it. These people may be defined as the
HIGHER TYPE OF MAN
.
Having established
the difference between actions, we must now return to
the question:
How does the mental apparatus of an animal differ from that of
a man?
Of the four categories of actions only the two lower ones are
accessible to animals. The category of 'rational' actions is not accessible to
them. This is proved, first of all, by the fact that animals do not speak as we
do.
It was shown earlier that the possession of speech is indissolubly
connected with the possession of concepts. Consequently, we may say that
animals do not possess concepts.
Is this true, and is the possession of instinctive
reason possible without
possessing concepts?
All that we know about instinctive reason tells us that it operates while
possessing only representations and sensations, and on the lower levels
possessing only sensations. The mental apparatus which thinks by means of
representations must be identical with instinctive reason which enables it to
make that
selection
from among the available representations which, from
outside, produces the impression of reasoning and drawing conclusions. In
reality, an animal does not think out its actions,
but lives by emotions,
obeying the emotion which is strongest at a given moment. Although it is true
that in the life of an animal there may be very acute moments, when it is
faced with the necessity of making a
selection
from a certain series of
representations. In that case,
at a given moment, its actions may appear to be
reasoned out. For instance, an animal, faced with danger, often acts with
surprising caution and intelligence. But in reality the actions of an animal are
governed not by thoughts but mostly by emotional memory and motor
representations. It has been shown earlier that emotions are
expedient and, in
a normal being, obedience to them should also be expedient. In an animal,
every representation, every remembered image is connected with some
emotional sensation and emotional recollection; there are no
unemotional
cold thoughts or images in the nature of an animal. Or, if there are some, they
are inactive, incapable of moving it to any action.
Thus, all the actions of animals, at times very complex, expedient and
seemingly
rational, can be explained without assuming the existence in them
of concepts, reasoning and mental conclusions. On the contrary, we must
admit that animals
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