Friday, February 17, 2012
Empiricism: a Marxist view
Excerpt from The History of Philosophy by Alan Woods
The Decadence of Empiricism
The Decadence of Empiricism
Whereas the materialism of Bacon reflected the hopeful, forward-looking
outlook of the Renaissance and the reformation, the philosophy of the
late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries took shape in an
altogether different climate. In England, the rich and powerful had
received a shock in the period of the Civil War, with its "excesses."
Having effectively broken the power of the absolute monarchy, the
bourgeoisie no longer needed the services of the revolutionary petit
bourgeoisie and the lower orders of society, the shock troops of
Cromwell's Model Army, who had begun to give voice to their independent
demands, not only in the field of religion, but by calling into
question the existence of private property.
Cromwell himself had crushed the left wing represented by the Levellers
and Diggers, but the wealthy Presbyterian merchants of the City of
London did not feel safe until, after Cromwell's death, they had invited
Charles back from France. The compromise with the Stuarts did not last
long, and the bourgeoisie was forced to eject Charles' successor James
from the throne. But this time there was no question of appealing to
the masses for support. Instead they called on the services of the
Dutch Protestant, William of Orange, to take possession of the English
throne, on condition of accepting the power of Parliament. This
compromise, known as the "Glorious Revolution," (although it was
neither) established once and for all the power of the bourgeoisie in
England.
The stage was set for a rapid growth of trade and industry, accompanied
by giant advances of science. In the realm of philosophy, however, it
did not produce great results. Such periods are not conducive to broad
philosophical generalisations. "New times," wrote Plekhanov, "produce
new aspirations, the latter producing new philosophies." The heroic
revolutionary age was past. The new ruling class wanted to hear no more
of such things. They even baptised the real revolution, which had
broken the power of their enemies, "The Great Rebellion." The men of
money were guided by narrow practical considerations, and looked with
distrust at theory, although they encouraged scientific research which
had practical consequences, translatable into pounds, shillings and
pence. This mean-spirited egotism permeates the philosophical thinking
of the period, at least in England, where it was only enlivened by the
writings of satirists like Swift and Sheridan.
The further evolution of the empiricist trend revealed its limited
character, which ended up by leading Anglo-Saxon philosophy into a
cul-de-sac out of which it has still not emerged. This negative side of
"sensationalism" was already evident in the writings of David Hume
(1711-76) and George Berkeley (1685-1753). The latter was the bishop of
Cloyne in Ireland, who lived just at the end of a stormy period when
Ireland had been drawn into the maelstrom of England's Civil War and
subsequent dynastic and religious upheavals ending in the "Glorious
Revolution" and the Battle of the Boyne, where the interests of the
Irish people were betrayed in a struggle between an English and a Dutch
Pretender, neither of whom had anything to do with them.
Reflecting the prevailing mood of philosophical conservatism, Berkeley
was obsessed with the need to oppose what he saw as the subversive
trends in contemporary science, which he interpreted as a threat to
religion. An astute, if not original thinker, he soon realised that it
was possible to seize upon the weak side of the existing materialism, in
order to turn it into its exact opposite. This he did quite
effectively in his most important work, A Treatise Concerning the
Principles of Human Knowledge (1734).
Taking as his starting point Locke's philosophical premises, he
attempted to prove that the material world did not exist. Locke's
empiricist theory of knowledge begins with the self-evident proposition:
"I interpret the world through my senses." However, it is necessary to
add the equally self-evident statement that the world exists
independent of my senses, and that the impressions I obtain through my
senses come from the material world outside me. Unless this is
accepted, we very quickly land up in the most grotesque mysticism and
subjective idealism.
Berkeley was well aware that a consistent materialist position would
lead to the complete overthrow of religion. He was, for instance, deeply
suspicious of the new science, which seemed to leave no room for the
Creator. Newton professed himself a believer. But his explanation of the
universe as a vast system of moving bodies, all acting in accordance
with the laws of mechanics, shocked the bishop. Where did God come into
all this? he asked. True, Newton assigned to the Almighty the task of
getting it all started with a push, but after that, God did not seem to
have been left very much to do!
Locke, like Newton, never renounced religion, but the bare declaration
that God exists (deism), while giving Him no real role in the affairs
of man or nature was merely a convenient fig leaf to conceal unbelief.
As Marx put it, "for materialism, deism is but an easy-going way of
getting rid of religion." (MECW, Vol. 4, p. 129.) Following Newton,
Locke was happy to take for granted the existence of an obliging Deity
who, after giving the universe a bit of a shove, then retired to the
celestial sidelines for the rest of eternity to allow men of science to
get on with their work. It was the philosophical equivalent of the
constitutional monarchy established as a compromise between parliament
and William III after the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688, which,
incidentally, was Locke's political ideal.
The deist disguise, however, did not fool Berkeley for a moment. There
was an evident weak link. What if the universe did not start in this
way? What if it had always existed? Locke and Newton assumed that,
following the laws of elementary mechanics, a clockwork universe must
have commenced with an external impulse. But there was no way they could
disprove the contrary assertion, that the universe had existed
eternally. In that case, the last vestige of a role for the Creator
vanished altogether. Locke also supposed that, in addition to matter,
the universe contained "immaterial" substances, minds and souls. But, as
he himself confessed, this conclusion did not flow necessarily from
his system. Consciousness might just be another property of matter
(which is just what it is in fact)—the property of matter organised in a
certain way. Here too, Locke's concessions to religion hung uneasily
from his materialist premises, as if they had been tacked on as an
afterthought.
Berkeley's philosophy, like that of Hume, is the expression of a
reaction against the revolutionary storm and stress of the previous
period, identified in his mind with materialism, the root cause of
atheism. Berkeley consciously set out to eradicate materialism once and
for all, by the most radical means—by denying the existence of matter
itself. Beginning with the undeniable assertion that "I interpret the
world through my sense," he draws the conclusion that the world only
exists when I perceive it—esse is percipi (to be is to be perceived).
"The table I write on I say exists, that is, I see and feel it; and if I
were to go out of my study I should say it existed—meaning thereby
that if I was in my study I might perceive it, or that some other
spirit actually does perceive it...
"For, what are the forementioned objects but the things we perceive by
sense? And what do we perceive besides our own ideas or sensations? And
is it not plainly repugnant that any one of these, or any combination
of them, should exist unperceived?" (Berkeley, The Principles of Human
Knowledge, pp. 66-7.)
This, then, is where empiricism, inconsistent materialism, gets us when
carried to its logical, or, rather, illogical, conclusions. The world
cannot exist unless I observe it. For this is exactly what Berkeley
says. In fact, he considers it strange that anyone should believe
otherwise: "It is indeed an opinion strangely prevailing amongst men,
that houses, mountains, rivers, and in a word all sensible objects, have
an existence, natural or real distinct from their being perceived by
the understanding." (Ibid., p. 66.) The question arises as to what it is
that makes the world real by the mere act of perceiving it. Berkeley
replies: "This perceiving, active being is what I call MIND, SPIRIT,
SOUL, or MYSELF." (Ibid., p. 65.)
All this is admirably clear and unambiguous. It is the doctrine of
subjective idealism, with no "ifs" or "buts." The modern philosophers of
the different schools of logical positivism follow in just the same
line, but lack both Berkeley's style and his honesty. The consequence of
this line of argument is extreme mysticism and irrationality.
Ultimately, it results in the notion that only I exist, and that the
world only exists insofar as I am present to observe it. If I walk out
of the room, it no longer exists, and the like. How did Berkeley deal
with this objection? Very easily. There may be objects that are not
perceived by my mind, but they are perceived by the "cosmic mind" of
God, and exist in it. Thus, at a single stroke, the Almighty, who was
reduced to a precarious existence on the margins of a mechanical
universe, has been reintroduced as the "whole choir of Heaven and
furniture of the earth," in a world entirely free of matter. In this
way, Berkeley believed that he had scored the "most complete and easy
triumph in the world" over "every wretched sect of atheists."
In purely philosophical terms, Berkeley's philosophy is open to many
objections. In the first place, his main criticism of Locke was that he
duplicated the world, that is, he supposed that behind the
sense-perceptions which, according to empiricism, are the only things we
can know, there was an external world of material things. To remove
this duality, Berkeley simply denied the existence of the objective
world. But this does not solve the problem at all. We are still left
with something outside our sense-perceptions. The only difference is
that this "something" is not the real, material world, but, according to
Berkeley, the immaterial world of spirits created by the "cosmic mind"
of God. In other words, by taking our sense-impressions as something
independent, separate and apart from the objective material world
outside us, we quickly land in the realm of spiritualism, the worst kind
of mysticism.
Berkeley's arguments only retain a degree of consistency if one accepts
his initial premise, that we can only know sense-impressions, but
never the real world outside ourselves. This is put forward
dogmatically at the beginning, and all the rest is derived from this
proposition. In other words, he presupposes what has to be proved,
namely that our sensations and ideas are not the reflection of the
world outside us, but things existing in their own right. They are not a
property of matter that thinks, of a human brain and nervous system,
capable of being investigated and understood scientifically, but
mysterious things of the spirit world, emanating from the mind of God.
They do not serve to connect us with the world, but constitute an
impenetrable barrier, beyond which we cannot know anything for sure.
By pushing the arguments of empiricism to the limit, Berkeley succeeded
in turning it into its opposite. Engels points out that even Bacon in
his natural history gives recipes for making gold, and Newton in his old
age "greatly busied himself with expounding the Revelation of St.
John. So it is not to be wondered at if in recent years English
empiricism in the person of some of its representatives—and not the
worst of them—should seem to have fallen a hopeless victim to the
spirit-rapping and spirit-seeing imported from America." (Engels, The
Dialectics of Nature, p. 69.) As we shall see, the propensity for
mystical thinking does not disappear, but rather appears to grow in
geometrical proportion to the advance of science. This is the price we
have to pay for the cavalier attitude of scientists who wrongly imagine
that they can get along without any general philosophical principles.
Expelled by the front door, philosophy immediately flies back in
through the window, and invariably in its most retrograde and
mystifying form.
Just as all ideas ultimately are derived from this objective material
world, which is said not to exist by Berkeley, so, in the last analysis,
their truth or otherwise is decided in practice, through experiment,
by countless observations, and, above all, through the practical
activity of human beings in society. Berkeley lived at a time when
science had largely succeeded in freeing itself from the deadly embrace
of religion, and had thereby made possible the greatest advances. How
did Berkeley's ideas fit in with all this? What kind of explanation do
Berkeley's ideas give of the material world? How do they relate to the
discoveries of Galileo, Newton and Boyle? For example, the corpuscular
theory of matter cannot be true, according to Berkeley, because there
is nothing for it to be true of.
Berkeley rejected Newton's theory of gravity, because it attempted to
explain things by "corporeal causes." Naturally enough, since, while the
sun and moon, being material, have mass, my sense-impressions of these
have none whatever and can exercise a gravitational pull only on my
imagination. He likewise disapproved of the most important mathematical
discovery of all—the differential and integral calculus, without which
the achievements of modern science would not have been possible. But no
matter. Since the concept of infinite divisibility of "real space" ran
counter to the basic postulates of his philosophy, he opposed it
vehemently. Having set his face against the major scientific discoveries
of his day, Berkeley ended his life extolling the properties of
tar-water as an elixir to cure all ills. One could be excused for
thinking that such an eccentric philosophy as this would vanish without
trace. Not so. The ideas of Bishop Berkeley have continued to exercise a
strange fascination on bourgeois philosophers down to the present day,
being the true origin and basis of the theory of knowledge
("epistemology") of logical positivism and linguistic philosophy. This
was dealt with brilliantly by Lenin in his book Materialism and
Empirio-Criticism, to which we shall return later.
Incredible as it may seem, this thoroughly irrational and
anti-scientific philosophy has penetrated the thinking of many
scientists, through the agency of logical positivism in different
guises. In Berkeley's lifetime his ideas did not get much of an echo.
They had to wait for the intellectual climate of our own contradictory
times, when the greatest advances of human knowledge rub shoulders with
the most primitive cultural throwbacks to get accepted in polite
society. As G. J. Warnock points out, in the Introduction to The
Principles of Human Knowledge, Berkeley philosophy "in our own day has
won far more general support than ever before." Thus, "today some
physicists...are inclined to argue exactly as he did, that physical
theory is not a matter of factual truth, but essentially of mathematical
and predictive convenience." (G. J. Warnock, The Principles of Human
Knowledge, p. 25.) The scientist and idealist philosopher Eddington
claimed that we "have a right to believe that there are, for instance,
colours seen by other people but not by ourselves, toothaches felt by
other people, pleasures enjoyed and pains endured by other people, and
so on, but that we have no right to infer events experienced by no one
and not forming part of any 'mind.'" (Russell, op. cit., p. 631.)
Logical positivists like A. J. Ayer accept the argument that we can only
know "sense-contents" and, therefore, the question as to the existence
of the material world is "meaningless." And so on and so forth. Old
Berkeley must be laughing in his grave!
The value of any theory or hypothesis is ultimately determined by
whether it can be applied successfully to reality, whether it enhances
our knowledge of the world and our control over our lives. A hypothesis
which does none of these things is good for nothing, the product of
idle speculation, like the disputations of the mediaeval Schoolmen
about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. A colossal amount
of time has been wasted in universities on endlessly debating this
kind of thing. Even Bertrand Russell is compelled to admit that a
theory like Berkeley's, which "would forbid us to speak about anything
that we have not ourselves explicitly noticed. If so, it is a view that
no one can hold in practice, which is a defect in a theory that is
advocated on practical grounds." Yet in the very next sentence he feels
obliged to add that "The whole question of verification, and its
connection with knowledge, is difficult and complex; I will, therefore,
leave it on one side for the present." (Op. cit., p. 632.) These
questions are only "difficult and complex" for someone who accepts the
premise that all we can know are sense-data, separate and apart from
the material world. Since this is the starting point of a great deal of
modern philosophers, no matter how they twist and turn, they cannot
dig themselves out of the trap set by Bishop Berkeley.
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