causes of the three
dimensionality of space.
The method of analogies is, on the whole, rather disheartening. It makes one walk in
a vicious circle. It helps to clear some things, but does not really give a straight answer
to anything. After numerous and prolonged attempts to find one's way in complex
problems with the help of analogies, one begins to feel the uselessness of all one's
efforts; one feels that, with these analogies, one is merely walking alongside
a wall - and then, with a feeling of complete hatred and disgust for analogies,
one begins to see the necessity for seeking some direct way which will lead
straight to where one needs to go.
This problem of higher dimensions has usually been tackled by means of
analogies. Only very recently has science begun to work out that direct
method which will be detailed later on.
So, if we wish to follow the direct road, without deviating from it, we must
rigidly adhere to Kant's fundamental propositions. But if we formulate
Hinton's thought from the point of view of these propositions, we shall get
the following result: we bear in ourselves the conditions of our space and
therefore must find in ourselves the conditions which will enable us to
establish the relation between our space and higher space.
In other words, it is in our mentality, in our perceiving apparatus, that we
must find the conditions of the world's three-dimensionality. And it is also
there that we must discover the conditions of the possibility of a higher
dimensional world.
If we set ourselves this task, we shall find we are on the direct road, and we
should be able to get an answer to our question; what is space and its three
dimensionality?
How are we to approach the solution of this problem?
Quite clearly, through the study of our consciousness and its properties.
We shall be free of all analogies and start on the right and direct road towards
the solution of the main problem of the subjective or objective character of
space, if we decide to examine the mental forms in which we perceive the
world, and see whether there is a correspondence between them and the
three-dimensional extension of the world. In other words, we must see
whether this idea of the three-dimensional extension of the world with its
properties is not the outcome of certain properties of our own mentality.
CHAPTER 8
Our perceiving apparatus. Sensation. Representation. Concept. Art as the language of
the future. To what extent does the three-dimensionality of the world depend on the
properties of our perceiving apparatus? What could prove this dependence? Where
could we find a real confirmation of this dependence? Psychology of animals. In what
does it differ from the human? Reflex. Irritability of the cell. Instinct. Pleasure - pain.
Emotional thinking. Absence of concepts. Language of animals. Logic of animals.
Different levels of intelligence in animals. The goose, the cat, the dog and the
monkey.
In order to find out the exact relation of our inner life to the outer world and to define
what
in our perception of the world belongs to the world and
what
belongs to ourselves,
we must turn to elementary psychology and examine the mechanism of our perceiving
apparatus.
The basic unit of our perception is a
sensation.
A sensation is an elementary change
in the state of our inner life, produced,
or so it appears to us,
either by some change in
the state of the outer world in relation to our inner life, or by a change in our inner life
in relation to the outer world. So physics and psycho-physics teach us. I shall not deal
here with the question of the correctness or incorrectness of the interpretations
advanced by these sciences. It is sufficient to define a sensation as an
elementary
change in the state of the inner life, i.e. as the element, or the basic unit of this change.
Experiencing a sensation, we assume it to be, so to speak, a reflection of some kind of
change in the external world.
The sensations experienced by us leave a certain trace in our memory. In
accumulating, memories of sensations begin to blend in our consciousness into groups
according to their similarity, to become associated, to be put together, or to be
contrasted. Sensations, usually experienced in close connection with one another, will
arise in our memory preserving the same connection. And gradually, out of
memories of
sensations
there are formed
representations.
Representations are, so to speak, group
memories of sensations. In the formation of representations, the grouping of sensations
follows two clearly denned directions. The first direction is according to the
character
of the sensations:
thus sensations of yellow colour will be linked with
other sensations of yellow colour, sensations of acid taste, with other
sensations of acid taste. The second direction is according to the
time of
receiving the sensation.
When one group, forming
one
representation,
contains different sensations experienced simultaneously, the memory of this
definite group of sensations is attributed to a common cause. The 'common
cause' is projected into the external world, as the object; and it is assumed that
the given representation reflects the real properties of this object. Such a
group memory constitutes a
representation,
as, for instance, the representation
of a tree -
this tree.
Into this group enters the green colour of the leaves, their
smell, their shade, the sound of the wind in the branches, and so on. All these
things, taken together, form, as it were, the focus of rays emitted by our mind
and gradually focused on the external object, which may coincide with it
either badly or well.
In the further complexities of mental life, memories of representations
undergo the same process as memories of sensations. In accumulating,
memories of representations or 'images of representation' become associated
along the most varied lines, are put together, contrasted, form groups and, in
the end, give rise to concepts.
Thus, out of the various sensations experienced at different times (in
groups), there arises in a child the representation of a tree (this tree), and later,
out of the images of representation of different trees is formed the
concept of
a tree,
i.e. not of this particular tree but of a tree in general.
The formation of concepts leads to the formation of
words
and the appearance
of
speech.
The rudiments of speech may appear on the lowest level of intelligence, at
the stage of living by sensations; at the stage of living by representations
speech becomes considerably more complex. But, so long as there are no
concepts, it will not be
speech
in the true sense of the word.
On the lower levels of intelligence certain sensations may be expressed by
certain sounds. In this way it is possible to transmit general impressions of
fear, anger, pleasure. These sounds may serve as danger signals, as a
summoning call, an entreaty, a threat and so on. But one cannot convey much
by them.
In the subsequent development of speech, if words or sounds express
representations,
as in the case of children, it means that a given sound or a
given word designates only
this or that
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