Thursday, June 18, 2026

We Never See the World for the First Time

We Never See the World for the First Time

Pre-understanding, Tradition, and Horizon

A child is born into a world that already has names.

Someone has decided what the people around the child are called, which words are used for the family, and what counts as home. Someone has named the days, divided the year into holidays, and established when the child should sleep, eat, begin school, and eventually be regarded as an adult.

The child does not encounter an uninterpreted reality.

The child encounters a language, a family, a history, and a society that have already given reality meaning.

Before the child can ask questions about the world, the world has already begun to answer who the child is. The child is described as a girl or a boy, calm or restless, capable or difficult, like the mother or like the father. The child learns what pleases adults, what makes them angry, and which emotions may be shown.

In this way, the child learns more than words.

The child learns what is worth noticing.

The child learns a world.

Hans-Georg Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics begins in this simple yet far-reaching insight: we never encounter the world for the first time. Whenever we see, listen, read, and judge, we always come from somewhere. We carry with us a language we did not create, a history we did not choose, and assumptions about truth, normality, and value that began to shape us long before we were able to examine them.

This does not mean that we are condemned to think as previous generations thought.

But it does mean that no reflection begins from zero.

We always enter a conversation that is already under way.

The World Comes to Us as Meaning

We do not first encounter a bare reality and then add meaning to it.

The world comes to us as meaningful.

We do not see only wood, stone, and walls. We see a home, a school, a hospital, or a prison. We do not see only a human body. We see a child, a stranger, a patient, a friend, or a person we believe we should fear.

Meaning does not arise solely within the individual. It is carried by language, practice, and history.

A house is a home because people have lived there, attached memories to its rooms, and created expectations about what a home should be. A school is not merely a building, but an institution shaped by ideas about knowledge, discipline, development, and the future. An office in a social service agency is not simply a room containing chairs and a table. It is a place where one person often has the power to ask, assess, and document, while another must explain their life.

The room has already been interpreted before the conversation begins.

The same is true of the words we use.

When a person is described as a client, patient, service user, pupil, or prisoner, certain aspects of that person become visible. Others recede into the background. These concepts are necessary. They make professional work possible and distribute responsibility.

But they also shape the gaze.

The person called a patient becomes visible first through illness. The person who becomes a client is read through the need for help. The person described as being at risk enters a world that is looking for danger.

We never see only the human being.

We also see through the words the world has taught us to use.

Before We Interpret, We Have Already Been Interpreted

We often think of interpretation as something we do.

We read a text, assess an action, or try to understand a human being. We are the active party, while the world lies before us as something to be deciphered.

Gadamer reminds us that the relationship also moves in the opposite direction.

Before we interpret the world, we have already been interpreted by it.

The family has given meaning to our behaviour. The school has assessed our abilities. Society has placed us in categories. Religion, politics, and culture have told us which lives are regarded as good, normal, and successful.

Some people grow up with the story that they are strong. Others learn that they are difficult, weak, or different. Such stories do not necessarily remain unchallenged, but they become part of the place from which the person later sees themselves and the world.

We carry the interpretations of others with us.

This becomes particularly clear when people later attempt to free themselves from them.

The person who was understood as lazy throughout childhood may spend an entire life proving their willingness to work. The person described as overly sensitive may begin to doubt their own reactions. The one who was always seen as strong may find it difficult to ask for help.

Even rebellion against the story may still be shaped by it.

We do not live only in a world we interpret.

We live in interpretations that have already begun to live within us.

Pre-understanding Makes the World Possible

Pre-understanding can sound like an obstacle.

We may think that the serious researcher, the skilled professional, and the just human being should set pre-understanding aside. Only then can the matter be assessed objectively.

But an entirely presuppositionless understanding is impossible.

Without pre-understanding, nothing would appear relevant.

A physician recognises a possible sign of illness because she already knows the human body and certain disease processes. A teacher perceives that a pupil is struggling because he has experience of learning. A historian understands the significance of a letter because she knows the period, the language, and the conflict within which it was written.

Pre-understanding is also active in everyday life.

We know approximately what is expected when we enter a church, a classroom, or a courtroom. We know the codes of the conversation, even though they are rarely written on the wall. We lower our voices in some places and take the floor in others.

Pre-understanding makes the world habitable.

It allows us to orient ourselves without having to investigate everything from the beginning each time.

But it also has a cost.

When the world becomes too familiar, we stop wondering why it is organised as it is. What could have been otherwise comes to appear natural. What has been historically created is experienced as self-evident.

At that point, pre-understanding becomes invisible.

And what is invisible often exerts the greatest power over the gaze.

Tradition Is More Than What Is Old

The word tradition often directs our thoughts towards something preserved from the past.

We think of holidays, folk music, old stories, religious rituals, and customs passed from one generation to the next.

But for Gadamer, tradition is something far more comprehensive.

Tradition also lives within the modern world.

It exists in the organisation of schools, the language of professions, the categories of law, and assumptions about what constitutes a good life. It exists in the ways we organise family, work, and care.

Tradition is not only something we consciously choose to preserve.

It is the historical context within which we already stand.

One society may place strong emphasis on independence. Children should learn early to manage on their own. Young adults are expected to leave home. Older people do not wish to become a burden.

Another society may understand dependence differently. The family may be a lifelong community, and mutual assistance may be a moral ideal rather than a sign of insufficient independence.

Both societies may experience their own arrangements as natural.

Yet both are historically shaped.

When people from these traditions meet, disagreement is therefore not merely a matter of differing opinions. They may stand within different understandings of the human being, the family, and responsibility.

To understand the conflict, we must examine more than the actions themselves.

We must attempt to understand the world within which those actions make sense.

Tradition as Authority

Modern human beings are often sceptical of authority.

We wish to think for ourselves. We do not want to accept something merely because it is old or because previous generations believed it.

This critical attitude has been essential in struggles against oppression, religious coercion, discrimination, and authoritarian institutions.

Gadamer, however, challenges the idea that all authority stands in opposition to reason.

Sometimes we acknowledge authority because we have good reason to believe that another person sees something we do not yet see. The pupil listens to the teacher. The inexperienced craftsperson follows the master. The young researcher reads earlier scholarship.

Such authority need not be blind obedience.

It may be a provisional trust that something is worth learning.

Tradition may similarly carry insights that cannot simply be replaced by contemporary opinion. We inherit language, art, institutions, and experience developed by earlier generations through long historical processes.

Yet the authority of tradition is never final.

What has been handed down must remain open to examination. Traditions may contain wisdom, but also violence, silence, and injustice. They may protect communities while simultaneously excluding people.

The question is therefore not whether we must choose between tradition and criticism.

Criticism itself arises within a historical context.

We use inherited concepts of freedom, equality, and human dignity when we criticise what has been inherited.

Tradition is not only what we criticise.

It has also given us the language with which we criticise.

The Horizon Within Which We Live

Gadamer uses the horizon as an image of understanding.

The horizon marks the limit of what is visible from the place where we stand. It is not a fixed wall. When we move, it moves. New landscapes come into view, and what previously appeared to be the whole world reveals itself as one perspective among several.

So it is with our horizon of understanding.

It encompasses the questions we are able to ask, the experiences we can recognise, and the answers we are able to imagine.

A person who has never experienced war may understand the word peace. But the word may acquire a different depth for someone who has seen their home destroyed.

A person who has always moved freely may believe that a building is accessible. A wheelchair user sees obstacles the other person has never learned to notice.

Someone who has never stood outside the community may experience a social gathering as pleasant. A person who has often been excluded may read glances, pauses, and small movements differently.

We inhabit the same world.

But the world does not appear in the same way from every position.

The horizon does not determine everything we can understand. But it shapes what first becomes visible.

Understanding therefore requires movement.

At times, we must leave the place from which our own view appears self-evident.

Expanding the Horizon

The horizon does not expand merely because we accumulate more information.

We may know a great deal about other people and still fail to understand them.

A professional may know a person’s diagnosis, income, family situation, and previous interventions. Yet all this knowledge may still be organised within the professional’s own understanding of what matters.

To expand the horizon requires that something challenge the way the knowledge itself is organised.

The other person must be able to show us that the problem is not what we thought it was. A text from the past must be able to question the present. An unfamiliar custom must be allowed to appear as more than a deviation from our own.

This does not mean that we uncritically adopt the other person’s horizon.

Nor is that possible.

We cannot become another person or step completely into another historical period. But we can discover that our own field of vision is limited.

This discovery is a form of learning.

We do not necessarily see less clearly when our initial certainty is disturbed.

We may begin to see more.

The Fusion of Horizons

Gadamer describes understanding as a fusion of horizons.

The expression may suggest that differences dissolve and that everyone eventually reaches agreement.

That is not the point.

When horizons meet, the possibility arises of a new understanding that neither party fully possessed beforehand.

This may happen in a good conversation.

Two people begin with different views. Gradually, they discover that their disagreement rests on different experiences, questions, and assumptions about the issue. Perhaps neither changes position completely. Yet both now understand the question differently.

The fusion of horizons is not a fusion of persons.

It is an expansion of the matter they are trying to understand.

The same applies when we read an old text. We cannot fully reconstruct the author’s original world. We always read from within our own time.

Yet the text may still challenge us.

When the questions of the past meet our own, new meaning may arise. We understand the text in a way its first readers perhaps did not, while the text makes our own present less self-evident.

Understanding is therefore neither a pure return to the past nor merely a modern use of it.

It is an encounter.

Professions Carry Traditions

Healthcare, social work, education, and therapy are not merely collections of methods.

They are traditions.

They have histories, foundational concepts, and assumptions about what a human being is, what a problem consists in, and what counts as help.

A medical tradition may understand suffering through the body. A psychological tradition may emphasise emotions and inner conflict. Social work may direct attention towards relationships, living conditions, and society.

All can contribute important knowledge.

But each tradition also has a limited horizon.

What becomes clear in the language of one profession may disappear in another. A person’s distress may be described as a symptom, a response to trauma, a social adaptation, or an existential crisis.

These descriptions need not exclude one another.

But they shape help in different ways.

The professional must therefore know more than the methods of the profession.

She must also know its history and its pre-understanding.

What has this profession taught me to see?

What does it find more difficult to notice?

Which forms of knowledge receive high status?

Which voices are more easily overlooked?

Such self-reflection does not weaken the profession.

It makes professional practice more responsible.

Institutions Remember

Traditions do not live only in individuals.

They live in institutions.

An institution may continue to reproduce ways of understanding people long after the original justifications have been forgotten. Procedures, forms, and categories carry a history.

The school may perpetuate assumptions about the good pupil. The healthcare system may organise the encounter around illness rather than life. Social services may require people to present themselves through their deficiencies in order to receive help.

No single person needs to intend this.

It is embedded in the way the system is organised.

The institution remembers through its practices.

This makes hermeneutic reflection necessary at the systemic level as well. It is not enough for the individual professional to try to remain open. We must examine which interpretations the organisation has already built into the encounter.

What must a person be called in order to gain access to help?

Which aspects of life must be documented?

What happens to what does not fit the form?

Sometimes a person must present themselves as more helpless, more ill, or more troubled than they experience themselves to be.

Help demands a particular story.

The institution’s pre-understanding then becomes part of the person’s reality.

Understanding Another Culture

Encounters between cultures make pre-understanding visible.

What we experience as natural reveals itself as historically and culturally shaped.

A family may place strong emphasis on collective responsibility. The professional may be concerned with individual self-determination. The family may understand obedience as respect. The helper may see a risk of control.

The conflict cannot necessarily be resolved by saying that all perspectives are equally valid.

Children’s rights must be protected. Violence and coercion must remain open to criticism. Tradition can never serve as a licence for abuse.

But an ethical judgement requires that we understand what we are judging.

Otherwise, we may confuse what is unfamiliar with what is harmful.

The professional must ask what a practice means within the family’s lifeworld, who holds power, who bears the cost, and how the most vulnerable experience the situation.

At the same time, the helper must examine their own tradition.

Why do my values appear natural to me?

Which historical experiences have shaped them?

What do I see clearly, and what might my own culture make more difficult to see?

Hermeneutic openness does not mean moral indifference.

It means that judgement must pass through understanding.

We Also Inherit Silence

Traditions transmit not only words and knowledge.

They also transmit silence.

Families may carry experiences that no one speaks about. Violence, shame, mental illness, poverty, or loss may remain as an invisible background for later generations.

Societies also carry such silences.

Some histories receive monuments and textbooks. Others are pushed aside. Certain groups learn that their experiences do not belong within the public narrative.

What is not told does not necessarily disappear.

It may live on in fear, norms, and relationships.

When people react strongly to something that appears minor, the reaction may have roots in a history the other person does not know. When a family resists public authorities, the mistrust may be shaped by earlier experiences of control or humiliation.

To understand tradition therefore also means listening for what has not been said.

Which history is missing from the room?

Who has been allowed to define the past?

Which experiences exist outside the official narrative?

A horizon does not expand only when new words are added.

It also expands when earlier silence is given language.

The Past Is Not Finished

We often think of the past as something that lies behind us.

Yet the past remains active in the present.

Gadamer uses the concept of historically effected consciousness to describe how inherited interpretations continue to shape us. We do not merely read history. History is already active in the way we read.

This applies both to societies and to individuals.

Earlier experiences may affect what we expect in new relationships. Old institutional practices may survive under new names. Historical differences in power may continue to shape who is heard and believed.

We do not need to be conscious of history in order to be influenced by it.

That is precisely why historical awareness is necessary.

It does not free us from the past.

But it may make us less blind to its effects.

To ask historically is to ask:

How did this become self-evident?

What alternatives existed?

Whose understanding prevailed?

What consequences did this have for those who did not fit?

Such questions can open the present.

What has become through history can also be changed.

Tradition and Freedom

If we always stand within a tradition, where does freedom exist?

Freedom cannot mean stepping entirely outside history. We cannot make ourselves without language, without tradition, or without the influence of others.

But we can relate to what we have inherited.

We can examine it, continue some of it, transform some of it, and reject some of it.

This freedom is not absolute. It always begins with something we did not choose. But it is real.

A person may discover that the family’s story about who they are need not be final. A profession may criticise practices once regarded as self-evident. A society may make room for histories long suppressed.

We do not create ourselves from nothing.

But neither are we merely the result of the past.

Freedom arises in conversation with what has been handed down.

We ask what it means, what it has made possible, and what it has prevented.

In this way, tradition may become something other than a burden.

It may become material for which we take responsibility.

We Also Understand from the Future

Understanding is not shaped only by the past.

It is also directed towards the future.

We see the world through expectations, hopes, and fears. What we believe may happen affects what we notice now.

A professional who expects that a child can develop sees different possibilities from one who regards the problems as permanent. A teacher who believes that a pupil can learn interprets mistakes differently from a teacher who has already given up.

People also understand themselves through the future.

The person who has hope may carry a difficult present differently from someone who sees no way forward.

The horizon does not lie only behind us.

It opens before us.

This gives understanding ethical significance.

The way we interpret a person may expand or restrict that person’s future. When a child is described as hopeless, difficult, or permanently damaged, the interpretation becomes part of the world the child must inhabit.

An understanding may open possibility.

It may also close it.

Seeing Again

We never encounter the world for the first time.

But we can see it again.

There is a difference.

To see again does not mean becoming without history. It means returning to what is familiar with questions that were not previously available.

An adult may understand childhood differently from how the child could. A profession may discover that a practice once called care also contained control. A society may read its own history with attention to voices that were previously absent.

The world is the same.

But the horizon has moved.

This possibility is the basis of learning.

If tradition simply determined us, no change would be possible. If we were entirely free from tradition, we would have no language in which to think change.

We stand between inheritance and possibility.

The task of hermeneutics is not to dissolve this tension.

It is to make us more conscious of it.

The Humble Horizon

The person who knows that the gaze has a history need not cease to judge.

But judgement may become more humble.

We may use knowledge without believing that it reveals everything. We may stand by values without making our own culture the measure of the world. We may criticise traditions while acknowledging that our criticism also has a history.

The humble horizon says:

I see something from here.

What I see may be important and true.

But the place from which I see is not the whole world.

This is not relativism.

It is a condition of responsible truth-seeking.

The person who believes themselves to be entirely without a horizon often makes their own horizon absolute.

The person who knows the limits of their view is more able to move.

The World Is Already Under Way

When we enter a room, something has happened before we arrived.

The people have histories. The words have meanings. The institution has procedures. The relationships contain power and expectations.

We never arrive in an entirely new world.

Yet the encounter may still bring something new.

The other person may show us something tradition has not taught us to see. An old text may ask a question we believed had been settled. An unfamiliar experience may make our own normality visible.

Then understanding begins to move.

Not because we leave history behind.

But because we allow history to encounter something it has not already determined.

We never see the world for the first time.

We see with words others have given us, through experiences we carry, and within horizons we did not entirely choose.

But we can learn to see how we see.

We can examine what we have inherited.

We can listen to what does not fit.

And we can allow the encounter with the world to transform the horizon from which we encounter it.

Perhaps this is what it means to understand:

Not to stand outside history.

But to enter it more responsibly.

Recommended Reading for Further Study

Readers who wish to explore pre-understanding, tradition, horizon, and the historical character of understanding may begin with the following works.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2010). Truth and Method. Continuum.

Gadamer’s principal work on understanding, tradition, historically effected consciousness, and the fusion of horizons. The book shows how all understanding arises from a historical situation that both opens and limits what we are able to see.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2007). The Gadamer Reader: A Bouquet of the Later Writings. Northwestern University Press.

An accessible English-language selection of Gadamer’s writings on language, conversation, history, and understanding. The book is well suited to students and readers who prefer shorter texts to the principal work.

Grondin, J. (2003). The Philosophy of Gadamer. Acumen.

A concise and lucid introduction to Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics. Grondin explains in particular the relationship between understanding, tradition, language, and historical consciousness.

Heidegger, M. (2010). Being and Time. State University of New York Press.

Heidegger’s analysis of human existence as being-in-the-world provides an essential background to Gadamer. Understanding is presented here as a fundamental mode of existence rather than merely a method.

MacIntyre, A. (2007). After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory (3rd ed.). University of Notre Dame Press.

MacIntyre demonstrates how moral concepts and practices can be understood only within historical traditions. The book is particularly relevant to the relationship between tradition, identity, and practical judgement.

Palmer, R. E. (1969). Hermeneutics: Interpretation Theory in Schleiermacher, Dilthey, Heidegger, and Gadamer. Northwestern University Press.

A classic introduction to the development of hermeneutics. The book helps readers see how Gadamer’s understanding of tradition and horizon emerges from earlier hermeneutic thought.

Ricoeur, P. (1981). Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press.

Ricoeur examines how language, action, and society are interpreted within historical contexts. The essays offer an important supplement to Gadamer, particularly in relation to criticism and method.

Taylor, C. (1989). Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity. Harvard University Press.

Taylor explores how modern identity has been shaped by historical, moral, and cultural sources. The book shows how human self-understanding never arises independently of tradition.

Warnke, G. (1987). Gadamer: Hermeneutics, Tradition and Reason. Stanford University Press.

A thorough analysis of the relationship between tradition, reason, and criticism in Gadamer. The book is especially relevant to readers interested in how we may criticise the tradition within which we ourselves stand.

Weinsheimer, J. C. (1985). Gadamer’s Hermeneutics: A Reading of Truth and Method. Yale University Press.

A systematic close reading of Truth and Method. The book is useful for students seeking a deeper understanding of Gadamer’s argument concerning historical consciousness, authority, and the fusion of horizons. 


We never arrive in an entirely new world.


This essay was written in a conversation with OpenAI/ChatGPT.


Vi ser aldri verden for første gang

 

Vi ser aldri verden for første gang

Forforståelse, tradisjon og horisont

Et barn blir født inn i en verden som allerede har navn.

Noen har bestemt hva menneskene rundt barnet heter, hvilke ord som brukes om familien, og hva som regnes som hjem. Noen har gitt dagene navn, delt året inn i høytider og fastsatt når barnet skal sove, spise, begynne på skolen og etter hvert regnes som voksent.

Barnet møter ikke en ufortolket virkelighet.

Det møter et språk, en familie, en historie og et samfunn som allerede har gitt virkeligheten mening.

Før barnet kan stille spørsmål om verden, har verden begynt å svare på hvem barnet er. Det blir omtalt som jente eller gutt, rolig eller urolig, flink eller vanskelig, lik sin mor eller sin far. Det lærer hva voksne gleder seg over, hva de blir sinte for, og hvilke følelser som kan vises.

Slik lærer barnet mer enn ord.

Det lærer hva som er verdt å legge merke til.

Det lærer en verden.

Hans-Georg Gadamers filosofiske hermeneutikk begynner i denne enkle, men vidtrekkende erkjennelsen: Vi møter aldri verden for første gang. Når vi ser, lytter, leser og vurderer, kommer vi alltid fra et sted. Vi bærer med oss et språk vi ikke har skapt, en historie vi ikke har valgt, og forestillinger om sannhet, normalitet og verdi som begynte å forme oss lenge før vi kunne undersøke dem.

Dette betyr ikke at vi er dømt til å tenke slik tidligere generasjoner tenkte.

Men det betyr at ingen refleksjon begynner fra null.

Vi trer alltid inn i en samtale som allerede er i gang.

Verden kommer til oss som mening

Vi møter ikke først en naken virkelighet og legger deretter mening til den.

Verden kommer til oss som meningsfull.

Vi ser ikke bare tre, stein og mur. Vi ser et hjem, en skole, et sykehus eller et fengsel. Vi ser ikke bare en menneskekropp. Vi ser et barn, en fremmed, en pasient, en venn eller en person vi bør være redd for.

Betydningen oppstår ikke bare inne i den enkelte. Den er båret av språk, praksis og historie.

Et hus er et hjem fordi mennesker har levd der, knyttet minner til rommene og skapt forventninger til hva et hjem skal være. En skole er ikke bare en bygning, men en institusjon med ideer om kunnskap, disiplin, utvikling og fremtid. Et kontor i sosialtjenesten er ikke bare et rom med stoler og et bord. Det er et sted der én person ofte har makt til å spørre, vurdere og dokumentere, mens en annen må forklare livet sitt.

Rommet er allerede fortolket før samtalen begynner.

Dette gjelder også de ordene vi bruker.

Når et menneske omtales som klient, pasient, bruker, elev eller innsatt, blir bestemte sider av personen synlige. Andre trer i bakgrunnen. Begrepene er nødvendige. De gjør arbeidet mulig og fordeler ansvar.

Men de gjør også noe med blikket.

Den som blir kalt pasient, blir først synlig gjennom sykdommen. Den som blir klient, blir lest gjennom behovet for hjelp. Den som blir omtalt som risikoutsatt, møter en verden som leter etter fare.

Vi ser aldri bare mennesket.

Vi ser også gjennom de ordene verden har lært oss å bruke.

Før vi fortolker, er vi allerede fortolket

Vi tenker gjerne at fortolkning er noe vi gjør.

Vi leser en tekst, vurderer en handling eller forsøker å forstå et menneske. Vi er den aktive parten, mens verden ligger foran oss som noe som skal tydes.

Gadamer minner oss om at forholdet også går den andre veien.

Før vi fortolker verden, er vi allerede selv blitt fortolket av den.

Familien har gitt mening til oppførselen vår. Skolen har vurdert evnene våre. Samfunnet har plassert oss i kategorier. Religion, politikk og kultur har fortalt oss hvilke liv som regnes som gode, normale og vellykkede.

Noen mennesker vokser opp med fortellingen om at de er sterke. Andre lærer at de er vanskelige, svake eller annerledes. Slike fortellinger blir ikke nødvendigvis stående uimotsagt, men de blir en del av stedet hvorfra mennesket senere ser seg selv og verden.

Vi bærer andres fortolkninger med oss.

Dette blir tydelig når mennesker senere forsøker å frigjøre seg fra dem.

Den som gjennom barndommen ble forstått som lat, kan bruke et helt liv på å bevise sin arbeidsvilje. Den som ble omtalt som overfølsom, kan begynne å tvile på egne reaksjoner. Den som alltid ble sett som sterk, kan få vanskeligheter med å be om hjelp.

Selv opprøret mot fortellingen kan være formet av den.

Vi lever ikke bare i en verden vi fortolker.

Vi lever i fortolkninger som allerede har begynt å leve i oss.

Forforståelsen gjør verden mulig

Forforståelse kan høres ut som en hindring.

Vi tenker at den seriøse forskeren, den dyktige profesjonsutøveren og det rettferdige mennesket burde legge sin forforståelse til side. Først da kan saken vurderes objektivt.

Men en helt forutsetningsløs forståelse er umulig.

Uten forforståelse ville ingenting fremstå som relevant.

En lege ser et mulig sykdomstegn fordi hun allerede kjenner menneskekroppen og bestemte sykdomsforløp. En lærer oppfatter at en elev strever fordi han har erfaring med læring. En historiker forstår betydningen av et brev fordi hun kjenner tiden, språket og konflikten det ble skrevet innenfor.

Også i hverdagen er forforståelsen virksom.

Vi vet omtrent hva som forventes når vi går inn i en kirke, et klasserom eller en rettssal. Vi kjenner kodene for samtalen, selv om de sjelden er skrevet på veggen. Vi senker stemmen noen steder og tar ordet andre steder.

Forforståelsen gjør verden beboelig.

Den gir oss mulighet til å orientere oss uten å undersøke alt fra begynnelsen hver gang.

Men den har også en pris.

Når verden blir for kjent, slutter vi å undre oss over hvorfor den er organisert slik. Det som kunne vært annerledes, fremstår som naturlig. Det historisk skapte oppleves som selvsagt.

Da kan forforståelsen bli usynlig.

Og nettopp det usynlige får ofte størst makt over blikket.

Tradisjonen er mer enn det gamle

Ordet tradisjon leder gjerne tanken mot noe som er bevart fra fortiden.

Vi tenker på høytider, folkemusikk, gamle fortellinger, religiøse ritualer og skikker som overføres fra én generasjon til den neste.

Men hos Gadamer er tradisjon noe langt mer omfattende.

Tradisjonen lever også i det moderne.

Den finnes i skolens oppbygning, profesjonenes språk, lovverkets kategorier og forestillingene om hva et godt liv består i. Den finnes i måten vi organiserer familien, arbeidet og omsorgen på.

Tradisjon er ikke bare noe vi velger å bevare.

Den er den historiske sammenhengen vi allerede står i.

Et samfunn kan legge sterk vekt på selvstendighet. Barn skal tidlig lære å klare seg selv. Unge voksne forventes å flytte hjemmefra. Eldre mennesker ønsker ikke å være til byrde.

Et annet samfunn kan forstå avhengighet annerledes. Familien kan være et livslangt fellesskap, og gjensidig hjelp kan være et moralsk ideal snarere enn et tegn på manglende selvstendighet.

Begge samfunn kan oppleve sine egne ordninger som naturlige.

Men de er historisk formet.

Når mennesker fra disse tradisjonene møtes, handler uenigheten derfor ikke bare om ulike meninger. De kan stå i ulike forståelser av mennesket, familien og ansvaret.

For å forstå konflikten må vi undersøke mer enn handlingene.

Vi må forsøke å forstå den verden handlingene gir mening innenfor.

Tradisjonen som autoritet

Det moderne mennesket er ofte skeptisk til autoritet.

Vi ønsker å tenke selv. Vi vil ikke godta noe bare fordi det er gammelt eller fordi tidligere generasjoner har ment det.

Denne kritiske holdningen har vært avgjørende i kampen mot undertrykkelse, religiøs tvang, diskriminering og autoritære institusjoner.

Men Gadamer utfordrer forestillingen om at all autoritet står i motsetning til fornuft.

Noen ganger anerkjenner vi autoritet fordi vi har grunn til å tro at den andre ser noe vi selv ennå ikke ser. Eleven lytter til læreren. Den uerfarne håndverkeren følger mesteren. Den unge forskeren leser tidligere forskning.

Slik autoritet behøver ikke være blind lydighet.

Den kan være en foreløpig tillit til at noe er verdt å lære.

Tradisjonen kan på samme måte bære innsikt som ikke uten videre kan erstattes av samtidens meninger. Vi arver språk, kunst, institusjoner og erfaringer som tidligere generasjoner har utviklet gjennom lange historiske prosesser.

Men tradisjonens autoritet er aldri endelig.

Det som er overlevert, må kunne undersøkes. Tradisjoner kan inneholde visdom, men også vold, taushet og urett. De kan beskytte fellesskap og samtidig holde mennesker utenfor.

Spørsmålet er derfor ikke om vi skal velge mellom tradisjon og kritikk.

Kritikken oppstår selv innenfor en historisk sammenheng.

Vi bruker overleverte begreper om frihet, likhet og menneskeverd når vi kritiserer det overleverte.

Tradisjonen er ikke bare det vi retter kritikken mot.

Den har også gitt oss språket vi kritiserer med.

Horisonten vi lever innenfor

Gadamer bruker horisonten som et bilde på forståelsen.

Horisonten markerer grensen for det som er synlig fra stedet der vi står. Den er ikke en fast mur. Når vi beveger oss, flytter den seg. Nye landskap trer frem, og det som tidligere virket som hele verden, viser seg å være én utsikt blant flere.

Slik er det også med vår forståelseshorisont.

Den omfatter de spørsmålene vi kan stille, erfaringene vi kan kjenne igjen, og svarene vi er i stand til å forestille oss.

En person som aldri har opplevd krig, kan forstå ordet fred. Men ordet kan få en annen dybde for den som har sett hjemmet bli ødelagt.

En person som alltid har beveget seg fritt, kan mene at en bygning er tilgjengelig. Den som bruker rullestol, ser hindringer den andre ikke har lært å legge merke til.

Den som aldri har stått utenfor fellesskapet, kan oppfatte en sosial sammenkomst som hyggelig. Den som ofte har vært ekskludert, kan lese blikk, pauser og små bevegelser på en annen måte.

Vi befinner oss i den samme verden.

Men verden viser seg ikke likt fra alle steder.

Horisonten bestemmer ikke alt vi kan forstå. Men den former det som først blir synlig.

Forståelse krever derfor bevegelse.

Vi må noen ganger forlate det stedet hvor vår egen utsikt virker selvfølgelig.

Å utvide horisonten

Horisonten utvides ikke bare ved at vi samler mer informasjon.

Vi kan vite mye om andre mennesker og likevel ikke forstå dem.

En profesjonell kan kjenne en persons diagnose, inntekt, familiesituasjon og tidligere tiltak. Men all denne kunnskapen kan fortsatt være organisert innenfor den profesjonelles egen forståelse av hva som er viktig.

Å utvide horisonten krever at noe får utfordre måten kunnskapen er ordnet på.

Den andre personen må kunne vise oss at problemet ikke er det vi trodde. En tekst fra fortiden må kunne stille spørsmål ved samtiden. En fremmed skikk må få tre frem som mer enn et avvik fra vår egen.

Dette innebærer ikke at vi ukritisk overtar den andres horisont.

Det er heller ikke mulig.

Vi kan ikke bli et annet menneske eller tre helt inn i en annen historisk tid. Men vi kan oppdage at vår egen synsrand er begrenset.

Denne oppdagelsen er en form for læring.

Vi ser ikke nødvendigvis mindre klart fordi vår første sikkerhet blir forstyrret.

Vi kan begynne å se mer.

Horisontsammensmeltning

Gadamer beskriver forståelsen som en sammensmeltning av horisonter.

Uttrykket kan gi inntrykk av at forskjeller oppløses og at alle ender i enighet.

Det er ikke poenget.

Når horisonter møtes, oppstår det mulighet for en ny forståelse som ingen av partene fullt ut hadde på forhånd.

Dette kan skje i en god samtale.

To mennesker begynner med ulike syn. Etter hvert oppdager de at uenigheten bygger på forskjellige erfaringer, spørsmål og forestillinger om saken. Kanskje endrer ingen av dem fullstendig mening. Men begge forstår nå spørsmålet på en annen måte.

Horisontsammensmeltningen er ikke en sammensmelting av mennesker.

Den er en utvidelse av saken de forsøker å forstå.

Dette gjelder også når vi leser en gammel tekst. Vi kan ikke gjenskape forfatterens opprinnelige verden fullstendig. Vi leser alltid fra vår egen tid.

Men teksten kan likevel utfordre oss.

Når fortidens spørsmål møter våre egne, kan en ny mening oppstå. Vi forstår teksten på en måte dens første lesere kanskje ikke gjorde, samtidig som teksten gjør vår egen samtid mindre selvfølgelig.

Forståelse er derfor verken ren tilbakevending til fortiden eller bare en moderne bruk av den.

Det er et møte.

Profesjoner bærer tradisjoner

Helsearbeid, sosialt arbeid, undervisning og terapi er ikke bare samlinger av metoder.

De er tradisjoner.

De har historier, grunnbegreper og forestillinger om hva et menneske er, hva et problem består i, og hva som teller som hjelp.

En medisinsk tradisjon kan forstå lidelse gjennom kroppen. En psykologisk tradisjon kan legge vekt på følelser og indre konflikter. Sosialt arbeid kan rette blikket mot relasjoner, levekår og samfunn.

Alle kan bidra med viktig kunnskap.

Men hver tradisjon har også en begrenset horisont.

Det som blir tydelig i ett fags språk, kan forsvinne i et annet. Et menneskes uro kan beskrives som et symptom, en reaksjon på traumer, en sosial tilpasning eller en eksistensiell krise.

Beskrivelsene behøver ikke utelukke hverandre.

Men de former hjelpen på ulike måter.

Den profesjonelle må derfor kjenne mer enn metodene i sitt fag.

Hun må også kjenne fagets historie og forforståelse.

Hva har denne profesjonen lært meg å se?

Hva har den vanskeligere for å få øye på?

Hvilke former for kunnskap får høy status?

Hvilke stemmer blir lettere oversett?

Slik selvrefleksjon svekker ikke profesjonen.

Den gjør fagligheten mer ansvarlig.

Institusjoner husker

Tradisjoner lever ikke bare i enkeltmennesker.

De lever i institusjoner.

En institusjon kan videreføre måter å forstå mennesker på lenge etter at de opprinnelige begrunnelsene er glemt. Rutiner, skjemaer og kategorier bærer en historie.

Skolen kan videreføre forestillinger om den gode eleven. Helsevesenet kan organisere møtet rundt sykdom fremfor liv. Sosialtjenesten kan kreve at mennesker fremstiller seg selv gjennom mangler for å få hjelp.

Ingen enkeltperson behøver å ønske dette.

Det ligger i måten systemet er innrettet på.

Institusjonen husker gjennom praksisen.

Dette gjør hermeneutisk refleksjon nødvendig også på systemnivå. Det er ikke nok at den enkelte profesjonelle prøver å være åpen. Vi må undersøke hvilke fortolkninger organisasjonen allerede har bygget inn i møtet.

Hva må et menneske kalles for å få tilgang til hjelp?

Hvilke sider av livet må dokumenteres?

Hva skjer med det som ikke passer i skjemaet?

Noen ganger blir mennesket nødt til å gjøre seg mer hjelpeløst, sykere eller mer problemfylt enn det opplever seg selv for å være.

Hjelpen krever en bestemt fortelling.

Da blir institusjonens forforståelse en del av menneskets virkelighet.

Å forstå en annen kultur

Møter mellom kulturer gjør forforståelsen synlig.

Det vi oppfatter som naturlig, viser seg å være historisk og kulturelt formet.

En familie kan legge stor vekt på kollektivt ansvar. Den profesjonelle kan være opptatt av individets selvbestemmelse. Familien kan forstå lydighet som respekt. Hjelperen kan se fare for kontroll.

Det er ikke sikkert at konflikten kan løses ved at alle perspektiver får være like gyldige.

Barnets rettigheter må ivaretas. Vold og tvang må kunne kritiseres. Tradisjon er aldri et frikort for overgrep.

Men en etisk vurdering krever at vi forstår det vi vurderer.

Ellers kan vi forveksle det fremmede med det skadelige.

Den profesjonelle må spørre hva en praksis betyr innenfor familiens livsverden, hvem som har makt, hvem som betaler prisen, og hvordan de mest sårbare opplever situasjonen.

Samtidig må hjelperen undersøke sin egen tradisjon.

Hvorfor fremstår mine verdier som naturlige?

Hvilke historiske erfaringer har formet dem?

Hva ser jeg tydelig, og hva kan min egen kultur gjøre vanskeligere å se?

Hermeneutisk åpenhet betyr ikke moralsk likegyldighet.

Den betyr at dommen må gå gjennom forståelsen.

Vi arver også taushet

Tradisjoner overfører ikke bare ord og kunnskap.

De overfører også taushet.

Familier kan bære erfaringer som ingen taler om. Vold, skam, psykisk lidelse, fattigdom eller tap kan ligge som en usynlig bakgrunn for senere generasjoner.

Også samfunn har slike tausheter.

Noen historier får monumenter og lærebøker. Andre skyves til side. Bestemte grupper lærer at deres erfaringer ikke hører hjemme i den offentlige fortellingen.

Det som ikke fortelles, forsvinner ikke nødvendigvis.

Det kan leve videre i frykt, normer og relasjoner.

Når mennesker reagerer sterkt på noe som virker lite, kan reaksjonen ha røtter i en historie den andre ikke kjenner. Når en familie motsetter seg myndigheter, kan mistilliten være formet av tidligere erfaringer med kontroll eller krenkelse.

Å forstå tradisjon betyr derfor også å lytte etter det som ikke er blitt sagt.

Hvilken historie mangler i rommet?

Hvem har fått definere fortiden?

Hvilke erfaringer finnes utenfor den offisielle fortellingen?

En horisont utvides ikke bare når nye ord legges til.

Den utvides også når tidligere taushet får språk.

Fortiden er ikke avsluttet

Vi tenker ofte på fortiden som noe som ligger bak oss.

Men fortiden virker i nåtiden.

Gadamer bruker begrepet virkningshistorie om hvordan overleverte fortolkninger fortsetter å prege oss. Vi leser ikke bare historien. Historien virker allerede i måten vi leser på.

Dette gjelder både samfunn og enkeltmennesker.

Tidligere erfaringer kan påvirke hva vi forventer i nye relasjoner. Gamle institusjonelle praksiser kan leve videre under nye navn. Historiske forskjeller i makt kan fortsette å forme hvem som blir hørt og trodd.

Vi trenger ikke være bevisste på historien for å være preget av den.

Nettopp derfor er historisk bevissthet nødvendig.

Den gjør oss ikke frie fra fortiden.

Men den kan gjøre oss mindre blinde for dens virkning.

Å spørre historisk er å spørre:

Hvordan ble dette selvfølgelig?

Hvilke alternativer fantes?

Hvem vant frem med sin forståelse?

Hvilke konsekvenser fikk det for dem som ikke passet inn?

Slike spørsmål kan åpne nåtiden.

Det som er blitt historisk til, kan også forandres.

Tradisjon og frihet

Dersom vi alltid står i en tradisjon, hvor finnes friheten?

Frihet kan ikke bety at vi trer helt ut av historien. Vi kan ikke gjøre oss språkløse, tradisjonsløse eller upåvirket av andre.

Men vi kan forholde oss til det vi har arvet.

Vi kan undersøke det, videreføre noe, forandre noe og avvise noe.

Denne friheten er ikke absolutt. Den begynner alltid med noe vi ikke selv har valgt. Men den er virkelig.

Et menneske kan oppdage at familiens fortelling om hvem det er, ikke behøver å være endelig. En profesjon kan kritisere praksiser som tidligere ble ansett som selvsagte. Et samfunn kan gi plass til historier som lenge ble undertrykt.

Vi skaper ikke oss selv fra ingenting.

Men vi er heller ikke bare resultatet av fortiden.

Friheten oppstår i samtalen med det overleverte.

Vi spør hva det betyr, hva det har gjort mulig, og hva det har hindret.

Slik kan tradisjonen bli noe annet enn en byrde.

Den kan bli et materiale vi tar ansvar for.

Vi forstår fra fremtiden også

Forståelse er ikke bare formet av fortiden.

Den er også rettet mot fremtiden.

Vi ser verden gjennom forventninger, håp og frykt. Det vi tror kan skje, påvirker det vi legger merke til nå.

En profesjonell som forventer at et barn kan utvikle seg, ser andre muligheter enn den som oppfatter problemene som varige. En lærer som tror at eleven kan lære, tolker feil annerledes enn en lærer som allerede har gitt opp.

Også mennesker forstår seg selv gjennom fremtiden.

Den som har et håp, kan bære en vanskelig nåtid annerledes enn den som ikke ser noen vei videre.

Horisonten ligger ikke bare bak oss.

Den åpner seg foran oss.

Dette gir forståelsen en etisk betydning.

Måten vi fortolker et menneske på, kan utvide eller innsnevre dets fremtid. Når et barn omtales som håpløst, vanskelig eller varig skadet, blir fortolkningen en del av verden barnet må leve i.

En forståelse kan åpne mulighet.

Den kan også lukke den.

Å se på nytt

Vi møter aldri verden for første gang.

Men vi kan se den på nytt.

Det er forskjell.

Å se på nytt betyr ikke å bli historieløs. Det betyr å vende tilbake til det kjente med spørsmål som ikke var tilgjengelige tidligere.

En voksen kan forstå sin barndom annerledes enn barnet kunne. En profesjon kan oppdage at en praksis som ble kalt omsorg, også rommet kontroll. Et samfunn kan lese sin egen historie med oppmerksomhet for stemmer som tidligere manglet.

Verden er den samme.

Men horisonten har flyttet seg.

Denne muligheten er grunnlaget for læring.

Dersom tradisjon bare bestemte oss, ville ingen forandring være mulig. Dersom vi var helt frie fra tradisjonen, ville vi ikke ha noe språk å tenke forandringen med.

Vi står mellom arv og mulighet.

Hermeneutikkens oppgave er ikke å løse denne spenningen.

Den er å gjøre oss mer bevisste på den.

Den ydmyke horisonten

Den som vet at blikket har en historie, trenger ikke slutte å dømme.

Men dommen kan bli mer ydmyk.

Vi kan bruke kunnskapen uten å tro at den viser alt. Vi kan stå for verdier uten å gjøre vår egen kultur til verdens målestokk. Vi kan kritisere tradisjoner og samtidig erkjenne at også vår kritikk har en historie.

Den ydmyke horisonten sier:

Jeg ser noe herfra.

Det jeg ser, kan være viktig og sant.

Men stedet jeg ser fra, er ikke hele verden.

Dette er ikke relativisme.

Det er en forutsetning for ansvarlig sannhetssøken.

Den som tror seg helt uten horisont, gjør ofte sin egen horisont absolutt.

Den som kjenner grensene for sitt utsyn, kan lettere bevege seg.

Verden er allerede i gang

Når vi trer inn i et rom, har noe skjedd før vi kom.

Menneskene har historier. Ordene har betydninger. Institusjonen har rutiner. Relasjonene har makt og forventninger.

Vi kommer aldri til en helt ny verden.

Men møtet kan likevel bringe noe nytt.

Den andre kan vise oss noe tradisjonen ikke har lært oss å se. En gammel tekst kan stille et spørsmål vi trodde var avsluttet. En fremmed erfaring kan gjøre vår egen normalitet synlig.

Da begynner forståelsen å bevege seg.

Ikke fordi vi legger historien bak oss.

Men fordi vi lar historien møte noe den ikke allerede har bestemt.

Vi ser aldri verden for første gang.

Vi ser med ord andre har gitt oss, gjennom erfaringer vi bærer, og innenfor horisonter vi ikke fullt ut har valgt.

Men vi kan lære å se hvordan vi ser.

Vi kan undersøke det vi har arvet.

Vi kan lytte til det som ikke passer inn.

Og vi kan la møtet med verden forandre den horisonten vi møter den fra.

Kanskje er det dette det vil si å forstå:

Ikke å stå utenfor historien.

Men å tre mer ansvarlig inn i den.

Anbefalt litteratur for videre lesning

Den som ønsker å fordype seg i forforståelse, tradisjon, horisont og forståelsens historiske karakter, kan begynne med følgende arbeider.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2010). Sannhet og metode: Grunntrekk i en filosofisk hermeneutikk. Pax Forlag.

Gadamers hovedverk om forståelse, tradisjon, virkningshistorie og horisontsammensmeltning. Boken viser hvordan all forståelse springer ut av en historisk situasjon som både åpner og begrenser det vi kan se.

Gadamer, H.-G. (2003). Forståelsens filosofi: Utvalgte hermeneutiske skrifter. Cappelen Akademisk Forlag.

Et tilgjengelig norsk utvalg av Gadamers tekster om språk, samtale, historie og forståelse. Boken passer godt som inngang for studenter og andre som ønsker kortere tekster enn hovedverket.

Grondin, J. (2003). The Philosophy of Gadamer. Acumen.

En konsentrert og tydelig innføring i Gadamers filosofiske hermeneutikk. Grondin forklarer særlig forholdet mellom forståelse, tradisjon, språk og historisk bevissthet.

Heidegger, M. (2007). Væren og tid. Pax Forlag.

Heideggers analyse av mennesket som væren-i-verden danner en avgjørende bakgrunn for Gadamer. Her blir forståelse betraktet som en grunnleggende eksistensform, ikke bare som en metode.

MacIntyre, A. (2007). After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory (3rd ed.). University of Notre Dame Press.

MacIntyre viser hvordan moralske begreper og praksiser bare kan forstås innenfor historiske tradisjoner. Boken er særlig relevant for forholdet mellom tradisjon, identitet og praktisk dømmekraft.

Palmer, R. E. (1969). Hermeneutics: Interpretation Theory in Schleiermacher, Dilthey, Heidegger, and Gadamer. Northwestern University Press.

En klassisk innføring i hermeneutikkens utvikling. Boken hjelper leseren til å se hvordan Gadamers forståelse av tradisjon og horisont vokser frem fra tidligere hermeneutisk tenkning.

Ricoeur, P. (1981). Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press.

Ricoeur undersøker hvordan språk, handling og samfunn fortolkes innenfor historiske sammenhenger. Tekstene gir et viktig supplement til Gadamer, særlig i spørsmål om kritikk og metode.

Taylor, C. (1989). Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity. Harvard University Press.

Taylor utforsker hvordan moderne identitet er formet av historiske, moralske og kulturelle kilder. Boken viser hvordan menneskers selvforståelse aldri oppstår uavhengig av tradisjon.

Warnke, G. (1987). Gadamer: Hermeneutics, Tradition and Reason. Stanford University Press.

En grundig analyse av forholdet mellom tradisjon, fornuft og kritikk hos Gadamer. Boken er særlig relevant for lesere som spør hvordan vi kan kritisere den tradisjonen vi selv står i.

Weinsheimer, J. C. (1985). Gadamer’s Hermeneutics: A Reading of Truth and Method. Yale University Press.

En systematisk nærlesning av Truth and Method. Boken er nyttig for studenter som ønsker å forstå Gadamers argumentasjon om historisk bevissthet, autoritet og horisontsammensmeltning.


Vi kommer aldri til en helt ny verden.


Essayet er skrevet i en samtale med OpenAI/ChatGPT


I Am Life That Wills to Live

 

I Am Life That Wills to Live

Albert Schweitzer, Reverence, and Responsibility for All Living Things

Albert Schweitzer is one of those historical figures who can easily be made too simple. He may be portrayed as the great humanitarian who left behind a brilliant academic and musical career in Europe to treat sick people in Africa. He may be placed among the moral heroes of the twentieth century: the theologian, organist, physician, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who devoted his life to others.

But such a narrative may also conceal him.

It turns a complex human being into a symbol. It may lead us to admire his actions without examining the thought behind them. And it may cause us to overlook the fact that Schweitzer, too, was shaped by the European and colonial assumptions of his time.

Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965). Photo from Wikipedia.

From the perspective of practical philosophy, the decisive question is not whether Albert Schweitzer was a perfect moral hero. No human being is. What is interesting is that he attempted to answer one of philosophy’s most fundamental questions:

How should a human being live when he is himself part of a life that creates, sustains, harms, and destroys other life?

Schweitzer’s answer was the expression reverence for life.

Behind these simple words lies a demanding ethic. It does not promise innocence. It does not offer a secure method capable of resolving every moral conflict. Instead, it asks us to become attentive to the life around us and to take responsibility for the power we possess over it.

This is what makes Albert Schweitzer a practical philosopher. He did not merely wish to describe the good. He wanted to find a way of living it.

A Life Across Boundaries

Albert Schweitzer was born in 1875 in Kaysersberg in Alsace, a region that shifted between German and French rule during his lifetime. He grew up in a pastor’s family, studied philosophy and theology, and became known at an early age as a scholar, pastor, organist, and interpreter of Johann Sebastian Bach.

He could have continued a respected academic and musical life in Europe. Instead, at the age of thirty, he began to study medicine. In 1913, he travelled with his wife, Hélène Bresslau, to Lambaréné in what was then French Equatorial Africa, now Gabon, where he established a hospital.

He did not, however, abandon music, philosophy, or theology. He continued to write and give concerts, partly to finance the work in Lambaréné. What was distinctive about his life was not that he replaced thought with action, but that he attempted to hold the two together.

Schweitzer did not wish to be one person at the university and another at the hospital. The theologian, musician, philosopher, and physician had to belong to the same life.

He received the Nobel Peace Prize for 1952. The award was announced in 1953, and the following year he delivered his Nobel lecture in the University Aula in Oslo. He used the prize money to establish a ward for people with leprosy at the hospital in Lambaréné. He later spoke publicly against nuclear testing and radioactive fallout.

Yet it was not primarily these major actions that made him a practical philosopher. What mattered was the question that connected them:

What does life require of me when I discover that others, too, wish to live?

When Civilisation Loses Its Ethical Direction

Schweitzer’s philosophy grew out of a profound concern about the development of European civilisation.

Europe had made immense scientific, technological, and economic progress. Human beings could control natural forces, build advanced machines, organise large societies, and produce knowledge on a scale earlier generations could scarcely have imagined.

But moral development had not necessarily kept pace.

The First World War demonstrated that a highly educated and technologically advanced civilisation could also organise destruction on an industrial scale. Science, administration, and technology did not guarantee humanity. They could just as easily be placed in the service of violence.

For Schweitzer, civilisation therefore meant more than material progress. A society is not truly civilised merely because it masters advanced technology. Civilisation requires human beings to develop an ethical attitude towards life.

This distinction remains essential.

We are capable of more and more. But the question is whether we are becoming wiser at the same speed.

Technical power and moral maturity are not the same. An invention may be impressive without being good. An action may be possible without being defensible. A society may be efficient and still be inhumane.

Schweitzer’s cultural criticism therefore begins with a simple but uncomfortable insight:

Human power has grown more quickly than the sense of responsibility accompanying it.

When this happens, civilisation becomes dangerous. It may appear advanced on the surface while being ethically impoverished within.

The Elementary Experience

Schweitzer searched for an ethical foundation that did not depend on a particular religion, nation, or philosophical school. He wanted an elementary ethic that could be understood by any person who took his own experience seriously.

During a journey on the Ogooué River in 1915, he found the formulation that would later become central to his thought:

I am life that wills to live, in the midst of life that wills to live.

The sentence does not begin with a theory. It begins with experience.

I experience myself as alive. I know within myself a desire to continue, to avoid pain, to develop, to protect what I love, and to preserve my own life.

But when I look around, I discover that this will does not exist in me alone. Other people also seek safety and fulfilment. The animal withdraws from pain. The bird builds its nest. The tree reaches towards the light. Every living being, in its own way, moves towards continued life.

Ethics arises when I no longer regard my own will to live as the only one that matters.

I wish to live. But the other also wishes to live.

My freedom therefore encounters a boundary. Other life is not merely material for my purposes. It carries its own striving and its own value.

This does not mean that all forms of life think, feel, or possess consciousness in the same way. Schweitzer did not deny the differences between human beings, animals, and plants. But he rejected the assumption that human similarity should automatically determine the value of other life.

We do not fully know what another living being means to itself or to the greater web of life.

We should therefore approach it with restraint.

From the Will to Live to Responsibility

Schweitzer’s discussion of the will to live has similarities with the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer viewed the world as the expression of a blind and restless will that constantly produces new needs, conflicts, and suffering. Because the will is never finally satisfied, life is fundamentally marked by unrest.

Schweitzer shared the insight into life’s conflict and suffering. Nature is not only harmony. Life consumes life. Animals hunt one another. Disease breaks down the body. Human beings compete, wound, and kill.

But Schweitzer did not draw the same conclusion as Schopenhauer.

The aim was not to turn away from the will to live, but to transform it ethically. My own will to live must be expanded through the recognition of the same will in others.

The transition may be expressed in this way:

I wish to live.

You also wish to live.

Therefore, I cannot relate to your life as though only my own life mattered.

This is where responsibility begins.

The transition does not occur automatically. Human beings may choose to close themselves within their own will to live. They may use power to advance their own lives at the expense of others. They may make strength, wealth, or pleasure the highest value.

Reverence for life therefore requires an inner expansion. Human beings must learn to allow other forms of life to enter their moral attention.

Ethics begins when the life of the other is no longer a matter of indifference to me.

What Does Reverence Mean?

The word reverence may sound old-fashioned. It may be associated with submission, religious solemnity, or respect for authority.

For Schweitzer, it means something different.

Reverence is the pause that arises when I encounter something I have no right to treat arbitrarily. I stop because the life before me does not belong entirely to me. It possesses a meaning that exceeds its usefulness.

Reverence is therefore more than a feeling. It is an attitude that affects the way I act.

It says:

Do not harm without reason.

Do not destroy what you can preserve.

Assist life when you are able.

Limit harm when it cannot be avoided.

Notice even the weak, overlooked, and apparently insignificant forms of life.

Schweitzer described the good as that which preserves, promotes, and develops life. Evil is that which restricts, harms, and destroys life.

This may sound like a simple rule. In reality, however, it opens a difficult moral landscape.

What does it mean to preserve life when one life can be saved only through an intervention in another? Should all lives always be given equal weight? How are we to choose when important interests conflict?

Schweitzer’s ethics does not remove these questions. It makes them more visible.

A Way of Life, Not a Complete Rulebook

Reverence for life cannot function as a mechanical rule that always produces one correct answer. Life is too complex.

A physician may need to inflict pain in order to heal. A society must cultivate land in order to produce food. Human beings must protect themselves against bacteria, parasites, and dangerous animals. Conservation may require certain species to be limited in order to preserve an entire ecosystem.

Schweitzer’s ethics therefore cannot tell us exactly what to do in every situation.

It tells us how we should enter the situation.

We should not approach it with indifference. We should not pretend that harm does not exist. We should ask whether it is necessary, whether it can be limited, and whether other possibilities are available.

At this point, Schweitzer approaches practical wisdom, what Aristotle called phronesis. Ethical action requires more than knowledge of general principles. It requires judgement in the particular situation.

But Schweitzer expands the field of responsibility. Practical wisdom concerns not only how human beings should live well together. It also concerns our relationship with all living things.

The philosopher Mike W. Martin has interpreted reverence for life as an overarching virtue, an “umbrella virtue” that brings together several moral qualities: authenticity, love, compassion, gratitude, justice, and a commitment to peace.

Reverence is not one isolated action. It is a form of character.

It is shaped through the many small choices in which a person either protects life or becomes hardened towards it.

An Ethic Without Innocence

The most demanding aspect of Schweitzer’s philosophy is the recognition that human beings can never live without causing harm.

We must eat. We must defend ourselves. We must intervene in nature. Even when we attempt to do good, our actions may have consequences we did not foresee.

We can therefore never achieve complete moral purity.

This makes Schweitzer’s ethic a tragic ethic.

The tragic does not consist only in the fact that people sometimes choose evil. It also lies in the fact that we may be forced to choose between values that all matter. Sometimes there is no solution without loss.

A person seeking moral innocence may attempt to close his eyes to this. Certain forms of life may be defined as unimportant, making the harm invisible. Or rules may be followed so rigidly that responsibility for the consequences no longer has to be felt.

Schweitzer does not permit this escape.

When we must harm life, we should recognise that harm is taking place. Necessity does not make the act morally insignificant. It does not free us from asking whether we could have acted differently.

But this does not mean that the human being should be paralysed by guilt.

There is a difference between guilt that makes us incapable of acting and responsibility that makes us more careful. Schweitzer’s aim was not for us to carry the suffering of the world as an unbearable personal accusation. His aim was that we should not become unfeeling.

His ethic may be summarised in this way:

We cannot live without causing harm. But we can live without becoming indifferent to the harm we cause.

This may be his most important contribution to practical philosophy.

Ethical Mysticism

Schweitzer was not only a moral philosopher. He was also a religious thinker with a strong mystical dimension.

Mysticism may be understood as the experience of being connected to a greater reality. Yet mysticism has often been accused of drawing human beings away from the world. The person who seeks union with the divine or with the whole of existence may come to regard concrete suffering as less important.

Schweitzer sought another form of mysticism.

He called it ethical mysticism.

Here, connection with life does not become a reason to withdraw. It becomes a reason to engage. When human beings discover that they belong to a larger web of life, they become more, not less, responsible for the living world.

Inner experience must therefore lead to outward action.

Silence should sharpen attention.

Meditation should deepen compassion.

Prayer should not merely offer comfort but make the human being more receptive to the suffering of others.

Ethical mysticism unites two movements that are often separated. It turns inward towards reflection and outward towards service.

Without the inward movement, action may become restless, self-righteous, or driven by the need to be the person who rescues others. Without the outward movement, spirituality may become self-absorbed and detached from the world.

Schweitzer attempted to hold the two together.

The inner life should give action direction. Action should test whether the inner life is true.

From Philosophy to the Hospital

The hospital in Lambaréné became the most visible expression of Schweitzer’s attempt to translate philosophy into practice.

He did not travel there as a young adventurer without other opportunities. He was already a recognised scholar and musician. The decision to study medicine therefore required a major reorientation of his life.

Yet it would be misleading to say that he simply sacrificed his earlier career. He also used his academic and musical position to support the work. Concerts, books, and public recognition helped finance the hospital.

Lambaréné thus became a place where the different sides of his life came together.

Nevertheless, the hospital should not be presented as simple proof that his philosophy was true. Good actions do not necessarily make every aspect of a person’s thought good. Even those who wish to help may exercise power in ways that violate the people the help is intended to serve.

Practical philosophy must therefore ask not only whether Schweitzer helped people. It must also ask how he understood the people he helped and how power was distributed within the work.

The Problem of the Heroic Narrative

In Europe and North America, Schweitzer was portrayed as an almost saintly figure: the white doctor who had left the comforts of civilisation to help people in Africa.

This narrative attracted attention and financial support. But it was also shaped by the colonial gaze.

Africa was easily presented as a passive setting for European goodness. Local people became background figures in the story of the great European helper.

More recent historical research has shown that Schweitzer’s relationship with Africa was more complex and problematic than the traditional heroic narrative suggests. He worked in Gabon for much of his life but did not learn the local languages and showed limited interest in the cultures among which he lived. The hospital remained strongly connected to his personal leadership and developed a clearly hierarchical structure.

His descriptions of Africans and his organisation of the work in Lambaréné were also marked by paternalistic assumptions from the colonial era. Even when he spoke about human brotherhood, the relationship could be presented as one between an older European brother and a younger African brother in need of guidance.

This must be understood within its historical context, but it cannot therefore be excused or treated as insignificant.

It concerns the credibility of his ethic itself.

How can a person proclaim that all life has value while at the same time relating to other human beings through a hierarchical and paternalistic perspective?

Here Schweitzer’s philosophy must be turned critically against Schweitzer himself.

When Ethics Tests Its Own Founder

The fact that Schweitzer did not always live fully in accordance with his own ethic does not necessarily make the ethic worthless. But it shows that moral insight does not automatically free a person from the prejudices of his time or from the power accompanying the role of helper.

This is an important point in practical philosophy.

We may understand something true and still act inconsistently.

We may wish to help and at the same time make the other person dependent.

We may speak about equality while retaining the right to define what the other needs.

We may do much good and still remain blind to how our own position shapes the encounter.

Schweitzer’s paternalistic blind spots therefore demonstrate why good intentions are not sufficient. Help must also involve listening, participation, and respect for the other person’s knowledge and self-determination.

Here reverence for life faces its own test.

To show reverence is not merely to wish to preserve another person’s biological life. It also means meeting the other as a subject with language, history, dignity, and the right to participate in decisions concerning his or her own life.

A critical reading of Schweitzer therefore need not either turn him into a saint or dismiss everything for which he stood. It may hold together two truths:

He carried out extensive work for sick people and developed a radical ethic concerning all living things.

At the same time, he was shaped by colonial and paternalistic assumptions that came into conflict with that ethic.

Practical philosophy begins precisely where we are able to endure such complexity.

The Moral Danger of Helping

Schweitzer’s life raises a question that extends far beyond Lambaréné:

What happens to a person when he takes on the role of helper?

The helper often gains power. The other person needs something: treatment, protection, money, knowledge, or access to institutions. The helper may then begin to believe that the good intention also gives him the right to decide.

In this way, care may become paternalistic.

It says: I know what is best for you.

At times, a professional must accept responsibility and act. But when the other person’s voice systematically becomes less important than the helper’s plans, dignity is placed at risk.

Schweitzer’s ethic can correct this, provided that reverence is allowed to include more than the physical preservation of life.

Reverence then begins with a pause:

Who is this person?

What does the situation mean to the other?

What does the other see that I do not see?

How can help be given without making the other person smaller?

This is the practical philosophy of the art of helping. Good is not done only for the other, but, as far as possible, together with the other.

Peace and Technological Power

Schweitzer’s ethic also led him into opposition to nuclear testing. In 1957, he addressed an international audience by radio and warned against radioactive fallout and the threat that the nuclear age posed to life.

This was a natural consequence of reverence for life.

Nuclear weapons revealed in an extreme form the imbalance he had warned against: human beings had developed a technical power capable of threatening entire societies, future generations, and the natural foundations of life. Moral judgement had not developed at the same pace as the capacity for destruction.

The question was no longer merely whether one human being could harm another. A political decision could affect people far away, animals, plants, and lives not yet born.

Schweitzer’s ethic therefore also became an ethic of the future.

We are responsible not only for the life immediately before us, but also for consequences extending beyond our own time and field of vision.

This makes him relevant to the contemporary climate crisis, the loss of biodiversity, and technological development.

We still live in a culture in which the ability to transform the world develops more quickly than our ability to comprehend the consequences.

Reverence in the Technological Age

Today, human beings intervene in life in ways Schweitzer could only partly have imagined.

We can alter genes, mass-produce animals, manipulate ecosystems, and develop technological systems that affect work, health, politics, and human relationships. Artificial intelligence can analyse, recommend, choose, and sort on a scale that exceeds the individual person’s understanding.

Schweitzer’s philosophy provides no ready-made answers to these questions. But it offers a moral test.

The question is not only:

What can technology do?

We must also ask:

Which forms of life are being promoted?

Who carries the risk?

Who is overlooked?

What is being harmed, and is the harm necessary?

Who has the power to decide?

Which consequences are transferred to human beings, animals, nature, or future generations?

This is a contemporary continuation of reverence for life.

It does not require us to reject technology. Schweitzer was himself a physician and made use of the medical knowledge of his time. But technology must remain subject to ethical evaluation concerning the life into which it intervenes.

Possibility is not the same as permission.

Efficiency is not the same as goodness.

Progress is not simply a question of what becomes new, but of which lives are given better opportunities to flourish.

The Human Being Is More Than a Consumer

Schweitzer’s cultural criticism also applies to a modern form of life in which human beings are assessed according to production, consumption, and economic usefulness.

When everything is measured by efficiency, the human being also risks becoming a means. The worker becomes a resource. The patient becomes a treatment pathway. The elderly person becomes a cost. Nature becomes raw material. The animal becomes a unit of production.

Reverence for life protests against such reduction.

It does not claim that usefulness is irrelevant. Societies must distribute resources, produce food, and organise services. But usefulness cannot be the only language we use when speaking about life.

A human being has value even when he or she does not produce.

An animal has significance even when it is of no use to us.

A forest is more than the quantity of timber it can provide.

A life exceeds the calculation that attempts to measure it.

This does not mean that all practical considerations disappear. It means that calculation must pause before something it cannot fully price.

This is where reverence begins.

Nearness and Infinite Responsibility

Schweitzer’s ethic may seem overwhelming. If all living things claim our attention, responsibility appears limitless.

No one can help every person, protect every animal, or prevent every form of destruction. The person who attempts to carry the suffering of the whole world alone will collapse.

How, then, can such an ethic be lived?

The answer must begin with nearness.

I cannot do everything, but I can do something where life actually meets me. I can act carefully in my choices. I can refrain from unnecessary harm. I can help a person, protect an animal, preserve a natural area, or support institutions that work for the conditions of life.

Responsibility is not the same as omnipotence.

It is rather the recognition that my limitations do not free me from doing what is genuinely possible.

Schweitzer himself sought a concrete form of service. Lambaréné was not a solution to all disease or all injustice. It was one place where he could act.

But nearness must not become an excuse for ignoring what is distant. Our actions belong to economic and technological systems that affect people and nature far beyond our field of vision.

Practical philosophy must therefore hold together two movements:

Concrete responsibility for the life before us.

Critical attention to the larger systems in which we participate.

From Schweitzer to Lönnebo

Martin Lönnebo devoted his 1964 doctoral dissertation to Albert Schweitzer’s ethical-religious ideal. This was no accident.

He found in Schweitzer a thinker who refused to separate faith from life. Mysticism had to become action. Spirituality had to lead to care. Philosophy had to have consequences for the way a person used his abilities and encountered the living world.

Lönnebo carried forward three fundamental impulses:

Thought and action must belong together.

Life must be met with reverence.

The inner life must lead the human being back into the world with greater responsibility.

But Lönnebo gave this inheritance a distinctively Nordic, ecclesiastical, and pastoral form. In his work, ethical mysticism became connected with silence, nature, prayer, mercy, and eventually the pearls of the Pearls of Life.

Schweitzer developed a philosophy of reverence for life.

Lönnebo made a related attitude into a practice that people could hold in their hands.

In this way, Schweitzer’s practical philosophy acquired a Nordic afterlife.

The Ethic of the Imperfect Human Being

Schweitzer is most interesting when we do not make him faultless.

His life reveals both the power and the limits of ethical ideals. He developed a radical understanding of the value of all living things. At the same time, his descriptions of Africans and the organisation of the work in Lambaréné were marked by paternalistic assumptions from the colonial era.

This does not make him irrelevant.

It makes him human.

And precisely for that reason, his life can teach us something that a purely heroic narrative cannot:

No moral insight makes us complete.

We must repeatedly allow our own principles to cast a critical light upon our actions, institutions, and blind spots.

Ethics is not something we possess once and for all. It is a task to which we must return.

Reverence for life must therefore also involve humility. I may be mistaken. My help may cause harm. My good intentions may conceal power. The other person may see something that I do not see.

Such humility does not weaken action. It makes action more responsible.

Living Without Indifference

Albert Schweitzer’s practical philosophy provides no formula for a life without guilt, loss, or conflict.

It does not always tell us which life should be given priority or how every concern should be weighed. It cannot remove the tragic condition that life exists through interventions into other life.

But it denies us the easiest way out: indifference.

We cannot do everything.

We cannot save everyone.

We cannot live without leaving traces.

But we can try to see.

We can ask before we intervene.

We can limit harm.

We can protect what is vulnerable.

We can allow the lives of others to matter in our own decisions.

Schweitzer did not ask the human being to withdraw from life in order to preserve moral purity. He asked us to enter life with open eyes.

Reverence for life is therefore not primarily a doctrine of innocence. It is a practice of wakefulness.

It reminds us that even the smallest form of life stands before us with its silent claim:

Let me live if you can.

Spare me when you must act.

And never forget that you, too, live because other life sustains you.


References

Goodin, D. K. (2013). The new rationalism: Albert Schweitzer’s philosophy of reverence for life. McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Harris, R. (2016). Schweitzer and Africa. The Historical Journal, 59(4), 1107–1132.

Kasten, J. (2006). Albert Schweitzer: His experience and example. Virtual Mentor, 8(12), 859–862.

Lönnebo, M. (1964). Albert Schweitzers etisk-religiösa ideal. Diakonistyrelsens bokförlag.

Martin, M. W. (2007). Albert Schweitzer’s reverence for life: Ethical idealism and self-realization. Ashgate.

Schweitzer, A. (1923). Civilization and ethics (J. Naish, Trans.). A. & C. Black.

Schweitzer, A. (1933). Out of my life and thought: An autobiography (C. T. Campion, Trans.). Henry Holt and Company.

Schweitzer, A. (1969). Reverence for life. Harper & Row.

The Nobel Prize. (n.d.). Albert Schweitzer – Facts.


Schweitzer did not ask the human being to withdraw from life in order to preserve moral purity. 
He asked us to enter life with open eyes.


Author’s Note

This essay reads Albert Schweitzer as a practical philosopher, with particular emphasis on his ethic of reverence for life, his cultural criticism, and the relationship between mysticism and action. At the same time, the colonial and paternalistic dimensions of the work in Lambaréné have been included. This is necessary in order to avoid an uncritical heroic narrative and to test Schweitzer’s life against his own ethical ideal. The essay draws particularly on Schweitzer’s Civilization and Ethics and Out of My Life and Thought, as well as more recent philosophical and historical interpretations. OpenAI/ChatGPT was used as a dialogue partner in the development of the text.