
What it means to be human
ROGER SCRUTONRoger Scruton tracks down the soul — the divine spark that distinguishes us from the rest of creation.
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Bar
at the Folies Bergère Edouard
Manet (1882)
|
Human beings are animals,
composed of nerves and sinews, cardiovascular systems and digestive tracts. We
hang from the tree of evolution on the same branch as the chimpanzee and the bonobo
and not far from those of the elephant, the zebra and the mouse. We are governed
by the laws of biology, and even our thoughts and emotions are the result of electrochemical
processes in the brain. Such, at any rate, is the conception fostered by popular
science and tub-thumped into us by Richard Dawkins. What room is there in this
picture for the soul — the divine spark that supposedly distinguishes humanity
from the rest of creation and which bears within itself the meaning of our life
on earth? Can we not give a complete account of the human condition in biological
terms, without referring to the elusive soul-stuff within? And if that is possible,
what grounds have we for thinking that the soul exists, still less that it is
the inner essence, the originating cause and the final end of our existence?
Suppose
you were to look at a painting — say Manet’s ‘Bar at the Folies Bergère’ in the
Courtauld Gallery — and ask yourself how it is composed. From the point of view
of chemical science, it is a canvas on which pigments are distributed. From the
point of view of the art-lover, it is an image of a woman on whose face the last
pale twilight of innocence is fading. You could draw a graph across the picture,
and indicate exactly what pigment is to be found at every pair of co-ordinates.
This description would not mention the woman, still less her fading innocence
or her blank but haunting gaze. Yet it could be a complete description. Somebody
who daubed a canvas in the way mapped by the graph would produce an exact copy
of Manet’s picture. He would do this even if he had not noticed the woman and
even if he was entirely blind to pictorial images. From the scientific point of
view, therefore, the woman is nothing over and above the pigments in which she
is seen.
But this woman exists in a space of her own. We see the back
of her head, reflected in the mirror, some ten feet behind her. Of course, there
is no part of this canvas that is ten feet behind any other part. The space within
the picture is not mapped by our imaginary graph, even if it will be automatically
reconstituted when we follow the graph’s instructions. Moreover, no smear of chrome
white can possibly have a fading innocence, nor can patches of cerulean and Prussian
blue look at us inquiringly or await our interest. But all those things can be
seen in the painting, and someone who doesn’t see them doesn’t understand what
he is looking at.
In short, the picture can be described in two contrasting
ways, and the descriptions are incommensurable. This resembles the case of the
human soul. We can imagine a complete account of the human being as a biological
organism from which nothing observable has been left out. Any creature with just
this biological constitution will behave as I do, and lead the life that is distinctive
of our kind. So why add a further story about the soul? Why not draw the obvious
conclusion, that because nothing needs to be added to the biology, the biology
is all that there is?
That would be like saying that since no woman is
mentioned in the scientific description of Manet’s canvas, there is no woman in
the picture. We can tell two stories about Manet’s canvas, both complete. One
explains it, the other tells us what it means. Likewise we can tell two stories
about the human organism, one that explains its physical appearance and behaviour,
the other which tells us what it means to us. Many concepts that feature in this
second story have no application in the first. For example, we describe people
as responsible and free. We praise them, blame them and see worth and meaning
in the things that they do. We criticise, argue, persuade. A complex language
has emerged through which we relate to each other, and this language bypasses
reference to the organism in something like the way our description of the woman
in Manet’s picture bypasses the physical constitution of the canvas.
As
in the case of the picture, the two descriptions that we give of the human being
are incommensurable. There is no place in the language of biology for the concepts
of freedom and responsibility. Biology can describe grimaces and facial contortions,
but it lacks the concept of a smile — ‘for smiles from Reason flow ... and are
of love the food’, as Milton finely put it. The concepts that we spontaneously
use to describe the human being do not explain; they interpret. And the interpretation
that we favour describes a reasonable creature, accountable to his kind.
Crucial
to this interpretation is the concept of self. Other animals are conscious, have
thoughts, desires and emotions. But only we are self-conscious, able to address
each other from ‘I’ to ‘I’ and to know ourselves in the first person, as subjects
in a world of objects. As Kant plausibly argued, self-consciousness and freedom
are two sides of a coin. It is I, not my body, who choose, and it is I who am
praised or blamed, not my limbs, my feelings or my movements. There is a mystery
here: how can I be both a free subject and a determined object, both the ‘I’ that
decides and the body that carries the decision through? Kant argued that the understanding
stops at the threshold of this mystery, and I suspect that he was right. It is
precisely this mystery that religions try to normalise with the story of the soul.
The story varies from epoch to epoch and creed to creed. But it is never
more simply put than in the language of the Koran, in which one word — nafs —
means both ‘self’ and ‘soul’. This soul is raised in me: only by learning the
ways of accountability do I rise to the condition of a free being, who realises
his freedom in his deeds. Hence the soul can be corrupted. There is such a thing
as the Devil’s work, which consists in undermining the self, tempting people to
see themselves as objects, leading them to identify completely with their biological
condition, to squander their selfhood in orgies of concupiscence and to refuse
all accountability for what they are and do. The moral truth is conveyed with
admirable simplicity in the great Sura of the Sun, Koran 91, which invokes the
wonders of creation: sun and moon, day and night, heaven and earth, and finally
‘a soul, and what formed her, to which He revealed both right and wrong’. The
Sura goes on to tell us that the one who safeguards the soul’s purity will prosper,
while he who corrupts it is destroyed. It requires no metaphysics to understand
the words ‘wa nafsin...’ — ‘and a soul...’. They are spoken in me and to me. The
verse refers to the self that harbours knowledge of right and wrong, and it is
just this that is the source of meaning in me.
Christians, Jews, Hindus
and Buddhists have other ways of capturing this simple thought, but the fundamental
observation is shared. Human beings stand out from the rest of creation. They
are subjects in a world of objects, and as a result they judge and are judged.
Hence they can be redeemed and corrupted. This work of redemption and corruption
is neverending. We do not need a metaphysical doctrine of the soul to make sense
of this; as we learn from the Koran, the reflexive pronoun is enough. Faith adds
just one crucial detail: namely, that the reflexive pronoun is used also by God.
Of course, seeing the matter in this way, we do nothing to justify the
belief in immortality. Nevertheless, we can go some way towards making that belief
intelligible. Although the woman in Manet’s picture is nothing over and above
the pigments in which we see her, you do not destroy her by destroying the pigments.
If Manet’s work were perfectly copied and then burned, we would confront a new
canvas, but the same woman. The person seen in the new painting would be identical
with the person seen in the old. This is a strange kind of identity, and not without
paradox. But it provides a model for theologians, should they wish to explain
the identity between the person that I encounter in encountering you and the person
who exists eternally in God’s perception. Immortality, seen in that way, is not
a prospect to look forward to but a light in which we stand. 
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Roger Scruton. "What it means to be human." The Spectator
(March 20, 2004).
This article reprinted with permission from Roger Scruton.
See his web site here.
THE
AUTHOR
Roger Scruton is a writer, philosopher, publisher, journalist, composer, editor, businessman and broadcaster. He has held visiting posts at Princeton, Stanford, Louvain, Guelph (Ontario), Witwatersrand (S. Africa), Waterloo (Ontario), Oslo, Bordeaux, and Cambridge, England and is currently visiting professor in the Department of Philosophy, Birkbeck College, London. Mr. Scruton has published more than 20 books including, An Intelligent Person's Guide to Modern Culture, An Intelligent Person's Guide to Philosophy, Sexual Desire, The Aesthetics of Music, The West and the Rest: Globalization and the Terrorist Threat, Death-Devoted Heart: Sex and the Sacred in Wagner's Tristan and Isolde, A Political Philosphy, and most recently Gentle Regrets: Thoughts from a Life.
Copyright
© 2004 Roger Scruton