A
magic world comes into being when one is driven by hidden forces to act in a
certain way, or as in the example of the pea weevil larva, the innate path
appears to be a magical phenomena. But is not the
larva impelled to burrow into the pea based upon instinct? Uexküll says ‘It is quite sure that we are here dealing
with an activity which, though conforming to a plan, is yet utterly senseless
from the weevil larva’s point of view, for no sensory stimulus of the future
beetle can possibly reach its larva.’ (Uexküll,68).
In the case of the little girl who shouts at the match stick “’Take away the
witch, I cant bear to look at her horrid face any more.”’(, 67) her magic world
seems vastly different from that of the larva. While the larva is acting upon
something innately determined, and as yet hidden from view, the little girl experiences
a kind of magic that seems to arise from her imagination. That I feel is the
distinction which I am having trouble with. How can one take imagination into
account with regards to an insect that is compelled to burrow into a pea? Uexküll doesn’t elaborate upon imagination as playing a part in
the magic world of a human beings, and to me that is a crucial part of it, or
at least something I would like to explore further.
It is baffling how one species can be innately driven to
take action regardless of any external forces that might dissuade it. It is
magic perhaps, and yet how can that be compared fairly to the case of a human
being? The magic world of the larva and that of the little girl seem to me so
vastly different in nature that one simply cannot compare or contrast them;
however, the problem is also due in part to what Uexküll presents to us at the
beginning of the book. ‘We are easily deluded into assuming that the
relationship between a foreign subject and the objects in his world exists on
the same spatial and temporal plane as our own relations with the objects in
our human world. This fallacy is fed by a belief in the existence of a single
world, into which all living creatures are pigeonholed’ ( p.14). One is bound
by the confines of her umwelt, unable to conceive of the umwelt of any other
living creature. There is no objective
reality beyond the subjective one which each of us inhabits. The umwelt of anyone
or anything is an impenetrable and in many ways magical world simply because it
is unknown and irrevocably closed off to us. I suppose this is why we cannot
really speak of the magic world of either the larva or the little girl, because
how could one climb out of their umwelt in order to peer into someone elses? It
is unknowable and shall remain so, it seems.
Could
Teilhard’s theory of the noosphere as the unification of all human thought
provide a way in which human beings might see beyond their respective
umwelten? He states, ‘We are faced with
a harmonized collectivity of consciousness equivalent to a sort of
super-consciousness. The idea is that of the earth not only becoming covered by
myriads of grains of thought, but becoming enclosed in a single thinking
envelope so as to form, functionally, no more than a single vast grain of
thought on the sidereal scale, the plurality of individual reflections grouping
themselves together and reinforcing one another in the act of a single
unanimous reflection. (Teilhard, 252).
Is the final stage of noogenesis, the transcendence of umwelt on a
cosmic scale? Uexküll
presents to his reader the definition of umwelt, saying, ‘We thus unlock the
gates that lead to other realms, for all that a subject perceives becomes his
perceptual world and all that he does, his effector world. Perceptual and
effector worlds together form a closed unit, the Umwelt.’(p.6) So in a certain sense the examples of the larva and
the little girl, absurd as it seems to place them in juxtaposition to one
another, is evidence of the magic that is everywhere amongst life and which
remains inexplicable. It is however all the while quite evident that there are
several differences between Teilhard and Uexküll
which may make it impossible to equate their philosophy. Uexküll was investigating not only human life, but he studied
in depth the world of animals, while Teilhard wrote of human consciousness. I
should hasten to restate my question, asking instead, if the noosphere could be
the transcendence of all human umwelten? This might result in total disaster,
unspeakable damage might ensue, for as Uexküll
warns us at the end of the book when speaking of nature ‘Should one attempt to
combine her objective qualities, chaos would ensue.’(p.80).
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