Bergson
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About this ebook
Michael Foley
Michael Foley was born in Derry, Northern Ireland, but since 1972 he has lived in London, working as a Lecturer in Information Technology. He is the author of two previous books, of which one, The Age of Absurdity, was a bestseller.
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Bergson - Michael Foley
INTRODUCTION
………
In my youth, satirical humour seemed the most appropriate response to a venal world and this interest in the theory and practice of comedy led me to Henri Bergson’s book Laughter: an Essay on the Meaning of the Comic. I was not entirely convinced by Bergson’s theories but I liked his scathing comments on the stultifying effects of convention and social life, which he defined as ‘an admiration of ourselves based on the admiration we think we are inspiring in others’.
I poked around in the Bergson oeuvre – but was disappointed. In his other work he displayed no satirical disgust or, despite the comedy book, wit, and his key work, Creative Evolution, proposed that the meaning of life was something called élan vital, which struck me as a vague, mystical concept. As a consequence of a scientific education, I respected only thinking that was hard-edged, logical and clear. For me, the intention of mysticism was to enshroud the world in mist.
So au revoir, Henri. I forgot about Bergson in the following decades of adult life, which was meant to comprise derisive laughter launched at the world from a rented garret but somehow turned out to be the conventional entanglements of mortgage, job, wife and child. Satire was no longer enough and I turned to thinkers like Erich Fromm, whose marvellous little book, The Art of Loving, helped me to make a go of marriage, whose The Sane Society taught me social and political awareness, and whose To Have and to Be taught me that religion might be of use to non-believers, and that Buddhism in particular might offer practical lessons.
Much later, I learned from the twentieth-century philosophy of mind that memory and the self are processes rather than fixed entities – and suddenly this connected with the theories of particle physics, which claim that at the heart of matter there are in fact no particles but only processes. Then that connection made a further connection with the central Buddhist concept of ‘no soul, no substance’. And, in a thrilling Eureka moment, philosophy, science and religion came together in the revelation that everything is process … and everything is connected to everything else. Or, to be more precise, that the cosmos is a vast unity of interpenetrating and interdependent processes, a gigantic mega process made up of maxi processes themselves made up of mini processes composed of micro processes – all the way in to the weird heart of matter and all the way out to the weird far end of our madly-expanding universe. And interacting with all this is the equally weird mega process of human consciousness, made up in turn of its own whirl of interpenetrating processes.
The concept that everything is process seemed to me an original insight, at least in Western thought. But my euphoria was soon tempered by the discovery that this was the central premise of process philosophy, a long-established and flourishing sub-genre with its own academic centres, professors and journals. On the other hand it was reassuring to discover that so many others shared the process view. I found that these ideas go back to Buddha and Heraclitus, who claimed that everything is fire and flow, and then it turned out that the true founder of modern process philosophy was none other than the thinker I had rejected so long before – Henri Bergson. ‘Substance is movement and change,’ he announced unequivocally. ‘There are changes, but underneath the changes no things which change: change does not require a support. There are movements, but no inert or invariable object which moves: movement does not imply a mobile,’ The crucial thing, according to Bergson, was to accept this movement and become part of it: ‘Philosophy can only be an effort to dissolve again into the Whole,’
In other words, it is all about process and unity. Bonjour encore, Henri. But who was this guy?
Henri Bergson (1859-1941) was the second child of Michael Bergson, a Polish composer/pianist who came to Paris to make his name but never succeeded, and Kate Levinson, a Yorkshire woman of Irish descent. Both father and mother were devout Jews, but Henri abandoned religion at a young age, possibly a response to being left in a boarding school while his parents took the other children to England, never to return. This early isolation may account for his independence and reserve, profound distrust of social life and insistence on the need to create and protect a deep self.
If rejecting Judaism was a rebellious act, it was his only one. Bergson seems to have desired only the conventional bourgeois life of career and family. Success at both school and university was followed by teaching secondary-level philosophy in the provinces, then lecturing in Paris and, once he was established, marriage, a daughter and an intimate, happy, intensely private family life. (He never spoke publicly of his wife and daughter, and after his death his widow complied with his wish to have all personal papers destroyed.)
Bergson’s life-changing revelation of process came in 1884 when he was engaged in that most pleasurable of processes – walking.
In other words, Plato’s influential concept of ideal unchanging forms that exist somewhere beyond the imperfect world was a fantasy expressing the human hunger for immutability and perfection. There is only this imperfect world and everything in it is constantly changing.
Bergson’s first two books promoting this idea were received with polite interest in French academic circles – but in 1902 he discovered that for popular success there is nothing more effective than promotion by an enthusiastic and energetic American. Out of the blue came a letter from William James who, despite being celebrated and seventeen years older, acclaimed Bergson’s second book, Matière et mémoire, as a masterpiece:
This letter must have been enthralling for Bergson, who had found in James’s work the two qualities he admired most – generosity and enthusiasm. And for me it was enthralling to discover that one of my favourite thinkers, James, was also a