<h3><span class="pb" id="Pg058"></span>IV</h3>
<p>We often fancy that institutions, social custom, collective
habit, have been formed by the consolidation of
individual habits. In the main this supposition is false
to fact. To a considerable extent customs, or wide-spread
uniformities of habit, exist because individuals
face the same situation and react in like fashion. But
to a larger extent customs persist because individuals
form their personal habits under conditions set by prior
customs. An individual usually acquires the morality
as he inherits the speech of his social group. The
activities of the group are already there, and some
assimilation of his own acts to their pattern is a prerequisite
of a share therein, and hence of having any
part in what is going on. Each person is born an
infant, and every infant is subject from the first breath
he draws and the first cry he utters to the attentions
and demands of others. These others are not just
persons in general with minds in general. They are
beings with habits, and beings who upon the whole
esteem the habits they have, if for no other reason than
that, having them, their imagination is thereby limited.
The nature of habit is to be assertive, insistent,
self-perpetuating. There is no miracle in the fact that
if a child learns any language he learns the language
that those about him speak and teach, especially since
his ability to speak that language is a pre-condition of
<span class="pb" id="Pg059"></span>
his entering into effective connection with them, making
wants known and getting them satisfied. Fond parents
and relatives frequently pick up a few of the child's
spontaneous modes of speech and for a time at least
they are portions of the speech of the group. But the
ratio which such words bear to the total vocabulary
in use gives a fair measure of the part played by purely
individual habit in forming custom in comparison with
the part played by custom in forming individual habits.
Few persons have either the energy or the wealth to
build private roads to travel upon. They find it convenient,
"natural," to use the roads that are already
there; while unless their private roads connect at some
point with the high-way they cannot build them even
if they would.</p>
<p>These simple facts seem to me to give a simple explanation
of matters that are often surrounded with
mystery. To talk about the priority of "society" to
<em>the</em> individual is to indulge in nonsensical metaphysics.
But to say that some pre-existent association of human
beings is prior to every particular human being who is
born into the world is to mention a commonplace.
These associations are definite modes of interaction of
persons with one another; that is to say they form
customs, institutions. There is no problem in all history
so artificial as that of how "individuals" manage
to form "society." The problem is due to the pleasure
taken in manipulating concepts, and discussion goes
on because concepts are kept from inconvenient contact
with facts. The facts of infancy and sex have
<span class="pb" id="Pg060"></span>
only to be called to mind to see how manufactured are
the conceptions which enter into this particular
problem.</p>
<p>The problem, however, of how those established
and more or less deeply grooved systems of interaction
which we call social groups, big and small, modify the
activities of individuals who perforce are caught-up
within them, and how the activities of component individuals
remake and redirect previously established customs
is a deeply significant one. Viewed from the standpoint
of custom and its priority to the formation of
habits in human beings who are born babies and gradually
grow to maturity, the facts which are now usually
assembled under the conceptions of collective minds,
group-minds, national-minds, crowd-minds, etc., etc.,
lose the mysterious air they exhale when mind is
thought of (as orthodox psychology teaches us to think
of it) as something which precedes action. It is difficult
to see that collective mind means anything more
than a custom brought at some point to explicit, emphatic
consciousness, emotional or intellectual.<SPAN name="FNanchor_3_" id="FNanchor_3_" href="#Footnote_3_" title="Mob psychology comes under the same principles, but in a negative aspect. The crowd and mob express a disintegration of habits which releases impulse and renders persons susceptible to immediate stimuli, rather than such a functioning of habits as is found in the mind of a club or school of thought or a political party. ... " class="fnanchor">[3]</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pb" id="Pg061"></span>
The family into which one is born is a family in a
village or city which interacts with other more or less
integrated systems of activity, and which includes a
diversity of groupings within itself, say, churches, political
parties, clubs, cliques, partnerships, trade-unions,
corporations, etc. If we start with the traditional
notion of mind as something complete in itself,
then we may well be perplexed by the problem of how
a common mind, common ways of feeling and believing
and purposing, comes into existence and then forms
these groups. The case is quite otherwise if we
recognize that in any case we must start with grouped
action, that is, with some fairly settled system of interaction
among individuals. The problem of origin and
development of the various groupings, or definite customs,
in existence at any particular time in any particular
place is not solved by reference to psychic
causes, elements, forces. It is to be solved by reference
to facts of action, demand for food, for houses, for a
<span class="pb" id="Pg062"></span>
mate, for some one to talk to and to listen to one talk,
for control of others, demands which are all intensified
by the fact already mentioned that each person begins
a helpless, dependent creature. I do not mean of course
that hunger, fear, sexual love, gregariousness, sympathy,
parental love, love of bossing and of being ordered
about, imitation, etc., play no part. But I do
mean that these words do not express elements or forces
which are psychic or mental in their first intention.
They denote <em>ways of behavior</em>. These ways of behaving
involve interaction, that is to say, and prior groupings.
And to understand the existence of organized ways or
habits we surely need to go to physics, chemistry and
physiology rather than to psychology.</p>
<p>There is doubtless a great mystery as to why any
such thing as being conscious should exist at all. But
<em>if</em> consciousness exists at all, there is no mystery in its
being connected with what it is connected with. That
is to say, if an activity which is an interaction of various
factors, or a grouped activity, comes to consciousness
it seems natural that it should take the form of
an emotion, belief or purpose that reflects the interaction,
that it should be an "our" consciousness or a
"my" consciousness. And by this is meant both that
it will be shared by those who are implicated in the
associative custom, or more or less alike in them all,
and that it will be felt or thought to concern others as
well as one's self. A family-custom or organized habit
of action comes into contact and conflict for example
with that of some other family. The emotions of ruffled
<span class="pb" id="Pg063"></span>
pride, the belief about superiority or being "as
good as other people," the intention to hold one's own
are naturally <em>our</em> feeling and idea of <em>our</em> treatment and
position. Substitute the Republican party or the
American nation for the family and the general situation
remains the same. The conditions which determine
the nature and extent of the particular grouping
in question are matters of supreme import. But
they are not as such subject-matter of psychology, but
of the history of politics, law, religion, economics, invention,
the technology of communication and intercourse.
Psychology comes in as an indispensable tool.
But it enters into the matter of understanding these
various special topics, not into the question of what
psychic forces form a collective mind and therefore a
social group. That way of stating the case puts the
cart a long way before the horse, and naturally gathers
obscurities and mysteries to itself. In short, the primary
facts of social psychology center about collective
habit, custom. In addition to the general psychology
of habit—which <em>is</em> general not individual in any intelligible
sense of that word—we need to find out just
how different customs shape the desires, beliefs, purposes
of those who are affected by them. The problem
of social psychology is not how either individual or
collective mind forms social groups and customs, but
how different customs, established interacting arrangements,
form and nurture different minds. From this
general statement we return to our special problem,
which is how the rigid character of past custom has
<span class="pb" id="Pg064"></span>
unfavorably influenced beliefs, emotions and purposes
having to do with morals.</p>
<p>We come back to the fact that individuals begin their
career as infants. For the plasticity of the young presents
a temptation to those having greater experience
and hence greater power which they rarely resist. It
seems putty to be molded according to current designs.
That plasticity also means power to change prevailing
custom is ignored. Docility is looked upon not as ability
to learn whatever the world has to teach, but as
subjection to those instructions of others which reflect
<em>their</em> current habits. To be truly docile is to be eager
to learn all the lessons of active, inquiring, expanding
experience. The inert, stupid quality of current customs
perverts learning into a willingness to follow
where others point the way, into conformity, constriction,
surrender of scepticism and experiment. When
we think of the docility of the young we first think of
the stocks of information adults wish to impose and
the ways of acting they want to reproduce. Then we
think of the insolent coercions, the insinuating briberies,
the pedagogic solemnities by which the freshness of
youth can be faded and its vivid curiosities dulled.
Education becomes the art of taking advantage of the
helplessness of the young; the forming of habits becomes
a guarantee for the maintenance of hedges of
custom.</p>
<p>Of course it is not wholly forgotten that habits are
abilities, arts. Any striking exhibition of acquired
skill in physical matters, like that of an acrobat or
<span class="pb" id="Pg065"></span>
billiard-player, arouses universal admiration. But we
like to have innovating power limited to technical matters
and reserve our admiration for those manifestations
that display virtuosity rather than virtue. In moral
matters it is assumed that it is enough if some ideal has
been exemplified in the life of a leader, so that it is now
the part of others to follow and reproduce. For every
branch of conduct, there is a Jesus or Buddha, a Napoleon
or Marx, a Froebel or Tolstoi, whose pattern
of action, exceeding our own grasp, is reduced to a
practicable copy-size by passage through rows and
rows of lesser leaders.</p>
<p>The notion that it suffices if the idea, the end, is
present in the mind of some authority dominates formal
schooling. It permeates the unconscious education derived
from ordinary contact and intercourse. Where
following is taken to be normal, moral originality is
pretty sure to be eccentric. But if independence were
the rule, originality would be subjected to severe, experimental
tests and be saved from cranky eccentricity,
as it now is in say higher mathematics. The regime
of custom assumes that the outcome is the same whether
an individual understands what he is about or whether
he goes through certain motions while mouthing the
words of others—repetition of formulæ being esteemed
of greater importance, upon the whole, than repetition
of deeds. To say what the sect or clique or class says
is the way of proving that one also understands and
approves what the clique clings to. In theory, democracy
should be a means of stimulating original thought,
<span class="pb" id="Pg066"></span>
and of evoking action deliberately adjusted in advance
to cope with new forces. In fact it is still so immature
that its main effect is to multiply occasions for imitation.
If progress in spite of this fact is more rapid
than in other social forms, it is by accident, since the
diversity of models conflict with one another and
thus give individuality a chance in the resulting chaos
of opinions. Current democracy acclaims success more
boisterously than do other social forms, and surrounds
failure with a more reverberating train of echoes. But
the prestige thus given excellence is largely adventitious.
The achievement of thought attracts others not
so much intrinsically as because of an eminence due to
multitudinous advertising and a swarm of imitators.</p>
<p>Even liberal thinkers have treated habit as essentially,
not because of the character of existing customs,
conservative. In fact only in a society dominated by
modes of belief and admiration fixed by past custom is
habit any more conservative than it is progressive. It
all depends upon its quality. Habit is an ability, an
art, formed through past experience. But whether an
ability is limited to repetition of past acts adopted to
past conditions or is available for new emergencies
depends wholly upon what kind of habit exists. The
tendency to think that only "bad" habits are disserviceable
and that bad habits are conventionally
enumerable, conduces to make all habits more or less
bad. For what makes a habit bad is enslavement to
old ruts. The common notion that enslavement to good
ends converts mechanical routine into good is a
<span class="pb" id="Pg067"></span>
negation of the principle of moral goodness. It identifies
morality with what <em>was</em> sometime rational, possibly
in some prior experience of one's own, but more
probably in the experience of some one else who is now
blindly set up as a final authority. The genuine heart
of reasonableness (and of goodness in conduct) lies
in effective mastery of the conditions which <em>now</em> enter
into action. To be satisfied with repeating, with traversing
the ruts which in other conditions led to good,
is the surest way of creating carelessness about present
and actual good.</p>
<p>Consider what happens to thought when habit is
merely power to repeat acts without thought. Where
does thought exist and operate when it is excluded from
habitual activities? Is not such thought of necessity
shut out from effective power, from ability to control
objects and command events? Habits deprived of
thought and thought which is futile are two sides of the
same fact. To laud habit as conservative while praising
thought as the main spring of progress is to take
the surest course to making thought abstruse and
irrelevant and progress a matter of accident and catastrophe.
The concrete fact behind the current separation
of body and mind, practice and theory, actualities
and ideals, is precisely this separation of habit and
thought. Thought which does not exist within ordinary
habits of action lacks means of execution. In lacking
application, it also lacks test, criterion. Hence it is
condemned to a separate realm. If we try to act upon
it, our actions are clumsy, forced. In fact, contrary
<span class="pb" id="Pg068"></span>
habits (as we have already seen) come into operation
and betray our purpose. After a few such experiences,
it is subconsciously decided that thought is too precious
and high to be exposed to the contingencies of action.
It is reserved for separate uses; thought feeds only
thought not action. Ideals must not run the risk of
contamination and perversion by contact with actual
conditions. Thought then either resorts to specialized
and technical matters influencing action in the library
or laboratory alone, or else it becomes sentimentalized.</p>
<p>Meantime there are certain "practical" men who
combine thought and habit and who are effectual. Their
thought is about their own advantage; and their habits
correspond. They dominate the actual situation. They
encourage routine in others, and they also subsidize
such thought and learning as are kept remote from
affairs. This they call sustaining the standard of the
ideal. Subjection they praise as team-spirit, loyalty,
devotion, obedience, industry, law-and-order. But they
temper respect for law—by which they mean the order
of the existing status—on the part of others with most
skilful and thoughtful manipulation of it in behalf of
their own ends. While they denounce as subversive
anarchy signs of independent thought, of thinking for
themselves, on the part of others lest such thought
disturb the conditions by which they profit, they think
quite literally <em>for</em> themselves, that is, <em>of</em> themselves.
This is the eternal game of the practical men. Hence
it is only by accident that the separate and endowed
<span class="pb" id="Pg069"></span>
"thought" of professional thinkers leaks out into action
and affects custom.</p>
<p>For thinking cannot itself escape the influence of
habit, any more than anything else human. If it is not
a part of ordinary habits, then it is a separate habit,
habit alongside other habits, apart from them, as
isolated and indurated as human structure permits.
Theory is a possession of the theorist, intellect of the
intellectualist. The so-called separation of theory and
practice means in fact the separation of two kinds of
practice, one taking place in the outdoor world, the
other in the study. The habit of thought commands
some materials (as every habit must do) but the materials
are technical, books, words. Ideas are objectified
in action but speech and writing monopolize their
field of action. Even then subconscious pains are
taken to see that the words used are not too widely
understood. Intellectual habits like other habits demand
an environment, but the environment is the study,
library, laboratory and academy. Like other habits
they produce external results, possessions. Some men
acquire ideas and knowledge as other men acquire monetary
wealth. While practising thought for their own
special ends they deprecate it for the untrained and
unstable masses for whom "habits," that is unthinking
routines, are necessities. They favor popular education—up
to the point of disseminating as matter of
authoritative information for the many what the few
have established by thought, and up to the point of
<span class="pb" id="Pg070"></span>
converting an original docility to the new into a docility
to repeat and to conform.</p>
<p>Yet all habit involves mechanization. Habit is impossible
without setting up a mechanism of action,
physiologically engrained, which operates "spontaneously,"
automatically, whenever the cue is given. But
mechanization is not of necessity <em>all</em> there is to habit.
Consider the conditions under which the first serviceable
abilities of life are formed. When a child begins to
walk he acutely observes, he intently and intensely experiments.
He looks to see what is going to happen
and he keeps curious watch on every incident. What
others do, the assistance they give, the models they set,
operate not as limitations but as encouragements to his
own acts, reinforcements of personal perception and
endeavor. The first toddling is a romantic adventuring
into the unknown; and every gained power is a
delightful discovery of one's own powers and of the
wonders of the world. We may not be able to retain
in adult habits this zest of intelligence and this
freshness of satisfaction in newly discovered powers.
But there is surely a middle term between a normal
exercise of power which includes some excursion into
the unknown, and a mechanical activity hedged within
a drab world. Even in dealing with inanimate machines
we rank that invention higher which adapts its movements
to varying conditions.</p>
<p>All life operates through a mechanism, and the
higher the form of life the more complex, sure and
flexible the mechanism. This fact alone should save
<span class="pb" id="Pg071"></span>
us from opposing life and mechanism, thereby reducing
the latter to unintelligent automatism and the former
to an aimless splurge. How delicate, prompt, sure and
varied are the movements of a violin player or an engraver!
How unerringly they phrase every shade of
emotion and every turn of idea! Mechanism is indispensable.
If each act has to be consciously searched
for at the moment and intentionally performed, execution
is painful and the product is clumsy and halting.
Nevertheless the difference between the artist and the
mere technician is unmistakeable. The artist is a masterful
technician. The technique or mechanism is fused
with thought and feeling. The "mechanical" performer
permits the mechanism to dictate the performance.
It is absurd to say that the latter exhibits habit
and the former not. We are confronted with two kinds
of habit, intelligent and routine. All life has its élan,
but only the prevalence of dead habits deflects life into
mere élan.</p>
<p>Yet the current dualism of mind and body, thought
and action, is so rooted that we are taught (and science
is said to support the teaching) that the art, the habit,
of the artist is acquired by previous mechanical exercises
of repetition in which skill apart from thought is
the aim, until suddenly, magically, this soulless mechanism
is taken possession of by sentiment and imagination
and it becomes a flexible instrument of mind. The fact,
the scientific fact, is that even in his exercises, his practice
<em>for</em> skill, an artist uses an art he already has. He
acquires greater skill because practice <em>of</em> skill is more
<span class="pb" id="Pg072"></span>
important to him than practice <em>for</em> skill. Otherwise
natural endowment would count for nothing, and
sufficient mechanical exercise would make any one
an expert in any field. A flexible, sensitive habit grows
more varied, more adaptable by practice and use. We
do not as yet fully understand the physiological factors
concerned in mechanical routine on one hand and
artistic skill on the other, but we do know that the
latter is just as much habit as is the former.
Whether it concerns the cook, musician, carpenter, citizen,
or statesman, the intelligent or artistic habit is
the desirable thing, and the routine the undesirable
thing:—or, at least, desirable and undesirable from
every point of view except one.</p>
<p>Those who wish a monopoly of social power find
desirable the separation of habit and thought, action
and soul, so characteristic of history. For the dualism
enables them to do the thinking and planning, while
others remain the docile, even if awkward, instruments
of execution. Until this scheme is changed, democracy
is bound to be perverted in realization. With our
present system of education—by which something much
more extensive than schooling is meant—democracy
multiplies occasions for imitation not occasions for
thought in action. If the visible result is rather a
messy confusion than an ordered discipline of habits, it
is because there are so many models of imitation set up
that they tend to cancel one another, so that individuals
have the advantage neither of uniform training
nor of intelligent adaptation. Whence an intellectualist;
<span class="pb" id="Pg073"></span>
the one with whom thinking is itself a segregated
habit, infers that the choice is between muss-and-muddling
and a bureaucracy. He prefers the latter,
though under some other name, usually an aristocracy
of talent and intellect, possibly a dictatorship of the
proletariat.</p>
<p>It has been repeatedly stated that the current philosophical
dualism of mind and body, of spirit and mere
outward doing, is ultimately but an intellectual reflex
of the social divorce of routine habit from thought, of
means from ends, practice from theory. One hardly
knows whether most to admire the acumen with which
Bergson has penetrated through the accumulation of
historic technicalities to this essential fact, or to deplore
the artistic skill with which he has recommended
the division and the metaphysical subtlety with which
he has striven to establish its necessary and unchangeable
nature. For the latter tends to confirm and sanction
the dualism in all its obnoxiousness. In the end,
however, detection, discovery, is the main thing. To
envisage the relation of spirit, life, to matter, body,
as in effect an affair of a force which outruns habit
while it leaves a trail of routine habits behind it, will
surely turn out in the end to imply the acknowledgment
of the need of a continuous unification of spirit
and habit, rather than to be a sanction of their divorce.
And when Bergson carries the implicit logic
to the point of a clear recognition that upon this basis
concrete intelligence is concerned with the habits
which incorporate and deal with objects, and that nothing
<span class="pb" id="Pg074"></span>
remains to spirit, pure thought, except a blind onward
push or impetus, the net conclusion is surely the
need of revision of the fundamental premiss of separation
of soul and habit. A blind creative force is as
likely to turn out to be destructive as creative; the vital
<em>élan</em> may delight in war rather than in the laborious
arts of civilization, and a mystic intuition of an <ins class="corr" title="ungoing" id="Corr_074_">ongoing</ins>
splurge be a poor substitute for the detailed work of an
intelligence embodied in custom and institution, one
which creates by means of flexible continuous contrivances
of reorganization. For the eulogistic qualities
which Bergson attributes to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan vital</i> flow not from
its nature but from a reminiscence of the optimism of
romanticism, an optimism which is only the reverse side
of pessimism about actualities. A spiritual life which
is nothing but a blind urge separated from thought
(which is said to be confined to mechanical manipulation
of material objects for personal uses) is
likely to have the attributes of the Devil in spite of its
being ennobled with the name of God.</p>
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