Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Gordon Clark: Karl Jaspers (The Southern Presbyterian Journal)

1959. Karl Jaspers. The Southern Presbyterian Journal, XVII.

Karl Jaspers 
By Gordon H. Clark, Ph.D.

During the nineteenth century it was widely held that the universe was neat and tidy. Everything could be clearly understood because everything was properly tucked away in its proper pigeon hole. This view was dominant both in philosophy and in religion, not to speak of science and popular literature. Although Jaspers himself entered philosophy through his scientific studies, science and Positivism did not contribute so directly to the background of Jaspers' thought as did Hegelianism. Hegel had shown how Absolute Reason could arrange the categories from which nothing (well, almost nothing) could escape. Modernism, descending from Schleiermacher, may not have been so streng wissenschaftlich, but it viewed man as rational and fundamentally good. God's in His heaven; all's right with the world. 

Hegel had not long been dead when Karl Marx and Soren Kierkegaard attacked this scheme of rational perfection. At first it seemed that the work of these two men would have no effect. Marx's influence went into underground plotting and came to light in the Bolshevik revolution of 1917. Kierkegaard lay quite forgotten and was discovered only after World War I. There was a reason why these two thinkers burst into prominence at the same time. If people at large could not grasp the technical criticism directed against the Hegelian Absolute, the brutal wars of this century convinced them that not all is right with the world and that man is neither good nor rational. 

These trends, and in particular the repudiation of reason, produced national socialism (Hitler) and international socialism (Stalin) in politics, existentialism in philosophy, and neoorthodoxy in religion. Although religiously minded people might be inclined to restrict their attention to neo-orthodoxy, on the ground that it is more directly their concern, nonetheless some knowledge of the wider existential philosophy is useful for understanding the basic philosophic ideas which these theologians apply to religious problems. For such a purpose this article will discuss Karl Jaspers. 

Jaspers became interested in philosophy through his studies in psychopathology. He was confronted with that dogmatic materialism which held that all mental illness was a physical disturbance of the brain. This theory, Jaspers saw, went far beyond the evidence. Undoubtedly an abnormal condition of the brain is sometimes the cause of mental illness, and in such cases physical treatment may cure the brain and restore sanity; but other cases are purely
mental or spiritual. At this time also Freud was attempting to explain man in terms of sexual impulses. Sexual desires may of course cause mental aberrations, but the absolutization of sex is as mistaken as the absolutization of materialism. Similarly the Marxian attempt to explain by absolutizing economics is grossly one-sided. 

From studies as these Jaspers concluded that there is no single viewpoint, no one principle, no single method by which to explain man. Each has some value, as a partial explanation, in a few cases. All should be used from time to time as the instance dictates. But the being of man cannot be exhausted by even the best theory. Now, this conclusion Jaspers did not restrict to psychopathology. He generalized it, and in doing so he obtained the guiding theme of all his later philosophy. In this: There is no absolute whatever. No explanation of anything is ever complete and final. 

There are many philosophies and many worldviews; they are all legitimate psychologically; all fill some human need; but there is no super-standpoint from which to judge among them. Conceptualization, best exemplified in Hegel, is superficial. Linear implication, as he terms traditional logic, and the belief that one possesses the truth are hypocrisy and inauthenticity. Concepts are at best indefinite subjective approximations. We make schemes and we remake them. We never attain a true world-view. There is no fixed and final standpoint. 

This theme Jaspers is never tired of repeating and defending. Kant's antinomies are evidence for it. They show the limits of knowledge. When one asks whether the world is finite or infinite, either in space or time, no answer is forthcoming. Or, worse, both answers are equally arguable. Now, in the case of an ordinary contradiction, if the terms are unambiguous, we always believe that one part is wrong and that the argument to support it is invalid. Kant's antinomies, however, are supported by equally valid arguments on both sides. The reason for this impasse is that the question concerns the world as a whole. 

Yet the world as a whole is never an object of human experience. No one has ever seen the world as a whole. Maybe there is no world as a whole. The appearance of the antinomies is therefore a warning that we have passed beyond the limits of knowledge. All our knowledge concerns parts of the world, particulars, individual things. These always stand in relation to other parts. We know such a particular only in its relation to its surroundings. We know it only from the viewpoint which at that moment we take. We cannot know it as it is in itself, for this would require us to know the world as a whole. 

Hegel, when he tried to subsume everything under general rational categories, lost the individual things in their particularity. Only the general remained. (His grudging admission of certain exceptions only betrays his failure.) Positivism seems at first to insist on the individual things: but here too the individual is lost in the generality of mechanical law. In spite of its early protests against Hegelian absolutism. Positivism is equally absolutistic. And the one absolutism is as mistaken as the other. 

What then must be done? In answer it will be impossible to follow jaspers through his thousands of pages: but, I believe, it will not really misrepresent him to attend to one basic consideration. 

Jaspers says (not too intelligibly in my opinion) that we must be our authentic selves by transcending the relativism of knowledge. This is not to say that there is a knowable object beyond the world on the basis of which we can solve the problem of philosophy. There is no super-absolute beyond the absolutes of Hegel and the Positivists. Rut there is some dimly dreamed background which makes our known world meaningful even while remaining meaningless. 

But, you say, this cannot be. Reality must be either meaningful or meaningless; it cannot be both. How are we better off transcending the antinomies to a position that is not a position? What reason can be given in favor of making an existential choice that is not based on reason? 

To such objections Jaspers gives a disconcerting reply. This choice, this transcending, this authentic self cannot be explained or understood. To demand reasons, as this objection does, betrays a failure to "understand" what Jaspers has been saying. The objection assumes some sort of absolute, some definite standpoint, by which such questions should be answered. Rut this is what Jaspers claims to have proved impossible. 

Endless dialectic, all embracing relativism, insoluble antinomies do not allow any fixity. When applied to religion this means that there is no one religion good and valid for all men. All religions are partial and relative; all satisfy some need; all are good so far as they go . . with perhaps the exception of the Christian religion. Jaspers has no place for a history of redemption, for this presupposes a beginning, a middle, and an end of the world. To conclude all men under sin is to treat all men by one method. No such generality is permissible. In particular, the Incarnation is an absurdity because it establishes a fixed center of meaning. Worse perhaps than other absurdities the Incarnation is a threat to human dignity. It prevents man from being a free personality, for it implies that man exists for the glory of God and not for and in himself alone. 

The objections a Christian makes against Jaspers must assume what Jaspers denies. If Jaspers cannot persuade the Christian to relativize his position and to view Christianity as merely one limited viewpoint among many, what further can jaspers sav? All he can do is to pronounce anathemas, as he did upon Calvin: "In uncharitable intolerance he is the horrible antithesis of philosophy both in theory and practice . . . He is the apex of that incarnation of Christian intolerance against which one can oppose nothing but intolerance." 

The Calvinist. however. can do something more than anathemize. When Jaspers said that reality was both meaningful and meaningless, he repudiated the law of excluded middle. As mentioned before, he looks with disfavor on straight line implication. But if logic is untrustworthy and if x is both x and not x, words lose their definite meaning, all statements become ambiguous, and intelligible discussion ceases. This, rather than Calvin is the horrible antithesis of all philosophy; and this is what Jaspers has treated us to. But no man has ever broken logic without logic breaking him. 

The neo-orthodox theologians come out of the same general movement that produced Jaspers. They all more or less clearly despise reason, clear cut concepts, and definite positions. They do not agree with Jaspers on every point. On the contrary they usually show an attachment to the idea of incarnation. A study of I heir existentialist background. however, leads one to wonder whether they can possibly combine a truly Christian view of the Incarnation with their irrational, relativistic philosophy. Do they perchance use the term Incarnation in some vague and ambiguous sense? If they repudiate all conceptual framework, as some of them explicitly admit, can they retain an intelligible concept of the Incarnation, or of anything else? At any rate, a better understanding of Neoorthodoxy is to be had through a study of the pit from which it, like Karl Jaspers, was digged. 

(footnote) The expository part of this article is based on R. D. Knudsen's monograph, The Idea of Transcendence in the Philosophy of Karl Jaspers.

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