Decline of the West - Abbreviated Version
Text
Summary produced by Michel Bauwens on the basis of reading notes made out of mostly excerpts from Spengler himself.
"The work falls naturally in two parts:
- The first, 'Form and Actuality', starts from the form language of the Great Cultures, attempts to penetrate to the deepest roots of their origin, and so provides itself with the basis of a science of the Symbolic.
- The second part, "World Historical Perspectives', starts from the facts of actual life; seeks to obtain a quintessence of historical experience, that we can set to work upon the formation of our own future." (p. 39)
Vol. I - Form and Actuality
Chapter I - Introduction
I. (p. 3)
"Is there a logic to history ? .. Is there a metaphysical structure of historic humanity? .. (Are there) a series of stages which must be traversed, and traversed moreover, in an orderly and obligatory sequence? .. Is all history founded upon general biographic archetypes?" (p. 3)
II. (p. 3)
"The means whereby to identify dead forms is Mathematical Law. The means whereby to understand living forms is Analogy." (p.3 ) ... Analogies, in so far as they have laid bare the organic structure of history, might be a blessing to historical thought. .. But as hitherto understood and practiced, they have been a curse." (p. 4-5)
III. (p. 5)
"This book introduces the theme of the 'world as history', given form out of its opposite, the 'world-as-nature'". (p.5)
"I have not hitherto found one historian, who has carefully considered the morphological relationship that inwardly brings together the expression of forms of all branches of culture. Viewed from this morphological standpoint even the humdrum facts of politics, assume a symbolic and even metaphysical character." (p. 6)
"There is, besides a necessity of cause and effect - .. the logic of space - ... another ... organic necessity in life, that of Destiny, the logic of time." (p. 6)
"We await .. the philosopher who will tell us in what language history is written." (p. 7) (>< Galileo wrote: "philosophy, as Nature's great book, is written in mathematical language", p. 6)
IV. (p. 7)
"Man has before him two possibilities of world formation:
- Nature, ... the shape in which he interprets the immediate impression of his senses - History, .. that from his imagination seeks comprehension of the living existence of the world, in relation to his own life. (p. 7)
"For whom is there History? .. For anyone (that) conceives himself as something rounded off and self-contained.. : there is no world-as-history. .. How if the self-consciousness of a whole nation .. rests on this historical spirit? .. The Classical Culture possessed no memory, no open history in this special sense." (p. 7)
"This pure Present, whose greatest symbol is the Doric Column, in itself predicates the negation of time (of direction). " (p. 8)
"For a roman consult, the past is substituted instantly into an impression that is timeless and changeless, polar and not periodic ... >< .. whereas for our world ... the past is definitely periodic." (p. 8)
- for example:
- "the Athenians passed a decree by which all who propagated astronomical theories were made liable to impeachment; Thucydides (made) the astonishing statement that before his time, no events of importance had occurred." (p. 8)
- "Classical history .. (is) the product of essentially mythological thinking" (p. 9). "It never entered the Classical head to draw any distinction between history as story and history as documents." (p. 9)
>< By contrast, "In the Indian Culture, .. it is a full millennium after Buddha, when Ceylon produces something remotely resembling a historical work, the 'Mahavansa'. (p. 9) ... "It is in the anonymous form that we possess the Indian philosophy." (p. 10)
"Indian man forgot everything but Egyptian man forgot nothing." ... The Egyptian soul (was) ... conspicuously historical. The Egyptian culture is an embodiment of care - care for the future - and for the past ... The body of the dead man was made everlasting, just as his personality ('ka'), was immortalized though the portrait statuettes. ... The Egyptian denied mortality >< the Classical Man affirmed it." (p. 10)
V. (p. 11)
"At the threshold of the Classical Culture, we meet the custom of burning the dead, typifying the ease with which it could forget every piece of its inward and outward past." (p. 10) "The symbolic act .. was the ceremonial completion of death, and the denial of historical duration. (p. 11)
"From this moment the plasticity of the individual spiritual evolution was at an end .. Classical drama admitted .. little themes .. of inward evolution and .. the Hellenistic instinct set itself against portraiture in the arts." (p. 11)
"Right into the imperial period, Classical art handled only the matter that was natural to it, the myth." (p.11) .. "No Greek ever wrote down any recollections .., not even Socrates >< .. On the contrary, the Vita Nuova is found at the very outset of the spiritual history of the West, .. a work of deep self-examination." (p. 11) .. Goethe considered his works, "only fragments of a single great confession." (p. 11)
"Men read Homer but never thought of excavating the hill of Troy .., for what they wanted, was myth, not history." (p. 11) >< "The chimes of countless clock towers that echo day and night over West Europe, are perhaps the most wonderful expression of which a historical world's feeling is capable." (p. 11)
"It remains to mention the .. difference between Classical and modern mathematics .. The former conceived of things as they are, as magnitudes, timeless and purely present, and so it proceeded to Euclidean geometry ('mathematical stasis'). >< We conceive things as they become and behave, as function, and this brought us to dynamics .. and differential calculus." (p. 12)
"We men of Western Culture are, with our historical sense, an exception and not the rule. World history is our picture, and not all mankind's." (p. 12)
VI. (p. 12)
"What then is World History ? .. The subdivision into Ancient, Medieval, and Modern .. is a meaningless scheme .. which has entirely dominated our historical thinking. . The scheme circumscribes the area of history, ... it rigs the stage." (p. 12-13)
"We select a single bit of ground as the natural center .., and make the central sun." (p. 13)
"From the morphological point of view, should our 18th cy. be more important than any other of the sixty centuries which preceded it?" (p. 13)
"The most appropriate designation for this current West European scheme history .. is the Ptolemaic system of history!" (p. 13)
VII. (p. 14)
"The scheme, 'ancient-medieval-modern', in its first form, was a creation of the Magian world sense .. The strictly dualistic sense of the East .. expressed itself by the figure of a catastrophe, an epochal change of phase between world creation and world decay, .. a drama in which one prevails over the other." (p. 14)
"Adding a third epoch, that we call 'modern' , on Western soil , gives the picture of history the look of progression." (p. 14) ("The oriental picture was at rest, with equilibrium as its outcome, and a unique divine act as its turning point", p. 14)
"Beyond the ancient and medieval, something definitive was beginning, a Third Kingdom .. The mystic number three applied to the world has something highly seductive." (p. 15)
"History was described,
- by Herder as the education of the human race
- by Hegel as the self-expansion of the world spirit
- by Kant as the evolution of the idea of freedom." (p. 15)
"On the threshold of Western Culture, we meet the great Joachim of Floris (c. 1145-1202) .. who shattered the dualistic world form of Augustine." (p. 15)
"His teaching (the Age of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost) .. moved the best: Dante, Thomas Aquinas, ... and awakened a world outlook which took entire possession of the historical sense of our Culture. .. Lessing took his idea of the 'education of the human race', with its three stages of child, youth, and man, from the teaching of the 14th cy. mystics." (p. 15)
But, "it is quite indefensible .. to endow the 3-phase system with tendencies that will bring it exactly to one's own standpoint.!" (. p15)
The total history .. may be merely an additive compilation of separate developments." (p. 16)
" 'Mankind' .. has no aim, no idea, no plan .. Break the magic circle and at once there emerges an astonishing wealth of actual forms) ... I see .. the drama of a number of mighty Cultures .. Each having its own idea, passions, its own death .. Each Culture has its own new possibilities of self-expression which arise, .. decay, and never return.. I see world history as a picture of endless formations and transformations." (p. 16-17)
VIII. (p. 17)
"When Plato spoke, he did so for the Greeks, in contrast with the barbarians. When Kant speaks, "he maintains the validity of his theses, for men of all times and places." (p. 17). But what he poses as necessary forms of thought are in reality only necessary forms of western thought." (p. .17)
"It is this that is lacking to the Western thinker: insight into the historically relative character of his data." ... We have "the duty of looking beyond them to find out what the men of other Cultures have with equal certainty evolved out of themselves .. Universal validity involves always the fallacy of arguing from "Consider the historical horizon of Nietzsche (which) ... lie deep in the essence of Western Civilization and are for the analysis of that civilization of decisive importance .. He never one moved outside the scheme ('ancient, medieval, modern'), nor did any other thinker of his time." (p. 18)
"All these are local and temporary values .. most of them limited ... to the intelligentsia of cities of the Western European type." (p. 19)
"The real student of manking treats no standpoint as absolutely right or absolutely wrong." (p. 19)
"One must free oneself of limitations of self .. before one dares assert the pretension to understand .. the world-as-history." (p. 19)
IX. (p. 20)
"To approach the phenomenal world in motion, these are the means of historical research." (Goethe's Living Nature, the thing-becoming, world-as-organism .. these are the world-as-history!)."
"Set forth the Classical Culture as a self-contained phenomenon embodying and expressing the Classical Soul; put it beside the Egyptian, the Indian, the Babylonian, the Chinese and the Western, and determine for each of these higher individuals what is typical in their surgings." (p.20)
X. (p. 20)
"Our narrower task ... is to determine ... the state of West Europe and America at the epoch of 1800-2000, ... to establish the chronological position of this period in the ensemble of Western culture history. " (p. 20)
"This period ... appears as chronologically parallel .. with the phase of Hellenism, and the present culmination, marked by World War, corresponds to the transition from the Hellenistic to the Roman Age." ( p. 20) ... (considered in the spirit of analogy, p. 20)
"Spengler insists .. we are not continuators of Classical Civilization, but its adorers: 'we ... must begin to realize ... how immeasurably alien these things are ... from our inner selves." (p. 21)
"Today, one group, mostly politicians, look at the Classics to argue how well we are doing; the other group, the Romantics, who do not feel well in this age, stress that we have betrayed it.
XI. (p. 22)
"There are two ways of regarding the Classic, the materialistic and the ideological." (p. 22)
"Each side, with its gaze fixed on causality, demonstrates that the other side cannot ... understand the true linkages." (p. 22)
"At bottom, the opposition is between culture man and those of civilization man. ... We have projected our deepest spiritual needs and feelings on to the Classical picture ... Few theses would be more helpful for understanding the Western soul." (p. 23)
"For the man who ... has won the unconditional freedom of outlook ... that which assigns relative ran .. is simply the greater or lesser purity of their form language and symbolism." (p. 24)
XII. (p.24)
"What is Civilization, understood as the organic logical sequel fulfillment of a culture ? .. For every Culture has its own Civilization .. The Civilization is the inevitable destine of the Culture." (p. 24)
"Necessary organic succession, .. in this principle we obtain the viewpoint .. from which .. the problems of historical morphology become capable of solution." (p. 24)
"For the first time, we are enabled to understand the Romans as successors of the Greeks .. (p. 24): Greek soul - Roman intellect! ... and this antithesis is the difference between Culture and Civilization." (p. 25)
"Again and again, there appears this type of strong-minded non-metaphysical man, and in the hands of this type .. lies .. the destiny of every 'late' period." (p 25)
" 'Pure' civilization, as a historical process, consists in a progressive taking down of forms that have become inorganic or dead .. In such periods do Buddhism, Stoicism, Socialism ripen into definite world conceptions which enable a moribund humanity .. to be reformed .. The transition from Culture to Civilization was accomplished in the Classical world in the 4th, for the Western in the 19th." (p 25)
"World city and province (are) the two basic ideas of every civilization .. Instead of a world ('true people: born and grown on the soil'), there is a city, a point ('while the rest dries up'), contemptuous of the country man .. Regions that lie outside the radiation circles of one of these cities .. become provinces." (p. 25)
"It is the common intellectual process of later periods ('such as the Ionic and the Baroque'), (that) provincial towns fight inwardly a lost battle against world cities .." (p. 25-26). "The world city means cosmopolitanism instead of 'home', 'society' in place of the state, natural instead of hard-earned rights .. Any high ideal of life becomes largely a question of money." (p. 26)
"All these things .. (mean) the definitive closing down of a Culture, and the opening of a quite new phase of human existence: anti-provincial, late, futureless, but quite inevitable." ( p. 26)
"What is the hallmark of a politic of civilization today, in contrast to a politic of Culture yesterday ? .. It is .. money! (p. 27) .. "To the Culture belongs gymnastics, the tournament; to the Civilization belongs Sport." (p. 27)
"It is possible to understand the Greeks without mentioning their economic relations; the Romans, on the other hand, can only be understood through these." (p. 27)
XIII.
"The Roman world dominion was a negative phenomenon, being the result not of a surplus of energy on one side, .. but of a deficiency of resistance .. The old East forwent all external self-determinations ('After Zama, the Romans never again .. were capable of waging a war against a great military power") (p. 28)
"To maintain the heroic posture for centuries is beyond the power of any people." (p. 28)
"Imperialism may continue to exist (as) .. amorphous and dispirited masses, as the typical form of the passing away, .. scrap material of a great history." (p. 28)
"Imperialism is Civilization 'Unadulterated' .. The energy of culture man is directed inwards, that of Civilization man outwards .. The expansive tendency is a doom, something demonic and immense ("it is not the conscious will of individuals, or even that of whole classes of people.")
=> For the 'brain man', there are only 'extensive' possibilities." (p. 28)
"This is the prelude of a future which is still in store for us .. This outcome is obligatory and insusceptible of modification." (p. 29)
"The future of the West is not a limitless tending upwards and onwards for all time .. but a single phenomena of history, strictly limited and defined." (p. 30)
XIV.
"This high plane of contemplation once attained, the rest is easy. .. In effect, the substitution of a Copernican for a Ptolemaic aspect of history, that is, an immeasurable widening of horizon .. When we use the risky word of 'freedom', we shall mean .. : freedom to do .. the necessary, or nothing." (p. 30)
"The present is a .. civilized time, and, ipso facto, a great number of life possibilities fall out as impossible. .. It is not in our power to make otherwise .. it is not .. permissible to defy clear historical experience." (p. 31)
"We have to reckon with the hard cold facts of a 'late' life, the parallel is to found in .. Caesar's Rome." (p. 31)
"Of great painting, or great music, there can no longer be, for Western people, any question ... Only extensive possibilities are left to them." (p.31)
"I can only hope that men of the new generation may be moved by this book to devote themselves to technics instead of lyrics." (p. 31)
XV.
"It still remains to consider the relation of a morphology of world history to philosophy. All genuine historical work is philosophy. (p.31).. Every thought lives in a historical world and is therefore involved in the common destiny of mortality." (p.32)
"Here are no eternal truths. Every philosophy is the expression of its own and only of its own time. No two ages possess the same philosophical intentions. The immortality of thought forms is an illusion." (p. 32)
"Only its necessity to life decides the eminence of a doctrine .. All the philosophers of the newest age are open to serious criticism: .. they do not possess real standing in actual life .. Not one of them .. has intervened .. in big .. actuality." (p.32) .. "At other times: .. Confucius was several times a minister. Pythagoras was the organizer of an important political movement. Goethe .. a model executive minister." (p. 33) .. The philosphers of today .. lack any weight." (p. 33)
"It has come to this, that the very possibility of a real philosophy .. is in question. .. A doctrine that does not attack and affect the life of a period .. is no doctrine." (p. 34)
"A time which coincides exactly with the idea of a world city .. is a time of decline. We have not chosen this time .. Everything depends on seeing our own position, our destiny, learly: .. we are born as men of the early winter of full Civilization." (p. 34)
"Systematic philosophy closes with the end of the 18th cy. Kant put its utmost possibilities in form .. He is followed by a specifically megalopolitan philosophy that was .. practical, irreligious." (as "parallelled in Chinese civilization by the 'Epicurean' Yang-Chu, the 'socialist' MoTi, the 'positivist' Mencius." (p. 35) )
"Schopenhauer .. is the first to make the Will to life ('creative life force'), the center of gravity of his thought. It has embraced all the possibilities of a true philosophy, and at the same time, has exhausted them." (p. 35)
"Ethical (philosophy) has been wound u p .. A third possibility, corresponding to Classical Skepticism, still remains to the soul world of the present day est .. It can be brought to light by the hitherto unknown methods of historical methodology." (p. 35)
"Skepticism .. of the West, .. is obliged to be historical through and through .. Its solutions are got by treating everything as relative, as a historical phenomenon, and its procedure is psychological .. We regard .. the history of philosophy as its gravest theme." (p. 35) ("comprehension of the past as organism")
"In this work, it will be our task to sketch this unphilosophical philosophy, the last that West Europe will know. Skepticism is the expression of a pure Civilization and it dissipates the world picture of the Culture that has gone before." (p. 35)
"Everything .. must be .. the expression of something living:
=> The Morphology of World History becomes .. a universal symbolism. (p. 36)
"Truths are truths only in relation to a particular mankind .. My own philosophy is able to express .. only the Western soul, .. in its present civilizational phase." (p. 36)
XVI.
"A political problem cannot be comprehended by politics themselves: important factors at work in the depths could only be grasped through their artistic manifestations." (or even scientific .. and .. philosophical ideas). .. Politico-social analysis (is) impossible without bringing in all the great problems of Being." (p. 36)
"No single fragment of history could be thoroughly illuminated .. untel the secret of World History itself, (i.e. until) .. the story of higher Mankind as an organism of regular study .. has been cleared up." (p. 36)
"There appeared the fundamental dependence of the most modern physical and chemical theories on the mythological concepts of our Germanic ancestors." (p. 36-37)
"Great groups of morphological relation are strictly symmetrical in structure .. Therefore, I saw the preent - the approaching World War - in a quite other light." (p. 37)
"Nietzsche himself had gripped all the decisive problems, although, being a romantic, he had not dared to look strict reality in the face .. The 'stock taking doctrine' .. could only come at this time." (p. 37)
"Man, as an element and representative of the World, is a member, not only of nature, but of History - which is a second Cosmos." (p. 38)
"History was seen as Nature, and treated accordingly, applying the principles of causality, the structure of rigid Being, to the picture of happenings." (p. 38)
"A baneful mistake, (as) necessity, so completely alien to the causal, (is) at work. A phenomenon is not only a fact for the understanding, but also an expression of the spiritual, not only an object, but a symbol as well." (p. 38)
"The work falls naturally in two parts:
- The first, 'Form and Actuality', starts from the form language of the Great Cultures, attempts to penetrate to the deepest roots of their origin, and so provides itself with the basis of a science of the Symbolic.
- The second part, "World Historical Perspectives', starts from the facts of actual life; seeks to obtain a quintessence of historical experience, that we can set to work upon the formation of our own future." (p. 39)
Chapter II - The Meaning of Numbers
(p. 41)
I.
"It is necessary to begin by drawing attention to certain basic terms: .. the exact significance .. ought to be made clear." (p. 41)
"Out of the results .. we .. obtain .. by consciousness, .. we may distinguish as final elements 'becoming' and 'the become' .. The become is always founded on the becoming. .. I further distinguish, 'proper' and 'alien'. Alien .. is always related to perception, the outer world, the life of sensation. Proper is involved with feeling, the inner life, in a way that defy analysis by abstract thought."
"I distinguish 'soul' and 'world': the two factors .. are always (p. 41) .. associated, and present themselves as a unit. .. We designate the Soul as 'possible' and the World as the 'actual'. We see 'Life' as the form in which the actualizing of the possible is accomplished." (p. 42)
"With respect to 'Direction', the possible is called the 'Future', and the actualized, the 'Past'. .. The actualizing itself, .. the center of meaning of life, we call the 'Present'.
=> 'Soul' is the still be be accomplished, 'World' is the accomplished, 'Life' is the accomplishing." (p. 42)
"We differentiate between 'possible' and 'actual' culture:
- culture as an 'idea' in existence
- culture as the 'body' of that idea, .. the total of its tangible expressions.
=> 'Higher history is the actualizing of possible Culture." (p. 43)
("Goethe's 'living nature' is a 'historical' world picture.", p. 43)
"The mechanism of pure nature picture, the world of Newton and Kant, is .. dissected in laws .. and finally reduced to system; the organism of pure history picture, .. the world of Plotinus, Dante and Giordano Bruno is .. inwardly experienced, grasped as a form or
=> "Nature is the numerable, while History .. is the aggregate of that which has no relations to mathematics." (p. 44)
"Gothic cathedrals and Doric temples are mathematics in stone .. The great arts are .. modes of interpretation by means of limits based on number .. It is the style of a Soul that comes out in numbers!" (p. 45)
III.
"There is not, and cannot be, number as such. There are several number world as there are several cultures." (p. 45)
"Each type (is) fundamentally peculiar and unique, an expression of the specific world feeling, .. a principle of ordering the Become." (p. 45)
"Consequently, there are more mathematics than one ..; not common to all mankind, but specific in each case to one definite sort of mankind." (p. 46)
"The style of any mathematic which comes into being .. depends wholly on the Culture in which it is rooted: ..The idea of the Euclidean geometry is actualized in the earliest forms of Classical ornament, and that of the Infinite Calculus in the earliest forms of Gothic architecture, centuries before the first learned mathematicians of their respective Cultures, were born."
"The genuine awakening of the ego, which turns the child into Higher Man, and initiates him into the community of his Culture, marks the beginning of number sense as it does that of language sense .. Therewith comes .. a feeling of awe regarding the deeper meaning of measuring and counting .. " (p. 46)
"Kant classified .. human knowledge according to 'a priori' ('universally valid') and 'a posteriori' ('variable') .. He ignored "the varying degree of this alleged 'universal validity'." (p. 46)
=> "The history spread out before us contains more than one style of knowing." (p. 47)
"Conclusion on final things are to be reached not by predicating constantly but by studying differentia and developing the organic logic of differences. " (i.e. "the comparative morphology of knowledge forms") (p. 47)
IV.
"There is no mathematic, but only mathematics! .. The 'history' of mathematics .. is a history of independent development .. The historically constituted Western Soul .. had to alter .. the essentially alien Euclidean system .. The agent was Descartes." (p. 47)
"The sense of form of the sculptor, the painter, the composer is essentially mathematical, .. the same inspired ordering of an infinite world. ..
>< "Whereas pure science does not apprehend but observes and dissects." (p. 47)
"The mathematician is only complete in so far as he feels within himself the beauty of the true. (cfr Goethe) .. Here we feel how nearly the secret of number is related to the secret of artistic creation." (p. 48)
"The domain of number, like the domain of tone, line, and color, becomes an image of the world form." (p. 48)
"Revealing would be a history of musical instrument written .. as a study of the deep spiritual bases of the tone colors. As early as the Gothic time, the development .. belongs spiritually to the Celtic Germanic North." (p. 48)
V.
"When about 540 BC, the circle of Pythagoreans arrived at the idea that 'number is the essence of all things' .. a wholly new mathematics was born", i.e. >< "it was NOT a step in the development of mathematics" (p. 49)
"It came forth from the depths of the Classical soul .. Older mathematics had long been extinguished and the Egyptian was never written down." .. Fulfilled by the 2nd cy AD, the Classical mathematic vanished in turn. .. It seemingly exist today .. only as notation .. and gave place to the Arabian." (p. 49)
"The great movement within the Middle East ("the Persian Babylonian Schools") .. and the Alexandrian mathematicians ('Arameans ... writing in Syriac') found its completion in .. Arabian Islamic thinkers, and after these again there was a long interval." (p. 49)
"Then a .. new mathematic was born, the Western, (which was) >< NOT 'the culmination of two thousand years of evolultion." (p. 49)
"The most valuable thing in Classical mathematics is the proposition that number is the essence of all things perceptible to the senses .. (It expresses) .. the world feeling of a soul devoted to the here and now." (p. 49)
"The opposite to the state of chaos, that of the cosmos, .. a harmonic order." (p. 49)
"Chaos .. for Classical mankind is that which possesses no number, measureless, the negation of form, boundless and formless .. Extension means body (>< " for us: space")" (p. 50)
"The whole world feeling of the matured Classical world led it to see mathematics only as the theory of relations of magnitude, .. "between bodies" (= 'solid geometry')." (p. 50)
"Classical number .. is measure in contrast to the immeasurable." (p. 50)
"The Classical soul felt the principle of the irrational .. as an impiety to the Divine itself .. Negative number were impossible in the Classical mathematic, let alone zero as a number." (p. 51)
"Great ideas belonging to other cultures .. lapse, because our thought, with its limitations, has not permitted us to assimilate them." (. 52)
VI.
"The Greek mathematic, as a science of perceivable magnitudes, .. confines itself to facts of the comprehensible present. .. >< Western: "numbers are images of the perfectly desensualized understanding .. and contain their abstract validity within themselves." (p. 52)
"To the Classical world feeling .. the cosmos is contained (in a materially finite and optically appreciable hollow sphere) in the middle of which (is) the planetary system." (p. 53)
"Classical mathematicians .. worked out .. a purely optical analysis of things-become, on the basis of sculptural Classical bounds .. Mathematical number (is) the formal principle of an extension world of which phenomenal existence is only derivative .. Numbers are symbols of the mortal. Stiff forms are the negation of life." (p. 54)
But numbers are also "the unborn forms to be realized as .. Culture, in a world ordered by spirituality": "Classical Apollonian number (is) regarded as the creation of Pythagoras, who founded a religion." (p. 55)
"Kepler and Newton, strictly religious creatures both .. remained convinced that it was .. through the medium of number, that they had been able to apprehend intuitively, the essence of divine world order." (p. 55)
VII.
"The Classical arithmetic .. was liberated from its sense bondage by Diophantus, .. a complete victory over the Classical world feeling .. There emerges .. the new limit feeling which I designate 'Magian'." .. Diophantus lived about 250 AD, in the 3rd cy of that Arabian culture, whose history .. comprises everything that happened, after the beginning of our era, that was later to be Islam's. .. In the time of Diophantus, the last shadow of the Attic statuary paled before the new space sense of cupola, mosaic and sarcophagus relief that we have in the early Christian Syrian style." (p. 56)
"The Classical Culture .. had been born around 1100 BC .. The Arabian Culture had been germinating in the East since Augustus." (p. 56)
"In Diophantus, number has ceased to be the measure and essence of plastic things. In the Ravennate mosaics, man has ceased to be a body. Unnoticed, Greek designation have lost their original connotations .. Diophantus has ceased to know the Pythagorean numbers." (p. 56)
"We have to begin to see the 'despised' late classical art, the tentative expression of the nascent Early Arabian Culture .. Throughout that world, men were no longer bright and free in the Attic way, .. they were rooted in the earth of a young countryside, not megalopolitan. Their Culture was in their Gothic condition, as all Cultures have been in their youth." (p. 57)
"Only in Baghdad and in the 9th-10th cy were the young ideas of the age of Diophantus carried through to completion by ripe masters." (p. 57)
VIII.
"The decisive act of Descartes (1637) .. consisted in the definite conception of a new number idea, .. expressed in the emancipation of geometry from measured and measurable lines. .. With that, the analysis of the infinite became a fact .. There emerged the abstract, spatial, un-Classical element of the point ... upending the Classical feeling of bounds." (p. 57)
"The replacement of lengths by positions, carries with it a purely spatial, and no longer a material, conception of extension. " (p. 58)
IX.
"The Classical Soul in the person of Pythagoras discovered its .. Apollonian number, the measure magnitude." >< "The Western Soul in the persons of Descartes (and his generation) discovered a notion of number that was the child of a passionate 'Faustian' tendency towards the infinite, .. at the moment exactly corresponding." (p. 58)
=> "Number as pure magnitude inherent in the material presentness of things is paralleled by number as pure relation," (p. 58)
(For) the Classical world, the cosmos is based on a deep need of visible limits and composed .. as a sum of material things." >< "The symbol of the West .. is .. function. This consists solely .. in abstract analysis." (p. 58)
" 'Power' .. is transferred to a transcendent relational world .. Every significant creation .. is a victory over the popular and sensuous number feeling in us." (p. 58-59)
"The history of Western knowledge .. is one of progressive emancipation from Classical thought .. An emancipation never willed but enforced in the depths of the unconscious." (p. 59)
"The development of the new mathematic consists of a .. (victorious) .. battle against the notion of magnitude." (p. 59)
X.
This section is a complex explanation of the fundamental difference between Greek and Western numbers, the latter mostly developed in the 18th cy.
XI.
"The element of direction, .. inherent to all 'becoming' .. is felt to be something alien and hostile, .. owing to its irreversibility .. Time has an oppressive ambiguity." (p. 61-62)
"This world-fear is assuredly the most creative of all prime feelings. .. Only the spiritually dead man of autumnal cities .. is able to evade it .. by setting up a secretless 'scientific worldview' between himself and the alien." (p. 62)
"The other prime feeling, dread, finds it expression .. in symbols of extension. Every Culture is aware of an opposition of time and space, of direction and extension .. The role of one is purely to experience, that of the other purely to know." (p. 62)
"In the mysticism of all primitive periods, to know God means to conjure him, to make him favorable, to appropriate him inwardly.. This is achieved principally by means of the Name .. When cognition has ripened to .. words, the original chaos of impressions .. transforms itself into 'Nature', that has laws and must obey them." (p. 62)
"The complete form worlds of the various arts and religions .. is the symbolizing of extension, it (has)the characteristics of binding and conjuring." (p. 63)
XII.
"In the Classical world, the staring point of every formative act was the ordering of the 'become', insofar as this present .. and measurable." >< "The Western, Gothic, form feeling is on the contrary that of an unrestrained, strong-willed, far-ranging soul; .. it's chosen badge is pure, imperceptible, unlimited space." (p. 63)
"The infinite space of our physics is a form of .. extremely complicated elements, tacitly assumed, .. come into being as an expression of 'our' soul.
=> " They are simple .. because for mean of the particular group it is anchored in the intuition; for 'alien' men their content is ipso facto quite inaccessible." (p. 63)
"Such a notion .. is our specifically Western meaning of the word 'space'." (p. 63)
"We know only .. the abstract space element of the point, which can neither be seen nor measured .. The straight line, for the Greeks a measurable edge, is for us an infinite continuum of points." (p. 64)
"Classical number, integral and corporeal, .. seeks to relate itself with the birth of body .. (For) Pythagoras, "1" was correlated with the male principle (the phallus); "3", the holy number, .. denoted the act of union between man and woman." (p. 64)
"Inevitably, the Classical became by degrees the Culture of the small, .. by means of the principle .. of visible limits .. What was far away .. was ipso facto, 'not there'." The Greek tongue .. possessed no word for space. The Greek .. was destitute of our feeling for landscape, horizon .. Home is what he can see from the citadel of his native town." (p. 65)
"The Polis is the smallest of all conceivable state forms .. and its policy is .. short range .. >< .. "as (much) as ours is that of the infinite and the ultra-visual. (p. 65)
XIII.
"Typically Classical art forms .. admit enlargement and reductions of scale .. >< "In the domain of (Western) Function, it is the idea of transformation of groups that is of decisive importance." (p. 66)
=> "All proportion assumes the constancy; >< "All transformation (assumes) the variability of constituents." (p. 66)
XIV.
- "Every construction affirms >< and every operation denies appearances;
- The one works with what is optically given, the other dissolves it .. Classical mathematics ..deals with concrete .. individual instances .. >< The mathematic of the infinite handles whole classes of formal possibilities, groups of functions." (p. 66)
"Nothing is less 'popular' than modern mathematic .. All the great works of the West, from the 'Divina Commedia' to 'Parsifal', are unpopular, whereas everything Classical, from Homer to the Altar of PerGamum, was popular to the highest degree." (p. 67)
XV.
This section deals with the notion of 'limits' in Western mathematics.
XVI.
"The liberation of geometry from the visual; and the algebra from the notion of magnitude; and the union of both .. This was the grand course of Western number thought. Abstract spatial relations .. ceased to have any application to sense-present phenomena." (p. 67)
XVII.
"The Classical soul, submitted to the sensuous, .. it rather felt than emitted its great symbols .. Descartes and his successors .. looked upon Number as something to be conquered, .. an abstract relation royally indifferent to all phenomenal support .. The will-to-power (Nietzsche) has distinguished the attitude of the Northern soul to its world." (p.. 68)
"In the Apollonian mathematic, the intellect is the servant of the eye, in the Faustian, its master." (p. 68)
"Absolute space is utterly un-Classical." (p. 68) .. "A postulate of a soul .. ever less satisfied with sensuous means of expression. The inner eye has awakened. .. The simple axiom is that extension is boundless, .. at once contradicts the essential character of all immediate perception. .. This space of a higher degree is symbol .. which is the peculiar property of the Western mind." (p. 69)
XVIII.
"Both Pythagorean and Cartesian, .. flourished for three centuries, completed the structure of their ideas at the same moment as the Cultures .. passed over in the phase of megalopolitan Civilization . For us, the time of great mathematicians is passed." (p. 70)
Box: Historical Overview (table, p. 70-71)
- CLASSICAL VS WESTERN CONCEPTIONS OF NUMBER
Chapter III. The Problem of World History
(p. 73)
Part I: Physionomic and Systematic
I.
"A member of his own culture is tempted to order the material of history according to a perspective that is limited." (p. 73)
"What has been missing is detachment, .. to view the whole fact of Man from an immense distance.. This the Western soul achieved in the domain of Nature, when it passed from the Ptolemaic world system." (p. 73)
"The physicist has long ago freed himself from prepossessions as to relative distance, the historian not so .. To liberate History, .. is the object of all that
II.
"Nature and History are the opposite extreme terms of man's range of possibilities, whereby he is enabled to order the actualities about him." (p. 74)
"An actuality is Nature insofar .. as it assigns things becoming their place as things become .. The cognized and 'Nature' are one and the same .. Nature is the sum of the law-imposed necessities." (p. 74)
"Experience, that which has been lived, that which has happened, is history. It carries the hallmark of Direction, 'time', of irreversibility." (p. 74)
"Law and the domain of law are anti-historical. >< Becoming has no number .. Pure becoming is .. incapable of .. being bounded .. History as positively treated is not pure becoming." (p. 75)
"In the presence of the same .. corpus of facts, every observer .. has a different impression of the whole (which) underlies his judgment .. The wish to write history scientifically involves a contradiction .. Real historical vision belongs to the domain of significances, in which the crucial words are not 'correct' and 'erroneous', but 'deep' and 'shallow'. " (p. 75)
"He who looks at becoming, experiences History; he who dissects them as become, cognizes Nature .. They are jointly present in every kind of understanding .. Western Man is in a high degree, historically disposed." (p. 76)
III.
"There emerge .., as the two basic elements of all world picturing, the principle of Form, and the principle of Law:
- the more a .. world picture shows the traits of 'Nature', the more .. law and number prevail
- the more .. intuitive the picture .. as eternally becoming, .. the more alien to numbers." (p. 76)
"Form is something mobile, something becoming .. the doctrine of transformation." (Goethe, cited p. 76)
In historical research, it appears as chronology, the number structure of dates and statistics.
IV.
"The task of world knowing (is) a need .. for the man of the higher Cultures. The task is necessarily a double one, in view of the distinction between 'Nature' and 'History'. .. It is .. impossible .. to have both working creatively at the same time." (p. 78)
"The natural science investigator .. finds in his world .. only directionless quantities .. When it has achieved this, pure nature knowledge has shot its bolt." (p. 78)
"The historical kind of impression process is alien to everything quantitative."
- Nature knowledge >< man knowledge
- Scientific experience >< vital experience
"All modes of comprehending the world .. may be described as Morphology:
- The morphology of the mechanical and the extended .. is called Systematic
- The morphology of the organic, of history and life .. is called Physiognomic (all that bears the sign of direction and destiny') (p. 79)
V.
"In the West, the Systematic mode of treating the world reached .. its culmination point during the last century. .. The great days of the Physiognomic are still to come." (p. 79)
"Every mathematic .. is the confession of a Soul .. Scientific experience is spiritual self-knowledge .. Knowledge of men .. implies .. knowledge of those superlative human organisms that I call Cultures." (p. 79)
"Physiognomic's art of portraiture (Faust) .. are portraits of an epoch .. For the nature researcher .. as systematist, the portraiture of the world is only a business of imitation." (p. 79)
"The nature researcher can be educated, but the man who knows history is born .., guided by a feeling which cannot be acquired by learning .. Reason, system and comprehension kill as the 'cognize'. That which is cognized becomes a rigid object .. Intuitive vision .. vivifies and incorporates .. in a living inwardly felt unity." (p. 80)
"The artist (or the real historian) sees the becoming of a thing, whereas the systematist .. learns the thing that has become." (p. 80)