<h3><span class="pb" id="Pg248"></span>VIII</h3>
<p>Certain critics in sympathy with at least the negative
contention, the critical side, of such a theory as has
been advanced, regard it as placing too much emphasis
upon intelligence. They find it intellectualistic, cold-blooded.
They say we must change desire, love, aspiration,
admiration, and then action will be transformed.
A new affection, a changed appreciation, brings with it
a revaluation of life and insists upon its realization. A
refinement of intellect at most only figures out better
ways of reaching old and accustomed ends. In fact we
are lucky if intellect does not freeze the ardor of generous
desire and paralyze creative endeavor. Intellect
is critical, unproductive while desire is generative. In
its dispassionateness intellect is aloof from humanity
and its needs. It fosters detachment where sympathy
is needed. It cultivates contemplation when salvation
lies in liberating desire. Intellect is analytic, taking
things to pieces; its devices are the scalpel and test-tube.
Affection is synthetic, unifying. This argument
affords an opportunity for making more explicit those
respective offices of wish and thought in forming ends
which have already been touched upon.</p>
<p>First we must undertake an independent analysis
of desire. It is customary to describe desires in terms
of their objects, meaning by objects the things which
<span class="pb" id="Pg249"></span>
figure as in imagination their goals. As the object is
noble or base, so, it is thought, is desire. In any case,
emotions rise and cluster about the object. This stands
out so conspicuously in immediate experience that it
monopolizes the central position in the traditional psychological
theory of desire. Barring gross self-deception
or the frustration of external circumstance, the
outcome, or end-result, of desire is regarded by this
theory as similar to the end-in-view or object consciously
desired. Such, however, is not the case, as
readily appears from the analysis of deliberation. In
saying that the actual outcome of desire is different in
kind from the object upon which desire consciously
fastens, I do not mean to repeat the old complaint
about the fallibility and feebleness of mortals in virtue
of which man's hopes are frustrated and twisted in realization.
The difference is one of diverse dimensions,
not of degree or amount.</p>
<p>The object desired and the attainment of desire are
no more alike than a signboard on the road is like the
garage to which it points and which it recommends to
the traveler. Desire is the forward urge of living creatures.
When the push and drive of life meets no obstacle,
there is nothing which we call desire. There is
just life-activity. But obstructions present themselves,
and activity is dispersed and divided. Desire is the outcome.
It is activity surging forward to break through
what dams it up. The "object" which then presents
itself in thought as the goal of desire is the object of
the environment <em>which, if it were present</em>, would secure
<span class="pb" id="Pg250"></span>
a re-unification of activity and the restoration of its
ongoing unity. The end-in-view of desire is that object
which were it present would link into an organized
whole activities which are now partial and competing.
It is no more like the actual end of desire, or the
resulting state attained, than the coupling of cars
which have been separated is like an ongoing single
train. Yet the train cannot go on without the coupling.</p>
<p>Such statements may seem contrary to common sense.
The pertinency of the illustration used will be denied.
No man desires the signboard which he sees, he desires
the garage, the objective, the ulterior thing. But does
he? Or is the garage simply a means by which a divided
body of activities is redintegrated or coordinated?
Is it desired in any sense for itself, or only because it is
the means of effective adjustment of a whole set of underlying
habits? While common sense responds to the
ordinary statement of the end of desire, it also responds
to a statement that no one desires the object
for its own sake, but only for what can be got out of it.
Here is just the point at which the theory that pleasure
is the real objective of desire makes its appeal. It
points out that not the physical object nor even its
possession is really wanted; that they are only means
to something personal and experiential. And hence it
is argued that they are means to pleasure. The present
hypothesis offers an alternative: it says that they
are means of removal of obstructions to an ongoing,
unified system of activities. It is easy to see why an
objective looms so large and why emotional surge
<span class="pb" id="Pg251"></span>
and stress gather about it and lift it high above the
floor of consciousness. The objective is (or is taken to
be) the key to the situation. If we can attain it, lay
hold of it, the trick is turned. It is like the piece of
paper which carries the reprieve a condemned man
waits for. Issues of life hang upon it. The desired object
is in no sense the end or goal of desire, but it is
the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sine qua non</i> of that end. A practical man will fix
his attention upon it, and not dream about eventualities
which are only dreams if the objective is not attained,
but which will follow in their own natural course
if it is reached. For then it becomes a factor in the
system of activities. Hence the truth in the various so-called
paradoxes of desire. If pleasure or perfection
were the true end of desire, it would still be true that
the way to attainment is not to think of them. For
object thought of and object achieved exist in different
dimensions.</p>
<p>In addition to the popular notions that either the object
in view or else pleasure is the end of desire, there
is a less popular theory that quiescence is the actual
outcome or true terminal of desire. The theory finds
its most complete practical statement in Buddhism. It
is nearer the psychological truth than either of the
other notions. But it views the attained outcome simply
in its negative aspect. The end reached quiets the
clash and removes the discomfort attendant upon divided
and obstructed activity. The uneasiness, unrest,
characteristic of desire is put to sleep. For this reason,
some persons resort to intoxicants and anodynes. If
<span class="pb" id="Pg252"></span>
quiescence were the end and it could be perpetuated,
this way of removing disagreeable uneasiness would be
as satisfactory a way out as the way of objective effort.
But in fact desire satisfied does not bring quiescence
unqualifiedly, but that <em>kind</em> of quiescence which marks
the recovery of unified activity: the absence of internal
strife among habits and instincts. Equilibration of activities
rather than quiescence is the actual result of
satisfied desire. This names the outcome positively,
rather than comparatively and negatively.</p>
<p>This disparity of dimensions in desire between the
object thought of and the outcome reached is the explanation
of those self-deceptions which psycho-analysis
has brought home to us so forcibly, but of which it
gives elaborately cumbrous accounts. The object
thought of and the outcome <em>never</em> agree. There is no
self-deceit in this fact. What, then, really happens
when the actual outcome of satisfied revenge figures in
thought as virtuous eagerness for justice? Or when
the tickled vanity of social admiration is masked as
pure love of learning? The trouble lies in the refusal
of a person to note the quality of the outcome, not in
the unavoidable disparity of desire's object and the outcome.
The honest or integral mind attends to the result,
and sees what it really is. For no terminal condition
is exclusively terminal. Since it exists in time it
has consequences as well as antecedents. In being a
consummation it is also a force having causal potentialities.
It is initial as well as terminal.</p>
<p>Self-deception originates in looking at an outcome in
<span class="pb" id="Pg253"></span>
one direction only—as a satisfaction of what has gone
before, ignoring the fact that what is attained is a state
of habits which will continue in action and which will
determine future results. Outcomes of desire are also
beginnings of new acts and hence are portentous. Satisfied
revenge may <em>feel</em> like justice vindicated; the
prestige of learning may <em>feel</em> like an enlargement and
rectification of an objective outlook. But since different
instincts and habits have entered into them, they
are actually, that is dynamically, unlike. The function
of moral judgment is to detect this unlikeness. Here,
again, the belief that we can know ourselves immediately
is as disastrous to moral science as the corresponding
idea regarding knowledge of nature was to physical
science. Obnoxious "subjectivity" of moral judgment
is due to the fact that the immediate or esthetic quality
swells and swells and displaces the thought of the active
potency which gives activity its moral quality.</p>
<p>We are all natural Jack Horners. If the plum comes
when we put in and pull out our thumb we attribute
the satisfactory result to personal virtue. The plum
is obtained, and it is not easy to distinguish obtaining
from attaining, acquisition from achieving. Jack Horner,
Esq., put forth <em>some</em> effort; and results and efforts
are always more or less incommensurate. For the
result is always dependent to some extent upon the
favor or disfavor of circumstance. Why then should
not the satisfactory plum shed its halo retrospectively
upon what precedes and be taken as a sign of virtue?
In this way heroes and leaders are constructed. Such
<span class="pb" id="Pg254"></span>
is the worship of success. And the evil of success-worship
is precisely the evil with which we have been
dealing. "Success" is never merely final or terminal.
Something else succeeds it, and its successors are influenced
by its nature, that is by the persisting habits
and impulses that enter into it. The world does not
stop when the successful person pulls out his plum;
nor does he stop, and the kind of success he obtains,
and his attitude toward it, is a factor in what comes
afterwards. By a strange turn of the wheel, the success
of the ultra-practical man is psychologically like
the refined enjoyment of the ultra-esthetic person. Both
ignore the eventualities with which every state of experience
is charged. There is no reason for not enjoying
the present, but there is every reason for examination
of the objective factors of <em>what</em> is enjoyed before
we translate enjoyment into a belief in excellence.
There is every reason in other words for cultivating another
enjoyment, that of the habit of examining the
productive potentialities of the objects enjoyed.</p>
<p>Analysis of desire thus reveals the falsity of theories
which magnify it at the expense of intelligence. Impulse
is primary and intelligence is secondary and in
some sense derivative. There should be no blinking of
this fact. But recognition of it as a fact exalts intelligence.
For thought is not the slave of impulse to
do its bidding. Impulse does not know what it is after;
it cannot give orders, not even if it wants to. It rushes
blindly into any opening it chances to find. Anything
that expends it, satisfies it. One outlet is like another
<span class="pb" id="Pg255"></span>
to it. It is indiscriminate. Its vagaries and excesses
are the stock theme of classical moralists; and while
they point the wrong moral in urging the abdication
of impulse in favor of reason, their characterization of
impulse is not wholly wrong. What intelligence has to
do in the service of impulse is to act not as its obedient
servant but as its clarifier and liberator. And this can
be accomplished only by a study of the conditions and
causes, the workings and consequences of the greatest
possible variety of desires and combinations of desire.
Intelligence converts desire into plans, systematic plans
based on assembling facts, reporting events as they happen,
keeping tab on them and analyzing them.</p>
<p>Nothing is so easy to fool as impulse and no one is
deceived so readily as a person under strong emotion.
Hence the idealism of man is easily brought to naught.
Generous impulses are aroused; there is a vague anticipation,
a burning hope, of a marvelous future. Old
things are to pass speedily away and a new heavens
and earth are to come into existence. But impulse burns
itself up. Emotion cannot be kept at its full tide. Obstacles
are encountered upon which action dashes itself
into ineffectual spray. Or if it achieves, by luck, a
transitory success, it is intoxicated, and plumes itself
on victory while it is on the road to sudden defeat.
Meantime, other men, not carried away by impulse, use
established habits and a shrewd cold intellect that manipulates
them. The outcome is the victory of baser
desire directed by insight and cunning over generous
desire which does not know its way.</p>
<p><span class="pb" id="Pg256"></span>
The realistic man of the world has evolved a regular
technique for dealing with idealistic outbursts that
threaten his supremacy. His aims are low, but he
knows the means by which they are to be executed. His
knowledge of conditions is narrow but it is effective
within its confines. His foresight is limited to results
that concern personal success, but is sharp, clearcut.
He has no great difficulty in drafting the idealistic
desire of others with its vague enthusiasms and its
cloudy perceptions into canals where it will serve his
own purposes. The energies excited by emotional idealism
run into the materialistic reservoirs provided by
the contriving thought of those who have not surrendered
their minds to their sentiment.</p>
<p>The glorification of affection and aspiration at the
expense of thought is a survival of romantic optimism.
It assumes a pre-established harmony between natural
impulse and natural objects. Only such a harmony
justifies the belief that generous feeling will find its
way illuminated by the sheer nobility of its own quality.
Persons of a literary turn of mind are as subject
to this fallacy as intellectual specialists are apt to the
contrary fallacy that theorizing apart from force of
impulse and habit will get affairs forward. They tend
to fancy that things are as pliant to imagination as
are words, that an emotion can compose affairs as if
they were materials for a lyric poem. But if the objects
of the environment were only as plastic as the
materials of poetic art, men would never have been
obliged to have recourse to creation in the medium of
<span class="pb" id="Pg257"></span>
words. We idealize in fancy because our idealizations
in fact are balked. And while the latter must start
with imaginative idealizations instigated by release of
generous impulse, they can be carried through only
when the hard labor of observation, memory and foresight
weds the vision of imagination to the organized
efficiencies of habit.</p>
<p>Sometimes desire means not bare impulse but impulse
which has sense of an objective. In this case desire and
thought cannot be opposed, for desire includes thought
within itself. The question is now how far the work of
thought has been done, how adequate is its perception
of its directing object. For the moving force may be
a shadowy presentiment constructed by wishful hope
rather than by study of conditions; it may be an emotional
indulgence rather than a solid plan built upon
the rocks of actuality discovered by accurate inquiries.
There is no thought without the impeding of impulse.
But the obstruction may merely intensify its blind surge
forward; or it may divert the force of forward impulse
into observation of existing conditions and forecast of
their future consequences. This long way around is
the short way home for desire.</p>
<p>No issue of morals is more far-reaching than the one
herewith sketched. Historically speaking, there is
point in the attacks of those who speak slightingly of
science and intellect, and who would limit their moral
significance to supplying incidental help to execution
of purposes born of affection. Thought too often is
specialized in a remote and separate pursuit, or employed
<span class="pb" id="Pg258"></span>
in a hard way to contrive the instrumentalities
of "success." Intellect is too often made a tool for a
systematized apology for things as "they are," that
is for customs that benefit the class in power, or else
a road to an interesting occupation which accumulates
facts and ideas as other men gather dollars, while
priding itself on its ideal quality. No wonder that at
times catastrophes that affect men in common are welcomed.
For the moment they turn science away from
its abstract technicalities into a servant of some human
aspiration; the hard, chilly calculations of intellect are
swept away by floods of sympathy and common
loyalties.</p>
<p>But, alas, emotion without thought is unstable. It
rises like the tide and subsides like the tide irrespective
of what it has accomplished. It is easily diverted into
any side channel dug by old habits or provided by cool
cunning, or it disperses itself aimlessly. Then comes
the reaction of disillusionment, and men turn all the
more fiercely to the pursuit of narrow ends where they
are habituated to use observation and planning and
where they have acquired some control of conditions.
The separation of warm emotion and cool intelligence
is the great moral tragedy. This division is perpetuated
by those who deprecate science and foresight in
behalf of affection as it is by those who in the name of
an idol labeled reason would quench passion. The intellect
is always inspired by some impulse. Even the
most case-hardened scientific specialist, the most abstract
philosopher, is moved by some passion. But
<span class="pb" id="Pg259"></span>
an actuating impulse easily hardens into isolated habit.
It is unavowed and disconnected. The remedy
is not lapse of thought, but its quickening and
extension to contemplate the continuities of existence,
and restore the connection of the isolated desire to
the companionship of its fellows. The glorification of
"will" apart from thought turns out either a commitment
to blind action which serves the purpose of
those who guide their deeds by narrow plans, or else
a sentimental, romantic faith in the harmonies of nature
leading straight to disaster.</p>
<p>In words at least, the association of idealism with
emotion and impulse has been repeatedly implied in
the foregoing. The connection is more than verbal.
Every end that man holds up, every project he entertains
is ideal. It marks something wanted, rather than
something existing. It is wanted because existence as it
<em>now</em> is does not furnish it. It carries with itself, then,
a sense of contrast to the achieved, to the existent.
It outruns the seen and touched. It is the work of
faith and hope even when it is the plan of the most
hard-headed "practical" man. But though ideal in
this sense it is not <em>an</em> ideal. Common sense revolts at
calling every project, every design, every contrivance of
cunning, ideal, because common sense includes above all
in its conception of the ideal the <em>quality</em> of the plan
proposed.</p>
<p>Idealistic revolt is blind and like every blind reaction
sweeps us away. The quality of the ideal is exalted till
it is something beyond all possibility of definite plan and
<span class="pb" id="Pg260"></span>
execution. Its sublimity renders it inaccessibly remote.
An ideal becomes a synonym for whatever is inspiring—and
impossible. Then, since intelligence cannot be
wholly suppressed, the ideal is hardened by thought
into some high, far-away object. It is so elevated and
so distant that it does not belong to this world or to
experience. It is in technical language, transcendental;
in common speech, supernatural, of heaven not of
earth. The ideal is then a goal of final exhaustive,
comprehensive perfection which can be defined only by
complete contrast with the actual. Although impossible
of realization and of conception, it is still regarded
as the source of all generous discontent with actualities
and of all inspiration to progress.</p>
<p>This notion of the nature and office of ideals combines
in one contradictory whole all that is vicious in
the separation of desire and thought. It strives while
retaining the vagueness of emotion to simulate the
objective definiteness of thought. It follows the natural
course of intelligence in demanding an object which
will unify and fulfil desire, and then cancels the work
of thought by treating the object as ineffable and unrelated
to present action and experience. It converts
the surge of present impulse into a future end only to
swamp the endeavor to clarify this end in a gush of
unconsidered feeling. It is supposed that the thought
of the ideal is necessary to arouse dissatisfaction with
the present and to arouse effort to change it. But in
reality the ideal is itself the product of discontent with
conditions. Instead however of serving to organize and
<span class="pb" id="Pg261"></span>
direct effort, it operates as a compensatory dream. It
becomes another ready-made world. Instead of promoting
effort at concrete transformations of what exists,
it constitutes another kind of existence already
somewhere in being. It is a refuge, an asylum from
effort. Thus the energy that might be spent in transforming
present ills goes into oscillating flights into a
far away perfect world and the tedium of enforced returns
into the necessities of the present evil world.</p>
<p>We can recover the genuine import of ideals and
idealism only by disentangling this unreal mixture of
thought and emotion. The action of deliberation, as
we have seen, consists in selecting some foreseen consequence
to serve as a stimulus to present action. It
brings future possibilities into the present scene and
thereby frees and expands present tendencies. But the
selected consequence is set in an indefinite context of
other consequences just as real as it is, and many of
them much more certain in fact. The "ends" that
are foreseen and utilized mark out a little island in an
infinite sea. This limitation would be fatal were the
proper function of ends anything else than to liberate
and guide present action out of its perplexities and
confusions. But this service constitutes the sole meaning
of aims and purposes. Hence their slight extent
in comparison with ignored and unforeseen consequences
is of no import in itself. The "ideal" as it
stands in popular thought, the notion of a complete
and exhaustive realization, is remote from the true
functions of ends, and would only embarrass us if it
<span class="pb" id="Pg262"></span>
could be embraced in thought instead of being, as it is,
a comment by the emotions.</p>
<p>For the sense of an indefinite context of consequences
from among which the aim is selected enters into the
<em>present</em> meaning of activity. The "end" is the figured
pattern at the center of the field through which runs
the axis of conduct. About this central figuration extends
infinitely a supporting background in a vague
whole, undefined and undiscriminated. At most intelligence
but throws a spotlight on that little part of the
whole which marks out the axis of movement. Even
if the light is flickering and the illuminated portion
stands forth only dimly from the shadowy background,
it suffices if we are shown the way to move. To the rest
of the consequences, collateral and remote, corresponds
a background of feeling, of diffused emotion. This
forms the stuff of the ideal.</p>
<p>From the standpoint of its <em>definite</em> aim any act is
petty in comparison with the totality of natural events.
What is accomplished directly as the outcome of a turn
which our action gives the course of events is infinitesimal
in comparison with their total sweep. Only an
illusion of conceit persuades us that cosmic difference
hangs upon even our wisest and most strenuous effort.
Yet discontent with this limitation is as <ins class="corr" title="unreasonble" id="Corr_262_">unreasonable</ins> as
relying upon an illusion of external importance to keep
ourselves going. In a genuine sense every act is already
possessed of infinite import. The little part of the
scheme of affairs which is modifiable by our efforts is
continuous with the rest of the world. The boundaries
<span class="pb" id="Pg263"></span>
of our garden plot join it to the world of our neighbors
and our neighbors' neighbors. That small effort which
we can put forth is in turn connected with an infinity of
events that sustain and support it. The consciousness
of this encompassing infinity of connections is ideal.
When a sense of the infinite reach of an act physically
occurring in a small point of space and occupying a
petty instant of times comes home to us, the <em>meaning</em> of
a present act is seen to be vast, immeasurable, unthinkable.
This ideal is not a goal to be attained. It
is a significance to be felt, appreciated. Though consciousness
of it cannot become intellectualized (identified
in objects of a distinct character) yet emotional
appreciation of it is won only by those willing to think.</p>
<p>It is the office of art and religion to evoke such appreciations
and intimations; to enhance and steady them
till they are wrought into the texture of our lives. Some
philosophers define religious consciousness as beginning
where moral and intellectual consciousness leave off. In
the sense that definite purposes and methods shade off
of necessity into a vast whole which is incapable of objective
presentation this view is correct. But they have
falsified the conception by treating the religious consciousness
as something that comes <em>after</em> an experience
in which striving, resolution and foresight are found.
To them morality and science are a striving; when striving
ceases a moral holiday begins, an excursion beyond
the utmost flight of legitimate thought and endeavor.
But there is a point in <em>every</em> intelligent activity where
effort ceases; where thought and doing fall back upon a
<span class="pb" id="Pg264"></span>
course of events which effort and reflection cannot
touch. There is a point <em>in</em> deliberate action where definite
thought fades into the ineffable and undefinable—into
emotion. If the sense of this effortless and unfathomable
whole comes only in alternation with the sense of
strain in action and labor in thought, then we spend
our lives in oscillating between what is cramped and
enforced and a brief transitory escape. The function
of religion is then caricatured rather than realized.
Morals, like war, is thought of as hell, and religion,
like peace, as a respite. The religious experience is a
reality in so far as in the midst of effort to foresee
and regulate future objects we are sustained and expanded
in feebleness and failure by the sense of an
enveloping whole. Peace in action not after it is the
contribution of the ideal to conduct.</p>
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