21.
CHAPTER XXI
NATURALISM AND HUMANISM:
ALLUSION has already been made to the conflict of natural science with
literary studies for a place in the curriculum. The solution thus far
reached consists essentially in a somewhat mechanical compromise whereby
the field is divided between studies having nature and studies having
man as their theme. The situation thus presents us with another
instance of the external adjustment of educational values, and focuses
attention upon the philosophy of the connection of nature with human
affairs. In general, it may be said that the educational division finds
a reflection in the dualistic philosophies. Mind and the world are
regarded as two independent realms of existence having certain points of
contact with each other. From this point of view it is natural that
each sphere of existence should have its own separate group of studies
connected with it; it is even natural that the growth of scientific
studies should be viewed with suspicion as marking a tendency of
materialistic philosophy to encroach upon the domain of spirit. Any
theory of education which contemplates a more unified scheme of
education than now exists is under the necessity of facing the question
of the relation of man to nature.
1. The Historic Background of Humanistic Study.
—It is noteworthy that classic Greek philosophy does not present
the problem in its modern form. Socrates indeed appears to have thought
that science of nature was not attainable and not very important. The
chief thing to know is the nature and end of man. Upon that knowledge
hangs all that is of deep significance—all moral and social
achievement. Plato, however, makes right knowledge of man and society
depend upon knowledge of the essential features of nature. His chief
treatise, entitled the Republic, is at once a treatise on morals, on
social organization, and on the metaphysics and science of nature.
Since he accepts the Socratic doctrine that right achievement in the
former depends upon rational knowledge, he is compelled to discuss the
nature of knowledge. Since he accepts the idea that the ultimate object
of knowledge is the discovery of the good or end of man, and is
discontented with the Socratic conviction that all we know is our own
ignorance, he connects the discussion of the good of man with
consideration of the essential good or end of nature itself. To attempt
to determine the end of man apart from a knowledge of the ruling end
which gives law and unity to nature is impossible. It is thus quite
consistent with his philosophy that he subordinates literary studies
(under the name of music) to mathematics and to physics as well as to
logic and metaphysics. But on the other hand, knowledge of nature is
not an end in itself; it is a necessary stage in bringing the mind to a
realization of the supreme purpose of existence as the law of human
action, corporate and individual. To use the modern phraseology,
naturalistic studies are indispensable, but they are in the interests of
humanistic and ideal ends.
Aristotle goes even farther, if anything, in the direction of
naturalistic studies. He subordinates
(Ante, p. 298)
civic relations to the purely cognitive life. The highest end of man
is not human but divine—participation in pure knowing which
constitutes the divine life. Such knowing deals with what is universal
and necessary, and finds, therefore, a more adequate subject matter in
nature at its best than in the transient things of man. If we take what
the philosophers stood for in Greek life, rather than the details of what
they say, we might summarize by saying that the Greeks were too much
interested in free inquiry into natural fact and in the æsthetic
enjoyment of nature, and were too deeply conscious of the extent in which
society is rooted in nature and subject to its laws, to think of bringing
man and nature into conflict. Two factors conspire in the later period of
ancient life, however, to exalt literary and humanistic studies. One is
the increasingly reminiscent and borrowed character of culture; the other
is the political and rhetorical bent of Roman life.
Greek achievement in civilization was native; the civilization of the
Alexandrians and Romans was inherited from alien sources. Consequently
it looked back to the records upon which it drew, instead of looking out
directly upon nature and society, for material and inspiration. We
cannot do better than quote the words of Hatch to indicate the
consequences for educational theory and practice. "Greece on one hand
had lost political power, and on the other possessed in her splendid
literature an inalienable heritage.... It was natural that she should
turn to letters. It was natural also that the study of letters should
be reflected upon speech.... The mass of men in the Greek world tended
to lay stress on that acquaintance with the literature of bygone
generations, and that habit of cultivated speech, which has ever since
been commonly spoken of as education.... Our own comes by direct
tradition from it. It set a fashion which until recently has uniformly
prevailed over the entire civilized world. We study literature rather
than nature because the Greeks did so, and because when the Romans and
the Roman provincials resolved to educate their sons, they employed
Greek teachers and followed in Greek paths."
[13]
The so-called practical bent of the Romans worked in the same direction.
In falling back upon the recorded ideas of the Greeks, they not only
took the short path to attaining a cultural development, but they
procured just the kind of material and method suited to their
administrative talents. For their practical genius was not directed to
the conquest and control of nature but to the conquest and control of
men.
Mr. Hatch, in the passage quoted, takes a good deal of history for
granted in saying that we have studied literature rather than nature
because the Greeks, and the Romans whom they taught, did so. What is
the link that spans the intervening centuries? The question suggests
that barbarian Europe but repeated on a larger scale and with increased
intensity the Roman situation. It had to go to school to Greco-Roman
civilization; it also borrowed rather than evolved its culture. Not
merely for its general ideas and their artistic presentation but for its
models of law it went to the records of alien peoples. And its
dependence upon tradition was increased by the dominant theological
interests of the period. For the authorities to which the Church
appealed were literatures composed in foreign tongues. Everything
converged to identify learning with linguistic training and to make the
language of the learned a literary language instead of the mother
speech.
The full scope of this fact escapes us, moreover, until we recognize
that this subject matter compelled recourse to a dialectical method.
Scholasticism frequently has been used since the time of the revival of
learning as a term of reproach. But all that it means is the method of
The Schools, or of the School Men. In its essence, it is nothing but a
highly effective systematization of the methods of teaching and learning
which are appropriate to transmit an authoritative body of truths.
Where literature rather than contemporary nature and society furnishes
material of study, methods must be adapted to defining, expounding, and
interpreting the received material, rather than to inquiry, discovery,
and invention. And at bottom what is called Scholasticism is the
whole-hearted and consistent formulation and application of the methods
which are suited to instruction when the material of instruction is
taken ready-made, rather than as something which students are to find
out for themselves. So far as schools still teach from textbooks and
rely upon the principle of authority and acquisition rather than upon
that of discovery and inquiry, their methods are Scholastic—minus
the logical accuracy and system of Scholasticism at its best. Aside
from laxity of method and statement, the only difference is that
geographies and histories and botanies and astronomies are now part of
the authoritative literature which is to be mastered.
As a consequence, the Greek tradition was lost in which a humanistic
interest was used as a basis of interest in nature, and a knowledge of
nature used to support the distinctively human aims of man. Life found
its support in authority, not in nature. The latter was moreover an
object of considerable suspicion. Contemplation of it was dangerous,
for it tended to draw man away from reliance upon the documents in which
the rules of living were already contained. Moreover nature could be
known only through observation; it appealed to the senses—which
were merely material as opposed to a purely immaterial mind.
Furthermore, the utilities of a knowledge of nature were purely physical
and secular; they connected with the bodily and temporal welfare of man,
while the literary tradition concerned his spiritual and eternal
well-being.
2. The Modern Scientific Interest in Nature.
—The movement of the fifteenth century which is variously termed
the revival of learning and the renascence was characterized by a new
interest in man's present life, and accordingly by a new interest in his
relationships with nature. It was naturalistic, in the sense that it
turned against the dominant supernaturalistic interest. It is possible
that the influence of a return to classic Greek pagan literature in
bringing about this changed mind has been overestimated. Undoubtedly
the change was mainly a product of contemporary conditions. But there
can be no doubt that educated men, filled with the new point of view,
turned eagerly to Greek literature for congenial sustenance and
reënforcement. And to a considerable extent, this interest in Greek
thought was not in literature for its own sake, but in the spirit it
expressed. The mental freedom, the sense of the order and beauty of
nature, which animated Greek expression, aroused men to think and
observe in a similar untrammeled fashion. The history of science in the
sixteenth century shows that the dawning sciences of physical nature
largely borrowed their points of departure from the new interest in
Greek literature. As Windelband has said, the new science of nature was
the daughter of humanism. The favorite notion of the time was that man
was in microcosm that which the universe was in macrocosm.
This fact raises anew the question of how it was that nature and man
were later separated and a sharp division made between language and
literature and the physical sciences. Four reasons may be suggested.
(a) The old tradition was firmly entrenched in institutions.
Politics, law, and diplomacy remained of necessity branches of
authoritative literature, for the social sciences did not develop until
the methods of the sciences of physics and chemistry, to say nothing of
biology, were much further advanced. The same is largely true of
history. Moreover, the methods used for effective teaching of the
languages were well developed; the inertia of academic custom was on
their side. Just as the new interest in literature, especially Greek,
had not been allowed at first to find lodgment in the scholastically
organized universities, so when it found its way into them it joined
hands with the older learning to minimize the influence of experimental
science. The men who taught were rarely trained in science; the men who
were scientifically competent worked in private laboratories and through
the medium of academies which promoted research, but which were not
organized as teaching bodies. Finally, the aristocratic tradition which
looked down upon material things and upon the senses and the hands was
still mighty.
(b) The Protestant revolt brought with it an immense increase of
interest in theological discussion and controversies. The appeal on
both sides was to literary documents. Each side had to train men in
ability to study and expound the records which were relied upon. The
demand for training men who could defend the chosen faith against the
other side, who were able to propagandize and to prevent the
encroachments of the other side, was such that it is not too much to say
that by the middle of the seventeenth century the linguistic training of
gymnasia and universities had been captured by the revived theological
interest, and used as a tool of religious education and ecclesiastical
controversy. Thus the educational descent of the languages as they are
found in education to-day is not direct from the revival of learning,
but from its adaptation to theological ends.
(c) The natural sciences were themselves conceived in a way which
sharpened the opposition of man and nature. Francis Bacon presents an
almost perfect example of the union of naturalistic and humanistic
interest. Science, adopting the methods of observation and
experimentation, was to give up the attempt to "anticipate"
nature—to impose preconceived notions upon her—and was to
become her humble interpreter. In obeying nature intellectually, man
would learn to command her practically. "Knowledge is power." This
aphorism meant that through science man is to control nature and turn
her energies to the execution of his own ends. Bacon attacked the old
learning and logic as purely controversial, having to do with victory in
argument, not with discovery of the unknown. Through the new method of
thought which was set forth in his new logic an era of expansive
discoveries was to emerge, and these discoveries were to bear fruit in
inventions for the service of man. Men were to give up their futile,
never-finished effort to dominate one another to engage in the
coöperative task of dominating nature in the interests of humanity.
In the main, Bacon prophesied the direction of subsequent progress. But
he "anticipated" the advance.
He did not see that the new science was for a long time to be worked in
the interest of old ends of human exploitation. He thought that it
would rapidly give man new ends. Instead, it put at the disposal of a
class the means to secure their old ends of aggrandizement at the
expense of another class. The industrial revolution followed, as he
foresaw, upon a revolution in scientific method. But it is taking the
revolution many centuries to produce a new mind. Feudalism was doomed
by the applications of the new science, for they transferred power from
the landed nobility to the manufacturing centers. But capitalism rather
than a social humanism took its place. Production and commerce were
carried on as if the new science had no moral lesson, but only technical
lessons as to economies in production and utilization of saving in
self-interest. Naturally, this application of physical science (which
was the most conspicuously perceptible one) strengthened the claims of
professed humanists that science was materialistic in its tendencies.
It left a void as to man's distinctively human interests which go beyond
making, saving, and expending money; and languages and literature put in
their claim to represent the moral and ideal interests of
humanity.
( d ) Moreover, the philosophy which professed itself based upon
science, which gave itself out as the accredited representative of the
net significance of science, was either dualistic in character, marked
by a sharp division between mind (characterizing man) and matter,
constituting nature; or else it was openly mechanical, reducing the
signal features of human life to illusion. In the former case, it
allowed the claims of certain studies to be peculiar consignees of
mental values, and indirectly strengthened their claim to superiority,
since human beings would incline to regard human affairs as of chief
importance at least to themselves. In the latter case, it called out a
reaction which threw doubt and suspicion upon the value of physical
science, giving occasion for treating it as an enemy to man's higher
interests.
Greek and medieval knowledge accepted the world in its qualitative
variety, and regarded nature's processes as having ends, or in technical
phrase as teleological. New science was expounded so as to deny the
reality of all qualities in real, or objective, existence. Sounds,
colors, ends, as well as goods and bads, were regarded as purely
subjective—as mere impressions in the mind. Objective existence
was then treated as having only quantitative aspects—as so much
mass in motion, its only differences being that at one point in space
there was a larger aggregate mass than at another, and that in some
spots there were greater rates of motion than at others. Lacking
qualitative distinctions, nature lacked significant variety.
Uniformities were emphasized, not diversities; the ideal was supposed to
be the discovery of a single mathematical formula applying to the whole
universe at once from which all the seeming variety of phenomena could
be derived. This is what a mechanical philosophy means.
Such a philosophy does not represent the genuine purport of science. It
takes the technique for the thing itself; the apparatus and the
terminology for reality, the method for its subject matter. Science
does confine its statements to conditions which enable us to predict and
control the happening of events, ignoring the qualities of the events.
Hence its mechanical and quantitative character. But in leaving them
out of account, it does not exclude them from reality, nor relegate them
to a purely mental region; it only furnishes means utilizable for ends.
Thus while in fact the progress of science was increasing man's power
over nature, enabling him to place his cherished ends on a firmer basis
than ever before, and also to diversify his activities almost at will,
the philosophy which professed to formulate its accomplishments reduced
the world to a barren and monotonous redistribution of matter in space.
Thus the immediate effect of modern science was to accentuate the
dualism of matter and mind, and thereby to establish the physical and
the humanistic studies as two disconnected groups. Since the difference
between better and worse is bound up with the qualities of experience,
any philosophy of science which excludes them from the genuine content
of reality is bound to leave out what is most interesting and most
important to mankind.
3. The Present Educational Problem.
—In truth, experience knows no division between human concerns and
a purely mechanical physical world. Man's home is nature; his purposes
and aims are dependent for execution upon natural conditions. Separated
from such conditions they become empty dreams and idle indulgences of
fancy. From the standpoint of human experience, and hence of
educational endeavor, any distinction which can be justly made between
nature and man is a distinction between the conditions which have to be
reckoned with in the formation and execution of our practical aims, and
the aims themselves. This philosophy is vouched for by the doctrine of
biological development which shows that man is continuous with nature,
not an alien entering her processes from without. It is reënforced by
the experimental method of science which shows that knowledge accrues in
virtue of an attempt to direct physical energies in accord with ideas
suggested in dealing with natural objects in behalf of social uses.
Every step forward in the social sciences—the studies termed
history, economics, politics, sociology—shows that social
questions are capable of being intelligently coped with only in the
degree in which we employ the method of collected data, forming
hypotheses, and testing them in action which is characteristic of
natural science, and in the degree in which we utilize in behalf of the
promotion of social welfare the technical knowledge ascertained by
physics and chemistry. Advanced methods of dealing with such perplexing
problems as insanity, intemperance, poverty, public sanitation, city
planning, the conservation of natural resources, the constructive use of
governmental agencies for furthering the public good without weakening
personal initiative, all illustrate the direct dependence of our
important social concerns upon the methods and results of natural
science.
With respect then to both humanistic and naturalistic studies, education
should take its departure from this close interdependence. It should
aim not at keeping science as a study of nature apart from literature as
a record of human interests, but at cross-fertilizing both the natural
sciences and the various human disciplines such as history, literature,
economics, and politics. Pedagogically, the problem is simpler than the
attempt to teach the sciences as mere technical bodies of information
and technical forms of physical manipulation, on one side; and to teach
humanistic studies as isolated subjects, on the other. For the latter
procedure institutes an artificial separation in the pupils' experience.
Outside of school pupils meet with natural facts and principles in
connection with various modes of human action.
(See ante, p. 36.)
In all the social activities in which they have shared they have had to
understand the material and processes involved. To start them in school
with a rupture of this intimate association breaks the continuity of
mental development, makes the student feel an indescribable unreality in
his studies, and deprives him of the normal motive for interest in
them.
There is no doubt, of course, that the opportunities of education should
be such that all should have a chance who have the disposition to
advance to specialized ability in science, and thus devote themselves to
its pursuit as their particular occupation in life.
But at present, the pupil too often has a choice only between beginning
with a study of the results of prior specialization where the material
is isolated from his daily experiences, or with miscellaneous nature
study, where material is presented at haphazard and does not lead
anywhere in particular. The habit of introducing college pupils into
segregated scientific subject matter, such as is appropriate to the man
who wishes to become an expert in a given field, is carried back into
the high schools. Pupils in the latter simply get a more elementary
treatment of the same thing, with difficulties smoothed over and topics
reduced to the level of their supposed ability. The cause of this
procedure lies in following tradition, rather than in conscious
adherence to a dualistic philosophy. But the effect is the same as if
the purpose were to inculcate an idea that the sciences which deal with
nature have nothing to do with man, and vice versa. A large part of the
comparative ineffectiveness of the teaching of the sciences, for those
who never become scientific specialists, is the result of a separation
which is unavoidable when one begins with technically organized subject
matter. Even if all students were embryonic scientific specialists, it
is questionable whether this is the most effective procedure.
Considering that the great majority are concerned with the study of
sciences only for its effect upon their mental habits—in making them
more alert, more open-minded, more inclined to tentative acceptance and
to testing of ideas propounded or suggested,—and for achieving a
better understanding of their daily environment, it is certainly
ill-advised. Too often the pupil comes out with a smattering which is
too superficial to be scientific and too technical to be applicable to
ordinary affairs.
The utilization of ordinary experience to secure an advance into
scientific material and method, while keeping the latter connected with
familiar human interests, is easier to-day than it ever was before. The
usual experience of all persons in civilized communities to-day is
intimately associated with industrial processes and results. These in
turn are so many cases of science in action. The stationary and
traction steam engine, gasoline engine, automobile, telegraph and
telephone, the electric motor enter directly into the lives of most
individuals. Pupils at an early age are practically acquainted with
these things. Not only does the business occupation of their parents
depend upon scientific applications, but household pursuits, the
maintenance of health, the sights seen upon the streets, embody
scientific achievements and stimulate interest in the connected
scientific principles. The obvious pedagogical starting point of
scientific instruction is not to teach things labeled science, but to
utilize the familiar occupations and appliances to direct observation
and experiment, until pupils have arrived at a knowledge of some
fundamental principles by understanding them in their familiar practical
workings.
The opinion sometimes advanced that it is a derogation from the "purity"
of science to study it in its active incarnation, instead of in
theoretical abstraction, rests upon a misunderstanding. AS matter of
fact, any subject is cultural in the degree in which it is apprehended
in its widest possible range of meanings. Perception of meanings
depends upon perception of connections, of context. To see a scientific
fact or law in its human as well as in its physical and technical
context is to enlarge its significance and give it increased cultural
value. Its direct economic application, if by economic is meant
something having money worth, is incidental and secondary, but a part of
its actual connections. The important thing is that the fact be grasped
in its social connections—its function in life.
On the other hand, "humanism" means at bottom being imbued with an
intelligent sense of human interests. The social interest, identical in
its deepest meaning with a moral interest, is necessarily supreme with
man. Knowledge about man, information as to his past, familiarity with
his documented records of literature, may be as technical a possession
as the accumulation of physical details. Men may keep busy in a variety
of ways, making money, acquiring facility in laboratory manipulation, or
in amassing a store of facts about linguistic matters, or the chronology
of literary productions. Unless such activity reacts to enlarge the
imaginative vision of life, it is on a level with the busy work of
children. It has the letter without the spirit of activity. It readily
degenerates itself into a miser's accumulation, and a man prides himself
on what he has, and not on the meaning he finds in the affairs of life.
Any study so pursued that it increases concern for the values of life,
any study producing greater sensitiveness to social well-being and
greater ability to promote that well-being is humane study.
The humanistic spirit of the Greeks was native and intense but it was
narrow in scope. Everybody outside the Hellenic circle was a barbarian,
and negligible save as a possible enemy. Acute as were the social
observations and speculations of Greek thinkers, there is not a word in
their writings to indicate that Greek civilization was not self-inclosed
and self-sufficient. There was, apparently, no suspicion that its
future was at the mercy of the despised outsider. Within the Greek
community, the intense social spirit was limited by the fact that higher
culture was based on a substratum of slavery and economic
serfdom—classes necessary to the existence of the state, as
Aristotle declared, and yet not genuine parts of it. The development of
science has produced an industrial revolution which has brought
different peoples in such close contact with one another through
colonization and commerce that no matter how some nations may still look
down upon others, no country can harbor the illusion that its career is
decided wholly within itself. The same revolution has abolished
agricultural serfdom, and created a class of more or less organized
factory laborers with recognized political rights, and who make claims
for a responsible rôle in the control of industry—claims which
receive sympathetic attention from many among the well-to-do, since they
have been brought into closer connections with the less fortunate
classes through the breaking down of class barriers.
This state of affairs may be formulated by saying that the older
humanism omitted economic and industrial conditions from its purview.
Consequently, it was one sided. Culture, under such circumstances,
inevitably represented the intellectual and moral outlook of the class
which was in direct social control. Such a tradition as to culture is,
as we have seen
(Ante, p. 304),
aristocratic; it emphasizes what marks off one class from another,
rather than fundamental common interests. Its standards are in the past;
for the aim is to preserve what has been gained rather than widely to
extend the range of culture.
The modifications which spring from taking greater account of industry
and of whatever has to do with making a living are frequently condemned
as attacks upon the culture derived from the past. But a wider
educational outlook would conceive industrial activities as agencies for
making intellectual resources more accessible to the masses, and giving
greater solidity to the culture of those having superior resources. In
short, when we consider the close connection between science and
industrial development on the one hand, and between literary and
aæsthetic cultivation and an aristocratic social organization on the
other, we get light on the opposition between technical scientific
studies and refining literary studies. We have before us the need of
overcoming this separation in education if society is to be truly
democratic.
Summary.
—The philosophic dualism between man and nature is reflected in
the division of studies between the naturalistic and the humanistic with
a tendency to reduce the latter to the literary records of the past.
This dualism is not characteristic (as were the others which we have
noted) of Greek thought. It arose partly because of the fact that the
culture of Rome and of barbarian Europe was not a native product, being
borrowed directly or indirectly from Greece, and partly because
political and ecclesiastic conditions emphasized dependence upon the
authority of past knowledge as that was transmitted in literary
documents.
At the outset, the rise of modern science prophesied a restoration of
the intimate connection of nature and humanity, for it viewed knowledge
of nature as the means of securing human progress and well-being. But
the more immediate applications of science were in the interests of a
class rather than of men in common; and the received philosophic
formulations of scientific doctrine tended either to mark it off as
merely material from man as spiritual and immaterial, or else to reduce
mind to a subjective illusion. In education, accordingly, the tendency
was to treat the sciences as a separate body of studies, consisting of
technical information regarding the physical world, and to reserve the
older literary studies as distinctively humanistic. The account
previously given of the evolution of knowledge, and of the educational
scheme of studies based upon it, are designed to overcome the
separation, and to secure recognition of the place occupied by the
subject matter of the natural sciences in human affairs.
Footnotes
[[13]]
The Influence of Greek Ideas and Usages upon the Christian Church.
pp. 43-44.