asked this question explicitly
-elsewhere, because only now can it receive the most effective reply.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Distinction between ignorance and error: practical genesis
-of the latter.</i></div>
-
-<p>Error is not ignorance, lack of knowledge, obscurity or doubt. An error
-of which we are altogether without consciousness is not error at all,
-but that inexhaustible field which the spiritual activity continues to
-fill to infinity. True and proper error is the affirmation of knowing
-what we do not know, the substitution of a representation for that
-which we do not possess, an extraneous conception for the one that
-is wanting. Now affirmation is thought itself, it is truth itself.
-When an inquiry has been completed, a process of cogitation closed,
-the result is the affirmation that a man makes to himself, not with
-a new act added to the foregoing, but with the act itself of thought
-that has thought. It is therefore impossible that in the circle of the
-pure theoretical spirit error should ever arise. Man has in himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-the fountain of truth. If it be true that on the death-bed there is
-no lying, because man transcends the finite and communicates with
-the infinite, then man who thinks is always on his bed of death, the
-death-bed of the finite, in contact with the infinite. We may know that
-we are ignorant, but this consciousness of ignorance is the cogitative
-process in its <i>fieri,</i> not yet having attained to its end, certainly
-not (as has been said) error. Before this last can appear, before
-we can affirm that we have reached a result, which the testimony of
-the conscience says has not been reached, something extraneous to
-the theoretical spirit must intervene, that is to say, a practical
-act which simulates the theoretical. And it simulates it, not indeed
-intrinsically (one does not lie with the depth of oneself or on one's
-death-bed), but in taking hold of the external means of communication,
-of the word or expression as sound and physical fact, and diverting
-it to mean what, in the given circumstances, it could not mean. The
-erroneous affirmation has been rendered possible, because something
-else has followed the true affirmation, which is purely theoretical,
-something that is improperly called affirmation in the practical sense,
-whereas it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> only <i>communication,</i> which can be substituted in a
-greater or less degree for the truth and falsely represent it. Thus the
-theoretical error <i>in general</i> arises, as do its particular forms and
-manifestations, from the substitution for, or the illegitimate mating
-of two forms of the spirit. These cannot be both theoretical here, but
-must be the theoretical and the practical forms, precisely because we
-are here in the field of the spirit in general and of the fundamental
-forms of its activity. We are ignorant, then, because it is necessary
-to be ignorant and to feel oneself ignorant, in order to attain to
-truth; but we err only because <i>we wish to err.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Proofs and confirmation.</i></div>
-
-<p>Like all true doctrines, this of the practical nature of the
-theoretical error, which at first sight seems most strange (especially
-to professed philosophers), is yet found to be constantly confirmed
-in ordinary thought. For all know and all continually repeat that
-(immoderate) passions and (illegitimate) interests lead insidiously
-into error, that we err, to be quick and finish or to obtain for
-ourselves undeserved repose, that we err by acquiescence in old ideas,
-that is to say, in order not to allow ourselves to be disturbed in our
-repose that has been unduly prolonged, and so on. We do not mention
-those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> cases in which it is a question of solemn and evident lies,
-the brazen-faced manifestation of interests openly illegitimate. Let
-us limit ourselves to the modest forms of error, to the venial sins,
-because if these be proved to be the result of will, by so much the
-more will this be proved of the shameless forms, the deadly sins. It is
-also said that we err in <i>deafening</i> ourselves and others with words,
-with the verse that sounds and does not create, with the brush that
-charms but does not express, with the formulæ that seem to contain a
-thought but contain the void. In this way we come to recognize that
-will has been rendered possible, owing to the communication being a
-practical fact, of which a bad use can be made by means of a volitional
-act. For the rest, if this were not so, what guarantee would truth
-ever possess? If it were possible to err even once in perfect good
-faith and that the mind should confuse true and false, embracing the
-false as true, how could we any longer distinguish the one from the
-other? Thought would be radically corrupt, whereas it is incorrupt and
-incorruptible.</p>
-
-<p>It is vain, therefore, to except the existence or the possibility of
-errors of good faith, because truth alone is of good faith, and error
-is always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> in a greater or less or least degree, of bad faith. Were
-this not so, it would be incorrigible, whereas it is by definition
-corrigible. Consequently, the last attempt to differentiate intention
-from volition fails, since it posits an intention that is frustrated in
-the volition, as the effect of a theoretical error, a good intention
-that becomes, through no fault of its own, a bad volition. The
-intention, being volition, takes possession of the whole volitional
-man, causing the intellect to be attentive and indefatigable in the
-search for truth, the soul ready to accept it, whatever it be, pure of
-every passion that is not the passion for truth itself, and eliminates
-the possibility, or assumes the responsibility of error.</p>
-
-<p>A proof of this is afforded by the fact that to exquisite and delicate
-souls, to consciences pure and dignified, even what are called their
-theoretical errors are a biting bitterness, and they blame themselves
-with them. On the other hand, in the presence of the foolish and the
-wicked, one is often in doubt as to whether their folly and wickedness
-come from the head or from the heart, whether it be madness rather
-than set purpose. The truth is that all this evil, which seems to
-arise from defective vision, comes really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> from the heart, for they
-have themselves forged those false views with their sophisms, their
-illegitimate internal affirmations and suggestions, that they may be
-more free in their evil inclinations, thus obtaining for themselves
-and for others a false moral <i>alibi.</i> We must applaud the former and
-exhort them to continue to persevere in their scruple, the condition
-of theoretical and practical health: we must inculcate to the second
-a return to themselves and the removal of the mask that they have
-assumed' as a disguise from themselves, before assuming it towards
-others.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Justification of the practical repression of error.</i></div>
-
-<p>A consequence of the principle established is the justification of the
-use of practical measures to induce those who err theoretically to
-correct themselves, castigating them, when this is of assistance, for
-admonition and example. It will be replied that these are measures of
-other times, and that we are now in an epoch of liberty, when their
-use is no longer permissible, and that we should now employ only the
-persuasive power of truth. But those who say this are without eyes to
-look within upon themselves. The Holy Inquisition is truly <i>holy</i> and
-lives for that reason in its <i>eternal</i> idea. The Inquisition that is
-dead was nothing but one of its contingent historical incarnations.
-And the Inquisition must have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> been justified and beneficial, if whole
-peoples invoked and defended it, if men of the loftiest souls founded
-and created it severely and impartially, and its very adversaries
-applied it on their own account, pyre answering to pyre. Thus Christian
-Rome persecuted heretics as Imperial Rome had persecuted Christians,
-and Protestants burned Catholics as Catholics had burned Protestants.
-If certain ferocious practices are now abandoned (are they definitely
-abandoned, or do they not persist in a different form?), we do not for
-that reason cease from practically oppressing those who promulgate
-errors. No society can dispense with this discipline, although the
-mode of its application is subject to practical, utilitarian and moral
-deliberation. We begin with man as a child, whose mental education is
-at once and above all practical and moral education, education for
-work and for sincerity (and no one has ever been seriously educated
-who has not received at the least a provident slap or two or had his
-ears pulled). This education is continued with the punishments for
-culpable negligence and ignorance threatened in the laws, and so on
-until we reach the spontaneous discipline of society, by means of which
-the artist who produces the ugly and the man of science who teaches
-the false are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> rebuked by the intelligent, or fall into discredit with
-them. Such illegitimate and transitory applause as they may sometimes
-obtain at the hands of the unintelligent and of the multitude is but
-a poor and precarious recompense for them. Literary and artistic
-criticism always has of necessity, and the more so the better it
-understands its office, a practical and moral aspect reconcilable with
-the purest æstheticity and theoreticity in the intrinsic examination of
-works.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Empirical distinctions of errors and philosophical
-distinctions.</i></div>
-
-<p>We certainly have good empirical reasons for distinguishing between
-errors of bad faith and errors of good faith, errors that are avoidable
-and errors that are unavoidable, pardonable and unpardonable,
-mortal and venial. No one would wish to deny that there is a wide
-difference between a slight distraction that leads to a wide erroneous
-affirmation, and such malice as gives rise to a small and almost
-imperceptible error, to a lie, which, externally considered, is almost
-harmless. We should be as indulgent in respect to the former as we are
-severe in respect to the latter. And from the empirical standpoint
-we should recommend in certain cases tolerance and indulgence in
-respect to the theoretical error, which should be looked upon rather
-as ignorance than as sin. We cannot but take count of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> those
-affirmations, which, while they do not represent the firm security
-of the true, are yet offered as points of support, or as provisional
-affirmations, like those <i>tibicines,</i> props or stakes, those bad verses
-that Virgil allowed to remain in the <i>Aeneid,</i> with the intention of
-returning to them again. But it was needful to record the true bases
-of the theory of error against the illusions arising from empiricism,
-the more so since the general tendency of our times (for reasons that
-we need not here inquire into) has led to their not being recognized.
-Those bases are in the practical spirit, and the practical theory of
-error is one of the justified forms of pragmatism, although perhaps it
-be that very truth against which the pragmatists sin.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>V</h4>
-
-<h4>IDENTITY OF VOLITION AND ACTION AND DISTINCTION BETWEEN VOLITION AND
-EVENT</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Volition and action: intuition and expression.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such are the relations between the practical activity and the
-theoretical, which precedes and conditions it.</p>
-
-<p>Asking ourselves now, what are the relations of this same activity with
-that which seems to follow it and to be outside the spirit, in company
-with corporeality, naturality, physic and matter (or however else it
-may be called)? we find ourselves face to face with a problem which
-we have already treated and solved in another part of the system of
-the spirit, and which we shall solve here in an analogous manner. What
-we may now designate as the problem of the relation between <i>volition
-and action,</i> formerly appeared in the theoretical philosophy as the
-problem of the relation between <i>intuition</i> and <i>expression.</i>&mdash;Are then
-volitions and actions two distinct terms that may appear now together,
-now separate? Can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> volition remain for its part isolated from action,
-whereas action is not able to separate itself from volition, or is the
-opposite true?&mdash;We reply, as we did on the former occasion, by denying
-the problem itself and by identifying intuition with expression,
-in such a manner that effective intuition became at the same time
-expression, and it was declared that a so-called expression, which was
-not at the same time intuition, was declared to be non-existent.&mdash;We
-reply in like manner on this occasion, that <i>volition and action</i> are
-<i>one,</i> and that volition without action or action without volition is
-inconceivable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Spirit and nature.</i></div>
-
-<p>Indeed, the relation between spirit and nature (which is a general
-relation, including the other particulars between intuition and
-expression, or between volition and action), understood in the way
-that it is here, is a relation, not between two entities, but only
-between two different methods of elaborating one unique reality,
-which is spiritual reality: thus it is not truly a relation. Nor are
-the two modes of elaboration two co-ordinated modes of knowledge,
-for that would lead back to a duplicity of objects, but the first is
-cognoscitive elaboration and true science, or philosophy, in which
-reality is revealed as activity and spirituality, while the other is an
-abstract<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> elaboration for practical convenience, without cognoscitive
-character. When this has been posited, the spiritual act of volition
-has not another reality face to face with it, with which it must join
-or combine, in order to become concrete, but is itself full reality.
-That which is called matter, movement, and material modification from
-the naturalistic point of view, is already included in the volitional
-spiritual act, of which it might be said without difficulty (as was
-once said amid much scandal of the Ego) that it is heavy, round,
-square, white, red, sonorous, and, therefore, physically determinable.
-The volition is not followed by a movement of the legs or arms; it
-is those movements themselves that are material for the physical,
-spiritual for the philosopher, extrinsic for the former, at once
-intrinsic and extrinsic for the latter, or better, neither extrinsic
-nor intrinsic (an arbitrary division). As poetry lives in speech and
-painting in colours, so the will lives in actions, not because the one
-is in the other as in an envelope, but because the one is the other and
-without the other would be mutilated and indeed inconceivable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Inexistence of volitions without actions and vice versa.</i></div>
-
-<p>We cannot affirm the distinction between volition and action, save in
-force and as a proof of a dualistic metaphysical view, of an abstract<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-spiritualism, with matter as being and substance for correlative
-term. But this point of view is eliminated by the idealist view,
-which recognizes only one unique substance, and that as spirituality
-and subjectivity. Without, however, now basing ourselves upon such
-considerations, and according to the order that we follow, applying
-ourselves to the examination of the facts of consciousness, we affirm
-that it would be impossible to adduce one volitional fact that should
-not be also a movement called physical. Those volitional acts, which
-according to some philosophers are consumed within the will and are
-in that way distinguished from external facts, are a phantasm. Every
-volition, be it never so small, sets the organism in motion and
-produces what are called external facts. The purpose is already an
-effectuation, a beginning of combat; indeed, simple desire is not
-without effects, if it be possible to destroy oneself with desires,
-as is in effect maintained On the other hand, it is not possible to
-indicate actions without volitions. Instinctive or habitual acts that
-have become instinctive are adduced; but these too are not set in
-motion, save by the will, not one by one, in their particulars, but
-as a whole, in the same way as a single hand sets in motion a most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-complicated machine which a thousand hands have previously constructed.
-There cannot then be volition without action, nor action without
-volition, as there cannot be intuition without expression or expression
-without intuition.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Illusions as to the distinction between these terms.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is well, however, to indicate one among the many sources from which
-is derived the illusion of this distinction and separation, effectively
-inexistent. A volitional act, which is a process of some duration,
-may be interrupted and substituted for other volitional acts; it may
-declare itself again and again begin its work (although this will
-always be more or less modified), and this may give occasion to new
-interruptions and new beginnings. It seems that in this way the will
-stands on one side, as something formed and definite, and that on the
-other execution pursues its way and is subject to the most varied
-accidents. But volition and execution proceed with equal and indeed
-with one single step. What we will we execute; the volition changes as
-the execution changes. In the same way, when we are engaged upon a work
-of art, on a long poem for instance, the illusion arises of an abstract
-conception or plan, which the poet carries out as he versifies. But
-every poet knows that a poem is not created from an abstract plan, that
-the initial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> poetical image is not without rhythm and verse, and that
-it does not need rhythm and verse applied to it afterwards. He knows
-that it is in reality a primitive intuition-expression, in which all
-is determined and nothing is determined, and what has been already
-intuified is already expressed, and what will afterwards be expressed
-will only afterwards be intuified. The initial intuition is certainly
-not an abstract plan, but a living and vital germ; and so is the
-volitional act.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Distinction between action and succession or event.</i></div>
-
-<p>When, therefore, it is affirmed that a volition is truly such, only
-when it produces effects, or that a volition is to be judged by
-its results, it is impossible not to assent, as we assent that an
-unexpressed expression or an unversified verse is neither an expression
-nor a verse. But in this signification only, because those propositions
-have sometimes assumed another, which on the contrary it is needful
-resolutely to reject. This is that in them action (will-action) has
-been confused with <i>succession or event.</i> Now, if volition coincide
-with action, it does not and cannot coincide with <i>event.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Volition and event.</i></div>
-
-<p>It cannot coincide, because what is action and what is event? Action
-is the act of the one; event, is the act of the whole: will is of man,
-event of God. Or, to put this proposition in a less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> imaginary form,
-the volition of the individual is as it were the contribution that he
-brings to the volitions of all the other beings in the universe, event
-the aggregate of all the wills and the answer to all the questions. In
-this answer is included and absorbed the will itself of the individual,
-which we have taken and contemplated alone. If, then, we wished to make
-the volition depend upon event, action upon succession, we should be
-undertaking to make one fact depend upon another fact, of which the
-first is a constituent part, placing among the antecedents of action
-what is its consequence, among things given those to be created, the
-unknown with the known, the future in the past.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Successful and unsuccessful actions: criticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The concepts of actions that are successful and of those that are
-unsuccessful, of actions that become fully concrete in the fact, and of
-those that become concrete only in part or not at all, are therefore
-inexact. No action (not even those that are empirically said to be most
-successful, not even the most obvious and ordinary) succeeds fully, in
-the sense that it alone constitutes the fact: every action diverges by
-necessity and by definition from succession or happening. If I return
-home every day by the usual road, my return home is every day new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> and
-different from that which might have been, imagined. This often amounts
-to a diversity of particulars which we may call of least importance,
-but which yet are not for that reason the less real. On the other hand,
-no action, however vain it be held (if it be action and not velleity of
-action and intrinsic contradiction, or by as much as it is action and
-not imagination and contradiction), passes without trace and without
-result.</p>
-
-<p>If any action could be rendered altogether vain, this same rendering
-vain would invade all other actions and no fact would happen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Action and foresight: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>The current proposition that we cannot act without <i>foreseeing</i> is
-also incorrect. Since the conception of foreseeing is contradictory,
-and since we cannot know a fact if it be not first a fact, that is, if
-it have not happened; if the contradictory hypothesis held, it would
-be impossible to act. But the truth is that what is called foreseeing
-is nothing but seeing; it is to know the given facts and to reason
-upon them with the universals. That is to say, it is the invariable
-theoretical base of action, already illustrated. When we will and act,
-what we will and do is <i>our own action</i> itself, not that of others or
-of all the others, and so is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> the resulting event. <i>Voluntas fertur in
-incognitum,</i> but the all intent upon itself does not take count of the
-unknown, which is in this case relatively unknowable and, therefore,
-relatively non-existent. The individual is aware that when he acts, he
-does not aim at anything but the placing of new elements in universal
-reality. He takes care that they shall be energetic and vital, without
-nourishing the foolish illusion that they must be the only ones, or
-that they alone produce reality. A popular little tale tells how
-God, who had at first granted to men to know their future lives and
-the day of their death, afterwards withdrew this knowledge from them
-altogether, because He perceived from experience that such knowledge
-made them lazy and inert. The new ignorance, on the other hand, revived
-and impelled them to vie with one another in activity, as though it
-had been granted them to obtain and to enjoy everything.<a name="FNanchor_1_5" id="FNanchor_1_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_5" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> How can we
-doubt that our good and energetic work can ever be rendered nugatory
-in the event? That is unthinkable, and the saying <i>fiat justitia et
-pereat mundus</i> is rectified by that other saying: <i>fiat justitia ne
-pereat mundus.</i> Bad is not born from good, nor inaction from action.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-Every volitional man, every man active in goodness, is a contradiction
-to that one-sided attitude in which the will is suppressed to give
-place to happening, a world unmade is believed to be already made,
-arms are crossed or the field deserted. But it also contradicts the
-fatuous security that the future world will conform to the ends of our
-individual actions taken in isolation; saying with the good sense of
-the Florentine statesman, that we ourselves control one half of our
-actions, or little less, Fortune the other half. Hence our trust in our
-own strength; hence, too, our apprehension of the pitfalls of Fortune,
-continually arising and continually to be conquered. This constitutes
-the interior drama of true men of action, of the political geniuses
-who have guided the destinies of man. While the unfit is all anxiety,
-or bewilderment and depression, the fatuous is all over-confidence or
-expectation of the impossible, also losing himself in bewilderment when
-he finally discovers that the reality is not what he imagined. Hence
-also the serenity of the sage, who knows that whatever happen there
-will always be opportunity for good conduct. <i>Si fractus illabatur
-orbis,</i> there will always be a better world to construct. Hope and fear
-are related to action itself in its becoming, not to its result and
-succession.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmation of the inderivability of the value of action
-from its success.</i></div>
-
-<p>We can illustrate the fact that no one seriously thinks of valuing
-an action according to its success, but that all value it at its
-intrinsic value as action, from the circumstance that no one recognizes
-any merit to the action of a marks-man who hits the bull's-eye, when
-shooting at the target with closed eyes; whereas no little merit is
-recognized to him who, after having taken careful aim, does not hit
-the mark but goes very near it. We are certainly often deceived in our
-practical judgments, and fortunate men are continually praised to the
-skies as men of great practical capacity, while the unfortunate are
-hurled into the mire as incompetent; for we do not distinguish exactly
-between action and success. This is not only so as to judgments of the
-present life: it is also true of the life of the past, of the pages of
-history, where imbeciles are made heroes and heroes calumniated; to
-the worst of leaders is attributed the honour of victories, ridiculous
-statesmen credited with ability. On the other hand, the sins of madmen
-are attributed to the wise, or they are accused of faults that are
-nobody's fault, but the result of circumstances. In vain will the
-Pericleses of all time ask, as did the ancient Pericles of the people
-of Athens, that the unforeseen misfortunes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> of the Peloponnesian war
-should be attributed to him, provided that by way of compensation he
-might have praise for all the fortunate things that should also happen
-παρὰ λόγον.<a name="FNanchor_2_6" id="FNanchor_2_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_6" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> All this depends upon an imperfect knowledge of facts
-more than upon anything else: hence the necessity of criticism. Just as
-the work of the poet and of the painter is not materially to be laid
-hold of in the poem or in the picture, but requires a re-evocation that
-is often very difficult, so the work of the man of action, which is in
-part fused in events and partly contained in them, as a bud that will
-open in the future, asks a keen eye and the greatest care in valuation.
-The history of men of action and of their deeds is easily changed
-into <i>legend,</i> and legends are never altogether eliminable, because
-misunderstanding or error is never altogether eliminable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Explanation of apparently conflicting facts.</i></div>
-
-<p>On the other hand, certain commonplaces seem to be in opposition to
-the criterion itself: for example, that men are judged by success and
-that it matters little what we have willed and done, when the result
-is not satisfactory. There are also certain popular customs that make
-individuals responsible for what happens outside their own spheres
-of action, not to mention the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> well-known historical examples of
-unfortunate leaders crucified at Carthage and guillotined at Paris, for
-no other cause in reality than that of not having won the victory. And
-there is also the insistence of certain thinkers upon the necessity of
-never distinguishing the judgment of the act from that of the fact. But
-such insistence is nothing but a new aspect of the implacable struggle
-that it has been necessary to conduct against the morality of the mere
-intention and against the sophisms and the subterfuges that arise from
-it; an insistence that has expressed itself in paradoxical formulæ,
-as are also paradoxical the trivial remarks of ordinary life that
-have been mentioned. As to the customs and condemnations narrated by
-history, these were without doubt extraordinary expedients in desperate
-cases, in which people had placed themselves in such a position that it
-was impossible or most difficult to verify intentions and actions, and
-to distinguish misfortunes from betrayals; and as all expedients born
-of like situations sometimes hit the mark, that is to say, punish bad
-faith, so will others increase with irrationality the evil that they
-would have wished to diminish, since in those cases there has not been
-any bad faith to punish and to correct.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_5" id="Footnote_1_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_5"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Arch. p. lo st. d. trad, pop.,</i> of Pitré (1882), pp.
-70-72.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_6" id="Footnote_2_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_6"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Thuc. ii. 64.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VI</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE PRACTICAL JUDGMENT, THE HISTORY AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE PRACTICAL</h4>
-
-
-<p>With these last considerations, we are conducted to the theory of
-practical judgments, that is, to those judgments of which we have
-demonstrated the impossibility, when their precedence to the volitional
-act was asserted; but their conceivability as following it, indeed
-their necessity, is clear, by the intrinsic law of the Spirit; which
-consists in always preserving or in continually attaining to full
-possession of itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Practical taste and judgment.</i></div>
-
-<p>But we must not confound the practical judgment with what has been
-called <i>practical taste, or the immediate consciousness of value, or
-the feeling</i> of the value of the volitional act. None can doubt that
-such a taste, consciousness, or feeling is a real fact. The practical
-act brings with it approbation and disapprobation, joy and sorrow,
-and like facts of consciousness that are altogether unreflective. By
-these we explain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> the immediate sympathy that certain actions afford
-us, and the enthusiasms that are often spread through wide circles of
-society, and the force of example, which is most successful in arousing
-imitative efforts. Thus at certain moments the soul of all seems to
-vibrate in unison with the soul of one, and the actions of many to be
-prepared and carried out, as though with one accord, without its being
-possible to say at those moments what is willed, what abhorred and what
-admired. That taste, or consciousness, or feeling is not, however,
-distinct from the volitional act, and is, indeed, the volitional act
-itself. It is that internal control of which we have already spoken,
-that immediate feeling of oneself, that immediate consciousness, which
-makes of it a spiritual act. Abstract it from the volitional act and
-the volitional act itself disappears from before you.</p>
-
-<p>If it can take place, not only in the individual who is acting, but
-also in him who contemplates the action, that is because the individual
-who contemplates becomes unified in that moment with the individual
-who acts, he wills imitatively with him, with him suffers and enjoys,
-as the disc-thrower watches with his eye and with his whole person
-the disc that has been thrown,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> follows its rapid and direct course
-and the dangers in the form of obstacles that it seems to be about to
-strike, its turns and deviations, and seems to become himself a running
-turning disc. The denomination "practical taste" is very well chosen,
-because the analogy with the theoretic activity and with æsthetic taste
-is here most full. But since æsthetic taste is not æsthetic judgment,
-as the mere reproduction of the æsthetic act is not the criticism of
-it, as the listener to a poem who sings within himself with the poet,
-must not be confused with the critic, who analyses and understands
-it, any more than the contemplator of a picture, of a statue, or of a
-piece of architecture, who paints with the painter, sculptures with
-the sculptor, or ideally raises airy masses with the architect; so we
-must distinguish practical taste and sympathy (or antipathy) from the
-practical judgment. Without taste (æsthetic or practical), judgment
-(æsthetic or practical) is not possible; but taste is not judgment,
-which demands a further act of the spirit.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The practical judgment as historical judgment.</i></div>
-
-<p>The practical judgment is, as has already been observed, a <i>historical</i>
-judgment; so that to judge practical acts and to give their history
-is really the same thing. What occurs here is analogous to what was
-demonstrated of the theoretic and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> æsthetic act, when we illustrated
-the coincidence of literary and artistic criticism with literary and
-artistic history. Criticism, be it practical or theoretic, cannot
-consist of anything but determining whether a spiritual act has taken
-place and what it has been. The differences between the one and the
-other criticism arise only from the diversity of content present
-in each case, asking different categories of judgment, but not of
-logical procedure, which is in both cases the same. Every other
-conception of the judgment, which should make it consist, not of a
-historical judgment, but of heaven knows what sort of measurement upon
-transcendental models, separated from the real world by a measurement
-of which the measure is extraneous to the measured, indeed (as though
-it were something of the other world) extraneous to the real itself,
-runs against insuperable contradictions, and makes judgment arbitrary
-and history grotesque; history would thus have value, not in itself,
-but outside itself, enjoying it as a loan from others, a gracious
-concession. But even these contradictions cannot appear in all their
-crudity, nor the opposite theory in all its unshakable truth, save from
-what will be seen further on, and we must here be satisfied with the
-enunciation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its logic.</i></div>
-
-<p>In order to avoid repetition, we must refer to the analysis of the
-single or historical judgment already given and assume its result,
-namely, that it is the only judgment in which there is a true and
-proper distinction between subject and predicate, and that it is
-composed of an intuitive element (subject) and of an intellectual
-element (predicate). In like manner the practical judgment is not
-possible without a clear representation of the act to be judged and
-a conception not less clear of what the practical act is in its
-universality and in its particular forms, and so on, specifying in its
-various sub-forms and possibilities of individuation. The judgment is
-the compenetration of the two elements, the historical synthesis which
-establishes: Peter has accomplished a useful act in tilling a piece
-of land of such and such dimensions; Paul has accomplished an action
-that is not useful in opening a new manufactory of boots, more costly
-and not better than those already on the market; -Pope Leo III. acted
-wisely, as custodian of the universal character of the Church of Rome,
-in consecrating Charles the Frank emperor, thus restoring the empire of
-the West;&mdash;Louis XVI. acted foolishly in not deciding upon a prompt and
-profound change of the French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> political constitution, and in allowing
-himself to be afterwards dragged unwilling whither he had not known
-how to go of his own will. And so on. There are therefore two ways of
-sinning against the exactitude of the practical judgment: either by not
-having exact information as to the content of the volitional act to be
-judged and understood, or by not having an exact criterion of judgment.
-The first of these errors can be exemplified by those judgments that
-are so frequently pronounced, without knowledge as to the true sequence
-of events or without placing oneself in the precise conditions in
-which the person to be judged found himself. Hence it happens not less
-often, that when the facts are really known, the precise conditions
-understood, and the defence of the accused has been heard, the judgment
-must be altered. A cause of the second error is the substitution
-(likewise a very common occurrence) of one category of judgment for the
-other, as when a moral act is praised and admired for its cleverness,
-or the gestures and the felicitous utterance of a practical man are
-praised, as though it were a question of judging an actor or reciter.
-As in art, so in life, differences of judgment arise, not so much from
-difference of understanding, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> from these oscillations and undue
-transpositions of judgments and concepts.</p>
-
-<p>It is likewise superfluous to enter into disputes as to the
-absoluteness or relativity of the practical judgment, because these
-have been superseded by the concept of the historical judgment, which
-is <i>both absolute and relative:</i> absolute for the categories that it
-applies, relative for the matter, always new, to which it applies them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Importance of the practical judgment.</i></div>
-
-<p>The importance of the practical judgment for practical life is of the
-greatest, and when we are warned: <i>nolite judicare</i> or <i>noli nimium
-judicare,</i> what are meant are not true acts of judgment, but certain
-psychical conditions, which reveal slight spiritual seriousness.
-And the importance is of the greatest, precisely because the nature
-of the judgment is historical, and as we know already, historical
-knowledge, knowledge, that is, of actual situations, is the basis of
-future actions. For this reason every man who is strongly volitional is
-continually submitting himself and others to judgment; for this reason
-we feel the need of talking to others about our own actions, in order
-to be upheld by the spirit of others in forming a just judgment. This
-is the origin of such social institutions as the confessional, or of
-poems such as the <i>Divina Commedia.</i> The only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> judgment without meaning
-is that <i>final judgment</i> made in the valley Jehoshaphat, because what
-object can there be in giving oneself the trouble of judging a world
-looked upon as ended? We judge in order to continue to act, that is,
-to live, and when universal life is at an end, judgment is vain (vain
-praise or paradise, vain cruelty or hell).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Difference between the practical judgment and the judgment
-of the event.</i></div>
-
-<p>The value of the volitional act is therefore, as has been demonstrated,
-in the act itself, and we must not expect and derive it from succession
-or event. The practical judgment always concerns the volitional act,
-the intention, the action (which are all one), and never the result or
-happening. With this distinction we annul one of the most disputed,
-intricate, and difficult questions: if it be possible to judge, or
-as they say, to try history. Since we know well that judgment and
-historical narrative coincide, we must reply in general, as we have
-replied, in the affirmative. We must in consequence deny all the absurd
-claims of an objectivity, which is the irrealizable aspiration to the
-abstention from thought and from history itself. We must also deny to
-the historian that frivolous privilege by which he is allowed to judge,
-almost tolerating in him an original sin or an incorrigible vice,
-provided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> he clearly distinguish between the serious and the facetious,
-between the narrative and the judgment, as though the distinction were
-ever possible. But the prejudice against those who make out a case
-against history on the ground that it should have happened in a manner
-different from what actually took place, and describe how this should
-have been, is well justified. Whoever possesses historical sense,
-or even simple good sense, cannot but agree to this. The question
-should in reality be asked differently, and in this manner: Is it
-correct to apply to history the categories of judgment that we apply
-to volitions and single acts? Is it correct to judge in a utilitarian
-or moral manner historical events and the whole course of history?
-Rectified in these terms, the question becomes clear, and requires a
-negative answer. When we narrate artistic or philosophical, economic
-or ethical history, we place ourselves at the point of view of the
-individual activity. As we expose æsthetic or philosophical products,
-useful or moral actions, we judge them at the same time æsthetically,
-philosophically, economically, morally, and we know in every case if
-the action has been such as it ought. Who would hesitate to affirm that
-(at least, as an affirmative method) the <i>Africa</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> of Petrarch was not
-what he wished it to be, a poetic work; or that Emmanuel Kant did not
-succeed in establishing from his practical postulates, according to his
-intention, the existence of a personal God and the immortality of the
-soul; or that Themistocles behaved in an undecided manner as regards
-Xerxes, not knowing how to resolve to sacrifice his ambitions to the
-safety of Greece, nor to inflict a grave loss upon his country, in
-order to satisfy his desire for vengeance; or that Napoleon ignored the
-rights of man, and behaved as one without scruples, when he ordered the
-arrest and shooting of the Duc d'Enghien? But what can be the advantage
-of asking if the arrest of the Persian expansion in Europe were a bad
-thing or a good? if the creation of the Roman Empire deserve blame?
-if the Catholic Church were wrong in concentrating Western religion
-in herself? if the English revolution of the seventeenth century, the
-French of the eighteenth, or the Italian of the nineteenth, could have
-been avoided? if Dante could have been born in our day and have sung
-the Kantian rather than the Thomist philosophy? if Michael Angelo
-might have painted the victories of the modern industrial world, which
-Manzotti has made into a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> ballet in his <i>Excelsior,</i> instead of the
-visions of the Last Judgment? Here we have before us, not individual
-spirits, whose work we examine in given circumstances, but facts that
-have happened, and these are the work, not of the individual, but of
-the Whole. They are (as has already been said) the work of God, and God
-is not to be judged, or rather He is to be judged, but not from the
-visual angle at which individual works and actions are to be judged. He
-is not to be judged as a poet or as a philosopher, as a statesman or
-a hero, as a finite being working in the infinite. The contemplation
-of His work is at the same time judgment. <i>Die Weltgeschichte das
-Weltgericht</i>: the history itself of the world is the judgment of the
-world, and in recounting the course of history, while not applying the
-judgment of the categories above indicated, which are inapplicable, we
-do, however, apply a judgment, which is that of necessity and reality.
-That which has been had to be; and that which is truly real is truly
-rational.</p>
-
-<p>But we cannot give the justification of this supreme judgment, of this
-world-embracing judgment (we repeat the refrain), until further on. Let
-it suffice for the present that in discussing the practical judgment
-we have limited it to all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> that part of history which contemplates
-actions, that is, to individual activity, to biography and to the
-biographical element, which is the material of all history. In it,
-the practical judgment is active and energetic, but is silent before
-the event, and every history is like an impetuous river of individual
-works, which flows into a sea, where it is immediately restored to calm
-serene. The rush of actions and of their vicissitudes, of victory and
-of defeat, of wisdom and of folly, of life and of death, are set at
-rest in the solemn peace of the "historical event."</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Progress of action and progress of Reality.</i></div>
-
-<p>As we have distinguished the practical judgment from the judgment of
-the event, the historical-individual from the historical-cosmic, so we
-must distinguish the concept of progress, as the progress which belongs
-to the volitional act and that which belongs to the event. The concept
-of progress (according to the explanations given elsewhere) coincides
-with the concept of activity. There is progress whenever an activity
-declares itself, whenever (not to leave the circle of the practical) we
-pass from irresolution to resolution, from conflict to the volitional
-synthesis, from suspense to action. But the event, which is no longer
-action but result, that is to say, is action, not of the individual
-but of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> the Whole, is not to be judged with that concept of progress,
-and in it progress coincides with the fact. That which follows
-chronologically, if it be truly real, represents a progress upon what
-precedes. Even illness is progress, if there were a latent crisis of
-health, and getting over it gives rise to more vigorous health. Even
-apparent regression (invasion of barbarians) is progress, if it lead to
-the ripening of a wider civilization. What is death for the individual
-is life for the Whole.&mdash;Hence the insipidity of the question, often
-proposed and still discussed by writers of treatises, whether there be
-practical progress, or as is said when limiting the question, moral
-progress.</p>
-
-<p>From the individual point of view, at every new volitional act,
-practicality and the relative impulse of progress are once more born,
-and they are extinguished with that act, to be born again in a new
-one, and so on in a circle of infinite changes. As to cosmic reality,
-we must declare, as in the previous example of the course of history,
-that it is itself progress (which is also confirmed by the positivist
-philosophy, when it declares that reality is evolved), but this is
-progress of reality and therefore progress without adjective, or at
-least without practical or moral adjective.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Precedence of the philosophy of the practical over the
-practical judgment.</i></div>
-
-<p>The intellectual element, which is constitutive in the practical
-judgment as in every other historical judgment, can also be called
-the philosophical element. Hence the consequence that a philosophy of
-the practical activity is a necessary condition of every practical
-judgment. This is another thesis of paradoxical appearance, which,
-however, it is not difficult to make plausible with suitable
-reflections, plausible at least to those who do not refuse to reflect.
-For what is philosophy but the thinking of the concept, and in this
-case the concept of the practical? The conclusion, then, that a
-philosophy is necessary for a judgment is irrefutable. The difficulty
-in admitting it comes from the false association of ideas, for which
-the sound of the word "philosophy" suggests the disputes of the
-schools, the treatise, the manual, or the academic lecture whereas
-we should think of philosophy in all its extension and profundity,
-inborn in the human spirit (we have elsewhere called this <i>ingenuous
-philosophy</i>) before its more complicated forms Every man has his
-own philosophy, more or less developed or rudimentary, more or less
-defective no one is without any philosophy. The first judgment on the
-practical activity is already guided by the light of a philosophical
-concept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> which, if it does not give a light, gives at least a glimmer,
-if not straight and certain, at the least undulating and tremulous,
-producing therefore tremulous and undulating judgments. Ingenuous
-philosophy and philosophy in the specific sense are not, therefore,
-separable from one another, with a clear-cut distinction, and if there
-exist a disability in pronouncing a judgment as to many people and
-to many actions, that arises from difficulties consequent upon the
-philosophy of the time, which must first of all be solved, before
-passing to the effective judgment. Hence long researches into doctrine
-are sometimes necessary. Thus it is difficult to do justice to the
-work of a rebel or of a revolutionary, without first clearing away
-prejudices and understanding what a revolution is, and the relative
-value of what is called obedience to the existing order of things.
-Thus it would be naive to condemn as faithless the Saxon regiments
-which deserted Napoleon on the field of Leipzig, or Marshal Ney, who
-returned to the service of Napoleon from that of Louis XVIII., unless
-we previously make clear the meaning and the limits of the political
-treaty and of the military oath, which cannot be the only unconditioned
-things in a world where nothing is unconditioned save the world itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmation of the philosophical incapacity of the
-psychological method.</i></div>
-
-<p>From the recognized precedence of philosophy over the practical
-judgment arises the confirmation of the impossibility of the
-psychological method as the foundation of a Philosophy of the
-practical. Descriptive psychology is based upon practical facts
-historically ascertained, or upon practical judgments. Hence, by
-proceeding from particular to particular, it is not only incapable of
-exhausting the infinite and of attaining to the real universal, but by
-the very choice of particular examples, which should be the foundation
-of philosophical research relating to the practical, it is under the
-necessity of first possessing a concept of the practical. Hence it
-stands between Scylla and Charybdis, between a vicious <i>progressus ad
-infinitum</i> and a not less vicious circle.</p>
-
-<p>In this way is eliminated the problem, monstrous from whatever point
-of view it may arise, as to the historical origin of the practical
-activity (economy or morality). If these activities be categories,
-which constitute fact and judge it reflected in the spirit, they
-cannot have arisen historically, as contingent facts. When we prove
-the historical origin of anything, with that very proof we destroy
-its universal value. The fears of certain moralists lest, with the
-indication of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> the historical origin of morality, its value should
-come to be denied, have therefore been wrongly mocked. Certainly, if
-morality had a historical origin, it would also have an end, like all
-historical formations, even the most grandiose, the Empire of the
-East or the Empire of the West, the Hunnish Empire of Attila or the
-Mongolian Empire of Gengiskhan. The fear manifested by the moralists
-in question was then an instinctive horror of the incorrect method
-of philosophical psychology, which now presupposes, now destroys the
-categories that it would wish to establish.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VII</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE PRACTICAL METHOD, RULES AND CASUISTRY</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Justification of the psychological method and of empirical
-and descriptive disciplines.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>In repeatedly rejecting the psychological method, as at the end
-of the last chapter, we have been very careful to make use of a
-cautious phraseology. Thus we have employed such expressions as
-"psycho-philosophical method," "speculative-descriptive method,"
-and the like, in order to make it quite clear that our hostility is
-directed against that mixture, or rather against its introduction into
-Philosophy, but is not directed against Psychology itself, that is,
-descriptive psychology. This psychology has always been practised,
-since the world was world, and we all practise it at every instant, and
-could not propose to banish it from the spirit, save at the risk of
-going mad.</p>
-
-<p>If indeed we know that the true and proper knowledge of theoretical
-philosophy is resolved into the cycle of art, philosophy, and history,
-and that we possess no other means of knowing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> the individual, both
-ingenuous and reflective, outside the knowledge of the universal given
-by philosophy, then we also know that the spirit needs to arrange and
-to classify the infinite intuitions and perceptions given to it by art
-and history, and to reduce them to classes, the better to possess and
-to manipulate them. We also know that the method called <i>naturalistic
-or positive</i> performs this function, and that hence arise natural
-disciplines or sciences. These do not, as is the popular belief,
-deal only with so-called inferior reality (minerals, vegetables, and
-animals), but with all manifestations of reality, including those most
-strictly termed spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we can at this point reduce to a more correct meaning a claim
-that has been usually maintained by those who have treated of the
-Practical and of the Ethical in our day. They demand that a science of
-the practical and of morality should be preceded by a wide historical
-inquiry and have a great mass of facts as its foundation. If such
-science be understood as a Philosophy of the practical and as an Ethic,
-such a demand is an irrational pretension, because the true relation is
-exactly the opposite: from philosophy to history, not from history to
-philosophy. But if, on the other hand, this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> science be understood as a
-naturalistic and empirical discipline, the claim is rational, because
-it is not possible to construct a discipline of that sort, save with
-material that has been historically-verified.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Practical description and its literature.</i></div>
-
-<p>The practical discipline that arranges in groups and classifies the
-spiritual facts concerning man, is <i>Psychology.</i> But the writer or the
-professor is not the only psychologist. Man himself is a psychologist;
-even the savage constructs in some sort of way his psychology of types
-and classes. And to remain within the circle of volitional acts, their
-psychology or description by types has always existed. A conspicuous
-example of this was the Comedy of Menander or the New Comedy in Greece.
-This partly received and gave artistic form to the results of the
-observations of the moralists and partly served as material for the
-elaboration of treatises, to such an extent that the <i>Characters</i>
-of Theophrastus have been looked upon as a repertory or summary of
-theatrical types. In the <i>Rhetoric</i> of Aristotle, a whole book is
-devoted to a description of affections, passions, and habits. In modern
-times, Descartes lamented the insufficiency of ancient treatises on the
-subject, and presented as quite a new thing his <i>Traité<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> des passions.</i>
-In this treatise, six <i>primitive</i> passions being distinguished
-(admiration, love, hate, desire, joy, and sadness), he maintained that
-all the others were derived from them: esteem, contempt, generosity,
-pride, humility, baseness, veneration, disdain, hope, fear, jealousy,
-certainty, desperation, irresolution, courage, hardihood, emulation,
-cowardice, terror, remorse, mockery, piety, satisfaction, repentance,
-favour, gratitude, indignation, anger, glory, shame, and so on.
-Spinoza, following the example of Descartes and correcting his
-theories, devoted the third part of his <i>Ethic</i> to the affections or
-passions, considering them <i>perinde ac si quaestio de lineis planis aut
-de corporibus esset.</i> Let it suffice to mention the <i>Anthropologia</i> of
-Kant among the other most celebrated treatises upon the argument.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Extension of practical description.</i></div>
-
-<p>But although we have recorded as examples these general treatises on
-the passions, it would be impossible to continue the enumeration,
-because descriptive psychology is carried out, so to speak, with
-the widest divergences and is infinitely subdivided. An ample
-bibliography would not suffice to catalogue all the books dealing
-with this discipline. These are sometimes arranged in chronological
-divisions (Psychology<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> of the Renaissance, of the eighteenth century,
-of the Middle Ages, even including prehistoric man!). Sometimes
-they contain geographical divisions (Psychology of the Englishman,
-of the Frenchman, of the Russian, of the Japanese, and so on),
-with subdivisions according to regions. Sometimes they combine the
-two methods (Psychology of the ancient Greek, of the Roman of the
-Decadence), and sometimes according to their psychical content
-(Psychology of the priest, of the soldier, of the politician, of the
-poet, of the man of science), and so on. And when the treatises that
-bear a title of the kind above mentioned had been catalogued, it would
-be also necessary to trace a great mass of descriptive psychology
-(and of the best sort) in the books of historians, novelists,
-dramatists, in memoirs and confessions, in maxims and advice for the
-conduct of life in the sketches of satirists and caricaturists. And
-when all these had been catalogued (a very difficult task), it would
-be necessary to take account of all the other psychology, which,
-formed in the spirit of individuals who are not writers, is poured
-forth in speech. This is found, but in small part, in collections of
-proverbs. It would also be necessary not to neglect (an altogether
-desperate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> enterprize) everything that each one of us does and forgets
-and substitutes continually in life, according to his own needs and
-experiences. <i>Tantae molis</i> would be a complete account, precisely
-because psychological construction, having for its object actions and
-individuals in action, is of such common use.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Normative knowledge or rules: their nature.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is another class of mental forms intimately connected with
-Psychology, and of this also we have denied the justification in the
-foregoing chapters, but only in the philosophical field, and not at
-all outside it. These are the <i>norms,</i> or <i>normative</i> knowledge and
-science, <i>maxims, rules, and precepts.</i> In truth, if philosophy,
-which commands and wills and judges, when its task is on the contrary
-to understand willing and commanding, and to make possible correct
-judgment&mdash;if such a philosophy be a contradiction in terms, there
-is yet nothing to prevent our taking the psychological classes, of
-which we have indicated the formation, and separating them from one
-another, according as they do or do not lead to certain other classes,
-which are called <i>ends</i> and are <i>abstract ends.</i> This is done when
-those classes are selected which are more efficacious for practical
-action. Psychological classes and rules<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> are therefore the same, save
-that in the second the character possessed by knowledge as prior to
-action is placed in relief, that is to say, its <i>technical</i> character.
-This is proved by the easy convertibility of rules into psychological
-observations, and of the latter into the former. It suffices to add
-the imperative to the first and to remove it from the second. "Do
-everything so as to seem good, for that helps in many things; but since
-false opinions do not last, you will have difficulty in seeming good
-for a long period, if you are not so in reality." That is a rule of
-Francesco Guicciardini<a name="FNanchor_1_7" id="FNanchor_1_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_7" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> (or rather of the father of Guicciardini,
-quoted by him). Now if we transfer this proposition from the imperative
-to the indicative mood and remove the predicate of exhortation, we
-have a mere psychological observation: "To seem good helps in an
-infinite number of things; but since false opinions do not last, it is
-difficult to seem good for long, unless one really be so." Here is a
-psychological observation of Vico upon seeming and being: "It happens
-naturally that man speaks of nothing but what he affects to be and is
-not."<a name="FNanchor_2_8" id="FNanchor_2_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_8" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> This can be turned into a maxim: "Watch yourselves, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> order
-that by talking too much of a given advantage, you may not let it be
-seen clearly that you do hot possess it." Or in relation to moral
-classes it can be turned thus: "Try to be that which you would like to
-appear to others," and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Usefulness of rules.</i></div>
-
-<p>Of rules it can be said that they do not possess absolute value. This
-is to be found written at the beginning of one of the best books of
-rules: <i>Peu de maximes sont vraies à tous égards</i> (Vauvenargues),
-and he might have said, "no maxim"; for if it were ever possible
-to produce one that was absolutely true, by that alone would it be
-demonstrated not to be a true maxim. But criticism prevails against
-the distortion of empirical rules into philosophical principles, or
-against the confusion between, the psychological and the speculative
-methods, to which attention has already been drawn. If this distortion
-be not committed, then rules are altogether innocuous. Not only are
-they innocuous, they are indispensable. Each of us is constantly
-making them for use in his own life. To live without rules would be
-impossible. Certainly, the man of action makes no practical rule, nor
-does he indicate how we should will and act in definite circumstances,
-nor does the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> poet make any rule of Poetic. Guicciardini himself,
-whom we have just quoted, and who formulated stupendous maxims, warns
-us: "These memories are rules that can be written down in books;
-but special cases, which, since they have a different cause, ask a
-different treatment, can ill be written down <i>elsewhere than in the
-book of discretion.</i>" Action depends upon the quickness of the eye,
-upon the perception of the situation historically given, which has
-never occurred before, and never will occur again, precisely identical.
-But it is useful to possess these types of actions to encourage and
-of actions to avoid, in order to sharpen the attention and to find
-one's way in the world of action, to facilitate and to discipline the
-examination of the concrete fact. If, therefore, individual rules are
-more or less transitory, the formation of rules is immortal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The literature of rules and its apparent decadence.</i></div>
-
-<p>The condition of literature in recent times would seem to be in
-disagreement with this affirmation, since as a fact there is a great
-falling off in the appearance of books of rules, compared with the
-enormous mass that remains in our libraries as an inheritance of the
-past. At one time rules of conduct were compiled for everything, not
-only for the moral life, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> the multiplication of treatises relating
-to vice and virtue, to merits and to sins, to things good and evil,
-to duties and to rights, dividing these and entering into minutiae,
-and again, summaries, catechisms, and various "decalogues," relating
-to every part of life. The literature of the Cinquecento gives rules
-even for the procuress and the courtesan, in most elegant little
-books, which bear the names of Piccolomini and of Aretino. In this
-same century, too, Ignatius of Loyola formulated rules for "tying up"
-the will, and for the reduction of the docile individual <i>perinde ac
-cadaver,</i> for the ends of "sanctity." We must further remark that
-all rules, including those on poetry and the arts, have at bottom a
-practical&mdash;character. That is to say, they are directed to the will, if
-only as intermediary. Thus it is necessary to add to the great mass of
-practical rules the unnumbered and innumerable treatises of Grammar,
-Rhetoric, Poetry of the figurative arts, of music, of dancing, and so
-on. But it is a fact that there are now hardly any treatises containing
-rules, either for morality, politics, or for the arts. Has the world by
-chance become learned on the subject, through inherited aptitude, or
-rather has the inutility of rules been discovered?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Neither the one nor the other. The rules still live in books and
-treatises; they have only changed their literary form. In literature
-they have reabsorbed that imperative which they used at first to
-display and to boast of, not only mentally but literally. That has
-been made possible by the already established convertibility of rules
-into psychological classes. Hence in modern times the literary form
-of the psychological observation is preferred to that of rules. This
-was indeed redundant, pedantic, and at the same time ingenuous, as
-for instance in the Italian Seicento. It is difficult to restrain
-a smile when reading the many books on what was called the <i>reason
-of State,</i> elaborated by the Italians of that day and imitated by
-foreigners, especially Spaniards and Germans. Those <i>arcana imperii,</i>
-those "secret strokes," those impostures, mysteriously inculcated on
-the printed page, are a true and real æsthetic contradiction. The
-eighteenth century therefore began to give up this form of treatise,
-and as it happens that men are accustomed to attribute to moral virtue
-that which is necessity or virtue of another kind, the writers of that
-century boasted of the moral progress which had set them free from the
-pernicious and immodest maxims of the "reason of State."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is very amusing to assist at the acts of repulsion and of exorcism,
-which a man like the Abbé Galiani believes himself obliged to make in
-his treatise <i>Dei doveri dei principi neutrali</i> (1782). When, having
-amply discussed this matter from the point of view of morality, he goes
-on to discuss it from the point of view of politics and of the reason
-of State, he despatches it in a few pages, abhorring, as he says,
-that "insidious and wicked science" which formed "the delight, first
-of Italian and then of almost all European minds of the fifteenth and
-seventeenth centuries." He protests at every step that he is "tired
-of repeating and of developing teachings of cunning and wickedness."
-But what the Abbot Galiani really abhorred was the robed scholastic
-treatment of a matter that he who was termed <i>Machiavellino</i> by his
-French friends, and declared that he did not admit in politics anything
-but <i>le machiavélisme pur, sans mélange, cru, vert, dans toute son
-âpreté,</i><a name="FNanchor_3_9" id="FNanchor_3_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_9" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> handled with very different ability and elegance in his
-conversations in Parisian <i>salons</i> and in his witty letters to Madame
-d'Épinay. The rules of the eighteenth century are to be sought in
-the speeches, essays, political opuscules, tragedies,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> plays dealing
-with the life of citizens, fiction, history, and books of memoirs. If
-Aretino and Piccolomini provided for the necessities of the respectable
-courtesans and procuresses of the Cinquecento, in the Settecento,
-Giacomo Casanova constructed the type of the perfect adventurer. He
-began with the rules to be followed as a system of life, the <i>se
-laisser aller au gré du vent qui pousse,</i> and passed to those that
-were more special and yet fundamental, such as that one should have no
-scruples <i>de tromper des étourdis, des fripons et des sots,</i> because
-they <i>défient l'esprit</i> and <i>on venge l'esprit quand on trompe un
-sot.</i> There should be still less scruple in deception in affairs of
-love, for, <i>pour ce qui regarde les femmes, ce sont des tromperies
-réciproques, qu'on ne met pas en ligne de compte; car, quand l'amour
-s'en mêle, on est ordinairement dupe de part et d'autre</i>.<a name="FNanchor_4_10" id="FNanchor_4_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_10" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> Let us
-leave to the reader to investigate, if he please, the rules of life
-that are concealed beneath the most modern forms of literature; these
-are a continuous, if not always beneficent, guide for daily life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Relation between the arts (collections of rules) and
-philosophical doctrines.</i></div>
-
-<p>Another circumstance that has led to the belief in the disappearance
-of books of rules is the observation that from those books dealing
-with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> the so-called <i>arts,</i> there has come to be a treatment of the
-philosophy of their subject-matter, in which those treatises have been
-dissolved. Thus from Poetics and Rhetorics has come Æsthetic, from
-Grammatic the Philosophy of language, from the Art of teaching and of
-reasoning Logic and Gnoseology, from the historical Art, Historic,
-from the Arts of economic government, the Science of Economy, from the
-treatises on Natural Law, the Philosophy of Law.</p>
-
-<p>When such philosophies, then, had appeared, treatises upon the Arts
-seemed to have become superfluous, and to this is attributed the cause
-of their diminution or disappearance. But although it be impossible not
-to recognize the historical process above described from books on the
-arts to books of systems, it is necessary to be careful to interpret
-it exactly and not to confuse it with a passing from empiria to
-philosophy. Thus it will be seen that the part absorbed and dissolved
-in philosophy has been precisely those philosophical attempts that
-were mingled with such collections of rules and precepts. For it was
-very natural that the writers who put them together and had ideas as
-to what should be done and what avoided, were often led to investigate
-the principles from which sprung the particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> rules. Believing
-that they were strengthening, they really came to surpass them, that
-is, they passed unwittingly from one form of treatment to another,
-from Psychology to Philosophy. But not even here has empiricism been
-refined into philosophy (a refinement which, strictly speaking, is
-impossible), but a more perfect philosophy has been substituted for one
-less perfect. The dissolution, then, has not been of the rules, but of
-that imperfect philosophy, a chemical process which has left the rules
-in what they possess of original as residuum. Hence their persistence,
-and indeed the impossibility that they should not persist, side by side
-with the most pure and perfect of philosophies.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Casuistic: its nature and utility.</i></div>
-
-<p><i>Casuistic</i> has had the same fate as the rules, and was also at one
-time responsible for a very copious literary production. Now it is
-cultivated as literature only by a few Jesuits, who carry on the
-glories of Escobar and of Sanchez, read only by priests preparing
-themselves for the post of confessor, whose studies are based for
-the most part upon old books (such as the <i>Theologia moralis</i> of the
-Neapolitan Sant' Alfonso de' Liguori). At one time Casuistic was
-not confined only to profane or theological morality, to the <i>casus
-conscientiae. </i> There were also books of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> casuistry composed for all
-aspects of life, for politics, for the life of the courtier ("the
-Wise Man at Court"), for the art of love. When the literary form of
-rules fell into discredit, that of Casuistic fell with it. But this
-does not mean that it is dead; it lives and will live as long as rules
-live. For Casuistic is nothing but the process of reasoning by which
-rules are made always more precise, passing from more general cases to
-those more particular, so that no one will ever be able to do without
-them.&mdash;If we take for rule of life this maxim: to avoid scientific
-polemics, because they constitute a waste of time, adding little to the
-progress of knowledge; in what way must we behave if a polemic be such
-that it enables us to gain on the one hand the time it makes us lose
-on the other? Shall we maintain the general rule, or shall we waive
-it on this occasion, if for no other reason than to give variety to
-our occupations? And how shall we behave if not only we retrieve the
-time lost but avoid losing more time in the future? Shall we wish to
-enter upon the polemic at once? But if our future be looked upon as
-uncertain, if we be far advanced in years or in bad health, will it not
-be better to renounce the uncertain gain of the future for the certain
-gain of the present?&mdash;This is a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> simple example of Casuistic,
-which a critic and writer (let us suppose that he is the writer of
-these pages) is obliged to propose to himself and to solve. Naturally,
-no Casuistic will ever furnish the concrete solution (which is the only
-one that counts), since, as has been said, no rule can ever furnish
-it. Rules and casuistry do not reach the individuality <i>omnimodo
-determinata,</i> which is the historical situation; yet if Casuistic
-aid my action, this will always differ from that, as concrete from
-abstract; or better, my action will always truly possess the form, the
-definiteness that abstract casuistry cannot possess. Woe to practical
-men who rely upon collections of maxims and casuistical reasonings,
-and woe to those who rely upon them. Those who argue at length upon
-practical matters and draw subtle distinctions, are to be avoided in
-the world of affairs and in the world of action. If they have not yet
-provoked some disaster, they are on the road to doing so now. This, at
-least, is a good rule; like the supreme rule (which is not a rule but
-philosophical truth), namely, that we must abandon rules, that is, face
-the individual case, which, as such, is always irregular.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jurisprudence as casuistry.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if a further proof be wanted of the necessity and perpetuity of
-maxims and of casuistry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> observe how these also persist in literary
-form, as laws, where this form is not eliminable. <i>Laws,</i> as we have
-seen, are not simple rules, but are based upon <i>formulæ of rules,</i>
-and must of necessity make explicit in them decisions as to doing and
-not doing. Jurisprudence is the Casuistic of law, or all the labour
-of so-called interpretation, which is at bottom the excogitation of
-new rules. All know that not only is Jurisprudence not of itself
-legislative, but that it cannot even determine the volitional act of
-the Statesman, nor the sentence, or decision upon the particular case,
-a decision which the judge creates upon each occasion. But no one would
-seriously think of suppressing the work and the function of those
-<i>casuists,</i> or judicial experts, a function which, since it has always
-existed and continues to exist, cannot but answer to a social need.
-It is possible to predict a form of social life, less complicated and
-weighty, in which that function would have less scope, but whatever be
-the case as regards this prediction, the casuistry of judicial experts
-will continue so long as there are laws and rules, that is to say,
-always.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_7" id="Footnote_1_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_7"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Ricordi politici e civili,</i> n. xliv. (in <i>Opere
-inedite</i>(2), Firenze, 1857; p. 97).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_8" id="Footnote_2_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_8"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Scritti inediti,</i> ed. Del Giudice, Napoli, 1862, p. 12.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_9" id="Footnote_3_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_9"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Letter to the d'Épinay, 5th September 1772.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_10" id="Footnote_4_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_10"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Mémoires,</i> ed. Paris, Gamier, s.a., i pp. 3-4.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VIII</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CRITIQUE OF THE INVASIONS BY PHILOSOPHY OF THE DOMAIN OF PRACTICAL
-DESCRIPTION AND OF ITS DERIVATIVES</h4>
-
-
-<p>In demonstrating the legitimacy and necessity of practical description
-and of its derivatives, Regolistic and Casuistic, we have not
-fulfilled, as it were, our whole knightly duty, which binds us to that
-discipline, which we have been obliged to maltreat so exceedingly,
-and shall further maltreat, when it has been or shall be presented as
-a philosophical method. It is now necessary to defend its existence
-against the invasion of philosophy, or rather of philosophers. We must
-make it obvious that if the empiricists and psychologists, who swell
-themselves out to philosophers, are bunglers, those too are bunglers
-who claim to solve empirical questions philosophically. Perhaps they
-are bunglers less worthy of pardon, because it is part of philosophy to
-know itself clearly, and consequently its own limits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>First form: tendency to generalize.</i></div>
-
-<p>The first bad effect that philosophy has upon practical description
-is the tendency to change it from description and collection of
-particular descriptions into something that has the air of generality
-and comprehensiveness. Because, if practical description be closely
-connected with the historical conditions of definite individuals and
-societies and with their wants, the more specific and near to the
-concrete it is, the better it will be, and the more useless by as much
-as it goes wandering toward the general. We owe to the evil influence
-of philosophy those verbose treatises upon psychological classes, such
-as virtue, duties, things good, affections, passions, and human types,
-to read which nourishes less than fresh water, which at least refreshes.</p>
-
-<p>Let him who wishes to be convinced compare the books of rules and
-observations that we owe to men of experience and to men of the
-world, such as the <i>Ricordi</i> of Guicciardini, the <i>Maximes</i> of
-Larochefoucauld, and the <i>Oraculo Manual</i> of Balthazar Gracian,
-with the <i>Traité des passions</i> of Descartes, with that section
-of the <i>Ethica</i> of Spinoza that relates to this matter, with the
-<i>Anthropologia</i> and the <i>Doctrine of Virtue</i> of Kant (we prefer to
-record great names). He will then see on whose side is the advantage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-an advantage of originality, of importance, and even of style, which
-is in this case a revelation. Those books by philosophers contain for
-the most part definitions of vocabulary and of words which there is no
-need to define, because everybody knows them to such an extent that the
-definitions, rather than make them more clear, make them obscure. Who,
-for example, can resist the philosophical triviality of the <i>Aphorisms
-for the Wisdom of Life</i> of Arthur Schopenhauer? Take the trouble to
-open a book to learn that good things are to be divided into personal,
-wealth and imagination, or reputation, and that the first (such as
-good health and a gay temperament) are pre-eminent over the others.
-Do we not learn more and with greater rapidity and efficacy from such
-proverbs as "God helps the merry man"? It is superfluous to observe
-that those books, in so far as they generalize, can never attain to
-philosophy. They remain at bottom more or less historical.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Historical elements persisting in generalizations.</i></div>
-
-<p>The good and generous wine of the born psychologists and precept-makers
-is diluted in a great deal of water, but that water, however much
-there be of it, never becomes pure and is always discoloured and of an
-unpleasant taste. Thus in classifications of ancient Ethic the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> idea of
-"virtue" or of "good" was announced as the most important, in Christian
-Ethic that of "duty," in the same way as in ancient Ethic the political
-character was dominant, in the modern the individualistic, according to
-the different character of the corresponding civilizations. Historical
-elements differentiate the Ethic of Aristotle, impregnated with sane
-Greek life, from that of the Stoics, in which is foretold the decadence
-of the antique world and the germs of the future discovered (for
-instance, cosmopolitanism, which precedes the Christian idea of the
-unity of the human race). The four Platonic virtues retain the name,
-but are filled with a new content, in the four cardinal virtues of the
-Christian Ethic; the seven deadly sins are not to be explained in all
-their settemplicity without the ascetic ideal of the Middle Ages.</p>
-
-<p>Among the various writers of treatises, the foreground is filled, now
-with the idea of effort or of duty, now with that of enjoyment and
-satisfaction; ideas are now despotic masters, now smiling friends;
-the dominant idea is in turn that of justice, of benevolence, of
-enthusiasm, and so on. In the systems of Catholic Ethic are reflected
-political absolutism and semi-feudal economy; in those of Protestant
-Ethic,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> constitutionalism, liberalism, the industrial and capitalistic
-world; a strict probity, not indeed without utilitarianism, and
-a hardness of heart, not indeed without austerity. Modern Ethic
-is concerned with property, with the struggle of classes, with
-proletarianism and communism. These are all historical facts and as
-such most worthy of attention, but for that very reason they should
-be examined in all their force and value and not through the medium
-of the pale categories of a universal doctrine, which they disturb
-and falsify and by which they are very often disturbed and falsified.
-Whoever undertakes to write general treatises upon the passions, upon
-the virtues, and upon the other practical classes, will always show the
-signs of his time in the categories that he establishes, and the result
-will be at once banal and empirical, that is to say, badly empirical.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Second form: literary union of philosophy and empiria.</i></div>
-
-<p>But hitherto the chief ill has been that useless and tiresome books are
-written. Matters begin to look graver when an approach is attempted
-between philosophical theories and empirical classifications and they
-are united in one treatise, as the <i>general</i> part and the <i>particular</i>
-part, the <i>abstract</i> and the <i>concrete</i> part, the <i>theoretical</i> and
-the <i>historical</i> part. We do not wish to refuse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> recognition to an
-occasionally just sense of the intimate relations between philosophy
-and history as among the motives that lead to such unions, the first of
-which flows into the second, revives it and is by it in turn revived.
-But the history, to which philosophy applies the torch, is all history
-in its palpitating reality; it is history represented by all histories
-that historians have written and will write, and also by those that
-they have not written and will not write. The history offered by these
-empirical descriptions is only a very small part of history and (what
-is worse) abstract and mutilated. This would, however, be an injury of
-not too grave a nature, even at this point, provided the incongruity
-were limited to literary unfitness; in which case, it is true, would be
-added to inutility the ugliness of a union capricious and artificial,
-but fortunately extrinsic. But by means of that extrinsic approach,
-the way is opened to the attempt at an intrinsic approach, and thus
-to the third form of the undue invasion of practical description by
-philosophy, which constitutes the <i>morbus philosophico-empiricus</i> in
-all its harm fulness.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Third form: attempt to place them in intimate connexion.</i></div>
-
-<p>The attempt at intrinsic approach takes place when empirical
-classes are placed in connection with the philosophical concepts or
-categories,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> with pure thought. Nearly all philosophers have fallen
-into this error, since it is very natural that they should not have
-wished to leave a <i>hiatus</i> between the first and second parts of
-their books of Philosophy of the practical, between the general and
-particular parts, and that they should have striven to connect the
-one with the other by passing logically from the concepts of the
-first to those of the second. The mistake was indubitably increased
-owing to their small degree of clearness as to the logical nature of
-the two orders of concepts (concepts and pseudo-concepts), which is
-fundamentally diverse, and we shall not further insist upon this matter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Science of the practical and Metaphysic: various
-significations.</i></div>
-
-<p>Rather let us note that sometimes there has been something rational
-in the minds of those who have required the Science of the practical
-or Ethic to be constructed independently of all Metaphysic. In truth,
-that programme of the independence of the Science of the practical
-or Ethic of Metaphysic has had various meanings that it will be well
-to enumerate briefly. The first meaning was that the Science of the
-practical, in so far as it was philosophy, should be independent of
-the <i>aggregate</i> of the philosophical system (Metaphysic). In this
-case<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> the claim was not acceptable, as we shall see, because it was
-at variance with the nature itself of philosophy, which is unity. The
-second meaning was that the Practical, as science, should be kept
-remote from every form of faith, or feeling or fancifulness (which has
-sometimes been called "Metaphysic"); and in this case the proposition
-was inexpugnable, however contestable may have seemed the opportuneity
-of the meaning given to that word. The third meaning was that the
-Science of the practical, in so far as it was descriptive, should stand
-by itself, in order to afford a base for philosophical induction. Use
-was here made of the erroneous idea, already rejected several times,
-of philosophy as an intensification of the psychological method, or
-as a carrying of it on. But in a fourth sense, it was desired finally
-to withdraw practical description from the perilous care of the
-philosophers, and it seems to us that with this fourth meaning was
-expressed a very just demand.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Damaging consequences of the invasions.</i></div>
-
-<p>What are, in fact, the consequences of the care that philosophers
-have bestowed upon practical description? We would not wish to use an
-over-coloured simile, but what happens is very much what would happen
-if a man were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> given a baby to suckle. He would press it violently
-against his dry and arid breast, incapable of nourishing, but well
-capable of tormenting it. Philosophy, when it approaches the empirical
-classes, will either begin to criticize their distinctions and abolish
-them, reducing several classes to one, and then reducing the reduced
-classes in their turn to a less number, until none are left at all and
-it finds itself in company with the universal philosophical principle
-alone, or alone with itself;&mdash;or it will contrive to preserve them
-as classes, deducing them philosophically, and will thus make them
-rigid and absolute, removing from them that elasticity and fluidity
-which they derive from their historical character, and converting them
-from useful classes that they were, into bad philosophemes, concepts
-contradictory in themselves.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>1a. Dissolution of the empirical concepts.</i></div>
-
-<p>Both these consequences have occurred, for the books of philosophers
-are full of examples, now of destruction, now of corruption of the
-empirical classes of the Practical. The treatment of the doctrine
-of the virtues or of so-called natural rights affords examples of
-destruction. Striving to distinguish courage from prudence, or justice
-from benevolence, or on the other hand, egotism from wickedness, they
-ended by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> recognizing that true courage is prudence, true prudence
-courage; that benevolence is justice, justice benevolence; that egotism
-is wickedness, wickedness egotism, and so on. In this way, all the
-virtues became one, the virtue of being virtuous, the will for the
-good, duty. In like manner, by giving philosophical form to the natural
-rights of life, of liberty, of culture, of property, and so on, they
-ended by recognizing that all rights merge in one single right, which
-is that of existence; which latter, indeed, is not a right, but a fact.
-The passions were reduced from seventy or eighty classes to six or
-seven fundamental, but these six or seven were in their turn reduced
-to two only, pleasure and pain, and of these two; it was finally
-discovered that they constituted one only&mdash;life, which is pleasure
-and pain together. But virtues, rights, passions, possess value in
-practical description only in so far as they are multiplicity&mdash;their
-value is always plural, never singular. To reduce them to a single
-class signifies to annul them, as to blow upon a candle signifies to
-extinguish it and to remain in darkness; darkness is to be understood
-as without empirical light. Now the philosopher should certainly
-destroy empirical ideas, but only in so far as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> they present themselves
-as philosophical distinctions, that is, in so far as they are empirico
-philosophical: and in that case it suffices him to show that they are
-empirical, without pretending to annul them in their own domain also:
-<i>debellare superbos,</i> but <i>parcere subjectis;</i> that is, he should spare
-strangers who remain quietly in their own house.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Examples: war and peace, property and communism, and the
-like.</i></div>
-
-<p>It might seem desirable to pass in review all these empirical
-distinctions and questions which the philosophers have thought that
-they had satisfactorily solved, when they had, on the contrary, passed
-beyond them. But the theme is inexhaustible, and we cannot here give
-even a rich selection, comprising the most frequent and important
-cases. We must limit ourselves to brief mention.&mdash;People discuss every
-day: whether war be an evil, and if it be possible to abolish it;
-if community of goods should take the place of private property; if
-rational government be that of liberty or of authority, of democracy
-or aristocracy, of anarchism or state organization; whether the State
-should be in the Church or the Church in the State, or side by side and
-independent; if freedom of thought should be admitted or restrained;
-if instruction should be free or undertaken by the State;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> and other
-similar problems. Now behold the philosopher applying himself to the
-study of these ideas. Having tested them, he is astonished that people
-can find in them opposing terms, and make them argument for dispute.
-In truth (he says), war is intrinsic to reality, and peace is peace in
-so far as by making an end of one war it prepares another; as Socrates
-demonstrated in the <i>Phaedo,</i> when, scratching his leg in the place
-where it had been pressed by the chain, he realized that he could not
-have experienced that pleasure had he not previously experienced the
-pain. Nor is property different from communism: the individual declares
-himself by an individual taking possession of things and becoming their
-owner; but by so doing he enters into relations and into communion with
-other individuals, and does business with them. And liberty excludes
-subjection the less, since <i>sub lege libertas;</i> nor does aristocracy
-exclude democracy, since the true aristocrat is the bearer of those
-universal values that are the substance of democracy; hence the more we
-are aristocratic the more we are democratic, and inversely. Nor does
-anarchism exclude State organization, because a collection of men,
-however free we suppose it to be, must nevertheless govern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> itself
-according to some laws, and these laws are the State. Then, the ideal
-State, being the best government of men for their perfectionment, both
-material and spiritual, accomplishes the work of the Church itself,
-which is neither above, nor below, nor beside the State, because it is
-the State. Thus in like manner, no one can grant or abolish freedom of
-thought, since thought is by definition freedom, and the restraint is
-thought itself, because liberty coincides with necessity. And finally
-State instruction cannot but correspond with rational demands, and the
-free instruction of citizens, if it be really so and not arbitrary and
-capricious, will be the same as that of the State, or will be changed
-into the instruction of the State.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Other examples.</i></div>
-
-<p>Passing to other orders of fact that are less political, but are also
-argument for practical discussions, we shall refer to the so-called
-conflicts between duty or interest, as symbolized in the legendary
-Titus Manlius, when offered the alternative <i>aut reipublicae aut sui
-suorumque obliviscendi</i>;&mdash;or to the so-called question of the two
-moralities, private and public, in support of which the not legendary
-Camillo Cavour said in 1860, that if he had done in his private
-interest what he had done for Italy, he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> have deserved the
-galleys;&mdash;or we can refer to questions of classification, and ask
-whether the kind of man who is socially harmless should be placed side
-by side with the criminal;&mdash;or to those others, famous in Casuistic,
-relating to capital punishment, homicide, suicide, lies, whether and
-when they should be permitted, and other similar questions. Here, too,
-the philosopher will smilingly observe that duties and interests can
-never be in conflict, because in every given case duty is always one
-only, and interest is always one only, that of the given case;&mdash;he
-will deny that there is one public and one private morality, because
-in man, the private person and the citizen, family relations, or
-those of friendship, and those of political life, are inseparable and
-indistinguishable;&mdash;that every man is bad and good, inoffensive and
-criminal, and that in the so-called criminal there must also be the
-non-criminal, if he be given the name of man;&mdash;that every punishment is
-a punishment of death, that is, it causes something to die, and that it
-is impossible to find a clear distinction between shutting a man up in
-prison and thus taking from him a more or less large slice of physical
-life, and taking it from him altogether by hanging or shooting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-him;&mdash;that homicide, as such, is so little a crime that in war it is a
-duty to commit it;&mdash;that a lie, which is silence as to what one knows,
-is in itself so innocent that no one in the world, save a foolish
-prater, tells all he knows, and that if it be admitted that one can
-and should be silent, that is to say, let others be deceived by our
-silence (though this is eloquent), there is no reason for not admitting
-that we can also betray them with speech (often less eloquent), as is
-done with children in order to send them to bed, and with sick persons
-in order to comfort them;&mdash;that, finally, culpable suicide is not
-the material act of depriving oneself of physical life (a thing done
-without incurring blame, and indeed with praise and glory, by those who
-sacrifice themselves for others in war, in epidemics, in dangers of all
-sorts, and by every one who consumes his own vital strength in a worthy
-cause), but the killing of the moral life in oneself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Misunderstanding on the part of philosophers.</i></div>
-
-<p>In all these answers to questions, we have not made our imaginary
-philosopher commit any blunder; we have indeed put into his mouth
-things that we believe to be all of them most true and irrefutable,
-because we believe them ourselves. And we hold that it is necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> to
-profess them against those who arbitrarily make questions philosophical
-whose terms are not philosophical. But when the philosopher offers
-those solutions to the empirical disputants, he behaves like him who,
-hearing a speech in a language of which he knows little, makes a reply
-that is in itself most reasonable, but without relation to the previous
-speech. The empiricist, if he have studied philosophy, will be able
-to reply, as did King Theodore, worn with misery, in the old <i>opéra
-bouffe</i> of the Abbé Casti, to him who recalls to him the miseries
-suffered by Marius, Themistocles, and Darius:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Good my son, I know them well,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For I have heard these tales before;</span><br />
-But just at present, truth to tell,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">'Tis money interests me more.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Historical significance of the aforesaid questions.</i></div>
-
-<p>Money, that is, ready money to spend in definite situations
-historically given, in order to find one's way in them; for all those
-questions are without universal signification, but have arisen from
-political and individual problems, to which they do and must belong.
-Certainly they are insoluble in the abstract, and this is the defect,
-or rather the nature of empirical questions, which, if they admitted
-of rigorous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> solution, would not be any longer empirical. Therefore it
-is a foolish thing to discuss them philosophically, as is seen in the
-conspicuous example of certain casuistical enquiries (the homicide of
-the unjust aggressor, the lie, incest, etc.) which have been treated by
-nearly all philosophers and have been dragged about for centuries in
-discussions on Ethic, although every century has left them at the same
-point as they were in the one preceding.</p>
-
-<p>But if it be not possible to solve, we can at least <i>state</i> them
-in abstract terms, in the same way as drill and the sham-fight are
-abstract, though certainly of use when the battle is really fought. We
-can and we should bear in mind these abstract solutions, in order that
-we may be the better able to solve a series of concrete cases, which
-are not identical, certainly, because identical cases do not exist, but
-more or less similar, and therefore require solutions that are more or
-less similar.&mdash;Can war be done away with? This question refers not to
-the elimination' of the category "war," but to the possibility or the
-reverse of avoiding in the twentieth century and in European countries
-that empirical war which is waged with cannons and cruisers, that
-costs milliards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> when it is not waged, and tens of milliards when it
-is waged, and out of which the conqueror comes conquered. It is well
-understood that some form of war will always continue, because war is
-inherent to life.&mdash;Can private property be done away with? This does
-not mean to ask if it be possible to prevent man from taking possession
-of things, of his food, or of the material that he requires for dress,
-or from inhabiting a house; but whether it be possible to alter, to
-the advantage of mankind, the proportion that now obtains between
-production with private capital and production with collective capital,
-giving the preference to the latter.</p>
-
-<p>And so on, for it would be tiresome to continue to state the historical
-problems that are grouped beneath each of the recorded formulæ, which
-indeed are easily to be found. Thus when we absolutely forbid the
-telling of lies, as indecorous and degrading, as that which severs the
-ties of human community and of reciprocal faith, as the vice (said
-Herbart) that has the special faculty of stirring up against it all
-the five moral ideas&mdash;justice, benevolence, equity, perfection, and
-internal liberty&mdash;the intention is to forbid what is usually called
-lying; but it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> is certainly not intended to institute a speculative
-enquiry as to the relation between knowing and making known, between
-the theoretic act of thought and the practical act of its communication
-to other individuals. Thus again, the prohibition of suicide has in
-view suicide through egoism, which is the most frequent form, and it is
-therefore useless to identify this with the universal relation between
-death and life, and with the proposition that life is preserved by
-means of death. Thus too, finally, the conception of the delinquent
-has been a beneficent rectification of common prejudices relating to
-the efficacy of certain laws and penalties applied to certain classes
-of individuals who are led to crime as though through unrestrainable
-natural tendency. For the rest, the wisdom of life teaches us usually
-to take individuals as we find them, with their virtues and vices, and
-without claiming to set them violently right, and to remake them from
-top to bottom. We should rather adapt them in the best way possible
-for our own ends, or for those of society. This does not, however,
-imply that they are fixed beings, and that each of those classes is
-heterogeneous in respect of the others. If, with the help of a foolish
-positivist philosophy, we make of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> idea of the delinquent something
-necessary, a natural being, as it is called, confounding naturalistic
-with natural and incorrectly hypostasizing gnoseological procedure,
-then, and then alone, are we right in reacting and in denying.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>2a. False deduction of the empirical from the
-philosophical.</i></div>
-
-<p>And yet those solutions of philosophers, who think that they are
-solving empirical questions by annulling or ignoring them, do not yet
-represent the worst that happens when philosophy usurps the function
-of empiria. Such misunderstanding, such hardness of hearing, may be
-proof of a spirit so energetically directed to universale that it is
-unable to see anything else, and may even for that reason possess
-some sympathetic quality. The worst of the worst is the entering upon
-empirical questions, not in order to annul, but to take sides in them
-and to solve them philosophically.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Affirmations relating to the contingent changed into
-philosophemes.</i></div>
-
-<p>This cannot be done, save by supporting empirical concepts with
-rigorous and philosophical concepts, confounding the one with the other
-by a trick of thought, and sometimes of words, making use of synonyms
-and homonyms, and pronouncing in the name of philosophy arbitrary
-solutions suggested only by caprice or self-interest. This is the
-complete corruption, alike of philosophy and of empiria. Not satisfied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-with making practical classes follow philosophical concepts of the
-practical, it is then sought to deduce the former from the latter,
-and behold them now deriving virtues and duties from the universal
-concept of practical moral activity, by means of the divisions of
-internal and external, of part and whole, of individual and society.
-These are concepts of relations, not susceptible of division, and
-therefore incapable of serving as base for empirical divisions. Or
-they have recourse to the triad of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis,
-which is the universal concrete itself, constituting unity, and
-therefore incapable of serving as basis for division. Or they will
-deduce the moral virtues according to the three faculties, as virtues
-of representation, feeling and thought, or according to the two of the
-will and the intellect, as dianoetic and ethical virtues; as though the
-base of the division of the <i>practical</i> could be that of <i>theoretical</i>
-and <i>practical.</i> Empirical concepts become in this way all false,
-whereas, in their real nature, they are neither false nor true.</p>
-
-<p>There is no thesis, however absurd, which cannot be defended with
-such a method. All know that there are aristocratic and democratic
-philosophers, libertarian and authoritarian,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> anarchical and
-organicist, socialistic and anti-socialistic, bellicose and pacific,
-feminist and antifeminist; and there are others who maintain the
-right to lie, the right to suicide, the right to prostitution, the
-right to incest, to making of themselves caterers for the scaffold,
-the right to the penalty of death. These solutions can be morally and
-politically justified in certain definite and particular cases. There
-are other solutions rationally unjustifiable in the individual case
-and put forward only through passion, wickedness, or prejudice, but in
-both hypotheses, they are outside philosophy and within it so false as
-to be odious, as that is odious which is maintained, not by means of
-intrinsic reason, but by imposition altogether extrinsic and external.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Reason of the rebellion against rules.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such hatefulness explains the rebellion against moral rules and
-concepts that has often taken place. This, together with that against
-literary classes and rules and others of the same sort, forms part
-of the vast movement of rebellion against empirical or empiricized
-philosophy. In truth, when those rules and ideas are taken by
-themselves, no rebellion is possible, because they do not exert any
-pressure and obey the orders of the man who has made them. But it
-happens otherwise, when they become rigid and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> philosophical, and
-as is said, absolute, claiming to substitute themselves as such for
-philosophy and to provide a base for judgments. In addition to this,
-from the enforced union of philosophemes with rules, has arisen the
-false idea of philosophizing about the practical (about an Ethic,
-for example), which showed itself to be <i>practical,</i> or, as is said,
-<i>normative.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Limits between philosophy and empiria.</i></div>
-
-<p>Philosophy, by taking part in empirical questions, ruins both itself
-and them, because it loses the serenity, the dignity, and the utility
-that are intrinsic to it. In like manner, the empirical disciplines
-ruin themselves and philosophy when they claim to philosophize with
-their classes, which are not categories, with their pseudo-concepts,
-which are not concepts, with their <i>generalia,</i> which are not
-<i>universalia.</i> Here too, safety lies in distinction: the observation of
-distinction alone makes possible beneficent co-operation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>IX</h4>
-
-
-<h4>HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS</h4>
-
-
-<p>A history of the general theories relating to the practical activity
-is still to write, although we have several relating to particular
-theories of Ethic. The mode in which such a historical narration should
-be conducted results from the historical explanations themselves,
-which we have exposed and shall continue to expose. Here we cannot
-even offer a rapid summary. We shall limit ourselves to making a&mdash;few
-remarks on the subject, and we shall give some historical account of
-certain problems of the philosophy of the practical, that have had, to
-some extent, profound treatment, or have at least been sufficiently
-discussed (for not a few others are virgin, or almost so), with the
-sole object of serving as a guide.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>I. Distinction between history of the practiced principle
-and history of the liberation from the transcendental.</i></div>
-
-<p>I. A first warning to bear in mind concerns the historical inquiry as
-to the varying <i>recognition of, or failure to recognize</i> the <i>practical
-reason</i> in respect to the other forms of the spirit.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> This series of
-thoughts is not to be confounded with that <i>other historical process,</i>
-so long and so intricate, which had its origin in the debate between
-St. Augustine and Pelagius (or perhaps rather in the opposition between
-Platonic mysticism and Aristotelian humanism), and through analogous
-debates, arising afresh during the Middle Ages and onward to modern
-times, culminating in the strife for the independence of morality and
-the practical reason in general from religion, which took place in
-the seventeenth century. The account of the various incidents of that
-debate perhaps occupies a larger space and a different place in the
-special histories of Ethic than it deserves. For it is not concerned
-with an entirely ethical or practical problem, but with that general
-philosophical movement which produced the progressive elimination of
-the transcendental and founded the immanentistic consideration of
-the real: a necessary condition for the conceivability of philosophy
-itself. In this lay the great importance of the affirmation that the
-practical and the moral spirit of man reveals itself as constant in the
-midst of the most various and opposed religious beliefs. This amounts
-to saying that it is independent of religion and knowable naturally and
-humanly, without the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> necessity of having recourse to the authority of
-revelation and of making shipwreck in mystery. It is customary to say
-that in the seventeenth century free-thought definitely won the victory
-upon the point most ardently contested, and in this connection are
-recorded the names of Charron, Grotius, Spinoza, and Pierre Bayle. To
-these could be added that of G. B. Vico, who conceived of Providence
-as immanent and considered that morality arose from "a sense common to
-all men," from a judgment "without any sort of reflection," foundation
-of the natural rights of man. But should the word "definite" be really
-used here? Whenever the idea of the transcendental reappears, even in
-the timid form of agnosticism, the autonomy of the practical reason is
-denied, or at least again put in doubt (and with it that of the whole
-human spirit).</p>
-
-<p>Two examples only of this must suffice, but they are conspicuous.
-Emmanuel Kant, not having been able to surpass the mystery that he
-had formulated&mdash;the principle of the practical reason&mdash;the categoric
-imperative remained suspended in the void, and in that void it invokes
-in relation to itself faith in a personal God and in a transcendental
-future life, which shall conciliate virtue and happiness, at variance
-in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> the life lived upon earth. This scrap of mystery which Kant
-allowed to remain in his system, suffices to obscure that autonomy
-of the practical reason and that concept of spiritual productivity
-which he had affirmed with so much energy. Another example, perhaps
-even more characteristic, is furnished by the Ethic that was prevalent
-for three centuries in the English School. It was a utilitarian Ethic
-and therefore incapable of truly founding moral reason. What was the
-consequence of that incapacity when recognized as such? Nothing but
-the renewed introduction of mystery, the explanation obtained by means
-of the idea of a personal God, assuming that most extravagant form
-known as "theological utilitarianism." By this theory, moral actions
-that in this life do not receive adequate recompense and seem to be
-unjustified from the utilitarian point of view, are rewarded by God
-in another life, thus finding their economic motive for being carried
-out in the present life. In our theoretic treatment of the subject, we
-do not concern ourselves with the controversy, already mooted in the
-<i>Eutyphron,</i> as to whether sanctity be loved by the gods as sanctity,
-or whether it be sanctity because it is beloved by the gods<a name="FNanchor_1_11" id="FNanchor_1_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_11" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-question that in the Middle Ages was transformed into that other one,
-differently solved by Abélard, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus: whether the
-moral law be given by divine decree, or whether the idea of God does
-not of necessity coincide with the idea of moral law. We do not treat
-of this, since we are occupied with the practical, not with theology
-or antitheology, and consider that the contest between philosophy
-and theology has been already solved and surpassed in the theory of
-knowledge. For the same reason, it seems to us that we should not trace
-its history in the History of the Philosophy of the Practical.<a name="FNanchor_2_12" id="FNanchor_2_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_12" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>II. The distinction of the practical from the theoretical.</i></div>
-
-<p>II. The true and proper history of the practical principle, conceived
-as autonomous, and of the problem concerning the identity or the
-distinction of the practical from theory, has a different line of
-development. As a rule this problem is referred back to the celebrated
-sayings of Socrates, that virtue is knowledge and vice ignorance, and
-to the corrections that Aristotle, while accepting, proposes in them,
-when he takes note of the part that belongs to the non-cognoscitive
-element. But, as often happens,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> those sayings and those corrections
-have been taken as being more profound than they genuinely were and
-could be. This, if it have not aided the exactness of historical
-interpretation, has nevertheless stimulated and fecundated thought.
-On reading without prejudice the parts of the <i>Memorabilia,</i> of the
-Platonic dialogues, of the <i>Nicomachean Ethics,</i> and of the <i>Magna
-Moralia</i> that relate to it, it appears evident that what is treated
-of in them is the altogether empirical question of the importance
-that mental development has for practical life, and whether knowledge
-suffices for this, or natural dispositions and discipline of the
-passions be not also necessary. Aristotle replied to Socrates, who had
-insisted upon the element of knowing, conceiving virtue as knowledge
-(λόγος), by modifying the statement with the assertion that virtue is
-not indeed simply knowledge, but is <i>with</i> knowledge (μετὰ λόγου).
-In these very ingenuous considerations is to be found at the most
-implicitly, but certainly not explicitly, the problem that was only
-stated later on; and it would be rash to classify Socrates as an
-intellectualist and Aristotle as a voluntarist. It is certain that the
-Aristotelian philosophy, in accordance with good sense,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> preserved the
-distinction between the two forms of the spirit, the theoretical and
-the practical, the reason and the will, a distinction that has also
-passed into the scholastic philosophy (<i>ratio cognoscibilis, ratio
-appetibilis</i>) and into that of the Renaissance. But it remained always
-vague, sometimes brought into prominence, sometimes, on the other hand,
-attenuated. Almost dissipated in those who conceive the principles of
-the practical as something similar or analogous to mathematical truths
-(Cudworth, Clarke, Wollaston, etc.), it always reaffirms itself when
-importance is given to the affections and passions, as is the case with
-many thinkers of the seventeenth century (Bacon, Descartes, Spinoza,
-Vico); and the doctrines of the Scottish school of sensationalists
-contributed not a little to keep it alive.</p>
-
-<p>It seems indubitable that Emmanuel Kant is to be connected to
-some extent rather with this last tradition than with that of the
-intellectualists: with Kant the practical reason possessed a domain of
-its own altogether distinct from and almost antithetical to the domain
-of the theoretical. But it is erroneous to present the successors
-of Kant as forgetful of the practical reason and as resolving every
-spiritual manifestation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> in the theoretical form of the spirit.
-For instance, Fichte, who had a very strong consciousness of the
-peculiarity of the practical activity, did not do this, nor did Hegel,
-though as commonly as unjustly accused of being a cold intellectualist.
-It should suffice to recall how Hegel always opposed that view of
-Plato and of other thinkers (for example Campanella) who assigned the
-government of the State to philosophers, a view in which the resolution
-of the practical into the theoretical spirit and of the will into
-knowledge seemed to become concrete. For Hegel, on the contrary, the
-domain of <i>history</i> is different from that of <i>philosophy;</i> history
-is indeed the idea, but the idea that shows itself in a <i>natural and
-unconscious</i> manner, and <i>philosophical</i> genius is not <i>political</i>
-genius. Nor must we forget the importance that he accorded to passion,
-to custom, to what is called the heart and is wont to be opposed to
-the brain and to argument. For Hegel, the will is not thought, but
-a special kind of thought, that is to say, thought which translates
-itself into existence, the impulse to give oneself existence. Whereas
-in the theoretical process, the spirit takes possession of the object
-and makes it its own by thinking, that is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> by universalizing it, in
-the practical process a difference is also stated and determined,
-which on the other hand consists of its own determinations and ends.
-The theoretical is contained in the practical, since there cannot be
-will without intelligence; but, on the other hand, the theoretical
-contains the practical, since to think is also to act. Hegel, in short,
-distinguishes the practical from the theoretical and unifies them,
-while retaining the distinction.<a name="FNanchor_3_13" id="FNanchor_3_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_13" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> What is not perhaps altogether
-clear to him, notwithstanding his view that history is the idea in a
-natural and unconscious mode, is the unreflective character of willing.
-To have given relief to this character, although in the exaggerated and
-inacceptable form of the will as blind and unconscious, is the merit of
-Arthur Schopenhauer, who is indeed far from standing alone in assigning
-an eminent place to the will, but connects himself with all the Kantian
-and post-Kantian philosophy, and in the first place with Fichte and
-Schelling.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>III. The mixtures of philosophy of the practical and
-description.</i></div>
-
-<p>III. The mixture of philosophical concepts with empirical concepts and
-with rules is a vice common to nearly all treatises of the Philosophy
-of the practical, beginning with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> <i>Nicomachean Ethic,</i> which,
-although in certain places loftily philosophical, should be placed in
-greater part rather at the head of the history of the works of the
-moralists and of writers on the practical, than of Ethic. The author
-himself recognized this practical character when he wrote, <i>πάς ὁ περὶ
-τῶν πρακτῶν λόγος τύπῳ καὶ οὐκ ἀκριβῶς ὀφείλει λέγεσθαι.<a name="FNanchor_4_14" id="FNanchor_4_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_14" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></i> And in
-this appears the prejudice that practical philosophy should be occupied
-with the practical: ἐπεὶ οὖν ἡ παροῦσα πραγματεία οὐ θεωρίας ἕνεκά
-ἐστιν ὥσπερ αἱ ἅλλαι (οὐ γὰρ ἵνα εἰδῶμεν τί εστιν ἡ ἀρετὴ σκεπτόμεθα
-άλλ' ἵν' ἀγαθοὶ ηινώμεθα, ἐπεὶ ούδὲν ἃν ἧν ὄφελος αὐτῆς), κτλ.<a name="FNanchor_5_15" id="FNanchor_5_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_15" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-Even the greatest thinkers of modern times are not exempt from that
-characteristic. Emmanuel Kant, while recognizing that the division and
-treatment of duties do not belong to the Critique of the Sciences (he
-should therefore have excluded them from philosophy, which is always
-<i>criticism),</i> finally relegates them to what he calls the "system"
-(and is in truth the anti-systematic)<a name="FNanchor_6_16" id="FNanchor_6_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_16" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> and writes the <i>Metaphysic of
-Customs,</i> divided into the doctrines of law and of the virtues. Fichte,
-in his <i>System of Ethic,</i> makes the applied follow the theoretical
-part. Hegel gives the doctrine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> of duties in the third part of his
-<i>Philosophy of Law,</i> which is entitled Of Ethicity (<i>Sittlichkeit</i>.)
-The Ethic of Herbart is intrinsically descriptive, for the author
-himself professed to wish simply "to describe the ideal of virtue,"<a name="FNanchor_7_17" id="FNanchor_7_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_17" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
-and the five practical ideas that he takes as principles were at bottom
-nothing but classes of virtue refined into ideas. Treatises of to-day
-are overflowing with empirical elements, as can be seen from those in
-English by Ladd and Seth, and by those in German of Paulsen, Wundt, and
-Cathrein. Sometimes a more concrete historical element is coupled in
-those treatises with the empirical classification of practical examples
-and institutions: as, for instance, in Cathrein, a modernized Jesuit,
-who exposes at length the moral views, not only of civilized people,
-ancient and modern, but also of the savages of Oceania, of Asia, of
-Cochin China, of the Hottentots and Boschimans, of the Botocudis, and
-so on. Questions of casuistry also survive in these treatises, such as
-whether and on what occasions it is permissible to tell a lie; this
-question is notably represented in the history of ideas, from the
-Socrates of the <i>Memorabilia</i> to Kant and Schopenhauer.<a name="FNanchor_8_18" id="FNanchor_8_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_18" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> Kant added<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
-questions of casuistry to the various sections of the <i>Metaphysic of
-Customs,</i> as scholia to the system and examples of the way in which the
-truth of particular questions should be sought.<a name="FNanchor_9_19" id="FNanchor_9_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_19" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Vain attempts at definitions of empirical concepts.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the efforts of ancient and modern philosophers rigorously to
-define empirical concepts afford more interest than the external form
-of treatment, as do their efforts to modify or to simplify, or indeed
-finally to deduce them rationally. The Platonic dialogues, such as the
-<i>Charmides,</i> the <i>Lachetes,</i> the <i>Protagoras,</i> are most instructive
-in this respect. Here it is sought to define sophrosune, andreia and
-the other virtues, without arriving at any precise result, or rather
-arriving at the contradictory one, that each of these virtues is <i>the
-whole of virtue,</i> whereas it should only be a <i>part</i> of it. In the
-<i>Republic</i> is sought the relation of the four virtues, or rather of
-three of them, prudence, temperance, and fortitude, with justice, which
-forms as it were the foundation and unity of the whole. From such
-discussions arose the affirmation, to be found also in Cicero, that
-the virtues are inseparable from one another: <i>virtutes ita copulatae
-connexaeque sunt, ut omnes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> participes sint, nec alia ab alia possit
-separari.</i><a name="FNanchor_10_20" id="FNanchor_10_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_20" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> The difficulty of the Platonic inquiry is renewed with
-all those who have given definitions of the virtues and of the other
-empirical concepts, because, when they have achieved with much labour
-a definition which appears satisfactory, it is afterwards always found
-to be too narrow or too wide. Thus the definition given by Kant and by
-others (Fichte, Schopenhauer) of egoism, consisting in their view, of
-considering other individuals as means and not ends, is the definition,
-not of egoism, but of any form of immorality which debases the Spirit
-that should be the end, by means of its own caprices. The same is to
-be said of the definitions given by Fichte as to the duties inherent
-to this or that condition and state: the duties, for instance, of the
-learned, who should love truth, communicate it to others, rectify
-errors, promote culture,<a name="FNanchor_11_21" id="FNanchor_11_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_21" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> and so on. These are all things that
-form part of the duty, not only of the learned, but of every man. The
-simplifiers are not more fortunate in their attempts to reduce the
-number of empirical concepts, for the concepts excluded by them have
-neither more nor less right to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> recognition than the others that they
-have accepted. Schopenhauer, for instance, when he rejects the class
-of duties toward oneself,<a name="FNanchor_12_22" id="FNanchor_12_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_22" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> should also reject that of duties toward
-others. For others and ourselves are correlative terms, and we cannot
-be benevolent to others and malevolent to ourselves, just to others
-and unjust to ourselves. If this be met with the objection that the
-empirical self is not the object of duties, we must reply that neither
-are the empirical "others," but only that Spirit which is in all and
-constitutes all. In reacting against these unifiers and simplifiers,
-other philosophers (as for example Herbart) have maintained the
-indeducibility of the virtues or duties from a single principle, which
-means that they have received those concepts into their philosophy
-atomistically, and left them there as something not digested and not
-digestible, an extraneous element. If they had openly admitted this and
-drawn from it the legitimate consequence, and for that reason excluded
-those concepts from philosophy, they would really have contributed
-toward simplifying and unifying, by making it homogeneous. But Herbart,
-if he have no other merit, has at any rate declared that the Philosophy
-of the practical is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> capable of solving all the problems that occur
-in life, and that we must always rely upon the answer of the heart,
-upon the delicacy of individual tact. And, therefore, while Kant still
-preserved casuistic questions in Ethic and professed to solve them
-rationally, Herbart showed that they lack the determinations that are
-of true importance in real cases, and that such questions are therefore
-as a rule either without meaning or insoluble (<i>entweder gar keiner
-Fragen, oder im Allgemein unauflöslich</i>).<a name="FNanchor_13_23" id="FNanchor_13_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_23" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Attempts at eduction.</i></div>
-
-<p>As concerns the attempt to connect and to deduct the empirical part of
-treatises from the philosophical, the first example is the Aristotelian
-division of the virtues into the dianoetic and ethic, with their
-consequent determination by means of the concept of mediacy (μεσότης)
-between two extremes. But this Aristotelian method, which was continued
-by the Scholastics, seemed to others (as for example Schleiermacher)
-nothing but "a heap of virtues," without any rule and without any
-certainty; hence he made constant attempts at new classifications and
-new deductions. Kant recognized that the ethical obligation, that is,
-respect for the law, is something unique and indivisible, and that to
-attain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> from that to duties or <i>ethica officia,</i> which are many, it
-is necessary to introduce the consideration of objects.<a name="FNanchor_14_24" id="FNanchor_14_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_24" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Here he
-should have stopped, because objects have infinite determinations, are
-infinite. Hence the enumeration, division and deduction of duties,
-should be simply pronounced impossible. Instead of doing this, he
-passed at a bound, how far logical we know not, from the general
-ethical obligation, to the division of duties into two great classes:
-of man toward man, and of man toward beings that are not human. He
-divided the first into duties toward oneself and duties toward other
-men, the second into that of the duties toward beings beneath man
-(animals) and those toward beings above him (God).<a name="FNanchor_15_25" id="FNanchor_15_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_25" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> The strangeness
-of these divisions, which sometimes verge on the comic, can already
-be seen, though abridged, in the first class of the duties toward
-oneself, subdivided in its turn into duties toward oneself as an animal
-or physical being, and duties toward oneself as a moral being; as
-though human duties are not always to be referred to spirituality and
-can ever concern physicality or animality. In their first aspect they
-receive a tripartite division, into the duty of self-preservation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-which is violated by suicide, by allowing oneself to be castrated (in
-order to sing soprano, as used to be done at that time at the San Carlo
-of Naples and at the Opera of Berlin), by allowing a healthy tooth
-to be pulled out in order to sell it (as does poor Fantine in the
-story of the <i>Misérables</i>); into the duty of preserving the species
-(violation: unnatural use of the sexual impulse);&mdash;into the duty of
-preserving the use of one's own strength (violation: gluttony). The
-duty of preserving the dignity of man is contained beneath the second
-heading (violation, lying, covetousness, abjection, etc.<a name="FNanchor_16_26" id="FNanchor_16_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_26" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>). The
-fact is that the duty of preserving the dignity of man comprises
-in itself, not only the class that stands first, of duties toward
-oneself, but also all the other duties toward men, animals, or gods.
-Fichte feels the difficulty, because he sees that conscience is that
-which determines our duty on each occasion; but he adds: "This is not
-enough for science: either we must be able to determine <i>a priori</i>
-that which our conscience will affirm in universal, or we must admit
-that an Ethic, as a pure applied science, is impossible."<a name="FNanchor_17_27" id="FNanchor_17_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_27" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The
-second horn of the dilemma was precisely that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> of the truth, but
-Fichte, like Kant, bowed to the supreme power of tradition and clung
-to the first. He divides duties into mediate and conditioned (toward
-oneself) and immediate and unconditioned (toward others), and into
-general and special (those of various states and conditions), deducing
-from this the fourfold division, resulting from the meeting of general
-conditioned duties, particular conditioned, general unconditioned,
-and particular unconditioned. Hegel, who in his youthful writings had
-denied absolute value to the virtues, and consequently the possibility
-of collisions between the virtues (for example, in the <i>Life of Jesus,</i>
-recently published), well defines the altogether empirical character
-of that treatise, calling it, by reason of its natural element and of
-the quantitive considerations upon which it is founded, "a natural
-history of the spiritual world" (<i>eine geistige Naturgeschichte</i>); but
-since he did not perceive the identity of the concept of duty with that
-of virtue, he believes in the possibility of a philosophical theory
-of duties.<a name="FNanchor_18_28" id="FNanchor_18_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_28" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> This is developed by him, as has been said, in the
-section of Ethicity, applying to it the dialectical rhythm proper to
-the philosophical universal, and distinguishing in it three moments: of
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> immediate natural spirit, which is the family, of the dissension
-from which arises civil society, and of conciliation, whence arises
-the State. But notwithstanding the external dialectical form, there
-is to be found in all this section of the Ethicity at every point,
-not so much the philosopher properly so-called, as the historian who
-describes and narrates, the acute and well-balanced politician and
-moralist. The merit of such a treatise resides precisely, therefore,
-in the abhorrence of a sham philosophy; with but slight modifications
-of literary form, it could be developed into a series of excellent
-historico-political essays. Certain of the propositions of the writing
-on <i>Natural Law</i> (1802-3)<a name="FNanchor_19_29" id="FNanchor_19_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_29" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> would tend to show that Hegel inclined
-to look upon the treatment of duties and institutions as nothing
-more than a provisional classification of historical and changeable
-material, a thought that is in any case suggested by his whole system.
-Schleiermacher was among the philosophers of that time who laboured,
-perhaps, with the greatest tenacity upon the empirical classes, with
-a view to reducing them to philosophical form; but the results were
-unhappy, only revealing, by their contradictions persisting after
-such efforts, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> impossibility of the task. In fact, Schleiermacher
-sees and does not see the unity of the three spheres of things good,
-of duties, and of virtues; hence they appeared to him to be three
-aspects of the same object, and he strangely placed them in analogical
-connection with three spheres of the natural world, the mechanical, the
-chemical, and the organic. He, too, starting from a double division and
-a double antithesis, ideal and temporal, of knowledge and exposition
-(<i>Darstellen,</i>) arrived at a quadruple division of the virtues, into
-wisdom and love, discretion and perseverance, which seemed to him to
-coincide with the four Platonic virtues, of φρόνησις, δικαιοσύνη,
-σωφροσύνη, and ἀνδρeίa, or with the four cardinal virtues derived from
-them, to which would correspond the four duties: of right, of vocation,
-of love, and of conscience.<a name="FNanchor_20_30" id="FNanchor_20_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_30" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> After this, it would be superfluous to
-proceed to enumerate the ethical systems of contemporary philosophy,
-noteworthy neither for the ingenuity of their artificial deductions nor
-for the grandeur of their paradoxes.<a name="FNanchor_21_31" id="FNanchor_21_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_31" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>IV. Various questions.</i></div>
-
-<p>IV. The very copious empirical element that fills the books on
-the Philosophy of the practical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> and the attempt to treat it
-philosophically have also had the injurious effect of distracting
-their authors from entering deeply into the problems of true and
-proper philosophy, to which the practical activity gives rise. Thus
-a history of the aforesaid aberrations would be as rich as a history
-of the speculation as to the will would be poor. The problem of the
-theoretic element in the volitional act, or of the theoretic phase
-of deliberation, has not been developed as it deserved, and as
-the important pages of the third and seventh books of the <i>Ethica
-Nicomachea</i> seemed to augur. The question, too, of the priority of
-the will over the concepts of the useful and of the good and of the
-practical judgments, is hardly touched by a philosopher here and there,
-and the Herbartian theory of practical judgments failed to excite
-any fervour of examination, criticism, or opposition. The concept
-of good will and of good intention, to which Kant gave a prominent
-place, is not discussed profoundly, save by Hegel, who goes deeply
-into the difficult problems of abstract and concrete intention in the
-introduction and in the second section of the <i>Philosophy of Law.</i>
-The other problem, as to the possibility or impossibility of willing
-without full knowledge, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> not adequately treated after Descartes and
-Spinoza.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The practical nature of error.</i></div>
-
-<p>In Descartes are also to be found the most acute observations as to the
-practical nature of error. After having stated that it is impossible
-that God should have given to man any faculty that was not perfect of
-its kind, he asks himself: "<i>D'où est-ce donc que naissent mes erreurs?
-C'est à savoir, de cela seul que la volonté, étant beaucoup plus ample
-et plus étendue que l'entendement, je ne la contiens pas dans les mêmes
-limites, mais que je l'étends aussi aux choses que je n'entends pas;
-auxquelles étant de soi indifférente, elle s'égare fort aisément, et
-choisit le faux pour le vrai et le mal pour le bien: ce qui fait que
-je me trompe et je pèche.</i>" Errors arise from the concourse of two
-causes, the faculty of knowing and the faculty of choice: "<i>car pour
-l'entendement seul je n'assure ni ne nie aucune chose, mais je conçois
-seulement les idées des choses que je puis assurer ou nier.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_22_32" id="FNanchor_22_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_32" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> For
-Descartes the affirmation was an act of the will, and here perhaps lies
-his mistake and the mistake of those who have followed him in this
-theory (Rosmini for example); that is to say, they have <i>mistaken</i>
-the <i>affirmation,</i> which is theoretical,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> for the <i>communication,</i>
-which is practical, or they have taken as being of the same degree the
-general will that is in affirmation through the unity of the spirit,
-and the particular will that is in error. Spinoza opposes Descartes'
-theory of error, but in conformity with the deterministic nature of
-his philosophy, his criticism relates only to the point as to whether
-the will can be the cause of error when it is not more than a mere
-abstraction or <i>ens rationis;</i> hence errors or the <i>particulares
-volitiones</i> can be determined, not indeed by the will and by liberty,
-but <i>a causis externis</i><a name="FNanchor_23_33" id="FNanchor_23_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_33" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> The consciousness of the introduction of
-the will into the theoretical spirit as production of error has been
-affirmed by Schleiermacher as well as by Rosmini:<a name="FNanchor_24_34" id="FNanchor_24_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_34" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> "It is the will
-(he writes) that conceals men from themselves: the judgment cannot err
-if it turn its gaze really upon itself."<a name="FNanchor_25_35" id="FNanchor_25_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_35" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> Baader frankly reduced
-incredulity to ill-will and moral corruption.<a name="FNanchor_26_36" id="FNanchor_26_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_36" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Practical taste.</i></div>
-
-<p>As to the concept of an immediate form of practical discrimination,
-independent of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> intellectual judgment, it is to be remarked
-that the faculty of <i>taste</i> in Gracian and in other thinkers of the
-seventeenth century<a name="FNanchor_27_37" id="FNanchor_27_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_37" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> has a practical rather than a theoretical
-origin, and that the sentimentalists of Ethic (Shaftesbury, Hutcheson
-and others) were led to posit a moral tact sense. Before Herbart talked
-of a <i>moral taste (sittlicher Geschmack<a name="FNanchor_28_38" id="FNanchor_28_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_38" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>)</i> Jacobi, who saw better
-than others the analogy between practical and æsthetic facts, had
-written: "The science of the good, like the science of the beautiful,
-is subject to the condition of <i>taste,</i> without which nothing can be
-decided, and beyond which nothing can be carried. The taste for the
-good, like that for the beautiful, is formed by means of models of
-excellence, and original acts are always the work of genius. By means
-of genius, nature gives laws to art, both as regards the good and the
-beautiful. Both are <i>liberal</i> arts; they do not allow themselves to be
-lowered to the level of mechanical arts and placed at the service of
-industry."<a name="FNanchor_29_39" id="FNanchor_29_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_39" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>V. The doctrines of feeling.</i></div>
-
-<p>V. With the mention of a few facts and names, it can be proved that
-the function of the term "feeling" in the history of philosophy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> has
-been as shown above. We have already said that the peculiarity of the
-practical form has been asserted by the use of the word "feeling" or
-similar denominations ("moral sense," "conscience," and the like),
-especially by the Scottish School, in opposition to intellectualist
-reductions. Jacobi appealed to the feeling of duty (<i>Gefühl der
-Pflicht</i>) or conscience in his ethical discussions. In our day, too, it
-has been affirmed (by Simmel<a name="FNanchor_30_40" id="FNanchor_30_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_40" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> and others), in opposition to abstract
-and imperative Ethics, that the practical decision is the product of
-feeling and is not definable by theoreticians. But the principal cause
-of the importance attached to feeling in the eighteenth century was
-the æsthetic problem. This is seen in Dubos's book, in the English
-sentimentalists (who approach the ideas of virtue and of beauty,
-treating of the moral sense and of the beautiful), and, finally, in
-the doctrines of Leibnitz himself and of his school, as to <i>confused
-cognition,</i> which led to the <i>Aesthetica</i> of Baumgarten.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The Wolfians.</i></div>
-
-<p>We owe the word and the concept of <i>feeling</i> (<i>Gefühl</i> and sometimes
-also <i>Empfindung</i>) principally to the Leibnitzian-Wolfians and to
-the German thinkers under the influence of Wolff (Mendelssohn,
-Tetens, Sulzer, Riedel).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jacobi and
-Schleiermacher.</i></div>
-
-<p>By means of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> speculation of Jacobi, on the other hand, feeling
-was called upon to fulfil the functions of a true and proper
-metaphysical organ. He had demonstrated in a rigorous and irrefutable
-manner that the form of the empirical sciences and of the abstract
-intellect, since it proceeds by nexus of cause and effect, is incapable
-of attaining to the infinite, and had assigned the affirmation of
-God to the "sense of the supersensible," to "immediate knowledge,"
-and to "feeling." After Jacobi, the same position was assumed by
-Schleiermacher, who maintained that it was impossible to know God by
-means of the intellect and to treat Him as an object, since He is
-indifference of thought and being. He can be known only by feeling,
-which is indifference of all determinate functions of ideal and real,
-of thought and being. The neocriticists and agnostics of to-day, with
-their appeal to feeling in all truly philosophical questions, are
-followers, often unconscious and certainly less coherent, of Jacobi and
-Schleiermacher.</p>
-
-<p>The concept of feeling in the Kantian philosophy can be said to derive
-its importance from the meeting of two unsatisfied wants, namely,
-that which sought a concept for the æsthetic activity and that which
-sought a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> <i>forma mentis</i> proper to philosophy. Indeed, the <i>Critique
-of Judgment</i> corresponds to feeling, the first part of which consists
-of an inquiry into the nature of the beautiful and of art. The second
-part (critique of the theological judgment) is an anticipation of the
-<i>concrete concept,</i> or of that organ of speculative thought which the
-<i>Critique of Pure Reason</i> had not discovered.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Hegel.</i></div>
-
-<p>Feeling, therefore, cannot but lose importance in the Hegelian
-philosophy, which makes of art a form of knowledge, and of the
-teleological judgment the logic of the idea or philosophical logic,
-resolving also in it the demand of Jacobi, whose feeling or immediate
-knowledge is shown to be logical knowledge and supreme mediation. In
-Hegel feeling is nothing but a class of spiritual facts, the lowest
-of all, that in which theory and practice are still indistinct.
-But this class has a merely psychological value in his system, not
-philosophical and real (which is not clearly recognised by him).
-Indeed, feeling, which was absolute knowledge for Jacobi and for
-Schleiermacher, is placed, not in the sphere of the absolute spirit,
-nor in that of the objective or practical spirit, but in the subjective
-spirit, or Psychology. The "doctrine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> of the three faculties"
-(<i>Dreivermögenslehre</i>), as was called that elaborated from Mendelssohn
-to Kant and promulgated in the Kantian philosophy, did not, however,
-remain without opponents in the nineteenth century; from Krug (1823) to
-the youthful Fichte, and in more recent times Brentano (1874).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Opponents of the doctrine of the three faculties. Krug.</i></div>
-
-<p>Krugs confutation is wrongly combated by Hamilton and discredited by
-Brentano, for it proceeds with perfect correctness, and is founded on
-the correct philosophical principle that' there are no other activities
-of the spirit conceivable, save those directed either inwardly or
-outwardly (immanent or theoretical and transcendent or practical),
-and that therefore there is no place for feeling, which would be a
-mixture of the two activities, and consequently a failure of direction
-or inactivity, nothing, therefore, but a poor, rudimentary knowing or
-willing, that is, a psychological class, not a philosophical category.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Brentano.</i></div>
-
-<p>Brentano, returning in a measure to Descartes, constructs the
-doctrine of the three faculties in a different way, determining them
-as representation (to which he makes art and the æsthetic activity
-correspond), judgment (to which corresponds science), and love and
-hate (to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> corresponds the practical). Feeling, therefore, does
-not find a place of its own in the psyche, and that which is wont to
-be called feeling is either representation, or love and hate. Brentano
-shows himself inferior to Krug in the philosophical demonstration of
-the inconceivability of this form of the spirit, but he has the merit
-of having substituted certain positive elements for the indeterminate
-word "feeling," although the function exercised by feeling in the
-development of philosophical thought is more important than Brentano
-succeeds in perceiving, for among other things he ignores and fails
-to recognize the relation of the concept of feeling to the demands of
-speculative thought.<a name="FNanchor_31_41" id="FNanchor_31_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_41" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_11" id="Footnote_1_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_11"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Eutyphron,</i> 10.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_12" id="Footnote_2_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_12"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The history of the enfranchising of Ethic from Religion
-has been done with especial care by Jodl, <i>Gesch. d. Ethik als philos.
-Wissensch.</i> vol. I<sup>2</sup>. (Stuttgart&mdash;Berlin, 1906). For Vico,
-cf. my book, <i>The Philosophy of G. B. Vico</i> (Bari, 1911).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_13" id="Footnote_3_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_13"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Phil. d. Rechts,</i> § 4, Zus.; <i>Gesch. d. Philos.</i> ii. pp.
-66, 169.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_14" id="Footnote_4_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_14"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nicom.</i> 1103.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_15" id="Footnote_5_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_15"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> See above.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_16" id="Footnote_6_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_16"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Kritik d. prakt. Vern.,</i> ed. Kirchmann, pp. 7-8.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_17" id="Footnote_7_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_17"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>Allg. prakt. Phil.,</i> ed. Hartenstein, p. 107.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_18" id="Footnote_8_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_18"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Memor.</i> iv., c. 2, §§ 14-16. Schopenhauer also
-exhaustively, <i>Gründl. d. Moral,</i> in <i>Werke,</i> ed. Grisebach, iii. pp.
-603-607.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_19" id="Footnote_9_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_19"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>Metaphys. d. Sitten,</i> ed. Kirchmann, p. 248.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_20" id="Footnote_10_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_20"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> <i>De Finibus,</i> v, c. 23.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_21" id="Footnote_11_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_21"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>System der Sittenlehre,</i> § 29, in <i>Werke,</i> iv. 346-347.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_22" id="Footnote_12_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_22"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Gründl. d. Moral,</i> ed., cit., iii. pp. 506-508.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_23" id="Footnote_13_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_23"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>Allg. prakt. Philos.,</i> ed. Hartenstein, pp. 29-30.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_24" id="Footnote_14_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_24"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>Metaphys. d. Sitten,</i> pp. 247-248.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_25" id="Footnote_15_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_25"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> <i>Op. cit.</i> p. 251.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_26" id="Footnote_16_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_26"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <i>Metaphys. d. Sitten,</i> p. 255 <i>sqq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_27" id="Footnote_17_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_27"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> <i>System d. Sittenlehre,</i> pp. 208.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_28" id="Footnote_18_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_28"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <i>Philos. d. Rechts,</i> §§ 148, 150.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_29" id="Footnote_19_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_29"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>Werke,</i> i. 323-423.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_30" id="Footnote_20_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_30"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> In the <i>Entwurf e. Systems d. Sittenlehre</i> (in <i>Werke,</i>
-sec. iii. vol. v.), and cf. the collected writings in <i>Werke,</i> iii. I.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_31" id="Footnote_21_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_31"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> For example, F. Paulsen, <i>System der Ethik,</i> Leipzig,
-1906.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_32" id="Footnote_22_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_32"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Médit.</i> iv.; and <i>Réponses aux 3mes et aux 3mes object</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_33" id="Footnote_23_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_33"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Epist. in <i>Opera,</i> ed. Gfrörer, p. 523.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_34" id="Footnote_24_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_34"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Cf., among other places, <i>Logica,</i> §§ p. 278 <i>sq.; Fil.
-d. diritto</i> (Napoli, 1844), I. p. 50.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_35" id="Footnote_25_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_35"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> <i>Monologen,</i> in <i>Werke,</i> i. 363.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_36" id="Footnote_26_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_36"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Cf. Jodl, <i>Gesch. d. Eth.</i> ii. pp. 131-132.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_37" id="Footnote_27_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_37"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> <i>Estetica</i> 4, p. 222.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_38" id="Footnote_28_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_38"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> <i>Allg. pract. Phil.</i> pp. 9-22.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_39" id="Footnote_29_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_39"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> <i>Woldemar</i>(1779, 1794-95), in <i>Werke,</i> v. p. 78.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_40" id="Footnote_30_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_40"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> <i>Einleitung in die Moralwissenschaft,</i> Berlin, 1892-93.</p></div>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_41" id="Footnote_31_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_41"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> For the doctrine of feeling see, chiefly, Volkmann,
-<i>Lehrb. d. Psychol.</i> (Cothen, 1885), ii. pp. 301-311; F. Brentano,
-<i>Psychol.</i> (Leipzig, 1874), 1., ii. c. 5; cf. <i>Ursprung sitt. Erkennt.</i>
-(Leipzig, 1889) pp. 51-55; A. Palme, <i>Sulzer's Psychol, u. d. Anfänge
-d. Dreivermögenslehre</i> (Berlin, 1905). Cf. also Croce, <i>Estetica,</i> pp.
-226-228, 4th ed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="SECOND_SECTION" id="SECOND_SECTION">SECOND SECTION</a></h5>
-
-
-<h4>THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS DIALECTIC</h4>
-
-
-
-<hr />
-<h4>I</h4>
-
-
-<h4>NECESSITY AND LIBERTY OF THE VOLITIONAL ACT</h4>
-
-
-<p>The relations of the practical form with the other forms of the spirit
-having been examined, it is now necessary to re-enter, so to speak, the
-interior of the volitional activity, and enclose ourselves within it,
-that we may study its mode of development, its rhythm, its dialectic.
-We shall no longer ask, therefore, whether the practical activity
-precede or follow knowledge, or exactly what knowledge it follows and
-what it precedes, what the volition is in relation to events, what the
-practical concept or judgment, and the like. But we shall ask what are
-good and evil, the passions and the forces that dominate them, desires
-and aspirations; and in the first place (this being the problem that
-opens the series and gives the key for the solution of the others) what
-are the <i>freedom and necessity</i> of the volitional act.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The problem of freedom.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></div>
-
-<p>This problem of freedom and necessity (that is to say, whether the will
-be free or determined) has seemed to be and is, from a certain point of
-view, most weighty and complicated, and we shall soon see why this is
-so. But at this point, owing to the premises that we have already laid
-down in our preceding treatises, and also in the part of the present
-treatise that has already been developed, it will be convenient to
-solve it with relative expedition.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Freedom of willing and freedom of action: criticism of such
-distinction.</i></div>
-
-<p>First of all, we have been able to eliminate the distinction that is
-wont to be made between freedom of willing and freedom of action,
-with the duplicity of the problem thus entailed. Indeed we know that
-volition and action coincide, and that it is impossible to conceive
-either a volition which is not at the same time action, or an action
-which is not at the same time volition, and that in consequence there
-cannot be freedom of willing on the one hand and freedom of action
-on the other. All the instances of the one that are brought forward
-can be reduced to the other, provided that the word "freedom" be not
-used in an improper and metaphorical manner. For example, a paralytic
-(they say) wills to get up and run; his spirit is free, but his
-action is restrained; he has freedom of willing, but not of action.
-But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> in reality the paralytic does not seriously will to get up and
-run; that is, he does not really will anything at all. Were he really
-and seriously to will, that might happen to him which happened to a
-paralytic gentleman in the Neapolitan revolt of 1547. This gentleman
-had himself carried into the square on the arms of his servants, but he
-was found, after the tumult, to the great astonishment of all, on the
-top of the campanile of San Lorenzo, whither he had climbed with his
-own legs; such had been his terror and such his will to be saved.<a name="FNanchor_1_42" id="FNanchor_1_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_42" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-As a rule, on the other hand, the paralytic does not will, because he
-knows that he cannot; at the most, he <i>would wish</i> or desire to find
-himself in different conditions to those in which he finds himself, in
-order that he may be able to will otherwise than he does now, which is
-to remain quiet. This confirms the identity of volition and action,
-and proves that the two supposed freedoms are one only. Thus, he who
-is threatened and yields to the threat declares that he is deprived of
-freedom of action, but that this is not exact is already affirmed in
-the formula: <i>coacti tamen volunt.</i> Enforced actions not only do not
-exist, but are not even conceivable. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> demand for greater freedom of
-action, such as new political liberties, is nothing but the demand for
-certain <i>new conditions of fact</i> for future volitions and actions. But
-it is a question of more or less, since, as we know, no countenance of
-imminent tyrant can extinguish the freedom of the soul; no ruler, be he
-ever so strong and violent, can prevent a rebellion, or, when all else
-fails, a fine death that affirms externally the freedom within. "The
-will that wills not cannot be subdued."<a name="FNanchor_2_43" id="FNanchor_2_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_43" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The volitional act: both free and necessary.</i></div>
-
-<p>The question that we have here to treat is, then, single, and concerns
-only the will, which, as such, includes in itself action. In replying,
-however, we cannot accept the dilemma, that the volitional act must
-be free or determined, and cling to one of the two horns: we must on
-the contrary deny the form of the question itself and say that the
-volitional act is <i>at once free and determined.</i></p>
-
-<p>Volition, in fact, as has been seen, does not arise in the void, but
-in a definite situation, in unchangeable historical conditions, in
-relation to an event, which, if it be, is necessary. The volition
-corresponds to that situation and it is impossible to separate it: when
-the situation changes, the volition changes; as the situation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> so the
-volition. This amounts to saying, that it is <i>necessitated</i> or always
-conditioned by a situation, and precisely by that situation in which it
-arises.</p>
-
-<p>But this also means that the volition is free. Because if the actual
-situation be its condition, the volition is not the condition, but the
-conditioned, for it does not remain fixed in the actual situation,
-nor repeats and makes a duplicate of it, which would be superfluous
-and therefore impossible in the effective development of the real,
-which does not allow of superfluity. The volition produces something
-different, that is, something new, something that did not exist
-previously and that now comes into existence: it is initiative,
-creation, and therefore act of <i>freedom.</i> Were this not so, volition
-would not be volition, and reality would not change, would not become,
-would not grow upon itself.</p>
-
-<p>And since without necessity there cannot be liberty, because without
-an actual situation there cannot be volition, so without liberty there
-cannot be necessity, the actual situations are not formed, which are
-always new and always necessary in respect to the new volitions. Actual
-situations are events, and events are the result of the concourse of
-individual volitions. The two terms cannot be separated, for if one
-be removed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> so is the other; but neither can they be looked upon as
-identical or synonymous. They are the two moments of the volitional
-act, distinct and united, which act is the <i>unity</i> of both, and
-therefore, as was said, is at once free and determined.</p>
-
-<p>This consciousness of necessity and liberty inseparably united is found
-in all men of action, in all political geniuses, who are never inert or
-reckless: they feel themselves at once bound and unbound; they always
-conform to facts, but always to surpass them. The fatuous, on the other
-hand, oscillate between the passivity of the given situation and the
-sterile attempt to overleap it, that is, to leap over their own shadow.
-They are consequently now inert, now forward. They do not therefore fix
-or conclude anything, they do not act; or, if they do, it is always
-according to what of the actual situation they have understood, and
-what of initiative they have displayed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Comparison with the æsthetic activity.</i></div>
-
-<p>The best comparison is afforded on this occasion also by the æsthetic
-activity. No poet creates his poem outside definite conditions of
-space and time, and even when he appears to be and is proclaimed "a
-soul of other times," he belongs to his own time. The historical
-situation is given to him. The world of his perceptions is such, with
-those men, those customs, those thoughts,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> those works of art. But
-when the new poem has appeared, there is in the world of reality (in
-the contemplation of reality) something that was not there before,
-which, although connected with the previous situation, yet is not
-identical with it, is indeed a new form, and therefore a new content,
-and so the revelation of a truth previously unknown. So true is this,
-that in its turn the new poem conditions a spiritual and practical
-movement, becomes part of the situation given for future actions and
-for future poems. He is a true poet who feels himself at once bound
-to his predecessors and free, conservative and revolutionary, like
-Homer, Dante, and Shakespeare, who receive into themselves centuries of
-history, of thought and of poetry, and add to those centuries something
-that is the present and will be the future: <i>chargés du passé, gros de
-l'avenir.</i> The false poet, on the other hand, is now a blind follower
-of tradition and imitator, now a charlatanesque innovator, and if in
-the vacuity in which he labours he sometimes does produce a fragment of
-poetry, this happens only when he is made to look into himself and to
-have a vision, be it great or small, of a world that arises.&mdash;But the
-comparison instituted is rather an analogy than a comparison, for that
-which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> happens in the practical sphere happens in that of poetry and in
-all the other spheres of the spiritual activity. The Spirit is freedom,
-and in order to be so, not in the abstract, but in the concrete, it
-must also be necessity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of determinism and of arbitrarism.</i></div>
-
-<p>This indissoluble connection of necessity and liberty confutes both the
-partial theories which dispute the field in the problem of freedom:
-the <i>deterministic</i> theory and that of <i>free will.</i> The determinists
-do not see in the volitional act anything but the actual situation;
-the followers of the theory of free will see nothing but the moment of
-freedom. These conceive a volition that is as it were a duplication,
-triplication, quadruplication of the given fact, and so on to the
-infinite; those a volition that bursts forth from nothing, or rains
-down from above and then inserts itself, no one knows how, into the
-course of the real. Both exaggerate, and since exaggerations are called
-in science errors in sense, both err, and being one-sided are proved
-false. But since, on the other hand, it is a quality of errors opposed
-to one another, to become identified and to pass, the one into the
-other, it is given to us to assist at a like spectacle in this case
-also, and to see the determinists change into arbitrarists and the
-believers in free will into determinists. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> first, in fact, passing
-from cause to cause, abandon the concept of cause at the end of the
-chain, as though (to use the expression of Schopenhauer), they were
-dismissing the hired carriage, made use of during the day for their own
-affairs, and return to free will. The others, being unable to justify
-freedom in the world of reality and of experience, justify it in a
-transcendental way, as the effect of a divine cause, which excludes
-free will, and excludes it also when it concedes it; for by the very
-fact of conceding, it determines, limits, and produces it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>General form of this antithesis: materialism and
-mysticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>But with this explanation of our thesis, and of the two theses opposing
-it, we are transported into the heart of one of the greatest problems
-of Gnoseology, so great in fact as to appear to contain in it the whole
-problem of philosophy. In fact, that which is called determinism and
-free will in the Philosophy of the practical is the same antithesis
-that in Gnoseology is called <i>materialism and mysticism.</i> And that
-which we here oppose to the two one-sided theses, as theory of that
-liberty which is also necessity, is called in Gnoseology, <i>idealism.</i>
-The thesis and antithesis are therefore to be found in all the
-particular problems of philosophy, since they concern the logical form
-in universal. This,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> then, is the reason why the question of freedom of
-willing has become so grave and complicated as to appear insoluble. To
-obtain a solution, it was necessary to construct a Logic of philosophy,
-and intrinsically necessary to renew the whole system of philosophy.
-Herbart wisely counselled never to discuss the freedom of the will with
-the laity, in order not to be misunderstood.<a name="FNanchor_3_44" id="FNanchor_3_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_44" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>Had this advice been followed, we should not have seen both determinism
-and free will torn asunder by advocates in the law courts, dragging
-in the one or the other to suit their purposes, and thus insulting
-good sense, which should alone rule in those places. The freedom of
-the will is doubted and discussed among philosophers, as the reality
-of the external world is doubted and discussed, but this is not done
-because it is wished to set in doubt the existence of the boots of
-this gentleman or of that gentleman's overcoat. If a confirmation be
-sought that the question of the freedom of willing is, as was said, the
-universal gnoseological or metaphysical question, let it be observed
-how the determinists and the advocates of free will affirm or deny the
-freedom of willing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> not only in that field, but in all fields. Indeed,
-whoever, for instance, should admit spiritual activity to knowledge and
-deny it to the will, would not, properly speaking, be a determinist,
-but an intellectualist or an æsthetician. That is to say, he would be
-a theoretician, who, in denying the freedom of the will, would simply
-mean to deny the existence of a practical activity side by side with
-the theoretic; for freedom is the very essence of every spiritual form,
-and with the denial of the freedom of that form is denied the form
-itself. Determinism, arbitrarism, libertarianism reflect, then, the
-universal gnoseological thesis of naturalism and mechanicism in the
-special practical field.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The materialistic sophisms of determinism.</i></div>
-
-<p>Determinism of the will, like materialism and mechanicism in general,
-consists in nothing but the transference to philosophical speculation
-of the form proper to the physical disciplines. By dint of classifying
-practical facts and presenting them as empirical concepts, and thus
-as merely related by cause and effect, they end by forgetting that
-those formulæ are not thoughts and that their content is not real
-reality; and causes or motives (abstractive transformation of the
-actual situation) are given as agents of the will, and thus the agent
-is destroyed for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span> cause, the form for the abstract material. Hence
-these timid phrases that on close inspection turn out to be tautologies
-or mistakes: "Freedom is an illusion; what prevails is always the
-strongest motive." But if we ask what is the strongest motive, we are
-told (and no other reply is possible) it is <i>that which prevails.</i>
-This, translated into our language, amounts to saying that the actual
-situation is the actual situation, and conditions the will, which is
-what it is and can be no other than it is.&mdash;Virtue is a mere product,
-like vitriol. Certainly, vitriol is also in its way a creation, a
-manifestation of the spirit, as is virtue, and if it be permitted to
-falsify vitriol by changing it into something material and mechanical,
-nothing forbids doing the same for virtue. Virtue, too, can be produced
-just like vitriol, that is to say, by setting in motion the spontaneous
-forces of the spirit and of so-called nature, which itself is also
-spirit, and nothing forbids endowing educators with the title of
-chemists and apothecaries of virtue.</p>
-
-<p>But metaphors are not arguments&mdash;Statistics prove the determinism of
-human actions, which always reappear in the same way and in the same
-quantity whenever certain actual circumstances appear.&mdash;But Statistics,
-if they collect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> and simplify facts and construct views and tables
-that are more or less useful, do not thus prove anything; for neither
-are the instances that they give as equivalent, really so, nor the
-relation that they declare between certain facts a real relation.
-If we turn from artificial formulæ to the immediate observation of
-the real, we find ourselves confronted with nothing but individuated
-volitional acts, resulting from necessity and liberty.&mdash;The individual
-has a constant character, of which action is the consequence: <i>operari
-sequitur esse.</i>&mdash;But the constant character is nothing but the
-abstraction of the single acts done by the individual. It is therefore
-natural that the actions should appear to be referable to the character
-which is derived from them; but it is not correct to say that there
-is equivalence, for abstraction is not equivalent to concretion.&mdash;The
-individual, even if he can be conceived as free in respect to his
-external environment, would be always subject to the law of his own
-nature.&mdash;But the law of his own nature is not a contingent thing, but
-the law itself of the Spirit, or, precisely, freedom, and it is quite
-clear that freedom is not free not to be free.&mdash;The social organism
-has its natural laws, which govern the action of the individual.&mdash;The
-social organism is also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> an abstraction, which is turned into a being
-only by the false interpretation of a metaphor. In all these examples,
-and in the many others that could be brought forward, the error is
-always the same as has been said: the substitution of the naturalistic
-for the speculative construction, Physic for Metaphysic. And since
-physical or naturalistic construction has no material other than given
-historical facts, the doctrines above mentioned, when they are not
-false, are always tautological and lead to the affirmation that the
-volitional fact is a fact, or that in it is the moment of necessity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The mysticism of arbitrarism.</i></div>
-
-<p>Arbitrarism, on the other hand, arises in the same way as mysticism,
-from distrust of thought; being unable to dominate the fact that should
-be explained, recourse is had to the inconceivable, to the absurd, to
-miracle; subjective and individual ignorance is hypostasized and of
-it is made a metaphysical reality. Arbitrarism, like mysticism, has
-its element of truth, in the negation of determinism, that is, in the
-recognition of the impotence of the naturalistic method and in the
-affirmation that the truth lies beyond that method, in the concept of
-creation and of freedom. But freedom separated from its logical and
-necessary moment becomes transformed into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span> will, just as in mysticism
-in general God is transformed into the mystery, ready to receive all
-individual caprices into himself, and to confer upon them an appearance
-of truth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of necessity-liberty, and idealism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The concept of freedom (necessity-liberty), which is at once scientific
-and not mechanical, and if it surpass the categories of Physic, does
-not surpass those of Metaphysic, is opposed to both these views. As
-idealist philosophy, it tends in general to conciliate the ideal with
-the actual, thought with complete reality, philosophy with the whole of
-experience. With the concept of freedom is eliminated the inertia of
-determinism, and the unstable springing about of arbitrarism. The gross
-material conception of the real disappears, because that which seems to
-be matter is revealed as spirit, the fact as creation, necessity as the
-product of liberty. But miracle disappears with them. For if the spirit
-be the eternal, omnipresent, continuous miracle, unattainable by the
-physical method,-a continual miracle, omnipresent and eternal, is no
-longer a miracle, but the same simple and ordinary reality, which each
-one of us contributes to create and each one of us can and does think.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of double causality; dualism and agnosticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>Strict determinism and strict arbitrarism are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> not, however, the
-sole adversaries of the concept of liberty-necessity, as rigorous
-materialism and mysticism are not the only adversaries of idealism.
-There exists another which must be called more dangerous (if
-misunderstanding be more dangerous than error). This doctrine, since
-it goes by the name of dualism, spiritualism, and neocriticism in
-general philosophy, could be called the doctrine <i>of double practical
-causality,</i> in the field of the practical problem. The supporters
-of this line of thought, despite many individual differences, are
-all agreed in positing two distinct series of facts: one which obeys
-mechanical causality, another which is initiative and creation, or (as
-they say) obeys causality through freedom. There are thus two series
-that interpenetrate one another or alternate at every instant and
-are mutually blended, the one in the other. Hence there is something
-of each in the volitional act, something of the strongest motive and
-something of free choice. Such a solution has some external resemblance
-with that which we maintain, but is intrinsically most different.
-Our solution is <i>fusion</i> of liberty and necessity, while this is
-<i>juxtaposition;</i> our solution is <i>conciliation,</i> this <i>transaction.</i>
-Like every juxtaposition and transaction it displeases both the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-contending parties, and falls into the power, now of the one, now of
-the other. Thus, if, according to the theories of that tendency, it
-be maintained that freedom exists, but that there are also causes
-tending to diminish it, or that there exist volitional acts, but that
-involuntary acts also exist, one does not understand how a series of
-facts that has its own law in itself (freedom, the will) can ever be
-subordinated to facts that obey a different law (diminution of freedom,
-involuntariness of acts). If this happen sometimes or many times, we
-must suspect that it happens always, and that the surviving freedom is
-a mask of freedom, illusion. Thus, if it be affirmed that side by side
-with causality, with equivalence of causes and effects, or with the
-possibility of foreseeing the effect by means of the cause, there is
-another causality, in which the effect is not equivalent to the cause,
-and that not only is it not to be foreseen, but is such that only after
-it has happened does it allow its cause to be discovered; then the
-doubt arises that one of the two causalities does not exist, because
-either the effect is equivalent to the cause, and so it must always be,
-or it is not equivalent to it, and so it will never be; or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> it can be
-foreseen by means of the cause, and so it will always be, or it cannot
-be foreseen, and never will be foreseen. The strict determinists and
-arbitrarists have the loyalty of error, and they are rare, because
-energetic spirits are rare, but the doctrine of double causality is
-tinged with some of the rouge of truth, and thus seduces the many,
-and is proper to weak and irresolute spirits, as indeed are dualism,
-spiritualism, agnosticism, neocriticism, of which this doctrine forms a
-particular case. When the absurdity of determinism and of arbitrarism
-has been recognized (and their very presence is an autocriticism), it
-is necessary to satisfy with a new and single concept the claim that
-they represent, certainly not with <i>the sum of two errors,</i> and the new
-single concept is that of true freedom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its character of transaction and transition.</i></div>
-
-<p>The doctrine of double causality has had its historical importance, not
-because it is a <i>transaction,</i> but rather because it is a <i>transition;</i>
-that is, a gradual approximation to the true concept, with the
-introduction into the naturalistic concept of an element of ferment and
-dissolution: the concept of a causality by means of freedom, that is,
-of a causality that is so only in name. The concept of freedom cannot
-tolerate that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> causality at its side, and of the two series posited,
-one of the two is not real in itself, but simply a particular product
-of the other: mechanical causality is not a fact, nor a conception, but
-an instrument created for its own ends by spiritual freedom itself.
-And only in this sense can it be admitted that freedom avails itself
-of causality for its effectuation, and the truth of the observation be
-realized, that the classifying of the perceptions in series of cause
-and effect becomes itself also a presupposition of will and action.
-The historical knowledge as to the actual situation that precedes the
-volition, since it includes of necessity philosophical universal in
-itself, so it can also include empirical universals, concepts, and
-pseudo&mdash;concepts: the consciousness of the productivity of the spirit
-and the mnemonic formulæ in which this productivity is fixed, and
-for which it certainly appears to be mechanical, but only to him who
-forgets that the formulæ themselves are mechanical.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_42" id="Footnote_1_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_42"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Summonte, <i>Historia di Napoli,</i> ed. 1675, iv. 205,
-"Miracle caused by fear."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_43" id="Footnote_2_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_43"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Dante, <i>Parad.</i> iv. 76.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_44" id="Footnote_3_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_44"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Einleit. in die Phil.</i> § 128, trad. Vidossich, p. 169.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>II</h4>
-
-
-<h4>FREEDOM AND ITS OPPOSITE. GOOD AND EVIL</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Freedom of action as reality of action.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>Since, then, the volitional act is freedom, the question as to whether
-in a given case an individual has or has not been free, is equivalent
-to this other question: <i>Has there really been volition</i> (action) in
-that case? This question can have and has (as any one who lends an
-ear to such discussions as are frequently heard can verify) but two
-meanings. The first is, whether the case under discussion be <i>action</i>
-or <i>event,</i> and, therefore, if it be or be not accurate to present it
-as an individual act. For example:&mdash;Was Jacobinism the crime or the
-glory of Voltaire and Rousseau? Was the defeat of Waterloo the fault of
-Marshal Grouchy? The second is, if it be really a question of <i>action,</i>
-what, <i>precisely,</i> has that action been? For example:&mdash;What were the
-respective parts of Voltaire and of Rousseau in the propaganda of the
-revolutionary spirit and of the Jacobin mode of thought? What did
-Marshal Grouchy really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span> know and will when, instead of listening to
-Exelmans and to others of his generals and marching whither the cannon
-was thundering, he obeyed to the letter the order he had received and
-attacked the Prussian army corps of Thielman?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Inconceivability of the absolute absence of action.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is a third meaning that is to be excluded: namely, as to whether
-at a given moment of time there has been any sort of action or, on
-the contrary, a void and total absence of action. For the only case
-in which the individual does not act is that in which he is dead or
-partially dead, be the death physiological or spiritual, that of a
-corpse or of a madman. The glory of putting poor madmen on a level
-with the guilty and the delinquent is to be left to the thinkers of
-the "new school of penal law." In every other case, man always acts,
-always wills, and is always responsible and free, because life, so long
-as it lasts, is nothing but a web of volitions and therefore of free
-acts. He is also responsible for the acts that contribute to put man
-in such conditions as amount to madness more or less transitory, and
-so of irresponsibility: such is the case of drunkenness and of moral
-dangers imprudently sought, and so on. At no point of life does the
-<i>practically indifferent</i> exist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Those actions, too, that appear to be neither willed nor free,
-because they have become habitual, mechanicized, instinctive, are
-willed and free, not indeed because (though this be true enough in
-itself) habitual acts were once acts of will, but because (as we have
-already had occasion to remark), although they have become facts
-almost external to the individual willing, yet it is always the will
-that permits them to act and can always arrest their action: they
-are therefore to be looked upon as conditions of fact that every new
-volition modifies, even when it accepts them. A machine is not the
-work of the arm that moves it, but of hundreds and thousands of other
-arms that were previously moved in order to construct it. But once
-constructed, that which sets in motion the machinery is always the
-work of one arm, an act of will, just as an act of will can stop its
-movement and finally cause its disaggregation and destruction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Non-freedom as antithesis and contrariety.</i></div>
-
-<p>But excluding the absolute absence of freedom of action (and of
-existence in so far as it is action), and on the other hand the
-presence of something different from it called causality having been
-previously excluded from the idea of freedom, it remains nevertheless
-indubitable that in the very bosom of freedom, there is <i>non-freedom.
-</i> Every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> volition is at the same time nolition, as every affirmation
-is negation. Volition is love, nolition hate; and, as we know, every
-love is hate, and the more we love, the more we hate. Antigone was
-born to love intensely, and for that very reason, to hate profoundly.
-What can be that which we hate in love and abhor in volition? What can
-this internal enemy be, which does not consist either in the absence
-of volition or in the presence of an extraneous and indifferent
-element?&mdash;Since it is neither absent nor indifferent, it cannot be
-anything but the <i>opposite or contrary</i> of freedom, anti-freedom, which
-constitutes the contradiction in its effective concretion.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Nullity and arbitrariness of non-freedom.</i></div>
-
-<p>Freedom is an indissoluble nexus of necessity and freedom: the force
-that tends to annul it is anti-freedom, the scission of that nexus, the
-analysis of that synthesis. On the one hand it aims at making liberty
-fall into nothingness, by compelling it to the inertia of the fact,
-and on the other, to make a leap into the void, by impelling it to
-will, a sterile endeavour&mdash;two movements that are one-sided and absurd,
-and become identified through the considerations already established
-in relation to determinism and arbitrarism. Therefore the opposite
-of freedom is qualified indifferently, either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> as the <i>passive,</i>
-taken by itself, opposed to the active, the fact that resists the new
-creation, or as the <i>active,</i> taken by itself and abstract, opposed
-to the passive: will opposed to liberty. Anti-freedom is either the
-material fact or arbitrary choice, but the first is resolved into will,
-the second into material fact. Only by an act of will can the fact
-that should continue to develop be fixed as a fact and so appear as a
-material fact, and only by a persistence in that fact, which should
-be surpassed, can will give itself the appearance of a content. The
-undertaking is contradictory, and the solution, the absence of freedom,
-is a contradiction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Good as freedom and reality, and evil as its opposite.</i></div>
-
-<p>Freedom and its opposite, freedom and its internal contradiction,
-freedom and will, are what is designated by the terms <i>good and evil.</i>
-With us these terms are given an altogether generic meaning, as they
-are taken as the representatives of all the other couples of opposites
-that are wont to be enunciated in the field of practical activity,
-as helpful and harmful, useful and useless, honest and dishonest,
-meritorious and blameworthy, pious and impious, lawful and sinful, and
-so on. All these formulæ either answer to the sub-distinctions of the
-practical activity (which we shall study further on), or are the same
-distinction,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> variously formulated, with reference to psychological
-classes. But all are to be reduced to those of good and evil for
-the purposes of the philosophical study of the practical activity
-in general, without ulterior determinations of them as moral or
-utilitarian good, moral or utilitarian evil, or any other form there
-may be, and without regard to the various empirical material, with
-which they may be filled.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of abstract monism and of the dualism of values.</i></div>
-
-<p>That practical good and evil are to be conceived as will and anti-will,
-and the good, therefore, as the reality and the bad as the irreality
-of the will, the good as something positive and the bad as something
-negative,&mdash;is the solution imposed by the impossibility of thinking
-the two others that differ from it: namely, that which considers the
-distinction between good and bad as inexistent (abstract monism of
-values), and that which considers the good as transcendent in respect
-of reality, which is always evil, unless the good deign to descend
-and modify it (abstract dualism of values). For the criticism of
-the abstract monistic view, it is necessary to distinguish between
-those doctrines that deny, not only the distinction between good
-and evil, but also all the analogous distinctions in every field of
-activity, including that of thought, and the doctrines that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> allow
-the distinction to subsist in other fields, but deny it in that of
-the practical. The first, which deny the distinction between true
-and false, are the suicide of Philosophy, the second, which deny it
-only between good and evil, are the suicide of the Philosophy of the
-practical: that is to say, both are founded upon errors that we have
-already criticized and surpassed, and upon which it would therefore
-be otiose to insist. As to the dualistic view (still common among
-right-thinking professors of philosophy, that is, among the lazy and
-the most lazy) it will be requisite to discuss this point seriously,
-when it has been demonstrated in what way Reality can place itself
-beneath the yoke of Value and of Goodness, which would be inferior
-to it by hypothesis, through the very fact that they were <i>unreal.</i>
-Reality living, these others dead; Reality like "the four bedevilled"
-of Giusti bent upon <i>doing so,</i> they, like the "two hundred simpletons"
-of the same poet, bent upon <i>saying</i> no. For if Value and Goodness be
-real, they will be the true Reality; and that which was first called
-by the name will be feigned reality, altogether identical with what we
-have indicated as the moment of contradiction and of will, arising in
-the very bosom of the practical activity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Objections to the reality of evil.</i></div>
-
-<p>An instance that is always formidable has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> certainly been cited against
-the thesis of evil as something negative and unreal, and of good as
-itself the only positive and real: it has actually been affirmed that
-this thesis offends against good sense. What? Is evil unreal? Is it
-nothing? Unreality and nothingness are then the knavish trick of some
-wicked person who starts a calumny, which, being received and believed,
-injures an honest man? Unreality and nothing, the passion that drags
-the gambler into economic ruin and moral abjection? So the world is all
-good, all rose-coloured, all sweet; and crimes, cowardice, foolishness,
-and baseness are illusions, and there is no reason to lament; so the
-feeling of life should be expressed with a perpetual smile, like that
-upon the lips of the wounded warriors in the marbles of Aegina? -But
-let good sense and its advocates remain tranquil. If evil be a nothing,
-that does not mean that it is nothing; if the vanity that seems to be
-a person, be vanity and not a person, that does not mean that it has
-not really the appearance of a person and should not be really combated
-and dissipated. The wise, who having defined evil, deny toothache,
-or like the stoical Posidonio forget the gout that transfixes them,
-need Giambattista Vico to remind them how no philosophy is able to
-save them from anxiety on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> behalf of "their wives in childbirth" and
-of "their sons who languish in disease"! The world is precisely that
-mixture of good and evil, which good sense says it is, and the sweet
-is always tempered with the <i>amari aliquid.</i> It cannot be adequately
-expressed either with lamentations only, or only with laughter. The
-thesis that we have enunciated wishes to abolish, not the consciousness
-of evil, but the false belief that this is something substantial, and
-thus prevent one evil from being increased by another, evil by error,
-<i>moral</i> trouble by <i>mental</i> confusion.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Evil within and without synthesis.</i></div>
-
-<p>Evil is either felt as evil, and in this case it means that it is not
-realized, but that in its place is realized the good. The gambler of
-the example, at the moment he knows he is doing himself economic harm,
-does not play; his hand is held; and it is held, because to <i>know,</i>
-in the practical sense, equals to <i>will</i>; and to know the harm of
-gambling means to know it as harm, and so to dislike gambling. If he
-take to dice or cards again, this arises because that knowledge is
-obliterated in him, that is, because he changes his mind; and in this
-case play is not looked upon any longer as harmful; it is willed,
-and so at that instant again becomes the good for him, because it
-satisfies one of his wants. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> calumniator, if he understand the
-idea that is passing through his mind, or rather the impulse that has
-seized him, as calumny, is for that very reason repugnant to it and
-does not pronounce those evil words: in that case indeed he is not
-a calumniator, but an honest man who resists a temptation (and no
-other definition of an honest man can be given). But if he pronounce
-them, this means that the opposing repugnance was not present or is
-no longer present: and therefore those words are no longer for him a
-wicked act of calumny, but a simple satisfaction of a desire to amuse
-himself, or to reject the evil that has been done to him, and therefore
-a good. In the same way, he who asserts what is false, he who renders
-himself guilty of error, if he be aware of himself as frivolous or a
-charlatan or disloyal, would be silent: if he talk and write and print
-false insinuations, this happens either because the will for truth
-does not exist in him, or is for the time being suppressed, and with
-it the desire to seek it out and to diffuse it; that is to say, for
-that will has been substituted the other of withdrawing from a painful
-labour, or of obtaining easy praise and gain; so, for one good has been
-substituted another. As a rule, it is admitted that we will the good
-and do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> evil. "I do not do the good that I will, and I do the evil
-that I do not will" (οὐ γὰρ ὂ θέλω ποιῶ ἀγαθόν, ἀλλὰ ὂ οὐ θέλω κακὸν
-τοῦτο πράσσω), said St. Paul.<a name="FNanchor_1_45" id="FNanchor_1_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_45" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> But it is a question of psychological
-confusion, owing to which a series of moments and alternatives is
-simplified into one single act, inexistent because contradictory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Affirmative judgments of evil as negative judgments.</i></div>
-
-<p>Thus evil, when real, does not exist save in the good, which opposes
-and conquers it, and therefore does not exist as a positive fact. When
-on the contrary it exists as a positive fact, it is not evil, but
-good (and in its turn has for shadow an evil, with which it strives
-and conquers). The judgments that we give when we judge an action to
-be foolish or wicked, a statement false, a work of art ugly, are all
-metaphorical. In delivering them we do not mean to say that there is an
-<i>existence</i> called error, ugliness, foolishness, but only that there is
-a given existence and that another is wanting. He who has launched a
-calumny, dissipated his property, soiled a canvas, printed a worthless
-book, does not, strictly speaking, deserve negative denominations,
-because to judge means to place oneself in the conditions of the person
-judged, and in those conditions there was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> neither evil nor ugliness
-nor error nor folly; otherwise the acts that are the objects of the
-judgment would not have been accomplished, and in so far as they are
-accomplished they deserve positive judgment. But what is meant by the
-negative form of those judgments is that such an act is this and not
-another, that it is utilitarian and not moral, a commercial and not a
-literary or scientific fact, and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmations of the doctrine.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is a very ancient saying to the effect that every one seeks
-his own good and that no one deliberately wills his own evil, and,
-therefore, that if the practically good man be the wise, then the
-bad man can but be the ignorant. Now if we remove from the thesis
-its intellectualist veneer, and translate wisdom and ignorance into
-practical terms, we see that wickedness is here looked upon as a limit,
-as a tendency toward the good, that has failed, not as the will for an
-evil. The dispute as to who sins the more, he who is conscious of the
-evil, or he who has no consciousness of it, is also illumined by the
-theory that we have here exposed, which declares that both parties to
-the dispute are right and wrong. For instance, he who is completely
-without moral consciousness, is morally innocent, whereas he who is
-more or less possessed of one,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> is also more or less of a sinner, for
-the law itself makes him so (τὴν ἀμαρτίαν οὐκ ἔγνων εἰ μὴ διὰ νόμου,
-also said St. Paul<a name="FNanchor_2_46" id="FNanchor_2_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_46" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>). But with this saying it is not desired to put
-the innocent above the sinner, but the contrary. That declaration of
-ignorance is the gravest condemnation, for it is thus recognized that
-the individual in question is unable to sin, and therefore unable to do
-right, since the possibility of sinning is all one with that of doing
-right. The poet inspires admiration, but he who does not know how to
-be anything but a poet, and is therefore unable to reason and to act,
-is deficient. The shrewd man is praised, but he who is <i>only</i> shrewd
-cannot be praised. The animal is a being, worthy of all esteem, but to
-call a man an animal, that is, to tell him that he is nothing but an
-animal, is to do him a great injury. In other words, while we recognize
-as good all that a man effectively does, we do not intend to cancel
-the distinction between one form and another of human activity, and
-between one act and another, between the utilitarian and the moral man,
-between fanciful and logical production, between animal and man. Nor
-do we mean that those emphatic expressions of negative character that
-we continually utter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> to one another and to ourselves, and by means of
-which we urge ourselves and others to more lofty modes of existence,
-are to be abandoned.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The poles of feeling (pleasure and pain) and their identity
-with their practical opposites.</i></div>
-
-<p>Here occurs an opportunity of tying a thread that we had left loose
-when discussing the theory of feeling, or rather the distinction of
-feeling into the two poles of <i>pleasure and pain,</i> understood, not as
-a psychological distinction of greater or less, or of <i>mixed states,</i>
-but as a philosophical distinction of <i>pure states,</i> or of terms that
-are truly opposed. When the vague and indeterminate term of "feeling"
-is directed toward theoretical facts and is determined by theoretical
-philosophy as æsthetic activity or speculative thought, or in some
-other way, the terms of pleasure and pain are, strictly speaking, not
-applicable to it. The pure theoretic activity considered in itself,
-cannot be polarized, as has been seen; it will always attain to the
-beautiful, always to the true. Only in so far as the theoretic activity
-is also practical activity, by the law of the unity of the spirit,
-will the polarization of good and evil, which in that case are called
-beautiful and ugly, true and false, take place through it if not in it.
-If the term "feeling" be on the contrary directed to practical facts,
-and its synonymity with the practical activity (of which feeling would
-be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> distinguishing characteristic) made clear by the Philosophy of
-the practical, it is clear that to it belongs immediately and no longer
-mediately that polarity of good and evil. Good and evil then become
-what theoreticians of feeling <i>call pleasure and pain.</i> These terms are
-identical with the preceding, as feeling is a fact identical with the
-practical activity, generically considered.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Doctrines concerning pleasure and happiness: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>This theory of pain and pleasure, as the synonyms of the practical
-positive and negative, helps to put an end to a long series of
-questions arising in connection with such concepts. Above all, the
-dispute as to whether pleasure be positive or negative will appear
-to be unfounded, and, therefore, whether pain have a positive or a
-negative value, or, finally, whether both be negative: unfounded,
-since "pleasure" means "positive" and "pain" "negative." At the most,
-it may be admitted that pain has also a positivity, which is however
-nothing but the positivity of the negative, that is the real existence
-of the negative pole.&mdash;The theory that man always proposes to himself
-pleasure as an end is, on the contrary, not only not unfounded, but of
-such evident truth as not to require enunciation, much less efforts
-to prove it. If pleasure be nothing but activity, it is natural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> that
-man should have no other end save pleasure, that is, activity, life
-itself. The correction that has been suggested by others, to the
-effect that man wills, not indeed pleasure, but activity, of which
-the outcome is pleasure, has but slight exactitude, for the two terms
-are not distinguishable, and the result is not separable from the
-activity; the pleasure of travelling is not separable from travelling.
-That polemic has value at the most against empiricism, which limits
-pleasure to an arbitrarily determined group of pleasurable facts, that
-is to say, circumscribes activity to certain particular manifestations
-of activity, collected in groups or classes, and substituted for
-the universal concept. Finally, by means of the identification
-of pleasure and pain with good and evil in general which we have
-given, all disputes as to the concept of <i>happiness</i> disappear, as
-to whether it be or be not distinct from that of the good action,
-practically coherent, and if man propose to himself <i>happiness</i> as an
-end. "Happiness" is equal to "pleasure," and "pleasure" is equal to
-"activity." To will the good (that is, to will well and energetically),
-and to be happy, are the same. The objection raised by some, that man
-does not will happiness, but a certain happiness, that he does not
-will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> pleasure, but a certain pleasure, not the good, but a certain
-good, is valid; but this only amounts to distinguishing volitional
-man in the act, from the theory of the will, constructed by the
-philosopher. If Tizio wishes at this moment to go to bed and Caio
-to take a moonlight walk, bed and walk are the affairs of Tizio and
-of Caio; for the philosopher there is no Tizio, no Caio, but man in
-universal; there is neither bed nor moon, but pleasure and the good.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Empirical concepts relating to good and evil.</i></div>
-
-<p>The practical activity, the will, which is also strife between good
-and evil, can be illuminated now from this side and now from that by
-that indivisible unity, according to the accidents of discourse and the
-varying situations of life. In this way arises a series of concepts
-which, in so far as they are unilateral, are empirical, and only
-become again philosophical in the thought of the unity of which they
-form part. Thus, to make use of a comparison, space in geometry can be
-analyzed and split up into a first, second, and third dimension; but
-as spatiality, it is a <i>unicum,</i> which does not possess either one or
-two or three dimensions; and when in measuring or constructing plans
-of measurement, we proceed to think one of these dimensions, we become
-aware that we cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> think them, save all three together, or not as
-three, but as one. The empirical, practical concepts that arise upon
-the antithetical and dialectical nature of the will, have had much
-importance, and it is fitting, therefore, that we should mention and
-explain at least the principal among them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Duty of being, ideal, inhibitive, and imperative power.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the situations of life lead to the directing of the attention
-chiefly to the aspect of the will striving against inaction and
-arbitrary choice, it is posited in this strife, in this becoming, as
-something that <i>is not</i> but <i>must be,</i> not as <i>real,</i> but as <i>ideal.</i>
-If the greatness of the ideal that is to be and to fill the soul with
-joy, be set in relief in this struggle, then the ideal appears sweet
-and smiling, as a <i>joy-bringing and beatific vision.</i> If, on the
-other hand, the effort of its becoming be set in relief, the ideal
-can be made into a metaphor, as will opposed to will, as legitimate
-against rebellious will; and then it assumes a sour, rough, and hard
-appearance, and the names of <i>inhibitive or imperative power,</i> in so
-far as it impedes the will, or promotes liberty.</p>
-
-<p>There is no less opportunity and interest in making clear that
-relation, from the point of view of the negative term, or of evil.
-A series of descriptive concepts then appears, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> present the
-consciousness of evil, now as obstinate <i>blindness (cor induratum),</i>
-now as <i>disquiet</i> and <i>scruple,</i> which induce vigilance and
-circumspection, now as <i>humility,</i> which does not permit forgetting
-how easy it is to slip into evil. But it is worthy of note that the
-series of words and empirical concepts that serve to illuminate
-the <i>satisfaction</i> of the good, the <i>victory</i> won over oneself,
-<i>tranquillity</i> of conscience, is far less rich. Perhaps this arises
-precisely because there is less practical interest in celebrating
-the pleasure of victory than in the inculcation of the necessity for
-strife and the abhorrence of evil. Why draw attention to joy and to
-repose when man is already too much inclined to allow himself joy and
-repose; does not Life allow them to itself and cause other problems
-to follow on each solution, new perils to follow perils overpast, and
-the necessity for new struggles? It is therefore of importance to
-direct the greater sum of attention to those aspects from which the eye
-is most frequently turned aside. Finally, these various aspects can
-be placed in relation with the greater or less frequency with which
-each appears in individuals, thus arriving at the construction of the
-concepts of <i>virtue and vice,</i> and of the models of <i>the virtuous
-man, the honest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> man, the deliberate man, the clever man,</i> and their
-opposites, <i>the vicious, the dishonest, the unreflective, the incapable
-man,</i> and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Their incapacity for setting as practical principles.</i></div>
-
-<p>The same thing happens with these empirical practical concepts as
-with all the other empirical concepts, of which we have spoken in
-general. They have been stiffened into philosophical concepts, for
-the hasty satisfaction of the philosophical need of man. Hence, among
-others, many of the disputes as to the principle of the Philosophy of
-the practical. Some indeed maintain that such a principle is to be
-found in <i>duty or the imperative; others in the idea or the ideal,
-others in the joy of good, others in the abhorrence of pain, others in
-virtue, others in enthusiasm,</i> and so on. Each of the above-mentioned
-theoreticians has the sharpest eyes for the discovery of the defects in
-the theories of others, but is short-sighted as regards his own. Those
-who maintain the ideal satirize the form of the categoric imperative
-as suggestive of police or <i>gendarmerie;</i> those of the imperative and
-of duty deride the quietist form and the insipid ecstasy proper to the
-contemplation of ideals; those of the avoidance of pain do not spare
-their sarcasms for the hunters of joy; those of joy call these plunged
-in sorrow hypocrites, who also obtain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> enjoyments for themselves, if in
-no other way, then secretly: <i>si non caste, caute.</i> The truth is that
-all are wrong as philosophers, because they all find the principle of
-the will, not in itself but in an empirical concept, which gives to it
-an abstract and mutilated appearance. And, on the other hand, all are
-right, because those aspects are all real, and in each one of them the
-others can be implicitly shown. The categoric imperative, for instance,
-contains in itself both the will, which, in so far as it commands
-itself, is the true will, the joy of being and the sorrow of not being
-what we wish to be, the ideal, and the necessity of self-realization,
-and so of entering into strife against irreality, thus becoming
-imperative, and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its characteristics.</i></div>
-
-<p>If none of the formulæ given above, owing to their empirical character,
-be able to indicate with precision the principle of the Philosophy
-of the practical, and all are more or less convenient <i>synecdoches,</i>
-for this reason none of those concepts are to be treated as rigorous
-concepts. If they be so treated, there is not one of them, however
-justified it may seem to be, that is not able to cause rebellions and
-has not done so. The type of the dutiful man has been reproached with
-being so much preoccupied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> with duty that he does not really perform
-it, because he forgets the impulse of the heart; of the type of the
-virtuous man it is said that he, as it were, ceases from being so by
-the very fact that virtue becomes in him a profession; of the type of
-the honest man, that there is nothing more base than the race of honest
-men; of the type of the <i>pious Aeneas,</i> that his piety is egoism; and
-in general of all these cases it has been recalled that a little vice
-is necessary for virtue, as alloy for metals. Repentance and remorse,
-too, although they be highly recommended as means of purification,
-have had their detractors; does it not suffice (they say) that an evil
-deed has been committed? Must the offence be aggravated by losing
-time over it, as though anything could be remedied with sorrowing and
-lamentation? But others have replied that, given human iniquity, it is
-better to exceed in the matter of remorse than to pass rapidly over
-it. Humility has been opposed with the <i>sume superbiam</i> as being more
-virile, and with the <i>laudum immensa cupido</i> as being more noble; the
-habit of self-tormenting with the <i>servite domino in laetitia,</i> as, on
-the other hand, the over-confident has been admonished with that other
-not less biblical dictum: <i>beatus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span> homo qui semper est pavidus.</i> These
-are objections and replies that may all of them have value for the
-empirical situations to which they refer; but they have neither truth
-nor value in philosophy, for which they are all of them false, because
-the distinctions from which they derive are not philosophical. Remorse,
-for instance, has a value, not in itself, but as a passage to activity,
-without which such passage would not take place; the virtuous habit has
-a value, not in itself, but in so far as it is practised and constantly
-preserved; duty cannot differ from the aspiration of the soul, and
-both cannot differ from the volitional act; confidence is at the same
-time trepidation, and humility must be one with the pride of merit. To
-sum up, for, the philosopher, the dialectic of the will is all in the
-concept of will, with its polarization of good and evil, which is the
-actuality and concreteness of that concept.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_45" id="Footnote_1_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_45"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Rom. vii 19.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_46" id="Footnote_2_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_46"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Rom. vii.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>III</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE VOLITIONAL ACT AND THE PASSIONS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The multiplicity of volitions and the struggle for unity.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the volitions followed one another, so to speak monadistically,
-each one shut up in itself, simple, impenetrable, indecomposible, it
-would be impossible to understand the moment that there is in them
-of arbitrary choice, of evil, of contradiction. But it is not so.
-The individual is solicited simultaneously by many or, more exactly,
-by infinite volitions, because the individual is at every moment a
-microcosm and in him is reflected the whole cosmos, and he reacts
-against the whole cosmos by willing in all directions. This infinity of
-volitions that is in every individual, can be proved by a very obvious
-fact: by what occurs in the contemplation of works of art, in which
-the same individual is able to reconstruct in himself the most various
-actions and psychological situations, and to feel himself in turn
-mild and sanguinary, austere and voluptuous, Achilles and Thersites.
-This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span> would not happen, had he not to some extent in himself the
-experience of all these various volitional attitudes. But even if we
-wish to restrict ourselves to those volitions that are the most closely
-connected with the historical situation, thus limited as well as may
-be (every historical situation is in reality a cosmic situation),
-restricting ourselves to what are called volitions of the moment, we
-have always, if not a chaos, certainly a multiplicity, or at the least
-a duality, of volitions. Were the individual to abandon himself to that
-chaos, to that multiplicity, to that duality, he would instantly be
-lacerated, broken in pieces, destroyed. But he does not abandon himself
-to it, for he is an individual, volitional and operating just because
-he renounces that feigned richness of the infinite and that pernicious
-richness of multiplicity or duality, limiting himself on each occasion
-to one single volition, which is the volition corresponding to the
-given situation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Multiplicity and unity as bad and good.</i></div>
-
-<p>This volition is consequently the result of a struggle in which the
-individual drives back all the other infinite volitions, to attach
-himself to that one alone which the given situation must and does
-arouse in him. And when the given volition does not affirm itself fully
-in this struggle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span> he falls a victim to multiplicity, in which is found
-that arbitrary choice attached to a volition which is not the one
-that should be willed, which he feels he wills and that he does will
-in a way. Hence the will becomes split up in different directions and
-contradictory, action not positive but negative, not truly action, but
-rather passivity.</p>
-
-<p>The multiplicity of volitions explains then the moment of arbitrary
-choice, of evil, in the practical activity. This could be defined as
-the <i>volition that conquers the volitions,</i> as its contrary arbitrary
-choice is <i>the contest of volitions with volition.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Excluded volitions and the passions or desires.</i></div>
-
-<p>The volitions that are driven back on every occasion and excluded, to
-make way for the volitional act, are variously denominated in ordinary
-speech and by psychologists as <i>appetites, tendencies, impulses,
-affections, wishes, velleities, desires, aspirations, passions.</i> But,
-as is usual with us, we do not intend to compose and defend such
-classes in a naturalistic and psychological sense, nor consequently
-to distinguish appetite from desire, or affection from passion, with
-boundaries that must of necessity be arbitrary and undulating. What is
-of real importance is only the distinction and the precise boundary,
-not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> arbitrary but real, between the volition and volitions, or, as we
-can now say, the relation between true and proper <i>volition</i> and <i>the
-passions or desires.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Passions and desires as possible volitions.</i></div>
-
-<p>Passions or desires are and are not volitions: they are not volitions
-in respect to the volitional synthesis, which, by excluding, annuls
-them as such; they are on the other hand volitions, if considered in
-themselves, for they are capable of constituting the centre of new
-syntheses in changed conditions. It has been said that we cannot <i>will
-the impossible,</i> but that we can perfectly well <i>desire it.</i> That is
-not exact, because the impossible, the contradictory, cannot even be
-the object of desire. No one wishes to find himself at the same moment
-in two different places, or to construct a triangle that should be at
-the same time a square: and even if such absurd wishes be manifested
-in words, the words will be absurd, but the desires will either be
-different from what is stated, or they will not exist even as desires.
-In a certain aspect all desires are desires of the impossible (and not
-only some of them), if, that is to say, we consider them as volitions
-that have not been realized and which cannot be realized at that
-moment: but from another point of view, they are all possible, and can
-indeed be precisely defined as <i>possible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span> volitions.</i> This is proved by
-their becoming gradually actual as the actual situation changes. If (to
-choose a very simple illustration) an individual engaged in a certain
-work repel the desire for food and sleep with his volition and action,
-that desire is nothing at that point, as actual volition; but it does
-not for that reason lose its intrinsic volitional character, for
-when the hour for the repast or for sleep has struck, it passes from
-possibility to actuality and becomes the will for food and sleep. The
-sophism previously criticized, by means of which a bad and unsuccessful
-act, that is to say one that is dominated by passion and caprice, is
-justified by proving that it has had a legitimate motive and answers to
-a good intention, appeals to this character of possibility, possessed
-by all desires, and artfully changes it into a character of actuality,
-thus substituting for the given the imagined situation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Volition as conflict with the passions.</i></div>
-
-<p>The relation that we have defined between volition and passions or
-desires explains why the will has often seemed to be nothing but
-a conflict with the passions, and life itself a battle (<i>vivere
-militare est,</i>) and at other times itself nothing but passions. The
-will is indeed homogeneous with the passions, and is opposed, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-to the nature of the passions, which is its own nature, but to their
-multiplicity. For this reason, it has been said that only passion acts
-upon the passions: for the will is a passion among passions. Even
-the poet or the philosopher, who frees himself from the passions by
-objectifying them and making them material for æsthetic contemplation
-or for speculative research, succeeds in so doing, only because he is
-able to affirm the passion over the passions: the passion for poetry or
-for philosophy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the freedom of choice.</i></div>
-
-<p>We must however beware of enunciating this relation in a false form,
-as happens with the theory called <i>freedom of choice,</i> where the will
-is conceived as the faculty that chooses one volition from among
-others and makes it its own. The will does not choose a volition
-(save metaphorically), but so to speak chooses the choice itself, or
-makes itself will among the desires which are not will. Nor should
-the possible actions that are excluded be looked upon as constituting
-a graduation in respect to the spirit, which should will <i>a</i> and not
-<i>b, c, d, e,</i> and so on, attributing to them, nevertheless, different
-values, which can be symbolized by the declining series of numbers,
-passing downward from the will which is 10, to 9, 8, 7, 6, and so on.
-In reality, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> volitions that are excluded (<i>b, c, d, e</i>) have no
-actual value, for the very reason that they are excluded. They may
-acquire it in other situations different from the one analyzed, but it
-is not possible to present the various situations together in one, and
-far less to determine them quantitatively and numerically, otherwise
-than in a symbolical manner. The propositions that present the will
-sometimes as the <i>strongest</i> volition in respect to the passions or
-desires, and sometimes as the <i>weakest</i> in respect to the passions,
-which seem to be the strongest, that is, according as we consider the
-active or the passive moment of the will, its victory or defeat, are
-also metaphorical and symbolical.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Significance of the so-called precedence of feeling over
-the volitional act.</i></div>
-
-<p>The relation established receives further light from the generally
-admitted theory of the necessary precedence of the <i>feelings</i> as
-condition for the volitional act. The volitional act is preceded by a
-jostling multiplicity of volitions, by a swarm of passions and desires,
-which it dominates; and therefore it may seem that it follows, not
-the volition, but something different from the volition, to be called
-<i>feeling.</i> It is certainly different, but only because it is the
-<i>plural</i> of that <i>singular.</i> The nature of the passions and desires in
-respect to the volitional act has not been clearly elucidated,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> and
-this is another of the reasons that have caused the customary category
-of "feeling" to appear and to be retained.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Polipathicism and apathicism.</i></div>
-
-<p>Finally and always through the established relation, the two opposed
-theories concerning the passions are excluded: that which makes the
-efficacious explanation of practical life to consist in giving free
-course to the passions, holding them all to be sacred as such: this
-theory could be called <i>polipathicism</i>; the other, which makes it
-consist of the eradication and destruction of all the passions, in
-order to give place to the exclusive domination of reason, of rational
-will, or of the will that really is will, and could therefore be called
-<i>apathicism.</i></p>
-
-<p>Polipathicism has the defect of not taking account among the passions
-of that which is passion <i>par excellence,</i> and which alone becomes
-actual, driving away the others: the will. Apathicism naturally
-possesses the opposite defect and takes account only of the will,
-and therefore not of that either, for the will becomes impotent when
-alone, just as in the other case it becomes a chaotic jumble of all the
-passions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Erroneousness of both opposed theses.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such views as these are so openly unsustainable that they hardly appear
-at all in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> strictness and purity, in the course of the history of
-philosophy, and then fugitively. But it is desirable to be attentive
-not to identify the theoretic formulæ given above with the programmes
-of certain groups, sects, associations, or individuals who have
-verbally proclaimed polipathicism and apathicism, whereas they have
-implied something very different, and could not have done otherwise.
-Complete polipathicism and complete apathicism could only be attained
-by the individual at the cost of disaggregation and annihilation. At
-the most, sects, groups, societies, and individuals have been able to
-conform to those formulæ as the simple expression of <i>tendencies;</i>
-or those formulæ are applicable to them by <i>hyperbole,</i> in the
-condemnation that it has been held desirable to inflict upon certain
-unhealthy tendencies. Certainly there are individuals whose passions
-are in such slight control as to suggest the absence of will; they
-run after every one of their desires, or leave their soul open to the
-onset of the passions that devastate it as the wind and the hail do the
-fields. Lorenzo the Magnificent (symbolizing with his wonted finesse
-a profoundly philosophical conflict) said to his son Piero, who was
-addicted to every pleasure and caprice: "And I never have any wish but
-you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> realize it for yourself."<a name="FNanchor_1_47" id="FNanchor_1_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_47" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> The young rake whose adventures were
-sung by De Musset may afford an example of the same disaggregation,
-composed of the most violent kind of passions:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Ce n'était pas Rolla qui gouvernait sa vie:<br />
-C'étaient ses passions; il les laissait aller,<br />
-Comme un pâtre assoupi regarde l'eau couler....<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>But even in these extreme and typical cases the will and the dominion
-of the passions are never altogether absent: otherwise it would be
-impossible to live, not only a lifetime, but a day, an hour, a minute.
-Thus too on the other hand, no individual, be he ever so apathetic
-and ascetic, ever frees himself altogether from the dominion of
-the passions and the desires. We read in the life of some saint or
-beatified personage, whose name escapes me, how he had attained to so
-great a degree of perfection that whatever food he put into his mouth,
-he tasted nothing but dry straw. Leaving to specialists the inquiry
-as to how a stomach of so slight a capacity for distinguishing one
-aliment from another could perform its function, and also as to the
-consequences for social productiveness of so strangely perfected an
-individual, it is certain that in order to nourish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> himself and live,
-the saint in question must have had the periodical appetite or desire
-of straw for his food, if for nothing else. Apathy too is often nothing
-but a most violent and tenacious, though disordered, passion for ease.
-Activity in any case reasserts itself with the dissolving of apathy,
-a state nigh to inertia and to death, when it dissolves <i>grata vice
-veris et Favoni,</i> that is, with the appearance of the desires, of those
-"suave impulses," those "heart-beats," that pain, and that pleasure,
-which Giacomo Leopardi depicted in his <i>Risorgimento,</i> overcome with
-astonishment, as though face to face with the mystery of life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Their historical and contingent meanings.</i></div>
-
-<p>The formulæ of polipathicism and of apathicism have had other
-contingent and historical meanings, but of a positive nature, which
-it is fitting to examine, in order to prevent the usual passage, so
-fruitful of errors, from philosophical to empirical theses. The return
-to the world and to nature, which is one of the characteristics of the
-Renaissance and of the Reformation itself; the rights of the passions,
-which is one of the traits of Romanticism in its initial period;
-neo-paganism, which has given to the Italy of our day its most lofty
-poetry in the work of Giosuè Carducci, were each in their turn nothing
-but beneficial reactions against the lazy monastic life of the Middle
-Ages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> against Protestant pedantry, against degenerate Romanticism,
-which despised the real world and dreamed of contradictory ideals.
-On the other hand, in different times and circumstances, Christian
-ascesis, Franciscan poverty, and Puritan strictness were beneficial
-reactions. So true is this, that we are wont to unite in our admiration
-heroes of abstinence and heroes of the passions, assertors of the
-spirit and assertors of the flesh, for all, in different ways, because
-in different historical situations, willed always the elevation of
-humanity. Every one of those historical manifestations can be and has
-been blamed and satirized, but only in its decadence, where it has
-exhausted its proper function, and is no longer truly itself, but its
-own mask.&mdash;The friars of the stories of the sixteenth century are not
-the companions of St. Francis, as the indecent Italians of the late
-Renaissance are not the active merchants, philologists, and artists who
-promoted it, nor is there a greater lack of historical sense than the
-transference of the characteristics of the one to the other, as is the
-way of vulgar detractors and apologists. One and the same historical
-fact (as has been brilliantly said) always shows itself twice: the
-first time as <i>tragedy,</i> the second as <i>comedy.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The domination of the passions and the will.</i></div>
-
-<p>The cases that we have recorded, which have seemed to represent
-unbridled or exhausted passion, possess not a pathological but a
-physiological character, in so far as they really consist of a
-domination, a volitional synthesis, which conquers and contains
-divergent and ruinous passions. And with this we have answered the
-question as to whether or no the passions can be dominated, and whether
-man be slave or free. We can dominate them, and in that domination is
-life; if we do not dominate them, we advance to meet death; to dominate
-or not to dominate them are the very poles of the will, positive and
-negative, and we cannot think of the one as being abolished without
-thinking of the other as also abolished.</p>
-
-<p>But the labour of dominating them is hard, as all life, "sweet life,"
-is hard. The passions, driven back and restrained again and again by
-the will, yet rage within us, tumultuous, though conquered. We tear
-out the cumbersome plants, but not their roots and seeds. The man who
-considers himself hardened to the trials of life, still feels and
-suffers: the man who seems calm is yet always agitated within. As the
-labour that is called physical deposits poison at the base of the
-organism; so does the labour called spiritual in the depths of the
-soul. Hence the bitterness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> in those men who have willed and laboured
-much; hence their <i>cupio dissolvi,</i> their aspiration for that bourne
-where all is peace. The poet sublimely imagines old Luther, after his
-victories, in the midst of the people awakened by him to a new life:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Yet with a backward look, he sighed:<br />
-Call me, O God, to thee, for I am tired,<br />
-Nor without malediction can I pray!<br />
-</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_47" id="Footnote_1_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_47"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> L. Domenichi, <i>Della scelta de motti, burle et facetie</i>
-(Firenze, 1566), p. 14.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>IV</h4>
-
-
-<h4>VOLITIONAL HABITS AND THE INDIVIDUALITY</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Passions and states of the soul.</i></div>
-
-<p>Just because the passions are possible volitions and therefore
-always have a definite content, it is no slight error on the part
-of writers of treatises, to consider joy and sorrow, enthusiasm and
-depression, content and discontent, tranquillity and remorse, and
-other antithetical couples, as passions. These couples are empirical
-concepts constructed upon the dialectical distinction of freedom and
-anti-freedom, of good and evil; but the groups of the passions must on
-the contrary be empirical concepts formed upon the basis of the varying
-determination of the volitional activity, according to <i>objects,</i> that
-is to say, in its <i>particular</i> determinations. Thus we can talk of the
-passion for celebrity, for science, for art, for politics, for riches,
-for luxury, for women, for the country, for the city, for sport, for
-fishing, and so on, with infinite subdivisions and complications.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Passions understood as volitional habits.</i></div>
-
-<p>The distinction usually drawn between the affections, the impulses,
-the desires on the one hand and the passions on the other, is on the
-contrary justified, though it always has an empirical character; these
-being considered, not as the single and instantaneous desire or impulse
-that prompts to a single action, but as an inclination or habit of
-wishing and of willing in a certain direction. In this sense, passion
-would be a generic concept (always empirical), which could be divided
-(empirically) into the classes of the virtues and vices; for virtue
-is nothing but the passion or habit of rational actions, and vice the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Their importance.</i></div>
-
-<p>These passions and volitional habits are not rigidly fixed, for nothing
-in the field of facts is rigidly fixed. As the bed of the river
-regulates the course of the river and is at the same time continuously
-modified by it, so is it with the passions and volitional acts, which
-reality keeps forming and modifying, and in modifying, forms anew
-and in forming modifies. For this reason there is always something
-arbitrary in defining habits as though they corresponded to a distinct
-and limited reality; and for this reason the concepts of them are
-arbitrary and empirical. Habits are not categories, nor do they give
-rise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> to distinct concepts; but they are the like in the unlike,
-unlike, itself also, in itself, although discernible in a certain way
-from other groups of dissimilar facts. Their importance is great,
-because they constitute, as it were, the bony structure of the body of
-reality. In them <i>individuality</i> understood as an empirical concept,
-has its foundation, for which, if it be not substance, neither is it a
-complex of casually divergent states.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The control of the passions in so far as they are
-volitional habits.</i></div>
-
-<p>The nature of the passions as volitional habits to be both fixed and
-mobile, that is to say, only relatively fixed and relatively mobile,
-is the principle that aids the solution of several much-debated and
-certainly important questions of the Philosophy of the practical. And
-in the first place, the passions being understood as habits, the answer
-to the question as to whether or no they can be controlled, and if the
-answer be in the affirmative, then in what limits, receives a somewhat
-different meaning, which explains the interest which that question
-has always aroused. Nothing, in fact, removes our consciousness of
-freedom and personality in so brutal a manner and makes us feel our
-impotence and misery in so depressing a way, as to find ourselves with
-our good intention and action hardly begun, face to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> face with the
-unchained forces of our passions and of the habits that oppose it,
-which drown with their deafening clamour the weak and timid voice of
-the incipient action, vex it with their arrogance, and drag it along
-paths well known and abhorred. We fall then into mistrust and baseness,
-believe ourselves lost for ever; freedom and will seem to be fables
-for the adornment of sermons and the books of moralists. The sage who
-recalls to man the absolute empire that he possesses over his passions
-and exhorts him never to be troubled and to repeat the twenty or
-four-and-twenty letters of the alphabet, so that the spirit may have
-time to recuperate its strength, to resist and to conquer, seems to
-utter the insipid babble of one who has never truly loved and hated,
-and to measure the full and overflowing souls of others on the model of
-his own empty or almost empty soul. We laugh freely at the "short legs"
-of ideals and good intentions, and read again with satisfaction not
-undiluted with bitterness, some little story like Voltaire's <i>Memnon ou
-la sagesse humaine,</i> which bears as motto the very appropriate epigraph:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Nous tromper dans nos entreprises,<br />
-C'est à quoi nous sommes sujets:<br />
-Le matin je fais des projets,<br />
-Et le long du jour des sottises;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>or at the most they conclude that there is no way to free oneself from
-a bad passion save with another one equally bad, from a vice with a
-vice, "as from a plank we pluck with nail a nail."</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Difficulty and reality of dominating them.</i></div>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, he who torments himself and gets angry, or laughs and
-draws such conclusions as these, is not in the right. That is to say,
-he is right to laugh at ingenuous sages and at odious preachers and
-moralists, for their theories are certainly simplicist and false. But
-he is wrong in not understanding that his own theory is also simplicist
-and false, for it runs into the opposite extreme.&mdash;Habits and passions
-are habits and passions, because slowly formed: it is therefore a vain
-illusion to attempt to destroy them at a blow. Perhaps it is believed
-that the passions are tender flowerets or grasses that a child has
-attached to the surface of the soil? They are a rank growth, strong
-oaks whose roots dive deep into the earth!&mdash;That is most true, but it
-is not for this reason impossible to modify and destroy them. They are
-indeed actually modified, for that very pain, that very disappointment,
-are a beginning of modification; since we do not persist in what we
-abhor and follow, dragged along by force; and little by little we
-end by freeing ourselves. The process of freeing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> ourselves from
-the passions, or from vicious habits, then, is effective, but slow,
-as the formation of those habits has been slow. We do not cure an
-illness with a sudden act of will, but nevertheless the will guides
-and directs the process of healing, and can open or close the entrance
-to the medicinal forces of nature. Now the passions or vicious habits
-are maladies that must follow their course, which, in order to be
-beneficial, must coincide with the cure. The sages who give receipts
-for freeing ourselves from them immediately are the Dulcamaras of moral
-maladies; but the existence of the Dulcamaras should not impel us to
-deny the existence of doctors, and above all of ourselves as doctors
-of ourselves. And we should certainly adopt a very bad and illusory
-method of cure, were we to accept the method so often recommended, of
-destroying passion with passion, or vice with vice, thus adding vice to
-vice, as those who treat the illnesses of the body with narcotics or
-with stimulants often add malady to malady.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Volitional habits and individuality.</i></div>
-
-<p>Habits, then, not less than single volitional acts, of which they were
-and are composed, can be and are continually conquered and modified,
-in so far as they are opposed to the new volitional syntheses. This
-confirms what has already been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span> said in criticizing the polipathetic
-view, which ignores the volition for the volitions, as the virtuous
-habit is ignored in favour of vicious habits. But the theory of
-apathicism is also to be found in this field, and it is needful
-to assert in opposition to it, the great importance proper to the
-volitional habits in giving concrete form to virtue. This second
-critical thesis is that which affirms the value of <i>individuality or
-peculiarity</i> in the practical field.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Negations of individuality for uniformity and their
-critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>Every individual is furnished by mother nature with certain definite
-habits, according to the contingencies of reality among which he enters
-the world; and he acquires yet others in the course of life, owing
-to the actual conditions through which he passes and to the works
-that he accomplishes. Those habits which he has from birth are called
-aptitudes, dispositions, natural tendencies: the others acquired. The
-individual in his reality is, as has been said, nothing but these
-groups of habits and changes as they change. Now is it rational and
-possible (the two questions here form one) that the individual in his
-willing and acting should rid himself of such habits? Is it possible
-to consider them as things without value? Is it possible to establish
-an antithesis between individuality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> and rational action, as between
-good and evil?&mdash;The levellers who claim to impose the same task upon
-all and wish to make of the female a male, of the poet a reasoner,
-of the man of science a warrior, of the saint a man of business, and
-thus to give to every one a part of the task of others;&mdash;the dreamers
-of a future society, in which all this shall have been done, and the
-poet should attend to his poem, after having played the philosopher
-for a couple of hours, for another couple of hours the tailor, and for
-yet another two the waiter at an inn;&mdash;all the pedants of abstract
-regularity, whom we meet to our great annoyance in life;&mdash;behold the
-apathicists appear anew, for, as in the theory of the volitional act,
-they advocated an abstract action, conducted by the rational will
-alone in the void of the passions; so here, they advocate an abstract
-rational habit, in the theory of volitional habits, a model of human
-activity, to which all individuals would be obliged to conform. Perhaps
-some such sensible observation as this of Vauvenargues should suffice
-to confute them: <i>Il ne faut pas beaucoup de réflexion pour faire cuire
-un poulet; et, cependant, nous voyons des hommes qui sont toute leur
-vie mauvais rôtisseurs: tant il est nécessaire dans tous les<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> métiers,
-d'y être appelé par un instinct particulier et comme indépendant de
-la raison.</i> But since it might be said that we wish to solve a grave
-question with a joke, we will recall that the volitional acts and the
-passions, volition and the volitions, are of the same nature (though
-the one is actual and the others only possible), and that the nature of
-willing implies actual definite situations, and that for this reason
-we never will in universal but always in particular. In the same way
-virtue, the virtuous habit of the will, is not of a different nature to
-the volitional habits in general, to the passions, but is particular
-and individual as they are. Those who make war upon individual habits
-never succeed in substituting for them a universal habit, which is
-inconceivable, but at the most other habits, equally particular and
-individual. The poet who will play the farmer, the tailor, and the
-waiter, in the imagined society of the future, will do all these things
-as a poet. This may perhaps be an advantage, but may also perhaps be
-the contrary, as future consumers of grain, of garments, and of repasts
-will become aware. For the rest, do we not even now see women devoting
-themselves to the severe studies of philology, of philosophy, and
-of mathematics?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> But with the rarest exceptions, they remain always
-women: their production, which is without originality, is not like
-that of man, done with the complete dedication of the whole being to
-the search for truth and of artistic perfection; and if in the midst
-of the most abstruse inquiry, the image of themselves as wife or
-mother pass through their minds, they desert, at the critical moment,
-the philosophical categories, the formulæ of flexions, the ruled or
-tangential spaces, and sigh for their unborn sons and for the husband
-that they have not found. Is this distortion of natural habits useful?
-Generally speaking, it is not. It is a doing and an undoing, a despisal
-of the riches wisely accumulated and capitalized by Reality in the
-course of its evolution.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Temperament and character. Indifference of temperament.</i></div>
-
-<p>Certainly the disposition natural or acquired is not virtue, and
-the <i>temperament</i> (since temperament is nothing but the sum of
-habits and aptitudes) is not <i>character.</i> But virtue and character
-presuppose habits and passions, of which they give the rational and
-volitional synthesis: they are the form of that matter. And as matter
-considered in the abstract is neither good nor bad, so the habits and
-the passions (as has been very well observed) are not in themselves
-either virtues or vices: they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> are facts. And it is necessary to take
-account of facts; otherwise, they revenge themselves. On the other
-hand, habits and passions certainly change; but not all of a sudden
-and capriciously, rather, little by little, and always on the basis of
-existing habits and passions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The discovery of the proper self.</i></div>
-
-<p>The first duty of every individual who wishes to act effectively,
-consists, therefore, in seeking for himself, in exploring his own
-dispositions, in establishing what aptitudes have been deposited in
-him by the course of reality, both at the moment of his birth, and
-during the development of his own individual life: in knowing, that
-is to say, his own habits and passions, not in order to make of them
-a <i>tabula rasa,</i> but to use them. The search is not easy and the
-preparatory part of life, namely youth, is spent upon it. Few are the
-fortunate individuals who have at once a clear and certain knowledge
-of their own being and of their duty; the majority seek and find
-it after many wanderings; and if such wanderings sometimes (as is
-written in the dedication of the <i>Scienza nuova</i>) "seem misfortunes
-and are opportunities," at others they are but a fruitless moving to
-and fro; hence those that are undecided during the whole of their
-lives, the eternal youths, those who aspire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> to all or to many of the
-directions of human activity and are incapable in all. But when our own
-being unveils itself and we see our path clearly, then to disordered
-agitation succeeds the calm of sure and regular work, with its defeats
-and victories, its joys and sorrows, but with the constant vision of
-the Aim, that is, of the general direction to be followed. Vainly will
-he who is endowed and prepared for guiding mankind in political strife
-and has a clear and lively perception of human strength and weakness,
-of what can and of what cannot be done, and is furnished, so to speak,
-with practical sense (with the sense of complications and slight
-differences), will try (save in the rarest and most exceptional cases,
-and this reserve is to be understood in all that we are saying here) to
-acquire a place among those who cultivate the abstract and universal,
-operations demanding almost opposite aptitudes; vainly will he who was
-born to sing attempt to calculate; vainly will he whose mind and soul
-were made to accentuate dissensions in their bitter strife bend himself
-to be a conciliator and a peacemaker. It is worse than superfluous, it
-is stupid to weep over one's choleric or phlegmatic temperament. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
-have been choleric saints that have even used the stick, and phlegmatic
-saints who have succeeded admirably in patient persuasion: the mild
-Francis, "all seraphic in his ardour," and the impetuous Dominic "whose
-blows fell on the boughs of heresy." Reality is diversity and has need
-of both, and each is praiseworthy if he do that well to which he has
-been <i>called.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The idea of "vocation."</i></div>
-
-<p>This concept of the <i>vocation</i> has a mystical and religious origin and
-preserves that form; but it is clear that by means of the previous
-considerations we have divested it of that form and reduced it to a
-scientific concept. The individual is not a "monad" or a "real," he
-is not a "soul" created by a God all in a moment and all of a piece;
-the individual is the historical situation of the universal spirit at
-every instant of time, and, therefore, the sum of the habits due to
-the historical situations. Those modes of conceiving and talking of
-one <i>and the same</i> individual in two <i>different</i> situations, or of two
-<i>different</i> individuals in the <i>same</i> situation, are to be avoided,
-because individual and situation are all one. But when the individual
-has been thus defined, it remains none the less true that each
-individual must direct his life according to pre-existing habits and
-personal dispositions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> and thus we discover the true meaning of the
-mythologies and religions that have been mentioned, and the struggles
-to find the suitable employment can be expressed with the words that
-religion has taught us when we were children: the "vocation" and the
-special "mission" that is allotted to us in life, until the last giving
-of accounts and the words of dismissal and repose: <i>Nunc dimitte servum
-tuum, Domine!</i> We are the children of that Reality which generates us
-and knows more than we, the Reality of which religions have caught a
-glimpse and called it God, father, and eternal wisdom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Misunderstandings as to the rights of individuality. Evil
-individuality.</i></div>
-
-<p>The affirmation of the rights that belong to individuality in the
-practical field has several times assumed and still assumes (in our
-time, more than in the past, owing to materialism and naturalism) a
-form, no longer symbolical and mystical, but wrong and irrational, that
-it is desirable to remark upon here, always in order to avoid possible
-equivoques. Indeed many look upon the respect due to their own beings
-as due to their caprice, that is to say, to what is on the contrary
-the negation of being: the right of the individual as the right to
-commit follies, or to a disaggregate individuality. The declared
-necessity of temperament<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> for character is exchanged for admiration of
-temperament considered in itself, which, as such, is neither admirable
-nor blameworthy; but when separated from character becomes vice and
-folly. Hence the admiration that has even become a literary fashion,
-for the dissolute, for the violent, for homicides, for the criminals of
-the public prisons, illustrated by a few courageous and energetic souls
-among them, whereas they are as a rule weak, vile, and turbid.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>False doctrines as to the connection of virtues and vices.</i></div>
-
-<p>Various theories are also erroneous, in which it has been sought to
-establish the relation between the passions and the will, temperament
-and character, passions and temperament being understood as vicious
-passions and evil temperament; that is, not in themselves, but in
-their antithesis to the rational will: hence the vain and paradoxical
-attempts to join together and harmonize virtue and vice. Thus it has
-been maintained that in certain vices are foreshadowed the virtues
-which will or can be developed from them; for instance, military
-valour in ferocity, industrial capacity in greed; whereas ferocity
-and greed are wilful acts and contradictions incapable of generating
-any virtue, as is seen in the customary cowardice of the ferocious
-and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>the ineptitude of the greedy and covetous. Such a connection of
-virtues and vices has on other occasions been presented as a mixture
-or co-temperament, and it has been affirmed that the vices enter into
-the composition of the virtues, as do poisons into the composition
-of medicines. Finally, virtue and vice have been placed in causal
-relation, and the causes of civil progress have been found in human
-vices. But the vices, as they are not the antecedents, so are they
-neither the ingredients nor the causes of the virtues. These are
-strength, those the lack of strength. It is generally affirmed that
-in every individual the virtues are accompanied by their correlative
-vices, but if this possess some approximate value as an empirical
-observation, strictly speaking it has none, because men can be
-conceived and are actually found, whose virtue, far from yielding to
-excesses and to vices, is eurythmic and temperate. But perhaps that
-common saying aims at something else that it fails of explaining
-well; namely, that every power has its impotence and every individual
-his limit; but this does not mean vice or defect; it is nothing but
-the tautological affirmation that the part is not the whole and the
-individual not the universal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The universal in the individual and education.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if the individual do not exhaust the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> universal, the universal
-lives in individuals; Reality in each of its particular manifestations.
-Therefore the affirmation of the right of individuality does not deny
-the right of universality; or it denies it only in that abstract form
-in which, to tell the truth, it is by itself denied. The individual
-is under the obligation to seek himself, but in order to do this he
-has also the obligation of cultivating himself as man in universal. A
-school that represented simply a cultivation of individual aptitudes,
-would be a training, not an education, a manufactory of utensils, not
-a nursery of spiritual and creative activities. The true specialism
-is universalism, and inversely, which means that if the universal do
-not act without specializing itself, yet specialization is not really
-specialization if it do not contain universality. If the two terms that
-are by nature indissoluble be divided, there remains only fruitless
-generalization or stupid particularization, and if our times have
-sinned in this latter respect, other times have sinned in the opposite.
-He is well-balanced who between these two forms of degeneration both
-knows and fills his own proper and individual mission so perfectly
-that he fulfils at the same time with it and through it the universal
-mission of man.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>V.</h4>
-
-
-<h4>DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Multiplicity and unity: development.</i></div>
-
-<p>The demonstration hitherto developed, that evil is negativity or
-contradiction, and that this contradiction takes place owing to the
-multiplicity of the desires in respect to the singleness of character
-of the volitional act, gives rise to the further question: Why should
-there be such a multiplicity, concurrent with the demand for unity, and
-thus be generated strife and contradiction? Here it would be fitting
-to observe that we must have filled our mouths very uselessly for a
-century with the word evolution, if such a question as this be renewed,
-or we remain bewildered and embarrassed before it. For the reason of
-that fact, which seems without a reason, is to be found precisely in
-the concept of <i>"evolution."</i> This concept resumes most ancient views,
-and has been substituted in modern times for that of an immovable
-Reality, of a God who exists perfect and satisfied in himself, and
-creates a world for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> his own transitory pleasure; or for a complex of
-beings, eternally the same, with variations that are only apparent.
-The concept of evolution has entered so profoundly into the blood and
-bones of modern man that even those repeat it who would be incapable
-of analyzing and understanding it; even the least acute of all, the
-positivist philosophers who like to call themselves "philosophers of
-evolution."</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Becoming as synthesis of being and not-being.</i></div>
-
-<p>But before it acquired, as a vague and confused formula, so great a
-publicity as quite to amount to popularity, a philosopher of genius had
-analyzed and synthetized it, induced and deduced it in an unsurpassable
-manner, with the speculative formula of reality as <i>becoming</i>; that
-is, as synthesis of being and not-being, being and not-being being
-thus unthinkable separately, and only thinkable in their living
-connection, which is becoming and <i>development</i> (evolution). Reality is
-development, that is, infinite possibility that passes into infinite
-actuality and from the multiplicity of every instant takes refuge in
-the one, to break forth anew in the multiple and produce the new unity.
-The inquiry into the dialectic of the volitional act enters in this
-way into the very heart of reality. In order to deny multiplicity,
-contradiction, evil and not-being, it would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> necessary to deny at
-the same time unity, coherence, good and being.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Nature as becoming. Its resolution in the spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if by the theory that has been recorded we have explained the
-necessity of evil for good, or the necessity of the not necessary for
-the necessary in the volitional act of man, the identification of the
-volitional act, which is man's, with reality which is of the universal
-whole, might seem to be too audacious. For (it will be said) the
-complex of other beings, that we are wont to separate from the complex
-of human beings and to oppose to it as nature, either is motionless
-and does not develop, or develops without any consciousness of good
-and evil, of pleasure and pain, of value and disvalue. Both theses
-have been maintained and nature has been represented, now as <i>without
-history, now as developing itself in an unconscious or mechanical
-manner.</i> But the contradictions and absurdities of both theses have
-been together perceived. "Motionless beings" is a phrase without
-meaning, to such a degree that even empirical science has everywhere
-pushed its way into history, and has talked of the evolution of animals
-and vegetables, of the chemical elements, and even of a history of
-light and heat. The other expression, "unconscious beings," is not
-less empty, because being and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> activity are not otherwise conceivable
-save in the way that we know our being, which is consciousness;
-and although empirical science certainly points to more and more
-rudimentary and tenuous forms of consciousness in beings, always
-differently individualized, yet it has never been able to demonstrate
-the absolutely unconscious. If so-called nature be, it develops, and if
-it develop, cannot do so without some consciousness. This deduction is
-not a matter of conjecture, but a logical and irrefutable consequence.
-What is there, then, that persists in men's souls, as an obstacle to
-the acceptance of this consequence, in accordance with the profound
-belief of humanity in a community of all beings with one another and
-with the Whole, as manifested in philosophies and in religions, in
-the speculations of the learned and in ingenuous popular beliefs? A
-scholastic prejudice, an idol of the intellect, the hypostasis of
-that concept of "nature" that Logic has taught us is nothing but the
-abstract, mechanicizing, classifying function of the human spirit; a
-prejudice arising from the substitution of the naturalistic method for
-reality, by which a function is changed and materialized into a group
-of beings. Those idealists were also slaves of the error of a like
-hypostasis,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> who, though they thought everything as an activity of the
-spirit, yet stopped when face to face with <i>Nature,</i> making of it an
-inferior grade of the Spirit, or, metaphorically, a spirit alienated
-from itself, an unconscious; consciousness, a petrified thought, and
-creating for it a special philosophy (as though all the other did
-not suffice), entitled precisely, <i>Philosophy of nature.</i> But modern
-thought knows henceforth how man creates for his use that skeleton or
-<i>mannequin</i> of an immobile, external mechanical nature, and he is no
-longer permitted to fall back into equivoque and substitute this for
-entity or for a complex of entities. Nor should he find any difficulty
-in discovering everywhere activity, development, consciousness, with
-its antitheses of good and evil, of joy and sorrow. Certainly the stars
-do not smile, nor is the moon pale for sorrow: these are images of
-the poets. Certainly animals and trees do not reason like men; this,
-when it is not poetry, is gross anthropomorphism. But nature, in her
-intimate self, longs for the good and abhors the evil, she is all wet
-with tears and all a-shiver for joy; strife and victory is everywhere
-and in every moment of universal life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Optimism and pessimism; critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>This conception of reality, which recognizes the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> indissoluble link
-between good and evil, is itself beyond good and evil, and consequently
-surpasses the visual angles of optimism and pessimism&mdash;of optimism
-that does not discover the evil in life and posits it as illusion, or
-only as a very small and contingent element, or hopes for a future
-life (on earth or in heaven) in which evil will be suppressed; and
-of pessimism, that sees nothing but evil and makes of the world an
-infinite and eternal spasm of pain, that rends itself internally and
-generates nothing. It confronts the first with the fact that evil is
-truly the original sin of reality, ineliminable so long as reality
-exists, and therefore absolutely ineliminable as a category: the
-second, with the other category the good, equally ineliminable, for
-without it evil could not be. And it is easy to show how the optimist
-declares himself a pessimist, the pessimist an optimist, out of
-their own mouths. The setting free from individuality and from will,
-which the pessimist proposes as a radical remedy, is the remedy that
-reality itself applies at every moment, for we free ourselves from the
-contradiction of individuality and of wilfulness by the affirmation
-of the rational will, with which the same pessimist cannot dispense,
-for the effectuation of his programme of ascesis or of suicide, which,
-according as it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> understood, is either not a programme, or a
-programme altogether capricious and without universal value. In truth,
-there is no need to oppose a eulogy of Life with a eulogy of Death,
-since the eulogy of Life is also a eulogy of Death; for how could we
-live, if we did not die at every instant?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Dialectic optimism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The dialectic conception of reality as development, that is, as a
-synthesis of being and not-being, can certainly be termed optimistic,
-but in a very different signification to that of abstract optimism. The
-synthesis is the thesis enriched with its antithesis, and the thesis is
-the good, being, not the bad or not-being. But who will wish seriously
-to oppose this logical consequence? Is it not a fact that men hope and
-live, although in the midst of their sorrows? Is it not a fact that the
-world is not ended and does not appear to have any intention of ending?
-And how would that be possible, if the moment of the good did not
-prevail, just because the positive prevails upon the negative and Life
-constantly triumphs over Death?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Concept of cosmic progress.</i></div>
-
-<p>This continuous triumph of Life over Death constitutes <i>cosmic
-progress.</i> Progress, from the point of view whence we have hitherto
-regarded it, that of individualized activity, is identical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> with
-activity; it is the unfolding of this upon passivity. Every volitional
-act, like every theoretical act, is therefore to be considered in
-itself, that is, only in relation to the given situation from which it
-breaks forth. In every new situation the individual begins his life
-all over again. But from the cosmic point of view, at which we now
-place ourselves, reality shows itself as a continuous growing upon
-itself; nor is a real regress ever conceivable, because evil being
-that which is not, is irreal, and that which is is always and only the
-good. The real is always rational, and the rational is always real.
-Cosmic progress, then, is itself also the object of affirmation, not
-problematic, but apodictic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Objections and critique of them.</i></div>
-
-<p>The difficulties that can be and are opposed to this thesis all arise
-from the confusion of the truly rational with that which is falsely so
-called, between the true real and that which improperly assumes this
-name, that is, between the real and the unreal. Thus will be remembered
-the instance of the end of the great Græco-Roman civilization, without
-adequate parallel in universal history, followed by the return of
-barbarism in the Middle Ages; or the common example of the shipwreck
-of noblest enterprises; or (to remain in the field that more nearly
-interests<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> us) the philosophic decadence, owing to which, a mean
-positivism was able to follow the idealism of the beginning of the
-nineteenth century, which stands to the former as the eloquence of
-an Attic orator to the stuttering of an ignorant school-boy. Did the
-Middle Age, then, represent an advance upon that Rome, whose memory
-lingered in the fancy as an image of lost dignity during that same
-Middle Age? Was the victory of European reaction over the citizen
-civilization of the Revolution and of the Empire progress? and in
-Lombardy, the new Austrian domination following upon the Kingdom of
-Italy? or in the Neapolitan provinces the Bourbon restoration after the
-Republic of 1799 and the French Decanate? Was Comte an advance upon
-Kant, Herbert Spencer upon Hegel? But different points of view are
-confused under the same name in these questions, and, therefore, we do
-not succeed in immediately arranging those facts beneath the principle
-that has been established. It is therefore necessary to analyze. It
-will then be immediately seen that ancient civilization, in what it
-possessed of truly real, did not die, but was transmitted as thought,
-institutions, and even as acquired aptitudes; hence it kept reappearing
-in the course of the centuries and still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> keeps reappearing: it
-certainly died in what it had of unreal, that is to say, in its
-contradictions, for instance, in its incapacity to find political and
-economic forms answering to the changed conditions of spirits. In like
-manner, the Middle Age, which was evidently in part progress, because
-it solved problems left unsolved by the preceding civilization, posed
-others that it did not solve and that were solved in the succeeding
-centuries; but if the posing of these new problems, which, while
-destroying the old, failed to substitute provisionally anything, was
-apparently not progress, neither was it regress, but the beginning of
-new progress. The same is to be said of precursors, conquered in their
-time, but conquerors in history, of the restorations and reactions
-that are so only in name, because they contain in themselves that with
-which they contend, if for no other reason, then for the very reason
-that they contend: of heroes and initiators, who were conquered and
-martyrized, yet knew that they were triumphing and did triumph in
-dying; the cross and the pyre will become symbols of victory: <i>in hoc
-signo vinces.</i> And finally, if the positivism of the second half of the
-nineteenth century seem as a whole so greatly inferior to idealism,
-that comes from its not being philosophy at all, but a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> hybrid jumble
-of natural sciences and metaphysic, thus intensifying an error that
-already existed in germ in idealism, and fecundating the problem
-for a better solution. Many philosophers living to-day are inferior
-to Socrates, because they have not even risen to the knowledge of
-the concept; but those who in our day have attained to the level of
-Socrates, are superior to him, because besides his thought they contain
-in themselves something that Socrates had not; and those philosophers
-who are logically on a level with Protagoras, surpass him, just because
-they are the Protagorases of the twentieth century. There is therefore
-never real regression in history; but only contradictions that follow
-upon solutions given, and prepare new ones.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Individuals and History.</i></div>
-
-<p>The solutions, once attained, are acquired for ever; the problems that
-have once been solved, do not again occur, or, which is the same thing,
-they recur in a different way to those of the past. The web of History
-is composed of such labours, to which all individuals collaborate;
-but it is not the work and cannot be the purpose of any of them in
-particular, because each one is exclusively intent on his particular
-work, and only in <i>rem suam agere,</i> does he also do the business of
-the world. History is happening, which, as has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> seen, is not to
-be judged practically, because it always transcends individuals, and
-to these and not to history is the practical judgment applicable.
-The judgment of History is in the very fact of its existence: its
-rationality is in its reality.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Fate, Fortune, and Providence.</i></div>
-
-<p>This historical web, which is and is not the work of individuals,
-constitutes, as has been said, the work of the universal Spirit, of
-which individuals are manifestations and instruments. In this way are
-implicitly excluded those views which attribute the course of things
-to Fate, to Fortune, or to Chance, that is, to mechanism or caprice,
-both of them insufficient and one-sided, like determinism and free
-will, each one invoking the other when it becomes aware of its own
-impotence. The idea of mechanical origin, of an evolution that takes
-place by the addition of very minute elements, is now being abandoned,
-even for that fragment of history called <i>History of Nature</i> (the
-only true and possible Philosophy of Nature), in which is beginning
-to reappear the theory of successive crises and revolution, and the
-idea of freedom, whose creations are not to be measured or limited
-mathematically. But the supreme rationality that guides the course of
-history, should not, on the other hand, be conceived as the work of a
-transcendent Intelligence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> or Providence, as is the case in religious
-and semi-fanciful thought, which does not possess other value than that
-of a confused presentiment of the truth. If History be rationality,
-then a Providence certainly directs it; but of such a kind as becomes
-actual in individuals, and acts, not on, but in them. This affirmation
-of Providence is not conjecture or faith, but evidence of reason.
-Who would feel in him the strength of life without such intimate
-persuasion? Whence could he draw resignation in sorrow, encouragement
-to endure? Surely what the religious man says, with the words "Let us
-leave it in God's hands," is said also by the man of reason with those
-other words: "Courage, and forward"?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The infinity of progress and mystery.</i></div>
-
-<p>The Spirit, which is infinite possibility passing into infinite
-actuality, has drawn and draws at every moment the cosmos from chaos,
-has collected diffused life into the concentrated life of the organ,
-has achieved the passage from animal to human life, has created and
-creates modes of life ever more lofty. The work of the Spirit is not
-finished and never will be finished. Our yearning for something higher
-is not vain. The very yearning, the infinity of our desire, is proof
-of the infinity of that progress. The plant dreams of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> the animal, the
-animal of man, man of superman; for this, too, is a reality, if it be
-reality that with every historical movement man surpasses himself. The
-time will come when the great deeds and the great works now our memory
-and our boast will be forgotten, as we have forgotten the works and the
-deeds, no less great, of those beings of supreme genius who created
-what we call human life and seem to us now to have been savages of
-the lowest grade, almost men-monkeys. They will be forgotten, for the
-documents of progress is in <i>forgetting</i>; that is, in the fact being
-entirely absorbed into the new fact, in which, and not in itself,
-it has value. But we cannot know what the future states of Reality
-will be, in their determined physiognomy and succession, owing to the
-"dignity" established in the Philosophy of the practical, by which the
-knowledge of the action and of the deed follows and does not precede
-the action and the deed. <i>Mystery</i> is just <i>the infinity of evolution</i>:
-were this not so, that concept would not arise in the mind of man,
-nor would it be possible to abuse it, as it has been abused by being
-transported out of its place, that is to say, into the consciousness
-of itself, which the spiritual activity should have and has to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
-fullest degree, that is, the consciousness of its eternal categories.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Illegitimate transportation of the concept of mystery from
-history to philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>The neglect of the moment of mystery is the true reason of the error
-known as the <i>Philosophy of history,</i> which undertakes to portray the
-plan of Providence and to determine the formula of progress. In this
-attempt (when it does not affirm mere philosophemes, as has very often
-happened), it makes the vain effort to enclose the infinite in the
-finite and capriciously to decree concluded that evolution which the
-universal Spirit itself cannot conclude, for it would thus come to deny
-itself. In Logic that error has been gnoseologically defined as the
-pretension of treating the individual as though it were the universal,
-making the universal individual; here it is to be defined in other
-words as the pretension of treating the finite as though it were the
-infinite, of making the infinite finite.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmation of the impossibility of a Philosophy of
-history.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the unjustified transportation of the concept of mystery from
-history, where it indicates the future that the past prepares and does
-not know, into philosophy, causes to be posited as mysteries which
-give rise to probabilities and conjectures, problems that consist of
-philosophical terms, and should therefore be philosophically solved.
-But if the infinite progress and the infinite perfectibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span> of man
-is to be affirmed, although we do not know the concrete forms that
-progress and perfectibility will assume (not knowing them, because now
-it imports not to <i>know,</i> but to <i>do</i> them), then there is no meaning
-in positing as a mystery the immortality of the individual soul, or the
-existence of God; for these are not <i>facts</i> that may or may not happen
-sooner or later, but <i>concepts</i> that must be proved to be in themselves
-thinkable and not contradictory, or to determine in what form they are
-thinkable and not contradictory. Their thinkability will indeed be
-a mystery, but of the kind that it is a duty to make clear, because
-synonymous with obscurity or mental confusion. What has so far been
-demonstrated has been their unthinkability in the traditional form.
-Nor is it true that they correspond to profound demands of the human
-soul. Man does not seek a God external to himself and almost a despot,
-who commands and benefits him capriciously; nor does he aspire to an
-immortality of insipid ease: but he seeks for that God which he has in
-himself, and aspires to that activity, which is both Life and Death.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VI</h4>
-
-
-<h4>TWO ELUCIDATIONS RELATING TO HISTORIC AND ÆSTHETIC</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The relation of desires and actions; and two problems of
-Historic and of Æsthetic.</i></div>
-
-<p>From the consideration of the practical activity in its dialectic, and
-in particular from the theory relating to desire and to action, shines
-forth, if we mistake not, the full light that has hitherto perhaps been
-invoked in vain upon certain capital points of Historic and Æsthetic,
-which, when treating of those disciplines, we were obliged either
-hardly to touch upon, or to develop in a manner altogether inadequate.
-The reason of this was that an adequate development, to be convincing,
-demanded as presupposition, a minute exposition as to the nature, the
-relations and the constitution of the practical activity, all of them
-things that could not be treated incidentally.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>History and art.</i></div>
-
-<p>History or historical narrative is, as we know, very closely related
-to art, in contradistinction to the abstract sciences, since both
-art and history<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> do not construct concepts of class, but represent
-concrete and individuated facts. History, however, is not art pure and
-simple, but is distinguished from it, because artistic representation
-is in it continually illuminated with the critical distinction
-between the real and the possible, what has happened and what has
-been imagined, the existing and the inexisting, with the consequent
-determinations connected with them, as to this or that particular mode
-of reality, event, and existence, that have taken place. In every
-historical narrative are always to be found, understood or implied, the
-affirmations that the narrative is real, that a different narrative
-would be imaginary, that the reality of the event in question properly
-belongs to this or that concept of politics, rights, war, diplomacy,
-economy, and so on. All this is quite absent from art, which is by
-nature ingenuous and free of critical discernment; so much so, that
-hardly have its representations become objects of reflection, than they
-are dissolved as art, to reappear with a changed appearance (no longer
-youthful, but virile or senile), as history.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The concept of existentiality in history.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if this distinction between art and history be precisely determined
-gnoseologically, when it has been said that in history the predicate
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> existentiality is added to mere representation (and, therefore,
-all the other predicates connected with the case, referring to the
-various forms of existence), and that therefore, the representative
-and artistic form of history contains in itself rational and
-philosophical method as precedent, yet there always remains the
-ulterior philosophical problem: What is the origin of that predicate
-of reality or existentiality on which all the others lean? We have
-already demonstrated that it was altogether inadmissible to derive it
-from a mysterious faculty called <i>Faith,</i> or to consider it as the
-apprehension of something extraneous to the spirit in universal, as <i>a
-datum or position.</i> And we also stated that if the spirit recognize
-its existence, yet it cannot attain to the criterion elsewhere than
-from itself; which criterion was nothing but the first reflection of
-the spirit upon the practical activity itself, giving rise to the
-duplication of reality that has happened and reality only desired, or
-of reality and irreality, of existing and inexisting.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its origin in the Philosophy of the practical: action and
-the existing, desires and the unexisting.</i></div>
-
-<p>All this now becomes a simple consequence of the connection that
-has been made clear between desire and action. The cognoscitive
-spirit, when it apprehends and ideally remakes this connection, has,
-in enunciating it, also enunciated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> for the first time the couples
-of terms that we have already mentioned and that variously express
-the criterion of existence. To distinguish desires from actions is
-tantamount to distinguishing the unreal from the real, the existing
-from the unexisting, and to think the practical act is tantamount
-to thinking the concept of existence and of effectual reality. For
-the determination of the relation between desire and action, and
-only for that, the criterion of existence is not necessary, because
-that relation is itself that criterion. To say "this is a desire"
-means, "this does not exist"; to say "this is an action" means, "this
-exists." The desires are possibility; the resolutive and volitional
-act or action, is actuality. And it is also evident that existent
-and inexistent are not separable, as though the inexistent were
-heterogeneous to the existent; the inexistent exists in its way, as
-possibility is possible reality; the phantasm exists in the fancy and
-desire in the spirit that desires. Thus the posing of the one term is
-also the posing of the other, as correlative. What is repugnant and
-contradictory is the introduction of the one term into the other. This
-takes place, for instance, when in narrating the history, reality that
-has happened is mingled as one single<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> thing with reality dreamed of or
-desired, and history is turned into <i>legend.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>History as distinction between actions and desires, and art
-as indistinction.</i></div>
-
-<p>It can be said that history always represents actions, and in this is
-implicit that it represents at the same time also desires, but only in
-so far as it distinguishes them from actions: history, therefore, is
-perception and memory of perception, and in it fancies and imaginations
-are also perceived as such and arranged in their place. And it would
-also be possible to say that art represents only desires, and is
-therefore all fancy and never perception, all possible reality and
-never effectual reality. But since to art is wanting the distinctive
-criterion between desires and actions, it in truth represents actions
-as desires and desires as actions, the real as possible, and the
-possible as real; hence it would be more correct to say that art is
-on the near side of the possible and the real, it is pure of these
-distinctions, and is therefore pure imagination or <i>pure intuition.</i>
-Desires and actions are, we know, of the same stuff, and art assumes
-that stuff just as it is, careless of the new elaboration that it will
-receive in an ulterior grade of the spirit, which is indeed impossible
-without that first and merely fantastic elaboration. Likewise when art
-takes possession of historical material, it removes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> from it just the
-historical character, the critical elements, and by this very fact
-reduces it once more to mere intuition.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The purely fantastic and the imaginary.</i></div>
-
-<p>It must further be noted that the purely fantastic, which is the
-representation of a desire, must not be confounded with the mechanical
-combination of images, that can be made idly, for amusement, or for
-practical ends. This operation (analogous to that of the intellect upon
-the pure concepts and representations, when it arbitrarily combines
-them in the pseudo-concepts), is secondary and derivative; and it
-presupposes the first, which provides it with the material that it cuts
-up and combines. Nothing is more extraneous and repugnant to poetry
-than this artificial <i>imagining,</i> precisely because it is external and
-repugnant to reality. Hence his would be a vain objection who should
-coldly and capriciously combine the most different images and ask for
-an explanation of the whole, with desire as the fundamental principle.
-Such combinations as these, since they do not belong to poetry, are
-void of real psychical content.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Art as lyrical or representation of feelings.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if the relation between desire and action be the ultimate reason
-for the distinction between art and history, and this distinction be
-the theoretical reflection of that real relation, the conception<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> of
-art as representation of volitional facts, taken in their quite general
-and indeterminate nature, in which desire is as action and action as
-desire, reveals why art affirms itself as <i>representation of feeling,</i>
-and why a work of art does not seem to possess and does not possess
-value, save from its <i>lyrical</i> character and from the imprint of the
-artist's personality. The work of art that reasons or instructs as
-to things that have happened, and finds a substitute for intimate
-and lyrical connections in historical reasonings and connections, is
-justly and universally condemned as cold and ineffectual. We do not
-ask the artist for a philosophical system nor for a relation of facts
-(if all this is to be found in his work it is <i>per accidens),</i> but
-for a dream of his own, for nothing but the expression of a world
-desired or abhorred, or partly desired and partly abhorred. If he
-make us live again in this dream the rapture of joy or the incubus of
-terror, in solemnity or in humility, in tragedy or in laughter, that
-suffices. Facts and concepts, and the question as to the metaphysical
-constitution of reality and how it has been developed in time, are all
-things that we shall ask of others.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Identity of ingenuous reality and feeling.</i></div>
-
-<p>It may seem that in this way the field of art has been much restricted
-and the ingenuous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> representation of the real excluded from it. But
-this ingenuous representation is just the representation of reality as
-dream. For reality is nothing (as we henceforth know) than becoming,
-possibility that passes into actuality, desire that becomes action,
-from which desire springs forth again unsatiated. The artist who
-represents it ingenuously, produces the lyric for this very reason. For
-him there is no necessity to reach it from without, as a new element:
-if he do this, he is a bad artist, and will be blamed as a hunter of
-emotions, emphatic, convulsive, wearisomely sentimental, forcedly
-jocose, an introducer of his own caprice into the coherence of the
-work, a confounder of his empirical with his artistic personality,
-which exists in the empirical individual, but is not equivalent to it.
-The feeling that the true artist portrays is that of things, <i>lacrymae
-rerum</i>; and by the identity of feeling and volition, of volition and
-reality already demonstrated in the Philosophy of the practical, things
-are themselves that feeling. The characteristic that Schelling and
-Schopenhauer noted in music, of reproducing, not indeed the ideas, but
-the ideal rhythm of the universe, and of objectifying the will itself,
-belongs equally to all the other forms of art, because it is the
-essence itself of Art, or of pure intuition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Artists and the will.</i></div>
-
-<p>An obvious confirmation of this theory is also the empirical
-observation often made, that the men who lose themselves in desires
-are rather poets than men of action, dreamers rather than actors; and
-in respect to this, that poets who seem to have the soul overflowing
-with energetic plans, magnanimous loves, and fierce hatreds are the
-most incapable in the field of action, and the worst of captains in
-practical struggles; because those plans, those loves and hates, are
-not will, but desires, and desires already weakened as such, because
-they are no longer in process of volitional synthetization, but have
-become the objects of contemplation and of dream. He who reads the
-biographies of artists, or has dealings with artists in daily life,
-almost always has the impression that their gusts of passion are
-nothing but poetry <i>about to break forth,</i> as a green bud that opens
-and breaks the brown sheath. And if this process be painful, that
-is because every travail of birth is painful. One sees, indeed, how
-everything generally ends <i>par des chansons.</i> A fine poem and the
-sufferer is calm again.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Actions and myths.</i></div>
-
-<p>This also explains why individual actions and practical collective
-movements are accompanied with hopes, beliefs, and <i>myths.</i> These have
-no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> logical or historical truth, but it is on the other hand impossible
-to criticize them, because they are not error, but fantastic projection
-of the state of soul of individuals and groups of individuals in
-action, and testify to the existence of desires ready to transform
-themselves into will and action. Utopias are poetry, they are not
-practical acts; but beneath that poetry there is always the reality
-of a desire that is a factor of future history. Hence it also happens
-that poets are thought of as <i>seers,</i> when the utopia of to-day becomes
-the reality of the morrow. The Utopian and semi-poetic Address of the
-Italian patriots to the Directory of June 18, 1799,<a name="FNanchor_1_48" id="FNanchor_1_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_48" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the not less
-Utopian Proclamation of Rimini of 1815, the song of Manzoni, in which
-rang out the fateful verse,</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-We shall not be free if we are not one,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>will become, for the Italians of 1860, effective action and <i>historical
-event.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Art as the pure representation of becoming and the artistic
-form of thought.</i></div>
-
-<p>Pure intuition, ingenuous representation of reality, representation
-of feeling, lyricism and personal intonation, are then all equivalent
-formulæ, all of them definitions of the æsthetic activity and of art.
-And it would be superfluous to repeat that art thus characterized
-remains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span> the concrete form of the superior theoretical grades of the
-spirit. In fact, logical thought or concept is also volition, owing to
-the unity of the spirit, and the representation of such volition is the
-logos made flesh, the concept that incorporates itself in language,
-palpitating with the drama of its becoming. What word of man is there
-that is not personally and lyrically coloured, whether he communicate
-the truth of science or narrate the incidents of life? And how could we
-deny a place among the dramas that agitate human life and art portrays,
-to that drama of dramas, which is the drama of thought and of the
-historical comprehension of the real?</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_48" id="Footnote_1_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_48"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> B. Croce, <i>Relazioni dei patrioti napoletani col
-Direttorio e col Consolato e l' idea dell' unità italiana,</i> Napoli,
-1902, pp. 69-73.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VII</h4>
-
-
-<h4>HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The problem of freedom.</i></div>
-
-<p>I. For the reasons stated in their place, a history of the concept of
-freedom would end by becoming almost a general history of philosophy.
-Denied in different ways in the mechanistic and deterministic
-conceptions (from the Stoics to Spinoza), and in the theological and
-arbitraristic (from Epicurus to St. Augustine and the mystics), that
-concept afterwards continually assumed a more and more conciliatory
-form; an indication that the question must be put in an altogether
-different way. This movement culminated in the Kantian theory, in
-which freedom, defended against the psychologists, is withdrawn from
-natural causality and affirmed <i>a priori,</i> as causality by means
-of freedom; but, at the same time, Kant did not succeed in fully
-justifying it, owing to his failure in the solution of the antitheses,
-the defect of the Kantian philosophy, which never really became a
-system. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span> embarrassments and absurdities to which the unsolved
-antithesis between liberty and causality gives rise, are sufficiently
-exemplified in a proposition to be found in the <i>Critique of Practical
-Reason</i>: "It would be possible to foresee what man will do in the
-future, if we possessed all the facts; yet he would be perfectly
-free."<a name="FNanchor_1_49" id="FNanchor_1_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_49" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> But notwithstanding these contradictions and embarrassments,
-the energetic affirmation of the principle of freedom by Kant (which
-had an altogether special certitude in Kant, in respect to the other
-two postulates of the practical reason, God and immortality, from
-which in this respect it was distinguished) helped to make prevalent
-the conviction of the impossibility of eliminating that concept or
-of escaping from it, and made of it the field of battle, where the
-fortunes of philosophy were decided. The problem of the freedom of
-willing is really solved or near to a solution, in those philosophies
-which do not fatigue themselves with it as a particular problem, but
-treat of it as something to be understood of itself, provided there
-be a non-mechanistic conception of reality, such as would not need
-special defence. This happens, not only with sentimentalists and
-mystics such as Jacobi and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> Schleiermacher, but also and above all in
-the Hegelian philosophy. Perhaps no philosopher has been less occupied
-with the problem of liberty than Hegel, just because he was always
-occupied with it. The will is free (he contents himself with saying);
-freedom is the fundamental determination of the will, as gravity is
-of matter; thus as gravity is matter itself, so is freedom the will.
-Hegel consequently saw true in the contest between arbitrarism and
-determinism, recognizing in determinism the merit of having given
-its value to the content, the datum, in opposition to the certainty
-of abstract auto-determination, so that freedom understood as free
-will is considered to be illusion. Free will is both determined and
-indetermined.<a name="FNanchor_2_50" id="FNanchor_2_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_50" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> But how Hegel could conciliate this theory of freedom
-with the mechanistic concept of nature that persists in him is another
-question. His failure to attain to this conciliation was perhaps among
-the reasons that made his profound solution of the antithesis between
-determinism and indeterminism seem a vain playing with words.</p>
-
-<p>After Hegel, a return was made to the Kantian doctrine, variously
-modified, in which is posited, now a double causality, now a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
-composition of diverging forces, now a double point of view, now two
-worlds, the one included in the other and dominated, the one by the
-principle of the conservation of energy, the other by that of increase.
-Such contradictory doctrines are to be found for example in Lotze
-and Wundt, to the latter of whom belongs the formula that the causal
-explanation is certainly to be applied to spiritual facts, but <i>a parte
-post,</i> not <i>a parte ante</i><a name="FNanchor_3_51" id="FNanchor_3_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_51" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> The philosophy of Bergson represents in a
-certain way a return to the sound idealistic view, which declares that
-the dilemma of determinism and indeterminism is surpassed.<a name="FNanchor_4_52" id="FNanchor_4_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_52" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of evil.</i></div>
-
-<p>II. The conception of the relation between bad and good, as reality
-opposed to reality, is mythological and religious (Parseeism,
-Manichæism, Jewish-Christian doctrine of the devil, etc.). But evil had
-already begun to reveal itself to the philosophical reflection of the
-ancients as the unreal, the not being; and this is explicitly affirmed
-in Neoplatonism. It was not, however, possible to understand this
-function of unreality, real in its way, without a general dialectical
-conception, which became very slowly mature. Without a dialectic
-conception, evil, conceived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> as unreality, becomes mere illusion, not
-so much a moment of the real as an equivocation of man philosophizing.
-This is clearly to be seen in Spinoza, who opposes the full laws of
-reality to the narrow laws of human nature, saying: <i>Quidquid nobis
-in natura ridiculum, absurdum aut malum videtur, id inde venit quod
-res tantum ex parte novimus, totiusque naturae ordinem et cohaerentium
-maxima ex parte ignoramus, et quod omnia ex usu nostrae rationis
-dirigi volumus, cum tamen id, quod malum esse dictat, non malum sit
-respectu ordinis et legum universae naturae; sed tantum solius nostrae
-naturae legum respectu.</i> For indeed, if evil, error and wickedness
-were something that had essence, God, who is the cause of all that
-has essence (continues Spinoza), would also be the cause of evil, of
-error, and of wickedness. But this is not so, because evil is nothing
-real. <i>Neronis matricidium</i> (he observes) <i>quatenus aliquid positivum
-comprehendebat, scelus non erat: nam facinus externum fecit, simulque
-intentionem ad trucidendam matrem Orestes habuit, et tamen, saltem ita
-uti Nero, non accusatur. Quodnam ergo Neronis scelus? Non aliud quam
-quod hoc facinore ostendit se ingratum, immisericordem ac inobedientem
-esse. Certum autem est, nihil horum aliquid essentiae exprimere,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> et
-idcirco Deum eorum non fuisse catisam, licet causa actus et intentionis
-Neronis fuerit</i><a name="FNanchor_5_53" id="FNanchor_5_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_53" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> But Spinoza was not able to determine in what sense
-Nero was really ungrateful, implacable, and disobedient, nor in what
-way such a judgment could be justified, owing to his idea of Substance,
-not as subject, spirit, activity, but as cause.</p>
-
-<p>Kant did not succeed in understanding the nature of evil; for him good
-and evil were "the categories of freedom,"<a name="FNanchor_6_54" id="FNanchor_6_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_54" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> and the view of Fichte
-who makes the radical evil to be <i>vis inertiae,</i> laziness (<i>Trägheit,</i>)
-which is in nature and in man as nature,<a name="FNanchor_7_55" id="FNanchor_7_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_55" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> represents progress in
-respect to the Kantian position. But only with the Hegelian dialectical
-view of evil, understood as negation, is evil at the same time given
-its right place; and its unreality, contradiction, which is no longer
-the product of illusion of thought, but of things themselves, in
-intimate contradiction with one another, if it be a blemish, is shown
-to be the blemish, not of human thought, but of reality.<a name="FNanchor_8_56" id="FNanchor_8_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_56" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Decision and freedom.</i></div>
-
-<p>III. Free will, too, is not considered as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> quality and character of
-complete liberty, but as its negation, will as contradiction, in the
-Hegelian philosophy. It was preceded in this respect, not only by Kant,
-but also by Descartes. Descartes wrote of the decision of indifference:
-<i>Cette indifférence que je sens lorsque je ne suis point porté vers
-un côté plutôt que vers un autre par le poids d'aucune raison est
-le plus bas degré de ma liberté, et fait plutôt paraître un défaut
-dans la connaissance qu'une perfection dans la volonté: car si je
-connaissais toujours clairement ce qui est vrai et ce qui est bon, je
-ne serais jamais en peine de délibérer quel jugement et quel choix je
-devrais faire; et ainsi je serais entièrement libre, sans jamais être
-indifférent.</i><a name="FNanchor_9_57" id="FNanchor_9_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_57" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-
-<p>Among the false formulæ of the <i>freedom of choice</i> can be mentioned
-that of Rosmini, who calls it <i>bilateral</i> freedom, or that of
-performing or not performing a given action.<a name="FNanchor_10_58" id="FNanchor_10_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_58" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> But since the spirit
-cannot be reduced to complete passivity, not to perform a given action
-is equivalent to performing a different one; and if this other action
-that presents itself before us be also not willed by us, then it will
-be another, and so on. Thus it is not a question of bilaterality, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
-of multiplicity of tendencies: not of the choice between two volitions,
-but of the synthesis of many appetites in one, which is the will or
-freedom.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Conscience and responsibility</i></div>
-
-<p>We may mention the disputes that have been preserved in the
-<i>Memorabilia</i> as to the greater responsibility of him who knows more
-(or wills more), as compared with him who knows less (or wills less),
-as to whether he that acts voluntarily be more unjust than he who
-acts involuntarily (ὁ ἑκὼν ἤ ὁ ἄκων). In this connection it is to
-be observed that he who voluntarily does not write or read well is
-certainly more grammatical than he who reads and writes ill through
-ignorance; and therefore that he who commits injustice while knowing
-what is just, is more just than he who commits it because he does not
-know what is just; and that he is better, who says what is false when
-he knows what is true, than he who says what is false, not knowing what
-is true. The dispute leads to the celebration of knowledge of self, or,
-as we should say, of knowing and possessing oneself.<a name="FNanchor_11_59" id="FNanchor_11_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_59" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>These thoughts are discussed anew in the <i>Hippias minor,</i> where
-the multiple difficulties are placed in relief and a conclusion
-reached that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> does not even satisfy those who propose it.<a name="FNanchor_12_60" id="FNanchor_12_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_60" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> It is
-henceforward clear that the question must be solved in the sense that
-he who is conscious of sinning is certainly a sinner, whereas he who
-is not conscious of so doing, does not sin at all; but this being even
-incapable of sinning is in itself a sin, and places the man who is in
-such a condition yet a degree lower. In the polemic of Pascal with the
-Jesuits&mdash;who maintained that in order to sin it was necessary to be
-conscious of one's own infirmity and of the suitable remedy, the wish
-to be healed and to ask it of God&mdash;the Jesuits were theoretically on
-the side of reason. <i>Croira-t-on, sur votre parole</i> (wrote Pascal),
-<i>que ceux qui sont plongés dans l'avarice, dans l'impudicité, dans
-les blasphèmes, dans le duel, dans la vengeance, dans les vols, dans
-les sacrilèges, aient véritablement le désir d'embrasser la chasteté,
-l'humilité et les autres vertus chrétiennes?</i> Nevertheless, it is
-inevitably so, if those acts of theirs are to be judged to be vices
-(and if they really are so). Hegel places himself on the side of
-Pascal, who accepts and refers to the following argument and reduction
-to the absurd: <i>Ils seront tous damnés ces demi-pécheurs qui ont
-quelque amour pour la vertu. Mais pour ces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span> francs-pécheurs, sans
-mélange, pleins et achevés, l'enfer ne les tient pas: ils ont trompé le
-diable à force de s'y abandonner.</i><a name="FNanchor_13_61" id="FNanchor_13_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_61" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>A reduction to the absurd which is not such: because the formula given
-as absurd expresses at bottom a very simple truth, which Hegel too
-stated in his own way, when he said that it was necessary to prefer
-self-will, evil, the erring Spirit, to the innocence of plants and
-animals, or of Nature.<a name="FNanchor_14_62" id="FNanchor_14_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_62" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The concept of duty.</i></div>
-
-<p>IV. A classical example of the disputes as to the principle of the
-Philosophy of the practical, arising from the consideration of this
-principle in its empirical formulations, can be furnished from the
-polemic of Herbart against Kant on the subject of <i>duty.</i> Herbart
-demonstrated that duty is not an original but a derived concept,
-and that it appears only when there is disagreement between the
-practical <i>ideas</i> and the <i>will</i>.<a name="FNanchor_15_63" id="FNanchor_15_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_63" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> But it would be possible to
-demonstrate with the same method that the practical ideas are derived
-concepts, because they do indeed presuppose the moral will, from the
-manifestations of which they are constituted by means of abstraction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
-Herbart was in the right against Kant, but he afterwards let the axe
-fall on his own feet. The hard formula of the imperative preferred by
-Kant had already been combated by Frederick Schiller, who accentuated
-the moment of pleasure, sympathy and enthusiasm in the good action.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Repentance and remorse.</i></div>
-
-<p>As to the other concepts and to the disputes to which they gave rise,
-it will be opportune to mention repentance and remorse. Spinoza does
-not see that it has value as a necessary negative moment, for he
-declared: <i>Poenitentia virtus non est, sive ex ratione non oritur; sed
-is qui facti poenitet bis miser, seu impotens est. Nam primo prava
-cupiditate, dein tristitia vinci se patitur;</i> and he concludes by
-assigning to it value for altogether empirical motives. Men rarely
-live (he says) <i>ex dictamine rationis</i>; and yet repentance and other
-similar affections do more good than harm, and if it be necessary to
-sin <i>in istam partem potius peccandum. Terret vulgus, nisi metuat.</i><a name="FNanchor_16_64" id="FNanchor_16_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_64" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
-But it was Hegel who instituted a regular persecution of the concept
-of repentance and remorse. There are certain passages in his works
-that should be read in connection with this question, in order that
-we may clearly see how he had an eye to contingent and historical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
-events in his criticism. "In the Christian world in general (he writes)
-there is in force an ideal of the perfect man, who cannot exist as
-multitude in a people; and if this ideal is found realized in monks,
-quakers, and such-like pious folk, it must be remarked that a mass of
-these sad creatures does not constitute a people, just as lice and
-parasitic plants cannot exist by themselves, but only on an organic
-body. In order to constitute a people, it would be above all desirable
-to destroy that lamblike gentleness of theirs, that vanity which is
-occupied solely with their own persons, the caring for them and holding
-them dear, and has always before it the image and consciousness of
-its own excellence. For life in the universal and for the universal
-demands, not such vile and listless gentleness, but an energetic
-gentleness, not a thinking of oneself and one's own sins, but of the
-universal and of what should be done for it. To him who nourishes so
-false an ideal, men must always appear to be affected with weakness
-and corruption, and that ideal to be so constituted that it can never
-be translated into reality. They attribute importance to trifles, to
-which no reasonable person pays special attention, and believe that
-such weaknesses and defects exist,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> even when they are not remarked.
-Nor should we admire their greatness of soul, but note rather that
-their corruption lies precisely in standing still and looking at that
-which they call weaknesses and errors, and in making out of nothing
-something that exists. A man with such weaknesses and defects is
-immediately quit of them, if he do not attach to them importance." The
-observations that Hegel makes in his <i>Æsthetic,</i> regarding the type of
-the Magdalen in Italian art, are in this respect especially curious.
-"In Italian painting the Magdalen appears, both within and without,
-as the <i>beautiful sinner;</i> sin in her is as seductive as conversion.
-But here neither sin nor sanctity are to be taken too seriously. She
-was pardoned, because she had loved much; she sinned through love and
-beauty; and the affecting element lies in this, that she has scruples
-about her love, and beautiful and sensible as she is, sheds torrents of
-tears. But her error is not that she has loved so much; her beautiful
-and moving error is precisely that she believes herself to be a sinner,
-whereas her sensitive beauty gives the impression that she could not
-have been otherwise than noble and of lofty senses in her love."<a name="FNanchor_17_65" id="FNanchor_17_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_65" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of the passions.</i></div>
-
-<p>V. The relation between the passions or desires and the will has rather
-been studied at the moment of strife between the will and the passions,
-than for itself and within its two terms, although Aristotle had
-already begun an analysis as to the diversity of appetites or βούλησις
-in respect to the intention or προαίρεσις, observing that the intention
-relates only to what can be done, whereas the appetition relates also
-to things that are impossible.<a name="FNanchor_18_66" id="FNanchor_18_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_66" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The opposed schools of the Cynics
-and Cyrenaïcs, Stoics and Epicureans, and others such, were chiefly
-concerned with the antithesis of the passions and the rational will;
-but the formulæ of all these schools, if they have some empirical value
-as precepts of life more or less suitable for definite individuals,
-classes and times, possess none or very little for philosophy. Cynics
-and Cyrenaïcs, Stoics and Epicureans, they seem rather to be monks
-following this or that rule than philosophers. The question as to the
-mode of freeing oneself from the passions and of dominating them,
-which lingered till the treatises of Descartes and Spinoza, has
-also a chiefly empirical character. G. B. Vico took up a position
-opposed to the two opposed degenerations arising from those practical
-tendencies, that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span> "quenching the senses," and of "making a rule of
-them." He despised both Stoics and Epicureans as "monastic or solitary
-philosophers," and maintained as "a philosopher politician," that it is
-needful "not to tear away his own nature from man, nor to abandon him
-in his corruption," but "to moderate the human passions and to make of
-them human virtues."<a name="FNanchor_19_67" id="FNanchor_19_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_67" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> Rarely has the defence of the passions enjoyed
-an equally limpid philosophical enunciation; as a rule, and even in
-Hegel, it has been directed chiefly against certain social tendencies,
-rather than against philosophical doctrines.<a name="FNanchor_20_68" id="FNanchor_20_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_68" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> The absolute
-abandonment to the passions or their absolute destruction, are theories
-that have not had true and proper representatives.&mdash;The confusion
-between the various meanings of the word "passion," understood now
-as appetition, or concrete and actual passion, now as a state of the
-soul (joy and sorrow), now as volitional habit, is to be found in the
-various treatises that we have already had occasion to record. It is
-natural that their character of indifference when understood as habits
-should have often been observed. Thus for Descartes, <i>elles sont toutes
-bonnes de leur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> nature et nous n'avons rien à éviter que leurs mauvais
-usages ou leur excès.</i><a name="FNanchor_21_69" id="FNanchor_21_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_69" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Virtues and Vices.</i></div>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the erroneous form of the defence of the passions,
-consisting of making them the preparation or cause of the virtues, is
-already to be found in the English philosophers of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries (More, Shaftesbury, etc.); and in the
-celebrated <i>Fable of the Bees</i> of Mandeville, it assumes the aspect of
-a paradoxical theory, in which the vices are looked upon as promoters
-and factors of progress, morality as inefficacious and harmful for this
-purpose. And La Rochefoucauld had written: "<i>Les vices entrent dans
-la composition des vertus comme les poisons dans la composition des
-remèdes.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_22_70" id="FNanchor_22_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_70" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of individuality: Schleiermacher.</i></div>
-
-<p>All these are false or crude forms, in which is involved the doctrine
-of the right to individuality, and they have always constituted and
-still constitute its danger. This doctrine received its most energetic
-expression in the romantic and preromantic period, thanks above all to
-Schleiermacher, after it had been referred to in a rather vague way by
-Jacobi.<a name="FNanchor_23_71" id="FNanchor_23_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_71" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<p>"For some time" (writes Schleiermacher in the <i>Monologues</i>) "I too was
-satisfied that I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> discovered Reason; and venerating equality with
-the <i>Unique Being</i> as that which is most lofty, I believed that there
-was one single measure for every case, that action should be in all of
-them the same, and that each one is distinguished from the other only
-in so far as it occupies a place of its own in space. I believed that
-humanity manifested itself differently only in the variety of external
-facts; but that the internal man, the individual, was not a being
-peculiarly (<i>eigenthümlich</i>) constructed, and that each was everywhere
-equal to the other." "But afterwards was revealed to me that which
-instantly raised me to a high state of exaltation: it became clear that
-every man must represent humanity in his own way, in an altogether
-individual combination of its elements, in order that it may manifest
-itself in every mode, and that everything most different may issue from
-its bosom and become effectual in the fulness of time and space....
-Owing to this thought, I felt myself to be a work individually willed
-and therefore elected by the Divinity and such that it must enjoy a
-particular form and culture; and the free act to which this thought
-belongs has collected and intimately joined together the elements of
-human nature in a peculiar existence."</p>
-
-<p>"While I now do whatever I do according to my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span> spirit and sense,
-my fancy places before me as very clear proof of the internal
-determination, a thousand other modes, in which it would be possible to
-act otherwise without offending the laws of humanity: I rethink myself
-in a thousand different forms, in order to discover with the greater
-certainty that which is especially mine."<a name="FNanchor_24_72" id="FNanchor_24_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_72" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Romantic and very modern theories.</i></div>
-
-<p>But this peculiarity (<i>Eigenthümlichkeit,</i>) opportunely placed in
-relief by Schleiermacher, and a thought much loved by the Romantics
-(Herder, Jacobi, G. Humboldt, the Schlegels, etc.), is often seen to
-degenerate into individual caprice, even in those times, as may be
-observed in the sort of caricature which Frederick Schlegel made of the
-Fichtian I, become the individual I, and in the notorious <i>Lucinde,</i>
-to which the same Schleiermacher inconsiderately devoted a series of
-letters of comment and defence. The last offshoots of the Romantics
-were Max Stirner and Frederick Nietzsche: in the former the value
-of individuality becomes changed into an affirmation of spasmodic
-egotism; in the second there is a continuous mixture of true and false,
-of good and of bad individuality, as is natural in a writer whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
-<i>Eigenthümlichkeit</i> was rather that of a poet than of a thinker.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The concept of development and progress.</i></div>
-
-<p>VI. We have discussed elsewhere Hegel's concept of development, and
-his thought as synthesis of opposites, which essentially belongs to
-the Hegelian philosophy and has been superficially treated and adopted
-by other philosophical schools, and this is not the place either to
-retrace their history or to demonstrate into what errors Hegel fell
-through abusing the truth that he had discovered. Among the errors of
-that philosophy (as for that matter of all contemporary philosophies
-and of those that have followed one another down to our own day), is
-to be noted the persistence of the concept of Nature as a mode of
-reality opposed to the mode of the Spirit, whence came a dualism that
-was not effectually surpassed, save in appearance. The doctrine of
-development by opposites is to be understood as accepted and maintained
-here, with the correction of the concept of nature, and also the
-doctrine of the synthesis of opposites, free from the use or abuse
-of it by Hegel for distinct concepts (and worse still, for empirical
-concepts). As for the concept of Providence, which is neither Fate
-nor Fortune, nor the work of a transcendent God, this, in its modern
-form, goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span> back to the <i>Scienza nuova</i> of Vico and is not to be
-confounded with the personal religious beliefs that Vico held and kept
-distinct from his philosophical concept as to immanent Providence.
-The same concept reappears in the Hegelian philosophy under the form
-of the Idea, or of the <i>astuteness of Reason,</i> which avails itself
-of men as its instruments and managers of business.<a name="FNanchor_25_73" id="FNanchor_25_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_73" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> Finally, the
-conception of cosmic progress was extraneous to the oriental world,
-to the Græco-Roman, and to the Christian worlds, prevailing in turn
-in the latter that of decadence from an original state of perfection
-and of circles or returns. In its modern form it takes its origin from
-thinkers free of these religious views, who merge in the philosophies
-of becoming and of evolution. But the concept of progress destroyed
-itself in many of these rationalistic philosophies, the "disappearance
-of evil" being posited as possible (Spencer), and a definite state
-of perfection conceived (though transferred from the past into the
-future), that is to say a Reality that should be Reality, indeed,
-perfect Reality having ceased to be development, that is to say, itself.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_49" id="Footnote_1_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_49"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Kr. d. prakt. Vern.</i> p. 119.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_50" id="Footnote_2_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_50"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Phil. d. Rechtes,</i> §§ 4, 15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_51" id="Footnote_3_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_51"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Lotze, <i>Grundzüge der Ethik</i> (Leipzig, 1884), pp. 26,
-30-31; Wundt, <i>Ethik</i><sup>2</sup> (Stuttgart, 1892), pp. 463-464.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_52" id="Footnote_4_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_52"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Essai sur les données immédiates de la conscience</i>
-(Paris, 1898).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_53" id="Footnote_5_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_53"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>Tract, theol.-pol.</i> vi. c. 6; <i>Ethica,</i> p. iv. intr.;
-<i>Epist.</i>36 (<i>Opera,</i> pp. 208, 378, 597).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_54" id="Footnote_6_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_54"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Kr. d. pr. Vernf.</i> p. 79.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_55" id="Footnote_7_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_55"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>System der Sittenlehre,</i> in <i>Werke,</i> iv. pp. 198-205.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_56" id="Footnote_8_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_56"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> See my study: <i>Ciò che è vivo e ciò che è morto della
-filosofia di Hegel</i> (Bari, 1907).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_57" id="Footnote_9_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_57"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>Médit.</i> iv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_58" id="Footnote_10_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_58"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> For example, <i>Compendio di Etica</i> (Roma, 1907), p. 56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_59" id="Footnote_11_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_59"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>Mentor,</i> iv. c. 2, § 19 <i>sqq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_60" id="Footnote_12_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_60"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Hippias minor,</i> 375.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_61" id="Footnote_13_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_61"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Pascal, <i>Provine,</i> i, iv.; Hegel, <i>Phil. d. Rechtes,</i> §
-40.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_62" id="Footnote_14_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_62"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>Enc.</i>§ 248.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_63" id="Footnote_15_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_63"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> <i>Allg. prakt. Phil.</i> pp. 121-122; <i>Einl. i. d. Phil.</i>
-(trad, ital.), pp. 118, 171, 224.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_64" id="Footnote_16_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_64"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <i>Ethic,</i> iv. prop. 54, p. 480.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_65" id="Footnote_17_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_65"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> <i>Gesch. d. Phil.</i> ii. 240-241; <i>Vorles. üb. Aesth.</i> ii.
-162-163.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_66" id="Footnote_18_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_66"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nicom.</i> Bk. iii. cc. 2-3, 1111-1113.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_67" id="Footnote_19_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_67"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>Scienza nuova seconda,</i> degn. 5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_68" id="Footnote_20_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_68"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>Phän. d. Geistes,</i> pp. 484-486; <i>Encycl.</i> § 474; <i>Phil.
-d. Rechtes,</i> § 124; <i>Phil. d. Gesch.</i> pp. 39-41.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_69" id="Footnote_21_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_69"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>Traité des passions,</i> iii. § 211.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_70" id="Footnote_22_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_70"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Maximes,</i> n. 182 (Ed. Garnier, p. 43).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_71" id="Footnote_23_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_71"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>Woldemar,</i> pp. 112-113.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_72" id="Footnote_24_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_72"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> <i>Monologen,</i> in <i>Werke,</i> i. 366-368, 372.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_73" id="Footnote_25_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_73"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> See the study of Hegel mentioned.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="THIRD_SECTION" id="THIRD_SECTION">THIRD SECTION</a></h5>
-
-
-<h4>UNITY OF THE THEORETICAL AND THE PRACTICAL</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Double result; precedence of the theoretical over the
-practical and of the practical over the theoretical.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>The study of the practical activity in its relations that we made in
-the first section has removed all doubt as to the thesis that the
-practical activity presupposes the theoretical, or that <i>knowledge is
-the necessary precedent of volition and action.</i><a name="FNanchor_1_74" id="FNanchor_1_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_74" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> But the succeeding
-study of the practical activity in its dialectic having led to the
-result that the practical activity is reality itself in its immediacy,
-and that no other reality (or we may say <i>other nature</i>) is conceivable
-outside will-action, compels us also to affirm the opposite thesis,
-that the theoretic activity presupposes the practical, and that
-<i>the will is the necessary precedent of knowledge</i>.<a name="FNanchor_2_75" id="FNanchor_2_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_75" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> And it is a
-precedent, not indeed in the sense admitted from the beginning, of
-the necessary implication of the will in every theoretical act, as
-will to know, by means of the unity of the Spirit<a name="FNanchor_3_76" id="FNanchor_3_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_76" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> (for this will
-is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span> subsidiary and not constitutive; but if it become constitutive it
-produces, as has been seen, wilfulness and the theoretical error<a name="FNanchor_4_77" id="FNanchor_4_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_77" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>),
-but precisely in the sense of a constitutive will, without which no
-knowledge would be thinkable.</p>
-
-<p>Knowledge, indeed, is knowledge of something: it is the remaking of
-a fact, an ideal recreation of a real creation. If there have not
-previously been a desire, an aspiration, a nostalgia, there cannot be
-poetry; if there have not been an impulse or a heroic deed, the epic
-cannot arise; if the sun do not illumine a landscape, or a soul invoke
-a ray of sunlight upon the countryside, the picture of a luminous
-landscape cannot exist. And if there be not a world of reality that
-generates a world of representations, Philosophy, which is the search
-for the universal, is not conceivable, nor History, the understanding
-of the individual.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Error of those who maintain the exclusive precedence of
-either.</i></div>
-
-<p>The indubitability of this affirmation, which no force of sophistry
-can destroy, renders fallacious both the opposite theses, which have
-several times been variously proposed and maintained: the exclusive
-priority of the theoretic, and the exclusive priority of the practical.</p>
-
-<p>Those who maintain them enter into so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span> desperate a contest with
-reality, that in order to issue from it without too much dishonour,
-they are finally compelled to call in the aid of a third term, which is
-in turn either thought that is not thought, or will that is not will,
-or something grey that contains in itself thought and will, without
-being either the one or the other, nor the unity of that duality. On
-the one hand is postulated a Logos, a thought <i>in se</i> (one does not
-understand how this can ever think and be thought), and it is made to
-adopt the resolution (which one does not understand how it can ever
-adopt) of coming forth <i>from itself</i> and creating a nature, in order
-to be able to return finally to itself, by means of this alienation,
-and to be henceforth <i>per se,</i> that is to say, able to think and to
-will. The defect of this artificial construction, its mythological and
-religious origin, can be said to have been already revealed, in the
-comparison employed with reference to it by the author who maintained
-it (Hegel), to the effect that the Logos is God <i>before</i> the creation
-of the world: a God, that is to say, altogether unreal and absurd.
-On the other hand, the excogitation of a <i>blind Will</i> (Schelling,
-Schopenhauer) completely tallies with this Thought that does not think
-because it has not previously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span> willed, and that does not truly will
-because it has not previously thought, and all of a sudden fashions
-for itself the instrument of knowledge, to succeed in surpassing
-itself in this alienation from itself, by means of liberation from
-willing obtained in the contemplation of the ideas and in asceticism.
-Here, too, we must repeat that the one error passes over and converts
-itself into the other, and this inevitable conversion causes the other
-secondary and hybrid forms of theory to have but slight interest, those
-in which the priority has been conceived as that of fancy, or feeling,
-or the unconscious, or the indifferentiated, and the like, all of which
-represent vain efforts to suppress one of the two fundamental forms of
-the spirit, or to derive them from a third, which consciousness does
-not reveal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Problem of the unity of this duality.</i></div>
-
-<p>This however does not mean that the demand to conceive the link of that
-duality, or the unity of the theoretical and the practical, manifested
-in all these erroneous attempts, is not legitimate. But in order to
-conceive this, it is necessary to insist above all upon the reality of
-this duality, of which is sought the connection and the unity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Not the duality of opposites.</i></div>
-
-<p>This connection cannot be the relation or synthesis of opposites. The
-theoretical is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span> the opposite of the practical, nor the practical
-the opposite of the theoretical: the opposite of the theoretical is
-error or the false, as the opposite of the practical is the volitional
-contradiction or evil. The theoretical, far from being negative, is
-positive, not less than the practical, and inversely. Neither form can
-therefore be in any way debased to a simple opposite. Opposition is
-intrinsic to the spirit and is to be found in each one of its forms:
-hence the general value of the spirit (activity against passivity,
-rationality and reality against irrationality and unreality, being
-against not-being) and that of its special forms (beautiful against
-ugly, true against false, useful against useless, good against evil).
-But precisely for this reason, it cannot constitute the character of
-one form in respect to the other: neither that of the true against the
-good, nor that of the beautiful against the useful, and so on.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Not duality of finite and infinite.</i></div>
-
-<p>Nor can the connection be thought as are thought the subdivisions of
-the theoretic and the practical forms, or according to the relations
-of individual to universal, of finite to infinite, the first of
-which terms conditions the second, but is conditioned by it only in
-an implicit manner. Of the two theoretical forms (and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span> we shall see
-further on that the forms of the practical are also two), the æsthetic
-precedes the logical and is autonomous: a song, a story, a statue, do
-not express any concept; but the philosophy that gives the concept, is
-at the same time fancy, expression, word: the prose of the philosopher
-is his song. The æsthetic form is the knowledge of the individual;
-the logical that of the universal, which is also individual. But this
-relation that arises within the theoretic, as within the practical
-form, cannot be transported to the relation of the two forms without
-logical incoherence: the subdivision, so to speak, is not the
-division. Thought is not the finite in respect of willing, which is
-the infinite; nor is the will the finite in respect of thought, which
-is the infinite. Thought and will are both of them at once finite
-and infinite, individual and universal. He who passes from action to
-thought, does not limit his own being by becoming finite; nor does he
-limit it by passing from thought to action; or better, in both cases he
-makes himself finite to attain to the infinite; poet to open to himself
-the way to the thought of the eternally true; man of action, that he
-may dedicate his work to the eternal good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Perfect analogy of the two forms, theoretic and practical.</i></div>
-
-<p>The two forms, theoretical and practical, both positive, both a
-connection of finite and infinite, correspond in everything, as has
-already appeared from our exposition, in which the appeal to the one
-from the problems of the other has always aided a better penetration
-of the nature of such problems and the finding of their solution.
-Thus in both there is genius and creation (geniuses of art and of
-thought, and geniuses of action); in both, reproduction and judgment
-take place in the same way (æsthetic taste, practical taste; history
-of art and history of philosophy, history of actions); in both arise
-representative concepts and empirical rules. The analogy will be
-better illustrated by what is to follow, when will be demonstrated the
-correspondence between art and economic, logical thought and ethicity,
-historical discrimination and ethical discrimination, empirical
-concepts and laws of action, and so on.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Not a parallelism, but a circle.</i></div>
-
-<p>If this analogy exclude the possibility of the two forms being
-<i>unequal,</i> it must not, on the other hand, be perverted with the
-object of conceiving them <i>parallel,</i> as would perhaps be pleasing
-to the parallelists of spirit and nature, soul and body; this is an
-expedient that is certainly easy, but certainly not satisfying. They
-are not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span> parallel, but are on the contrary bound, the one to the
-other, in such a way that the one proceeds from the other. From the
-æsthetic apprehension of reality, from philosophical reflection upon
-it, from historical reconstruction, which is its result, is obtained
-that knowledge of the actual situation, on which alone is formed and
-can be formed the volitional and practical synthesis, the new action.
-And this new action is in its turn the material of the new æsthetic
-figuration, of the new philosophical reflection, of the new historical
-reconstruction. In short, knowledge and will, theory and practice,
-are not two parallels, but two lines, such that the head of the one
-is joined to the tail of the other; or, if a geometric symbol also be
-desired, such that they constitute, not a parallelism, but a <i>circle.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The circle of Reality: thought and being, subject and
-object.</i></div>
-
-<p>They constitute therefore the circle of reality and of life, which is
-duality-unity of thought and being, of subject and object, in such
-a way that to think the subject is the same as to think the subject
-of an object, and to think an object is the same as to think the
-object of a subject. In truth, it sometimes seems strange and almost
-impossible that such hard and difficult questions should have arisen
-as to the objectivity of knowledge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span> and as to whether thought attains
-to being, or whether there be a being beyond thought. Thought is such,
-precisely because it affirms being, and being is such, precisely
-because it is generated by a thought. It is only when we remember
-that in those questions were included others of a very difficult and
-intricate nature, concerning divine transcendency and the content of
-the concept of nature (gnoseological questions, which it is the glory
-of modern philosophy to have asked and solved);&mdash;it is only then that
-we understand how the relation of thought and being, of knowing and of
-willing, has also become obscure. Kant was forced to come to a stop
-before the mystery of reality, because he had not altogether conquered
-transcendency, nor altogether surpassed the false conception of nature
-as <i>ens,</i> given by the naturalists. It revealed itself to him, not
-as a circle, but as an assemblage of lines diverging or joining to
-infinity. Hegel made two of will and nature, owing to the insufficiency
-of his gnoseological theory relating to the natural sciences, and was
-led to posit a Philosophy of nature in opposition to a Philosophy of
-the spirit, thus permitting to exist a form of non-mediate dualism,
-after he had destroyed so many, or making it mediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span> in the artificial
-manner to which we have referred. The shadows of that gnoseology having
-been dispersed, the relation between theory and practice, subject and
-object, appears in full light; and the answer becomes very simple to
-the question as to how, when everything is unconvertible relation of
-condition and conditioned, thought and being are reciprocally condition
-and conditioned, and as to how the vicious circle is avoided. The
-criticism of vicious circles includes in itself and affirms the idea
-of a circularity that is not vicious; thought and being are not a
-succession of two finites, but an absolute relation, that is, the
-Absolute itself. To express ourselves mythologically, if the creation
-of the world be the passage from chaos to cosmos, from not-being to
-being, this passage does not begin either with the theoretic or with
-the practical, with the subject, or with the object, but with the
-Absolute, which is the absolute relation of the two terms. <i>In the
-beginning was neither the Word nor the Act; but the Word of the Act and
-the Act of the Word.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the theories as to the primacy of theoretical
-or of practical reason.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is well to state again that in consequence of the relation and
-correlation established, all the questions as to the primacy of
-thought or will, of the contemplative or active life, and speaking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
-more empirically, of the thinker or the man of action, disappear.
-To pose such problems is as though one were to ask which of the two
-semicircles of a circle has precedence. Similar questions, always
-insoluble or badly solved, have their origin in internal obscurity as
-to the fundamental correlation. When man has attained to the summit of
-knowledge (a summit that is certainly not Art; nor, strictly speaking,
-Philosophy, but History, the knowledge of the concrete real, that
-is, the actuality of philosophy), when he has completely penetrated
-the actual situation, can he perhaps stop at this point and say <i>hic
-manebimus optime?</i> Can he arrest life which is raging and demanding
-to be continued? And if he succeed in suspending it for an instant in
-thought, why has he suspended, if not to continue it? Knowledge is
-not an end, but an instrument of life: knowledge that did not serve
-life would be superfluous and harmful.&mdash;On the other hand, when a man
-has willed and has thrown himself into action, when he has produced
-another piece of life, can he blindly continue to produce life for
-ever? Would not blindness impede the production itself? Therefore he
-must rise from life to knowing, if he wish to look in the face the
-product that he has lived, and surpass it with thought, for which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span> life
-is now means and instrument. Knowledge serves life and life serves
-knowledge; the contemplative life, if it do not wish to become insipid
-ease, must lead to activity, and that activity, if it do not wish to
-become an irrational and sterile tumult, must lead to contemplation.
-Reality, in specifying aptitudes, has formed men of thought and men
-of action, or of prevailing thought or prevailing action, these not
-superior to those, for they are collaborators.&mdash;Thus the discussions
-as to whether human progress be moral or intellectual, or whether the
-propelling force be the practical and economic activity, or philosophy,
-or religion (Buckle, Kidd, etc.), are shown to be vain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>New pragmatism: life conditioning Philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is rather to be considered that from this bond between theory
-and practice is obtained a pragmatism of a new sort, of which the
-pragmatists have never thought, or at least have not been able to
-distinguish from the others and to give it value. If Life condition
-Thought, we have in this the apodictic demonstration of the always
-historically conditioned form of every thought; not only of Art, which
-is always the art of a time, of a soul, of a moment; but also of
-Philosophy which can solve only those problems presented by Life. Every
-philosophy reflects and cannot but reflect the preoccupations,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span> as
-they are called, of a definite historical moment; and this, not in the
-quality of its <i>solutions</i> (in which case it would be and is indeed bad
-philosophy), but in the quality of its <i>problems.</i> Thus it is at once
-contingent and eternal, mortal and immortal, extratemporal and living
-only in time and history.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Deductive confirmation of the two forms and deductive
-exclusion of the third feeling.</i></div>
-
-<p>Finally, with the establishment of the duality-unity of the theoretical
-and the practical, we have demonstrated that which at the beginning
-of the exposition had only been asserted and presupposed: namely,
-why a <i>practical</i> form of the spirit must be placed beside the
-theoretical,<a name="FNanchor_5_78" id="FNanchor_5_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_78" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> and why there is no <i>third</i> form beyond these, whether
-it be called <i>feeling</i> or by any other name.<a name="FNanchor_6_79" id="FNanchor_6_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_79" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> The theoretical form
-postulates the practical, because the subject postulates the object;
-but the spirit does not postulate a third form intermediate between the
-two, or unity of the two, because it is itself precisely mediator and
-unity of itself, <i>subject-object.</i></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_74" id="Footnote_1_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_74"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Section I.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_75" id="Footnote_2_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_75"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Section II.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_76" id="Footnote_3_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_76"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Section I. c. 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_77" id="Footnote_4_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_77"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Section I. c. 4.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_78" id="Footnote_5_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_78"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Section I. c. 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_79" id="Footnote_6_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_79"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Section I. c. 2.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a><br /><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="SECOND_PART" id="SECOND_PART">SECOND PART</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE PRACTICAL ACTIVITY IN ITS SPECIAL FORMS</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a><br /><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="FIRST_SECTIONa" id="FIRST_SECTIONa">FIRST SECTION</a></h5>
-
-
-<h4>THE TWO PRACTICAL FORMS: ECONOMIC AND ETHIC</h4>
-
-
-
-<hr />
-<h4>I</h4>
-
-
-<h4>DISTINCTION OF THE TWO FORMS IN THE PRACTICAL CONSCIOUSNESS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The utilitarian or economic form, and the moral or ethical
-form.</i></div>
-
-<p>All that has been developed in the preceding book concerns the
-practical activity <i>in general:</i> therefore no account has been taken of
-the special distinctions of the practical forms, as though there were
-none, or they have only been alluded to as something problematical;
-and when exemplifications have been given, recourse has been had
-indifferently to one or to the other of the forms commonly admitted,
-whether or no they are to be held philosophically distinguishable.
-Now, on the contrary, we affirm in an explicit manner that the spirit,
-which we have seen distinguished as theoretical and practical, is
-sub-distinguished as practical spirit, into two forms,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span> of which the
-first may be called utilitarian or <i>economic,</i> the second moral or
-<i>ethical.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Insufficiency of the descriptive and psychological
-distinction.</i></div>
-
-<p>In affirming this sub-distinction, we are obliged to renounce (as we
-have already done for the practical in respect to the theoretical) a
-demonstration by the psychological method, which has already shown
-itself to be vicious. If indeed it were applicable in this field, we
-should doubtless be able to strike the intellect and persuade the soul
-for a moment, by pointing to the spectacle of life as a demonstration
-of the two forms, economic and ethic, showing on the one hand, farmers,
-commercial men, speculators, conquerors of men and of territories,
-wielders of the word or of the sword as instrument of dominion;
-and, on the other hand, educators, benefactors, disinterested and
-self-sacrificing men, martyrs and heroes; on the one hand, economic
-institutions (manufactories, mines, exchanges, exploration companies),
-and on the other moral institutions (educators and schools, charitable
-societies, orders of Sisters of Charity, or red, white, or blue Cross
-Companies, and so on). What can be better proof of the reality of the
-bipartition enunciated? Cannot we touch it, as with the hand? However
-(as already in the case of the distinction between the theoretical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
-and the practical), what is touched with the hand is not on that
-account seized by the intellect, and indeed in a little while it also
-escapes the hand which had thought to be its master. For when we better
-observe the individuals who seemed to be merely economic, they seem to
-be also moral, and inversely;&mdash;moral institutions are also economic,
-and economic moral The benefactor calculates and wishes to attain his
-object with the same <i>cupiditas</i> as the peasant, all intent upon gain;
-and the peasant in his turn is ennobled in his chase after lucre by
-the dignity of labour and by the moral impulses that sustain it;&mdash;all
-charitable institutions are economic undertakings, and economic
-undertakings are subject to moral laws, so that in drawing up accounts
-there is no knowing where is that material distinction between the
-economic and the ethical activities. The truth is that here too it is
-not possible to start from contingent facts and from their classes
-with empirical limitations, to attain to philosophical distinctions,
-but that it is necessary to start from these, in order to interpret
-contingent facts, and finally to understand also the mode of formation
-of empirical classes. For this reason the psychological method revolves
-in a circle that is effectively vicious.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Deduction and the necessity of integrating it with
-induction.</i></div>
-
-<p>Neither is it possible to proceed with the method that we shall call
-deductive solely; that is, we see the necessity of the two sub-forms
-of the practical activity, which, being the object of the subject and
-therefore in every way analogous to the activity of the subject, that
-is, to the theoretical, must have a duplication of forms answering
-to the duplication of the theoretical activity into æsthetic and
-logical, and cannot posit the universal practical without positing the
-individual that shall be its vehicle. This deduction, although in every
-way correct and rigorous, cannot be convincing, save when it is also
-demonstrated that it responds to fact as revealed by observation, that
-is, when deduction is also induction, as the speculative method demands.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The two forms as a fact of consciousness.</i></div>
-
-<p>Leaving, therefore, on this occasion also, the deductive proof to the
-complete development of the theory, we shall begin by appealing to
-observation of self, in order that every one may verify in himself
-the existence of the two different forms of volitional acts, termed
-by us economic and ethic. The economic activity is that which wills
-and effects only what corresponds to the conditions of fact in which
-a man finds himself; the ethical activity is that which, although
-it correspond to these conditions, also refers to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span> something that
-transcends them. To the first correspond what are called individual
-ends, to the second universal ends; the one gives rise to the judgment
-concerning the greater or less coherence of the action taken in itself,
-the other to that concerning its greater or less coherence in respect
-to the universal end, which transcends the individual.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The economic form.</i></div>
-
-<p>If we wish to recognize only the moral form of activity, we soon
-perceive that it draws with it the other, from which it is distinct;
-for our action, although universal in its meaning, cannot but be
-something concrete and individually determined. What is put in practice
-is not morality in universal, but always a determinate moral volition:
-as Hegel remarked in a different connection, we do not eat fruit in
-general, but cherries, pears, plums, or, these cherries, these pears,
-these plums; we hasten to comfort in this or that way an individual,
-made in this or that way, who finds himself in this or that state of
-misfortune; we do justice at this or that point of time and space to
-individual beings on a definite matter. If a good action be not solely
-our individual pleasure, it must become so: otherwise, how could we
-carry it out? Thus, by closer examination, we realize that our action<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
-always obeys a rational law, even when its moral law is suppressed, so
-that, when every inclination that transcends the individual has been
-set aside, we do not on that account remain the prey of caprice. We
-shall desire only our own will, we shall follow only our own individual
-inclination; but, even so, it is necessary to will this will and this
-inclination coherently, not to undulate between two or more volitions
-at the same time. And if we succeed in really obtaining our desire,
-if, while the moral conscience is for a moment suspended within us,
-we abandon ourselves to the execution of a project of vengeance and
-attain to it in spite of many obstacles, thus executing a masterpiece
-of ability, a practical masterpiece; even when, in this case, <i>populus
-non plaudit,</i> we for our part certainly <i>nos nobis plaudimus,</i> and feel
-most satisfied, at least so long as lasts the suspension of the moral
-consciousness; for we have done what we willed to do, we have tasted,
-though but for a little while, the pleasure of the gods. Whereas if,
-although we follow our desire, we do something different from it, or
-mingle several mutually exclusive desires with one, and having decided
-not to drink wine, for example, in order to obey the advice of the
-doctor and to remain in good health, we yet yield to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span> the wish to drink
-it, that pleasure is, so to say, poisoned by preoccupation, the taste
-is at the same time distaste, unless we succeed in forgetting for some
-moments the advice of the doctor, or think that very possibly he does
-not know what he is saying. We continually apply the same criterion
-to the incidents of life; actions and individuals, of whom we cannot
-morally approve, drag from us sometimes cries of admiration for the
-ability with which they have conducted themselves, for the firmness
-that they display, worthy (as is said) of a better cause. The Epicurean
-Farinata, who raised himself erect on his red-hot bed, or the impious
-Capaneus who cursed Jove beneath the rain of punishing fire, obtain
-from us that esteem which we refuse to those sad souls who lived
-without infamy and without praise. Art has celebrated in tragedies and
-poems the strong characters of great criminals, but it has turned to
-ridicule in comedies little criminals, the violent who show themselves
-timid, the astute who let themselves be cheated.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The ethical form.</i></div>
-
-<p>As we cannot fail to recognize this form of the practical activity,
-quite individual, hedonistic, utilitarian, and economic, and the
-importance that it possesses, joined to or separated from morality,
-as the case may be, and the special practical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span> judgments that have
-their origin in it (the judgment of convenience, whether it be called
-utilitarian or economic), so it would be impossible not to recognize
-the moral form. Yes, the volitional act satisfies us as individuals
-occupying a definite point of time and space, but if it fail to
-satisfy us at the same time as beings transcending time and space,
-our satisfaction will be ephemeral and will rapidly be changed into
-dissatisfaction. To one desire succeeds another, and to this another,
-and so on to infinity; but the one is different from the other, and
-the new either condemns the old or is by it condemned. If we succeed
-in arranging our pleasures in series and classes, and in subordinating
-and connecting them, certainly there will be some gain; but the gain
-will not have been a true one on this occasion either. We shall at
-the most be able to guide our life according to some plan, and for a
-certain time that has not the exactitude of the moment; instead of the
-instantaneous will to which succeeds a different will, we shall have
-general ends for which we shall work. We shall propose, for instance,
-to do certain work and to abstain from doing certain other work, in
-order to marry a loved one, to win a seat in Parliament, or to obtain
-literary fame. But those ends are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span> also merely contingent (they are
-general, not universal), and consequently cannot assuage our thirst.
-When we all have attained to them, we shall experience <i>le déboire</i>
-that <i>la cueillaison d'un rêve au cœur qui l'a cueilli</i> always leaves
-behind. The company of the fair beloved will weary, the political
-ambition realized will leave the soul empty, literary fame will seem
-the shadow of vanity. Perhaps too, we shall change our side, like
-the sick man who cannot rest on his bed of feathers, and begin to
-follow other ends; the lover deluded with matrimony will turn to other
-loves; the ambitious man, weary of political life, will think of new
-ambitions, or of that of not having any, and of retiring to so-called
-domestic peace; the seeker for literary fame will long for ease,
-silence, and forgetting. But in vain: dissatisfaction persists. And it
-will always persist, and pallid Care will always sit behind us, on the
-croup of our horse, if we are not able to tear from the contingent its
-character of contingent, breaking its spell, and bringing ourselves to
-a full stop in that <i>progressus ad infinitum</i> from thing to thing, from
-pleasure to pleasure, to which it impels us, if we be not able to place
-the eternal in the contingent, the universal in the individual, duty
-in desire. Then only do we acquire that internal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span> peace, which is not
-in the future, but in the present, because eternity is in the moment,
-for him who knows how to place it there. Our actions will always be
-new, because reality always places new problems before us, but if we
-accomplish them with lofty souls, and with purity of heart, seeking in
-them that which surpasses them, we shall on every occasion possess the
-Whole. Such is the character of the moral action, which satisfies us,
-not as individuals, but as men, and as individuals only in so far as
-we are men; and in so far as we are men, only by means of individual
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Impossibility of eliminating it.</i></div>
-
-<p>Those men in whom the moral consciousness is wanting, or is confused
-and intermittent, make us fearful&mdash;fearful for ourselves, obliged to be
-on our guard against them and to ward off their snares and injuries,
-and fearful for them, for if they have not already fallen the prey to
-the most terrible torments, they certainly will do so. They are like
-people dancing unconsciously upon ground that has been mined; the
-conscious spectator trembles for them, they do not; but if by chance
-they escape the danger, they will be retrospectively horrified when
-they look back. The inebriation evaporates and the clear outlines of
-reality reappear, but that which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> restores form to those outlines is
-the eternal, not the contingent, morality, not desire. We see this take
-place in an intense form in what are called <i>conversions,</i> followed by
-the intention of leaving the world and its false joys and retiring to a
-cloister; or, without metaphor, of becoming regenerated, of beginning
-a new life with new ideal presuppositions. But intensive conversions
-are catastrophes which occur, like popular revolutions, when continuous
-evolution is impeded. The wise man is converted and renewed at every
-moment, without the solemnity of a conversion, and with the <i>memorare
-novissima</i> he retains in the contingent, his contact with the eternal.
-He knows that he must love things and creatures one by one, each in
-its individuality, for he who does not love thus is neither good nor
-bad, not even being a man. He will wish for literary fame, political
-power, matrimony, according to his aptitudes and to the conditions in
-which he finds himself; but he will wish for all these things without
-wishing for them; he will wish for them, not for themselves, but for
-that which they contain of universal and constant; he will love them
-in God, ready to abandon them immediately their ideal content shall
-have left them; he will seriously desire them with all ardour for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
-themselves, but only when their self is also "his other self." No
-thing, no creature possesses unconditioned value, which belongs only to
-that which is neither thing nor creature. The value of our individual
-life is conditioned for each of us, and we must guarantee and defend
-it as vehicle of the universal, and we must be ready to throw it
-away, as a useless and pernicious thing, when it does not serve this
-end, or rebels. But the value of every being dear to us is not less
-conditioned, and Jesus said with reason, when preparing himself for
-his divine mission, that he had come to separate men from their wives,
-their sons, their friends, and from their native land. That separation
-in union, that union in separation, is the moral activity, individual
-and universal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmed by facts.</i></div>
-
-<p>Thus it happens that art, which has celebrated strong characters, able
-men and affairs well conducted, has also celebrated, and with greater
-liveliness, those strong men who have placed their strength at the
-service of that other strength which surpasses them and makes them
-eternal. For this reason, no embittered soul, no sceptic and pessimist
-remains long firm in his negation of all moral light; such negations
-are indeed as a rule true <i>amantium irae. </i> The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> singer of the lesser
-Brutus who had thus ferociously imprecated:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Foolish Virtue, hollow mists and fields<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Of restless ghosts</span><br />
-Are thy schools, and Repentance turns her back upon<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">thee, ...</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>is the same who, on witnessing a slight act of generosity, exclaims
-with emotion:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-Fair Virtue, when my spirit becomes aware of thee,<br />
-It exults, as at a joyous event....<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The coldest and most self-contained philosophers, when they speak of
-it, find themselves sometimes impelled to adopt a poetic tone, and
-Aristotle will say of Justice that it is "a more wonderful thing than
-Hesperus or the Morning Star,"<a name="FNanchor_1_80" id="FNanchor_1_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_80" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and Emmanuel Kant will compose an
-apostrophe to Duty, and will write at the end of the <i>Critique of
-Practical Reason</i>: "Two things fill the soul with ever new and ever
-increasing veneration and admiration the more often and the longer
-reflection is occupied with them: <i>the starry heaven</i> above me, and
-<i>the moral law</i> within me." And even the great mass of rhetoric that
-has for its object virtue or the moral law is a homage rendered to this
-supreme force of life, reality of reality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The impossibility of suppressing the economic or the moral form of the
-activity in our practical consciousness, the continual appeal that the
-one makes to the other, the revolving of our practical judgment about
-the two aspects, both of them necessary, of the useful and the honest,
-energy and goodness, pleasure and duty, explain why the Psychology
-and the Description of practical life have constituted the two kinds
-of types and classes, of economic and of moral men, of economic and
-of moral institutions. Such rough and approximate distinctions have
-however at bottom, in this as in other cases, an intimate and rigorous
-distinction, which every one will find evident in himself, if he look
-inward upon himself and fix his gaze persistently on the universal
-forms of the spirit that acts within him.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_80" id="Footnote_1_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_80"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nicom.</i>1. v. c. i, 1129 b.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>II</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ETHICAL FORM</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Exclusion of materialistic and of intellectualistic
-criticisms.</i></div>
-
-<p>The distinction of the two forms, well known to the inner
-consciousness, will appear more clearly when we examine the reasons
-for which the one or the other of them has been denied. We say the one
-or the other, because we have now freed ourselves from the obligation
-of refuting the theses that have their origin in presuppositions,
-both materialistic and intellectualiste, and therefore deny the moral
-and economic activities, either because they do not admit the concept
-of spiritual activity itself, or because they do not admit the more
-special conception of practical activity. The greater number of
-those who deny morality are nothing but mechanicists, empiricists,
-materialists, and positivists, to whose brains not only do economy and
-morality appear inconceivable, but also art and science and, in short,
-every spiritual value. They ask: Where is this moral principle of which
-you discourse?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span> Point it out to us with your finger. But they also ask:
-Where are the categories or the pure concept? Where is the æsthetic
-synthesis and the pure intuition? Where is the <i>a priori</i> of perception
-and of history? Where are all these fine things you talk of as though
-they existed, and that we neither see nor touch?&mdash;And for our part, we
-can henceforth let them say what they will, only praying in our hearts
-that God may illuminate them and make them discover (at least when they
-are near to death and the dense veil of their bodies has become more
-thin) that if the universals were <i>things</i> that it was possible to
-perceive as we do individual things, they would not be universals.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The two possible negations.</i></div>
-
-<p>When the double assumption of a spiritual activity and of a practical
-form of it has been admitted, it is not possible to do otherwise
-than either to deny the economic for the moral form, or the moral
-for the economic. What might seem to be a third possibility, that of
-denying the two forms, is reducible to the first, because, when the
-distinction of the terms has been suppressed, there remains nothing
-but the practical activity considered in general, which coincides with
-the individual and economic activity. We shall begin then with the
-examination of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> negation of morality for economy, which is the
-thesis of <i>utilitarianism.</i> Those same materialists have recourse to
-utilitarianism when they wish to present some sort of a Philosophy
-of the practical, but with what little right they avail themselves
-of such aid, is clear from what has already been said: the useful is
-always value and teleology, and materialism, in all its sub-forms and
-varieties, is incapable of positing the smallest concept of value and
-finality.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The thesis of utilitarianism against the existence of moral
-acts.</i></div>
-
-<p>Utilitarianism affirms that no other volition exists save that
-which answers to the merely individual determination, or, as it is
-also expressed, to the pleasure of the individual, understanding
-by pleasure, not the generic pleasure that also accompanies moral
-satisfaction in the individual, but that which is exclusively
-individual. Actions, therefore, as it says, are what concern it, not
-their motives, that is, the motive of the individuality of the act
-abstractly conceived, not that of the spirit become concrete in it;
-thus, not killing for fear of punishment and not killing because
-repugnant to one's own conscience, become the same thing. They are the
-consequences of different conditions, but in both cases of the same
-motive, which is personal convenience. And as there does not exist
-a pleasure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span> that cannot be and is not substituted for a different
-pleasure, so there is not an action, however moral it be called, that
-cannot be interrupted and changed, when different conditions present
-themselves. Every action, every man has his price: it is all a matter
-of discovering what that price is. He who seems to place the glory
-of his country above all other aspirations, although he cannot, for
-example, be corrupted by money, by vanity, or by pleasure, will yet
-always have in him some weak point that a more expert corrupter will
-discover or be able to discover; and when the discovery has been made
-and the suitable transaction proposed, the glory of his country will be
-abandoned, because it has been well compensated for by something else.
-This way of looking upon human actions has appeared to be concrete,
-exact, rational; and the utilitarian theory, if it have often been
-called <i>hedonistic,</i> and sometimes even <i>æsthetic</i> (understanding by
-æsthetic, individual pleasure), is also wont to be decorated with the
-name of ethical or practical <i>rationalism, rational morality.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Difficulties arising from the presence of these.</i></div>
-
-<p>All would go very well, and the practical activity would in this way be
-entirely explained and unified, if we did not at every moment of life
-run against the distinction between mere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span> pleasure and duty, between
-the useful and the honest action, and if there did not arise in our
-conscience an invincible distinction between the things that have a
-price and those that have none, and if an abyss did not differentiate
-among apparently similar actions that which has a merely utilitarian
-from that which has a moral motive. The utilitarians even (who,
-although bad philosophers, are men, and as such carry at the bottom of
-their souls a far better philosophy than they profess in books and in
-the schools) are not able to suppress that distinction in themselves
-and to deny all recognition to the power of morality, to which, as men,
-they submit at every moment. How then are they to behave? How are they
-to explain the genesis of that distinction which, by the premises that
-they have posited, cannot be other than illusion? What is there that
-gives effective existence to the fallacious category of morality, side
-by side with the veracious one of utility?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Attempt to explain them as quantitative distinctions.</i></div>
-
-<p>There have been several attempts to solve that hard resisting term
-of morality. The first, which was logically bound to present itself,
-was that of considering facts called moral as nothing but empirical
-groups of utilitarian facts, and of explaining the false category as
-an hypostasis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span> of those empirical groups, arbitrarily reduced to a
-rigorous and philosophical concept. Banking, usury, commerce, industry,
-agriculture, and labour are empirically distinguished, yet are all
-economic facts. Courage, prudence, temperance, chastity, justice,
-modesty are empirically distinguished, yet are all moral facts. Why
-not unite the two series, and recognize the unity and continuity of
-nature by the insertion among them of other types and terms? Morality
-is also utility, but the utility of the <i>greater number</i>; interest is
-interest, but <i>well understood</i>; pleasure is pleasure, but pleasure of
-<i>greater duration and quantity,</i> preferred to another less intense, or
-more fugitive; egoism, egoism of family, of race, of human race, egoism
-of <i>species,</i> altruism; eudemonism, but <i>social</i> eudemonism, enjoyment,
-but enjoyment of <i>sympathy,</i> utility, but utility of conforming, not
-to one's own individual judgment, but to that of <i>public opinion.</i>
-Thus are moral facts included in utilitarian, in the same way as the
-number a hundred thousand is not less a number than two or three and
-the others inferior to it, because it is composed of three and of two
-and of other numbers less than itself. Cæsar Borgia murders his brother
-and thus gets rid of a rival both in love and in politics, that is, he
-seeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span> his advantage; but Giordano Bruno also seeks his own advantage,
-and nothing else, when he allows himself to be burned in order to
-assert his philosophy, because, for one constituted as he, with that
-demoniacal fury of his for philosophical truth, the pyre must have
-seemed a very miserable and negligible thing, just as his brother's
-blood seemed to Cæsar Borgia. Call the one of these actions utility
-of a complexity of ten and the other utility of a complexity of a
-hundred, or give to the complexity a hundred the name of morality, of
-well-understood self-interest, of sympathy, of altruism, and so on, and
-to the complexity of ten that of utility, of individual interest, of
-egoism: the two actions will not thus have been declared of a different
-nature.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the fact is that they have already been declared of a <i>different
-nature</i> by the utilitarians themselves. No one, indeed, will have been
-deceived with the ingenious phraseology excogitated: <i>well-understood</i>
-interest is no longer mere self-interest; the egoism of <i>species</i> is
-not egoism, <i>durable</i> pleasure is not mere pleasure. The difference
-between the one term and the other is not quantitative, and even where
-a <i>greater</i> quantity is talked of, a <i>greater</i> duration, a <i>greater</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
-number, arithmetical definitions are not posited, but symbols pointing
-to qualitative differences. There is a difference, not of complexity
-but of nature, between the action of Cæsar Borgia and that of Giordano
-Bruno; there is no common measure between baseness and moral elevation
-as there is between undulating plains and mountains. The two series, of
-empirical utilitarian concepts and of empirical moral concepts, are not
-only irreducible to a single series, but remain obstinately distinct
-and irreducible. All that can be done, and has been done, is to unify
-them verbally; and in this the utilitarians have shown themselves as
-bold as it was possible to be in so miserable an enterprise. But the
-identity or similarity of words does not suffice to cancel the profound
-distinctions of things.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Attempt to explain them as facts either extraneous to the
-practical or irrational and stupid.</i></div>
-
-<p>There would have been an immediate passage from the consciousness
-of the puerility of such identifications to the recognition of
-a distinct ethical form, if purpose and prejudice had not made
-resistance, prompting, on the contrary, the search for new expedients
-for setting themselves free in theory from the tedious and recurring
-phantom of morality. On this occasion also these expedients must have
-been just two: that is, to declare morality or concept <i>extraneous</i>
-to the practical, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span> intrinsic to it indeed, but <i>contrary.</i> The
-first was attempted, but feebly, when morality was spoken of as the
-fantasticality of poets, as the dream or rosy illusion caressed in
-life. No attention was paid to the fact that what the poet imagines
-cannot be contradictory and absurd, but must indeed be founded in the
-reality of life and in the nature of things; and that morality is
-not the æsthetic form in which it is reproduced and represented, but
-practical form or action. But the unmaintainability of this attempt
-was too evident for its success. The other expedient, on the contrary,
-has always had and still has great success. This turns morality into
-a practical contradictory concept, that is, into something certainly
-practical, but without motive, incoherent, and in contradiction to the
-healthy development of the practical. It is true that it is usually
-enunciated in very different words from those used by us. They speak
-as follows: What is called a good and virtuous action is nothing but
-the product of the association between certain acts that are for us
-the means to a pleasure, and that pleasure itself; so that gradually,
-even where the primitive pleasure is absent, those acts are sought
-and repeated for themselves, as though in themselves pleasurable.
-The savage fought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span> against the enemies who assailed his tribe, that
-he might not be made a slave or sacrificed to the idol of another
-tribe, that is to say, in order to defend his personal liberty or his
-life; but later on, man, forgetting that the tribe or the city or the
-State were simple means for protecting life and goods, defends them
-for themselves and allows himself to be despoiled and slain for his
-country. In the same way (to employ the classical example), money
-is first sought as a means to enjoyment, and to form a supply for
-procuring a life more comfortable and secure; but by degrees he who
-amasses money turns in his soul the means into the end, and becomes
-avaricious, that is, he finds delight in the mere possession of money,
-and sacrifices for that all his other joys, even an easy life, food,
-house and sleep, which he originally intended that money should obtain
-for him. Morality arises entirely from a similar process of association
-between means and end, and the case of the miser explains by analogy
-every act of virtue that cannot be directly reduced to simple pleasure
-and individual utility.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Associationism and evolutionism. Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>Now the association here discussed is neither that of logic nor
-of æsthetic, nor valid association, synthesis, but irrational and
-fallacious association.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span> It is only possible to exchange means for end
-as the result of a bad association of ideas: therefore that association
-is folly and stupidity, as the miser adduced as an example is stupid
-and foolish, being called "miser" precisely for this reason, with the
-intention of blaming him (for this word does not mean "economic" or
-"provident"). And behold! morality should be defined as that which
-is practically irrational, foolish, stupid, the product of illusion
-and confusion, or the <i>contrary</i> of the practical activity, which is
-clear-sightedness, rationality, wisdom. Thus defined, it is at the
-same time annulled. Indeed, irrationality is that which is condemned
-to be perpetually subjected to the rational; and what is called the
-moral man, if he were nothing but a false associator of ideas, would be
-constantly confuted by the man of good sense, by the utilitarian, who
-would prevent him from committing the stupidity of sacrificing himself
-for his children, for his country, or for knowledge; or, were he to
-persist, would cover him with contempt and ridicule. The fear that to
-discover its origin would be tantamount to abolishing morality would
-therefore be perfectly justified in this new sense also; or better,
-it would not be a question of a fear, but of a fact: morality would
-be in a state of progressive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span> annulment, as the effect of increasing
-instruction, both in the individual and in society. It has been replied
-that neither this fear nor this fact arises, because that false
-association is <i>indissoluble,</i> being a product of <i>heredity,</i> or, to
-speak of it in proper terms, it is hereditary stupidity (evolutionistic
-utilitarianism). But whether inherited or acquired, it is so dissoluble
-as to be dissolved in the theory proposed: <i>lux facta est,</i> and no
-one succeeds in obscuring it any longer. If, notwithstanding that
-pretended light, morality be not dissipated, if recourse be had to the
-miserable subterfuge of insuperable heredity (which is surpassed at
-the very moment in which its origin is made clear), this means to say
-that, for the moralist himself, morality is not the irrational, but
-something very rational. He does not succeed in identifying it with the
-merely individually useful, but neither can he reject it as the pure
-and simple negative of this. And since he does not wish to abandon the
-utilitaristic hypothesis, there is no other path open to him but that
-of recourse to <i>mystery.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>A desperate attempt: theological utilitarianism and
-mystery.</i></div>
-
-<p>This is precisely what happens in the last form of utilitarianism,
-which has seemed to be capricious and extravagant, but is on the
-contrary profoundly auto-critical, since it reveals the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span> ultimate
-essence and defect of the doctrine: what is known as <i>theological
-utilitarianism.</i> Human actions are always inspired by what is merely
-useful to the individual, and if a number of these seems to diverge
-from this criterion, this happens because account is not taken of
-an actual fact, by means of which even the actions which seem to be
-divergent are reduced to the common measure. This given fact is the
-life beyond this world, in which God rewards or punishes him who has
-obeyed or disobeyed his will, in the life of this world. He who in this
-life seems to resist the impulse of his personal advantage and performs
-sacrifices of every sort, even to that of his own life, follows equally
-with the others his personal advantage; and believing in God, in the
-immortality of the soul, and in the reward and the punishment that
-await him, he regulates his action according to these actual facts.
-<i>Intuitionistic</i> Ethic, which places a moral duty at the side of
-individual pleasure, but indeducible from it, is in reality deduced
-from individual pleasure, and is likewise turned into <i>rational</i> or
-utilitarian Ethic by means of the transcendental datum. In this way the
-solution makes shipwreck in mystery; since God, immortality, the other
-life, the divine command, punishments and rewards,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span> cannot be defined
-and justified by means of thought and concept. When utilitarianism
-becomes theological, it abandons the philosophical field, confessing by
-so doing its philosophical defeat. And to philosophical consideration
-the distinction between the individually useful and that which is
-also superindividual shines out ever more clearly after the many vain
-attacks of utilitarianism, the affirmation of the moral form, as united
-and distinct from the utilitarian; the <i>autonomy</i> of Ethic against
-every form of <i>utilitarianism</i> and every <i>heteronomous Ethic.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>III</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CRITIQUE OF THE NEGATIONS OF THE ECONOMIC FORM</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The thesis of moral abstracticism against the concept of
-the useful.</i></div>
-
-<p>If in the course of philosophical history, the theory of utility has
-sought to cause the disappearance of the other practical term, which
-is morality, by swallowing it up, we are not to believe that morality
-has been for its part more modest and discreet and has not in its
-turn attempted to devour its companion. One exaggeration has been met
-with another; to utilitarianism has been opposed that error which may
-be called <i>moral abstracticism,</i> by means of which is refused to the
-concept of utility the place that belongs to it in the organism of the
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Such a refusal (analogous to our analysis of the utilitarian theory)
-cannot take place, save in three ways: that is, in so far as value is
-denied to the useful, either as <i>practical</i> concept, or as <i>positive</i>
-concept, or as <i>philosophical</i> concept.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span> Here too we naturally
-do not take count of the theses of the materialists or of the
-intellectualists, which (especially those of the former) have raged in
-the field of Economy not less than in that of Ethic, giving rise to
-insane attempts to explain the useful on mechanical principles, or with
-the contingencies of historical evolution.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The useful as the means or as theoretical fact.</i></div>
-
-<p>The useful (it has been said) is nothing but the <i>means</i> to obtain a
-certain end. For example, if I take a walk every day with a view to
-keeping myself in good health, the daily walk is the suitable means and
-is therefore useful; if, on the contrary, I find that it makes me ill,
-this means that it is not the suitable means and it would be, and I
-should declare it to be, useless or harmful. Now by the demonstration
-given above, it is known that means and end are indistinguishable in
-the <i>practical,</i> for what is called means is nothing but the actual
-situation (and the knowledge of it), from which arises the practical
-act, and to which that act corresponds. Thus it is most possible to
-separate the means from the end; but in so doing, the consideration of
-the practical act is abandoned, and we pass to that of its theoretical
-antecedent; and if the mere theoretical antecedent be called "useful"
-or "practical" in ordinary speech (remembering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span> the practical act,
-to which it has been or it is presumed that it may be united) then a
-metaphor is employed, against which there is nothing to be said. Those,
-then, who define the useful as the means should once for all realize
-that with such a definition they remove that concept from the circle
-of the Philosophy of the practical and transport it into Logic, where
-the relation of means and end is the very same as that of cause and
-effect, and it again becomes part of the theory of empirical concepts,
-in which cause and effect are wont to be posited as terms separately
-conceivable. This has been more or less consciously recognized, when
-the useful has been defined as the <i>technical,</i> for we know that the
-technical is nothing but knowledge thus made into a metaphor, owing to
-the relation that it has or is presumed to be capable of having, with
-an action that has been done or is about to be done.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Technical and hypothetical imperatives.</i></div>
-
-<p>The theoretical character of the technical has, on the contrary,
-been obscured, when technical knowledge has received the name
-of <i>hypothetical imperatives,</i> distinct and ranged beside the
-<i>categorical.</i> The imperative is will, and is therefore always both
-categoric and imperative: <i>a</i> is willed (categorically), but <i>a</i> would
-not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span> willed if the condition of fact and situation <i>b</i> did not exist
-(hypothetically). The merely hypothetical imperative is the knowledge,
-that remains when abstraction is made of the practical act or of the
-will; and is no longer an imperative, but a theoretic affirmation.
-Where effective will is not, imperatives cannot be talked of.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique: the useful is a practical fact.</i></div>
-
-<p>Having made clear that the definition of the useful as <i>means</i> implies
-the negation of the useful as a practical fact and its reduction to a
-theoretical category already known, we must exclude the possibility
-of such a reduction, for in the useful, the practical character, the
-effectivity of the will, is ineliminable. "It is useful for me to take
-a walk" means, "It pleases me to take a walk," "I will to do it." It
-is a question, not of contemplation or of reasoning, but of volitional
-movement. The knowledge that precedes the utilitarian act is one thing,
-the act itself is another. The old man has the same knowledge as the
-young man, he has indeed much more (<i>si jeunesse savait, si vieillesse
-pouvait!</i>), but he does not will what the young man wills: he knows
-that by traversing so many kilometers he will arrive at a certain
-definite point; but it is not useful for him to go there, because it is
-not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span> useful for him to traverse those kilometers, or to submit to that
-exertion at the risk of an illness. The utilitarian will is expressed,
-not in merely hypothetical imperatives, but in those categoric
-imperatives that are at the same time hypothetical. The general formula
-is "will!" or "will that you will!" or "be coherent in your willing!"
-as the individuated forms are those that we are continually repeating
-to ourselves, "now, to bed!" "now, up you get!" and the like; which,
-when developed, mean: "go to bed" (if you wish to rest yourself), "get
-up" (if you wish to work), and so on. The distinction between the
-cognoscitive and the volitional theses is here evident.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The useful as the egoistic or immoral.</i></div>
-
-<p>Since then, owing to the unalterably practical character of the
-utilitarian fact, it was not possible to insist upon its reduction to
-the technical, and since, on the other hand, it was not desired to
-recognize it as a practical category side by side with the practical
-category of morality, they have tried to think of it as something
-certainly practical, but at the same time of little value, to beware
-of it, to combat it, to free ourselves from it. "Useful" has in this
-way become synonymous with wilfulness, with individual caprice, with
-will more or less perverted, and (looking upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span> immorality as the
-individual I, shut up in itself and rebelling against the universal)
-with <i>egoism.</i> This theory is supported by certain common modes of
-speech, in which the moral man is opposed to the man intent upon what
-is useful to him as an individual, the ethical to the economic life.
-But it is a question of phrases, true,' perhaps, in a certain sense,
-but inexact when understood or interpreted as affirmations of a contest
-between morality and utility.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique: the useful is amoral.</i></div>
-
-<p>We discover at once that the contest is inexistent, by merely thinking
-of the case already mentioned, of the man in whom the moral conscience
-is not developed or has been suppressed, or of the case&mdash;limit
-called <i>innocence.</i> What is done in innocence responds, no doubt, to
-individual pleasure, and so to what is useful for the individual, as
-he feels it in the given circumstances: were this not so, what is done
-would not be done. But innocence is not immoral on this account. It
-will be <i>amoral,</i> because it is merely individual volition deprived
-of the light of the eternal; it will never be <i>immoral.</i> Thus (to
-make use of the comparison and analogy of the theoretic activity) the
-images that the poet creates will be without philosophy, but will not
-for this reason be anti-philosophical. Because, were that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span> so, they
-would have to be partially philosophical, that is to say, to enter into
-strife with philosophy; but there is no such strife, and, therefore,
-those images, although philosophically not true, are none the less not
-philosophically false. Yet they are theoretical acts, in the same way
-that philosophy is a theoretical act. The philosophical innocence of
-the poet does not change his intuitive knowledge into bad philosophical
-knowledge, into a negative of philosophy.&mdash;Further, the useful not
-only is not the negative of morality, but, as we know, is also a fact
-that unites itself very well with morality, as the word is joined to
-the thought, making it concrete and palpable, so much so that thought
-without words is impossible. What honourable man would tolerate being
-judged disuseful? What moral action would be truly moral, were it not
-at the same time useful? The good action is good, because it is not
-bad, that is, it absolutely excludes the bad at the point in which
-it becomes effective; but certainly it is not so, because disuseful;
-indeed, in being good, it is also useful, because it absolutely
-comprehends the useful in itself at the point in which it becomes
-effective. The union of morality with utility suffices to eliminate the
-concept of the useful as a negative. Certainly negative and positive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
-do unite to give rise to becoming and to development; but their union
-is that of strife, not of concord.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The useful as ethical minimum.</i></div>
-
-<p>The third way of eliminating the concept of the useful from Philosophy,
-or from the Philosophy of the practical, is that which makes of it
-a concept of ethical description, or an empirical and psychological
-concept designating certain groups of very minute ethical facts, the
-rudimentary ethical consciousness. Hence the illusion of the existence
-of volitional acts indifferent in respect to morality. These acts are
-really indifferentiated for the mind that is examining them, which
-sometimes does not take the trouble to do so minutely, save when such
-an examination is seriously undertaken, and then they are always
-differentiated into good or bad. Thus it generally said that eating and
-sleeping, playing at cards or at billiards, are things that appertain,
-not to morality, but to individual utility, and that each one may
-conduct himself as he wills in respect to them, whereas individual
-choice is excluded when it is necessary to fulfil one's own obligations
-of social work or of respecting the life of one's neighbour. But if
-we observe attentively, we see that also in eating or in sleeping, in
-playing cards or billiards, one acts morally or immorally, since, for
-example, it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span> immoral to ruin one's health with eating too much,
-or with sleeping too little, or to corrupt soul and intellect with
-card-playing and dawdling in billiard-rooms, when one can do something
-better.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique: the useful is premoral.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the useful is none of all these things; it is not the complex of
-ethical micro-organisms, in which we discover with the microscope the
-same facts of life and of death that we observe with the naked eye in
-macro-organisms. No microscope will ever discern in it the oppositions
-of moral good and evil, because these oppositions are not really there;
-there are only those of utilitarian or economic good and evil. For the
-useful is not the moral minimum, but the <i>premoral.</i> In this case it
-is a question, not of approximative, but of rigorous difference; not
-psychological, but philosophical.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>A desperate attempt: the useful as inferior practical
-conscience. Confirmation of the autonomy of the useful.</i></div>
-
-<p>Finally, it is necessary to consider the attempt to present the
-utilitarian conscience as a moral conscience, <i>different and inferior</i>
-to another moral conscience placed over it, not as a new mode of
-eliminating the concept of the useful, by absorbing it in that of
-morality, but as a confession of the autonomy of that moment of the
-spirit. It would be moral, because there is no contradiction to be
-found in it that can cause it to be judged immoral, and if it be so
-judged, this happens<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span> because it is looked at from the point of view
-of the superior conscience, or because the superior conscience is
-erroneously transported into the inferior. But this has importance
-precisely because it is not moral, and because the value that it is
-admitted to possess, far from being morality, is spirituality; that
-is to say, it constitutes a peculiar spiritual value, different from
-morality. "Better a will of some sort than no will at all" is a common
-saying which means that prior to morality, there is another and more
-elementary spiritual demand. The distinction of the two consciences,
-then, is philosophical, not one of more or less, a distinction of
-degrees, but not of empirical degrees, which coincides with our
-conclusion. Thus, to return to the usual comparison, the poetical
-figuration is true, and can only be judged false by him who looks upon
-it from a philosophical point of view, or himself falsifies it by
-turning it into a bad philosopheme. But the truth of that figuration
-is not philosophical, and remains purely and simply poetical truth.
-It will be said that morality is implied in utilitarian volition,
-because, when the individually useful is posited, the universal, which
-will dominate and correct it, is promoted, in the same way as it has
-been said that philosophy is implied in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span> æsthetic intuition,
-since by positing the individual imagination is posited the claim of
-the universal, which surpasses and renders it untrue. But since the
-æsthetic conscience is distinguished from the philosophical, precisely
-because that which in the latter is <i>explicit</i> is only <i>implicit</i>
-in the former, so, in like manner, the utilitarian conscience is
-distinguished from the moral conscience, because that morality which
-becomes explicit and effective in the second, is only implicit or
-actually inexistent in the first. The difference between <i>implicit</i> and
-<i>explicit</i> is another way of enunciating the distinction between the
-two consciousnesses or practical forms, the autonomy of both being thus
-recognized.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>IV</h4>
-
-
-<h4>RELATION BETWEEN THE ECONOMIC AND ETHICAL FORMS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Economic and ethic as the double degree of the practical.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>The respective distinction and autonomy of the two forms, economic and
-ethic, as we have hitherto been expounding it, and as results from the
-words "inferior" and "superior" just now used, is that of two degrees,
-at once distinct and united, such that the first can stand without
-the second, but the second cannot stand without the first. The moment
-of distinction lies in that possibility of existence independent of
-the first; the moment of unity is in the impossibility of independent
-existence of the second. If the first were wanting, there would be
-identity; if the second, there would be abstract distinction or
-separation. For this reason we have insisted upon showing that there
-are actions without morality, yet which are perfectly economical,
-whereas moral actions that are not also perfectly useful or economical
-do not exist. Morality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span> lives in concrete, in utility, the universal
-in the individual, the eternal in the contingent. Hence our reason
-for reducing the theses that denied the distinction between the two
-practical forms to an exclusive affirmation of the economic form, this
-latter being as it were the general form, which of itself involves both
-itself and the other.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Errors arising from conceiving them as coordinated.</i></div>
-
-<p>Even when both the practical forms, economic and ethic, utility and
-morality, are admitted, the gravest errors arise from failing to
-understand the connection of unity-distinction that exists between
-them, conceiving them as juxtaposed or parallel, and the respective
-concepts as coordinated.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Disinterested actions. Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>In truth, if utility and morality were coordinate concepts, each
-included as species beneath the general concept of practical activity,
-the first consequence that could be drawn from this (and it has been
-drawn) is that morality is conceivable without utility. This has given
-rise to the absurd concept of <i>disinterested</i> actions, that is, of
-those moral actions that should hold themselves aloof from any sort
-of impure contact with utility. But disinterested actions would be
-foolish actions, that is to say, wilful acts, caprices, non-actions.
-Every action is and must be interested; indeed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span> the more profoundly it
-is interested, so much the better. What interest is stronger and more
-personal than that which impels the man of science to the search for
-truth, which is his life? Morality requires that the individual should,
-in every case, make his individual interest that of the universal; and
-it reproves those who engage themselves in an insoluble contradiction
-between the individual interest of the universal and that which is
-merely individual. But it cannot claim to suppress the interest, that
-is, itself, in the same way that the volitional act dominates the
-passions, but cannot eradicate them without eradicating itself. Hence,
-as the volitional act triumphs over the passions as the <i>supreme
-passion,</i> so morality triumphs over interests as the <i>supreme interest.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Vain polemic conducted with such an assumption against
-utilitarianism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The polemic of autonomous Ethic against the heteronomous Ethic of
-utilitarianism has had a false and fruitless beginning, owing to this
-fiction of disinterested actions. In the belief of conquering and more
-than conquering, it has been attempted to show that man accomplishes
-some actions without any personal interest, whereas on the contrary
-an easy victory has in this way been prepared for the adversary.
-Utilitarianism, in fact, has always been able triumphantly to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
-the counter-demonstration that there is no action, be it as lofty as
-you will, that does not answer to a personal end. It is evident that
-the hero has his personal interest in the <i>pro patria mori,</i> just as
-the saint, who wishes to direct his soul toward humility, finds his
-own account in allowing himself to be abused, beaten and splashed
-with mud ("in this is perfect joy," said Francesco of Assisi to Frate
-Leone). Correct polemic should not enter upon the useless task of
-denying this evidence; it should on the contrary admit, as was admitted
-above, that there is no action which does not answer to an individual
-desire, since it is the individual that performs it, and the universal
-is always obliged to avail itself of individuals. But when this point
-has been conceded and admitted, it will prove, as was proved above,
-that the useful action can either remain merely personal or progress
-to the action that is universal-personal, ethical-useful. And the
-ethical-useful action itself is precisely the new spiritual category
-that the utilitarian does not see.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Actions morally indifferent, obligatory, supererogatory,
-etc. Critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>A second erroneous but unavoidable consequence of the conception of
-useful and moral as coordinated concepts is that while, according to
-that theory, there can be ethical actions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span> economically disinterested
-or indifferent, so there can be actions that are useful and <i>morally
-indifferent.</i> The indifferent would not be those that are merely
-economic, and, therefore, neither moral nor immoral, which we have
-recognized as the necessary precedent of moral actions, reappearing
-always when a return is made to the state of innocence, or as soon
-as the moral conscience is abolished or suspended. They would on the
-contrary be economic actions that should persist as such, that is, as
-ingenuous and amoral, when the moral consciousness is already kindled,
-and consequently in the very circle of such a conscientiousness.
-They are altogether inadmissible when thus conceived, and to have
-admitted them is equivalent to annulling morality, as the recognition
-of the right of subjects to rebel at their pleasure would be to annul
-sovereignty, or a burlesque contract containing the clause that each
-party should be free not to observe the other clauses agreed upon, at
-his pleasure. Indifferent actions do not exist, either for economy
-or for morality, and those to which such a character is generally
-attributed are, as we know, indifferentiated, not indifferent, and
-always differentiable when more closely examined. Only he who places
-the useful and the moral, side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span> by side with one another, separate
-and impenetrable, is of necessity led to conceive of useful actions
-morally indifferent, and as such <i>licit or permissible.</i> Hence it
-also happens that moral actions also seem to be <i>obligatory</i> compared
-with the first; and that, in order to obtain equilibrium at the other
-extremity, ultramoral or more than moral actions, called <i>meritorious
-or supererogatory,</i> are placed side by side with obligatory actions
-that hold the mean. But morality does not grant leave <i>not to do,</i> nor
-prizes for <i>doing more than was required</i>; it simply imposes <i>doing,</i>
-doing always what is morally good, always realizing the universal, in
-ordinary as in extraordinary life, on the occasions that occur every
-day, every hour, every minute, as in those that occur every year, every
-ten years, every century. Nothing is indifferent to economy in its
-sphere and nothing to morality in its sphere: in it, economic actions
-with their premoral character do not persist, but only moral actions
-subsist. Economicity is certainly the concrete form of morality; but it
-is never an element that possesses a value of its own in the moral life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Comparison with the relation of art and philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>A comparison with the theoretic activity will serve to make clearer
-this criticism of the <i>licit</i> or morally indifferent. Artistic
-intuitions or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span> expressions are neither true nor false philosophically,
-so much so that Philosophy, if it wish to exist, must also become
-concrete itself, as living speech, æsthetic form, intuition-expression,
-and place itself as an intuition among intuitions, though it be
-an intuition <i>portans mysteria,</i> that is, enclosing in itself the
-universal. But the appearance of philosophy reacts upon the pure
-intuitions, or upon the poetic representation of the world, in which
-existent and inexistent were indistinct; and the world of intuition
-transforms itself into the world of perceptions, in which those that
-once were poetic intuitions, are now all of them critical or reflective
-images penetrated by the concepts, divided into images of existence
-and images of possibility. In the world of perception or of history,
-no poetical element can subsist as such; what was a bewitching truth
-in the field of art, were it introduced into history, would give rise
-to disharmony and become changed into a repugnant lie, as we see is
-actually the case in history mingled with inventions and fables.
-History too assumes artistic form; but it cannot tolerate in its bosom
-art as an element standing alone. Utilitarian or economic volitions and
-the moral-economic volitions (universal and historical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span> perceptions
-or representations of the practical) proceed in a manner perfectly
-analogous (intuitions of the practical). Moral indifference belongs
-to the first, when they are on this side of the moral conscience,
-but within this conscience they lose the right to innocence, as in
-history the pure intuitions, when they have become perceptions, lose
-the privilege that they possessed as pure intuitions. The ethical
-discrimination of the economic volitions, which takes place through the
-moral conscience, is then in full correspondence with the historical
-discrimination of the æsthetic intuitions, which takes place through
-the logical conscience.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Other erroneous conceptions of modes of action.</i></div>
-
-<p>We owe to the false conception by coordination, not only the two
-monstrous little concepts of <i>disinterested actions</i> and of those that
-are morally <i>indifferent, licit, or permissive,</i> but others also, which
-have been deduced by means of a somewhat different casuistic from the
-same general hypothesis. Indeed, in the preceding case, useful and
-moral, posited as apart and parallel, were maintained one extraneous
-to the other and at peace between themselves. But nothing forbade that
-warlike plans should be attributed to those two entities, just as when
-two coordinate animal species are posited, we may suppose, either
-that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span> the individuals of each one mind their own affairs and allow
-the individuals of the other species to live and to prosper in peace,
-or that the one takes to persecuting the other, sometimes injuring
-or destroying it and sometimes being by it injured or destroyed.
-Thus were and are obtained concepts of <i>moral anti-economic</i> actions
-and of <i>anti-economic moral</i> actions, of <i>immoral economic</i> actions,
-and of <i>economic immoral</i> actions, four concepts which are all four
-to be rejected. Moral action can never be accomplished at a loss:
-morality is for the moral man the supreme advantage in the situation
-in which he finds himself, and it would be erroneous to measure it
-by comparison with what an individual without morality would do in
-the same situation, for, as we know, individual and situation are
-all one, in such a way that a like comparison is impossible. In a
-similar manner, an anti-economic action can never be moral; at the
-most it will not even be amoral, or will not even posit the primary
-and generic condition of morality, that is, it will not be action,
-but inert contemplation. An immoral action can never be economic,
-because immorality implies internal disagreement and strife between
-one volition directed to the universal and another directed to the
-merely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span> individual, hence the result will be practical inconclusion
-and infecundity, dissatisfaction and remorse; that is to say, just
-the opposite of utility and economicity. In like manner, an economic
-action can never be immoral: at the most (when it is merely an economic
-action), it will be amoral.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Pleasure and the economic activity, happiness and virtue.</div>
-
-<p>The bond of unity and distinction that exists between the concepts of
-the useful and the moral and the consequent negation of the formula of
-coordination, help to solve in a definite way the intricate questions
-relating to <i>pleasure and morality, happiness and virtue.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Pleasure, pain and feeling.</i></div>
-
-<p>First of all, we can here give yet another meaning to the indeterminate
-category of <i>feeling</i> with its poles of pleasure and pain, for it is
-clear that when feeling was distinguished from moral activity and set
-at variance with it, we had in view nothing but the pure economic
-activity. And in truth, of all the tendencies included in that concept
-as sketched out, this of economicity seems on the whole to prevail
-over the others, so much so that we shall henceforth be disposed to
-give to the word "feeling" the name of economic activity. Thus it
-was reasonably maintained, with implied reference to this meaning,
-that pleasure and pain are <i>proper</i> to feeling and <i>extraneous</i> to
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span> other spiritual forms, and that they only act in the others as
-<i>concomitants.</i> For if the theoretical forms give rise to the dialectic
-of true and false, in so far as the practical spirit can be introduced
-into them, it is clear that pleasure and pain come to those forms from
-the practical spirit, with which the theoretic spirit is always in
-unity. In the practical spirit too, the moral activity divides into
-pleasure and pain, in so far as it has concrete or economic form; and
-therefore in so far as it is economic, not in so far as it is moral.
-Pleasure and pain belong to feeling alone, because they belong to the
-economic activity alone, which is the practical in its general form,
-involving of itself all the other forms, practical and theoretic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Coincidence of duty with pleasure.</i></div>
-
-<p>When this has been established, pleasure or economic feeling or
-economic activity as positive cannot be at strife with duty or with
-the moral activity in its positivity, for the two terms coincide.
-The divergence existed only when they were conceived, not in unity
-and distinction, but in coordination. When we speak of a good action
-accompanied with pain, we make an inexact statement, or better, we make
-use of a mode of expression that must be understood, not literally,
-but in its spirit. The good action, as such, always brings with it
-satisfaction and pleasure, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span> pain said to accompany it, either
-shows that the action is not yet altogether good, because it has not
-been willed with complete internal accord, or that a new practical
-problem, still unsolved and therefore painful, lies beyond the
-pleasurable moral action.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of rigorism or asceticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The other false idea, of <i>rigoristic or ascetic</i> Ethic, which makes war
-upon pleasure as such, derives from the plan of coordination, through
-the already mentioned casuistic of the conflict between the coordinated
-terms. Indeed, if it be legitimate to combat this or that pleasure,
-which enters into a contest with the moral act, it is not possible to
-abolish the category of pleasure, for the reason already given, that
-in this way the category itself of morality, which has its reality and
-concreteness in pleasure (in economicity), would be abolished: the
-concrete and real moral act is also pleasurable. The attempt to abolish
-pleasure is as insane as would be the wish to speak without words or
-any other form of expression, preserving thought pure of such sensual
-contacts, that is to say, producing an inexpressed and inexpressible
-thought. This last attempt has been made by <i>mysticism,</i> which either
-does not give thoughts at all, or, contradicting itself, gives them
-expressed and logical,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span> like those of all other doctrines. Asceticism
-provides a complete counterpart to this in the practical field, for it
-might be called <i>mysticism of the practical</i> in the same way as the
-name of <i>asceticism of the theoretical</i> would not be unsuitable to
-mysticism.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Relation of happiness and virtue.</i></div>
-
-<p>What has been said of the relation between pleasure and morality, is
-to be repeated of the other between happiness and virtue, a relation
-that is identical with the preceding, from which it diners only because
-expressed by means of empirical concepts of class. Happiness is not
-virtue, as pleasure is not morality, because there exist the pleasure
-of the innocent or of the mentally deficient, and the happiness of the
-child or the brute, who are without moral conscience. But virtue is
-always happiness, as morality is always pleasure. It will be said that
-a virtuous man may be unhappy, because he suffers atrocious physical
-pain or is in financial difficulties, and, therefore, that virtue and
-happiness do not coincide. But this is a vulgar sophism, because the
-virtuous man, who should be also happy, must be truly and altogether
-virtuous; that is to say, he must cure and conquer the ills of the body
-and of fortune with his energy, if he can, or, if it be impossible
-to conquer them, he must resign himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span> and take them into account
-and develop his own activity within the limits that they lay down.
-Every individual, not only the unfortunate individual of the example,
-has his limits; and everyone can transform his limits into pains by
-being dissatisfied with them, just as every one can, with resignation,
-transform his pains into limits and conditions of activity. It will be
-said that sometimes the evils that assail the virtuous man are not only
-incurable, but so intolerable as to render all resignation impossible.
-But he who does not effectively and absolutely resign himself, that is,
-does not accommodate himself to life, dies; and the occurrence of the
-death of the individual is neither happiness nor unhappiness: it is a
-fact or event.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the subordination of pleasure to morality.</i></div>
-
-<p>Finally, the theory that <i>subordinates</i> pleasure or happiness, utility
-or economy, to duty, to virtue, to moral activity, is to be rejected.
-The subordination of the one term to the other is not possible on this
-side of morality, because only one of the two terms is present; and
-in like manner it is impossible in the moral circle, because, though
-the terms are certainly two, they are two in one, not one above and
-the other below; that is to say, they are distinct terms that become
-unified. Morality has complete empire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span> over life, and there is not an
-act of life, be it as small as you will, that morality does not or
-ought not to regulate. But morality has no <i>absolute empire over the
-forms or categories of the spirit,</i> and as it cannot destroy or modify
-itself, so it cannot destroy or modify the other spiritual forms, which
-are its necessary support and presupposition.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>No empire of morality over the forms of the spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>Hence is apparent the remarkable fatuity of those who pretend to
-regulate morally the <i>function</i> of art, of science, or of economy and
-profess <i>moralistic</i> theories of art and philosophy and a <i>moralized</i>
-economic science. The poet, the man of science, the business man, must
-be as honest as others, but it is not given to them to tear in pieces
-the nature of poetry, of science and of industry, in the madness of
-honesty. Indeed, were this done or attempted, and the poet were to
-introduce extraneous elements into his work of art, through his failure
-to understand morality, or the philosopher to veil or alter the purity
-of truth, or the man of business foolishly to bring his own business
-to ruin, then and only then, would they be dishonest. To substitute
-the <i>single acts</i> of life that appertain to morality, for <i>the
-universal forms of the spirit,</i> and to predicate of these what should
-be predicated only of those,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span> is so evident an absurdity that it could
-not be committed by anyone accustomed to philosophical distinctions.
-But what nonsense is so evident that idle babblers and elegant men of
-letters do not know how to cover with their ratiocinative and æsthetic
-flowers and to present to society or to the academic world as truth, or
-at least as a theory worthy of reflection and discussion?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Inexistence of other practical forms and impossibility of
-subdivision of the two established.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such, then, are the two forms of the practical activity, and such their
-relation; and as it is not possible to reduce them to one alone, so
-it is not possible to multiply them beyond the two, which altogether
-exhaust the nexus of finite and infinite. Hence, too, we perceive that
-the economic and also the ethic-economic activity do not each of them
-give rise to new subdivisions, because other terms of subdivision are
-not conceivable beyond the duality of finite and infinite. As there
-are no philosophical and ethical classes, nor categories of expression
-(rhetoric), nor categories of concepts (formalistic logic), so there
-are no economic categories and ethical categories beyond those that
-constitute utility (volition of the individual) and morality (volition
-of the universal).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>V</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMY AND THE SO-CALLED SCIENCE OF ECONOMY</h4>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Problem of the relations between Philosophy and Science of
-Economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>Internal observation, confirming at all points rational necessity,
-has rendered clear the existence of a special form of practical
-activity, the utilitarian or economic, and of a correlative Economic
-or Philosophy of economy. But however irrefutable may seem the
-demonstration that we have given, yet it will never be altogether
-satisfactory, while a very important point is left obscure: the
-relation between our <i>Philosophy of economy</i> and the <i>Science of
-economy.</i></p>
-
-<p>This is a system of doctrine that takes various names and forms, and
-is presented in turn as political, national, pure, or mathematical
-Economy; it is a system of doctrines which, although not without
-precedents in antiquity, has been gradually formed, especially in
-recent centuries, and is now in fullest flower. A saying of Hegel is
-often recorded, not without satisfaction, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span> even in his time he
-praised Economy as "a science that does much honour to thought, because
-it extracts the laws from a mass of accidentally."<a name="FNanchor_1_81" id="FNanchor_1_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_81" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>Has it the same object as our Philosophy of economy? If the reply be
-in the affirmative, how does it ever arrive at concepts altogether
-different? Or is it an empirical science, and if so, from what source
-does it derive the rigour and absoluteness by which it is removed
-from all empiricism and formulates truths of universal character? Two
-strict sciences with the same object are inconceivable; and yet as
-it seems, there must here be precisely two: hence the perplexity and
-disorientation that the affirmation of a Philosophy of economy must and
-does produce.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Unreality of the laws and concepts of economic science.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the economic actions of man be considered, in their uncontaminated
-and undiminished reality, with an eye free from all prejudice, it
-is never possible to establish even a <i>single one</i> of the concepts
-and laws of economic science. Every individual is different at every
-moment of his life: he wills always in a new and different way, not
-comparable with the other modes of his or of others' willing. If A
-spent seven soldi to buy a loaf of bread yesterday, and to-day he
-spend the same amount<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span> in making the same purchase, the seven soldi of
-to-day are not for this reason those of yesterday, nor is the bread
-the same as that of yesterday, nor the want that A satisfies to-day
-the same as that of yesterday, nor is the effort that his action
-costs him identical with that of yesterday. If the individual B also
-spend seven soldi for a loaf of bread, the action of B is different
-from that of A, as that of the A of to-day was different from that
-of yesterday. If we lead the economist on to this ground of reality
-(or rather to the side of this Heraclitean river, in which it is not
-possible to dip the same hands twice in the same water), he will feel
-himself impotent, for he will not find any point of support for the
-edification of any of his theories.&mdash;The value of a piece of goods
-(says a theorem of Economy) depends upon the quantity of it and of all
-the other goods that are upon the market.&mdash;But what does "goods" mean?
-Bread, for example, or wine? In reality, abstract bread and wine do
-not exist, but a given piece of bread, a given glass of wine, with a
-given individual who will give a treasure or nothing in order to eat
-the one or to drink the other, according to the conditions in which he
-finds himself.&mdash;Any sort of enjoyment, when protracted, decreases and
-finally becomes extinguished.&mdash;That is the law<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span> of Gossen, one of the
-foundation&mdash;stones of economic theory. But what are these enjoyments
-that are protracted, decrease, and end by becoming extinguished? In
-reality there exist only actions, which assume different positions
-at every moment, owing to the continual changing of surrounding
-reality, in which the volitional individual operates. The difference
-is qualitative, not quantitative: if the individual A eat the bread
-that he has bought for seven soldi, when swallowing the second or the
-tenth or the last mouthful, he has a pleasure, not inferior to that
-which he had when swallowing the first, but different: the last was
-not less necessary for him, in its way, than the first; otherwise he
-would have remained unsatisfied in his normal want, in his habit, or in
-his caprice.&mdash;The economic man seeks the maximum of satisfaction with
-the least effort.&mdash;That is the very principle of Economy, but neither
-does this principle correspond with reality, most simple and general
-though it be. The individual A disputes for an-hour, in order to save
-two soldi in the purchase of an object, for which he has been asked
-ten lire, thus attaining the maximum satisfaction for himself with the
-least means that is naturally at his disposal on that occasion. The
-individual B, making boast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span> of his magnificence, lights his cigarette
-with a banknote of a hundred lire, thus likewise attaining for himself
-the greatest satisfaction to which he aspired, with the least means
-that he possessed, namely, by burning that paper money. But if this
-be so, we have here a question, not of greatest and least, but of
-individual ends and of relative means adopted, or (owing to the unity
-of means and ends already noted), of actions individually different.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Economic Science founded upon empirical concepts, but not
-empirical or descriptive.</i></div>
-
-<p>Certainly, it is quite possible to abstract in a greater or less
-measure from the infinite variety of actions and to construct a
-series of types or concepts of classes and of empirical laws, thus
-rendering uniform the formless, within certain limits. Thus is
-obtained the concept of bread and of the consumption of bread, and
-of the various portions of bread and of other objects, for which a
-portion of bread can be exchanged, and so on. In this way are full
-philosophico-historical reality and the method of logical necessity
-and of realistic observation of facts abandoned for a feigned reality
-and for a method of arbitrary choice, which, as we know, has its good
-reasons for existing in the human spirit, and does great service by
-the swift recall and easy control of the requisite knowledge. And
-if Economy consisted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span> in the establishment of a series of laws and
-examples in the above sense (or when understood in this way), it would
-join the number of the descriptive disciplines; and in that case there
-would be no necessity for us to speak of it further, for it would
-suffice to refer back to what has already been said of the relations of
-the Philosophy of the practical with practical Description, classes,
-rules, and casuistic. But economic Science is not descriptive, and is
-not developed according to the following formula: goods are divided
-into the classes <i>a, b, c, d, e,</i> etc., and the class <i>a</i> is exchanged
-with the class <i>b</i> in the proportion of I to 3, the class <i>b</i> with the
-class <i>c</i> in the proportion of I to 5, etc. In such a formula is always
-understood the <i>up and down,</i> the <i>for the most part,</i> and <i>the very
-nearly:</i> the classes <i>with their ups and downs</i> are as stated; the
-exchanges take place <i>for the most part</i> in the proportions stated; if
-things are to-day <i>very nearly</i> thus, to-morrow they will be so <i>very
-nearly,</i> in a different way.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, the propositions of the Science of Economy are
-rigorous and necessary. "Granted that soils of different degrees of
-fertility are cultivated, their possessors will all obtain, besides
-the absolute rent, a differential rent, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span> the exception of the
-possessor of the least fertile soil" (Ricardo's law). "Bad money drives
-out good" (Gresham's law). Now, it is not conceivable in any case that
-soils of different fertility, all of them cultivated, should not give
-a differential rent. It will be said that the State can confiscate the
-differential rent, or that the possessor, owing to his bad cultivation
-or to his bad administration, may lose it; but the proposition does
-not remain less sound on this account. Nor is it possible that, when
-an unchangeable paper money is in circulation, gold coins should also
-circulate indifferently and on a par with it, when the total of the
-money in circulation lowers the value of the monetary unit beneath
-the metallic value of the better money. A madman who might be in
-possession of a hoard of gold pieces at the time of the circulation of
-the declining paper money (which causes poverty) would perhaps give it
-in exchange for the inferior money; but the wise man will keep it in
-his safe. The economic proposition expresses the rational necessity,
-not the madness, which is irrational. Those propositions, like all the
-others of economic science, are therefore certainly not descriptions,
-but <i>theorems.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Their mathematical nature.</i></div>
-
-<p>The denomination "theorems" makes us think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span> at once of the mathematical
-disciplines, among which alone can economic Science find a place.
-The propositions of that science being excluded from philosophical,
-historical, or naturalistic science, there remains nothing that they
-can be, save <i>mathematical.</i> Yes, they are mathematical, but not pure
-mathematics, for in that case they would be nothing but arithmetic,
-algebra, or the calculus, that is, they would belong to the kind of
-mathematical disciplines called <i>applied,</i> because they introduce into
-the paradigms of the calculus certain data taken from reality, that is
-to say, taken from without the purely numerical conception. Economic
-Science, then, is a mathematic applied to the concept of human action
-and to its sub-species. It does not inquire what human action is; but
-having posited certain concepts of action, it creates formulæ for the
-prompt recognition of the necessary connections.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its principles; their character of arbitrary postulates and
-definitions. Their utility.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that such propositions examined in their truth
-appear in one respect arbitrary and in another tautological. But it is
-not thus that they are examined, and it is not thus that propositions
-of mathematics are ever examined, for their value lies solely in the
-service that they render. Certainly Ricardo's law relating to land of
-varying fertility is nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span> but the definition of lands of various
-fertility, in the same way that Gresham's law relating to bad money is
-nothing but the definition of bad money. The same may be said of any
-other economic law, as, for example, that every protective tariff is
-destruction of riches, or that a demand for commodities is not a demand
-for labour, since these, like the preceding, are simply definitions
-of the protective tariff, of the demand for commodities, and of the
-demand for labour. And it could be proved of all of them that they are
-arbitrary, because the concepts of land, tariffs, commodities, money,
-and so on, are arbitrary, and because they become necessary only when
-that arbitrariness has been admitted as a postulate. But the same
-demonstration can be given of any theorem in Geometry; since it is not
-less arbitrary and tautological, that the measure of a quadrilateral
-should be equal to the base multiplied by the height, or that the
-sum of the squares of a cathetic should be equal to the square of
-the hypotenuse. This does not prevent Geometry from being Geometry,
-or negate the fact that without it we should not have been able to
-build the house in which we dwell, nor to measure this star upon which
-we live, nor the others that revolve around it or around which we
-revolve.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span> Thus, it would be impossible to find one's way in empirical
-reality without these economic formulæ, and that would happen which
-happened when economic science was still in its infancy; namely, that
-by its means measures of government were adopted, which were admirably
-suited to produce in the highest degree those evils which it was
-thought could be avoided by its help, a misfortune of which the Spanish
-government in Lombardy or in the Province of Naples in the seventeenth
-century, with its <i>cries</i> and its <i>pragmatics</i> in economic and
-financial matters, has left most excellent examples. Or what happens
-now, when ignorance, or deceitful interest, which profits by ignorance,
-proposes or causes to be adopted ruinous measures under the appearance
-of <i>publica salus,</i> arguing that they are good, or that they are good
-for different reasons than those for which they could be maintained.
-Such, for instance, would be the proposal for fresh expenditure on
-public works that are useless or of little use during a period of
-economic depression in a country, and instead of relieving, increase
-the general depression; or the increase of protective tariffs, when
-industrial progress is slow, which ought to encourage industry, but on
-the contrary produce an industry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span> that is unstable and artificial, in
-place of one that is spontaneous and durable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Comparison of Economic with Mechanics, and reason for its
-exclusion from ethical, æsthetic and logical facts.</i></div>
-
-<p>The special form of application of mathematics, which we find in
-economic Science, has been compared on several occasions with that
-which takes place in Mechanics. "The economic man" of the first has
-seemed to be altogether like the "material point" of the second, and
-Economy has been called "a sort of Mechanics," or simply "Mechanics."
-All this is very natural, for Mechanics are nothing but the complex
-of formulæ of calculation constructed on reality, which is Spirit and
-Becoming in Metaphysic, and may be abstracted and falsified in Science,
-so as to assume the aspect of Force or a system of forces, for the
-convenience of calculation. Economy does the same thing, when it cuts
-off from the volitional acts certain groups, which it simplifies and
-makes rigid with the definition of the "economic man," the laws of
-"least means," and the like. And owing precisely to this mechanicizing
-process of economic Science, it is ingenuous to ask oneself why
-ethical, logical, or æsthetic facts are not included in Economy, and
-in what way they can be included. Economic science is the sum of
-abstractive operations effected upon the concept of Will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span> or Action,
-which is thus <i>quantified.</i> Now since moral facts are also will and
-action, and since economic Science is not occupied with qualitative
-distinctions, not even with the quality itself of that economic fact
-which it employs as its material, it is clear that Science cannot
-lay any stress upon moral distinguished from economic facts, nor can
-it receive them in a special class, because its assumption is the
-indistinction of the two orders of facts, and they are included in that
-indistinction. As to æsthetic or scientific facts, these, taken by
-themselves, are not facts, but representations and thoughts of facts,
-and as such escape economic calculation: considered in the unity of the
-spirit, they are certainly facts, that is to say, volitional products,
-but as such are already found included with these in the indistinction
-of economic Science.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Errors of philosophism and historicism in Economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>As a mathematical discipline, economic Science is ultimately
-<i>quantitative,</i> and it remains so, even when it makes use of the
-smallest possible number of numerical and algebraical signs (even when
-it is not <i>mathematical Economy</i> in the strict sense of the word). The
-attempts, both of philosophism and historicism, which claim to deny
-Economy, by criticizing its abstractness and its arbitrariness, and to
-make it philosophical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span> (or as they say <i>psychological</i>) and historical
-are therefore to be reproved. If Economy do not give the universal
-truth of Philosophy, nor the particular truth of History, Philosophy
-and History are in their turn incapable of making the smallest
-calculation: if Economy have not eyes for the true, Philosophy and
-History have not arms to break and to dominate the waves of fact, which
-would oppress man with their importunity and finally prevent him from
-seeing. Hence the absurdity of <i>philosophism</i> and <i>historicism</i>; hence
-too, the sound tendency of Economy to constitute itself <i>pure</i> Economy,
-free of <i>practical</i> questions, which are also, it is clear, historical,
-not abstract and scientific questions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The two degenerations: extreme abstracticism and
-empiristical disaggregation.</i></div>
-
-<p>But economy has in itself other enemies besides these that are
-external, in so far as it is certainly a mathematical discipline, but
-an applied mathematic, that is to say, one that assumes empirical
-data. These empirical data can be infinitely multiplied, and hence
-result infinite economic propositions, each distinct from the other;
-and on the other hand, they can be regrouped, simplified and unified,
-so as finally to return to the indistinct <i>x.</i> If the first tendency
-prevail, we have what is called economic empiricism, a cumbrous
-mass of disaggregated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span> propositions; if the second, a very general
-formula, which sometimes does not even preserve the smallest vestige
-of that concept of human action from which it started, and becomes
-altogether confounded with the formulæ of arithmetic, of algebra and
-of the calculus. Sound economic Science must be at once abstract and
-empirical, in accordance with its nature, connecting and unifying
-disaggregate propositions; but it must not allow distinction to be
-lost in unity, for the one is as necessary as the other. Those who
-are unacquainted with the generalities of Economic Science, and those
-acquainted only with its details, are alike incapable, though for
-different reasons, of calculating the economic consequences of a
-fact. The first see all the facts as one single fact, the second, all
-the facts as different, without any arrangement by similarities and
-hierarchies. The question as to the relative proportion of generalities
-and particulars to be given in treatises, is one that has been
-much discussed, but since this has only a didascalic and pedagogic
-importance, it is only possible to answer it, case for case, according
-to the nature of the various scholastic institutions that are held in
-view. To maintain that Economy must stop short at this or that degree
-of abstraction,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span> and for example be limited to what are called external
-goods or riches, excluding services; or to capital, as a concept
-distinct from land and human labour, without striving to unify these
-three concepts, is altogether capricious. Every unification, like every
-specification, can be useful, and haters of abstracticism are also
-abstracticists, but only half so.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>dance at the History of the various tendencies of Economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>All those acquainted with economic studies will have recognized in
-the concepts that we have explained, the <i>logical motives</i> of the
-history of Economy, the divisions, the polemics, the defeats and the
-victories of this or that school and the progress of that branch of
-studies. The quantitative character of economic science already appears
-in its classics; in the inquiries of Aristotle as to prices and value
-(<i>Politic</i> and <i>Nichomachean Ethic</i>); and this is apparent also in
-the rare mentions by Mediæval and Renaissance writers. Economists
-have always been mathematicians, even when they have not spoken of
-mathematical Economy. Our writers of the nineteenth century, Galiani,
-Genovesi and Verri, were mathematicians in their methods; Francesco
-Ferrara, the greatest Italian economist of the nineteenth century, was
-a mathematician. The economic principle, which is all one with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
-excogitation of the economic man, was formulated by the head of the
-physiocratic school, Quesnay; and if the title of <i>political Economy,</i>
-first given to the discipline by Montchrétien in 1615, prevailed,
-that of <i>social Arithmetic</i> also sometimes made its appearance. Its
-progress has consisted, not only in the discovery of new economic
-theorems, but also in the connection and unification of those that had
-previously been posited in isolation, of material and immaterial goods,
-of the cost of production and of rarity, of gross and net produce, of
-agricultural rents and of all the others that are not agricultural, of
-the production, distribution and circulation of riches, of economic and
-financial laws, of social and isolated economy, of the value of utility
-and of the value of exchange. It has even been possible to unite with
-the body of admitted economic doctrines those of Marx, which seemed
-revolutionary, for these are only definitions of a particular casuistry
-founded upon the comparison of different types of economic constitution.</p>
-
-<p>But to conquer empiricism was not enough; economic Science was menaced
-in its existence by the so-called <i>historical School,</i> which refused
-to recognize abstract definitions and set up against them the infinite
-variety of historical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span> facts; hence the strife with historicism
-conducted by Menger and the Austrian school. A consequence of the
-struggle against the political degeneration of economic science was
-the constitution of Economy as a <i>pure</i> science (Cairnes). This was
-all the more necessary, inasmuch as by confounding the abstract with
-the concrete, and in the concrete itself, Economy with Ethic, there
-was a desire manifested upon several occasions among German economists
-(ethical school), and among Catholics of all countries, for an economic
-Science that should have as its base Ethic. The conception of Economy
-as a science deduced from the <i>egoistic</i> hypothesis, has been the
-extreme form of the reaction against ethicism (for example in the
-treatise of Pantaleoni). The dangers arising from philosophism have
-been less, because recent times, in which that discipline has most
-flourished, have not sinned through excessive philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Of late, owing to the works of Jevons and of other Englishmen, of
-Gossen, of the Italians of the school of Ferrara, and of the Austrians,
-Economy has become at once more and more complicated and more simple,
-owing to the applications, extensions, and reductions that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span> it has
-effected. But if with its progress it be able to become ever more exact
-and perspicuous, yet it will never for that reason become <i>organic;</i>
-its character of a quantitative discipline, of an applied mathematic,
-in which the atomism of the postulates and of the definitions is
-insuperable, does not allow of such metamorphoses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Signification of the judgment of Hegel upon the Science of
-Economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>In this connection and as the seal upon what we have just been saying,
-it is fitting to observe that the phrase of Hegel referred to above
-can only have been interpreted as expressing admiration for the degree
-of truth attained by Economy, owing to the ignorance of Hegelian
-philosophy that has become usual; as though Hegel meant that Economic
-science did much honour to the <i>thought,</i> that is, to the speculative
-reason. Hegel wished to say, on the contrary, that Economy does much
-honour to the intellect, that is, to the intellect alone, to that
-<i>abstractive</i> and arbitrary <i>intellect</i> which he hunted down in all
-his philosophy: that it is not indeed true and philosophical science,
-but a simple descriptive or quantitative discipline treated with much
-elegance. This praise also contained the demand for a delimitation,
-which, however, he did not expressly enunciate, develop and execute.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_81" id="Footnote_1_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_81"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Philos, d. Rechtes,</i> § 189. <i>Zus.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VI</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CRITIQUE OF THE CONFUSIONS BETWEEN ECONOMIC SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY OF
-ECONOMY</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Adoption of the method and of definition of Economy by
-Philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is no disagreement, then, between the Philosophy of Economy
-described by us and economic Science or Calculus, of which we have just
-defined the nature, since there cannot be any between two altogether
-heterogeneous forms, the one moving within the categories of truth, the
-other outside them, with objects of a practical order. This reciprocal
-tolerance can be disturbed only by Philosophy, when it compels itself,
-either to invade the field of economic Science, or to receive within
-itself, to a greater or less extent, the method and the formulæ
-proper to the latter. We have already referred to the first, when we
-noted the inadmissibility of the economic attempts of philosophism
-and historicism, and we will say no more on the subject. But it is
-opportune to draw attention to the fact that we must distinguish
-among<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span> these attempts those that we are accustomed to meet with in
-many treatises on economy, pure or political, and in the Science of
-finance (especially in the prologues), which labour to discover what
-economic action may be, and in what way it differs from morality, what
-are pleasure and pain, utility and value; whether the State be rational
-will that levies a portion of the riches of the citizens for the ends
-of civilization, or a simple fact resulting from general economic laws
-and the like. In all these efforts of the writers of treatises, we have
-an example of the gradual passage from empiria to philosophy, which is
-to be observed in all the other fields of knowledge, and if it be only
-possible to say in general that the Philosophy of Economy is derived
-from economic Science, it is certain, on the other hand, that it finds
-no small incentive in the philosophical doubts and discussions which
-economic Science supports. On the other hand, the claim to resolve
-philosophically and historically the economic Science or Calculus
-is, as we have seen, altogether sterile, or contradicts itself in
-development.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Errors that derive from it.</i></div>
-
-<p>From the second of the cases stated above, that is to say, from the
-mixture of economic with philosophic methods, arises a series of errors
-that are very common and very grave, and of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span> which it is opportune to
-take some notice here.</p>
-
-<p>These errors can be divided into three groups, according as they
-consist of <i>(a)</i> considering economic Science or Calculus as a method
-exclusive of every other, and alone capable of bestowing upon man all
-the truth that can ever be attained in the field of human actions;
-<i>(b)</i> in attributing the value of universal thought to the empirical
-thoughts upon which economic calculation is based; <i>(c)</i> in changing
-into reality the fictions excogitated for the establishment of the
-Calculus.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>1st. Negation of philosophy for economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>Of the three groups, the first, which represents the most extended
-and radical form of the error, is, as usual, the least harmful, for
-the reason previously given, that the precise and loyal positions are
-those that are the most completely surpassed. Several cultivators
-of economic Science, among the most strict and mathematical, enter
-upon this desperate struggle against philosophy, which they ridicule
-as empty chatter and do not merely wish to subdue but altogether to
-destroy, substituting for it the methods of empirical observation and
-of mathematical construction, thus favouring a particular empirical and
-mathematical philosophy of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span> own, however much they may protest
-to the contrary. That the pretension is unsustainable, is to be seen,
-both from the contradictions in which they become entangled and from
-the very fury that animates them, which is, at bottom, vexation at not
-being able to free themselves from the contradictions in which they
-have become involved. For our part, we should like to say to those
-excellent economists, alike pure and mathematical, did this not appear
-to be pouring oil upon the flames:&mdash;Spare yourselves the trouble of
-philosophizing. Calculate, and do not think!</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>2nd. Universal value attributed to empirical concepts.
-Example: protection and free trade.</i></div>
-
-<p>The other group is represented by a particular case of the empiristical
-error that we have already several times criticized, and many
-propositions of the kind that one hears in ordinary conversation,
-against which simple good sense has often rebelled, are to be reduced
-to it. Thus the empirical consideration of certain human actions as
-constituting richness and happiness, causes those individuals and
-peoples who possess property of that sort to be called rich and happy;
-but to this is opposed, with evident truth, that every one is happy
-in his own way and that external conditions are not proof of internal
-satisfaction, which is alone real and effective.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span> The great dispute on
-free trade is also to be reduced to the same misunderstanding, for when
-we undertake to demonstrate that wealth is destroyed by protection, the
-demonstration is efficacious only if the wealth, said to be destroyed,
-is precisely that of which it was desired to assure the increase by
-protection; but nothing has been proved if it be a different quality
-of wealth that it may be desirable to acquire, even with the loss
-and the destruction of the other. For example, a people may find it
-advantageous from a political and military point of view to maintain in
-its territories the cultivation of grain or the construction of ships,
-even if that were to cost more than to provide itself with grain and
-ships from abroad; in this case, we should, strictly speaking, talk,
-not of the destruction of wealth, but rather of the acquisition of
-wealth (presumed national security), paid for with dear grain and dear
-naval construction. When the empirical ideas of free trade were raised
-to the dignity of <i>laws of nature</i> (reason), there was a rebellion
-against the economists, by which it was made clear that those laws
-of nature were laws, not absolute, but empirical, that is to say,
-historical and contingent facts, and that the economists who propounded
-them as absolute,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span> were not at all men of science, but politicians,
-and represented (if not seriously, at least by unconscious suggestion,
-or, if it be preferred, by mere chance) the interests of certain
-definite classes or of certain definite peoples. And the rebellion was
-right, although it afterwards degenerated into the inconclusiveness
-of historicism, and absolutely denied to those false practical
-applications the formulæ and laws of Economy, which are <i>natural</i> in
-quite another sense, as nominal and therefore irrefutable definitions.
-Abstract principles, which are always inadequate to grasp the richness
-of reality, supply with a simple instrument him who passes from them
-to historical and sociological observation, which requires altogether
-different methods. Hence, for instance, the meaning of the school of
-Le Play, which in studying concrete economic conditions took note of
-religion, of family and political feelings, and of all the other things
-connected with the first; hence the admitted necessity of completing
-the analytic method (as it is called) with the synthetic, or (as it
-would be preferable to say) of neglecting abstractions when dealing
-with the problems of life and of directly intuiting life itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>3rd. Transformation of the functions of the calculus into
-reality.</i></div>
-
-<p>But what is particular to a philosophy that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span> enters into hybrid wedlock
-with economic Science, is the transformation of those quantitative
-principles, of which we have seen the artificial origin, into effective
-reality. As a result, when this origin has not been observed, or has
-been forgotten, we may chance to hear the theories of Gossen on the
-decline of pleasures, as though they were "fundamental laws of human
-sensibility"; or that some <i>homo economicus</i> has appeared, constructor
-of diagrams and calculator of degrees of utility and of curves of
-satisfaction, as though these were real things. Some false conceptions
-derive from economic principles transported into the philosophy of the
-practical, which we have already had occasion to refute, such as that
-of a <i>scale of values,</i> which the volitional man is supposed to have
-before him whenever he deliberates, and that other of the embarrassment
-he experiences in choosing between <i>two equal goods;</i> and finally the
-belief that man <i>wills things,</i> whereas what he wills in reality is not
-things but actions.</p>
-
-<p>The comparisons, metaphors and symbols, taken from Economy and used
-in ordinary conversation, lead to the false belief that mathematical
-constructions and those of the economic calculus are the real processes
-of the psyche or of the Spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The pretended calculus of pleasures and pains, and the
-doctrines of optimism and pessimism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The quantification of volitional acts, taken as a real fact and
-introduced into philosophy, has given origin to the idea of a <i>calculus
-of pleasures and pains and of a balance of life,</i> to be established
-with the pleasures on the profit side of the account and the sorrows
-on the side of loss. And there have even been ravings about a double
-mensuration of pleasures, to be based upon their <i>intensity</i> and
-<i>duration.</i> But the real man, at the moment he enjoys, has before him
-only his own enjoyment, and at the moment that he suffers, only his
-own sorrow: the past is past and life is not to be described like the
-profit and loss account of a business. The true economic man says to
-himself what Fra Jacopone sang in one of his lauds:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-So much is mine<br />
-As enjoyed and bestowed for the love divine!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The sophisms that assume consistency owing to this false conception,
-are most strange. Let the little dialogue of Leopardi with the seller
-of almanacs suffice for all. No one would wish to live his life again,
-not because the sorrows always exceed the pleasures, as that dialogue
-suggests, but rather because man is not, as he believes, a consumer
-of pleasures. He is a creator of life, and for this reason the idea
-of doing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span> again what has already been done, of retreading the same
-path, of reliving the already past, is repugnant to him, even were it
-all made up of pleasures as suggested, because he aspires only and
-always to the future. <i>Optimism and pessimism,</i> being each of them
-respectively unable altogether to deny pleasure and pain, are obliged
-to have recourse to these calculations and balances, in order to defend
-their preconceived conclusions: but in so doing they fall from Scylla
-into Charybdis and each reveals its own sophistical nature.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, a philosophy that calculates is a philosophy that toys
-or dotes, and if we have certainly advised the economists and
-mathematicians to calculate and not to think, we must, on the contrary,
-cry to the philosopher:&mdash;Think, and do not calculate! <i>Qui incipit
-numerare, incipit errare!</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VII</h4>
-
-
-<h4>HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS</h4>
-
-
-<p>The concepts of the useful and of the moral and the various attempts
-either to absorb the one in the other or to distinguish them, while
-recognizing their relations, are the problem on which has laboured the
-Philosophy of the practical as Ethic and Economic. Has this problem
-ever been fully solved? It will be permissible to doubt it, when we
-observe that a philosophical concept of the useful has been wanting
-until our own days; and that in consequence one of morality must also,
-strictly speaking, have been wanting, for it could not have been
-understood in its fulness and purity, owing to the obscure position of
-the term with which it is united.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Greek Ethic and its ingenuousness.</i></div>
-
-<p>I. The utilitarian character of Greek Ethic has been affirmed on
-several occasions; but one experiences a certain repugnance in applying
-so precise a term to the documents of ancient thought that remain to
-us. Socrates, it is true,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span> posited the useful as the supreme concept
-of morality, and identified the good life with eudæmonia; but for him
-that useful was nevertheless distinct from the merely pleasing, since
-it consisted in what is useful to man as man, and his eudæmonia bore
-much resemblance to the tranquil conscience of him who fulfils his
-proper duties. Plato (for example, in the <i>Protagoras</i>) expounds the
-doctrine that good things are nothing but pleasant things, and bad
-things painful; but this doctrine is enunciated in order to place in
-relief the thesis that man does not do wrong, save through ignorance,
-and because the bad seems to him to be the good; without saying that
-in other dialogues the distinction between pleasure and the good is
-recognized. Nor can the most systematic of the ancient philosophers,
-Aristotle, be called without reserve a hedonist, a eudæmonist, or a
-utilitarian, on the strength of his doctrine of happiness. Happiness
-is the supreme good, it is an end for itself; but virtue is already
-included for Aristotle in happiness, virtue which is found there, not
-as an adjunct, but intrinsic, for which exterior goods are indeed
-necessary, but only as instruments. The virtuous man must be a lover
-of himself (φίλαυτος), that is to say, just, temperate, liberal of his
-possessions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span> ready to yield honours and offices to his friends; lover
-of himself, then, in the lofty signification of the word (lover, not of
-the empirical, but of the metempirical ego), as opposed to the wicked
-man, who is his own enemy. Even Epicurus could not be included among
-the hedonists, since for him pleasure is not an end, but a means for
-<i>calm,</i> which is the true good, and calm is tranquillity of the spirit,
-which only the virtuous man can enjoy.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore more exact to consider Greek Ethic in its general
-character, not as eudæmonistic and utilitarian, but here also, in
-relation to the new problem that we now have before us (in the same
-way as was done above, in respect to practical intellectualism), as
-<i>ingenuous</i>; for in truth that problem did not constitute the centre
-of inquiries and discussions, as they present themselves in our times,
-nor were the different schools divided upon it. They were distinguished
-from one another (as has been already noted in respect to the doctrine
-of the passions), rather by the different rules of life respectively
-laid down by each as preferable. The antitheses of the Cynics and
-Cyrenaïcs, of the Epicureans and the Stoics, have but a superficial
-resemblance to those of the ethical rigorists or abstractionists,
-hedonists or utilitarians, which have appeared as the result<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span> of the
-antithesis between pleasure and pain explicitly stated in modern times.
-It would be difficult to point out ethical rigorists and utilitarians
-among thinkers truly and properly so called. In order to discover the
-utilitaristic attitude at that period of history, it would be necessary
-to have recourse to some rhetorician, such as Carneades, ready to
-maintain indifferently the most opposed paradoxes, or to Callicles and
-Thrasymachus, so magnificently portrayed in the Platonic dialogues.
-These were rather men of the world than philosophers, giving the
-immediate and violent impression of the struggle for life, and for this
-reason they were at conflict with Socrates, the philosopher, whom they
-sometimes treated as a clown and utterer of paradoxes, sometimes pitied
-as a child, a "suckling" child, and objected to him that philosophers
-do not understand one iota about politics (as often has been and often
-will be objected by politicians, not altogether without reason). If it
-be wished, all the same, to find a reference to later utilitarianism
-among the sophists, the hedonists and the Epicureans, or among the
-Stoics, with their conception of life as a war against the passions,
-something of future rigorism and asceticism, or in certain discussions
-among the Platonic dialogues as to the relation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span> between pleasure and
-pain, a first trace of the discussions upon the same argument that have
-become most complicated in modern times, by all means let this be done,
-provided it be never forgotten that it is an affair of glimmers, rather
-than of vivid light, of antitheses hardly accentuated, not of those
-that are well defined and stand out clearly.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Importance of Christianity for Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>II. The precise and it may be said violent affirmation of the
-antithesis, was the work of Christianity, which, conceiving pleasure
-and duty, nature and morality to be heterogeneous elements, did
-great service, both to the progress of civilization in general and
-in particular to Ethic. It is necessary to insist upon this, for the
-modern world was bound afterwards to react against this antithesis,
-and necessarily to assume an Antichristian, even a pagan attitude,
-and modern art and poetry are often inspired with an abhorrence of
-the tenebrous Middle Ages and of sad Christianity, and give a sigh of
-regret for Greece as for a lost Paradise, or a shout of jubilation
-as for a Paradise regained. But reactions are reactions and poetry
-is poetry: humanity never retraces its footsteps, though it is often
-wont to adorn the future with memories of the past. The Greece of our
-hearts is a new Greece,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span> profoundly modified by Christianity; the
-Greece of Goethe and of Hegel is no longer the Greece of Sophocles and
-of Aristotle, but a Greece far richer and more intense. Thought, like
-life, never turns back, and if it be necessary eventually to attain to
-a theoretic conciliation between pleasure and duty, between the useful
-and morality, such a conciliation will be very different from that of
-still ingenuous Greek Ethic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The three resulting directions: utilitarianism, rigorism,
-and psychologism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The spectacle afforded by modern Ethic, from the Renaissance to the
-beginning of the nineteenth century, and also (with few exceptions) in
-the later periods is still altogether dominated by that antithesis, and
-therefore two currents are to be discerned in it: one that attaches
-itself to the first term of the antithesis, the useful, and denies the
-second, or resolves it in the first, the other, which denies the useful
-and retains moral duty as the exclusive form of the practical activity.
-This latter is <i>rigoristic</i> Ethic, child of Christianity and of ascetic
-oriental sources, which flowed into it together by direct filiation;
-the other is <i>utilitarianism,</i> child also, though illegitimate, of
-the distinction or rending asunder of the ancient unity of duty
-and pleasure, virtue and happiness, effected by Christianity. The
-antithesis sometimes seems to be solved and a Philosophy <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>of the
-practical appears, which, without clinging exclusively to one term or
-the other, receives both into itself. But this philosophy, when it
-does not reveal itself at bottom (which generally happens), as masked
-utilitarianism, or (a less frequent case) rigorism attenuated in
-expression, has the defect of being, not philosophy, but an empirical
-description of the so-called principles of the practical, placed one
-beside the other, without a profound definition or deduction of either.
-This third direction may be called <i>intuitionism</i> or <i>psychologism.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Hobbes, Spinoza.</i></div>
-
-<p>Utilitarianism is principally represented by English thought, to which
-belongs Hobbes, the greatest of all utilitarians, who proclaimed, <i>in
-statu naturae</i> (that is to say, in genuine reality) <i>mensuram juris
-esse utilitatem.</i><a name="FNanchor_1_82" id="FNanchor_1_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_82" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Similar doctrines are to be found in Spinoza, who
-has also been looked upon and criticized as a pure utilitarian. But the
-matter is rather more complicated as regards Spinoza. Of him it should
-rather be said that he would have been the most resolute of ethical
-rigorists, had he ever been able to construct an Ethic. His determinism
-was an insuperable obstacle to this, for it does not admit distinctions
-of values, but considers the good.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span> like being, in its abstractness,
-and therefore, the being of each one as <i>suum essere conservare</i>; hence
-the appearance of utilitarianism, assumed by the Ethic of Spinoza.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>English Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>From Hobbes descend Locke, Hartley, Hume, Adam Smith, Warburton,
-Paley, and others such; they are all less courageous and less coherent
-philosophers than he. Indeed, if Hobbes himself could not but be
-incoherent and could not avoid causing a desire for and therefore
-a state of peace to arise from a state of nature or of war, whence
-is discovered to the mind a source of the practical, altogether
-different from that of the useful alone, which was presupposed; with
-the mean and sophistical efforts of his successors, the incoherence
-becomes altogether irritating. The aid sought from associationism
-is among these efforts, and the excogitation of the example of the
-miser (found for the first time in 1731, in a discourse of the Rev.
-John Gay),<a name="FNanchor_2_83" id="FNanchor_2_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_83" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and also the admission of the principle of sympathy
-beside that of egoism, a principle which with a cast of the dice is
-made to disappear again, and to become absorbed in egoism itself. The
-inanity of utilitarianism, which has already in Hobbes a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span> tendency to
-disavow itself, by recognizing as true laws not those of nature, but
-those revealed by God (<i>in Scripturis sacris latae</i>),<a name="FNanchor_3_84" id="FNanchor_3_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_84" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and in Locke
-retained the divine side by side with the civil laws and those of
-public opinion,<a name="FNanchor_4_85" id="FNanchor_4_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_85" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> became evident in the theological utilitarianism of
-Warburton and of Paley. As for intuitionists and psychologists, such as
-Shaftesbury, Hutcheson, Butler, these either left an unsolved dualism
-(as was above all the case with the last), or, although possessing the
-most lively consciousness of moral force, they yet strove to deduce
-it in some way from the egoistical and utilitarian principle. The
-French materialists of the eighteenth century, such as Helvétius and
-D'Holbach, though less subtle, are more consequent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Idealistic Philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>Rigoristic Ethic displayed its strength against anti-ethical
-utilitarianism and anti-philosophical psychologism, not only in
-traditional scholastic, but also in the explicit polemic undertaken by
-Cudworth, Cumberland, Clarke and Price, against Hobbes, Locke, and the
-other utilitarians who followed them. The makers of great systems, too,
-attached themselves to ethical rigorism, Descartes (and in a certain
-sense Spinoza),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span> Malebranche, Leibnitz, and the philosophy of the
-school of Leibnitz, as the moral consciousness declared itself in its
-true nature in Jean Jacques Rousseau against the French materialists.
-But rigorism also ended by contradicting itself in the same way as
-utilitarianism, owing to its one-sidedness, when it recognized a
-principle that was not merely utilitarian or that lost itself in
-mystery, either by reasoning with the utilitarian principle in the
-course of its development, or by receiving utilitarianism into itself,
-without any mediation, in the form of the morally indifferent. This is
-an old evil, which had already appeared in the <i>ἀδιάφορα</i> of Stoicism,
-and in all those exceptions to the rigorous moral law, which ascetic
-Christianity had been obliged to allow, in order to exist side by side
-with the worldly life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Kant and his affirmation of the ethical principle.</i></div>
-
-<p>III. The strength and the weakness of rigorism are to be clearly seen
-in the greatest ethical system to which it led: the moral doctrine of
-Emmanuel Kant. It was time that the principle of Christian Ethic should
-be reaffirmed, duty as clearly distinguished from pleasure, giving to
-it that relief which it had been without in the systems of Descartes
-and of Leibnitz, after the materialistic and utilitarian orgy that had
-lasted for more than a century,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span> and after the equivocal attempts at an
-approach and fusion of the useful and the moral. Kant did not indeed in
-this respect oppose Wolffian Leibnitzianism; and although the ethical
-concept of <i>perfectio</i> seemed to him to be empty and indeterminate, yet
-he was never able to prove that it was a eudæmonistic and utilitarian
-concept.<a name="FNanchor_5_86" id="FNanchor_5_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_86" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> But that concept certainly had not the energy of duty and
-of the Kantian categoric imperative, which are true declarations of war
-against every heteronomous morality. This is the merit of Kant, after
-whom no serious philosopher can be anything but a Kantian in Ethic, as,
-after Christianity, to no one, not a wind-bag or an extravagant, is it
-given to be anything but a Christian. Moral action has no other motive
-than morality itself: to promote one's own happiness (said Kant) can
-never be <i>immediately</i> duty, and even less the principle of all duties.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Self-contradictions of Kant concerning the concept of the
-useful, of prudence, of happiness, etc.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the mistake of Kant lies in not having well analyzed the concepts
-of pleasure, of happiness and of the useful, and in having thought that
-he could free himself from them, by placing them among another set of
-principles, which he called <i>hypothetical</i> imperatives and opposed to
-the <i>categoric. </i> We know that the imperative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span> of those concepts is
-not less categoric than that of morality: it is a true imperative,
-not to be confounded with the knowledge of experience, metaphorically
-called imperative, because it assumes the appearance of a technique
-dealing with the practical. Kant was to some extent aware of this, for
-he sub-distinguishes the hypothetical imperatives into <i>problematical</i>
-and <i>assertorial.</i> The first of these are technical and give rise to
-maxims of <i>cleverness</i> (<i>Geschicklichkeit</i>); the second are <i>pragmatic</i>
-and consist of maxims of <i>prudence.</i> Observe the difficulties in which
-he becomes involved, through not wishing to recognize the autonomous
-character of these imperatives compared with the moral imperatives,
-that is to say, the categoricity of both. The imperatives of prudence
-and of happiness are concerned (he says) "with an end which can be
-assumed as real among all rational beings (in so far as the imperatives
-can be applied to them in their quality of dependent beings); and,
-therefore, an intention, which not only they <i>may</i> possess, but which
-it is assumed with certainty that they <i>do</i> possess, according to a
-necessity of nature, which is the intention of happiness." We should
-therefore conclude that they are concerned with an end not less
-serious than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span> that of morality. But Kant perceives the poison in the
-argument and strives to turn them again into imperatives concerning
-means: "ability" (he continues) "in the choice of the means of one's
-own well-being, may be called <i>prudence;</i> therefore the imperative
-relating to the choice of the means for one's own happiness, namely the
-precept of prudence, is always hypothetical; the action is ordered, not
-absolutely, but only as means for another purpose." It is clear that to
-be able to call that knowledge or ability "prudence" is not sufficient
-to change the imperative of happiness into mere ability and knowledge.
-Kant perceives this also: "If it were easy to give a definite concept
-of happiness, the imperatives of prudence would altogether coincide
-with those of ability and would also be analytic. For it would be
-said in the one case as in the other, that he who wishes the end also
-wishes (necessarily, in conformity with reason) the only means for the
-purpose within his power. The concept of happiness is unfortunately
-so indeterminate, that although every one wishes to attain to it, he
-is nevertheless unable ever to say definitely and in accordance with
-himself exactly what he desires and wishes. The reason is that the
-elements which belong<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span> to the concept of happiness are all empirical
-and must therefore all be taken from experience; quired an absolute
-whole, a maximum of well-being in my present state and in every future
-state." In what shall happiness be placed? In riches? In knowledge? In
-long life? In good health? None of these things is without dangers. In
-short, it is impossible to determine with full certainty, according
-to any principle whatever, what would make man truly happy; therefore
-it is not possible to act according to a definite principle, but only
-according to empirical concepts; and the imperatives of prudence,
-strictly speaking, command nothing.&mdash;As we see, the only effective
-argument of Kant against the admission of the categoric imperatives of
-well-being, of utility, of happiness, is that he does not know exactly
-what they are. This did not authorize him to exclude those imperatives
-and reduce them to pseudo&mdash;imperatives, to hypothetic imperatives,
-or to empirical rules. In other passages of his works, Kant tends to
-the other solution of excluding the maxims of prudence from the pure
-practical reason, because they are maxims of self-love (<i>Selbstliebe,</i>)
-or of the practical reason empirically or <i>pathologically</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span>
-conditioned, since for him every pleasure that precedes the moral law
-and is independent of it, is pathological, that is to say, it belongs
-to the senses, to the inferior appetitive faculty, not to that which
-is superior and to reason. Kant often returns to this point and always
-experiences the same embarrassments and contradictions, as is proved by
-the variety of the arguments to which he has recourse.<a name="FNanchor_6_87" id="FNanchor_6_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_87" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Errors derived from it in his Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the unrecognized autonomy of the useful, of happiness, of
-well-being, generally revenges itself; because, surreptitiously
-introduced, it causes itself to be unduly recognized afterwards. Thus
-it comes about that Kant creates, on the one hand, the monster of
-disinterested actions, and on the other, does not altogether exclude
-the concept of actions morally indifferent or permissible.<a name="FNanchor_7_88" id="FNanchor_7_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_88" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Thus,
-too, it happens that owing to the discord that he preserves between
-virtue and happiness, thinking vain the pretence of the Stoics and
-Epicureans to reconcile them in this life, he is led to postulate
-the existence of God and of the immortality of the soul, and to
-make of virtue a means of rendering oneself worthy of happiness in
-another life. "The cold duty of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span> Kant" (wrote Hegel) "is the last
-undigested morsel given by revelation to reason, and it weighs
-upon its stomach."<a name="FNanchor_8_89" id="FNanchor_8_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_89" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> Consequently, the Ethic of Kant, although
-so different in tendencies and inspiration, yet joined hands with
-theological utilitarianism, ending at length by also declaring that
-moral obligation is inconceivable, without the idea of a God, who
-rewards and punishes in another life, and by declaring that God and the
-immortality of the soul cannot be otherwise affirmed than by means of
-moral exigencies. Moral rigorism, like utilitarianism, makes shipwreck
-in mystery.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Occasions for a philosophy of economy.</i></div>
-
-<p>IV. Occasions and opportunities for a philosophical concept of the
-useful were not, to tell the truth, wanting to the thought anterior
-to Kant; but Kant let them all slip. Without attributing too much
-suggestive power to certain classes of virtues, such as <i>fortitude</i>
-or <i>prudence</i> (virtues that are generically economic, not exclusively
-moral), which had passed from the Greek into the Christian Ethic,
-nor to certain acute aphorisms of psychologists and moralists (for
-instance: <i>Il y a des héros en mal comme en bien;&mdash;Ce n'est pas
-assez d'avoir des grandes qualités, il en faut avoir l'économie;&mdash;La
-souveraine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span> habilité consiste à bien connaître le prix des choses,
-etc.<a name="FNanchor_9_90" id="FNanchor_9_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_90" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>),</i> a first opportunity was certainly afforded by that inferior
-faculty of appetition, which the Wolffian philosophy had inherited
-from the Platonic, Aristotelian, and scholastic tradition.<a name="FNanchor_10_91" id="FNanchor_10_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_91" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> That
-faculty was parallel with the inferior faculty of knowledge, which
-that same philosophy had with Baumgarten attempted to develop into an
-independent science, <i>Aesthetica,</i> a development that should have led
-to the thought of an analogous transformation of the corresponding
-practical faculty, which might have become an <i>Oeconomica</i> or <i>Ethica
-inferior,</i> as from Æsthetic had been made a <i>Gnoseologia inferior.</i> But
-Kant also rejected Æsthetic, as science of a special theoretic form,
-science of intuition or fancy, conceiving instead, on the one hand
-a transcendental Æsthetic or doctrine of space and time, and on the
-other, a Critique of judgment, or doctrine of finality and morality,
-symbolized in nature;<a name="FNanchor_11_92" id="FNanchor_11_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_92" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> thus he fell into other difficulties, when
-he wished to establish an analogy between the other forms of the
-practical reason and that of the theoretical.<a name="FNanchor_12_93" id="FNanchor_12_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_93" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Although he preserved
-the division of the faculty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span> of appetition into inferior and superior
-(<i>untere und obere Begehrungsvermögen,</i>) he failed to realize, as we
-have seen, the true philosophical concept of the <i>inferior.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The problem of politics and Machiavellism.</i></div>
-
-<p>A second opportunity was presented by the series of treatises, which,
-from Machiavelli onward, had come to conceive of politics as a fact
-independent of morality, elaborating in particular those precepts and
-maxims of the "reason of state," of which we have already had occasion
-to expose the empirical character. But however empirical they were,
-those mental products gave rise to the problem of the relations between
-morals and politics, that is to say, as to whether the two terms could
-be considered as immediately identifiable. The thought of Machiavelli,
-in particular, constituted an enigma that all attempted to interpret
-in the most different ways, most by vituperating, some by defending it
-with strange reasons (Spinoza was among the defenders<a name="FNanchor_13_94" id="FNanchor_13_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_94" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>), though they
-never succeeded in freeing themselves from its difficulties, for to
-that end would have been necessary the understanding of the spiritual
-value of the utilitarian will, even if amoral. It was only when this
-difficult concept was to some extent caught sight of (by De<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span> Sanctis)
-that Machiavelli appeared at once justified and criticized; but while
-that concept remained obscure, the point of view of Machiavelli was
-never attained and the work was condemned for reasons of a moralistic
-character (Villari).<a name="FNanchor_14_95" id="FNanchor_14_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_95" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Kant, too, in his work on <i>Perpetual Peace,</i>
-treated the problem of the relations between morality and politics,
-affirming that no disagreement is possible between them, unless by
-politics is meant a <i>doctrine</i> of prudence, that is, "a theory of
-maxims for the selection of the means best adapted for the objects of
-individual advantage; that is, when the existence of morality is not
-altogether denied."<a name="FNanchor_15_96" id="FNanchor_15_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_96" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> Here too, he was right, when he claimed that
-concrete political actions should be submitted to morality; but, on the
-other hand, he did not perceive that submission and identity presuppose
-a previous independence and distinction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The doctrine of the passions.</i></div>
-
-<p>Finally, a third opportunity was offered, in the rehabilitation of the
-passions, begun by the philosophers of the seventeenth century and
-expressed, as has been said, in a notable manner by Vico. Now if the
-passions in general be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span> the volitional activity itself, considered
-in its dialectic, they are also the soul turned to the particular,
-the useful in respect to the universal, which is sought by morality.
-This is to be seen especially in Vico and better still in Hegel, very
-similar to Vico in this respect; he admirably developed this moment
-of <i>particularity,</i> which is passion, necessary for the concreteness
-of the universal. As the passions for Vico are human nature itself,
-which morality directs but does not destroy, and are neither good
-nor bad in themselves, and <i>utilitates ex se neque turpes neque
-honestae, sed earum inaequalitas est turpitudo, aequalitas autem
-honestas</i><a name="FNanchor_16_97" id="FNanchor_16_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_97" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>&mdash;so, for Hegel, "passion is neither good nor bad in its
-formal character and only expresses the fact that a subject has placed
-all the living interest of his spirit, of his talent, of his character,
-of his enjoyment, in a single content. Nothing great can or has been
-accomplished without passion. Only a morality that is dead and too
-often hypocritical can inveigh against the form of passion as such. ...
-Ethicity concerns the content, which, as such, is universal, something
-inactive, and has its active element in the subject: the fact that the
-content is immanent in it constitutes interest,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span> and in so far as it
-dominates all the efficient subjectivity, passion."<a name="FNanchor_17_98" id="FNanchor_17_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_98" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Hegel and the concept of the useful.</i></div>
-
-<p>The same Hegel once observed: "As for what concerns utility, morality
-must not play the disdainful towards it, for every good action is
-actually useful, that is to say, possesses reality and produces
-something good. A good action that were not useful would not be an
-action, would not possess reality. The inutility of the good in itself,
-as its unreality, is its abstractness. Not only is it possible to be
-conscious of utility, but we ought to be conscious of it, since it is
-true that it is useful to know the good: utility does not mean anything
-but that we are conscious of our own action. If this be blameworthy, it
-will also be blameworthy to know the goodness of one's own action."<a name="FNanchor_18_99" id="FNanchor_18_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_99" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-<p>Hegel thus discovered the function of the useful when rehabilitating
-the passions, though in a fugitive manner. But Kant had not attributed
-importance to the problem of the passions in Ethic, and had not
-therefore been in a position to avail himself of the suggestion
-contained in the doctrine of the passions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Fichte and the elaboration of the Kantian Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>Fichte, in re-elaborating the Kantian philosophy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span> showed the relation
-between pleasure and duty in a manner that came very near to the
-truth. He gave precedence to what he called the <i>empirical</i> over the
-moral man, the former corresponding entirely to the merely utilitarian
-or economic. What, asks Fichte, will be his maxim of action at this
-stage? "As there is no other impulse in his consciousness save the
-natural, and as this is directed only toward enjoyment and has pleasure
-for its motive, that maxim cannot but be to choose what promises the
-maximum of pleasure in intensity and extension; that is, the maxim
-of his own happiness. This may likewise be sought in the pleasure of
-others by means of the sympathetic impulses; but the ultimate scope
-of his action always remains the satisfaction of those impulses and
-pleasures which arise from it, and therefore, his own happiness. Man
-at this stage is an intelligent animal." "But," he continues, "it is a
-fault to remain here, and man must raise himself to a stage at which
-he enjoys an altogether different liberty; he must be free, not only
-<i>formaliter,</i> but also <i>materialiter,</i> that is, he must attain to the
-moral stage."<a name="FNanchor_19_100" id="FNanchor_19_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_100" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> That first stage, then, is formal freedom, and is no
-longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span> considered a pathological condition of the spirit, or as that
-merely technical knowledge of which Kant speaks. This would constitute
-no small progress, if Fichte had been conscious of all the richness of
-the concept of which he had caught a glimpse, and had made it fructify.
-But it seems that he was not aware of this, and certainly he took no
-advantage of it whatever.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The problem of the useful and of morality in the thinkers
-of the nineteenth century.</i></div>
-
-<p>V. The inventive genius of modern Ethic is exhausted with these
-thinkers. Their successors have reproduced the old situations, one
-after the other. Some, while accepting the Kantian morality, wished
-to temper and correct its exaggerations, which was not possible,
-save by a more profound speculative vision of the relation between
-pleasure and good, the useful and the moral; whereas they believed that
-they could attain to it by <i>also</i> taking account of pleasure and of
-happiness, and by conceiving a doctrine of happiness or eudæmonology
-side by side with Ethic, but subordinate to it (in Italy: Galluppi
-and Rosmini). Schiller had already recognized in Kant's time the
-unilaterality of Kant, and had made it the object of criticism and of
-epigram, which, however, does not mean that he had truly and properly
-corrected its errors. Others occupied themselves in various ways
-with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span> enumeration and juxtaposition of the principles: thus, for
-instance, Schopenhauer makes compassion arise beside egoism, which
-then divides into benevolence and justice; and Herbart, although he
-excludes the useful, because, according to him, "it refers to a point
-external to itself,"<a name="FNanchor_20_101" id="FNanchor_20_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_101" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> enumerates five practical ideas that are not
-all truly moral. The affinity both of Herbart and of Schopenhauer,
-with Shaftesbury, Hutcheson and English and Scottish psychologism,
-is clear. The study of the practical ideas of Herbart is not without
-interest as an unconscious affirmation of the necessity of the
-economic principle. The first of these, indeed, <i>internal freedom,</i>
-consists in being able to achieve with our own strength the model
-that we propose to ourselves, and is liberty, but not yet moral
-liberty. "To be able to decide <i>according to motives</i>" (says Herbart
-on one occasion) "is already a sign of psychical health: to decide
-<i>according to the best motives</i> is the condition of morality."<a name="FNanchor_21_102" id="FNanchor_21_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_102" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
-The second of the practical ideas, that of <i>perfection,</i> is concerned
-precisely with the strength of the will, taken in itself, and resembles
-a combination of the Hellenic virtues of fortitude and temperance.
-Here willing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span> is considered in itself, independently of its objects,
-and in this consideration there is no other difference, save their
-strength, between the various Willings: the greater this is, the more
-it is admired; weakness displeases and strength pleases the practical
-judgment, and this even when it is unjust, iniquitous and wicked, and
-notwithstanding such vices.<a name="FNanchor_22_103" id="FNanchor_22_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_103" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> Lotze, following Herbart, determines
-as requisites of actions, that they must be possible, energetic,
-conscientious on the one hand, and on the other, consequent, habitual,
-individual, stating that these two series of predicates apply equally
-to moral and immoral actions.<a name="FNanchor_23_104" id="FNanchor_23_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_104" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>&mdash;He does not think it worth while to
-take count of the English utilitarians and post-Kantian intuitionists,
-or of their French, Italian, and German imitators; because, just as the
-appearance of a Hobbes, of a Hume, or of a Shaftesbury, is important
-in their time, so the appearance of a Bentham or of a Spencer out of
-their time is insignificant, for these latter amuse themselves with
-the useful, with association and evolution (which according to them
-should become the socially useful), and with the double principle of
-egoism and of altruism. Stuart Mill alone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span> can afford some interest,
-when he says (with that mental inconclusiveness which has seemed to
-many to be acuteness and equilibrium) that moral pleasures differ from
-the sensual, not only in degree, but also in genus and in quality (<i>in
-kind</i>); and that justice is a class of socially useful actions that
-arouses feelings themselves also different, not only in degree, but
-also in genus and in quality (<i>in kind</i>), from those caused by useful
-actions. In short, the philosophy of the nineteenth century has not
-only been unable to progress, but has not even been able to maintain
-itself on a level with the practical doctrines of Fichte and of Hegel,
-in which a glimpse was caught of the relation of first and second
-practical degree, and there was a tendency to reconcile passion and
-ethicity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Extrinsic union of Ethic and of economic Science, from
-antiquity to the nineteenth century.</i></div>
-
-<p>VI. Certainly economic science, owing to its empirico-quantitative
-character, already noted, was not made to fill the void and to furnish
-a more positive and exact concept of the useful. The contact between
-Economy and Philosophy remained for a time extrinsic, since economic
-Science appeared in treatises upon the Philosophy of the practical,
-together with the other juridical and historical matter, which it was
-customary to include with it. The precedent for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span> such a union could be
-found even in Aristotle's <i>Nichomachean Ethic,</i> which supplies certain
-notions as to the concept of price and value. Considerations on the
-same argument abound in the Scholastics, especially in St. Thomas,
-whose <i>Oeconomica</i> always forms part of his Ethic, as the doctrine for
-the government of the family. Finally, there is an ample discussion
-of the subject in the treatises of the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, which took the name of <i>natural Rights.</i> It happened that
-the English moralists of the eighteenth century were also led to
-occupy themselves with Economy and the economists with Ethic, owing
-to the juxtaposition of the two concepts for didascalic reasons and
-for University convenience. Thus Hutcheson developed Economy, in his
-<i>Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy</i> (1747); and the <i>Essays</i> of
-Hume are occupied with moral and economic questions; and Adam Smith
-is the author, not only of <i>The Wealth of Nations,</i> but also of <i>The
-Theory of the Moral Feelings,</i> almost two parts of a Philosophy of the
-practical. The importance of economic studies had become so palpable at
-that time, that toward the end of the century, Buhle was led to include
-them in the history of philosophy (and we believe that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a></span> he was the
-first). He exposes at length in his work the ideas of Hume, of Smith,
-of Stewart, attributing it as a merit to the English writers to have
-reduced that material to philosophy by a method of treatment without
-example (he said) in previous centuries.<a name="FNanchor_24_105" id="FNanchor_24_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_105" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> Finally, Hegel dedicated
-certain important paragraphs of his <i>Philosophy of Law,</i> in the section
-dealing with civil society,<a name="FNanchor_25_106" id="FNanchor_25_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_106" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> to the "system of wants," or Economy.
-The cult of Economy has rather increased than diminished in the
-nineteenth century and the much-discussed social problem (especially
-capitalism and socialism) has not been without a certain influence
-upon treatises of Ethic, where, if we rarely find statements that are
-strictly economic, there is always plenty of chatter about property and
-production and the relations between the working and capitalistic class.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Philosophical questions arising from a more intimate
-contact between the two.</i></div>
-
-<p>But a more intimate bond could not take place, save when attempts to
-understand the material of science and to place it in the system of
-the spirit were united with economic Science, properly so called. For
-since that science is occupied with human actions and appears to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span> give
-advice as to conduct, in what relation can it possibly stand to Ethic,
-which is also occupied with actions and also gives advice?&mdash;Such a
-question was in a certain way already implied in the mediæval idea of
-a <i>justum pretium,</i> to be placed beside the effective price, which is
-realized according to the knowledge and convenience of each; it forms
-the kernel of the debate between the <i>subjective and the objective</i>
-concept of value, that is, between the purely economic consideration
-and another resulting from moral exigencies, between the value that
-is, and that which in a certain way should be. It began to wax ardent,
-with the accusation, of being theoreticians of egoism, hurled at the
-great English economists, Smith and Ricardo; this accusation, taken
-up and modified by others, became accepted as the true and proper
-designation of the function of Economy, which should accordingly be
-that of studying human actions in their exclusively abstract, egoistic
-aspect. But, since abstraction is not full reality, the false task
-assigned to Economy called for the aid of the doctors. Such were
-the French economists, seized with the mania of teaching generosity
-to the cold Britons (Blanqui, etc.); such too were the Germans, who
-wished to induce Economy to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span> mend its ways and to become conscious of
-its lofty duties towards the human race (Knies); such, finally, were
-the Christians and Catholics, who thought to purify or to exorcise
-that worldly and diabolical science by mingling with it ethical and
-economical considerations. It was rarely suspected that economic
-facts, as such, are neither egoistic nor altruistic, neither moral nor
-immoral; and when it was desired to philosophize the subject, some one
-got out of the difficulty by enumerating five groups of human actions,
-four egoistic and only one moral: the search for the satisfaction
-of one's own conscience, with the fear of blame attached (Wagner).
-The problem, especially in Austria, passed from the hands of the
-mathematicians into those of the psychologists. These have undertaken
-to seek out the resemblance and the difference between economic and
-ethical values. But on the psychological ground (as we have already
-remarked when discussing intuitionistic solutions), far from solving
-the antithesis, philosophy is dissolved. The mathematicians on the
-other hand, that is to say the economists, who employ the quantitative
-method, fascinated with the evidence of this procedure and failing
-to realize that it is empty evidence, instead of limiting themselves
-to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span> construction of their most useful formulæ, increase the
-confusion by beginning to philosophize in the strangest manner; as
-is to be observed in the case of Pareto, one of the most acute and
-learned of contemporary economists. In one of his recent writings he
-exposes the method of economic science with a string of propositions
-such as these: "<i>Il faut faire une opération de séparation.... Cette
-première opération accomplie, ... il est nécessaire de substituer par
-abstraction, des conceptions simples, au moins relativement, aux objets
-réels extrêmement complexes.... Mais la science n'est réellement liée
-à une abstraction plutôt qu'à une autre.... Pour peu qu'on y trouve un
-avantage.... Cela ne suffit pas encore: il faut continuer à séparer et
-à abstraire....</i>"</p>
-
-<p>And after having thus advised us to treat facts without pity,
-mutilating them, grinding them down, substituting for them names or
-abstractions, Pareto continues undisturbed, as though all this were
-nothing: these theories, "<i>telles, au moins que nous les concevons, se
-séparant des anciens en ce qu'elles s'attachent aux faits et non aux
-mots</i>"!<a name="FNanchor_26_107" id="FNanchor_26_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_107" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> If such be the facts, what will be the words?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The theories of the hedonistic calculus: from Maupertuis to
-Hartmann.</i></div>
-
-<p>VII. It is all the more necessary to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span> understand the diversity
-between economic Science and the Philosophy of economy, between the
-quantitative and the qualitative processes, owing to the fact that
-since economic studies first flourished, in the eighteenth century,
-absurd ideas were introduced into the books of philosophers, as
-to the calculus of pleasures and the balance of life. Maupertuis'
-book, <i>Essai de philosophie morale</i> (1749), had a great influence
-in this direction. Here, a balance is presented, showing a deficit
-on the side of pleasures; and, following this lead, many Italian
-philosopher-economists of the same period occupied themselves with such
-calculations and balances (Ortes, Verri, Briganti, etc.), arriving at
-results, now optimistic, now pessimistic.<a name="FNanchor_27_108" id="FNanchor_27_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_108" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> Galluppi, too, accepted
-the method as a good one,<a name="FNanchor_28_109" id="FNanchor_28_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_109" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> and it is no marvel that the poet
-Leopardi made it his, steeped as he was in the sensualistic philosophy
-of the preceding century. But not only are the trivial optimistic
-sophisms of the utilitarians founded upon it, but likewise many of the
-pessimistic arguments of Schopenhauer and especially of Hartmann, the
-latter quite unconscious (being in other respects closely connected
-with the German idealist tradition)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span> that he was accepting an element
-of an altogether anti-idealistic, that is, of a mechanistic origin.</p>
-
-<p>For all these reasons, it is important to oppose the concept of the
-useful (which is not indeed a concept, but an abstraction), given by
-economic Science, with its philosophic concept. This we have attempted
-to do in the preceding theory of Economy, as at once distinct from
-and united with Ethic. In that theory, we have especially striven to
-collect stray threads of aphorisms and observations of good sense
-as to the value of the will, even when amoral; as to the doctrines
-of happiness and of pleasure, of the inferior appetitive faculty,
-of others dealing with politics and the arts of prudence, of the
-new conception of the passions, considered as the spirit in its
-individuality;&mdash;we have striven to attach to these that which is as
-it were the philosophical result drawn from economic Science, that
-is to say, the idea of a form of value that would be neither the
-intellectual, the æsthetic, nor the ethical, and cannot by any means
-be resolved into an ethical anti-value or egoism;&mdash;and finally, we
-have attempted to unite all these threads into one, in order to form
-the bond that ethical rigorism has hitherto been unable to place
-between itself and reality,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span> between the universal and the practical
-individual, at the same time justifying utilitarian, activity in its
-autonomy. We believe that this historical sketch will have contributed
-to make clear the necessity of our attempt.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_82" id="Footnote_1_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_82"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>De cive,</i> c. i. § 10.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_83" id="Footnote_2_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_83"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> E. Albee, <i>A History of English Utilitarianism,</i> London,
-1902, pp. 26-27.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_84" id="Footnote_3_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_84"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>De cive,</i> c. iii. § 33.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_85" id="Footnote_4_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_85"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Essay on Human Understanding,</i> Book II. c. 28, § 7 <i>sqq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_86" id="Footnote_5_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_86"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>Gründl. d. Metaphys. d. Sitten,</i> p. 70.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_87" id="Footnote_6_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_87"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Gründl,</i> p. 36 <i>sq.; Kr. d. prakt. Vernft.</i> pp. 15,
-21-28, 43, 145; cf. <i>Metaph. d. Sitt.</i> pp. 208-209.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_88" id="Footnote_7_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_88"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>Metaph. d. Sitt.</i> pp. 22, 23, 246.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_89" id="Footnote_8_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_89"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Gesch. d. Phil.</i> iii. p. 535.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_90" id="Footnote_9_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_90"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> La Rochefoucauld, <i>Maximes</i> (ed. Gamier), nn. 159, 185,
-224.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_91" id="Footnote_10_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_91"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Wolf, <i>Psych, emp.,</i> Frankfort and Leipzig, 1738, §§ 584,
-880.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_92" id="Footnote_11_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_92"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Croce, <i>Estetica,</i> pp. 324-328.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_93" id="Footnote_12_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_93"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Kr. d. prakt. Vern.</i> pp. 79, 108.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_94" id="Footnote_13_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_94"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>Tract. theol.</i> c. iv. § 7.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_95" id="Footnote_14_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_95"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Cf. Croce, in De Sanctis, <i>Scritti vari</i> (Napoli, 1898),
-i. pp. xiv-xvi, pref.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_96" id="Footnote_15_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_96"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> <i>Zum ewigen Friede,</i> in <i>Werke</i> (ed.
-Rosenkranz-Schubert), vol. vii. pt. i. p. 370.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_97" id="Footnote_16_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_97"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <i>De uno univ. juris principio,</i> § 46.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_98" id="Footnote_17_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_98"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> <i>Encykl.</i> § 474, and cf. other passages: <i>Phän. d.
-Geistes,</i> pp. 484-486; <i>Encykl.</i> § 474; <i>Phil. d. Rechtes,</i> § 124;
-<i>Phil. d. Gesch.</i> pp. 39-41.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_99" id="Footnote_18_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_99"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <i>Gesch. d. Phil.</i> ii. pp. 405-6.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_100" id="Footnote_19_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_100"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>System der Sittenlehre,</i> p. 180 <i>sq.</i>; cf. p. 15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_101" id="Footnote_20_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_101"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>Einleitung,</i> § 82 (Italian transl. p. 102).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_102" id="Footnote_21_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_102"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>Op. cit.</i> § 128 (It. tr. p. 172).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_103" id="Footnote_22_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_103"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Allg. prakt. Phil.</i> p. 35.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_104" id="Footnote_23_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_104"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>Grundzüge der Ethik,</i> §§ 12, 14.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_105" id="Footnote_24_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_105"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> <i>Gesch. d. neueren Philos.</i> (1796-1804), sect. iv. cap.
-18 (Fr. tr., Paris, 1816, v. 432-753)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_106" id="Footnote_25_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_106"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> <i>Phil. d. Rechts,</i> § 189 <i>sqq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_107" id="Footnote_26_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_107"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> "L'Économie et la sociologie au point de vue
-scientifique" in <i>Rivistetele Scienza,</i> i. (1907) 293, 312.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_108" id="Footnote_27_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_108"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> See M. Losacco, <i>Le dottrine edonistiche italiane del
-secolo XVIII</i> (Napoli, 1902).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_109" id="Footnote_28_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_109"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Galluppi, <i>Elementi di filosofia</i> (Napoli, 1846), ii.
-265-266, 406 <i>sqq.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="SECOND_SECTIONb" id="SECOND_SECTIONb">SECOND SECTION</a></h5>
-
-
-<h4>THE ETHICAL PRINCIPLE</h4>
-
-
-
-<hr />
-<h4>I</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CRITIQUE OF MATERIAL AND OF FORMALISTIC ETHIC</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Various meanings of "formal" and "material."</i></div>
-
-<p>It is a much-disputed question whether the Principle of Ethic should be
-conceived as <i>formal</i> or <i>material.</i> The question, already difficult in
-itself, has become yet more difficult, so as almost to cause despair
-of its solution, owing to the fact that those terms, "formal" and
-"material," are understood (as often happens in philosophy) in a double
-sense. Hence, those who win assent to their thesis as to the formality
-of the ethical principle are afterwards wont to avail themselves of
-this assent, in order stealthily to introduce another thesis, which,
-although it be also beneath the banner of the "formal," yet has nothing
-to do with the first and is as false as that is true. And since those
-who maintain the material principle do the same thing, both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span> alike
-come to expose their flanks to one another's blows. In the process of
-unravelling this tangled skein, we shall begin by giving to those two
-words the meaning that they usually bear in philosophical terminology,
-meaning by "formal" the universal and by "material" the contingent. And
-in this signification we affirm, above all, that the principle of Ethic
-is <i>formal</i> and certainly not <i>material.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The ethical principle as formal (universal) and not
-material (contingent).</i></div>
-
-<p>Were it material, it would express itself by means of propositions
-indicating a single volition or a group of single volitions as the true
-and proper essence of the moral volition; and the moral activity would
-consist of a determinate action or of a determinate group of actions.
-But the moral act is always that which surpasses the single or the
-groups of singles: to will and to effect the single and the series of
-singles as such, does not appertain to the ethical, but to the merely
-economic form. He who loves things for things' sake (be they such, and
-as many as you will, of this or that kind, one, many, infinite) does
-not yet love the universal, which is everywhere, and is not exhausted
-in any particular thing, nor in any number of things, however immense.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Reduction of material to utilitarian Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>If we posit a material principle for Ethic,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span> we relapse as a
-consequence into <i>utilitarianism,</i> from which we thought we had
-escaped; because, after having asserted the universal, it is now
-determined, either as a single or (which amounts to the same thing) as
-a feigned universal, a simply general concept of group or series. This
-vicissitude, however, presents itself in every sphere of philosophy:
-when the universal and formal principle of that sphere is materialized,
-we return to the sphere immediately, below it. For example, an
-esthetic that posits as its principle certain single forms of art,
-thus substituting matter for form, relapses from art to life lived,
-which is the condition that precedes art and upon which art raises
-itself in order to intuite and to dominate life. Material Ethic has
-therefore been with reason discredited as heteronomous and utilitarian.
-Not indeed that it is so directly and admits itself so to be: on
-the contrary, it professes to be anti-utilitarian and does nothing
-directly, save to point to a given object as the true content of
-morality. But that object, being single, implies a merely utilitarian
-volition; and material Ethic is utilitarian, because, whatever it may
-do or say, it is logically reducible to utilitarianism.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Rejection of material principles.</i></div>
-
-<p>The rejection of all material character from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span> the ethical principle
-is of the greatest importance, for it frees Ethic from a long series
-of concepts, each one of which has been proposed in turn as the true
-ethical principle, and several still find many supporters, both in
-ordinary thought and in treatises called scientific. For us, those
-concepts should not be examined comparatively, so as to arrive at
-preferring the one to the other, or a new one of the same type to all
-the concepts previously enunciated; but they are all false, for one and
-the same reason, as any other that may in future be excogitated will be
-false, if it contain in it anything material.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Benevolence, love, altruism, etc.; and critique of them.</i></div>
-
-<p>A first group of such material principles is found in relation to
-the general concept of an action, directed toward the welfare of
-individuals, other than the individual acting. Morality (they say)
-is <i>sacrifice of self, benevolence, love, altruism, compassion,
-humanitarianism,</i> or simply <i>naturalism</i> of the Franciscan sort,
-which commands us to respect, protect, and love the animals also,
-since they too are God's creatures (brother Wolf, sister Fox). Such
-formulæ, especially those of <i>benevolence and altruism,</i> have been and
-continue to be successful; and hardly a doubt is harboured but that
-they determine in the most complete and satisfactory manner the proper
-principle of morality.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span> But in truth <i>others,</i> as individuals, have no
-rights that I too do not possess as an individual: I am another for
-the other, and he is an I for himself; and if each one provided for
-the good of others, neglecting and trampling upon his own good, the
-result would be perfectly identical to what would happen, were each one
-to provide for himself without concern for others. Morality demands
-the sacrifice of me for the universal end, but of me only in my merely
-individual ends; and, therefore, in this case, of me as of others. It
-has no particular animosity against me, so as to wish to sacrifice me
-at all costs to others. We must be severe, not only with ourselves, but
-with others also; exigent, not only with ourselves, but with others
-also; and so, on the contrary, benevolent not only toward others,
-but also toward ourselves; compassionate, not only toward others,
-but also towards this instrument of labour that we carry about with
-us and of which we sometimes demand too much; that is, our empirical
-individuality. Reality is neither democratic nor aristocratic, but
-both together; it abhors the privilege of some over others as much as
-that equality, according to which each one must have the same value
-as the other at every moment. All are in turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span> masters and servants;
-worthy of respect as bearers and representatives of good, worthy of
-punishment and reprehension as clouding and impeding the good. Morality
-never considers individuals in themselves, but always in their relation
-to the universal; and in this respect there is no one who does not
-deserve to be saved or to be suppressed; there is no animal or other
-being of any kind that should not now be favoured in its existence,
-now annihilated. No individual is treated as an <i>end,</i> but all as
-<i>means</i> for universal morality; and they only obtain the dignity of
-ends, in so far as they are means for universal morality. The rights of
-animals have been written for and against; but in truth, a lamb has now
-the duty of being slaughtered, now the right of being left in peace,
-according to circumstances; in the same way that a man has now the
-right to go for a walk with his friends and to sing serenades beneath
-the windows of fair ladies, now the duty of putting on a uniform and
-of betaking himself beneath the walls of a citadel, where he will be
-blown in pieces by the enemy's grape-shot. Altruism is as insipid as
-egoism, and is reducible at bottom to egoism; in much the same way as
-sensual love, which has justly been called "egoism for two." Indeed,
-why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span> should we be ready to sacrifice ourselves for others, and to
-promote their desire in every case and in spite of everything? For what
-reason, save for the blind and irrational attachment to them which
-makes a man throw away his life or descend to abjection for a wicked
-woman furiously loved, suffer every shame and torment for an unworthy
-son, or yield to the impulses of sympathy inspired by an individual?
-This blind and irrational attachment to others is at bottom attachment
-to ourselves, to our nerves, to our fancies, to our convenience, to our
-habits. It is utility, not morality; for morality wills us to be ready
-to separate ourselves from others as from ourselves, when the occasion
-arises, to leave wives and sons and brothers, and follow duty which
-transcends them all. "Thou only, O ideal, art true,..." or rather, by
-means of the ideal and of the universal, all things are true; without
-the ideal, there is not one of them that does not become false, as
-there is not an organism that does not become vile clay, when abandoned
-by life.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Social organism, State, interest of the race, etc. Critique
-of them.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is another group of material principles which seems to surpass
-individuals, because it makes morality to consist of promoting either
-so-called <i>laws of nature</i> or so-called <i>institutions.</i> Of such kind
-are those that place morality in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span> service of the <i>social organism
-and of the State, or of the interest of the Species and of Life</i> (this
-being understood as animal life or very near to animality). But if it
-seem that contingent facts are thus escaped, that is not really so.
-For none of these concepts expresses the universality of the real, but
-this or that group of its particular manifestations: the life called
-social or political, this or that animal species, this or that vital
-manifestation. And none of these facts can be ethically willed without
-exceptions. The moral man sacrifices the State to the Church, or the
-Church to the State, atrophies certain organs and suppresses certain
-vital functions for universal ends, or for the ends of what is called
-civilization; he defends, preserves and increases certain aptitudes
-of the human race, but lets others disappear or modifies them, always
-adapting the interest of the species to that of the ideal. Were he to
-do otherwise, he would again be substituting utility for morality,
-his immediate affection for certain things or for certain single and
-individual facts, to the affection for them that should always be
-<i>mediated,</i> that is to say, mediated by the universal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Material religious principles. Critique of them.</i></div>
-
-<p>A third group of material principles, called religious, which make
-morality to consist of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span> conforming to the will of God and of the
-gods, is not intrinsically different from these. Where the idea of
-the transcendental and of religious mystery is introduced, there is
-darkness; and anything can be put into darkness. In the first place,
-nothing but darkness itself can be put there, and in this case the
-religious solution is agnosticism, confession of ignorance, such as
-we have hitherto treated, in criticizing theological utilitarianism
-or abstract ethical rigorism, which, by means of its insoluble
-contradictions, also leads to the idea of God and of mystery. But one's
-own will, caprice and individual interests can also be put there;
-and then religion becomes attachment to a being or to an order of
-beings, which, though they be imaginary, are not for that reason less
-individual; attachment to them is love or fear, sympathy or fear of
-the evil they can do, and tendency to avoid it by propitiation with
-prayers, adulation, gifts, services, worship. Religious principles,
-then, understood as material principles, also become converted, as all
-know, and we may add, know all too well, into utilitarian principles;
-because, through intently fixing the gaze upon this aspect of religion,
-they have forgotten to look at others more important and certainly more
-noble.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Formal principle as affirmation of a merely logical
-exigency.</i></div>
-
-<p>The ethical principle is not adequately expressed, either by the
-<i>altruistic</i> concept, or by that of <i>natural formations</i> and of
-<i>institutions,</i> or by that of the <i>gods;</i> because all of these are
-general concepts, or sometimes merely individual representations; they
-are certainly not universal concepts. And by the necessity of the
-universal and the insufficiency of the merely general and individual,
-the ethical principle must be <i>formal</i> and not <i>material.</i> However (and
-here we enter into the new meaning of this word and into the new debate
-announced), the formal ethical principle has likewise been understood
-as not susceptible of extension beyond the enunciation of the character
-of universality, which the principle itself should possess. Its formula
-has seemed to be nothing but that of a <i>universal law,</i> to which all
-men can conform in complete harmony among themselves; of <i>respect
-towards all beings,</i> in the degree that appertains to each, of that
-which satisfies <i>the exigencies of reason and of conscience,</i> and so
-on. Now the formality claimed by this and similar formulæ has nothing
-to do with the formality first claimed; and since in the preceding
-debate we took the side of those who maintain formal as against
-material Ethic, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span> here we must defend material against formal Ethic;
-or better, an Ethic that is not material against an Ethic that is not
-formal, save in the pretentions of those who thus baptize it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of a formal ethic in this sense: tautologism.</i></div>
-
-<p>What does the formality of Ethic mean in the new sense? Nothing
-but this: that it is not necessary to inquire <i>what is the ethical
-principle,</i> but that we must be satisfied with saying that <i>whatever
-it be, it must be universal.</i> But that it must be universal is a
-proposition which belongs, not to Ethic, but to Logic; the principles
-of all philosophical sciences must possess the character of
-universality, the logical as the æsthetic, the principle of Ethic as
-that of Economic, the moral categoric imperative as the utilitarian
-categoric. Thus the thesis of formality in the new meaning is reduced
-to placing at the head of Ethic, not the ethical principle, <i>but the
-logical exigency of the ethical principle,</i> in the same way that a
-similar claim in Æsthetic would result in placing at the head of
-that science, not the formal æsthetic principle, as for example,
-Intuition-expression, but a formal æsthetic principle, the claim for
-a law, so made that no form of beauty could ever be excluded from
-it. Instead of constructing the science, the affirmation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg 436]</a></span> of logical
-necessity, which that construction must obey, is infinitely repeated;
-but the thesis of formality in the new sense would be better called the
-thesis of <i>tautologism.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Tautological principles: ideal, chief good, duty, etc., and
-critique of them.</i></div>
-
-<p>Besides the formulæ to which we have referred, namely those of the
-<i>categoric imperative, of the universal law, of the respect for being,
-of the rational and of conscience,</i> the formulæ of the <i>chief good,
-of duty (or of law), of the ideal, of true pleasure, of constant
-pleasure, of spiritual pleasure, of personal dignity, of self-esteem,
-of the just mean, of harmony, of proportion, of justice, of perfection,
-of following nature,</i> and so on, also belong to the tautological
-principles of Ethic; they are all tautologies, because they do not
-determine to what object those logical claims are applicable. To ask
-what is the form of will that produces a <i>constant, spiritual and
-true</i> pleasure, which makes <i>perfect, gives self-esteem, satisfies our
-conscience, strikes the just mean,</i> answers to what <i>ought</i> to be done,
-attains to <i>the supreme good,</i> and so on, is tantamount to asking,
-<i>What is the ethical form?</i> This is precisely what must be answered,
-if we do not wish to fall into tautology, and the reply cannot be the
-question itself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Tautological meaning of certain formulæ, material in
-appearance.</i></div>
-
-<p>And it is convenient to note here that many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span> of the formulæ that
-we have criticized as belonging to material Ethic, have also been
-frequently-employed as tautological formulæ, that is to say, as symbols
-and metaphors of the ethical truth to be determined. The <i>others,</i> of
-which altruism speaks, are at bottom not others as physically distinct
-from us, but others in an ideal sense, that is, as duty surpassing
-the empirical ego; <i>God,</i> of which religious Ethic speaks, is that
-indeterminate concept, that logical exigency, which is also called the
-<i>categoric imperative; the State or Life</i> that one pledges oneself
-to serve is not this or that State, this or that particular form of
-life, but the symbol of the ideal; the <i>nature</i> to be followed is that
-nature, or ethical principle within us, which the speculative reason
-must determine. Thus do material principles often progress, ceasing
-to be such, in order to become tautological, that is, abandoning the
-possession of undue determination, owing to the consciousness of a
-want, of a lacuna to be filled.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Conversion of tautological Ethic into material and
-utilitarian Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>The evil is that tautologism inevitably returns to that undue
-possession, because, imagining that it has established that ethical
-principle which it has not established at all, and that it has finally
-constructed Ethic, of which it has not even laid the foundations, it
-sets to work to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span> explain moral and concrete facts by means of that
-empty form. The consequence of this is that utilitarian motives, as
-usual, fill the empty space. Why should we not violate a deposit that
-has been entrusted to us? Perhaps because (as they say) the moral law
-is a universal law? That does not suffice. Respect for the deposit
-cannot be deduced from this principle, for a universal law is equally
-thinkable, according to which is deduced in certain cases a respect for
-the deposit and in certain other cases the contrary. This then is the
-fact: that to restore a deposit confided to us may sometimes happen to
-be a bad action, as, for instance, to restore the weapon entrusted to
-us, when he who claims it intends to commit suicide or to assassinate.
-Thus it happens that not knowing how to put an end to the controversy
-in virtue of the true ethical principle, and wishing nevertheless in
-some way to use that empty formula, it comes to be filled with the only
-principle possessed, namely the utilitarian; and the reason given for
-respecting the deposit is said to be the desirability of respecting for
-engagements, for the ends of the individual, failing which (it will
-be said) no business would thenceforth be effected and the world of
-affairs would languish.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>In what sense Ethic should be formal and in what other
-sense material.</i></div>
-
-<p><i>Formal</i> Ethic, in the new sense, or as it would be better called,
-tautological Ethic, might be called <i>formalistic,</i> owing to its thus
-falling back into material, heteronomous and utilitarian Ethic, since
-<i>formalism</i> here (as in Æsthetic and Logic) is the caricature of
-formality, and almost a sort of materiality. In maintaining <i>formal</i>
-Ethic we do not wish that it should be <i>formalistic</i>; that is, that it
-should be again covertly material. And we wish that formal Ethic should
-also be material, always understanding by this that it must give, not
-the mere logical condition of the ethical principle, but <i>this ethical
-principle itself</i> in its concreteness, determining what moral volition
-is in its reality.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>II</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE ETHICAL FORM AS ACTUATION OF THE SPIRIT IN UNIVERSAL</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Tautological Ethic and its connection with Philosophy,
-either partial or discontinuous.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the strange idea of an ethical principle that should be formal,
-in the sense of its not being known exactly what it is and how it is
-justified, has ever been able to arise, this is due to two erroneous
-philosophical conceptions, of which one can be called <i>partial,</i> the
-other <i>discontinuous</i> philosophy. According to the first conception,
-man is capable of knowing something of reality, certainly, but not
-all: he perceives and arranges the data of experience by means of the
-categories, but he is aware of the limitation of his thought and of the
-impossibility of attaining to the heart of the real, which he does, it
-is true, end by attaining in a certain way, but only with the heart,
-not with thought. This being stated, and coming to the case of Ethic,
-man hears the voice of conscience in himself, the command of the moral
-law; he cannot think of any sophism to escape it: but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span> precisely what
-that law is, he is unable to say; the idea of a divine ordinance of
-the world which presents itself to his spirit, may also be affirmed by
-the heart, but never by thought. The second conception is confounded
-by some thinkers with the first and becomes partial philosophy or
-agnosticism; but if we observe closely, it is distinct from the other.
-For here it is not actually asserted that the foundation of morality
-is unknowable, but it is said to be unknowable in the circle of Ethic,
-or that such knowledge goes beyond that circle. Ethic establishes the
-moral law, deduces or arranges beneath it ethical precepts and by means
-of them judges single actions. Ethic is ignorant as to whether that
-law really exists, or what may be its precise universal content. It
-hands this problem over to Metaphysic, or to general Philosophy, which
-solves it in its own way, or is presumed to be capable of solving it.
-In this conception, then, there arises a question as to competence
-and hierarchy between thought and thought, between particular and
-general philosophy; whereas, in the former, is affirmed the absolute
-incompetence of thought.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Rejection of both these conceptions.</i></div>
-
-<p>But we do not run the risk of colliding with the obstacle placed
-before us with these philosophical views, because we have constantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span>
-rejected them both throughout the whole of our exposition of the
-Philosophy of the spirit and have demonstrated their falsity. Partial
-Philosophy is a contradictory concept: thought either thinks all
-or nothing; and if it had a limit it would have it as thought and
-therefore as surpassed. Whoso admits something unknowable, declares
-everything unknowable, and inevitably falls into total scepticism. Nor
-is the idea of a discontinuous philosophy divided into a whole and
-its parts, with the whole outside the parts and the parts outside the
-whole less inconceivable; so that, while Ethic is being studied, the
-whole (complete Philosophy) seems problematical; and a part (Ethic)
-can be known to some extent without knowing the whole (the whole
-of Philosophy). This is a false view, ultimately derived from the
-empirical sciences, in which it is possible to apprehend one order
-of phenomena independently of the others; and to apprehend phenomena
-without explicitly posing or by dismissing to another occasion the
-philosophical problem as to their truth. Philosophy is a circle and a
-unity and every point of it is intelligible only in relation to all the
-others. The didascalic convenience of exposing a group of philosophical
-problems separately from others&mdash;or also (if it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span> please others, as
-it has not pleased us) of dividing the exposition into particular
-philosophical sciences, and into general Philosophy (also called
-Metaphysic)&mdash;should not lead to the misconception that the indivisible
-is really being divided. The whole of Philosophy is at once enunciated
-with the first philosophical proposition; and the others that come
-after will all be nothing but explanations of the first.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The ethical form as volition of the universal.</i></div>
-
-<p>Therefore, since we have never denied faith to thought, nor broken in
-pieces the unity of Philosophy, we have no secret to reveal at this
-point; not even a poor secret, like the exponents of discontinuous
-Philosophy, who solemnly make known at the end what they have assumed
-from the beginning. Our formal ethical principle is never empty form
-that must only now be filled with a content. It is full form, form
-in the philosophical and universal sense, which is also content and
-therefore universal content. We have not restricted ourselves to
-defining the ethical form as universal form, which would have resulted
-in tautologism; but we have defined it <i>volition of the universal,</i>
-thus distinguishing it from the economic form, which is simply volition
-of the individual. And if we now ask ourselves what is the universal,
-we must reply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span> that the answer has already been given, and that whoever
-has not yet understood, whoever indeed has not understood it for some
-time, will never understand it. The universal has been the object of
-all our Philosophy of the Spirit, and we have always had to keep it
-before our eyes, in studying, not only the practical function, but
-any other function of the spirit; just as we cannot have the idea
-of the branch of a tree without the idea of the trunk from which it
-springs and without which there would not be the branch of a tree. That
-concept, then, is not a <i>deus ex machina</i> to appear unexpectedly at the
-end of the play and hastily bring it to a conclusion, but the force
-that has animated it from the first to the last scene.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The universal as the Spirit (Reality, Liberty, etc.).</i></div>
-
-<p>What is the universal? It is the Spirit, it is Reality, in so far as
-it is truly real, that is, in so far as it is unity of thought and
-willing; it is Life, in so far as realized in its profundity as this
-unity itself; it is Freedom, if a reality so conceived be perpetual
-development, creation, progress. Outside the Spirit nothing is
-thinkable in a truly universal form. Æsthetic, Logic, Historic, this
-very Philosophy of the practical, have demonstrated and confirmed
-this truth in every way. Every other concept brought forward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span> reveals
-itself (and has revealed itself beneath our analysis), either as a
-feigned universal, or as something contingent that has been abstracted
-and generalized, or as the hypostasis of certain of our particular
-spiritual products, such as mathematical formulæ, or as the negation of
-the Spirit, on which is conferred positive value (first with metaphor
-and then with metaphysic).</p>
-
-<p>And the moral individual who wills the universal, or that which
-transcends him as an individual, turns precisely to the Spirit, to
-real Reality, to true Life, to Liberty. The universal is in concrete
-the universal individualized, and the individual is real in so far as
-he is also universal. He is not able to assert one part of himself
-without asserting the other (under the penalty of stopping half-way,
-<i>dimidiatus vir,</i> and so of again becoming nothing). But in order to
-assert them both, he must first posit the one as explicit and the other
-as implicit, and then make the other also explicit. Man as economic
-individual, at the first moment (so to speak) of his revealing himself
-to life and to existence, cannot will, save individually: will his
-own individual existence. There is no man, however moral he be, who
-does not begin in this way. How could he ever surpass and finally
-deny his own individual life, if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span> he had not first affirmed it and
-did not reaffirm it at every instant? But he who should stop at that
-affirmation of the individual, regarding the first stage of development
-as the resting-place, would enter into profound contradiction with
-himself. He should will, not only his own self individualized, but also
-that self, which, being in all selves, is their common Father. Thus he
-promotes the realization of the Real, lives a full life and makes his
-heart beat in harmony with the universe: <i>cor cordium.</i></p>
-
-<p>The moral individual has this consciousness of working for the Whole.
-Every action, however diverse, which conforms to ethical duty, conforms
-to Life; and if, instead of promoting Life, it should depress and
-mortify it, for that very reason it would be immoral. Where facts seem
-to demonstrate the contrary, the interpretation of facts is erroneous,
-since it affirms as a criterion of judgment a life which is not that
-true life, which, as we know, we serve even by dying&mdash;dying as an
-individual, as a collectivity, as a social class, or as a people. The
-most humble moral act can be resolved into this volition of the Spirit
-in universal. Thus it happens that the soul of a simple and ignorant
-man, altogether devoted to his rude duty, vibrates in unison with that
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span> the philosopher, whose mind receives into it the universal Spirit:
-what the one thinks at that moment, the other does, thus attaining
-by his own path to that full satisfaction, that act of life, that
-fruitful conjunction with the Real, which the other has attained to by
-a different path. It may be said that the moral man is a <i>practical
-philosopher</i> and the philosopher a <i>theoretic actor.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Moral acts as volitions of the Spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>This criterion of the Spirit, of Progress, of Reality, is the intimate
-measure of our acts in the moral conscience, as it is the foundation,
-more or less clearly expressed, of our moral judgments. Why do we exalt
-Giordano Bruno, who allowed himself to be condemned to the stake for
-asserting his philosophy? Perhaps for the calmness with which he faced
-the torture? But many fanatics, even malefactors, are capable of this,
-and it may sometimes even be a simple sensual desire, of which we
-have seen examples in history and of which a modern Italian poet has
-lately sung, exalting the beauty of the flame and the voluptuousness of
-the pyre. By facing death and refusing to deny his philosophy, Bruno
-contributed to the creation of a larger form of civilization, and
-for this reason he is not only a victim, but also a <i>martyr,</i> in the
-etymological<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span> sense of the word: witness and realizer of a demand of
-the Spirit in universal.&mdash;Why do we praise the charitable man? Perhaps
-because he yields to the emotion caused by the spectacle of suffering.
-But emotion in itself is neither moral nor immoral, and thus to yield
-to it materially is weakness, that is, immorality. The charitable man,
-when he removes or mitigates suffering, relights a life and reconquers
-a force for the common work, which both he and the person whom he has
-benefited, must serve.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of antimoralism.</i></div>
-
-<p>There is indeed nothing more foolish than antimoralism, so much the
-fashion in our day; it is an ugly echo of unhealthy social conditions,
-of one-sided theories ill understood (Marxism, Nietzscheianism).
-Antimoralism is justified, in so far as it combats moral hypocrisy
-in favour of effective morality instead of that of mere words, but
-it loses all meaning when it inflates empty phrases or combines
-contradictory propositions and preaches against morality itself. By so
-doing, it thinks to celebrate strength, health and freedom, but on the
-contrary exalts servitude to unbridled passions, the apparent health of
-the invalid and the apparent strength of the maniac. Morality (begging
-pardon of literary immoralists), far from being a pedantic fiction or
-the consolation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span> of the impotent, is <i>good blood against bad blood.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confused tendencies of tautological, material, religious
-formulæ, etc., toward the Ethic of the Spirit.</i></div>
-
-<p>We must also declare that this truth concerning the ethical principle
-understood as will that has for its end the universal or the Spirit,
-is to some extent confirmed by several of the formulæ that we have
-criticized, which have erred only in defining it, either confusing
-altogether the universal and the contingent, or have fallen into
-tautologism. Those who posit Life, or the interest of the Species,
-Society or the State, as the end of morality, have in view that Life,
-that Species, that Society, or that ideal State, which is the Spirit
-in universal, although they are not able to define it clearly. The
-same may be said of other formulæ, which often have a better intention
-at starting than that realized in the development of the relative
-doctrines, or, on the contrary, a development superior to their bad
-initial intention.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The Ethic of the Spirit and religious
-Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>This function of symbol possessed by idealist Ethic, this
-affirmation that the moral act is love and volition of the Spirit
-in universal, is to be found above all in religious and Christian
-Ethic, in the Ethic of love and of the anxious search for the divine
-presence. This is the fundamental characteristic of religious Ethic,
-which remains unknown to vulgar rationalists and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg 450]</a></span> intellectualists, to
-so-called free-thinkers, and to frequenters of masonic lodges, owing to
-their narrow party passion or lack of mental subtlety. There is hardly
-an ethical truth (and we have already had occasion to refer to this
-matter) that cannot be expressed with the words that we have learned
-as children from traditional religion, and which rise spontaneously
-to the lips, as the most elevated, the most appropriate and the most
-beautiful; words which are certainly impregnated with mythology, but
-are also weighty with profound philosophical content. There is without
-doubt an exceedingly strong antithesis between the idealist philosopher
-and the religious individual, but it is not greater than that within
-ourselves, when, in the imminence of a crisis, we are divided in
-soul and yet very near to unity and to interior conciliation. If the
-religious man cannot but see in the philosopher his adversary, his
-mortal foe, the philosopher, on the other hand, sees in him his younger
-brother, his very self of a moment past. Hence he will feel himself
-more nearly allied to an austere, emotional, religious Ethic, troubled
-with phantoms, than to an Ethic that is superficially rationalistic:
-for this latter is only in appearance more philosophical than the
-other, since if it possess the merit of recognizing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span> (verbally only, or
-with <i>psittacism,</i> as Leibnitz would have said) the supreme rights of
-reason, yet in plucking thought from the soil in which it has grown and
-depriving it of vital sap, it exercises them very ill.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>III</h4>
-
-
-<h4>HISTORICAL NOTES</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Merit of the Kantian Ethic.</i></div>
-
-<p>I. It is the singular merit of Kant to have put an end, once for all,
-to every material Ethic, by proving its utilitarian character: a
-merit that is not cancelled by the lacunæ that exist in other parts
-of his thought, entangling him unawares in the materialism and in the
-utilitarianism that he had surpassed. It would be anti-historical to
-desire to judge a thinker by the contradictions into which he falls
-and so to declare his work to be a failure and of no importance, when
-it is only imperfect. There are errors in all the works of man, and
-error is always contradiction; but he who has the eye of the historian
-discovers where lies the true strength of a thought and does not deny
-the light, because of necessity accompanied with shadow. Before Kant,
-ethic was either openly utilitarian or such that although presenting
-itself in the deceitful form of Ethic of sympathy, or religious Ethic,
-was yet reducible to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span> utilitarianism. Kant conducted an implacable and
-destructive war, not only against admitted utilitarian forms, but also
-against those that were masked and spurious, called by him material
-Ethic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The predecessors of Kant.</i></div>
-
-<p>In this too, his predecessors are to be found in traditional philosophy
-of Christian origin, or, if it be preferred, Platonic (opposition
-of material to formal Ethic can already be observed in the attitude
-of Aristotle to Plato). If the fathers and the scholastics had been
-divided as to the question of the relation between moral laws and the
-divine will, and many of them, especially the mystics, had made that
-law to depend upon the divine will and upon nothing else, yet views
-had not been wanting, according to which the power of changing at
-will the moral laws, that is to say, of changing his own essence, was
-denied to God, since he could not be <i>supra se.</i> Religious Ethic was
-cleansed of every admixture of arbitrarism and utilitarianism by this
-solution, accepted by nearly all religious thinkers of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries (by Cudworth, by Malebranche, and finally by
-Leibnitz). On the other hand, we cannot but recognize that many other
-material formulæ used to be understood in an ideal, or, as we have
-said, in a symbolical manner; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span> certainly that very eudæmonism
-of Aristotle, toward which Kant showed himself too severe, was not
-the pleasure and happiness of the hedonists and utilitarians, and the
-mediety (μεσότης) proposed as the distinctive character of virtue,
-although without doubt empty and often incoherent, was already almost
-a formal principle. The same is to be said of the Stoic principle of
-<i>following nature</i>; and coming to the immediate predecessors of Kant,
-of that <i>perfectio</i> already mentioned, which Kant, after wavering a
-little, reduced to happiness, not, however, without stating that it is
-a more indeterminate concept than any other. With Kant, however, the
-point was admitted, that the moral law is not to be expressed in any
-formula, which contains representative and contingent elements.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Defect of that Ethic: agnosticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The defect of the Kantian Ethic is the defect of his whole philosophy:
-agnosticism, which prevents his truly surpassing either the phenomenon
-or the thing in itself, leading him, on the one hand, toward
-empiricism, on the other toward that transcendental metaphysic, which
-no one had done more to discredit than himself. He combated the concept
-of the good or supreme good as the principle of Ethic, and he was right
-in so far as he understood it as object of any sort, of "a good," as of
-a "thing." But this did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span> not exempt him from the duty of defining the
-supreme good as that which is not exhausted in any particular object,
-or of determining the universal. Now his philosophy was incapable of
-attaining to the universal.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of Hegel and of others.</i></div>
-
-<p>Hence the involuntary return to utilitarianism, clearly stated by Hegel
-in his youthful essay upon natural Right. The practical principle of
-Kant (remarked Hegel) is not a true but a negative absolute; hence
-with him the principle of morality becomes converted into immorality:
-since every fact can be thought in the form of universality, it is
-never known what fact should be received into the law. In the famous
-example of the deposit, Kant had said that it is necessary to keep
-faith as regards the deposit, otherwise there would no longer be
-deposits.<a name="FNanchor_1_110" id="FNanchor_1_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_110" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> But if there were no more deposits, how would this
-constitute a contradiction to the form of the law? There would perhaps
-be contradiction and absurdity for material reasons, but it is already
-agreed that this is not to be brought up in the argument. Kant wishes
-to justify property, but he does not attain to more than the tautology,
-that property, if it be property, must be property, opening the way
-to the free choice of conceiving at will as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span> duties these or those
-contingent definitions of property. The moral maxims of Kant, owing to
-the empirical determinations that they assume, are contradictory, not
-only of one another, but of themselves. This inevitable degeneration
-of the Kantian Ethic was called by Hegel <i>tautology and formalism</i>.<a name="FNanchor_2_111" id="FNanchor_2_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_111" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-Other thinkers were also affected by the utilitarianism of the
-Kantian Ethic: Schopenhauer even declared that his doctrine has no
-other foundation than egoism, since it can be reduced to the concept
-of reciprocity, and he protested against the Kantian theory that we
-should be compassionate to animals, in order to exercize ourselves
-in the virtue of compassion, judging it to be the effect of the
-Judæo-Christian views of Kant.<a name="FNanchor_3_112" id="FNanchor_3_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_112" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Schopenhauer was in some respect
-right in these observations, although as regards animals we must note
-that the same attitude is found in Spinoza and in other thinkers and
-that it derives from material and utilitarian Ethic; and for the rest
-that it would be very unjust to see nothing but egoism in the categoric
-imperative of Kant, for this, we repeat, though it constitute its
-danger, does not constitute its essential character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Kant and the concept of freedom.</i></div>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, in Kant himself, in this thinker, so rich in
-contradictions and suggestions, was indicated the concept which, when
-elaborated, was to constitute the principle, not merely of tautological
-and formalistic, but of concrete and formal Ethic, the concept of
-<i>freedom.</i> By means of this concept Kant enters into the heart of the
-real and reaches that region of which mysticism and religion had from
-time to time caught a glimpse and had here and there attained. As the
-origin of the rigid Kantian ethical conception and of his abhorrence
-for the material and mundane is to be found in Christianity (and in
-Paganism), so the origin of the concrete moral idea is to be sought in
-St. Augustine, and also in St. Paul, in the mystics and in the great
-French Christians of the seventeenth century; in that virtue of which
-Pascal wrote as <i>plus haute que celle des pharisiens et des plus sages
-du paganisme,</i> and it operates with omnipotent hand, by means of which
-alone is it possible <i>dégager l'âme de l'amour du monde, la retirer
-de ce quelle a de plus cher, la faire mourir à soi-même, la porter et
-l'attacher uniquement et invariablement à Dieu.</i><a name="FNanchor_4_113" id="FNanchor_4_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_113" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> The successors
-of Kant, especially Fichte and Hegel, closed the circle which he had
-left open,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span> and altogether excluding transcendency, they made of God
-freedom and of freedom reality. Fichte, who expelled the phantom of the
-thing in itself from theoretical philosophy, removed from the categoric
-imperative the appearance of <i>qualitas occulta,</i> which it had borne in
-the Philosophy of the practical, illuminating that tenebrous region,
-ready to receive any sort of phantasm or superstition, such as belief
-in a moral law arbitrarily imposed by the divinity.<a name="FNanchor_5_114" id="FNanchor_5_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_114" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> Hegel does not
-recognize duty and the categoric imperative, but freedom only, and as
-he says, the free spirit is that in which subject and object coincide
-and freedom is freely willed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Ethic in the nineteenth century.</i></div>
-
-<p>II. After the classical epoch of modern philosophy, in the general
-regression of Ethic, the concept of the concreteness and universality
-of the practical principle was also lost. Omitting the utilitarians,
-who no longer have a place here, it must suffice to record how there
-was a return either to the formalistic principles, which Hegel
-criticized in Kant (for instance the principle of the Ethic of Rosmini,
-the <i>respect for being,</i> afterwards combated by Gioberti), or directly
-to those material principles which Kant had already excluded. Such
-are the <i>compassion</i> of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span> Schopenhauer, the <i>five practical ideas</i> of
-Herbart, the love of Feuerbach, <i>benevolence</i> as the supreme ethical
-idea of Lotze, the <i>theological</i> morality of Baader, the <i>life</i> of
-Nietzsche, and the like.</p>
-
-<p>The principles of the first were completed with a religious conception
-(here too Rosmini may afford an example), and those of the second, when
-they did not reveal themselves as utilitarian or tautological, showed
-an obscure tendency toward the Ethic of Freedom. This must not be
-overlooked in the Ethic of Nietzsche, which despite the rocks and mud
-that the thought of Nietzsche drags with it, is yet anti-hedonistic and
-anti-utilitarian and quite full of the sense of Life as activity and
-power. Positivistic evolutionism is also often unconscious idealism;
-and the moral actions, united to evolution, can be interpreted as
-those which correspond to the Spirit in universal. The concepts of the
-pessimists alone are altogether incapable of idealistic interpretation
-(for example, Schopenhauer), and those of the semi-pessimist and
-semi-idealist Hartmann are strangely contradictory. He makes morality
-to consist of the promotion of civilization, whence so lofty a
-condition of the spirit can be attained that it will be possible to
-decree universal suicide by means of the vote of all the world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The question asked after Kant, whether Ethic should be formal
-or material, is one that we have made more precise in the other
-form, whether Ethic should be abstract or concrete, full or empty,
-tautological or expressive&mdash;that is (with even greater precision),
-whether Ethic can be established before and without a philosophical
-system and even be reconciled with agnosticism, has no longer been
-understood, even by its pretended followers, the Neocriticists or
-Neokantians. These have either believed they had solved it by means of
-moderate utilitarianism, or by going outside it and denying the most
-secure result of the Kantian critique of Ethic; or they have discussed
-it tiresomely, without making a step in advance. Progress indeed was
-possible on one condition alone: that a philosophical system should
-be constructed not inferior to that of the postkantian idealists. But
-this would have been tantamount to demanding the death of neokantianism
-or neocriticism, which has not only not attempted to surpass the
-idealistic systems, but has even maintained that we should philosophize
-without a system, declaring that a system is altogether inconceivable.
-The Neokantians can thus be recognized as the descendants of Kant; but
-in the same way as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span> the last descendant of the Hapsburgs in Spain,
-who was neither emperor, king, soldier, nor man, could be recognized
-as the descendant of Charles the Fifth, who was man, soldier, king,
-and emperor: because, like his great predecessor, he possessed the
-deformed, hanging lip of the Hapsburgs.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_110" id="Footnote_1_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_110"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Krit. d. prakt. Vern.</i> pp. 30-31.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_111" id="Footnote_2_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_111"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Ueb. d. wissensch. Behandlungsarten d. Naturrechts,</i> in
-<i>Werke,</i> i. 353; cf. <i>Gesch. d. Phil.</i> iii. 533 sqq.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_112" id="Footnote_3_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_112"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Gründl, d. Moral,</i> in <i>Werke,</i> ed. cit., iii. 538,
-542-543.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_113" id="Footnote_4_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_113"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Lettres prov.</i> 1. 5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_114" id="Footnote_5_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_114"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>System d. Sittenlehre,</i> pp. 49-51.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a><br /><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="THIRD_PART" id="THIRD_PART">THIRD PART</a></h4>
-
-
-<h3>LAWS</h3>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a><br /><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[Pg 465]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>I</h4>
-
-
-<h4>LAWS AS PRODUCTS OF THE INDIVIDUAL</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Definition of law.</i></div>
-
-<p><i>Law</i> is a volitional act, which has for content a <i>series</i> or <i>class</i>
-of actions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Philosophical and empirical concepts of society.</i></div>
-
-<p>This definition excludes above all from the concept of law a
-determination that is generally considered essential to it, the
-determination of <i>society</i>; this amounts to saying that it also extends
-the concept of law to the case of the <i>isolated individual.</i> But in
-order that there may be no misunderstanding in relation to a point
-like this of the highest importance, it will be well to show that the
-word "society" has a double meaning, philosophical and empirical, and
-if we exclude its empirical sense from the concept of law, it would
-neither be possible nor our wish, to exclude its philosophical sense.
-Reality is unity and multiplicity together, and an individual is
-conceivable, in so far as he is compared with other individuals, and
-the process of reality is effective, in so far as individuals enter
-into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[Pg 466]</a></span> relations with one another. Without multiplicity there would not
-be knowledge, action, art or thought, utility or morality; therefore
-the isolated individual, torn from the reality that constitutes him
-and that he constitutes, is something abstract and absurd. But he
-is no longer absurd, when understood in another way, with polemical
-intention against a false concept; as an individual not absolutely,
-but relatively isolated, in respect to certain contingent conditions
-which had wrongly been held essential: in which case the concept of
-society is conversely itself abstract and unreal. "Society," indeed,
-is also used to mean a multiplicity of beings of the same species, and
-it is evident that here an arbitrary element enters into the problem,
-for the naturalistic concept of sameness of species is arbitrary
-and approximative; hence the pretended sameness might fail and the
-society yet exist all the same. A man may not be able to find those
-who resemble him among a multitude of men and conduct himself as if
-they did not exist; but this does not prevent his living in the society
-of beings that are called natural, with his dog, his horse, with
-plants, with the earth, with the dead and with God. When he is placed
-in solitude or isolated from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[Pg 467]</a></span> other beings, said to belong to the
-same species as himself, that other society, or the communion with
-what remains to him of reality, will always continue, thus enabling
-him to continue his life of contemplation, of thought, of action and
-of morality. In order to understand the Spirit in its universality,
-we must separate it from contingencies, and society in the empirical
-sense is contingency, which the concept of the isolated individual
-(isolated from it and not from reality, from the <i>societas hominum,</i>
-not from the <i>societas entium</i>), enables us to surpass. The great
-services which this concept has rendered to Logic, to Æsthetic and
-especially to Economy, are known, for the latter only began to develop
-the philosophical spirit in itself, when it conceived economic facts
-as they take place in the individual, prior to what is called society,
-thus positing the concept of an isolated economy. Conversely, Economic,
-Æsthetic, Ethic and all philosophical problems and sciences lost their
-true nature and became bastardized, when gross <i>sociologism</i> replaced
-among social contingencies those universals, which philosophers had
-with great labour removed from them and thought in their purity.
-Defining laws, then, as facts that occur, not only in society,
-but also in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[Pg 468]</a></span> isolated individual, our intention is simply to
-concentrate attention upon the concept of <i>true society,</i> which is <i>all
-reality,</i> and not allow it to be diverted and confused with accidental
-determinations, of the kind that may and may not be.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Laws as individual product: programmes of individual life.</i></div>
-
-<p>No great art is required to find instances of individuals who make
-laws for themselves, carry them out and change them, grant rewards to
-themselves and inflict upon themselves punishments; nor is there any
-need to incommode the worthy Robinson of the economists to this end.
-Without being obliged to make the effort of imagining ourselves cast
-upon a desert island and provided only with a sack of corn and the
-Bible, it suffices to have eyes and to observe our daily life, for
-numbers of examples of internal legislation to present themselves.
-Those laws, made for our use and consumption, are called <i>programmes
-of life.</i> Who can live without programmes? Who does not decide that he
-will desire certain actions and avoid certain others? From youth onward
-we begin to legislate in this way and this production of internal laws
-is interrupted only by death. We say, for instance:&mdash;"I shall devote
-my life to agriculture: I shall live in the country every year from
-June to November; from December<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[Pg 469]</a></span> to February I shall come to town,
-that I may not lose touch with political or social life; from March
-to May I shall travel, for pleasure and instruction." This programme
-is subdivided and completed with other programmes, according to the
-various conditions and possibilities taken into consideration; and laws
-are established as to the way one should conduct oneself in respect to
-religion, family, friends, the State, the Church and also in respect to
-this or that individual; for (as is observed by Logic) the individual
-conceived as a fixed being, also becomes a concept, abstraction, group,
-series, or class. He who wished it, would be able to establish a
-parallel between programmes or individual laws and laws that are called
-social: in the individual would be found fundamental statutes, laws,
-rules, ordinances, temporary arrangements, contracts, single laws and
-all the other legal forms found in societies. Now in what conceivable
-way do the programmes of the individual differ from those of society?
-Are not those laws <i>programmes,</i> and are not those programmes <i>laws?</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Exclusion of the character of compulsion and critique of
-this concept.</i></div>
-
-<p>To this interrogation of ours, which does not express a doubt within
-us, but states what seems to be an undeniable fact, defying any sort
-of contradiction, may be objected (and it is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg 470]</a></span> common objection)
-that there is a great difference between individual laws and those of
-society or of the State: these are compulsory, those are not; and for
-this reason these are true laws, while the others are mere programmes.
-But we cannot attach any importance to this objection, at least as thus
-formulated; because, having now traversed the whole of the Philosophy
-of the practical, general, and special, we have never met with what
-is called compulsion in the circle of willing and doing, save in the
-negative sense of deficiency of will and action. No action can ever
-be compulsory; every action is free, because the Spirit is freedom;
-there may not be action in a certain case, but a compulsory action
-is inconceivable, since it is a question of terms that exclude one
-another. Does the fact give the lie to our assertion? Let us examine
-the fact for a little, face to face and without preconceptions. Let us
-for this purpose take an extreme case: for instance, that of the law of
-a most powerful despot, who, being in command of police, should order a
-group of men to bring their first-born to sacrifice to the god in whom
-he believes, but they do not. Are the men who hear this manifestation
-of will constrained by it? What menace can make him who wishes to say
-no, say yes?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg 471]</a></span> That group of men will rebel, will take up arms, will
-rout the troops of the despot, will put him to death, or render him
-incapable of harming; and in this hypothesis the law will not reveal
-any character, of compulsion. But in the other hypothesis also, where
-they do not rebel and in the meantime bow to the will of the despot,
-either that they may not risk their own lives, or because they defer
-their rebellion to a more propitious moment and consign their sons
-to death; they will not have suffered any compulsion, but will have
-freely willed: they will have willed to preserve their own lives at
-the expense of their sons'; or to sacrifice some of them in order to
-have the time to put themselves into such a position that they may be
-able to rebel with the hope of victory. Thus we find in social laws,
-now observance, now inobservance of the law; but both occur in freedom.
-Inobservance may be followed by what is called punishment (that is to
-say, the legislator who has imposed a given class of actions, will
-adopt certain definite measures against those who do not obey them; to
-wit: he will will another class of actions, destined to render possible
-the first, because the punishment is a new condition of things set
-before the individual,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg 472]</a></span> according to which he must alter his previous
-mode of action); but the punishment always finds itself face to face
-with the freedom of the individual. He will be able freely to observe
-the law in order to avoid the punishment or its recurrence; but he will
-also be able freely to rebel against it, as in the instance adduced.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Identical characteristics of individual and social laws.</i></div>
-
-<p>If compulsion be wanting to individual laws, this is because it is
-also always wanting to social laws: while, on the contrary, what is
-really present in social laws is equally present in the observances and
-rebellions, rewards and punishments of individual laws.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the former example: the individual who has decided to
-devote himself to agriculture as programme of life, may be seized
-all of a sudden with a great desire to devote himself to painting or
-to music; and what had previously pleased may henceforward displease
-him: that intimacy with mother earth, with harvests and vintages,
-which seemed to be the very life for him, his true ideal, may come to
-seem to him tiresome and repugnant. But if he be a serious person,
-if he do not will and not will at every moment, if he do not present
-in his own individuality a complete resemblance to those peoples
-who change in mid-November<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg 473]</a></span> the laws made in October and proceed
-from revolution to revolution, he will examine his situation and
-will recognize, for instance, that the desire arisen in his soul is
-a velleity that does not answer to his true vocation and that the
-first programme must remain intact; hence will take place in him a
-struggle between that programme and the new rebellious volition. It
-may happen that in this case the individual will sometimes neglect
-the programme traced, in order to abandon himself to the temptations
-of his pictorial or musical dilettanteism; but since this will happen
-against his individual law, and since force must remain on the side of
-law, this breach of observance will be followed by special measures,
-such as the throwing away of brushes and violin, or by his forbidding
-to himself those moments of recreation in such amusements, which he
-used to allow himself and which have now become dangerous. In other
-words, the individual inflicts punishments on himself in case of the
-non-observance of his law, and these punishments must be held to be
-such in the strictest sense of the term. And if we accept the other
-hypothesis, analogous to that made in the case of social laws, should
-the individual find himself possessed with so vehement a desire of
-becoming a painter or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[Pg 474]</a></span> a musician, as to be compelled to believe that
-the original programme, the original law of his individuality, did
-not correspond, or no longer corresponded with his true temperament,
-he will rebel against the law and destroy it in himself, in the same
-manner as in the other example the people destroyed the law of the
-despot, by fighting with him, imprisoning, or slaying him.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Individual laws as in ultimate analysis alone real.</i></div>
-
-<p>Individual programmes or laws then are laws, and this concept includes
-the isolated individual as well as society; and therefore the character
-of sociality is not essential to the concept of law. Thus, to be more
-precise, the only laws that really exist are individual laws and it is
-not possible to conceive of social and individual laws as two forms
-of the general concept of laws; unless individual and society be both
-understood in the empirical sense, thus abandoning philosophical
-consideration. If the individual be understood in the philosophical
-sense, in which he is the Spirit concrete and individualized, it
-is clear that what are called social laws can also be reduced to
-individual laws; because, in order to observe a law, we must make
-it our own, that is to say, individualize it, and in order to rebel
-against it, we must expel it from our own personality, in which it
-wished unduly to remain or to introduce itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[Pg 475]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the division of laws into judicial and social
-and into their sub-classes. Empiricity of every division of laws.</i></div>
-
-<p>The exclusion of the character of sociality from the concept of law
-frees philosophy from a series of problems, grafted upon that pretended
-character. The principal of these was that of the distinction of social
-laws into political and judicial, on the one hand and merely social
-on the other; and the further distinction of judicial law into public
-and private, civil and penal, national and international, into laws
-properly so called and regulations, and so on. If the concept itself of
-social law be empirical, then all the distinctions and sub-distinctions
-of it proposed must also be empirical, and altogether without
-philosophical value. So true is this that it is impossible to decide
-for one distinction or definition against another, or to correct those
-hitherto given by proposing new ones. Whoever undertakes to examine
-any one of these distinctions, at once realizes the aphilosophical
-character affirmed of them <i>a priori.</i> Thus judicial or political laws
-have been distinguished from the merely social, with the affirmation
-that those are compulsory, these conventional; whereas compulsion is
-impossible in both cases, for the reasons given, and if by compulsion
-be meant the threat of a penalty, this is to be found in merely social
-laws, not less than in judicial. The law against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[Pg 476]</a></span> the falsification
-of public money is usually described as judicial: he who falsifies
-it runs the risk of undergoing some years' imprisonment. It is a law
-called social that we must answer a salutation with a salutation: he
-who does not do this runs the risk of being held ill-bred and excluded
-from the society of the well-bred. What essential difference is there
-between the two laws? An attempt has been made to differentiate them by
-saying that the former has emanated from and is sustained by a <i>supreme
-power,</i> vigilant as to its observance, the second from particular
-circles of individuals. But where is the seat of this supreme power?
-Certainly not in a superindividual, who dominates individuals, but in
-individuals themselves. And in this case its power and value correspond
-with the power of the individuals who compose it; that is to say,
-it is the law of a circle, empirically considered to be larger and
-stronger, but whose volitions are realized in so far as the individuals
-composing it spontaneously conform to them, because they recognize the
-convenience of doing so. Monarchs who believed themselves to be most
-powerful, have realized at certain moments that the power did not at
-all reside in their persons or title, but in a universal consensus
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[Pg 477]</a></span> opinion, failing which their power vanished, or was reduced to a
-gesture of solitary command, not far removed from the ridiculous. Laws
-that seem to be excellent remain unapplied, because they meet with
-tacit general resistance, or as is said, do not accord with custom:
-this should suffice to enlighten the mind as to the inseverable unity
-of what is called the State and what is called society. The State
-is not a being, but a mobile complex of varied relations between
-individuals. It may be convenient to limit this complex as well as
-possible, to make a being of it to oppose other complexes: of this
-there can be no doubt; and let us leave to jurists the excogitation
-of these and other similar distinctions, fictitious but opportune;
-nor let us consider that their work should be declared in the least
-absurd. We only say that it must not be forgotten that the fictitious
-is fictitious, as is the claim made to reason about it as rational
-and philosophical, and to fill volumes and volumes with tiresome
-disquisitions, which are necessarily vain, though the distinctions that
-form their object are not vain in their circle. We who are not jurists
-but philosophers, and to whom it is therefore not permitted to produce
-and adopt practical distinctions, must conceive as laws and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[Pg 478]</a></span> include
-equally in the same category, alike the English <i>Magna Charta</i> and
-the statute of the Sicilian <i>Mafia,</i> or of the Neapolitan <i>Camorra;</i>
-the <i>Regula monachorum</i> of Saint Benedict and that of the <i>brigata
-spendereccia</i> that was sung in sonnets by Folgore di San Geminiano and
-Cene della Chitarra and is recorded by Dante in the <i>Inferno;</i> the
-canon law and the military code, and that <i>droit parisien,</i> which a
-certain personage of Balzac had studied for three years in the blue
-boudoir of one lady and in the rosy drawing-room of another, and which,
-although no one ever speaks of it, yet constitutes (says the great
-novelist) <i>une haute jurisprudence sociale, qui, bien apprise et bien
-pratiquée, mène à tout.</i><a name="FNanchor_1_115" id="FNanchor_1_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_115" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> What more can be said? Even those <i>literary
-and artistic laws are laws</i> which express the will to produce works,
-possessing this or that other kind of argument and arrangement, as
-would be the law that drama should be divided into five or three acts
-or <i>days,</i> and that romances must not exceed four or five hundred
-pages, 16mo, and that a monumental statue must be nude or heroically
-clad. It is evident that if anybody violate these laws, he may be
-excluded (and he was indeed excluded) from the academies of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[Pg 479]</a></span> good
-taste, which did not prevent his being received for that very reason
-into the anti-academies of the independents: in just the same way as
-to have incurred punishments announced by the penal code is a title of
-admission to certain criminal societies.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Extension of the concept of law.</i></div>
-
-<p>These examples that we have selected among the most extraordinary
-and the most apt to scandalize, help to make it quite clear that the
-concept of law must be taken in its full logical extension, when
-we wish to philosophize about it. Among the many obstacles that
-philosophy meets with is a curious sort of false shame, which looks
-upon contact with certain arguments as injurious to the dignity of
-philosophy: a contact which is avoided by arbitrarily narrowing and
-therefore falsifying philosophical concepts. That of law especially
-has a tradition of <i>solemnity,</i> and brings with it associations that
-must be broken in pieces. Otherwise it is impossible even to understand
-what are those <i>firm and unwritten laws</i> of the gods, which Antigone
-opposed to the decrees of men and how they exercise their efficiency;
-or <i>the sayings of Lacedaemon,</i> in obedience to which fell the three
-hundred at Thermopylae; or <i>the laws of the fatherland,</i> which, with
-their irresistible authority, caused Socrates to remain at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[Pg 480]</a></span> moment
-when others counselled and facilitated his flight. Life is composed of
-big and little actions, of least and greatest, or better, of a very
-dense web of very diverse actions; and it is not a too brilliant idea
-to cut that web in pieces and to throw away some of the pieces as less
-beautiful, in order afterwards to contemplate in those pieces only that
-have been thus selected, cut out and disconnected, the web that no
-longer exists.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_115" id="Footnote_1_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_115"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Balzac, <i>Le Père Goriot</i> (ed. Paris, Calman Lévy, 1891),
-p. 85.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[Pg 481]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>II</h4>
-
-
-<h4>THE CONSTITUTIVE ELEMENTS OF LAWS. CRITIQUE OF PERMISSIVE LAWS AND OF
-NATURAL LAW</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The volitional character and the character of class.</i></div>
-
-<p>The undue restrictions and empirical divisions of the concept of
-laws having been destroyed, if our attention be now directed to the
-character that has been determined as properly belonging to them,
-we have the means of distinguishing them from the other spiritual
-forms with which they are often confused, partly as the result of the
-metaphors and homonyms usual in ordinary speech. Laws, as has been
-said, are <i>volitional acts</i> concerning <i>classes</i> of actions. Therefore,
-where the volitional element or the element of class is wanting, there
-cannot be law, save in name and by metaphor.</p>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote">Distinction of laws from the so-called laws of nature.</div>
-
-<p>So-called <i>laws of nature</i> or <i>naturalistic laws</i> are not laws,
-owing to the absence of the volitional element: they consist of
-simple enunciations of relations between empirical concepts, that
-is, of rules. This is an instance of what is called a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[Pg 482]</a></span> natural law:
-platinum melts at a temperature of 1780 degrees; or this other of a
-grammatical law: that in the Greek language masculine nouns of the
-second declension have the genitive in <i>ου</i>(with exceptions, in this
-as in the other case). But they are laws in about the same way as
-the King of Cups is king; and indeed it is known historically that
-this denomination was transported by the Stoics from the domain of
-politics, where it had first appeared, to that of nature. Empirical
-concepts and rules may, as we know, assume an imperative literary form;
-hence it will be said: "If you wish to melt platinum, heat it to 1780
-degrees"; "If you wish to speak Greek, decline masculine nouns of the
-second declension with an <i>ου</i> in the genitive." But the literary form
-does not change anything of their true nature: those imperatives are
-hypothetical imperatives, that is, false imperatives, improper laws.
-Grammatical and chemical laws will remain mere formulæ, instruments
-of knowledge, and not at all of action, until some one obliges me or
-I oblige myself to talk Greek, or to open a chemical laboratory where
-platinum is melted. The jurist who elaborates cases and rules is not
-the legislator: the latter alone (with a sword in one hand) can endow
-the excogitations cf the other with the character of law.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[Pg 483]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Implication of the second in the first.</i></div>
-
-<p>Certainly an act of will is necessary in order to construct empirical
-concepts, formulæ, and rules (as indeed we know), an act of will
-which is not that of the will implied in every act of thought, but
-is a special and explicit act which, by manipulating representations
-and concepts, makes a <i>quid medium,</i> which is neither representation
-nor concept, and although altogether irrational from the theoretical
-point of view, is of use in the economy of the spirit. But the law in
-its true meaning is a volitional act, which <i>assumes</i> that primary
-volitional act whence are formed the pseudo-concepts or concepts of
-class <i>as already completed;</i> precisely because it is the will which
-has for its <i>object</i> a <i>class</i> of objects. It is not possible to
-impose speaking according to the rule of the Greek language, or to
-melt platinum according to its chemical formula, before these rules
-have been laid down. And here appears very clearly the difference
-between those two kinds of spiritual products, which the imperative
-literary form, given to classes and rules, darkens and confuses. This
-difference can be recognized in concrete cases by means of a most
-simple expedient: if the rule (as we have already had occasion to
-prove) can be converted into a statement of class, then the law is
-inconvertible.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[Pg 484]</a></span> "If you wish to melt platinum, heat it to 1780 degrees"
-is a proposition that is exactly equal to "platinum melts at 1780
-degrees." But the law, "Let there be opened in every city a chemical
-laboratory where platinum is to be melted," is not to be converted from
-the imperative to the indicative, whatever efforts we make.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Distinction of laws from practical principles.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the volitional element be wanting to naturalistic laws, it is
-certainly present in other spiritual formations also denominated and
-considered as laws: but not that of <i>class,</i> therefore neither are
-these laws. Such is the case with economic and moral law, and through
-them, with logical and æsthetic laws. The moral law says, "Will the
-universal"; that is to say, "Will the good, the useful, the true, the
-beautiful." Therefore (considered in reality and not in scientific
-theory, where it appears as the concept of itself) it is a volitional
-act. But this volitional act has the spirit itself for object, which
-is and exists, in so far as it wills and affirms itself; it has for
-object a form or a <i>universal,</i> whereas laws have for object something
-material and at the same time not instantaneous, something more or less
-fixed, something <i>general:</i> a <i>class,</i> not an <i>idea.</i> Universal laws
-(that would better be called <i>principles</i>) are the Spirit or producer;
-true and proper laws<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[Pg 485]</a></span> are the special product of the spirit; therefore
-the first can certainly be called laws, but for an altogether different
-reason to the second.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Laws and single acts.</i></div>
-
-<p>Owing to the absence of the element of generality or of class, no
-one would describe a single individuated act as law. The resolution
-and action by which I do not rise from my seat at this moment and go
-eagerly to meet the friend whose coming at the wrong moment interrupts
-me at my work, is a volitional act, not a law; such as on the other
-hand would be the volitional act that I might form within myself,
-consisting in the intention or the programme of receiving my friends
-seated and in a lukewarm way, whenever they should come to visit me in
-the hours before noon, in order to make them understand by this act of
-mine that they disturb me at my work, and that they should abstain from
-their inopportune visits, unless they wish to submit to the penalty of
-meeting with anything but a cordial reception from their friend.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Identity of imperative, prohibitive, and permissive laws.</i></div>
-
-<p>From the general but not universal character that we must recognize
-to the content of laws, we have the solution of certain controversies
-of the greatest importance which have been and are much discussed,
-hitherto without a satisfactory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[Pg 486]</a></span> or duly demonstrated conclusion. In
-the first place, we must mention the dispute as to whether or no there
-exist <i>permissive</i> laws, and whether the formula that the law <i>aut
-jubet aut vetat aut permittit</i> is to be accepted. It has generally been
-admitted that the law <i>aut jubet aut vetat,</i> and that the permission
-is nothing but the removal of a previous inhibition, that is, the
-partial or total abrogation of a law. But in reality, the law, since it
-is a volitional act, <i>jubet</i> only; to command is to will: to command
-that a chemical laboratory be opened in every city means to will that
-one should be opened. And since every willing is at the same time a
-not-willing, as every affirmation is at the same time a negation, every
-command is at the same time an inhibition, and every <i>jubeo</i> is a
-<i>veto</i> (whether the will be expressed in the literary form of positive
-or negative, of command or of inhibition, is here without importance).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Permissive character of every law, and impermissive
-character of every principle.</i></div>
-
-<p>As to permissive laws, these are inconceivable side by side with the
-imperative or prohibitive, not indeed because no law ever permits, but
-because by the very fact that those are imperative or prohibitive,
-they are at the same time permissive: every <i>jubeo</i> or <i>veto</i> is at
-the same time a <i>permitto.</i> Principles, as universal volitions, never
-permit, because nothing escapes their command;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[Pg 487]</a></span> but a single volitional
-act, affirming itself, does not exclude for that reason the possibility
-that other volitional acts, indeed infinite acts, should be affirmed;
-for the singular never exhausts its universal. And laws are volitions
-of class, they impose groups of single acts&mdash;groups that are more or
-less rich, but always contingent: hence a law always leaves all the
-other actions and classes of action that can be the object of will
-unwilled (that is, neither commanded nor prohibited), and, therefore,
-<i>permitted.</i> And even if we take all the laws formulated up to a
-given moment, all together they do not exhaust the universal; and if
-new laws be accumulated, one upon the other, be divided and split up
-"with panting breath," to obtain complete exhaustion, a <i>progressus in
-infinitum</i> will certainly be attained, but never exhaustion, which is
-unattainable. This amounts to saying that outside law or laws, there
-is always <i>the permitted, the lawful, the indifferent, the privilege,
-the right,</i> or whatever be termed the concept correlative to that
-of command, veto, or duty, a duality of terms that expresses the
-<i>finitude</i> of law; hence, when a determined privilege, a determined
-legal right, a determined right, has been annulled by a new law, when
-something previously indifferent has been differentiated,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[Pg 488]</a></span> privilege,
-the permitted, the indifferent, right, always arise from the bosom of
-the new law.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Mutability of laws.</i></div>
-
-<p>Another contingent character of the content of laws is their
-<i>mutability.</i> Laws are changeable, whereas principles, or laws of
-the universal content, are unchangeable, and ready to give form to
-all the most various historical material. Since actual conditions
-are constantly changing, it is necessary to add new laws to the old,
-to retouch and correct these, or to abolish them altogether. This is
-to be seen equally in the programmes of individual lives, as in the
-programmes of social and political laws.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Empirical concepts as to the modes of change.</i></div>
-
-<p>The question as to the number of modes of changing that laws possess
-does not concern us, because, philosophically speaking, there is never
-but one mode: the free will that produces the new law in new conditions
-of fact. Involuntary changing can only be a formula for indicating
-certain changes, always voluntary, that occur in a less solemn way
-than others; but from these, can never be absent the solemnity of the
-human will that celebrates itself. Thus, in like manner, the question
-as to whether we should recognize conservation or revolution as the
-fundamental concept of practical life, does not concern us; for every
-conservative is at the same time a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[Pg 489]</a></span> revolutionary, since he is always
-obliged to adapt the law that he wishes to preserve to the new facts;
-and every revolutionary is also a conservative, since he is obliged to
-start from certain laws that he preserves, at any rate provisionally,
-that he may change others and substitute for them new laws, which he
-in his turn intends to preserve. Revolution for revolution's sake, the
-cult of the Goddess Revolution, is an insane effort, which is so none
-the less because it has sometimes appeared in History and like all
-insane efforts it ends with suicide. Revolution revolutionizes itself
-and turns into reaction. Thus when revolutionaries and conservatives
-are distinguished and opposed to one another, an empirical distinction
-is made there also, the meaning of which is to be found in the
-historical circumstances among which it has arisen. Count Cavour was
-a conservative in respect to certain problems and revolutionary in
-respect to certain others, to such a degree that he seemed to the
-Mazzinians to be a conservative and to the clericals and legitimists
-a revolutionary. Robespierre, if he were a revolutionary for the
-Girondins and at last even for the neo-moderate Danton, yet to the eyes
-of Hébert and of Chaumette seemed to be a conservative,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[Pg 490]</a></span> enemy of the
-free development of the rights of man.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the eternal Code or natural Right.</i></div>
-
-<p>We should on the other hand be very careful as to the demand so
-often made and also so far as possible put into execution, for <i>an
-eternal code, a limit-legislation or model, a universal, rational, or
-natural</i> justice, as it has been variously termed. Natural justice,
-universal legislation, eternal code, claim to fix the transitory
-and are therefore a contradictory concept: contradictory precisely
-to the principle of the mutability of laws, which is the necessary
-consequence of their contingent and historical character. Were natural
-Right permitted to do what it announces, were God to permit that the
-affairs of Reality should be carried on according to the ill-assorted
-ideas of writers and professors, we should witness with the formation
-and application of the eternal Code, the cessation <i>ipso facto</i> of
-Development, the end of History, the death of Life and the dissolution
-of Reality.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Natural justice as the new justice.</i></div>
-
-<p>This world-ending does not take place, because, though it be possible
-to dwell in contradiction, it is impossible to make it concrete and
-actual: God, that is to say Reality, does not permit this. Thus it
-happens that under the name of natural justice, two sorts of products
-have existed in turn, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[Pg 491]</a></span> sometimes a mixture of those two different
-products, which have nothing to do with the programme announced. On the
-one hand, projects of new laws that seemed better than the old or good
-by comparison with these judged more or less bad, have been proposed
-as natural or rational justice, and precisely for this reason the old
-laws were called unnatural and irrational and the new <i>rational and
-natural.</i> Just as passionate and erotic temperaments, uninstructed by
-the experience of their past, swear with the utmost seriousness that
-their new love will be <i>constant, eternal and their last,</i> so man, when
-he creates new laws, is often seized with the illusion that his laws
-will not change as did the old ones, forgetting that the old ones were
-once young and that they "satisfied divers" in their heyday, to express
-oneself in the words of the old carnavalesque song. Those natural
-laws are historical, those eternal laws are transitory, like all the
-others. All know how in certain times and places, religious tolerance,
-freedom of trade, private property, constitutional monarchy, have been
-proclaimed eternal; and in others, the extirpation of unbelievers,
-commercial protection, communism, the republic, and anarchy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Natural justice as philosophy of the practical.</i></div>
-
-<p>Universal concepts, which were nothing but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[Pg 492]</a></span> the Principles of the
-philosophy of the practical themselves, have on the other hand had a
-tendency to be classed as natural justice and to surpass the transitory
-and contingent. They are certainly eternal and unchangeable, but no
-longer laws, for they are formal and not material. Thus treatises of
-natural justice have sometimes become simply treatises (sometimes
-very valuable) of the Philosophy of the practical and especially of
-Ethic.&mdash;When (as to tell the truth has generally been the case) a
-practical description has accompanied a general treatment of Ethic,
-leading to a series of proposals for social, judicial or political
-reform, there has then occurred a <i>mingling</i> of two different
-productions, which we have mentioned, philosophy and casuistic. But a
-natural justice has always remained unachieved, because unachievable
-and contradictory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of natural justice.</i></div>
-
-<p>In our times, owing to the increase of the historical sense, the
-constructions of natural justice and of the eternal Code have almost
-altogether lost the attraction they once exercized. But absurd problems
-having their origin in those contradictory concepts still persist
-and absurd methods of treating problems of similar origin legitimate
-when taken in their true terms. An example of the first of these two
-kinds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[Pg 493]</a></span> diseased residues is the treating of the <i>natural rights</i> of
-man and the attempt to establish what rights belong to man by nature
-and what by historical contingencies. Among the first are enumerated
-the right to life, to liberty, to work, to the family and so on; and
-among the second, those that have their origin in the Italian State
-or in special contracts that have been concluded. But no right of any
-sort belongs to man outside society (which in this case means outside
-history), that is to say, considered as spirit in universal, save that
-of existing as spirit, which indeed is not a right, but necessary
-reality. Catalogues of natural rights are either tautologies, which
-repeat that man as spirit has the right (and therefore at the same
-time the duty) of developing himself as spirit (and he does develop
-in this manner, if he be man and be alive); or they are arbitrary
-rationalizations of historical contingencies, such as the right to
-work, which is nothing but the formula of the workpeople of the
-<i>ateliers nationaux</i> in forty-eight, or of the insurgents of Lyons; or
-the right to private property, which was the formula of the burghers
-against the bonds of feudalism and is again their formula against the
-modern proletariat movement.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jusnaturalism persisting in judgments and juridical
-problems.</i></div>
-
-<p>We must recognize examples of the second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[Pg 494]</a></span> kind of error in the
-discussions constantly held as to social or political institutions,
-when instead of combating them as irrational, or of defending them as
-rational in historical circumstances, they are defended and combated
-because they differ from or conform to the true idea of right or to
-the true idea of those particular institutions, recourse being thus
-had to abstract reasons, as has very well been said. A reformer will
-maintain the recognition of the right of women to the administrative
-or political vote, because women also form part of the State and
-have general and particular interests, which they wish to guarantee
-directly, without the inter-position of men, whose interests are
-sometimes at variance with theirs: an argument that a conservative
-will deny altogether, making appeal to the function of woman, enclosed
-by eternal law in the circle of the family. A reformer will propose
-divorce as the natural complement to matrimony, because, where
-spiritual agreement ends, there too should end every other tie, whereas
-a conservative will oppose the argument as contradictory to the very
-essence of matrimony, comparing such a proposal with concubinage,
-or with what is called free love. And so on.&mdash;When such arguments
-are heard, it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[Pg 495]</a></span> remarked that natural rights are not dead. But
-the question as to the political vote for women may be serious or
-ridiculous, according to place and time; as divorce is loftily moral or
-profoundly immoral, according to time and place, and it is only mental
-narrowness or ignorance that can place outside humanity, or believe to
-be living or persisting in immorality, peoples that practise divorce
-or indissoluble matrimony, or those of to-day, who refuse the vote to
-women or those of the future who will recognize their right to it, if
-they do recognize it. But even polygamy or free love is not immoral,
-irrational and unnatural, once it has been an institution considered
-legitimate in certain times and places; nor even, we insist upon saying
-it (however repugnant to our hearts and to our stomachs of civilized
-Europeans), anthropophagy, for even among the anthropophagi were men
-(we hope it will be admitted), who felt themselves to be most virtuous
-in their clearest consciousness of self, and who nevertheless ate their
-like with the same tranquillity that we eat a roast chicken, without
-hatred of the chicken, but being quite well aware, for the moment
-at any rate, that we are not able to do otherwise. The unconscious
-reasoners on the basis of natural law must have forgotten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[Pg 496]</a></span> that
-page of Cornelius Νepos, which, however, they must certainly have
-translated in their first years at the gymnasium: <i>Expertes literarum
-Graecarum nihil rectum nisi quod ipsorum moribus conveniat putabunt.
-Hi, si didicerint non eadem omnibus esse honesta atque turpia, <span class="smcap">sed
-omnia majorum institutis judicari,</span> non admirabuntur nos in Graiorum
-virtutibus exponendis mores eorum secutos. Neque enim Cimoni fuit turpe
-Atheniensium summo viro, sororem germanam habere in matrimonium: quippe
-quum ejus cives eodem uterentur instituto; at id quidem nostris moribus
-nefas habetur. Laudi in Graecia ducitur adolescentulis quam plurimos
-habere amatores. Nulla Lacedaemoni tam est nobilis vidua quae non ad
-scenam eat mercede conducta...</i>. And he continues to give further
-examples.<a name="FNanchor_1_116" id="FNanchor_1_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_116" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> So ancient are the unreasonable tendency to be scandalized
-and the reasonable defence of the variety of customs made by good sense.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_116" id="Footnote_1_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_116"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Vitae excell. imper.,</i> pref.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[Pg 497]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>III</h4>
-
-
-<h4>UNREALITY OF THE LAW AND REALITY OF ITS EXECUTION. FUNCTION OF LAW IN
-THE PRACTICAL SPIRIT</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Law as abstract and unreal volition.</i></div>
-
-<p>Since law is the volition of a class of actions, it is the volition
-of an <i>abstract.</i> But as we already know, to will an abstract is
-tantamount to willing abstractly. And to will abstractly is not truly
-to will, for we will only in concrete, that is, in a determined
-situation and with a volitional synthesis corresponding to that
-situation, such that it is immediately translated into action, or
-better, is at the same time effective action. Consequently it seems
-that we should declare the volition that is law to be a pretended
-volition: contradictory, because lacking a single, unique and
-determined situation; ineffectual, because springing from the insecure
-ground of an abstract concept; a volition, in fact, that is not willed;
-a volitional act, not real, but <i>unreal.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Ineffectuality of laws and effectuality of practical
-principles.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such indeed it is. What is really wanted is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[Pg 498]</a></span> not the law, but the
-single act, done <i>under</i> the law, as it is called, that is to say,
-the <i>execution</i> of the law. The single volition is the only one that
-is carried out: the execution of the law is the only thing really
-and truly willed and done. When the law has been formulated, life
-continues ceaselessly to propound its problems, and these either do not
-enter into the provisions of the law and are solved simply and solely
-with universal practical principles (economic and ethic), or they do
-enter into them and then it is necessary <i>to apply</i> the law, unless
-it be held to be more convenient to change it, or (this would be a
-pathological case) action be not taken against it, although there be
-consciousness that this is ill done.</p>
-
-<p>But even when we are in the situations foreseen by the law and act in
-accordance with it, or, as is said, <i>apply or carry out</i> the law, we
-must not allow ourselves to be misled by all these metaphors; for we
-must consider that the single situations in which we will and act can
-never be foreseen by the law, nor is it possible to act in accordance
-with it, to follow it out and to apply it. Situations are not foreseen,
-because nothing is foreseen, and the real fact is always a surprise,
-something that happens once only and we can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[Pg 499]</a></span> only know it as it is
-after it has happened. For the new fact a new measure is necessary;
-for the new body a new suit of clothes. The measure of the law, on the
-other hand, since it is abstract, hesitates between the universal and
-the individual and is without the strength of either. To carry out the
-law? But it is only the pedant of life who proposes to do such a thing,
-as it is only the pedant of art who attempts to apply the rules of art.
-The true artist follows the impulse of his æsthetic conscience, the
-practical man the initiative of his practical genius. What is called
-the single act, observance and execution of the law, obeys, not the
-law, but the ethical or practical principle, and obeys it individually.
-The man who has his head full of laws that he has made for himself or
-has accepted from others, makes a deep reverence to the Ladies' Law
-when the time comes for action, and proceeds on his own initiative.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Exemplificatory clarification.</i></div>
-
-
-<p>It is the law that at the age of twenty we must present ourselves in
-our district and do military service for a certain time. Let us for
-the moment set aside the case in which those called upon to serve
-rebel and, having seized the power of the government, abolish the law
-of conscription, and re-establish that of voluntary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[Pg 500]</a></span> enlistment. And
-let us likewise set aside the other case, in which the conscripts
-violate the law by deserting and going abroad, or hide in a cave, like
-a hero of Padre Bresciani, or (like a good Tolstoian who applies the
-principle of non-resistance to evil) allow themselves to be put in
-prison rather than touch arms. Let us select the case of the peaceful
-burgess who becomes a warrior that he may not go to prison; or of the
-good citizen who recognizes his duty of serving his country and for
-that reason obeys the law. In presenting himself in his district and
-in the regiment, he has obeyed, not the voice of the law (which is a
-voice), but his moral conscience, or simply his economic conscience.
-This has already been demonstrated and we need not insist upon it.
-But how can he ever obey the law, which directs him to do military
-service of precisely this or that nature? Each individual has his own
-temperament, his own talent, his own particular physical strength, and
-each one will lend his services entirely in his own way, different from
-that of another. And (be it noted) he will not do so only more or less
-well or observing the law more or less, but really in a different way,
-even when all observe the law with equal diligence and scrupulosity.
-It may seem as if all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[Pg 501]</a></span> carry out a military exercise at the same
-moment, but the fact is that each man moves in a different way to the
-others; or that in a parade march all walk in the same way, but, as a
-matter of fact, all (even in the Prussian army) walk in a different
-way. If we look at it as a whole and from a distance, there seems to
-be uniformity; if we look at it from near at hand we discover the
-difference. If we could make the experiment of comparing a regiment
-of fifty years before with one of fifty years after, leaving military
-regulations, arms, accoutrements, and everything else unaltered in
-the interval, the lack of uniformity of the apparent uniformity would
-leap to the eyes, a lack of uniformity that would have been rendered
-possible by the changes that had taken place in the surrounding life,
-in the culture, the moral education, the political conscience, the
-mode of nourishment, the dwellings, and so on. But the experiment is
-possible, if not in time, then in space, that is to say, by observing
-the application of the same military regulations upon two different
-populations. Thus one seems to have in hand one book written in two
-different languages; which is literally no longer the same book,
-but two different books. Giusti translated into Milanese and Porta
-translated into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[Pg 502]</a></span> Florentine are no longer Porta or Giusti, but two new
-poets.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Doctrines against the utility of laws. Their
-unmaintainability.</i></div>
-
-<p>This indubitable truth, as to the impossibility of applying the law and
-of incorporating it in facts, and as to the necessity of acting in each
-case, according to historical exigencies, is the true reason for the
-turning of so many people's heads at different times and in different
-places, causing them to proclaim nothing less than the inutility
-of laws and to ask for their abolition. If it be necessary to come
-eventually to the individual action, and if deliberation and execution
-must be remitted to the action of the individual, what is the object of
-binding ourselves with bonds, which it is afterwards necessary to tear
-off and to break, that we may act? What is the object of laboriously
-constructing instruments, which we are obliged to throw away when we
-come to practical action, that we may use our naked hands? Owing to
-such ingenuous reasonings as these, people have come to long for a
-society without laws, in which each will do his own share of work, on
-account of its attractiveness alone, as we find among the Harmonicists
-of Fourier and in many other anarchical Utopias. Or they have sighed
-for the absolute paternal government of the good old days, for the
-geniality of a good-hearted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[Pg 503]</a></span> tyrant, untrammelled with laws, who will
-be able to follow the best dictates of his heart. Or, to descend to
-less strange and more actual examples, it has been proposed that the
-judge should on each occasion create the law, according to the case
-before him; that is to say, that he should cease to be a judge (not
-having a law to apply, and properly speaking not being able to give
-judgment) and be a free decider of litigation and corrector of customs;
-or at least that he should free himself from <i>legal fictions</i> and judge
-according to the individual reality of each individual case.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Unsustainability of such confutations.</i></div>
-
-<p>These theories are without doubt unsustainable, not excluding the last,
-which has the appearance of being moderate; because the so-called
-judicial fiction is intrinsic to the law and exists even when we
-think that it is not present, for it is always a fiction to place a
-concrete case in an abstract category. But defenders of the utility of
-law have met these erroneous doctrines with the bad argument that law
-does not admit of individual solutions, and demands strict obedience,
-because the moment of individuality, of inobservance, and of violation
-that may be called legitimate, does actually exist in the law and is
-intrinsic to its very nature. Both adversaries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[Pg 504]</a></span> and defenders of law
-are therefore philosophically wrong, those who assert its inutility and
-those who claim for it an impossible utility.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Empirical meanings of those controversies.</i></div>
-
-<p>And we say "philosophically," for it is well known that in this case,
-as in so many other disputes of philosophic appearance, are often
-concealed disputes of a practical and political nature, in which right
-and wrong are divided and connected in an altogether different manner.
-The adversaries of laws are often nothing but adversaries of too many
-laws, or legitimately demand a less pedantic and mechanical office
-for the judge than that which he often has at present; whereas the
-maintainers of laws are opposed to revolutionaries, who would wish
-to abrogate the definite laws, on which civil progress rests, or to
-discredit all laws, and cause society to enter upon a terrible crisis
-that would not promise good results. But all this is extraneous to the
-philosophic problem.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Necessity of laws.</i></div>
-
-<p>If the defenders of the utility of laws had wished to make use of an
-argument of good sense against their adversaries, of the sort that
-imposes, even when it does not rigorously demonstrate their contention,
-they might have simply noted the demand for laws, for ordinances,
-for justice, for the State, which appears at all points<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[Pg 505]</a></span> of human
-history.&mdash;Better a bad government than no government at all; better
-laws that are mediocre, but stable, than the frantic pursuit for
-better and better laws, with the instability that is the inevitable
-consequence! And on the other hand, may God save us from genial
-despots, from inspired judges, from tribunals that dive into treasures
-of equity!&mdash;These are the utterances that we hear in history. Battles
-have been fought for <i>legality,</i> and rivers of blood have been shed for
-it; for legality are faced the troubles of litigation, and energetic
-action is displayed, which only superficial intellects can consider
-a waste of time and trouble; for no trouble is superfluous when we
-are protecting our own rights, and none is more sacred, since it also
-guards the offended majesty of the law, the rights of all. Those who
-declaim against laws can well do so with a light heart, for the law
-surrounds, protects, and preserves their life for them. No sooner had
-all laws disappeared than they would lose the wish to declaim:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-In such wise as when sometimes in the wood<br />
-The shepherd spies the wolf, and straight has lost<br />
-Spirit and sense, and words die on his tongue;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>and he would be obliged to have speedy recourse to the remedy and make
-laws of some sort again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[Pg 506]</a></span> whatever they be, that he may again resume
-his calm, his work and his gossip.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Laws as preparation for action.</i></div>
-
-<p>Passing from consideration <i>ad oculos</i> to the philosophical, it is to
-be said, on the other hand, that the utility of law does not at all
-reside in its effectuality, which is something impossible, since the
-single act of the individual is alone effectual; but in this, that in
-order to will and to carry out the single act, it is usually necessary
-to address oneself to the general, of which that individual is a single
-case; that is, to address oneself to the group, of which the individual
-is a component part, just as in aiming we generally begin by aiming at
-the region where is the point upon which the aim will be fixed. Law is
-not a real and effectual volition; it is without doubt an imperfect and
-contradictory volition, but for that very reason a preparation for the
-synthetic and perfect volition. Law, in short, since it is the volition
-of an abstract, is not a real volition, but an <i>aid</i> to real volition;
-as (to employ the usual comparison) wooden bridges and scaffoldings are
-aids to the construction of a house and have not been useless, because
-they must be pulled down when the house has been built.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Analogy between the practical and the theoretical spirit:
-practical laws and empirical concepts.</i></div>
-
-<p>Here the analogy between the constitution of the practical and of the
-theoretical spirit is again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[Pg 507]</a></span> shown to be most exact. We meet with
-theoretical forms in the latter also, which are not really so and are
-contradictory in themselves, positing representations that function as
-universals and universals that are representative: arbitrary forms,
-in which the will undertakes to command what it is not possible to
-command, that is to say, representations and concepts, things which
-precede and do not follow the volitional and practical form. But we
-know that those fictitious concepts, those formulæ, those laws that
-are not laws, those admitted falsities, which, therefore, are not
-falsities, serve as a help to memory, and assist thought in finding
-its way amid the multiform spectacle of the world, which it must
-penetrate for itself. We do not think them, but they help us to
-think; we do not imagine them, but they help us to imagine. Thus the
-philosopher generally fixes his mind upon the pseudo-concepts, that he
-may afterwards rise to the universals; and the artist also turns his
-attention to them that he may find beneath them the individual, the
-lively and ingenuous intuition that he seeks. The same pseudo-concepts,
-made the object of volition and changed from formulæ to laws, fulfil
-an analogous office in the practical spirit, making it possible for
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[Pg 508]</a></span> will to will in a certain direction, where it afterwards meets the
-useful action, which is always individuated.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The promotion of order in reality and representation.</i></div>
-
-<p>Another aspect of the analogy is not less important. The
-pseudo-concepts would not be possible, if reality did not offer the
-like side by side with the unlike; which is not the universal and
-necessary, but the general, a contingent (so to speak) less contingent
-than others, a relatively constant variable. Pseudo-concepts are
-arbitrary, not because they posit the like where is the unlike, but
-because they make that variable rigid, which is only relatively
-constant, making of it something absolutely constant and changing
-the like into the identical. Now the practical spirit, which creates
-reality, has need to create not only the unlike, but also the like; not
-only that which lasts an instant, but also that which endures almost
-unchanged for a year, a century, a millennium, or a millennium of
-millenniums; not only the individual, but also the species, not only
-the great man, but also the people, not only the actions that do not
-occur again, but also those that return periodically, similar, though
-not identical. Laws fulfil this function, for they constitute what
-is called the <i>social,</i> or <i>cosmic order.</i> This order,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[Pg 509]</a></span> however, is
-always relative and includes instability in itself; it is a rectilinear
-figure, which, on being closely examined, reveals itself as also
-curvilinear. For this reason it is necessary to make laws, and it is
-necessary to violate, though obeying them in their execution.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Origin of the concept of plan or design.</i></div>
-
-<p>This function of law as an unreal volition, aiding nevertheless and
-preparing the real, throws light upon a concept that we have had to
-reject when exposing the nature and method of functioning of the
-volitional act; that is to say, on the concept of <i>plan or design or
-model,</i> as proper to the practical activity, which is said to act by
-carrying out a pre-established <i>design.</i> We have already demonstrated
-that design and the execution of the design are in reality all one, and
-that man acts by changing his design at every instant, because reality,
-which is the basis of his action, changes. And as in the Philosophy
-of the practical in general, so in particular in Ethic, the concept
-of pre-established design has no place; because, if it be true than
-in ethicity the universal is distinguished from the merely individual
-action, it is also true that the universal does not exist in concrete,
-save incorporated and individualized as this or that good action. The
-universal of ethicity is not a design and cannot be willed for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[Pg 510]</a></span> itself
-outside all individuation, in the same way as to fall in love is to
-fall in love with an individual and not with love. But that concept
-of design, proposed for action and carried out by its means, though
-erroneously adopted in Economy and in Ethic, must nevertheless have its
-legitimate meaning in some special order of facts; otherwise it would
-not be possible to make even erroneous use of it. This meaning is to be
-found, as has been seen, in the fact of laws.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[Pg 511]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>IV</h4>
-
-
-<h4>CONFUSION BETWEEN LAWS AND PRACTICAL PRINCIPLES. CRITIQUE OF PRACTICAL
-LEGALISM AND OF JESUITIC MORALITY</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Transformation of principles into practical laws:
-legalism.</i></div>
-
-<p>Nothing perhaps better makes clear the true nature of laws than the
-examination of the very grave errors introduced by their means into
-the Philosophy of the practical: for, owing to the failure to perceive
-the character of mere <i>aid</i> proper to their function, laws have been
-confused with practical principles, these being looked upon as laws and
-those as principles.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Genesis of the concept of the practically licit and
-indifferent.</i></div>
-
-<p>We always live surrounded by innumerable laws, although these are
-always finite in number. The Decalogue also admonishes: "Take not
-the name of God in vain"; "Honour thy father and thy, mother"; "Thou
-shalt not steal"; "Thou shalt commit no murder"; "Thou shalt not covet
-thy neighbour's house, nor his wife, nor his man-servant, nor his
-maid-servant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is his"; etc.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[Pg 512]</a></span>
-The decalogue or hectalogue of prudence admonishes us: "Raise not up
-against thee too many enemies "; "Mind your own business"; "Conciliate
-him who is more powerful than thou"; "Hurt him who hurts thee"; etc.
-Those laws that are so many and so minute easily lead to the false
-belief that they suffice together to regulate our economic action and
-our moral life, and that practical principles can be substituted for
-and be fully represented by a Decalogue or code, which should be the
-true and proper regulator of human life.</p>
-
-<p>But the Decalogue, the code, the <i>Corpus juris,</i> ample and minute
-though they be, are not, as we know, capable of exhausting the infinity
-of actions conditioned by the infinite variety of facts. Every law
-brings with it, as its necessary correlative, as the shadow of its
-light, actions that are indifferent and indifferentiable, the legally
-indifferent, the licit, the permissible, the right, the faculty of
-doing or of not doing. As an inevitable consequence of this, practical
-principles having been conceived as a series or complex of laws, the
-concept of the <i>practically indifferent</i> must also be posited and the
-<i>licit</i> changed from <i>legal</i> to <i>practical.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Consequence of this: the arbitrary.</i></div>
-
-<p>And this is what happens. At every moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[Pg 513]</a></span> of life we find ourselves
-face to face with actual situations, to which the laws that we possess
-either do not apply at all, or apply only in the approximative way
-that we have seen; at every moment of life, we find ourselves without
-the guidance of the law, face to face with the indifferent and the
-indifferentiated. The practical man knows well that the laws were a
-mere help, merely a preparatory stage to action, and that he must in
-each case face the actual situation as it arises, intuite and perceive
-it in its originality, and perform his own action with originality.
-But he who has accepted the <i>legalitarian</i> conception of the practical
-activity and has abandoned practical principles as useless or looked
-upon them as non-existent, now that he finds himself abandoned also by
-the laws, in which he had put too much trust, has no other guide on
-which to fall back save his own <i>will.</i></p>
-
-<p>And will is not a guide but <i>the lack of a guide</i>; it is not action
-but inaction, that is to say, contradictory action; not activity, but
-passivity, not prudence and good, but imprudence and evil.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the legalitarian conception of practical principles produces
-neither more nor less than the death of the practical, installing
-passivity in the place of activity, evil in the place of good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[Pg 514]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The legalitarian theory, which proposes to fix and to determine with
-precision the true concept of freedom, arrives at just the opposite
-result: the will.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Ethical legalism as simply a particular case of practical
-legalism.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is opportune to remark here that moral legalism, which has hitherto
-alone occupied the attention of critics, is nothing but a particular
-case of general practical legalism, and if the particular and not
-the general case has been observed, this has depended upon the
-failure to recognize the economic form in its autonomy, so common
-with philosophers. But from the examples that we have given, it has
-clearly resulted that legalism is an error which embraces alike
-Economy and Ethic, introducing into both the philosophic absurdity of
-the <i>practically indifferent.</i> Even a man without moral conscience,
-or one deprived of it for a moment, if he conceive the guidance of
-his utilitarian action in the form of laws, loses the compass of his
-utilitarianism and falls into the arbitrary, which is the ruin of his
-own individuality. If (to resume the usual example) I impose upon
-myself the not drinking of wine as a hygienic law, and it happen to me
-to find myself at a certain moment in such physiological conditions
-that a glass of wine can accelerate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[Pg 515]</a></span> the beating of the heart and
-restore to me the strength of which I am in need; and if, through faith
-in the established law, I forget that the law is conditional and not
-absolute and that the only absolute law is to do at a given moment
-what is useful at that moment; it is evident that by so reasoning and
-acting, I am substituting superstition and therefore the arbitrary for
-prudence and that I am causing injury to myself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the practically indifferent.</i></div>
-
-<p>It is necessary to maintain against the morally and practically
-indifferent, that it is a concept altogether external to Ethic and
-Economic and devastates it terribly whenever it penetrates into it,
-or (what is worse) subtly corrupts it. In Economic as in Ethic, in
-the true and proper practical field, there is no <i>faculty</i> that is
-not also <i>obligation</i>; there is no <i>right</i> that is not at the same
-time a <i>duty;</i> there is nothing <i>licit</i> that is not <i>forbidden;</i> nor
-<i>permitted</i> that is not turned into a <i>command.</i> πάντα ἔξεστιν, ἀλλ' οὐ
-πάντα συμφέρει, said St. Paul,<a name="FNanchor_1_117" id="FNanchor_1_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_117" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> in obscure but suggestive language
-that has been much discussed&mdash;all is allowed to us but we do not allow
-anything&mdash;we should say in explanation; everything can and should be
-spiritually elaborated by the will and receive the form of freedom.
-But in order to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[Pg 516]</a></span> destroy that paradoxical concept at the roots, it
-is necessary to reach the point underground where the concept of
-<i>practical legalism</i> is to be found, and to show, as we have done, its
-origin, in the confusion between <i>principles and laws.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Contests between rigorists and latitudinarians and their
-common error.</i></div>
-
-<p>In vain have the <i>rigorists,</i> becoming aware of the ruin that menaced
-the theory of Ethic, struggled against the theoreticians of the morally
-indifferent, or <i>latitudinarians.</i> So long as neither party left the
-legalitarian field, one side was right against the other and both were
-equally wrong, Pharisees and Sadducees, Jansenists and Molinists.
-The rigorists clung desperately to the law, refusing to admit that
-it could be <i>doubtful</i> and give rise to the morally indifferent; the
-law was <i>certain.</i> But the law is never really either doubtful or
-certain: revolving upon empirical concepts, it never limits anything
-with precision and therefore is not certain; having for its object,
-not concrete action, but only preparation for it, does not propose to
-limit the illimitable and so is neither uncertain nor doubtful: it
-stands on this side or the other of such categories. Thus the rigorists
-also found themselves face to face with the morally indifferent, and
-had no way of vanquishing it. They could advise the choice of the
-most painful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[Pg 517]</a></span> and repugnant action, self-denial, self-tormenting; but
-this too was a kind of wilfulness and evil. The latitudinarians, on
-the other hand, could enlarge the field of the morally indifferent
-at their pleasure, placing in evidence the dubiety of law and its
-consequent impotence as a practical principle; but since they did not
-recognize any practical principle outside the form of law, they were
-finally obliged to have recourse to it, that they might have some
-point of orientation in the guidance of their lives. And since they
-could not find it in the law itself, recognized as doubtful, they were
-obliged to place it in the authority of its interpreters; and when
-these authorities were at variance, in the adding up of authorities
-(just as is done for the Roman jurists in the law of citation made
-by Theodosius II.); and since, finally, two or three or four or a
-hundred authorities, when they are uncertain, are not of greater value
-than one who is equally uncertain, any sort of authority finally had
-to suffice them as justification for an action. <i>Probabilitism,</i> far
-from being merely an illegitimate degeneration of legalism, is its
-logical consequence. Reduced as they were to authority, why should
-one be of more account than another, when all are estimable people
-worthy of credence?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[Pg 518]</a></span> Why should the precedence be given to Papinian
-over Paul or over Ulpian? If Villalobos be of opinion that a priest
-who has committed a moral sin cannot say mass the same day, Sanchez,
-on the other hand, Jopines that he can: why, then, should a priest who
-finds himself in that case follow Villalobos rather than Sanchez? It
-is true that if he make a blind choice between Villalobos and Sanchez,
-he becomes the prey of self-will; but self-will and legalism are
-indissoluble, and the more carefully he tries to free himself from the
-bond, the more tightly it winds itself around him.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jesuitic morality as doctrine of fraud against the moral
-law.</i></div>
-
-<p>Practical legalism can also give rise to a monstrously absurd theory,
-which we shall call <i>Jesuitic morality,</i> not because it is peculiar
-to the Jesuits or to Catholicism, but as dutiful homage to the most
-conspicuous and likewise the most celebrated in literature of its
-historical incarnations. The theory of Jesuitic morality admits that we
-can rationally <i>defraud</i> ethical law.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Concept of legal fraud.</i></div>
-
-<p>That the law is <i>defrauded or eluded</i> every day, taken in itself, is
-neither moral nor immoral, since it is an expedient of social strife
-like another, and in certain cases may be a legitimate act of war and
-a fraud only in name. A law held to be iniquitous should be combated
-openly;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[Pg 519]</a></span> but if the imposer of the iniquitous law, or he who wishes to
-profit by it, have committed a mistake in drafting it, so that it can
-be interpreted in such a way as to become good, or at least better, it
-is very natural that the adversary should profit by the mistake, if
-for no other reason than that he may discredit the law as equivocal
-and lacking in precision and compel society to discuss it again. Who
-does not applaud the fraud of Portia, when it is a question of saving
-the life of the noble Antonio from a Shylock? And if even the <i>ferox
-animus</i> of Shylock has found defenders, as symbol of the tenacity with
-which we must make our own rights respected, yet Portia also will
-always find her supporters, as symbol of ingenious rebellion against an
-unjust law.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Absurdity of the fraud against ones self and against the
-moral law.</i></div>
-
-<p>But what is altogether irrational and yet seems to be admitted by
-Jesuitic morality, is <i>the fraud against oneself,</i> and so against one's
-own moral conscience. To defraud one's own conscience, to rebel against
-it with violence or with artifice, is contradiction, wilfulness, evil.
-It sometimes happens that we exert ourselves to still what is called
-the internal voice of admonition, the Socratic demon, or the guardian
-angel. This happens in the utilitarian, not less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[Pg 520]</a></span> than in the moral
-field; when, for instance, we yield to a pleasure which we know to be
-harmful and had intended to avoid for that reason, and when by dint of
-subtleties we try to persuade ourselves that it differs from that which
-we had recognized as harmful. We attempt, but we never really succeed;
-we may be able to obscure our conscience for an instant, but we can
-never permanently and altogether darken it; the effort itself calls for
-the light that we would avoid.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jesuitic morality not explainable as mere legalism.</i></div>
-
-<p>But that pretension of Jesuitic morality cannot on the other hand
-derive from mere ethical legalism, because legalism produces the
-contradictions that we have already placed in relief; it generates the
-morally indifferent and at the same time suppresses it; and when it
-has suppressed again generates, in order again to suppress it; and so
-on to infinity, an anxious and sterile doing and undoing. But it never
-authorizes fraud. Simple legalism will never justify our pretending to
-ourselves when a definite action is willed or when we have a definite
-intention, that we will another action and have a different intention;
-or, as they say, <i>direction of the intention</i>: the intention is that
-which it is and it does not allow itself to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[Pg 521]</a></span> directed at will. To
-obey the letter of the law with the clear intention of breaking it in
-spirit will never be justified.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jesuitic morality as alliance between legalism and
-theological utilitarianism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The pretension of Jesuitic morality becomes illuminated and transparent
-to the intellect, only when we make the hypothesis of an alliance
-between <i>practical legalism and theological utilitarianism</i>; that is
-to say, when not only do we conceive morality as a series or complex
-of legislative decisions, but when we likewise consider these to
-be nothing less than the product of the will of God. They are not
-in themselves moral as such, and to observe them does not arise of
-intrinsic necessity; but they are obeyed as the lesser evil, through
-fear of worse or in hope of future advantage. In this case there is a
-silent struggle between God the legislator and man, a struggle between
-the weak and the overbearing, in which the strength of the weak lies in
-ingenuity, their tactic in fraud. Hence the dominant concept of Jesuit
-morality: to get the better of the divine laws as far as possible, to
-do the least possible of what they command; and when called upon to
-give an account of one's own actions before the tribunal of confession,
-or before the universal judgment, so to subtilize upon the law, that
-from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[Pg 522]</a></span> interpretation thus put upon it, what has been done seems to
-belong to the licit and permissive. God forbids man to kill man; but
-does he intend to forbid this, when the motive for this killing is the
-glory of God himself? When the slayer acts as though he were the hand
-of God himself and is all one with him? Without doubt, no: so that
-it will be lawful for the Jesuit to kill or cause to be killed his
-Jansenist adversary, who injures divine interests by disclosing the
-defects of the holy Company, which is the image of God upon earth: that
-killing, then, is not only lawful, but ordained. But if he want to kill
-his adversary, not through zeal for the divine glory, but because of
-the injury that he causes to the personal and immoral interests of the
-Jesuit? This too is permitted, provided that when killing him, though
-animated with personal hate, he withdraw his regard from the real
-motive, and <i>directing</i> his intention to the divine glory, thus justify
-the <i>means</i> by the <i>end.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Distinction between the doctrine and the practice of the
-Jesuits.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such is the monstrous logical product, born of the union between
-<i>legalism</i> and the theory of <i>theological utilitarianism</i>; such is
-the essence of Jesuitic morality, which has justly aroused horror and
-disgust. And we call it <i>logical</i> (or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[Pg 523]</a></span> illogical) product, because
-we wish to make it clear that here as elsewhere we are occupied with
-theories only and are criticizing them alone. In practical action
-Jesuitic morality was often better than the theory would imply; even
-the Padre Caramuel, who put the question as to the right possessed by
-the Jesuits of slaying the Jansenists, must have been at bottom a good
-man; because, having almost arrived at an affirmative conclusion to
-his inquiry by dint of perverting the moral law, he was seized by pity
-and defrauded his own fraud, concluding negatively that the Jansenists
-<i>occidi non possunt quia nocere non potuerunt,</i> because (said he)
-they are poor devils, unable to obscure the glorious brilliance of
-the Company, as the owl does not conceal the light of the sun.<a name="FNanchor_2_118" id="FNanchor_2_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_118" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> And
-Saint Alphonso dei Liguori, who is usually looked upon as an example
-of that lurid morality in our day, when he set to work to stir up
-afresh the ugliness of casuistic in connection with the sixth and ninth
-commandments, experienced all the repugnance of the gallant gentleman
-that he was, at such a task, imposed upon him by the traditional mode
-of treating Ethic, as is to be seen by his declarations,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[Pg 524]</a></span> exclamations,
-and exhortations: <i>Nunc aegre materiam illam tractandam aggredimur,
-cujus vel solum nomen hominum mentes infidi. Det mihi veniam, quaeso,
-castus lector!... Ora studiosos ... ut ... eo tempore saepius mentem
-ad Deum elevent et Virgini immaculatae se commendent, ne dum aliorum
-animos Deo student acquirere, ipsi suarum detrimentum patiantur.</i><a name="FNanchor_3_119" id="FNanchor_3_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_119" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-If Jesuitism were also moral corruption, this was not due to its
-abstract theories, but to the education that it practised, which was
-depressing, servile, and directed to mortify the strength of the will
-and of the intelligence, to reduce a man to be like <i>senis baculus,</i>
-a docile and passive instrument in the hands of others; and to the
-confusion in consciences as to the real motives of actions, which it
-not only preserved but increased, lulling souls to sleep with sophisms
-and allurements of devotion <i>aisées à pratiquer,</i> by means of which the
-gates of Paradise could be unlocked, and with <i>chemins de velours</i> on
-which one could mount to the sky with every indulgence. The rigorists
-and latitudinarians are philosophically equivalent; but it is a fact
-that in practice the rigorists were generally energetic and austere
-souls; which should not cause us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[Pg 525]</a></span> to forget that the latitudinarians
-also, amid their distorted theories, sometimes had a lucid vision of
-the <i>complications</i> of reality and felt the necessity of a morality
-less abstract and less disharmonic in relation to life, however
-incorrectly they may nevertheless have developed its theory.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_117" id="Footnote_1_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_117"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> 1 Cor. x. 23.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_118" id="Footnote_2_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_118"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Pascal, <i>Prov.</i> 1. 7.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_119" id="Footnote_3_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_119"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Theol. moralis</i><sup>7</sup>, Bassano, 1773, i. 168.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[Pg 526]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>V</h4>
-
-
-<h4>JUDICIAL ACTIVITY AS AN ACTIVITY GENERICALLY PRACTICAL (ECONOMIC)</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Legislative activity, as generically practical.</i></div>
-
-<p>The will that wills classes of actions, or the activity that makes
-laws and that we can henceforward term <i>legislative activity</i> without
-fear of misunderstanding, is either moral or merely economic; and
-therefore, when dialecticized, is either moral or immoral, economic or
-anti-economic. It is true that this will is abstract and indeterminate;
-but that does not prevent it from being, and from being obliged to be,
-either moral or merely economic; and, therefore, abstractly moral and
-abstractly economic, and so also abstractly immoral and anti-economic.
-A programme of action will be conceived, as they say, wisely or
-foolishly, to a good or to a bad end, for mere reasons of utility, or
-with a lively desire for good. The legislator is a volitional man, and
-as such to be judged both utilitarianly and morally. The laws that
-are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[Pg 527]</a></span> his volitional product are useful or injurious, good or bad. This
-judgment is also without doubt abstract, for it is necessary first to
-see the legislator engaged in the practical act of the application of
-his law, in order to recognize what he can do and who he is. We know
-many (others or ourselves?) who make plans for the most beautiful
-lives, legislating admirably for themselves and for others; yet these
-show themselves mean and bad in action: and we not infrequently find
-the opposite case of men who calumniate themselves and who, after they
-have declared the most dishonest, or at least the most amoralistic, of
-intentions, when they find themselves face to face with the bad action,
-ugly with the ugliness of sin, say, as the old man in the fable said to
-Death: "I have not called thee!"</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Vanity of disputes as to the character of institutions,
-economic or ethic: punishment, matrimony, the State, etc.</i></div>
-
-<p>From these considerations, which seem to be most obvious, a not
-obvious consequence is to be drawn; namely, that it is perfectly vain
-to descant upon the utilitarian or moral character of laws, or of
-these or those laws; to ask oneself, for instance, whether the object
-of <i>punishment</i> be <i>deterritio</i> or <i>emendatio</i>; if <i>matrimony</i> be an
-exchange of services or a sacrament, a union of interests or a society<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[Pg 528]</a></span>
-with moral ends; if the <i>State</i> be the result of a contract or of a
-moral idea, and so on. These questions have an immense literature
-devoted to them, which has been accumulated for centuries, and although
-they be vain for us, yet they cannot be so for one who has not yet
-become clear as to the special forms of the practical activity and as
-to the nature of law. For him they are not vain, since they represent
-as it were in a concentrated form, the complete philosophical problem
-concerning the practical; although they must of necessity turn out
-to be insoluble. Punishment can be conceived and willed as a mere
-utilitarian menace, to prevent others from performing certain classes
-of actions, even if they be ethically of the highest value; or as
-moral solicitude for the amelioration of society and the individual
-himself who has erred, by obliging him to re-enter himself and change
-his mind. Even the pain of death can be directed to this end and death
-that has given or restored to the guilty a day, an hour, an instant
-of that human life, of that contact with the infinite, which he had
-lost, may be held not to have been in vain. Matrimony may be instituted
-for the more regular satisfaction of the sexual instinct and for
-other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[Pg 529]</a></span> similar interests of utilitarian life; and also to secure, that
-interpénétration of souls, which is the great mover of the moral life.
-The State may arise from a mere contract which draws together isolated
-individuals and groups and unites them for defence and offence; and
-also form the profound moral aspiration of the individuals, who
-recognize the universal in themselves and are attentive to realize it
-in modes ever more rich and more lofty. All institutions, all laws may
-receive this double form; and although there be laws that are merely
-utilitarian, those that are moral are also, as is clear, utilitarian
-or economic, and therefore not useless but useful. An amoral man will
-make for himself amoral laws; and between an amoral man and an amoral
-woman no other marriage but that of interest is possible; and between
-a hundred amoral individuals, no other State is possible but that
-established by contract; and no other punishment will be applicable in
-such a State save that of mere <i>deterritio.</i> It will be objected that
-amoral individuals and multitudes do not exist, and it may be true that
-they do not exist in a continuous manner: but they do exist at certain
-moments; and this as we know, suffices to justify, indeed to prove
-necessary, our theory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[Pg 530]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Legislative activity as economic.</i></div>
-
-<p>Thus no other answer is possible to the question asked as to whether
-the legislative activity be moral or merely economic, save that it may
-be the one or the other, and therefore, that it is not of necessity
-moral; thus, defining it in its full extension, it must be called
-<i>generically practical,</i> or taken in itself, <i>merely economic.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Juridical activity: its economic character.</i></div>
-
-<p>Passing now from the legislative activity to that of him who realizes
-and executes the law (an activity that we may call <i>juridical,</i> in
-order not to confound it with the other), and asking whether juridical
-activity be moral or distinct from morality and if distinct, what is
-its distinctive characteristic, the answer cannot but be most simple
-for us who have attained to our present position. So simple indeed,
-that to give it would seem to be almost superfluous. Not only must the
-activity of carrying out the law not be intrinsically diverse from the
-activity of legislating, but as has been seen, it obeys exclusively
-practical principles, economic and ethic. Hence the 'juridical activity
-can be merely economic and it can be moral; and seeing that economicity
-is the general form that of itself involves the other, the juridical
-activity is generically practical, or <i>economic. </i> As such and in so
-far as it is such,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[Pg 531]</a></span> it is at once distinct from and united with the
-moral form.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Its consequent identity with the economic activity.</i></div>
-
-<p>But juridical activity does not merely enter the economic activity;
-it is exactly identical with it: juridical activity and economic
-activity are <i>synonyms.</i> Legislative activity enters economy and
-nevertheless distinguishes itself from it, as volition of the abstract,
-indeterminate volition. The juridical activity is on the other hand
-concrete and determined, like the other, nor is it distinguished from
-it by any secondary character. It might be attempted to subdistinguish
-the economic and juridical activity, while admitting the generic
-identification, and to look upon the latter as such that although
-obeying the economic principle, it is yet developed <i>under the laws;</i>
-whereas the former would exist even where <i>laws were wanting.</i> But the
-distinction would be empirical, of undulating boundaries. Strictly
-speaking, man is surrounded with laws in all his actions, and he always
-acts under all the laws, and at the same time he effectually acts under
-none of them, save that of his own practical conscience.</p>
-
-<p>If the identity and synonymity of law, understood as juridical activity
-with economy, has not been discovered, that too is connected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[Pg 532]</a></span> with the
-lack of recognition of the practical utilitarian category on the part
-of philosophers and with their considering it, as they erroneously
-did, either as egotism and immorality, or as an altogether empirical
-division, to which was added a concept, also empirical, of the
-juridical activity itself, which should be limited to what are called
-laws emanating from the State, sometimes graciously including in them
-social laws, and always altogether ignoring the fundamental form,
-individual laws.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The failure to recognize the economic form and the meaning
-of the problem concerning the distinction between morality and law.</i></div>
-
-<p>But this failure of recognition has not prevented the appearance and
-persistence of the problem of the <i>combined unity and distinction of
-law and morality,</i> which has been the most frequent though the most
-complicated mode of affirming the claim of a special Philosophy of
-economy. A serious beginning of meditation upon law had hardly begun,
-when something was observed in it that it was impossible to resolve
-into the concepts of Ethic. Hence the generally admitted recognition
-of the distinction between law and morality and the many attempts
-at determining of what the peculiar character of the former exactly
-consisted.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Theories of compulsion and exteriority, as distinctive
-characters: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>This character was placed most frequently and with greater insistence
-in the two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[Pg 533]</a></span> determinations of <i>compulsion</i> and of <i>exteriority.</i> And it
-was said that law is distinguished from morality because it is possible
-to exercize compulsion in the juridical, but not in the moral field;
-or that law deals with the field of external relations, morality with
-the internal; or that one is the <i>psychical,</i> the other the <i>physical</i>
-side of action. But as to the first determination, we have already
-shown that it has no meaning at all when applied to the forms of the
-spiritual activity, where nothing is compulsory and everything is at
-once free and necessary: the juridical activity, if it be activity,
-must likewise always be determined by free agreement. The second, which
-is the determination of exteriority, is not less inconceivable; for it
-is not given to separate the external from the internal, since they are
-both one, nor the word from its meaning, nor the body from its spirit.
-Compulsion and exteriority, taken strictly as concepts, are therefore,
-in this case, void and contradictory formulæ. To fill them somehow with
-a thought, it would be necessary to understand as compulsion certain
-modes of action, as opposed to certain other modes; for instance,
-compulsion would be the action by which an accused person was conducted
-to prison by two policemen and non-compulsion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[Pg 534]</a></span> that of him who should
-be induced to go and constitute himself a prisoner through the
-persuasion of others; and as exteriority, certain classes of actions
-opposed to certain others; so that, for example, the deportment of
-an individual as communal or provincial councillor would belong to
-external life, his relations with his confessor or with his Æsculapius
-to internal life. But compulsion and exteriority, reduced to these
-meanings, become gross and empirical concepts, of which no use can be
-made in philosophy and which therefore cannot be of the least value as
-qualifying and distinguishing law from morality.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way, no value is to be attached to such a distinction,
-when determined from what is licit to what is commanded, from rights
-to duties, from what is permitted to what is obligatory; because licit
-and commanded, rights and duties, from what is permitted to what is
-obligatory, are correlative concepts constituting an indissoluble nexus
-and it is not possible to separate and to oppose them to one another.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Moralistic theories of rights: critique.</i></div>
-
-<p>The difficulty of conveniently fixing the distinction with the
-characters indicated, leads one to think of a different sort of
-tentative, according to which rights would certainly be distinguished
-from ethicity, not placed above or beside it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[Pg 535]</a></span> but rather in the
-very sphere of morality itself, as the species in respect to the
-genus or the part in respect of the whole. Juridical action would be
-moral, but it would belong to the inferior levels of morality; it
-would be occupied with the execution of simple <i>justice,</i> with the
-establishment of order, proportion, equality; whereas morality would
-represent <i>more than justice,</i> and would upset the equilibrium of
-rights with benevolence, generosity, sacrifice, heroism. Rights (it
-is also said) are limited to the <i>ethical minimum,</i> while morality
-strives for the <i>maximum;</i> rights are concerned with strict rights or
-<i>perfect</i> duties, morality with meritorious and supererogatory actions,
-<i>imperfect</i> duties. But these determinations also pretend to separate
-the inseparable, by drawing an arbitrary line of division between small
-and great actions, between least and greatest, and they employ concepts
-that are altogether empirical, as, for instance, that of justice
-as distinct from benevolence, of the strictly obligatory from the
-meritorious and supererogatory; and worse still than this, metaphors
-and symbols, such as equality, order, regularity; or they operate
-directly with the arithmetical and geometrical proportion of actions.
-And consciously or unconsciously a return is made to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[Pg 536]</a></span> Ethic pure and
-simple, with the theories that make juridical activity to consist of
-the recognition of others as <i>persons,</i> or with the search for <i>general
-utility</i> (superindividual). When we act in view of the <i>person</i> in
-other individuals (or in oneself), or of the useful, which is not the
-useful for the individual, but although it comprehends, yet transcends
-it:&mdash;the merely juridical conscience has already been surpassed, it has
-been filled with a moral content, that is to say, an ethical form has
-been given to the practical activity. The double sense of the terms
-"rights" and "morality" is in this way preserved in words but denied in
-fact.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Duality of positive and ideal, historical and natural
-rights, etc.; and absurd attempts at unification and co-ordination.</i></div>
-
-<p>The dual sense of the terms is also affirmed by the very ancient
-distinction between <i>positive and ideal, historical</i> and <i>natural</i>
-rights, <i>right</i> and <i>justice,</i> or, as it has also been formulated,
-between the <i>two different justices,</i> realistic and idealistic,
-fruitful in conjunction. Natural rights, with their homonyms just
-stated, besides the generically practical significations that we have
-already examined, have also had the narrower one of ethical ideal or
-morality; and therefore it cannot cause astonishment that it should
-appear now conjoined with, now detached from positive rights. But how
-joined and disjoined? For us it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">[Pg 537]</a></span> a question of degrees, whence the
-positivity of both forms is recognized: the second of these is included
-in the first: the ideal right or morality (if it be right, and not
-simply abstract excogitation willed by no one, or vague desire) is
-both positive and historical. But those who posited the distinction
-without being able to make it definite and so to dominate it were led
-to conceive one or the other term as negative; and therefore both as
-negative between themselves and existing only in a third: which meant
-to reannul the distinction by reducing it to abstract contradiction.
-If one of the two were conceived as negative, either the ideal justice
-(that is, the seriousness of moral strength) was denied and turned to
-ridicule, or positive justice, that is, the seriousness of volitional
-strength, was presented as something turbid and impure and at best
-as a human imperfection, to which it was advisable to resign oneself
-since it would disappear in a society of perfect men or in a future
-life of perfection. Juridical activity became something contingent
-and mortal. Matters were even worse, if it were found impossible to
-eliminate it with similar religious, apocalyptic, or millenary fancies.
-The negative was then conceived as positive or co-ordinated with the
-positive: hence incredible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[Pg 538]</a></span> logical divisions of rights into forms or
-species of <i>moral</i> and <i>immoral rights, of just</i> and <i>unjust</i> rights,
-in which the species has the function of <i>negation of the genus,</i>
-almost as though the race of horses were to be divided into two kinds:
-<i>dead</i> and <i>living</i> horses! Unjust or immoral rights are not rights,
-but a contradiction of them, and if we sometimes describe in this way
-a real and effective juridical act (an economic act), it is necessary
-to observe that the denomination is given from the point of view of a
-superior form of activity. Rights in themselves as rights, understood
-positively, are never immoral, but only <i>amoral.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Value of all these theories as confused perception of the
-amoral character of justice.</i></div>
-
-<p>All these errors, all these sterile tentatives have their origin, as
-has been said, in the lively consciousness of a distinction existing
-between right and morality and at the same time of the impossibility
-of determining this correctly, owing to lack of clarity as to the
-purely economic form of the practical activity. When the juridical
-activity has been identified with the economic and when juridical
-(economic) activity has in consequence been conceived as at once united
-with and distinct from morality, we are able to recognize that these
-attempts have nevertheless fulfilled a very useful function; that is
-to say, they have more or less energetically asserted and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[Pg 539]</a></span> defended
-the position that there existed a characteristic distinction between
-right and morality and that it was necessary to seek for it. They are
-therefore far superior, notwithstanding their errors, to that confused
-ethical conception, which receives rights and morality indistinctly
-into its bosom, or to the utilitaristic conception, which arrives by a
-different route at the same indistinction. This merit belongs to the
-theories of the moral minimum, of justice, of the two justices and of
-the contest between positive and ideal rights; but in a much greater
-degree to that of compulsion, of exteriority, of the licit. With these
-last was almost unconsciously set in relief the fact that right obeys
-a law different from that of Ethic, and may be called <i>compelled and
-not free by comparison with it,</i> because not founded upon the necessity
-of the universal; that in respect to the supreme <i>interiority</i> of
-Ethic it can be considered as something <i>exterior;</i> that in respect
-to the ethical imperative, it appears as something indifferentiated
-or <i>licit.</i> These are without doubt symbols, tautologies, vague and
-imprecise phrases, but efficacious in keeping the attention alert and
-in promoting doubt and research.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Confirmations of this character in the ingenuous
-consciousness.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the impossibility of absorbing rights into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[Pg 540]</a></span> Ethic altogether and
-without leaving residues is proclaimed or confessed, not only in the
-theories of philosophers, but by simple thought, and especially by the
-consciousness we have of the real world being governed, not by abstract
-morality, but, as is said, by <i>force,</i> or by the will in action.
-"Disarmed prophets" will be efficacious in poetry, but ridiculous in
-practical reality: <i>la force prime le droit,</i> precedes it and is always
-of greater value than an unreal and contradictory ethical right and
-aspiration, afterwards dissolved in the empty and arbitrary. We will
-not recall proverbs, maxims, historical examples, though this would be
-easy; that little story of Franco Sacchetti which preserves "a fair
-speech" of Messer Ridolfo da Camerino, will suffice for all. One of his
-nephews had been at Bologna studying law for a good twelve years, and
-when, having become an excellent lawyer, he returned to Camerino, he
-went to pay a visit to Messer Ridolfo. When he paid the visit, Messer
-Ridolfo said, "And what didst thou do at Bologna?" He replied, "My
-Lord, I have learned <i>reason.</i>" Said Messer Ridolfo, "Thou hast spent
-thy time ill." The young man replied that the saying seemed to him to
-be very strange. "Why was it ill spent, my Lord?" And Messer Ridolfo
-said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[Pg 541]</a></span> "<i>Because thou shouldst have learned force, which is worth two
-of the other.</i>" The youth began to smile, and thinking it over again
-and again, both he and the others that heard, perceived that what
-Messer Ridolfo had said, was true.<a name="FNanchor_1_120" id="FNanchor_1_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_120" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Comparison between right and language. Grammars and codes.</i></div>
-
-<p>And here too we are at last able to establish a parallel between
-the practical and theoretic activity, between the problems of the
-Philosophy of right and those of Logic and Æsthetic. The comparison of
-right and language has been several times attempted, with very great
-correction of thought, although necessarily defective execution, since
-it was customary to conceive both language and right in an abstract
-and empirical manner. Whoever should wish to take up the inquiry
-again would do great service, were he to insist upon the fact that
-since it has been impossible to understand what language really is,
-so long as grammars and vocabularies were taken as its reality, so it
-is impossible to understand anything of rights, so long as the eye is
-fixed upon laws and codes, or what is even worse, upon the commentaries
-of jurists, or upon the abstract volitional fact, or altogether upon
-what is not a true and proper volitional fact, but the elaboration of
-formulæ and of general concepts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[Pg 542]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Logic and language; morality and rights.</i></div>
-
-<p>Only when rights appear as individual and continually new work of
-individuals, only when the attention is directed to the spectacle of
-real life and not to the abstractions of legislators and dispenses with
-the dissertations of jurists, is it possible to state the problem:
-how does this juridical work coincide with, and how does it differ
-from moral work? And here too the comparison with language is fitting,
-although language be not logicity, yet logical thought cannot become
-concrete, save in speaking; so moral activity cannot live, save by
-translating itself into laws and institutes, and in the realization of
-laws and institutes, that is, in the juridical and economic activity.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, just as the history of a language is always arbitrary and
-abstract, so long as it is considered alone, outside the works in which
-the language is incarnate and the true history of a language is its
-poetry and literature, so <i>the true history of the rights of a people</i>
-(of the rights that have really been executed and not merely formulated
-in laws and codes, be often proved to be a dead letter) cannot but be
-altogether one with <i>the social and political history of that people:</i>
-an altogether juridical or economic history; a history of <i>wants</i> and
-of <i>labour.</i></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_120" id="Footnote_1_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_120"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Novelle, xl.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[Pg 543]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>VI</h4>
-
-
-<h4>HISTORICAL ANNOTATIONS</h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Distinction between morality and rights, and its importance
-for the history of the economic principle.</i></div>
-
-<p>I. The history of the distinction between morality and rights is very
-important, precisely because, as has been said, it is the manifestation
-of the very strongly&mdash;felt desire to posit in some way a philosophy of
-the aethical or amoral practical form: a manifestation which is the
-most conspicuous of all those that we have had occasion to note on the
-subject (theory of politics, theory of the inferior appetitive faculty,
-theory of the passions, etc.).<a name="FNanchor_1_121" id="FNanchor_1_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_121" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> And owing to the impossibility of
-satisfying that exigency with the intellectual data possessed, the
-problem of the relation between rights and morality has become anything
-but an amusing puzzle, a theme for true vain eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>Emmanuel Kant in the <i>Critique of Pure Reason,</i> wishing to give a
-characteristic example of the difficulty of definitions, found nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[Pg 544]</a></span>
-better to record than that jurists were always seeking a definition
-of rights, but had never succeeded in finding one.<a name="FNanchor_2_122" id="FNanchor_2_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_122" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> And a jurist
-philosopher of our times (Jhering) has called the definition of rights,
-in their difference from morality, the "Cape Horn," or the Cape of
-tempests (or shipwrecks?) of juridical science.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Indistinction up to the time of Thomas.</i></div>
-
-<p>The problem of that distinction is on the other hand relatively recent
-and therefore the history of the Philosophy of rights has rightly been
-placed not further back than the end of the seventeenth century, or not
-much beyond Christian Thomas.<a name="FNanchor_3_123" id="FNanchor_3_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_123" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Up to that time, it is not possible to
-speak strictly of a Philosophy of rights. Treatises of jurisprudence,
-of rights and of the State, in regard to what of philosophical they
-contained, were nothing but treatises of Ethic; not indeed because
-the two sciences were (as they were) materially united in the same
-books, but precisely because the two concepts were indistinct. The
-speculations of antiquity for this part also of the Philosophy of the
-practical have the character of ingenuousness already noted. It would
-be incorrect to reconstruct a moralistic philosophy from the rights
-of Plato, founding it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">[Pg 545]</a></span> for example, upon the theory developed in the
-<i>Gorgias</i> as to the eagerness to purge his punishment that should exist
-in the criminal, similar, in this respect, to the sick man, who knows
-that the medicine will free him from his disease.<a name="FNanchor_4_124" id="FNanchor_4_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_124" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> The researches
-of Aristotle also as to justice (perhaps the best the classical world
-has left us on the subject), look upon justice in a narrow sense, as
-a virtue among virtues,<a name="FNanchor_5_125" id="FNanchor_5_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_125" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> which should not intrinsically possess any
-greater reason for distinguishing itself from the other virtues than
-they for distinguishing among themselves. The pompous definitions
-of the Roman jurists, still the joy of schools of jurisprudence and
-of judges' rhetoric, have no philosophical weight and would in any
-case confirm the identity of rights with Ethicity, if not absolutely
-with the entire knowable and practical universe. There is hardly a
-ray of the distinction to be traced in the discussions as to whether
-rights exist by nature or by convention and in the concept of a <i>ἁπλῶς
-δίκαιον,</i> opposed to that of <i>πολιτικὸν δίκαιον</i> found in Plato, and
-more explicitly in Aristotle,<a name="FNanchor_6_126" id="FNanchor_6_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_126" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> and rendered popular by Cicero when
-speaking of the <i>recta ratio, naturae congruens, diffusa in omnes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">[Pg 546]</a></span>
-constans, sempiterna</i>; of rights not drawn from the Twelve Tables or
-from the pretorian Edict, but <i>ex intima philosophia</i>; and of rights
-that on the other hand are <i>varie et ad tempus descriptae populis,</i>
-whence they have the name of laws <i>favore magis quam re.</i><a name="FNanchor_7_127" id="FNanchor_7_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_127" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>This rough distinction between natural and positive, absolute and
-relative rights; this concept of an ideal right placed face to face
-with real rights, or of which the real should be an imperfect and
-partial translation, also reappears in St. Thomas Aquinas and in other
-scholastics. And there is nothing more than this in those thinkers who
-founded what was called natural rights in the seventeenth century,
-such as Grotius and his followers. It is true that the boast of having
-distinguished rights from morality and religion has usually been
-attributed to that historical period. But it is hardly necessary to
-repeat that what was meant by these formulæ were the great social and
-political questions which took the form of wars of religion in the
-Europe of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; that so-called
-distinction, therefore, the result of long strife, though it have great
-practical value as a sign of social transformation, has no doctrinal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">[Pg 547]</a></span>
-value. The idea of autonomy, proper to the juridical activity, is
-absent even in the profound treatise of Vico on universal rights, for
-this contains only an altogether empirical distinction between <i>virtus</i>
-and <i>justitia</i>; of these the first <i>cum cupiditate pugnai,</i> and the
-second <i>utilitates dirigit et exaequat;</i> and both derive their origin
-from the <i>vis veri</i> or <i>ratio humana;</i> and as all the virtues are
-connected and none of them can exist alone (<i>nulla virtus solitaria</i>),
-so <i>virtus</i> and <i>justitia</i> are at bottom one.<a name="FNanchor_8_128" id="FNanchor_8_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_128" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> The work of Vico,
-which gives a new conception of the relation between ideal and history
-and most original applications of Roman history, turns out to be
-nothing but Ethic, when considered beneath the aspect of Philosophy of
-Rights. Nor on the other hand could the problem of the nature of rights
-truly form the object of enquiry on the part of utilitarians (Hobbes
-and others); with whom, if the absorption of rights in morality was not
-found, this did not arise because the one was distinguished from the
-other, but because morality itself was denied in what was proper to
-itself: the problem of the distinction disappeared, because its terms
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Thomas and his followers.</i></div>
-
-<p>II. Thomas provided the apple of discord, or as might also be said,
-cast the leaven of progress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">[Pg 548]</a></span> into the treatment of rights, when
-he distinguished three forms of the <i>rectum</i>: the <i>justum,</i> the
-<i>honestum,</i> the <i>decorum,</i> placing the first in opposition to the other
-two, the <i>forum externum</i> to the <i>internum,</i> and attributing to rights
-and justice the character of coercibility.<a name="FNanchor_9_129" id="FNanchor_9_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_129" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> The formula had a rapid
-and unsuspected fortune, and became current in the schools. Gundling,
-for instance, defined right as the "ordering of external relations."<a name="FNanchor_10_130" id="FNanchor_10_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_130" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Kant and Fichte.</i></div>
-
-<p>It was completely developed and reasoned out, with all the strictness
-that its erroneity permitted, in the doctrines of Kant and Fichte, who
-were the greatest of Thomas's scholars for this part of the study.
-Kant opposed <i>legality</i> to morality; the juridical imperative is
-expressed with the formula, "act externally" (<i>handle äusserlich</i>);
-right is conjoined with the faculty of compulsion (<i>zwingen.</i>) Hence
-his doctrines are often amoralistic or economic as regards individual
-juridical institutions, and this is especially the case when he deals
-with the State, with matrimony, and with punishment; these were
-followed by Fichte, who made some reservations for matrimony alone,
-considering it an institution not only juridical, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">[Pg 549]</a></span> also natural
-and moral.<a name="FNanchor_11_131" id="FNanchor_11_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_131" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> On the other hand rights were for Kant something that
-surpassed the individual will and utility; it was the sum of the
-conditions by means of which the will of the one can be united with
-the will of another, according to a universal law of liberty.<a name="FNanchor_12_132" id="FNanchor_12_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_132" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-Fichte in like manner conceived of rights as altogether free of every
-admixture of morality; as an objective order, arising from the fact
-of the individual who coherently affirms himself and his own liberty,
-thus also affirming other individuals and their liberty.<a name="FNanchor_13_133" id="FNanchor_13_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_133" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> Both
-philosophers thus preserve the moralistic concept of the legal and
-the <i>justum</i>; rights, although armed with compelling power, are never
-force alone, but the external ordering of freedom, namely, justice.
-For this reason, Kant explicitly excludes force, in so far as it is
-constitutive of rights and speaks of a "force without law"; and both
-he and Fichte make coercibility to flow, not from the nature of the
-volitional force itself, but from the violation of order. It is just,
-says Kant, to repel force with force, when it would interfere with
-liberty. The right of coercion (repeats Fichte) is founded solely upon
-the violation of the original right. But it remains obscure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">[Pg 550]</a></span> what this
-poor legality, justice, coexistence, and harmony of wills may be;
-what force may be and why and how it is connected with the preceding
-definition is not investigated. The distinction of the juridical from
-the moral sphere is announced and proclaimed more loudly than perhaps
-was ever done before or since; but to announce and to proclaim is not
-to carry out. If rights be changed into an ordinance more or less
-rational, to be identified with the concept of justice, one does not
-see how they can exist independently of morality. Kant and Fichte
-were prevented from conceiving the juridical function free from every
-element of morality or immorality, by the function which they assigned
-to compulsion (symbol of law), submitting it to ethical exigencies.
-In this uncertainty, there cannot be wanting and there is not wanting
-the thought that rights are not indeed an eternal category, but a
-historical and transitory fact; and as Spinoza had already said, <i>si
-cum humana natura ita comparatum esset ut homines id quod maxime utile
-est maxime cuperent, nulla esset opus arte ad concordiam et fidem</i>;
-Fichte thus looked upon the juridical State simply as a <i>State of
-necessity</i> opposed to the <i>State of reason</i>: and when perfection has
-been attained and there is complete accord of all in the common end,
-"the State" (he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">[Pg 551]</a></span> said) "disappears as a legislative and compulsive
-force."<a name="FNanchor_14_134" id="FNanchor_14_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_134" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the ulterior phase of his thought, Fichte <i>Hegel</i> afterwards took
-further steps toward a closer union between morality and rights. But
-the complete resolution of the first in the second is effected in the
-system of Hegel, though it is customary to blame this philosopher for
-the opposite fault, namely, that he resolves morality in right. Above
-all, Hegel would hear nothing of the concept of force in right: facts
-of force and of violence, as, for instance, the relation between a
-slave and his master, appertain, according to him, to a circle, which
-lies on this side of right, to the subjective spirit, to a world in
-which wrong can still be right. The fact that violence and tyranny are
-met with in positive rights is an accidental thing and does not affect
-its real nature. For Hegel, as for his predecessors, co-operation
-arises only as reaction from the violation of what is just, and is
-violence preservative of liberty, suppression of the previous violence.
-"To define abstract and rigorous rights as law which we can be
-compelled to obey, means" (writes Hegel) "to see them as a consequence
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">[Pg 552]</a></span> what takes place only by the cross road of wrong." But there is
-more: abstract rights, which form the first moment of the Philosophy
-of the practical in Hegel, are unreal; he opposes to them the second
-moment, morality, which also is abstract and unreal, consisting of the
-good intention, which has not yet been incorporated in action and life:
-thus concrete reality is realized only in the third moment, in the
-ethos, which synthetizes the abstract rights and the abstract morality
-of the intention in social life.<a name="FNanchor_15_135" id="FNanchor_15_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_135" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> From this it is clear that the
-purely juridical moment does not possess effective spiritual autonomy
-for Hegel; <i>so</i> much so, that it is placed by him upon the same plane
-as abstract and unreal morality. In consequence of his identification
-of rights with ethicity, Hegel is opposed to Kant and Fichte in his
-definitions of single rights; he rejects the compulsory and contractual
-theory of the State and (the Kantian) theory of matrimony as a strict
-contract made between individuals as to the reciprocal use of their
-bodies.<a name="FNanchor_16_136" id="FNanchor_16_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_136" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> The compulsory theory of punishment seemed to him to reduce
-the latter to a mere economic fact, by means of which "the State as
-judging power, opens a business with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">[Pg 553]</a></span> goods called crimes exchangeable
-for other goods, and the code is <i>the list of prices.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_17_137" id="FNanchor_17_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_137" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Herbart and Schopenhauer.</i></div>
-
-<p>Herbart too denies the originality of the character of compulsion
-in the idea of rights, and this is one of his five practical ideas,
-or, "the agreement of many wills, thought as a rule that eliminates
-strife." But even in this superficial moralistic reduction, force
-reappears all of a sudden, one knows not how: society has need of an
-external bond, in order to subsist; force and power (<i>Macht</i>) are
-added to society and <i>the State</i> arises.<a name="FNanchor_18_138" id="FNanchor_18_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_138" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The same contradictions
-are to be found in Schopenhauer: after he has posited the two virtues
-of justice and benevolence, he makes a chapter of morality out of the
-pure doctrine of law. The science of rights in the specific sense
-borrows this chapter in order to study its opposite: all the limits
-that morality looks upon as not to be passed without intention of
-wrong-doing, on the contrary are considered by the science of rights
-as limits, of which violation by others is not to be tolerated and
-from which one has the right to expel others. Thus the distinction
-between internal and external is in this way reproduced in all
-its unmaintainability under the denomination of <i>rights and their
-opposite.</i> But the bridge of asses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">[Pg 554]</a></span> is always the junction of rights
-with force, that is to say, with the element extraneous to Ethic; and
-in this connection Schopenhauer has nothing better to offer than a
-comparison. "As there are certain chemical substances never to be found
-pure and isolated, but always in some sort of combination with another
-element, which gives to them the necessary consistency; so rights, when
-they must set foot in the real world and dominate it, have need of a
-small adjunct of will and force, in order to be able (notwithstanding
-its nature, which is really ideal and therefore ethereal) to operate
-and persist in this real and material world, without evaporating and
-flying to heaven, as was the case with Hesiod."<a name="FNanchor_19_139" id="FNanchor_19_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_139" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Rosmini and others.</i></div>
-
-<p>Rosmini presents the two elements not well harmonized, as the
-eudæmonological and the ethical. Rights for him are not mere
-eudæmonism, but a eudæmonistic fact, produced by moral right and
-receiving form from it; hence the science of rights "stands between
-Eudæmonology and Ethic, so that one of its ends extends to the one
-and the other to the other." It would not be easy to explain and to
-justify what he calls a mediate science, composed of Eudæmonology
-and Ethic; and it would be far less easy to explain how this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">[Pg 555]</a></span> science
-comes to be "completely distinct" as regards its components. If rights
-have a moral form, they are moral and not eudæmonological. Owing to
-this difficulty Rosmini was led to introduce the concept of the licit
-as criterion of differentiation, defining right as "a personal faculty
-and power of enjoying, acting and being able to act, a lawful good
-that must not be impeded by others."<a name="FNanchor_20_140" id="FNanchor_20_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_140" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Juridically understood this
-constitutes a tautology, ethically something worse. Other Catholic
-authors (Taparelli, for example) deplore the separation of <i>ethos</i> from
-<i>jus,</i> introduced (they say) by Protestant doctrines and the limitation
-of right to what a man can externally exact from others according to
-law; "whence it happens that in the enumeration of laws, actions are
-sometimes posited that are real moral faults in the agent"; maintaining
-on the contrary the necessity of treating morality and rights together,
-"for rights are part of morality in the same way that trigonometry and
-conic sections are a part of geometric theories."<a name="FNanchor_21_141" id="FNanchor_21_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_141" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Stahl, Ahrens, Trendelenburg.</i></div>
-
-<p>III. If Catholic doctrines deserve mention for their conservativism, it
-is necessary to record the names of Stahl, Ahrens, and Trendelenburg,
-for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">[Pg 556]</a></span> no other reason than the great popularity that they enjoyed in
-the schools. Stahl divides the ethical action of man into two domains,
-differing in content and character. This dualism is founded upon the
-double relation of human existence, individual and social, which gives
-rise to two forms of imperatives: to the imperative of the individual
-will, of religion, and of morality, and to that which aims at moulding
-social life and is the imperative of rights. This theory, which has
-a varied terminology, can be reduced to the theory of exteriority
-(sociality, rights), and interiority (individuality, morality). In
-a very similar way Ahrens includes law in the science of the good
-or Ethic&mdash;the fundamental science. He remarks that good intention,
-virtue, are not sufficient to secure to man that complex of material
-and spiritual goods of which he has need, and therefore there must be
-a second mode of effecting in the good, which what is of importance
-would be, not the motives of the will, but the pursuit of the good and
-its real existence in life. Trendelenburg (who regrets the classical
-concept of the identity of Ethic and Law and looks upon the time
-when they began to be distinguished as a beginning of degeneration)
-discovers three sides to rights: the <i>logical,</i> the <i>ethical,</i> and
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">[Pg 557]</a></span> <i>physical</i> (compulsion),<a name="FNanchor_22_142" id="FNanchor_22_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_142" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> of which none, as we see, is truly
-judicial.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Utilitarians.</i></div>
-
-<p>For the reasons already indicated, it is not necessary to pause
-over the juridical ideas of the utilitarians of the eighteenth and
-nineteenth centuries, whose last celebrated representatives were,
-in England, Bentham, Austin and Spencer. The German Kirchmann is to
-be identified with the utilitarian tendency. He reduces morality to
-the <i>respect</i> inspired, not by the law, but by the <i>person</i> of the
-legislator, a respect afterwards converted into respect for the law
-"owing to a peculiarity of human nature, as the result of long custom
-and exercise." According to this view, rights are defined as "a union
-of pleasure and morality, whether the first calls the second to its
-aid or the second the first, in cases when the isolated efficacy of
-either should prove insufficient." Thus rights are declared to be, not
-an original principle, but the simple union of two different elements.
-Jhering failed to surpass utilitarianism, notwithstanding his profound
-juridical knowledge and his lively intellect. He attempted to impart
-an original character to his utilitarian theory, by declaring that it
-was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">[Pg 558]</a></span> <i>objective</i> in respect to the usual utilitarian theories, but
-he always remained under the obligation that he had undertaken, of
-showing how the purest ideality of Ethic could be fortified with such,
-a conception. The distinctions drawn by Jhering between recompense,
-compulsion, duty, and love, since they lack a foundation, vacillate and
-prove but little convincing.<a name="FNanchor_23_143" id="FNanchor_23_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_143" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Recent writers of treatises.</i></div>
-
-<p>IV. Running rapidly through other recent philosophers of Rights, we
-do not meet with original thoughts that compare with those of Kant,
-of Fichte, and of Hegel. Lasson conceives of the philosophy of Rights
-as a part of Ethic and co-ordinates with it three other parts&mdash;the
-philosophy of custom, of morality or doctrine of the virtues and the
-doctrine of the ethos or of the ethical personality. Rights are the
-first of these three ethical moments and is concerned with the willing
-of man as a willing still essentially natural; reason joins it as a
-force essentially determining and limiting, at first only external; the
-object of rights is to guarantee the conditions of the common life, in
-so far as it is the condition for all human ends.&mdash;Steinthal recognizes
-that rights undoubtedly "possess an exteriority altogether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">[Pg 559]</a></span> opposed to
-the interiority of Ethic; hence, if they be not apprehended in their
-profound nature, they may easily be repugnant to moral feeling": they
-are "the system of modes of compulsion, by means of which are secured
-social ethical ends." But (we repeat) since the external cannot be
-separated from the internal, we do not see in what way ethical ends can
-be distinguished from their modes of realization. Steinthal also says
-that "Ethic is like a river and Rights like the bed of the river": a
-comparison that can be variously interpreted, like all comparisons and
-which for our part we should be disposed to find excellent, were it
-admitted that as the bed of the river, when it runs dry, yet remains
-always the bed of a possible river, so Rights can remain without Ethic
-and yet be always Rights. But the signification in which Steinthal
-employs that comparison is simply the same as the diad of external and
-internal; that is to say, he in his turn wishes to distinguish the
-indistinguishable, so that it would on the contrary be necessary to
-reply that the bed of the river and the river are not two things but
-one, because a river without a bed cannot exist and a bed without a
-river is not the bed of a river.&mdash;Schuppe denies that Rights and the
-State can claim what is immoral, but affirms that all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_560" id="Page_560">[Pg 560]</a></span> the same they
-are inferior to the exigencies of morality, because Rights and the
-State concern individuals in their spatial-temporal concretion, but
-do not attain to the profundity afforded by conscience in universal.
-The ethical concept of rights preponderates in Wundt, for he does not
-conceive of any other object of rights, subjective and objective, save
-morality. Cohen, in like manner, does not admit other independence
-to the science of rights save that, of writing in concepts, and of
-organizing as a system of concepts the rights that is eternally
-unwritten, the moral law.<a name="FNanchor_24_144" id="FNanchor_24_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_144" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>As we see, if the names of the writers and sometimes their phraseology
-change, the thoughts that alternate or combine are always the same.
-Rümelin, who undertook to criticize a series of definitions of rights,
-from that of Kant onwards, reproved Kant for having drawn too great a
-distinction between rights and morality, and others (Ahrens, Stahl,
-Trendelenburg) for having drawn too little. Finally, he gives his
-definition in a provisional and tentative manner: "juridical ordinance
-has the task of assuring to a people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_561" id="Page_561">[Pg 561]</a></span> that part of the good adapted
-for realization by a social force, according to universal norms."
-Jellinek distinguishes the norms of rights from those of religion, of
-ethicity and of custom, by a triple character: <i>(a)</i> because they are
-norms for the external conduct of men among themselves; <i>(b)</i> because
-they derive from a recognized external authority; <i>(c)</i> because their
-obligatoriness is guaranteed by external powers.&mdash;Stammler attaches
-secondary importance to the element of compulsion, and although he does
-not explicitly identify justice and morality, assigns to them the same
-territory, where they should act with different methods, since the
-perfectionment of the soul, the character and the thought are distinct
-from right behaviour. And adopting the turn of phrase of a famous
-proposition of the <i>Critique of Pure Reason,</i> he ends by formulating
-the following statement: "Justice without love is empty; compassion
-without a right rule is blind." The Frenchman Duguit transports with
-greater frankness the centre of rights into morality: he conceives of
-rights as altogether different from force; not as <i>political,</i> but
-as <i>limit</i> of force; as consciousness of human solidarity, beneath
-whose rule we are all placed, State and individual, strong and weak,
-governors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_562" id="Page_562">[Pg 562]</a></span> and governed. French philosophers of rights generally oppose
-the German school, in which the character of force is prominent, so
-that French juridical philosophy sometimes assumes (for example, in
-Fouillée) an attitude analogous to that assumed, as we know, by the
-"generous" French economic school toward the English economists. And
-merely that some Italian name should not be absent from this review of
-recent writers, we will record Miraglia, who repeats the old Kantian
-division, making it yet more empirical: "Morality and rights are part
-of Ethic, because the good can be chiefly developed in the intimate
-relations of the conscience, or on the contrary can be developed
-by preference in the external relations between man and man and
-between man and thing";&mdash;and Vanni, who mixes a little positivistic
-evolutionism with this empirical reduction, affirming that rights are
-not originally distinct from morality, but that afterwards they were
-gradually differentiated, and rights now have the special function of
-guardianship and guarantee: "that is to say, the ethical minimum alone
-has been guaranteed, that much of the ethical field as is most directly
-necessary for the maintenance of life in common, leaving to other
-forces the task of regulating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_563" id="Page_563">[Pg 563]</a></span> what is most individual in life." And so
-on, though it seems that this is enough.<a name="FNanchor_25_145" id="FNanchor_25_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_145" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Strident contradictions. Stammler.</i></div>
-
-<p>Such are the contradictions in which the Philosophy of rights has
-struggled for about two centuries. Rights do not seem to be identical
-with Ethic, but they also do not seem to be simply different; they
-seem to be at once identical and different, but yet it has been found
-impossible to fix the element of difference with the concepts of
-external, of compulsion and others such. The thought of a difference
-between the two forms of activity has not been further eliminated;
-but neither has it been transformed and absorbed. This is a morbid
-condition, of which the gravest symptom is the logical absurdity of
-the aforesaid two rights and two justices. Rümelin talks of the pure
-ideal justice, which selects from the evidence and judges on the basis
-of immediate impressions of feeling; and of a realistic, rational,
-empirical, disciplined and developed justice: two justices that must
-however act together.<a name="FNanchor_26_146" id="FNanchor_26_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_146" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Others, seeking relations between those two
-concepts from a single fact and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_564" id="Page_564">[Pg 564]</a></span> failing to conquer the difficulty,
-force logic by distinguishing between <i>concept</i> and <i>ideal</i> of rights,
-or (as Vanni said) between <i>logical</i> concept and concept of the
-<i>rational exigencies</i> of rights: as though a concept could be truly
-logical, if it do not derive from rational exigencies, and as if these
-can be valid, if they be not the concept itself. Worse still, Stammler
-affirms the identity of rights with moral rights, and of rights alone
-with immoral rights, arriving at the already criticized division of
-effective rights (<i>Gesetzes</i>) into two classes. It "is either right
-rights (<i>richtiges Recht</i>) or not; and right rights are effective,
-whose content of will possesses the property of being <i>right.</i> Hence,
-right rights stand to effective rights as <i>species to genus.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_27_147" id="FNanchor_27_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_147" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-To meditate upon this plan of division is more than sufficient to
-produce the conviction of the failure of the Philosophy of rights, as
-it has been developed and as it could be developed with the practical
-presuppositions hitherto admitted. As the result of the direction of
-studies, from Thomas to the most recent, there remains nothing but
-the problem itself, as originated by the definitions of Thomas, and
-become certainly more acute and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">[Pg 565]</a></span> difficult, owing to later disputes and
-inquiries, but never solved.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The value of law.</i></div>
-
-<p>V. Less attention has been bestowed upon the concept of <i>law,</i> upon
-which it was impossible to obtain full light, on the one hand before
-the theory of abstract concepts had been developed (representative of
-class) in their difference from the universal, and on the other before
-preconceptions as to the necessary social and political character of
-laws had been discarded.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>In antiquity.</i></div>
-
-<p>But the difficulties contained in that concept had several times been
-observed in antiquity. In a dialogue between Alcibiades and Pericles,
-preserved in the <i>Memorabilia,</i> it is asked if all laws be laws, or
-only those that are just; and it is shown that it does not suffice
-that a law should be a law, in order to ensure its observance.<a name="FNanchor_28_148" id="FNanchor_28_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_148" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
-No true solution, however, was reached in this, as in many questions
-discussed at this period by Greek philosophy. The <i>Crito</i> is rather a
-stupendous work of art than a philosophical thesis, for it shows to
-the life the state of soul of Socrates, and the importance that he
-attributed to the laws and to the social order: the reason alleged for
-obedience to them, being placed in the fact that we have tacitly or
-explicitly agreed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_566" id="Page_566">[Pg 566]</a></span> to remain within the boundaries of a given state,
-has in it something of the sophistical. Even in antiquity was seen the
-necessity of tempering the rigidity of laws by means of the equable,
-το ἐπιεικέç, which Aristotle defined as the correction of the law
-where it sins through its character of generality (ἐπανόρθωμα νόμου ᾗ
-ἐλλείπει διὰ τὸ καθόλου).<a name="FNanchor_29_149" id="FNanchor_29_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_149" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> But it was not possible to escape from
-empiricism by means of the concept of equity. The law sins, not once,
-but always, through abstractness, or better, it never sins at all,
-because its function resides precisely in that abstractness.&mdash;In modern
-times Diderot felt and expressed all the gravity of the conflicts that
-arise, alike from the observance and from the inobservance of the law,
-and he expresses this in his <i>Entretien d'un père avec ses enfants sur
-le danger de se mettre au-dessus des lois. "Mon père</i> (remarks one
-of the sons at the end of the dialogue), <i>c'est qu'à la rigueur il
-n'y a pas de lois pour le sage.... Parlez plus bas.... Toutes étant
-sujettes à des exceptions, c'est à lui qu'il appartient de juger des
-cas où il faut s'y soumettre ou s'en affranchir.&mdash;Je ne serais pas trop
-fâché</i> (concludes the father), <i>qu'il y eût dans la ville un ou deux
-citoyens, comme toi;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">[Pg 567]</a></span> mais je n'y habiterais pas, s'ils pensaient tous
-de même.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_30_150" id="FNanchor_30_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_150" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Romanticism.</i></div>
-
-<p>The attitude of rebellion to the laws showed itself in German thought
-and literature in the preromanticism of the <i>Sturm und Drang</i> (for
-instance in the <i>Räuber</i> of Schiller), and in Romanticism properly
-so called, when among others appeared the theories that limited the
-State, such as those of Wilhelm von Humboldt, and theories of sexual
-relations, such as those of Friedrich Schlegel. In the <i>Lucinde</i> is
-displayed great horror for <i>bourgeois</i> customs and for every sort of
-constraint, sexual relations being advocated with woman, family, love
-and fidelity, but without matrimony.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Jacobi.</i></div>
-
-<p>Jacobi represents this attitude in several of his writings, with great
-elevation of soul, and especially in the <i>Woldemar</i> (1779, 1794-96),
-the most lively protest that has ever been made against law in the name
-of the individual. Here the question treated is precisely whether we
-should follow the inspirations of our own conscience or the laws of
-our own people. Sides are taken against "the compulsion and violence
-exercised by usages, customs, habits, and against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">[Pg 568]</a></span> those who do not
-think, save by means of those laws, holding them sacred, with resolute
-soul and mind inert"; and "that audacious heroic spirit is celebrated,
-which raises itself above the laws and common morality that it may
-produce a new order of things." "His heart alone tells man immediately
-what is good; his heart alone, his instincts only, can tell him
-immediately: to love it is his life. Reflection teaches him to know and
-to practise what leads to good. Habit assures and makes his the wisdom
-that he has acquired." "But this individual initiative," he observes,
-"may be the cause of abuse and misunderstandings." "Without doubt,"
-replied Jacobi, "but what cannot be misunderstood has little meaning,
-and what cannot be abused has but little force in use." Men may be
-divided into two classes; the one exaggerates fear, the other hope and
-courage. The former are circumspect, always in doubt, they fear the
-truth because it may be misunderstood, they fear great qualities, lofty
-virtue, because of the aberrations to which it may give rise; and they
-have evil always before their eyes. The latter are the bold (who could
-be called the irreflective in the Platonic sense) and they behave with
-less exactitude; they are not so perplexed, they trust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_569" id="Page_569">[Pg 569]</a></span> rather to the
-voice of their heart than to any word from without; they build rather
-upon courage than upon virtue, which generally keeps them waiting too
-long. They sometimes ask themselves with Young: Is virtue then alone
-baptized and are the passions pagan? "If," says Jacobi, "I must keep
-to one of these classes, I choose the second." "Yes," he exclaims
-elsewhere, opposing the abstractness of Kant,&mdash;"yes, I am atheist and
-impious, yes, I will to lie, in opposition to the will that wills
-nothing, as Desdemona lied when dying, I will to lie and to deceive
-like Pylades, when he slew himself for the sake of Orestes; I will to
-slay like Timoleon; to break laws and oaths like Epaminondas and John
-de Witt; to commit suicide like Otho; to despoil the temple like David;
-to pluck ears of corn on the Sabbath day, if only because I am hungry
-and the law is made for man, not man for the law. By the sacrosanct
-conscience that I have within me, I know that the <i>privilegium
-aggratiandi</i> for such crimes against the pure letter of the law,
-rational, absolute and universal, is the sovran right of man himself,
-the seal of his dignity, of his divine nature."<a name="FNanchor_31_151" id="FNanchor_31_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_151" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> But it must be
-remarked upon reading these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_570" id="Page_570">[Pg 570]</a></span> effusions (most sincere, as all that came
-from the pen of Jacobi), that they are rather manifestations of states
-of the soul than theories, and therefore, strictly speaking, not to be
-theoretically censured, as is the case with all affirmations that place
-in relief one side of reality, without denying the others by doing so.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Hegel.</i></div>
-
-<p>Hegel discovered this, observing in relation to our last extract:
-"Neither of the two sides can be wanting to moral beauty, neither
-its liveliness as individuality, by which it does not obey the
-dead concept, nor the form of concept and of law, universality and
-objectivity, which is the side exclusively considered by Kant, by means
-of the absolute abstraction to which he submitted liveliness, thereby
-suffocating it. The passage cited as to the liveliness and freedom
-of the moral life does not exclude objectivity, but does not express
-it either." Hence the danger of the romantic attitude, which had no
-need of exhortations such as those of Jacobi, for it already too much
-preferred <i>magnanimous</i> to <i>honest, noble</i> to <i>moral</i> action; and was
-much inclined to free itself of the law itself under the pretext of
-freeing itself from the <i>letter</i> of the law. Meeting empirical with
-empirical observations, Hegel also remarked that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_571" id="Page_571">[Pg 571]</a></span> examples of the
-violation of laws due to the divine majesty of man, adduced by Jacobi,
-were conditioned by the natural temperament, by actual situations, and
-especially by circumstances of supreme misfortune, of supreme and rare
-necessity, in which few individuals find themselves. "It would be very
-sad for liberty if it could only prove its majesty and become actual
-in extraordinary cases of cruel laceration of the moral and natural
-life and in extraordinary individuals. The ancients, on the other hand,
-found the highest morality in the life of a well-ordered State." Hegel
-admitted that the affirmation of Jacobi, "The law is made for man, not
-man for the law," contained a great truth, when it was intended to
-allude in this way to the positive or statutory law. But the opposite
-was also true, when the allusion was to the moral law, taken as
-universal, outside of which, when the individual was separated from it,
-there was nothing but appetites and sensible impulses, which can only
-be means for the law.<a name="FNanchor_32_152" id="FNanchor_32_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_152" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
-
-<p>But we must not fail to recognize that Hegel does not avail himself of
-this most exact distinction in his philosophy, for there the dominating
-motive is respect for the laws and the tendency<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_572" id="Page_572">[Pg 572]</a></span> to attack individual
-initiative. Hegel repeats many times with complacency the saying of
-the Pythagorean, that the best way of educating a young man is to
-make him citizen of a State ruled by good laws; and he remarks that
-Herculeses belong to primitive and barbarous times, and that individual
-valour has but a small field in times of culture. He was most averse
-to criticism of and rebellion against the authority of the State; for
-these did not seem to him to correspond to the reality of the spirit.
-That surface is not the reality; at bottom all desire order; and it is
-necessary to distinguish apparent political sentiment from that which
-men really will, for within them they will the thing, but hesitate as
-to particulars, and enjoy the vanity of censuring.<a name="FNanchor_33_153" id="FNanchor_33_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_153" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> Men believe
-that the State exists and that in it alone are particular interests
-realized; but habit makes invisible to them that upon which our entire
-existence depends. There is in short in Hegel, besides the philosopher,
-a politician and moralist regretful of the excesses of revolutionaries
-and of unbridled romanticism; and there is also in him the desire for
-an exact inquiry into the function and limits of positive law.<a name="FNanchor_34_154" id="FNanchor_34_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_154" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_573" id="Page_573">[Pg 573]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Recent doctrines.</i></div>
-
-<p>In recent times there have been many and very various manifestations
-connected with the concept of this function and of its limits, and
-it would occupy much space to enumerate and to illustrate them all.
-We shall mention three, very distant and different. The first, which
-belongs to the political and social field, is the doctrine of anarchy
-and is opposed to laws of all sorts; it is a not purely philosophical
-doctrine, though it involves philosophical questions.<a name="FNanchor_35_155" id="FNanchor_35_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_155" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> The other
-two, which more properly belong to the juridical field, are, the
-assertion of the importance of laws and of the duty of defending their
-existence, even where their violation by others does not interfere
-with our individual interests, or when their defence costs individual
-sacrifices (this was the argument of a vigorous little book by
-Jhering);<a name="FNanchor_36_156" id="FNanchor_36_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_156" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>&mdash;and by way of contrast the demand for a free creation of
-the law by the judge (<i>die freie Rechtsfindung,</i>) which has given rise
-to discussions that are yet burning, more directly provoked by a little
-book of Kantorowicz (Gnaeus Flavius).<a name="FNanchor_37_157" id="FNanchor_37_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_157" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Natural rights and their dissolution. The historical school
-of rights.</i></div>
-
-<p>VI. If then there has not been a great gain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_574" id="Page_574">[Pg 574]</a></span> in clearness of
-fundamental concepts, as regards this part of the subject, there has on
-the contrary been an indubitable advance in consciousness acquired as
-to the mutability of laws and as to the consequent contradictoriness of
-the idea of natural Rights. This, with its complement, the catalogue
-of innate natural and inalienable rights of man, had great success in
-the seventeenth century for political and social reasons, attaining
-its highest development in the century following. But it may be said
-that the doctrine of innate rights was liquidated by Kant in the
-<i>Metaphysic of Custom,</i> when he wrote the proposition that liberty is
-the only original and innate rights, which belong to man through his
-very humanity,<a name="FNanchor_38_158" id="FNanchor_38_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_158" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> at the very moment when it was most energetically
-affirmed in a practical form in the <i>Declaration of the Rights of
-Man.</i> In the system of Hegel the constructions of natural rights began
-to lose their rigidity; becoming indeed historical categories of
-Ethicity or <i>Sittlichkeit,</i> determinations of the spirits of various
-peoples (<i>Volksgeister,</i>) which are in their turn determinations of
-the Absolute or of the Idea. Owing to this view (without taking into
-account his error of wishing to philosophize and to make dialectical
-what is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_575" id="Page_575">[Pg 575]</a></span> historical and empirical), Hegel connected himself closely
-with the historical school of rights (Hugo, Savigny, etc.). This,
-notwithstanding the exaggeration by which he seemed to deny the value
-of the ideal demands made of rights, had the merit of shaking the old
-conception of natural rights. This has retained its place in treatises
-from that time onward in a more or less worm-eaten and unstable
-condition by the force of inertia; or it has been preserved by Catholic
-writers (by Rosmini not less than by the Padre Taparelli), whose
-conception is of necessity but little historical; or it has reappeared
-in those curious Catholics and anti-historians, the positivists
-(Spencer, Ardigò). But that natural rights are nothing but <i>new</i>
-historical rights in the struggle of their becoming, is a conviction
-that has penetrated the general consciousness.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The comparison between rights and language.</i></div>
-
-<p>We also owe to the historical school the comparison between the
-life of rights and the life of language; this was prepared by the
-discoveries of comparative linguistic, which although substantially
-correct, yet had, as we have observed, the defect of limiting itself
-to the <i>grammatical</i> form of both facts, not to their genuine and
-direct reality. Jacobi, in the already quoted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_576" id="Page_576">[Pg 576]</a></span> effusions of <i>Woldemar,</i>
-had recourse to the same comparison, for other reasons and with a
-more exact understanding of its terms; speaking there of the moral
-infraction of laws, he wrote: "For such exceptions, for such <i>licences
-of lofty poetry,</i> the grammar of virtue has no definite rules and
-therefore does not mention them No grammar, least of all the general
-and philosophical, could contain in itself all that appertains to a
-living language, and teach how, in every epoch, every dialect must be
-formed. But it would be unwise to affirm that every one may speak as
-they feel inclined." And again, "Virtue is free art; and as artistic
-genius gives laws to art by its creations, so moral genius gives laws
-to human conduct: just, good, noble, excellent, is what the just, good,
-noble, and excellent man practises, achieves and produces in conformity
-with his character; he <i>invents virtue,</i> procures and generates
-adequate expression for human dignity."<a name="FNanchor_39_159" id="FNanchor_39_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_159" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The concept of law, and the studies of comparative Rights
-and of the general Doctrine of Rights.</i></div>
-
-<p>VII. The study of the concept of law is also progressing, and
-henceforth is not confined to so-called juridical laws and to
-legislations and codes. Researches into primitive rights and into
-those of savage and barbarous peoples, known as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_577" id="Page_577">[Pg 577]</a></span> juridical Ethnography
-or comparative rights, have greatly contributed to destroy many
-prejudices; as also the attention that has been directed to facts
-called social, that is to say, not strictly political. A school that
-has had independent yet partly similar manifestations in England
-(Austin, Sumner Maine, etc.) and in Germany, where it has taken
-the name of school of <i>the general Doctrine of Rights (allgemeine
-Rechtslehre,</i> according to the denomination given to it by Adolph
-Merkel), studies in particular the concept of law in its various
-classes and subclasses; and from it there cannot but issue a more
-correct understanding of the concept of law, as from the refinement
-of political Economy into pure Economy has come, first Psychology and
-then the Philosophy of economy. Meanwhile (and as far as we know)
-the literature of the school, dominated as it is by the needs of
-jurisprudence, maintains an empirical or <i>intellectualistic</i> character;
-and jurists, rather than philosophers themselves, are those that most
-cultivate it. The distinctions and sub-distinctions of the laws are
-conducted with subtlety, but are without solid foundation, because the
-concept posited as basis of law is uncertain and arbitrary. Limiting
-ourselves to a single example, let us mention Bierling,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_578" id="Page_578">[Pg 578]</a></span> perhaps the
-most philosophical of those various writers. Bierling first of all
-excludes from the concept of law the modes of man's conduct toward
-God, toward himself, and toward animals; but he gives no serious
-reason for this. He then arrives, by a mere arbitrary act, at the
-limiting of the concept of law to the manner of men's conduct among
-themselves, and defines rights in the juridical sense (as he calls it:
-"in general, all that men living together in any sort of community
-reciprocally recognize as a norm and rule of this living together"). He
-then introduces into the concept thus defined, not by deduction, but
-as the result of a second arbitrary act, the concept of exteriority,
-adding that, "the object of law is a definite <i>external</i> procedure
-of man toward man."<a name="FNanchor_40_160" id="FNanchor_40_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_160" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> In all this is evident the bad influence of
-jurisprudence and of its empirical preoccupations.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>legalism and moral casuistic.</i></div>
-
-<p>VIII. Ethical legalism became a bitter question for Christianity,
-precisely because of the contest between lofty Christian morality and
-its legalitarian form, chiefly inherited from Judaism. In the ancient
-world there is almost no trace of the question, just because the
-struggle was never acute.<a name="FNanchor_41_161" id="FNanchor_41_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_161" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> Hence the difficulties debated among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_579" id="Page_579">[Pg 579]</a></span>
-patristics and the scholastics as to derogability from divine laws
-and the consequent distinctions between a perfect and an imperfect
-moral life, between precepts and counsels; and as recourse is had to
-precedents in judicial questions, so here with these ethical problems
-concerning exceptions made by God to the moral law, to the precepts
-of the Bible (where some were not beautiful).<a name="FNanchor_42_162" id="FNanchor_42_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_162" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> The practical needs
-of confession give origin to books on casuistic, of which collections
-exist dating from the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The
-Reformation manifested aversion to these treatises: Luther said that
-moral theologians had first extinguished in men the fear of God and had
-then placed soft cushions beneath their hands and feet; and Melanchthon
-lamented that the Christian Republic was honoured <i>theologastrorum
-sententiis de conscientiae casiobus, inestricabilibus, ubi nunquam
-non ex quaestione quaestio nascitur,</i> and called them <i>conscientiarum
-cauteria.</i><a name="FNanchor_43_163" id="FNanchor_43_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_163" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Probabilitism and Jesuitic morality.</i></div>
-
-<p>The inconclusiveness of legalism was converted into a most powerful
-poison by the Jesuits, with their <i>probabilitism,</i> of which precursors
-were not wanting in the Middle Ages, but it received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_580" id="Page_580">[Pg 580]</a></span> definite form
-from the Dominican Bartolomeo Medina in 1577. From that time onward
-probabilitism began to be surrounded with a copious literature, which
-continually increased in the course of the seventeenth century, to
-decline in the century following. The opposition originated by the
-Jansenists, whose capital literary document, the <i>Provinciales</i> of
-Pascal also dates from the seventeenth century (1656), was the period
-of the greatest vigour of the doctrine. But if the most perfect
-and most Christian moral conscience dwelt in the Jansenists and in
-Pascal and if the absurd consequences to which probabilitism led
-became clearly evident in that polemic, yet it cannot be said that
-philosophically the error was finally superseded. Ere this could have
-happened, it would have been necessary, on the one hand to destroy
-all possibility of theological utilitarianism (which was impossible
-to carry out in a religious and transcendental Ethic, owing to its
-mystical and irrationalistic character) and on the other to destroy
-legalism. Pascal himself (and St. Augustine, to whom he appeals) was
-always confined in the legislative conception of morality; hence
-he speaks of the laws of "not slaying," which it was necessary to
-obey strictly, save in the cases established by God or when he gives
-particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_581" id="Page_581">[Pg 581]</a></span> orders to put certain persons to death. The Catholic
-Church, always astutely political, condemned without hesitation the
-extreme <i>rigorists,</i> who wish that the law should always be followed
-and the extreme <i>latitudinarians,</i> who think that any sort of
-reasons, however slight and improbable, suffice for not observing the
-law; allowing intermediate sects to discuss among themselves until
-they were out of breath, that is to say, <i>the moderate rigorists,
-the probabiliorists or tutiorists, the equiprobabilitists and the
-probabilitists.</i> Sant Alfonso dei Liguori adhered to these last, who
-were of opinion that it is always permissible to do what we wish,
-provided always that there be probable reasons, though less probable
-than those that militate in favour of the law. In his <i>Dissertatio de
-usu moderato opinionis probabilis,</i><a name="FNanchor_44_164" id="FNanchor_44_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_164" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> he thus exposed the principal
-argument of his thesis: <i>Peto ab adversariis ut indicent (si possunt)
-tibinam legem hanc esse scriptam invenerint, quod teneamur inter
-opiniones probabiles probabiliores sequi? Haec lex quidem, prout
-universalis, deberet omnibus esse nota et certa: at quomodo ista lex
-certa dici potest, cum communis sententia doctorum, saltem longe major
-illorum pars, post tantum discrimen absolute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_582" id="Page_582">[Pg 582]</a></span> asserant, hanc legem non
-adesse? Usque dum igitur de tali lege dubitatum, opinio quod adsit haec
-lex sequendi probabiliora, quamvis alicui videatur probabilior, nunquam
-tamen lex dici potest, sed appellanda erit mera opinio, utpote ex
-fallibili motivo deducta, quae vim nequaquam habet, ut lex, obligandi.</i>
-This doctrine still retains in our day very firm supporters among the
-Jesuits (Cathrein,<a name="FNanchor_45_165" id="FNanchor_45_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_165" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> Lehmkuhl,<a name="FNanchor_46_166" id="FNanchor_46_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_166" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> etc.).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Critique of the concept of the licit.</i></div>
-
-<p>But if the destruction of theological utilitarianism has been brought
-about by the criticism of the transcendental and by idealistic Ethic,
-that of legalism, with its expression as the licit, the permissible,
-or morally indifferent, appears in Fichte and in Schleiermacher. Kant
-did not treat the question explicitly and, as observed, we can deduce
-from certain of his utterances that he did not altogether abandon the
-concept of the licit.<a name="FNanchor_47_167" id="FNanchor_47_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_167" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Fichte.</i></div>
-
-<p>But Fichte, in a note to his <i>Natural Rights,</i> wrote: "A right is
-evidently something of which a man can avail himself or not; and
-is therefore the result of a law that is merely permissive. ...
-The permission is not expressly given by the law and is deduced by
-interpretation from its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_583" id="Page_583">[Pg 583]</a></span> limitation. And the limitation of a law
-is shown by the fact of its being something conditioned. It is not
-absolutely apparent, therefore, that a permissive law which commands in
-an unconditioned manner and therefore extends to all, can be deduced
-from the moral law."<a name="FNanchor_48_168" id="FNanchor_48_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_168" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Schleiermacher.</i></div>
-
-<p>What was a mere mention in Fichte became an ample demonstration in the
-celebrated memoir of Schleiermacher, <i>On the Concept of the Licit</i>
-(1826), which resolutely drove the licit out of the field of Ethic,
-by demonstrating its altogether juridical nature: "The original seat
-of this concept cannot be the domain of Ethic, in which it is not
-admissible: it appertains to the domain of law and of positive law; and
-there is something originally licit in civil life, precisely in this
-sense that there is something half-way between what is commanded and
-what is forbidden, the proper object of law."<a name="FNanchor_49_169" id="FNanchor_49_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_169" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Rosmini.</i></div>
-
-<p>Rosmini, owing to having ignored this origin of the lawful, proceeded
-to divide human actions into four classes: the prohibited, the
-licit, the commanded, and the superogatory; the last three were all
-innocent, but the licit was simply innocent, while the commanded and
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_584" id="Page_584">[Pg 584]</a></span> superogatory were also furnished with moral value. Hence arose
-grave errors in his Ethic and in his Philosophy of law and definitions
-that it is impossible to grasp, such as the following relating to
-superogatory actions: "The obligatory consists in preserving the moral
-order, but the superogatory consists in preserving the said order in
-a more excellent and perfect manner, with fuller, more frequent, and
-more ardent acts of the will. These second not only preserve the moral
-order, but augment it, almost creating a part of it themselves with
-their activity; they make themselves not only followers of the good,
-but authors of the good itself." Rosmini also considered that the
-posing of the question of probabilitism represented progress in Ethic;
-that is, upon "what man should do, if he found himself in doubt as
-to performing or omitting to perform an action." But the solution of
-the question that he gave on his account amounted (be it said to his
-honour) to the annihilation of legalism, since for him a doubtful law
-does not oblige when it is positive Rights, but it does oblige when
-it is moral law, that is, when there is a fear of offending against
-the supreme and necessary law, which wills absolutely to be always
-fulfilled.<a name="FNanchor_50_170" id="FNanchor_50_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_170" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> In other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_585" id="Page_585">[Pg 585]</a></span> terms, the true practical law is never (even
-when it appears to be so) positive law; and the concept of law, which
-always has a positive meaning, is extraneous to Ethic and to the
-Philosophy of the practical: a result to which Rosmini does not attain,
-or at least is not conscious of attaining.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_121" id="Footnote_1_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_121"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> See above, pp. <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_122" id="Footnote_2_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_122"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Krit. d. rein. Vern.</i> (ed. Kirchmann), p. 572.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_123" id="Footnote_3_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_123"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Lasson, <i>System der Rechtsphilosophie</i> (Berlin, 1882), p.
-2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_124" id="Footnote_4_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_124"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Gorgias,</i> 476-478.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_125" id="Footnote_5_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_125"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nicom.</i> 3, v. c. 1-2.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_126" id="Footnote_6_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_126"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i> v. c. 7, 9; <i>Magna Moralia,</i> i. c. 34.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_127" id="Footnote_7_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_127"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>De repudi,</i> iii. c. 22; <i>De legibus,</i> ii. c. 5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_128" id="Footnote_8_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_128"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>De imo univ. jur. princ.</i> §§41, 43, 86.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_129" id="Footnote_9_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_129"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>Fundamenta juris nat. et gentium</i> (1705).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_130" id="Footnote_10_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_130"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Windelband, <i>Geschichte d. Phil.</i> p. 424.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_131" id="Footnote_11_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_131"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>Gründl. d. Naturr.</i> (1796), append., sect. I.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_132" id="Footnote_12_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_132"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Metaphys. d. Sitten,</i> 1797 (ed. Kirchmann), pp. 31-35.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_133" id="Footnote_13_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_133"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>Gründl, d. Naturr.</i> pt. i. sect. 1.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_134" id="Footnote_14_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_134"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Spinoza, <i>Tract, pol.</i> c. 6, § 3; Fichte, <i>System d.
-Sittenlehre,</i> § 18 <i>in fine.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_135" id="Footnote_15_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_135"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> <i>Phil. d. Rechts,</i> passim, concerning force and violence,
-§§ 3, 57, 94.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_136" id="Footnote_16_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_136"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <i>Op. cit.</i>§ 158, <i>sqq.</i> 161, 258.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_137" id="Footnote_17_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_137"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> <i>Werke,</i> I., p. 371.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_138" id="Footnote_18_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_138"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <i>Allg. prakt. Phil.</i> pp. 48, 126-128.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_139" id="Footnote_19_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_139"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>Werke,</i> i. 441-445; cf. v. 259-260.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_140" id="Footnote_20_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_140"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>Fil. d. diritto</i> (Napoli, 1844), i. 20-21, 88-89, 94-97.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_141" id="Footnote_21_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_141"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>Saggio teor. d. dir. nat.</i> (Palermo, 1857), <i>in princ.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_142" id="Footnote_22_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_142"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Stahl, <i>Rechts-u. Staatslehre</i><sup>2</sup> (Heidelberg,
-1845), b. ii. ch. I; Ahrens, <i>Naturr.</i> (It. tr., Napoli, 1860), i. 219
-<i>sq.</i>; Trendelenburg, <i>Naturrecht auf d. Grunde d. Ethik</i> (Leipzig,
-1860).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_143" id="Footnote_23_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_143"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Kirchmann, <i>Begr. d. Rechtes u. d. Moral</i><sup>2</sup>
-(Berlin, 1873), pp. 107114; see Jhering, <i>Der Zweck i. Reckt</i> (i.2,
-1883; ii.3, 1886).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_144" id="Footnote_24_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_144"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Lasson, <i>op. cit.;</i> Steinthal, <i>Allg. Ethik</i> (Berlin,
-1885), pp. 135-8; Schuppe, <i>Ethik u. Rechtsphil.</i> (Breslau, 1881), pp.
-283-4; Wundt, <i>Ethik</i><sup>2</sup> (Stuttgart, 1892),.p. 565 <i>sq.</i>;
-Cohen, <i>Ethik d. reinen Willens</i> (Berlin, 1904), p. 567.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_145" id="Footnote_25_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_145"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Rümelin, <i>Reden u. Aufsätze,</i> new series (Freiburg i. B.,
-1881), p. 342; Jellinek, <i>Allgemeine Staatslehre</i> (Berlin, 1900), p.
-302 <i>sq.;</i> Stammler, <i>Lehre v. richtig. Rechte</i> (Berlin, 1902); Duguit,
-<i>L'État, le droit objectif et la loi positive</i> (Paris, 1901); Fouillée,
-<i>L'Idée moderne du droit en Allem., en Angl. et en France</i> (Paris,
-1876); Miraglia, <i>Fil. d. dir.</i> (Napoli, 1903), p. 80; Vanni, <i>Lez. d.
-fil. d. dir.</i> (Bologna, 1904), pp. 113-114.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_146" id="Footnote_26_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_146"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Rümelin, <i>op. cit.</i> pp. 176-202. Cp. Lasson, p. 215 <i>sq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_147" id="Footnote_27_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_147"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> <i>Op. cit.</i> p. 22. Cf. Bergbohm, <i>Jurisprudenz u.
-Rechtsphilosophie</i> (Leipzig, 1892), i. 141-147 <i>n.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_148" id="Footnote_28_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_148"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> <i>Mem.</i> i. 2. 40 <i>sq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_149" id="Footnote_29_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_149"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> <i>Eth. Nicom.</i> Bk. v, c. II.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_150" id="Footnote_30_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_150"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> <i>Œuvres,</i> edit. Assézat et Tourneux, v. (Paris, Gamier,
-1875), pp. 307-8.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_151" id="Footnote_31_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_151"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> <i>Woldemar,</i> passim.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_152" id="Footnote_32_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_152"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> <i>Werke,</i> i. 52 <i>sq.;</i> xvi. 21 <i>sq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_153" id="Footnote_33_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_153"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>Phil. d. Rechts,</i> sect. II. <i>passim;</i> cf. pp. 150, 153.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_154" id="Footnote_34_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_154"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> <i>Op. cit.</i> § 268, <i>Zus.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_155" id="Footnote_35_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_155"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> An ample exposition of such doctrines is to be found in
-E. Zoccoli, <i>De Anarchia,</i> Turin, 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_156" id="Footnote_36_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_156"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> <i>La Lotta pel diritto,</i> It. tr., Milan, 1875.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_157" id="Footnote_37_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_157"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> <i>La Lotta per la scienza del diritto</i> (It. tr., Palermo,
-1908); cf. <i>Critica,</i> vi. pp. 199-201.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_158" id="Footnote_38_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_158"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> <i>Metaphys. d. Sitt.</i> p. 40.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_159" id="Footnote_39_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_159"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> <i>Woldemar,</i> pp. in, 416, and <i>passim.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_160" id="Footnote_40_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_160"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Bierling, <i>Juristische Prinzipienlehre</i> (Freiburg i. B.,
-1894-98, 2 vols.).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_161" id="Footnote_41_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_161"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Sidgwick, <i>History of Ethics,</i> London, 1892, p. III <i>sq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_162" id="Footnote_42_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_162"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> A. Bonucci, <i>La derogabilità del diritto naturale nella
-Scolastica,</i> Perugia, 1906.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_163" id="Footnote_43_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_163"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Hist. remarks in dissert., <i>De casuisticae theologiae
-originibus, locis atque praestantia</i> (together with De Ligorio, <i>Theol.
-mor.,</i> ed. cit., pp. xxiv-lxxvi).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_164" id="Footnote_44_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_164"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> In <i>Theol. mor.</i> i. 10-24.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_165" id="Footnote_45_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_165"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Cathrein, <i>Moralphilosophie,<sup>4</sup></i> i. 428-437.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_166" id="Footnote_46_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_166"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> <i>Probabilismus vindicatus</i> (Freiburg, Bk. i., 1906).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_167" id="Footnote_47_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_167"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> See above, p. <a href="#Page_405">405</a>; cf. also <i>Krit. d. rein. Vern.</i> pp.
-10-11 <i>n.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_168" id="Footnote_48_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_168"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> <i>Gründl. d. Naturr.</i> introd. § iii. <i>n.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_169" id="Footnote_49_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_169"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> <i>Werke,</i> sect, iii., vol. ii., pp. 418-445; cf. G. Mayer,
-<i>Die Lehre vom Erlaubten in der Gesch. d. Ethik seit Schleiermacher,</i>
-Leipzig, 1899.</p></div>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_170" id="Footnote_50_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_170"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> <i>Compendio di Etica,</i> pp. 48, 96, 284-285.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_586" id="Page_586">[Pg 586]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="CONCLUSION" id="CONCLUSION">CONCLUSION</a></h4>
-
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>The Philosophy of the Spirit as the whole of Philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>With the Philosophy of the practical terminates the exposition that
-we had proposed to give of the Philosophy of the Spirit; and the
-exposition of the whole of Philosophy also terminates, because the
-Spirit is the whole of Reality.</p>
-
-<p>Here at the end, this proposition has no need of such proof or
-verification as is customary in calculation. Because the proof
-of Philosophy is intrinsic to it and consists of the reciprocal
-confronting of the development of thought and its demands, between
-the System and Logic. And Logic, as we know, if it be in a certain
-sense the whole of Philosophy (philosophy in brief or in idea or in
-potentiality), is also a part among the parts of the philosophical
-system; so that the confrontation of the System and of Logic, of
-thought in act and thought in idea, between thought and the thought
-of thought, has been continuously present and active in the course of
-the exposition, and the coincidence of the two processes and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_587" id="Page_587">[Pg 587]</a></span> their
-confluence into one has been clearly demonstrated.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Correspondence between Logic and System.</i></div>
-
-<p>Logic affirms the thinkability of the real and the inconceivability
-of any limit that could be put to thought, of every excogitation of
-the unknowable. And Philosophy, examining every part of the real,
-has not found any place in which to lodge the unknowable in thought.
-Logic posits as the ideal of the concept, that it should be universal
-and not general, concrete and not abstract; that it should be pure
-of intuitions such as those of mathematics and differ from them in
-being necessary and not conventional; fruitful in intuitions like
-those of the empirical sciences, but differing from them by its
-infinite fecundity which dominates every possible manifestation of
-the real. And the system has effectively shown that this desideratum
-of Logic is not a chimæra and that the Spirit is indeed that concept
-which corresponds to the ideal of the concept: there is nothing that
-is not a manifestation of the Spirit (an effectual manifestation,
-not conventional or metaphorical). Logic, rejecting all dualism or
-pluralism, wills that the philosophical concept shall be a unique
-concept or of the One, and does not suffer heterogeneous concepts
-at its side. And the system has con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_588" id="Page_588">[Pg 588]</a></span>firmed that the concept of the
-Spirit alone fulfils the logical condition of the concept; and that
-the concept of Nature, far from being a concept of something real, is
-the hypostasis of a manner of elaborating reality, not philosophical
-but practical; thus the concept itself of Nature, in so far as it is
-effectual, is nothing but the product of a function of the Spirit.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the Logic of the idea of the concept deduces
-that it must be a synthesis of itself and of its opposite. For its
-opposite, far from being heterogeneous and different, is flesh of the
-flesh and blood of the blood of the concept itself, as negation is of
-affirmation. And the system has led us before the Spirit or Reality as
-development, which is the true reality of the real and synthesis of
-opposites. Logic deduces that the concept is synthesis of itself and
-of the distinct from itself, of the universal and of the individual,
-and that therefore Philosophy must flow into History, and mediate its
-comprehension. And the system shows the capacity of its principles for
-interpreting the complex reality of History, and above all the history
-of philosophy itself, by solving its problems. Logic does not admit
-other distinctions of the concept than those that are the outcome
-of its own nature, such as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_589" id="Page_589">[Pg 589]</a></span> relations of subject-object and of
-individual-universal; and the system has confirmed these distinctions,
-duplicating itself as Philosophy of knowledge and Philosophy of action,
-of theory and of practice; subdividing itself as to the first, into
-Æsthetic and Logic; as to the second, into Economic and Ethic. And
-since the demand of the concept has been entirely satisfied, when these
-divisions have been exhausted, we have not found the possibility of new
-subdivisions, for example into various æsthetic or into various ethical
-categories among the particular sub-forms of the Spirit.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Dissatisfaction at the end of every system, and its
-irrational motive.</i></div>
-
-<p>Some are seized as with a sense of dissatisfaction and delusion when
-they arrive at the end of the philosophical system and at the result
-that there is no reality save the Spirit and no other Philosophy save
-the Philosophy of the Spirit; and they do not wish to resign themselves
-to accepting that and nothing else as Reality, although obliged to do
-so by logical necessity. A world beyond which there is no other seems
-to them poor indeed; an immanent Spirit, trammelled and far inferior
-by comparison with a transcendental Spirit, an omnipotent God outside
-the world; a Reality penetrable by thought, less poetical than one
-surrounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_590" id="Page_590">[Pg 590]</a></span> with mystery; the vague and indeterminate, more beautiful
-than the precise and determined. But we know that they are involved in
-a psychological illusion, similar to his who should dream of an art
-so sublime that every work of art really existing would by comparison
-appear contemptible; and the dreamer of this turbid dream, should not
-succeed in achieving a single verse. Impotent are those poets most
-refined; impotent those insatiable philosophers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><i>Rational motive: the inexhaustibility of Life and of
-Philosophy.</i></div>
-
-<p>But precisely because we know the genesis of their psychological
-illusion, we know that there is in it (and there could not fail to be)
-an element of truth. The infinite, inexhaustible by the thought of
-the individual, is Reality itself, which ever creates new forms; Life
-is the true mystery, not because impenetrable by thought, but because
-thought penetrates it to the infinite with power equal to its own. And
-since every moment, however beautiful, would become ugly, were we to
-dwell in it, so would life become ugly, were it ever to linger in one
-of its contingent forms. And because Philosophy, not less than Art, is
-conditioned by Life, so no particular philosophical system can ever
-contain in itself all the philosophable; no philosophical system is
-<i>definite,</i> because Life itself is never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_591" id="Page_591">[Pg 591]</a></span> <i>definite.</i> A philosophical
-system solves a group of problems historically given and prepares the
-conditions for the posing of other problems, that is, of new systems.
-Thus it has always been and thus it will always be.</p>
-
-<p>In such a sense, Truth is always surrounded with mystery, an ascending
-to ever higher heights, which are without a summit, as Life is without
-a summit. At the end of one of his researches every philosopher just
-perceives the uncertain outlines of another, which he himself, or he
-who comes after him, will achieve. And with this <i>modesty,</i> which is of
-the nature of things themselves, not my personal sentiment; with this
-modesty, which is also confidence that I have not thought in vain, I
-bring my work to a conclusion, offering it to the well disposed as an
-<i>instrument of labour.</i></p>
-
-
-<h4>THE END</h4>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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