Chapter I. — The Metaphysics of the Understanding
A 2. SPINOZA
The philosophy of Descartes underwent
a
great variety of unspeculative developments,
but in Benedict Spinoza a direct successor
to this philosopher may be found, and
one
who carried on the Cartesian principle
to
its furthest logical conclusions. For
him
soul and body, thought and Being, cease
to
have separate independent existence.
The
dualism of the Cartesian system Spinoza,
as a Jew, altogether set aside. For
the profound
unity of his philosophy as it found
expression
in Europe, his manifestation of Spirit
as
the identity of the finite and the
infinite
in God, instead of God's appearing
related
to these as a Third — all this is an
echo
from Eastern lands. The Oriental theory
of
absolute identity was brought by Spinoza
much more directly into line, firstly
with
the current of European thought, and
then
with the European and Cartesian philosophy,
in which it soon found a place.
First of all we must, however, glance
at
the circumstances of Spinoza's life.
He was
by descent a Portuguese Jew, and was
born
at Amsterdam in the year 1632; the
name he
received was Baruch, but he altered
it to
Benedict. In his youth he was instructed
by the Rabbis of the synagogue to which
he
belonged, but he soon fell out with
them,
their wrath having been kindled by
the criticisms
which he passed on the fantastic doctrines
of the Talmud. He was not, therefore,
long
in absenting himself from the synagogue,
and as the Rabbis were in dread lest
his
example should have evil consequences,
they
offered him a yearly allowance of a
thousand
gulden if he would keep away from the
place
and hold his tongue. This offer he
declined;
and the Rabbis thereafter carried their
persecution
of him to such a pitch that they were
even
minded to rid themselves of him by
assassination.
After having made a narrow escape from
the
dagger, he formally withdrew from the
Jewish
communion, without, however, going
over to
the Christian Church. He now applied
himself
particularly to the Latin language,
and made
a special study of the Cartesian philosophy.
Later on he went to Rhynsburg, near
Leyden,
and from the year 1664 he lived in
retirement,
first at Voorburg, a village near the
Hague,
and then at the Hague itself, highly
respected
by numerous friends: he gained a livelihood
for himself by grinding optical glasses.
It was no arbitrary choice that led
him to
occupy himself with light, for it represents
in the material sphere the absolute
identity
which forms the foundation of the Oriental
view of things. Although he had rich
friends
and mighty protectors, among whom even
generals
were numbered, he lived in humble poverty,
declining the handsome gifts offered
to him
time after time. Nor would he permit
Simon
von Vries to make him his heir; he
only accepted
from him an annual pension of three
hundred
florins; in the same way he gave up
to his
sisters his share of their father's
estate.
From the Elector Palatine, Carl Ludwig,
a
man of most noble character and raised
above
the prejudices of his time, he received
the
offer of a professor's chair at Heidelberg,
with the assurance that he would have
liberty
to teach and to write, because “the
Prince
believed he would not put that liberty
to
a bad use by interfering with the religion
publicly established.” Spinoza (in
his published
letters) very wisely declined this
offer,
however, because “he did not know within
what limits that philosophic liberty
would
have to be confined, in order that
he might
not appear to be interfering with the
publicly
established religion.” He remained
in Holland,
a country highly interesting in the
history
of general culture, as it was the first
in
Europe to show the, example of universal
toleration, and afforded to many a
place
of refuge where they might enjoy liberty
of thought; for fierce as was the rage
of
the theologians there against Bekker,
for
example (Bruck. Hist. crit. phil. T.
IV.
P. 2, pp. 719, 720), and furious as
were
the attacks of Voetius on the Cartesian
philosophy,
these had not the consequences which
they
would have had in another land. Spinoza
died
on the 21st of February, 1677, in the
forty-fourth
year of his age. The cause of his death
was
consumption, from which he had long
been
a sufferer; this was in harmony with
his
system of philosophy, according to
which
all particularity and individuality
pass
away in the one substance. A Protestant
divine,
Colerus by name, who published a biography
of Spinoza, inveighs strongly against
him,
it is true, but gives nevertheless
a most
minute and kindly description of his
circumstances
and surroundings — telling how he left
only
about two hundred thalers, what debts
he
had, and so on. A bill included in
the inventory,
in which the barber requests payment
due
him by M. Spinoza of blessed memory,
scandalizes
the parson very much, and regarding
it he
makes the observation: “Had the barber
but
known what sort of a creature Spinoza
was,
he certainly would not have spoken
of his
blessed memory.” The German translator
of
this biography writes under the portrait
of Spinoza: characterem reprobationis
in
vultu gerens, applying this description
to
a countenance which doubtless expresses
the
melancholy of a profound thinker, but
is
otherwise wild and benevolent. The
reprobatio
is certainly correct; but it is not
a reprobation
in the passive sense; it is an active
disapprobation
on Spinoza's part of the opinions,
errors
and thoughtless passions of mankind.(1)
Spinoza used the terminology of Descartes,
and also published an account of his
system.
For we find the first of Spinoza's
works
entitled “An Exposition according to
the
geometrical method of the principles
of the
Cartesian philosophy.” Some time after
this
he wrote his Tractatus theologico-politicus,
and by it gained considerable reputation.
Great as was the hatred which Spinoza
roused
amongst his Rabbis, it was more than
equalled
by the odium which he brought upon
himself
amongst Christian, and especially amongst
Protestant theologians — chiefly through
the medium of this essay. It contains
his
views on inspiration, a critical treatment
of the books of Moses and the like
chiefly
from the point of view that the laws
therein
contained are limited in their application
to the Jews. Later Christian theologians
have written critically on this subject,
usually making it their object to show
that
these books were compiled at a later
time,
and that they date in part from a period
subsequent to the Babylonian captivity;
this
has become a crucial point with Protestant
theologians, and one by which the modern
school distinguishes itself from the
older,
greatly pluming itself thereon. All
this,
however, is already to be found in
the above-mentioned
work of Spinoza. But Spinoza drew the
greatest
odium upon himself by his philosophy
proper,
which we must now consider as it is
given
to us in his Ethics. While Descartes
published
no writings on this subject, the Ethics
of
Spinoza is undoubtedly his greatest
work;
it was published after his death by
Ludwig
Mayer, a physician, who had been Spinoza's
most intimate friend. It consists of
five
parts; the first deals with God (De
Deo).
General metaphysical ideas are contained
in it, which include the knowledge
of God
and nature. The second part deals with
the
nature and origin of mind (De natura
et origine
mentis). We see thus that Spinoza does
not
treat of the subject of natural philosophy,
extension and motion at all, for he
passes
immediately from God to the philosophy
of
mind, to the ethical point of view;
and what
refers to knowledge, intelligent mind,
is
brought forward in the first part,
under
the head of the principles of human
knowledge.
The third book of the Ethics deals
with the
origin and nature of the passions (De
oriqine
et natura affectuum); the fourth with
the
powers of the same, or human slavery
(De
servitute humana seu de affectuum viribus);
the fifth, lastly, with the power of
the
understanding, with thought, or with
human
liberty (De potentia intellectus seu
de libertate
humana). (2) Kirchenrath Professor
Paulus
published Spinoza's works in Jena;
I had
a share in the bringing out of this
edition,
having been entrusted with the collation
of French translations.
As regards the philosophy of Spinoza,
it
is very simple, and on the whole easy
to
comprehend; the difficulty which it
presents
is due partly to the limitations of
the method
in which Spinoza presents his thoughts,
and
partly to his narrow range of ideas,
which
causes him in an unsatisfactory way
to pass
over important points of view and cardinal
questions. Spinoza's system is that
of Descartes
made objective in the form of absolute
truth.
The simple thought of Spinoza's idealism
is this: The true is simply and solely
the
one substance, whose attributes are
thought
and extension or nature: and only this
absolute
unity is reality, it alone is God.
It is,
as with Descartes, the unity of thought
and
Being, or that which contains the Notion
of its existence in itself. The Cartesian
substance, as Idea, has certainly Being
included
in its Notion; but it is only Being
as abstract,
not as real Being or as extension (supra,
p. 241). With Descartes corporeality
and
the thinking 'I' are altogether independent
Beings; this independence of the two
extremes
is done away with in Spinozism by their
becoming
moments of the one absolute Being.
This expression
signifies that Being must be grasped
as the
unity of opposites; the chief consideration
is not to let slip the opposition and
set
it aside, but to reconcile and resolve
it.
Since then it is thought and Being,
and no
longer the abstractions of the finite
and
infinite, or of limit and the unlimited,
that form the opposition (supra, p.
161),
Being is here more definitely regarded
as
extension; for in its abstraction it
would
be really only that return into itself,
that
simple equality with itself, which
constitutes
thought (supra, p. 229). The pure thought
of Spinoza is therefore not the simple
universal
of Plato, for it has likewise come
to know
the absolute opposition of Notion and
Being.
Taken as a whole, this constitutes
the Idea
of Spinoza, and it is just what pure
being
was to the Eleatics (Vol. 1. pp. 244,
252).
This Idea of Spinoza's we must allow
to be
in the main true and well-grounded;
absolute
substance is the truth, but it is not
the
whole truth; in order to be this it
must
also be thought of as in itself active
and
living, and by that very means it must
determine
itself as mind. But substance with
Spinoza
is only the universal and consequently
the
abstract determination of mind; it
may undoubtedly
be said that this thought is the foundation
of all true views — not, however, as
their
absolutely fixed and permanent basis,
but
as the abstract unity which mind is
in itself.
It is therefore worthy of note that
thought
must begin by placing itself at the
standpoint
of Spinozism; to be a follower of Spinoza
is the essential commencement of all
Philosophy.
For as we saw above (Vol. I. p. 144),
when
man begins to philosophize, the soul
must
commence by bathing in this ether of
the
One Substance, in which all that man
has
held as true has disappeared; this
negation
of all that is particular, to which
every
philosopher must have come, is the
liberation
of the mind and its absolute foundation.
The difference between our standpoint
and
that of the Eleatic philosophy is only
this,
that through the agency of Christianity
concrete
individuality is in the modern world
present
throughout in spirit. But in spite
of the
infinite demands on the part of the
concrete,
substance with Spinoza is not yet determined
as in itself concrete. As the concrete
is
thus not present in the content of
substance,
it is therefore to be found within
reflecting
thought alone, and it is only from
the endless
oppositions of this last that the required
unity emerges. Of substance as such
there
is nothing more to be said; all that
we can
do is to speak of the different ways
in which
Philosophy has dealt with it, and the
opposites
which in it are abrogated. The difference
depends on the nature of the opposites
which
are held to be abrogated in substance.
Spinoza
is far from having proved this unity
as convincingly
as was done by the ancients; but what
constitutes
the grandeur of Spinoza's manner of
thought
is that he is able to renounce all
that is
determinate and particular, and restrict
himself to the One, giving heed to
this alone.
1. Spinoza begins (Eth. P. I pp. 35,
36)
with a series of definitions, from
which
we take the following.
a. Spinoza's first definition is of
the
Cause of itself. He says: “By that
which
is causa sui, its own cause, I understand
that whose essence” (or Notion) “involves
existence, or which cannot be conceived
except
as existent.” The unity of existence
and
universal thought is asserted from
the very
first, and this unity will ever be
the question
at issue. “The cause of itself” is
a noteworthy
expression, for while we picture to
ourselves
that the effect stands in opposition
to the
cause, the cause of itself is the cause
which,
while it operates and separates an
“other,”
at the same time produces only itself,
and
in the production therefore does away
with
this distinction. The establishing
of itself
as an other is loss or degeneration,
and
at the same time the negation of this
loss;
this is a purely speculative Notion,
indeed
a fundamental Notion in all speculation.
The cause in which the cause is identical
with the effect, is the infinite cause
(infra,
p. 263); if Spinoza had further developed
what lies in causa sui, substance with
him
would not have been rigid and unworkable.
b. The second definition is that of
the
finite. “That thing is said to be finite
in its kind which can be limited by
another
of the same nature.” For it comes then
to
an end, it is not there; what is there
is
something else. This something else
must,
however, be of a like nature; for those
things
which are to limit each other must,
in order
to be able to limit each other, touch
each
other, and consequently have a relation
to
each other, that is to say they must
be of
one nature, stand on a like basis,
and have
a common sphere. That is the affirmative
side of the limit. “Thus a thought
is” only
“limited by another thought, a body
by another
body, but thoughts are not limited
by bodies
nor" conversely "bodies by
thoughts.”
We saw this (p. 244) with Descartes:
thought
is an independent; totality and so
is extension,
they have nothing to do with one another;
they do not limit each other, each
is included
in itself.
c. The third definition is that of
substance.
“By substance I understand that which
exists
in itself and is conceived by itself,
i.
e. the conception of which does not
require
the aid of the conception of any other
thing
for its formation (a quo formari debeat);”
otherwise it would be finite, accidental.
What cannot have a conception formed
of it
without the aid of something else,
is not
independent, but is dependent upon
that something
else.
d. In the fourth place Spinoza defines
attributes,
which, as the moment coming, second
to substance,
belong to it. “By attribute I understand
that which the mind perceives as constituting
the essence of substance;” and to Spinoza
this alone is true. This is an important
determination; the attribute is undoubtedly
a determinateness, but at the same
time it
remains a totality. Spinoza, like Descartes,
accepts only two attributes, thought
and
extension. The understanding grasps
them
as the reality of substance, but the
reality
is not higher than the substance, for
it
is only reality in the view of the
understanding,
which falls outside substance. Each
of the
two ways of regarding substance — extension
and thought — contains no doubt the
whole
content of substance, but only in one
form,
which the understanding brings with
it; and
for this very reason both sides are
in themselves
identical and infinite. This is the
true
completion; but where substance passes
over
into attribute is not stated.
e. The fifth definition has to do with
what
comes third in relation to substance,
the
mode. “By mode I understand the affections
of substance, or that which is in something
else, through the aid of which also
it is
conceived.” Thus substance is conceived
through
itself; attribute is not conceived
through
itself, but has a relation to the conceiving
understanding, in so far as this last
conceives
reality; mode, finally, is what is
not conceived
as reality, but through and in something
else.
These last three moments Spinoza ought
not
merely to have established in this
way as
conceptions, he ought to have deduced
them;
they are especially important, and
correspond
with what we more definitely distinguish
as universal, particular and individual.
They must not, however, be taken as
formal,
but in their true concrete sense; the
concrete
universal is substance, the concrete
particular
is the concrete species; the Father
and Son
in the Christian dogma are similarly
particular,
but each of them contains the whole
nature
of God, only under a different form.
The
mode is the individual, the finite
as such,
which enters into external connection
with
what is “other.” In this Spinoza only
descends
to a lower stage, the mode is only
the foregoing
warped and stunted. Spinoza's defect
is therefore
this, that he takes the third moment
as mode
alone, as a false individuality. True
individuality
and subjectivity is not a mere retreat
from
the universal, not merely something
clearly
determinate; for, as clearly determinate,
it is at the same time Being-for-itself,
determined by itself alone. The individual,
the subjective, is even in being so
the return
to the universal; and in that it is
at home
with itself, it is itself the universal.
The return consists simply and solely
in
the fact of the particular being in
itself
the universal; to this return Spinoza
did
not attain. Rigid substantiality is
the last
point he reached, not infinite form;
this
he knew not, and thus determinateness
continually
vanishes from his thought.
f. In the sixth place, the definition
of
the infinite is also of importance,
for in
the infinite Spinoza defines more strictly
than anywhere else the Notion of the
Notion.
The infinite has a double significance,
according
as it is taken as the infinitely many
or
as the absolutely infinite (infra,
p. 263).
“The infinite in its kind is not such
in
respect of all possible attributes;
but the
absolutely infinite is that to whose
essence
all belongs that expresses an essence
and
contains no negation.” In the same
sense
Spinoza distinguishes in the nine-and-twentieth
Letter (Oper. T. I. pp. 526-532) the
infinite
of imagination from the infinite of
thought
(intellectus), the actual (actu) infinite.
Most men, when they wish to strive
after
the sublime, get no farther than the
first
of these; this is the false infinite,
just
as when one says “and so on into infinity,”
meaning perhaps the infinity of space
from
star to star, or else the infinity
of time.
An infinite numerical series in mathematics
is exactly the same thing. If a certain
fraction
is represented as a decimal fraction,
it
is incomplete; 1/7 is, on the contrary,
the
true infinite, and therefore not an
incomplete
expression, although the content here
is
of course limited. It is infinity in
the
incorrect sense that one usually has
in view
when infinity is spoken of; and even
if it
is looked on as sublime, it yet is
nothing
present, and only goes ever out into
the
negative, without being actual (actu).
But
for Spinoza the infinite is not the
fixing
of a limit and then passing beyond
the limit
fixed — the sensuous infinity — but
absolute
infinity, the positive, which has complete
and present in itself an absolute multiplicity
which has no Beyond. Philosophic infinity,
that which is infinite actu, Spinoza
therefore
calls the absolute affirmation of itself.
This is quite correct, only it might
have
been better expressed as: “It is the
negation
of negation.” Spinoza here also employs
geometrical
figures as illustrations of the Notion
of
infinity. In his Opera postuma, preceding
his Ethics, and also in the letter
quoted
above, he has two circles, one of which
lies
within the other, which have not, however,
a common centre.
“The inequalities of the space between
A
B and C D exceed every number; and
yet the
space which lies between is not so
very great.”
That is to say, if I wish to determine
them
all, I must enter upon an infinite
series.
This “beyond” always, however, remains
defective,
is always affected with negation; and
yet
this false infinite is there to hand,
circumscribed,
affirmative, actual and present in
that plane
as a complete space between the two
circles.
Or a finite line consists of an infinite
number of points; and yet the line
is present
here and determined; the “beyond” of
the
infinite number of points, which are
not
complete, is in it complete and called
back
into unity. The infinite should be
represented
as actually present, and this comes
to pass
in the Notion of the cause of itself,
which
is therefore the true infinity. As
soon as
the cause has something else opposed
to it
— the effect — finitude is present;
but here
this something else is at the same
time abrogated
and it becomes once more the cause
itself.
The affirmative is thus negation of
negation,
since, according to the well-known
grammatical
rule, duplex negatio affirmat. In the
same
way Spinoza's earlier definitions have
also
the infinite already implied in them,
for
instance in the case of the just mentioned
cause of itself, inasmuch as he defines
it
as that whose essence involves existence
(supra, p. 258). Notion and existence
are
each the Beyond of the other; but cause
of
itself, as thus including them, is
really
the carrying back of this “beyond”
into unity.
Or (supra, p. 259) “Substance is that
which
is in itself and is conceived from
itself;”
that is the same unity of Notion and
existence.
The infinite is in the same way in
itself
and has also its Notion in itself;
its Notion
is its Being, and its Being its Notion;
true
infinity is therefore to be found in
Spinoza.
But he has no consciousness of this;
he has
not recognized this Notion as absolute
Notion,
and therefore has not expressed it
as a moment
of true existence; for with him the
Notion
falls outside of existence, into the
thought
of existence.
g. Finally Spinoza says in the seventh
place:
“God is a Being absolutely infinite,
i. e.
a substance consisting of infinite
attributes,
each of which expresses an eternal
and infinite
essence.” Does substance, one might
here
ask, possess an infinite number of
attributes?
But as with Spinoza there are only
two attributes,
thought and extension, with which he
invests
God, “infinite” is not to be taken
here in
the sense of the indeterminate but
positively,
as a circle is perfect infinity in
itself.
The whole of Spinoza's philosophy is
contained
in these definitions, which, however,
taken
as a whole are formal; it is really
a weak
point in Spinoza that he begins thus
with
definitions. In mathematics this method
is
permitted, because at the outset we
there
make assumptions, such as that of the
point
and line; but in Philosophy the content
should
be known as the absolutely true. It
is all
very well to grant the correctness
of the
name-definition, and acknowledge that
the
word “substance” corresponds with the
conception
which the definition indicates, but
it is
quite another question to determine
whether
this content is absolutely true. Such
a question
is not asked in the case of geometrical
propositions,
but in philosophic investigation it
is the
very thing to be first considered,
and this
Spinoza has not done. Instead of only
explaining
these simple thoughts and representing
them
as concrete in the definitions which
he makes,
what he ought to have done was to examine
whether this content is true. To all
appearance
it is only the explanation of the words
that
is given, but the content of the words
is
held to be established. All further
content
is merely derived from that, and proved
thereby;
for on the first content all the rest
depends,
and if it is established as a basis,
the
other necessarily follows. “The attribute
is that which the understanding thinks
of
God.” But here the question is: How
does
it come that besides the Deity there
now
appears the understanding, which applies
to absolute substance the two forms
of thought
and extension? and whence come these
two
forms themselves? Thus everything proceeds
inwards, and not outwards; the determinations
are not developed from substance, it
does
not resolve itself into these attributes.
2. These definitions are followed by
axioms
and propositions in which Spinoza proves
a great variety of points. He descends
from
the universal of substance through
the particular,
thought and extension, to the individual.
He has thus all three moments of the
Notion,
or they are essential to him. But the
mode,
under which head falls individuality,
he
does not recognize as essential, or
as constituting
a moment of true existence in that
existence;
for it disappears in existence, or
it is
not raised into the Notion.
a. The main point then is that Spinoza
proves
from these Notions that there is only
One
Substance, God. It is a simple chain
of reasoning,
a very formal proof. “Fifth Proposition:
There cannot be two or more substances
of
the same nature or of the same attribute.”
This is implied already in the definitions;
the proof is therefore a useless and,
wearisome
toil, which only serves to render Spinoza
more difficult to understand. “If there
were
several” (substances of the same attribute)
“they must be distinguished from one
another
either by the diversity of their attributes
or by the diversity of their affections”
(modes). “If they are distinguished
by their
attributes, it would be directly conceded
that there is only one substance having
the
same attribute.” For the attributes
are simply
what the understanding grasps as the
essence
of the one substance, which is determined
in itself, and not through anything
else.
“But if these substances were distinguished
by their affections, since substance
is by
nature prior to its affections it would
follow
that if from substance its affections
were
abstracted and it were regarded in
itself,
i. e., in its truth, it could henceforth
not be regarded as distinct from other
substances.”
“Eighth Proposition: All substance
is necessarily
infinite. Proof: For otherwise it must
be
limited by another substance of the
same
nature, in which case there would be
two
substances of the same attribute, which
is
contrary to the fifth proposition.”
“Every
attribute must be conceived for itself,”
as determination reflected on itself.
“For
attribute is what the mind conceives
of substance
as constituting its essence, from which
it
follows that it must be conceived through
itself,” i. e., substance is what is
conceived
through itself (see the fourth and
third
definitions). “Therefore we may not
argue
from the plurality of attributes to
a plurality
of substances, for each is conceived
by itself,
and they have all been, always and
at the
same time, in substance, without the
possibility
of the one being produced by the other.”
“Substance is indivisible. For if the
parts
retained the nature of the substance,
there
would be several substances of the
same nature,
which is contrary to the fifth proposition.
If not, infinite substance would cease
to
exist, which is absurd.”(3)
“Fourteenth Proposition: No other substance
than God can either exist or be conceived.
Proof: God is the absolutely infinite
substance,
to whom can be denied no attribute
which
expresses the essence of substance,
and He
exists necessarily; therefore if there
were
a substance other than God, it must
be explained
by means of an attribute of God.” Consequently
the substance would not have its own
being,
but that of God, and therefore would
not
be a substance. Or if it were still
to be
substance, “then there would necessarily
follow the possibility of there being
two
substances with the same attribute,
which
according to the fifth proposition
is absurd.
From this it then follows that the
thing
extended and the thing that thinks”
are not
substances, but “are either attributes
of
God, or affections of His attributes.”
By
these proofs and others like them not
much
is to be gained. “Fifteenth proposition:
What is, is in God, and cannot exist
or be
conceived without God.” “Sixteenth
proposition:
By the necessity of the divine nature
infinite
things must follow in infinite modes,
i.
e., all that can fall under the infinite
understanding. God is therefore the
absolute
First Cause.”
Spinoza then ascribes freedom and necessity
to God: “God is the absolute free cause,
who is determined by nothing outside
of Himself,
for He exists solely by the necessity
of
His nature. There is no cause which
inwardly
or outwardly moves Him to act, except
the
perfection of His nature. His activity
is
by the laws of His Being necessary
and eternal;
what therefore follows from His absolute
nature, from His attributes, is eternal
as
it follows from the nature of the triangle
from eternity and to eternity that
it, three
angles are equal to two right angles."
That is to say, His Being is His absolute
power; actus and potentia, Thought
and Being,
are in Him one. God has not therefore
any
other thoughts which He could not have
actualized.
“God is the immanent cause of all things,
not the transient (transiens),” i.
e., external
cause. “His essence and His existence
are
the same, namely, the truth. A thing
which
is determined to perform some action,
is,
since God is cause, necessarily determined
thereto by God; and a thing which is
thus
determined cannot render itself undetermined.
In nature nothing is contingent. Will
is
not a free cause, but only a necessary
cause,
only a mode; it is therefore determined
by
another. God acts in accordance with
no final
causes (sub ratione boni). Those who
assert
that He does so, appear to establish
something
apart from God, which does not depend
on
God, and which God in His working keeps
in
view, as though it were an end. If
this view
is taken, God is not a free cause,
but is
subject to fate. It is equally inadmissible
to subject all things to the arbitrary
pleasure
of God, i. e., to His indifferent will.”(4)
He is determined solely by His own
nature,
the activity of God is thus His power,
and
that is necessity. He is then absolute
power
in contrast to wisdom, which sets up
definite
aims, and consequently limitations;
particular
aims, thoughts of what is about to
come to
pass, and the like are therefore put
out
of the question. But beyond this universal,
no advance is made; for it must be
noticed
a negation. Moreover, if God is the
cause
of the world, it is implied that He
is finite;
for the world is here put beside God
as something
different from Him.
b. The greatest difficulty in Spinoza
is,
in the distinctions to which he comes,
to
grasp the relation of this determinate
to
God, at the same time preserving the
determination.
“God is a thinking Being, because all
individual
thoughts are modes which express God's
nature
in a certain and determinate manner;
there
pertains therefore to God an attribute
the
conception of which all individual
thoughts
involve, and by means of this they
also are
conceived. God is an extended Being
for the
same reason.” This means that the same
substance,
under the attribute of thought, is
the intelligible
world, and under the attribute of extension,
is nature; nature and thought thus
both express
the same Essence of God. Or, as Spinoza
says,
“The order and system of natural things
is
the same as the order of the thoughts.
Thus,
for instance, the circle which exists
in
nature, and the idea of the existing
circle,
which is also in God, are one and the
same
thing” (they are one and the same content),
“which is” merely “expressed by means
of
different attributes. If we therefore
regard
nature either under the attribute of
extension
or of thought, or under any other attribute
whatever, we shall find one and the
same
connection of causes, i. e., the same
sequence
of things. The formal Being of the
idea of
the circle can be conceived only by
means
of the mode of thought, as its proximate
cause, and this mode again by means
of another,
and so on infinitely; so that we must
explain
the order of the whole of nature, or
the
connection of causes, by the attribute
of
thought alone, and if things are considered
by the attribute of extension, they
must
be considered only by the attribute
of extension,
— and the same holds good. of other
causes.”(5)
It is one and the same system, which
at one
time appears as nature, and at another
time
in the form of thought.
But Spinoza does not demonstrate how
these
two are evolved from the one substance,
nor
does he prove why there can only be
two of
them. Neither are extension and thought
anything
to him in themselves, or in truth,
but only
externally; for their difference is
a mere
matter of the understanding, which
is ranked
by Spinoza only among affections (Eth.
P.
I. Prop. XXXI. Demonst. p. 62), and
as such
has no truth. This has in recent times
been
served up again by Schelling in the
following
form: In themselves, the intelligent
world
and the corporeal world are the same,
only
under different forms; so that the
intelligent
universe is in itself the whole absolute
divine totality, and the corporeal
universe
is equally this same totality. The
differences
are not in themselves; but the different
aspects from which the Absolute is
regarded
are matters external to it. We take
a higher
tone in saying that nature and mind
are rational;
but reason is for us no empty word,
for it
means the totality which develops itself
within itself. Again, it is the standpoint
of reflection to regard aspects only,
and
nothing in itself. This defect appears
in
Spinoza and Schelling in the fact that
they
see no necessity why the Notion, as
the implicit
negative of its unity, should make
a separation
of itself into different parts; so
that out
of the simple universal the real, the
opposed,
itself becomes known. Absolute substance,
attribute and mode, Spinoza allows
to follow
one another as definitions, he adopts
them
ready-made, without the attributes
being
developed from the substance, or the
modes
from the attributes. And more especially
in regard to the attributes, there
is no
necessity evident, why these are thought
and extension in particular.
c. When Spinoza passes on to individual
things, especially to self-consciousness,
to the freedom of the 'I,' he expresses
himself
in such a way as rather to lead back
all
limitations to substance than to maintain
a firm grasp of the individual. Thus
we already
found, the attributes not to be independent,
but only the forms in which the understanding
grasps substance in its differences;
what
comes third, the modes, is that under
which
for Spinoza all difference of things
alone
falls. Of the modes he says
(Ethic. P. I. Prop. XXXII. Demonst.
et Coroll.
11. p. 63): In every attribute there
are
two modes; in extension, these are
rest and
motion, in thought they are understanding
and will (intellectus et voluntas).
They
are mere modifications which only exist
for
us apart from God; therefore whatever
refers
to this difference and is specially
brought
about by it, is not absolute, but finite.
These affections Spinoza sums up (Ethices,
P. I. Prop. XXIX. Schol. pp. 61, 62)
under
the head of natura naturata: “Natura
naturans
is God regarded as free cause, in so
far
as He is in Himself and is conceived
by Himself:
or such attributes of substance as
express
the eternal and infinite essence. By
natura
naturata, I understand all that follows
from
the necessity of the divine nature,
or from
any of the attributes of God, all modes
of
the divine attributes, in so far as
they
are regarded as things which are in
God,
and which without God can neither exist
nor
be conceived.” From God proceeds nothing,
for all things merely return to the
point
whence they came, if from themselves
the
commencement is made.
These then are Spinoza's general forms,
this is his principal idea. Some further
determinations have still to be mentioned.
He gives definitions of the terms modes,
understanding, will, and of the affections,
such as joy and sadness.(6) We further
find
consciousness taken into consideration.
Its
development is extremely simple, or
rather
it is not developed at all; Spinoza
begins
directly with mind. “The essence of
man consists
of certain modifications of the attributes
of God”; these modifications are only
something
related to our understanding. “If we,
therefore,
say that the human mind perceives this
or
that, it means nothing else than that
God
has this or that idea, not in so far
as He
is infinite, but in so far as He is
expressed
by the idea of the human mind. And
if we
say that God has this or that idea,
not in
so far as He constitutes the idea of
the
human mind, but in so far as He has,
along
with the human mind, the idea of another
thing, then we say that the human mind
perceives
the thing partially or inadequately.”
Truth
is for Spinoza, on the other hand,
the adequate.(7)
The idea that all particular content
is only,
a modification of God is ridiculed
by Bayle,(8)
who argues from it that God modified
as Turks
and Austrians, is waging war with Himself;
but Bayle has not a trace of the speculative
element in him, although he is acute
enough
as a dialectician, and has contributed
to
the intelligent discussion of definite
subjects.
The relation of thought and extension
in
the human consciousness is dealt with
by
Spinoza as follows: “What has a place
in
the object” (or rather in the objective)
“of the idea which constitutes the
human
mind must be perceived by the human
mind;
or there must necessarily be in the
mind
an idea of this object. The object
of the
idea which constitutes the human mind
is
body, or a certain mode of extension.
If,
then, the object of the idea which
constitutes
the human mind, is the body, there
can happen
nothing in the body which is not perceived
by the mind. Otherwise the ideas of
the affections
of the body would not be in God, in
so far
as He constitutes our mind, but the
idea
of another thing: that is to say, the
ideas
of the affections of our body would
not be
likewise in our mind.” What is perplexing
to understand in Spinoza's system is,
on
the one hand, the absolute identity
of thought
and Being, and, on the other hand,
their
absolute indifference to one another,
because
each of them is a manifestation of
the whole
essence of God. The unity of the body
and
consciousness is, according to Spinoza,
this,
that the individual is a mode of the
absolute
substance, which, as consciousness,
is the
representation of the manner in which
the
body is affected by external things;
all
that is in consciousness is also in
extension,
and conversely. “Mind knows itself
only in
so far as it perceives the ideas of
the affections
of body,” it has only the idea of the
affections
of its body; this idea is synthetic
combination,
as we shall immediately see. “The ideas,
whether of the attributes of God or
of individual
things, do not recognize as their efficient
cause their objects themselves, or
the things
perceived, but God Himself, in so far
as
He is that which thinks.”(9) Buhle
(Geschichte
der neuern Philos. Vol. III. Section
II.
p. 524) sums up these propositions
of Spinoza
thus: “Thought is inseparably bound
up with
extension; therefore all that takes
place
in extension must also take place in
consciousness.”
Spinoza, however, also accepts both
in their
separation from one another. The idea
of
body, he writes (Epistol. LXVI. p.
673),
includes only these two in itself,
and does
not express any other attributes. The
body
which it represents is regarded under
the
attribute of extension; but the idea
itself
is a mode of thought. Here we see a
dividing
asunder; mere identity, the undistinguishable
nature of all things in the Absolute,
is
insufficient even for Spinoza.
The individuum, individuality itself,
is
thus defined by Spinoza (Ethic. P.
11. Prop.
XIII. Defin. p. 92): “When several
bodies
of the same or of different magnitudes
are
so pressed together that they rest
on one
another, or when, moving with like
or different
degrees of rapidity, they communicate
their
movement to one another in a certain
measure,
we say that such bodies are united
to one
another, and that all together they
form
one body or individuum, which by this
union
distinguishes itself from all the other
bodies."
Here we are at the extreme limit of
Spinoza's
system, and it is here that his weak
point
appears. Individuation, the one, is
a mere
synthesis; it is quite a different
thing
from the Ichts or self-hood of Boehme
(supra,
pp. 205-207), since Spinoza has only
universality,
thought, and not self-consciousness.
If,
before considering this in reference
to the
whole, we take it from the other side,
namely
from the understanding, the distinction
really
falls under that head it is not deduced,
it is found. Thus, as we have already
seen
(p. 270) “the understanding in act
(intellectus
actu), as also will, desire, love,
must be
referred to natura naturata, not to
natura
naturans. For by the understanding,
as recognized
for itself, we do not mean absolute
thought,
but only a certain mode of thought
— a mode
which is distinct from other modes
like desire,
love, etc., and on that account must
be conceived
by means of absolute thought, i. e.,
by means
of an attribute of God which expresses
an
eternal and infinite essentiality of
thought;
without which the understanding, as
also
the rest of the modes of thought, could
neither
be nor be conceived to be.” (Spinoza,
Ethices,
P. 1. Propos. XXXI. pp. 62,
63). Spinoza is unacquainted with an
infinity
of form, which would be something quite
different
from that of rigid, unyielding substance.
What is requisite is to recognize God
as
the essence of essences, as universal
substance,
identity, and yet to preserve distinctions.
Spinoza goes on to say: “What constitutes
the real (actuale) existence of the
human
mind is nothing else than the idea
of a particular”
(individual) “thing, that actually
exists,”
not of an infinite thing. “The essence
of
man involves no necessary existence,
i. e.,
according to the order of nature a
man may
just as well be as not be.” For the
human
consciousness, as it does not belong
to essence
as an attribute, is a mode — a mode
of the
attribute of thought. But neither is
the
body, according to Spinoza, the cause
of
consciousness, nor is consciousness
the cause
of the body, but the finite cause is
here
only the relation of like to like;
body is
determined by body, conception by conception.
“The body can neither determine the
mind
to thought, nor can the mind determine
the
body to motion, or rest, or anything
else.
For all modes of thought have God as
Cause,
in so far as He is a thinking thing,
and
not in so far as He is revealed by
means
of another attribute. What therefore
determines
the mind to thought, is a mode of thought
and not of extension; similarly motion
and
rest of the body must be derived from
another
body.”(10) I might quote many other
such
particular propositions from Spinoza,
but
they are very formal, and a continual
repetition
of one and the same thing.
Buhle (Gesch. d. neuern Phil. Vol.
III.
Section 2, pp. 525-528), attributes
limited
conceptions to Spinoza: “The soul experiences
in the body all the 'other' of which
it becomes
aware as outside of the body, and it
becomes
aware of this 'other' only by means
of the
conceptions of the qualities which
the body
perceives therein. If, therefore, the
body
can perceive no qualities of a thing,
the
soul also can come to no knowledge
of it.
On the other hand, the soul is equally
unable
to arrive at the perception of the
body which
belongs to it; the soul knows not that
the
body is there, and knows itself even
in no
other way than by means of the qualities
which the body perceives in things
which
are outside of it, and by means of
the conceptions
of the same. For the body is an individual
thing, determined in a certain manner,
which
can only gradually, in association
with and
amidst other individual things, attain
to
existence, and can preserve itself
in existence
only as thus connected, combined and
associated
with others,” i. e., in infinite progress;
the body can by no means be conceived
from
itself. “The soul's consciousness expresses
a certain determinate form of a Notion,
as
the Notion itself expresses a determinate
form of an individual thing. But the
individual
thing, its Notion, and the Notion of
this
Notion are altogether and entirely
one and
the same thing, only regarded under
different
attributes. As the soul is nothing
else than
the immediate Notion of the body, and
is
one and the same thing with this, the
excellence
of the soul can never be anything else
than
the excellence of the body. The capacities
of the understanding are nothing but
the
capacities of the body, if they are
looked
at from the corporeal point of view,
and
the decisions of the will are likewise
determinations
of the body. Individual things are
derived
from God in an eternal and infinite
manner”
(i. e., once and for all), “and not
in a
transitory, finite and evanescent manner;
they are derived from one another merely
inasmuch as they mutually produce and
destroy
each other, but in their eternal existence
they endure unchangeable. All individual
things mutually presuppose each other;
one
cannot be thought without the other;
that
is to say they constitute together
an inseparable
whole; they exist side by side in one
utterly
indivisible, infinite Thing, and in
no other
way whatever.
3. We have now to speak of Spinoza's
system
of morals, and that is a subject of
importance.
Its great principle is no other than
this,
that the finite spirit is moral in
so far
as it has the true Idea, i. e., in
so far
as it directs its knowledge and will
on God,
for truth is merely the knowledge of
God.
It may be said that there is no morality
loftier than this, since its only requisite
is to have a clear idea of God. The
first
thing Spinoza speaks of in this regard
is
the affections: “Everything strives
after
self-preservation. This striving is
the actual
essence of the thing, and involves
only indefinite
time; when referred exclusively to
mind,
it is termed will; when referred to
both
mind and body together, it is called
desire.
Determination of the will (volitio)
and Idea
are one and the same thing. The sense
of
liberty rests on this, that men do
not know
the determining causes of their actions.
The affection is a confused Idea; the
more
clearly and distinctly, therefore,
we know
the affection, the more it is under
our control.”(11)
The influence of the affections, as
confused
and limited (inadequate) ideas, upon
human
action, constitutes therefore, according
to Spinoza, human slavery; of the passionate
affections the principal are joy and
sorrow;
we are in suffering and slavery in
so far
as we relate ourselves as a part.(12)
“Our happiness and liberty consist
in an
enduring and eternal love to God; this
intellectual
love follows from the nature of mind
in so
far as it is regarded as eternal truth
through
the nature of God. The more a man recognizes
God's existence and loves Him, the
less does
he suffer from evil affections and
the less
is his fear of death.”(13) Spinoza
requires
in addition the true kind of knowledge.
There
are, according to him, three kinds
of knowledge;
in the first, which he calls opinion
and
imagination, he includes the knowledge
which
we obtain from an individual object
through
the senses — a knowledge fragmentary
and
ill-arranged — also knowledge drawn
from
signs, pictorial conceptions and memory.
The second kind of knowledge is for
Spinoza
that which we derive from general conceptions
and adequate ideas of the properties
of things.
The third is intuitive knowledge (scientia
intuitiva) which rises from the adequate
idea of the formal essence of certain
attributes
of God to the adequate knowledge of
the essence
of things.”(14) Regarding this last
he then
says: “The nature of reason is not
to contemplate
things as contingent, but as necessary
.
. . to think of all things under a
certain
form of eternity (sub quadam specie
æternitatis);”
i. e., in absolutely adequate Notions,
i.
e. in God. “For the necessity of things
is
the necessity of the eternal nature
of God
Himself. Every idea of an individual
thing
necessarily includes the eternal and
infinite
essence of God in itself. For individual
things are modes of an attribute of
God;
therefore they must include in themselves
His eternal essence. Our mind, in so
far
as it knows itself and the body under
the
form of eternity, has to that extent
necessarily
the knowledge of God, and knows that
it is
itself in God and is conceived through
God.
All Ideas, in so far as they are referable
to God, are true.”(15) Man must trace
back
all things to God, for God is the One
in
All; the eternal essence of God is
the one
thing that is, the eternal truth is
the only
thing for man to aim at in his actions.
With
Spinoza this is not a knowledge arrived
at
through philosophy, but only knowledge
of
a truth. “The mind can succeed in tracing
back all affections of the body or
images
of things to God. In proportion as
the mind
regards all things as necessary, it
has a
greater power over its affections,”
which
are arbitrary and contingent. This
is the
return of the mind to God, and this
is human
freedom; as mode, on the other hand,
the
spirit has no freedom, but is determined
from without. “From the third kind
of knowledge
there arises the repose of the mind;
the
supreme good of the mind is to know
God,
and this is the highest virtue. This
knowledge
necessarily produces the intellectual
love
of God; for it produces a joyfulness
accompanied
by the Idea of God as cause — i. e.
the intellectual
love of God. God Himself loves Himself
with
an infinite intellectual love.”(16)
For God
can have only Himself as aim and cause;
and
the end of the subjective mind is to
be directed
on Him. This is therefore the purest,
but
also a universal morality.
In the thirty-sixth Letter (pp. 581-582)
Spinoza, speaks of Evil. The allegation
is
made that God, as the originator of
all things
and everything, is also the originator
of
evil, is consequently Himself evil;
in this
identity all things are one, good and
evil
are in themselves the same thing, in
God's
substance this difference has disappeared.
Spinoza says in answer to this “I assert
the fact that God absolutely and truly”
(as
cause of Himself) “is the cause of
everything
that has an essential content” (i.
e., affirmative
reality) “be it what it may. Now if
you can
prove to me that evil, error, crime,
etc.,
are something that expresses an essence,
I will freely admit to you that God
is the
originator of crime and evil and error.
But
I have elsewhere abundantly demonstrated
that the form of evil cannot subsist
in anything
that expresses an essence, and therefore
it cannot be said that God is the cause
of
evil.” Evil is merely negation, privation,
limitation, finality, mode — nothing
in itself
truly real. “Nero's murder of his mother,
in so far as it had positive content,
was
no crime. For Orestes did the same
external
deed, and had in doing it the same
end in
view — to kill his mother; and yet
he is
not blamed,” and so on. The affirmative
is
the will, the intention, the act of
Nero.
“Wherein then consists Nero's criminality?
In nothing else but that he proved
himself
ungrateful, merciless, and disobedient.
But
it is certain that all this expresses
no
essence, and therefore God was not
the cause
of it, though He was the cause of Nero's
action and intention.” These last are
something
positive, but yet they do not constitute
the crime as such; it is only the negative
element, such as mercilessness, etc.
that
makes the action a crime. “We know
that whatever
exists, regarded in itself and without
taking
anything else into consideration, contains
a perfection which extends as widely
as the
essence of the thing itself extends,
for
the essence is in no way different
therefrom."
— "Because then,” we find in the
thirty-second
letter (pp. 541, 543), “God does not
regard
things abstractly, or form general
definitions,”
(of what the thing ought to be) “and
no more
reality is required of things than
the Divine
understanding and power has given and
actually
meted out to them; therefore it clearly
follows
that such privation exists only and
solely
in respect to our understanding, but
not
in respect to God;” for God is absolutely
real. It is all very well to say this,
but
it does not meet the case. For in this
way
God and the respect to our understanding
are different. Where is their unity?
How
is this to be conceived? Spinoza continues
in the thirty-sixth letter: “Although
the
works of the righteous (i. e., of those
who
have a clear idea of God, to which
they direct
all their actions and even their thoughts),
and” also the works “of the wicked
(i. e.,
of those who have no idea of God, but
only
ideas of earthly things," — individual,
personal interests and opinions, —
"by
which their actions and thoughts are
directed),
and all whatsoever exists, necessarily
proceed
from God's eternal laws and counsels,
and
perpetually depend on God, they are
yet not
distinguished from one another in degree,
but in essence; for although a mouse
as well
as an angel depends on God, and sorrow
as
well as joy, yet a mouse cannot be
a kind
of angel, and sorrow cannot be a kind
of
joy," — they are different in
essence.
There is therefore no ground for the
objection
that Spinoza's philosophy gives the
death-blow
to morality; we even gain from it the
great
result that all that is sensuous is
mere
limitation, and that there is only
one true
substance, and that human liberty consists
in keeping in view this one substance,
and
in regulating all our conduct in accordance
with the mind and will of the Eternal
One.
But in this philosophy it may with
justice
be objected that God is conceived only
as
Substance, and not as Spirit, as concrete.
The independence of the human soul
is therein
also denied, while in the Christian
religion
every individual appears as determined
to
salvation. Here, on the contrary, the
individual
spirit is only a mode, an accident,
but not
anything substantial. This brings us
to a
general criticism of the philosophy
of Spinoza,
in the course of which we shall consider
it from three different points of view.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the first place Spinozism is asserted
to be Atheism — by Jacobi, for instance
(Werke,
Vol. IV. Section I, p. 216) — because
in
it no distinction is drawn between
God and
the world; it makes nature the real
God,
or lowers God to the level of nature,
so
that God disappears and only nature
is established.
But it is not so much God and nature
that
Spinoza sets up in mutual opposition,
as
thought and extension; and God is unity,
not One made up of two, but absolute
Substance,
in which has really disappeared the
limitation
of the subjectivity of thought and
nature.
Those who speak against Spinoza do
so as
if it were on God's account that they
were
interested; but what these opponents
are
really concerned about is not God,
but the
finite — themselves. The relationship
between
God and the finite, to which we belong,
may
be represented in three different ways:
firstly,
only the finite exists, and in this
way we
alone exist, but God does not exist
— this
is atheism; the finite is here taken
absolutely,
and is accordingly the substantial.
Or, in
the second place, God alone exists;
the finite
has no reality, it is only phenomena,
appearance.
To say, in the third place, that God
exists
and we also exist is a false synthetic
union,
all amicable compromise. It is the
popular
view of the matter, that the one side
has
as much substantiality as the other;
God
is honoured and supreme, but finite
things
also have Being to exactly the same
extent.
Reason cannot remain satisfied with
this
"also,” with indifference like
this.
The philosophic requisite is therefore
to
apprehend the unity of these differences
in such a way that difference is not
let
slip, but proceeds eternally from substance,
without being, petrified into dualism.
Spinoza
is raised above this dualism; religion
is
so also, if we turn its popular conceptions
into thoughts. The atheism of the first
attitude
— when men set up as ultimate the arbitrariness
of the will, their own vanity, the
finite
things of nature, and the world dwells
for
ever in the mind — is not the standpoint
of Spinoza, for whom God is the one
and only
substance, the world on the contrary
being
merely an affection or mode of this
substance.
In the respect that Spinoza does not
distinguish
God from the world, the finite, it
is therefore
correct to term his theory atheism,
for his
words are these: Nature, the human
mind,
the individual, are God revealed under
particular
forms. It has been already remarked
(pp.
257, 258, 280) that undoubtedly Substance
with Spinoza does not perfectly fulfill
the
conception of God, since it is as Spirit
that He is to be conceived. But if
Spinoza
is called an atheist for the sole reason
that he does not distinguish God from
the
world, it is a misuse of the term.
Spinozism
might really just as well or even better
have been termed Acosmism, since according
to its teaching it is not to the world,
finite
existence, the universe, that reality
and
permanency are to be ascribed, but
rather
to God alone as the substantial. Spinoza
maintains that there is no such thing
as
what is known as the world; it is merely
a form of God, and in and for itself
it is
nothing. The world has no true reality,
and
all this that we know as the world
has been
cast into the abyss of the one identity.
There is therefore no such thing as
finite
reality, it has no truth whatever;
according
to Spinoza what is, is God, and God
alone.
Therefore the allegations of those
who accuse
Spinoza of atheism are the direct opposite
of the truth; with him there is too
much
God. They say: If God is the identity
of
mind and nature, then nature or the
individual
man is God. This is quite correct,
but they
forget that nature and the individual
disappear
in this same identity: and they cannot
forgive
Spinoza for thus annihilating them.
Those
who defame him in such a way as this
are
therefore not aiming at maintaining
God,
but at maintaining the finite and the
worldly;
they do not fancy their own extinction
and
that of the world. Spinoza's system
is absolute
pantheism and monotheism elevated into
thought.
Spinozism is therefore very far removed
from
being atheism in the ordinary sense;
but
in the sense that God is not conceived
as
spirit, it is atheism. However, in
the same
way many theologians are also atheists
who
speak of God only as the Almighty Supreme
Being, etc., who refuse to acknowledge
God,
and who admit the validity and truth
of the
finite. They are many degrees worse
than
Spinoza.
The second point to be considered is
the
method adopted by Spinoza for setting
forth
his philosophy; it is the demonstrative
method
of geometry as employed by Euclid,
in which
we find definitions, explanations,
axioms,
and theorems. Even Descartes made it
his
starting-point that philosophic propositions
must be mathematically handled and
proved,
that they must have the very same evidence
as mathematics. The mathematical method
is
considered superior to all others,
on account
of the nature of its evidence; and
it is
natural that independent knowledge
in its
re-awakening lighted first upon this
form,
of which it saw so brilliant an example.
The mathematical method is, however,
ill-adapted
for speculative content, and finds
its proper
place only in the finite sciences of
the
understanding. In modern times Jacobi
has
asserted (Werke, Vol. IV. Section I.
pp.
217-223) that all demonstration, all
scientific
knowledge leads back to Spinozism,
which
alone is a logical method of thought;
and
because it must lead thither, it is
really
of no service whatever, but immediate
knowledge
is what we must depend on. It may be
conceded
to Jacobi that the method of demonstration
leads to Spinozism, if we understand
thereby
merely the method of knowledge belonging
to the understanding. But the fact
is that
Spinoza is made a testing-point in
modern
philosophy, so that it may really be
said:
You are either a Spinozist or not a
philosopher
at all. This being so, the mathematical
and
demonstrative method of Spinoza would
seem
to be only a defect in the external
form;
but it is the fundamental defect of
the whole
position. In this method the nature
of philosophic
knowledge and the object thereof, are
entirely
misconceived, for mathematical knowledge
and method are merely formal in character
and consequently altogether unsuited
for
philosophy. Mathematical knowledge
exhibits
its proof on the existent object as
such,
not on the object as conceived; the
Notion
is lacking throughout; the content
of Philosophy,
however, is simply the Notion and that
which
is comprehended by the Notion. Therefore
this Notion as the knowledge of the
essence
is simply one assumed, which falls
within
the philosophic subject; and this is
what
represents itself to be the method
peculiar
to Spinoza's philosophy. Of this demonstrative
manner we have already seen these examples:
The definitions from which Spinoza
takes
his start — as in geometry a commencement
is made with the line, triangle, &c.
— concern universal determinations,
such
as cause of itself, the finite, substance,
attribute, mode, and so on, which are
solely
and simply accepted and assumed, not
deduced,
nor proved to be necessary; for Spinoza
is
not aware of how he arrives at these
individual
determinations. He further speaks of
axioms,
for instance (Ethic. P. I. Ax. I. p.
36):
“What is, is either in itself or in
another.”
The determinations “in itself” and
“in another”
are not shown forth in their necessity:
neither
is this disjunction proved, it is merely
assumed. The propositions have, as
such,
a subject and predicate which are not
similar.
When the predicate is proved of the
subject
and necessarily combined with it, the
discrepancy
remains that the one as universal is
related
to the other as particular: therefore
even
although the relation is proved, there
is
present at the same time a secondary
relation.
Mathematical science, in its true propositions
respecting a whole, escapes from the
difficulty
by proving also the converse of the
propositions,
in this way obtaining for them a special
definiteness by proving each proposition
in both ways. True propositions may,
therefore,
be looked on as definitions, and the
conversion
is the proof of the proposition in
the form
in which it is expressed. But this
means
of escaping the difficulty Philosophy
cannot
well employ, since the subject of which
something
is proved is itself only the Notion
or the
universal, and the proposition form
is therefore
quite superfluous and out of place.
What
has the form of the subject is in the
form
of an existent thing, as contrasted
with
the universal, the content of the proposition.
The existent thing is taken as signifying
existent in the ordinary sense; it
is the
word which we use in every-day life,
and
of which we have a conception that
has nothing
of the Notion in it. The converse of
a proposition
would simply read like this: The Notion
is
that which is thus popularly conceived.
This
proof from the usage of language —
that we
also understand this to be the meaning
in
every-day life, or in other words that
the
name is correct — has no philosophic
significance.
But if the proposition is not one like
this,
but an ordinary proposition, and if
the predicate
is not the Notion, but some general
term
or other, a predicate of the subject,
such
propositions are really not philosophic:
we might instance the statement that
substance
is one and not several, but only that
in
which substance and unity are the same.
Or,
in other words, this unity of the two
moments
is the very thing which the proof has
to
demonstrate, it is the Notion or the
essence.
In this case it looks as if the proposition
were the matter of chief importance,
the
truth. But if in these really only
so-called
propositions, subject and predicate
are in
truth not alike, because one is individual
and the other universal, their relation
is
essential, i. e., the reason for which
they
are one. The proof has here a false
position
indeed, as if that subject were implicit
or in itself, whereas subject and predicate
are, fundamentally even, moments in
separation;
in the judgment “God is One,” the subject
itself is universal, since it resolves
itself
into unity. On the other side it is
implied
in this false position that the proof
is
brought in from outside merely, as
in mathematics
from a preceding proposition, and that
the
proposition is not therefore conceived
through
itself; thus we see the ordinary method
of
proof take its middle term, the principle,
from anywhere it can, in the same way
as
in classification it takes its principle
of classification. The proposition
is then,
as it were, a secondary affair; but
we must
ask if this proposition is true. The
result
as proposition ought to be truth, but
is
only knowledge. The movement of knowledge,
as proof, falls therefore, in the third
place,
outside of the proposition, which ought
to
be the truth. The essential moments
of the
system are really already completely
contained
in the pre-suppositions of the definitions,
from which all further proofs have
merely
to be deduced. But whence have we these
categories
which here appear as definitions? We
find
them doubtless in ourselves, in scientific
culture. The existence of the understanding,
the will, extension, is therefore not
developed
from infinite substance, but it is
directly
expressed in these determinations,
and that
quite naturally; for of a truth there
exists
the One into which everything enters,
in
order to be absorbed therein, but out
of
which nothing comes. For as Spinoza
has set
up the great proposition, all determination
implies negation (supra, p. 267), and
as
of everything, even of thought in contrast
to extension, it may be shown that
it is
determined and finite, what is essential
in it rests upon negation. Therefore
God
alone is the positive, the affirmative,
and
consequently the one substance; all
other
things, on the contrary, are only modifications
of this substance, and are nothing
in and
for themselves. Simple determination
or negation
belongs only to form, but is quite
another
thing from absolute determinateness
or negativity,
which is absolute form; in this way
of looking
at it negation is the negation of negation,
and therefore true affirmation. This
negative
self-conscious moment, the movement
of knowledge,
which pursues its way in the thought
which
is present before us, is however certainly
lacking to the content of Spinoza's
philosophy,
or at least it is only externally associated
with it, since it falls within self-consciousness.
That is to say, thoughts form the content,
but they are not self-conscious thoughts
or Notions: the content signifies thought,
as pure abstract self-consciousness,
but
an unreasoning knowledge, into which
the
individual does not enter: the content
has
not the signification of 'I.' Therefore
the
case is as in mathematics; a proof
is certainly
given, conviction must follow, but
yet the
matter fails to be understood. There
is a
rigid necessity in the proof, to which
the
moment of self-consciousness is lacking;
the 'I' disappears, gives itself altogether
up, merely withers away. Spinoza's
procedure
is therefore quite correct; yet the
individual
proposition is false, seeing that it
expresses
only one side of the negation. The
understanding
has determinations which do not contradict
one another; contradiction the understanding
cannot suffer. The negation of negation
is,
however, contradiction, for in that
it negates
negation as simple determination, it
is on
the one hand affirmation, but on the
other
hand also really negation; and this
contradiction,
which is a matter pertaining to reason,
is
lacking in the case of Spinoza. There
is
lacking the infinite form, spirituality
and
liberty. I have already mentioned before
this (pp. 93, 94; 129-137) that Lullus
and
Bruno attempted to draw up a system
of form,
which should embrace and comprehend
the one
substance which organizes itself into
the
universe; this attempt Spinoza did
not make.
Because negation was thus conceived
by Spinoza
in one-sided fashion merely, there
is, in
the third place, in his system, an
utter
blotting out of the principle of subjectivity,
individuality, personality, the moment
of
self-consciousness in Being. Thought
has
only the signification of the universal,
not of self-consciousness. It is this
lack
which has, on the one side, brought
the conception
of the liberty of the subject into
such vehement
antagonism to the system of Spinoza,
because
it set aside the independence of the
human
consciousness, the so-called liberty
which
is merely the empty abstraction of
independence,
and in so doing set aside God, as distinguished
from nature and the human consciousness
—
that is as implicit consciousness of
freedom,
of the spiritual, which is the negative
of
the corporeal, and man has also the
consciousness
that his true Being lies in what is
opposed
to the corporeal. This has been firmly
maintained
by religion, theology, and the sound
common
sense of the common consciousness,
and this
form of opposition to Spinoza appears
first
of all in the assertion that freedom
is real,
and that evil exists. But because for
Spinoza,
on the other hand, there exists only
absolute
universal substance as the non-particularized,
the truly real — all that is particular
and
individual, my subjectivity and spirituality,
has, on the other hand, as a limited
modification
whose Notion depends on another, no
absolute
existence. Thus the soul, the Spirit,
in
so far as it is an individual Being,
is for
Spinoza a mere negation, like everything
in general that is determined. As all
differences
and determinations of things and of
consciousness
simply go back into the One substance,
one
may say that in the system of Spinoza
all
things are merely cast down into this
abyss
of annihilation. But from this abyss
nothing
comes out; and the particular of which
Spinoza
speaks is only assumed and presupposed
from
the ordinary conception, without being
justified.
Were it to be justified, Spinoza would
have
to deduce it from his Substance; but
that
does not open itself out, and therefore
comes
to no vitality, spirituality or activity.
His philosophy has only a rigid and
unyielding
substance, and not yet spirit; in it
we are
not at home with ourselves. But the
reason
that God is not spirit is that He is
not
the Three in One. Substance remains
rigid
and petrified, without Boehme's sources
or
springs; for the individual determinations
in the form of determinations of the
understanding
are not Boehme's originating spirits,
which
energize and expand in one another
(supra,
pp. 202, 203). What we find regarding
this
particular then is that it is only
a modification
of absolute substance, which, however,
is
not declared to be such; for the moment
of
negativity is what is lacking to this
rigid
motionlessness, whose single form of
activity
is this, to divest all things of their
determination
and particularity and cast them back
into
the one absolute substance, wherein
they
are simply swallowed up, and all life
in
itself is utterly destroyed. This is
what
we find philosophically inadequate
with Spinoza;
distinctions are externally present,
it is
true, but they remain external, since
even
the negative is not known in itself.
Thought
is the absolutely abstract, and for
that
very reason the absolutely negative;
it is
so in truth, but with Spinoza it is
not asserted
to be the absolutely negative. But
if in
opposition to Spinozism we hold fast
to the
assertion that Spirit, as distinguishing
itself from the corporeal, is substantial,
actual, true, and in the same way that
freedom
is not something merely privative,
then this
actuality in formal thought is doubtless
correct, yet it rests only upon feeling;
but the further step is that the Idea
essentially
includes within itself motion and vitality,
and that it consequently has in itself
the
principle of spiritual freedom. On
the one
hand, therefore, the defect of Spinozism
is conceived as consisting in its want
of
correspondence with actuality; but
on the
other side it is to be apprehended
in a higher
sense, I mean in the sense that substance
with Spinoza is only the Idea taken
altogether
abstractly, not in its vitality.
If, in conclusion, we sum up this criticism
that we have offered, we would say
that on
the one hand with Spinoza negation
or privation
is distinct from substance; for he
merely
assumes individual determinations,
and does
not deduce them from substance. On
the other
hand the negation is present only as
Nothing,
for in the absolute there is no mode;
the
negative is not there, but only its
dissolution,
its return: we do not find its movement,
its Becoming and Being. The negative
is conceived
altogether as a vanishing moment —
not in
itself, but only as individual self-consciousness;
it is not like the Separator we met
with
in Boehme's system (supra, p. 206).
Self-consciousness
is born from this ocean, dripping with
the
water thereof, i. e., never coming
to absolute
self-hood; the heart, the independence
is
transfixed — the vital fire is wanting.
This
lack has to be supplied, the moment
of self-consciousness
has to be added. It has the following
two
special aspects, which we now perceive
emerging
and gaining acceptance; in the first
place
the objective aspect, that absolute
essence
obtains in self-consciousness the mode
of
an object of consciousness for which
the
“other” exists, or the existent as
such,
and that what Spinoza, understood by
the
“modes” is elevated to objective reality
its an absolute moment of the absolute;
in
the second place we have the aspect
of self-consciousness,
individuality, independence. As was
formerly
the case with respect to Bacon and
Boehme,
the former aspect is here taken up
by the
Englishman, John Locke, the latter
by the
German Leibnitz; in the first case
it did
not appear as a moment, nor did it
in the
second appear as absolute Notion. Now
while
Spinoza only takes notice of these
ordinary
conceptions, and. the highest point
of view
he reaches in regard to them is that
they
sink and disappear in the one Substance,
Locke on the contrary examines the
genesis
of these conceptions, while Leibnitz
opposes
to Spinoza the infinite multiplicity
of individuals,
although all these monads have one
monad
as the basis of their Being. Both Locke
and
Leibnitz therefore came forward as
opponents
of the abovementioned one-sidedness
of Spinoza.
Notes:
1. Collectanea de vita B. de Spinoza
(addita
Operibus ed. Paulus Jennæ 1802-1803,
T. II.),
pp. 593-604, 612-628 (Spinoza Epist.
LIII-LIV.
in Oper. ed. Paul T. I. pp. 638-640)
642-665; Spinozæ Oper. ed. Paul T.
II. Præf.
p. XVI.
2. Collectanea de vita B. de Spinoza,
pp.
629-641; Spinozæ Ethic. (Oper. T. II.)
Pp.
1, 3 et not., 33.
3. Spinoz. Ethices, P. I. Prop. V.
VIII.
X. et Schol., XIII. pp. 37-39, 41,
42, 45.
4. Spinoz. Ethices, P. I. Prop. XVII.,
Coroll.
I., II., et Schol., Prop. XVIII., Prop.
XX.,
et Coroll. I. Prop. XXI., XXVI., XXVII.,
XXIX., XXXII., XXXIII. Schol. II. pp.
51-57,
59, 61, 63, 67, 68.
5. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. I.,
II.,
VII. et Schol. pp. 78, 79, 82, 83.
6. Spinoz. Ethic. P. I. Prop. XXX-XXXII.
pp. 62, 63; P. III. Defin. III. p.
132; Prop.
XI. Schol., p. 141.
7. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. XI.
Demonst.
et Coroll. pp. 86, 87; Defin. IV. pp.
77,
78.
8. Dictionnaire historique et critique
(édition
de 1740, T. IV.), Article Spinosa,
p. 261,
Note N. No. IV.
9. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. XII.,
XIII.
et Schol. Prop. XIV., XXIII., V. pp.
87-89,
95, 102, 80, 81.
10. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. XI.
(Axiom
I. p. 78) et Demonstr. Prop. X. pp.
85-87;
Prop. VI. p. 81; P. III. Prop. II.
pp. 133,
134.
11. Spinoz. Ethices, P. III. Prop.
VI-VIII.
Prop. IX. Schol. pp. 139,1 140; P.
II. Prop.
XLIX. Coroll. p. 123; P. III. Prop.
II. Schol.
p. 136; P. V. Prop. III. Demonst. et
Coroll.
pp. 272, 273.
12. Spinoz. Ethices, P. III. Prop.
I. p.
132; Prop. III. p. 138; P. IV. Præf.
p. 199;
P. III. Prop. XI. Schol. pp. 141, 142;
P.
IV. Prop. II. p. 205; P. III. Prop.
III.
et Schol. p. 138.
13. Spinoz. Ethices, P. V. Prop. XXXVI.
Schol. Prop. XXXVIL Demonstr., Prop.
XXXVIII.
et Schol. pp. 293-295.
14. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. XL.
Schol.
II. pp. 113, 114.
15. Spinoz. Ethices, P. II. Prop. XLIV.
et Coroll. II. pp. 117, 118; Prop.
XLV. p.
119; P. V. Prop. XXX. p. 289: P. II.
Prop.
XXXII. p. 107.
16. Spinoz. Ethices, P. V. Prop. XIV.
p.
280; Prop. VI. p. 275; Prop. XXVII.
pp. 287,
288; Prop. XXXII. Coroll.; Prop. XXXV.
pp.
291, 292.
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