AcceptingMill’sview,itisremarkablethatthegreaterrorofhisownschool,whichprofessedtobebaseduponexperience,wastherejectionofhistory;andthegreatmeritoftheaprioriand’intuitionist’schoolwaspreciselytheirinsistenceuponhistory。TothisIshallhavetoreturnhereafter。Meanwhile,MillproceedstoshowhowColeridge,byarguingfromthe’idea’ofchurchandstate,hadatleastrecognisedthenecessityofshowingthatpoliticalandsocialinstitutionsmusthaveasufficientreason,andbejustifiedbysomethingmorethanmereobstinateprejudice。MenlikePittandSirRobertPeel,iftheyacceptedColeridge’ssupport,wouldhavetoaltertheirwholeposition,Coleridge’sdefenceofhisidealchurchwasatoncetheseverestsatireupontheexistingbodyandaproof,asagainstBenthamandAdamSmith,oftheadvantagesofanendowedclassforthecultivationanddiffusionoflearning。Coleridge,moreover,thoughheobjectedtotheReformBill,showedhimselfabetterreformerthanLordJohnRussell。HeadmittedwhattheWhigsrefusedtosee,thenecessityofdiminishingtheweightofthelandownerinterest。Landownerswerenottobeultimatesourcesofpower,buttorepresentonefactorinareasonedsystem。Inshort,byadmittingthatallsocialarrangementsinsomesensewereembodimentsofreason,headmittedthattheymustalsobemadetoconformtoreason。
ColeridgeandBentham,then,arenotreallyenemiesbutallies,andtheywieldpowerswhichare’oppositepolesofonegreatforceofprogression。’31thequestion,however,remains,howthephilosophyofeachleaderisreallyconnectedwithhispracticalconclusions。Mill’sviewwouldapparentlybethatColeridgesomehowmanagedtocorrecttheerrorsorfillthegapsoftheUtilitariansystem——averynecessarytask,asMilladmits——whileColeridgewouldhaveheldthatthoseerrorsweretheinevitablefruitofthewholeempiricalsystemofthought。TheReasonmustberestoredtoitsrightfulsupremacyovertheUnderstanding,whichhadbeenworkingitswickedwillsincethedaysofLockeandtheeighteenthcentury。Theproblemisawideone。I
mustbecontenttoremarktheinevitableantithesis。Whetherenemiesorallies,theUtilitariansandtheirantagonistswereseparatedbyagulfwhichcouldnotbebridgedforthetime。Themenofcommon-sense,whohadnophilosophyatall,wereshockedbytheimmediatepracticalapplicationsofUtilitarianism,itshostilitytotheoldorderwhichtheyloved,itsapparenthelplessnessinsocialquestions,itsrelegationofallprogresstotheconflictofselfishinterests,itsindifferencetoallthevirtuesassociatedwithpatriotismandlocalties。Bymorereflectiveminds,itwascondemnedasrobbingtheworldofitspoetry,stiflingthereligiousemotions,andevenquenchingsentimentingeneral。Thefewwhowishedforaphilosophyfoundtherootofitserrorsintheassumptionswhichreducedtheworldtoachaosofatoms,outwardlyconnectedandcombinedintomeredeadmechanism。Theworld,forthepoetandthephilosopheralike,mustbenotacongeriesofseparatethings,butinsomesenseaproductofreason。
Thought,notfact,mustbetheultimatereality。Unfortunatelyorotherwise,thepoeticalsentimentcouldnevergetitselftranslatedintophilosophicaltheory。Coleridge’srandomanddiscursivehintsremainedmerehints——
asuggestionatbestforfuturethought。Mill’scriticismshowshowfartheycouldbeassimilatedbyasingularlycandidUtilitarian。Tohim,wesee,theyrepresentedmainlythetruththathisownparty,followingthegeneraltendencyoftheeighteenthcentury,hadbeenledtoneglectthevitalimportanceoftheconstructiveelementsofsociety;thattheyhadsacrificedordertoprogress,andthereforeconfoundedprogresswithdestruction,andfailedtoperceivetherealimportanceinpasttimesevenoftheinstitutionswhichhadbecomeobsolete。Socialatomismorindividualism,therefore,impliedatotalmisconceptionofwhatMillcallsthe’evolutionofhumanity。’
Thismarksacriticalpoint。The’Germano-Coleridgians’hadatheoryofevolution。Byevolution,indeed,wasmeantadialecticalevolution;theevolutionof’ideas’orreason,inwhicheachstageofhistoryrepresentsamomentofsomevastandtranscendentalprocessofthought。Evolution,sounderstood,seemedrightlyorwronglytobemeremysticismorintellectualjuggling。Ittookleaveoffact,ormanagedbysomeillegitimateprocesstogivetoacrudegeneralisationfromexperiencetheappearanceofapurelylogicaldeduction。Inthisshape,therefore,itwasreallyopposedtoscience,althoughthetimewastocomeinwhichevolutionwouldpresentitselfinascientificform。32Meanwhile,theconcessionsmadebyJ。S。
Millwerenotapprovedbyhisfellows,andwouldhavebeenregardedaslittleshortoftreasonbytheolderUtilitarians。Thetwoschools,ifColeridge’sfollowerscouldbecalledaschool,regardedeachother’sdoctrinesassimplycontradictory。Inappealingtoexperienceandexperiencealone,theUtilitarians,astheiropponentsheld,hadreducedtheworldtoadeadmechanism,destroyedeveryelementofcohesion,madesocietyastruggleofselfishinterests,andstruckattheveryrootsofallorder,patriotism,poetry,andreligion。Theyretortedthattheircriticswereblindadherentsofantiquatedprejudice,andsoughttocovesuperstitionanddespotismeitherbyunprovabledogmaticassertions,orbytakingrefugeinacloudymysticaljargon,whichreallymeantnothing。
Theydidnotloveeachother。
Notes:
1。SeeDictionaryofNationalBiography,under’GeorgeGrote。’Bentham’sMS。
isintheBritishMuseum,andshows,Ithink,thatGrote’sshareintheworkwasagooddealmorethanmereediting。IquotefromareprintbyTruelove1875。ItwasprivatelyreprintedbyGrotehimselfin1866。
2。Cf。Hobbes’sdefinition:
’Fearofpowerinvisiblefeignedbythemind,orimaginedfromtalespubliclyallowed,[is]RELIGION:notallowed,SUPERSTITIONS。Andwhenthepowerimaginedistrulysuchasweimagine,TRUERELIGION。’-
Works,Molesworth,iii,45。
3。’PhilipBeauchamp,’ch。
ii,pp。11-15。
4。Ibid。,p。17。
5。’PhilipBeauchamp,’p。
21。
6。Ibid。,pp。22and104。
7。’PhilipBeauchamp,’ch。
iii。
8。’PhilipBeauchamp,’ch。
iv。
9。Ibid。,p。45,ch。v。
10。Ibid。,p。52,ch。vi。
11。’PhilipBeauchamp,’ch。
viii。
12。Ibid。,partii,ch。i。
13。Ibid。,p。80,partii,ch。ii。
14……’PhilipBeauchamp,’
pp。97,99。
15。Ibid。,p。101。
16。Ibid。,p。103。
17。’PhilipBeauchamp,’p。
163。
18。Ibid。,p。122。
19。ThewriterswereChalmers,Kidd,Whewell,SirCharlesBell,Roget,Buckland,Kirby,andProut。Theessaysappearedfrom1833to1835。TheversatileBroughamshortlyafterwardseditedPaley’sNaturalTheology。
20。’PhilipBeauchamp。’p。
88。
21。Froude’sCarlyle,i,215;ii,93。
22。Mill’sDissertations,i,235;ii。130。
23。GeorgeBorrow’svehementdislikeofScottastheinventorofPuseyismandmodernJesuitismofallkindsischaracteristic。
24。Prelude,bk。xiii。
25。Coleridge’sLetters1890,pp。643-49。
26。MrHutchinsonStirlinginsistsuponthisintheFortnightlyReviewforJuly1867。
Heproves,Ithink,thatColeridge’sknowledgeofthevariousschemesofGermanphilosophyandofthepreciserelationofKant,Fichte,andSchellingwasaltogetherdesultoryandconfused。Howfarthisisimportantdependsuponwhetherweattachmuchorlittleimportancetoprecisecombinationsofwordsusedbythesephilosophers。
27。Dissertations,i,392-474。
28。Ibid。,i,424。
29。Dissertations,i,437。
30。Ibid。,i,425-27。
31。Dissertations,i,437。
32。Coleridge’sHintstowardstheFormationofamoreComprehensiveTheoryofLife,editedbyS。B。Watson,in1848,isacuriousattempttoapplyhisevolutiondoctrinetonaturalscience。Lewes,inhisLettersonComte’sPhilosophyoftheSciences,saysthatitisa’shamelessplagiarism’fromSchelling’sErsterEntwurf,etc。Itseems,asfarasIcanjudge,thatColeridge’sdoctrinesaboutmagnetism,reproduction,irritability,sensibility,etc。,are,infact,adaptedfromSchelling。Thebookwasintended,asMrE。H。
Coleridgetellsme,forachapterinaworkonScrophula,projectedbyGillman。AsColeridgediedlongbeforethepublication,hecannotbedirectlyresponsiblefornotacknowledgingobligationstoSchelling。Unfortunatelyhecannotclaimthebenefitofagoodcharacterinsuchmatters。Anyhow,Coleridge’soccasionalexcursionsintosciencecanonlyrepresentavagueacceptanceofthetranscendentalmethodrepresented,asIunderstand,byOken。