Egotism in German Philosophy

Part 10

Chapter 101,006 wordsPublic domain

The whole transcendental philosophy, if made ultimate, is false, and nothing but a private perspective. The will is absolute neither in the individual nor in humanity. Nature is not a product of [Pg 168] the mind, but on the contrary there is an external world, ages prior to any idea of it, which the mind recognises and feeds upon. There is a steady human nature within us, which our moods and passions may wrong but cannot annul. There is no categorical imperative but only the operation of instincts and interests more or less subject to discipline and mutual adjustment. Our whole life is a compromise, an incipient loose harmony between the passions of the soul and the forces of nature, forces which likewise generate and protect the souls of other creatures, endowing them with powers of expression and self-assertion comparable with our own, and with aims no less sweet and worthy in their own eyes; so that the quick and honest mind cannot but practise courtesy in the universe, exercising its will without vehemence or forced assurance, judging with serenity, and in everything discarding the word absolute as the most false and the most odious of words. As Montaigne observes, "He who sets before him, as in a picture, this vast image of our mother Nature in her entire majesty; who reads in her aspect such universal and continual variety; who discerns himself therein, and not himself only but a whole kingdom, to be but a most delicate dot--he alone esteems things according to the just measure of their greatness."

[Pg 169] INDEX

Alexander the Great, a model for German idealists, 80, 81 Aristotle, 120, 124

Belief in God, disproved pragmatically, 134 Bull-psychology, 148, 153 Burckhardt, 47 Byron, 48, 49

Cæsar Borgia, a superman, 138 Calvinism, in Kant, 57; in Fichte, 25, 77; in Hegel, 111 Categorical imperative, its origin, 56; its prerogatives, 62; its dangers, 63 Chancellor, the German, his chivalrous after-thought about Belgium, 50 Christianity, foreign to Germany, 11; undermined by German philosophy, 104, 105; patronised by Goethe, 46; abandoned by romantic individualists, 107; denounced by Nietzsche, 130-132; has one element in common with egotism, 106 Classicism, romantic in Goethe, 46; missed by Nietzsche, 139-142; when truly vital, 48 Conquest, a sublime duty, 80, 81 Contraries, alleged to be inseparable, 89, 90 Criticism, historical, has a transcendental basis, 29 _Critique of Pure Reason_, its agnosticism, 14; its sophistical foundation, 20

Durer, 27

Egotism, defined, 6; distinguished from selfishness, 95-97, 100-102, 118; based on error, 167; implicit in the Kantian imperative and postulates, 62-64; implies integrity, force, self-complacency, 163-166; is odious in pedants, 142 Emerson, 24, 49; quoted, 119 England, judged by Fichte, 76 Evil, justified, 123, 132-134

Faith, German conception of it, 13, 27; corroborated only by itself, 31, 68 Faust, typical egotist, 13, 14; prefigures the evolution of Germany, 50, 51, 157; improves on Saint John, 52 Fichte, 65-83

_Gemüth_, why self-conscious, 160 German ethics, its faults, 103 German language, its merits, 75 German nation, its purity, 75; its mission, 78, 79; in what sense the chosen people, 73, 74; necessary to the continued existence of God, 68; and of history, 79; its fortunes, 158-160 German philosophy, not all philosophy in Germany, 11; primitive, 27; subjective, 12; in what senses idealistic, 15; in what sense not so, 16; ambiguous, 17, 18; a revelation, 22; must continually be proved afresh, 26; is a work of genius, 155 Gobineau, 77 Goethe, 43-53; quoted, 159, 165 Good and evil above right and wrong, 124 Gospel, amended by Faust, 52; glossed by Hegelians, 105

Happiness, not for the egotist, 14, 15; he despises it, 152; not abstract nor absolute, 110, 111; attainable, 118; its nature, 152, 153 Heathenism, use of the word, 144; contrast with paganism, 145, 146; its modern form, 147, 148 Hegel, 84-98 Human nature, 117, 118

Idealism, meanings of the word, 15, 16; fosters practical materialism, 5, 69-72, 78, 81, 82; should be imposed on the young, 80; its mystical issue, 38-40 Ideals, when captious, when solid, 137 Infinity, evaded by Hegel, 88, 89; recognised again by Schopenhauer, 108, 109

Kant, 54-64; 25, 34, 35, 42 Knowledge, assumed to be impossible, 15; abuse of the term, 39, 60

Leibniz, anticipates transcendentalism, 33; his insidious theology, 104 Lessing, on truth, 129 Locke, sets the ball rolling, 32 Luther, 135, 157

Max Stirner, 99-103; quoted, 73 Montaigne, quoted, 168 Music, 16, 161 Musset, 49 Mysticism, in knowledge, 38-40; in morals, 123

Nietzsche, 114-143

Optimism, egotistical, 25, 111, 114, 116, 118, 119

Passion, not naturally egotistical, 101; may become so, 95, 98; dull in egotists, 165, 166 Paulsen, 42 Perception, terminates in things not in ideas, 19 Pessimism, inherits disregard of intrinsic values, 109; reacts against optimism, 25, 111; is arbitrary, 116 Pier Gynt, typical egotist, 13, 14 Plato, his idealism contrasted with the German, 16; his oppressive politics, 81; on inspiration, 141 Postulates of practical reason, equivocal, 58-64 Power, divers meanings of the word, 125-127 Preservation, no law of nature, 115 Progress, when illusory, 17; when real, 112 Protestantism, 21-31, 151

Religion in German philosophy, 7, 13, 75, 76, 82, 83 Rome and German genius, 150

Schopenhauer, 108-122 Selfishness, distinguished from egotism, 95, 97, 100-102, 118 Society, its alleged consciousness, 17, 18; a "spook," 99 Socrates, 146 Spinoza, religious feeling transferred to nature, 24; his mysticism in ethics, 123 Spirit, its meanings, 37; its mystic unity, 38 State, the absolute, an idol, 96-98 Substance, egotistical use of the term, 17, 92 Superman, 136-143

Tender minds, how attracted to German philosophy, 24 Transcendentalism, 32-42 Truth, a figment of the will, 28; made in Germany, 88; less valuable than illusion, 14, 128-130; not the strong point of philosophies, 154

Understanding, hostility of Hegel to the, 90, 91

Wagner, 136, 150 War, a boon, 96; how it should be started, 79; is to rage for two hundred years, 115 Wilhelm Meister, 44 Will, used metaphorically, 36, 114; should be disinterested, 67; may be fulfilled in defeat, 66, 67; is unstable and indeterminate, 156-158; may be denied, 119, 120 Winkelmann, 140, note