ladder. This view is, of course, derived not from real facts but from the desire
at all costs to systematize what they observe, be it even on entirely artificial
grounds. People think that if they construe a system, they already know
something. But in reality absence of a system is very often nearer to true
knowledge than an artificial system.
'Evolutionists' who are incapable of understanding the whole, without
representing it to themselves as a chain, each link of which is derived from
another link, are like the blind men in an Eastern tale who feel an elephant
from different sides and assert, one that the elephant is like pillars, another
that he is like a thick rope, and so on. Only, evolutionists add to this that the
elephant's trunk must have
evolved
from his legs, the ears from the trunk, and
so on. But, after all, we know that all this is -
an elephant, i.e.
one single
being, unknown to the blind men. Just such a single being is the living world.
And with regard to forms of consciousness, it is much more correct to regard
them not as consecutive stages, nor as phases of evolution, distinct from one
another, but as different sides or pans of one
whole,
which we do not know.
In 'man' this unity is self-evident. All the forms of consciousness can exist
in him simultaneously: the life of the cells and the organs with their
consciousnesses; the life of the whole body, taken as one;
the life of emotions and logical reason, and the life of higher forms of
consciousness.
The higher form of consciousness is necessary for the organization of life
on earth, as we are already beginning to see. For a long time, under the rule of
materialism and positivist thought, people forgot or distorted religious ideas
and thought it possible to live by logical reason alone. But now, little by little,
it becomes evident to those who have eyes to see, that people, left to the
mercy of logical reasoning only, are incapable of organizing their life on
earth, and if they do not finally exterminate one another as did some
Polynesian tribes, they will at any rate create (and have already created)
utterly impossible conditions of life in which everything gained will be lost,
i.e. everything that was given them by men of self-consciousness and of
cosmic consciousness.
The living world of nature (including man) is analogous to man, and it is
much more convenient and correct to regard the different forms of
consciousness in the different parts and strata of living nature not as separate
and evolving from one another, but as belonging to
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