The term "spiritualism" has been frequently used to denote the belief in
the possibility of communication with disembodied spirits, and the various
devices employed to realize this belief in practice. The term "Spiritism"
(q. v.), which obtains in Italy, France, and Germany, seems more apt to express
this meaning. Spiritualism, then, suitable stands opposed to materialism.
We may say in general that Spiritualism is the doctrine which denies that the
contents of the universe are limited to matter and the properties and operations
of matter. It maintains the existence of real being or beings (minds,
spirits) radically distinct in nature from matter. It may take the form of
Spiritualistic Idealism, which denies the existence of any real material being
outside of the mind; or, whilst defending the reality of spiritual being, it may
also allow the separate existence of the material world. Further,
Idealistic Spiritualism may either take the form of Monism (e.g., with Fichte),
which teaches that there exists a single universal mind or ego of which all
finite minds are but transient moods or stages: or it may adopt a pluralistic
theory (e.g. with Berkeley), which resolves the universe into a Divine Mind
together with a multitude of finite minds into which the former infuses all
those experiences that generate the belief in an external, independent, material
world. The second or moderate form of Spiritualism, whilst maintaining the
existence of spirit, and in particular the human mind or soul, as a real being
distinct from the body, does not deny the reality of matter. It is, in
fact, the common doctrine of Dualism. However, among the systems of philosophy
which adhere to Dualism, some conceive the
separateness or mutual independence of soul and body to be greater and others
less. With some philosophers of the former class, soul and body seem to
have been looked upon as complete beings merely accidentally united. For
these a main difficulty is to give a satisfactory account of the inter-action of
two beings so radically opposed in nature.
Historically, we find the early Greek
philosophers tending generally towards Materialism. Sense experience is
more impressive than our higher, rational consciousness, and sensation is
essentially bound up with the bodily organism. Anaxagoras was the first,
apparently, among the Greeks to vindicate the predominance of mind or reason in
the universe. It was, however, rather as a principle of order, to account
for the arrangement and design evident in nature as a whole, than to vindicate
the reality of individual minds distinct from the bodies which they animate.
Plato was virtually the father of western spiritualistic philosophy. He
emphasized the distinction between the irrational or sensuous and the rational
functions of the soul. He will not allow the superior elements in
knowledge or the higher "parts" of the soul to be explained away in terms of the
lower. Both subsist in continuous independence and opposition. Indeed, the
rational soul is related to the body merely as the pilot to the ship or the
rider to his horse. Aristotle fully recognized the spirituality of the
higher rational activity of thought, but his treatment of its precise relation
to the individual human soul is obscure. On the other hand, his conception
of the union of soul and body, and of the unity of the human person, is much
superior to that of Plato. Though the future life of the human soul, and
consequently its capacity for an existence separate from the body, was one of
the most fundamental and important doctrines of the Christian religion, yet
ideas as to the precise meaning of spirituality were not at first clear, and we
find several of the earliest Christian writers (though maintaining the future
existence of the soul separate from the body), yet conceiving the soul in a more
or less materialistic way (cf. Justin, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Clement, etc.).
The Catholic philosophic doctrine of Spiritualism received much of its
development from St. Augustine, the disciple of Platonic philosophy, and its
completion from Albertus Magnus and St. Thomas, who perfected the Aristotelian
account of the union of soul and body.
Modern Spiritualism, especially of the more
extreme type, has its origin in Descartes. Malebranche, and indirectly
Berkeley, who contributed so much in the sequel to Monistic Idealism, are
indebted to Descartes, whilst every form of exaggerated Dualism which set mind
and body in isolation and contrast traces its descent from him. In spite
of serious faults and defects in their systems, it should be recognized that
Descartes and Leibnitz contributed much of the most effective resistance to the
wave of Materialism which acquired such strength in Europe at the end of the
eighteenth and during the first half of the nineteenth centuries. In
particular, Maine de Biran, who emphasized the inner activity and spirituality
of the will, followed by Jouffroy and Cousin, set up so vigorous an opposition
to the current Materialism as to win for their theories the distinctive title of
"Spiritualism". In Germany, in addition to Kant, Fichte, and other Monistic
Idealists, we find Lotze and Herbart advocating realistic forms of Spiritualism.
In England, among the best-known advocates of Dualistic Spiritualism,
were, in succession to the Scottish School, Hamilton and Martineau; and of
Catholic writers, Brownson in America, and W. G. Ward in England.
EVIDENCE FOR THE DOCTRINE OF SPIRITUALISM
Whilst modern Idealists and writers advocating an extreme form of Spiritualism
have frequently fallen into grievous error in their own positive systems, their
criticisms of Materialism and their vindication of the reality of spiritual
being seem to contain much sound argument and some valuable contributions, as
was indeed to be expected, to this controversy.
(1) Epistemological Proof
The line of reasoning adopted by Berkeley against Materialism has never met with
any real answer from the latter. If we were compelled to choose between
the two, the most extreme Idealistic Materialism would be incomparably the more
logical creed to hold. Mind is more intimately known than matter, ideas
are more ultimate than molecules. External bodies are only known in terms
of consciousness. To put forward as a final explanation that thought is
merely a motion or property of certain bodies, when all bodies are, in the last
resort, only revealed to us in terms of our thinking activity, is justly
stigmatized by all classes of Spiritualists as utterly irrational. When the
Materialist or Sensationist reasons out his doctrine, he is landed in hopeless
absurdity. Materialism is in fact the answer of the men who do not think,
who are apparently quite unaware of the presuppositions which underlie all
science.
(2)
Teleological Proof
The contention, old as Anaxagoras, that the order, adaptation, and design
evidently revealed in the universe postulate a principle distinct from matter
for its explanation is also a valid argument for Spiritualism. Matter
cannot arrange itself. Yet that there is arrangement in the universe, an that
this postulates the agency of a principle other than matter, is continually more
and more forced upon us by the utter failure of natural selection to meet the
demands made on it during the last half of the past century to accomplish by the
blind, fortuitous action of physical agents work demanding the highest
intelligence.
(3) Ethical Proof
The denial of spiritual beings distinct from, and in some sense independent of,
matter inexorably involves the annihilation of morality. If the mechanical
or materialistic theory of the universe be true, every movement and change of
each particle of matter is the inevitable outcome of previous physical
conditions. There is no room anywhere for effective human choice or
purpose in the world. Consequently, all those notions which form the constituent
elements of man's moral creed--duty, obligation, responsibility, merit, desert,
and the rest--are illusions of the imagination. Virtue and vice, fraud and
benevolence are alike the inevitable outcome of the individual's circumstances,
and ultimately as truly beyond his control as the movement of the piston is in
regard to the steam-engine.
(4) Inefficacy and Uselessness of Mind in the Materialist View
Again, unless the reality of spirit distinct from, and independent of, matter be
admitted, the still more incredible conclusion inexorably follows that mind,
thought, consciousness play no really operative part in the world's history.
If mind is not a real distinct energy, capable of interfering with, guiding, and
influencing the movements of matter, then clearly it has played no real part in
the creations of art, literature, or science. Consciousness is merely an
inefficacious by-product, an epiphenomenon which has never modified in any
degree the movements of matter concerned in the history of the human race.
(5) Psychological Proof
The outcome of all the main theses of psychology, empirical and rational, in
Catholic systems of philosophy is the establishment of a Spiritualistic Dualism,
and the determination of the relations of soul and body. Analysis of the
higher activities of the soul, and especially of the operations of intellectual
conception, judgment, reasoning, and self-conscious reflection, proves the
faculty of intellect and the soul to which it belongs to be of a spiritual
nature, distinct from matter, and not the outcome of a power inherent in a
bodily organ. At the same time the Scholastic doctrine, better than any
other system, furnishes a conception of the union of soul and body which
accounts for the extrinsic dependence of the spiritual operations of the mind on
the organism; whilst maintaining the spiritual nature of the soul, it safeguards
the union of soul and body in a single person.