Chapter V True and False Subjectivism
THE subjective stage of human development that critical juncture in
which, having gone forward from symbols, types, conventions, having turned its
gaze superficially on .e individual being to discover his truth and right law of
action ld its relation to the superficial and external truth and law of e
universe, our race begins to gaze deeper, to see and feel what is behind the
outside and below the surface and therefore to live from within. It is a step
towards self-knowledge and towards living in and from the self, away from
knowledge of things as the not-self and from the living according to this
objective idea of life and the universe. Everything depends on how that step is
taken, to what kind of subjectivity we arrive and how far we go in
self-knowledge; for here the dangers of error are as great and far-reaching as
the results of right seeking. The symbolic, the typal, the conventional age
avoid these dangers by building a wall of self-limitation against them; and it
is because this wall becomes in the end a prison of self-ignorance that it has
to be broken down and the perilous but fruitful adventure of subjectivism
undertaken. Page – 37
from the subjective standpoint. In education our object is to
know the psychology of the child as he grows into man and to found our systems
of teaching and training upon that basis. The new aim is to help the child to
develop his intellectual, aesthetic, emotional, moral, spiritual being and his
communal life and impulses out of his own temperament and capacities, – a very
different object from that of the old education which was simply to pack so much
stereotyped knowledge into his resisting brain and impose a stereotyped rule of
conduct on his struggling and dominated impulses.1 In dealing with the criminal the most advanced societies are no
longer altogether satisfied with regarding him as a law-breaker to be punished,
imprisoned, terrified, hanged or else tortured physically and morally, whether
as a revenge for his revolt or as an example to others; there is a growing
attempt to understand him, to make allowance for his heredity, environment and
inner deficiencies and to change him from within rather than crush him from
without. In the general view of society itself, we begin to regard the
community, the nation or any other fixed grouping of men as a living organism
with a subjective being of its own and a corresponding growth and natural
development which it is its business to bring to perfection and fruition. So
far, good; the greater knowledge, the truer depth, the wiser humanity of this
new view of things are obvious. But so also are the limitations of our knowledge
and experience on this new path and the possibility of serious errors and stumblings.
1 There has been a rude set-back to this development in totalitarian States whose theory is that the individual does not exist and only the life of the community matters, but this new larger view still holds its own in freer countries. Page – 38
can only find
it safely if he regards clearly two great psychological truths and lives in that clear
vision. First, the ego is not the self; there is one self of all and the soul is
a portion of that universal Divinity. The fulfilment of the individual is not
the utmost development of his egoistic intellect, vital force, physical well
being and the utmost satisfaction of his mental, emotional, physical cravings,
but the flowering of the divine in him to its utmost capacity of wisdom, power,
love and universality and through flowering his utmost realisation of all the
possible beauty and delight of existence. Page – 39
not the
satisfaction of the mere egoistic will-to-live for the sake of one’s lower
members is the true object at which a humanity subjectively seeking to know and
fulfil its own deepest law and truth should increasingly aim. Page – 40 admitting and realising our unity with others can we entirely fulfil our true self-being1. Of these two truths mankind has had some vague vision in the principle with regard to the individual, though it has made only a very poor and fragmentary attempt to regard them in and in nine-tenths of its life has been busy departing from them – even where it outwardly professed something of the law. But they apply not only to the individual but to the nation. Here was the first error of the German subjectivism. Reasoning of the Absolute and the individual and the universal, it looked into itself and saw that in fact, as a matter of life, That seemed to express itself as the ego and, reasoning from the conclusion of modern Science, it saw the individual merely as a cell of the collective ego. This collective ego was, then, the greatest actual organised expression of life and to that all ought to be subservient, for so could Nature and its evolution best be assisted and affirmed. The greater human collectivity exists, but it is an inchoate and unorganised existence, and its growth can best be developed by the better development of the most efficient organised collective life already existing; practically, then by the growth, perfection and domination of the most advanced nations or possibly of the one most advanced nation, the collective ego which has best realised the purpose of Nature and whose victory and rule is therefore the will of God. For all organised lives, all self-conscious egos are in a state of war, sometimes overt, sometimes covert, sometimes complete, sometimes partial, and by the survival of the best is secured the highest advance of the race. And where was the best, which was the most advanced, self- realizing, efficient, highest-cultured nation, if not, by common admission as well as in Germany’s own self-vision, Germany itself? To fulfil then the collective German ego and secure its growth and domination was at once the right law of reason, the supreme good of humanity and the mission of the great and supreme Teutonic race2.
1 Is another side of the truth in which this interdependence is not so imperative, it phenomenon of spiritual evolution which has nothing to do with the present 2 The emphasis has somewhat shifted now and taken its stand more upon the crude vitalistic notions of blood, race, life-room, but the old idea is there giving more force to the later formulation. Page – 41
From this egoistic self-vision flowed a
number of logical consequences, each in itself a separate subjective error.
First, since the individual is only a cell of the collectivity, his life must
be entirely subservient to the efficient life of the nation. He must be made
efficient indeed, – the nation should see to his education, proper living,
disciplined life, carefully trained and subordinated activity,
- but as a
part of the machine or a disciplined instrument of the national Life.
Initiative must be the collectivity’s, execution the individual’s. But where
was that vague thing, the collectivity, and how could it express itself not
only as a self-conscious, but an organised and efficient collective will and
self-directing energy? The State, there was the secret. Let the State be
perfect, dominant, all-pervading, all-seeing, all-effecting; so only could the
collective ego be concentrated, find itself, and its life be brought to the
highest pitch of strength, organisation and efficiency. Thus Germany founded
and established the growing modern error of the cult of the State and the
growing subordination driving in the end towards the effacement of the
individual. We can see what it gained, an immense collective power and a
certain kind of perfection and scientific adjustment of means to end and a high
general level of economic, intellectual and social efficiency, – apart from the
tremendous momentary force which the luminous fulfilment of a great idea gives
to man or nation. What it had begun to lose is as yet only slightly apparent, - all that
deeper life, vision, intuitive power, force of personality, psychical sweetness
and largeness which the free individual brings as his gift to the race. Page – 42
to the collective good as determined by
the collective will. But in relation to other States, to other collective egos
the general condition, the effective law is still that of war, of strife
between sharply divided egoisms each seeking to fulfil itself, each hampered
and restricted in its field by the others. War then is the whole business of
the State in its relation to other States, a war of arms, a war of commerce, a
war of ideas and cultures, a war of collective personalities each seeking to
possess the world or at least to dominate and be first in the world. Here there
can enter no morality except that of success, though the pretence of morality
may be a useful stratagem of war. To serve the State, the German collectivity
which is his greater and real self is the business of the German individual
whether at home or abroad, and to that end everything which succeeds is justifiable.
Inefficiency, incompetence, failure are the only immorality. In war every
method is justified which leads to the military success of the State, in peace
every method which prepares it; for peace between nations is only a covert
state of war. And as war is the means of physical survival and domination, so
commerce is the means of economic survival and domination; it is in fact only
another kind of war, another department of the struggle to live, one physical,
the other vital. And the life and the body are, so Science has assured us, the
whole of existence.
1 "Nordic" is now the established term. Page – 43 taken into Germany and become part of the German collectivity; races less capable but not wholly unfit must be Germanised; others, hopelessly decadent like the Latins of Europe and America or naturally inferior like the vast majority of the Africans and Asiatics, must be replaced where possible, like the Herreros, or, where not possible, dominated, exploited and treated according to their inferiority. So evolution would advance, so the human race grow towards its perfection.1 We need not suppose that all Germany thought in this strenuous fashion, as it was too long represented, or that the majority thought thus consciously; but it is sufficient that an energetic minority of thinkers and strong personalities should seize upon the national life and impress certain tendencies upon it for these to prevail practically or at the least to give a general trend subconsciously even where the thought itself is not actually proposed in the conscious mind. And the actual events of the present hour seem to show that it was this gospel that partly consciously, partly subconsciously or half articulately had taken possession of the collective German mind. It is easy to deride the rigidity of this terrible logic or riddle it with the ideas and truths it has ignored, and it is still easier to abhor, fear, hate and spew at it while practically following its principles in our own action with less openness, thoroughness and courage. But it is more profitable to begin by seeing that behind it there was and is a tremendous sincerity which is the secret of its force, and a sort of perverse honesty in its errors; the sincerity which tries to look straight at one’s own conduct and the facts of life and the honesty to proclaim the real principles of that conduct and not – except as an occasional diplomacy – profess others with the lips while disregarding them in the practice. And if this German ideal is to be defeated not merely for a time in the battle-field and in the collective persons of the nation or nations professing it, as happened abortively in the War, but in the mind of man and in the life of the human race, an equal sincerity and a less perverse honesty has to be practised by those who have arrived at a better law.
1 This was written more than thirty years ago, but later developments have emphasised and brought out the truth of the description which was indeed much less apparent then. Page – 44 The German gospel has evidently two sides, the internal and the external, the cult of the State, nation or community and of international egoism. In the first, Germany, even if for a time entirely crushed in the battle-field, seems to have already secured the victory in the moral sense of the human race. The unsparing compulsion as against the assistance of the individual the State1 – for his and the common good, of course, professes to compel for harm? – is almost everywhere either dominant or else growing into a strong and prevailing current of opinion; the champions of individual freedom are now defeated and dwindling army who can only fight on in the hope of a future reaction or of saving something of their principle from the wreck. On the external side, the international, battle of ideas still goes on, but there were from the beginning ominous signs;2 and now after the physical war with its first psychological results is well over, we are already able to see in which direction the tide is likely to flow. War is a dangerous teacher and physical victory leads often to a moral defeat. Germany, defeated in the war, has won in the after war; the German gospel re-arisen in a sterner and fiercer avatar threatens sweep over all Europe. It is necessary, if we are not to deceive ourselves, to note that even in this field what Germany has done is to systematize strong actual tendencies and principles of international action the exclusion of all that either professed to resist or did actually modify them. If a sacred egoism – and the expression come from Teutonic lips – is to govern international relations, then it is difficult to deny the force of the German position, The theory of inferior and decadent races was loudly proclaimed by other than German thinkers and has governed, with whatever assuaging scruples, the general practice of military domination and commercial exploitation of the weak by the
1 Not always in the form of Socialism, Bolshevic Communism or Fascism. Other forms of government that are nominally based on the principles of individualistic democracy and have begun to follow the same trend under the disguise or the mere profession of its opposite. 2 The League of Nations was at no time a contrary sign. Whatever incidental or temporary good it might achieve, it could only be an instrument for the domination of the rest of by Europe and of all by two or three major nations. Page – 45
strong; all
that Germany has done is to attempt to give it a wider
extension and more rigorous execution and apply it to European as well as to
Asiatic and African peoples. Even the severity or brutality of her military
methods or of her ways of colonial or internal political repression, taken even at their worst, for much once stated against
her has been proved and admitted to be deliberate lies manufactured by her
enemies, was only a crystallizing of certain recent tendencies towards the
revival of ancient and mediaeval hard-heartedness in the race. The use and even
the justification of massacre and atrocious cruelty in war on the ground of
military exigency and in the course of commercial exploitation or in the
repression of revolt and disorder has been quite recently witnessed in the
other continents, to say nothing of certain outskirts of Europe.1
From one point of view, it is well that terrible examples of the
utmost logic of these things should be prominently forced on the attention of
mankind; for by showing the evil stripped of all veils the choice between good
and evil instead of a halting between the two will be forced on the human
conscience. Woe to the race if it blinds its conscience and but- tresses up its
animal egoism with the old justifications; for the gods have shown that Karma
is not a jest.
1 Witness Egypt, Ireland, India, and afterwards Abyssinia, Spain, China – wherever still man tries to dominate by force over man or nation over nation. Page – 46 and adjuncts, but in something deeper whose roots are not in the ego, but in a Self one in difference which relates the good of each, on a footing of equality and not of strife and domination, to the good of the rest of the world. Page – 47 |