248
THE ARCHITECTUREOF HUMANISM
tiveethics,scienceandtheology,fromtheirpractical
reference,firstbecameandlongremained
the
reason's
principal preoccupation. When, in its turn,
the
mind's disinterested thought arose,
its
speculation
wasinevitablyspentupon thecontradictions
which
primitive ethics, science and theology,
were seen,
eithersinglyorincombination,tocontain. Butthe
impulsealongthispathwhich theintellect
received
inthebeginning,andsolongmaintained,
stillcircum-
scribesitsuse. Itisbyhabitinattentive,by
nature
unsubmissive,totheprocess
whichallthistime was
silentlymouldingandtransfiguringtheartsofform.
Thearts,afterall—
save
on technical
questions
—
haveneversought,
orhavenotsought tillnow,the
reason's interference. Reason supplied the means
;
theyofthemselvesdefinedandfixed
theend. Forart
itselfisaspeciesofthought,
havingitsowndialectic,
arrivingbyitsown processesatits
ownconclusions,
and through the language
of its own forms made
capableof
communication. Theartist,byimmediate
and spontaneous preference,
rejects one form and
substitutes
another, and demonstrates
thereby the
rightness of his emendation.
That is hisdialectic.
Argumentmay
confirm,butdoesnotofitself
supply,
his choice.
In so far then as
his fellow-men are
brought, by sympathy
or imitation,to share
these
preferences,artistic
canonsand
traditions willarise.
But
traditionsdonotexist
invacuo: they
manifest