[PREFATORY NOTE]
[PREFACE]
[CHAPTER I. EXPLANATION]
[CHAPTER II. FACT]
[CHAPTER III. MATTER AND MEMORY]

PREFATORY NOTE

Being an extract from a letter by Professor Henri Bergson

Ayant lu de près le travail de Mrs. Stephen je le trouve intéressant au plus haut point. C’est une interprétation personelle et originale de l’ensemble de mes vues—interprétation qui vaut par elle-même, indépendamment de ce qui j’ ai écrit. L’auteur s’est assimilé l’esprit de la doctrine, puis, se dégageant de la matérialité du texte elle a développé à sa manière, dans la direction qu’elle avait choisi, des idées qui lui paraissaient fondamentales. Grâce à la distinction qu’elle “établit entre “ fact “ et “ matter, “ elle a pu ramener à l’unité, et présenter avec une grande rigueur logique, des vues que j’avais été obligé, en raison de ma méthode de recherche, d’isoler les unes des autres. Bref, son travail a une grande valeur; il témoigne d’une rare force de pensée.

HENRI BERGSON.

PREFACE

The immense popularity which Bergson’s philosophy enjoys is sometimes cast up against him, by those who do not agree with him, as a reproach. It has been suggested that Berg-son’s writings are welcomed simply because they offer a theoretical justification for a tendency which is natural in all of us but against which philosophy has always fought, the tendency to throw reason overboard and just let ourselves go. Bergson is regarded by rationalists almost as a traitor to philosophy, or as a Bolshevik inciting the public to overthrow what it has taken years of painful effort to build up.

It is possible that some people who do not understand this philosophy may use Bergson’s name as a cloak for giving up all self-direction and letting themselves go intellectually to pieces, just as hooligans may use a time of revolution to plunder in the name of the Red Guard. But Bergson’s philosophy is in reality as far from teaching mere laziness as Communism is from being mere destruction of the old social order.

Bergson attacks the use to which we usually put our minds, but he most certainly does not suggest that a philosopher should not use his mind at all; he is to use it for all it is worth, only differently, more efficiently for the purpose he has in view, the purpose of knowing for its own sake.

There is, of course, a sense in which doing anything in the right way is simply letting one’s self go, for after all it is easier to do a thing well than badly—it certainly takes much less effort to produce the same amount of result. So to know in the way which Bergson recommends does in a sense come more easily than attempting to get the knowledge we want by inappropriate methods. If this saving of waste effort is a fault, then Bergson must plead guilty. But as the field of knowledge open to us is far too wide for any one mind to explore, the new method of knowing, though it requires less effort than the old to produce the same result, does not thereby let us off more easily, for with a better instrument it becomes possible to work for a greater result.