question of size. Decrease the scale of the picture, and the
impossible becomes possible at once. All fancies are not so easily
reducible to
actual facts as the one we have taken, but all,
perhaps,
eventually may be explicable in the same general way. At
present we certainly cannot
affirm that anything may not be thus
explained. For the
actual is widening its field every day. Even in
this little world of our own we are daily discovering to be fact
what we should have thought
fiction, like the sailor's mother the
tale of the flying fish. Beyond it our ken is widening still more.
Gulliver's travels may turn out truer than we think. Could we
traverse the inter-planetary ocean of ether, we might
eventuallyfind in Jupiter the land of Lilliput or in Ceres some old-time
country of the Brobdignagians. For men constituted muscularly like
ourselves would have to be proportionately small in the big planet
and big in the small one. Still stranger things may exist around
other suns. In those bright particular stars--which the little girl
thought pinholes in the dark
canopy of the sky to let the glory
beyond shine through--we are
finding conditions of
existence like
yet
unlike those we already know. To our groping speculations of
the night they almost seem, as we gaze on them in their twinkling,
to be winking us a sort of
comprehension. Conditions may exist
there under which our wildest fancies may be
commonplace facts.
There may be
"Some Xanadu where Kublai can
a
stately pleasure dome decree,"
and carry out his conceptions to his own disillusionment, perhaps.
For if the embodiment of a fancy, however complete, left nothing
further to be wished,
imagination would have no
incentive to work.
Coleridge's
distinction does very well to separate, empirically,
certain kinds of
imaginative concepts from certain others; but it
has no real
foundation in fact. Nor
presumably did he mean it to
have. But it serves, not inaptly, as a text to point out an
important
scientific truth,
namely, that there are not two such
qualities of the mind, but only one. For
otherwise we might have
supposed the fact too
evident to need mention. Imagination is the
single source of the new, the one mainspring of psychical advance;
reason, like a balance-wheel, only keeping the action regular.
For reason is but the touchstone of experience, our own, inherited,
or acquired from others. It compares what we imagine with what we
know, and gives us answer in terms of the here and the now, which
we call the
actual. But the
actual is really nothing but the local.
It does not mark the limits of the possible.
That
imagination has been the moving spirit of the psychical world
is
evident,
whatever branch of human thought we are pleased to
examine. We are in the habit, in common parlance, of making a
distinction between the search after truth and the search after
beauty,
calling the one science and the other art. Now while we are
not slow to
imputeimagination to art, we are by no means so ready
to
appreciate its
connection with science. Yet
contrary, perhaps,
to exogeric ideas on the subject, it is science rather than art that
demands
imagination of her votaries. Not that art may not
involvethe quality to a high degree, but that a high degree of art is quite
compatible with a very small
amount of
imagination. On the one side
we may
instancepainting. Now
painting begins its
career in the
humble
capacity of copyist, a pretty poor copyist at that. At first
so slight was its skill that the rudest symbols sufficed.
"This is a man" was conventionally implied by a few scratches
bearing a very distant
relationship to the real thing. Gradually,
owing to human
vanity and a growing taste, pictures improved.
Combinations were tried, a bit from one place with a piece from
another; a sort of mosaic requiring but a slight
amount of
imagination. Not that
imagination of a higher order has not been
called into play, although even now pictures are often happy
adaptations rather than creations proper. Some masters have been
imaginative; others,
unfortunately for themselves and still more for
the public, have not. For that the art may
attain a high degree of
excellence for itself and much
distinction for its professors,
without
calling in the aid of
imagination, is
evident enough on this
side of the globe, without travelling to the other.
Take, on the other hand, a branch of science which, to the average
layman, seems
peculiarly" target="_blank" title="ad.特有地;古怪地">
peculiarly un
imaginative, the science of mathematics.
Yet at the risk of appearing to cast doubts upon the validity of its
conclusions, it might be called the most
imaginative product of
human thought; for it is simply one vast
imagination based upon a
few
so-called axioms, which are nothing more nor less than the
results of experience. It is none the less
imaginative because its
discoveries always
accordsubsequently with fact, since man was not
aware of them
beforehand. Nor are its
inevitable conclusions
inevitable to any save those possessed of the mathematician's
prophetic sight. Once discovered, it requires much less
imaginationto understand them. With the light coming from in front, it is an
easy matter to see what lies behind one.
So with other fabrics of human thought,
imagination has been
spinning and weaving them all. From the most
concrete of inventions
to the most
abstract of conceptions the same force reveals itself
upon
examination; for there is no gulf between what we call practical
and what we consider theoretical. Everything
abstract is ultimately
of practical use, and even the most immediately utilitarian has an
abstract principle at its core. We are too prone to regard the
present age of the world as preeminently practical, much as a
middle-aged man laments the witching fancies of his
boyhood. But,
and there is more in the
parallel than
analogy, if the man be truly
imaginative he is none the less so at forty-five than he was at
twenty, if his
imagination have taken on a more
critical form;
for this latter half of the nineteenth century is perhaps the most
imaginative period the world's history has ever known. While with
one hand we are contriving means of
transit for our ideas, and even
our very voices, compared to which Puck's
girdle is anything but
talismanic, with the other we are stretching out to grasp the action
of mind on mind, pushing our way into the very realm of mind itself.
History tells the same story in detail; for the history of mankind,
imperfectly as we know it, discloses the fact that
imagination,
and not the power of
observation nor the
kindred cap
ability of
perception, has been the cause of soul-evolution.
The
savage is but little of an
imaginative being. We are tempted,
at times, to imagine him more so than he is, for his fanciful
folk-lore. The proof of which overestimation is that we find no
difficulty in imagining what he does, and even of imagining what he
probably imagined, and
finding our suppositions verified by
discovery. Yet his powers of
observation may be
marvellously
developed. The North American Indian tracks his foe through the
forest by signs unrecognizable to a white man, and he reasons most
astutely upon them, and still that very man turns out to be a mere
child when put before problems a
trifle out of his
beaten path.
And all because his forefathers had not the power to imagine
something beyond what they
actually saw. The very
essence of the
force of
imagination lies in its
ability to change a man's habitat
for him. Without it, man would forever have remained, not a mollusk,
to be sure, but an animal simply. A plant cannot change its place,
an animal cannot alter its conditions of
existence except within
very narrow bounds; man is free in the sense nothing else in the
world is.
What is true of individuals has been true of races. The most
imaginative races have proved the greatest factors in the world's
advance.
Now after this look at our own side of the world, let us turn to
the other; for it is this very
psychological fact that mental
progression implies an ever-increasing individualization, and that
imagination is the force at work in the process which Far Eastern
civilization, taken in
connection with our own, reveals. In doing
this, it explains
incidentally its own
seeming anomalies, the most
unaccountable of which,
apparently, is its
existence.
We have seen how impressively
impersonal the Far East is. Now if
individuality be the natural
measure of the
height of civilization
which a nation has reached,
impersonality should betoken a
relatively laggard position in the race. We ought,
therefore, to
find among these people certain other
characteristics corroborative
of a less
advanced state of development. In the first place,
if
imagination be the
impulse of which increase in
individuality is
the resulting
motion, that quality should be at a
minimum there.