CHAPTER -II
The Age of Individualism
and
Reason
AN
INDIVIDUALISTIC age of human
society comes as a result of the corruption
and failure of the conventional, as a revolt against the reign of the petrified
typal figure: Before it can be born it is necessary that the old truths shall
have been lost in the soul and practice of the race and that even the
conventions which ape and replace them shall have become devoid of real sense
and intelligence; stripped of all practical justification, they exist only
mechanically by fixed idea, by the force of custom, by attachment to the form.
It is then that men in spite of the natural conservatism of the social mind are
compelled at last to perceive that the Truth is dead in them and that they are
living by a lie. The individualism of the new age is an attempt to get back
from the conventionalism of belief and practice to some solid bed-rock, no
matter what, of real and tangible Truth, And it is necessarily individualistic,
because all the old general standards have become bankrupt and can no longer
give any inner help; it is therefore the individual who has to become a
discoverer, a pioneer, and to search out by his individual reason, intuition,
idealism, desire, claim upon life or whatever other light he finds in himself
the true law of the world and of his own being. By that, when he has found or
thinks he has found it, he will strive to rebase on a firm foundation and
remould in a more vital even if a poorer form religion, society, ethics,
political institutions, his relations with his fellows, his strivings for his
own perfection and his labour for mankind.
It is in Europe that the age of
individualism has taken birth and exercised its full sway; the East has entered
into it only by . contact and influence, not from an original impulse. And it
is to its passion for the discovery of the actual truth of things and for the
governing of human life by whatever law of the truth it has found that the West
owes its centuries of strength, vigour, light,
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progress,
irresistible expansion. Equally, it is due not to any original falsehood in the
ideals on which its life was founded, but to the loss of the living sense of
the Truth it once held and its long contented slumber in the cramping bonds of
a mechanical conventionalism that the East has found itself helpless in the
hour of its awakening, a giant empty of strength, inert masses of men who had
forgotten how to deal freely with facts and forces because they had learned
only how to live in a world of stereotyped thought and customary action. Yet
the truths which Europe has found by its individualistic age covered only the
first more obvious, physical and outward facts of life and only such of their
more hidden realities and powers as the habit of analytical reason and the
pursuit of practical utility can give to man. If its rationalistic civilisation
has swept so triumphantly over the world, it is because it found no deeper and
more powerful truth to confront it; for all the rest of mankind was still in the
inactivity of the last dark hours of the conventional age.
The individualistic age of Europe was in
its beginning a revolt of reason, in its culmination a triumphal progress of
physical Science. Such an evolution was historically inevitable. The dawn of
individualism is always a questioning, a denial. The individual finds a
religion imposed upon him which does not base its dogma and practice upon a
living sense of ever verifiable spiritual Truth, but on the letter of an
ancient book, the infallible dictum of a Pope, the tradition of a Church, the
learned casuistry of schoolmen and Pundits, conclaves of ecclesiastics, heads
of monastic orders, doctors of all sorts, all of them unquestionable tribunals
whose sole function is to judge and pronounce, but none of whom seems to think
it necessary or even allowable to search, test, prove, inquire, discover. He
finds that, as is inevitable under such a regime, true science and knowledge
are either banned, punished and persecuted or else rendered obsolete by the habit
of blind reliance on fixed authorities; even what is true in old authorities is
no longer of any value, because its words are learnedly or ignorantly repeated
but its real sense is no longer lived except at most by a few. In politics he
finds everywhere divine rights, established privileges, sanctified tyrannies
which are evidently armed with an oppressive power and justify them-
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selves by
long prescription, but seem to have no real claim or title to exist. In the
social order he finds an equally stereotyped reign of convention, fixed
disabilities, fixed privileges, the self-regarding arrogance of the high, the
blind prostration of the low, while the old functions which might have
justified at one time such a distribution of status are either not performed at
all or badly performed without any sense of obligation and merely as a part of
caste pride. He has to rise in revolt; on every claim of authority he has to
turn the eye of a resolute inquisition; when he IS told that this is the sacred
truth of things or the command of God or the immemorial order of human life, he
has to reply, "But is it really so? How shall I know that this is the truth
of things and not superstition and falsehood? When did God command it, or how
do I know that this was the sense of His command and not your error or
invention, or that the book on which you found yourself is His word at all, or
that He has ever .' spoken His will to mankind? This immemorial order of which
you speak, is it really immemorial, really a law of Nature or an imperfect
result of Time and at present a most false convention?
. And or all you say, still I must ask, does it
agree with the facts
of the world, with my sense of right, with my
judgment of truth, with my experience of reality?" And if it does not the
revolting individual flings off the yoke, declares the truth as he sees it and
in doing so strikes inevitably at the root of the religious, the social, the
political, momentarily perhaps even the moral order of the community as it
stands, because it stands upon the authority he discredits and the convention
he destroys and not upon a living truth which can be successfully opposed to
his own. The champions of the old order may be right when they seek to sup-
press him as a destructive agency perilous to social security, political order
or religious tradition; but he stands there and can no other, because to
destroy is his mission, to destroy falsehood and lay bare a new foundation of
truth.
But by
what individual faculty or standard shall the innovator find out his new
foundation or establish his new measures? Evidently, it will depend upon the
available enlightenment of the time and the possible forms of knowledge to
which he has access. A t first it was in religion a personal illumination
support-
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ed in
the West by a theological, in the East by a philosophical reasoning. In society
and politics it started with a crude primitive perception of natural right and
justice which took its origin from the exasperation of suffering or from an
awakened sense of general oppression, wrong, injustice and the indefensibility
of the existing order when brought to any other test than that of privilege and
established convention. The religious motive led at first; the social and
political, moderating itself after the swift suppression of its first crude and
vehement movements, took advantage of the upheaval of religious reformation,
followed behind it as a useful ally and waited its time to assume the lead when
the spiritual momentum had been spent and, perhaps by the very force of the
secular influences it called to its aid, had missed its way. The movement of
religious freedom in Europe took its stand first on a limited, then on an
absolute right of the individual experience and illumined reason to determine
the true sense of inspired Scripture and the true Christian ritual and order of
the Church. The vehemence of its claim was measured by the vehemence of its
revolt from the usurpations, pretensions and brutalities of the ecclesiastical
power which claimed to withhold the Scripture from general knowledge and impose
by moral authority and physical violence its own arbitary interpretation of sacred
writ, if not indeed another and substituted doctrine, on the recalcitrant
individual conscience. In its more tepid and moderate forms the revolt
engendered such compromises as the episcopalian Churches, at a higher degree of
fervour Calvinistic Puritanism, at white heat a riot of individual religious
judgment and imagination in such sects as the Anabaptist, Independent, Socinian
and countless others. In the East such a movement divorced from all political
or any strongly iconoclastic social significance would have produced
simply a series of religious reformers, illumined saints, new bodies of belief
with their appropriate cultural and social practice; in the west atheism and
secularism were its inevitable and predestined goal. At first, questioning the conventional
forms of religion, the meditation of the papal authority for the authority of
the scripture, it could not fail to go forward and question the scripture
itself and then all supernatural-
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ism,
religious belief or suprarational truth no less than outward creed and
institute.
For, eventually, the evolution of Europe
was determined less by the Reformation than by the Renascence; it flowered by
the vigorous return of the ancient Graeco- Roman mentality of the one rather
than by the Hebraic and religio-ethical temperament of the other. The
Renascence gave back to Europe on one hand the free curiosity of the Greek
mind, its eager search for first principles and rational laws, its delighted
intellectual scrutiny of the facts of life by the force of direct observation
and individual reasoning, on the other the Roman's large practicality and his
sense for the ordering of life in harmony with a robust utility and the just
principles of things. But both these tendencies were pursued with a passion, a
seriousness, a moral and almost religious. ardour which, lacking in the ancient
Graeco-Roman mentality, Europe owed to her long centuries of Judaeo-Christian
discipline. It was from these sources that the individualistic age of Western
society sought ultimately for that principle of order and control which all
human society needs and which more ancient times attempted to realise first by
the materialisation of fixed symbols of truth, then by ethical type and
discipline, finally by infallible authority or stereotyped convention.
Manifestly, the unrestrained use of individual illumination or judgment without
either any outer standard or any generally recognisable source of truth is a
perilous experiment for our imperfect race. It is likely to lead rather to a
continual fluctuation and disorder of opinion than to a progressive unfolding
of the truth of things. No less, the pursuit of social justice through the
stark assertion of individual rights or class interests and de- sires must be a
source of continual struggle and revolution:' and may end in an exaggerated
assertion of the will in each to live his own life and to satisfy his own ideas
and desires which will produce a serious malaise or a radical trouble in the
social body. Therefore on every individualistic age of mankind there is
imperative the search for two supreme desiderata. It must find a general
standard of Truth to which the individual judgment of all will be inwardly
compelled to subscribe without physical constraint or imposition of irrational
authority. And it must
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some
principle of social order which shall be equally founded on a universally
recognisable truth of things; an order is needed that will put a rein on desire
and interest by providing at least some intellectual and moral test which these
two powerful and dangerous forces must satisfy before they can feel justified
in reach too asserting their claims on life. Speculative and scientific reason
for their means, the pursuit of a practicable social justice and sound utility
for their spirit, the progressive nations of Europe set out on their search for
this light and this law.
They found and held it with enthusiasm in the discoveries of physical Science.
The triumphant domination, the all-shattering and irresistible victory of
Science in nineteenth century Europe is explained by the absolute perfection
with which it at least seemed for a time to sa1isfy these great psychological
wants of the western mind. Science seemed to it to fulfil impeccably its search
for the two supreme desiderata of an individualistic age. Here at last was a
truth of things which depended on no doubtful Scripture or fallible human
authority but which Mother Nature herself had written in her eternal book for
all to read who had patience to observe and intellectual honesty to judge. Here
were laws, principles, fundamental facts of the world and of our being which
all could verify at once for themselves and which must therefore satisfy and
guide the free individual judgment, delivering it equally from alien compulsion
and from erratic self-will. Here were laws and truths which justified and yet
con- trolled the claims and desires of the individual human being; here a
science which provided a standard, a norm of knowledge, a rational basis for life,
a clear outline and sovereign means for the progress and perfection of the
individual and the race. The attempt to govern and organise human life by
verifiable Science, by a law, a truth of things, an order and principles which
all can observe and verify in their ground and fact and to which there- fore
all may freely and must rationally subscribe, is the culminating movement of
European civilisation. It has been the fulfilment and triumph of the
individualistic age of human society; it has seemed likely also to be its end,
the cause of the death of
individualism and its putting
away
and burial among the monuments
of the past
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For this discovery by
individual free-thought of universal laws of which the individual is almost a
by-product and by which he must necessarily be governed, this attempt actually
to govern the social life of humanity in conscious accordance with the
mechanism of these laws seems to lead logically to the suppression of that very
individual freedom which made the discovery and the attempt at all possible. In seeking the truth
and
law
of his own being the individual seems to have discovered a truth and law which
is not of his own individual being at all, but of the collectivity, the pack,
the hive, the mass. The result to which this points and to which it still seems
irresistibly to be driving us is a new ordering of society by a rigid economic
or governmental Socialism in which the individual, deprived again of his freedom
in his own interest and that of humanity, must have his whole life and action
determined for him at every step and in every point from birth to old age by
the well- ordered mechanism of
the State.1 We might then have a
curious new version, with very important differences, of the old Asiatic or
even of the old Indian order of society. In place of the religio-ethical
sanction there will be a scientific and rational or naturalistic motive and
rule; instead of the Brahmin Shastrakara the scientific, administrative and
economic expert. In the place of the King himself observing the law and
compelling with the aid and consent of the society all to tread without
deviation the line marked out for them, the line of the Dharma, there will
stand the collectivist State similarly guided and empowered. Instead of a
hierarchical arrangement of classes, each with its powers, privileges and duties there will be
established
an initial equality of education and opportunity, ultimately perhaps with a
subsequent determination of function by experts who shall know us better than
ourselves and choose for us our work and quality. Marriage, generation and the
education of the child may be fixed by the scientific State as of old by the
Shastra. For each man there will be a long stage of work
1
We already see a violent though incomplete beginning
of this line of social evolution in Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, Communist
Russia. The trend is for more and more nations to accept this beginning of a
new order, and the resistance of the old order is more passive than active
-
it
lacks the fire, enthusiasm and self-confidence which animates the innovating
Idea.
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for the State superintended
by collectivist authorities and per- haps in the end a period of liberation,
not for action but for enjoyment of leisure and personal self-improvement,
answering to the Vanaprastha and Sannyasa Ashramas of the old Aryan society.
The rigidity of such a social state would greatly surpass that of its Asiatic
forerunner; for there at least there were for the rebel, the innovator two
important concessions. There was for the individual the freedom of an early
Sannyasa, a renunciation of the social for the free spiritual life, and there
was for the group the liberty to form a sub-society governed by new conceptions
like the Sikh or the Vaishnava. But neither of these violent departures from
the norm could be tolerated by a strictly economic and rigorously scientific
and Unitarian society. Obviously, too, there would grow up a fixed system of
social morality and custom and a body of socialistic doctrine which one could not be allowed to question
practically, and perhaps not even intellectually, since that would soon shatter
or else undermine the system. Thus we should have a new typal order based upon
purely economic capacity and function, gunakarma, and rapidly petrifying
by the inhibition of individual liberty into a system of rationalistic
conventions. And quite certainly this static order would at long last be broken
by a new individualist age of revolt, led probably by the principles of an
extreme philosophical Anarchism.
On the other hand, there are in
operation forces which seem likely to frustrate or modify this development
before it can reach its menaced consummation. In the first place, rationalistic
and physical Science has over passed itself and must before long be overtaken
by a mounting flood of psycho- logical and psychic knowledge which cannot fail
to compel quite a new view of the human being and open a new vista before
mankind. At the same time the Age of Reason is visibly drawing to an end; novel
ideas are sweeping over the world and are being accepted with a significant
rapidity, ideas inevitably subversive of any premature typal order of economic
rationalism, dynamic ideas such as Nietzsche's Will-to-live, Bergson's
exaltation of Intuition above intellect or the latest German philosophical
tendency to acknowledge a suprarational faculty
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and
a suprarational order of
truths. Already another mental poise is beginning to settle and conceptions are
on the way apply themselves in the field of practice which promise to give the
succession of the individualistic age of society not to 'Dew typal order, but
to a subjective age which may well be a eat and momentous passage to a very
different goal. It may be doubted whether we are not already in the morning
twilight of new period of the human cycle.
Secondly, the West in its triumphant
conquest of the world
s
awakened the
slumbering East and has produced in its midst increasing struggle between an
imported Western individualism and the old conventional principle of society.
The latter is here rapidly, there slowly breaking down, but something quite
different from Western individualism may very well take its place. Some opine,
indeed, that Asia will reproduce Europe's Age of Reason with all its
materialism and secularist individualism while Europe itself is pushing onward
into new forms and ideas; but this is in the last degree improbable. On the
contrary, the signs are that the individualistic period in the East will be
neither of long duration nor predominantly rationalistic and secularist in its
character. If then the East, as the result of its awakening, follows its own
bent and evolves a novel social tendency and culture, that is bound to have an enormous effect
on the
direction
of the world's civilisation; we can measure its probable influence by the
profound results of the first reflux of the ideas even of the unawakened East
upon Europe. Whatever that effect may be, it will not be in favour of any
re-ordering of society on the lines of the still current tendency towards a
mechanical economism which has not ceased to dominate mind and life in the
Occident. The influence of the East is likely to be rather in the direction of
subjectivism and practical spirituality, a
greater opening of our physical existence to the
realisation of ideals other than the strong but limited aims suggested by
life and the body in their own gross
nature.
But, most important
of all, the individualistic age of Europe has in its discovery of the
individual fixed among the idea-forces of 'the future two of a master potency
which cannot be entirely eliminated by any temporary reaction. The first of
these, now.
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universally accepted, is the democratic conception of
the right of all individuals as members of the society to the full life and the
full development of which they are individually capable. It is no longer
possible that we should accept as an ideal any arrangement by which certain
classes of society should arrogate development and full social fruition to
themselves while assigning a bare and barren function of service alone to
others. It is now fixed that social development and well-being mean the development
and well-being of all the individuals in the society and not merely a
flourishing of the community in the mass which resolves itself really into the
splendour and power of one or two classes. This conception has been accepted in
full by all progressive nations and is the basis of the present socialistic
tendency of the world. But in addition there is this deeper truth which
individualism has discovered, that the individual is not merely a social unit;
his existence, his right and claim to live and grow are not founded solely on
his social work and function. He is not merely a member of a human pack, hive
or ant- hill; he is something in himself, a soul, a being, who has to fulfil
his own individual truth and law as well as his natural or his assigned part in
the truth and law of the collective existence.1 He demands freedom, space, initiative for his soul,
for his nature, for that puissant and tremendous thing which society so much
distrusts and has laboured in the past either to suppress altogether or to
relegate to the purely spiritual field, an individual thought, will and
conscience. If he is to merge these eventually, it cannot be into the
dominating thought, will and conscience of others, but into something beyond
into which he and all must be both allowed and helped freely to grow. That is
an idea, a truth which, intellectually recognised and given its full exterior
and superficial significance by Europe, agrees at its root with the profoundest
and highest spiritual conceptions of Asia and has a large part to play in the
moulding of the future.
1 This is no longer
recognised by the new order, Fascist or Communistic,
-
here
the individual is reduced to a cell or atom of the social body. "We have
destroyed," proclaims a German exponent, "the false view that men are
individual beings; there is no liberty of individuals, there is only liberty
of nations or races."
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