<h3> CHAPTER VI <br/> UTILITY </h3>
<p>We have seen in the last chapter that pragmatism is
both a criticism and a theory. It shows us that the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P56"></SPAN>56}</span>
notion that truth is correspondence involves the
conception of an "impossible" knowledge, and the notion
that truth is coherence or consistency involves the
conception of a "useless" knowledge. The explanation
pragmatism itself offers is of the kind that is called in
the technical language of philosophy teleological. This
means that to explain or to give a meaning to truth
all we can do is to point out the purpose on account of
which it exists. This is not scientific explanation.
Physical science explains a fact or an event by showing
the conditions which give rise to it or that determine
its character. Pragmatism recognises no conditions
determining truth such as those which science embodies
in the conception of a natural law—that is, the idea of
a connection of natural events with one another which
is not dependent on human thoughts about them nor
on human purposes in regard to them. Truth is in
intimate association with human practical activity; its
meaning lies wholly in its utility. We must therefore
now examine somewhat closely this notion of utility.</p>
<p>There appears to me to be a serious defect in the
pragmatist conception and application of the principle
of utility; it is based on a conception altogether too
narrow. A theory that condemns any purely logical
process as resulting in "useless" knowledge can only
justify itself by insisting on an application of the
principle of utility that will be found to exclude not
merely the Absolute of philosophy but most if not all
of the results of pure mathematics and physics, for these
sciences apply a method of pure logical deduction and
induction indistinguishable from that which pragmatism
condemns. The intellectual nature of man is an
endowment which sharply distinguishes him from other
forms of living creatures. So supreme a position does
our intellect assign to us, so wide is the gap that separates
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P57"></SPAN>57}</span>
us from other creatures little different from ourselves
in respect of perfection of material organisation and
adaptation to environment, that it seems almost natural
to suppose that our intellect is that for which we exist,
and not merely a mode of controlling, directing, and
advancing our life. Now it is possible to hold—and this
is the view that I shall endeavour in what follows to
develop—that the intellect is subservient to life, and that
we can show the manner and method of its working and
the purpose it serves. So far we may agree with the
pragmatist, but it is not the same thing to say that the
intellect serves a useful purpose and to say that truth,
the ideal of the intellect, the end which it strives for, is
itself only a utility. Were there no meaning in truth
except that it is what works, were there no meaning
independent of and altogether distinct from the practical
consequences of belief, of what value to us would the
intellect be? If the meaning the intellect assigns to
truth is itself not true, how can the intellect serve us?
The very essence of its service is reduced to nought; for
what else but the conception of an objective truth, a
logical reality independent of any and every psychological
condition, is the utility that the intellect puts
us in possession of? It is this conception alone that
constitutes it an effective mode of activity. Therefore,
if we hold with the pragmatist that the intellect is
subservient to life, truth is indeed a utility, but it is a
utility just because it has a meaning distinct from
usefulness. On the other hand, to condemn any knowledge
as "useless" is to deny utility to the intellect.</p>
<p>Before I try to show that the logical method of the
idealist philosophy, which pragmatism condemns because
it leads to "useless" knowledge, is identical in every
respect with the method employed in pure mathematics
and physics, I will give for comparison two illustrations
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P58"></SPAN>58}</span>
that seem to me instances of a narrow and of a wide
use of the concept of utility.</p>
<p>A short time ago an orang-utang escaped from its
cage in the Zoological Gardens under somewhat singular
and very interesting circumstances. The cage was
secured with meshed wire of great strength, judged
sufficient to resist the direct impact of the most powerful
of the carnivora; but the ape, by attention to the twisting
of the plied wire, had by constant trying succeeded in
loosening and finally in unwinding a large section. It
escaped from its enclosure, and after doing considerable
damage in the corridor, including the tearing out of a
window frame, made its way into the grounds and took
refuge in a tree, twisting the branches into a platform
said to be similar to the constructions it makes in its
native forests.</p>
<p>In taking this action as an illustration, I am not
concerned with the question of what may be the distinction
between action that is intelligent and action that is
instinctive. If we take intelligence in a wide and general
meaning, we may compare the intelligence shown by this
ape with the intelligence shown by man in the highest
processes of the mind. Psychologists would, I think,
be unanimous in holding that in the mind of the ape
there was no conception of freedom, no kind of mental
image of unrestricted life and of a distinct means of
attaining it, no clearly purposed end, the means of
attaining which was what prompted the undoing of the
wire, such as we should certainly suppose in the case of
a man in a similar situation. It was the kind of intelligent
action that psychologists denote by the description
"trial and error." It seems to me, however, that this
exactly fulfils the conditions that the pragmatist doctrine
of the meaning of truth require. We see the intellect
of the ape making true by finding out what works.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P59"></SPAN>59}</span>
We can suppose an entire absence of the idea of objective
truth to which reality must conform, of truth unaffected
by purpose. Here, then, we seem to have the pure type
of truth in its simplest conditions, a practical activity
using intelligence to discover what works. Is the difference
between this practical activity and the higher mental
activities as we employ them in the abstract sciences one
of degree of complexity only, or is it different in kind?</p>
<p>Let us consider now, as an illustration of the method
of the abstract sciences, the well-known case of the
discovery of the planet Neptune. This planet was
discovered by calculation and deduction, and was only
seen when its position had been so accurately
determined that the astronomers who searched for it knew
exactly the point of the heavens to which to direct their
telescopes. The calculation was one of extraordinary
intricacy, and was made independently by two
mathematicians, Adams of Cambridge and Leverrier of Paris,
between the years 1843 and 1846. Each communicated
his result independently—Adams to the astronomer
Challis, the Director of the Cambridge Observatory,
and Leverrier to Dr. Galle of the Berlin Observatory.
Within six weeks of one another and entirely unknown
to one another, in August and September 1846, each of
these astronomers observed the planet where he had
been told to look for it. This is one of the romances
of modern science. It is not the discovery but the
method that led to it which may throw light on our
problem of the nature of truth.</p>
<p>At first sight this seems exactly to accord with and
even to illustrate the pragmatist theory, that truth is
what works. The investigation is prompted by the
discrepancies between the actual and the calculated
positions of Uranus, the outermost planet, as it was then
supposed, of the system. This revealed a need, and this
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P60"></SPAN>60}</span>
need was met by the practical postulate of the
existence of another planet as yet unseen. The hypothesis
was found to work even before the actual observation
put the final seal of actuality on the discovery. What
else but the practical consequences of the truth claim
in the form of the hypothesis of an undiscovered planet
were ever in question? Yes, we reply, but the actual
method adopted, and the knowledge sought for by the
method, are precisely of the kind that pragmatism
rejects as "useless" knowledge. Why were not the
observed movements of Uranus accepted as what they
were? Why was it felt that they must be other than
they were seen to be unless there was another planet?
The need lay in the idea of system. It was inconsistent
with the system then believed complete, and the need
was to find the complete system in which it would
harmonise. The truth that was sought for was a
harmonious individual whole, and the method employed
precisely that which the Absolutist theory of reality
employs. There is observed a discrepancy, an
inconsistency, a contradiction within the whole conceived as
a system. This negation is treated as a defect, is
calculated and accurately determined, and is then
positively affirmed of the reality. Now, what is distinctive
in this method is that reality is conceived as a complete
system. If the felt defect in this system cannot be
made good by direct discovery, its place is supplied by
a fiction, using the term in its etymological meaning to
express something made and not in its derived meaning
to express something found false. This intellectual
process of construction is purely logical; no psychological
element in the sense of the will to believe enters
into it or colours it in any way.</p>
<p>This is not an isolated instance, it illustrates the
method of science in all theorising. An even more
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P61"></SPAN>61}</span>
striking illustration than that we have just given is the
case of the hypothesis of the luminiferous æther—a
supposed existence, a fiction, that has served a useful,
even an indispensable service in the history of modern
physics. To many physicists, even to Lord Kelvin, the
hypothesis seemed so surely established that its
nonexistence hardly seemed thinkable, yet all the
experiments designed to detect its presence have been
uniformly negative in result, and it now seems not even
necessary as a hypothesis, and likely to disappear. The
æther was not only not discovered, it was not even
suspected to exist, as in the case of the unknown planet
Neptune—it was logically constructed. It was required
to support the theory of the undulatory nature of light
and to fulfil the possibility of light propagation in space.
It was therefore a postulate, called forth by a need—so
far we may adopt the pragmatist account. But
what was the nature of the need, and what was the
method by which the postulate was called forth? It
is in answering this question that the pragmatist
criterion fails. The need was intellectual in the purely
logical meaning of the term, and it was met by a purely
logical construction. The need was a practical human
need only in so far as the intellect working by logical
process is a human endowment but not in any personal
sense such as is conveyed by the term psychological.
Willingness or unwillingness to believe, desire, aversion,
interest were all irrelevant. Given the intellect, the
logical necessity was the only need that called forth by
logical process the "truth-claiming" hypothesis of the
æther. But even so, the pragmatist will urge, is its
truth anything else but its usefulness as shown in the
practical consequences of believing it? Was it not
true while it was useful, and is it not only now false, if
it is false, if it is actually discovered not to be useful?
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P62"></SPAN>62}</span>
The reply is that no mathematician or physicist would
recognise the possibility of working with a conception
of truth that simply identified truth with utility, and
for this reason that he can only conceive reality as a
system whose truth is symbolised in an equation. It
is the system that determines and characterises the
postulate, and not the postulate advanced at a venture,
tried and verified, that constitutes the system. The
mathematician begins by placing symbols to represent
the unknown factors in his equation, and proceeds by
means of his known factors to determine their value.
The æther is at first a pure fiction constructed to supply
an unknown existence recognised as a defect. Its truth
cannot mean that it works for it cannot but work,
having been constructed purely for that purpose. Its
truth means that it corresponds to some actual
existence at present unknown. To prove its truth the
physicist does not appeal to its value as a hypothesis,
but devises experiments by which, if it does exist, its
existence will be demonstrated. In this actual case the
experiments have had a uniformly negative result, and
therefore the truth of the hypothesis is made doubtful
or denied. The hypothesis continues to work as well
as it ever did, and physicists will probably long
continue to use it, but it has failed to establish its truth
claim. The result is the modern Principle of Relativity,
which, as we have already said, has produced a
revolution in modern physics. The abolition of the æther
would have been impossible if the physicist had been
content with the utility of his hypothesis and had not
experimented to prove its truth. The relation between
truth and utility is thus proved to be that it is useful
to know what is true.</p>
<p>These two illustrations of scientific method—namely,
the discovery of Neptune and the negative discovery
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P63"></SPAN>63}</span>
that the æther is non-existent—make it evident that
verification is the intellectual process not of making
true, but of finding true. We can, indeed, distinguish
quite clearly the two processes. The first process, that
of making true, is the constructing of the fiction by
which we complete an incomplete system, and the
second is the testing of that fiction to see if it
corresponds to anything actually existing. No kind of
intellectual activity will make an idea true, and conversely
we may say that were truth only a utility, then
knowledge instead of being systematic would be chaotic.
Existence has its roots in reality, not in knowledge.
Reality does not depend on truth. Truth is the
intellectual apprehension of reality.</p>
<p>If the pragmatist objects that in this argument I
have throughout supposed him to be urging the narrow
meaning of utility, namely, that it is usefulness in the
strictly practical sense, whereas he intends it in the
widest possible meaning—a meaning that includes
theoretical usefulness—then the trouble is a different
one; it is to know how and where the pragmatist stops
short of the coherence theory of truth, and wherein his
method differs from that of the idealist.</p>
<p>This brings me to the consideration of another theory
in which the concept of utility plays a large, indeed a
predominant part. This is the theory of the relation
of knowledge to life that is given to us in the philosophy
of Bergson. I have in one of the volumes of this series
given an account of this philosophy; I am here only dealing
with its relation to this special problem of the nature
of truth. It has been claimed that this philosophy is
only a form of pragmatism, but it is not a theory of
truth, and it has this essential difference from
pragmatism that it is the intellect and not truth that is a
utility. Before we consider the question that it gives
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P64"></SPAN>64}</span>
rise to in regard to truth, let us first examine the theory
of the intellect, and the nature of its utility. The
intellect is a mode of activity, an endowment acquired
in the course of evolution, and which has been retained
and perfected because of its utility. This does not
mean that the intellect directs us to what is useful and
inhibits us from courses fatal to life, neither does it
mean that it gives us any power to make true what is
not already true, it means that the power to acquire
knowledge is useful. There is a contrast in our own
existence between our life and our intellect.</p>
<p>To understand the way in which the intellect serves
the living creature endowed with it, we need only regard
it from the standpoint of ordinary experience. We
know in ourselves that our life is wider than our intellect,
and that our intellect serves the activity of our life.
The common expressions we employ, such as using our
wits, taking an intelligent interest, trying to think, all
imply a utility distinct from the intellect. So viewed,
our life appears as an active principle within us,
maintaining our organism in its relations, active and passive,
and reactive to the reality outside and independent of
it. Our intellect also seems both active and passive.
It receives the influences that stream in upon us from
the reality around us, it apprehends and interprets
them, and works out the lines of our possible action in
regard to them. The influences that flow in upon us
from the outside world are already selected before our
intellect apprehends them, for they flow in by the
avenues of our senses, and the senses are natural
instruments of selection. If we picture these influences as
vibrations, then we may say that a certain group of
vibrations of a very rapid frequency are selected by
the eye and give rise to vision, that another group of very
much lower frequency are selected by the ear and
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P65"></SPAN>65}</span>
give the sensation of sound, and other groups are
selected by taste, smell, and touch. Many groups are
known indirectly by means of artificial instruments,
and all the infinite series that unite these groups of the
actually experienced vibrations escape our apprehension
altogether—we have no means of selecting them.
But all these sense data, as we may call them, come to
us without exertion or activity on our part; it is the
intellect which gives them meaning, which interprets
them, which makes them the apprehension or awareness
of objects or things. And the active part that the
intellect plays is also a process of selection. This is
evident if we reflect upon the universal form which our
intellectual activity takes, namely, attention. It is in
the act of attention that we are conscious of mental
activity, and attention is essentially selection—the
selection of an interest. Besides the natural selection that
is effected by our senses and the conscious selection that
is manifest in attention, there is also a more or less
arbitrary selection that our intellect performs in
marking out the lines of our practical interest and possible
action. In this work of selection the intellect makes
the world conform to the necessities of our action.</p>
<p>So far we have looked at our intellectual endowment
from the standpoint of ordinary common-sense
experience. Let us now consider the philosophical theory
based on this view, which explains the nature of
knowledge by showing its purpose. The intellect not only
selects, but in selecting transforms the reality. It
presents us with knowledge that indeed corresponds
with reality, for it is essentially a view of reality, but also
in selecting it marks out divisions, and gives to reality
a form that is determined by practical interest. The
same reality is different to different individuals and to
different species according to their practical interests.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P66"></SPAN>66}</span>
The practical end which the human intellect serves is
to present us with a field for our life activity. This
is the real world for us, as we know it, real objects in a
real space. Had we no other way of knowing but that
of our intellect we should not know the life which is
active within us as it is really lived, we should be as
those who, standing outside, watch a movement, and
not as those who are carried along in the movement
and experience it from within. In life and intellect we
have the counterpart of reality and appearance. Life
is not something that changes; it is the change of which
the something is the appearance. Life is the reality of
which all things, as we understand them, are the
appearances, and on account of which they appear. The solid
things in space and time are not in reality what they
appear; they are views of the reality. The intellect
guided by our practical interest presents reality under
this form of solid spatial things. Clearly, then, if this
view be true, the whole world, as it is presented to us
and thought of by us, is an illusion. Our science is not
unreal, but it is a transformed reality. The illusions
may be useful, may, indeed, be necessary and indispensable,
but nevertheless it is illusion.</p>
<p>But here there arises a new difficulty in regard to
truth. If the usefulness of the intellect consists in the
active production of an illusion, can we say that the
intellect leads us to truth? Is it not only if we can
turn away from the intellect and obtain a non-intellectual
intuition that we can know truth?</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
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<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P67"></SPAN>67}</span></p>
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