138 68 16MB
English Pages 402 [416] [416] Year 1928
221 experienced and interpreted.
The
roots of metaphysics too are to
attempt to remain be found in these spiritual motives, in spite of its The hopelessness of this aim has already been pure cognition.
by Kant when he disclosed the development of the mimdus intelUgihilis by moral consciousness, and placed the category {Primat dcr praJctlscJien of value above the category of being. demonstrated
appended
may have moved Hamann when he
Something similar
Vermmft.)
expression
the
to
‘Things of another world are nothing
the note;
another world’
of
‘things
more than
certain peculiar
views of the present changeable and sensible nature which that
is
Keduced
given to ns.’^)
supernatural world-picture with
God beyond, which
‘lifts
is
forms,
is
all
to the final simplest motives, the
creation out of nothing and the
its
of
central experience
a
of
freedom
Pantheism on the other hand,
above nature’.
itself
in all its different
dency which
radiation
a
is
is
of the experience of depen-
a reflex
based on the biological, logical or aesthetic context
of life.
Finally,
of the
empirical
follows from this that such a strong devaluation
it
be bound up
consciousness of reality can
witli
world degenerates into mere
the theistic viewpoint that the present
appearance, or at least into a meaningless purely negatively deter-
mined matter
(//?)
This sentiment plays as important a part
ov).
dualism as in Kant’s and the entire early Christian world
in Plato’s
lived in this dualism
But since
of
cognition
mind and body. and
its
—
achievements finds in religious
one must from
consciousness such an opposing force,
its
point of
view, either through I’eflection or experience, consider the question of the ‘limits
thus appears dualistic
of cognition’.
type
to belief.
motivated scepticism; giving
of
religious
sufficiencies;
has
three
Either science
refer
meaning
in
its
to
‘belief
the contrast which
and knowledge’ the
is
of
subordinating
devaluated by a religiously so to speak, constitutive
or the functional sphere of belief sort
of
possibilities
so that there is,
mutually delimited by a
also
we
by the naive old phrase
religious
knowledge
If
room
lacks
for the
and
and knowledge
inis
double mental book keeping in
0 In P. H. Jacobi, Works Vol. IV, 2, p. 70. Very characteristic is the note which Goethe (Maxims and Reflections IV.) adds to thi.s
passage in
Hamann: For him, as a pronounced immanent mystic, the turning toward another world amounts to watching the blindspot or mental aberration.
TYPES OF MEN THE PSYCHOLOaY AND ETHICS OF PERSONALITY
-
OT
^IDUABD SPBANGER FBOrESSOB OP PHILOSOPHY AXH PPOAQOOICS IN THE UNIVERSITY OP BERLIN
AUTHOEIZED TRANSLATION OP THE PIFTH GERMAN EDITION BY
PAUL J
W
PIGOES Ph.D
MAX NIEMETER VERLAG HALLE (SAALB) 1928
HAFNER PUBLISHING COMPANY
NEW YORK
All nglits renrred Coigrrigbt
bj Mns
AicfflCfcr Verltg, Halle
(Saale),
l'i3ti
DEDICATED TO
ALOIS AND SOFIE RIEHL WITH LOVE EVERLASTING
TABLE OF CONTENTS vn
Author’s Preface Part I
Philosophical Basis.
Chapter
1
„
2
Two Kinds of Psychology Methods of Qeisteswissensdmft
3 Analytical and Syn-
21
thetical
3 4
„
5
Mental Acts of Solidarity The Elementary Mental Laws
33 55
6
SubjeotiTO Spheres of Interests and Objective Levels
„
7
Summnry''and Outline
II
The Idcallp Basic Types of Indmduahty
„
Part
Indmdnal Mental Acts
„
,
The Theoretic Attitude The Economic Attitude The Aesthetic^ Attitude 4 The Social Attitude 5 The Political Attitude 6 The Eeligious Attitude
Chapter 1 2 „ ^ r
„ „
Part III
'
Part
2
The Ethical Problem The One sided Systems
„
3
Collective
IV
172 188 210
Conserpiences foi Ethics
„
„
109 130 147
3
Chapter 1
„
64 84 104
249 of Ethics
and Individual Morality
4 The Hierarchy of Values 5 The Personal Ideal
The Understanding of Mental
„
Complex TjT®® 2 Histoncally determined Types
„
3
„
4
Chapter 1
On Understanding The Hhythm of Life
257 267 278 304
Slnictuics
319 348 366 391
AUTHOR’S PREFACE
P
erhaps the study of
man
is
any other science
And
it is
we have
more worthy of consideiation than cnnous that though for centanes
the nn/beious species of plants and animals in
classified
a well-ordered system, and have mosses and each minute fication
species
At any
homo
we
rate,
still
names
for the raiest
regard man, whose classi-
he weie
if
is
by
human
of
differences
and
one
'relations of
Noah’s Ark
But thisjs only genealogy not morphology
contains an infinite vaiictj
all of
man, only
the species
classify
and clan, that
according to race, nationalit} descent
scientific
ne
insect,
should be more impoitant to us, as
if
there were
a Linnaeus of anthropology he would need manj more than twentyfour classes to cover (he most important foims of the
human body,
oven disregaiding the human soul This book attempts to carry ont a new method of diffeiontiating
human
There have been many
types, especially types of the soul
attempts to solve this problem, and the old theoiy of Tempei aments
has endured for thousands of years
The
^Charactets’ of Theophiastus
ranks with the most important literature of the world of
man
ancient
The more a
times
organic world
is
carried
biological
ovei
into
and genetic study of the
the
woild of
frequent are the attempts to utilize the instincts dencies
Gl issification
according to his dominant emotions also dates back to
of
man
as
a basis for classifying
more the
are
emphasized, the finer are the methods
of intelligence
is
And
In these
undoubtedly the leadei
Everyone must admit that man can be
by interpreting him
more
developed for deter-
mining them on a qualitative and quantitative basis psychological efforts America
tho
anginal ten-
and general endowment
the
differences
man oi
the individual
as a multifoim
entirely undei stood only
phenomenon among the psy chic
organisms of the earth, and as a biologically determined being
having great
possibilities
of variation
As such
a being
man
is
—
—
vm
dependent on the conditions of his nitiinl inMnonnicnt like >n\ other jininnl, rcprnrdlecs of nhether one ronsidcrs Jus psAcJnc onl>
diftcrentntion>! •IS
the result of einironmcntsl diffcrentis or
is
the outcome of diff’crcnl mental direclues
onh
in
the
Icicl
n
n
but
iturnl
serintion of his life depend
md
poners to
The
book
this
Mcn point
il
mcntil
ilso
problem
llie
1
on the
is
learned Isrgcl}
Jins
calcgonts
from
the
liittei
think tint the biological foun-
il
and ln\c
region
hitlicito
leitlu in which mtanlng-conknts
ncglcetcd
become
Ameucin, Lnglish, and
i
In Gernnui
with
the
nothcr line of
Ihoiiglit
is
soeiological
Ins been dc\ duped,
of Culture (liultmiyhilosophc)
called the 'Pliilosophi
life
large estent rrench scientists ako,
consider thc-e p-ichie altitudes of bthivior
problems
slaits
to
these
Eignifieant
bciond mere adaptation to conditions which bareh pri-scnc nsiivlh
ire
tod'ii
(cultur'il)
piiniiinlv
«l
pre-
unimport'int but because sticntisls have minutch
ire
the biologic
snpcrbiologic
And
forces
ciiltnriil
nhich he represents
bnt
biological
do «o not because
1
dations of life
studied
much on
is
dificrontntioiis
consider
1
m'ln li\es not
formstion and
tlie
energies of intnrc ninth lus mind
control
therefore not onli In
lliil
n mltiirnl cniironinent
.ilso in
he has schicicd lodat
iiliirli
Tins school
coni option tint there arc dcteriiiin ints of higher
developmental levels other thin the mere f'Ct of social lelations
These
factors
creating
unique objective contents of experiencing and
arc
cm,
that
nevertheless
obev
of course, livv-
Thus
there
is
vvliich
appcir
oiilv
cannot
bo deduced from the mere
in
forms
sociil
hut
and act in common
fact that people live i
diftircncc between the soeicdogv
iiiaikcd
of
Gciman 'GctslcspJtilocopJiic or KnUnrphJosophic icison nnnv points of view set forth here m iv seem
"Western nations ind
Tor
this
thcAracncm
foreign to
these chapters the
general
Ic iding
i
mav give
1 ask Iheitforc tint he
of the argument before condemning
For, the f
psv chologists
leader
fnendlv consider ition and at least ittcmpt
ticnd
icts
considered bv
arc to a large
extent
to follow
it
as mis-
both Amcric.m and German the same
And
these
f.icts
which we tn
to understand scientific illv will appear most clcarlv the reader begins with the summarv of the first part lOG) and then reads Paitll The first part might (pp 104
if
—
give tho impression that tin® (it the recent International
is
inotlici
instance of whit Clapartdc
Congress of pBjdiologv
m
Groningen,
1926) complained of as tLe German passion the contiary, as indicated
genuine
are these
by the German
life-forms
It
my
is
title
belief
On
‘Zehensformen', these
that
we cannot
solve
by such simple psychological concepts as ‘Idea’, ‘Instinct’, ‘Adaptation’ and ‘Inheritance and we need more complex tools of analysis
questions
‘Peeling’,
‘Striving’,
but
Variation’,
that
Modem Geiman
psychologists usually speak of the investigation of
We
forms (^Gmeheitsfo) scinmg)
total
wilting systematic
foi
Bat we are not dealing here with abstract questions
treatises
no longei believe that the
highei psychic achievements can be understood through the summation 01
We
elaboration of simple psychological elements
regard these
elements as dependent phenomena in a meaningful hfe-totahty the
whole
which must be known
of
one wants to understand the
it
part played in the psychic whole by each individual psychic function
In a word, which
new psychology context
physical organism
its
oiganism
is
and vegetative functions,
The same
it,
it
Even a
oi
aggregation
is
a life-unity
cells is
determined
Besides that, the total
whose conditions
and from which, by means of
‘vital importance’ for
its
it
sense organs
chooses just those factois that arc of
that
is,
of biological significance
more apparent on a mental level No one feelings, instincts and volitional acts belong
relation is
can deny that ideas, as
and the elementary
group of
whole
also placed in an environment for
internally organized
just
cell oi
relation or contribution to the
this
or meaningful total
life- context,
more than a mere summation which could exist alone It
which the function of each
by IB
is
one of
each
of cells
becomes the fundamental concept of
leceive their significance only from this total
functions
in
also
the structure,
of primary importance foi psychology,
IS
much
to
economic activity
investigation
scientific
or
as
leligwus contemplation
to
atUstic
creation,
But for the very
reason that these elements appear in all these connections, the
importance
lies
pecubar kind
not so
much
in the elements themselves as in their
And
of interaction
this inteiaction to
foim a total
achievement of unique significance 1 call a stmetwe
The concept IS
familiar
to
stiuctiire
biologists,
the theoiy of organisms grasp
reason
the
we
whole both in
or law of construction (Aiifbaugesets)
and
But its
this it is
concept of totality appears in
always
difficult for science to
totabty and individuality
follow a procedure that
is
For
this
divided into four steps, each
Btep of wLicli 16 as artificial ns all mental analysis of an organism
must be
wc
(1) First
totality of the soul its
pure form, that
ideal tjTies which
abstraction
Then we think of this value-tendenc} m we idealise it In this way we construct
ifl,
we use
This
as regular though artificial outlines
counteracted by our third step,
is
from tbc
isolate a psjohic value -tendency
(2)
(3) the relation of
the one-sided tjpe to the whole (the method of totalisation)
(4)
The
fourth step also counterbalances the initial artificiality of our method b) the process of individuahsation which emphasizes special historical,
Thus we develop we think of the abstract
geographical and wholly personal circumstances
a
scientific
method similar
First
to Galileo’s
we add more and more
pure case and then
concrete conditions
In this way the psychology of higher psychic phenomena can
be made
a science suitable for the foundation of the various
into
social sciences insofar as the
understood at
all
Even though
this
ovenndmdnal
cultural forms can be
through their reactions on individual mental
whole method may seem too
life
abstract, nevertheless
abstraction is on essential preliminaiy for science
Even
anal) tical
geometry does not begin at once with curves of the second order but rather with regular figures such
is
the straight line, the circle
or the sphere, and then proceeds to the most complex forms, provided that such
forms
illustrate
still
a law by means of which they
weie evolved
Our aim
is to
contemporaneous society
cognize psyohologicallv the context of our real
life
as
In Germany
we
it
goes on in the frame of a civilized
are convinced that this life not only can
be undei stood psychologically but that
it
also represents
individual context of unique laws of meaning only
an over-
Here, however,
we
venture to deal with what can be expenenced in individual
mental
life
It
would be wholly erroneous
to
believe that any
one of these types really exists as desenbed by our wholly one-sided method. They exist as little as we may expect to find a perfect cube, or a rigid body or a body falling in a struction of these ideal basic types of clarify
and bring order
vacuum The conhuman nature serves only to
to the confusion of
complex real forms There
must be some way for our thought to approach these and more closely Therefore suffice
to
it
is
realities
most important to question whether our
understand the most
significant
forms
more tyqies
of personality.
—
XI
Pei haps the reader misses a basic type that has been more definitely
The
expressed in America the ‘Peoweei
type
’
phenomenon Bnt I consider type Por the centie of this the
in
pioneei
the
conquest of
for existence
great
theiefoie,
IS
aesthetic
achievements
that
well tiained
is,
To
self-control
eneigies,
this extent his
When
Thus man
is
filled
utiLtarian aim) in
tlie
it
it
with a joyous piide,
oots,
were,
has a leaning to
consciousness pf his
even
participating in the peaceful competition of sport
i
the feeling
enjoyed onlj in the preliminary exercise (as
side
He
and the conquest of the elements
foimallv, with no immediatel}
the
political
Usually the
obstacles
mental impulses, are biological
like those of all
power
material
vitality,
pon era and
decisive volitional
of
an expression of the
attitude lies in the feeling of powei,
human and
himself with the urgent problems of colonisation,
busies
struggle
needs,
as
it
I did not consider
and inventor) as an independent
a uniqne and very important
lepresents
it
why
translatoi asked
(the adventurer, explorer
giant that
I
if
And
he if
is
onn only
ho breaks
a record he glows with the feclmg of superioiity in which he experiences the apotheosis of his vital energies substitute for military traming for the instincts tend to it
Spoit becomes a
modem man whose
atiophy in peaceful society
,
all the
includes real dangers and serious obstacles
combatii o
moie insofar as
Indeed spoit has
now become almost a sepaiato legion of onltnro which might have Nevertheless 1 have not developed it as its own typical attitude such because this sphere of
power and the
overlap
lies
on the borderlme where the region
aesthetic spheie of play parti}
jSport is
touch and partly
a divergence from the political instinct into an
imaginatively determined foim of play as demanded b} a peaceful, indnstiialized
and democratic community objected that this book abandons the concicte
Some people have
gionnd of experience and lednces psychologj to mere speculation 1
cannot admit this objection and beg indulgence
the reasons for
my
stand
finall} to indicate
Ps} chological experience
is
not gained
only in the laboratory oi the clinic or merely fiom contempoiar}
human of this
beings bnt also from the vast nnmbei of
whom wo know broademng
of
men
only through literary documents onr
experience
all the
of the past
Wo
need
more since otherwise
we should learn only psychological phenomena which coriespond What is the value of the most comto our cultural determinants
xn
—
prohensivc mnES-statisticB compared to tbo enormous material of different pE}chic
strnotnres
psychology aims
and
aspect
whicli
Innsmits
Listory
M\
ns’
to
an understanding of these historical etmcturcs
at
even though I can give
their transfoi matron
The supplement
to this typo psy
Bpace to this
little
chology would be a de\ elop-
mental psr chology' emphasizing on one hand structural transformations in the different ages of individuals in the
human
soul itself during
have only attacked the
I
IQt'i
JvgcndaUos'
dcs
first
and on the
its
other, stiiictnral changes
So far
thonsand-y car-old history
pait of this problem in
ed Leipzig 1928 It
my
'^Psj/chologie
also necessary to study
is
the mental stincture of piimitivc people or earlier cultural epochs,
and a few attempts have been made in nail’s
And
To
this direction
well-known book 'Adolescence' I owe
many
Stanley
suggestions
Spengler and the explorer Probenius in Germany liaie shown
an especially
go
sense in this direction
fine psi chological
To summarize direction which I am beyond
book only
this
a
takes
first step,
convinced must be pursued further
if
but in a
ps\ chologi
phenomena to the understanding The more differentiated modern men and
elementary
IS
to
of
higher mental lifc^
cultures become, the greater will be our need of these insights for
oui practical life
and IS
if
as
We
possible in the it
must bridge the gap between soul and
context of life from which our
modem
culture has drifted
This
aw ay but
without which a higher culture in the long run cannot last I
soul,
same way between group and group
were, the conscious re- establishment of the diiine total
want
to
—
thank the translator for the great pains he has
taken in preparing this book for the English -reading pnbbc
am
also
much indebted
to
Dr Japha
in
Halle (Saale)
for
reading of the English text and careful revision of the proof
has thus aided greatly lu the success of a
And
finally I
difficult
wish to thank my friend and pupil
I
the
She
undertaking
Dr Wenke
in Berlin
for his help
Berlin, Febniary 25
1926
Eduard Spranger.
PART
I
PHILOSOPHICAL BASIS
iger, Tjpea of
mon
1
TWO KINDS OF PSYCHOLOGY
O
ne might begm a study of character and with the question
pomt
scientific
of view?
its
possible types
I9 there such a thing as character from a
Empiricists maintain that
we must
limit
clnracter study strictly to actual psychological processes and their
The} also believe that theie is no gionnd for assuming earner of these expenences and reactions, either constant or
vanations -I
developing according to definite laws
admit that states,
many
there
is
Foi, even though empincists
an individual connected with psychological
of them regard this individual as a flux 01 an event
(Altus) and so declare that
it is
unwarranted
to conceive it as a
substance
by substance we necessarily mean ‘matenal substance* this attitude 16 only too well justified. Eant too limited the concept of substance to the permanent substratum which we think of apnori as underlying all temporally changmg natural phenomena This, If
however, IS,
is
only the transcendental conception of substance, that
the concept of permanence in a theory of cognition
scientist
means by substance not only what
is
But the
absolutely permanent
and unchanging but also a unifying law or a sum
total of
laws
by means of which we think of a subject relatively permanent in time Thus the scientist divides substance into a complex of ‘legal’ relations .ind
which are valid for a mental subject locabsed in space
time I
cannot conceive
how
the
Geisteswissenschaft&i
could get
along without such a concept of substance, namely the assumption that the behavior of a subject which is identical scientifically investigated
Only by means
m
time
may be
of this conception is the
mental subject determined as having 'being* and the manifoldness of
its
behavior
reduced
to
essential
{Wesens-
corielations
verJcmiepftinge/i)
1*
4
The problem however,
further complicated bj
is
undergoing some sort of development in which
as
the fact that
the individual as stable, but must think of
we cannot regard
its
‘being’
it
is
preserved according to certain laws in spite of organic deformation, 1
which necessarily follow one from
e certain changes of condition
ps\oholog\
We
the
of
at
stage
definite
shall, rather, take a cross-section of the subject
maturity and view
of mental
attitudes
laws
ns the earner of constant
it
That we are here dealing with
behaaior
shown bj the
is
we assume
fict that
above tcmpoial experience and
over and
dual,
to elaborate here a developmental
But we do not intend
another
and
dispositions to experiences
mjstenous
for science, not
acts
in the indivi-
‘acts’,
enduring
Tliesc dispositions arc then,
qualities but precipitations of cognized
A
laws and the mental grasp of identity in temporal changes
become an object of knowledge if we presuppose If (he individual were a chaos devoid of laws,
subject can only
lawful behavior that
IS,
if it
could not be reduced to gcncial ideal
interdependent relations of ideal
mamtams
All
entities
(and
should have to abandon
the very attempt to formulate a science involves
that
certain assumptions
—
science itself
we
entities),
But wc should follow Kant when he
a scientific characteiologj
which afterward become the foundation of the
this discussion
however, has as jet given us no specific
information about the kind of law peculiar to the mental realm
But
let
us not be
theory of cognition itself
and oui
pnnciple
of
We
to
want
detained bj
We
questions pertaining solclj
want rather
preliminary question the
differentiating
basic
to
is
to a
present characterologj
meant
tvpes
bring
to
out the
mental attitudes
in
reduce each to a special law by means of uhich
internal construction
may be
imderstood
its
Let ns now, therefore,
consider in more detail whether such an investigation would
come withm the field of psychology Some psychologists confine their studj to the subject, that is, to processes and conditions belonging to an individual which another consciousness can only reconstruct indirectly through the aid of
own
subjective processes
For such a science even would bo a nddle
to
its
approach the
subjectivity of anothei being
As a matter creations
By
of fact, subjectivity is always related to objectn e
‘objecfive’ I
mean
(a) only
what
is
independent of
the single individual, that which confionts and influences
may mean
the mental objects which
are naturally
derive therefrom their enduring form
works of
art,
the individual
rites
is
etc)
These
distinction remains to
be made
We
attached to
too
matter and
however, repiesent at the
latter
by which
effectual relations
A
constant!} surrounded
which
we have
e tools, language, writing,
(i
same time psychologically determined
and
it
the sectional area of sensory phenomena with
socalled Nature presents each individual, (b) Secondly
must
and very important
third
differentiate (c) the over-
indiiidual meaning contained in the matenal points of contact of these objects from the psychic reciprocal inteirelation tbej
are
it
it
I
a book
give
it
an
an intellectual
more from the point aesthetically These
"dearly give ns a systematic division of the is based in each case on an ideal relation
a unique system of values
i
may \iew
as
it
by which
consider
mind which
sciousness
has
looking upon
theoretically, or once
appearance, I
of its
distinctions
objective to
again
significance,
achievement I classify
three
I
a part of matter) as a saleable object
economic of view
When
np aocio - histoncally
built
(primarilj
This division
by the giving and expeiiencing
corresponding objective system
of
of
is
reflected in con-
meaning which always
values
Each
of these
Thns the
fundamental attitudes Innst be based on a unique law
laws of cognition aie different from those underlying economic behavior, or those
upon which
artistic cieation
and enjoyment aie
based
By
considering the subject with
as interwoven with the
world, relate
we it
free
it
to objective lealities
(1) because
expeiiences and creations
They
are objective
foi
states
and
three reasons
they are attached to physical forms -whether these
function as direct carriers of value,
means
its
configurations of the histoiioal and social
from the isolation of purely subjective
of
or sjmbols,
as signs
of artistio expression- (2) because they
from the reciprocal relations
many
or
as
have been developed
single
subjects
-in
this
context I call them collectively determined forms- and (3) because
they are based on definite laws of meaning which have an overindividnal validity
The whole
This last point needs elucidation
of nature is never present to our senses at
one time, and in the same way the histoiico-mental woild given to us in
its totality
is
any
nevei
Bather both must be ‘actualized’ again
6
oxpcncncc
jind agniii jn individual
nhicli exists ‘for us’ is infimtelj
also
so
field,
iiidividual’s
And
the menial world onlj
IS
the context of niturc
is
greater than
oiir
limited )
Elements heie are rather to be conceived as conscious contents
which
differentiate
themselves
qualitatively
and
spectivclv anal} zed as independent phenomena, artificial
Those
isolation
if
can
be
intio-
need be through
qualities of the elements
which can no
longer appeal independently in consciousness are aptly designated '
ittributes’, that is,
man> psychologists
dependent simple contents classify single
Thus, for instance,
sound impressions as independent
conscious elements, but differentiate nevertheless the attributes of
volume and timbre
pitch,
This ps>chology usually considers only so
many
classes
of
conscious elements as aie necessary and sufficient to build up the total process
method successfully used in
the
Etiation of psychic
used to
This
of individual consciousness
make
atoms
(i
all natural
is
an imitation of
The
sciences
lUii-
o conscious particles) has in fact been
clear the intention of this synthetic process
The
of the method differs widely with individual
actual development
Some
with a primal y class of psychological elements and deduce otheis from them, conceiving tho latter
psj cliologists
start
m
some way as attributes Herbart attempts to build up conscious life as a mechanism of ideas in which feeling and desire are only ‘iccompaniments of the one class of primary ideas in
his
if
This conception receives a slightly different emphasis
we agree with Wundt
but
a
Muensterberg,
physiological psychology treats the simple sensation as a
psychic atom
piocess
In this
that the soul
case
is
howevei,
not a substantial being, simple processes merely
replace the simplest elements Psychologists do not always go so fai
one class of piimai} elements or processes
number
a limited the
tnpaitite
sponding
of basic classes
division
into
to cognition, feeling
ideas,
The
as to postulate only
Some
of them retain
outstanding
feelmgs
and conation)
and
example
dosiies
is
(coive-
Usually these classes
are then furthei subdivided
*)
long
The
external object, for instance, and not the idea is
two inches
10
We are not interested in giving a detailed and in subjecting each
in this direction
no
tainly find
account of the attempts
One can
to criticism
mental phenomena in experience general names and to
the province of psychologj'
ne
the above
find that
is
But we must question whether
denies that the poet, the
educator
word
of
psychological processes the minister and the
historian,
must be good psychologists in the accepted sense of the
But
it 18
a striking fact that those
achievements in this
psychology
of
18
field
aiif
often
who have made
dm
notable
knew nothing whatever about
The psychology
elements
Romeo md Jitha common with such that this
in asking this
accomplish the most im-
to
fails
portant results for the understanding
Noone
And
thus exhausted
method
utilize these
and then of the
of the simpler
a more specific description first more complex psychological states In
cer-
similar and funda-
fault with the attempt to give
Gottfried
in
a form of analysis
And
a
Keller’s
has nothing in
for instance,
JDorfe,
who would deny Or take the psycho-
yet
a profound psychological study?
logy of politics, can this study be mastered by means of these elementary concepts? It
always makes an essential difference whether one dissects
a psychological process or whether one treats broader contexts of meaning
was certainly
in
it
as a whole in
Moses, angry with the Jewish people,
One might analyze his conand ideas, accoiding to the
a state of emotion
dition according to its feeling states
course and rhy'thm of these feelmgs and their tension and relaxation
But the histonan takes indicate only the
all
complex
this
state
for granted
and
is
satisfied
to
one wants to explain psycho-
If
logically the decision of a historical figure, one does not begin by
analyzing this judgment into ideas, feelings and desires, but classifies
only the motive which ultimately prevailed in a historical
meanmg- and value complex
The
lest is self-explanatory
some abnormal conditions have intervened
As
unless
a rule, the Geistes-
wmenschaften do not go back to the
last distinguishable elements
They remain on a higher conceptual
level,
sidei
and immediately con-
the inner process as a significant whole which has impoitance
because a poet
it
is
a part of a total mental situation
Noone thinks
that
merely mixes ideas, feelings and desires in order to create
the psychological world of his heroes
They
are,
on the contrary,
immediately present to his imagmation as significant wholes
— To
11
meanugful
destroy the sonrs
total is the scientific limit
One might compare its procedure Anyone who eviscerates a frog inner construction and also, by lefiection, the
of the psychology of elements
with the vivisection of a frog
may
learn
its
physiological
expect to
functions
of
its
He must
organs
however,
not,
he able to put Hie parts together again and so
lecreate the living frog
Similarly, the
meie synthesis
to
of ps>chic
elements can never create the totality of a soul whose meaningful
complex the
On
related to the entire mental woild
IS
whole
significant
difteicntiates
its
piimary
is
the contiaiy,
however,
Analysis,
which do not in
elements
the least
meielj
give
Wundt,
fundamental reason for the insight of the whole
the
in the
methodological principles of his psychology acknowledged this in the Bocalled piinciples of ‘creative Bj'nthesis’ and ‘relative analysis’
psychology, too,
Ills
in
the
begpns
construction
with the
a psychology of elements
is
of his
ekments
classic
of the
outline
soul
This
is
and advances by way of
mental formations to the more complex configurations and
t!iat
final!}
But Wundt strongly emphasizes the
development
to ps}chic
shown
psychology which
of
fact
forms composed of elements contain qualities which could not
What
he deduced from the qualities of the elements themselves Mill
called
‘mental
ohjemistrj'’,
Complex forms contam
thesis’
predicted fiom
the
Wundt
designates
characteristics
original elements
But
‘creative
syn-
which could not be
this
does not reall}
formulate a laio of creative synthesis, for that would have to be a
law which enunciated an
could
not
principle
be grasped
irrational
scientifically
designates the
complex of relations that I
rather
think
that
constant error of Wundt’s method
this It is
up a mental world from elements Rather, in this mechanism out of material parts
absolutely impossible to build as one does a
case
the
significant
total
is
and valid
the if
relation to the whole
fundamental thmg
and
analysis
is
onh
one thinks of the elements and moments in I should, therefoie, reverse the point of
View and replace the principle of creative synthesis by that of destructive analysis
The above simile has already indicated that the attitude which we have described is not without analogy in the natural sciences Hoone has yet realized the hope of understanding an organism bv means of puiely physico-chemical principles
True, partial physical
,
12 and chemical processes are peiceptiblc evcrjv.hcre in
But they are never
lealm i
snfficient to
The problem
total function
tlie
or{;.iiiic
explain the organism as
of the organic cMdontly lies on
i
higher conceptual level than the scientific concepts of chcmistrj
and phjsics
But
because the fact that ivc do find material proecsscs
is
in influence of
proof that such a relation
Therefore in the foUouing
is possible
problem and deal cxclu-
with the moie general legion of meaning relations
Wo
to
was a pecnliarity of the mental toUlitj represent a meaning relation What does that signify^ Meaning said above that
it
alwajs has reference to value ficant
if
all
its
parti
il
Anj
processes
functional relation
concern us for
whom
pa
Its
sc
bo meanmgful because a total
effect
A
if
may be IS
i
its
the values
one mnv even speak of
all its partial acliievements
An
work togcthei organism
is
functions tend toward the preservation of
existence under given environmental conditions, since
vation of all
signi-
present
at
machine, for inst nice, ma) be said
which somehow has value
meaningful insofar as
not
who can cspericnce
himself or in another consciousness, or
for
It does
these achicv'cments are of value, whether the
relation takes place in an individual
a thing as valuable
is
can be understood throngh
reference to valuable total achievements
to
easier
is
mental forces on
regarded by Geisieswissenschaft as sufficient
ire shall leave aside the psjcho-phjsical
Eiveh
This
develop the philosophical question
instead
shall
and
shall not pursue this problem anj farther
I
considered valuable for itself
But most
its
prescr-
significant
the psjchic life of an individual because an individual
experiences within itself the valuable or valueless significance of its
total actions
and the relations of
its partial
functions
Dilthej
for this reason, called the soul a purpose complex, or teleological structure
Through the inner teleology ho ascribed
to the psj cho-
logical total a structure such that it registered the valuable
and
harmful by means of some sort of feeling regnlatoi
But the problem
is
not so simple as Dilthey implies bj this
concept of structure If
the soul were Tcall> nothing more than such an immanent
teleology one could conceive acts self
it
purely biologically, that
is
all its
and experiences would be regulated by the desmed goal of preservation, to which one might add a reference to the preser-
vation of the specie's
Many people do
conceive the soul as such
13 a stiucture tending only toward
The human
preservation of self and species
tlie
however (the abbieviation inclusive concept of an
soul,
throughout for
be used
will
‘soul’
the
individual’s
actions,
reactions and expeiiences), is interwoven with a far laigei system
On
of value contexts than that of pure satisfaction of self
a lower
On
purely biologically^) deteimined
level, perhaps, the soul is
a
higher level, the historical for instance, the soul participates in objective values which
cannot be deduced from the simple value
We
of self preservation
mean by mind, mental
an ovenndividual meanmg and
of history and which have
That the individual soul determined by
more than a
interrelation with
its
two ways
illustrated in
is
validity
teleological structure
for self-preservation and physical enjoyment
conceined solelj
(1)
this
mental context
preservation
of
While
regarded
intellectual
no
satisfies
an actual value foims, bo
Thus the
life
which
cognition
man because
achievement
isolated
vital needs
result is
is
of
cannot,
pure
of
from the
in all
its
An
expediency
biological
different
to the
be experienced as
can
aesthetic enjoj'ment
a
as
human being
is
This
an individual eipenences as valuable
and achievements which have no immediate relation
objects
fur
life or objective
those realized values which were foimed in the process
culture,
fictitious primitive
the former has higher and more far-reaching needs
than mere existence and
E itisfaction
animal pleasure
His
achievements and experiences leach to highei levels of value and his internal
makeup
is
differentiated accordingly
logical structure of the soul deviates to
a
(2)
fact that
And
valuable IS
per se valueless
To
much
is
with
diSicnlt
the
express this in psychological terms
objective
problem of the
values
unless
1)
it
I
IS
brings
is
biological
the
by no means up the very
Some
actually valued
no better than the opinion
This
that nothing is leal
the object of actual sense perception
mean by
self or species
is
This
critical-objective or genuine values
tend to regard as valuable only what view, however,
all that is
experienced as valuable that
subjective values (with their individual pecubanties)
coincide
well
It is a
no individual experiences as valuable
conveisely,
teleo-
moie noticeable
still
extent from the simple biological regulative system
known
The
any structure wliicn seeks
Nor can
this
solely to preserve
14 extreme empiricism end relativism be saved by the
fiction
the collective evaluations of all people (corresponding!}
perceptions of all
hnman
For the question
the objectively valuable (the objectively real) 18
that
the sense
beings) arc the subjective correlative for
By
do aU these people value correctly?
the ciitical-objective
value ure do not conceive anything susceptible of purely intellectual
But
demonstration
do
ire
01
intend
imply that evaluation
to
which coincide with these laws of evaluation
‘valid’
dental factual consciousness of an} individual of
objectively valuable,
the
values
Just
as
bemg,
of
is
The
acci-
not the measure
but merely of what he subjectively
we have added
the idea
an overindividual
of
within the empirical self, to the genuine
cognitive consciousness,
cognition
is
and that only those values are ‘genuine’
subject to definite laws,
we need
so
to
consciousness for genuine evaluation
an
construct It
overindividual
would bo totally erroneous,
however, to believe that this overindividual ‘normative conscionsness’ could be understood as
a
society IS just as liable as
that
collective (social)
an
mdmdnal
consciousness
construct a normative consciousness objective
laws,
i
For
to err in value judgments,
they ma} be just as purely subjective
IS,
We
must instead
e a consciousness guided
by
which shall be arbiter of collective as well as
individual judgments
This construction
of
a normative consciousness
is
only
a
metaphysical shortcut for an exceedingly complex conception of
laws
In contrast with Eickert,
we
shall
proceed to investigate
minutely the special laws of evaluation and their interrelations
And
in the third section of this
thesis into
indicate
book we
a normative ideal of culture
how
objective value fiom a cntical
shall consider their syn-
Here we only wish
pomt
to
of view transcends
subjectivity in geisiesioissemchafthche philosophy
An
intellectual life as it represents itself in history, a cnltuie,
not only means the actualisation of genuine values, but also contams
apparent values (such as erroneous values based on theoretically
judgments, or subjective values which arise from pnrel} momentary and disparate evaluations, or unsolved value conflicts) Whatever is objectively valuable in a culture must be thought of as the fulfillment of norms of evaluation, as the results of laws of evaluation which confront the individual as demands unless he obeys them of his- own accord
false
16 Let
now look back
116
upon whose threefold
interrelation
The
vgue
interrelations,
objective
this
self,
it is,
values
pel verted exist
a very high degree,
Fnithermore one might mclnde in
very complex
concept of mental norms
It IS,
This objective mind does not yet
and errors
complex of norms which
instead, the ideal
totality or in sections confronts society,
dual,
as
but also in the sense that
‘subjective’ then
it is
it
either in
as well as the indivi-
a real deniand of how one should evaluate
‘objective’ not only in the sense that
dual
to
anft that it is a not-I which exercises a
found the valid, objective and genuine values by excluding
hirli
its
the
mentalitj
tire
make up
of chance and failure helped to
iclion on the individual >^01
number
infinite
mental world were not
This mind now confironts the individual and
mind
independent of the
I
It
historical
mass of pnie subjectivity and obscured norms
objective at least in this sense that
15
already tonched
of objects as something trans-
which created
acts
A
aliiais lawful
this
we have
and summation of the behavior of an
rnbjeots
of
field
which can be understood only through the
ciibjective
of
significance
been projected into the
Las
mind
to the concept of the objective
It is
normative, genuine and valid,
would mean not only the isolated individual as
opposed to the ovenndividual histonco -mental sphere, but
which deviates from the norm
tbing clarity
we
then
exists outside of the indivi-
For the sake
of
everj''-
greater
shall in future call the first form 'dbjekiwet Geisf and
the second hiormativer Geist' (corresponding for instance to Hegel’s
absohitem Geisf)
The
individual
insofar as
it is
mental, must be thought of as
The
belonging to both though in diffeient senses with
its
objective
mind
content of genuine and false values signifies the socially
determined milieu, the intellectual environment which has become history directive
The normative mind, howevei, means which aims
bej’-ond
of relative value, toward that
The
first
the cnltuial ethical
every given condition, that
is
only
which has genuine and tiue value
then represents reality, the second that which should
become so Getstcsivtssenscliafiltclie
ing
conclusions
The
psychology theiefore draws the follow-
individual soul must be thought of as a
meaningful content of functions in which different value tendencies are correlated in the unity of consciousness
These value
attitudes
16 irc detei mined b\ specific
to the
Hns
The
of value
classes
various
normative
of value which correspond
empiiical
finds
self
itself
by ovenndmdnal mental configurations of value which m their realization have become detached from the cxpciienoing selves In them the constructive laws of value have alreadi created an overmdividual meaning which transcends the individual sui rounded
ahead}
Insofar then as taut connections
we seek the structure of the ovenudiridual icsulwe find onisehes in the field of general (desciipAnd insofar as we diiect our interest to
tive) Geistcsiiissoischaft
normative laws of value and to the mental value formations which follow
these
laws,
we study
the ethics
Should we,
of culture
however, place the meaningful experiences and acts of the individual in the foreground (regardless of whethei these coincide with
from the ideal noims) oui study
01 deviate
For psychology
hche psychology
is
that psychology is possible without
or the critical objective
nmque problem background of of
elements
knowledge
On
a
is
gcisteswissenschaft-
and
descriptive
under-
though one must not think
standing but not a normative science,
knowledge of the normative
the contiai}
wo regarded
ai?
it
the
of psychology to outline the subjective against the
The ps}cholog\
objeotivit} in all its significations
constantly
presupposes
ph}Sical
and
ph} Biological
manner gmteswisscnschaftJiche psjchologi presupposes the knowledge of mental objectivities in geneial In like
Mental
life
accordingly
is
a complex of significant contexts in
which
attitudes can be differentiated and in which the objective and subjective senses often conflict The cognitive is one of such attitudes
This
is
dommated b} a
definite
law though the
indivi-
dual does not always expenence and behave in accordance with it
The
upon an
aesthetic is
objective
mother
attitude
A
work
law of construction even
of ait is
if it
based
cannot be for-
mulated, but the subject does not alwajs realize in himself the
complete objective sense of the IS
aitistic object
one of economic evaluation and creation
A
third attitude
But even though the
subject is usually inclined to behave according to these objective
laws of value, subjective deviations aie found
And
these can
only be understood psychologically In concluding let us compare the two psjchologies
Geistes-
mssenscliafthche psychology begins with the totality of the mental structure
(By structure we mean a context of achievements, and
17
by achievement we mean the
lealization of objective value)
Theie
aie partial stiuctmes which deiive their meaning from the total
mental stiuctuie of which they are a part, such paitial structures are foi
instance
that
cognitive,
the
The
consciousness
specifically leligious
whenevei the achievements of these
upon
And
precipitation
definite laws,
that is,
if
or
partial
structures
if
achievements
these
critical
noimative sense
as the inclusive concept of ovenndividual configurations
mental
’
content
is
‘
based
are
they are accoiding to norms, then
they found the objective mind in the 13 ,
collective
total
work and the mind develops
co-operate and result in an objective (trans-
of vaiious subjects subjective)
technical
of
that
whose
any consciousness that can place upon which this content is founded
accessible to
itself in the concrete situation
Consequently, above the limited and fortuitous individuals there develops a mental world of ovei individual sense, which in the historical
process grows, changes and under ceitain conditions disintegiates
The psychology
elements on the
of
methodologically justified
if
it
contrary,
can only be
investigates, in every case, the last
distinguishable content in lelation to the paitial structures (single
achievements), and beyond these the total structure
logy
18
after
This psycho-
thus dependent upon stiuctural psychology and must come feelings
Ideas,
it
and desires take pait in acts of puie
cognition as well as in technical cieation oi in aesthetic behavior,
but in each case in a unique oiganic combination
expressed as follows
if
it
and
This
desires aie
m
may be
themselves
Theiefoie the psychology of elements, taken
senseless material
alone and
ideas, feelings
consistently followed
its
own method, wonld be a
science of meaningless parts, and would be as futile as the natuial sciences which
build up
nevei
significance
find
the
nature
phenomena The psychic embedded in a structural context,
of natuial
elements only have a meaning just as
from mateiial elements but can
if
the parts of an organism have a meaning through then
con elation
Then
ideas and their connections
become a cognitive
Older of objective significance in contrast to the elementary purely subjective play of association
an
aesthetic
meaning
if
Or, on the other hand, they receive
they appear
m
the lawful structure which
coiresponds to the aesthetic attitude
Our compaiison
of the
two kinds of psjchology consciously
emphasizes the points of extreme diffeience
Sprang er, Types
of
men
To
the question of
2
18 wliether theie is
any possible agrccmont
them we mast answer that the
oi
mediate stops betivccn
different points of
view nhich arc
determined by the different intended objects cannot be abolished, bnt that
we can
and methods
adjust the difference in the foi motion of concepta
Phj Biological psychology nhich expressly
investi-
gates the relation of the psychical to the anatomical and physiological facts can never coincide with a psychology which investi-
gates the psychical in
which
18
by
its
relation to the
mind
Bnt the method
based upon an analogy of atomic and mechanical theoiy
can be improved upon
Indeed this was attempted long ago even
who started from the point of view The very adoption of biological terms and
psychologists
science
of natural
the
point
of view of developmental theory signifies a reconciliation of the different psychologies
The
discussions
and ‘GesiaW
development', ‘structure’, ‘totality’ heit)
of the concepts (i
e
‘psychic
Geghedcit-
are in too gieat a state of flux to allow a summary
A
point
reference to William Stern,
Koehler-Wertheimer-Koffka, must
E R
at this
Jaensch, Felix Kriiegei,
smee they are, despite their differences, all exponents of the movement which has as its goal the unification 6i psychological method Meanwhile no one of the above mentioned concepts suffices to designate
The
the
peoulianty'
of
suffice,
gmiesxoisscnsclaflhche
psychology
ultimate distinction lies in the fact that the latter deals with
meaningfully related acts
and experiences of the subject
This
subjective meaning, however, could never be understood by anothei
individual
how
if it
did not present itself as a special case, no
mattu
unique, of objectively valid meaning contexts, because objective
laws of constinction play
a lole in the structures, even
if
not
wholly unqualifiedly
There is thus created, over and above the meaning which is comprehensible to others ') I should call a mental achievement the interweaving of subjective mental functions by means of which an overmdividnal meaning- complex, an objective mental confignration is created Insofar as the soul individual, a
IS
not merely
a self-preservative system but a mental struotuie
There is, however, also a purely subjective meaning such as for instance, is found a wholly private set of symbols or certain pathological mental states If however we still call this meaningful we have already made a reference to the fact that indirectly, through objective meaning tendencies, their final indindnal specification is generally obvions »)
m
19
complex
capable
18
it
achievements, of creating overin dividual
of
The pS 3^chical elements on the contrary, They are always purely
meaning constellations
aie and lemain bound to the individual
me
ideas,
Ins
Another individual can nevei shaie with feelings and Jns desiies For essentially they
and isolated
subjective
Ins
are puiely individual states or functions
my
and they also are inseparable from
meaning
the
woik
of art,
with
and
desires
creates
first
m
may act may
i
elation
develop a coiresponding mental act
The
again be an interweaving of ideas, feelings
But then they are
ideas etc
7)17/
which of conise do
The meaning
not coiTCspond with his ideas in kind and content 18
all
we have
common
in
then the individual soul It IS
m (i
the
to
connection
this
e
gieatlj
too
i
As
creating and experiencing meaning
caches into overindividual mentality credit
toward
of
E R
a
reunion
Jaensch to have worked of
both
psychologies
the psychology of elements and gcistesioissenscliafthclie psycho-
He
logy)
distinction
Tt should set us thinking, that the
says quite rightly of two
kinds of psychology implies a resurrection of
the doctrine of the dual nature of truth
howevei, that no matter how perceptions
we
find
illusion that
fostered
by the
deepl}’’
even
that never,
consciousness of leality which
The
something
language or a
Then by empathic
a technical product
or
structure of this
He
cognitive achievement fixed
object I
this
Accoi-
phenomena which
with
the introspecting individual
b}-'
experiences
of his
either a
objective,
states
however, for another individual to communicate to
It IS possible,
me
my own
expeiience of self
dingly the psychology of elements deals
can be dnectly experienced only
have
I
is
m
these
sensations
regions
is
fact,
and
there a
two independent psychologies are possible was
work
Our
consciousness which
to
are those which are most completely realized
And
we have
investigations of these conscious strata
showed that the intentions which referred of consciousness
an indubitable
wholly devoid of meaning value
stiatified structuie of
elucidated in our
It is
we exploie
therefore
it is
meaning and value in.
the higher level
impossible to miss them here,
though in the lowei levels they are only bi ought to light by a very searching investigation
But
this
difference
is
one of degree and
not of essence*^)
E R
Jaensch, TJelei den
Aufbau do Wahinchinungsioelt
1923 p 413
2^
Leipzig
20
The of
lawful stiuctuic in which there
its
meins
individuil soul participates in the montil world bj
intellectual experience
is
cioation and cralnation for the total soul
and
Tlie individual soul
•)
cannot alwajs wliolh grasp the objective sense of this legion, other times
norms There
it
There
transcends
with
it
its
of
which arc in thcmsclics onlv tendencies of the
The
meaning
discovcrj
of
We
called their inclusive concept the normative
mind
uisscnscliaftliclic
we
and
laws
these
branching iclations will bo our next problem
because
mind and
also a continual tension between the historical
IS
the eternal laws oroation
their
have previously This
gcistcs-
problem immcdiatclj becomes one of psjchologj
shall attempt to investigate the manifold subjects with
a view to discoloring which of the mental laws
each one ind t>picalli determines
its
structure
gences from the idea of a normal structure of
dominant in
is
For, these diver-
man
deal witli the
histoncal and individnil pccnli intics, the description of vhich
The
present ition
the
of
human
soul
structure
as
such in
relation to the total structure of the objective and normatiie
would be the psjchologj
subject
The
psichology IS
is
domiin of psjchologj
in the
spccificalh
it
actnitj which follows certain
thus a tension betneen the soul and the mind
is
matter
region
the studj
which some aspect of
tlic
of
mind
general
gcistesjcissenschafthchc
differential
gcistesnissenschafthchc
of
of tjpes objective
of individualized structures
and normative mind
is
in
predomi-
nantly expressed
0 How
far this
mental objectivity must be affixed to the materially endnnng temporal existence we cannot here
objective in order to attain an
investigate
Cf
my
essaj in the Festschrift fuer Volkclt 1918
des Verslehens uiid cur gcistesicissenschaftbchen JPsgcJiologte
Zur Tlteone
2
METHODS OF GEISTESWISSENSCHAFT ANALYTICAL AND SYNTHETICAL
T
he unity of the soul
and experiences
acts
founded
is
We
What
mental achievements
body and therefore
is
meanings
m
ordinarily called ‘ego’
is
difteient
definitely localized
culminate in its
tiated
number
its
m
They
bound
and time a coherent
must, theie-
this structuie is differen-
structure
which has
is
its
composed
of a
unique function
illustiation of this is
found in
on the basis of a coherent plan
now define a few necessary mean the activity of an individual e the structural intei weaving of many different psychic functions,) Thus, for create a mental achievement of ovenndmdual sense For the sake
to
But
total
An
specific value
division of laboi
By
expressions (i
The
of partial structures each of
and so also
any
m a umtaiy meaning
achievements
is
in space
individuality they belong to a closed structuie fore,
single
that experience
and experiences are processes
Insofar as all acts
its
cannot be
self
some mystenous way,
the experiencing center which in to the
This
shall see latei
by no means unequivocal but has
IS
different
the relation of all
to the individual
defined but only experienced of self
m
instance, a
of clarity I shall
‘mental act* I
judgment
is
a mental act, while the participating ideas,
associations, reproductions, feelings
psychic that
I
carrier
unites
functions
hum this
me
by which
to
If
I
and conative processes are only
should give a meaning
to
a few notes
myself and thus make them a sort of objective
would also represent a mental act
to anothei
I define
Conespondmg
person
my to
is
a mental
act,
The
love which
and likewise the claim
right against his
the act as spontaneous oi
behavior {sinngebendes Yerlialten) there
given behavior, {sinne^fiiUendes
is
the receptive or meaning-
Yerlialten)
expeiience I actualize the ovei individual
meaning- giving
the
‘experience*
meaning which
is
In
attached
22 I translate the
to mental creations
my
states of
when in
my
When
soul
destiny and
may be
being I
when
said to
meaning
I understand
when
a work of ait,
I ‘enjoj’
into the actual ps} chic
what another person
hand
I recognize the
expenence
Acts and experiences cannot be sharply distingnishcd there is an experiential factor which has a on the individual, and in aU experiences there is a
all acts
we
In the following
character
word
‘act’
sajs,
God human
of
I feel mjself beloved by another
For, in
reflex action
resisting act
shall, theiefore, generally
even when the mental relation
is
use the
more an experience
than a creation, more a reception of meaning than a giving of significance
A special This sense
class of mental
acts',
then, creates its
own meaning
grasped and interpreted by a coiresponding class of
is
Thus,
experiences
has a peculiar meaning
foi instance, cognition
The
which must not be mistaken for that of art or of religion visual experience involved in seeing a star
astronomy,
or
whether
and
class of acts
its
of
appearance
its
tained in
has
its
it
is
m
Therefore each
lywio or religions
and of the human achievements con-
histoiy
Every cultural realm
ideal independence because it subserves a definite significance
We have
already defined meaning as something associated with
value
Ovenndividual meaning
value
‘Overindmdual’ here
the critical sense might that
toward
one thinks both of the possible varieties
one refers to a sphere of culture
it
interpreted in
inclines
associated class of experiences has a specific
When
region of meaning
may be
my mood
various ways, according as to whether
still
is
thus related to overindividnal
signifies
A
which follows certain noims
values
IS
thus intended
not the collective (which in
be subjective) but only
critical objective,
of objective
class
definite
and realized by the mental
correspondingly a value of the associated class the particular experience
It
is
And
acts
apprehended in
should follow, therefore, that
it is
possible to derive classes of acts from classes of value
Now The in
however, we must guard against a
stincture of the individual
the
value
acts
and
experiences
themselves
accurately,
when mental
specific
laws,
mind
is,
experiences
not
are acts
evaluations
misunderstanding
so to speak,
articulated
But the mental
necessanly
acts
evaluations
and More
are earned out according to then
and
value
experiences
aie
founded
23
upon them because the
mental tendency has been objec-
specific
by means
satisfied
tivel}'-
mental
the
of
But
acts
the
acts
themselves aie not evaluations, or at least not necessarily so
uould be wholly eironeous, for instance,
cognition as evaluating acts, as has been done
It
regard the acts of
to
now and
then
Affix-
mations and negations aie not predicates of positive or negative
On
value which must be ascribed to propositions cognitive
thiough
have their own
acts
examination of the pure
cognitive
are
acts
indifferent
The
cognitive
value
decrease of
individual increase or
mining role
to
life
the contrary,
which must be derived
structure
as
attitude fai
of
does not play any deter-
by which we cognize
categories
And
itself
the feeling
as
reality
aie
purely mental attitudes with a lefeience to objects which cannot
be derived from any evaluation of the same
any lawful!} earned out act
that to
and
for the active subject, a specific experience of value
Or
to the class of pure cognitive values
as
a definite
of evaluation
class
acts
of
Whenever
I
the
mood and not
But anothei senes
And
of acts
experience
is
added
complex of technical
no element
mood
portrayed,
the
to
acts involved in
tilling his field is
previous
a general formula
ever\
becomes the object
field
of
In
constellation of purpose
its
And
contained a
is
expiess this in
mental activity,
of actual endeavoi, is
of evaluation
To
the actual
not evaluation
the successful completion of his work there
third kind of value experience, the economic
altitude
it
and expenences, namely the purely aesthetic one
finally, the
m
belongs
empathically appieciate oi re-live the
eneigy which a farmer expends in
But
affixed,
this
the tones or tonal sequence which I evaluate
value
specific
is
again, aesthetic behavioi
and expenences has in
tonal sequence of a symphony, and find a certain it is
however
It is true,
of cognition there
insofai
as
it
dominated by a specific
temporal appearance
from the realization of
it
becomes a
this purpose,
as in any teleology, is leflected on These ‘have’ value, but aie not of couise
the specific value experience,
the means and tools evaluations is
In a machine too the technical value of any part
piopoitional to
its
contribution to the achievement of the whole
But one cannot understand the parts solely fiom the
They They
total value
are lather, the objects of chemical and physical consideration are subject not only to laws of value, but primaiily to laws
of mathematics, statics
and dynamics
In applying this consideration
24 to
our problem,
find that theories of cognition,
•n-e
aesthetics
md
economics are not theoiies of value, though
it is
cognitive achievements, aesthetic experience
and economic production
from the standpoint of their
aesthetic to a
specific classes of value
correlate each class of mental acts to
one ma}
finally,
If,
mental unity in the individual, then
formed
all
obvious that each
is
it
i
of cognitive,
and economic values which are, nevertheless,
system of values must somehow shade each
may speak
of values, if one
corresponding system
possible to consider
the others and that
off into
experience of n definite class of values must be related to
the whole value experience of the mental subject
Otherwise the
mental subject would have no structure,
i e no closed constellation wonld be instead a bundle of achievements random This center, in which the value of every
of achievements
conjoined at
It
mental achievement of
life,
we
is
experienced as related to the mental totalitv
shall later call the religious realm
of finality
is
experience
is
peculiar
to
the
religious
religious insofar as
it
Therefore a charactei
and every mental
acts,
of ultimate impoitancc for
is
But we are getting too
the individual’s total value expenence far ahead of our sdbject
must
It
suffice for the introdnctorj
emphasize here that
we
We
cative of the division of the mental realm
see that
its
every region has
its
shall, howevei,
unique laws of construction, requinng
Our method,
a special analysis
of concepts to
definition
consider diffeient value directions as indi-
then, shall be to view each specific
value as a goal which the total act and experience structure of the
specific
region
Pure cognitive value
subserves
whenevei the pure law of cognition
When
the law
of
economics
is
realized
is
in
acts or experiences, the purely economic value
is
unless experience follows the laws of
region
In conclusion
tempoial pi o cesses, that this
does
its specific
and expenences
acts
is,
is
achieved
specific
acts
actualized in a specific group of
attached to
are, as the
it
it
indicate,
they occui as real events in time
not imply that their content
is
But
has no value
names
merely temporal
But
We
have said that mental acts reabze value, and here we must make
two
distinctions
first,
their eternal tendency
which suffuses them, and secondly, the created
by them, or
lather,
economic goods there
is
and the mental law
historic realitj
which they endow with
meanmg
which
is
Above
the ‘Economic’, superior to cognition there
25 IS
lud highei than \\ork 3 of art
‘Tiiitb’
and Justice, become
temporal in a double sense, hrst in respect spice and time the}
the real world of
to
aie actualized in a peculiai mannei, at least
ichieved in a struggle with the world, for instance, they aie
ire
given
material representation, and secondly as
i
tactual experience
of
some soul
mentil content of acts
contain
the acts
m
ictualisation
We
cnce
v
an
only possible because
is
which
ilidit}
histone
ictuil
means
the timeless b> i
can be undeistood regard-
independent of then
is
the world, or then realization
tre ited according to certain
horn
obvious however, that the
This
ind time oi
it
ictualized in the
m
individual expeii-
understand the significance of mental acts by putting
m
onrsehes
law
i
It is
timeless since
is
less of intervening space
111
These eternal
‘Beauty*
is
or laws, for instance Tiuth, Beauty
objects
timeless
of
il
situition,
its
as configuration following
liws, even though the manifolduess of
cm
then
piehcnsion, then,
lawful
meins
to its eteinil 8 >stem of
The m
iin
problem
i
phenomeni
its
fatructurc
educing
i
is
pnon com-
Mentil
eteinal
temporal mentil phenomenon
meining of
i
psychology of
ids
is is
to
find
built,
the
or in
words, to determine the lines of contict which exist between
the overindiYidual mentil life and the individuil it
ilwa^s
enclosed tempoiall> but their
oi
fundamental duections in which the objectiic mind othei
definite
is
ne\ei be wholly understood a
Mentil phenomena arc determined mentil content,
which meaning was
p irticipates laws, just as natuie can be conceived
point of view
temper ill> determined ind
m
The ment il realm
norms
cinnot be doubted that the objective mind, with
uegitive viluo content, has
its
roots
m
Foi
center
ict its
positive
and
the experiences and cieations
Through these individuals it was developed We may must always bo awakened to new life
of finite individuals
md
m
issume
them
it
therefore that
coincides, in
its
The meaning
mind
the mentil structure
of
a subjective
soul
fund iraentil lines with the stiucture of the objective directions in
which the acts and expeiiences
of the individual move, reflect the culturil regions of value, but only in
legard
to the
fundamental tendencies and not the historic
Foi, the normative
*)
of
mind opeiates
il
content
in both as the formitive principle
It is absolutely futile to try to nuderstauil simply
‘expression* the relation to the historically uuniue
by the category
ludmdual
of the
— There life
determined
18
honever, there
The
The moaning
o£ nn indn idtnl
given objects e
alwajs re-created and transfoimed b\ the
is
and arc
living Sonia nlncli sustain it
which
—
the mcining of historicnUj
bj'
and culture
ciiltmc,
2G
nlso i reciprocal iclntion
is
siistained bj
Above
it
the individual soul,
for
both,
norms
a guiding stai, the all-inclnsive concept of
is
are valid
idea of humanitv
the
application of this concept to the objective
mind leads
to the
idea of a genuine culture
Tims, mental
We
we might
life
might
start
deduce from
determine the fundamental directions
order to
in
its
given objective culture and
organisation the attitudes uhich must
Or we maj
contained in an individual soul structure
ilw.ays
be
build
tr> to
from the eternal attitudes
an articulated cultuic sjnthcticall}
lip
of
two methods
avail omselves of cither of
from the histoncall>
Let ns take up both methods in gi cater detail
of the soul
I
A
culture
or
historicallj is
which aio kept sepai
ite in
(Tins
subjeofs
Culture
ment
is
i
on the highei cnltuial spheres
the consciousness and linguage of the
done apparent!} regardless of time and space)
divided into
18
life,
number of
given mental
composed of
developmental levels,
i
number of icgions
of activitj or acliicic-
In each of these regions a specific kind of value
We may
also call each sphere of value,
is
is
mines the goal one
may be
In over> purpose constellation there
allowed to snimisc, a definite law
the system of structural
means which
satisfj
its
Let ns enumerate, for thepiesent, regardless of
which
may be
considcied independent
realized
seen from the point
of view of leal purposes, a purpose constell ition insofar as
')
is
it
deter-
immanent,
which regulates
domm int
purpose
s} stem, the regions
puie and applied science,
art, moralitj, religion, societj , politics, law and edncition Of course these regions aie not spatially conjoined like paits of
economics,
the body
They
are rathei interlaced to foim a structure,
i
c
a
mmd, in any definite histoncal form The objective mind embraces more than the mere expression of the indmdnal soul structure which
objective far IS
histoncally connected with it
0 The
abbreviated expression ‘law’
complex of laws which
is often greatlj
of course
difterentiated
always indicates a
27
Thus modem
constellation of achievements
theoretical science has
aspects which are political, economic, moral and pedagogical
m
economics
we
The
religious factois
differentiation of each region
leal division, but rathei
value which division
is
must have been very obvious
aie realized
thus not a
is
a theoretical isolation according
But the motives
intended in each case
The modem discussion instance, shows how difficult
differentiation is not easy
knowledge’ for
And
science and religion
this
foi
But
classes
they do not grasp moie than the geneial boundaries, because ‘belief or
the
to
Foi, the geneial boundaiies
by the uneducated
even
mstinctively
And
moral and even
find judicial, scientific, technical,
finer
of the question it is
to sepaiate
the problem of distinguishing politics,
law, society and the field of moials leads us into the most complicated questions
we want
If
coriespondmg purposive
to find a
legion of the individual soul for each cultuial legion, as for instance a
economic, technical
scientific,
and a
religious heiedity,
and social nature, we
judicial
aie faced with the same iiddle which
demanded
a solution in our
What
pievious consideration of various cultural spheres the religious yearning of the soul?
How
the scientific and aesthetic motives'^
Where
end and the
political begin^ etc
It
is,
a moral and
urge,
aesthetic
oi
political,
is
constitutes
distinguished
it
from
does the social nature
of course, possible to use
the objective cultural systems as piinciples of discovering the basic
mental attitudes, as
But
it
IS
I did in the first edition of this
volume (1914)
not sufficient merely to reduce the overindividual context
to individual tendencies
For we cannot
in this
way
satisfactoril}
explain the significance of these acts
There
is
Every
a further difficulty
histoiical region of culture
has peculiaiities which belong solely to that paiticular epoch
nomy may be
of
money and
of credit, science
may be
Eco-
positivistic,
society a class system, religion interwoven with philosophy to the
point of confusion, and law perhaps be any positivistic individual
law
If
we were
to construct
to the above spheres
t 3^pes
we should
of behavior
which coirespond
airive not at eternal t^pes, valid
for all differentiated cultures, but rathei at historical!}" determined t 3"pes
hclie
t^pes
We
Thus Woelfflin Grundbeg) iffe
has
in set
his
which are derived from must
theiefore,
caiefull}
work
magnificent
side
by the
side
eternal
direct
oui
Kunstgeschtclit-
historical
and
eternal
being of plastic art inquiry
so
that
we
eternal laws of economics, art
reicli the
cm
This it
and religion themscl\es
How
scarcely be done bj a reductive method
would be for instance, to reduce
the histoiical
difficult
chance data of
an epoch to eternal and separable laws of economics and jurispru-
What a difference there would be in wo started with Spinoza’s woild view
dence 1
eligion
if
Chnstianitj
of Ritschl
It
the final concept of or the neo-protestant
obvious that one can only achieve
is
a iclatively correct picture in this waj after a preliminary compaiison of cnltiiial sj stems indifferent cultural levels and cultural is admittcdlj futile if we Our study must be based on
But such a comparison
individualities
merely collect mateiial empirically deductive pimciples so that
we
one can assume a prioti, an identical law of structure
we might
science something that
classify as
is
nearly related to religion or aesthetic intuition
what
as moral
As
is roallj
hne
which
Otherwise
more Or we might take essentially
of a legal nature
a second alteraative one might think of utilising as principles
for the sjstematio division
levels
m
only compare those forms
of mental regions the single
which have been found by reflecting upon mental
and pedagogy would then point toward
But even
if
the
who would be
life
cultural
Science,
economics, politics, sociology, jurisprudence, ethics
aits, religion,
situation
specific
mental motives
were more clearly defined than
make a
able to
it
is,
systematic division of the social
sciences?*)
We
must
insist that it
conclusions from
the
would not do to arrive
actual
situation
nt philosophical
of the individual sciences
which as a rule have been so developed for practical reasons.
Thus pure economics customarily taught
No we may
mattei
how
is
So
leally
satisfy our ambition,
of the analytic,
Thus we must
different
from economics as
it is
this alternative is also fruitless
difficult it is
and how
we must
insufficientlj
at first
accept the synthetic instead
the deductive lather than the reductive method try to deduce from the eternal attitudes of
human
nature the fundamental directions which each culture embodies in
unique arrangement and irrational interrelation
’)
Cf Georg v Mayr Begnff tmd CUtedcnmg der Siaatsictsscnschaften
Tubmgen 1910 (3)
29
II It follows
fiom the conclusions in the
up
if
external and internal material
to
And
elements aie no longer constellations of meaning
understind
to
consider as building material only what has
meaning or a the
matter by means
significant
of
always significantly
soul from
the
interi elated
qualitatively
different,
yet
end
it is
To
mental attitudes
meaning
all
classes of acts
because
of
their
and
are necessary
which are cleaily
diffeient
sufficient
mental phenomena
The
to
this
Completed, fiom each
distinct
immanent meanings explain
i
which
e
manifoldness
the
up
to build
is
necessary to completely determine the vaiious attitudes
other
material
an independent
Our problem then
significant attitude
stiucture
total
im-
is
it
of
In the reilm of psychology of structure we
devoid of meaning
may
or the soul
life
For, the psychic elements ^\h^oh have been partiall}
deduced fiom their correlation
possible
that the
concerned with the
which the mental
last diffeientiable elements out of 13 built
chaptei
fiist
synthetic method must not be thought of as
of
qualification ‘necessary’ indicates that
independent attitude should be excluded,
complex act which might be
‘sufficient’
the
no
means that no
deduced fiom the combination
of
simpler acts which endow with meaning should be included Since both the deductive and inductive methods aie essential to
every genuine science, so the
piinciples
13
final test of the validity of
a
pnon
there also the fact that by means of these principles
one really can understand the manifoldness of empirical phenomena
But
this historical verification is
of our method lies rather their intended
in
of these
nature
oi
m
a second step
apion
tendencies with material which
for, this necessitates
life
central point
the fact that all mental attitudes and
meanings can be understood
historical
The
can nevei
i)
may be
The
filling
taken fiom
be reasoned out befoiehand,
a knowledge of facts, just as individual natuial
A
prion, of course, does not mean previous to all experience, but It is not our intention to spin out the mental world with all experience from a pi ion concepts, but to understand its fundamental laws of meaning which are already assumed when we classify in any particular region any The encroaching of what is evidently a prion into single phenomenon has been treated more in detail by Theodoi factual contexts psychological
Ensmann logie
Die
JEJigenart des Geistigciii Inductive
Leipzig 1924
und
emsichtige Psyc/io-
30 liiws
cm
only be derived through observation of rcil mtui
But the formitne pimeiples,
rences
directions of meaning,
m
(in
law of causaliti) are conditions necessary
mind and nature
If ci
il
occin-
case fundament
this
il
the case of natural science the general
understanding of
to the
human being n ei e a chaos
erv
of changing
tendencies there would be no possibility of interpreting the histoiical
But the mental nucleus of man always has the
and social world
Even though the degrees
same stiucture
of differentiation change
with the developmental processes of the mind (as well in the latent
foim as in the most developed) there are eternal tendencies, eternal directions
of
and experiences, without which
acts
it
would
be
impossible to ‘understand’ the inner cobtext of a foreign and distant
We
soul foi
this
carry in oui
reason
it
own being
may be
the scaffolding of the mind
presented a prion without consideration
and geographical differences
of histoiical
possible to predict that wherevei find the
And
same fundamental
we
attitudes
find
Yes,
human
And
it
must even bo
culture
we
shall
that with the special
emphasis of one attitude there are necessary displacements of
explain, affirm and I
make
a pi ion
vivid
must confess, however, that
I
in eveiy
have found
vision from the great complexity
b\ a metaphor
which seems
me
to
methodological it is
which
is
of mind before one
historical representation
out the fundament il mental attitudes
to
this
This was because
principle only after y ears of study to free one’s
all
The fundamental laws of The examples only
the others in the total \alue of life these attitudes can bo understood
I shaB try
illuminating
necessary
invohed
can smglc
to illustrate this It takes practice
hear the limited number of leitmotifs which interweave to form
the sounding
symphony
of life
Certain motifs force themselves
on our attention and cannot be overlooked, but others have been so elaboiated and vaiied by' the composer that
them
after hearing
Life
18
them once
m
their simple
we can
only'
grasp
form
alwaas for us a complex process and the simple compo-
nents of meaning hardly ever appeal in an isolation such that
we
might express them immediately in abstract thought Quite suddenly', however, in 1920, I perceived that it was precisely this mter-
weavmg which
should be the startmg point foi
Perhaps unconsciously influenced I
by'
became convmced that everything
our
new method
a neo-Platonic point of view is
a part of eveiy thing else
31 In each section of mental
though in diffeient proportions,
life,
Each
mental attitudes are present
all
mental act displays to
total
the analyzing obseiver all the aspects into which the mind could
possibly be differentiated
One must
certainly be prepared to altei all one’s concepts in
No
Older to understand this line of thought 18
proposed, on the contrary
and far-reaching
complicated theoiy
extiaoidinaiily simple
it is
All fruitful
pimciples aie simple and clear
scientific
the alteration of one’s thought
is
But
we
necessitated by the fact that
heie anal} zing not a single mental legion but rather all of
lie
them
in
i
For apparently
each other
elation to
has not been previously considered and
and limited essence onl}
learn to see stinctuie
isolating
been understood
of each attitude has not
mental tiansformation will not be easy
and idealizing
if
complexity
this
consequently the simple
foi
This
But one can
everyone
one recognizes the necessity of
fiist
in order later to understand the interrelations
of life as a complication of oiiginally veiy simple threads
A
which
bias
is
a necessary copsequence of every determined
methodological procedure
is
caused b} the fact that we must start
But we
from the single mental subject
find
only in the objective mental medium which
We
geneiations and carried on b} entire groups the
forget that
summation
is
many
created by
must
howevei,
not,
accompanying social reciprocal interrelation and the form
leall} onl}
and complicates
starting point
this
is
Mental
itself
the individual as a tendcnc}
m
life
which the mental itself
life
expands
must previously exist
For unless some germ
of
m
could
it
be found in him we should go on indefinitely adding zero to zeio
True, the single acts in they grow
into
this
And
extension in society
an evei
oi
that individual
in the historical inci casing
individual and bears him awa}
stieam
We
shall,
visible
which surrounds the
But analysis must begin with the
individual consciousness, ignoring as far as possible
pecubanties
find
first
development of society
theiefore,
speak
first
of
its
the
historical
individual
mental acts, meaning those which a single individual, no mattei
how
primitive,
must cany out
Even Robinson Cnisoe must
cognize,
have economic and aesthetic relations and reverently appreciate But he could neither love nor the meaning of the couise of life rule
Here we come
social mental acts
to the tuining point
By
where we must postulate
individual mental acts then,
we mean
those
to
AThoBO
Significant
completion a second
ego
is
not
ncccssirj
Bj social mental acts we mem those which e\piessl> impl\, or hare as their object the expeiiential context of another person
The mere
fact that a mental act is occasioned
or appears in social interrelation it
as social, for here society
content
Those mental
acts,
is
is
by social correlations
not sufficient to chaiactcrize
mcrclj
the carrier of the mental
however, which intend anothci peisoii
or a group as such, constitute a special class for themselves
3
INDIVIDUAL MENTAL ACTS we
^ reverie ^
m
find,
and about ns, a mass
which really mean nothing
of impressions
I
This condition
i-rnot he adeqnatelj' portrayed in words, since verbal definitions
and other associated meanings which nre excluded when we are semi-conscious We aie drowned in a EC.I of light and color without form or limit There isi a wealth uniTK'diatel} include intellectual
of undifferentiated sounds
There
clearly localized state
a scarcely apperceived general feeling
mind antecedent to
characteristic of
arc not separated nor It
we
and dull bodily pressuies which aie not is
which merges vaguely into other
is
m
has been asserted that
confront
and"” that
‘reality’,
its
Such a chaos
states
is
Subject and object
cieation
the object lecognized and given meaning
waking consciousness
we then
objective order around us and build
onl}’-
do
separate our ego from the
up a conceptual world which
This is a wholly mistaken idea the same for all observers Even the scientist does not for a moment think of translating the IS
sense impressions of his daily experience into a scientific and strictly
He
theoretic form
colors
of
themselves clouds,
is satisfied to let
the sun rise and
set,
he sees
and hears tones even though he ‘knows’ that these aie
qualities
his
own
He
continues to
of its
looking
soul
and not immediately
the
of
things
speak of the sun’s hiding behind
down upon
the earth and of ‘nature’
as
arranged in a certain manner and as having either a beneficent or a maleficient attitude toward
man
He
chooses to be interested
in a certain object rather than others, finds his
mood
reflected in
the universe so that the coming of autumn gives him a premonition of his IS
own approaching death
In a word
the conscious attitude
not by any means sjnonymons with the
theoretic
attitude
The
naive
consciousness
scientific
of
Sprani^er,
l^es
of men.
oi
pureh
reality is
absolutely determinable for all times and all people
not
Secondly,
3
apprehension of realitj
this naive
m
is
not merely a preliminary step
cognizing behavior, but contains in a enrions jumble a totality
Added
of lelations to life
the irorld
attitude
The
in c-stnco
circumstances
is
last faotoi
means
toward the identical essence
di'fctcd
’"nii.ssion
we
cognizing act
that the
directed to the general, that
co^ized
deiive the
m
all
an act which
is
is
Thus from the experienced
identical object
b) In this experienced something there lemains a factoi, howevei,
cannot be included
M.fl.
everything
say then
are always the starting point collects its rays
religious language is
of
m
a final
simply ‘the soul
’
a religious impoitance
64 whether
m
not
oi
Evor\ thing relates
religious center
stone at
tlie
in
the
cxpenonce
actual
my
The
feet
unit}
it
of
closely
mine
experience
embracing religious value emphasis
all
appioachcs
this religious ccntci,
to
the
eicn
reflected
is
{Weithctonung)
Finally evciy thing deserves respect or condemnation
boemse
it
is
a pait of the total value context of life
But
same
is
the place to call attention to the fact that the
this IS
The
meaning contexts
true of the other
tically signiJScant
of a
grej
w hcthei
it
mined wall
much an
is
diffeientiation
identification,
theoretic acts
may
also grasp an>
instance this study, which contexts
seeks onlj
of
Likewise everything maj become the object
impression-expression
The
aesthe-
is
aesthetic experience as
For both have the chaiacter
the red of a full blown rose
of general
Every form
be in the real or the imaginative zone is
is
and essential correlations
As
conscious content
directed to the total
to grasp in
them
identities,
of the
for
meaning
difteronces
and
In the last analysis, even thing,
identical contexts of plistic life
even the non-phj sical ma} be significant for the immediate economic lalne context
mj
For, c\er> thing
materiallj
determined self
furthering or hindering as nothing to value
is
is
for the psycho-ph> sical state of
advantageous
cither
Kothing
or
harmful,
of economic indifference, just
is
of theoretic or aesthetic indifference or of indifference
at all
If,
however, in these partial values and
in the
partial significance of life, everything
can liave
moie
must harmonize together
just
make a symphony
And
in the final
meaning
e\ cry thing
as melodies and phrases intei weave to
the great leitmotif of
life’s
symphoni
is
its
place, then even
the experience siurra {itla
4
MENTAL ACTS OF SOLIDARITY
T
which we
he acts
so
may have
all
then
essential chaiaoteiistics iMthout social leciprocit} of an}
soit
h-ive
studied
fax
The} meiely add, to the subjective experiential context, objective configurations which in themselves expeiience nothing and are the subjects neithei the
foi
hive refeience acts
of
of acts noi
cognitive, to
objects
meaning
which are in themselves the subjects of iihich then occuis
m
the regions
factoi
The
of a second subject can
life
be understood thiough the significant mterpietation of the
mental
Only
to
that the mteipietation of foreign experiential contexts
is
becomes a fundamental only
however,
possible,
It is
economic and religious attitudes
The change
e persons)
(i
expeiiences
aesthetic,
which
acts
he accomplishes
one has
after
enteicd
in
his
individual
an empathic
into
i
situation
uith
elation
his
mental piocess (a relation which need not necessarily be cognitive)
cm
one enjoy him as a ps}cho- lesthetical phenomenon
economic
acts, his ‘work’, is favoiable to our 8}
purposes he
and bodily
And
experienced as useful
is
life is
i
becomes the object
elated to
If his
stem of economic
finall}
if
his
meaning of our
the ultimate
mental life
he
of religious expeiience
Whethei these inteipretative
aie to
acts
be classed only in
the cognitive region, oi whether they also belong in each case to
the mental world to whose meaning they aie empathically related IS
a
question
we answei
it
which requiies the problem
judgments in the
is
fiiithei
GeisietiWissenscliaften
heie nothing new, and aie instead
meaning giving
investigation
veiy closel} lelated
acts
still
At any
to
But however that of value late
we have
concerned with the foui
which we have previously consideied
Omitting foi the moment the peculiaiities of the interpietative
which aie lequiied when persons become the object of theoletic, aesthetic, economic and religious acts, we might say*" even
acts
56
BobmEon Crusoe could develop second
had no
thej'
if
its
There
directions
completion
meaningful
socio- reciprocal
or
action
is
a
be ven
True, these acts would
subject
experiential
primitive
these
in
which requires for
nothing posited
historical
But their essence and fundamental content is the same. There arc however, without doubt some mental acts and expenences Bobinson Crusoe, which are possible onlj in a social context summation
especiaUj'
if
we
separate him from his animals, social or pedagogical
political, juristic,
more
vestigate
closeli
the social
could' not
have
Let us in-
experiences
phenomena
of mental life
The
question which confronts us is whether there are independent
first
mental acts which
mental
are
and which
attitudes
di£erent from the four basic
essentially
correspond
to
the
phenomenon
of
society
The
methodological difficulty which
gations of society is that societj effects
we
into
which the individual
cannot imagine anj
is
found in
is
an ovenndividual context of
is
bom
individual
It
Without
detei mines
context
this
from the ven
And
beginning everj individual’s whole mental stiucture it
all iniesti-
through
he shares in the "unique level of mind which in each case
the result
with
this,
of
the
however,
of the individual
histoncal developmental process
place in which society can be experienced or It IS true that entities
meaning actualized
its
one maj consider the social groups as ovenndividual
which act in space and time as vitalized masses, but even
then one understands them
mdmdualities
means
ib
In contrast
we must emphasize that the experiential context who is a part of any society can be the onlj
The
in
the
scheme of mental
cognitive
individual mental stmctuie
of understanding mental configurations,
is
our only cognitive
and
for this reason
the complexly interwoven innei stmctuie of sociological formations IS for
ever bejond our cognition and undei standing
This limitation of our cognitive means, which not sufficiently observed, psjchologj of individuality
is
is
as
a rule
however of no importanee for the
On
the contrary, our interest in this
investigation is directed to those bonds which unite one individual
soul to another and thus to the truly experiential foundations of the social lelations 01
enndmdual
The new and unique
reflexes
which the
latter,
as
formations, aie capable of eliciting in the individual
cxpeiience will not be considered in this study
57
we wished
If
foim
(ovei individual) of experience
a
above
the
of
assume
to
m
question
puielv
a
eveiy objective
foi
conesponding individual form
society a
Individualized family experiences would conespond
to the famil},
of
answer
to
we should have
analjtical mannei
expeiiences of fiiendship to friendship, expeiiences
One might perhaps
shaieholder to the stockcompany etc
mam
start off with the
of objective social forms,
classes
but that
would not solve the question of the point of view from which
The
one should classify these experiences
ps) chological point of
view, the basic forms of social expenence
looking
aie
Another
and
for
cannot
thus
difficulty with
serve
procedure
this
is
are
the
as
cal!}
Assuming
given
foi
B}stem
cultural
that one
instance, of the
state
many
the legal system to law and the
’\^e
point
starting
we might thus take
that
into account historical peculiarities rather than reall)
phenomena
what
exactly
i
foundational
educes the historibasic acts,
political
to
extia-state
and extra-legal
forms of society to specifically „80cial“ acts one cannot derive in this
way
consider the objective state onl}
as a special
think that the forces at woik in
it
fact that
form of society, and
are the same
as in
power within a
the state wields the highest social
sectional region
(soveieignt})
and that the
laws (as
it
moulds
m
from the
totality of the othei associations
also
itself
any other
Others, influenced by
kind of ^socialisation" (Vei gesellschaftiing) the
Some people
the borderbne between state and societ}
state
alone fixes
sepaiate
these forms),
and oppose
the
it to
the state
societ}
in a narrower sense
Obviously
we
are
dealing
historical levels, the peculiarities into an analytical proceduie
social acts
we should
If
such
in of
cases
with
complicated
which aie easily taken over
we wish
to grasp the
fundamental
instead proceed 8} nthetically and ask which
simple attitudes of association are possible within a group of beings, whether of two or of thousands i
classification of
empirical forms
on the basis of social ps}choIog}
any purpose acts
m
of society
we wish
to
which the consciousness
of society
And
human
Thus we do not attempt but a differentiation
temporarily disregarding
emphasize those unique meanmgful of union builds itself
up
Eveiy form of society (we repeat here the method used in its membeis,
the foregoing chaptei) rests, in the consciousness of
on two interwoven mental
acts,
either of which
may be dominant
58
means of acts of po\\er oi sympathj, The} confiont each othei on an snboidmation oi cooidlnation Evei\ one knous th it we are dealing equal basis oi aie giadated with two dimensions when ive mention the two coiiesponding act
Human
beings aie united by
diiections
of
the
subjects
the
limited
fiist
domination and dependency, the second act diiection,
would icsult
isolated,
if
m.i}
I
e\tiemes
of
One by love and hate s>stem in a social powei
(which would not at all coiiespond to the system of community
the
b}
state),
the
other in
be united nith othei s b}
a
relations
Acts of dominance and sjmpowei or by bonds of sympathy pathy seem then to designate the fundamental meaning tendencies
of
in the social realm of subjection
aio
Coiiesponding leceptive sets are the expenences
and of sjmpath}
Accoiding
to
piesent in
eveiy
means
of value
one's
own value
oui
fundamental act
social
community
oi
direction, or
poison’s value diiection
i)
Inpothesis
consciousness
the
contiast,
thiongh
both
components of
union bi
and through supeiioiit} of
its
dependence upon anothei
Relations of domination cannot be thought
of without Bimnltaneoiis lelations of commuiiit}
and in these theie
aie again piesent factois both of supeioidination and suboidination,
legal dless of whethei these
meaning lelations are peimanentlv
oi
only temporal ily actualized in the consciousness of the paiticipants Soon, however, the act of domination
By
may become piedominant,
sympathy I mean here mental acts which are directed dominant value direction of another being, they thus determine, at least on one side, a consciousness of identical intention and of unity We do not refer here to the sphere of passing acts of
to the essential value or the mentally
association through emotion (feeling of equality,
The
tiuly mental acts of
sympathy aie
compassion, suggestion)
differentiated
from each othei hj
the depth, extent and diiiation of the intention toward the other
And
upon the depth and content of the value 'for the sake of which’ one sympathizes wuth the other A love founded on religion according to depth, extent and duration would he the highest, on the other hand sjunpathy in regard to external economic purposes would be comparitively low, no matter whethei it appears in the form of
this differentiation depends again
mutualism or the more valuable form of altiiiism As a choose the aesthetic -erotic empathy which Schelei in his important and learned Wesen und Foiinen der Sympaihic Bonn 192B solidarity,
midpoint
(2)
of
we might
designates as the vital feeling of oneness {vtiale Einsfiichlung)
a compieheusive comparison with Scheler’s presentation would go heyoud the limits of this study
at this
But point
59 then the ‘socnl’ act^) becomes subservient,
oi if the
‘sociar act
decisive then the snpenoiity of the one subseives the
s\mpathetic lelationship and vice veisa
mav
but in leadeiship
an nnescapeable factor of comradeship, and comradeship
is
many subtle giadations The problem, however,
Ins
deepei
still
In a social context one
oneself either as leader or follower,
feel
there
is
We
ippeared
is
moie complicated than has
as }et
above that we judge the independence
said
mental acts by the question of whether there
is
Do
specific region of value in the structuial context of the soul
power and 6}mpatliy actually found unique
of
a coriesponding
One
classes of value?
might object that we are here dealing onl} with sociological forms of
alternate
i
elation
cooperation
oi
sammcmonlaingsfoimcn) be thought of
And
might say that power
the influence of superioritj
as the
value
othei
This
piesent also lies
Thus
m
But the unique
if
the factor
side of this
i
is
possible onlv insofai
mdiiectly, the superioi
onl}
superior person
the fact that the
peisonal value
otheis definite and lasting
however,
result,
finall}
of
community
Powei
is
is
heie
elation of superordmatiou
has lealized for and in
himself a gioup of values which places the other in a inner dependency
One
contents
a foreign value SNStem, so that
initiates in
person affirms, even
direction
value
signifies the superiority of the
content and value strning ovei
motives of behavioi
Zai-
indeed power and sympathy cannot
independent of definite
as
ode)
which the previously disclosed value
in
tendencies are actualized
{Wechschonhungs-
i
elation of
therefoie always an actual supeiioiit}
which can be understood only by means of the value content of the powerful subject and is consequent!} based throughout upon this
Powei
content
can only bo
thought of as
superioi it}
ot
actual knowledge, or of technical means (hence derives the relation of propel ty)
or
of
capacity to
express oneself
aesthetically and
thus influence people strongly (powei of orator} for instance) or of leligious conviction (enthusiasm
And
similarly with
i
e
charismatic power)
sympathy, one might say,
sympathy
is
a
tinning toward the other due to a community of inteiests and a stiiving for the
same values
We
love another person as a cainei
of value or because he posits oi seaiches for value 1)
rom
I use the expression ^social’ in
the popular usage ns meaning
*
what
This factor
follows in a different sense
based upon sympathy’
60 empnical for ne emnot deduce a in ion
also presupposes something
whether the other
we
bond If
The
are dealing nith a
one of eqnalitj
18
means of positive predicates, since
it
meant for him something whoUj indeter-
minate or the mcio possibilit\ might
still
We
of assuming determination
ask, however, whether there
is
not a sort of original
formation which serves as a foundation for all others, so that they
seem to be derived from or founded on is
it
In philosoph} there
a tendency to regard the theoretic forms of determination (thouglit
alone or expanded to cognition) as original form prehensible since philosophy itself
is
great mistake, I might saj the hcreditarj secretli
tran'iforina
of the material of
cognition
is
theoretic context of
life
in
This
com-
is
a science and consequentiv
places the theoretic attitude above all others
sm
It is,
howcier, a
of philosoplij
that
it
the pcculiantj of an instrument into a qualit\
Philosoph} must alwaj s be cognition
The
alwajs more thin and different from a
object
mcrclj
Philosophx can no more include all the meaning
mere theorj
than
aesthetics
can
transform
art
into
85 But instead, both philosophy and aesthetics merely
scionce
minate present pictures of
with then own
life
Previous to the piesent discussion
illu-
light, that of theoietic
Bnt the atheoretic content must always be preserved theoretic form analysis
we allowed
in the
by
for this fact
aapcrting that in every meaningful experience all othei diiections of
mpining aie contained, even colors the whole experience
if
This was at
"We can now lUnstrate
st-rt
When we
nndei the domination of one which
it
a methodological
first
by the following example
speak of Nature are obviously imply moie than an
‘expLiience’
Foi, nature as a whole cannot be experienced
c'r
the whole only in thought, or in biief
refer to
The
'l)''i'glit
itl
0
il
IS
connotations of this thought
not necessarily
the case onlj
if
we
itself
maj be
nature
We is
a
wliolly different,
mainly a theoretic act
This would
conceived the meaning of nature to be a
clo'ed system, an inclusive concept of identically recnriing essences
uhich behaved according to identical laws This is what nature means for the scientist who thious the network of thought-forms and categories over natuie, and where it is a mattei of indiffeience nhctlier be finally reduces oveiything to quantitative mathematical
fqu'tions
whether ho stops at the explanatory principle of
or
substantial forms 'totality
oneself into play
It is,
however, also possible to confront this
of nature’ in anothei attitude its
of foim
of nature
life, its
Oi
One can empathicalh
This
is
the
aesthetic
its
inteipretation
again the selection of values might be regarded
from the utilitarian standpomt for the preservation
mamtainance of human
Or
life
finally,
be always identical) can meaning and intend, accordmg
context
of
totality
of life in
comfortable
entei into a leligioiis to
which every individual has
sinful level of the physical
oi
nature (which only the
theorist believes to
illusion
feel
color, its light, its smell, its rhythm,
and harmony
its
emphasis, that
his being,
or the
and the material, or even an mferioi
beyond which the real meaning of
life
may be found
Indeed, some will perhaps inclme to call all these meaning interpretations metaphysical -religious, totality
of
beemse they
nature which is never given
are related to that
But the
different act-
colorations remain, even if in every case only a section of socalled
natnie
(foi
instance
a plant)
is
correspondmg regions of meamng
giasped
ind
classified
in
the
86 Of course these
onh
meaning region' are
difierenfiitions of
In
abstractions arri% ed at b\ theoretic reflection
undivided
of acts
there
find
.all
directions of
that
w IS onh
of anahsis
is
cverj
in
we have
as
act
total
The
But
problem
real
determine in the meaningful total act
to
mce
c shall
i
explained aboie
a preliminarv rough determination
i'
Btructuie nhicli
the
act
unique in c\cr\ case and which builds up exacth
i'
For the meanings interrelate not once onlj
complex
till'
and
life
meaning
•'gain
perfo’-m
tlic
but
awain and again so that, as in the Volta column, the same strata
m ij
shall trevt only the
Later when we consider pnmarj complications but we must
that tins too
a methodological shortcut
be found sei eral limes
IS just
two relatnch simple examples of
The
we
pcs
sai
here
forms
stratified
aesthetic effect of a mediaeval cathedral is based on a
hctcrogcncons acts
great m.an}
act of cognition in
the outline
knowledge of
its
cars
i
judgment
When wc
if
is
judgment
this
a
this
in
it
God
the house of
m
new
figures etc
So
experience too
its size
sense, so
fullest
its
knowledge that
appreciate
insignificance of the individual
form on the basis of
see regularities of
VTc cannot, uithout a harmonic
purpose
this IS the latent historical
m
arc
comprehend
of religious acnoration .add the silent
primitive
the ver\
is
and repetitions of parts of
of distance
aesthetic impressions
Lleracntari also the
First there
which u e determine as a part of the real world
of the cathedral’s external shape,
form, relations
hundred
t\
I shall cite onl>
it
we
Over and above
has a past of seven
enormous
realize the
Perhaps ue
the effort in\ohed
conscious
theoretic, thongli scarcelj
a tremendons achievement of human cooperation
‘that is
iihich
would haic been impossible uithont the harmonious relation
of
tlicir
ill
Much more
souls'
niaj
be woven together in such an
experience, and the whole could, and docs .1
religious Eignific
an aesthetic
act,
u ith manj people, have But there mn\ also be nothing more than cmpathic cxpencncc of formed grandeur
mce
in
Or take a simpler example icsthctic
‘Gold
is
experience) rare'
‘The nng
‘This is
nng
gold’
(economic valuation)
shines’
(theoretic
(the significance of this relation of loae enters in)
m>
life’
(comparison of economic and religious
jon’
The
it
to
a
condensed single act
full sigaificancc of this act is,
therefore,
it
to
‘I prize
i allies)
which
mcntallj
(pnmitiie
evaluation)
mother gave
finally
‘I
me’ it
as
give
becomes
founded throngh
87 a comple'C of other mental acts and can be adequately understood
by empathy Here is an enoimous
individual analysis of G-etstes-
field foi
The problem
v^isscnschaftcn
to stndj
is
of foundations of value acts, experiences
In order
draw a few simple
to
we must make use
possibilities
the
many
different kinds
and constant dispositions
lines through this field of
of a
enormous
simplifying consti notion, as
For every one of the mam spheres of meaning we posit on the one hand its subjective attitude and on the othei its oliaractcristic form of objective existence Even though the outlines follows
we
v.lwrh
ndh
’
j
irt
IS
me
seems to
it
that
we
one-sided influence of the natnial sciences upon previous
fhologi shows itself in the nairow conception of the ego
ii'hcvL that
p
only be crude
considered
The p
give here can
open up a new world of questions which philosophy has
Mnn
Manj
connection with the physical
its
of the self
is the most essential them a psychical tact which
It is, therefore, foi
connected with natuie (nature being interpreted solely in physical
m
its spatial and temporal localisation and phjs'ological terms) and must it«clf be interpreted as a pioduct of nature From this view,
which
wholly undei
IS
the
by
irani
has been di)
in xiew of our principle that in every mental
The
others
are not,
I have never midntiuncil ifant cbanctcrDlogy cannot oncat It*cl(
by other element i th's the dominant value direction of the individnoL I do, hiiwcvir. iroI*t that the mental character of man is principally
dctormic'l
thru'iirh
hi* oxrn life
in In* v« ty llVrirl'
1
the value organ by means of which he live* and *hapt-i
IVl rn I wrote thi* book J did not
imp .rtani woik
dvfnitr p^r isal
il'r
S iL vJuc tvpt*
llaili 10H',
Formah^mw p
know
that
Max
m Jer Kthk uk>I the
GOT, al
Schelsr
a*enale
bnngs forward the idea
of
105 howevei, absent but are instead in a definite relation to the figures
The
on top
and
isolating
idealising
method
thus
is
leenforced
by the
totalising (totahsierende)
wanted
to describe the manifoldness of the historically determined
types
we should hare But
procedure
this
Here we remain
we
add an individualising (indtviduahsterende) point of view of historical pecnlianties does
to
We
not enter in here
method
want only
to
work out the few most general
forms of personality In the following
wc
shall start with each type from the central
region and relate the five others to
must appear
it
The
direction of
i
elation
a ptiori from the meaning of the basic sphere For, the diiections of mental acts and their interrelation to a total to ns
a pfioti (even though not in every single
structure are within us
This
detail)
basic
not the merely intellectual a
is
structure
pnon
but the plastic
means of which we are able with a
bj
of life
variation of our individual attitude to anticipate or to follow in-
tclbgentl) situations which five
points
we have not expenenced
Besides these
view we shall present a section on the tjpe of
of
motivation which belongs to each
life
form
For,
it
will be clearly
seen that the reasonable choice of one or more value emphasized
purposes and the causal-theoretical calculation of the means necessary to their
attainment,
originates
in
IS
onl>
is
a
special kind of motivation
a blend of the theoretic
which we might
call
which
and economic types and
tho t}pe of technical motivation
This tjpe
characteristic of our time, but not of all time nor indeed
With the consideration
all beings of our time
of motivation
already touch upon the specific ethics of this region, but
remember that
this section is
purely psychological
of
we
we must
In othei words,
no value judgments are made in regard to the types except those Even which refer to uhat follows of then innei consti notion
where we speak
of
an
ethical
psychology of these ethics
tendency we refer onlj
For,
we can
grasp
to
the
psychologically
the psychic mental attitude which belongs to every ethical attitude of
an individual
Noimatn e experiences always have
slant even though the
norms themselves and
a psj chological
their validity cannot
be the object of purely' psychological consideration
Besides the
question of the type of motivation and the ty'pe of ethics
make a survey
of the
can be differentiated
we
shall
most important forms into which the types
The
standpoint of such differentiation will
—
—
lOG
drairs frois the aniqne ftractnrc of eich
lie
for every type.
baTf a It
Many
cxrisplcs
trill
repon and thc«
furthonnoro, be difficult for ns to at old tafcinc lao^t of
frill,
tlie
example' from our own and clasMc culture.
cm
ont}
be applied
irithont
For,
this stud}
mediating interpretationt to culture*
wiifxc meantne dinction* are already clearl} differentiated
ofou Ml piononnred
i
) General validity then, comprehends (universality of the subject) (2) Validity of all objects which have been included in this general concept or law (universahty of the object)
112
And by means
interrelations
He
m
lives
an
e}es gazing into the
world, his
eternal
he transcends the moment
of this
future and sometimes comprehending ir>hole epochs
And
history
m
the immortality which
which
Even
He
become, so
has
who
scholars
vocational
all
We
is
general
necessity,
objectivity,
most easily
can find this attitude then
lives’
woik
may be found independent
type
hia
moment
creature of the
chosen careeis in
this
partakes of
systematized to a degree
instinctive
follow
But elementary forms of
He
master
from the eternal validity of
speak,
to
can
beliavior
the
and applied logic
validity
among
radiates
practical
his
mmd
his
impossible for
IS
of the world's
this reflection he intertwines past and present in
an ordered whole which
tiuths
distant
of
Here the structural aspect appears perhaps even
life
moie clearly than
moie complex natures
in the
men
of great
II
To
attempt
objectively
least
whole
the
like projecting a plastic object
is
the cognitive value
At
comprehend
to
they
is
content
expeiiential
upon a plane
When
placed hist the others must necessarily suffei
undergo a
determined
structurally
which can only be understood
if
transformation
we constantly remind ourselves
of their relation to the theoretic man’s life centei
No
complete
life is
pressure, physical needs
achievement
possible without economic acts
and
all the
make themselves
felt
mateiial bases of intellectual
though
even
existence
is
to
him
one
iiishes
to
But no othei side of
dedicate oneself to purely objective study
needs
External
so unimportant subjectively, as these immediate
Foi, utilitarian interests necessitate such a stiong subjective
emphasis that they injure
all
And
puie cognition
this dismterested
is just what has led to objective systems which would never have been developed if obseivation had been lestiicted
cognitive attitude
to the directly useful scientific
training
consciously repudiates
application and utilitarian interest of our
classical period
helpless
of
the
He
(I
this
all
might
which followed the
of the eighteenth century)
the face
For
and ‘applied’
practical
The
reason any puiely
immediately practical cite
here the idealism
utilitaiian lationalism
that
m
puie theoiist
is
necessaiy consequence
problems of
life
the
is
has not learned to relate his reflections to specific
practical situations and the necessaiy puipose-means consideiations
lie IS
fitted for
ill
a stinggle for existence, not because he lacks
understanding, but because such an attitude
His consequent helplessness
pioblems
technical
is
often
foreign to his nature
is
carried
over to the simplest
‘Kant, the great theorist,
small mechanic, the
first all
and Lampe, the
head, the second all hands, vrero often
nonplussed by insignificant things*')
PJnlosopJian nocessc
est,
vtverc
est necessef A scholai may sunonnd himself uith a mass boohs and instruments and jet have no bed to sleep in, as Hcrminn Reich reports of Pinl von Winterfeldt Plato depreciates the economic tjpe of man Spinoza canies on a modest
non of
—
—
trade which does not satisfj him all
this
we
In seeming contradiction to
that scholars sometimes develop
find
miserliness oi even
m
‘Where jour tieisure
a pathological
astonishing passion to accumulate wealth
is,
thcie will lour heart be also’
these aie not born theorists and, like sophists, really aio utilitarians
many
We cm
perhaps
of the old (and
new)
understand howevei, that
Thej come fiom the
the pure theorist might exhibit such traits
feeling that the practical side of life presents almost insuperable difficulties
For
this
renson their
expresses
deficiency
itself
in
haplnraid accumulation, not so much for the love of possession IS
the
in
desiie for
tlcoi'st loathes
ficedom fiom such material worries
the economic attitude with
verj
its
specific
The law
Wheio we find the cainest conviction that economic possessions make tor independence, there we no longer have the pure theoietio mixed attitude
tvpe but instcid theorist,
Ins limits
Schopenhauer was not a pure
were set by the will
This contrast between the theoretic and economic attitudes expressed hv the Gieck thinkers who They upon anj foim of eaniing one’s living felt that the business interest of the sophists was definitely opposed And since the dsagia to the pniely philosophic state of mind which also stood for the aesthetic set was their highest value, the
has
been most strongly
looked scornfullj
word ^dvavaoq acquired the same deprecatory meaning which And when today ve are thej gave to the word ^agfiagog offended by the mixing of the commeicial attitude with research,
quest for truth and philosophic reflection, this effect of *)
the ancient Greek point of view but
Wasiaiiski,
Bibbothek
Immanuel Kant in semen
is is
not only an afterexpressive of an
letzten Lebensjahren, Deutsche
p 239
Siirang-cr, T\iic? of
mm
8
114 eternal
The economic and
psychology
m
cannot both have a place
the
theoietic
attitudes
m
the same soul, at least not
equal
propoitions
The economic
attitude
Foi, even cognitive acts
as a suboidinated factoi
they
economy,
without
aie
cognitive behavior
neveitheless enteis
certain
immanent lawfulness
then
injuiing
demand a
psycho - ph} siological achievements which must obey the economy A phjsical foimula, perhaps a yard long, may be of eneigy but
accurate,
A
it
cannot thus be used
ceitam technique underlies as
the
instruments
and
well
as
But
aptitude
pme
pragmatism,
which often necessitates
to
perveisions
The
is
is
in
IS
Aesthetic
additions
distinctly
subjective,
it
of imaginative combinations
is
latliei
to
quite easily understood
now and
entei into the
impulsive (whim)
who were
where the
once of
chief
technical ability
is
tiuth
and all
on the other hand,
aitistic inventions
‘Intuition’
Hegel used
it is
to
The
theoiist’s
and Romanticists, who emotional powers,
may become
a
is
method
devoid of method and puiel\
say that one could do nothing
entiiely guided
the aesthetic type ultimately
it
said
piuging cognition of
object with all then
then but fundamentally
with people
of
empathj, sometimes even productive
and
thus
of
and cognition once
His goal
imagination,
passionate objection to all such di earners
want
forms
necessaiily devaluated by the
also
can be achieved onlv by cnticall\
subjective
certain
The same may be
level
theoretic type because of his dominant set this
mechanical
ends which perhaps
biological
no longei thought, but
aesthetic attitude
precise
Where economy
as
expeiimcntal psjcholog}
of
veiy
ceitam
a
cognitive laws are abolished
was upon an undifferentiated requirement
presupposes
mling piinciple,
cognition
of
research (the histoiical
must be suboidinated
the
more becomes a means certain
all scientific
consequentlv
all this
becomes
thought
physical)
a means
as
clings
while the scientist strives to master
by emotion
In addition,
with his whole soul to form it
intellectually
and analyze
into geneial essences
Only that is scientific which has been grasped in a generally valid sense, and therefore the aim of science is conceptual desciiption but not the stimulation of an emotional
it
attitude
Plato, himself a poet, banished poets from his philosophic
which the theoretic ideal was placed above eveiything else because poets did not desne pnmaiily truth but lather to
state
in
115 excite feelings
and
to stimulate
dangerous
He
also
>)
emotions which were often ethicallj
m
saw
them beings twice lemoved from which were in themselves
reality because they copied single objects
back
copies, instead of going
The
valid Idea
stoics
to the original, eteinal
believed imagination
man who
danger of the wise
and generallj
be the greatest
to
stiove to regulate his life by general
laws, because the maginaiio chained
man
to
single objects
and
extornal tilings
This devaluation of the pictorial imagination, the imagmaUo, can be traced up to modem lationalism, and Spinoza’s
knowm
position in this regard is well
In the Leibnitzean school
the tmaqmatio uses from the level of a confused cognition to an
independent aesthetic impoitance
The
theorist,
Lick conceptual imagination, but he subjects
and discipline b\
It is
VoihiMungsJo aft which
is
it
however, does not to
strict
relation
dominated throughout
objective Laws
IVhen the theoiist views
own
pcculi
ir
He
bias
artistic objects lie
judges them with his
traces then influences from a puiely scientific
standpoiut and tiica to foimnlate his conclusions in aesthetics, not content
until
he has -biased the conciote
formulated gcneial idea which obje'’lioa to
mn«ic
but also to
hi->
t”!
the
iiio«t
’S
rrtistic
satisfies his lational
object
upon
needs
a
Kant’s
piobablj not duo only to a natural defect in
liis
psi chological stnicluio
unintellcctnal art since
the general laws theorist
is
upon uhitlTit
is
To him music was
he never undoistood
oi discovered
based (dm ThemaUl)
®)
The pure
pnmarilj inteiested in the object, in rational technique
oi
pure concepts in a manner directly opposed to the aesthetic attitude
And aesthetic
’)
A
}ct even the purest theoiist cannot quite factoi
exclude the
but must recognize this attitude at least as a
eimilai fanatical adherence to truth as
an enemy of art
is
found
in Eousseau, based here, however, on ascetic rather than theoretic motives Here we must also class the objection which is felt by some philosophers
with a decided logical trend to the socalled philosophy of life They scent in this an aesthetic or mjsticnl element which they cannot understand ) Cf Gladstone, Faraday (p 47 of the German translation) On the function of imagination in science see
my
essay
Fhaniaste mid Welt-
anschauung in the collected aolnme Weltanschauung Berlin 1911 p 142fi, and al®o Heinrich Maier Psychologic des emottonalen Venhens Tuebingen 1908 ch 5 Kognitive Pliantasietnetigkeit und Phantasieurtcile ») The mathematician’s question on hearmg a Beethoven symphony 5” ‘Beautiful, but what is thus proved by it IS famous 8*
116 All thought finally bordeis on the individual, the Even the most abstiact logical piocess seems to have
auboidmate act pictoiuil
a
No
thought
wholly possible without
13
tative ideas
It
which
inadequate,
no matter hoiv
snbstiatum,
is
imaginative
and represen-
illustiative
has often been demonstiated that the fruitfulness of
empiiical thought ultimately depends upon the wealth and plasticity of
An
such ideas leason
this
empiiical thinkei (botanist, geogiapher etc
most closely
is
i
achieved a great deal
Kant’s abstiact intellect too seems to have
Geometiy exhibits an aesthetic chaiacter
in this aesthetic direction
because
concepts also have foim, even though
its
foim of the theoietic
(lational)
Similar aesthetic
urns aie peihaps even
art
are
more valid
The pioblem
means
itself,
concept und lawful
however,
all art
suggest a
No
concrete
seems
imaginative pictuie
to
The
detail here
historian
is
much
very
various reasons for this
Especially today
*)
so
still
when
accessible
to
directed
is
the
into empathic
to
IS
matter
how
closely
it
ultimately appio-
cannot be developed in
and
it
is
in the nature
of
things
abolished
For, historical
isolated occurrences
which are only
imagination
Besides
relations with past eras
mind This empathic relation but
uses in older to
the conceptual outfit of the
that this attitude cannot be completel)
leconsti notion
in
impeifectly developed, the aesthetic acts are
the foiegiound
in
consists
be bound up with factuil material and mental
laws which are embodied in the iindei standing, aches art
in those
the desciiptive sciences
is,
drawing a pictuie (leprcsentation) which
history
only empathic
the single instance not the starting point but
In them the geueial (namely
fine
context)
it is
‘soul’
aim of then endeivoi, that
rathei the
and
cl
make
sciences which
foi
though
the aesthetic tjqie
elated to
)
is
this,
histoiy
must enter
and then unique
states of
not indicative of aesthetic enjoyment,
a necessaij foundation for the specific geistcsivissenscliaftliclie
‘)
Of
W
V Humboldt’s
historian in bis
Ofterdmgen I 5
Hedcueho ,
also
Geschichischi eibers schrift vol 100
und
my
famous comparison of the poet and the Aufgahe des Gescluchtbchieiheis and Novalis essay TF v J3 ’s Eede uehei die Aufgahe des
die
die Schellmgsche Ehilosojdiie
Indicative of the aesthetic attitude
is
Histonsche Zeitthe interweaving
of the particular ivith the general, so that the seemingly individual cases of history illustiate
a general law This attitude is expressed again and again in Eanke's solemn phrase ‘And here I believe I see a general law
of life’
117 cognitive acts whicli
no
call concrete
is,
therefore,
undeistandmg The histoiian moio subjective in these achievements than il ho weic tiying to understand tiiangles and circles A student of
hoivever,
18 ,
oiilj
Geisicstoissenschaft
alwajs less theoretic than the
investigator of cognate objects
which cannot he value subjects in The pnic theoiist appeals more clearly when special methods which have been developed to explain natural objects
thcmsohcs
applied to geistesiussenschafiliche objects
arc artificiallj
Lot us non turn to the social out
where we
field
iking fact, nimely, that the thcoiist
sti
Despite the ideational general validity of
mil, the will la
distinctlj
attitude
antithetical
lb
to
He
minds
uanon
be interested
public
in
meetings
Family
Lscape his observation
IVi
neithci
Not
the
biotlicrhood of icseirch, truth,
others
'I
ties
contemplating
he onh kind of community which that of convictions held in
is
attitude
understood he feels at home
18
differentiated
as
now an
invisible
cien thinkers of different nations not plastic
IS
mankind
seem to him unimportant
No
matter
It is
how
human
is
When
academy
Wherever his science was not
of thought united
based upon a onesided knowledge
to generalize his obseivations
The
his
dominant abilities
indiiiduality
and
Approach the p 175
attitude
and tends iriationality
any single ocouirence which can only be grasped by
Theaitetos
of
caicfully the theorist studies men, his
Everj where ho finds intellectual motives and
>)
to
in accordance with
common
This form of social relation
powers of undcistandiug arc limited bj
arc beyond him
ties
soul, but
and knowledge unites him
his natuie
of
The
In
aesthetic enjojment of the
to
also
the
man
i)
blood lelahQji nor an altimstic desuc to help
mankind
him
so
in
wise
illnstiates
Thcaetot distint
tbe occasional and haphazaid in his immediate environment
cl'‘rniij,
m'”,
Plato
as
man in how
no matter
eteinal
the
in
or empathic relations with
but alwajs stiongly subjective
cares neither foi his ancestors nor his neighbors, noi
beautiful interlude on the wise lives
is
His coolly objective mental
8^mpathctlc
with their bioad or
otliors,
critical
every intellectnalism
This explains whj the pure
cannot be a social natuie
llieori't
IS
personal, that
an individualism
tln.rcforc perforce
knowledge, the
all
autonomous lethmlnng of naive convictions,
to the
something so
at once observe
a complete individualist
is
intuition
theorist for advice in a piactical
118 and he inclines
situation
to
look upon the issue from the stand-
and
or definite laws
human espeiience
point of all
The
the subtle and individualizing points
oveilook
to
consolation which he
‘This offeis will probably be based on some such generality as In regard to single instances of everyday often happens in life’ This explains perhaps life he has more wisdom than shiewdness
why we have no
which deal adequately with artist is
fields the
In these
life
moie keen than that
The same phenomena It
or moial philosophies
satisfactory psychologies
of the scholar
are repeated
the
in
cannot be denied that the theonst has
Bupenoiity because
of
sphere
political
decided feeling
a
of
But he cannot
mental achievements
bis
of the
ey^e
lacks the interest in the concrete
which
comprehends the individual peculiaiities of any given case
The
make use
of
it
because he
knowledge
dictum
power, should thus be qualified
is
one knows how to use specifically
But
it
The
theoretic type
consciousness
expressed instead in the vague feeling
he has no desire
deny the central age
‘But I
knows’’,
insofar as
executive ability is lacking in the
power
of
I could if I
is
here
would
But
do so since in that very moment he would
to
Kanke, who cried in his old
interest of his life
cannot die yet,
I
know
so
who compiehended
and Hegel,
much
that
noone
else
tumultuous period
his
from an almost eschatological point of view that the woild not only was as
it
was, but must be so and signified a mental apex,
are very similar natures
For him
Fichte
is
a totally
difteient character
all science points to a formative ait of
Vamnfthimsi)
The
theorist’s
will to
leason (gestaltende
act usually
spends
itself
and polemics
These are his weapons Once he has shown that a curient opinion is false he does not know what
in criticism
remains to be done
His entiie ambition can be centered in the
Eiasmus could not understand how anyone found Luthei’s Geiman translation of the New Testament
solution of a limited problem
moie important than the
scholar
is
immediate recognition
engage the
eyes
is
due
in isolating leseaich,
sacrifice
of
own Latin
his
pioverbial
of
others
Pei haps to
need
great pioblems and
is
seized
of
conciete
and
the fact that minoi scholais
who
want
his
foi
lecompensed
at least to be
then immediate neainess to
upon them
The ambition
translation
life,
foi
by having the
But anyone who investigates tiuly
by the passion
foi
knowledge needs
119 no other blessedness than he finds in quiet activity, and his unremarked existence is solaced by the conviction that the truth
make its own way after his death Neveitheless it is striking that so few scholars love the anonymity into which all really general truth must finally sink Apparently every'body likes to be comwill
pensated for his expenditure of eneigy
Wherevei the actively IS
theorist,
misappiehending his own nature, does
enter politics, his limitations die immediately seen
inclined to think that education is the only
All
from Condorcet to
positivists
He
road to progress
Buckle and those
today
of
represent this intellectnalistic IS
of positive value only'
relation with
dogma They forget that knowledge when it has been brought into organic its possessoi Human And even though we may all human intelligence
the other mental pouors of
beings arc not mere creatures of leason
paidon the
onoi in looking upon
theorist’s
as equal because the results of coircct thinking are equally valid,
we must plernnl
that the nomntdleotnal
insist
obstacle to their equality
structure
of
man
wo
b>
means of
And
chemistry
it
It is true that
mathematical
nature
phjsics
ind
man and
cannot be denied that
inteirelated uith socalled natural contexts
intellect aic closelj
The bonndaij must
therefore bo lerj
not our task
obvious without further investigation that the
It
is
carefulh
drawn, but tins
is
feeling for psjchio life and mental contexts presupposes a whollj difleient strnctnre
bj
than
is
necessitated
by obscnation and
arrangement and intcrpietation of material objects
collection
llTiether one
speaks here of an ‘inner and outer imagination or of ‘understanding
and explaining’ the are diSerentlj
fact remains that these arc
oiganizcd
The
‘nsion’
that for instance, Jiuman beings
who or
interpret the external bj
vice versa,
who
treat
two lipcs nhich
is dilteicnt in
and the difference reaches so far back into the
total
the two cases
mental structure
and epochs appear again and again
means of psvchic meaning
contexts,
mental achievements according to the
scheme of mere external causal explanations There results therefore, as an insight into the plasticiti of total life, the far-reaching difference between the tjpe who apprehends mankind as a region of
mechanical legal necessitj
and the other l>pe who deduces
everything from meaningful value motives and spontaneous purpose striving
The more
distinction
to the
between analj tic and
formal side of cognition
sj nthetic direction
The importance
belongs
for science
127 of these predominating tendencies
is
minds which are principally directed unravel
continuous
in
life
well
known
Theie are some
to the differences of phenomena
Others chiefly notice the identities
Correspondingly, some people
reflection
and others,
because
thej
constantly recurring traits, elevate life into the spheie
realize its
of generally valid contexts
For the
classical logician theic existed a characteiistic equa-
between generality
lisation
and law) and
And
that which is according to species
e
(i
Foi them species
totality
law was so
oi
to
speak
out of which the special differentiated itself oi emanated
the unit}
indeed logically both are related
For,
anyone who has
grasped the general law also includes an entire region of phenomena, but
a
onl}
region and not
bo cognized and thonght
tile
There
whole cosmos of that which can is,
another difference
theiefoie,
between specialising and nnivorsalising thinkers
who,
people
like
Robert Mayei
devote then
the
essence
of
leal
lives
to the
others, howcvei,
appears as a sjstematic whole which one
cognitive problem
must master in order really to understand the the
There are some
whole
To
intensive investigation of one special problem
science
paiticiilar
Theiefore
includes a tendency not only to the
but also to the whole Whore this tendency is lacking or enh partiallj developed ue are at the border of real science The meic aphorist foi instance, like Nietzsche voices aesthetic
goiicial
imptrcsions rather than thecietically founded and identical contexts
hand has a comprehensive vision in phenomenon is no longer strictly differentiated which is bom from the leligious diive to
Tlic mcinph3Eician on the other
which
llie
individual
or thought through and
the Absolute
from the aesthetic uige to foim
or
speaks reverently of the ‘general’, that which
and that which
is
is
When
Hegel
according to species
accoiding to totality (the Geneial and the Total)
flows together to form an undifferentiated unity distinction of partial
and comprehensivo thinkers
If
one applies the
to the theoi etical
typo in the widest sense, one finds, beside the specialists
again sec and think thiongh one side of for
whom
existence
is
essentiall}
thej
not
satisfied
until
thought
on the
totality
are
life,
who
the univeisal theorists
one tremendous problem and who
have erected a monistic structure of Thej live their lives in one
of life
dominating thought or one comprehensive Logos whose manysidedness issues
from an Absolute Unitj
126
make a
Let n 3
the
of
diherentiation
final
of
and reasoning
classification,
On
is
For, even the
open, often with enormous
difficulty
thinking
all real
achievement
productiie
a
activity',
Xoone can
creative
the contrary
a difference between the theorist
is
who breaks
nen roads in understanding
,
and conquers new land, and the other who ‘thinks himself
an accepted
of thought and cannot go beyond
line
Fichte
into’ is
a
though he accomplished nothing which could
crcatii e thinker
really
the
and the receptive
not mutnallj exclusive
is
an inner
is
productire
peoples’ thoughts
other
nnderetand by merely adopting
Kei crthelC'S there
regard to
in
theoretically
This antithesis, however, appreciation
point
But noone had a stronger feeling
be termed a mental discovery
than ho for the activity of thought, and he would certainly' have
phrase
the
transl ited
il
dQ/ij t^r
onh
justified
6 ^oyog ‘In the beginnmg
was the deed*
there
V Finally nliich
we
,
are
a hidden inner
Scepticism
16
opposed
18
1
elated
m
lives
The
affinity
theoretical sceptic
is
the
the only
ty
pe
npon such
This sccpjticism presupposes the experience of the theoretic
contrast ideal
discussing here
in
antithetical to the theorist if the contrast is b"scd
IS
to
is
it
only'
meaningful
if
the thing which
has buried an ideal and it
One can be a
one of harsh pride
is
renounces
In this way' the sceptic
He
the quiet tcais which he weeps for
demeanor
it
ns a scientific thought
the scientific fanatic
to
even
if
his
outward
sceptic for diticrcnt
reasons, from religions veneiation, wcilth of aesthetic imagination, desire
for
action
"Wlicn
the
\icw that of every valid, ty
cognitive it
constantly
theorist
he only
bi
means
of a
that
prov'es
new
it
an
•'ttitudc
it
is
m
tlis
form
it
is
this
point of
held generally*
its
psv chologic limits
The negation
may seem
illogical,
a very interesting and possible structure
which may be subjectively understood appears
it
he himself belongs to the theoretic
pc w ithoiil hav mg understood
IS
to
denied the possibility*
theory which
of science because of certain scientific experiences
but
of these
scientific ciitical leasons
objects
was inconsequential because
theory
Kone
But one can also be a theoretical sceptic
may be based upon
scepticism
IS,
politics or industry*
in socicts,
attitudes concern ns here
That
Although scepticism rarely
characteristic of the theoretic type since
129 it
repiesents this t>pe
self-criticism
Feihaps
with the wildest expectations and keenest
Hume was
truthfulness, however, finally It
sounds p.iradoxical when
type
13
the most religions
such a man His honest}' and made even his scepticism productive we declare that a ceitain atheistic
But theie
is
some foundation
of truth
for this statement, because the puie atheist is so only because of
a disappointed religions impulse
In the same
way we might say
that the sjstematic sceptic is in a certain sense the purest form of theorist because he transcends himself
Sprnnffcr, Typen of
9
2
THE ECONOMIC ATTITUDE I
M apt
pieservation of
depends upon natural piodncts and forces which are
life
to
These needs are not constant but
man’s needs
satisfy
Even
mciease with his development
have been
satisfied
point
this
The
an and nature aie cloaoly interwoven
wants glow until he
liis
is finally
The
seldom or ncvei reached
IS
the most urgent needs
aftei
But
satiated
capacity of natural
pioducts to satisfy needs (by maintaining and developing physical life)
IS
means the
The
called their utility
We
to satisfy needs
that
fact
adjustments
the
conditions
value quality of this aim
is
is
thus always a physical
shall accept without further discussion
maiutainance
given
to
useful
of is
by means of appiopnate
life
The
the aim of this process
lepieseuted in expeiience not only by
the feeling of ‘pleasant’ and ‘unpleasant’, but on the higher mental levels 01
by the terms
harmful
measuied
is
But whatever
‘useful’ oi ‘haimfiil’ first
is
useful
of all in regard to the value of the
mere pieseivation of biological
life
and the
instincts
which regulate
the satisfaction of needs Utilities aie then,
Even purely
and forces
pioducts
in geneial,
goods in the form of physical intellectual
achievements are
of objectivation
A
painting, for instance, cannot be cierted without canvas, color
and
only mediated by the
wood its
A
aid of physical
means
certain technical skill in line
production
and coloi plays a pait
physical processes are involved in the publi-
A
speech fatigues the speaker and his heaiers
cation of a book
unless a certain economy of eneigy and time the physical
it is
material aspect
it is
Thus
is
observed
In a woid,
and physiological forces enter even the intellectual
realm, because
goods
in
Many
based upon a certain technique and with this
connected with economic values and exchangeable
the useful can also serve the realization of the non-
131 woild of objects which we have mentioned above
physical
the
and transcendental woild And in this respect mental woik can be economically evaluated Physical energy, time and mateiial aie used But the inner value of cognition, imaginative
ideational,
of
a work of art or a religious manifestation
They
preseivativo units view, which
m
m
in teims of self-
are luxuries fiom the economic point of
a favoiable economic period aie highly valued and
times of dearth
constant
incommensuiable
is
Such value cannot be expiessed
economically
difficulty
may of
sink to the zero point
epochs
cultural
all
m
This explains the
measuring the value
nariow economic sense
of intellectual pioducts in a
In the following pages our discussion will be confined
economy which takes place goods and natuial forces
Such
(i
purposive behwior)
e
utilities
minimum
aie there even enough foi is
This
the
to
if
diffeient
forms
as
and simultaneously both
deteimme which inner
his
pioducer
man might
appeal
consumei
This
as
oi
For, every
i
man
will only be mentioned
A
economic tjpe)
man
abundant subsistence and goods suited limit hia ecouomic
is
m two is,
of
necessaiily
His economic enviionment and his needs
(The influence
of these natuies shall predominate
structure
diffeientiate the
economic only
is
the economic piocess extends over generations
see theiefore that the economic
course, only a designation a
of
work and
is
oveibalances the expenditure of eneigy
po^^el
in
tiuo even
is
We \eiy
gam
Rational activity
bung goods fiom difierent application of known natm al
necessaij
This expenditure of energy
when
aie not unlimited, nor
satisfaction
places and to transform them by the
laws
to that
in the region of life-preserving physical
when we begin
to
with few wants or with an
may
to his individual needs,
activity almost solely to
He
consumption
then
is
an enjoyer even though ho must feed himself and thus accomplish The economic phenomenon la more a minimum of pioductive woik expiessed,
cleaily
m
a
however, by the individual who
certam line in older
to
be able
to
is
pioductive
consume these
oi
other
goods
In him the balance between utility and disutility can be
clearly
seen
strives 18
to
to
But even he,
free himselt
misundeistand
lecognize this
impulse
the
background of
his
activity,
fiom the piessuie of immediate wants
the
longing
m
entue psychology of economics not
foi
fieedom
One must lemember
that
of
action
human
as
wants,
its
if
It
to
fundamental
the individual
132 IS
unrestrained
average
but
his economic drive,
in
economic stnving even
an
constantly
infinite
do not cense at a definite
glow beyond the given point of if
All
satisfaction
confined to the compass of nature, has re-creating
self
On
power
one hand this
might appear as a hopeless eircle of ever unsatisfied endeavor, on the other, however,
by means
might be considered as the pou erfnl impulse
it
and technical behavior grow beyond
of which economic
the isolated individual and become objectivb meaningful
Our
We
must,
*it
phenomena
and idealising method must solve two
isolating
difficulties
present, disregard the special economic forms which
correspond to changing cultural epochs
We
cannot dwell onesidedl}
on agriculture or trade and industiy, natural, money, or credit economy but only on the etemil economic motive as a constant
and
function between the subject
both of
Furthermore
despite the variability of
utilities
n e must disregard the special historical forms
which production, exchange and consumption arc We must carry oiu method of isolation to the point
society
in
earned on
wheie a single man could
subsist,
only work in definite social and
even though in
reality
My
lcg.il relations
people
opinion
is
economic type shows only one mental attitude no matter whether he carries on independent or city, national or world that the purely
economy
We
And did
it is
only the type that interests us
not find the theoretic type limited to scholars
It
developed as a unique structure of the soul which might appear
The same
apart from pure science
structure need not necessarily
daily bread in
On
many phases
is
The economic men who earn their
true here
be confined
to
the contrary, the basic motive of utility appears of personality,
dominates regions in which
we
should really expect to find different attitudes and even becomes the decisive ethics of existence
Conversely, people
who
constantly
emphasize the economic factor as their last word need not necessarily
be
bom
utilitarians
The
Marxists for instance are predominantly
Their theory' does not correspond to their This fact might be utilized in a critique of the economic
theorists or pobticians
practice
inteipretation of history if the latter did not apply a psychology
of unconscious determination
which
is
pure constructive metaphysics
and no longei descnption
The economic man
in general, he
who
of life prefers utility to all other values
He
is,
m
all the lelations
sees every'thing as
133 a means for self-preservation,
an aid in the natural struggle fox existence and a possibility to render life pleasant He economizes
goods and forces, time and space in order
to gain the maximnm As moderns we might call this the because (as we shall later see) the entire
of useful effect for himself *
practical type’, partly
technical
field
included in the
is
economic point of view
But
the value of practical activity lies not in the depths of a value
determining disposition
The Greeks would
the doer (TtQdrTorza)
m
but
call this
the wholly external useful result
type the maker (jrotofiira) hut nevei
0 II
Thus the economic type
sees
cognition from
his purposive
type asks
The theorist seeks truth for itself but the economic ‘How can this fact be used^’ He interprets Goethe’s
expicssion
‘Anything that
viewpoint
utilitarian sense
ballast
and,
disregarding its
not useful
Unapplied knowledge
The economic t}pe
according to
is
its
a burden’, 2 ) in a narrow
for
him meiely unnecessary
seeks only wisdom that can be utilized
pure objective context combines knowledge
Thus we have
application
technical knowledge,
is
is
who
the type embodying
organizes everything by
its
practical use
This attitude gave birth to pragmatism which does not allow any special law
of cognition but calls whatever
or harmful,
true
Tiuth
or false
is
to
worth reflected back upon the theoretical act IS
all
mdicatu e
of this evaluation of science
knowledge accoiding
to the degree
the self-preservation of the knower, (or
biologically useful
is
them nothing but pioved
He
m
Spencer’s pedagogy
attempts to summarize
which
maybe
it
contributes to
to the preservation
of the species)
^*) Herbert Schnek in Dc? ‘iaiwmle Bcgnff des Wnischafismoischen^ Jnhrbnecher fuer l^^atioualoekonoinie und Statistik, vol 122 (1924) p 439 gives a \alnnhle and strictly methodological survey of the different forms in winch the doctrine of the ‘homo oeconomicus’ appears in the history
of economics
In another essay
Der
irraUojiale
Begnjf des Wtitschafts-
p 192 he discusses the historical nctuahsatioiis of the An general type which arise by its being cro'^sed with other motives Alfred Ruehl by developed illustration is special out excellently worked
mcnschcn op
cit
Die Wirtschaftsjpsychologie des Spanios, Zeitschnft der Erdknnde zu Berlin 1922 5)
‘Was man
nicht nutzt,
1 st
eine schwere Last’
Gesellschaft fuel
Goethe’s Faust,
131
Even on that
thongli
of
seems that the ^^lne of theory
it
utility
it
may
is
dependent
neveitheless often be interwoven with
economic bchavioi as a subordinate act Civilized man lives upon a level where sclf-presenation is no longer regulated purely bj
He
instinct
of
is
aided in his struggle for existence by the knowledge
and their causal relations
quality of objects
the
Utilitarian
knowledge more and more outbalances pure wisdom With increasing complexitj of economic methods greater intellectual capacity is
demanded
of
man
He no longer needs
to
know merely the economic man t) Such
value of things but also the economic essence of
man
reaches
onesided
study
considers
only economic usefulness
of
general foimula nothing
is
climax in Taylorism which
its
Of conrse according
No
economically insignificant
to our
span of
time or space, or object, no intellectual product oi charactcrological
economically unimpoitant
trait is
have a 'business head'
It is
The economic man must
therefore
no longer possible on higher levels common sense which is sufficient
to get along with nothing but that
on lowei
The
levels
ideal goal
of
the
economic tjpe
is
an
economic rationalism, the tiansformation of the whole process of life into
The
On
a compiehensive calculation in which no cognition
of
limits
unknown
*)
always set also the limits of economics
the other hand the irrationality of natural
wholly be abolished by any 'forwaidlooking finds its natural limits at this point
phenomena cannot
attitude’, paitly
unique future circumstances cannot be predicted
end
f ictor is
because
Intellectual ability
and calculation and i ationalisation
Consequently another quality
is
needed which
is
not purely
intellectual but is lather a matter of imaginative intuition or belief
the willingness to take a chance
may have the
calculated,
element of
or based
Howevei well economic buhai lor
some factois aie always lacking
And
here
chance enters in either supported by imagination
upon a
belief in ‘luck’
And
thus the economic type
touches the region of aesthetics and religion
*)
This
IS
earned so far that the art of stimulating new needs is The psychology of ad-
practiced, instead of satisfying existing ones
vertising has recently been developed into a separate hianch of science
Of Werner Sombart,
Der Bourgeois, Muenchen 1920 on the calAnd further Max Weber, l)ie Wirtschaft vnd (he Oidmmgen wid Maechte (Grnndnss der Sozialoekonomik
culation of capitalism gesellscJiaflhchen
HI, 1 p 35} § 4 on the typical measures of rational economics
135
The
component
aesthetic
is
chaiaeteiized by the fact, that
has a psychic- expel lental but not a utilitarian value regions
mutuaUg
are
to the beautiful
The
exclusive
have no lOom
to
happy moods spoiled
beaut}’'
Barth
and haimony can afford
existence which develops his
But
certain onesided lines
mnei
foi
to enter the struggle foi
power along
the aesthetically impoitant
if
from an economic point of view
may
The two
as a rule inimical
both side by side, neithei does the
foi
Noone who staves
soul
la
it
Splendid landscapes aie destroyed from economic
motives, woiks of ait demolished and
seems
useful
i)
it is
regarded as luxury
2)
is
viewed
Luxuries
become economically necessary goods through i refanement of wants Cultured people have a ceitain need for aitistic smiouudings Then imagination demands stimulation and satisf iction especiall} it by vocation they aie put undei course
of
graduall}
the pressure of some division of labor
be wholly separated fiom the economic
economic natuies
of
This explains the desire in many
be patrons of
to
but fail to
elevation
social
makeup
nairow needs have been outdistanced
that
signifies
It
and luxuiies can be afforded of
the aesthetic cannot aesthetic
becomes in social relations a factoi wJiich increases
possessions prestige
Thus The
They
art
appieciate
utilize art as a
its
means
inner significances
Anothei point of contact between the aesthetic and the economic seems
to
he
in the fact that scarcity goods (gold
(the
woik
of
high exchange value of luxuries
A
his
own
It
18
of
his
life
highly
own
will
fiec
ud
is
always a sign of luxui}
he icgaids
Everybody atypical
of couise also included in the class
is
to the social region
egotistical since
IS
have
gieat master for instance) have a very
a
This
gold stand
Let US now turn type
silvei)
Then again articles which can never be
an aesthetic significance replaced
and
else
in foi
is
it
as his
first
duty to preserve
consequently of lessei impoitance
the economic the
The puiely economic
man
to
sike of others
i
enounce anything
Only egoism and
is not intended to deny that the aesthetic and the have some developmental factors in common It is (1) the preparation and *) Luxuiy has heie a double meaning consumption of a surplus of goods beyond purely economic needs, and (2)
This statement
biologically useful
everything which
is
not immediately useful but belonging to the othei may he designated as luxury
regions of value, especially the aesthetic,
In both cases determination
we
are dealing with a unique category of economic value
136 mutualism
economic forms of the social attitude
pnmaiil)
are
Wberover altruism, as the principle of renunciation of goods in favor of someone else, appears, it must bo born from some motive A consistent economic system has no other than economic ones place for
beings
The economic man’s interest in lie secs man purely from
charitj
utilitarian
onli
18
view of economy, that help
accepts
cicn this mutual relation
but
economic point of view in
Such an
favor
his
human
the point of
He
included in the
is
There mnst always be a positive balance can be earned
attitude
economic exploitation which from the rentability
other
as a piodnccr, consumer or a bu} cr
is,
as
strict point of
would be perfectlj logical ‘)
as
far
pure
view of economic
Economic calculation must
also consider moral qualities, but only insofar as they arc economically important, such as
thrift, indnstrj', cffieioncy, order, reliability,
Anj man
in short the vocational-economic abilities
deserves credit
qualities
That
credit is
‘The man
men
is
good
One should observe
make
for
relations
good business
busmees expression
the wai in which business
All forms of honorarv demonstration,
create social relations
of good will or sjmpath}
enter into the economic relation
Tho\
But with the pure economic tjpc such
do not go beyond business interests
economic point of
possessing such
a moral cmpliasis
onl}
of economic qualities is testified bj the current
Mew man
is
necessarily onlj
From a
the pnrel>
means
to
an end
and can be evaluated according to his ability to work, his capital
power*)
or his purchasing
The
fact that there arc real business
friendships and mutual interests is not a contradiction of just
been said
Foi, the economic subject
is
what has
not nccessarilj a
Bndolf Goldscheid has lately introduced into sociology the principle as an ethico -political point of There are of course such considerations in politics One should, however, avoid such a term where really ‘social’ purposes are in question For, in economic relations man can only be considered ns an economic means or as the subject of economic values This principle does not lead us into higher value contexts >)
of
human economy {Menschcnoelonomie)
view
s)
means
Dcr
‘Man
This
p 711
man
IS
regarded only ns a unit of work and nature only ns a All life is one huge business relation ’ Sombart,
of production
lapitahsUscJie UnUniehmer, Archiv fuer Sozialwissenschaft IB
IS often
vol 29
true not only of the capitalist but of every purely economic
Conversely, capitalism too, ns
dominated by other motives.
an economic phenomenon
in histoiy,
137 single
individual
but often a collective subject
a family, two or
more partneiB, a corporation, a nation or a group of nations But of each collective subject the same can be said as of the individual
The
in regard to economic egoism
The
associations
specific
unit has meiely been enlarged
As
structure than the purely economic
Wealth to
IS
This
control
its
extension
material,
forces,
power again has
a
form of compeiiiwn
power over people
implies
also
is
monei
b\
money
with
toda}
power appears
for
economic motive
tlic
based upon
is
owner and
the
this is
always a desire to own more than
motivating
its
And
again presupposes economic natmes point,
But
the type
if
m
the
This attitude dominates even the lowest level
and can be extirpated onl} of
however
and the technical means necessary
Thus economic stnving
other people
power
another
of
pronounced economic character
The dominant attitude
pure
course
collective entities
make themselves felt in an economic-egoisfic sense power The economic man has power overnatnre,
their activities
its
have
themselves
in
gives piestige even is
The
itself
influence,
which
as if to emphasize this
if
it
has not been earned
connected neither with his industr} nor his
shrewdness
But
all this IS
based upon an assumption which
is
no longer
purely economical, namely the validity of the legal order which guarantees
the
rights
of
The
piopcrty
private
principle of the
own
natural right that private proper^ must be the result of one’s
could only be
exertion,
m
of inheritance it
etrictl}
the economic sjstem
principle itself
onl>
an
if
is
there were no law
question
But even here
incomplete, for savings become ‘possession’
ovenndmdnal
correctly seen
social
such a legal status
motives
makes
and
is
itself felt
man should have
Private property
is
(as It is
a special interest
the result of economic
m
isolated economic egoism all
Thus wherevei the
economic claims are given prefeience
appears then as the social normative form in which economics
taken
as
the
material of social
life
Such a conception
course vciy narrow and ns abstract as the type of whicli
A
claim
all other competitors
only the legal recognition of that attitude which
economic type legislates
Law
recognizes this
will
by Fichte) by excluding
Tight howcvei tliat the economic
IS
m
if
could not be enforced on account of cconomico-teehmcal reasons
The
in
earned out
purely
economic conception of the
state
is
of
we speak
would coirespond to
po and indeed Ibc slate appears to many people as nothing more than the snpcnndividnal oiganisation of economic life, as a sort of higher pioducti\c commnnity, a corporation or a stoch company We ha\o no right here to tike np a position against sncli a conception from the normatiio point of vicn and mnet tins tj
satisfy
with
ouiselves
economic tvpo
irhioh
observation
the
gives rise
This same type nonld judge
powci
that
this
to
it
again the pure
is
relation
to
questions of
all social vocations
accoiding
Vocation and earning-powei aic in fact
to their earning capacity
for liim absolutely identical concepts It
cannot surprise us fhoicforc that
cialuation not only
tlie
human beings but also of the entire norld is seen from this point of Mew The economic \alnc is for this t\pc the highest of
value to
1
In a religious sense
elate
it
to a liighei
c
Its tolalitj
I
the ownci
of
as
it
is,
thciefore, no longer ncccssari
meaning, bnt
it
world-embracing aalne
all wealth,
must onlj be posited in
God appears then
>)
leligion which tries to interpret the
racming of
such a factor, foi, without daili bread
life
life
as
Everj
as the giver of all useful gifts
of course contains
would bo impossible
The deepest mj stories of the world seem to begin with bicad and its life giMng power One can imagine a religion bom from pnrclj ^ economic motives, when the economic religious mcwb and cnlts naturally reflect the special sjstem of economics
herdsman
is
different
from that of the
tradei again different fiom that of the
but a passion for it IS
weiUb without
Mammon
acquired,
is
If
which thej This
1
elation
of
lliat
tlie
nothing remains
consideration of the waj in which
The
the highest god
religio-superstitions
concepts of the stockbrokers and speculators curious beliefs in fate and chance
Tlie god of tbe
agiicnltnralist,
miner
Thej
aic
dominated bi
sccretlv woiehip a powci
imagine to be in control of the great world-lottery
between economics and icligion has been histoncallj Ma\ Weber and Troeltsch One should, as far as
investigated bj
possible tij definitelj
to
differentiate
between religious concepts which are
determined by economic motives, and converseh
,
those
economic forms of behavior which are determined b\ leligio-cthical views which existed independently of the economic region *) The
ethii.
>)
Gf Werner Sombart,
")
Max Weber
Dcr Bowrgeots, p
137ft
‘sacred economics’
in the introdnction to his treatises on
Her WeUrehtjiontn
Die
Wtrlscliafts-
(Gesanunelte Aufsaetze znr Eeligionssoziologie
139
m
two factors could however hardly be separated reciprocal ment
such a narrow
To look upon economic
relation
il
m
a gift from God, oi to stiive for economic success
prospeiity as oidei visibly
to justify
such glace does not wholly belong to the economic point
of view
For, here the desue
to
to
God seems
obtain the grace of
We
supercede the economic motuc
are only concerned with
the deification of utilit> as such, the birth of deities out of economic
-God as giver, as protectoi
Intel ests
of the fields, as incieasei
etc-
m
lathei
of
ram
the sheep, as safe guide on the sea, as giver of the sun and
short of all useful gifts which enrich the physical-desiimg
than the
spiiitiial
doubt that an auahsis
would lead
a
to
part of
We
man
have not the slightest of primitive
of leligious (especially
m
or hope, in the desire and will to live, and
ones)
m
wealih of such symbols which originated
fear
the psychology
of
woik and enjoyment 111
Economic motives can be distinguished from theoretic ones because then deciding vilucs arc not the logical ones of ordination
The useful is not identical with mere moment iiy feeling-effect which
but those of utility
The
lattei
a
is
though
even
it
may
be dangeious
m
the pleasant is
the long run
enjoyable
The
useful
alwiys presupposes a ccitain degree of theoretic insight into the practicil
and psychological conditions
ments of useful or useless the economic this
ire built
on
i
But neveithcless theoietic
motivation
rooted
m
the
of
foim
specific
m
by the
take place in
goods
01
satisfying
of
which he
two ways which
habits which
pliy
a
diffei
contraiy,
expcueuces
this
m
is
utilitarian is
This deteimination
lolo
of
aie not decisive in
the
externally
definite
Also
instinctive
Economic bchavioi
needs
judg-
the fust pirt
we s ud
as
is
On
values, as wants and their satisf ictiou
motivated
m
factors
economic man
the
all
rational foundation
which we developed
\olume, the piinciple of least action,
rationality
the
principle
Therefoie
of life
thus
may
there are useful
a whole
life
and
there aie, on the other hind, puiposive endeavois which aie only called foith by a specific and sometimes entiiely tiausitoiy situation
Vol I
Tuebingen 1922
p 240 265ft) also emphasizes this necessity
He
primarily investigated the functional relations between the structures of This context leads to historic types and thus touches society anil religion
more complicated phenomena than we have here
in
mind
140 speaking, vre might differentiate between constant con'
Biologically of
ditions
which must be met with a peimanent adaptation,
life
and momentary needs to which one mnst react situation is the motivating
first
of
man and
specifically
power we have the
we have
the second case
in
the type
If the
foresigTited type
who
is
readily
adaptable to mergeneies
The motive There
foresight
of
the
is
group of virtues
this
The motives
built
carry out
to
practical ability
We
suit
Therefore
thrift
up from the motive
of foresight
any purpose
an unexpected purpose demand a
call lesonrcefnlness that
which quickly
adaptability for
is
and
to
does necessitate
emergency necessitated by the need to choose a
of
means snitable
it
work
of
versatility
But
of purpose, strength of will, ordei
constancy
motive
constant
no special demand for an unusual
is
cnstomaiy satisfactions to customary' needs
finds the
If this resourcefulness is
giasp of single instances then
it
form of mdividual
most suitable causal means based on the imagmative
resembles aesthetic intuition
If,
however, general and practical causal means (technical rules) and their
application
considered then
aie
we have
the leflective and
Keen judgment, presence of mind, invenmake quick decisions and versatility are the this type of motivation To act according
rational resourcefulness tiveness,
to
ability
to
which belong to
virtues
maxims,
general
wisdom
into
which one has developed in contemplative
a system of life,
entuely different from
obviously
is
simply facing every particular instance with practical resourcefulness
and suitable means case,
This distinction of motives
choice of means to
aim in each case for the useful
hero discuss the ethical value of this type that
we
and external adaptation
is
to
values
a specific value in
And noone
work there
is
shall not
In any case
we
are
is
not
For, the aim of self-preservation
itself
a specific kind of value which
colors all the utilitarian values which subserve
utilitarian values
may
This
We
aie dealing here with a value region that
wholly unimportant for ethics
belong
in the first
economic motive which gmdes the intelligent
become the central foice of a person’s makeup certain
is,
But in the second case the primary
an intellectual one
directive factor is the
it
Because
we subsume them under
a narrow sense,
i
e
they'
the head of
the primarily
economic
will deny that at least in the ethics of economic
a specifically moral factor
141
The man
by economic motives
gtiided
He
related to reality than the theorist
obviously moie closely
is
also
must
reflect
but in the
end he takes an active part in the development of actuality
^The
painless conception of a thought does not result in an economic act
The unique
side of business r^hich
unknov?n
is
to mtellectuabsts is
the knitting up of thought with reality and thiough this connection
thought crystallize into reality
letting
that the motives should alwa)
m
the case
practical life
Every decided
attitude
form of genius
if
problem
m
its
unconscious creativity
ability
we must
any other the extent
mind the
to the
m
acts
Sombart emphasizes
of motivation
is
seldom
m
way
‘In regard to the
this
investigate
Even the
individual
his
this case as well as
which conscious reasons are the real
to
capitalistic entrepreneur
economic type as such
On
cit
Sombart has
p 699)
but this sentence also applies
the primitive level the utilitarian
On
tendency acts with the certainty of an instinct it
This
and can become a
elemental power
has
one stresses
not necessary
is
it
least of all in active natures
driving forces of economic activity’ (op in
But
be fully conscious
s
and perhaps
economic man of exceptional because he ‘must’
’t)
often becomes such a passion that
higher levels
must have unlimited scope
it
Quite regardless of the fact that big capitalists often act not from
purely economic motives but from social and political ones, the abstract
economic tendency
rises
personal advantage
striving foi
m It
many mstances above mere so to speak, the idea of
is,
the nseful and of the productive which becomes a daemonic passion
But the net return, the
rentability
and
profit
the decisive
are
factors even in undertakmgs of supermdmdual dimensions and thus
deteimme the
limit of the
working with a
constantly
doing so but he 18
is
economic type deficit
special reasons foi
no longei a puiely economic type
sometimes an undeitakmg
also true
Anyone who can stand
may have
the interest of the public,
yet there
hidden desire for purely personal
is
is
gam
2)
The converse
supposed to be only in nothing behind I
it
but a
add here an excerpt
from the Harabuig prospectus of the re-creation of the German
W schaft
Eathenan cited by Werner Sombart, Archiv p 728
fixer
Sozialwissen-
vol 29
if a capitahstic Shoe Factory were an inIn connection with manufacture shoes (instead of profit)’ Jena 1925 ed 2 also E Ehrenberg, Grasse Yermoegen^ I
Werner Sombart, 'As stitution to this topic cf
142 Foreign Service (Hambuig, April 1918, p 4) ivliicli expic^scs with incisive clearness wliat, in many cases, acts only as a half conscious
‘As
motive
everything
fai
as the general attitndo of foreign tiadc
not wish to force anything on
For
them
Our
ruled by motives of utility
is
this
of other nations
reason trade
This
is
its
adapted
is
is
concerned
foreign tiado docs
enstomers but rather to to the desires
satisf)
and needs
not done in order to please or to
moral conquests but to achieve
and
utility
to
make
acqnire a steady
customer
IV
A type
striking contiast
attracted onr attention in the beginning of this
already
lias
chapter
between differentiated forms of the economic
makes a greit
It
goods himself (even additional work)
if
difference
whether a man pioduccs
increasing their value tliiough some
onI> b}
The
mereh consumes them
or whether ho
first
The The
t\pe has the siipciiority which comes with eficctiie actiiity the
other faces
economic world with some embarnssment
and
terms worker
enjojer
m
themsehes embody
judgment whoso purely external emphasis
is
most people consider that'onlj phi sical labor or 18
prodnetne and do not fully appreciate the
and mental pow er for intellectual productivity even the consumer may
sense
commands a wealth
of
goods
occupy
which
ethic
attitude
On
a
direct
In a
cmplo} ment
strict
ir
Gott
'
If
more
saver,
uses
to
tho
according to Luther
Should tho consumer, however, be limited
down
smallest possible
is
to
amount
to
itself
Thus we have the
of consumption
whose constant endeavor the
to
spiritual
a small amount of goods then the economic principle shows onesidedly as a cutting
he
higher plane he approaches the aesthetic
and in a lower form he no longer lues in a
Bauch,
economic
lanons positions
can be used without any
context but leads instead a brutish existence, ‘Ir
value
utilization ofplijsical t)
productive retuin on his part he scarcely belongs any
economic type
il
how ci ci appaient since
the goods which ho
limit
Many
educated spinsters
(and bachelors also at the present time) spend their lives in such
a painfnl, because reallv negative, existence
W
Though
the productive
Eliasberg in the Archiv fuer Sozinlwissensobaft, vol 50 (1922) p 87 treats in general of Psychology and Wbrl from the point of view of a psTcliology of meaning contexts »)
143 saver
forced
to live a sad ascetic life unless he ennobles his by aims which are rooted in some other value context Different employments give rise to othei special foims of the la
existence
economic type
Pei haps no power
is
m
The whole
stiongly as his vocation
man
adult life moulds a
so
mentality of the agricultui alist
entirely diffeient from that of the stock raisei
the aitisan differs
,
from the clerk and the fisherman from the mmei
Natuie seems
to
stamp the sonl with the special conditions under which he wrests from
livelihood
his
economic
The
hex
because of the unpioductive
he
an essential place
fills
who
tiadei
unique place in
a
finds
partly through his manysided activities and paitly
life
which clings
trait
him even though
to
economic 8}atem
in the
The
publisher,
and science with economic endeavoi, presents a combination of mental motives which nevertheless centei
unites
curious
ait
These economicallv determined vocational
in the economic region
types have long been utilized by wiiteis in psychological studies
Gustav Fro}tig has drawn the diffeient foims of the mei chant
m
und Hdben, peasants have been made litei ary subjects by Gotthelf, G Kellei and the lecent HeimatdicMei like Roseggei, Hansjakob, Fienssen and Ganghofer Not until the artisan became a social pioblem, however, did he find his poets Of late, sociology which giew out of national economy, has made his Soil
Pcstalozzi,
The
psychological studies of vocational types hclie is
work
um elated
at present
is
to vocational
geisteswissenscliaft-
ps}cholog}
which
a blanch of the psychology of elements and has not ^et fully
developed
methods
its
remind the leader of the masterful
I here
treatment of peasant tjpes by Pestalozzi
m
(published at piesent by Seyffait 1901
The methods employed jects of
m
economic endeavoi
Vol 6
economics
It
makes
diffei
we have
to
pp 30
of 1782
— 54)
according to the sub-
a radical difference whether
the economic tjpe appears in a natural,
In the second case
his Scliiveize)l)latt
money
or credit econom\
deal also with the psychology
of
raonev and a beginning of an extensive pathology of the economic
type which of
money
I
cannot develop in this outline
is
highly developed people
In the thud case
of the banker and the speculator *)
man
Compare
in Platons
The piopei
appieciation
often beyond the chaiacter and undeistandmg even of
The
we have
the psychology
basic outline of the economic
^vlth this attitude the depreciatory treatment of the
Republic
II
372 etc
working
114 t\pc
nniiui--,
bccmsc
inmetl ‘‘picnHtion’
On
1 be called mental tjpes But nnfortnniteh such tjpes arc cacn essential to the mcebanism of And tins exhibits the our compile ited modern economic sistcin
arc at the border of what
‘soullcssncss’ to which the historical development of economics its
constant separation from indiMdual will and
and
power has led
The problem becomes even more complex when we add
to
the subject of onr discussion (the object and inctbod of economics) the
extent of economic opcriltons action
in the refle-'
onlj
We
arc mlercsted of course
upon the soul It makes a great dificicncc owns one cow or two hundred, whether
psv chologicallv whether one
one
one acre or cmploj s laborers to cultivate hundreds, whether
tills
one
retails
soap or supplies the world with nncliincrj,
whether
one works on a handloom or simplj tends the lever of an niitomatic
A
loom
must trace
psjchologj
ffcistcsK issenscJiaflhclte
all
psjchic influences winch correspond to these economic forms
have been some contrasted with onl>
attempts in a
factorj
the psvchologv
worker
of
(lie
which
IS
We
a whollj
strnctnral
different sort of relationship
we have a
psjchologj
economic level
Whether n
mcc}nnica11>
creates
themselves absolute] v meaningless, establishes
in
In this comparison
and
must be content here with an observation
taken from the midpoint of the discnssion
man works in a meaningful whole or onlj parts which are
as
This includes of course not
the isolitcd economic motive but also social, political
religions contexts
the
TJieie
artisan
A
and
repetition of the antithesis between
the
psjchologj
relations of life could
have
between a man and his work
onlj-
psjcbologj
of
elements
on
the
which neglected the meaningful been developed
m a period where
the division of labor had split up the meaningful whole to such
an extent that the single worker no longer comprehended
it
(at
145 cconomicilly)
I'-’-t
For, the factory workers on one hand nd
longer grasp
the significance of the system in which they are engaged while the directors of such mass production transcend the
m
mdnidnal relations to economic goods Even the days Rousseau the farmer seemed the only complete man, for he is in touch with the meaning of economics, a veiy essential
finer
of
closcl)
side in
For him, as for the artisan, there is some meaning work because he deals directly with the consumer The mere cogs in a machine which although it masters nature
of life
his
others are to
an extent never dreamed
in former times has as a totality
ojf
developed a domination over the mass of mankind almost more
power of natnre This already touches upon the
terrible than the
some importance for the though
IS
it
not in
of
the social form of economy
known and
If
differences
visible
final point of view,
which has
economic type even a purely economic natnre This is
differentiation of the
itself
we emphasize
it
is
only the most well
clear that the
man
of house
economv is nearest to the total economic problem of life He is much nearer and perhaps more powerful than the individual of a greatlj differentiated territorial economy And if finally the national economy becomes so complicated as world econom}--,
man might
to
be utterly dependent on
well feel in regard to this veiy complex
B>stem like the magician’s apprentice over
had formerly been
his servants,
whom
the spints,
who
had gained a fateful power With is a more complex division of
increasing social interrelation there
labor
And
this introduces into the soul structure of the individual
an overindividual factor which mechanizes rather than organizes
him of
Economically
we
are a more dependent people than those
any previous epoch
We
have been stimulated from
can no longer control needs which The means for then
earliest infancy
make us dependent upon people whom wo have never who are as indifferent to us as human beings as we are to them Thus economy is more and moie interwoven into the present legal and political system until we reach a point where its satisfaction
seen and
individual natnre objective
is
strnctnies
completely blotted out
have
Enormously complicated
come between the
man and
living
the
economic process so that the simple personal economic structure has almost become unrecog;nizeable As an organized humanity we are to an incredible degree masters of natnre, but have become Spran^rer, Types
joI
men
'
10
60 interdependent
And
noone of ns can now stand on Ins own
tlint
yet economic self-snffiucnc> is perhaps
complete
man
can
as long as
oifei
more necessary
feet to a
than all the wealth which a world-wide organisation it
functions properly *)
V In some people the economic sense seems to have died, not
hecausc
different motive (sociil
i
or aesthetic) has become pre-
dominant, bnt because the single motive of economic behavior
earned
to
extreme
a ridiculous
If
the
economic
is
originally
is
rooted in the balance of cneigy between the individual and the objective woild of goods
md
meaning cannot be achieved
any
utilitarian result,
whcie 1
it
oi
can be nsed
if
their purposive utilisation, then this if
the cxpenditnre of eneigy exceeds
cncigy
In the
the unproductive consumer,
e
the economic tjpc
stored np
instance
beyond the point
we ha\c
the waster,
and in the other the miser, the
uneconomic acquirer and savei
Bnt
is
first
Both types aio perversions of
Their decisive value experience
is
golden mean
mcahing of economy which can only be found
to
grasp everything they lose the real meaning of their
0
in the
Both types arc thus structurally not only perversions
but also extieme exaggerations of the economic typo
have
economic
in their cndeavoi fully to enjoy the value of this region they
lose the real
own
blissful
moments
—
life
By
trying
But they
the glorious thrill of extremes
I remind the reader that all these remarks should only be interThey do not however refer only to the psychology
preted psychologically
of specifically economic ethics bnt also to the psychology of chance 18 at present
very
which
much neglected
’) For the psychology of the miser cf Scheler, Her Fonmhsmits tn der Etlith und die matenale WerteUuk p 239 Herbert Schnek op cit p 200
3
THE AESTHETIC ATTITUDE I
Tn Jl.
the in
section
first
attempted to reduce the aesthetic factor
natnie and the various forms of ait to one foim of mental
endowment
of
of aestheticism
meaning
we
If
we wished
should say
to
summarize the essence
the formed expression of an
‘it is
Herein are contained three stages, (l)^there
impression’
is
the
mpiession, a sensuous concrete objective picture given in reality or created
by the imagination, and which
in t(s emotional significance,
mp
presentation of
is
psychically expeiienced
(2) the enpiession, a sensuous-concrete
psychological content enlarged by imagination
a physical or imagined material, (3) this form as the pioduct of the mutual interfusion of impression and expression whicli is
in
achieved in or
factors
most pronounced sense
its
harmony
established
is
Since
we hnow
if
a condition of equilibnnm
between the objective and subjective
that theoretic acts are alwajs present in
our comprehension of the given, and since the object usually has
no soul of its own, we generally deal in giving or experiencing form with a fusion of conceptual and empathic acts Theoietic constitutive acts
and those of psychic empathy participate in every
aesthetic experience
The problem
of aesthetics
is
to
investigate
moie accurately
the border-line between tho object as such and the attiibntes with
which
my
soul endows
it
By
first
purely theoretical standpoint the object
defining the object from is
a
necessarily brought into a
conceptual isolation which is unknown to the naive aesthetic enjoj er
>)
elevates this unsafe positivistic procedure ‘} Joseph Strzygowshi to a fundamental methodological pnnciple whenever he wants stnctly to differentiate between SacHiforscktmg and Beschmerforschimg in aesthetics
(Die Knsts der Geisteswissenschaflen,
Wien 1923 ) Even
science finds the
bald ‘fact’ problematic, and as for art
1fW
148
The
latter,
on the contrary
m
lives, as it were,
the aesthetic objects
If in this and simultancoush experiences both them and himself condition he is conscions of n manifold, free and nniqno psychic
impulse ho experiences ‘form’
We
generally look for this process in an artist or an artlovor
however, we look more closely we find that really wo have
If,
before us only a derived, \crj' limited and occasional appearance of
the
As
tjpe
aesthetic
of something
radiations
deeper the
is called foith by a work of art, jiist as mind created the work of ait The process When one says that itself may take place u holly internally Saphael uonld have been a great painter eien if he had been
mind
aesthetic state of
same
that
of
stito
born withont hands one means that ho understood things like a
He always looked
painter
when he
did not
periences
aestheticall}
at the world with a painter’s cj e even
his impression in the roundabout technical
fix
In a word,
procedure of painting ,
works of
art
only from a soul that exare
inner vision grows the externally visible,
rh}thm of the soul docs music art
a derived phenomenon so also
18
which
calls
it
To
forth
born,
out of the
onl>
only as a result of inner
But
arise
the
just ns
work
of
the aesthetic appreciation
is
approach the
ongm
aesthetics
of
most describe aesthetic experience as compared with the
we
theoretic,
economic and religious attitudes
We state
know
that all aesthetic condnet
a
of pure contemplation,
letting oneself
nature of actual or imagined objects is
nndesirous
It
is
a
go in the manifold
Beal contact with the world
alwa> s passionate and teems with the struggle for material and
But there
spiritual existence IB
is
just as
welcome as
joj
This second experience
is
,
is
a further experience
and transforming powers of emotion this peculiar transmutation
in
which pain
suffering just as blessed as happiness
the imaginative grasp,
We
are
i
all
e
the forming familiar with
which in the acts of our memoiy
lifts
the toiments of the past into the plane of enjojable contemplation
And we know veil of
some people always shroud themselves with a imagination through which they see themselves and daily that
experience
The same
factors
experience which
take part in this all-animating form of
we have analyzed above
creation or enjoyment
in the process of artistic
Fate and environment provide the impression,
149 the individual supplies the unique qualit} feeling completel)
When
of feeling
this
embraces the impressions ^hey are transfomed
into expressions of ps\chic impulse and are a'isimilated as personal
The
possessions
m
feelings
t\pc
aesthetic
cherishes
He
a very characteristic waj
and pcrccptinl abundance nith a minimum
An
tendenev
erotic
attraction
if
reflection
that
there
and albo
desire,
at
reflection
loses its singular
the
theoretical
first
hnndreds of thonsands have loved thus and that
nothing unusual about
is
of logical
instance, immcdiateh
for
,
becomes mere
it
Only
it
aesthetic
expcnence brings
out the mcomparability of the situation’s emotional content there
If
the whole
soul
acts
as a forming
define
to expressions
of these spiritual
be
on)>
bom The
structure
we
powers
An
objective
interest,
into
desire
and
an
is
there
is
immediate action
not reflecting,
of art
(which can
In
its
work of
art its
or a formed
always a peculiar kind
but
contact
it
with
cmpatliically
that at the
reality
enjoyment,
They do not which
awakens
moving picture
contemplating
what winch
Bound up with of self
were second hand
They look on
it,
personality
phenomenon
aesthetic
wholly
accentuated form we call
For, even though all tjpes establish
because these natures Inc as
come
work
aesthetic soul shares with a
generally call ‘individuahtj
aestheticism
We
the aesthetic t}pe
from such a soul) most clearly icvcals the souls
indniduilitj
arouses
But
bit of life,
cannot approach an) more closely the mastery
concrete and perceptual shape tins
in ever^
nature as one which forms all impressions
its
Wc
power
wc have
(giving color, mood, rhjthm) then
can bnefl}
0
nothing but the fanciful en 30 >mcnt of a single
is
have onl> a poetic mood, or an aestlutic whim
situation ere if
and
expeiiences
his
lives in their concreteness
and
of life
enjoying
According as to which of the three aspects of experience predominant, wo can
differentiate
three
aesthetic
ty^pes
it
is
Some
people give themselves up to external ‘impressions’ with intense They are hungry for ‘experience’ and therefore enjoyment 5)
Schiller’s central concept of ‘aesthetic determinabihty
used in his
2l8t letter on aesthetic education refers to tins p'^ychic structure and thus
According to him wc must denotes the condition of highest formativity regard *tbe power which is given back to man in the aesthetic mood as the highest of all gifts, as the gift of humanity (of being human)’ must be understood here in the aesthetic and not in 5*) ‘Impression’ the theoretic or practical utilitarian sense
150 If the inner becomes an c\perience for them binding and forming power is lacking no have the Itnp) csswmsis of life who hurry from one impression to the other shimming
c\crj thing easily
only the surface from each in
Othcis, however, live so intensely
i)
emotional woild that they meet and eolor every
inner
their
These
impression with a subjective tint natures, the
of
) C£ Kierkegaard, Either- Or Jiaipdlpata Bichard Hnmann, Eer Impresswmsmus tn Lebcn vnd Kvnsl, Koeln 1907 especiallj p 143ff In this brilliant book much is classed as specifically impressionistic which is true of the aesthetic type in general I (Diederichs) p 165 One compare in general Hegel, =) Philosoplne der Geschtchte ('the forms of beautiful individuality’}, Jakob Burckhardt, EiiUiir der Eenatssance, Eduard Spranger, WiOiclm v JTiimboldt ttnd die Himamtaeisidee, Christian Weiser, Shaftesbury mid das deutsche Getsleslebcii Cf the seldom remarked book of K. Bonnski, Balthasar Graeian und die HofliteraUir tn Deutschland, Halle 1894 on the historj of the concept of inner form which goes back to Cicero and is best known under the term ‘the beautiful soul’ See further v Waldberg, Studien und Quellen utr Geschtchte des Bomans I The devdopmental history of the beautiful sold in Sxmnt^ mysticism (Literarhistonscbe Forschnngen, Heft 41 1910)
—
WW
—
—
161
In’'
the advantage
'n\
form, (colors, tones, poetic pictnres)
of being able to project bis experiences into
e
i
the
power
of self-
nhich
is not identical with the innei foiming power and Hnmboldt wore aesthetic natures but without creative powers objective ‘sensible’ 1 ah They struggled in vain Tor expression, since they were at bottom onl> self-creators Con-
cxprc'JSion,
i:
PIi Moritz*)
lersch
the disadvantage of the artist
n
he
that
who can
create exteimally
forced by this very fact to linger over some single
is
(he
creation
creates
a Zens,
dr ima, a dance or a song)
or an Aphrodite,
Thus
a lyiic poem, a
his vital energy is so concentrated
on a single point that he nevei quite reaches, or
Therefore genuine
the inner form nliollj
to
V ho like Goethe carry a
Most
artists
now
which
work through
their
works signify rather a stiuggle for innei
ci cations
&om
that form
type
we
its
its
draw only the most decided
shall
mental
tries to strike a
subjective penetiation lines so
main outline will not be blurred by the variations
should have to write a whole Aesthetics the
^)
on the innei forming power which
balance between objective experience and this
the
In some
shall consider the aesthetic typo only insofar as
structure rests
now
occasion)
element (the inner world) predominates
creative artists successive
that the
lose
but only a few,
whole growth succeed
element (the
the impressionistic
foim than actual
Within
may even
have an insatiable longing
do not go beyond single or limited expressions, in
cxpressionistic
We
artists
express themselves in a masterpiece,
if
we wished
We
manifold forms of the external artistic world
interested in the inner artist,
he whose inward
We
to describe
are only
life is aesthetically
organized
n
-
The
various regions of value into which
are, for the aesthetic type, *)
What
I
mean
here,
human
life is
organized
wholly illuminated by aesthetic standards
E
Ph Montz, staitmg from
the background
of an aesthetically determined metaphysics of the universal relation in
creative nature, called ‘the capacity of the
logy
orgamsm
which
implanted in the finer texture a beginning of a structural psychois
This is to develop’ Of extracts from his wntings in Goethe’s Italiemscher Beise, and
my lecture Goethe und die Metamorphose des Menschen, Goethejahrbuch 1924 Gerhart Hauptmann in a speech on the celebration of his
birthday
in the university of Leipzig, spoke in this sense of 'eternal beginning’
and
of 'the productive scepticism’
— Conseqnentlj
lie
sees c%cr>
Knowledge
forming power
—
152
where that which enlirges
cm
add but
own inner
liis
einco
little
destroys
it
the perceptual and classifies e\cr> thing according to concepts of
This c\pl>ims the nrcrsion of the truly aesthetic
gencial validity
tjpo to the conceptual a lack of plasticitj
One
the
of
It
seems to him to have a certain
and color and to be an almost
liberating
teaching us to question the conventional
its
and traditional picture of reality and to see animated
e
1
of
(bcscelt schen)
Konrad Fiedler
husk
of art and indeed also of artistic
cftects
experience, is found in
paiicit},
lifeless
it
again 'originally*,
This factor dominates the aesthetics
In the impicssionistic
there
acstlictician
is
Dilthoy, as a historian, was
usually a leaning toward relativism
so organized that although he made, in visualizing his characters,
conceptual determinations the final presentation
of
them, he eliminated them in
all of
did not satisfy his need
because the}
He
pictorial individiialit}
But
called this 'caution*
it
rcall}
for
was
an aesthetic factor in his mind which led sometimes to a fear of generalisations and forced veil
which
IS
nltimatcl}
him
to leave his figures shrouded in the
characteiistic of life itself
been untiring in visualizing actual historical figures shows that
scientific reflection is for
the study of anatomy
is foi
But he had This example
man what
the purely aesthetic
the creative artist, or the philosophic
anal} SIS of art for a Schiller or a Goethe, an intcrmcdiar} stage,
through which he struggles to full
Thus the
of life
factor
the
in
man
eternal laws in his
of life’s
plasticit}
theoretic attitude
aesthetic
t)
,
color and individuality
mav be found
But his goal
own
is
as a subordinated
the presentation
concrete individualit}
,
and the
formation of his personality so that the gcneial radiates through the specific
To
do this he must make a certain choice between different
sciences
At
first
only the Getsiesiotsscnscltaffcn (language, literature
0 What Womuger colled 'abstraction* in his Abstraction «iid EtnfvMung Jena 1911 is at bottom not an independent phenomenon A mathematically organized soul feels mathematics into and out of forms
Counter-
point IS an example in music of this high degree of rationality stdl remains audible mathematics just as the mathematics which
is visible
in the formative arts
although the form Beiousstsetn
same way
p 74
is
But
it
It contains the fundamental factor of aesthetics,
here highly rationalized
criticises
Womngcr*8
Volkelt
Das
aestlicUsche
conception of abstracbon in the
—
158 ltd ’
•
seemed dnectly to serve the creation of an inner
liistor})
Because of their eminently educational content they were
rid
c»He(l bj
the aesthetic
r itiiTC, since the} it
well
IS
Frenchmen
''belles
also aid the foimation of the inner life
known how much
The
aesthetic
m
rcl itcd life
And to
man’s conception of the essence of Nature
is
and culture
wholly different fiom that of the theoretic with the
>)
meant
jnst these natnial sciences
f^octhc in hiB longing for form
nffiiut}
Heidei was the
letbes'
apply this conception to all sciences, inclnding those of
to
man
He
has a close
mythological method of thought which feels a
For, there
nature
an aspect of nature which
is
cannot be grasped except by' an aesthetic sense, since in nature, too, creative to
form seems to play a pait
Everything organic appears
bo guided by an inner urge for development so immanently
teleological that one
might almost ascribe a soul to
it
Aristotle,
though no poet Ins nevertheless made the conception of entelechy the center of his system
He was a
a highei sense of form than
law
the
of
Greek, and the Greeks had
any other nation
So inner form (the
purposive organic development of the inner being)
became for him, and for long centuries of the socalled middle ages, the main explanatory principle of nature,
even though such an
indiMdnalizing law (similar to the character of a single man) can
bo grasped only by
Modem
aesthetic intnition
natural science
has attempted to destroy these formae substantiales, but they always
crop up again
It is
comprehensible that a
man
like Goethe,
who
experienced himself as an oiganic developmental process, a lawful
metamorphosis, saw in nature the same forming power, the
since
Leibnitz,
He
17^^
century and
its
later
offspring,
especially
Shaftesbury and
determined the intellectual woild from which he came
possessed the power of organic thought in the same astonishing
degree
as
the
power of organic
vision
s)
The same
intellectual
trend ruled the philosophy of Schelling and Froebel and was again
who could
not be satisfied with the ‘night-
of nature, but agaiu called
upon the soul as an explanatory
expressed by Fechner
new’
m
a dry moraliBing manner has also drawn a borderline >) between the sciences, those which enable an aesthetic presentation of the world and those which only reproduce the necessity of fate Herbart
’)
Cf Schiller
*)
Cf
my
JDte Freundschaft
lecture cited above
1S4
The
principle
of nature
We
conflict of the organic
human we find
as eternal as the
is
must make
it
clear that
and mechanical conceptions tjpes which he behind them ourselves at the limit of exact
For, the soul of nature, and the individual souls or types
science living in
tbiough cmpitby
can be grasped only
it,
neither kernel nor shell, bnt c\ cry thing at the
same
is
true
of
individuality of a
historical
man
if reality
all
Here
and
art borders on science,
could only bo more deeply penetrated
if
seems
theoretical
Insofar, therefore, the aesthetic type has
(conceptual)
it
grasped by
mind over and abo\o tho purely
the forces of the
is
*
or an epoch can only be discerned by such
an empnthic foim sense as
‘Nature
The The psychic
same time
Geistmoissaiscliaficn
its
special
organ for understanding tho woild (a soit of ‘hunch’), an cmpathic intuition
For tho pure
with such a tendency
For the
i)
only an extravagant romanticist
man
a
theorist,
theorist,
nature
is
is
a
system of functional equations, or a complexity of conceptuallydefined energies
But
let
us beai
in mind
that Plato
believed
moderation to be tho factor which made the world, (the cosmos)
and the soul bcantiful
Thus
a ital
too, the source of experiences of
Now
let
economic values in
sharp contrast
object be
enjoyment, indifferent life
it
empathy may find in mathematics, form and beauty
us turn to the relations of the aesthetic typo with
The practical and aesthetic points of view are Anyone who ascribes a use to an aesthetic
technical or moral,
destroys
its
a value, either for education or
pure being
The
aesthetic
as the theorist
(Here the above mentioned points
even in view of the apparent contradictions) as he
who develops himself would
life if
he subscribed all his eneigies to
life
man
is
as
and helpless in the face of tho practical demands of
destroy' his
The
is
hold
artist as
well
whole position toward
To comprehend
utility
with a forming and enjoying fancy
still
quite
different
from
Anyone who comprehends his own life as an organic developmental process, which is dominated by a constant form an attitude which does not seem to have existed before Goethe understands himself aesthetically ») Even the practical everyday things are too much for the aesthetic ’)
—
mmd
—
I see in my mind’s eye the picture of these natures who take life are always frightened by real life because they are always looking formed echo and are unused to so much matenal I also see, however, others who treat the heavy material of life as if it were only chimencal, as if the whole world were only an aesthetic ‘phenomenon’
hard,
who
for the
155 mg’
Mroi] '
oner him
I lie
I
not
of
all
hnman
developmental novel ends with the
this
individual limitation, piofession
But
contradiction of the aforesaid
-i
which the stage seemed
life
So he wanted to develop himselE in the woild of
Even though
on
pi iise
Meister hoped to achieve completion hy an
participation in
-iip'ihic
i' (
TVillielin
it
ideal of a contemplative self- development,
that
totally misguided
it IS
had real
could not become
because his
not in his aim but in the mateiial
a narrow
compiehcnsive that he had to
Thus Goethe thought,
complete personality*) the
universal indefiniteness
life,
and
he,
who
the aesthetic form
to fiee himself
lift
himself
from mere mattei
powei of imagination, the plaj impulse
limitations, sought
its
and aesthetic cultivation*) it
of
above them a moie potent
In a far different way, Schiller, who had to
above the necessities of
He
worker, in spite of his limitations
purpose was so
life
straggled from
and
though not in the sense
It
of life to another in older to create
form
the pure
means instead that one must have experiences before one can work them over into form
IVilliclm Mcister eried,
icinjin a
it is
means that he planned
For, Goethe certainly would not have
a mere businessman
gloiificd
and useful woik,
of the mere cnit of aesthetic illusion,
here a rejection
Devotion to the purely useful, when
And it (m agieement
becomes a ruling urge, destioys the aesthetic attitude
seems strange at
first
tha*^
Goethe
m
his
old age
with the classic Ealokagathie) should designate the purely piactical
Susanna,
at the
end of his Wandetjahie, as ‘Good and Beautiful’
(die Gute-Schoene)
But
this strangeness disappears if
ourselves that even in the
first part,
we remind
he had called the expressions
of a purely religio-erotic type the Confessions of a beautiful soul
Cf Jonas Cohn,
0
Her
Ccist dei -Emelurnff 1919 p 91
I cannot agree
that a desire for vocational education is particularly strongly felt by artists
we have
—
Schiller here instead the conquest of mere artistry too was impressed in this way by Meister, 'that he achieved determination without losing his beautiful flexibihty, that he learned to control himself
Perhaps
hut found in this hmitation the passage through form to the infinite’ (Letter to Goethe July 8t*», 1796) Schiller’s conception of aesthetic determination (see above) represents what we have called the aesthetic type ) The impulse to form means for Schiller something different than for us, namely the purely rational forming capacity of Beason in the Kantian sense
Cf
and p 281 appearance
my hook Wilhelm v Humboldt und die Bumamtaetsidee 341 fi What we call form, Schiller called living form or freedom in
1S6 His inner nssimilatire and formative power was so universal that it
This greatest
united all other types in a comprehensive form
had, to nse a Bomantic expression, such an
of all self-creators
allround ‘sensormm’ that his aesthetic attitude toward life included the others
all
The
stming
nnclcns, howoicr, remains his
for
inner form, or better, the formation of his entelechy with the aid of everj thing
The
which
life
brought to him in the uay of mateiial
item in the principles of aesthetic foim
In every art
an economy of medinm, applied not onij
medium
also to the intensity of the IS
to the
we observe
magnitude but
E\cry gradation and tension
measured according to the ps> cho-phj sical energy of the enjoying
subject IS
>)
practical factor also necessarily appears as a subordinate
Similar to this
is
the formation of
Here economy
life itself
shown bj not desiring anj thing unattainable and b} restnctiug
the power of imagination
man
the purely aesthetic
It
appears further in the fact that for
periods of depression must necessarily
The
follow upon those of enthusiasm
aesthetic type differs from
the severelj stoic in striving for abundant and
manj sided experience
and in not being content with a pure intellcctnaluing of everj aesthetic enthusiasm
life But demands a subsequent quietude, every act
of expansion one of limitation
And
thus a stoic
belongs to the aesthetic
limitation, neccssarilj
tj
trait,
pe
the pathos of
It is introduced
by the factor of power economy which enters into every mental act The aesthetic man is bj no means an unsocial tjpe But since individuality is a part of his nature,
he tends in social relations
toward eccentricity and self-importance In other words, individualism
and not self-denial
Where desire
this
to
tjpe
is
is
characteristic of the aesthetic tj'po sociallj
strongly
marked the man
is
not ruled by a
help otheis in the practical or spnitual needs of
life,
but they become like all of
life,
and
This aesthetic factor appears very
differentiating
empathy
clearly in social relations association of people in
There
is
objects
of aesthetic enjoyment
an easj -going, mostly
superficial
which neither personal needs nor professional manner of receptivitj and self-expression
interests but the peculiar is
enjojed
People here come in contact through the medinm of
expression and impression, temporariij there arises a sjnthesis or fusion of souls, but
it
canies with
reminds one of the play of «)
‘From
utility
it
butterflies
no sense of obligation and
The charm
through truth to beauty
’
of such social
(TFanderjuAre)
157 'rfiMtics
fiom the tree and easy contact of indiTidnalides
aiises
Hint are mutually inteicstmg,
but in a pure case without any real
Dinding of Intel ests
Eroticism illustrates a higher and more enduring form of this
We mean
•'(>=thetico-social relation
dctei mined
th
if
the
form of love
human body
by
this the frankly aesthetically
is
rooted primarily in the fact
Eroticism
operates as a symbol of a pure, free, natural,
forming power of the soul
It appears as
an expression of something
psichological, which the enjoying subject expeiiences as longing
The body
here considered the adequate symbol of a truly valuable
is
may be
Eioticism
soul
reciprocal but that
In higher stages the bodily aspects
nature
may
act of love
Pci haps Plato
not essential to
showed the way is
0 uthfal, 2) while the naive
to this kind of eroticism
markedly
the eroticism of a refiecting soul
is
And
erotic
attracted
eroticism
on the contrary
with sexuality
is
The
is
A is
may be
appearance in consciousness
its
and usually
)
4th ed. Ch 4
Youthful eroticism
What we
m
called the female pnnciple
the female soul
spirit
'(V'ho
She
is
most clearly realized
the necessary complement to the male
is
He
staves for inner form
only matures through empathy
‘The eternal feminine leads us upward
with her
relation of the
two sexes
is,
is
spiritual
The meaning
does not take the upper hand, an aesthetic one true marriage
The
’
therefore, insofar as phj steal sexuality
of
neither physical nor practical hut a mutual spiritual
completion, development, in the highest sense of the word, of inner
For this reason only earlj mamage can fulfill this highest But the real meaning of such a union finally surpasses aesthetic factor which is only a preliminary symbol, and leads into a total life nnit> which culminates in religions
form
purpose
the merely'
values
*)
K its
we
turn back to social relations,
aesthetic
the sexes,
charactei
it
is
now
explicable
why
spiritual contact of
a union which
The pure
stimulating to the imagination
much
it is
on the
rests especially
only that there
is
temporary and
aesthetic tjpe allows too
imagination to entei into his social relations
He
has no under-
standing of the active lojalty which helps another person even soul 18
his
feeling
devoid
at all
of charm
for 'the
and
attraction
if
Aesthetes have no
practical side of solidarity
Because they
have no real comprehension of mankind they interpret socialism, for instance, in a peculiar of
political
socialism,
way
which, seen from the point of view
can only be called a miscomprehension
on Sociahsm and ihe Soul of Man by the aesthete Oscar Wilde Socialism is for him onlj a means and is valuable only because it leads to that and to a most complete life This most complete life however man can only find in the sphere of artistic imagination
Illustrative of this is the essay
of aesthetic individualism,
of individualism known Only in is man beautiful, although his purpose is to The proper duties of the state are the useful, those individual, the beautiful The aesthetic socialism of Oscar
the most intensive kind
It IB
voluntary associations
be beautiful of the
Wilde and Gustav Landauer impressions,
The
is
thus a protection
agamst ugly
a spiritual insurance against distressing experiences
leal value of life is only achieved
if
everyone lets his whole
*) On the difference between the vital feebng of oneness which I call Eros or aesthetic love and the real understanding personal love cf Scheler
irescH
und Formen der Summihte
Bonn 1923
rg
t
veil np from within and lives, a complete individual, creating
cn]o\
'Tid
mg
ir.
1)
now proceed
].ct IIS
to the political sphere
Like the theorist
knowledge, so the aesthetic man in his consciousness of
his
and personality has a feeling of power
individu ility
This
of
is
coarse the characteristic inner powei, which even Nietzsche never
trmscended
power Tins
in his
aesthetic
sphere, that
by
decorative appearance,
suggestion
rhetorical
type naturally finds outer means to the effects of artistic creation
is,
language by which he
the
is
The own
etc
tries to influence people,
aesthetic beauty of clothes
But when ambition predominates we
po-s over into the political type
The
aesthetic
man
and an individualist withdraws fiom mankind and as his position is thieatened
soon
as
iulfjus ct aiceo
'
And
realization that ho
power
If
paiticipates
the in
is
2)
by
and house,
heie he
is
by
others,
as an aristocrat
is self-sufficient,
'Odi ptofanum
unconsciously influenced by the
unable to cope mentally with the world of
aesthetic type does
not practise this reserve but
he finds that he has no aptitude for it by himself Now nothing is moie fundamentally
politics^
Tie judges everything
crippling to the aesthete than subordination to overindividnal social
which
forces
He
real
demand from him something
definite,
conceives even the state aesthetically
s)
limited
and
Under favorable
‘) Oscar Wilde, Ser So'zlahmm und die Seele des Menschen usw Translated by Hedwig Lachmann and Gustav Landauer Berlin 1904 Gnstav Landauer, Aufnif sum Sostaltsmus Berlin ed 2, 1919 (Page for page IS evidence of the type developed above) 'We are poets, and shall do away with the scientific swindlers, the Marxists, the frigid, the hollow and mindless ones so -that poetic vision, the artistically concentrated creativity, the enthusiasm and prophetic power finds a place where they may in future work, create and build, in life, with human bodies, for the achievements and social Me of groups, communities and peoples ’ p 34
—
*}
The
feeling of
power projected on
aesthetic presentations creates
As Kant has already shown, According to our differentiation it is to he understood ns the appearance of another type, namely that of moral elevation above nature which is made the object of aesthetic refiection and enjoyment Monologen III ‘Where ') Cf Schleiermacher in his romantic stage are the old legends of the state told by the wise men? Where is the power which this highest stage of existence should give, to each man, where the consciousness each should have, to he part of its reason,
the phenomenon of sublimity and heroism it
IS
not purely aesthetic
imagination
(
Even the
in
classic
man, the complete pcrsonalih, would prefer to li\o according to the pure law of his own nature, to liavo room for his own growth nnd unfolding, His creed to
to
find
through organic self-development
libcrt>
tho liberalism of harmonious mankind, which
is
strong
contrast
Hoclderliu’s terrible to
of
tho
and
political
nestlictic points
men near Alabanda
Hjperion, the
Wo Tho
now ipproach
(m
— which
contrast to pnrelj
higiicst
A
nine
is
1a
not the
view in
appear so activity
po to religion
I call the beautiful
harmonious bcantj)
His creed
is
find
*)
tho relation of tho aesthetic
aestheticallj important,
sense
of
that
him are onlj politicians and propagandists for
Bnt Hjperion dreams of a theocracy of bcantj
the
We
be confused with Kantian liberalism of dntj
—
m
a wider
has for him
a religion of beauty
For
this
reason, the harsh dualism betAvecn life licrc and in Heaven, tho
devaluation of the phjsical, seems to him intolerable, likewise tho
Hnenclien 1925 gives a masterly psychological analysis of the romantic For type of mind which he too subordinates to the aesthetic type ‘It gives n political tins reason must romanticism deform real politics
romanticism ns well ns a political Lytic’ (ed 1 p 115) *) Cf Oscar Wilde’s antagonism to every kind of anthoritative sociabsm,
'Where there is no spirit and no ’ is external power, regulation and the state ‘The state never resides in the inner individual, it has never become a of individuality nor will’ quality of free etc v Humboldt, Itlccn en cinem VersucU, die Gremen der ITtrAsatnleit des Staales bcstminen, especially the three first chapters Works (Akademieansgabe) I p 117
and Gustav Landauer op mt. p 19 ff inner necessitj, there
—W
‘Therefore the interesting
man
therefore he flowers into
m
nU occupations and positions, rapturous heanty in n manner of life ivhich is interesting in
comcides with his character’ (i e outside of the state in freedom) Leopold T Wiese, Dcr Liberahsmm Vergangcnbcit vnd Ziikunfl Berlin Die romantischen MetapoUtiker 1917, above all p 155 ff
m
»)
EwUtir
Cf
md
my
essay Eoelderhn
und das
deutsche Nattonalbetcusslsetn, in
Ersttdnmg ed 3 Leipzig 1925
eifion
f
'
I
of
i‘
tliought
by
in then
}onth
The
for
IS
and Shaftesbury, ScheUing and Goethe them a union with this harmony
Biaino, Leibniz
Religion
>)
is to
acsthetico-religions conception of the world is
Animism
2)
It
must bo remembered that Schlei'ermacher’s analysis of religion, in the first edition of his JRcden uher dte Schgion, shows a pronounced ae'-tlictico
-religions
type
It
is
remarkable how
little
description
of the bridal
souls,
which
IS
consciousness
a fusion of
oi
wicstling for the
fiom God,
sin,
a sense of disparity, of
dungeon of individuality and a desperate
imprisonment in the
Lord have no place in this religion Later up more histoiico-Chnstian factors in
took
Schlciermachei
A
very .characteristic of the aesthetic process
of distance
thcor>
of leligion
realm
of
the
embrace in which we become one with
thionghont the form of empathy
the universe has
space ho
And
gives to the factor of moialifj, to the noimative value
But
the-
Men
cxpeiience
pme like
aesthete has
little
on, his
use for this
Humboldt and Goethe
in
their
>onth have not found in themselves this consciousness of duality
which the conception of transcendency
of
HoelderLn they is
felt
the love of beauty’
IS also
the
is
only a reflex
borne up by the beauty of the world
the most holy
’
(Hoeldeilin
(W
I 72)
metaphysical woild piinciplo
Like
‘Religion
W
‘The most beautiful I 105) For them the aesthetic becomes But to aU. Platonists it is no
longer merely appearance, veil, illusion, segment, but esseutially ’) ‘What other point of companson for genuine beauty is there except the inclusive concept of all the harmonious relations of the entirety of Nature, which cannot he grasped by any thought’’ Goethe ItahemscJie
m
Eetse, cited hei ’)
Montz
Scheler in his
aesthetic
empathy the
much quoted book on sympathy still
difierentintes
beyond
deeper vital feeling of oneness which can grow (op cit p 16ff p 84ff p 90ff)
into a feeling of unity with cosmic life
I incline to classify both feelmg^ as aesthetic insofar as they are mental Of section IV i Schelcr adds another sphere of vital values
Sprnngcr, Types
of
men
11
162 ftorld
stnicluie,
the
most valid meaning that
phenomena
behind
lies
Even
of the world
tinged foi them
nnd (fiom a religious point of mow)
final,
all crude,
unformed and ugly
death and sichncss are
suffering,
The
with a delicate poetic tint
interpretation of
icsthctic t>pc is cleirh
Clmstianify peculiar to the
illustrated in
Oscar Wilde's icfeicncc to Christ as the ‘Aesthete of the soul’i)
While the beaiitj
piiio theorist or purelj
is
concealed,
There
who
very
diflionlt
differentiation of
At
The
mental
any
in
find
to
just
life
which
is
meaning and
was no philosophy
appears on this level
not alwav s given historically
man’s notion of the u orld influenced bj
If a
markedlj
an objective
m this
context
it
wishes to express something
that has been purel} aesthetically expcnenced and visualized
was a
striking
the sensibly
ages was
mind
aesthetic
will certainlj choose the available fignrative
it
language, oien though
who
presupposes a
It
of religion there was no art,
that ontside
tradition
as there
with an acstheticall}
case
specific
the height of the middle ages ei erj
and
of life
between the two, howcvci,
borderline
as well as of the self was so stronglj leligion
man
treats materials nith a religious
or composes
upon
meaning
of the productive artist, or a religious type
the point of vien
IS
final
becomes for the aesthetic t}pe the
a great difference between a
is
organized soul
paints
it
and the real value
fulfilment of sense itself,
then, looks
element in which the
as a preliminarj
onli
of the world
man
religions
example of
The
this
Dante
very complex relation between
perceptible and the snpcr-scnsible during the middle
first
Max Dvonik
stmctnrally
interpreted
The uniqnc
desire
for the formative arts by
and problem of
this art
was
to
transform the spiritual which could only be grasped subjectively, into the sensibly perceptible
‘The uniqueness of the development
of mediaeval art lies not only in the religions character which familiar
to
everyone
—
equally religions and y different
which
art
of the counter -reformation
despite the
—
from the Gothic)
many
points in
lies
depreciate *}
is
was very
but in this omnipotence of a mental
bey^ond
experience in spiritual things (comparable to our to
common
material expenence and whose was so great that every immediate reference to sensible
constiuction influence
(the
et,
the
Schiller in
a ennons
modem
impulse
was conceived as a meaningless and
same)
Goethe also designates Chnsbanity (August 1795)
letter to
as ‘the only aesthetic rebgiou
’
1
163 .."’rable -r{
1
Mn
against
'"P'r-scnbiblc explanation of life 1
and the consequent reaction
to
sensible
.
A
soul structure which is closer to the natni al-sensible and
moie free from leligions hadition has the
’ts
characterize
religion
whether one considers not
possibility of letting
inner aesthetic oiganisation develop toward the infinite relations
o1iic.li
as religious oi
the widei
in
aestlietic
upon a doctrine but
pnm.iril\ 1
'Tbns Gotliic
only attempt to strike a balance between the
tho
epi ("(cnts
and hnman leason*')
trnth
latliei
sense
pantheism (which
Regardless reallj
is
upon an oiganisation
aesthetic,
of
based
of the soul)
the creations of such a mind
line, without any historico-ieligions sjmbolism, a leligious
ill
oignificmce which expresses Sohleieimachers
Uunasum'
(^'hl3 is especially
in poetij
^Snm
tind
hue, of conise,
if
Geschmacl
they choose
There are innumerable examples
nature for their object)
Oskar Beyer has developed
mative art very biilliantlv
m
this point of
of this
view for for-
writing and illustration
But here
re reach the point wlieie these stmetnres cannot be further explained and one must rely upon spintnal insight (besceltes Sehen) *) Tins
infinite
expansion of the aesthetic oigan has been con-
formulated
sciouslj
feeling of natnie
by
in
a
description
Gottfried Keller
of *)
renewed
„E$ wai
and deepened die
Imgehcnde
Liche an alles Gewoidene Htnd JBestehendc, wclclie das JRecM tind die
Bedeuiwig jeglichen Emges ehrt und den 2!usammenJiang tind
die Tiefe
der Welt enipfindet
lucnstleiiscJie
Biese Liebe sieht
lioeJier
als
das
Eei aiisstehlen des einselnen eu eigenmietsigem
Zioccle,
tmmei eu KleinhcJikeit und Lattne fueJnt,
sie stelit
uclcJies indefst
aucli hoelier als das Gentessen und Ahsondeni nacli Sfmmungen und iomantischen Lieblidbaeien, und nur sie allem vennag cine eu geben" And again „Die Welt tst innahch ruing und still, und so muss es auch dir Mann scin, dei sie verstelien und als em wirTeendei Tcil von tin sie tvidcrspiegeln will Bulie eielit das Lehen an, Unrulie vet sclieuelit es, Gott liaelt sicli maeusclienstiU, danon bewegt stch die Welt um tlin
gleichmaessige, daueinde Glut
1)
Max Dvorak, KunsigesdhtcMe
als Geistesgesclitchtc
Muenohen 192i
p 60 ’)
malem •)
Oskar Beyer, Die tmendltche Landscliaft Vbet reltgtoese Naturund Hire Meistci With 34 reprodnctions Fiircheverlag, Berlin 1922 Oruenet Heinndi III 1 11 *
l64
Mcnwhen nun wacrc dies sicli eha leidcnd und cutchend lahaltcn tortichaziclicn lassen, ah thnen nachjaacn
I^le)
den
dass
c)
an
sicJt
7iUensilci itcJicn
amxmenden,
so
itnd die JDingc
Zuqc miUichl, lann demcTbcn
niclit
am Wegc
damn
uclchci
del,
und muessig, und
flucssiq
Diescr
^(chf
dei
SeJiei
isi
denn tro
soil,
?n eincm fcsihclictt
me
so herein ctbcn,
mchi
uchci-
as! das gance Jjclcn des
tsl
Gcselicncn “ III
All these d
life)
tjpc
form of motnntion chnrnctcristic
specific
m
It
determined
the deeper aitnirs of
(in
not bj general liers nor iitilitnrnn considerations but b}
will to form
not reach
This, alas,
is
Self-realization,
The
self-enjovmcnt arc aesthetic aims
and Oscar
Ibsen
or
But c\cn these nnsuccccsful attempts arc motivated
a desire to develop one’s imagined self
fulfilment,
the
often a misdirected impulse uhicli docs
goal, but gets side-tracked in biassed subjectivity
its
impicsBionism by
show the
ita
of the ncsthctic
"SAildc
is
‘Be
v
final
self-
gospel of
But such inner form-
ourself’
development results not from rational considciation but rather from unconscious this
follow
of action, not because
lacks style
it is
fitness
(For this reason those
who
because
it
Sgmposion, represents
confuses in
decorum with purity Phaedra
is
find this aesthetic
in Cicero’s
the
In all actions
and moderation
They would
this
(Heddn Gablcr)
cl
their
Bnt the Socrates described hero
We
discoverer of real spiritual beauty
honestuni',
in
somewhat
life,
w ith Baltasar Gracian, Shaftesbury, Herder, Goethe,
Humboldt, Heinsc and Hocldcrlin
v
ague
the ‘widrc’ of conventional
knighthood, in the whole Renaissance as the style of finally
And
Pansanias,
type on a lower plane, and
moral code in diiicrcnt degrees
'dccouim
it
talk most of this generilly
form of
distorts their faces
wish would be to die beautifully
in Plato’s
and
flute
taste*,
reject a course
life)
.icsthctic
they arc led by a sense of beauty
avoid plaving the
They
dangerous or inconsistent but because
remain in the vestibule of the
last
often confnsc
young people,
especially
But the moio moderate arc guided by ‘good
and a sense of decorum or
tact
of the type
Some,
which, unfortunately, often reacts into stoic
enthusiasm,
resignation
by
The bunglers
iiispintion
with riotous living
creed
and
Schiller,
>)
We
>) Cf Herder’s