from rational, conscious causes, such as the work of human beings appears to
us; and we see actions proceeding from unconscious blind forces of nature,
such as the movement of waves, ebbing and flowing tides, the flow of rivers,
etc., etc.
Such a division of observed actions into rational and mechanical seems
naive even from the positivist point of view. If we have learned something by
the
study of nature, if the positivist method has given us anything at all, it is
the conviction of the essential
unity
of phenomena. We know, and we know
this for certain, that things basically similar cannot result from dissimilar
causes. And scientific philosophy knows it too. Therefore it also regards the
above-mentioned division as naive and, aware of the impossibility of such a
dualism - that one part of observed phenomena proceeds from rational and
conscious causes and another part from irrational and unconscious -
it finds it
possible to explain
everything
as proceeding from irrational and unconscious
causes.
Scientific observation tells us that the apparent rationality of human actions
is nothing but illusion and self-deception. Man is a plaything in the hands of
elemental forces. He is only a transmitting station of forces. Everything that
he thinks he
does
is in reality done for him by external forces which enter into
him with air,
with food, with sunlight. Man does not perform a single action
by himself. He is only a prism through which a line of action is reflected in a
certain way. But as a ray of light does not originate from the prism, so the
action does not originate from man's intellect.
In confirmation of this there is advanced,
among other things, the
'theoretical experiment' of German psycho-physiologists. They assert that, if it
were possible from the moment of birth to deprive a man of
ALL EXTERNAL
IMPRESSIONS
: of light, sound, touch, heat, cold and so on, and at the same time
keep him alive, such a man would not be capable of
ANY
,
EVEN THE MOST
SIGNIFICANT ACTION
.
It follows from
this that man is an automaton, similar to the
automaton
on
which the American physicist Tesla worked and which, obeying electric
currents and long-distance wireless waves, was supposed to perform a whole
series of complex movements.
It follows that all
man's actions
depend on external stimuli. The smallest
reflex requires an external irritation. A more complex action needs a whole
series of preceding complex irritations. Sometimes there is a great lapse of
time between the irritation and the action, and a man does not feel any
connection between them. Consequently he regards
his actions as volitional,
whereas, in actual fact, volitional actions do not exist. A man cannot do
anything
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