Outlines of the Doctrine of Knowledge
by Johann Fichte
I.
THE Doctrine of Knowledge, apart from all special and definite knowing,
proceeds immediately upon Knowledge itself, in the essential unity
in which it recognises Knowledge as existing; and it raises this
question in the first place - How this Knowledge can come into being,
and what it is in its inward and essential Nature?
The following must be apparent: - There is but One who is absolutely
by and through himself, - namely, God; and God is not the mere dead
conception to which we have thus given utterance, but he is in himself
pure Life. He can neither change nor determine himself in aught
within himself, nor become any other Being; for his Being contains
within it all his Being and all possible Being, and neither within
him nor out of him can any new Being arise.
If, therefore, Knowledge must be, and yet be not God himself, then,
since there is nothing but God, it can only be God out of himself,
- God's Being out of his Being, - his Manifestation, in which he
dwells wholly as he is in himself, while within himself he also
still remains wholly such as he is. But such a Manifestation is
a picture or Schema.
If there be such a Schema - and this can only become evident through
its immediate being, seeing that it is immediate - it can only be
because God is; and, so surely as God is, it cannot but be. It is,
however, by no means to be conceived of as a work of God, effected
by some particular act, whereby a change is wrought in himself;
but it is to be conceived of as an immediate consequence of his
Being. It is absolutely, according to the Form of his Being, just
as he himself is absolutely; although it is not he himself, but
his Schema.
Again: - Out of God there can be nothing whatever but this; - no
Being that is essentially independent, for that he alone is; - only
his Schema can there be out of him, and thus a Being out of God
signifies merely his Schema; - the two expressions mean precisely
the same thing.
II.
Further. - Since it cannot be overlooked by the Doctrine of Knowledge
that Actual Knowledge does by no means present itself as a Unity,
such as is assumed above but as a multiplicity, there is consequently
a second task imposed upon it, - that of setting forth the ground
of this apparent Multiplicity. It is of course understood that this
ground is not to be derived from any outward source, but must be
shown to be contained in the essential Nature of Knowledge itself
as such; - and that therefore this problem, although apparently
two-fold, is yet but one and the same, - namely, to set forth the
essential Nature of Knowledge.
III.
This Being out of God cannot, by any means, be a limited, completed,
and inert Being, since God himself is not such a dead Being, but,
on the contrary, is Life; - but it can only be a Power, since only
a Power is the true formal picture or Schema of Life. And indeed
it can only be the Power of realising that which is contained in
itself - a Schema. Since this Power is the expression of a determinate
Being - the Schema of the Divine Life - it is itself determined;
but only in the way in which an absolute Power may be determined,
- by laws, and indeed by determinate laws. If this or that is to
become actual, the Power must operate in this way or that, subject
to that determination.
IV.
Thus in the first place - There can be an Actual Being out of God
only through the self-realisation of this absolute Power: - this
Power, however, can only produce pictures or Schemae, which by combination
become Actual Knowledge. Thus, whatever exists out of God, exists
only by means of absolutely free Power, as the Knowledge belonging
to this Power, and in its Knowledge; - and any other Being but this
out of the true Being which lies hidden in God is altogether impossible.
V.
Again, as to the determination of this Power by laws: - It is, in
the first place, determined through itself, as the Power of Actual
Knowledge. But it is essential to Actual Knowledge that some particular
Schema should be realised through this Power; and then that through
the same identical Power, in the same identical position, this Schema
should be recognised as a Schema, and as a Schema not in itself
independent, but demanding, as a condition of its Existence, a Being
out of itself The immediate and concrete expression of this recognition,
- which in Actual Knowledge never attains to consciousness, but
which is elevated into consciousness only by means of the Doctrine
of Knowledge, is Actual Knowledge itself in its Form; and, in consequence
of this latter recognition, there is, of necessity, assumed an Objective
Reality, wholly transcending the Schema and independent of Knowledge.
Since in this knowledge of the Objective Reality, even the Schema
itself is concealed, much more is the Power which creates it concealed
and unseen. This is the fundamental law of the Form of Knowledge.
So surely therefore as the Power develops itself in this particular
way, it develops itself as we have described; not merely schematising,
but also schematising the Schema as a Schema, and recognising it
in its dependent nature; - not that it must unconditionally do this,
but that only by means of this process can it attain to Actual Knowledge.
In consequence of this there is much that remains invisible in
Actual Knowledge, but which, nevertheless, really is as the manifestation
of this Power. If therefore this, and all other manifestation of
this Power, were to be imported into Knowledge, then could this
only occur in a Knowledge other than that first mentioned; and thus
would the unity of Knowledge necessarily be broken up into separate
parts, by the opposition of the law of the form of visibility to
that law by which Knowledge perceives itself as a perfect and indivisible
whole.
VI.
Further: - Within this its Formal Being, this Power is also determined
by an unconditional Imperative. It shall recognise itself as the
Schema of the Divine Life, which it is originally, and through which
alone it has Existence; - consequent]y this is its absolute vocation,
in which its efficiency as a Power is completely exhausted. It shall
recognise itself as the Schema of the Divine Life, - but it is originally
nothing more than a Power, although most assuredly it is this determinate
Power of the Schema of God: - if it is to recognise itself as such
a Schema in Reality, then it must make itself so actually, by the
realisation of the Power - by its self-realisation.
VII.
The recognition of itself as a Power to which an unconditional Imperative
is addressed, and which is able to fulfil that Imperative, and the
actual realisation of this Power, should the latter come to pass,
are distinct from each other; and the possibility of the latter
is dependent on the previous accomplishment of the former.
It shall recognise itself as the Divine Schema, not by means of
any Being inherent in itself, for there is no such Being, but by
means of the realisation of the Power. It must therefore previously
possess the knowledge that it is such a Power, and also by what
marks it may recognise itself in its self-realisation, in order
that it may direct its attention to these characteristic marks,
and so be enabled to judge of the realisation which they denote.
Or it may be regarded thus - By means of the realisation of the
Power there arises a Schema, and a consciousness of that which is
contained in the Schema, and not more than this. (§ v.) The
formal addition, which lies beyond the immediate contents of the
Schema, - ie. that it is the Schema of God, - is not immediately
contained in it; and can only be attributed to it in consequence
of some characteristic mark perceived in the actual realisation
of the Power. The characteristic mark is this - that the Power realize
itself, with absolute Freedom, in accordance with the recognised
universal Imperative.
VIII.
If it shall recognise itself as a Power to which an unconditional
Imperative is addressed, it must, previous to this definite recognition,
have also recognised itself generally as a Principle; - and since
it can only recognise itself by means of its own self-development,
it must necessarily develop itself before being able to recognise
itself immediately as the Principle in this development. The necessity
for this is contained in the intuition that the Imperative shall
become visible to it; and it may therefore be named a necessity
of the Imperative - a shall of the shall - namely, a necessity of
its visibility: - consequently this Imperative - this shall - lies
in the primitive determination of the Power through its Being from
God. Since, when it does not recognise itself generally as a Principle,
it cannot, in the same position and at the same time, recognise
itself in any more definite form, it is clear that these two modes
of Knowledge are separate and distinct from each other. We call
Knowledge by means of an immediate invisible principle - Intuition.
IX.
Since neither the Power itself as such, nor the Divine Life, is
schematised in Intuition, by which indeed there is first introduced
the practical possibility of such schematising, it is clear that
there is nothing left remaining in Intuition but the mere Form of
Power as given in its immediate expression. It is (§ V.) a
Power of Contemplation, - and that indeed without direction towards
the one Divine Life, which from this standpoint remains concealed;
- an undefined, wholly indeterminate, and yet absolute Power, -
and hence an Infinite. It therefore schematises itself as contemplating
an infinity in one glance:- SPACE; it consequently thus also schematises
itself as contracting and limiting itself, in the same undivided
Intuition, to a point in that first infinity, a point which in itself
is likewise infinitely divisible, a consolidated infinite Space
within the other simple infinite Space, - or MATTER; - thus as an
infinite Power of self-concentration, and consequently also as an
unlimited Material World in Space: - all which, according to the
fundamental law of Knowledge which we have already adduced (§
v.) must appear to it as actual, self-existent Being.
Further: - by virtue of its merely formal power of Being, it is
an absolutely primitive Principle. In order to schematise itself
as such in Intuition, it must antecedent to its actual activity,
perceive a possible form of activity which - thus it must seem to
it - it either might or might not be able to realize. This possible
form of activity cannot be perceived by it in the Absolute Imperative,
which to this point of view is invisible; hence it can only be perceived
in a likewise blindly schematised Causality, which indeed is not
an immediate Causality but only appears to become so through the
apparent realisation of the Power. But such a Causality is an Instinct.
It was necessary that the Power should feel itself impelled to this
or that form of activity, but without the source of the impulse
being immediately perceived, since such an immediate recognition
would deprive it of the appearance of Freedom, which is here an
indispensable characteristic.
This activity demanded by Instinct can only be an activity exercised
on the Material World. Hence the Instinct to activity comes into
view in immediate relation to material existences; these are consequently
recognised in this immediate relation, and acquire, through this
relation, not merely extension in Space, but, even more, their internal
qualities: - and by this remark we have completed the definition
of material existences, which was before left incomplete.
Should the Power, by means of this Instinct and the consequent
appearance of self-determination, perceive itself as in a state
of real activity, then, in the perception of this activity, it would
be associated with the Material World in the same undivided Form
of Intuition; and hence in this Intuition, thus uniting it with
the Material World, it would perceive itself as a material existence
in a double relation to the Material World: - partly as Sense, that
it might feel the relation of that world to its Instinct, - partly
as Organism, that it might contemplate its own activity therein.
In this activity it now beholds itself as the same identical Power
in a state of self-determination; but as not exhausted in any form
of its activity, and as thus remaining a Power ad infinitum. In
this perception of its unlimited Power there arises before it an
Infinity; not in one glance, like that first mentioned, but an Infinity
in which it may behold its own infinite activity; - an infinite
series of successive links:- TIME. Since this activity can be exercised
ad infinitum only on the Material World, Time is likewise transferred
to that world in the unity of Intuition, although that world already
possesses its own peculiar expression of Infinitude in the infinite
divisibility of SPACE and of all its parts.
It is obvious that the position in which the Power gives itself
up wholly to the contemplation of the Material World and is exhausted
therein, is distinct from that in which it becomes cognisant of
its Instinct towards activity in this previously recognised World,
- that nevertheless there remains, even in the latter position,
a Schema of present and necessary Existence, in order that it may
be possible for the Instinct to enter into relations with such Existence:
- and this forms the connection between these two separate and distinct
positions of Intuition.
This whole domain of Intuition is, as we said, the expression and
Schema of mere Power. Since Power, without the Schema of the Divine
Life, is nothing, while here it is nevertheless schematised in this
its nothingness, - this whole domain is consequently nothing in
itself, and only in its relation to Actual Being does it acquire
significance, the practical possibility of the latter being dependent
upon it.
X.
There is further contained in the Power an original determination
to raise itself to the perception of the Imperative, the practical
realisation of which is now rendered immediately possible by the
recognised Existence of the whole domain of Intuition. But how and
in what way can this elevation be accomplished ? That which abides
firmly in Intuition, and is indeed the very root of it, is Instinct;
- by its means the Power itself is made dependent on Intuition,
and is imprisoned within it. The condition and the only means for
the now possible realisation of the Power, is therefore the liberation
of itself from Instinct, and the abolition of the latter as the
invisible and blind impulse of schematising, - and in the abolition
of the principle, the consequence of it - imprisonment in Intuition
- is likewise abolished. Knowledge would then stand forth in its
primitive unity, as it is perceived at first by the Doctrine of
Knowledge; - in this its essential unity it would manifest itself
as dependent, and as requiring a substratum - a unity which shall
exist absolutely through itself. Knowledge in this form is no longer
Intuition, but Thought; - and indeed Pure Thought, or Intelligising.
XI.
Before proceeding further, we must from this central point indicate
a distinction hitherto unnoticed in the sphere of Intuition. Only
through blind Instinct, in which the only possible guidance of the
Imperative is awanting, does the Power in Intuition remain undetermined;
where it is schematised as absolute it becomes infinite; and where
it is presented in a determinate form, as a principle, it becomes
at least manifold. By the above-mentioned act of Intelligising,
the Power liberates itself from Instinct, to direct itself towards
Unity. But so surely as it requires a special act for the production
of this Unity, - (in the first place indeed inwardly and immediately
within the Power itself, because only under this condition could
it be outwardly perceived in the Schema), - so surely was the Power
not viewed as One in the sphere of Intuition, but as Manifold; -
this Power, which now through perception and recognition of itself
has become an Ego - an Individual, - was, in this sphere, not one
Individual, but necessarily broken up into a world of Individuals.
This indeed does not occur in the Form of Intuition itself. The
original schematising principle, and the principle which recognises
this Schema immediately and in the very act of its production as
a Schema, are of necessity numerically one, not two; and thus also,
in the domain of Intuition, that which immediately contemplates
its Intuition is a single, self-inclosed, separate principle, in
this respect inaccessible to any other: - the individuality of all
men, who, on this account, can each have but one separate individuality.
But this separation of Individuals must certainly take place in
that Form in which alone unity also is produced, - namely, in that
of Thought; - hence the individuality we have described, however
isolated it may appear in the immediate Intuition of itself, yet,
when it comprehends itself in Thought, perceives itself, in this
Thought, as an Individual in a world of Individuals like itself;
which latter, since it cannot behold them as free principles like
itself in immediate Intuition, can only be recognised by it as such,
by an inference from the mode of their activity in the World of
Sense.
From this farther definition of the sphere of Intuition - that
in it the Principle, which through its Being in God is One, is broken
up into Many - there follows yet another. This division, even in
the One Thought, and the mutual recognition, which nevertheless
is necessarily found in connection with it, would not be possible
were not the Object of the Intuition and of the Activity of all,
one and the same, - a like World to them all. The Intuition of a
World of Sense existed only in order that through this World the
Ego might become visible to itself as standing under the Law of
an Absolute Imperative. For this nothing more was necessary than
that the Intuition of such a World should simply be; - the manner
of its being is absolutely of no importance, since for this purpose
any form of it is sufficient. But the Ego must besides recognise
itself as One in a given Multiplicity of Individuals; - and to this
end it is necessary, besides the general determinations of the World
of Sense already mentioned, that this World should be the same to
each beholder: - the same Space, and the same filling up of it for
all; - notwithstanding that it is still left to individual Freedom
to apprehend this common filling up in its own particular order
in Time - the same Time, and the same filling up of it by sensible
events for all; - notwithstanding that it still remains free to
every one, so far as his own thought and action are concerned, to
fill it up after his own fashion. The necessity for the Imperative
becoming visible (§ VIII.) as it proceeds from God, is assuredly
contained in the One Principle, since there is but One Principle
that proceeds from God; and thus, in consequence of the unity of
the Power, it is possible for each Individual to schematise his
World of Sense in accordance with the law of that original harmony;
- and every Individual, under the condition of being found on the
way towards the recognition of the Imperative, must so schematise
it. I might say: - Every Individual can and must, under the given
condition, construct the True World of Sense, - for this indeed
has beyond the universal and formal laws above deduced, no other
Truth and Reality than this universal harmony.
XII.
Let us return to Pure Thought or Intelligising (§ I). By it
Knowledge is perceived as its only possible Schema of the Divine
Life. In this Thought I do not possess knowledge immediately, but
only in a Schema; still less do I possess in it the Divine Life
immediately, but only in a Schema of the Schema, - in a doubly ineffectual
conception. I reflect, - and a power of so reflecting must, for
the reason to be given presently, be contained in the general Power,
- I reflect that I perceive this Knowledge; that therefore I can
perceive it; that since, according to the insight thus obtained,
Knowledge is the expression of God, this Power itself is likewise
his expression; that the Power exists only that it may be realised;
and that consequently, in virtue of my Being from God, I shall perceive
it. Only by means of this reflection do I arrive at the insight
that I shall, absolutely: - but I shall, besides, attain this insight;
- hence, - this must surely be now apparent - there must, likewise
in virtue of my Being from -God, be an absolute Power of this reflection
contained in the general Power. The whole sphere which we have now
described thus reveals itself as an Imperative of perception- -
that I, - the Principle already perceived in the sphere of Intuition,
- that I shall. In it, the Ego, which through. mere reflection is
immediately visible as a Principle, becomes the Principle of the
Schema, - as is apparent in the insight of Knowledge in its unity,
and of the Divine Life as its substratum, which we have already
adduced; - to which I may now add, by virtue of this immediate reflection-
- I think this, - I produce this insight. This Knowledge, by means
of a Principle which is immediately visible as a Principle, is Pure
Thought, as we said; - in contradistinction to that by means of
an immediate invisible Principle - Intuition.
These two, Pure Thought and Intuition, are thus distinguished from
each other in this, - that the latter, even in its very principle,
is abolished and annihilated by the former. Their connection, on
the other hand, consists in this, - that the latter is a condition
of the practical possibility of the former, - also that the Ego
which appears in the latter, still remains in the former in its
mere Schema, and is there taken into account, although in its Actuality
it is abolished along with Instinct.
XIII.
In the thought thus described I merely conceive of Knowledge as
that which may be the Schema of divine Life, and, - since this possibility
if the expression of God and is thus founded in Being, - as that
which shall be the Schema of the Divine Life; - but I myself by
no means am this. To be this actually no outward power can compel
me; as before no outward power could compel me even to realise the
Intuition of the true Material World, or to elevate myself to Pure
Thought, and therefore to an actual although empty insight into
the absolutely formal Imperative. This remains in my own power;
nut now, since all the practical conditions are fulfilled, it stands
immediately in power.
If, setting aside on the one hand mere void Intuition, and on the
other empty Intelligising, I should now, with absolute freedom and
independence of these, realise my Power, what would ensue? A Schema;
- a Knowledge therefore which, through Intelligising, I already
know as the Schema of God; but which, in the knowledge thus realised,
immediately appears to me as that which I absolutely shall; - a
Knowledge, the substance of which proceeds neither from the World
of Sense, for this is abolished, - nor from contemplation of the
mere empty Form of Knowledge, for this too I have cast aside; -
but which exists through absolutely as it is, just as the Divine
Life, whose Schema it is, is through itself absolutely as it is.
I know now that I shall. But all Actual Knowledge brings with it,
by its formal nature, its schematised apposition; - although I now
know of the Schema of God, yet I am not yet immediately this Schema,
but I am only a Schema of the Schema. The required Being is not
yet realised.
I shall be. Who is this I? Evidently that which is, - the Ego gives
in Intuition, the Individual. This shall be.
What does its Being signify? It is given as a Principle in the
World of Sense. Blind Instinct is indeed annihilated, and in its
place there now stands the clearly perceived Shall. But the Power
that at first set this Instinct in motion remains, in order that
the Shall my now set it (the Power) in motion, and become its higher
determining Principle. By means of this Power, I shall therefore,
within its sphere, - the World of Sense, - produce and make manifest
that which I recognise as my true Being in the Supersensuous World.
The Power is given as an Infinite; - hence that which in the World
of Thought is absolutely One - that which I shall - becomes in the
World of Intuition an infinite problem for my Power, which I have
to solve in all Eternity.
This Infinitude, which is properly a mere indefiniteness, can have
place only in Intuition, but by means in my true Essential Being,
which, as the Schema of God, is as simple and unchangeable as himself.
How then can this simplicity and unchangeableness be produced within
the yet continuing Infinitude, which is expressly consecrated by
the absolute Shall addressed to me as an Individual?
If, in the onflow of Time, the Ego, in every successive moment,
had to determine itself by a particular act, through the conception
of what it shall, - then in its original Unity, it was assuredly
indeterminate, and only continuously determinable in an Infinite
Time. But such an act of determination could only become possible
in Time, in opposition to some resisting power. This resisting power,
which was thus to be conquered by the act of determination, could
be nothing else than the Sensuous Instinct; and hence the necessity
of such a continuous self-determination in Time would be the sure
proof that the Instinct was not yet thoroughly abolished; which
abolition we have made a condition of entering upon the Life in
God.
Through the actual and complete annihilation of the Instinct, that
infinite determinability is itself annihilated and absorbed in a
single, absolute determination. This determination is the absolute
and simple Will which makes the likewise simple Imperative the impulsive
Principle of the Power. Even if this Power should still flow forth
into Infinitude, as it must do, the variety is only in its products,
not in itself: - it is simple, and its purpose is simple, and this
purpose is at once and for ever completed.
And thus then the Will is that point in which Intelligising, and
Intuition or Reality, thoroughly interpenetrate each other. It is
a real principle, - for it is absolute, irresistibly determining
the Power, while it also maintains and supports itself, - it is
an intelligising principle, - for it penetrates itself, and recognises
the Imperative. In it the Power is completely exhausted, and the
Schema of the Divine Life elevated to Actuality.
The infinite activity of the Power itself is not for its own sake,
and as an ultimate end; but it is only for the sake of evidencing,
in Intuition, the Being of the Will.
XIV.
Thus then does the Doctrine of Knowledge, which in its substance
is the realisation of the absolute Power of intelligising which
has now been defined, end with the recognition of itself as a mere
Schema in a Doctrine of Wisdom, although indeed a necessary and
indispensable means to such a Doctrine: - a Schema, the sole aim
of which is, with the knowledge thus acquired, - by which knowledge
alone a Will, clear and intelligible to itself and reposing upon
itself without wavering or perplexity, is possible, - to return
wholly into Actual Life; - not into the Life of blind and irrational
Instinct which we have laid bare in all its nothingness, but into
the Divine Life which shall become visible to us.
|