<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P60"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXII"></SPAN>XII<br/> PRIMITIVE THOUGHT</h2>
<p>And now let us indulge in a very interesting speculation; how did it feel to be
a man in those early days of the human adventure? How did men think and what
did they think in those remote days of hunting and wandering four hundred
centuries ago before seed time and harvest began. Those were days long before
the written record of any human impressions, and we are left almost entirely to
inference and guesswork in our answers to these questions.</p>
<p>The sources to which scientific men have gone in their
attempts to reconstruct that primitive mentality are very
various. Recently the science of psycho-analysis, which
analyzes the way in which the egotistic and passionate
impulses of the child are restrained, suppressed, modified or
overlaid, to adapt them to the needs of social life, seems to
have thrown a considerable amount of light upon the history
of primitive society; and another fruitful source of
suggestion has been the study of the ideas and customs of
such contemporary savages as still survive. Again there is a
sort of mental fossilization which we find in folk-lore and
the deep-lying irrational superstitions and prejudices that
still survive among modern civilized people. And finally we
have in the increasingly numerous pictures, statues,
carvings, symbols and the like, as we draw near to our own
time, clearer and clearer indications of what man found
interesting and worthy of record and representation.</p>
<p>Primitive man probably thought very much as a child thinks,
that is to say in a series of imaginative pictures. He
conjured up images or images presented themselves to his
mind, and he acted in accordance with the emotions they
aroused. So a child or an uneducated person does to-day.
Systematic thinking is apparently a comparatively late
development in human experience; it has not <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P61"></SPAN></span>played any great
part in human life until within the last three thousand
years. And even to-day those who really control and order
their thoughts are but a small minority of mankind. Most of
the world still lives by imagination and passion.</p>
<p>Probably the earliest human societies, in the opening stages
of the true human story, were small family groups. Just as
the flocks and herds of the earlier mammals arose out of
families which remained together and multiplied, so probably
did the earliest tribes. But before this could happen a
certain restraint upon the primitive egotisms of the
individual had to be established. The fear of the father and
respect for the mother had to be extended into adult life,
and the natural jealousy of the old man of the group for the
younger males as they grew up had to be mitigated. The
mother on the other hand was the natural adviser and
protector of the young. Human social life grew up out of the
reaction between the crude instinct of the young to go off
and pair by themselves as they grew up, on the one hand, and
the dangers and disadvantages of separation on the other. An
anthropological writer of great genius, J. J. Atkinson, in
his <i>Primal Law</i>, has shown how much of the customary
law of savages, the <i>Tabus</i>, that are so remarkable a
fact in tribal life, can be ascribed to such a mental
adjustment of the needs of the primitive human animal to a
developing social life, and the later work of the psycho-
analysts has done much to confirm his interpretation of these
possibilities.</p>
<p>Some speculative writers would have us believe that respect
and fear of the Old Man and the emotional reaction of the
primitive savage to older protective women, exaggerated in
dreams and enriched by fanciful mental play, played a large
part in the beginnings of primitive religion and in the
conception of gods and goddesses. Associated with this
respect for powerful or helpful personalities was a dread and
exaltation of such personages after their deaths, due to
their reappearance in dreams. It was easy to believe they
were not truly dead but only fantastically transferred to a
remoteness of greater power.</p>
<p>The dreams, imaginations and fears of a child are far more
vivid and real than those of a modern adult, and primitive
man was always something of a child. He was nearer to the
animals <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P62"></SPAN></span>also, and he could suppose them to
have motives and reactions like his own. He could imagine
animal helpers, animal enemies, animal gods. One needs to
have been an imaginative child oneself to realize again how
important, significant, portentous or friendly, strangely
shaped rocks, lumps of wood, exceptional trees or the like
may have appeared to the men of the Old Stone Age, and how
dream and fancy would create stories and legends about such
things that would become credible as they told them. Some of
these stories would be good enough to remember and tell
again. The women would tell them to the children and so
establish a tradition. To this day most imaginative children
invent long stories in which some favourite doll or animal or
some fantastic semi-human being figures as the hero, and
primitive man probably did the same—with a much
stronger disposition to believe his hero real.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-62"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-62.jpg" alt="RELICS OF THE STONE AGE" width-obs="400" height-obs="350" /> <p class="caption">
RELICS OF THE STONE AGE
<br/>
<small>Chert implements from Somaliland. In general form they are
similar to those found in Western and Northern Europe
<br/>
<i>Brit. Mus.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>For the very earliest of the true men that we know of were
probably quite talkative beings. In that way they have
differed from the Neanderthalers and had an advantage over
them. The Neanderthaler may have been a dumb animal. Of
course the primitive <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P63"></SPAN></span>human speech was probably a very
scanty collection of names, and may have been eked out with
gestures and signs.</p>
<p>There is no sort of savage so low as not to have a kind of
science of cause and effect. But primitive man was not very
critical in his associations of cause with effect; he very
easily connected an effect with something quite wrong as its
cause. “You do so and so,” he said, “and so
and so happens.” You give a child a poisonous berry
and it dies. You eat the heart of a valiant enemy and you
become strong. There we have two bits of cause and effect
association, one true one false. We call the system of cause
and effect in the mind of a savage, Fetish; but Fetish is
simply savage science. It differs from modern science in
that it is totally unsystematic and uncritical and so more
frequently wrong.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-63"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-63.jpg" alt="WIDESPREAD SIMILARITY OF MEN OF THE STONE AGE" width-obs="550" height-obs="442" /> <p class="caption">
WIDESPREAD SIMILARITY OF MEN OF THE STONE AGE
<br/>
<small>On the left is a flint implement excavated in Gray’s
Inn Lane, London; on the right one of similar form chipped by
primitive men of Somaliland
<br/>
<i>Brit. Mus.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>In many cases it is not difficult to link cause and effect,
in <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P64"></SPAN></span>many
others erroneous ideas were soon corrected by experience; but
there was a large series of issues of very great importance
to primitive man, where he sought persistently for causes and
found explanations that were wrong but not sufficiently wrong
nor so obviously wrong as to be detected. It was a matter of
great importance to him that game should be abundant or fish
plentiful and easily caught, and no doubt he tried and
believed in a thousand charms, incantations and omens to
determine these desirable results. Another great concern of
his was illness and death. Occasionally infections crept
through the land and men died of them. Occasionally men were
stricken by illness and died or were enfeebled without any
manifest cause. This too must have given the hasty,
emotional mind of primitive man much feverish exercise.
Dreams and fantastic guesses made him blame this, or appeal
for help to that man or beast or thing. He had the
child’s aptitude for fear and panic.</p>
<p>Quite early in the little human tribe, older, steadier minds
sharing the fears, sharing the imaginations, but a little
more forceful than the others, must have asserted themselves,
to advise, to prescribe, to command. This they declared
unpropitious and that imperative, this an omen of good and
that an omen of evil. The expert in Fetish, the Medicine
Man, was the first priest. He exhorted, he interpreted
dreams, he warned, he performed the complicated hocus pocus
that brought luck or averted calamity. Primitive religion
was not so much what we now call religion as practice and
observance, and the early priest dictated what was indeed an
arbitrary primitive practical science.</p>
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