Unconscious Memory(Fiscle Part-3), Samuel Butler [the best motivational books .txt] 📗
- Author: Samuel Butler
Book online «Unconscious Memory(Fiscle Part-3), Samuel Butler [the best motivational books .txt] 📗». Author Samuel Butler
Making Mistakes." Passing Over The Fact That Instinct Is Again
Personified, The Statement Is Still Incorrect. Instinctive Actions
Are Certainly, As A General Rule, Performed With Less Uncertainty
Than Deliberative Ones; This Is Explicable By The Fact That They Have
Been More Often Practised, And Thus Reduced More Completely To A
Matter Of Routine; But Nothing Is More Certain Than That Animals
Acting Under The Guidance Of Inherited Experience Or Instinct
Frequently Make Mistakes Which With Further Practice They Correct.
Von Hartmann Has Abundantly Admitted That The Manner Of An
Instinctive Action Is Often Varied In Correspondence With Variation
In External Circumstances. It Is Impossible To See How This Does Not
Involve Both Possibility Of Error And The Connection Of Instinct With
Deliberation At One And The Same Time. The Fact Is Simply This--When
An Animal Finds Itself In A Like Position With That In Which It Has
Already Often Done A Certain Thing In The Persons Of Its Forefathers,
It Will Do This Thing Well And Easily: When It Finds The Position
Somewhat, But Not Unrecognisably, Altered Through Change Either In
Its Own Person Or In The Circumstances Exterior To It, It Will Vary
Its Action With Greater Or Less Ease According To The Nature Of The
Change In The Position: When The Position Is Gravely Altered The
Animal Either Bungles Or Is Completely Thwarted.
Not Only Does Von Hartmann Suppose That Instinct May, And Does,
Involve Knowledge Antecedent To, And Independent Of, Experience--An
Idea As Contrary To The Tendency Of Modern Thought As That Of
Spontaneous Generation, With Which Indeed It Is Identical Though
Presented In Another Shape--But He Implies By His Frequent Use Of The
Word "Unmittelbar" That A Result Can Come About Without Any Cause
Whatever. So He Says, "Um Fur Die Unbewusster Erkenntniss, Welche
Nicht Durch Sinnliche Wahrnehmung Erworben, Sondern Als Unmittelbar
Besitz," &C. {144a} Because He Does Not See Where The Experience Can
Have Been Gained, He Cuts The Knot, And Denies That There Has Been
Experience. We Say, Look More Attentively And You Will Discover The
Time And Manner In Which The Experience Was Gained.
Again, He Continually Assumes That Animals Low Down In The Scale Of
Life Cannot Know Their Own Business Because They Show No Sign Of
Knowing Ours. See His Remarks On Saturnia Pavonia Minor (Page 107),
And Elsewhere On Cattle And Gadflies. The Question Is Not What Can
They Know, But What Does Their Action Prove To Us That They Do Know.
With Each Species Of Animal Or Plant There Is One Profession Only,
And It Is Hereditary. With Us There Are Many Professions, And They
Are Not Hereditary; So That They Cannot Become Instinctive, As They
Would Otherwise Tend To Do.
Chapter 9 Pg 117
He Attempts {144b} To Draw A Distinction Between The Causes That Have
Produced The Weapons And Working Instruments Of Animals, On The One
Hand, And Those That Lead To The Formation Of Hexagonal Cells By
Bees, &C., On The Other. No Such Distinction Can Be Justly Drawn.
The Ghost-Stories Which Von Hartmann Accepts Will Hardly Be Accepted
By People Of Sound Judgment. There Is One Well-Marked Distinctive
Feature Between The Knowledge Manifested By Animals When Acting
Instinctively And The Supposed Knowledge Of Seers And Clairvoyants.
In The First Case, The Animal Never Exhibits Knowledge Except Upon
Matters Concerning Which Its Race Has Been Conversant For
Generations; In The Second, The Seer Is Supposed To Do So. In The
First Case, A New Feature Is Invariably Attended With Disturbance Of
The Performance And The Awakening Of Consciousness And Deliberation,
Unless The New Matter Is Too Small In Proportion To The Remaining
Features Of The Case To Attract Attention, Or Unless, Though Really
New, It Appears So Similar To An Old Feature As To Be At First
Mistaken For It; With The Second, It Is Not Even Professed That The
Seer's Ancestors Have Had Long Experience Upon The Matter Concerning
Which The Seer Is Supposed To Have Special Insight, And I Can Imagine
No More Powerful A Priori Argument Against A Belief In Such Stories.
Close Upon The End Of His Chapter Von Hartmann Touches Upon The One
Matter Which Requires Consideration. He Refers The Similarity Of
Instinct That Is Observable Among All Species To The Fact That Like
Causes Produce Like Effects; And I Gather, Though He Does Not
Expressly Say So, That He Considers Similarity Of Instinct In
Successive Generations To Be Referable To The Same Cause As
Similarity Of Instinct Between All The Contemporary Members Of A
Species. He Thus Raises The One Objection Against Referring The
Phenomena Of Heredity To Memory Which I Think Need Be Gone Into With
Any Fulness. I Will, However, Reserve This Matter For My Concluding
Chapters.
Von Hartmann Concludes His Chapter With A Quotation From Schelling,
To The Effect That The Phenomena Of Animal Instinct Are The True
Touchstone Of A Durable Philosophy; By Which I Suppose It Is Intended
To Say That If A System Or Theory Deals Satisfactorily With Animal
Instinct, It Will Stand, But Not Otherwise. I Can Wish Nothing
Better Than That The Philosophy Of The Unconscious Advanced By Von
Hartmann Be Tested By This Standard.
Chapter 10 Pg 118
Recapitulation And Statement Of An Objection.
The True Theory Of Unconscious Action, Then, Is That Of Professor
Hering, From Whose Lecture It Is No Strained Conclusion To Gather
That He Holds The Action Of All Living Beings, From The Moment Of
Their Conception To That Of Their Fullest Development, To Be Founded
In Volition And Design, Though These Have Been So Long Lost Sight Of
That The Work Is Now Carried On, As It Were, Departmentally And In
Due Course According To An Official Routine Which Can Hardly Now Be
Departed From.
This Involves The Older "Darwinism" And The Theory Of Lamarck,
According To Which The Modification Of Living Forms Has Been Effected
Mainly Through The Needs Of The Living Forms Themselves, Which Vary
With Varying Conditions, The Survival Of The Fittest (Which, As I See
Mr. H. B. Baildon Has Just Said, "Sometimes Comes To Mean Merely The
Survival Of The Survivors" {146}) Being Taken Almost As A Matter Of
Course. According To This View Of Evolution, There Is A Remarkable
Analogy Between The Development Of Living Organs Or Tools And That Of
Those Organs Or Tools External To The Body Which Has Been So Rapid
During The Last Few Thousand Years.
Animals And Plants, According To Professor Hering, Are Guided
Throughout Their Development, And Preserve The Due Order In Each Step
Which They Take, Through Memory Of The Course They Took On Past
Occasions When In The Persons Of Their Ancestors. I Am Afraid I Have
Already Too Often Said That If This Memory Remains For Long Periods
Together Latent And Without Effect, It Is Because The Undulations Of
The Molecular Substance Of The Body Which Are Its Supposed
Explanation Are During These Periods Too Feeble To Generate Action,
Until They Are Augmented In Force Through An Accession Of Suitable
Undulations Issuing From Exterior Objects; Or, In Other Words, Until
Recollection Is Stimulated By A Return Of The Associated Ideas. On
This The Eternal Agitation Becomes So Much Enhanced, That Equilibrium
Is Visibly Disturbed, And The Action Ensues Which Is Proper To The
Vibration Of The Particular Substance Under The Particular
Conditions. This, At Least, Is What I Suppose Professor Hering To
Intend.
Chapter 10 Pg 119
Leaving The Explanation Of Memory On One Side, And Confining
Ourselves To The Fact Of Memory Only, A Caterpillar On Being Just
Hatched Is Supposed, According To This Theory, To Lose Its Memory Of
The Time It Was In The Egg, And To Be Stimulated By An Intense But
Unconscious Recollection Of The Action Taken By Its Ancestors When
They Were First Hatched. It Is Guided In The Course It Takes By The
Experience It Can Thus Command. Each Step It Takes Recalls A New
Recollection, And Thus It Goes Through Its Development As A Performer
Performs A Piece Of Music, Each Bar Leading His Recollection To The
Bar That Should Next Follow.
In "Life And Habit" Will Be Found Examples Of The Manner In Which
This View Solves A Number Of Difficulties For The Explanation Of
Which The Leading Men Of Science Express Themselves At A Loss. The
Following From Professor Huxley's Recent Work Upon The Crayfish May
Serve For An Example. Professor Huxley Writes:-
"It Is A Widely Received Notion That The Energies Of Living Matter
Have A Tendency To Decline And Finally Disappear, And That The Death
Of The Body As A Whole Is A Necessary Correlate Of Its Life. That
All Living Beings Sooner Or Later Perish Needs No Demonstration, But
It Would Be Difficult To Find Satisfactory Grounds For The Belief
That They Needs Must Do So. The Analogy Of A Machine, That Sooner Or
Later Must Be Brought To A Standstill By The Wear And Tear Of Its
Parts, Does Not Hold, Inasmuch As The Animal Mechanism Is Continually
Renewed And Repaired; And Though It Is True That Individual
Components Of The Body Are Constantly Dying, Yet Their Places Are
Taken By Vigorous Successors. A City Remains Notwithstanding The
Constant Death-Rate Of Its Inhabitants; And Such An Organism As A
Crayfish Is Only A Corporate Unity, Made Up Of Innumerable Partially
Independent Individualities."--The Crayfish, P. 127.
Surely The Theory Which I Have Indicated Above Makes The Reason Plain
Why No Organism Can Permanently Outlive Its Experience Of Past Lives.
The Death Of Such A Body Corporate As The Crayfish Is Due To The
Social Condition Becoming More Complex Than There Is Memory Of Past
Experience To Deal With. Hence Social Disruption, Insubordination,
And Decay. The Crayfish Dies As A State Dies, And All States That We
Have Heard Of Die Sooner Or Later. There Are Some Savages Who Have
Not Yet Arrived
Comments (0)