登陆注册
26504600000018

第18章

These words are meant to impeach the entire English psychology derived from Locke and Hume, and the entire German psychology derived from Herbart, so far as they both treat 'ideas' as separate subjective entities that come and go.Examples will soon make the matter clearer.Meanwhile our psychologic insight is vitiated by still other snares.

'The Psychologist's Fallacy.' The great snare of the psychologist is the confusion of his own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is ****** his report.I shall hereafter call this the 'psychologist's fallacy' par excellence.For some of the mischief, here too, language is to blame.The psychologist, as we remarked above (p.183), stands outside of the mental state he speaks of.Both itself and its object are objects for him.Now when it is a cognitive state (percept, thought, concept, etc.), he ordinarily has no other way of naming it than as the thought, percept, etc., of that object.He himself, meanwhile, knowing the self-same object in his way, gets easily led to suppose that the thought, which is of it, knows it in the same way in which he knows it, although this is often very far from being the case. The most fictitious puzzles have been introduced into our science by this means.The so-called question of presentative or representative perception, of whether an object is present to the thought that thinks it by a counterfeit image of itself, or directly and without any intervening image at all ; the question of nominalism and conceptualism, of the shape in which things are present when only a general notion of them is before the mind ; are comparatively easy questions when once the psychologist's fallacy is eliminated from their treatment, - as we shall ere long see (in Chapter XII).

Another variety of the psychologist' fallacy is the assumption that the mental state studied must be conscious of itself as the psychologist is conscious of it.The mental state is aware of itself only from within ; it grasps what we call its own content, and nothing more.The psychologist, on the contrary, is aware of it from without, and knows its relations with all sorts of other things.What the thought sees is only its own object ; what the psychologist sees is the thought's object, plus the thought itself, plus possibly all the rest of the world.We must be very careful therefore, in discussing a state of mind from the psychologist's point of view, to avoid foisting into its own ken matters that are only there for ours.We must avoid substituting what we know the consciousness is , for what it is a consciousness of , and counting its outward, and so to speak physical, relations with other facts of the world, in among the objects of which we set it down as aware.Crude as such a confusion of standpoints seems to be when abstractly stated, it is nevertheless a snare into which no psychologist has kept himself at all times from falling, and which forms almost the entire stock-in-trade of certain schools.We cannot be too watchful against its subtly corrupting influence.

Summary.To sum up the chapter, Psychology assumes that thoughts successively occur, and that they know objects in a world which the psychologist also knows.These thoughts are the subjective data of which he treats, and their relations to their objects, to the brain, and to the rest of the world constitute the subject-matter of psychologic science.Its methods are introspection, experimentation, and comparison.But introspection is no sure guide to truths about our mental states ; and in particular the poverty of the psychological vocabu. lary leads us to drop out certain states from our consideration, and to treat others as if they knew themselves and their objects as the psychologist knows both, which is a disastrous fallacy in the science.

Footnotes On the relation between Psychology and General Philosophy, see G.C.Robertson, 'Mind,' vol.VIII.p.1, and J.Ward, ibid.p.153 ; J.Dewey, ibid.vol.IX.p.1.

Compare some remarks in Mill's Logic, bk.I.chap.

III.§§ 2, 3.

Logic, § 40.

Psychologie, bk.II.chap.III.§§ 1, 2.

Cours de Philosophie Positive, I.34-8.

Auguste Comte and Positivism, 3d edition (1882), p.64.

Wundt says: "The first rule for utilizing inward observation consists in taking, as far as possible, experiences that are accidental, unexpected, and not intentionally brought about....First it is best as far as possible to rely on Memory and not on immediate Apprehension....Second , internal observation is better fitted to grasp clearly conscious states, especially voluntary mental acts: such inner processes as are obscurely conscious and involuntary will almost entirely elude it, because the effort to observe interferes with them, and because they seldom abide in memory." (Logik, II.432.)

In cases like this, where the state outlasts the act of naming it, exists before it, and recurs when it is past, we probably run little practical risk of error when we talk as if the state knew itself.

The state of feeling and the state of naming the feeling are continuous, and the infallibility of such prompt introspective judgments is probably great.But even here the certainty of our knowledge ought not to be argued on the a priori ground that percipi and esse are in psychology the same.The states are really two ; the naming state and the named state are apart ; percipi is esse' is not the principle that applies.

J.Mohr : Grundlage der Empirischen Psychologie (Leipzig, 1882), p.47.

In English we have not even the generic distinction between the-thing-thought-of and the-thought-thinking-it, which in German is expressed by the opposition between Gedachtes and Gedanke , in Latin by that between cogitatum and cogitatio.

Compare B.P.Bowne's Metaphysics (1882), p.408.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 凌道心

    凌道心

    古怪的黑莲心,脑海中奇异的画面,一个契机,一段传奇。
  • 人间失真

    人间失真

    每一个生命都构成这世界的契机,每一个契机又都造就着毁灭,那么在一切的终焉尽头又有什么?这双眼睛所见,业火熊熊。
  • 残界一梦

    残界一梦

    在冰冷的宇宙深处,密密麻麻飞驰着一群令人头皮发麻的身影,近看竟是成千上万只五爪神龙,他们颜色各不相同,形态各异。有浑身沐浴在离火之精中御空而行的,有包裹在湛蓝色葵水之精中的,有鼻孔处喷出两道红火拱着宝珠而行的,也有周身被龙卷风环绕而进者……这群神龙,一起护送着最中间的一口古朴的石棺而行,他们要去何方,所葬何人?极远之地,踌躇、毕方、腾蛇、九尾、饕餮……等强大的先天神兽遥遥而望……一个少年踏剑而行,手擎九龙戟,从宇宙深处极速赶来……
  • 狼妖冥皇

    狼妖冥皇

    尊贵无比的冥皇殿下降到人间,会发生怎样一个有爱的故事呢?————————分割线————————好吧,这其实是一个智商爆表颜值爆表情商却为负的冥皇殿下到人间来找自家不见了很久的弟弟,却被某一只狡猾无比的狐仙给扑倒了的故事……
  • 绝世无双:邪王妖娆妃

    绝世无双:邪王妖娆妃

    现代神偷穿越异世大陆,成为被家族抛弃的家庭里,开始走上通往强者之路可谁能告诉她,那个冷酷邪魅,霸道腹黑,武道天武无人能及的殿下是从哪里冒出来的,一心向往自由自在的生活,偏偏他誓死不放手,誓要宠她入骨,爱她如命。强者遇强者的碰撞,一场追逐与被追逐的好戏上古神胎?远古神兽?她看了看自己的纯白毛绒爪子,欲哭无泪
  • 每天10分钟销售课

    每天10分钟销售课

    谨以《每天10分钟销售课》先给那些不甘于平庸,不怕失败,用于坚持,渴望改变人生、成就辉煌的销售员们。 1分钟问题导入、3分钟案例阅读、3分钟经典解析、3分钟精心铭记,每天只需10分钟,帮你完成一次销售技能的迅速提升。
  • 静默的钢铁

    静默的钢铁

    “士兵是钢铁,静默的钢铁。”他们在国家最需要时,义无反顾地被铸成最锋利的形状。他们生于沉默与黑暗,爆发时轰鸣,最后又归于静默,却被深深打下了不可逆转的烙印。希姆莱的秘密计划,来自西藏的“天使”基因,恶梦般的改造,血脉的力量与原罪,执着,坚守,思考,抗争,直至灭亡——这就是静默钢铁,那支曾经存在过的,纳粹德军由改造人和超级士兵组成的,存在于黑暗中的精锐特殊部队。苏军的不死军团,来自OSS,却身为盖世太保的双面女谍,拥有犹太血统的党卫军女兵,生化圣母莱克莎,继承一切的伊克蕾——“贝尔珀斯坦一家,至少毁了我们五个师!”——某美国陆军少将。即使他们的光荣和梦想,随着第三帝国的毁灭,堕入黑暗之中,成为人们避之不及的凶兆,以及大洋彼岸,论坛上争论不休的话题,然而历史却不会忘记他们。
  • 古玩行家

    古玩行家

    古玩行水深!这行里有各式各样真假难辨的古玩,充斥着鱼龙混杂形形色色的古玩人。老前辈说:在这行里稍有不慎,你就可能跌入万丈深渊,当然,如果你能成为古玩行家,就会有另外一种可能……我是一个平凡的人,我没有透视眼,没有鉴宝异能,而我却有别人无法企及的东西,陪伴我经历着一个个不平凡的古玩故事。我叫林辰东,这是我的古玩故事。
  • 历史视野中的大众媒介公信力

    历史视野中的大众媒介公信力

    本书以我国大众传播媒介的发展史为线索,从政府、媒介、受众三方视角,对自1872年《申报》创刊至今一百多年内,我国大众媒介公信力的发展和变迁进行了系统考察。通过对不同历史阶段内政府的新闻政策、大众传播媒介的自我定位、受众对大众传播媒介的使用和认知这三个层面进行的观察和梳理,探讨了不同时期响大众传播媒介公信力的主要因素及其相互关系。
  • 织女星的眼泪

    织女星的眼泪

    那年夏天,我们匆匆遇见匆匆离别,年少的我们喜欢一个人只是因为那天天气很好,心情不错,你闯进了我的风景,把她留在纸上,我却把你留在心上。