A GENERAL VIEW OF POSITIVISM
AUGUSTE COMTE (1856)
trans: by J H Bridges, Robert
Speller and
Sons, 1957;
From the first chapter
Transcribed: by Andy Blunden
in 1998,
|
from Chapter I: Its Intellectual Character
Our doctrine, therefore, is one which
renders
hypocrisy and oppression alike impossible.
And it now stands forward as the result
of
all the efforts of the past, for the
regeneration
of order, which, whether considered
individually
or socially, is so deeply compromised
by
the anarchy of the present time. It
establishes
a fundamental principle by which true
philosophy
and sound polity are brought into correlation;
a principle which can be felt as well
as
proved, and which is at once the keystone
of a system and a basis of government.
I
shall show, moreover, in the fifth
chapter,
that the doctrine is as rich in aesthetic
beauty as in philosophical power and
in social
influence. This will complete the proof
of
its efficacy as the centre of a universal
system. Viewed from the moral, scientific,
or poetical aspect, it is equally valuable;
and it is the only principle which
can bring
Humanity safely through the most formidable
crisis that she has ever yet undergone.
It
will be now clear to all that the force
of
demonstration, a force peculiar to
modern
times, and which still retains much
of its
destructive character, becomes matured
and
elevated by Positivism. It begins to
develop
constructive tendencies, which will
soon
be developed more largely. It is not
too
much, then, to say that Positivism,
notwithstanding
its speculative origin, offers as much
to
natures of deep sympathy as to men
of highly
cultivated intellects, or of energetic
character.
*
The spirit and the principle of the
synthesis
which all true philosophers should
endeavour
to establish, have now been defined.
I proceed
to explain the method that should be
followed
in the task, and the peculiar difficulty
with which it is attended.
The object of the synthesis will not
be secured
until it embraces the whole extent
of its
domain, the moral and practical departments
as well as the intellectual. But these
three
departments cannot be dealt with simultaneously.
They follow an order of succession
which,
so far from dissevering them from the
whole
to which they belong, is seen when
carefully
examined to be a natural result of
their
mutual dependence. The truth is, and
it is
a truth of great importance, that Thoughts
must be systematised before Feelings,
Feelings
before Actions. It is doubtless, owing
to
a confused apprehension of this truth,
that
philosophers hitherto, in framing their
systems
of human nature, have dealt almost
exclusively
with our intellectual faculties.
The necessity of commencing with the
coordination
of ideas is not merely due to the fact
that
the relations of these, being more
simple
and more susceptible of demonstration,
form
a useful logical preparation for the
remainder
of the task. On closer examination
we find
a more important, though less obvious
reason.
If this first portion of the work be
once
efficiently performed, it is the foundation
of all the rest. In what remains no
very
serious difficulty will occur, provided
always
that we content ourselves with that
degree
of completeness which the ultimate
purpose
of the system requires.
To give such paramount importance to
this
portion of the subject may seem at
first
sight inconsistent with the proposition
just
laid down that the strength of the
intellectual
faculties is far inferior to that of
the
other elements of our nature. It is
quite
certain that Feeling and Activity have
much
more to do with any practical step
that we
take than pure Reason. In attempting
to explain
this paradox, we come at last to the
peculiar
difficulty of this great problem of
human
Unity.
The first condition of unity is a subjective
principle; and this principle in the
Positive
system is the subordination of the
intellect
to the heart.
Without this the unity that we seek
can never
be placed on a permanent basis, whether
individually
or collectively. It is essential to
have
some influence sufficiently powerful
to produce
convergence amid the heterogeneous
and often
antagonistic tendencies of so complex
an
organism as ours. But this first condition,
indispensable as it is, would be quite
insufficient
for the purpose, without some objective
basis,
existing independently of ourselves
in the
external world. That basis consists
for us
in the laws or Order of the phenomena
by
which Humanity is regulated. The subjection
of human life to this order is incontestable;
and as soon as the intellect has enabled
us to comprehend it, it becomes possible
for the feeling of love to exercise
a controlling
influence over our discordant tendencies.
This, then, is the mission allotted
to the
intellect in the Positive synthesis;
in this
sense it is that it should be consecrated
to the service of the heart.
I have said that our conception of
human
unity must be totally inadequate, and,
indeed
cannot deserve the name, so long as
it does
not embrace every element of our nature.
But it would be equally fatal to the
completeness
of this great conception to think of
human
nature irrespectively of what lies
outside
it. A purely subjective unity, without
any
objective basis, would be simply impossible.
In the first place any attempt to coordinate
man's moral nature, without regard
to the
external world, supposing the attempt
feasible,
would have very little permanent influence
on our happiness, whether collectively
or
individually; since happiness depends
so
largely upon our relations to all that
exists
around us. Besides this, we have to
consider
the exceeding imperfection of our nature.
Self-love is deeply implanted in it,
and
when left to itself is far stronger
than
Social Sympathy. The social instincts
would
never gain the mastery were they not
sustained
and called into constant exercise by
the
economy of the external world, an influence
which at the same time checks the power
of
the selfish instincts.
*
To understand this economy aright,
we must
remember that it embraces not merely
the
inorganic world, but also the phenomena
of
human life, though more modifiable
than any
others, are yet equally subject to
invariable
laws; laws which form the principal
objects
of Positive speculation. Now the benevolent
affections, which themselves act in
harmony
with the laws of social development
incline
us to submit to all other laws, as
soon as
the intellect has discovered their
existence.
The possibility of moral unity depends,
therefore,
even in the case of the individual,
but still
more in that of society, upon the necessity
of recognising our subjection to an
external
power. By this means our self-regarding
instincts
are rendered susceptible of discipline.
In
themselves they are strong enough to
neutralise
all sympathetic tendencies, were it
not for
the support that the latter find in
this
External Order. Its discovery is due
to the
intellect; which is thus enlisted in
the
service of feeling, with the ultimate
purpose
of regulating action.
Thus it is that an intellectual synthesis,
or systematic study of the laws of
nature,
is needed on far higher grounds than
those
of satisfying our theoretical faculties,
which are, for the most part, very
feeble,
even in men who devote themselves to
a life
of thought. It is needed, because it
solves
at once the most difficult problem
of the
moral synthesis. The higher impulses
within
us are brought under the influence
of a powerful
stimulus from without. By its means
they
are enabled to control our discordant
impulses,
and to maintain a state of harmony
towards
which they have always tended, but
which,
without such aid, could never be realised
Moreover, this conception of the order
of
nature evidently supplies the basis
for a
synthesis of human action; for the
efficacy
of our action depends entirely upon
their
conformity to this order. But this
part of
the subject has been fully explained
in my
previous work, and I need not enlarge
upon
it further. As soon as the synthesis
of mental
conceptions enables us to form a synthesis
of feelings, it is clear that there
will
be no very serious difficulties in
constructing
a synthesis of actions. Unity of action
depends
upon unity of impulse, and unity of
design;
and thus we find that the co-ordination
of
human nature, as a whole, depends ultimately
upon the coordination of mental conceptions,
a subject which seemed at first of
comparatively
slight importance.
The subjective principle of Positivism,
that
is, the subordination of the intellect
to
the heart is thus fortified by an objective
basis, the immutable Necessity of the
external
world; and by this means it becomes
possible
to bring human life within the influence
of social sympathy. The superiority
of the
new synthesis to the old is even more
evident
under this second aspect than under
the first.
In theological systems the objective
basis
was supplied by spontaneous belief
in a supernatural
Will. Now, whatever the degree of reality
attributed to these fictions, they
all proceeded
from a subjective source; and therefore
their
influence in most cases must have been
very
confused and fluctuating. In respect
of moral
discipline they cannot be compared
either
for precision, for force, or for stability,
to the conception of an invariable
Order,
actually existing without us, and attested,
whether we will or no, by every act
of our
existence.
*
This fundamental doctrine of Positivism
is
not to be attributed in the full breadth
of its meanings to any single thinker.
It
is the slow result of a vast process
carried
out in separate departments, which
began
with the first use of our intellectual
powers
and which is only just completed in
those
who exhibit those powers in their highest
form. During the long period of her
infancy
Humanity has been preparing this the
most
precious of her intellectual attainments,
as the basis for the only system of
life
which is permanently adapted to our
nature.
The doctrine has to be demonstrated
in all
the more essential cases from observation
only, except so far as we admit argument
from analogy. Deductive argument is
not admissible,
except in such cases as are evidently
compounded
of others in which the proof given
has been
sufficient. Thus, for instance, we
are authorised
by sound logic to assert the existence
of
laws of weather; though most of these
are
still, and, perhaps, always will be,
unknown.
For it is clear that meteorological
phenomena
result from a combination of astronomical,
physical and chemical influences, each
of
which has been proved to be subject
to invariable
laws. But in all phenomena which are
not
thus reducible, we must have recourse
to
inductive reasoning; for a principle
which
is the basis of all deduction cannot
be itself
deduced. Hence it is that the doctrine,
being
so entirely foreign as it is to our
primitive
mental state, requires such a long
course
of preparation. Without such preparation
even the greatest thinkers could not
anticipate
it. It is true that in some cases metaphysical
conceptions of a law have been formed
before
the proof really required had been
furnished.
But they were never of much service,
except
so far as they generalised in a more
or less
confused way the analogies naturally
suggested
by the laws which had actually been
discovered
in simpler phenomena. Besides, such
assertions
always remained very doubtful and very
barren
in result, until they were based upon
some
outline of a really Positive theory.
Thus,
in spite of the apparent potency of
this
metaphysical method, to which modern
intellects
are so addicted, the conception of
an External
Order is still extremely imperfect
in many
of the most cultivated minds, because
they
have not verified it sufficiently in
the
most intricate and important class
of phenomena,
the phenomena of society. I am not,
of course,
speaking of the few thinkers who accept
my
discovery of the principal laws of
Sociology.
Such uncertainty in a subject so closely
related to all others, produces great
confusion
in men's minds, and affects their perception
of an invariable order, even in the
simplest
subjects. A proof of this is the utter
delusion
into which most geometricians of the
present
day have fallen with respect to what
they
call the Calculus of Chances; a conception
which presupposes that the phenomena
considered
are not subject to law. The doctrine,
therefore,
cannot be considered as firmly established
in any one case, until it has been
verified
specially in every one of the primary
categories
in which phenomena may be classed.
But now
that this difficult condition has really
been fulfilled by the few thinkers
who have
risen to the level of their age, we
have
at last a firm objective basis on which
to
establish the harmony of our moral
nature.
That basis is, that all events whatever,
the events of our own personal and
social
life included, are always subject to
natural
relations of sequence and similitude,
which
in all essential respects lie beyond
the
reach of our interference.
This, then, is the external basis of
our
synthesis, which includes the moral
and practical
faculties, as well the speculative.
It rests
at every point upon the unchangeable
Order
of the world. The right understanding
of
this order is the principal subject
of our
thoughts; its preponderating influence
determines
the general course of our feelings;
its gradual
improvement is the constant object
of our
actions. To form a more precise notion
of
its influence, let us imagine that
for a
moment it were really to cease. The
result
would be that our intellectual faculties
after wasting themselves in wild extravagancies,
would sink rapidly into incurable sloth;
our nobler feelings would be unable
to prevent
the ascendancy of the lower instincts;
and
our active powers would abandon themselves
to purposeless agitation. Men have,
it is
true, been for a long time ignorant
of this
Order. Nevertheless we have been always
subject
to it; and its influence has always
tended,
though without our knowledge, to control
our whole being; our actions first,
and subsequently
our thoughts, and even our addictions.
As
we have advanced in our knowledge of
it,
our thoughts have become less vague,
our
desires less capricious our conduct
less
arbitrary. And now that we are able
to grasp
the full meaning of the conception,
its influence
extends to every part of our conduct.
For
it teaches us that the object to be
aimed
at in the economy devised by man, is
wise
development of the irresistible economy
of
nature, which cannot be amended till
it is
first studied and obeyed. In some departments
it has the character of fate; that
is, it
admits of no modification. But even
here,
in spite of the superficial objections
to
it which have arisen from intellectual
pride,
it is necessary for the proper regulation
of human life. Suppose, for instance,
that
man were exempt from the necessity
of living
on the earth, and were free to pass
at will
from one planet to another, the very
notion
of society would be rendered impossible
by
the licence which each individual would
have
to give way to whatever unsettling
and distracting
impulses his nature might incline him.
Our
propensities are so heterogeneous and
so
deficient in elevation, that there
would
be no fixity or consistency in our
conduct,
but for these insurmountable conditions.
Our feeble reason may fret at such
restrictions,
but without them all its deliberations
would
be confused and purposeless. We are
powerless
to create: all that we can do in bettering
our condition is to modify an order
in which
we can produce no radical change. Supposing
us in possession of that absolute independence
to which metaphysical pride aspires,
it is
certain that so far from improving
our condition,
it would be a bar to all development,
whether
social or individual. The true path
of human
progress lies in the opposite direction;
in diminishing the vacillation, inconsistency,
and discordance of our designs by furnishing
external motives for those operations
of
our intellectual, moral and practical
powers,
of which the original source was purely
internal.
The ties by which our various diverging
tendencies
are held together would be quite inadequate
for their purpose, without a basis
of support
in the external world, which is unaffected
by the spontaneous variations of our
nature.
But, however great the value of Positive
doctrine in pointing out the unchangeable
aspects of the universal Order, what
we have
principally to consider are the numerous
departments in which that order admits
of
artificial modifications Here lies
the most
important sphere of human activity.
The only
phenomena, indeed, which we are wholly
unable
to modify are the simplest of all,
the phenomena
of the Solar System which we inhabit.
It
is true that now that we know its laws
we
can easily conceive them improved in
certain
respects; but to whatever degree our
power
over nature may extend, we shall never
be
able to produce the slightest change
in them.
What we have to do is so to dispose
our life
as to submit to these resistless fatalities
in the best way we can; and this is
comparatively
easy, because their greater simplicity
enables
us to foresee them with more precision
and
in a more distinct future. Their interpretation
by Positive science has had a most
important
influence on the gradual education
of the
human intellect: and it will always
continue
to be the source from which we obtain
the
clearest and most impressive sense
of Immutability.
Too exclusively studied they might
even now
lead to fatalism; but controlled as
their
influence will be henceforward by a
more
philosophic education, they may well
become
a means of moral improvement, by disposing
us to submit with resignation to all
evils
which are absolutely insurmountable.
*
In other parts of the external economy,
invariability
in all primary aspects is found compatible
with modifications in points of secondary
importance. These modifications become
more
numerous and extensive as the phenomena
are
more complex. The reason of this is
that
the causes from a combination of which
the
effects proceed being more varied and
more
accessible, offer greater facilities
to our
feeble powers to interfere with advantage.
But all this has been fully explained
in
my System of Positive Philosophy. The
tendency
of that work was to show that our intervention
became more efficacious in proportion
as
the phenomena upon which we acted had
a closer
relation to the life of man or society.
Indeed
the extensive modifications of which
society
admits, go far to keep up the common
mistake
that social phenomena are not subject
to
any constant law.
At the same time we have to remember
that
this increased possibility of human
intervention
in certain parts of the External Order
necessarily
coexists with increased imperfection,
for
which it is a valuable but very inadequate
compensation. Both features alike result
from the increase of complexity. Even
the
laws of the Solar System are very far
from
perfect, notwithstanding their greater
simplicity,
which indeed makes their defects more
perceptible.
The existence of these defects should
be
taken into careful consideration; not
indeed
with the hope of amending them, but
as a
check upon unreasoning admiration.
Besides,
they lead us to a clearer conception
of the
true position of Humanity, a position
of
which the most striking feature is
the necessity
of struggling against difficulties
of every
kind. Lastly, by observing these defects
we are less likely to waste our time
in seeking
for absolute perfection, and so neglecting
the wiser course of looking for such
improvements
as are really possible.
In all other phenomena, the increasing
imperfection
of the economy of nature becomes a
powerful
stimulus to all our faculties, whether
moral,
intellectual or practical. Here we
find sufferings
which can really be alleviated to a
large
extent by wise and well-sustained combination
of efforts. This consideration should
give
a firmness and dignity of bearing,
to which
Humanity could never attain during
her period
of infancy. Those who look wisely into
the
future of society will feel that the
conception
of man becoming, without fear or boast,
the
arbiter, within certain limits, of
his own
destiny, has in it something far more
satisfying
than the old belief in Providence,
which
implied our remaining passive. Social
union
will be strengthened by the conception,
because
every one will see that union forms
our principal
resource against the miseries of human
life.
And while it calls out our noblest
sympathies,
it impresses us more strongly with
the importance
of high intellectual culture, being
itself
the object for which such culture is
required.
These important results have been ever
on
the increase in 'modern times' yet
hitherto
they have been too limited and casual
to
be appreciated rightly, except so far
as
we could anticipate the future of society
by the light of sound historical principles.
Art, so far as it is yet organised,
does
not include that part of the economy
of nature
which, being the most modifiable, the
most
imperfect, and the most important of
all,
ought on every ground to be regarded
as the
principal object of human exertions.
Even
Medical Art, specially so called is
only
just beginning to free itself from
its primitive
routine. And Social Art, whether moral
or
political, is plunged in routine so
deeply
that few statesmen admit the possibility
of shaking it off. Yet of all the arts,
it
is the one which best admits of being
reduced
to a system; and until this is done
it will
be impossible to place on a rational
basis
all the rest of our practical life.
All these
narrow views are due simply to insufficient
recognition of the fact, that the highest
phenomena are as much subject to laws
as
others. When the conception of the
Order
of Nature has become generally accepted
in
its full extent, the ordinary definition
of Art will become as comprehensive
and as
homogeneous as that of Science; and
it will
then become obvious to all sound thinkers
that the principal sphere of both Art
and
Science is the social life of man.
Thus the social services of the Intellect
are not limited to revealing the existence
of an external Economy, and the necessity
of submission to its sway. If the theory
is to have any influence upon our active
powers, it should include an exact
estimate
of the imperfections of this economy
and
of the limits within which it varies,
so
as to indicate and define the boundaries
of human intervention. Thus it will
always
be an important function of philosophy
to
criticise nature in a Positive spirit,
although
the antipathy to theology by which
such criticism
was formerly animated has ceased to
have
much interest, from the very fact of
having
done its work so effectually. The object
of Positive criticism is not controversial.
It aims simply at putting the great
question
of human life in a clearer light. It
bears
closely on what Positivism teaches
to be
the great end of life, namely, the
struggle
to become more perfect; which implies
previous
imperfection. This truth is strikingly
apparent
when applied to the case of our own
nature,
for true morality requires a deep and
habitual
conscience.
*
I have now described the fundamental
condition
of the Positive Synthesis. Deriving
its subjective
principle from the affections, it is
dependent
ultimately on the intellect for its
objective
basis. This basis connects it with
the Economy
of the external world, the dominion
of which
Humanity accepts, and at the same time
modifies.
I have left many points unexplained;
but
enough has been said for the purpose
of this
work, which is only the introduction
to a
larger treatise. We now come to the
essential
difficulty that presented itself in
the construction
of the Synthesis. That difficulty was
to
discover the true Theory of human and
social
Development. The first decisive step
in this
discovery renders the conception of
the Order
of Nature complete. It stands out then
as
the fundamental doctrine of an universal
system, for which the whole course
of modern
progress has been preparing the way.
For
three centuries men of science have
been
unconsciously co-operating in the work.
They
have left no gap of any importance,
except
in the region of Moral and Social phenomena.
And now that man's history has been
for the
first time systematically considered
as a
whole, and has been found to be, like
all
other phenomena, subject to invariable
laws,
the preparatory labours of modern Science
are ended. Her remaining task is to
construct
that synthesis which will place her
at the
only point of view from which every
department
of knowledge can be embraced.
In my System of Positive Philosophy
both
these objects were aimed at. I attempted,
and in the opinion of the principal
thinkers
of our time successfully, to complete
and
at the same time co-ordinate Natural
Philosophy,
by establishing the general law of
human
development, social as well as intellectual.
I shall not now enter into the discussion
of this law, since its truth is no
longer
contested. Fuller consideration of
it is
reserved for the third volume of my
new treatise.
It lays down, as is generally known,
that
our speculations upon all subjects
whatsoever,
pass necessarily through three successive
stages: a Theological stage, in which
free
play is given to spontaneous fictions
admitting
of no proof; the Metaphysical stage,
characterised
by the prevalence of personified abstractions
or entities; lastly, the Positive stage,
based upon an exact view of the real
facts
of the case. The first, though purely
provisional,
is invariably the point from which
we start;
the third is the only permanent or
normal
state; the second has but a modifying
or
rather a solvent influence, which qualifies
it for regulating the transition from
the
first stage to the third. We begin
with theological
Imagination, thence we pass through
metaphysical
Discussion, and we end at last with
positive
Demonstration. Thus by means of this
one
general law we are enabled to take
a comprehensive
and simultaneous view of the past,
present,
and future of Humanity.
In my System of Positive Philosophy,
this
law of Filiation has always been associated
with the law of Classification, the
application
of which to Social Dynamics furnishes
the
second element requisite for the theory
of
development. It fixes the order in
which
our different conceptions pass through
each
of these phases. That order, as is
generally
known, is determined by the decreasing
generality,
or what comes to the same thing, by
the increasing
complexity of the phenomena; the more
complex
being naturally dependent upon those
that
are more simple and less special. Arranging
the sciences according to this mutual
relation,
we find them grouped naturally in Six
primary
divisions; Mathematics, Astronomy,
Physics,
Chemistry, Biology, and Sociology.
Each passes
through the three phases of developments
before the one succeeding it. Without
continuous
reference to this classification the
theory
of development would be confused and
vague.
The theory thus derived from the combination
of this second or statical law with
the dynamical
law of the three stages, seems at first
sight
to include nothing but the intellectual
movement.
But my previous remarks will have shown
that
this is enough to guarantee its applicability
to social progress also; since social
progress
has invariably depended on the growth
of
our fundamental beliefs with regard
to the
economy that surrounds us. The historical
portion of my Positive Philosophy has
proved
an unbroken connection between the
development
of Activity and that of Speculation;
on the
combined influence of these depends
the development
of Affection. The theory therefore
requires
no alteration: what is wanted is merely
an
additional statement explaining the
phases
of active, that is to say, of political
development.
Human activity, as I have long since
shown,
passes successively through the stages
of
Offensive warfare, Defensive warfare,
and
Industry. The respective connection
of these
states with the preponderance of the
theological,
then metaphysical, or the positive
spirit
leads at once to a complete explanation
of
history. It reproduces in a systematic
form
the only historical conception which
has
become adopted by universal consent;
the
division, namely, of history into Ancient,
Mediaeval, and Modern.
Thus the foundation of Social science
depends
simply upon establishing the truth
of this
theory of development. We do this by
combining
the dynamic law, which is its distinctive
feature, with the statical principle
which
renders it coherent, we then complete
the
theory by extending it to practical
life.
All knowledge is now brought within
the sphere
of Natural Philosophy, and the provisional
distinction by which, since Aristotle
and
Plato, it has been so sharply demarcated
from Philosophy ceases to exist. The
Positive
spirit, so long confined to the simpler
inorganic
phenomena, has now passed through its
difficult
course of probation. It extends to
a more
important and more intricate class
of speculations,
and disengages them for ever from all
theological
or metaphysical influence. All our
notions
of truth are thus rendered homogeneous,
and
begin at once to converge towards a
central
principle. A firm objective basis is
consequently
laid down for that complete coordination
of human existence towards which all
sound
Philosophy has ever tended, but which
the
want of adequate materials has hitherto
made
impossible.
*
It will be felt, I think, that the
principal
difficulty of the Positive Synthesis
was
met by my discovery of the laws of
development,
if we bear in mind that while that
theory
completes and coordinates the objective
basis
of the system, it at the same time
holds
it in subordination to the subjective
principle.
It is under the influence of this moral
principle
that the whole philosophical construction
should be carried on. The inquiry into
the
Order of the Universe is an indispensable
task, and it comes necessarily within
the
province of the intellect; but the
intellect
is too apt to aim in its pride at something
beyond its proper function, which consists
in unremitting service of the social
sympathies.
It would willingly escape from all
control
and follow its own bent towards speculative
digressions; a tendency which is at
present
favoured by the undisciplined habits
of thought
naturally due to the first rise of
Positivism
in its special departments. The influence
of the moral principle is necessary
to recall
it to its true function; since if its
investigations
were allowed to assume an absolute
character,
and to recognise no limit, we should
only
be repeating in a scientific form many
of
the worst results of theological and
metaphysical
belief. The Universe is to be studied
not
for its own sake, but for the sake
of Man
or rather of Humanity. To study it
in any
other spirit would not only be immoral,
but
also highly irrational. For, as statements
of pure objective truth, our scientific
theories
can never be really satisfactory. They
can
only satisfy us from the subjective
point
of view; that is, by limiting themselves
to the treatment of such questions
as have
some direct or indirect influence over
human
life. It is for social feeling to determine
these limits; outside which our knowledge
will always remain imperfect as well
as useless,
and this even in the case of the simplest
phenomena; as astronomy testifies.
Were the
influence of social feeling to be slackened,
the Positive spirit would soon fall
back
to the subjects which were preferred
during
the period of its infancy; subjects
the most
remote from human interest and therefore
also the easiest. While its probationary
period lasted, it was natural to investigate
all accessible problems without distinction;
and this was often justified by the
logical
value of many problems that, scientifically
speaking, were useless. But now that
the
Positive method has been sufficiently
developed
to be applied exclusively to the purpose
for which it was intended, there is
no use
whatever in prolonging the period of
probation
by these idle exercises. Indeed the
want
of purpose and discipline in our researches
is rapidly assuming a retrograde character.
Its tendency is to undo the chief results
obtained by the spirit detail during
the
time when that spirit was really essential
to progress.
Here, then, we are met by a serious
difficulty.
The construction of the objective basis
for
the Positive synthesis imposes two
conditions
which seem, at first sight, incompatible.
On the one hand we must allow the intellect
to be free, or else we shall not have
the
full benefit of its services; and,
on the
other, we must control its natural
tendency
to unlimited digressions. The problem
was
insoluble, so long as the study of
the natural
economy did not include Sociology.
But as
soon as the Positive spirit extends
to the
treatment of social questions, these
at once
take precedence of all others, and
thus the
moral point of view becomes paramount.
Objective
science, proceeding from without inwards,
falls at last into natural harmony
with the
subjective or moral principle, the
superiority
of which it had for so long a time
resisted.
As a mere speculative question it may
be
considered as proved to the satisfaction
of every true thinker, that the social
point
of view is logically and scientifically
supreme
over all others, being the only point
from
which all our scientific conceptions
can
be regarded as a whole. Yet its influence
can never be injurious to the progress
of
other Positive studies; for these,
whether
for the sake of their method or of
their
subject matter, will always continue
to be
necessary as an introduction to the
final
science. Indeed the Positive system
gives
the highest sanction and the most powerful
stimulus to all preliminary sciences,
by
insisting on the relation which each
of them
bears to the great whole, Humanity.
Thus the foundation of social science
bears
out the statement made at the beginning
of
this work, that the intellect would,
under
Positivism, accept its proper position
of
subordination to the heart. The recognition
of this, which is the subjective principle
of Positivism, renders the construction
of
a complete system of human life possible.
The antagonism which, since the close
of
the Middle Ages, has arisen between
Reason
and Feeling, was an anomalous though
inevitable
condition. It is now for ever at an
end;
and the only system which can really
satisfy
the wants of our nature, individually
or
collectively, is therefore ready for
our
acceptance. As long as the antagonism
existed,
it was hopeless to expect that Social
Sympathy
could do much to modify the preponderance
of self-love in the affairs of life.
But
the case is different as soon as reason
and
sympathy are brought into active co-operation.
Separately, their influence in our
imperfect
organisation is very feeble; but combined
it may extend indefinitely. It will
never,
indeed, be able to do away with the
fact
that practical life must, to a large
extent,
be regulated by interested motives;
yet it
may introduce a standard of morality
inconceivably
higher than any that has existed in
the past,
before these two modifying forces could
be
made to combine their action upon our
stronger
and lower instincts.
*
In order to give a more precise conception
of the intellectual basis on which
the system
of Positive Polity should rest, I must
explain
the general principle by which it should
be limited. It should be confined to
what
is really indispensable to the construction
of that Polity. Otherwise the intellect
will
be carried away, as it has been before,
by
its tendency to useless digressions.
It will
endeavour to extend the limits of its
province;
thereby escaping from the discipline
imposed
by social motives and putting off all
attempts
at moral and social regeneration for
a longer
time than the construction of the philosophic
basis for action really demands. Here
we
shall find a fresh proof of the importance
of my theory of development. By this
discovery
the intellectual synthesis may be considered
as having already reached the point
from
which the synthesis of affections may
be
at once begun; and even that of actions,
at least in its highest and most difficult
part, morality properly so called.
With the view of restricting the construction
of the objective basis within reasonable
limits, there is this distinction to
be borne
in mind. In the Order of Nature, there
are
two classes of laws; those that are
simple
or Abstract, those that are compound
or Concrete.
In my work on Positive Philosophy,
the distinction
has been thoroughly established, and
frequent
use has been made of it. It will be
sufficient
here to point out its origin and the
method
of applying it.
Positive science may deal either with
objects
themselves as they exist, or with the
separate
phenomena that the objects exhibit.
Of course
we can only judge of an object by the
sum
of its phenomena; but it is open to
us either
to examine a special class of phenomena
abstracted
from all the beings that exhibit it,
or to
take some special object, and examine
the
whole concrete group of phenomena.
In the
latter case we shall be studying different
systems of existence; in the former,
different
modes of activity. As good an example
of
the distinction as can be given is
that,
already mentioned, of Meteorology.
The facts
of weather are evidently combinations
of
astronomical, physical, chemical, biological,
and even social phenomena; each of
these
classes requiring its own separate
theories.
Were these abstract laws sufficiently
well
known to us, then the whole difficulty
of
the concrete problem would be so to
combine
them, as to deduce the order in which
each
composite effect would follow. This,
however,
is a process which seems to me so far
beyond
our feeble powers of deduction, that,
even
supposing our knowledge of the abstract
laws
perfect, we should still be obliged
to have
recourse to the inductive method.
Now the investigation of the economy
of nature
here contemplated is evidently of the
abstract
kind. We decompose that economy into
its
primary phenomena, that is to say,
into those
which are not reducible to others.
These
we range in classes, each of which,
notwithstanding
the connection that exists between
all, requires
a separate inductive process; for the
existence
of laws cannot be proved in any one
of them
by pure deduction. It is only with
these
simpler and more abstract relations
that
our synthesis is directly concerned:
when
these are established, they afford
a rational
groundwork for the more composite and
concrete
researches. The great complexity of
concrete
relations makes it probable that we
shall
never be able to co-ordinate them perfectly.
In that case the synthesis would always
remain
limited to abstract laws. But its true
object,
that of supplying an objective basis
for
the great synthesis of human life,
will none
the less be attained. For this groundwork
of abstract knowledge would introduce
harmony
between all our mental conceptions,
and thereby
would make it impossible to systematise
our
feelings and actions, which is the
object
of all sound philosophy. The abstract
study
of nature is therefore all that is
absolutely
indispensable for the establishment
of unity
in human life. It serves as the foundation
of all wise action; as the philosophia
prima,
the necessity of which in the normal
state
of humanity was dimly foreseen by Bacon.
When the abstract laws exhibiting the
various
modes of activity have been brought
systematically
before us, our practical knowledge
of each
special system of existence ceases
to be
purely empirical, though the greater
number
of concrete laws may still be unknown.
We
find the best example of this truth
in the
most difficult and important subject
of all,
Sociology. Knowledge of the principal
statical
and dynamical laws of social existence
is
evidently sufficient for the purpose
of systematising
the various aspects of private or public
life, and thereby of rendering our
condition
far more perfect. Should this knowledge
be
acquired, of which there is now no
doubt,
we need not regret being unable to
give a
satisfactory explanation of every state
of
society that we find existing throughout
the world in all ages. The discipline
of
social feeling will check any foolish
indulgence
of the spirit of curiosity, and prevent
the
understanding from wasting its powers
in
useless speculations; for feeble as
these
powers are, it is from them that Humanity
derives her most efficient means of
contending
against the defects of the External
Order.
The discovery of the principal concrete
laws
would no doubt be attended by the most
beneficial
results, moral as well as physical;
and this
is the field in which the science of
the
future will reap its richest harvest.
But
such knowledge is not indispensable
for our
present purpose, which is to form a
complete
synthesis of life, effecting for the
final
state of humanity what the theological
synthesis
effected for its primitive state. For
this
purpose Abstract philosophy is undoubtedly
sufficient; so that even supposing
that Concrete
philosophy should never become so perfect
as we desire, social regeneration will
still
be possible.
*
Regarded under this more simple aspect,
our
system of scientific knowledge is already
so far elaborated, that all thinkers
whose
nature is sufficiently sympathetic
may proceed
without delay to the problem of moral
regeneration;
a problem which must prepare the way
for
that of political reorganisation. For
we
shall find that the theory of development
of which we have been speaking, when
looked
at from another point of view, condenses
and systematises all our abstract conceptions
of the order of nature.
This will be understood by regarding
all
departments of our knowledge as being
really
component parts of one and the same
science;
the science of Humanity. All other
sciences
are but the prelude or the development
of
this. Before we can enter upon it directly,
there are two subjects which it is
necessary
to investigate; our external circumstances,
and the organisation of our own nature.
Social
life cannot be understood without first
understanding
the medium in which it is developed
and the
beings who manifest it. We shall make
no
progress, therefore, in the final science
until we have sufficient abstract knowledge
of the outer world and of individual
life
to define the influence of these laws
on
the special laws of social phenomena.
And
this is necessary from the logical
as well
as from the scientific point of view.
The
feeble faculties of our intellect require
to be trained for the more difficult
speculations
by practice in the easier. For the
same reasons,
the study of the inorganic world should
take
precedence of the organic. For, in
the first
place, the laws of the more universal
mode
of existence have a preponderating
influence
over those of the more special modes;
and
in the second place it is clearly incumbent
on us to begin the study of the Positive
method with its simplest and most characteristic
applications. I need not dwell further
upon
principles so fully established in
my former
work.
Social Philosophy, therefore, ought
on every
ground to be preceded by Natural Philosophy
in the ordinary sense of the word;
that is
to say by the study of inorganic and
organic
nature. It is reserved for our own
century
to take in the whole scope of science;
but
the commencement of these preparatory
studies
dates from the first astronomical discoveries
of antiquity. Natural Philosophy was
completed
by the modern science of Biology, of
which
the ancients possessed nothing but
a few
statical principles. The dependence
of biological
conditions upon astronomical is very
certain.
But these two sciences differ too much
from
each other and are too indirectly connected
to give us an adequate conception of
Natural
Philosophy as a whole. It would be
pushing
the principle of condensation too far
to
reduce it to these two terms. One connecting
link was supplied by the science of
Chemistry
which arose in the middle ages. The
natural
succession of Astronomy, Chemistry,
and Biology
leading gradually up to the final science,
Sociology, made it possible to conceive
more
or less imperfectly of an intellectual
synthesis.
But the interposition of Chemistry
was not
enough: because, though its relation
to Biology
was intimate, it was too remote from
Astronomy.
For want of understanding the mode
in which
astronomical conditions really affected
us,
the arbitrary and chimerical fancies
of astrology
were employed, though of course quite
valueless
except for this temporary purpose.
In the
seventeenth century, however, the science
of Physics specially so called, was
founded;
and a satisfactory arrangement of scientific
conceptions began to be formed. Physics
included
a series of inorganic researches, the
more
general branch of which bordered on
Astronomy,
the more special on Chemistry. To complete
our view of the scientific hierarchy
we have
now only to go back to its origin,
Mathematics;
a class of speculations so simple and
so
general, that they passed at once and
without
effort into the Positive stage. Without
Mathematics,
Astronomy was impossible: and they
will always
continue to be the starting-point of
Positive
education for the individual as they
have
been for the race. Even under the most
absolute
theological influence they stimulate
the
Positive spirit to a certain degree
of systematic
growth. From them it extends step by
step
to the subjects from which at first
it had
been most rigidly excluded.
We see from these brief remarks that
the
series of the abstract sciences naturally
arranges itself according to the decrease
in generality and the increase in complication.
We see the reason for the introduction
of
each member of the series, and the
mutual
connection between them. The classification
is evidently the same as that before
laid
down in my theory of development. That
theory
therefore may be regarded, from the
statical
point of view, as furnishing a direct
basis
for the co-ordination of Abstract conception,
on which, as we have seen, the whole
synthesis
of human life depends. That coordination
at once establishes unity in our intellectual
operations. It realises the desire
obscurely
expressed by Bacon for a scala intellectus,
a ladder of the understanding, by the
aid
of which our thoughts may pass with
ease
from the lowest subjects to the highest,
or vice versa, without weakening the
sense
of their continuous connection in nature.
Each of the six terms of which our
series
is composed is in its central portion
quite
distinct from the two adjoining links;
but
it is closely related in its commencement
to the preceding term, in its conclusion
to the term which follows. A further
proof
of the homogeneousness and continuity
of
the system is that the same principle
of
classification, when applied more closely,
enables us to arrange the various theories
of which each science consists. For
example,
the three great orders of mathematical
speculations,
Arithmetic, Geometry, and Mechanics,
follow
the same law of classification as that
by
which the entire scale is regulated.
And
I have shown in my Positive Philosophy
that
the same holds good of the other sciences.
As a whole, therefore, the series is
the
most concise summary that can be formed
of
the vast range of Abstract truth; and
conversely,
all rational researches of a special
kind
result in some partial development
of this
series. Each term in it requires its
own
special processes of induction; yet
in each
we reason deductively from the preceding
term, a method which will always be
as necessary
for purposes of instruction as it was
originally
for the purpose of discovery. Thus
it is
that all our other studies are but
a preparation
for the final science of Humanity.
By it
their mode of culture will always be
influenced
and will gradually be imbued with the
true
spirit of generality, which is so closely
connected with social sympathy. Nor
is there
any danger of such influence becoming
oppressive,
since the very principle of our system
is
to combine a due measure of independence
with practical convergence. The fact
that
our theory of classification, by the
very
terms of its composition, subordinates
intellectual
to social considerations, is eminently
calculated
to secure its popular acceptance. It
brings
the whole speculative system under
the criticism,
and at the same time under the protection
of the public, which is usually not
slow
to check any abuse of those habits
of abstraction
which are necessary to the philosopher.
The same theory then which explains
the mental
evolution of Humanity, lays down the
true
method by which our abstract conceptions
should be classified; thus reconciling
the
conditions of Order and Movement, hitherto
more or less at variance. Its historical
clearness and its philosophical force
strengthen
each other, for we cannot understand
the
connection of our conceptions except
by studying
the succession of the phases through
which
they pass. And on the other hand, but
for
the existence of such a connection,
it would
be impossible to explain the historical
phases.
So we see that for all sound thinkers,
History
and Philosophy are inseparable.
*
A theory which embraces the statical
as well
as the dynamical aspects of the subject,
and which fulfils the conditions here
spoken
of, may certainly be regarded as establishing
the true objective basis on which unity
can
be established in our intellectual
functions.
And this unity will be developed and
consolidated
as our knowledge of its basis becomes
more
satisfactory. But the social application
of the system will have far more influence
on the result than any overstrained
attempts
at exact scientific accuracy. The object
of our philosophy is to direct the
spiritual
reorganisation of the civilised world.
It
is with a view to this object that
all attempts
at fresh discovery or at improved arrangement
should be conducted. Moral and political
requirements will lead us to investigate
new relations; but the search should
not
be carried farther than is necessary
for
their application. Sufficient for our
purpose,
if this incipient classification of
our mental
products be so far worked out that
the synthesis
of Affection and of Action may be at
once
attempted; that is, that we may begin
at
once to construct that system of morality
under which the final regeneration
of Humanity
will proceed. Those who have read my
Positive
Philosophy will I think, be convinced
that
the time for this attempt has arrived.
How
urgently it is needed will appear in
every
part of the present work.
*
I have now described the general spirit
of
Positivism. But there are two or three
points
on which some further explanation is
necessary,
as they are the source of misapprehensions
too common and too serious to be disregarded.
Of course I only concern myself with
such
objections as are made in good faith.
The fact of entire freedom from theological
belief being necessary before the Positive
state can be perfectly attained, has
induced
superficial observers to confound Positivism
with a state of pure negation. Now
this state
was at one time, and that even so recently
as the last century, favourable to
progress;
but at present in those who unfortunately
still remain in it, it is a radical
obstacle
to all sound social and even intellectual
organisation. I have long ago repudiated
all philosophical or historical connection
between Positivism and what is called
Atheism.
But it is desirable to expose the error
somewhat
more clearly.
Atheism, even from the intellectual
point
of view, is a very imperfect form of
emancipation;
for its tendency is to prolong the
metaphysical
stage indefinitely, by continuing to
seek
for new solutions of Theological problems,
instead of setting aside all inaccessible
researches on the ground of their utter
inutility.
The true Positive spirit consists in
substituting
the study of the invariable Laws of
phenomena
for that of their so-called Causes,
whether
proximate or primary - in a word, in
studying
the How instead of the Why. Now this
is wholly
incompatible with the ambitious and
visionary
attempts of Atheism to explain the
formation
of the Universe, the origin of animal
life,
etc. The Positivist, comparing the
various
phases of human speculation, looks
upon these
scientific chimeras as far less valuable
even from the intellectual point of
view
than the first spontaneous inspirations
of
primeval times. The Principle of Theology
is to explain everything by supernatural
Wills. That principle can never be
set aside
until we acknowledge the search for
Causes
to be beyond our reach, and limit ourselves
to the knowledge of Laws. As long as
men
persist in attempting to answer the
insoluble
questions which occupied the attention
of
the childhood of our race, by far the
more
rational plan is to do as was done
then,
that is, simply to give free play to
the
imagination. These spontaneous beliefs
have
gradually fallen into disuse, not because
they have been disproved, but because
mankind
has become more enlightened as to its
wants
and the scope of its powers, and has
gradually
given an entirely new direction to
its speculative
efforts. If we insist upon penetrating
the
unattainable mystery of the essential
Cause
that produces phenomena, there is no
hypothesis
more satisfactory than that they proceed
from Wills dwelling in them or outside
them;
an hypothesis which assimilates them
to the
effect produced by the desires which
exist
within ourselves. Were it not for the
pride
induced by metaphysical and scientific
studies,
it would be inconceivable that any
atheist,
modern or ancient, should have believed
that
his vague hypotheses on such a subject
were
preferable to this direct mode of explanation.
And it was the only mode which really
satisfied
the reason, until men began to see
the utter
inanity and inutility of all search
for absolute
truth. The Order of Nature is doubtless
very
imperfect in every respect, but its
production
is far more compatible with the hypothesis
of an intelligent Will than with that
of
a blind mechanism. Persistent atheists
therefore
would seem to be most illogical of
theologists:
because they occupy themselves with
theological
problems, and yet reject the only appropriate
method of handling them. But the fact
is
that pure Atheism even in the present
day
is very rare. What is called Atheism
is usually
a phase of Pantheism, which is really
nothing
but a relapse disguised under learned
terms,
into a vague and abstract form of Fetishism.
And it is not impossible that it may
lead
to the reproduction in one form or
other
of every theological phase as soon
as the
check which modern society still imposes
on metaphysical extravagance has become
somewhat
weakened. The adoption of such theories
as
a satisfactory system of belief, indicates
a very exaggerated or rather false
view of
intellectual requirements, and a very
insufficient
recognition of moral and social wants.
It
is generally connected with the visionary
but mischievous tendencies of ambitious
thinkers
to uphold what they call the empire
of Reason.
In the moral sphere it forms a sort
of basis
for the degrading fallacies of modern
metaphysicians
as to the absolute preponderance of
self-interest.
Politically, its tendency is to unlimited
prolongation of the revolutionary position:
its spirit is that of blind hatred
to the
past: and it resists all attempts to
explain
it on Positive principles, with a view
of
disclosing the future. Atheism, therefore,
is not likely to lead to Positivism
except
in those who pass through it rapidly
as the
last and most shortlived of metaphysical
phases. And the wide diffusion of the
scientific
spirit in the present day makes this
passage
so easy that to arrive at maturity
without
accomplishing it, is a symptom of a
certain
mental weakness, which is often connected
with moral insufficiency, and is very
incompatible
with Positivism. Negation offers but
a feeble
and precarious basis for union: and
disbelief
in Monotheism is of itself no better
proof
of a mind fit to grapple with the questions
of the day than disbelief in Polytheism
or
Fetishism, which no one would maintain
to
be an adequate ground for claiming
intellectual
sympathy. The atheistic phase indeed
was
not really necessary, except for the
revolutionists
of the last century who took the lead
in
the movement towards radical regeneration
of society. The necessity has already
ceased;
for the decayed condition of the old
system
makes the need of regeneration palpable
to
all. Persistence in anarchy, and Atheism
is the most characteristic symptom
of anarchy,
is a temper of mind more unfavourable
to
the organic spirit, which ought by
this time
to have established its influence than
sincere
adhesion to the old forms. This latter
is
of course obstructive: but at least
it does
not hinder us from fixing our attention
upon
the great social problem. Indeed it
helps
us to do so: because it forces the
new philosophy
to throw aside every weapon of attack
against
the older faith except its own higher
capacity
of satisfying our moral and social
wants.
But in the Atheism maintained by many
metaphysicians
and scientific men of the present day,
Positivism.
instead of wholesome rivalry of this
kind,
will meet with nothing but barren resistance.
Anti-theological as such men may be,
they
feel unmixed repugnance for any attempts
at social regeneration, although their
efforts
in the last century had to some extent
prepared
the way for it. Far, then, from counting
upon their support, Positivists must
expect
to find them hostile: although from
the incoherence
of their opinions it will not be difficult
to reclaim those of them whose errors
are
not essentially due to pride.
*
The charge of Materialism which is
often
made against Positive philosophy is
of more
importance. It originates in the course
of
scientific study upon which the Positive
System is based. In answering the charge,
I need not enter into any discussion
of impenetrable
mysteries. Our theory of development
will
enable us to see distinctly the real
ground
of the confusion that exists upon the
subject.
Positive science was for a long time
limited
to the simplest subjects: it could
not reach
the highest except by a natural series
of
intermediate steps. As each of these
steps
is taken, the student is apt to be
influenced
too strongly by the methods and results
of
the preceding stage. Here, as it seems
to
me, lies the real source of that scientific
error which men have instinctively
blamed
as materialism. The name is just, because
the tendency indicated is one which
degrades
the higher subjects of thought by confounding
them with the lower. It was hardly
possible
that this usurpation by one science
of the
domain of another should have been
wholly
avoided. For since the more special
phenomena
do really depend upon the more general,
it
is perfectly legitimate for each science
to exercise a certain deductive influence
upon that which follows it in the scale.
By such influence the special inductions
of that science were rendered more
coherent.
The result, however, is that each of
the
sciences has to undergo a long struggle
against
the encroachments of the one preceding
it;
a struggle which, even in the case
of the
subjects which have been studied longest,
is not yet over. Nor can it entirely
cease
until the controlling influence of
sound
philosophy be established over the
whole
scale, introducing juster views of
the relations
of its several parts, about which at
present
there is such irrational confusion.
Thus it appears that Materialism is
a danger
inherent in the mode in which the scientific
studies necessary as a preparation
for Positivism
were pursued. Each science tended to
absorb
the one next to it, on the ground of
having
reached the positive stage earlier
and more
thoroughly. The evil then is really
deeper
and more extensive than is imagined
by most
of those who deplore it. It passes
generally
unnoticed except in the highest class
of
subjects. These doubtless are more
seriously
affected, inasmuch as they undergo
the encroaching
process from all the rest; but we find
the
same thing in different degrees, in
every
step of the scientific scale. Even
the lowest
step, Mathematics, is no exception,
though
its position would seem at first sight
to
exempt it. To a philosophic eye there
is
Materialism in the common tendency
of mathematicians
at the present day to absorb Geometry
or
Mechanics into the Calculus, as well
as in
the more evident encroachrnents of
Mathematics
upon Physics, of Physics upon Chemistry,
of Chemistry, which is more frequent,
upon
Biology, or lastly in the common tendency
of the best biologists to look upon
Sociology
as a mere corollary of their own science.
In all cases it is the same fundamental
error:
that is, an exaggerated use of deductive
reasoning; and in all it is attended
with
the same result; that the higher studies
are in constant danger of being disorganised
by the indiscriminate application of
the
lower. All scientific specialists at
the
present time are more or less materialists,
according as the phenomena studied
by them
are more or less simple and general.
Geometricians,
therefore are more liable to the error
than
any others; they all aim consciously
or otherwise
at a synthesis in which the most elementary
studies, those of Number, Space, and
Motion,
are made to regulate all the rest.
But the
biologists who resist this encroachment
most
energetically, are often guilty of
the same
mistake. They not unfrequently attempt,
for
instance, to explain all sociological
facts
by the influence of climate and race,
which
are purely secondary; thus showing
their
ignorance of the fundamental laws of
Sociology,
which can only be discovered by a series
of direct inductions from history.
This philosophical estimate of Materialism
explains how it is that it has been
brought
as a charge against Positivism, and
at the
same time proves the deep injustice
of the
charge. Positivism, far from countenancing
so dangerous an error, is, as we have
seen,
the only philosophy which can completely
remove it. The error arises from certain
tendencies which are in themselves
legitimate,
but which have been carried too far;
and
Positivism satisfies these tendencies
in
their due measure. Hitherto the evil
has
remained unchecked, except by the theological-metaphysical
spirit, which, by giving rise to what
is
called Spiritualism, has rendered a
very
valuable service. But useful as it
has been,
it could not arrest the active growth
of
Materialism, which has assumed in the
eyes
of modern thinkers something of a progressive
character, from having been so long
connected
with the cause of resistance to a retrograde
system. Notwithstanding all the protests
of the spiritualists, the lower sciences
have encroached upon the higher to
an extent
that seriously impairs their independence
and their value. But Positivism meets
the
difficulty far more effectually. It
satisfies
and reconciles all that is really tenable
in the rival claims of both Materialism
and
Spiritualism; and, having done this,
it discards
them both. It holds the one to be as
dangerous
to Order as the other to Progress.
This result is an immediate consequence
of
the establishment of the encyclopaedic
scale,
in which each science retains its own
proper
sphere of induction, while deductively
it
remains subordinate to the science
which
precedes it. But what really decides
the
matter is the fact that such paramount
importance,
both logically and scientifically,
is given
by Positive Philosophy to social questions.
For these are the questions in which
the
influence of Materialism is most mischievous,
and also in which it is most easily
introduced.
A system therefore which gives them
the precedence
over all other questions must hold
Materialism
to be quite as obstructive as Spiritualism,
since both are alike an obstacle to
the progress
of that science for the sake of which
all
other sciences are studied. Further
advance
in the work of social regeneration
implies
the elimination of both of them, because
it cannot proceed without exact knowledge
of the laws of moral and social phenomena.
In the next chapter I shall have to
speak
of the mischievous effects of Materialism
upon the Art or practice of social
life.
It leads to a misconception of the
most fundamental
principle of that Art, namely, the
systematic
separation of spiritual and temporal
power.
To maintain that separation, to carry
out
on a more satisfactory basis the admirable
attempt made in the Middle Ages by
the Catholic
Church, is the most important of political
questions. Thus the antagonism of Positivism
to Materialism rests upon political
no less
than upon philosophical grounds.
With the view of securing a dispassionate
Consideration of this subject, and
of avoiding
all Confusion, I have laid no stress
upon
the charge of immorality that is so
often
brought against Materialism. The reproach,
even when made Sincerely, is constantly
belied
by experience, indeed it is inconsistent
with all that we know of human nature.
Our
opinions, whether right or wrong, have
not,
fortunately, the absolute power over
our
feelings and conduct which is commonly
attributed
to them. Materialism has been provisionally
connected with the whole movement of
emancipation,
and it has therefore often been found
in
common with the noblest aspirations.
That
connection, however, has now ceased;
and
it must be owned that even in the most
favourable
cases this error, purely intellectual
though
it be, has to a certain extent always
checked
the free play of our nobler instincts,
by
leading men to ignore or misconceive
moral
phenomena, which were left unexplained
by
its crude hypothesis. Cabanis gave
a striking
example of this tendency in his unfortunate
attack upon mediaeval chivalry. Cabanis
was
a philosopher whose moral nature was
as pure
and sympathetic as his intellect was
elevated
and enlarged. Yet the materialism of
his
day had entirely blinded him to the
beneficial
results of the attempts made by the
most
energetic of our ancestors to institute
the
Worship of Woman.
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