- What do you hope to create in your life that will outlast it?
- Do you consider it a mark of education to "dally" with suicide?
- Do you agree that maybe is the right answer to "Is life worth living?"
- Could you resign yourself to a hopeless life? Would that life be worth living?
- Do you believe in an "unseen order"? Must you, to be religious?
- Are you willing to "go further than secular skeptics" with respect to religious experience? 181
- What sorts of experiences give you a feeling of eagerness, zest, reality, importance, etc.?
- Have you had an experience you'd describe as "mystical"?
- Do you ever "tap into the sublime"? 182
- Have you ever had an unbidden moment of "perfect exhilaration"?
William James
OUR judgments concerning the worth of things, big or little, depend on the feelings the things arouse in us. Where we judge a thing to be precious in consequence of the idea we frame of it, this is only because the idea is itself associated already with a feeling. If we were radically feelingless, and if ideas were the only things our mind could entertain, we should lose all our likes and dislikes at a stroke, and be unable to point to any one situation or experience in life more valuable or significant than any other.
Now the blindness in human beings, of which this discourse will treat, is the blindness with which we all are afflicted in regard to the feelings of creatures and people different from ourselves.
We are practical beings, each of us with limited functions and duties to perform. Each is bound to feel intensely the importance of his own duties and the significance of the situations that call these forth. But this feeling is in each of us a vital secret, for sympathy with which we vainly look to others. The others are too much absorbed in their own vital secrets to take an interest in ours. Hence the stupidity and injustice of our opinions, so far as they deal with the significance of alien lives. Hence the falsity of our judgments, so far as they presume to decide in an absolute way on the value of other persons' conditions or ideals.
Take our dogs and ourselves, connected as we are by a tie more intimate than most ties in this world; and yet, outside of that tie of friendly fondness, how insensible, each of us, to all that makes life significant for the other!—we to the rapture of bones under hedges, or smells of trees and lamp-posts, they to the delights of literature and art. As you sit reading the most moving romance you ever fell upon, what sort of a judge is your fox-terrier of your behavior? With all his good will toward you, the nature of your conduct is absolutely excluded from his comprehension. To sit there like a senseless statue, when you might be taking him to walk and throwing sticks for him to catch! What queer disease is this that comes over you every day, of holding things and staring at them like that for hours together, paralyzed of motion and vacant of all conscious life? The African savages came nearer the truth; but they, too, missed it, when they gathered wonderingly round one of our American travellers who, in the interior, had just come into possession of a stray copy of the New York Commercial Advertiser, and was devouring it column by column. When he got through, they offered him a high price for the mysterious object; and, being asked for what they wanted it, they said: "For an eye medicine,"—that being the only reason they could conceive of for the protracted bath which he had given his eyes upon its surface.
The spectator's judgment is sure to miss the root of the matter, and to possess no truth. The subject judged knows a part of the world of reality which the judging spectator fails to see, knows more while the spectator knows less; and, wherever there is conflict of opinion and difference of vision, we are bound to believe that the truer side is the side that feels the more, and not the side that feels the less.
Let me take a personal example of the kind that befalls each one of us daily:—
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A PLURALISTIC MYSTICNot for the ignoble vulgar do I write this article, but only for those dialectic-mystic souls who have an irresistible taste, acquired or native, for higher flights of metaphysics. I have always held the opinion that one of the first duties of a good reader is to summon other readers to the enjoyment of any unknown author of rare quality whom he may discover in his explorations. Now for years my own taste, literary as well as philosophic, has been exquisitely titillated by a writer the name of whom I think must be unknown to the readers of this article; so I no longer continue silent about the merits of Benjamin Paul Blood.
Mr. Blood inhabits a city otherwise, I imagine, quite unvisited by the Muses, the town called Amsterdam, situated on the New York Central Railroad. What his regular or bread-winning occupation may be I know not, but it can’t have made him super-wealthy. He is an author only when the fit strikes him, and for short spurts at a time; shy, moreover, to the point of publishing his compositions only as private tracts, or in letters to such far-from-reverberant organs of publicity as the Gazette or the Recorder of his native Amsterdam, or the Utica Herald or the Albany Times. Odd places for such subtile efforts to appear in, but creditable to American editors in these degenerate days! Once, indeed, the lamented W. T. Harris of the old “Journal of Speculative Philosophy” got wind of these epistles, and the result was a revision of some of them for that review (Philosophic Reveries, 1889). Also a couple of poems were reprinted from their leaflets by the editor of Scribner’s Magazine (“The Lion of the Nile,” 1888, and| “Nemesis,” 1899). But apart from these three dashes before the footlights, Mr. Blood has kept behind the curtain all his days.[2]
The author’s maiden adventure was the Anesthetic Revelation, a pamphlet printed privately at Amsterdam in 1874. I forget how it fell into my hands, but it fascinated me so “weirdly” that I am conscious of its having been one of the stepping-stones of my thinking ever since. It gives the essence of Blood’s philosophy, and shows most of the features of his talent–albeit one finds in it little humor and no verse. It is full of verbal felicity, felicity sometimes of precision, sometimes of metaphoric reach; it begins with dialectic reasoning, of an extremely Fichtean and Hegelian type, but it ends in a trumpet-blast of oracular mysticism, straight from the insight wrought by anaesthetics–of all things in the world–and unlike anything one ever heard before. The practically unanimous tradition of “regular” mysticism has been unquestionably monistic; and inasmuch as it is the characteristic of mystics to speak, not as the scribes, but as men who have “been there” and seen with their own eyes, I think that this sovereign manner must have made some other pluralistic-minded students hesitate, as I confess that it has often given pause to me. One cannot criticise the vision of a mystic–one can but pass it by, or else accept it as having some amount of evidential weight. I felt unable to do either with a good conscience until I met with Mr. Blood. His mysticism, which may, if one likes, be understood as monistic in this earlier utterance, develops in the later ones a sort of “left-wing” voice of defiance, and breaks into what to my ear has a radically pluralistic sound. I confess that the existence of this novel brand of mysticism has made my cowering mood depart. I feel now as if my own pluralism were not without the kind of support which mystical corroboration may confer. Morrison can no longer claim to be the only beneficiary of whatever right mysticism may possess to lend prestige.
This is my philosophic, as distinguished from my literary, interest, in introducing Mr. Blood to this more fashionable audience: his philosophy, however mystical, is in the last resort not dissimilar from my own... (continues)
“Ever not quite!”–this seems to wring the very last panting word out of rationalistic philosophy’s mouth. It is fit to be pluralism’s heraldic device. There is no complete generalization, no total point of view, no all-pervasive unity, but everywhere some residual resistance to verbalization, formulation, and discursification, some genius of reality that escapes from the pressure of the logical finger, that says “hands off,” and claims its privacy, and means to be left to its own life. In every moment of immediate experience is somewhat absolutely original and novel. “We are the first that ever burst into this silent sea.” Philosophy must pass from words, that reproduce but ancient elements, to life itself, that gives the integrally new. The “inexplicable,” the “mystery,” as what the intellect, with its claim to reason out reality, thinks that it is in duty bound to resolve, and the resolution of which Blood’s revelation would eliminate from the sphere of our duties, remains; but it remains as something to be met and dealt with by faculties more akin to our activities and heroisms and willingnesses, than to our logical powers. This is the anesthetic insight, according to our author. Let my last word, then, speaking in the name of intellectual philosophy, be his word.–“There is no conclusion. What has concluded, that we might conclude in regard to it? There are no fortunes to be told, and there is no advice to be given.–Farewell!”
1. The greatest use of life is what, according to WJ?
ReplyDeleteThe greatest use of life “is to spend it on something that will outlast it.” (Kaag, p. 169
2. What did WJ write to Benjamin Blood about education?
WJ wrote to Mr. Blood that “no man is educated who has never dallied with the thought of suicide.”
3. What was WJ's final entreaty in "On a Certain Blindness in Human Beings"?
“In James’s final entreaty in ‘One a Certain Blindness,’ he reminded his readers that they often don’t have a clue about how other people experience the meaning of their lives. Better to leave it a ‘maybe.’” (Kaag, p. 172)
4. What does WJ say is the difference between resignation and hope?
ReplyDeleteThe human characteristic he called “willingness to live on a chance. The existence of chance makes the difference…between a life of which the keynote is resignation and a life of which the keynote is hope.” (Kaag, p. 174)
5. What would we lose, if we were without feeling?
“If we were radically feelingless, and if ideas were the only things our mind could entertain, we should lose all our likes and dislikes at a stroke, and be unable to point to any one situation or experience in life more valuable or significant than any other.” (WJ, On Certain Blindness, p. 1)
6. When does a life become "genuinely significant"?
“Wherever a process of life communicates an eagerness to him who lives it, there the life becomes genuinely significant.” (WJ, On Certain Blindness, p. 3)
7. "To miss ___ ___ is to miss all."
ReplyDelete“For to miss the joy is to miss all.”
8. "Life is always worth living" if you have responsive sensibilities like ____'s.
Emerson’s
9. What is distinctive about B.P. Blood's version of mysticism?
B. P. Bloods mysticism, which was monastic in the beginning, develops later into “a sort of ‘left-wing’ voice of defiance, and breaks into what to my ear has a radically pluralistic sound.” according to WJ (A Pluralistic Mystic, p. 1)
10. What's WJ's last word in philosophy?
James writes, “Let my last word, then, speaking in the name of intellectual philosophy, be his (Blood’s) word. ‘There is no conclusion. What has concluded, that we might conclude in regard to it? There are no fortunes to be told, and there is no advice to be given. -Farewell!’” (A Pluralistic Mystic, Last page)
The first bit of that last word is surely right, "there is no conclusion"... but there's plenty of advice to be given, beginning with WJ's own: "Hands off" others ways of pursuing happiness, trust your spontaneity, allow yourself to feel, be receptive to joy... and as he says in "What Makes a Life Significant," persevere on behalf of your "un-habitual ideals"...
ReplyDeleteCould you resign yourself to a hopeless life? Would that life be worth living?
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely. Life is about more than just hope. Experience is always happening weither or not we hope for it to happen. I assume without hope we would live far more fufilling lives. Mostly becasue we wouldn't get distracted by a life that we hope one day will come. Even though I can't help myself from wishing for better I feel like if I learned to be content with what is actually happening I would be far better off in general.
What do you hope to create in your life that will outlast it?
ReplyDeleteTo put shortly: A family. In fact, among the greatest pleasures derived from family is knowing that all for which you worked will continue to live. A good family not only allows one to pass on their estate along with all of its physical property. A family also gives on the opportunity to pass on one's wisdom and have it built upon.
Moreover, I think it needs to be mentioned that family does not necessarily need to be blood. Family can be found in an adopted child or even a form of mentorship. Family can also be found within the community in which on lives. These too can serve as vessels to carry on your wisdom and materiel possessions.