10. The Eternal Life as taught by Professor Münsterberg.
Some philosophical pessimists undervalue life simply because it is subject
to limitation. They ascribe all evils to that condition, forgetting that
without limitation life is a mere blank. Suppose our sight could see all things
at once, then sight has no value nor use for us, because it is life's purpose
to choose to see one thing or another out of many; and if all things be present
at once before us through sight, it is of no purpose. The same is true of
intellect, bearing, smell, touch, feeling, and will. If they be limitless, they
cease to be useful for us. Individuality necessarily implies limitation, hence
if there be no limitation in the world, then there is no room for
individuality. Life without death is no life at all.
Professor Hugo Münsterberg finds no value, so it seems to me, in 'such life
as beginning with birth and ending with death.' He says:3 "My life
as a causal system of physical and psychological processes, which lies spread
out in time between the dates of my birth and of my death, will come to an end
with my last breath; to continue it, to make it go on till the earth falls into
the sun, or a billion times longer, would be without any value, as that
kind of life which is nothing but the
mechanical occurrence of physiological and psychological phenomena had as such
no ultimate value for me or for you, or for anyone, at any time. But my real
life, as a system of interrelated-will-attitudes, has nothing before or after
because it is beyond time. It is independent of birth and death because it
cannot be related to biological events; it is not born, and will not die; it is
immortal; all possible thinkable time is enclosed in it; it is eternal."
Professor Münsterberg tries to distinguish sharply life as the causal system
of physiological and psychological processes, and life as a system of interrelated-will-attitudes,
and denounces the former as fleeting and valueless, in order to prize the
latter as eternal and of absolute value. How could he, however, succeed in his
task unless he has two or three lives, as some animals are believed to have? Is
it not one and the same life that is treated on the one hand by science as a
system of physiological and psychological processes, and is conceived on the
other by the Professor himself as a system of interrelated-will-attitudes? It
is true that science treats of life as it is observed in time, space, and
causality, and it estimates it of no value, since to estimate the value of
things is no business of science. The same life observed as a system of
interrelated-will-attitudes is independent of time, space, and causality as he
affirms. One and the same life includes both phases, the difference being in
the points of view of the observers.
Life as observed only from the scientific point of view is bare abstraction;
it is not concrete life; nor is life as observed only in the
interrelated-will-attitude point of view the whole of life. Both are
abstractions. Concrete life includes both phases. Moreover, Professor
Münsterberg sees life in the relationship entirely independent-of time, space,
and causality, saying: "If you agree or disagree with the latest act of
the Russian Czar, the only significant relation which exists between him and
you has nothing to do with the naturalistic fact that geographically 'an ocean
lies between you; and if you are really a student of Plato, your only important
relation to the Greek philosopher has nothing to do with the other naturalistic
fact that biologically two thousand years lie between you"; and declares
life (seen from that point of view) to be immortal and eternal. This is as much
as to say that life, when seen in the relationship independent of time and
space, is independent of time and space-that is, immortal and eternal. Is it
not mere tautology? He is in the right in insisting that life can be seen from
the scientific point of view as a system of physiological and psychological
processes, and at the same time as a system of interrelated-will-attitudes
independent of time and space. But he cannot by that means prove the existence
of concrete individual life which is eternal and immortal, because that which
is independent of time and space is the relationship in which he observes life,
but not life itself. Therefore we have to notice that life held by Professor
Münsterberg to be eternal and immortal is quite a different thing from the
eternal life or immortality of soul believed by common sense.
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