Introduction B. The Relation of Philosophy
to Other Departments of Knowledge
2. Separation of Philosophy from other
Allied
Departments of Knowledge.
The history of the other Sciences,
of culture
and above all the history of art and
of religion
are, partly in regard to the elements
contained
in them, and partly to their particular
objects,
related to the history of Philosophy.
It
is through this relationship that the
treatment
of the history of Philosophy has been
so
confused. If it is to concern itself
with
the possession of culture generally
and then
with scientific culture, and then again
with
popular myths and the dogmas contained
only
in them, and yet farther with the religious
reflections which are already thoughts
of
a speculative kind, and which make
their
appearance in them, no bounds are left
to
Philosophy at all. This is so, partly
on
account of the amount of material itself
and the labour required in working
it up
and preparing it, and partly because
it is
in immediate connection with so much
else.
But the separation must not be made
arbitrarily
or as by chance, but must be derived
from
fundamental determinations. If we merely
look at the name of Philosophy, all
this
matter will pertain to its history.
I shall speak of this material from
three
points of view, for three related aspects
are to be eliminated and separated
from Philosophy.
The first of these is that which is
generally
considered to be the domain of science,
and
in which are sound the beginnings of
understanding
thought. The second region is that
of mythology
and religion; the relation of Philosophy
to them seems often to be inimical
both in
the time of the Greeks and of the Christians.
The third is that of philosophizing
and the
metaphysics of the understanding. While
we
distinguish what is related to Philosophy,
we must also take note of the elements
in
this related matter which belong to
the Notion
of Philosophy, but which appear to
us to
be partially separated from it: and
thus
we may become acquainted with the Notion
of Philosophy.
a. Relation of Philosophy to Scientific
Knowledge.
Knowledge and thought certainly form
the
element of whatever has to do with
particular
sciences as they form the element of
Philosophy;
but their subjects are mainly finite
subjects
and appearance. A collection of facts
known
about this content is by its nature
excluded
from Philosophy: neither this content
nor
such a form has anything to do with
it. But
even if the sciences are systematic
and contain
universal principles and laws from
which
they proceed, they are still related
to a
limited circle of objects. The ultimate
principles
are assumed as are the objects themselves;
that is, the outward experience or
the feelings
of the heart, natural or educated sense
of
right and duty, constitute the source
from
which they are created. Logic and the
determinations
and principles of thought in general
are
in their methods assumed.
The forms of thought or the points
of view
and principles which hold good in the
sciences
and constitute the ultimate support
of all
their matter, are not peculiar to them,
but
are common to the condition and culture
of
the time and of the people. This culture
consists mainly in the general ideas
and
aims, in the whole extent of the particular
intellectual powers dominating consciousness
and life. Our consciousness has these
ideas
and allows them to be considered ultimate
determinations; it makes use of them
as guiding
and connecting links, but does not
know them
and does not even make them the objects
of
its consideration. To give an abstract
example,
each act of consciousness has and requires
the whole abstract thought-determination
of Being. "The sun is in the heavens,
the bunch of grapes is ripe,"
and so
on into infinitude. Again, in a higher
culture,
such relations as those of cause and
effect
are involved, as also those of force
and
its manifestation. All its knowledge
and
ideas are permeated and governed by
a metaphysic
such as this; it is the net in which
all
the concrete matter which occupies
mankind
in action and in impulses, is grasped.
But
this web and its knots in our ordinary
consciousness
are sunk into a manifold material,
for it
contains the objects and interests
which
we know and which we have before us.
These
common threads are not drawn up and
made
explicitly the objects of our reflection.
We Germans seldom now count general
scientific
knowledge as Philosophy. And yet traces
of
this are found, as for instance, in
the fact
that the philosophic Faculty contains
all
the Sciences which have not as their
immediate
aim the Church and State. In connection
with
this, the significance of the name
of philosophy,
which is even now an important matter
of
discussion in England, comes in question.
Natural Sciences are in England called
Philosophy.
A "Philosophic Journal" in
England,
edited by Thompson, treats of Chemistry,
Agriculture, Manuring, Husbandry, Technology,
like Hermbstädt's Journal, and gives
inventions
connected therewith. The English call
physical
instruments, such as the barometer
and thermometer,
philosophical instruments. Theories
too,
and especially morality and the moral
sciences,
which are derived from the feelings
of the
human heart or from experience, are
called
Philosophy, and finally this is also
so with
the theories and principles of Political
Economy. And thus at least in England,
is
the name of Philosophy respected. Some
time
ago a banquet took place under the
presidency
of Lord Liverpool, at which the minister
Canning was also present. The latter
in returning
thanks congratulated England in having
philosophic
principles of government there brought
into
operation. There, at least, Philosophy
is
no by-word.
In the first beginnings of culture,
however,
we are more often met by this admixture
of
Philosophy and general knowledge. There
comes
a time to a nation when mind applies
itself
to universal objects, when, for example,
in seeking to bring natural things
under
general modes of understanding, it
tries
to learn their causes. Then it is said
that
a people begins to philosophize, for
this
content has thought in common with
Philosophy.
At such a time we find deliverances
about
all the common events of Nature, as
we also
find intellectual maxims, moral sentences,
general principles respecting morality,
the
will, duty, and the like, and those
who expressed
them have been called wise men or philosophers.
Thus in the beginnings of Greek Philosophy
we find the seven sages and the Ionic
Philosophers.
From them a number of ideas and discoveries
are conveyed to us which seem like
philosophic
propositions. Thus Thales, amongst
others,
has explained that the eclipse of sun
and
moon is due to the intervention of
the moon
or earth. This is called a theorem.
Pythagoras
found out the principle of the harmony
of
sounds. Others have had ideas about
the stars:
the heavens were supposed to be composed
of perforated metal, by which we see
throughout
the empyrean region, the eternal fire
which
surrounds the world. Such propositions
as
products of the understanding, do not
belong
to the history of Philosophy, although
they
imply that the merely sensuous gaze
has been
left behind as also the representation
of
those objects by the imagination only.
Earth
and heaven thus become unpeopled with
gods,
because the understanding distinguishes
things
in their outward and natural qualities
from
Mind.
In a later time the epoch of the revival
in the sciences is as noteworthy in
this
respect. General principles regarding,
the
state, &c., were given expression
to,
and in them a philosophic side cannot
be
mistaken. To this place the philosophic
systems
of Hobbes and Descartes belong: the
writings
of the latter contain philosophic principles,
but his Philosophy of Nature is quite
empirical.
Huge Grotius composed an international
law
in which what was historically held
by the
people as law, the consensus gentium,
was
a main element. Though earlier, medicine
was a collection of isolated facts
and a
theosophic combination mixed up with
astrology,
&c. (it is not so long ago since
cures
were effected by sacred relics), a
mode of
regarding nature came into vogue according
to which men went forth to discover
the laws
and forces of Nature. The a priori
reasoning
regarding natural things, according
to the
metaphysics of the Scholastic Philosophy
or to Religion, has now been given
up. The
Philosophy of Newton contains nothing
but
Natural Science, that is, the knowledge
of
the laws, forces, and general constitution
of Nature, derived from observation
and from
experience. However much this may seem
to
be contrary to the principle of Philosophy,
it has in common with it the fact that
the
bases of both are universal, and still
further
that I have made this experience, that
it
rests on my consciousness and obtains
its
significance through me.
This form is in its general aspect
antagonistic
to the positive, and has come forward
as
particularly opposed to Religion and
to that
which is positive in it. If, in the
Middle
Ages, the Church had its dogmas as
universal
truths, man, on the contrary, has now
obtained
from the testimony of his "own
thought,"
feeling and ideas, a mistrust of these.
It
is merely to be remarked of this that
"my
own thought" is in itself a pleonasm,
because each individual must think
for himself,
and no one can do so for another. Similarly
this principle has turned against the
recognized
constitutions and has sought different
principles
instead, by them to correct the former.
Universal
principles of the State have now been
laid
down, while earlier, because religion
was
positive, the ground of obedience of
subjects
to princes and of all authority were
also
so. Kings, as the anointed of the Lord,
in
the sense that Jewish kings were so,
derived
their power from God, and had to give
account
to Him alone, because all authority
is given
by God. So far theology and jurisprudence
were on the whole fixed and positive
sciences,
wherever this positive character might
have
been derived. Against this external
authority
reflection has been brought to bear,
and
thus, especially in England, the source
of
public and civil law became no longer
mere
authority derived from God like the
Mosaic
Law. For the authority of kings other
justification
was sought, such as the end implied
in the
State, the good of the people. This
forms
quite another source of truth, and
it is
opposed to that which is revealed,
given
and positive. This substitution of
another
ground than that of authority has been
called
philosophizing.
The knowledge was then a knowledge
of what
is finite - the world of the content
of knowledge.
Because this content proceeded through
the
personal insight of human reason, man
has
become independent in his actions.
This independence
of the Mind is the true moment of Philosophy,
although the Notion of Philosophy through
this formal determination, which limits
it
to finite objects, has not yet been
exhausted.
This independent thought is respected,
has
been called human wisdom or worldly
wisdom,
for it has had what is earthly as its
object,
and it took its origin in the world.
This
was the meaning of Philosophy, and
men did
rightly to call it worldly wisdom.
Frederick
von Schlegel revived this by-name for
Philosophy,
and desired to indicate by it that
what concerns
higher spheres, such as religion, must
be
kept apart; and he had many followers.
Philosophy,
indeed, occupies itself with finite
things,
but, according to Spinoza, as resting
in
the divine Idea: it has thus the same
end
as religion. To the finite sciences
which
are now separated also from Philosophy,
the
Churches objected that they led men
away
from God, since they have as objects
only
what is finite. This defect in them,
conceived
of from the point of view of content,
leads
us to the second department allied
to Philosophy,
that is, to Religion.
b. Relation of Philosophy to Religion.
As the first department of knowledge
was
related to Philosophy principally by
means
of formal and independent knowledge,
Religion,
though in its content quite different
from
this first kind or sphere of knowledge,
is
through it related to Philosophy. Its
object
is not the earthly and worldly, but
the infinite.
In the case of art and still more in
that
of Religion, Philosophy has in common
a content
composed entirely of universal objects;
they
constitute the mode in which the highest
Idea is existent for the unphilosophical
feeling, the perceiving and imagining
consciousness.
Inasmuch as in the progress of culture
in
time the manifestation of Religion
precedes
the appearance of Philosophy, this
circumstance
must really be taken account of, and
the
conditions requisite for beginning
the History
of Philosophy have to depend on this,
because
it has to be shown in how far what
pertains
to Religion is to be excluded from
it, and
that a commencement must not be made
with
Religion.
In Religion, races of men have undoubtedly
expressed their idea of the nature
of the
world, the substance of nature and
of intellect
and the relation of man thereto. Absolute
Being is here the object of their consciousness;
and as such, is for them pre-eminently
the
"other," a "beyond,"
nearer or further off, more or less
friendly
or frightful and alarming. In the act
and
forms of worship this opposition is
removed
by man, and he raises himself to the
consciousness
of unity with his Being, to the feeling
of,
or dependence on, the Grace of God,
in that
God has reconciled mankind to Himself.
In
conception, with the Greeks, for instance,
this existence is to man one which
is already
in and for itself and friendly, and
thus
worship is but the enjoyment of this
unity.
This existence is now reason which
is existent
in and for itself, the universal and
concrete
substance, the Mind whose first cause
is
objective to itself in consciousness;
it
thus is a representation of this last
in
which not only reason in general, but
the
universal infinite reason is. We must,
therefore,
comprehend Religion, as Philosophy,
before
everything else, which means to know
and
apprehend it in reason; for it is the
work
of self-revealing reason and is the
highest
form of reason. Such ideas as that
priests
have framed a people's Religion in
fraud
and self-interest are consequently
absurd;
to regard Religion as an arbitrary
matter
or a deception is as foolish as it
is perverted.
Priests have often profaned Religion
- the
possibility of which is a consequence
of
the external relations and temporal
existence
of Religion. It can thus, in this external
connection, be laid hold of here and
there,
but because it is Religion, it is really
that which stands firm against finite
ends
and their complications and constitutes
a
region exalted high above them. This
region
of Mind is really the Holy place of
Truth
itself, the Holy place in which are
dissolved
the remaining illusions of the sensuous
world,
of finite ideas and ends, and of the
sphere
of opinion and caprice.
Inasmuch as it really is the content
of
religions, this rational matter might
now
seem to be capable of being abstracted
and
expressed as a number of historical
theorems.
Philosophy stands on the same basis
as Religion
and has the same object - the universal
reason
existing in and for itself; Mind desires
to make this object its own, as is
done with
Religion in the act and form of worship.
But the form, as it is present in Religion,
is different from what is found to
be contained
in Philosophy, and on this account
a history
of Philosophy is different from a history
of Religion. Worship is only the operation
of reflection; Philosophy attempts
to bring
about the reconciliation by means of
thinking
knowledge, because Mind desires to
take up
its Being into itself. Philosophy is
related
in the form of thinking consciousness
to
its object; with Religion it is different.
But the distinction between the two
should
not be conceived of so abstractly as
to make
it seem that thought is only in Philosophy
and not in Religion. The latter has
likewise
ideas and universal thoughts. Because
both
are so nearly related, it is an old
tradition
in the history of Philosophy to deduce
Philosophy
from Persian, Indian, or similar philosophy,
a custom which is still partly retained
in
all histories of Philosophy. For this
reason,
too, it is a legend universally believed,
that Pythagoras, for instance, received
his
Philosophy from India and Egypt; the
fame
of the wisdom of these people, which
wisdom
is understood also to contain Philosophy,
is an old one. The Oriental ideas and
religious
worship which prevailed throughout
the West
up to the time of the Roman Empire,
likewise
bear the name of Oriental Philosophy.
The
Christian Religion and Philosophy are
thought
of in the Christian world, as more
definitely
divided; in these Eastern days, on
the other
hand, Religion and Philosophy are still
conceived
of as one in so far as that the content
has
remained in the form in which it is
Philosophy.
Considering the prevalence of these
ideas
and in order to have a definite limit
to
the relations between a history of
Philosophy
and religious ideas, it is desirable
to note
some further considerations as to the
form
which separates religious ideas from
philosophical
theorems.
Religion has not only universal thought
as inward content implicite contained
in
its myths, ideas, imaginations and
in its
exact and positive histories, so that
we
require first of all to dig this content
out of such myths in the form of theorems,
but it often has its content explicite
in
the form of thought. In the Persian
and Indian
Religions very deep, sublime and speculative
thoughts are even expressed. Indeed,
in Religion
we even meet philosophies directly
expressed,
as in the Philosophy of the Fathers.
The
scholastic Philosophy really was Theology;
there is found in it a union or, if
you will,
a mixture of Theology and Philosophy
which
may very well puzzle us. The question
which
confronts us on the one side is, how
Philosophy
differs from Theology, as the science
of
Religion, or from Religion as consciousness?
And then, in how far have we in the
history
of Philosophy to take account of what
pertains
to Religion? For the reply to this
last question
three aspects have again to be dealt
with;
first of all the mythical and historical
aspect of Religion and its relation
to Philosophy;
in the second place the theorems and
speculative
thoughts directly expressed in Religion;
and in the third place we must speak
of Philosophy
within Theology.
A. Difference between Philosophy and
Religion.
The consideration of the mythical aspect
of Religion or the historical and positive
side generally, is interesting, because
from
it the difference in respect of form
will
show in what this content is antagonistic
to Philosophy. Indeed, taken in its
connections,
its difference passes into apparent
inconsistency.
This diversity is not only found in
our contemplation
but forms a very definite element in
history.
It is required by Philosophy that it
should
justify its beginning and its manner
of knowledge,
and Philosophy has thus placed itself
in
opposition to Religion. On the other
hand
Philosophy is combated and condemned
by Religion
and by the Churches. The Greek popular
religion
indeed, proscribed several philosophers;
but the opposition is even more apparent
in the Christian Church. The question
is
thus not only whether regard is to
be paid
to Religion in the history of Philosophy,
for it has been the case that Philosophy
has paid attention to Religion, and
the latter
to the former. Since neither of the
two has
allowed the other to rest undisturbed,
we
are not permitted to do so either.
Of their
relations, therefore, we must speak
definitely,
openly and honestly - aborder la question,
as the French say. We must not hesitate,
as if such a discussion were too delicate,
nor try to help ourselves out by beating
about the bush; nor must we seek to
find
evasions or shifts, so that in the
end no
one can tell what we mean. We must
not seem
to wish to leave Religion alone. This
is
nothing else than to appear to wish
to conceal
the fact that Philosophy has directed
its
efforts against Religion. Religion,
that
is, the theologians, are indeed the
cause
of this; they ignore Philosophy, but
only
in order that they may not be contradicted
in their arbitrary reasoning.
It may appear as if Religion demanded
that
man should abstain from thinking of
universal
matters and Philosophy because they
are merely
worldly wisdom and represent human
operations.
Human reason is here opposed to the
divine.
Men are, indeed, well accustomed to
a distinction
between divine teaching and laws and
human
power and inventions, such that under
the
latter everything is comprehended which
in
its manifestation proceeds from the
consciousness,
the intelligence or the will of mankind
which
makes all this opposed to the knowledge
of
God and to things rendered divine by
divine
revelation. But the depreciation of
what
is human expressed by this opposition
is
then driven further still, inasmuch
as while
it implies the further view that man
is certainly
called upon to admire the wisdom of
God in
Nature, and that the grain, the mountains,
the cedars of Lebanon in all their
glory,
the song of the birds in the bough,
the superior
skill and the domestic instincts of
animals
are all magnified as being the work
of God,
it also implies that the wisdom, goodness
and justice of God is, indeed, pointed
out
in human affairs, but not so much in
the
disposition or laws of man or in actions
performed voluntarily and in the ordinary
progress of the world, as in human
destiny,
that is, in that which is external
and even
arbitrary in relation to knowledge
and free-will.
Thus what is external and accidental
is regarded
as emphatically the work of God, and
what
has its root in will and conscience,
as the
work of man. The harmony between outward
relations, circumstances and events
and the
general aims of man is certainly something
of a higher kind, but this is the case
only
for the reason that this harmony is
considered
with respect to ends which are human
and
not natural such as those present in
the
life of a sparrow which finds its food.
But
if the summit of everything is found
in this,
that God rules over Nature, what then
is
free-will? Does He not rule over what
is
spiritual, or rather since He himself
is
spiritual, in what is spiritual? and
is not
the ruler over or in the spiritual
region
higher than a ruler over or in Nature?
But
is that admiration of God as revealed
in
natural things as such, in trees and
animals
as opposed to what is human, far removed
from the religion of the ancient Egyptians,
which derived its knowledge of what
is divine
from the ibis, or from cats and dogs?
or
does it differ from the deplorable
condition
of the ancient and the modern Indians,
who
held and still hold cows and apes in
reverence,
and are scrupulously concerned for
the maintenance
and nourishment of these animals, while
they
allow men to suffer hunger; who would
commit
a crime by removing the pangs of starvation
through their slaughter or even by
partaking
of their food?
It seems to be expressed by such a
view
that human action as regards Nature
is ungodly;
that the operations of Nature are divine
operations, but what man produces is
ungodly.
But the productions of human reason
might,
at least, be esteemed as much as Nature.
In so doing, however, we cede less
to reason
than is permitted to us. If the life
and
the action of animals be divine, human
action
must stand much higher, and must be
worthy
to be called divine in an infinitely
higher
sense. The pre-eminence of human thought
must forthwith be avowed. Christ says
on
this subject (Matt. vi. 26-30), "Behold
the fowls of the air," (in which
we
may also include the Ibis and the Kokilas,)
"are ye not much better than they?
Wherefore,
if God so clothe the grass of the field,
which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast
into
the oven, shall He not much more clothe
you?"
The superiority of man, of the image
of God,
to animals and plants is indeed implicitly
and explicitly established, but in
asking
wherein the divine element is to be
sought
and seen - in making use of such expressions
- none of the superior, but only the
inferior
nature, is indicated. Similarly, in
regard
to the knowledge of God, it is remarkable
that Christ places the knowledge of
and faith
in Him not in any admiration of the
creatures
of nature nor in marvelling at any
so-called
dominion over them, nor in signs and
wonders,
but in the witness of the Spirit. Spirit
is infinitely high above Nature, in
it the
Divine Nature manifests itself more
than
in Nature.
But the form in which the universal
content
which is in and for itself, first belongs
to Philosophy is the form of Thought,
the
form of the universal itself. In Religion,
however, this content is for immediate
and
outward perception, and further for
idea
and sensation through art. The import
is
for the sensuous nature; it is the
evidence
of the Mind which comprehends that
content.
To make this clearer, the difference
must
be recollected between that which we
are
and have, and how we know the same
- that
is, in what manner we know it and have
it
as our object. This distinction is
an infinitely
important matter, and it alone is concerned
in the culture of races and of individuals.
We are men and have reason; what is
human,
or above all, what is rational vibrates
within
us, both in our feelings, mind and
heart
and in our subjective nature generally.
It
is in this corresponding vibration
and in
the corresponding motion effected that
a
particular content becomes our own
and is
like our own. The manifold nature of
the
determinations which it contains is
concentrated
and wrapt up within this inward nature
-
an obscure motion of Mind in itself
and in
universal substantiality. The content
is
thus directly identical with the simple
abstract
certainty of ourselves and with self-consciousness.
But Mind, because it is Mind, is as
truly
consciousness. What is confined within
itself
in its simplicity must be objective
to itself
and must come to be known. The whole
difference
lies in the manner and method of this
objectivity,
and hence in the manner and method
of consciousness.
This method and manner extends from
the
simple expression of the dullness of
mere
feeling to the most objective form,
to that
which is in and for itself objective,
to
Thought. The most simple, most formal
objectivity
is the expression of a name for that
feeling
and for the state of mind according
with
it, as seen in these words, worship,
prayer,
etc. Such. expressions as "Let
us pray"
and "Let us worship" are
simply
the recalling of that feeling. But
"Let
us think about God" brings with
it something
more; it expresses the absolutely embracing
content of that substantial feeling,
and
the object, which differs from mere
sensation
as subjective self-conscious activity;
or
which is content distinguished from
this
activity as form. This object, however,
comprehending
in itself the whole substantial content,
is itself still undeveloped and entirely
undetermined. To develop that content,
to
comprehend, express and bring to consciousness
its relations, is the commencement,
creation
and manifestation of Religion. The
form in
which this developed content first
possesses
objectivity is that of immediate perception,
of sensuous idea or of a more defined
idea
deduced from natural, physical or mental
manifestations and conditions.
Art brings about this consciousness,
in
that it gives permanence and cohesion
to
the fleeting visible appearance through
which
objectivity passes in sensation. The
shapeless,
sacred stone, the more place, or whatever
it is to which the desire for objectivity
first attaches itself, receives from
art,
form, feature, determinate character
and
content which can be known and which
is now
present for consciousness. Art has
thus become
the instructress of the people. This
was
the case with Homer and Hesiod for
instance,
who, according to Herodotus (II. 53),
"Made
the Greeks their Theogony," because
they elevated and consolidated ideas
and
traditions in unison with the spirit
of the
people, wherever and in whatever confusion
they might be found, into definite
images
and ideas. This is not the art which
merely
gives expression in its own way to
the content,
already perfectly expressed, of a Religion
which in thought, idea and words has
already
attained complete development; that
is to
say, which puts its matter into stone,
canvas,
or words as is done by modern art,
which,
in dealing either with religious or
with
historical objects, takes as its groundwork
ideas and thoughts which are already
there.
The consciousness of this Religion
is rather
the product of thinking imagination,
or of
thought which comprehends through the
organ
of imagination alone and finds expression
in its forms.
If the infinite Thought, the absolute
Mind,
has revealed and does reveal itself
in true
Religion, that in which it reveals
itself
is the heart, the representing consciousness
and the understanding of what is finite.
Religion is not merely directed to
every
sort of culture. "To the poor
is the
Gospel preached," but it must
as being
Religion expressly directed towards
heart
and mind, enter into the sphere of
subjectivity
and consequently into the region of
finite
methods of representation. In the perceiving
and, with reference to perceptions,
reflecting
consciousness, man possesses for the
speculative
relations belonging to the absolute,
only
finite relations, whether taken in
an exact
or in a symbolical sense, to serve
him to
comprehend and express those qualities
and
relationships of the infinite.
In Religion as the earliest and the
immediate
revelations of God, the form of representation
and of reflecting finite thought cannot
be
the only form in which He gives existence
to Himself in consciousness, but it
must
also appear in this form, for such
alone
is comprehensible to religious consciousness.
To make this clearer, something must
be said
as to what is the meaning of comprehension.
On the one hand, as has been remarked
above,
there is in it the substantial basis
of content,
which, coming to Mind as its absolute
Being,
affects it in its innermost, finds
an answering
chord, and thereby obtains from it
confirmation.
This is the first absolute condition
necessary
to comprehension; what is not implicitly
there cannot come within it or be for
it
- that is, a content which is infinite
and
eternal. For the substantial as infinite,
is just that which has no limitations
in
that to which it is related, for else
it
would be limited and not the true substantial.
And Mind is that alone which is not
implicit,
which is finite and external; for what
is
finite and external is no longer what
is
implicit but what is for another, what
has
entered into a relation. But, on the
other
hand, because the true and eternal
must be
for Mind, become known, that is, enter
into
finite consciousness, the Mind for
which
it is, is finite and the manner of
its consciousness
consists in the ideas and forms of
finite
things and relations. These forms are
familiar
and well known to consciousness, the
ordinary
mode of finality, which mode it has
appropriated
to itself, having constituted it the
universal
medium of its representation, into
which
everything that comes to consciousness
must
be resolved in order that it may gave
and
know itself therein.
The assertion of Religion is that the
manifestation
of Truth which is revealed to us through
it, is one which is given to man from
outside,
and on this account it is also asserted
that
man has humbly to assent to it, because
human
reason cannot attain to it by itself.
The
assertion of positive Religion is that
its
truths exist without having their source
known, so that the content as given,
is one
which is above and beyond reason. By
means
of some prophet or other divine instrument,
the truth is made known: just as Ceres
and
Triptolemus who introduced agriculture
and
matrimony, for so doing were honoured
by
the Greeks, men have rendered thanks
to Moses
and to Mahomed. Through whatever individual
the Truth may have been given, the
external
matter is historical, and this is indifferent
to the absolute content and to itself,
since
the person is not the import of the
doctrine.
But the Christian Religion has this
characteristic
that the Person of Christ in His character
of the Son of God, Himself partakes
of the
nature of God. If Christ be for Christians
only a teacher like Pythagoras, Socrates
or Columbus, there would be here no
universal
divine content, no revelation or knowledge
imparted about the Nature of God, and
it
is regarding this alone that we desire
to
obtain knowledge.
Whatever stage it may itself have reached,
the Truth must undoubtedly in the first
place
come to men from without as a present
object,
sensuously represented, just as Moses
saw
God in the fiery bush, and as the Greek
brought
the god into conscious being by means
of
sculpture or other representations.
But there
is the further fact, that neither in
Religion
nor in Philosophy does this external
form
remain, nor can it so remain. A form
of the
imagination or an historical form,
such as
Christ, must for the spirit be spiritual;
and thus it ceases to be an external
matter,
seeing that the form of externality
is dead.
We must know God "in Spirit and
in Truth."
He is the absolute and actual Spirit.
The
relation borne by the human spirit
to this
Spirit involve the following considerations.
When man determines to adopt a Religion
he asks himself, "What is the
ground
of my faith?" The Christian Religion
replies - "The Spirit's witness
to its
content." Christ reproved the
Pharisees
for wishing to see miracles; the Spirit
alone
comprehends Spirit, the miracle is
only a
presentiment of that Spirit; and if
the miracle
be the suspension of natural laws,
Spirit
itself is the real miracle in the operations
of nature. Spirit in itself is merely
this
comprehension of itself. There is only
one
Spirit, the universal divine Spirit.
Not
that it is merely everywhere; it is
not to
be comprehended as what is common to
everything,
as an external totality, to be found
in many
or in all individuals, which are essentially
individuals; but it must be understood
as
that which permeates through everything,
as the unity of itself and of a semblance
of its "other," as of the
subjective
and particular. As universal, it is
object
to itself, and thus determined as a
particular,
it is this individual: but as universal
it
reaches over this its "other,"
so that its "other" and itself
are comprised in one. The true universality
seems, popularly expressed, to be two
- what
is common to the universal itself and
to
the particular. A division is formed
in the
understanding of itself, and the Spirit
is
the unity of what is understood and
the understanding
person. The divine Spirit which is
comprehended,
is objective; the subjective Spirit
comprehends.
But Spirit is not passive, or else
the passivity
can be momentary only; there is one
spiritual
substantial unity. The subjective Spirit
is the active, but the objective Spirit
is
itself this activity; the active subjective
Spirit is that which comprehends the
divine,
and in its comprehension of it it is
itself
the divine Spirit. The relation of
Spirit
to self alone is the absolute determination;
the divine Spirit lives in its own
communion
and presence. This comprehension has
been
called Faith, but it is not an historical
faith; we Lutherans - I am a Lutheran
and
will remain the same - have only this
original
faith. This unity is not the Substance
of
Spinoza, but the apprehending Substance
in
self-consciousness which makes itself
eternal
and relates to universality. The talk
about
the limitations of human thought is
futile;
to know God is the only end of Religion.
The testimony of the Spirit to the
content
of Religion is itself Religion; it
is a testimony
that both bears witness and at the
same time
is that witness. The Spirit proves
itself,
and does so first in the proof; it
is only
proved because it proves itself and
shows
or manifests itself.
It has farther to be said, that this
testimony,
this inward stirring and self-consciousness,
reveals itself, while in the enshrouded
consciousness
of devotion it does not arrive at the
proper
consciousness of an object, but only
at the
consciousness of immersion in absolute
Being.
This permeating and permeated Spirit
now
enters into conception; God goes forth
into
the "other" and makes Himself
objective.
All that pertains to revelation and
its reception,
and which comes before us in mythology,
here
appears; everything which is historical
and
which belongs to what is positive has
here
its proper place. To speak more definitely,
we now have the Christ who came into
the
world nearly two thousand years ago.
But
He says, "I am with you even unto
the
ends of the earth; where two or three
are
gathered together in My Name, there
will
I be in the midst." I shall not
be seen
of you in the flesh, but "The
Spirit
of Truth will guide you into all Truth."
The external is not the true relation;
it
will disappear.
The two stages have here been given,
the
first of which is the stage of devotion,
of worship, such as that reached in
partaking
of the Communion. That is the perception
of the divine Spirit in the community
in
which the present, indwelling, living
Christ
as self-consciousness has attained
to actuality.
The second stage is that of developed
consciousness,
when the content becomes the object;
here
this present, indwelling Christ retreats
two thousand years to a small corner
of Palestine,
and is an individual historically manifested
far away at Nazareth or Jerusalem.
It is
the same thing in the Greek Religion
where
the god present in devotion changes
into
prosaic statues and marble; or in painting,
where this externality is likewise
arrived
at, when the god becomes mere canvas
or wood.
The Supper is, according to the Lutheran
conception, of Faith alone; it is a
divine
satisfaction, and is not adored as
if it
were the Host. Thus a sacred image
is no
more to us than is a stone or thing.
The
second point of view must indeed be
that
with which consciousness begins; it
must
start from the external comprehension
of
this form: it must passively accept
report
and take it up into memory. But if
it remain
where it is, that is the unspiritual
point
of view: to remain fixed in this second
standpoint
in this dead far-away historic distance,
is to reject the Spirit. The sins of
him
who lies against the Holy Ghost cannot
be
forgiven. That lie is the refusal to
be a
universal, to be holy, that is to make
Christ
become divided, separated, to make
Him only
another person as this particular person
in Judea; or else to say that He now
exists,
but only far away in Heaven, or in
some other
place, and not in present actual form
amongst
His people. The man who speaks of the
merely
finite, of merely human reason, and
of the
limits to mere reason, lies against
the Spirit,
for the Spirit as infinite and universal,
as self-comprehension, comprehends
itself
not in a "merely" nor in
limits,
nor in the finite as such. It has nothing
to do with this, for it comprehends
itself
within itself alone, in its infinitude.
If it be said of Philosophy, that it
makes
reality the subject of its knowledge,
the
principal point is that the reality
should
not be one outside of that of which
it is
the reality. For example, if from the
real
content of a book, I abstract the binding,
paper, ink, language, the many thousand
letters
that are contained in it, the simple
universal
content as reality, is not outside
of the
book. Similarly law is not outside
of the
individual, but it constitutes the
true Being
of the individual. The reality of my
Mind
is thus in my Mind itself and not outside
of it; it is my real Being, my own
substance,
without which I am without existence.
This
reality is, so to speak, the combustible
material which may be kindled and lit
up
by the universal reality as such as
objective;
and only so far as this phosphorus
is in
men, is comprehension, the kindling
and lighting
up, possible. Feeling, anticipation,
knowledge
of God, are only thus in men; without
such,
the divine Mind would not be the in
and for
itself Universal. Reality is itself
a real
content and not the destitute of content
and undetermined; yet, as the book
has other
content besides, there is in the individual
mind also a great amount of other matter
which belongs only to the manifestation
of
this reality, and the individual surrounded
with what is external, must be separated
from this existence. Since reality
is itself
Spirit and not an abstraction, "God
is not a God for the dead but for the
living,"
and indeed for living spirits.
The great Creator was alone And experienced
desire, Therefore He created Spirits,
Holy
mirrors of His holiness. The noblest
Being
He found no equal; From out the bowl
of all
the spiritual world, There sparkled
up to
Him infinitude.
Religion is also the point of view
from
which this existence is known. But
as regards
the different forms of knowledge existing
in Religion and Philosophy, Philosophy
appears
to be opposed to the conception in
Religion
that the universal mind first shows
itself
as external, in the objective mode
of consciousness.
Worship, commencing with the external,
then
turns against and abrogates it as has
just
been said, and thus Philosophy is justified
through the acts and forms of worship,
and
only does what they do. Philosophy
has to
deal with two different objects; first
as
in the Religion present in worship,
with
the substantial content, the spiritual
soul,
and secondly with bringing this before
consciousness
as object, but in the form of thought.
Philosophy
thinks and conceives of that which
Religion
represents as the object of consciousness,
whether it is as the work of the imagination
or as existent facts in history. The
form
of the knowledge of the object is,
in religious
consciousness, such as pertains to
the ordinary
idea, and is thus more or less sensuous
in
nature. In Philosophy we do not say
that
God begot a Son, which is a relation
derived
from natural life. Thought, or the
substance
of such a relation, is therefore still
recognized
in Philosophy. Since Philosophy thinks
its
object, it has the advantage of uniting
the
two stages of religious consciousness
- which
in Religion are different moments -
into
one unity in philosophic thought.
It is these two forms which are different
from one another and which, as opposed,
may
therefore seem to be mutually conflicting;
and it is natural and it necessarily
seems
to be the case, that on first definitely
coming to view they are so to speak
conscious
of their diversity, and hence at first
appear
as inimical to one another. The first
stage
in the order of manifestation is definite
existence, or a determinate Being-for-self
as opposed to the other. The later
form is
that Thought embraces itself in the
concrete,
immerses itself in itself, and Mind,
as such,
comes in it to consciousness. In the
earlier
stage, Mind is abstract, and in this
constraint
it knows itself to be different, and
in opposition
to the other. When it embraces itself
in
the concrete, it is no more simply
confined
in determinate existence, only knowing
or
possessing itself in that diversity,
but
it is the Universal which, inasmuch
as it
determines itself, contains its "other"
within itself. As concrete intelligence,
Mind thus comprehends the substantial
in
the form which seemed to differ from
it,
of which it had only grasped the outward
manifestation and had turned away from
it;
it recognizes itself in its inward
content,
and so it for the first time grasps
its object,
and deals justice to its opposite.
Generally speaking, the course of this
antithesis
in history is that Thought first of
all comes
forth within Religion, as not free
and in
separate manifestations. Secondly,
it strengthens
itself, feels itself to be resting
upon itself,
holds and conducts itself inimically
towards
the other form, and does not recognize
itself
therein. In the third place, it concludes
by acknowledging itself as in this
other.
Or else Philosophy has to begin with
carrying
on its work entirely on its own account,
isolating Thought from all popular
beliefs,
and taking for itself quite a different
field
of operation, a field for which the
world
of ordinary ideas lies quite apart,
so that
the two exist peacefully side by side,
or,
to put it better, so that no reflection
on
their opposition is arrived at. Just
as little
did the thought of reconciling them
occur,
since in the popular beliefs the same
content
appeared as in any external form other
than
the notion - the thought that is, of
explaining
and justifying popular belief, in order
thus
to be able again to express the conceptions
of free thought in the form of popular
religion.
Thus we see Philosophy first restrained
and confined within the range of the
Greek
heathen world; then resting upon itself,
it goes forth against popular religion
and
takes up an unfriendly attitude to
it, until
it grasps that religion in its innermost
and recognizes itself therein. Thus
the ancient
Greek philosophers generally respected
the
popular religion, or at least they
did not
oppose it, or reflect upon it. Those
coming
later, including even Xenophanes, handled
popular ideas most severely, and thus
many
so-called atheists made their appearance.
But as the spheres of popular conception
and abstract thought stood peacefully
side
by side, we also find Greek philosophers
of even a later period in development,
in
whose case speculative thought and
the act
of worship, as also the pious invocation
upon and sacrifice to the gods, coexist
in
good faith, and not in mere hypocrisy.
Socrates
was accused of teaching other gods
than those
belonging to the popular religion;
his daimonion
was indeed opposed to the principles
of Greek
morals and religion, but at the same
time
he followed quite honestly the usages
of
his religion, and we know besides that
his
last request was to ask his friends
to offer
a cock to Æesculapius - a desire quite
inconsistent
with his conclusions regarding the
existence
of God and above all regarding morality.
Plato declaimed against the poets and
their
gods. It was in a much later time that
the
Neo-platonists first recognized in
the popular
mythology rejected earlier by the philosophers,
the universal content; they transposed
and
translated it into what is significant
for
thought, and thus used mythology itself
as
a symbolical imagery for giving expression
to their formulas.
Similarly do we see in the Christian
Religion,
thought which is not independent first
placing
itself in conjunction with the form
belonging
to this Religion and acting within
it - that
is to say, taking the Religion as its
groundwork,
and proceeding from the absolute assumption
of the Christian doctrine. We see later
on
the opposition between so-called faith
and
so-called reason; when the wings of
thought
have become strengthened, the young
eaglet
flies away for himself to the sun of
Truth;
but like a bird of prey he turns upon
Religion
and combats it. Latest of all Philosophy
permits full justice to be done to
the content
of Religion through the speculative
Notion,
which is through Thought itself. For
this
end the Notion must have grasped itself
in
the concrete and penetrated to concrete
spirituality.
This must be the standpoint of the
Philosophy
of the present time; it has begun within
Christianity and can have no other
content
than the world-spirit. When that spirit
comprehends
itself in Philosophy, it also comprehends
itself in that form which formerly
was inimical
to Philosophy.
Thus Religion has a content in common
with
Philosophy the forms alone being different;
and the only essential point is that
the
form of the Notion should be so far
perfected
as to be able to grasp the content
of Religion.
The Truth is just that which has been
called
the mysteries of Religion. These constitute
the speculative element in Religion
such
as were called by the Neo-platonists
being
initiated, or being occupied with speculative
Notions. By mysteries is meant, superficially
speaking, the secret, what remains
such and
does not arrive at being known. But
in the
Eleusinian mysteries there was nothing
unknown;
all Athenians were initiated into them,
Socrates
alone shut himself out. Openly to make
them
known to strangers was the one thing
forbidden,
as indeed it was made a crime in the
case
of certain people. Such matters however,
as being holy, were not to be spoken
of.
Herodotus often expressly says (e.
g. ii.
45-47) that he would speak of the Egyptian
Divinities and mysteries in as far
as it
was pious so to do: he knew more, but
it
would be impious to speak of them.
In the
Christian Religion dogmas are called
mysteries.
They are that which man knows about
the Nature
of God. Neither is there anything mysterious
in this; it is known by all those who
are
partakers in that Religion, and these
are
thus distinguished from the followers
of
other Religions. Hence mystery here
signifies
nothing unknown, since all Christians
are
in the secret. Mysteries are in their
nature
speculative, mysterious certainly to
the
understanding but not to reason; they
are
rational, just in the sense of being
speculative.
The understanding does not comprehend
the
speculative which simply is the concrete
because it holds to the differences
in their
separation; their contradiction is
indeed
contained in the mystery, which, however,
is likewise the resolution of the same.
Philosophy, on the contrary, is opposed
to the so-called Rationalism of the
new Theology
which for ever keeps reason on its
lips,
but which is dry understanding only;
no reason
is recognizable in it as the moment
of independent
thought which really is abstract thought
and that alone. When the understanding
which
does not comprehend the truths of Religion,
calls itself the illuminating reason
and
plays the lord and master, it goes
astray.
Rationalism is opposed to Philosophy
in content
and form, for it has made the content
empty
as it has made the heavens, and has
reduced
all that is, to finite relations -
in its
form it is a reasoning process which
is not
free and which has no conceiving power.
The
supernatural in Religion is opposed
to rationalism,
and if indeed the latter is related
in respect
of the real content to Philosophy,
yet it
differs from it in form, for it has
become
unspiritual and wooden, looking for
its justification
to mere external authority. The scholastics
were not supernaturalists in this sense;
they knew the dogmas of the Church
in thought
and in conception. If Religion in the
inflexibility
of its abstract authority as opposed
to thought,
declares of it that "the gates
of Hell
shall not triumph over it," the
gates
of reason are stronger than the gates
of
Hell, not to overcome the Church but
to reconcile
itself to the Church. Philosophy, as
the
conceiving thought of this content,
has as
regards the idea of Religion, the advantage
of comprehending both sides - it comprehends
Religion and also comprehends both
rationalism
and supernaturalism and itself likewise.
But this is not the case on the other
side.
Religion from the standpoint of idea,
comprehends
only what stands on the same platform
as
itself, and not Philosophy, the Notion,
the
universal thought determinations. Often
no
injustice is done to a Philosophy when
its
opposition to Religion has been made
matter
of reproach; but often, too, a wrong
has
been inflicted where this is done from
the
religious point of view.
The form of Religion is necessary to
Mind
as it is in and for itself; it is the
form
of truth as it is for all men, and
for every
mode of consciousness. This universal
mode
is first of all for men in the form
of sensuous
consciousness, and then, secondly,
in the
intermingling of the form of the universal
with sensuous manifestation or reflection
- the representing consciousness, the
mythical,
positive and historical form, is that
pertaining
to the understanding. What is received
in
evidence of Mind only becomes object
to consciousness
when it appears in the form of the
understanding,
that is to say, consciousness must
first
be already acquainted with these forms
from
life and from experience. Now, because
thinking
consciousness is not the outward universal
form for all mankind, the consciousness
of
the true, the spiritual and the rational,
must have the form of Religion, and
this
is the universal justification of this
form.
We have here laid down the distinction
between
Philosophy and Religion, but taking
into
account what it is we wish to deal
with in
the history of Philosophy, there is
something
still which must be remarked upon,
and which
partly follows from what has been already
said. There is the question still confronting
us as to what attitude we must take
in reference
to this matter in the history of Philosophy.
B. The religious element to be excluded
from the content of the History of
Philosophy.
i. Mythology first meets us, and it
seems
as if it might be drawn within the
history
of Philosophy. It is indeed a product
of
the imagination, but not of caprice,
although
that also has its place here. But the
main
part of mythology is the work of the
imaginative
reason, which makes reality its object,
but
yet has no other means of so doing,
than
that of sensuous representation, so
that
the gods make their appearance in human
guise.
Mythology can now be studied for art,
&c.
But the thinking mind must seek out
the substantial
content, the thought and the theory
implicitly
contained therein, as reason is sought
in
Nature. This mode of treating mythology
was
that of the Neo-platonists ; in recent
times
it has for the most part become the
work
of my friend Creuzer in symbolism.
This method
of treatment is combated and condemned
by
others. Man, it is said, must set to
work
historically alone, and it is not historic
when a theory unthought of by the ancients,
is read into a myth, or brought out
of it.
In one light, this is quite correct,
for
it points to a method adopted by Creuzer,
and also by the Alexandrians who acted
in
a similar way. In conscious thought
the ancients
had not such theories before them,
nor did
anyone maintain them, yet to say that
such
content was not implicitly present,
is an
absurd contention. As the products
of reason,
though not of thinking reason, the
religions
of the people, as also the mythologies,
however
simple and even foolish they may appear,
indubitably contain as genuine works
of art,
thoughts, universal determinations
and truth
for the instinct of reason is at their
basis.
Bound up with this is the fact that
since
mythology in its expression takes sensuous
forms, much that is contingent and
external
becomes intermingled, for the representation
of the Notion in sensuous forms always
possesses
a certain incongruity, seeing that
what is
founded on imagination cannot express
the
Idea in its real aspect. This sensuous
form
produced as it is by an historic or
natural
method, must be determined on many
sides,
and this external determination must,
more
or less, be of such a nature as not
to express
the Idea. It may also be that many
errors
are contained in that explanation,
particularly
when a single one is brought within
our notice;
all the customs, actions, furnishings,
vestments,
and offerings taken together, may undoubtedly
contain something of the Idea in analogy,
but the connection is far removed,
and many
contingent circumstances must find
their
entrance. But that there is a Reason
there,
must certainly be recognized, and it
is essential
so to comprehend and grasp mythology.
But Mythology must remain excluded
from
our history of Philosophy. The reason
of
this is found in the fact that in Philosophy
we have to do not with theorems generally,
or with thoughts which only are implicite
contained some particular form or other,
but with thoughts which are explicit,
and
only in so far as they are explicit
and in
so far as a content such as that belonging
to Religion, has come to consciousness
in
the form of Thought. And this is just
what
forms the immense distinction which
we saw
above, between capacity and actuality.
The
theorems which are implicite contained
within
Religion do not concern us; they must
be
in the form of thoughts, since Thought
alone
is the absolute form of the Idea.
In many mythologies, images are certainly
used along with their significance,
or else
the images are closely attended by
their
interpretation. The ancient Persians
worshipped
the sun, or fire, as being the highest
existence;
the first cause in the Persian Religion
is
Zervane Akerene - unlimited time, eternity.
This simple eternal existence possesses
according
to Diogenes Lærtius (I. 8), "the
two
principles Ormuzd and Ahriman, the
rulers
over good and evil." Plutarch
in writing
on Isis and Osiris (T. II. p. 369,
ed. Xyl.)
says, "It is not one existence
which
holds and rules the whole, but good
is mingled
with evil; nature as a rule brings
forth
nothing pure and simple; it is not
one dispenser,
who, like a host, gives out and mixes
up
the drink from two different barrels.
But
through two opposed and inimical principles
of which the one impels towards what
is right,
and the other in the opposite direction,
if not the whole world, at least this
earth
is influenced in different ways. Zoroaster
has thus emphatically set up the one
principle
(Ormuzd) as being the Light, and the
other
(Ahriman) as the Darkness. Between
the two
is Mithra, hence called by the Persians
the
Mediator." Mithra is then likewise
substance,
the universal existence, the sun raised
to
a totality. It is not the mediator
between
Ormuzd and Abriman by establishing
peace
and leaving each to remain as it was;
it
does not partake of good and evil both,
like
an unblest middle thing, but it stands
on
the side of Ormuzd and strives with
him against
the evil. Ahriman is sometimes called
the
first-born son of the Light, but Ormuzd
only
remained within the Light. At the creation
of the visible world, Ormuzd places
on the
earth in his incomprehensible kingdom
of
Light, the firm arches of the heavens
which
are above yet surrounded on every side
with
the first original Light. Midway to
the earth
is the high hill Albordi, which reaches
into
the source of Light. Ormuzd's empire
of Light
extended uninterruptedly over the firm
vault
of the heavens and the hill Albordi,
and
over the earth too, until the third
age was
reached. Then Ahriman, whose kingdom
of night
was formerly bound beneath the earth,
broke
in upon Ormuzd's corporeal world and
ruled
in common with him. Now the space between
heaven and earth was divided into light
and
night. As Orniuzd had formerly only
a spiritual
kingdom of light, Ahriman had only
one of
night, but now that they were intermingled
he placed the terrestrial light thus
created
in opposition to the terrestrial night.
From
this time on, two corporeal worlds
stand
opposed, one pure and good, and one
impure
and evil, and this opposition permeates
all
nature. On Albordi, Ormuzd created
Mithra
as mediator for the earth. The end
of the
creation of the bodily world is none
other
than to reinstate existence, fallen
from
its creator, to make it good again,
and thus
to make the evil disappear for ever.
The
bodily world is the battle-ground between
good and evil; but the battle between
light
and darkness is not in it self an absolute
and irreconcilable opposition, but
one which
can be conquered, and in it Ormuzd,
the principle
of Light, will be the conqueror.
I would remark of this, that when we
consider
the elements in these ideas which bear
some
further connection with Philosophy,
the universal
of that duality with which the Notion
is
necessarily set forth can alone be
interesting
and noteworthy to us; for in it the
Notion
is just the immediate opposite of itself,
the unity of itself with itself in
the "other:"
a simple existence in which absolute
opposition
appears as the opposition of existence,
and
the sublation of that opposition. Because
properly the Light principle is the
only
existence of both, and the principle
of Darkness
is the null and void, - the principle
of
Light identifies itself with Mithra,
which
was before called the highest existence.
The opposition has laid aside the appearance
of contingency, but the spiritual principle
is not separate from the physical,
because
the good and evil are both determined
as
Light and Darkness. We thus here see
thought
breaking forth from actuality, and
yet not
such a separation as only takes place
in
Religion, when the supersensuous is
itself
again represented in a manner sensuous,
notionless
and dispersed, for the whole of what
is dispersed
in sensuous form is gathered together
in
the one single opposition, and activity
is
thus simply represented. These determinations
lie much nearer to Thought; they are
not
mere images or symbols, but yet these
myths
do not concern Philosophy. In them
Thought
does not take the first place, for
the myth-form
remains predominant. In all religions
this
oscillation between form and thought
is found,
and such a combination still lies outside
Philosophy.
This is also so in the Sanchuniathonic
Cosmogony
of the Phoenicians. These fragments,
which
are found in Eusebius (Præpar. Evang.
I.
10), are taken from the translation
of the
Sanchuniathon from Phoenician into
Greek
made by a Grammarian named Philo from
Biblus.
Philo lived in the time of Vespasian
and
ascribes great antiquity to the Sanchuniathon.
It is there said, "The principles
of
things are found in Chaos, in which
the elements
exist undeveloped and confused, and
in a
Spirit of Air. The latter permeated
the chaos,
and with it engendered a slimy matter
or
mud which contained within it the living
forces and the germs of animals. By
mingling
this mud with the component matter
of chaos
and the resulting fermentation, the
elements
separated themselves. The fire elements
ascended
into the heights and formed the stars.
Through
their influence in the air, clouds
were formed
and the earth was made fruitful. From
the
mingling of water and earth, through
the
mud converted into putrefying matter,
animals
took their origin as imperfect and
senseless.
These again begot other animals perfect
and
endowed with senses. It was the crash
of
thunder in a thunderstorm that caused
the
first animals still sleeping in their
husks
to waken up to life."7
The fragments of Berosus of the Chaldeans
were collected from Josephus, Syncellus
and
Eusebius under the title Berosi Chaldaica,
by Scaliger, as an appendix to his
work De
emendatione lemporum, and they are
found
complete in the Greek Library of Fabricius
(T. xiv. pp. 175-211). Berosus lived
in the
time of Alexander, is said to have
been a
Priest of Bel and to have drawn upon
the
archives of the temple at Babylon.
He says,
"The original god is Bel and the
goddess
Omoroka (the sea), but beside them
there
were yet other gods. Bel divided Omoroka
in two, in order to create from her
parts
heaven and earth. Hereupon he cut off
his
own head and the human race originated
from
the drops of his divine blood. After
the
creation of man, Bel banished the darkness,
divided heaven and earth, and formed
the
world into its natural shape. Since
certain
parts of the earth seemed to him to
be insufficiently
populated, he compelled another god
to lay
hands upon himself, and from his blood
more
men and more kinds of animals were
created.
At first the men lived a wild and uncultivated
life, until a monster" (called
by Berosus,
Oannes) "joined them into a state,
taught
them arts and sciences, and in a word
brought
Humanity into existence. The monster
set
about this end with the rising of the
sun
out of the sea, and with its setting
he again
hid himself under the waves."
ii. What belongs to Mythology may in
the
second place make a pretence of being
a kind
of Philosophy. It has produced philosophers
who availed themselves of the mythical
form
in order to bring their theories and
systems
more prominently before the imagination,
for they made the thoughts the content
of
the myth. But the myth is not a mere
cloak
in the ancient myths; it is not merely
that
the thoughts were there and were concealed.
This way happen in our reflecting times;
but the first poetry does not start,
from
a separation of prose and poetry. If
philosophers
used myths, it was usually the case
that
they had the thoughts and then sought
for
images appropriate to them; Plato has
many
beautiful myths of this kind. Others
likewise
have spoken in myths, as for example,
Jacobi,
whose Philosophy took the form of the
Christian
Religion, through which he gave utterance
to matter of a highly speculative nature.
But this form is not suitable to Philosophy.
Thought which has itself as object,
must
have raised itself to its own form,
to the
form of thought. Plato is often esteemed
on account of his myths; he is supposed
to
have evinced by their means greater
genius
than other philosophers were capable
of.
It is contended here that the myths
of Plato
are superior to the abstract form of
expression,
and Plato's method of representation
is certainly
a wonderful one. On closer examination
we
find that it is partly the impossibility
of expressing himself after the manner
of
pure thought that makes Plato put his
meaning
so, and also such methods of expression
are
only used by him in introducing a subject.
When he comes to the matter in point,
Plato
expresses himself otherwise, as we
see in
the Parmenides, where simple thought
determinations
are used without imagery. Externally
these
myths may certainly serve when the
heights
of speculative thought are left behind,
in
order to present the matter in an easier
form, but the real value of Plato does
not
rest in his myths. If thought once
attains
power sufficient to give existence
to itself
within itself and in its element, the
myth
becomes a superfluous adornment, by
which
Philosophy is not advanced. Men often
lay
hold of nothing but these myths. Hence
Aristotle
has been misunderstood just because
he intersperses
similes here and there; the simile
can never
be entirely in accord with thought,
for it
always carries with it something more.
The
difficulty of representing thoughts
as thoughts
always attaches to the expedient of
expression
in sensuous form. Thought, too, ought
not
to be concealed by means of the myth,
for
the object of the mythical is just
to give
expression to and to reveal thought.
The
symbol is undoubtedly insufficient
for this
expression; thought concealed in symbols
is not yet possessed, for thought is
self-revealing,
and hence the myth does not form a
medium
adequate for its conveyance. Aristotle
(Metaphysics III. 4) says, "It
is not
worth while to treat seriously of those
whose
philosophy takes a mythical form."
Such
is not the form in which thought allows
itself
to be stated, but only is a subordinate
mode.
Connected with this, there is a similar
method of representing the universal
content
by means of numbers, lines and geometric
figures. These are figurative, but
not concretely
so, as in the case of myths. Thus it
may
be said that eternity is a circle,
the snake
that bites its own tail. This is only
an
image, but Mind does not require such
a symbol.
There are people who value such methods
of
representation, but these forms do
not go
far. The most abstract determinations
can
indeed be thus expressed, but any further
progress brings about confusion. Just
as
the freemasons have symbols which are
esteemed
for their depth of wisdom - depth as
a brook
is deep when one cannot see the bottom
-
that which is hidden very easily seems
to
men deep, or as if depth were concealed
beneath.
But when it is hidden, it may possibly
prove
to be the case that there is nothing
behind.
This is so in freemasonry, in which
everything
is concealed to those outside and also
to
many people within, and where nothing
remarkable
is possessed in learning or in science,
and
least of all in Philosophy. Thought
is, on
the contrary, simply its manifestation;
clearness
is its nature and itself. The act of
manifestation
is not a condition which may be or
may not
be equally, so that thought may remain
as
thought when it is not manifested,
but its
manifestation is itself, its Being.
Numbers,
as will be remarked in respect of the
Pythagoreans,
are unsuitable mediums for expressing
thoughts;
thus monas, dnas, trias are, with Pythagoras,
unity, difference, and unity of the
unity
and of the difference. The two first
of the
three are certainly united by addition;
this
kind of union is, however, the worst
form
of unity. In Religion the three make
their
appearance in a deeper sense as the
Trinity,
and in Philosophy as the Notion, but
enumeration
forms a bad method of expression. There
is
the same objection to it as would exist
to
making the mensuration of space the
medium
for expressing the absolute. People
also
quote the Philosophy of the Chinese,
of the
Foï, in which it is said that thoughts
are
represented by numbers. Yet the Chinese
have
explained their symbols and hence have
made
their meaning evident. Universal simple
abstractions
have been present to all people who
have
arrived at any decree of culture.
iii. We have still to remark in the
third
place, that Religion, as such, does
not merely
form its representations after the
manner
of art; and also that Poetry likewise
contains
actual thoughts. In the case of the
poets
whose art has speech as medium, we
find all
through deep universal thought regarding
reality; these are more explicitly
expressed
in the Indian Religion, but with the
Indians
everything is mixed up. Hence it is
said
that such races have also had a Philosophy
proper to themselves; but the universal
thoughts
of interest in Indian books limit themselves
to what is most abstract, to the idea
of
rising up and passing away, and thus
of making
a perpetual round. The story of the
Phoenix
is well known as an example of this;
it is
one which took its origin in the East.
We
are able similarly to find thoughts
about
life and death and of the transition
of Being
into passing away; from life comes
death
and from death comes life; even in
Being,
in what is positive, the negation is
already
present. The negative side must indeed
contain
within it the positive, for all change,
all
the process of life is founded on this.
But
such reflections only occasionally
come forth;
they are not to be taken as being proper
philosophic utterances. For Philosophy
is
only present when thought, as such,
is made
the absolute ground and root of everything
else, and in these modes of representation
this is not so.
Philosophy does not reflect on any
particular
thing or object already existing as
a first
substratum; its content is just Thought,
universal thought which must plainly
come
first of all; to put it otherwise,
the Absolute
must in Philosophy be in the form of
thought.
In the Greek Religion we find the thought-determination
"eternal necessity;" which
means
an absolute and clearly universal relation.
But such thought has other subjects
besides;
it only expresses a relation, the necessity
to be the true and all-embracing Being.
Thus
neither must we take this form into
our consideration.
We might speak in that way of a philosophy
of Euripides, Schiller or Goethe. But
all
such reflection respecting, or general
modes
of representing what is true, the ends
of
men, morality and so on, are in part
only
incidentally set forth, and in part
they
have not reached the proper form of
thought,
which implies that what is so expressed
must
be ultimate, thus constituting the
Absolute.
C. Particular theories found in Religion.
In conclusion, the philosophy which
we find
within Religion does not concern us.
We find
deep, speculative thoughts regarding
the
nature of God not only in the Indian
Religions,
but also in the Fathers and the Schoolmen.
In the history of dogmatism there is
a real
interest in becoming acquainted with
these
thoughts, but they do not belong to
the history
of Philosophy. Nevertheless more notice
must
be taken of the Schoolmen than of the
Fathers,
for they were certainly great philosophers
to whom the culture of Christendom
owes much.
But their speculations belong in part
to
other philosophies such as to that
of Plato,
which must in so far be considered
for themselves;
partly, too, they emanate from the
speculative
content of Religion itself which already
exists as independent truth in the
doctrine
of the Church, and belong primarily
to faith.
Thus such modes of thought rest on
an hypothesis
and not on Thought itself; they are
not properly
speaking themselves Philosophy or thought
which rests on itself, but as ideas
already
firmly rooted, they act on its behalf
either
in refuting other ideas and conclusions
or
in philosophically vindicating against
them
their own religious teaching. Thought
in
this manner does not represent and
know itself
as the ultimate and absolute culmination
of the content, or as the inwardly
self-determining
Thought. Hence, too, when the Fathers,
seeing
that the content of the Christian Religion
can only be grasped after the speculative
form, did, within the teaching of the
Church,
produce thoughts of a highly speculative
nature, the ultimate justification
of these
was not found in Thought as such, but
in
the teaching of the Church. Philosophic
teaching
here finds itself within a strongly
bound
system and not as thought which emanates
freely from itself. Thus with the scholastics,
too, Thought does not construct itself
out
of itself, but depends upon hypotheses;
and
although it ever rests more and more
upon
itself, it never does so in opposition
to
the doctrine of the Church. Both must
and
do agree, since Thought has to prove
from
itself what the Church has already
verified.
c. Philosophy proper distinguished
from
Popular Philosophy.
Of the two departments of knowledge
allied
to Philosophy we found that the one,
that
of the special sciences, could not
be called
a philosophy in that it, as independent
seeing
and thinking immersed in finite matter,
and
as the active principle in becoming
acquainted
with the finite, was not the content,
but
simply the formal and subjective moment.
The second sphere, Religion, is deficient
in that it only had the content or
the objective
moment in common with Philosophy. In
it independent
thought was an essential moment, since
the
subject had an imaginary or historical
form.
Philosophy demands the unity and intermingling
of these two points of view; it unites
the
Sunday of life when man in humility
renounces
himself, and the working-day when he
stands
up independently, is master of himself
and
considers his own interests. A third
point
of view seems to unite both elements,
and
that is popular Philosophy. It deals
with
universal objects and philosophizes
as to
God and the world; and thought is likewise
occupied in learning about these matters.
Yet this Philosophy must also be cast
aside.
The writings of Cicero may be put under
this
category; they contain a kind of philosophy
that has its own place and in which
excellent
things are said. Cicero formed many
experiences
both in the affairs of life and mind,
and
from them and after observing what
takes
place in the world, he deduced the
truth.
He expresses himself with culture on
the
concerns most important to man, and
hence
his great popularity. Fanatics and
mystics
may from another point of view be reckoned
as in this category. They give expression
to a deep sense of devotion, and have
had
experiences in the higher regions.
They are
able to express the highest content,
and
the result is attractive. We thus find
the
brightest gleams of thought in the
writings
of a Pascal - as we do in his Pensées
But the drawback that attaches to this
Philosophy
is that the ultimate appeal - even
in modern
times - is made to the fact that men
are
constituted such as they are by nature,
and
with this Cicero is very free. Here
the moral
instinct comes into question, only
under
the name of feeling; Religion now rests
not
on what is objective but on religious
feeling,
because the immediate consciousness
of God
by men is its ultimate ground. Cicero
makes
copious use of the consensus gentium;
in
more modern times this appeal has been
more
or less left alone, since the individual
subject has to rest upon himself. Feeling
is first of all laid hold of, then
comes
reasoning from what is given, but in
these
we can appeal to what is immediate
only.
Independent thought is certainly here
advanced;
the content too, is taken from the
self;
but we must just as necessarily exclude
this
mode of thinking from Philosophy. For
the
source from which the content is derived
is of the same description as in the
other
cases. Nature is the source in finite
sciences,
and in Religion it is Spirit; but here
the
source is in authority; the content
is given
and the act of worship removes but
momentarily
this externality. The source of popular
Philosophy
is in the heart, impulses and capacities,
our natural Being, my impression of
what
is right and of God; the content is
in a
form which is of nature only. I certainly
have everything in feeling, but the
whole
content is also in Mythology, and yet
in
neither is it so in veritable form.
The laws
and doctrines of Religion are that
in which
this content always comes to consciousness
in a more definite way, while in feeling
there still is intermingled the arbitrary
will of that which is subjective.
Note:
7. Sanchuniathonis Fragm. ed. Rich. Cumberland,
Lond. 1720, 8; German by J. P. Kassel,
Magdegurg,
1755, 8, pp. 1-4. |