the foundations of personality-第17章
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d resting。 Things happen again and again; though in slightly altered form; and our desires; satisfied now; soon repeat their urge。 The great organic needs and sensations repeat themselves and with the periodic world of outer experience must be dealt with according to a more or less settled policy。 It is the organizing energy that works out the policy; that learns; inhibits; chooses and acts;and it is the essential character…developing principle。 For like our bodily organs which are whipped into line by the nervous system; our impulses; instincts; and reflexes'1' have their own policy of action and therefore need; for the good of the entire organism; discipline and coordination。 It may sound as if the body were made up of warring entities and states and that there gradually arose a centralized good; and though the analogy may lead to error; it offers a convenient method of thinking。 '1' Roux; the great French biologist; has shown that each tissue and each cell competes with the other tissues and the other cells。 The organism; though it reaches a practical working unity as viewed by consciousness; is nevertheless no entity; it is a collection; an aggregate of living cells which are organized on a cooperation basis just as men are; but maintain individuality and competition nevertheless。
Moreover; the organizing energy seems often to be at work when consciousness itself is at rest; as in sleep。 Often enough a man debates and debates on lines of conduct and wakes up with his problem solved。 Or he works hard to learn and goes to bed discouraged; because the matter is a jumble; and wakes up in the morning with an orderly and useful arrangement of the facts。 A writer seeks to find the proper opening;and gives up in a frenzy of despair。 He is perhaps walking or driving when suddenly he lifts his head as one does who is listening to a longed…for voice; and in himself he finds the phrases that he longs for。 Something within has set itself; so it seems; the task of bringing the right associations into consciousness。 What we call quickness of mind; energy of mind; is largely this function。 It is this which adapts us to different situations; different groups; by calling into play organized modes of talking or acting。 We pass from a group of ladies in whose presence we have been friendly but decorous; perhaps unconventionally formal; to a group of business intimates; men of long acquaintance。 Without even being conscious of it we lounge around; feet on the table; carelessly dropping cigarette ash to the floor; using language chosen for force rather than elegance; we discuss sports; women; business and a whole group of different emotions; habits and purposes come to the surface; though we were not at all conscious of having repressed them while in the presence of the ladies。 A faux pas is where the organizer has 〃slipped〃 on his job; lack of tact implies in part a rigid organizing energy; neither plastic nor versatile enough。 We are now ready to face certain developments of these three main factors; viz。; the response to stimuli; choice and inhibition; and the organizing energy。 Largely we might classify people according to the type of vigor of their reactions to stimuli; the quality and vigor of choice and of inhibition; and the quality and vigor of the organizing energy。 We note that there are people who have; as it were; exquisitely sensitive feelers for the stimuli of one kind or another and who react vigorously; perhaps excessively; that there are others of a duller; less reactive nature; largely because they are stimuli…proof。 Others are under…inhibited; follow desire or outer stimulus without heed; without a brake; others are over…inhibited; too cautious; too full of doubt; unable to choose the reaction that seems appropriate。 The organizing energy of some is low; they never seem to unify their experiences into a code of life and living; they are like a string of beads loosely strung together with disharmonious emotions; desires; purposes。 In others this energy is high; they chew the cud of every experience and (to change the metaphor) they weld life's happenings; their memories; their emotions and purposes into a more unified ego; a real I; harmonious; self…enlightened; clearly conscious of aim and end and striving bravely towards it。 Or there is over…unification and fanaticism; with narrow aim and little sympathy for other aims。 Sketched in this very broad way we see masses of people; rather than individuals; and we are not finely adjusted to our subject。 Psychologists rarely concern themselves to any extent with these matters; they deal mainly with their outgrowths;emotions; instinct; intelligence and will。 We are at once beset with difficulties which are resolved mainly by ignoring them。 In such a book as this we are not concerned with the fundamental nature of these divisions of the mental life; we must omit such questions as the relation of instinct to racial habit; or the evolution of instinct from habit; if that is really its origin。 Again I must repeat that we shall deal with these as organic; as arising in the sensitized individual as a result of environmental forces; as manifestations of a life which is as yetand perhaps always will bemysterious to us。 We shall best consider these manifestations of mental activity as an interplay of the reactions of stimulation; inhibition; choice; organizing energy; and not as separate and totally different matters。 We shall see that probably emotion is one aspect of reaction to the world; while instinct is merely another aspect; that intelligence is a cerebral shift of instinct; and that will is no unity but the energy of instincts and purposes。 Before we go farther we must squarely face a problem of human thought。 Man; since he started reflecting about himself; has been puzzled about his consciousness。 How can a person be aware of himself; and what identifies and links together each phase of consciousness? There is an enormous range of thought on this subject: from those who identified consciousness as the only reality and considered what the average person holds as realitiesthings and peopleas only phases of consciousness; to those who; like Huxley; regard consciousness as an 〃epi…pbenomenon;〃 a sort of overture to brain activity and having nothing whatever to do with action; nothing to do with choice and plan; so that; as Lloyd Morgan points out; 〃An unconscious Shakespeare writes plays acted by an unconscious troupe of actors to an unconscious audience。〃 The first extreme view; that of Berkeley and the idealists; nullifies all other realities save that of the individual thinker and reduces one to the absurdities of Solipsism where a man writes books to convince persons conjured up by himself and having no existence outside of himself; the other view nullifies that which seems to each of us the very essence of himself。 I shall take a very simple view of consciousness;'1' simply because I shall deliberately dodge the great difficulties。 Consciousness is the result of the activities of a group of more or less permanently excited areas of the brainareas having to do with positions of the head; eyes and shoulders; areas having to do with vision; hearing and smell; areas having to do with speech;these constituting extremely mobile; extremely active parts of the organism。 From these consciousness may irradiate to the activities of almost every part of the organism; in different degrees。 We are often extremely conscious of the activities of the hands; in less degree of the legs; we may become wrapped up almost completely in a sensation emanating from the sex organs; and under fear or excitement the heart may pound so that we feel and are conscious of it as ordinarily we can never be。 The state of consciousness called interest may shift our feeling of self to any part of our body (as in pain; when a part usually out of consciousness swings into it; or when the hand of a lover grips our own so that the great reality of our life at the moment seems to be the consciousness of the hand) or it may fasten us to an outside object until our world narrows to that object; nothing else having any conscious value。 This latter phenomenon is very striking in children; they become fascinated by something they hea