creation of the world begins when the blind will to
live groundlessly and fortuitously passes over from
essence to phenomenon, from potency to act, from supra-existence
to existence, and, in irrational striving after existence,
draws to itself the only content which is capable
of realization, the logical Idea. This latter
seeks to make good the error committed by the will
by bringing consciousness into the field as a combatant
against the insatiable, ever yearning, never satisfied
will, which one day will force the will back into
latency, into the (antemundane) blessed state of not-willing.
The goal of the world-development is deliverance from
the misery of existence, the peace of non-existence,
the return from the will and representation, become
spatial and temporal, to the original, harmonious
equilibrium of the two functions, which has been disturbed
by the origin of the world or to the antemundane identity
of the absolute. The task of the logical element
is to teach consciousness more and more to penetrate
the illusion of the will—in its three stages
of childlike (Greek) expectation of happiness to be
attained here, youthful (Christian) expectation of
happiness to be attained hereafter, and adult expectation
of happiness to be attained in the future of the world-development—and,
finally, to teach it to know, in senile longing after
rest, that only the doing away with this miserable
willing, and, consequently, with earthly existence
(through the resolve of the majority of mankind) can
give the sole attainable blessedness, freedom from
pain. The world-process is the incarnation, the
suffering, and the redemption of the absolute; the
moral task of man is not personal renunciation and
cowardly retirement, but to make the purposes of the
Unconscious his own, with complete resignation to
life and its sufferings to labor energetically in
the world-process, and, by the vigorous promotion of
consciousness, to hasten the fulfillment of the redemptive
purpose; the condition of morality is insight into
the fruitlessness of all striving after pleasure and
into the essential unity of all individual beings
with one another and with the universal spirit, which
exists in the individuals, but at the same time subsists
above them. “To know one’s self as
of divine nature, this does away with all divergence
between selfwill and universal will, with all estrangement
between man and God, with all undivine, that is, merely
natural, conduct.”
[Footnote 1: Cf. Volkelt, Ueber die Lust als hoechsten Werthmassstab (in the Zeitschrift fuer Philosophie, vol. lxxxviii.), 1886, and O. Pfleiderer, Philosophy of Religion, vol. ii. p. 249 seq.]