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1901 2012
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The Nobel Prize in Literature 1908
Rudolf Eucken
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Harald Hjärne, Director of the Swedish Academy, on December 10, 1908
Alfred Nobel was a man of action who,
during his successful business career in the competing markets of
many countries and in the international trade centres, had
developed an awareness of the inner contradictions and dangers of
modern developments. Mankind still seemed to him to need help,
and therefore he thought that the best investment for his own
fortune would be to use ts interest to support those of whom the
future would reveal that - in the words of his will -
«mankind profited most from them».
The ambiguity of all human work and its tools or weapons
challenged him to a personal deed in behalf of human progress. He
knew the enormous usefulness f his own technical inventions for
military purposes; therefore, he wanted to support any promising
efforts toward international peace. How could his worldly mind
have overlooked that all our civilization is full of strife, that
it invites abuse as well as proper use, and that it can be turned
toward evil as well as good?
His chief interest, however, was the intellectual sphere, despite
its inherent contradictions. It appeared to him, the cosmopolitan
familiar with the languages and civilizations of France and
England, as a complex of arts and sciences, of exact natural
science and humanistic belles-lettres. The former he sought to
stimulate by supporting discoveries and inventions for the
benefit of mankind. Turning to literature with the same
philanthropic concern, he established a prize for what he called
«excellence in works of an idealistic tendency».
Alfred Nobel was deeply influenced by the outlook of Victor
Rydberg's poetry and philosophy. He knew what ideals mean to the
human mind, to the will that creates and maintains civilization,
cultivates and reaps its fruits, and through the struggle and
darkness of life breaks a path toward a new dawn of light and
peace. Wherever such ideals are manifested in their infinite
variety and strengthen the willingness of men to serve each other
- whether in the poet's inspiration, the philosopher's attempt to
solve the riddle of life, the historian's biographies, or the
work of any scholar or writer that looks toward those ideals as
models in his freedom and independence - there one finds the
literature that Alfred Nobel had in mind. This literature makes
use of whatever art and science can offer, and from it mankind
«profits the most» precisely because it mirrors the
ideal truth without any regard for the useful. The creations and
forms of this literature are as manifold s the ideals, and they
are forever new and free.
The Swedish Academy has therefore felt that it acted with the
sanction of Alfred Nobel when it decided this year to award the
literary prize founded by Nobel to one of the most prominent
thinkers of our age, Professor Rudolf Eucken, «in
recognition of his earnest search for truth, his penetrating
power of thought, his wide range of vision, and the warmth and
strength of presentation with which in his numerous works he has
vindicated and developed an idealistic philosophy of
life».
For over thirty years Professor Eucken has been publishing
profound contributions in several areas of philosophy. His
activity as a writer has yielded increasingly many and important
books as his basic philosophy has become both more coherent and
more comprehensive. Particularly in recent years he has published
the works that afford us the most thorough introduction to his
thought; moreover, the wider public has received from him
uncommonly lucid and powerful expositions of his attempts to
resolve the most urgent problems of contemporary civilization.
Thus he is in the midst of giving the final shape to his mature
thought, and everywhere one can see new ideas which we hope he
will be able to develop fully in the near future.
I cannot here give a detailed account of Eucken's long and
versatile career as a philosopher, because time is short and the
subject difficult for one with little knowledge of most of his
special fields. I can only make some generalizations and dwell in
particular on the historical foundations of his
Weltanschanung and his views on the meaning of historical
processes. Professor Eucken considers history a decisive
influence on his philosophy, and it was philological and
historical studies that led him toward philosophy. Ever since his
early days the actual life of man and society has meant much more
to him than the abstractions of mere thought analysis.
Unfortunately we shall have to omit many interesting
ramifications of his thought in order to get a clear picture at
least of its main results.
The confident and rising idealism today in the intellectual life
not only of Germany but everywhere on the higher and freer levels
of civilized life is very different from those proud
constructions which bore that name and which went bankrupt half a
century ago with Hegel's magnificent system. It was an attempt to
derive the inexhaustible wealth of life and the world from
abstract categories and concepts by means of a daring dialectic,
and to force all human research, all civilization, under the yoke
of a complete system of thought. But closer analysis revealed
this attempt to be beyond the competence of the philosophical
search for truth, and in fact it accelerated the change to an
equally dogmatic materialism.
We Swedes know that even at the zenith of dialectic absolutism
Boström directed his logical criticisms toward its basic
attitudes. By going back to earlier views both here and abroad,
he developed a different outlook which has had its adherents in
this country up to the present. There is an indisputable
resemblance between his views and those developed by Professor
Eucken in his writings. This is not surprising, for they both
represent a basic type that since the earliest days of
civilization - notwithstanding temporary eclipses - has preserved
its vitality in the face of pantheistic abstractions as well as
materialistic fear of thought. But this characteristic agreement
in their basic views does not exclude independent and personal
development; on the contrary it rather promotes it, and no branch
of philosophy has produced so many marked profiles as realistic
idealism. Socrates and Plato were led by this idealism to hold
that philosophy is a search for truth rather than a fixed dogma,
and this tireless search, by whatever means, has characterized
philosophy throughout the ages. Thus Eucken and Boström
reached their common goal by quite different means.
Since his youth Eucken has carefully observed the busy and steady
philosophical attempts to reassess external and inner experience
and to gain firm ground again after the collapse of the bold
philosophical systems. Philosophy turned in different directions
with varying expectations and success. Sometimes the motto was
«Back to Kant», and the great metaphysical iconoclast
served as a model for thorough studies of the limits of human
knowledge, or else one listened hesitantly to his declaration of
an eternal realm of reason based on unassailable moral
postulates. Again there were attempts to give philosophy a safe
position by tying it to the victorious advances of modern science
or, more successfully, by independently questioning its
presuppositions and methods. There were attempts to discover the
secrets of the human soul in its manifestations, whether by
observation or experiment, and there was hope that such research
would lead toward the discovery of the proper relation of
physical and psychological existence.
Eucken has been familiar with all these schools, but his main
field has been historical and critical research on the emergence
and development of mainstreams of thought in connection with the
evolution and change of general culture. Like so many pioneers in
his field, he has always been convinced that there can be no true
progress without a proper regard for tradition and that there is
more to the annals of philosophy than a kaleidoscope of systems
rising and falling with equal suddenness. As Eucken has often
emphasized, there can be no continuity in philosophy unless it
grows like the other sciences and continually treats and develops
the same problems, lest every mind should believe that he could
start all over from the beginning only to be replaced by someone
else in the same manner.
Apart from collections of monographs and essays in this field,
Eucken as early as 1878 published the first comprehensive results
of his method. In Grundbegriffe der Gegenwart [Basic
Concepts of Modern Thought] he discusses the origin, formulation,
and development of common modern concepts since the days of
ancient philosophy and scholasticism. Such terms are
«subjective nd objective», «experience and
evolution», «monism and dualism»,
«mechanistic and organic», «law and
individuality», «personality and character»,
«theoretical and practical», «immanence and
transcendence». But he is not interested merely in
definition of terms; he wants to describe the leading goals and
attitudes of a period by elucidating, in his own words,
«concepts as a mirror of their time». With each
dissection the object becomes more clearly delineated. In the
fourth edition, which appeared this year, the scope of the book
has widened; it has become a thorough critique of the conflicts
in modern civilization; accordingly, the title of the book has
been changed to Geistige Strömungen der Gegenwart
(1908) [Main Currents of Modern Thought]. Indeed, the
author has developed his own basic ideas in it, and it is a
rewarding labour to study them in their wealth and
complexity.
A thinker who considers the perennial questions of human
civilization from this point of view will soon learn that he
cannot solve them either by ignoring their close interrelation or
by limiting himself to epistemological questions. Undoubtedly
these problems constantly impinge upon each other; they cover the
whole of human existence, influence individuals that are
particularly susceptible to their importance, and thereby
exercise a reforming power over entire communities and ages. The
attempt to trace them in their vital and seminal role amounts to
giving a comprehensive survey of human intellectual history. At
the same time such a project is more conducive to arousing and
widening philosophical interest than a mere analysis of
conflicting dogmas, schools, and sects. Eucken undertook such a
task in Die Lebensanschauungen der grosser Denker: Eine
Entwicklungsgeschichte des Lebensproblems der Menschheit von
Plato his zur Gegenwart (1890) [The Problem of Human Life
as Viewed by the Great Thinkers from Plato to the Present
Time ]. This work, revised and expanded through seven
editions, bears witness not only to the depth and scope of
Eucken's research but to his mastery of marshalling his thoughts
and to the maturity of his style.
Eucken has developed his own philosophy in several works such as
Der Kampf um einen geistigen Lebensinhalt: Neue Grundlegung
einer Weltanschauung (1896) [The Struggle for a Spiritual
Content of Life: New Principles of a Philosophy] and
Grundlinien einer neuen Lebensanschauung (1907) [Life's
Basis and Life's Ideal: The Fundamentals of a New Philosophy of
Life] as well as the more popular Der Sinn und Wert des
Lebens ( I908)[The Meaning and Value of Life ] and
Einführung in eine Philosophie des Geisteslebens
(1908) [Introduction to a Philosophy of the Mind]. The last
mentioned work in particular is a masterly and lucid exposition
of his views.
In recent years Eucken has also turned his attention to religious
questions, in Der Wahrheitsgehalt der Religion (1901)
[The Truth of Religion] and Hauptprobleme der
Religionsphilosophie der Gegenwart (1907) [Main Problems of
Contemporary Philosophy of Religion], the latter based on three
lectures delivered during a theological summer institute at the
University of
Jena. This year he has developed his ideas about the
philosophy of history at some length in a treatise that forms
part of the great encyclopaedic work Die Kultur der
Gegenwart [Contemporary Civilization]. According to hints in
recent works he is now planning a thorough re-examination of
ethical problems.
His deep insights into history and his significant attempts to
relate his own thoughts on the forces of life to the evidence of
history place Eucken far above the superficial attitudes that
exaggerate and misinterpret the inner meaning of history. These
attitudes, at the cost of an unprejudiced love of truth, have
become all too common in this century of history.
Furthermore, Eucken sees a threat to civilization in the
caricature of historicism, which partly intends to drag all firm
goals and higher aims into the whirlpool of a misunderstood
relativity and partly supports the frequent attempts to limit and
paralyze the human will by fitting all human developments and
achievements into a supposed naturalistic and fatalistic causal
nexus. But in contrast to Nietzsche, for instance, he does not
believe in the right or ability of the overweening individual to
maintain his own will to power in the face of the obligations to
the eternal majesty of moral laws. It is not the individual or
the superman in his separate existence, but the strong character
formed in the consciousness of free harmony with the intellectual
forces of the cosmos, and therefore profoundly independent, that
in Eucken's view is called upon to liberate us from the
superficial compulsion of nature and the never completely
inescapable pressure of the historical chain of cause and
effect.
In history as well as in his personal existence man has life of a
higher nature, a life originating not in nature but existing in
itself and through itself, a life of the mind, which is in
reality beyond time but which is revealed to us only in temporal
manifestations. All true development presupposes some basis of
existence. To the extent to which man comes to participate in the
intellectual life, he acquires a power that is eternal and above
the vicissitudes of time. This eternal life is a realm of truth,
for truths with a limited existence are unthinkable. At the same
time it is an infinite whole of living power, far above the world
as it appears to us but exercising its influence in the world for
us and through us. It is not an abstract castle in the air to
which we can escape on the wings of a mystical and supposedly
logical imagination, but as a wholly living power it confronts
our entire personality with an either-or, a choice of the will
that makes the evolution of man and mankind a ceaseless struggle
between the higher and the lower life.
History is the mirror of mankind's victories and defeats in this
struggle, the vicissitudes of which have been due to the
self-determination of the free personality. Hence no philosophy
of history can predict the future of this struggle. Even the
civilization handed to us as a heritage does not survive by
itself but demands our persistent and personal struggle for the
true and genuine life of the mind. Nothing else can justify and
support our endeavours for morality and art and our political and
social work.
«Utilitarianism,» Eucken says, «which ever form it
assumes, is irreconcilably opposed to true intellectual culture.
Any intellectual activity degenerates unless it is treated for
its own sake.» Although a great admirer and lover of art,
Eucken has turned with equal severity against the aestheticism
which is preached so loudly in our days and which «infects
only reflective and pleasure-loving hedonists». «No art
that values itself and its task can afford to condemn morality. A
creative artist of the highest order has hardly ever been a
follower of an aesthetic view of life.» Our Runeberg is a
poet after his heart, for such an outlook «with its
indifference to moral values and its arrogant exclusiveness is
quite foreign to him». And only those nations, whether great
or small, that have created and maintained a civilization full of
genuine intellectual life have a contribution to make to mankind.
A contribution may be made only by those nations whose future
consists not in a vain endeavour to use aterial force and weapons
to «transform quantity into quality», but in the ever
growing revelation of eternal life within the limits of temporal
existence.
Eucken does not reject a metaphysics that tries to express
conceptually those things that are accessible to us in the
infinite realm of truth and life. But he has not constructed an
everlasting system, nor did he want to do so. His philosophy,
which he himself calls a philosophy of action, operates primarily
with the forces of human evolution and is therefore more dynamic
than static. We may regard him as a Kulturphilosoph who
fully meets the standards and needs of our age.
Professor Eucken - The lofty and scholarly idealism of your
Weltanschauung, which has found such vigorous expression
in your many and widely read works, has justified the Swedish
Academy in awarding to you the Nobel Prize in Literature for this
year.
The Academy greets you with sincere and respectful admiration and
hopes that your future works, too, will bear ample fruit for the
benefit of culture and humanity.
At the banquet, Harald Hjärne addressed, in German, his personal congratulations to Professor Eucken. He recalled Thuringia and, in particular, the University of Jena, the heart of German humanism, and the relations of that university with the history of the Swedish Reformation. In his reply, Mr. Eucken spoke enthusiastically about the idealism for which he had struggled and expressed his gratitude toward Sweden and the Swedish Academy.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1908
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