But let us be charitable—and serious. What Mr.
Burroughs instances as acts of instinct certainly are acts
of instincts. By the same method of logic one could easily
adduce a multitude of instinctive acts on the part of man
and thereby prove that man is an unreasoning animal. But
man performs actions of both sorts. Between man and the
lower animals Mr. Burroughs finds a vast gulf. This gulf
divides man from the rest of his kin by virtue of the power
of reason that he alone possesses. Man is a voluntary
agent. Animals are automatons. The robin fights its
reflection in the window-pane because it is his instinct to
fight and because he cannot reason out the physical laws
that make this reflection appear real. An animal is a
mechanism that operates according to fore-ordained rules.
Wrapped up in its heredity, and determined long before it
was born, is a certain limited capacity of ganglionic
response to eternal stimuli. These responses have been
fixed in the species through adaptation to environment.
Natural selection has compelled the animal automatically to
respond in a fixed manner and a certain way to all the usual
external stimuli it encounters in the course of a usual
life. Thus, under usual circumstances, it does the usual
thing. Under unusual circumstances it still does the usual
thing, wherefore the highhole perforating the ice-house is
guilty of lunacy—of unreason, in short. To do the unusual
thing under unusual circumstances, successfully to adjust to
a strange environment for which his heredity has not
automatically fitted an adjustment, Mr. Burroughs says is
impossible. He says it is impossible because it would be a
non-instinctive act, and, as is well known animals act only
through instinct. And right here we catch a glimpse of Mr.
Burroughs’s cart standing before his horse. He has a
thesis, and though the heavens fall he will fit the facts to
the thesis. Agassiz, in his opposition to evolution, had a
similar thesis, though neither did he fit the facts to it
nor did the heavens fall. Facts are very disagreeable at
times.
But let us see. Let us test Mr. Burroughs’s test of reason
and instinct. When I was a small boy I had a dog named
Rollo. According to Mr. Burroughs, Rollo was an automaton,
responding to external stimuli mechanically as directed by
his instincts. Now, as is well known, the development of
instinct in animals is a dreadfully slow process. There is
no known case of the development of a single instinct in
domestic animals in all the history of their domestication.
Whatever instincts they possess they brought with them from
the wild thousands of years ago. Therefore, all Rollo’s
actions were ganglionic discharges mechanically determined
by the instincts that had been developed and fixed in the
species thousands of years ago. Very well. It is clear,
therefore, that in all his play with me he would act in
old-fashioned ways, adjusting himself to the physical and
psychical factors in his environment according to the rules
of adjustment which had obtained in the wild and which had
become part of his heredity.
Rollo and I did a great deal of rough romping. He chased me
and I chased him. He nipped my legs, arms, and hands, often
so hard that I yelled, while I rolled him and tumbled him
and dragged him about, often so strenuously as to make him
yelp. In the course of the play many variations arose. I
would make believe to sit down and cry. All repentance and
anxiety, he would wag his tail and lick my face, whereupon I
would give him the laugh. He hated to be laughed at, and
promptly he would spring for me with good-natured, menacing
jaws, and the wild romp would go on. I had scored a point.
Then he hit upon a trick. Pursuing him into the woodshed, I
would find him in a far corner, pretending to sulk. Now, he
dearly loved the play, and never got enough of it. But at
first he fooled me. I thought I had somehow hurt his
feelings and I came and knelt before him, petting him, and
speaking lovingly. Promptly, in a wild outburst, he was up
and away, tumbling me over on the floor as he dashed out in
a mad skurry around the yard. He had scored a point.
After a time, it became largely a game of wits. I reasoned
my acts, of course, while his were instinctive. One day, as
he pretended to sulk in the corner, I glanced out of the
woodshed doorway, simulated pleasure in face, voice, and
language, and greeted one of my schoolboy friends.
Immediately Rollo forgot to sulk, rushed out to see the
newcomer, and saw empty space. The laugh was on him, and he
knew it, and I gave it to him, too. I fooled him in this
way two or three times; then he became wise. One day I
worked a variation. Suddenly looking out the door, making
believe that my eyes had been attracted by a moving form, I
said coldly, as a child educated in turning away
bill-collectors would say: “No my father is not at home.”
Like a shot, Rollo was out the door. He even ran down the
alley to the front of the house in a vain attempt to find
the man I had addressed. He came back sheepishly to endure
the laugh and resume the game.
And now we come to the test. I fooled Rollo, but how was
the fooling made possible? What precisely went on in that
brain of his? According to Mr. Burroughs, who denies even
rudimentary reasoning to the lower animals, Rollo acted
instinctively, mechanically responding to the external
stimulus, furnished by me, which led him to believe that a
man was outside the door.
Since Rollo acted instinctively, and since all instincts are
very ancient, tracing back to the pre-domestication period,
we can conclude only that Rollo’s wild ancestors, at the
time this particular instinct was fixed into the heredity of
the species, must have been in close, long-continued, and
vital contact with man, the voice of man, and the
expressions on the face of man. But since the instinct must
have been developed during the pre-domestication period, how
under the sun could his wild, undomesticated ancestors have
experienced the close, long-continued, and vital contact
with man?
Mr. Burroughs says that “instinct suffices for the animals,”
that “they get along very well without reason.” But I say,
what all the poor nature-fakers will say, that Rollo
reasoned. He was born into the world a bundle of instincts
and a pinch of brain-stuff, all wrapped around in a
framework of bone, meat, and hide. As he adjusted to his
environment he gained experiences. He remembered these
experiences. He learned that he mustn’t chase the cat, kill
chickens, nor bite little girls’ dresses. He learned that
little boys had little boy playmates. He learned that men
came into back yards. He learned that the animal man, on
meeting with his own kind, was given to verbal and facial
greeting. He learned that when a boy greeted a playmate he
did it differently from the way he greeted a man. All these
he learned and remembered. They were so many
observations—so many propositions, if you please. Now, what
went on behind those brown eyes of his, inside that pinch of
brain-stuff, when I turned suddenly to the door and greeted
an imaginary person outside? Instantly, out of the
thousands of observations stored in his brain, came to the
front of his consciousness the particular observations
connected with this particular situation. Next, he
established a relation between these observations. This
relation was his conclusion, achieved, as every psychologist
will agree, by a definite cell-action of his grey matter.
From the fact that his master turned suddenly toward the
door, and from the fact that his master’s voice, facial
expression, and whole demeanour expressed surprise and
delight, he concluded that a friend was outside. He
established a relation between various things, and the act
of establishing relations between things is an act of
reason—of rudimentary reason, granted, but none the less of
reason.
Of course Rollo was fooled. But that is no call for us to
throw chests out about it. How often has every last one of
us been fooled in precisely similar fashion by another who
turned and suddenly addressed an imaginary intruder? Here
is a case in point that occurred in the West. A robber had
held up a railroad train. He stood in the aisle between the
seats, his revolver presented at the head of the conductor,
who stood facing him. The conductor was at his mercy.
But the conductor suddenly looked over the robber’s
shoulder, at the same time saying aloud to an imaginary
person standing at the robber’s back: “Don’t shoot him.”
Like a flash the robber whirled about to confront this new
danger, and like a flash the conductor shot him down. Show
me, Mr. Burroughs, where the mental process in the robber’s
brain was a shade different from the mental processes in
Rollo’s brain, and I’ll quit nature-faking and join the
Trappists. Surely, when a man’s mental process and a dog’s
mental process are precisely similar, the much-vaunted gulf
of Mr. Burroughs’s fancy has been bridged.
I had a dog in Oakland. His name was Glen. His father was
Brown, a wolf-dog that had been brought down from Alaska,
and his mother was a half-wild mountain shepherd dog.
Neither father nor mother had had any experience with
automobiles. Glen came from the country, a half-grown
puppy, to live in Oakland. Immediately he became infatuated
with an automobile. He reached the culmination of happiness
when he was permitted to sit up in the front seat alongside
the chauffeur. He would spend a whole day at a time on an
automobile debauch, even going without food. Often the
machine started directly from inside the barn, dashed out
the driveway without stopping, and was gone. Glen got left
behind several times. The custom was established that
whoever was taking the machine out should toot the horn
before starting. Glen learned the signal. No matter where
he was or what he was doing, when that horn tooted he was
off for the barn and up into the front seat.
One morning, while Glen was on the back porch eating his
breakfast of mush and milk, the chauffeur tooted. Glen
rushed down the steps, into the barn, and took his front
seat, the mush and milk dripping down his excited and happy
chops. In passing, I may point out that in thus forsaking
his breakfast for the automobile he was displaying what is
called the power of choice—a peculiarly lordly attribute
that, according to Mr. Burroughs, belongs to man alone. Yet
Glen made his choice between food and fun.
It was not that Glen wanted his breakfast less, but that he
wanted his ride more. The toot was only a joke. The
automobile did not start. Glen waited and watched.
Evidently he saw no signs of an immediate start, for finally
he jumped out of the seat and went back to his breakfast.
He ate with indecent haste, like a man anxious to catch a
train. Again the horn tooted, again he deserted his
breakfast, and again he sat in the seat and waited vainly
for the machine to go.
They came close to spoiling Glen’s breakfast for him, for he
was kept on the jump between porch and barn. Then he grew
wise. They tooted the horn loudly and insistently, but he
stayed by his breakfast and finished it. Thus once more did
he display power of choice, incidentally of control, for
when that horn tooted it was all he could do to refrain from
running for the barn.
The nature-faker would analyze what went on in Glen’s brain
somewhat in the following fashion. He had had, in his short
life, experiences that not one of all his ancestors had ever
had. He had learned that automobiles went fast, that once
in motion it was impossible for him to get on board, that
the toot of the horn was a noise that was peculiar to
automobiles. These were so many propositions. Now
reasoning can be defined as the act or process of the brain
by which, from propositions known or assumed, new
propositions are reached. Out of the propositions which I
have shown were Glen’s, and which had become his through the
medium of his own observation of the phenomena of life, he
made the new proposition that when the horn tooted it was
time for him to get on board.
But on the morning I have described, the chauffeur fooled
Glen. Somehow and much to his own disgust, his reasoning
was erroneous. The machine did not start after all. But to
reason incorrectly is very human. The great trouble in all
acts of reasoning is to include all the propositions in the
problem. Glen had included every proposition but one,
namely, the human proposition, the joke in the brain of the
chauffeur. For a number of times Glen was fooled. Then he
performed another mental act. In his problem he included
the human proposition (the joke in the brain of the
chauffeur), and he reached the new conclusion that when the
horn tooted the automobile was not going to start. Basing
his action on this conclusion, he remained on the porch and
finished his breakfast. You and I, and even Mr. Burroughs,
perform acts of reasoning precisely similar to this every
day in our lives. How Mr. Burroughs will explain Glen’s
action by the instinctive theory is beyond me. In wildest
fantasy, even, my brain refuses to follow Mr. Burroughs into
the primeval forest where Glen’s dim ancestors, to the
tooting of automobile horns, were fixing into the heredity
of the breed the particular instinct that would enable Glen,
a few thousand years later, capably to cope with
automobiles.
Dr. C. J. Romanes tells of a female chimpanzee who was
taught to count straws up to five. She held the straws in
her hand, exposing the ends to the number requested. If she
were asked for three, she held up three. If she were asked
for four, she held up four. All this is a mere matter of
training. But consider now, Mr. Burroughs, what follows.
When she was asked for five straws and she had only four,
she doubled one straw, exposing both its ends and thus
making up the required number. She did not do this only
once, and by accident. She did it whenever more straws were
asked for than she possessed. Did she perform a distinctly
reasoning act? or was her action the result of blind,
mechanical instinct? If Mr. Burroughs cannot answer to his
own satisfaction, he may call Dr. Romanes a nature-faker and
dismiss the incident from his mind.
The foregoing is a trick of erroneous human reasoning that
works very successfully in the United States these days. It
is certainly a trick of Mr. Burroughs, of which he is guilty
with distressing frequency. When a poor devil of a writer
records what he has seen, and when what he has seen does not
agree with Mr. Burroughs’s mediaeval theory, he calls said
writer a nature-faker. When a man like Mr. Hornaday comes
along, Mr. Burroughs works a variation of the trick on him.
Mr. Hornaday has made a close study of the orang in
captivity and of the orang in its native state. Also, he
has studied closely many other of the higher animal types.
Also, in the tropics, he has studied the lower types of
man. Mr. Hornaday is a man of experience and reputation.
When he was asked if animals reasoned, out of all his
knowledge on the subject he replied that to ask him such a
question was equivalent to asking him if fishes swim. Now
Mr. Burroughs has not had much experience in studying the
lower human types and the higher animal types. Living in a
rural district in the state of New York, and studying
principally birds in that limited habitat, he has been in
contact neither with the higher animal types nor the lower
human types. But Mr. Hornaday’s reply is such a facer to
him and his homocentric theory that he has to do something.
And he does it. He retorts: “I suspect that Mr. Hornaday is
a better naturalist than he is a comparative psychologist.”
Exit Mr. Hornaday. Who the devil is Mr. Hornaday, anyway?
The sage of Slabsides has spoken. When Darwin concluded
that animals were capable of reasoning in a rudimentary way,
Mr. Burroughs laid him out in the same fashion by saying:
“But Darwin was also a much greater naturalist than
psychologist”—and this despite Darwin’s long life of
laborious research that was not wholly confined to a rural
district such as Mr. Burroughs inhabits in New York. Mr.
Burroughs’s method of argument is beautiful. It reminds one
of the man whose pronunciation was vile, but who said: “Damn
the dictionary; ain’t I here?”
And now we come to the mental processes of Mr. Burroughs—to
the psychology of the ego, if you please. Mr. Burroughs has
troubles of his own with the dictionary. He violates
language from the standpoint both of logic and science.
Language is a tool, and definitions embodied in language
should agree with the facts and history of life. But Mr.
Burroughs’s definitions do not so agree. This, in turn, is
not the fault of his education, but of his ego. To him,
despite his well-exploited and patronizing devotion to them,
the lower animals are disgustingly low. To him, affinity
and kinship with the other animals is a repugnant thing. He
will have none of it. He is too glorious a personality not
to have between him and the other animals a vast and
impassable gulf. The cause of Mr. Burroughs’s mediaeval
view of the other animals is to be found, not in his
knowledge of those other animals, but in the suggestion of
his self-exalted ego. In short, Mr. Burroughs’s homocentric
theory has been developed out of his homocentric ego, and by
the misuse of language he strives to make the facts of life
agree with his theory.
After the instances I have cited of actions of animals which
are impossible of explanation as due to instinct, Mr.
Burroughs may reply: “Your instances are easily explained by
the simple law of association.” To this I reply, first,
then why did you deny rudimentary reason to animals? and why
did you state flatly that “instinct suffices for the
animals”? And, second, with great reluctance and with
overwhelming humility, because of my youth, I suggest that
you do not know exactly what you do mean by that phrase “the
simple law of association.” Your trouble, I repeat, is with
definitions. You have grasped that man performs what is
called abstract reasoning, you have made a definition of
abstract reason, and, betrayed by that great maker of
theories, the ego, you have come to think that all reasoning
is abstract and that what is not abstract reason is not
reason at all. This is your attitude toward rudimentary
reason. Such a process, in one of the other animals, must
be either abstract or it is not a reasoning process. Your
intelligence tells you that such a process is not abstract
reasoning, and your homocentric thesis compels you to
conclude that it can be only a mechanical, instinctive
process.
Definitions must agree, not with egos, but with life. Mr.
Burroughs goes on the basis that a definition is something
hard and fast, absolute and eternal. He forgets that all
the universe is in flux; that definitions are arbitrary and
ephemeral; that they fix, for a fleeting instant of time,
things that in the past were not, that in the future will be
not, that out of the past become, and that out of the
present pass on to the future and become other things.
Definitions cannot rule life. Definitions cannot be made to
rule life. Life must rule definitions or else the
definitions perish.
Mr. Burroughs forgets the evolution of reason. He makes a
definition of reason without regard to its history, and that
definition is of reason purely abstract. Human reason, as
we know it to-day, is not a creation, but a growth. Its
history goes back to the primordial slime that was quick
with muddy life; its history goes back to the first
vitalized inorganic. And here are the steps of its ascent
from the mud to man: simple reflex action, compound reflex
action, memory, habit, rudimentary reason, and abstract
reason. In the course of the climb, thanks to natural
selection, instinct was evolved. Habit is a development in
the individual. Instinct is a race-habit. Instinct is
blind, unreasoning, mechanical. This was the dividing of
the ways in the climb of aspiring life. The perfect
culmination of instinct we find in the ant-heap and the
beehive. Instinct proved a blind alley. But the other
path, that of reason, led on and on even to Mr. Burroughs
and you and me.
There are no impassable gulfs, unless one chooses, as Mr.
Burroughs does, to ignore the lower human types and the
higher animal types, and to compare human mind with bird
mind. It was impossible for life to reason abstractly until
speech was developed. Equipped with swords, with tools of
thought, in short, the slow development of the power to
reason in the abstract went on. The lowest human types do
little or no reasoning in the abstract. With every word,
with every increase in the complexity of thought, with every
ascertained fact so gained, went on action and reaction in
the grey matter of the speech discoverer, and slowly, step
by step, through hundreds of thousands of years, developed
the power of reason.
Place a honey-bee in a glass bottle. Turn the bottom of the
bottle toward a lighted lamp so that the open mouth is away
from the lamp. Vainly, ceaselessly, a thousand times,
undeterred by the bafflement and the pain, the bee will hurl
himself against the bottom of the bottle as he strives to
win to the light. That is instinct. Place your dog in a
back yard and go away. He is your dog. He loves you. He
yearns toward you as the bee yearns toward the light. He
listens to your departing footsteps. But the fence is too
high. Then he turns his back upon the direction in which
you are departing, and runs around the yard. He is frantic
with affection and desire. But he is not blind. He is
observant. He is looking for a hole under the fence, or
through the fence, or for a place where the fence is not so
high. He sees a dry-goods box standing against the fence.
Presto! He leaps upon it, goes over the barrier, and tears
down the street to overtake you. Is that instinct?
Here, in the household where I am writing this, is a little
Tahitian “feeding-child.” He believes firmly that a tiny
dwarf resides in the box of my talking-machine and that it
is the tiny dwarf who does the singing and the talking. Not
even Mr. Burroughs will affirm that the child has reached
this conclusion by an instinctive process. Of course, the
child reasons the existence of the dwarf in the box. How
else could the box talk and sing? In that child’s limited
experience it has never encountered a single instance where
speech and song were produced otherwise than by direct human
agency. I doubt not that the dog is considerably surprised
when he hears his master’s voice coming out of a box.
The adult savage, on his first introduction to a telephone,
rushes around to the adjoining room to find the man who is
talking through the partition. Is this act instinctive?
No. Out of his limited experience, out of his limited
knowledge of physics, he reasons that the only explanation
possible is that a man is in the other room talking through
the partition.
But that savage cannot be fooled by a hand-mirror. We must
go lower down in the animal scale, to the monkey. The
monkey swiftly learns that the monkey it sees is not in the
glass, wherefore it reaches craftily behind the glass. Is
this instinct? No. It is rudimentary reasoning. Lower
than the monkey in the scale of brain is the robin, and the
robin fights its reflection in the window-pane. Now climb
with me for a space. From the robin to the monkey, where is
the impassable gulf? and where is the impassable gulf
between the monkey and the feeding-child? between the
feeding-child and the savage who seeks the man behind the
partition? ay, and between the savage and the astute
financiers Mrs. Chadwick fooled and the thousands who were
fooled by the Keeley Motor swindle?
Let us be very humble. We who are so very human are very
animal. Kinship with the other animals is no more repugnant
to Mr. Burroughs than was the heliocentric theory to the
priests who compelled Galileo to recant. Not correct human
reason, not the evidence of the ascertained fact, but pride
of ego, was responsible for the repugnance.
In his stiff-necked pride, Mr. Burroughs runs a hazard more
humiliating to that pride than any amount of kinship with
the other animals. When a dog exhibits choice, direction,
control, and reason; when it is shown that certain mental
processes in that dog’s brain are precisely duplicated in
the brain of man; and when Mr. Burroughs convincingly proves
that every action of the dog is mechanical and
automatic—then, by precisely the same arguments, can it be
proved that the similar actions of man are mechanical and
automatic. No, Mr. Burroughs, though you stand on the top
of the ladder of life, you must not kick out that ladder
from under your feet. You must not deny your relatives, the
other animals. Their history is your history, and if you
kick them to the bottom of the abyss, to the bottom of the
abyss you go yourself. By them you stand or fall. What you
repudiate in them you repudiate in yourself—a pretty
spectacle, truly, of an exalted animal striving to disown
the stuff of life out of which it is made, striving by use
of the very reason that was developed by evolution to deny
the possession of evolution that developed it. This may be
good egotism, but it is not good science.
Papeete, Tahiti.
March 1908. |