|
The Riddles of Philosophy
Preface to the 1923 Edition
When, on the occasion of its second edition in 1914, I enlarged my
book, World and Life Conceptions of the Nineteenth Century, the
result was the present volume, The Riddles of Philosophy. In
this book I intend to show those elements of world conceptions that
appear historically and that move the contemporary observer of these
riddles to experiences of greater depth of consciousness as he
encounters the feelings with which they were experienced by the
thinkers of the past. Such a deepening of the feelings is of profound
satisfaction to one who is engaged in a philosophical struggle. What
he in his own mind is striving for is strengthened through the fact
that he sees how this endeavor took shape in earlier thinkers on whom
life bestowed viewpoints that may be close to, or far from, his own.
In this way I intend in this book to serve those who need a
presentation of the development of philosophy as a supplement to their
own paths of thought. Such a supplement will be valuable to anyone
who, in his own mode of thinking, wishes to feel himself at one with
the intellectual work of mankind, and who would like to see that the
work of his own thoughts has its roots in a universal need of the
human soul. He can grasp this when he allows the essential elements of
the historical world conceptions to unfold before his eye.
For many observers, however, such a display has a depressive effect.
It causes doubt to invade their minds. They see thinkers of the past
contradicting their predecessors and contradicted by their successors
in turn. It is the intention in my account of this process to show how
this depressing aspect is extinguished by another element. Let us
consider two thinkers. At first glance the contradiction of their
thoughts strikes us as painful. We now take these thoughts under a
closer inspection. We find that both thinkers direct their attention
to entirely different realms of the world. Suppose one thinker had
developed in himself the frame of mind that concentrates on the mode
in which thoughts unfold in the inner weaving of the soul. For him it
becomes a riddle how these inward soul processes can become decisive
in a cognition concerning the nature of the external world. This point
of departure will lend a special color to all his thinking. He will
speak in a vigorous manner of the creative activity of the life of
thought. Thus, everything he says will be colored by idealism. A
second thinker turns his attention toward the processes accessible to
external sense perception. The thought processes through which he
holds these external events in cognitive perception do not themselves
in their specific energy enter the field of his awareness. He will
give a turn to the riddles of the universe that will place them in a
thought environment in which the ground of the world itself will
appear in a form that bears semblance to the world of the senses.
If one approaches the historical genesis of the conflicting world
views with presuppositions that result from such a thought
orientation, one can overcome the deadening effect these world
perspectives have on each other and raise the point of view to a level
from which they appear in mutual support.
Hegel and Haeckel, considered side by side, will at first sight
present the most perfect contradiction. Penetrating into Hegel's
philosophy, one can go along with him on the path to which a man who
lives entirely in thoughts is bound. He feels the thought element as
something that enables him to comprehend his own being as real.
Confronted with nature, the question arises in him of the relation in
which it stands toward the world of thought. It will be possible to
follow his turn of mind if one can feel what is relatively justified
and fruitful in such a mental disposition. If one can enter into
Haeckel's thoughts, one can again follow him part of the way. Haeckel
can only see what the senses grasp and how it changes. What is and
changes in this way he can acknowledge as his reality, and he is only
satisfied when he is able to comprise the entire human being,
including his thought activity, under this concept of being and
transformation. Now let Haeckel look on Hegel as a person who spins
airy meaningless concepts without regard to reality. Grant that Hegel,
could he have lived to know Haeckel, would have seen in him a person
who was completely blind to true reality. Thus, whoever is able to
enter into both modes of thinking will find in Hegel's philosophy the
possibility to strengthen his power of spontaneous, active thinking.
In Haeckel's mode of thought he will find the possibility to become
aware of relations between distant formations of nature that tend to
raise significant questions in the mind of man. Placed side by side
and measured against one another in this fashion, Hegel and Haeckel
will no longer lead us into oppressive skepticism but will enable us
to recognize how the striving shoots and sprouts of life are sent out
from very different corners of the universe.
Such are the grounds in which the method of my presentation has its
roots. I do not mean to conceal the contradictions in the history of
philosophy, but I intend to show what remains valid in spite of the
contradictions.
That Hegel and Haeckel are treated in this book to reveal what is
positive and not negative in both of them can, in my opinion, be
criticized as erroneous only by somebody who is incapable of seeing
how fruitful such a treatment of the positive is.
Let me add just a few more words about something that does not refer
to the content of the book but is nevertheless connected with it. This
book belongs to those of my works referred to by persons who claim to
find contradictions in the course of my philosophical development. In
spite of the fact that I know such reproaches are mostly not motivated
by a will to search for truth, I will nevertheless answer them
briefly.
Such critics maintain that the chapter on Haeckel gives the impression
of having been written by an orthodox follower of Haeckel. Whoever
reads in the same book what is said about Hegel will find it difficult
to uphold this statement. Superficially considered, it might, however,
seem as if a person who wrote about Haeckel as I did in this book had
gone through a complete transformation of spirit when he later
published books like Knowledge of the Higher World and Its
Attainment, An Outline of Occult Science, etc.
But the question is only seen in the right light if one remembers that
my later works, which seem to contradict my earlier ones, are based on
a spiritual intuitive insight into the spiritual world. Whoever
intends to acquire or preserve for himself an intuition of this kind
must develop the ability to suppress his own sympathies and
antipathies and to surrender with perfect objectivity to the subject
of his contemplation. He must really, in presenting Haeckel's mode of
thinking, be capable of being completely absorbed by it. It is
precisely from this power to surrender to the object that he derives
spiritual intuition. My method of presentation of the various world
conceptions has its origin in my orientation toward a spiritual
intuition. It would not be necessary to have actually entered into the
materialistic mode of thinking merely to theorize about the spirit.
For that purpose it is sufficient simply to show all justifiable
reasons against materialism and to present this mode of thought by
revealing its unjustified aspects. But to effect spiritual intuition
one cannot proceed in this manner. One must be capable of thinking
idealistically with the idealist and materialistically with the
materialist. For only thus will the faculty of the soul be awakened
that can become active in spiritual' intuition.
Against this, the objections might be raised that in such a treatment
the content of the book would lose its unity. I am not of that
opinion. An historical account will become the more faithful the more
the phenomena are allowed to speak for themselves. It cannot be the
task of an historical presentation to fight materialism or to distort
it into a caricature, for within its limits it is justified. It is
right to represent materialistically those processes of the world that
have a material cause. We only go astray when we do not arrive at the
insight that comes when, in pursuing the material processes, we are
finally led to the conception of the spirit. To maintain that the
brain is not a necessary condition of our thinking insofar as it is
related to sense perception is an error. It is also an error to assume
that the spirit is not the creator of the brain through which it
reveals itself in the physical world through the production and
formation of thought.
|
Last Modified: 17-Jul-2009 |
The Rudolf Steiner Archive is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|