Blanks,findingblanks wrote: ↑Thu Jun 24, 2021 6:43 pm "The basic error of many scientific endeavours, especially those of the present day, consists precisely of the fact that they believe they present pure experience, whereas in fact they only gather up the concepts again that they themselves have inserted into it. Someone could object that we have also assigned a whole number of attributes to pure experience. We called it an endless manifoldness, an aggregate of unconnected particulars, etc. Are those then not conceptual characterizations also? In the sense in which we use them, certainly not. We have only made use of these concepts in order to direct the reader's eye to reality free of thoughts. We do not wish to ascribe these concepts to experience; we make use of them only in order to direct attention to that form of reality which is devoid of any concept."
I agree with you on the above quote. Steiner places quite stark contrast here between thinking (concepts) and pure experience. Let's see what he has to say about it in the 1924 edition preface:
We may be quite confident that the quote about the pure experiences would be one of the things that he would have rephrased in case of (1). But at the same time, anyone who has experienced the depth of these matters cannot do otherwise but agree with (2). The same essence that we find in this early work, we find later in PoF and throughout his whole life.Steiner wrote: It might seem strange that this work of my youth, almost forty years old now, should appear today unchanged and expanded only by some notes. In its manner of presentation it bears the earmarks of a thinking that lived in the philosophy of forty years ago. If I were writing it today, I would state many things differently (1). But I would not be able to present anything different as the essential being of knowledge (2). Yet what I would write today would not be able to bear within itself so faithfully the germ of the world view for which I have stood and which is in accordance with the spirit. One can write in such a germinal way only at the beginning of a life of knowledge. This perhaps justifies a new publication of a youthful work in this unchanged form.
(numbers added by me)
To give some support to (2) we can look at some other quotes from the same book.
From this is quite clear he admits that there's a thought in looking, even if we don't need to do any work to hold it. If this is the case why didn't he express similarly in the first quote? I don't know. That's why I guess this would be one of the things he would rectify in case of (1).Steiner wrote: We are so used to seeing the world of concepts as empty and without content, and so used to contrasting perception with it as something full of content and altogether definite, that it will be difficult to establish for the world of concepts the position it deserves in the true scheme of things. We miss the fact entirely that mere looking is the emptiest thing imaginable, and that only from thinking does it first receive any content at all. The only thing true about the above view is that looking does hold the ever-fluid thought in one particular form, without our having to work along actively with this holding. The fact that a person with a rich soul life sees a thousand things that are a blank to someone spiritually poor proves, clear as day, that the content of reality is only the mirror-image of the content of our spirit and that we receive only the empty form from outside.
Another one:
I suppose here we can again spend much time on the wording. For example, it might be objected "Why he puts again such a stark contrast between the thoughts that we draw out of ourselves and the perceptions? Couldn't it be that they have always been one and the same and it's just our fantasy that thinking brings them together?" This can only be understood rightly if we appreciate the fact that in thinking we experience self-propelled activity. This objection holds perfectly well if we diminish our spiritual role and focus on the experience of thoughts that always seem to accompany perceptions. Note - I say 'experience of thoughts', not experience of 'thinking'. To experience the latter we need to bring the exceptional state. Otherwise our thinking is perceived in a way no different that the contemplation of leaves growing on a branch or blown by the wind - that is, as something that 'just happens' spontaneously, we simply witness the unfoldment of thinking. It is here that the contemplative mystic would argue that even the feeling of spiritual causation of thinking is present just as yet another perception and the ego emerges as a 'strange loop' that revolves around the illusion of causative spiritual activity.Steiner wrote: The best proof that this is so is provided by the fact that people who lead a richer spiritual life also penetrate more deeply into the world of experience than do others for whom this is not the case. Much that passes over the latter kind of person without leaving a trace makes a deep impression upon the former. (“Were not the eye of sun-like nature, the sun it never could behold.” Goethe) Yes, someone will say, but don't we meet infinitely many things in life about which previously we had not had the slightest concept, and do we not then, right on the spot, at once form concepts of them? Certainly. But is the sum total of all possible concepts identical with the sum total of those I have formed in my life up to now? Is my system of concepts not capable of development? Can I not, in the face of a reality that is incomprehensible to me, at once bring my thinking into action so that in fact it also develops, right on the spot, the concept I need to hold up to an object? The only ability useful to me is one that allows a definite concept to emerge from the thought-world's supply. The point is not that a particular thought has already become conscious for me in the course of my life, but rather that this thought allows itself to be drawn from the world of thoughts accessible to me. It is indeed of no consequence to its content where and when I grasp it. In fact, I draw all the characterizations of thoughts out of the world of thoughts. Nothing whatsoever in fact, flows into this content from the sense object. I only recognize again, within the sense object, the thought I drew up from within my inner being. This object does in fact move me at a particular moment to bring forth precisely this thought-content out of the unity of all possible thoughts, but it does not in any way provide me with the building stones for these thoughts. These I must draw out of myself.
To return to the question. Why does he say "These [thoughts] I must draw out of myself" and not simply "I find the thoughts together with the perceptions"? Because the latter is the case only in the effortless mode of cognition where we have either witnessed the same perception many times and the concept is united with it as if by reflex, or if the perception is new but compatible enough with our whole knowledge that it immediately and effortlessly snaps to a new concept. In less trivial cases we must exercise thinking in order to reach the needed concept. When I'm confronted with a diagram of a four-stroke engine for the first time there's a small chance that I'll immediately be presented with the concepts of the four strokes, the valves, the ignition, the camshaft, etc. I need to work with my thinking in order to understand how the engine works. To understand this I need to find the proper concepts and relate them together. Here we can fully justifiably say that the concepts come out of thinking. They are symbolized in the diagram but by just looking at it I would have nothing but the concept of a pretty picture.
I won't say that when we don't have the right concepts we have experience of chaos (although this is also possible). The thing is that more often we focus on the things that we do know. For example, in the pencil exercise, there are tons of concepts that I can experience if I go into the details. Does this mean that when I have only the concept of 'pencil' when I look at it, I also experience the chaos of everything else that can be known about the pencil but which I have not yet conceptualized? Not really. My consciousness is filled with the meaning of 'pencil' and not with the meaning of everything that I don't know about it. This is also the reason that it's not always easy to show somebody what more can be found by enriching our spiritual life. The superficial mind is completely filled with the concepts it experiences, it doesn't experience that there's something missing unless it develops real interest in the World. For example, a superficial man may be completely happy with the diagram of the engine and accept it as a pretty picture of art. Only when he realizes that the diagram symbolizes a whole world of physical facts and laws, he also feels that this missing world must be added by thinking, if the diagram is to be understood in the way its author intended it.
Let my summarize:
1/ I fully acknowledge that we can't experience 'pure percept' without any meaning/ideal element. I agree that from what you quoted it sounds that Steiner insists on precisely the opposite - that we can have pure experienced devoid of thinking. This would be modified in case of (1). Yet as seen from other parts of the book, the essential nature of the knowing process is intact. He even agrees that mere looking is always accompanied with effortlessly experienced meaning.
2/ The above shouldn't prevent us from recognizing that nonetheless the conceptual world that our consciousness accesses, grows. This doesn't mean that before that, perceptions existed as free floating 'pure experiences' without ideal element. They do have some kind of meaning experienced together with them but it's clear that this meaning evolves as thinking continues to work with them.
Is my system of concepts not capable of development? I think anyone who doesn't live purely instinctive life, is capable of answering this question. And this is at the heart of the whole science of knowing. This can be comprehended even by Kant but where Steiner makes the step forward is that he recognizes that within this union of perception and knowing, we are the essential being of the World.
Returning to the topic of this thread. I don't think the Schop would suggest that cognition was not inherent within the will. I don't see a reason he would need to do that. Instead, this cognitive element becomes able of thoughtful self-experience only at certain threshold of complexity. He made his philosophy quite explicit on the fact that this cognitive element feels as the victim of the 'blind giant' on whose shoulders he is carried. And this is where the difference lies with Steiner. The whole work of the latter focuses precisely on the possibility that awakened cognition can grow into the blind giant such that his formerly unconscious point of view becomes conscious, concentrically united with that of the feeble man on his shoulders. Whether Schop has secretly allowed for this possibility - I don't know. The fact is that in his life work he made it quite explicit that something like that is not considered. What is considered is giving oneself to aesthetic contemplation by coming to peace with the giant.
Both Schop and Steiner recognize the blind giant (the lower nature). The great difference is how they deal with it. In Schop it is about coming to terms with the utter meaninglessness of the situation and at least experiencing some peace by living in the own element of ideas. The fact remains, though, that this element will always remain only the tip of the iceberg. Steiner goes further by showing that the cognitive element can develop and extend beneath the surface. Not that it doesn't already exist there, but it's not yet organized. Then what were the blind urges of the lower man, become elucidated by the Spirit. Once elucidated we're in position to alter these flows. This is why we need knowledge in order to be free. We're free not because we exhibit unrestricted behavior but when we attain to the deeper strata where we can work with the forces that have formerly determined our behavior with iron necessity. To understand this we need to consider that to have real knowledge of the motives of our actions is not the same as having theoretical explanation for them. The real knowledge requires higher order experience of the causes of our behavior, sympathies and antipathies. For example, people think they are free to have a favorite color. They are free as far as no one has restricted the palette for them and gave them to choose between two or three colors. But did we really choose that color? Or we simply find it as a peculiarity of our character, just like we find the color of our hair? We are free only when we attain to the spiritual foundations which explain why exactly this is our favorite color and not some other. We wouldn't be free if we have that knowledge only as something theoretical. For example, a neuroscientist can tell us "Your favorite color is this because these and these neurons fire in this particular way". But this doesn't at all change my inner experience. When through spiritual development we attain to the deeper strata of consciousness we live within the actual living forces which imbue certain color with sympathetic feeling. Now we're free because at that level we can actually alter the way these forces work. Even if we don't 'switch' our favorite color, we're still free to experience what it could be to temporarily have other colors as equally sympathetic. So this is the kind of freedom we're talking about. Not simply about feeling unrestricted, even though we have no clue why we would choose exactly the things we choose, but about attaining to the spiritual forces and beings that constitute our organism, and from whence we can alter our metamorphic process in ways impossible if we were simply flowing along in blissful ignorance.