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VI
OUR FATE IN THOSE INFINITIES 1 THE first infinity, the ideal
infinity, corresponds most nearly with the requirements of our reason, which
does not justify us in giving it the preference. It is impossible for us to
foresee what we shall become in it, because it seems to exclude any becoming.
It therefore but remains for us to address ourselves to the second, to that
which we see and imagine in time and space. Furthermore, it is possible that it
may precede the other. However absolute our conception of the universe, we have
seen that we can always admit that what has not taken place in the eternity
before us will happen in the eternity after us and that there is nothing save
an untold number of chances to prevent the universe from acquiring in the end
that perfect consciousness which will establish it at its zenith. 2 Behold us, then, in the infinity of
those worlds, the stellar infinity, the infinity of the heavens, which
assuredly veils other things from our eyes, but which cannot be a total
illusion. It seems to us to be peopled only with objects — planets, suns,
stars, nebulae, atoms, imponderous fluids — which move, unite and separate,
repel and attract one another, which shrink and expand, are for ever shifting
and never arrive, which measure space in that which has no confines and number
the hours in that which has no term. In a word, we are in an infinity that
seems to have almost the same character and the same habits as that power in
the midst of which we breathe and which, upon our earth, we call nature or
life. What will be our fate in that
infinity? We are asking ourselves no idle question, even if we should unite
with it after losing all consciousness, all notion of the ego, even if we
should exist there as no more than a little nameless substance — soul or matter,
we cannot tell — suspended in the equally nameless abyss that replaces time and
space. It is not an idle question, for it concerns the history of the worlds or
of the universe; and this history, far more than that of our petty existence,
is our own great history, in which perhaps something of ourselves or something
incomparably better and vaster will end by meeting us again some day. 3 Shall we be unhappy there? It is
hardly reassuring when we consider the ways of nature and remember that we form
part of a universe that has not yet gathered its wisdom. We have seen, it is
true, that good and bad fortune exist only in so far as regards our body and
that, when we have lost the organ of suffering, we shall not meet any of the
earthly sorrows again. But our anxiety does not end here; and will not our
mind, lingering upon our erstwhile sorrows, drifting derelict from world to
world, unknown to itself in an unknowable that seeks itself hopelessly, will
not our mind know here the frightful torture of which we have already spoken
and which is doubtless the last that imagination can touch with its wing?
Finally, if there were nothing left of our body and our mind, there would still
remain the matter and the spirit (or, at least, the obviously single force to which
we give that double name) which composed them and whose fate must be no more
indifferent to us than our own fate; for, let us repeat, from our death
onwards, the adventure of the universe becomes our own adventure. Let us not,
therefore, say to ourselves: “What can it matter? We shall not be
there.” We shall be there always, because everything will be there. 4 And will this everything wherein we
shall be included, in a world ever seeking itself, continue a prey to new and
perpetual and perhaps painful experiences? Since the part that we were was
unhappy, why should the part that we shall be enjoy a better fortune? Who can
assure us that yonder the unending combinations and endeavours will not be more
sorrowful, more stupid and more baneful than those which we are leaving; and
how shall we explain that these have come about after so many millions of
others which ought to have opened the eyes of the genius of infinity? It is
idle to persuade ourselves, as Hindu wisdom would, that our sorrows are but illusions
and appearances: it is none the less true that they make us very really
unhappy. Has the universe elsewhere a more complete consciousness, a more just
and serene understanding than on this earth and in the worlds which we discern?
And, if it be true that it has somewhere attained that better understanding,
why does the mind that presides over the destinies of our earth not profit by
it? Is no communication possible between worlds which must have been born of
the same idea and which lie in its depths? What would be the mystery of that
isolation? Are we to believe that the earth marks the farthest stage and the
most successful experiment? What, then, can the mind of the universe have done
and against what darkness must it have struggled, to have come only to this?
But, on the other hand, that darkness and those barriers which can have come
only from itself, since they could have arisen no elsewhere, have they the
power to stay its progress? Who then could have set those insoluble problems to
infinity and from what more remote and profound region than itself could they
have issued? Some one, after all, must know the answer; and, as behind infinity
there can be none that is not infinity itself, it is impossible to imagine a
malignant will in a will that leaves no point around it which is not wholly
covered. Or are the experiments begun in the stars continued mechanically, by
virtue of the force acquired, without regard to their uselessness and their
pitiful consequences, according to the custom of nature, who knows nothing of
our parsimony and squanders the suns in space as she does the seed on earth,
knowing that nothing can be lost? Or, again, is the whole question of our peace
and happiness, like that of the fate of the worlds, reduced to knowing whether
or not the infinity of endeavours and combinations be equal to that of
eternity? Or, lastly, to come to what is most likely, is it we who deceive
ourselves, who know nothing, who see nothing and who consider imperfect that
which is perhaps faultless, we who are but an infinitesimal fragment of the
intelligence which we judge by the aid of the little shreds of understanding
which it has vouchsafed to lend us? 5 How could we reply, how could our
thoughts and glances penetrate the infinite and the invisible, we who do not
understand nor even see the thing by which we see and which is the source of
all our thoughts? In fact, as has been very justly observed, man does not see
light itself. He sees only matter, or rather the small part of the great worlds
which he knows by the name of matter, touched by light. He does not perceive
the immense rays that cross the heavens save at the moment when they stopped by
an object akin to those with which his eye is familiar upon this earth: were it
otherwise, the whole space filled with innumerable suns and boundless forces,
instead of being an abyss of absolute darkness, absorbing and extinguishing
shafts of light that shoot across it from every side, would be but a monstrous
and unbearable ocean of flashes. And, if we do not see the light, at
least we think we know a few of its rays or its reflexions; but we are
absolutely ignorant of that which is unquestionably the essential law of the
universe, namely, gravitation. What is that force, the most powerful of all and
the least visible, imperceptible to our senses, without form, without colour,
without temperature, without substance, without savour and without voice, but
so awful that it suspends and moves in space all the worlds which we see and
all those which we shall never know? More rapid, more subtle, more incorporeal
than thought, it wields such sway over everything that exists, from the
infinitely great to the infinitely small, that there is not a grain of sand
upon our earth nor a drop of blood in our veins but are penetrated, wrought
upon and quickened by it until they act at every moment upon the farthest
planet of the last solar system that we struggle to imagine beyond the bounds
of our imagination. Shakspeare’s famous lines, “There are more things in heaven and
earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your
philosophy,” have long since become utterly
inadequate. There are no longer more things than our philosophy can dream of or
imagine: there is none but things which it cannot dream of, there is nothing
but the unimaginable; and, if we do not even see the light, which is the one
thing that we believed we saw, it may be said that there is nothing all around
us but the invisible. We move in the illusion of seeing
and knowing that which is strictly indispensable to our little lives. As for
all the rest, which is well-nigh everything, our organs not only debar us from
reaching, seeing or feeling it, but even restrain us from suspecting what it
is, just as they would prevent us from understanding it if an intelligence of a
different order were to bethink itself of revealing or explaining it to us. The
number and volume of those mysteries is as boundless as the universe itself. If
mankind were one day to draw near to those which to-day it deems the greatest
and the most inaccessible, such as the origin and the aim of life, it would at
once behold rising up behind them, like eternal mountains, others quite as
great and quite as unfathomable; and so on, without end. In relation to that
which it would have to know in order to hold the key to the riddle of this
world, it would always find itself at the same point of central ignorance. It
would be just the same if we possessed an intelligence several million times
greater and more penetrating than ours. All that its miraculously increased
power could discover would encounter limits no less impassable than at present.
All is boundless in that which has no bounds. We shall be the eternal prisoners
of the universe. It is therefore impossible for us to appreciate in any degree
whatsoever, in the smallest conceivable respect, the present state of the
universe and to say, as long as we are men, whether it follows a straight line
or describes an immense circle, whether it is growing wiser or madder, whether
it is advancing towards the eternity which has no end or retracing its steps
towards that which had no beginning. Our sole privilege within our tiny
confines is to struggle towards that which appears to us the best and to remain
heroically persuaded that no part of what we do within those confines can ever
be wholly lost. 6 But let not all these insoluble
questions drive us towards fear. From the point of view of our future beyond
the grave, it is in no way necessary that we should have an answer to
everything. Whether the universe have already found its consciousness, whether
it find it one day or seek it everlastingly, it could not exist for the purpose
of being unhappy and of suffering, either in its entirety, or in any one of its
parts; and it matters little if the latter be invisible or incommensurable,
considering that the smallest is as great as the greatest in what has neither
limit nor measure. To torture a point is the same thing as to torture the
worlds; and, if it torture the worlds, it is its own substance that it
tortures. Its very fate, wherein we have our part, protects us; for we are
simply morsels of infinity. It is inseparable from us as we are inseparable
from it. Its breath is our breath, its aim is our aim and we bear within us all
its mysteries. We participate in it everywhere. There is naught in us that
escapes it; there is naught in it but belongs to us. It extends us, fills us,
traverses us on every side. In space and time and in that which, beyond space
and time, has as yet no name, we represent it and summarise it completely, with
all its properties and all its future; and, if its immensity terrifies us, we
are as terrifying as itself. If, therefore, we had to suffer in
it, our sufferings could be but ephemeral; and nothing matters that is not
eternal. It is possible, although somewhat incomprehensible, that parts should
err and go astray; but it is impossible that sorrow should be one of its
lasting and necessary laws; for it would have brought that law to bear against
itself. In like manner, the universe is and must be its own law and its sole
master: if not, the law or the master whom it must obey would be the universe
alone; and the centre of a word which we pronounce without being able to grasp
its scope would be simply shifted. If it be unhappy, that means that it wills
its own unhappiness; if it will its unhappiness, it is mad; and, if it appear
to us mad, that means that our reason works contrary to everything and to the
only laws possible, seeing that they are eternal, or, to speak more humbly,
that it judges what it wholly fails to understand. 7 Everything, therefore, must end, Dr
perhaps already be, if not in a state of happiness, at least in a state exempt
from all suffering, all anxiety, all lasting unhappiness; and what, after all,
is our happiness upon this earth, if it be not the absence of sorrow, anxiety
and unhappiness? But it is childish to talk of happiness and unhappiness where infinity is in question. The idea which we entertain of happiness and unhappiness is something so special, so human, so fragile that it does not exceed our stature and falls to dust as soon as we take it out of its little sphere. It proceeds entirely from a few contingencies of our nerves, which are made to appreciate very slight happenings, but which could as easily have felt everything the opposite way and taken pleasure in that which is now pain. I do not know if my readers remember
the striking passage in which Sir William Crookes shows how well-nigh all that
we consider as essential laws of nature would be falsified in the eyes of a
microscopic man, while forces of which we are almost wholly ignorant, such as
surface-tension, capillarity or the Brownian movements, would preponderate.
Walking on a cabbage-leaf, for instance, after the dew had fallen, and seeing
it studded with huge crystal globes, he would infer that water was a solid body
which assumes spherical form and rises in the air. At no great distance, he
might come to a pond, when he would observe that this same matter, instead of
rising upwards, now seems to slope downwards in a vast curve from the brink. If
he managed, with the aid of his friends, to throw into the water one of those
enormous steel bars which we call needles, he would see that it made a sort of
concave trough on the surface and floated tranquilly. From these experiments
and a thousand others which he might make, he would naturally deduce theories
diametrically opposed to those upon which our entire existence is based. It
would be the same if the changes were made in the direction of time, to take an
hypothesis imagined by the philosopher William James: “Suppose we were able, within the
length of a second, to note distinctly ten thousand events instead of barely
ten, as now; if our life were then destined to hold the same number of
impressions it might be a thousand times as short. We should live less than a
month, and personally know nothing of the change of seasons. If born in winter,
we should believe in summer as we now believe in the heats of the carboniferous
era. The motions of organic beings would be so slow to our senses as to be
inferred, not seen. The sun would stand still in the sky, the moon be almost
free from change and so on. But now reverse the hypothesis, and suppose a being
to get only one thousandth part of the sensations that we get in a given time,
and consequently to live a thousand times as long. Winters and summers will be
to him like quarters of an hour. Mushrooms and the swifter growing plants will
shoot into being so rapidly as to appear instantaneous creations; annual shrubs
will rise and fall from the earth like restlessly boiling water-springs; the
motions of animals will be as invisible as are to us the movements of bullets
and cannon-balls; the sun will scour through the sky like a meteor, leaving a
fiery trail behind him, &c. That such imaginary cases (barring the
super-human longevity) may be realised somewhere in the animal kingdom, it
would be rash to deny.” 8
We believe that we see nothing
hanging over us hut catastrophes, deaths, torments and disasters; we shiver at
the mere thought of the great interplanetary spaces, with their intense cold
and their awful and gloomy, solitudes; and we imagine that the worlds that
revolve through space are as unhappy as ourselves because they freeze, or
disaggregate, or clash together, or are consumed in unutterable flames. We
infer from this that the genius of the universe is an abominable tyrant, seized
with a monstrous madness, delighting only in the torture of itself and all that
it contains. To millions of stars, each many thousand times larger than our
sun, to nebulae whose nature and dimensions no figure, no word in our language
is able to express, we attribute our momentary sensibility, the little
ephemeral play of our nerves; and we are convinced that life there must be
impossible or appalling, because we should feel too hot or too cold. It were
much wiser to say to ourselves that it would need but a trifle, a few papillae
more or less to our skin, the slightest modification of our eyes and ears, to
turn the temperature of space, its silence and its darkness into a delicious
springtime, an incomparable music, a divine light. “Nothing is too wonderful to be
true,” said Faraday. It were much more reasonable to
persuade ourselves that the catastrophes which our imagination sees there are
life itself, the joy and one or other of those immense festivals of mind and
matter in which death, thrusting aside at last our two enemies, time and space,
will soon permit us to take part. Each world dissolving, extinguished,
crumbling, burnt or colliding with another world and pulverised means the
commencement of a magnificent experiment, the dawn of a marvellous hope and
perhaps an unexpected happiness drawn direct from the inexhaustible unknown.
What though they freeze or flame, collect or disperse, pursue or flee one
another: mind and matter, no longer united by the same pitiful hazard that
joined them in us, must rejoice at all that happens; for all is but birth and
rebirth, a departure into an unknown filled with wonderful promises and maybe
an anticipation of some ineffable event. |