11.
CHAPTER XI
EXPERIENCE AND THINKING:
1. The Nature of Experience.
—The nature of experience can be understood only by noting that it
includes an active and a passive element peculiarly combined. On the active
hand, experience is trying—a meaning which is made explicit
in the connected term experiment. On the passive, it is undergoing.
When we experience something we act upon it, we do something with it; then
we suffer or undergo the consequences. We do something to the thing and
then it does something to us in return: such is the peculiar combination.
The connection of these two phases of experience measures the fruitfulness
or value of the experience. Mere activity does not constitute experience.
It is dispersive, centrifugal, dissipating. Experience as trying involves
change, but change is meaningless transition unless it is consciously connected
with the return wave of consequences which flow from it. When an activity
is continued into the undergoing of consequences, when the change
made by action is reflected back into a change made in us, the mere flux is
loaded with significance. We learn something. It is not experience when
a child merely sticks his finger into a flame; it is experience when the
movement is connected with the pain which he undergoes in consequence.
Henceforth the sticking of the finger into flame means a burn.
Being burned is a mere physical change, like the burning of a stick of
wood, if it is not perceived as a consequence of some other action.
Blind and capricious impulses hurry us on heedlessly from one thing to
another. So far as this happens, everything is writ in water. There is
none of that cumulative growth which makes an experience in any vital
sense of that term. On the other hand, many things happen to us in the
way of pleasure and pain which we do not connect with any prior activity
of our own. They are mere accidents so far as we are concerned. There
is no before or after to such experience; no retrospect nor outlook, and
consequently no meaning. We get nothing which may be carried over to
foresee what is likely to happen next, and no gain in ability to adjust
ourselves to what is coming—no added control. Only by courtesy
can such an experience be called experience. To 'learn from experience"
is to make a backward and forward connection between what we do to
things and what we enjoy or suffer from things in consequence. Under
such conditions, doing becomes a trying; an experiment with the world to
find out what it is like; the undergoing becomes
instruction—discovery of the connection of things.
Two conclusions important for education follow. (1) Experience is
primarily an active-passive affair; it is not primarily cognitive.
But (2) the measure of the value of an experience lies in the
perception of relationships or continuities to which it leads up. It
includes cognition in the degree in which it is cumulative or amounts
to something, or has meaning. In schools, those under instruction are
too customarily looked upon as acquiring knowledge as theoretical
spectators, minds which appropriate knowledge by direct energy of
intellect. The very word pupil has almost come to mean one who is
engaged not in having fruitful experiences but in absorbing knowledge
directly. Something which is called mind or consciousness is severed
from the physical organs of activity. The former is then thought to be
purely intellectual and cognitive; the latter to be an irrelevant and
intruding physical factor. The intimate union of activity and
undergoing its consequences which leads to recognition of meaning is
broken; instead we have two fragments: mere bodily action on one side,
and meaning directly grasped by "spiritual" activity on the other.
It would be impossible to state adequately the evil results which have
flowed from this dualism of mind and body, much less to exaggerate them.
Some of the more striking effects, may, however, be enumerated. (a)
In part bodily activity becomes an intruder. Having nothing, so it is
thought, to do with mental activity, it becomes a distraction, an evil
to be contended with. For the pupil has a body, and brings it to school
along with his mind. And the body is, of necessity, a wellspring of
energy; it has to do something. But its activities, not being utilized
in occupation with things which yield significant results, have to be
frowned upon. They lead the pupil away from the lesson with which his
"mind" ought to be occupied; they are sources of mischief. The chief
source of the "problem of discipline" in schools is that the teacher has
often to spend the larger part of the time in suppressing the bodily
activities which take the mind away from its material. A premium is put
on physical quietude; on silence, on rigid uniformity of posture and
movement; upon a machine-like simulation of the attitudes of intelligent
interest. The teachers' business is to hold the pupils up to these
requirements and to punish the inevitable deviations which occur.
The nervous strain and fatigue which result with both teacher and pupil
are a necessary consequence of the abnormality of the situation in which
bodily activity is divorced from the perception of meaning. Callous
indifference and explosions from strain alternate. The neglected body,
having no organized fruitful channels of activity, breaks forth, without
knowing why or how, into meaningless boisterousness, or settles into
equally meaningless fooling—both very different from the normal
play of children. Physically active children become restless and
unruly; the more quiescent, socalled conscientious ones spend what
energy they have in the negative task of keeping their instincts and
active tendencies suppressed, instead of in a positive one of
constructive planning and execution; they are thus educated not into
responsibility for the significant and graceful use of bodily powers,
but into an enforced duty not to give them free play. It may be
seriously asserted that a chief cause for the remarkable achievements of
Greek education was that it was never misled by false notions into an
attempted separation of mind and body.
(b) Even, however, with respect to the lessons which have to be
learned by the application of "mind," some bodily activities have to be
used. The senses—especially the eye and ear—have to be
employed to take in what the book, the map, the blackboard, and the
teacher say. The lips and vocal organs, and the hands, have to be used
to reproduce in speech and writing what has been stowed away. The
senses are then regarded as a kind of mysterious conduit through which
information is conducted from the external world into the mind; they are
spoken of as gateways and avenues of knowledge. To keep the eyes on the
book and the ears open to the teacher's words is a mysterious source of
intellectual grace. Moreover, reading, writing, and
figuring—important school arts—demand muscular or motor
training. The muscles of eye, hand, and vocal organs accordingly have
to be trained to act as pipes for carrying knowledge back out of the
mind into external action. For it happens that using the muscles
repeatedly in the same way fixes in them an automatic tendency to
repeat.
The obvious result is a mechanical use of the bodily activities which
(in spite of the generally obtrusive and interfering character of the
body in mental action) have to be employed more or less. For the senses
and muscles are used not as organic participants in having an
instructive experience, but as external inlets and outlets of mind.
Before the child goes to school, he learns with his hand, eye, and ear,
because they are organs of the process of doing something from which
meaning results. The boy flying a kite has to keep his eye on the kite,
and has to note the various pressures of the string on his hand. His
senses are avenues of knowledge not because external facts are somehow
"conveyed" to the brain, but because they are used in doing something
with a purpose. The qualities of seen and touched things have a bearing
on what is done, and are alertly perceived; they have a meaning. But
when pupils are expected to use their eyes to note the form of words,
irrespective of their meaning, in order to reproduce them in spelling or
reading, the resulting training is simply of isolated sense organs and
muscles. It is such isolation of an act from a purpose which makes it
mechanical. It is customary for teachers to urge children to read with
expression, so as to bring out the meaning. But if they originally
learned the sensory-motor technique of reading—the ability to
identify forms and to reproduce the sounds they stand for—by
methods which did not call for attention to meaning, a mechanical habit
was established which makes it difficult to read subsequently with
intelligence. The vocal organs have been trained to go their own way
automatically in isolation; and meaning cannot be tied on at will.
Drawing, singing, and writing may be taught in the same mechanical way;
for, we repeat, any way is mechanical which narrows down the bodily
activity so that a separation of body from mind—that is, from
recognition of meaning—is set up. Mathematics, even in its higher
branches, when undue emphasis is put upon the technique of calculation,
and science, when laboratory exercises are given for their own sake,
suffer from the same evil.
(c) On the intellectual side, the separation of "mind" from direct
occupation with things throws emphasis on things at the expense of
relations or connections. It is altogether too common to separate
perceptions and even ideas from judgments. The latter are thought to
come after the former in order to compare them. It is alleged that the
mind perceives things apart from relations; that it forms ideas of them
in isolation from their connections—with what goes before and
comes after. Then judgment or thought is called upon to combine the
separated items of "knowledge" so that their resemblance or causal
connection shall be brought out. As matter of fact, every perception
and every idea is a sense of the bearings, use, and cause, of a thing.
We do not really know a chair or have an idea of it by inventorying and
enumerating its various isolated qualities, but only by bringing these
qualities into connection with something else—the purpose which
makes it a chair and not a table; or its difference from the kind of
chair we are accustomed to, or the "period" which it represents, and so
on. A wagon is not perceived when all its parts are summed up; it is
the characteristic connection of the parts which makes it a wagon. And
these connections are not those of mere physical juxtaposition; they
involve connection with the animals that draw it, the things that are
carried on it, and so on. Judgment is employed in the perception;
otherwise the perception is mere sensory excitation or else a
recognition of the result of a prior judgment, as in the case of
familiar objects.
Words, the counters for ideals, are, however, easily taken for ideas.
And in just the degree in which mental activity is separated from active
concern with the world, from doing something and connecting the doing
with what is undergone, words, symbols, come to take the place of ideas.
The substitution is the more subtle because some meaning is recognized.
But we are very easily trained to be content with a minimum of meaning,
and to fail to note how restricted is our perception of the relations
which confer significance. We get so thoroughly used to a kind of
pseudo-idea, a half perception, that we are not aware how half-dead our
mental action is, and how much keener and more extensive our
observations and ideas would be if we formed them under conditions of a
vital experience which required us to use judgment: to hunt for the
connections of the thing dealt with.
There is no difference of opinion as to the theory of the matter. All
authorities agree that that discernment of relationships is the
genuinely intellectual matter; hence, the educative matter. The failure
arises in supposing that relationships can become perceptible without
experience—without that conjoint trying and undergoing of which we
have spoken. It is assumed that "mind" can grasp them if it will only
give attention, and that this attention may be given at will
irrespective of the situation. Hence the deluge of half-observations,
of verbal ideas, and unassimilated "knowledge" which afflicts the world.
An ounce of experience is better than a ton of theory simply because it
is only in experience that any theory has vital and verifiable
significance. An experience, a very humble experience, is capable of
generating and carrying any amount of theory (or intellectual content),
but a theory apart from an experience cannot be definitely grasped even
as theory. It tends to become a mere verbal formula, a set of
catchwords used to render thinking, or genuine theorizing, unnecessary
and impossible. Because of our education we use words, thinking they
are ideas, to dispose of questions, the disposal being in reality simply
such an obscuring of perception as prevents us from seeing any longer
the difficulty.
2. Reflection in Experience.
—Thought or reflection, as we have already seen virtually if not
explicitly, is the discernment of the relation between what we try to do
and what happens in consequence. No experience having a meaning is
possible without some element of thought. But we may contrast two types
of experience according to the proportion of reflection found in them.
All our experiences have a phase of "cut and try" in them—what
psychologists call the method of trial and error. We simply do
something, and when it fails, we do something else, and keep on trying
till we hit upon something which works, and then we adopt that method as
a rule of thumb measure in subsequent procedure. Some experiences have
very little else in them than this hit and miss or succeed process. We
see that a certain way of acting and a certain consequence are
connected, but we do not see how they are. We do not see the details
of the connection; the links are missing. Our discernment is very gross.
In other cases we push our observation farther. We analyze to see just
what lies between so as to bind together cause and effect, activity and
consequence. This extension of our insight makes foresight more
accurate and comprehensive. The action which rests simply upon the
trial and error method is at the mercy of circumstances; they may change
so that the act performed does not operate in the way it was expected
to. But if we know in detail upon what the result depends, we can look
to see whether the required conditions are there. The method extends
our practical control. For if some of the conditions are missing, we
may, if we know what the needed antecedents for an effect are, set to
work to supply them; or, if they are such as to produce undesirable
effects as well, we may eliminate some of the superfluous causes and
economize effort.
In discovery of the detailed connections of our activities and what
happens in consequence, the thought implied in cut and try experience
is made explicit. Its quantity increases so that its proportionate
value is very different. Hence the quality of the experience changes;
the change is so significant that we may call this type of experience
reflective—that is, reflective par excellence. The
deliberate cultivation of this phase of thought constitutes thinking as
a distinctive experience. Thinking, in other words, is the intentional
endeavor to discover specific connections between something which
we do and the consequences which result, so that the two become continuous.
Their isolation, and consequently their purely arbitrary going together,
is canceled; a unified developing situation takes its place. The
occurrence is now understood; it is explained; it is reasonable, as we
say, that the thing should happen as it does.
Thinking is thus equivalent to an explicit rendering of the intelligent
element in our experience. It makes it possible to act with an end in
view. It is the condition of our having aims. As soon as an infant
begins to expect he begins to use something which is now going on
as a sign of something to follow; he is, in however simple a fashion,
judging. For he takes one thing as evidence of something else,
and so recognizes a relationship. Any future development, however elaborate
it may be, is only an extending and a refining of this simple act of
inference. All that the wisest man can do is to observe what is going
on more widely and more minutely and then select more carefully from
what is noted just those factors which point to something to happen.
The opposites, once more, to thoughtful action are routine and
capricious behavior. The former accepts what has been customary as a
full measure of possibility and omits to take into account the
connections of the particular things done. The latter makes the
momentary act a measure of value, and ignores the connections of our
personal action with the energies of the environment. It says,
virtually, "things are to be just as I happen to like them at this
instant," as routine says in effect "let things continue just as I have
found them in the past." Both refuse to acknowledge responsibility for
the future consequences which flow from present action. Reflection is
the acceptance of such responsibility.
The starting point of any process of thinking is something going on,
something which just as it stands is incomplete or unfulfilled. Its
point, its meaning lies literally in what it is going to be, in how it
is going to turn out. As this is written, the world is filled with the
clang of contending armies. For an active participant in the war, it is
clear that the momentous thing is the issue, the future consequences, of
this and that happening. He is identified, for the time at least, with
the issue; his fate hangs upon the course things are taking. But
even for an onlooker in a neutral country, the significance of every move
made, of every advance here and retreat there, lies in what it portends.
To think upon the news as it comes to us is to attempt to see what
is indicated as probable or possible regarding an outcome. To fill our
heads, like a scrapbook, with this and that item as a finished and
done-for thing, is not to think. It is to turn ourselves into a piece
of registering apparatus. To consider the bearing of the occurrence
upon what may be, but is not yet, is to think. Nor will the reflective
experience be different in kind if we substitute distance in time for
separation in space. Imagine the war done with, and a future historian
giving an account of it. The episode is, by assumption, past. But he
cannot give a thoughtful account of the war save as he preserves the
time sequence; the meaning of each occurrence, as he deals with it, lies
in what was future for it, though not for the historian. To take
it by itself as a complete existence is to take it unreflectively.
Reflection also implies concern with the issue—a certain
sympathetic identification of our own destiny, if only dramatic, with
the outcome of the course of events. For the general in the war, or a
common soldier, or a citizen of one of the contending nations, the
stimulus to thinking is direct and urgent. For neutrals, it is indirect
and dependent upon imagination. But the flagrant partisanship of human
nature is evidence of the intensity of the tendency to identify
ourselves with one possible course of events, and to reject the other as
foreign. If we cannot take sides in overt action, and throw in our
little weight to help determine the final balance, we take sides
emotionally and imaginatively. We desire this or that outcome. One
wholly indifferent to the outcome does not follow or think about what is
happening at all. From this dependence of the act of thinking upon a
sense of sharing in the consequences of what goes on, flows one of the
chief paradoxes of thought. Born in partiality, in order to accomplish
its tasks it must achieve a certain detached impartiality. The general
who allows his hopes and desires to affect his observations and
interpretations of the existing situation will surely make a mistake in
calculation. While hopes and fears may be the chief motive for a
thoughtful following of the war on the part of an onlooker in a neutral
country, he too will think ineffectively in the degree in which his
preferences modify the stuff of his observations and reasonings. There
is, however, no incompatibility between the fact that the occasion of
reflection lies in a personal sharing in what is going on and the fact
that the value of the reflection lies upon keeping one's self out of the
data. The almost insurmountable difflculty of achieving this detachment
is evidence that thinking originates in situations where the course of
thinking is an actual part of the course of events and is designed to
influence the result. Only gradually and with a widening of the area of
vision through a growth of social sympathies does thinking develop to
include what lies beyond our direct interests: a fact of great
significance for education.
To say that thinking occurs with reference to situations which are still
going on, and incomplete, is to say that thinking occurs when things are
uncertain or doubtful or problematic. Only what is finished, completed,
is wholly assured. Where there is reflection there is suspense. The
object of thinking is to help reach a conclusion, to project a possible
termination on the basis of what is already given. Certain other facts
about thinking accompany this feature. Since the situation in which
thinking occurs is a doubtful one, thinking is a process of inquiry, of
looking into things, of investigating. Acquiring is always secondary,
and instrumental to the act of inquiring. It is seeking, a quest, for
something that is not at hand. We sometimes talk as if "original
research" were a peculiar prerogative of scientists or at least of
advanced students. But all thinking is research, and all research is
native, original, with him who carries it on, even if everybody else in
the world already is sure of what he is still looking for.
It also follows that all thinking involves a risk. Certainty cannot be
guaranteed in advance. The invasion of the unknown is of the nature of
an adventure; we cannot be sure in advance. The conclusions of
thinking, till confirmed by the event, are, accordingly, more or less
tentative or hypothetical. Their dogmatic assertion as final is
unwarranted, short of the issue, in fact. The Greeks acutely raised the
question: How can we learn? For either we know already what we are after,
or else we do not know. In neither case is learning possible; on the first
alternative because we know already; on the second, because we do not know
what to look for, nor if, by chance, we find it can we tell that it is what
we were after. The dilemma makes no provision for coming to know, for
learning; it assumes either complete knowledge or complete ignorance.
Nevertheless the twilight zone of inquiry, of thinking, exists. The possibility
of hypothetical conclusions, of tentative results, is the fact
which the Greek dilemma overlooked. The perplexities of the situation suggest
certain ways out. We try these ways, and either push our way out, in
which case we know we have found what we were looking for, or the
situation gets darker and more confused—in which case, we know we are
still ignorant. Tentative means trying out, feeling one's way along
provisionally. Taken by itself, the Greek argument is a nice piece of
formal logic. But it is also true that as long as men kept a sharp
disjunction between knowledge and ignorance, science made only slow and
accidental advance. Systematic advance in invention and discovery began
when men recognized that they could utilize doubt for purposes of
inquiry by forming conjectures to guide action in tentative
explorations, whose development would confirm, refute, or modify the
guiding conjecture. While the Greeks made knowledge more than learning,
modern science makes conserved knowledge only a means to learning, to
discovery.
To recur to our illustration. A commanding general cannot base his
actions upon either absolute certainty or absolute ignorance. He has a
certain amount of information at hand which is, we will assume,
reasonably trustworthy. He then infers certain prospective movements,
thus assigning meaning to the bare facts of the given situation. His
inference is more or less dubious and hypothetical. But he acts upon
it. He develops a plan of procedure, a method of dealing with the
situation. The consequences which directly follow from his acting this
way rather than that test and reveal the worth of his reflections. What
he already knows functions and has value in what he learns. But will
this account apply in the case of the one in a neutral country who is
thoughtfully following as best he can the progress of events? In form,
yes, though not of course in content. It is self-evident that his
guesses about the future indicated by present facts, guesses by which
he attempts to supply meaning to a multitude of disconnected data,
cannot be the basis of a method which shall take effect in the campaign.
That is not his problem. But in the degree in which he is
actively thinking, and not merely passively following the course of events,
his tentative inferences will take effect in a method of procedure
appropriate to his situation. He will anticipate certain future moves,
and will be on the alert to see whether they happen or not. In the degree in
which he is intellectually concerned, or thoughtful, he will be actively
on the lookout; he will take steps which although they do not affect the
campaign, modify in some degree his subsequent actions. Otherwise his
later "I told you so" has no intellectual quality at all; it does not
mark any testing or verification of prior thinking, but only a
coincidence that yields emotional satisfaction—and includes a
large factor of self-deception.
The case is comparable to that of an astronomer who from given data has
been led to foresee (infer) a future eclipse. No matter how great the
mathematical probability, the inference is hypothetical—a matter
of probability.
[8]
The hypothesis as to the date and position of the anticipated eclipse
becomes the material of forming a method of future conduct. Apparatus
is arranged; possibly an expedition is made to some far part of the globe.
In any case, some active steps are taken which actually change some
physical conditions. And apart from such steps and the consequent
modification of the situation, there is no completion of the act of
thinking. It remains suspended. Knowledge, already attained knowledge,
controls thinking and makes it fruitful.
So much for the general features of a reflective experience. They are
(i) perplexity, confusion, doubt, due to the fact that one is implicated
in an incomplete situation whose full character is not yet determined;
(ii) a conjectural anticipation—a tentative interpretation of the
given elements, attributing to them a tendency to effect certain
consequences; (iii) a careful survey (examination, inspection,
exploration, analysis ) of all attainable consideration which will
define and clarify the problem in hand; (iv) a consequent elaboration of
the tentative hypothesis to make it more precise and more consistent,
because squaring with a wider range of facts; (v) taking one stand upon
the projected hypothesis as a plan of action which is applied to the
existing state of affairs: doing something overtly to bring about the
anticipated result, and thereby testing the hypothesis. It is the
extent and accuracy of steps three and four which mark off a distinctive
refiective experience from one on the trial and error plane. They make
thinking itself into an experience. Nevertheless, we never get wholly
beyond the trial and error situation. Our most elaborate and rationally
consistent thought has to be tried in the world and thereby tried out.
And since it can never take into account all the connections, it can
never cover with perfect accuracy all the consequences. Yet a
thoughtful survey of conditions is so careful, and the guessing at
results so controlled, that we have a right to mark off the reflective
experience from the grosser trial and error forms of action.
Summary.
—In determining the place of thinking in experience we first noted
that experience involves a connection of doing or trying with something
which is undergone in consequence. A separation of the active doing
phase from the passive undergoing phase destroys the vital meaning of an
experience. Thinking is the accurate and deliberate instituting of
connections between what is done and its consequences. It notes not
only that they are connected, but the details of the connection. It
makes connecting links explicit in the form of relationships. The
stimulus to thinking is found when we wish to determine the significance
of some act, performed or to be performed.
Then we anticipate consequences. This implies that the situation as it
stands is, either in fact or to us, incomplete and hence indeterminate.
The projection of consequences means a proposed or tentative solution.
To perfect this hypothesis, existing conditions have to be carefully
scrutinized and the implications of the hypothesis developed—an
operation called reasoning. Then the suggested solution—the idea or
theory—has to be tested by acting upon it. If it brings about
certain consequences, certain determinate changes, in the world, it is
accepted as valid. Otherwise it is modified, and another trial made.
Thinking includes all of these steps,—the sense of a problem, the
observation of conditions, the formation and rational elaboration of a
suggested conclusion, and the active experimental testing. While all
thinking results in knowledge, ultimately the value of knowledge is
subordinate to its use in thinking. For we live not in a settled and
finished world, but in one which is going on, and where our main task is
prospective, and where retrospect—and all knowledge as distinct from
thought is retrospect—is of value in the solidity, security, and
fertility it affords our dealings with the future.
Footnotes
[[8]]
It is most important for the practice of science that
men in many cases can calculate the degree of probability and the amount
of probable error involved, but that does alter the features of the
situation as described. It refines them.