Young men and women, if they have any ambition, will not be satisfied merely
to earn a living and to establish themselves in a comfortable, but meaningless
routine. People of serious intentions want to make an effective impact on
the world around them. Christian men and women not only want to leave
their mark on the world, but they are under divine obligation to
make the attempt. To do so, to achieve anything above a mere average result,
one prerequisite is an understanding of the civilization of which we are a
part. If we wish to be persuasive, we must know what other people are thinking.
Therefore, to understand our contemporary society, it is desirable , I should
like to say, essential to have a grasp of recent philosophy.
The reason why philosophy is so important in understanding a civilization,
the reason why therefore philosophy is essential to anyone who wishes to influence
society is simply that on the whole philosophy controls the thoughts of men.
People may not be aware of the factors which influence their thinking; they
many never have heard of the world's greatest thinkers; but over a period
of time the theories of philosophers are popularized, publicized, and are
then incorporated in the thinking of ordinary citizens.
One example of a philosopher controlling the thinking of a later generation,
in this case the religious thinking of the early twentieth century, is that
of Freidrich Schleiermacher. It was he who produced modernism. There were
many Christians forty or fifty years ago who took alarm at modernism, but
they did not always recognize its source nor understand its leading ideas.
Therefore they were puzzled at its popularity and were at a loss to meet
it. These fundamentalists thought modernism was merely a matter of denying
miracles, the Virgin Birth, the Atonement, and the Resurrection. But these
were only the implications of modernism. At its basis was a different view
of the nature of religion. Schleiermacher had recommended a religion based
upon experience instead of on revelation. His thought was essentially man-centered
rather than God-centered. The Psychology of Religious Experience replaced
Theology and the doctrines of the Bible were then discarded one by one. Even
today, when the fortunes of modernism have ebbed in the seminaries, millions
of people in the pews continue to think more or less as Schleiermacher taught.
To meet modernism adequately, one should know its source, its motivation,
and the essential structure of its ideas. In general, if one wishes to work
with people who have unconsciously accepted the views of an earlier thinker,
it is most desirable, I would like to say essential, to understand the factors
which have formed their opinions.
However, the contemporary philosophy about which I wish to speak is not the
modernism of Schleiermacher and Ritschl. Later I wish to speak of a secular
philosophy and of a religious movement that have some basic elements in common
and which between them pretty well characterize the thought of the United
States today. The secular philosophy is Pragmatism or Instrumentalism, and
the religious movement is called Neo-orthodoxy. Both of these derive from
one or a few philosophers who lived about a century ago.
Near the beginning or the nineteenth century, Hegel dominated all philosophy.
No one else approached him in breadth of interest, profundity of insight,
or power of detailed reasoning. His system of Absolute Idealism claimed to
have a rational explanation of everything. Reason had solved all problems,
and the System was well nigh perfect. After his death his philosophy spread
from Germany, overshadowed all else in England, and was widely held in American
Universities.
During this time of Hegel's popularity, there began in Germany, indeed among
Hegel's immediate students, a movement which was destined to control our twentieth
century thought. Karl Marx and Soren Kierkegarrd both studied under Hegel.
Both came to the conclusion that Hegel was terribly mistaken. They agreed
that Reason had not solved all problems and that Reason could not solve all
problems. In one way or another they and their followers disparaged Reason.
Thus, though Marx and Soren Kierkegarrd differed on many points of importance,
the former being an atheistic socialist and the latter and individualistic
Christian, the two of them in their common attack on Reason initiated the
irrationalism that characterizes a large section of today's thinking.
By irrationalism I do not mean a view, like that of Roman Catholic philosophy,
which defends a sphere of faith superior to reason; nor do I mean any judicious
distrust of so-called rationalizations and quick and easy solutions to difficult
and intricate problems. Irrationalism here means a fundamental repudiation
of reason itself. In this type of philosophy the very forms of thought, the
very processes of logic are denied validity.
To come to grips with the main subject matter it will be enough in the first
placed to give a short account of the secular philosophies of William James
and John Dewey with their immediate European predecessors, Friedrich Nietzsche
and Emile Durkheim. Then, in the second place, I shall compare this secular
philosophy with some of the basic factors in the religious movement known
as Neo-orthodoxy.
Nietzsche the German and Durkheim the Frenchman, sixty or seventy years after
the first attacks on Hegel's deification of reason, arrived at their irrationalism
through a biological approach. Though they may not have been the first to
apply the principles of evolution to philosophy, they did so more thoroughly
than any of their predecessors.
With this approach it follows in both cases that there are no universal standards
of morality nor are there fixed forms of logic binding all thought. Both logic
and morality are subject to flux. As for morality Nietzsche proclaims the
Superman who is superior to traditional standards, and Durkheim has each society
produce its own standards so that it cannot be judge on the standards of any
foreign civilization.
The effect of this view on the forms of logic can best be approached by emphasizing
the naturalism that Nietzsche so clearly expresses. Naturalism, in popular,
inexact language, is a sort of materialism. Not only does Nietzsche repudiate
the universal Hegelian Reason, he also denies the existence of a soul or mind.
For him, as it was for Marx, the starting point of all philosophy is the body.
Therefore he concludes, the notion that the universe is amenable to the forms
of human thinking is downright naive.
Everything that reaches our consciousness, so he says, is simplified and
adjusted to our needs. We never find a fact of nature; we never grasp things
as they are. The whole apparatus of knowing is a simplifying device, directed
not at truth, but at the utilization of the world for our human purposes.
Logic as an evolutionary development distorts reality, and what we now call
truth is simply the kind of error without which the species cannot survive.
The basic law of logic is the law of contradiction. We cannot think without
it. But this, in Nietzsche's opinion, is only a sign of our inability - our
inability to affirm and to deny one and the same thing. To suppose that logic
and the law of contradiction is adequate to reality presupposes a knowledge
of reality prior to and independent of this law. Obviously therefore the law
of contradiction holds good only for assumed existences that we have created.
Both Nietzsche and Durkheim consider the laws of thought to be the product
of evolution. Today men are born with these evolutionary products so bred
in them that they cannot think otherwise. These habits are useful, but this
does not make them true. According to Durkheim the concepts of time, contradiction,
and causality are the outgrowths of religious rites and social ceremonies.
There is no universal concept of time or causality; each society has its own.
Individuals who used categories different from those of their society were
treated as insane, were eliminated, with the result that only those people
survived who used the socially approved modes of thought.
William James continues this attack against what he calls the "serpent of
rationalism." The Hegelian Absolute is futile and theism is vacuous. The categories
of logic are evolutionary products. Space and time are not apriori
intuitions but artificial constructions. Other categories could have been
developed, and might have proved as serviceable as those we use now.
Toward the end of his life James also denied the existence of consciousness
and gave evidence of adopting the viewpoint of behaviorism. At any rate, John
Dewey very clearly bases knowledge on biological functions and explicitly
professes a certain type of behaviorism.
John Dewey traces all knowledge back to "sensori-motor co-ordinations." Time
and time again Dewey objects to "mentalistic"terminology. Mind, he says, is
the complex of bodily habits. Indeed, habits formed in the exercise of biological
aptitudes are the sole agents of observation, recollection, and judgment.
A mind which performs these operations is a myth; concrete habits do all the
perceiving and reasoning that is done. In one place Dewey very bluntly says
Knowledge lives in the muscles, not in the consciousness.
Since these muscles and biological aptitudes are directed toward survival,
it follows for Dewey that truth, including the laws of logic, is instrumental.
Our concepts have been devised as tools for solving our problems. If an idea
or concept works, it is true. This pragmatic principle that truth is what
works is much more clearly stated in Dewey than in James. From reading James
one might suppose that the truth of an idea is tested by putting it work.
If the test is successful, the idea is proved have been true.
For example, some Christians might borrow from James and say that we should
put God to the test; we should believe in God; we should accept the idea of
God. Then if our belief is confirmed by success in the affairs of life, or
at least in a future life, when God's judgment justifies our belief, the idea
of God will be clearly seen have been true.
Dewey prevents a Christian from using pragmatism in any such way. For him,
"ideas are statements, not of what is or has been, but of acts to be performed."
"An idea or conception is a... plan to act in a certain way." Therefore
the idea of God is not the idea of a pre-existing Being; it is a plan of action,
and its meaning is totally exhausted in the overt muscular movements of solving
a problem. Similarly the concepts of physics and chemistry, such as gravitation
or sulfuric acid are not statements of antecedent existences, but of operations
in the laboratory.
Naturally Dewey says the same thing about the concepts of logic. The law
of contradiction is constructed as a useful tool for the purpose of solving
a problem. So long as this law of logic is useful, it will be retained. When
in the future another problem arrives for which this tool is not adapted,
we will invent a different concept, we will form a different plan of operation,
we will formulate a different sort of logic.
Now, Dewey was such a voluminous writer and his views have been so influential
on any number of subjects that it is tempting to continue with an extended
exposition of his philosophy. However, the occasion forbids; and having made
the simple point of instrumental behaviorism, I must rush on to my criticism
of the logic it proposes. The criticism too must be brief and constricted.
This I regret, for the matter, in my opinion, is extremely important. Irrationalism
is a wide-spread phenomenon. Essentially the same views are found among the
logical positivists and the Oxford analytical philosophers. For example, A.J.
Ayer, like Dewey, holds that logic is an arbitrary construction and that "it
is perfectly conceivable that we should have employed different linguistic
conventions."
In a moment it will be shown that Neo-orthodoxy also entertains much the
same idea of logic. This is why a knowledge of secular philosophy is so important
in religious discussions. They are both branches from the same trunk. None
of their forms can be fully understood apart from the common background. Therefore,
if the common logic of these several schools is defective, one criticism will
engulf them all.
If logical principles are arbitrary and tentative, either because they are
the procedural stipulations of the analytical school, or because they are
the conventions of a society, or because they are behavioristic muscular habits,
and if therefore it is conceivable to employ different linguistic conventions,
it should be possible for these philosophers to invent a different convention
and abide by it as they express their views. Can they do so?
Now, the Aristotelian law of contradiction which they reject or which they
assert can be rejected requires that a given word must not only mean something,
but it must also not mean something else. The term dog must mean
dog, but also it must not mean mountain; and mountain must not mean
metaphor. Each term must refer something definite and at the same time there
must be other objects which it does not refer. Suppose the word mountain meant
metaphor, and dog, and Bible, and the United States. Clearly, if a word meant
everything, it would mean nothing.
If, now, the law of contradiction is not a fixed truth, if it is merely tentative,
and if another form of thought is conceivable, I challenge these philosophers
to write a book in conformity with their principles. That is, I challenge
them to write a book without using the law of contradiction - without insisting
that words have definite references. As a matter of fact, it will not be hard
for them do so. Nothing more is necessary than to write the word metaphor
sixty thousand times. Metaphor metaphor metaphor metaphor. This means, the
dog ran up the mountain; for the word metaphor means dog, ran, and
mountain. But unfortunately, the sentence "Metaphor metaphor metaphor metaphor"
also means, "Next Christmas is Thanksgiving;" for the word metaphor
has these meanings as well.
The point should be clear. One cannot write a book or speak a sentence that
means anything without using the law of contradiction. Logic is neither a
procedural convention, nor a product of society, nor a muscular habit. Logic
is an innate necessity. Whether it be the secularism of John Dewey and A.J.
Ayer, or the religious theory of the Neo-orthodox, or even the frequent pietistic
depreciation of our so-called fallible human reason, this irrationalism makes
all intelligible religion impossible. Each definite doctrine singly and the
sum of them as a verbal revelation are emptied of all meaning. But fortunately
this irrationalism makes itself impossible also. The theories of Nietzsche,
Dewey, and Ayer are self-refuting because they cannot be stated intelligibly
except in virtue of the law they repudiate.
The second half, or I should say the second part of this paper, for instead
of being an equal half, it will be only a short appendix, deals with Neo-orthodoxy.
The exposition of Neo-orthodoxy must be brief and constricted as the preceding
exposition was. Only enough will be given show that Neo-orthodoxy shares the
same irrationalism and therefore suffers the same fate of unintelligibility.
This is the case because they are twin products of the same anti-Hegelian
motif. Karl Marx stimulated the secular and naturalistic reaction, and Soren
Kierkegaard furthered the religious reaction. Both held reason and intellect
in low esteem.
For Soren Kierkegaard God is truth; but truth exists only for a believer
who inwardly experiences the tension between himself and God. If an actually
existing person is an unbeliever, then for him God does not exist. God exists
only in subjectivity.
The emphasis on subjectivity and the corresponding disparagement of objectivity
results in the destruction of Christianity's objective historicity. The historical
is not the religious and the religious is not the historical. Real religion
does not consist in understanding anything; it is a matter of feeling and
anti-intellectual passion. To base one's religion on objective history puts
it at the mercy of the ever changing results of historical criticism. It is
absurd to suppose that eternal blessedness can be based on historical information.
The important matter is not what a person believes, but how he believes.
This method of religion is not intellectual; it is an experience of suffering
and despair; it is passionate appropriation and decision. What is
appropriated is of little importance.
In his vivid style Soren Kierkegaard describes two men at prayer. The one
is in a Lutheran church and entertains a true conception of God; but because
he prays in a false spirit, he is praying to an idol. The other is actually
in a heathen temple praying to idols; but because he prays with an infinite
passion, he is in truth praying to God. For the truth lies in the inward How,
not in the external What. "If only the How of this relation
is in truth, then the individual is in truth, even though he is thus related
to untruth."
This illustration implies that it is objectively indifferent whether one
worships God or an idol. What counts is the individual's subjective relation
to an unknown Something. But if our worship is directed to an unknown Something,
rather than to Hegel's Absolute, or to the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
who gives us information about himself, there would seem to be no distinguishable
difference between worshiping God and worshiping the devil.
Most of the contemporary disciples of Soren Kierkegaard continue this anti-intellectualism.
For example, Reinhold Niebuhr asserts that every affirmation about man's place
in the cosmos become involved in contradictions when fully analyzed. There
is no escape from rational absurdity. Man is free from reason with a freedom
that is above all the categories of philosophy. However, for the purposes
of this lecture, I shall confine the analysis to the views of Emil Brunner.
Emil Brunner distinguishes between two varieties of truth. First, there is
the ordinary truth of everyday affairs, mathematics, and science. One may
call it abstract truth. Brunner calls it It-truth to distinguish it from the
second variety which he calls Thou-Truth. As we pass from logic and mathematics,
though sociology and anthropology, on to theology, we leave the abstract It-Truth
and enter the religious realm of personal relationships. Here man is no mere
neutral observer, as he is supposed to be in logic and mathematics, but rather
he is himself affected by the truth and exercises faith and personal trust.
At the center of this sphere is an individual's personal confrontation with
God.
In this experience of personal confrontation the traditional philosophical
distinction between subject and object is transcended, and the new truth becomes
a relationship of subject to subject. God is never an object of knowledge.
One who has had this personal confrontation with God, as the Apostles had,
may talk about it later. In talking about it, they use subjects and predicates,
they use forms of logic and abstract thought. But what they say is not really
true. Abstract, verbal, proportional truth is merely a pointer to the personal
truth. Some propositions point more directly than others, but even the words
of Scripture are only pointers.
Brunner does not mean that the words of language are conventional, so that
different sounds in different languages mean the same thing. Dog
and Hund and Chien are all arbitrary sounds to express the
same thought. But for Brunner it is not just the sound or word, it is the
thought itself that fails to grasp the object. He says quite explicitly that
the conceptual content itself, as well as the verbal expression, is not the
real thing; it is only a framework, a means, a pointer.
For this reason, says Brunner, we should not allow the logic of our language
to carry us too far. Although what we actually say in one proposition may
validly imply a second proposition, it often happens that faith must curb
our logic. Sometimes we may follow the implication of our thoughts, but sometimes
faith causes us to deny in the conclusion what we asserted in the premises.
Thus it is that Brunner uses good logic to refute Schleiermacher; but because
good logic supports rather than refutes John Calvin, faith curbs our logic
and refutes Calvin for us.
Here, obviously, Brunner is in trouble. For why could he not have accepted
logic in the case of Calvin and curbed his logic in the case of Schleiermacher?
How does one know when to accept the implications of his own assertions and
when not to? This question is a pointer, it points to the arbitrary
irrationalism of Brunner's position. If two implications are equally valid,
there can be no reason for following one and curbing the other.
In fact, Brunner is in a worse position even than this would indicate --
if worse there be. Since all propositions are merely pointers and since their
intellectual content is merely an empty framework, it really doesn't make
much difference whether our assertions are true or false. Not only is it immaterial
whether you or I speak the truth, we cannot even depend on God to speak the
truth. Brunner quite explicitly says that a false proposition can be a pointer
as well as a true one. God Himself is free from the limitations of abstract
truth and can speak His special variety of truth in false statements.
"Our knowledge of God" - to translate from Philosophie und Offeenbarung
- "which we obtain from revelation, is first an As-if Knowledge." That is
to say, revelation is not strictly true. We are perhaps to live as if it were
true, but we must not suppose that revelation is the truth. Brunner of course
tries to deflect criticism by adding that "This As-if contains no uncertainty
-- for it is a divinely guaranteed as-if".
It is difficult, however, to derive much comfort from such a divinely guaranteed
As-if. For since God sometimes uses falsehood in revelation, the guarantee
itself may be As-if and false. How could we possibly tell? Even if the divine
guarantee were not false, it is still merely a pointer to some unknowable
and unintelligible something. It could never be accepted at literal face value.
This underlying objection to Neo-orthodoxy is not that it denies this or
that Christian doctrine. The objection is not that it discards half or three
quarters of the Bible. The underlying objection is that all intelligibility
has vanished. No doctrine remains. Nothing of the Bible is left. Truth has
become impossible and we are left to the mercy of blind passion.
This is the outcome of contemporary irrationalism. To it attaches all the
opprobrium that the word irrational suggests, and the cost of accepting
such a viewpoint is nothing less than insanity.
On the other hand, sanity and Christianity require intellect, reason, logic,
and truth, for in the beginning was the Word, the Logos, the eternal wisdom
of God.