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The greatness of Kant lies in that he has
thoroughly investigated and grasped the powers and limits of reason, and knows
to what extent reason can provide man with genuine knowledge. But his weakness
is in that he stretches the functions of reason beyond their limits, to a
province over which reason cannot have sway, and coming to the bitter decision
that the things-in-themselves cannot be known, tried to floor all attempts to
construct a metaphysics of reality. If Hume gave us scepticism, Kant appears to
give us agnosticism. Both leave us in the same position as far as our knowledge
of reality is concerned. Kant did not notice that his antinomies are not real
contradictions but different perspectives, views of reality, all true at some
time, at a particular stage in the development of the powers of our knowledge.
Kant himself knows that this predicament in which we are landed by the
antinomies is due to our falsely supposing that space, time and cause are
external and independent of perception. When these forms of perception get
identified with knowledge itself, in a manner different from that in which Kant's
categories are contained in the understanding, all these antinomies get
resolved in a wholeness of perception which is supersensuous intuition. As it
was already shown, the world is real for purposes of certain aspects of life,
ideal for certain others, relative at some stage, and non-existent at another.
These are not contradictions, but piecemeal views of reality given to the mind
which cannot know it as a whole at one stroke. It may appear from an
exclusively abstract point of view of the pure reason that our knowledge of
reality is phenomenal, but we should say that this is merely an act of
supererogation on the part of reason, and an untenable thesis. The effect
cannot know its cause without its ceasing to be an effect. It is futile to know
reality, as such, through the mind or the reason. Kant admitted this for a
reason different from the one which the Vedanta gives. Kant limits experience
to sense, understanding and reason, without caring to heed to their
presuppositions; so he denies the possibility of a genuine metaphysics of
reality. But to the Vedanta, experience does not consist merely in these; there
is another faculty of knowledge on which these are based and without which
these are meaningless, and which is in a position to build a sound metaphysics,
comprehensive and satisfactory. This basis, this presupposition of all relative
knowledge, is the soul, the self, the arguer, the doubter, the ground lying
behind scepticism, phenomenalism and agnosticism, which is not a matter of
doubt, not an appearance, not unknown.
The ideas of freedom and necessity, of the
nature of causality and of a necessary being above the world, of an ultimate
causeless cause, which for Kant are not above the phenomena of the categories
of the understanding, hinge upon the problem of self, of an immutable,
incorruptible, immortal, simple, indivisible, spiritual substance or being. For
Kant such a self is inconceivable, our concept of it is involved in phenomena,
it is not above the finishing categories; hence the concepts of the world and God,
too, who bear relations to the self, are phenomenal. Kant says that we know
ourselves not as we are but as we appear to ourselves through the categories.
We know the world not as it is, but as it appears to us through the categories.
We know God not as He is, but as He passes through the mill of our
understanding and reason. The world as such, soul and God are all
things-in-themselves and so exist beyond experience.
We cannot, however, charge Kant with the
guilt of denying soul, world and God altogether; for what he seems to say is
that these cannot be known through sensation, perception, understanding or
reason; else there would be no meaning in his positing the
things-in-themselves. But the trouble with him is that he would not accept that
we have any other kind of experience than the sensuous and the mental. He has,
no doubt, the genius to conceive of an intellectual intuition which, he says,
if we could possess it, would enable us see things face to face, at once in
their true essences. But he denies its reality and accepts it only as a
probability; we have only sensuous intuition, we know nothing supersensuous. He
denies an immediate intuition of even our own selves and makes the self an
object of the discursive reason. His opinion is that one knows oneself but not one's self. He smacks of Hume when he says that
what we know of ourselves are only successive mental states, percepts, and
nothing more. We have only a thought of self, not a perception of self, and
this thought is a bundle of such states. Kant wavers between this view and the
one that radically differentiates him from Hume, the admission of a synthetic
or transcendental unity of apperception, a unifying ego, an I, which cannot be
identified with a perception or a thought and without which no knowledge is
possible. But this ego of Kant is different from the Atman of Vedanta, for the
former is still an empirical form relating itself to empirical experience. Kant
holds that his ego transcends empirical consciousness; but really it cannot do
so, for it becomes in his hands an individualised will which ever presses
beyond itself. But he distinguishes it from the empirical ego as the Vedanta
separates the Atman from the Jiva. The notion of the self appears to Kant to be
an object of the discursive reason because he deliberately makes it an object
of the reason. We do not know our own existence through the reason, but we have
an immediate intuitive apprehension of our being identical with an indivisible
consciousness. This fact is too clear to require extra contemplation over it.
Our conscious being never becomes an object; it ever persists in being the
ground and presupposition of all our processes of knowledge. If the self is to
become an object, where is the knowledge of this object to subsist? This knowledge
would require another self on which to base itself; and this process of
reasoning would end in an infinite regress. The apprehension of the self does
not admit of any relations, and process of knowing, any kind of duality
in regard to itself. The Vedanta declares that there are certain spiritual laws
which we daily experience in our own selves, though indistinctly on account of
the presence of a veil of ignorance covering the self, and which exist even
prior to the categories of the understanding. As Kant's a priori categories or principles of knowledge are universal and determine the nature of
perceptions and things, so the Vedanta holds that there are principles of
knowledge which are more universal and necessary than Kant's judgements
and categories and which determine even these judgements and categories.
Knowledge through the understanding is by no means the only possible one. There
is a spiritual realisation of the Absolute, which is not a mere probability but
a certainty, a certainty greater than that offered by the fact of our
experience of an empirical world of bodies.
Kant is a person who knows, and yet knows
not he knows. He makes suggestive statements, comes to the very borderland of
reality, but stops there. This he does because he is unable to step beyond the
realm of the understanding and finds himself hemmed in from all sides by the
laws of the understanding. He says that the concepts or the ideas of the pure
reason, the ideas of a unified world, soul and God, are merely regulative principles
which reveal the limits of possible knowledge and assert that there is a
transcendental reality beyond our possible experience. Now Kant does not know
that his assertion of a transcendental reality is impossible merely with the
aid of his categories. He owed the possibility of this concept of
things-in-themselves to a touch of the supersensuous intuition, though this
intuition never came to him as a direct perception. He says that the
things-in-themselves can be thought, though not known. Now, how does thought
function? It does so through the categories. Can we apply the categories in our
thinking the things-in-themselves? No. Then by what means does Kant think them?
He cannot say that it is the reason and not the mind that thinks them, for even
the reason functions with the categories. It is obvious then that he thinks the
things-in-themselves with a faculty transcending the senses and the categories.
And this is nothing short of supersensuous intuition.
Kant overlooks the fact that the reason
always exhibits an irresistible confidence in its powers to apprehend the
things-in-themselves in empirical perception. It refuses to yield to the
threats of the understanding that what it knows are mere projections of the
relative categories of possible knowledge. It is impossible to disregard the
superhuman urge within us which is ever anxious to recognise the supreme need
for the indivisible, the infinite, the real in us and in all things. Kant also
forgets that he cannot account for the correspondence of the forms of the
categories of the mind within with the material of sense-perception outside,
unless there is a common conscious background, a unity underlying the two.
Knowledge is possible because of an existence which is common to both the
subject and the object. If the categories of the understanding do not bear a
consciousness-relation to the material supplied by the senses, there would be
no adaptation of the former to the latter. The relation between the mind within
and the objects outside is a knowledge-relation, and this knowledge or
consciousness should be an underlying unity covering both the knower and the
known. In other words, knowledge conceived as the presupposition and ground of
all possible human knowledge in empirical experience is universal existence
itself. It is this independent, omnipresent Existence-Consciousness that we
term the Absolute.
If, as Kant thinks, the Ideas of reason
have merely a regulative use, valid only in so far as they give a unity and
order to our knowledge, and if we are to act merely as if their objects
exist, we would be living in a world of fancies, imaginations, chimeras; nay,
life would be impossible. The meaning that we instinctively discover in life
detests any such propositions, and affirms a preciousness and value in
existence that cannot be compared with anything we perceive in the world of
sense. The Ideas of reason are not mere probabilities or future possibilities,
but stand for an eternal fact that is the very basis of the entire structure of
possible knowledge here. The possibility of having in our reason such Ideas
arises not, as Kant thinks, on account of reason's abstracting the
conditions from the conditioned, but by the very presuppositions made by the
reason itself. We proceed not from the conditioned to the unconditioned, but
from the unconditioned to the conditioned. We begin with a self-evident
unconditioned consciousness which is in us, and without assuming which as a
fact there can be no thought, no life. Even the functions of the Ideas of reason
as pointers to the limits of experience imply the existence of the limitless,
for a knowledge of what is beyond limits is at once included in our knowledge
of limits. Descartes was confident that we cannot know ourselves as finite
beings without referring this knowledge of ours to the existence of the
infinite. Further, how can the conditioned ideas which we have been given by
the conceptual categories give rise to the Ideas of the infinite, the
unconditioned, the immortal? How can the Idea of the Absolute arise in us if it
is not buried already in our own consciousness? How can even an idea or a
notion or a concept of the Absolute or the infinite become possible if our
consciousness is completely locked within the finite categories? Kant misses to
discover in the Ideas of reason real a priori principles which logically
precede the categories of the understanding. H.J. Paton, a well-known Kantian
scholar, tells us that Kant does not really seem to have argued from the
existence of the given in experience to the things-in-themselves as its cause,
but rather seemed to regard them as immediately present to us in all
appearances. A knowledge that the world is phenomenal is based on an inner
conviction, pointing not merely to a probability or a possibility but to the
reality of all realities, and suggesting that an immutable being exists
transcending phenomena. It is Kant's intellectual bias that prevents him
from accepting these truths which shine before us as in daylight. To the senses
the real, no doubt, appears as an abstract idea, for it is far removed from the
reach of their knowledge. Kant shows a prejudice in favour of the sole
authority of sense- knowledge when he disregards the claims of the Ideas of
reason and relegates them to the limbo of probabilities. The organising
capacity, the law and order and the passion for unity present in the mind prove
the existence of a unitary and indivisible conscious self. Space and time,
though empirically real, are transcendentally ideal, and the necessity and
universality of the truths of mathematics which is possible only in spatial
extension and in the time-form felt as a succession of homogeneous moments, and
of physics which owes allegiance to the laws of mathematics in conformity with
the categories of the understanding, emerges out of the mind as an outward
phenomenal expression of the unity underlying the processes of all our
knowledge. The immediate consciousness of self requires it to be recognised as
unlimited, pervading all phenomena. This consciousness in its essence is the
Supreme Being. It is the Ishvara of the Vedanta when viewed in relation to the
world of experience; it is Brahman in its own being. As the categories of the
understanding suit the sense-material in giving us knowledge, the Ideas of
reason refer to Ultimate Reality, though we require a deeper insight to
appreciate this fact. And even as the categories by themselves have no
significance in knowledge without their adaptation to sense-material received
in empirical perception, the Ideas of reason have no significance of their own
in knowledge if they do not agree with the Reality experienced in supersensuous
intuition. These Ideas do not merely constitute a regulative method in life,
but act as representations of the Reality existing by its own right. The
systematic unity which the Idea of the Supreme Being gives to life is the
shadow cast by the existence of the Supreme Being.
Kant's arguments against the
ontological proof for the existence of God needs correction. His illustration
that the idea of my having some thalers in my pocket book does not prove that
they exist there is not applicable to our concept of God. What Kant needs to be
told is that he could not have the idea of thalers if thalers did not have
existence. What is important is not whether they exist in the pocket book or
elsewhere, but that they exist; their existence or non-existence in the pocket
book is irrelevant to the question of the Idea of God, for the Idea of God is
the Idea of the omnipresent, the infinite, not something which may exist
somewhere localised as in the pocket-book or outside it, and so such an Idea
should imply the existence of what it points to, even as the idea of thalers
proves that thalers do exist. The reason why Kant finds himself obliged to deny
existence to God from the Idea of God is that he entirely cuts off thought from
reality, while in fact thought at one stage of its being gets identified with
reality. The cosmological argument for the existence of God depends on the
ontological argument, and gets explained together with it. The contingent
demands a cause, the non-contingent, the non-accidental, which is necessary to
give completeness and a systematic character to experience. That such a cause
does not exist cannot follow from the contingent nature of phenomena; on the
other hand, contingent phenomena affirm an absolute ground. We are bound to
admit the existence of an Intelligent Being on which phenomena depend. In his
account of the physico-theological proof for the existence of God Kant makes God
an Architect of the world building upon a hampering material, but does not
think that God can be shown to be the creator of the world, subjecting the
world to His Will. It is a false abstraction of the Idea of God from the nature
of things that is responsible for Kant's supposition that God is an
outward agency working on a given material. The Idea of God includes the ideas
of omnipresence, eternity and infinity, which forbid any attempt to exclude God's
presence from the world. God can have meaning only when he comprehends the
world in the very existence of His consciousness, which not only takes Him
beyond even creatorship but makes Him the Absolute-Existence. To the Vedanta,
the Absolute is the only reality, which includes and transcends every form of experience.
This Absolute is Existence-Consciousness-Bliss.
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