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Henry Sidgwick- Eye of the Universe

Page 52

by Bart Schultz


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  more than egoistic ropes of sand, be they ethical or epistemic. It is here,

  in his construction of notions of consensus and authority, that one must

  search for Sidgwick’s deeper views about publicity as they bear on matters

  of sex, class, and race.

  How, then, to reconcile the demands of inquiry with the esotericism

  of the utilitarian method? Of the pursuit of truth and the pursuit of the

  greatest happiness? And both of these with one’s own happiness? What

  kind of culture hero did Sidgwick think the times demanded, and what

  kind did he conceive himself to be? How could he even talk about an

  ideal community of enlightened utilitarians while avoiding the “illimitable

  cloudland” of utopian conjecture? What could even an eager politician do

  when confronted with such complexity? How many selves needed to be

  sacrificed?

  With such problems before him, what was an Apostle to do? For

  Sidgwick, the answer was clear: hunt ghosts. Harmony and esotericism of

  a rather literal sort had not yet failed.

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  Spirits

  I. Preliminaries and Cautionaries

  The battle is to be fought in the region of thought, and the issue is belief or disbelief in the unseen world, and in its Guardian, the Creator-Lord and Deliverer of Man.

  W. E. Gladstone

  Occultism is the metaphysic of dunces.

  Theodor W. Adorno

  Whatever one may think of parapsychology, it is impossible to appreci-

  ate Sidgwick’s worldview without recognizing his commitment to such

  investigations. Like Gladstone and so many others who feared that

  dogmatic materialism was on the rise and orthodox religion in serious

  peril – which in the s and s, especially, it seemed hard to deny –

  Sidgwick regarded these studies as the vital avenue by which to meet the

  challenges thrown down by the likes of T. H. Huxley, “Darwin’s Bulldog.”

  Just as the Idealism of Green and Bradley was a reaction to the growing

  climate of unbelief, so too Sidgwick’s parapsychology was a bit of philos-

  ophizing with strategic intent, a return to the concerns of Swedenborg to

  parallel the return to the concerns of Kant (though of course, one could

  also view it as carrying forward certain forms of Romanticism). It certainly

  proved to be a happy vehicle for the poetic imagination, as both subject and

  object.

  As noted in Chapters  and , Sidgwick appears to have been fasci-

  nated by ghosts for practically his entire life, quite possibly as a result of

  being exposed to so many deaths in his early years. He would sometimes

  refer, in his letters, to his “ghost-seeing” tendencies. Even his mentor,

  Benson, had shared this fascination, helping to found the Cambridge

  “Ghost Society” during his time there, an institution that Sidgwick then

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  Henry Sidgwick: Eye of the Universe

  participated in when he was a Cambridge undergraduate. By the time of

  his graduation, he was already a fund of tales about supposed paranormal

  happenings, though these were more or less held in check by his orthodox

  religious views and skeptical doubts about the quality of the evidence.

  Anglican orthodoxy for the most part disapproved of any untoward inter-

  est in ghosts.

  Again, as recounted in Chapter , it was the battering dealt his Anglican

  beliefs during his years of “storm and stress,” when he came to struggle

  so with the entire issue of the evidence for miraculous happenings, that

  pushed him to accord a truly cosmic significance to these interests, the-

  ological and ethical, and to surround himself with a circle of (mostly

  younger) friends of similar disposition willing to seek firmer support

  for such claims. Quickly becoming known as the Sidgwick Group, after

  their researches took systematic form in the s, they became the re-

  spectable core of the official Society for Psychical Research, which was

  born in , with Sidgwick as its first president, the others serving on

  its Council, and a membership list of some one hundred names, many

  of them highly respectable. By the mid-eighties it had  members and

  associates – everyone from Gladstone to Tennyson to Lewis Carroll –

  and Sidgwick was confident that it could “run without further nursing.”

  When it crested, in about , it had , members and associates as

  well as a respectable endowment fund, the result of various bequests. Its

  Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research were very widely read;

  it had an in-house Journal; and it was busy assembling a fine library to

  support its researchers. After , there was also an American version,

  which, though not as flourishing as the original, attracted such leading

  intellectual figures as William James and worked in close collaboration

  with the British organization, of which it was officially a branch from

   until .

  As a piece of cultural and social history, therefore, psychical re-

  search is clearly a fascinating development, affording a wealth of insights

  into the assumptions and practices governing knowledge, expertise, and

  inquiry during this period. In Sidgwick’s case, this endeavor to reenchant

  the universe was of course bound up with his worries about the chaos of

  the dualism of practical reason and the grounding of egoism; as indicated

  in the previous chapters, such concerns were absolutely crucial to him,

  and he regarded the empirical investigation of the paranormal as a form of

  theological study that could help to vindicate belief in the moral order of

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  the universe, the harmony of duty and interest. Also noteworthy, however,

  is the way in which this line of inquiry took the same form as so many of

  his other Apostolic quests, becoming in large part an intimate fellowship

  of seekers revealing to each other their deepest concerns. Thus, Sidgwick’s

  parapsychology happily illuminates the larger social dimensions of his

  epistemology as well as his metaphysical views, extending even to his

  political concerns. The “failure” of The Methods of Ethics had only

  strengthened his interest in “psychological experiments in ethics an
d in-

  tuitive Theism,” and in the “miraculous” as perhaps a permanent element

  in human history – the defining interests of his years of storm and stress.

  How curious that it fell to ghosts to prove that the wages of virtue were

  not dust.

  Of course, given the subsequent record of inconclusive and fraudulent

  research in parapsychology, which in recent times has been so mercilessly

  exposed by such critics as Martin Gardner and a professional magician,

  “The Amazing Randi,” it is difficult to recapture anything like the rec-

  titude and intellectual aspirations of the early psychical researchers. And

  to be sure, even at the start, the Society had its divisions, with the “scien-

  tific” contingent on one side and the séance-loving “Spiritualists,” led by

  Stainton Moses, on the other. One could safely say, however, that it was

  largely because of the comparative sobriety that Sidgwick early on brought

  to the Society that their work enjoyed the long period of respectability that

  it did. And still more importantly, the work of the psychical researchers

  proved to be a very fertile breeding ground for many different forms of

  psychological research; their work on such topics as hypnosis and the var-

  ious forms of unconscious thought was entangled with the developments

  that would later be absorbed into various regions of clinical and exper-

  imental psychology. Although these investigations remain controversial,

  they are not usually placed in the same category as attempts to commu-

  nicate with the dead. It is also important to stress that psychical research,

  perhaps because of its novelty, provided an important vehicle for the work

  of independent, intellectually motivated women – for example, Eleanor

  Mildred Balfour, whose marriage to Sidgwick in  only reinforced

  her commitment to a life of research and educational activity. Ironically,

  however, the SPR has also been described as a highly gendered (and

  orientalist) effort, reinscribing male authority and at odds with some of the

  very movements that were, albeit in strange ways, empowering women –

  notably, the Theosophical movement.

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  Henry Sidgwick: Eye of the Universe

  Yet Sidgwick and his group apparently regarded all such work as an open

  and fair field. Again, he embarked on it in the same spirit of Apostolic truth

  seeking that characterized his work on religion and ethics, insisting that

  however potentially important the results might be, the method had to

  be one of impartial, disinterested inquiry rather than advocacy. And on

  the whole, his views of the results were rather measured: he did think that

  there was sound evidence for telepathy and unconscious thought processes

  (as demonstrated by hypnotism), but he did not think that the results of his

  other parapsychological inquiries had been very successful. Such modest,

  mostly negative results would in due course mean that all of his anxieties

  about the corrosive impact that his skepticism might have would return

  with renewed force. Indeed, the people involved in psychical research

  were often uniquely subject to the force of Sidgwick’s skepticism, and

  they did not always react very appreciatively: another eminent member of

  the SPR would comment, after Sidgwick’s death, that “[t]here are some

  people so constituted that nothing psychic will take place in their presence.

  Prof. Sidgwick was one.” Mediums were apt to complain that he was too

  “fidgety.”

  Still, unpopularity with the spirits may have served Sidgwick well, and

  it was in this region that he did the most to spell out his philosophy of mind

  and the moral psychology that informed his other efforts. And his more

  philosophical criticisms of empiricism, materialism, and idealism make

  much more sense when read with the example of his psychical research

  in mind. Here, surely, he had found the “deepest problems,” for which a

  solution had to be sought.

  II. The Fellowship

  After Death

  I have been buried for seven long days;

  Here in the cold deep grave I lie:

  Dark, all is dark! tho’ the sun’s warm rays

  Slumber above on the earth close by.

  For seven more days shall I wait fast bound

  In coffin and shroud, tho’ I seem but dead;

  While the spirits of those whom I wronged flit round,

  And fill me with torture and horrible dread.

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  What men call wicked was I on the earth,

  What men call lost am I here below:

  For twice seven days ere I have new birth

  Shall the souls that I wronged flit to and fro.

  I am theirs for a while: they may do what they will

  With my poor body and pitiful soul,

  While I lie in the vault where all life is still,

  Where dank air sickens and far sound roll.

  Where the stones seem heavy and like to sink

  With the weight of the woe that I wrought in my life,

  And crush me, or hurry me over the brink,

  Down, down, to a pit of unending strife.

  But I know that ere long I shall find release;

  When twice seven days and nights are sped

  I shall change. Shall I soar to the realms of peace?

  Or down shall I fall to the place of the dead?

  Poem, signed “,” published in The Cliftonian,

  November  (believed to be by either Arthur

  or Henry Sidgwick)

  As we have seen, Sidgwick’s skepticism was only heightened by his work on

  the Methods, which failed to vindicate an independent, justifiable ethical

  system and consequently aggravated, if anything, his anxieties about the

  future of religious belief and, correlatively, the future of civilization.

  Again, his early inclination to “provisionally postulate” the “continued ex-

  istence of the soul in order to effect that harmony of Duty with Happiness

  which seemed to me indispensable to rational moral life” had involved,

  as he later explained, “setting out on the serious search for empirical ev-

  idence” (M –). This retrospective suggests just how his concerns

  became so focused on psychical research, during the period from  to

  , and what his priorities were. Eleanor Mildred Sidgwick, née Balfour,

  whom Sidgwick first met and began working with during this period, was

  also quite clear about the formative interests of the Sidgwick Group and

  the SPR:

  The question whether good scientific evidence of survival – as distinct of course

  from philosophical or theological reasons for believing it – could be obtained, is

  probably one which from the foundation of the Society in �
� has interested the

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  Henry Sidgwick: Eye of the Universe

  majority of the members more than any other branch of our enquiries, because of

  the far-reaching consequences its solution would carry with it. One consequence

  would be a decisive argument against materialism, and it is this that leads some

  of those who hold dogmatically a materialistic view of the universe to oppose, not

  only any conclusion that survival can be proved, but any enquiry into the subject,

  with a virulence resembling that of medieval theologians.

  This was to be a common theme of the Sidgwick Group – namely,

  the dogmatism of so many of those who professed to be representing sci-

  ence. Much of their initial energies went into simply trying to persuade

  people that the evidence was not all in yet, one way or the other, and

  that empirical inquiries were a promising alternative to the inconclusive,

  question-begging answers coming from theology and philosophy, or from

  those spiritualists who regarded all such experimental investigations of the

  paranormal as wrong “because they must be the work either of the devil or

  of familiar spirits, with whom the Bible forbid us to have dealings.” Still,

  the fiercest opposition was from the scientists, not from the religiously in-

  clined. As Sidgwick retrospectively put it, in his SPR presidential address

  of :

  We believed unreservedly in the methods of modern science, and were prepared to

  accept submissively her reasoned conclusions, when sustained by the agreement

  of experts; but we were not prepared to bow with equal docility to the mere

  prejudices of scientific men. And it appeared to us that there was an important

  body of evidence – tending primâ facie to establish the independence of soul or spirit – which modern science had simply left on one side with ignorant contempt;

  and that in so leaving it she had been untrue to her professed method, and had

  arrived prematurely at her negative conclusions. (CWC)

  This attitude was shared by most of the important founding members

  of the Sidgwick Group. Myers, for example, many of whose insights into

  Sidgwick’s early Cambridge years have been appealed to in early chapters,

 

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