Part One Before Logical Empiricism
Chapter One Georg Simmel on Historical Understanding
Martin Kusch
1.1. Introduction
Since the early nineteenth century, âunderstandingâ (Verstehen) has been a central category in philosophical debates over the aims and methods of the sciences and the arts, over methodological differences between fields of study, and even over the human condition in general. The term first gained prominence in the German-speaking lands where historians like Johann Gustav Droysen, philosophers like Wilhelm Dilthey, or social theorists like Max Weber used it to demarcate history from philosophy, the humanities from the natural sciences, or the right from the wrong approaches in history, economics, and sociology.
In this chapter, I shall analyze a contribution, of the same time and context, that has only rarely received detailed scholarly attention: Georg Simmelâs theory of historical understanding. Simmelâs account was closely related to the ideas of Droysen, Dilthey, and Weber; he critically responded to Droysen or Dilthey, and Weber reacted with both admiration and hostility to Simmelâs suggestions. At the same time, Simmelâs proposal was bold, original, and provocative. In what follows, I shall reconstruct Simmelâs reflections on understanding as he developed them from the 1890s until his death in 1918. Limitations of space do not, however, allow me to detail the various stages in the development of Simmelâs position.1
I shall try to make plausible the following theses. First, Simmelâs theory of understanding was not initially part of a systematic attempt to demarcate the natural sciences from the social sciences or the humanities. Only from around 1905 onward did Simmel fall in line the neo-Kantian demarcation efforts. Second, Simmel criticized some ingredients and forms of the âreenactmentâ (Nachbilden) theory of understanding. Third, Simmelâs theory was anti-realist in its likening of the historian to an artist and in thereby emphasizing the historianâs creativity in constructing âhistorical pictures.â This anti-realism was of a piece with Simmelâs neo-Kantian âcritique of historical reasonâ with its emphasis on the âhistoricalâ or ârelative a priori.â Fourth, Simmelâs reflections on understanding fitted with his general relativistic outlook. Still, fifth, Simmel was âanti-historicistâ if by âhistoricismâ one means the attempt to reduce philosophy to history. And sixth, the development of Simmelâs ideas on understanding culminated in his efforts to integrate his conception of (historical) understanding with his âphilosophy of lifeâ (Lebensphilosophie).
Having reconstructed and analyzed Simmelâs position, I shall briefly consider criticisms by his contemporaries, especially Franz Eulenburg, Max Frischeisen-Köhler, Otto Hintze, and Max Weber. This will allow me to comment, in a context-sensitive way, on the strengths and weaknesses, as well as the originality, of Simmelâs position.
1.2. Verstehen and the Nineteenth-century âDemarcation Problemsâ
Nineteenth-century debates over the nature and role of understanding were tied to attempts to distinguish between philosophy, the natural sciences, the humanities, and the social sciences. Droysen ([1868] 2013: § 14) famously wrote: âIn line with the objects and the nature of human thinking, there are three possible scientific methods: the (philosophically or theologically) speculative [method], the mathematical-physical [method], and the historical [method]. Their respective essence is: to come to know [erkennen], to explain, and to understand.â Dilthey used understanding in a similar way. His credo ânature we explain, mental life we understandâ ([1894] 1990: 144) was frequently cited. The underlying thought was that in the study of âexternal nature, we postulate, below the appearances, a connection in the form of abstract concepts. But in the intellectual [geistig] world, the connection is experienced and reenacted [nachverstanden]â (Dilthey [1910] 2006: 49).
At least in his early writings (e.g., Einleitung in die Moralwissenschaft), Simmel ([1891â2] 1989â91) emphasized the âunity of science.â Thus, the first edition of Probleme der Geschichtsphilosophie merely conceded that the natural sciences differ from historical research in regularly displaying a stronger and broader consensus concerning âcategories of ordering and evaluatingâ ([1892] 1989: 328). This was more a difference in degree than a difference in kind.
Moreover, Simmel reasoned that since all historical research is ultimately concerned with human mental states, psychology must have a central position within it. He wrote that âif psychology were a science of laws of nature, then history would be applied psychology in the very sense in which astronomy is applied mathematicsâ ([1892] 1989: 304). Three things are important about this sentence. First, Simmel did not say that history is applied psychology. He formulated a counterfactual with a false antecedent; that is, he did not believe psychology to have (strict) laws (ibid.: 339â79), and hence he denied that historical research is simply applied psychology. Second, even if there were psychological laws of nature, history would still not reduce to psychology. After all, and to stick to Simmelâs comparison, many astronomical entities cannot be reduced to mathematics. Finally, while Simmel rejected the idea that history is applied psychology, he was comfortable with saying that âpsychology is the a priori of the historical sciences.â And it was the descriptiveânot the normative!âtask of epistemology to find the rules âaccording to which, on the basis of mind-external documents and traditions, one infers not only mental processes but also the elements that suffice to create an âunderstandableâ connection between these processesâ (ibid.: 338).
In subsequent writings, Simmelâs attitude towards demarcation changed. The second (1905) and third (1907) editions of Probleme der Geschichtsphilosophie discussed the relationship between historical research and psychology in new ways. (I shall follow the 1907 edition throughout, since it differs only slightly from the 1905 edition.) To begin with, Simmel now aimed to explain how historyâs focus on individuals could be reconciled with a (limited) role for psychological laws. Key here was an analogy with a major thesis in Simmelâs philosophy of natural science. According to this thesis, nature consists of two (kinds of) elements, laws of nature and a âprimary matterâ with a structure in and of itself. This primary matter is governed by laws of nature. It can be conceived of, Simmel [1907] 2015: 234) proposed, as a âtotal individualâ (Gesamtindividuum). Concerning psychological laws in particular, Simmel reasoned that we can think of each human being as an individual in the sense introduced: each one of us is governed by the same psychological laws, and yet, in each case, these psychological laws govern a different primary structure, a different âreal a priori.â In this way, general psychological laws and ultimately ineffable individuals both have to be reckoned with (ibid.: 235).
Moreover, for Simmel historical research was situated between psychology and logic. Logic concerns itself with the contents of propositions and the logical relations between them. Psychology investigates mental processes. History differs from both logic and psychology. Like psychology, history focuses on mental processes; and like logic, history is preoccupied with contents. In other words, history is interested in the âpsychological development of contentsâ; it aims to understand how individuals experienced, shaped, and responded to such contents (ibid.: 237). Simmel also held that historical understanding is primarily preoccupied with âreenacting meaningâ (Sinn). This sets history apart from the causal analysis of psychology and the inference-centered perspective of logic. In addition, historical understanding is distinctive also because it homes in on particular events rather than general patterns. Historical understanding draws contents and mental processes together into âunique constellations,â âsyntheses of imagination,â where âthere is no necessity of psychological events based on laws of nature, and there is no logical necessity connecting the contents with general validityâ (ibid.: 274). Reaching this goal requires the peculiar talents and dispositions of outstanding individual historians. In the natural sciencesâwhere âmathematics is the idealââthe individuality of the researcher is of little significance in the constitution of the subject matter. But it is of great importance in the case of history (ibid.: 296).
The demarcation efforts of the second and third editions of Probleme der Geschichtsphilosophie clearly resonated both with Droysenâs and Diltheyâs emphasis on understanding as unique to the humanities and with the Southwest School of neo-Kantiansâ urging that history is essentially about particular events (Windelband, Rickert).
In later writings, Simmel tied the concerns with demarcation to his âphilosophy of lifeâ (Lebensphilosophie). In a paper of 1918, he conjectured that the historian deals with a peculiar object: an object to which the historian âhas to grant a being-for-itselfâ; that is, an object in âthe category of the you.â The âyouâ is the only element in the universe allowing for a âmutual understandingâ (gegenseitiges Verstehen) and a feeling of unity. Simmel regarded it as obvious that the category of the âyouâ is, for the both the everyday and the historical worlds, as important as are the categories of substance or causality for the natural scientific world (1918: 161â2). With this claim, Simmel committed himself to a very strict divide between the natural and the historical sciences.
1.3. The Critique of the Theory of Reenactment
One central thread running through all of Simmelâs discussions of understanding was the criticism of certain versions or ingredients of the âreenactmentâ theory of understanding. An influential formulation of this version could be found in some passages of Droysenâs Historik:
Similar notions can be found in many other nineteenth-century German historians, artists, theologians and philosophers (cf. Wach 1926, 1929, 1933; Beiser 2011). Dilthey claimed, for instance, that our attribution of mental states to others i...