Theoretical and practical science
The sketch of Fichte's argument which I have just presented
unfortunately still does not tell us very much about how he conceived the difference between theory and practice as parts of philosophy. Thus it does not tell us about the distinct manner in which he conceived of the I as a first principle in relation to each. This question is complicated by what Frederick Neuhouser has shown, that Fichte adopted one view of the matter in the 1794Foundation of the Doctrine of Science
, but then changed his views significantly by the time he wrote the two Introductions of 1797 and theSystem of Ethics
of 1798.
According to the earlier view, presented in theConcept of a Doctrine of Science
and theFoundation
of 1794, the doctrine of science is supposed to ground all other particular sciences, including both theoretical and practical sciences (SW 1:63-66). Fichte intends this not in the sense that other sciences are each grounded on some particular principle or principles belonging to theWissenschaftslehre
, but rather in the sense that they are each grounded on the fundamental principle itself. The boundary between the doctrine of science and particular sciences is marked by the way the first principle is taken. "As soon as an action which is in itself entirely free has been given a specific direction, we have moved from the domain of the general doctrine of science into that of some particular science" (SW 1:63-64).
The division of theoretical from practical science is therefore based on considering the two ways in which the I can relate to the not-I. If the I adopts a dependent relation to the not-I, then it is determined as "intelligence" and the science is theoretical. If we consider the I as independent in relation to the not-I, then its relation is one ofstriving
and we are dealing with the practical part of the doctrine of science.
This is the way Fichte presents things in the practical part of theFoundation
of 1794 (especially § 5, SW 1: 246-285). Neuhouser argues that Fichte's deduction of practical reason is supposed to consist in grounding the theoretical use of reason and then showing that reason can be theoretical only if it is also practical.
That he is correct is clearly indicated in the following remark: "Up to now a practical faculty of reason has been postulated, but not proved. Such a proof... can be achieved in no other way than by showing that reason cannot even be theoretical unless it is practical; that there can be no intelligence in the human being unless he possesses a practical faculty" (SW 1:264).
Fichte's subsequent argument in theFoundation
is that this practical faculty, in order to be able to limit its distinct practical drives by one another and to bring them into harmony through "interdetermination", must include a drive to absolute activity for its own sake, or a "drive for drive's sake", that is, a capacity to give itself "an absolute law or categorical imperative" (SW 1:327). The I as practical principle is
transcendentally deduced from the theoretical I.
By 1797, however, Fichte had changed his mind both about the strategy for justifying practical reason and about the relation between the doctrine of science and its theoretical and practical parts. In theFirst
Introduction to the Doctrine of Science
of 1797, he famously maintains that there are only two consistent philosophies, dogmatism (or materialism) and idealism (or criticism). Philosophy before Kant was based entirely on the principle of dogmatism, that of the thing in itself, which leads necessarily (Fichte insists) to determinism, fatalism, authoritarianism, the denial of human dignity and resignation to the unfreedom and injustice which has reigned in human society up to now; the new or critical philosophy is grounded on the principle of idealism, the I, which leads necessarily to the affirmation of freedom, morality and the unlimited possibility of progress in human history. The principle one follows, the philosophy one chooses, depends on the kind of person one is. Neither philosophy can refute the other, because each begins with a different principle, and each of the two principles from the outset excludes the other (SW 1:425-435). Idealism and dogmatism,
therefore, each begin with a faith in which their respective systems resolve to persevere (SW 4:25-26).
Such remarks may lead us to think that Fichte has simply abandoned the whole idea of establishing a doctrine of science on the basis of an absolutely certain first principle, and is resorting instead to a blind leap of faith as the ground of his system of idealism. But a closer look at what he says will remove this impression. For the apparent strength of dogmatism, its ability to withstand the challenge of criticism and maintain itself as a faith in the minds of its adherents, is due not to any evidence in its behalf or to any weakness in the evidence for criticism. Instead, it is due entirely to the freedom-fearing closed-mindedness of the dogmatic mindset, and in the end to either the weakness or viciousness of character on the part of the dogmatists themselves.
Fichte regularly ascribes to idealism two advantages, each decisive from the standpoint of reason, which it has over dogmatism. In the first place, whereas the dogmatist's principle -- the thing in itself -- is a mere presupposition, a thought which can never be given in intuition, the principle of idealism -- the I's freedom -- is at every moment directly exhibited in consciousness, given to us as an intuition in our most inward feeling (SW 1: 428, 445-446, 4:44, 54, GA 4/2:20-21). We can take the practical standpoint only insofar as we ascribe freedom to ourselves, and this standpoint is unavoidable -- even as a theorist I must take it insofar as I deliberate about what hypotheses to test, how to test them, and what conclusions to draw from the evidence. To be sure, the dogmatist consistently rejects its own self-generated awareness of freedom -- on the authority of dogmatism's principle -- as a delusion. But dogmatism can neither deny the experience of freedom which is inseparable from the practical standpoint, nor offer any comparably self-evident experience in evidence of its principle. Dogmatism's faith is therefore adopted willfully and contrary to experience, where idealism's faith is nothing but a confidence in what it directly experiences (SW 4:26). This is a faith born of the fear to use one's own reason, a fear reinforced by social traditions and hierarchies which depend on the denial of the fundamental freedom and equal dignity of every rational being.
Idealism's second advantage, according to Fichte, is that it can be completed as a philosophical system, whereas dogmatism cannot. Thus idealism's starting point can be demonstratively guaranteed, whereas dogmatism's cannot (SW 1:466). Idealism can even explain how we come to ascribe the representations of consciousness to a thing in itself. But dogmatism is unable to explain our consciousness of freedom on its principles, and it therefore can only reject this consciousness as an illusion (SW 1:435-440). The dogmatist, moreover, is "unable to offer a clear account of how representations could be produced within any creature by the influence of things" (GA 4/2:20).
For, once again, the standpoint from which we have representations is the practical standpoint of a free agent, and to regard oneself as free is
incompatible with regarding oneself as a thing.
The contest between idealism and dogmatism is not, therefore, an epistemic stalemate, to be settled merely by an arbitrary decision or act of faith. Fichte's claim is rather that a consistent dogmatist is someone who has on principle cut himself off both from immediate evidence and scientific demonstration through a stubborn denial of both immediate experience and scientific reason. Dogmatism, in Fichte's view, is a philosophical attitude which expresses a morally corrupt character and corresponds to an unfree social order which rests on mental servitude, vanity, dishonesty, self-deception and complacent despair over the power of reason (SW 1:434). People are drawn to dogmatism either because they benefit from the system of unfreedom or because they are victims deluded and intimidated by it who are afraid to throw off their chains. It is in this sense only that Fichte holds that dogmatists cannot be "refuted," but can only be "cultivated," "educated," or "cured" (SW 1:136, GA 4/2:21).
The fundamental change in Fichte's method between 1794 and 1797, however, is that whereas the earlier system made the practical power of reason into an object of demonstration, the later system grounds itself directly on the original Act (Tathandlung
) through which the free I posits itself. This is why Fichte repeatedly asserts that no one can be compelled to adopt idealism. Fichte cannot demonstrate his starting point but can only invite his readers to initiate it for themselves (SW 1:429, 1:458, 4:8, GA 4/2:32). It is in this sense that Fichte, reversing what he said in theFoundation
of 1794, now claims that his first principle is a "postulate": "The reader or student of philosophy must begin by doing something" (GA 4/2:29). According to Fichte, in 1794 he began with self-awareness as a fact (Tatsache
), something found in experience, and attempted to demonstrate from this the practical freedom, the original Act (Tathandlung
), which made it possible. But after 1797 he begins directly with the Act and the doctrine of science is to show how it generates the fact: "Here we began with the Act and arrived at the fact; but the method of the book [of 1794] was just the reverse" (GA 4/2:33). This means that now the first principle of the doctrine of science is directly a practical principle; practice is not only the ground of theory but even the starting point of philosophy as a whole.
This change reflects itself in the way Fichte conceives of the relation of the doctrine of science to the theoretical and practical sciences. In 1794, Fichte began with a general grounding of the entire doctrine of science (Part I: §§ 1-3, SW 1:91-122) then proceeded to the theoretical part of the doctrine of science (Part II: § 4, SW 1:123-246) and finally to the practical part (Part III: §§ 5-11, SW 1:246-328). In theSystem of Ethics
of 1798, however, theoretical and practical sciences are presented as simply two equal parts of a single unified doctrine of science, neither taking systematic precedence over the other (SW 4:15).
That this is an intentional change is documented in a transcript of Fichte's lectures of 1797:
"[These lectures will] follow a method of presentation that is just the opposite of that followed by the author in his compendium of 1794, where he proceeded from the theoretical portion of philosophy (i.e. from what had to be explained) to the practical part (i.e. to what was meant to serveas the basis
for explaining the former). In the present lectures, however, the hitherto familiar division between theoretical and practical philosophy is not to be found. Instead, these lectures present philosophyas a whole
, in the exposition of which theoretical and practical philosophy are united. This presentation follows a much more natural path, beginning with the practical sphere, or whenever it would contribute to the clarity of the exposition to do so, inserting the practical into the theoretical, in order to explain the latter in terms of the former: a liberty for which the author was not yet sufficiently self-confident at the time he published hisDoctrine of
Science
" (GA 4/2:17).
Fichte apparentlyalways
regarded the practical as the foundation of the theoretical, so that his earlier procedure is not to be understood as founding the practical on the theoretical but, on the contrary, as a regressive method, moving from what is grounded back toward the ground. The I, therefore, was always regarded as fundamentally a practical rather than a theoretical principle. The new presentation of the system merely makes this explicit.