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THE LIBRARY
of
VICTORIA UNIVERSITY
Toronto 5, Caimda
SIR JOHN LUBBOCK S
HUNDRED BOOKS
BENEDICT DE SPINOZA
TRACTATTJS THEOLOGTCO-POLTTieuS,
TKACTATUS POLITICUS
inte.d Inj permi^ mn. of Gcunjf J><!/ ami tinn* fr<nn
"
fur "Sir
BENEDICT DE SPINOZA
TRACTATUS THEOLOaiCO-POLITICUS,
TRACTATUS POLITICUS
INTRODUCTION
BY
R. H. M. ELWES
APR I 4
their gradually
Original unpopularity of Spinoza s writings,
England .......
increasing influence in Germany, France, Holland, and
3
Preface
Origin and consequences of superstition 3
Causes that have led the author to write G
Course of his investigation 8
For what readers the treatise is designed. Submission of
author to the rulers of his country 11
Chap. I. Of Prophecy 13
Definition of prophecy 13
Distinction between revelation to Moses and to the other
15
prophets
Between Christ and all other recipients of revelation . . 1 U
Spirit
The different senses in which things may be referred to God. 20
Different senses of "Spirit of God"
Prophets perceived revelation by imagination . ... 22
24
CONTENTS.
PACK
Chap. II. Of Prophets "27
the individual 30
Answer to
..........
Explanation of apparent discrepancy of the Epistle to the
Romans
the arguments for the eternal election of the Jews.
53
C4
.........
The existence of the latter not inconsistent with the former
class ot laws
Divine law a kind of law founded on human dec-roe called :
57
Cliap. V. Of the
Cfrrnionial Law
...*..
Testimony of the Scriptures in favour of reason and the
...... G5
09
Ceremonial law of the Old Testament no part of the Divine
universal law, but partial and
temporary. Testimony of
the prophets themselves to this 69
Testimony of the New Testament 7i>
98
Chap. VII. Of the Interpretation of Scripture .
Refuted . .116
Traditions of the Pharisees and the Papists rejected . .118
authorship of the Pentateuch, and the
other
Chap. VIII. Of the
historical books of the Old Testament 120
The Pentateuch not written by Moses 120
His actual writings distinct 124
Traces of late authorship in the other historical books . . 127
All the historical books the work of one man .. .129
130
Probably Ezra
Who compiled first the book of Deuteronomy . 13i
And then a history, distinguishing the books by the names of
their subjects 132
Philosophy ....
Foundations of Faith, which is once for all
.
*
.
jo-;
182
The only test of faith obedience and good works . . . Ib4
As different men are disposed to obedience
by different
opinions,
doctrines
Fundamental
.....
universal faith can contain
distinction
only the simplest
.
2()0
>u ()
This principle applies to mankind in the state
of Nature 20]
low a transition from this state to a civil
Subjects not slaves
state
... is possible 20 J
oOG
Of alliance
Uftrvuson
....
Definition of private civil
right and wrong . ,~
2 8
-
In what sense
sovereigns are bourn! hv Divine law 2
^vu government not inconsistent with reliion . . ~>
i
Sovereign Power.
th>
wku*\
why *
OJ
could
l A 2n U hj tJ r Ucocratic Snvblie
hardly have continued without Di*scn*ivn
fell, and
issension . 214
CONTENTS.
PAGE
The absolute theory of
Sovereignty ideal No one can iu
fact transfer all his
rights to the Sovereign power. Evi
dence of this ,214
The greatest danger in all States from within, not without
216 .
Changed a
first to
pure democratic 21 J
Theocracy . . .
....
. . ,221
224
. .
228
priesthood 232
Chap. XVIir. From the Commonwealth of the Hebrews and their
History certain Lessons are deduced . . . .237.
....
. . 245
246
24!)
Position of the Apostles exceptional 250
Why Christian States, unlike the Hebrew, suffer from dis
putes between the civil and ecclesiastical powers . . 254
Absolute power in things spiritual of modern rulers . . 256
Chap. XX. That in a Free State every man may Think what
he Likes, and Say what he Thinks 257
The mind not subject to State authority . . . ,257
Therefore in general language should not be . . . . 258
A man who disapproving of a law, submits his adverse opinion
to the judgment of the authorities, while
acting in accor
dance with the law, deserves well of the State . . . 259
Thatliberty of opinion is beneficial, shown from the history
Amsterdam
of 264
Danger to the State of withholding it. Submission of the
Author to the judgment of his country s rulers . . 265
CONTENTS.
PAGE
AUTHOR S NOTES TO THE TREATISE 267
A. POLITICAL TREATISE 279
Extract from the Preface to Opera Posthunia . . .281
Contents 283
287
Chap. I. Introduction
II. Of Natural Right 291
III. Of the Kight of Supreme Authorities . . . .301
IV. Of the Functions of Supreme Autlnrit
V. Of the Best State of a Dominion
VI. Of Monarchy
,
....s . , . 309
313
316
VII. Of Monarchy. Continuation 327
VIl I. Of Aristocracy 345
IX. Of Aristocracy.
X. Of Aristocracy.
XI. Of Democracy
Continuation
Conclusion ..... .
370
378
385
INTRODUCTION.
Konstatiert ist es, das der Lebenswandel des Spinoza frei von allem
"
Tadel war,und rein und makellos wie das Leben seines gb ttlichen Vetters,
Jesu Christi. Auch wie Dieser litt er fiir seine Lehre wie Dieser trug er
die Dornenkrone. Ueberall, wo ein grosser Geist seine Gedenken aus-
"
1 "
Correspondence, and
8
"Benedict de Spinoza 5
his Life, Ethics."
1870.
*
I take this early opportunity of recording my deep obligations to
Mr. Pollock s book. I have made free use of it, together with Dr.
Martineau s, in compiling this introduction. In the passages which
Mr. Pollock has incidentally translated, I have been glad to be able to
refer to the versions of so distinguished a scholar.
Yl INTRODUCTION.
1
pliers ;
Auerbach
biographical novel has been translated,
s
1
Letter XXXII. See vol. ii.
most beautiful, but she had a great deal of wit," and as the
story runs displayed
her sagacity ly rejecting the proffered
love of Spinoza for the sake of his fellow-pupil Kerkering,
who was to enhance his attractions ly the gift of a
a"ble
partes I. et II.
more geometrico demonstrate per Benedictum de
Spinoza Amsteloda-
mensein. Accesserunt ejusdem cogitata
metaphysica. Amsterdam,
1663."
XVI INTRODUCTION.
and have never had any aim but the welfare and
"
added,
good of the State."
In 1673, Spinoza was offered by the Elector Palatine,
b
xviii INTRODUCTION.
1
Charles Lewis, a professorship of philosophy at Heidelberg,
a
but declined it, on the plea that teaching would interfere
with his original work, and that doctrinal restrictions,
however slight, would prove irksome.
In the following year, the Ethics were finished and cir
with his friends, but chose rather to live upon what he liiul
at home, though it were never so little, than to sit down to
a good table at the expense of another man. . . . He was
very careful to cast up his accounts every quarter which ;
1
Letter LIU. Letter LIV.
INTRODUCTION. XIX
one; you need not look for another, nor doubt that you may
Spinoza had never been robust, and had for more than
twenty years been suffering from phthisis, a malady which,
at any rate in those days, never allowed its victims to
Improve
ment of the Understanding") on logical method. The
last-named had been begun several years previously, but
had apparently been added to from time to time. It
develops some of the doctrines indicated in the Ethics,
and serves in some sort as an introduction to the larger
work.
In considering Spinoza s system of philosophy, it must
not be forgotten that the problem of the universe seemed
much simpler in his day, than it does in our own. Men
had not then recognized, that knowledge is a world whose
"
for the form in which his work is cast would seem to lay
stress on their interdependence. It has often been said,
that the geometrical method was adopted, because it was
XX11 INTRODUCTION.
As no system is
entirely true, so also no system is en
tirely original. Each must in great measure be the recom
bination of elements supplied by
its predecessors.
Spinozism
forms no exception to this rule many of its leading con ;
of Bacon and
of Hobbes, and almost certainly of Giordano
Bruno, but these two elements, the Jewish and the Carte
sian, aro themain sources of his system, though it cannot
properly be called the mere development of either. From
INTRODUCTION. XX111
ness beyond the reach of change for himself and his fellow-
men. With a fervour that reminds one of Christian flee
ing from the City of Destruction, he dilates on the vanity
of men s ordinary ambitions, riches, fame, and the plea
sures of sense, and on the necessity of looking for some
more worthy object for their desires. Such an object he
finds in the knowledge of truth, as obtainable through
clear and distinct ideas, bearing in themselves the evidence
of their own veracity.
Spinoza conceived as a vast unity all existence actual
and possible indeed, between actual and possible he re
;
1
may be worth while to cite the often-quoted testimony of the
It
good"
that which we know with certainty to be useful to
us we style evil that which we know will hinder us in
"
"
emotion."
Every man necessarily, and therefore rightly,
seeks his own interest, which is thus identical with virtue ;
but his own interest does not lie in selfishness, for man is
always in need of external help, and nothing is more useful
to him than his fellow-men hence individual well-being is
;
passions, are set forth in the first portion of the fifth part
INTRODUCTION.
definition of passion
of the Ethics. They depend on the
As soon as we form a clear and dis
as a confused idea.
tinct idea of it changes its character,
a passion, and ceases
participated in by
our fellow-men.
The concluding propositions of the Ethics have given
rise to more controversy than any other part of the sys
tem. Some have maintained that Spinoza is in
critics
"intellectual
eternity
to the doctrine in dispute.
1
"The human mind," says
Spinoza,
"
ment. He "
. XXXI
PEACE, BE WITH
HELD.
Hereby know we tbut we dwell in Him, and He in ns, because lie hath given it
says (lib. iv. chap. 10) : The mob has no ruler more
"
?
iellow with an intense desire to enter holy orders, and thus
the love of diffusing God s religion degenerated into sordid
avarice and ambition. Every church became a theatre,
where orators, instead of church teachers, harangued,
caring not to instruct the people, but striving to attract
admiration, to bring opponents to public scorn, and to
preach only novelties and paradoxes, such as would tickle
the ears of their congregation. This state of things neces
sarily stirred up an amount of controversy, envy, and hatred,
which no lapse of time could appease so that we can
;
who flatly despise reason, who reject and turn away from
understanding as naturally corrupt, these, I say, these
of all men, are thought, lie most horrible !to possess
light from on High. Verily, if they had but one spark of
light from on High, they would not insolently rave, but
would learn to worship God more wisely, and would be
as marked among their fellows for mercy as
they now are
for malice; if they were concerned for their
opponents
souls, instead of for their own reputations, they would no
longer fiercely persecute, but rather be filled with pity and
compassion.
Furthermore, if any Divine light were in them, it would
appear from their doctrine. I grant that they are never
tired of professing their wonder at the
profound mysteries
of Holy Writ; still I cannot discover that
they teach
anything but speculations of Platonists and Aristotelians,
to which (in order to save their credit for
Christianity)
they have made Holy Writ conform; not content to rave
with the Greeks themselves, they want to make the
pro
phets rave also showing conclusively, that never even in
;
CHAPTER I.
OF PROPHECY.
ledge which we
acquire by our natural faculties depends on
our knowledge of God and His eternal laws but ordinary ;
will meet with thee and I will commune with thee from
the
mercy seat which is between the Cherubim." Some sort of
real voice must
necessarily have been employed, for Moses
found God ready to commune with him at
any time. This,
as I shall
shortly show, is the only instance of a real voice!
We might, perhaps, suppose that the voice with which
God called Samuel was real, for in 1 Sam. iii. 21, we read,
"And the Lord
appeared again in Shiloh, for the Lord re-
Himself to Samuel in Shiloh
vealed^ by the word of the
Lord
"
;
implying that the appearance of the Lord consisted in
His making Himself known to Samuel
through a voice in ;
your God."
even Moses saw the Lord s face. These are the only media
of communication between God and man which I find
mentioned in Scripture, and therefore the only ones which
may be supposed or invented. We may be able quite to
comprehend that God can communicate immediately with
man, for without the intervention of bodily means He_ com
municates to our minds His essence; still, a man who can by
pure intuition comprehend ideas which are neither contained
in nor deducible from the foundations of our natural know-
ledge, must necessarily possess a niind far superior to those
of his fellow men, nor do I believe that
any have been so
iii lowed save Christ. To Him the ordinances of God lead-
f HAf. OF r-ftOMlECY. 19
the old law was given through an angel, and not imme
diately by God ; whence it follows that if Moses spoke with
God face to face as a man speaks with his friend (i.e. by
means of their two bodies) Christ communed with God
mind to mind..
Thus we may conclude that no one except Christ re
ceived the revelations of God without the aid of
imagina
tion, whether in words or vision. Therefore the power of
prophecy implies not a peculiarly perfect mind, but a
peculiarly vivid imagination, as I will show more clearly
in the next chapter. We
will now inquire what is meant
in the Bible by the
Spirit of God breathed into the pro
phets, or by the prophets speaking with the Spirit of God ;
1 Sam. xxx. 12 ;
i.e. he breathed again.
Courage and strength: "Neither did there remain
(3.)
any more spirit in any man," Josh. ii. 11 "And the spirit
;
:
<20 A THKOUXilCO-rOUTlCAL TREATISE. [cHAP. I.
in m
an," Job xxxii.
7 i.e. wisdom is not always found among
;
hath poured out on you the spirit of deep sleep," Is. xxix.
10 ;
their spirit softened," Judges viii. 3
"Then was He ;
"
Isaiah xxxiii. 1.
From the meaning of disposition we get
(7.) Passions and "faculties. lofty spirit means pride, A
a lowly spirit humility, an evil spirit hatred and melan
fornica-
choly. So, too, the expressions spirits of jealousy,
tion, wisdom, counsel, bravery, stand for a jealous, lasci
gave it."
jharp-playing.
[equivalent to the mind of man, for instance, Job xxvii. 3 :
"And the
Spirit of the Lord in my nostrils," the allusion
being to Gen. ii. 7 : And God breathed into man s nostrils
"
in Gen. vi. 3 :
"
of his body, and not the spirit which I gave him to discern
the good, I will let hi.Ti alone. So, too, Ps. li. 12 : "Create
Thy Holy Spirit from me." It was supposed that sin origi-
/
only from the body, and that good impulses come
iiitteil
God against the bodily appetites, but prays that the spirit
which the Lord, the Holy One, had given him might be re
newed. Again, inasmuch as the Bible, in concession i.o
CHAP. I.] OF PROPHECY. 23
Spirit."
Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by
the breath of His mouth," i.e. by a mandate issued, as it
were, in one breath. Also Ps. cxxxix. 7, Whither shall I "
first came to
you, to preach God s anger and His sentence
gone forth against you) I spoke not in secret from the
"
Lord was upon a prophet," The Lord breathed His Spirit "
into men," "Men were filled with the Spirit of God, with
the Holy Spirit," &c., are quite clear to us, and mean that
the prophets were endowed with a peculiar and extraordi
nary power, and devoted themselves to piety with especial
constancy; that thus they perceived the mind or the
1
:
men by a transcendental term. Everything takes place
by the power of God. Nature herself is the power of God
under another name, and our ignorance of the power of
God is co-extensive with our ignorance of Nature. It is
absolute folly, therefore, to ascribe an event to the power
of God when we know not its natural cause, which is the
power of God.
However, we are not now inquiring into the causes of
prophetic knowledge. We
are only attempting, as I have
said, to examine the Scriptural documents, and to draw
our conclusions from them as from ultimate natural facts ;
CHAPTER II.
OP PROPHETS.
they can form no idea of God, and only know Him through
! created things, of which they know not the causes, can
imblushingly accuse philosophers of Atheism.
Treating the question methodically, I will show that pro
phecies varied, not only according to the imagination and
physical temperament of the prophet, but also according
to his particular opinions and further that prophecy never
;
me,"
the
"
revealed the truth, and did not forbid his proclaiming it.
Still the certitude of prophecy remains, as I have said,
not mathematical (i.e. did not necess* rily follow from the per
ception of the thing perceived or se^n), but only moral, and
as the signs were only given to c mvince the prophet, it
follows that such signs were given .cording to the opinions
a>
to philosophize more
correctly, and understand that the
^
from the amount of snow in the air (see Josh. x. 11), the
refraction may have been greater than usual, or that there
may have been some other cause which we will not now in
quire into.
So also the sign of the shadow going back was revealed
to Isaiah according to his understanding that is, as pro
;
thought that the sun moves and that the earth is still of ;
;
24),
venture there be fifty righteous within the
city/ and in
accordance with this belief God was revealed to him as
;
his household after him that they should keep the way of
the Lord (Gen. xviii. 19) it dot s not state that he held
"
shall come to pass that if they will not believe thee, neither
hearken to the voice of the first sign, that they will believe
the voice of the latter sign but if not, thou shalt take of
;
that this Being Whom they were bound to obey was the
highest and Supreme God, or (to use the Hebrew phrase)
God of gods, and thus in the song (Exod. xv. 11) he ex
claims,
"
and Jethro says (Exod. xviii. 11), Now I know that the
"
Thou
face;" and inasmuch as Moses believed that God can be
looked upon that is, that no contradiction of the Divine
nature is therein involved (for otherwise he would never
have preferred his request) it is added, For no one shall "
CHAPTEE m.
OF THE VOCATION OF THE HEBREWS, AND WHETHER THE
GIFT OF PROPHECY WAS PECULIAR TO THEM.
them, but not near others (Deut. iv. 7) that to them alone
;
has marked them out before others (Deut. iv. 32) it;
they had been ordained for all, and they themselves would
have been no less wise. The miracles would have shown
44 A THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TKEATISE. [CHAP. III.
1. The
knowledge of things through their primary causes.
2. The government of the
passions, or the acquirement
of the habit of virtue.
3. Secure and
healthy life.
The means which most directly conduce towards the first
two of these ends, and which
may be considered their
proximate and efficient causes are contained in human
nature so that their acquisition
itself, hinges only on our
own power, and on the laws of human nature. It
concluded that these gifts are not peculiar to
may be
any nation, but
have always been shared by the whole human
race, unless,
indeed, we would indulge the dream that nature
formerly
46 A THEOLOGICO-POLTTTCAL TREATISE. [CHAP. III.
God, not only to their own nation but to many others also.
Ezekiel prophesied to all the nations then known Obadiah ;
out for all Moab" (verse 36), "and therefore mine heart shall
sound for Moab like pipes in the end he prophesies their
;"
earth that doeth good and sinneth not," Eccles. vii. 20.
(Vide 2 Epist. Peter ii. 15, 16, and Jude 5, 11.)
His speeches must certainly have had much weight with
God, and His power for cursing must assuredly have been
very great from the number of times that we find stated in
Scripture, in proof of God s great mercy to the Jews, that
God would not hear Balaam, and that He changed the
cursing to blessing (see Deut. xxiii. 6, Josh. xxiv. io, Neh.
xiii. 2).Wherefore he was without doubt most acceptable
to God, for the speeches and cursings of the wicked move
God not at all. As then he was a true prophet, and never
theless Joshua calls him a soothsayer or augur, it is certain
that this title had an honourable signification, and that
52 A. TllEOLOGlCO-VOLlTlCAL TREATISE. [CHAP. III.
from God nay, that without such aid they must necessarily
;
oracles of God."
But
we look to the doctrine which Paul
if
especially
desired to teach, we shall find
nothing repugnant to our
present contention; on the contrary, his doctrine is the same
as ours, for he that God is the God
"
It, now
only remains to us to answer the arguments of
those who would persuade themselves that the election of
the Jews was not temporal, and merely in respect of their
commonwealth, hut eternal for, they say, we see the Jews
;
CHAPTER IV.
it, is Paul s meaning when lie says, tliat those who live
under the law cannot be justified through the law, for jus
tice, as commonly denned, is the constant
and perpetual
will to render every man his due. Thus Solomon says
(Prov. xxi. 15),
"
good should consist. Now, since all our knowledge, and the
certainty which removes every doubt, depend solely
on the
knowledge of God firstly, because
;
without God nothing
can exist or be conceived secondly, because so long as we
;
F
66 A THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. IV,
good for its own sake, not from fear of evil. have seenWe
that he who acts rightly from the true knowledge and love
of right, acts with freedom and constancy, whereas he who
acts from fear of evil, is under the constraint of evil, and
acts in bondage under external control. So that this com
mandment of God to Adam comprehends the whole Divine
natural law, and absolutely agrees with the dictates of the
light of nature nay, it would be easy to explain on this
;
by the sage, for he says (Prov. xiii. 14) : The law of the
"
all her
paths peace" (xiii. 16, 17). According to Solomon,
therefore, it is only the wise who live in peace and
equa
nimity, not like the wicked whose minds drift hither and
thither, and (as Isaiah says, chap. Ivii. are like the
"
20)
troubled sea, for them there is no
peace."
When
thy heart, and knowledge is pleasant to thy soul, discretion
shall preserve thee,
understanding shall keep thee, then
shalt thou understand
righteousness, and judgment, and
equity, yea every good path." All of which is in obvious
agreement with natural knowledge for after we have come :
to the
understanding of things, and have tasted the excel
lence of knowledge, she teaches us ethics and true
virtue.
Thus the happiness and the peace of him who cultivates
_
his natural
understanding lies, according to Solomon also,
not so much under the dominion of fortune
(or God s ex
ternal aid) as in inward
personal virtue (or God s internal
aid), for the latter can to a great extent be preserved by
vigilance, right action,and thought.
Lastly, we must by
110 means
pa.ss over the passage in
Paul s Epistle to the Komans, i. 20, in which he
says:
For the invisible things of God from the creation of
"
the
world are clearly seen, being understood
by the things that
are made, even His eternal
power and Godhead so that j
IV.
68 A THEOLOGICO-rOLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP.
rection of Christ.
the lusts ot
"
every
unless they be
wisely counteracted.
sarily spring,
Thus we see that Scripture literally approves of the light
of natural reason and the natural Divine law,
and I have
fulfilled the made at the beginning of this chapter.
promises
CHAP. V.] OF THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 69
CHAPTER Y.
didst not desire mine ears hast Thou opened burnt offer
; ;
Lord, and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of
the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy
father: for the mouth of the Lord has spoken Thus it."
sions, the hill of God," and His tents and the dwellers
" "
this is
proved in Scripture entirely through experience that
is,through the narratives there related. No definitions of
doctrine are given, but all the sayings and
reasonings are
adapted to the understanding of the masses. Although
experience can give no clear knowledge of these tilings, nor
explain the nature of God, nor how He directs and sustains
all things, it can nevertheless teach and
enlighten men
sufficiently to impress obedience and devotion on their
minds.
It is now, I think, sufficiently clear what
persons are bound
to believe in the Scripture narratives, and in what
degree
they are so bound, for it evidently follows from what has
been said that the knowledge of and belief in them is particu
larly necessary to the masses whose intellect is not capable
of perceiving things clearly and Further, he
distinctly.
who denies them because he does not believe that God exists
or takes thought for men and the world,
may be accounted
impious but a man who is ignorant of them, and neverthe
;
of the Scriptures, and none the less has right opinions and
a true plan of life, he is absolutely blessed and truly pos
sesses in himself the spirit of Christ.
The Jews are of a directly contrary way of thinking, for
they hold that true opinions and a true plan of life are of
no service in attaining blessedness, if their possessors have
80 A TnEOLOGICO-rCLITICAL TREATISE. V.
[CHAP.
I undertook to
say concerning Divine law.
CHAP. VI.] OF MIRACLES. 81
CHAPTEE VI
OF MIKACLES.
nature, are the very efficacy and power of God, and as the
laws and rules of nature are the decrees of God, it is in
every
way to be believed that the power of nature is infinite, and
that her laws are broad enough to embrace
everything con
ceived by the Divine intellect the
only alternative is to;
its modi
fications, but infinite other things besides matter.
84 A THEOLOGICO-rOLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. VI,
tion to God
nature and laws, and, consequently, belief in
s
it would throw doubt upon everything, and lead to Atheism.
I think I have now sufficiently established my second
point, so that we can again conclude that a miracle, whether
in contravention to, or beyond, nature, is a mere absurdity ;
unto the voice of that prophet for the Lord your God
;
For the
A THEOLOaiCO-POIJTlCAL TREATISE. [CHAP. VI.
that Moses should scatter ashes in the air (Exod. ix. 10) ;
Thy wind (i.e. with a very strong wind), and the sea
covered them." Thus the attendant circumstance is omitted
in the history, and the miracle is thereby enhanced.
But perhaps someone will insist that we find many
things in Scripture which seem in nowise explicable by
natural causes, as for instance, that the sins of men and
their prayers can be the cause of rain and of the earth s
fertility, or that faith can heal the blind, and so on. But
I think I have already made sufficient answer: I have
shown that Scripture does not explain things by their
secondary causes, but only narrates them in the order and
the style which has most power to move men, and espe
cially uneducated men, to devotion and therefore it speaks
;
be one day wliich shall be known to the Lord, not day nor
night but at even time it shall be light." In these words
;
thereof, shall not give their light the sun shall be dar
;
kened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause
her light to shine." Now I suppose no one imagines that
at the destruction of Babylon these
phenomena actually
occurred any more than that which the prophet adds,
For I will make the heavens to tremble, and remove the
"
stitution of
"
10,and Job ii. 9, and for all things being referred to God,
whence it appears that the Bible seems to relate nothing
but miracles, even when speaking of the most ordinary oc
currences, as in the examples given above.
Hence we must believe that when the Bible says that
the Lord hardened Pharaoh s heart, it only means that
Pharaoh was obstinate when it says that God opened the
;
thing new under the sun," and in verses 11, 12, illustrating
the same idea, he adds that although something occasionally
happens which seems new, it is not really new, but hath
"
been already of old time, which was before us, whereof there
is no remembrance, neither shall there be any remembrance
of things that are to come with those that come after."
Again in chap. iii. 11, he says, God hath made everything
"
Let
:
"
CHAPTER vrr.
\\T HEN people declare, as all are ready to do, that the
VV is the Word of God
Bible teaching man true blessed
ness and the way of salvation, they evidently do not mean
what they say for the masses take no pains at all to live
;
of Moses,
"
in the "
history
statements are set forth as laws, and what as moral pre
cepts, it is important to be acquainted with the life, the
conduct, and the pursuits of their author: moreover, it
becomes easier to explain a man s writings in proportion as
we have more intimate knowledge of his genius and tem
perament.
Further, that we may not confound precepts which are
eternal with those which served only a temporary purpose,
or were only meant for a few, we should know what was
the occasion, the time, the age, in which each book was
written, and to what nation it was addressed.
Lastly, we should have knowledge on the other points I
have mentioned, in order to be sure, in addition to the
authenticity of the work, that it has not been tampered
with by sacrilegious hands, or whether errors can have
crept in, and, if so, whether they have been corrected by
men sufficiently skilled and worthy of credence. All these
things should be known, that we may not be led away by
blind impulse to accept whatever is thrust on our notice,
instead of only that which is sure and indisputable.
Now, when we are in possession of this history of Scrip
ture, and have finally decided that we assert nothing as
prophetic doctrine which does not directly follow from such
104 A THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE.
[CHAP. VII.
teaches that we should have care for nothing, save only for
the kingdom of God and His righteousness, which is com
mended as the highest good (see Matt. vi. 33), it follows
that by mourners He only meant those who mourn for the
kingdom of God and righteousness neglected by man for :
prophecy, history,
or miracle. We
have already pointed
the
out that great caution is necessary not to confound
mind of a prophet or historian with the mind of the Holy
Spirit and
the truth of the matter therefore I need not
;
quaintance is sufficient. We
need make no researches con
cerning the life, the pursuits, or the habits of the author ;
not from affirming that the world hath existed from eter
nity, because of what Scripture saith concerning the world s
creation. For the texts which teach that the world was
created are not more in number than those which teach
that God hath a body neither are the
; approaches in this
matter of the world s creation closed, or even made hard to
us so that we should not be able to
explain what is
:
they did not grasp the intrinsic reason of what was preached,
which, according to Maimonides, would be necessary for au
understanding of it.
There is nothing, then, in our method which renders it
necessary that the masses should follow the testimony of
commentators, for I point to a set of unlearned people who
understood the language of the prophets and apostles;
whereas Maimonides could not point to any such who
could arrive at the prophetic or apostolic meaning through
their knowledge of the causes of tilings.
to the multitude of our own time, we have bhowii
As
that whatsoever is necessary to salvation, though its reasons
may be unknown, can easily be understood in any language,
CHAP. VII.] OF THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE. 117
to which we may add, that does away with all the cer
it
of old there were also heretics and impious men who gained
the high-priesthood by improper means, but who, neverthe
less, had Scriptural sanction for their supreme power of in
terpreting the law. (See Deut. xvii. 11, 12, and xxxiii. 10,
also Malachi ii.
8.)
However, as the popes can show no such sanction, their
authority remains open to very grave doubt, nor should any
one be deceived by the example of the Jewish high-priests
and think that the Catholic religion also stands in need of
a pontiff he should bear in mind that the laws of Moses
;
CHAPTEE
OF THE ACTHORSHIP OP THE PENTATEUCH AND THE OTHIiR
HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT.
a man of enlightened
intelligence, and no small learning,
who was the first, so far as I know, to treat of this
opinion,
dared not express his
meaning openly, but confined him
self to dark hints which I shall not
scruple to elucidate,
thus throwing full light on the
subject.
The words of Abeii Ezra which occur in his
on Deuteronomy are as follows: commentary
"Beyond Jordan, &c.
.... If so be that thou understandest the
mystery of the
twelve .... moreover Moses wrote the law
The
Canaanite was then in the land .... it shall be revealed
on the mount of God .... then also behold his
bed, his
iron bed, then shalt thou know the truth." In these few
words he hints, and also shows that it was not Moses who
wrote the Pentateuch, but someone who lived
long after
him, and further, that the book which Moses wrote was
something different from any now extant.
To prove this, I say, he draws attention to the facts
I. That the
preface to Deuteronomy could not have
been written by Moses, inasmuch as he had never
crossed
the Jordan.
H. That the whole book of Moses was written at full
length on the circumference of a single altar (Deut. xxvii. and
Josh vm.37), whichaltar,
according to the Eabbis, consisted
ot only twelve stones therefore the book
:
of Moses must
have been of far less extent than the Pentateuch. This
is
what our author means, I think,
by the mystery of the
twelve, unless he is referring to the twelve curses contained
m the chapter of
Deuteronomy above cited, which he
thought could not have been contained in the law, because
Moses bade the Levites read them after the recital of the
and so bind the people to its observance. Or
jaw, again,
he may have had in his mind the last
chapter of Deutero
nomy whiph treats of the death of Moses, and which con-
tains twelve verses. But there is no need to dwell further
on these and similar
conjectures.
HI. That in Deut. xxxi. 9, the
expression occurs, "and
Moses wrote the law:" words that cannot be ascribed
to
Moses, but must be those of some other writer narratin^
the deeds and writings of Moses.
IV. That in Genesis xii. 6, the
historian, after narratina
that Abraham journeyed through the land of Canaan, adds"
122 A THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. Till.
took from another the land which bears his name if this be ;
not the true meaning, there lurks some mystery in the pas
sage, and let him who understands it keep silence." That
is, if Canaan invaded those regions, the sense will be, the
Canaanite was then in the land, in contradistinction to the
time when it had been held by another but if, as follows
:
from Gen. chap. x. Canaan was the first to inhabit the land,
the text must mean to exclude the time present, that is the
time at which it was written therefore it cannot be the
;
silence isrecommended.
V. That in Genesis xxii. 14 Mount Moriah is called
the mount of God, a name which it did not acquire till after
1
was not made in the time of Moses, for Moses does not
point out any spot as chosen by God on the contrary, he
;
1
S-e Note 9.
CHAP. VIII.] THE AUTHORSHIP OF THE PENTATEUCH. 123
;
"
day."
III. We
must note that some places are not styled by
the names they bore during Moses lifetime, but
by others
which they obtained subsequently. For instance, Abraham
issaid to have pursued his enemies even unto Dan, a name
not bestowed on the city till long after the death of Joshua
(Gen. xiv. 14, Judges xviii. 29).
IV. The narrative is prolonged after the death of Moses,
for in Exodus xvi. 34 we read that the children of Israel "
viii. 14.
From what has been said, it is thus clearer than the sun
at noonday that the Pentateuch was not written by Moses,
but by someone who lived long after Moses. Let us now
turn our attention to the books which Moses actually did
write, and which are cited in the Pentateuch thus, also, ;
not omit to notice that out of all the books which Moses
wrote, this one book of the second covenant and the song
(which latter he wrote afterwards so that all the people
might learn it), was the only one which he caused to be re
ligiously guarded and preserved. In the first covenant he
had only bound over those who were present, but in the
second covenant he bound over all their descendants also
(Deut. xxix. 14), and therefore ordered this covenant with
future ages to be religiously preserved, together with the
Song, which was especially addressed to posterity as, then, :
it was written
many generations after Samuel s death. For
in book i. chap. ix. verse 9, the historian remarks in a
Beforetime, in Israel, when a man went to
"
parenthesis,
inquire of God, thus he spake Come, and let us go to the
:
Lord was dead, that God spake unto Joshua," &c., so in the
same way, after the death of Joshua was concluded, he
passes with identically the same transition and connection
to the history of the Judges And it came to pass after
:
"
came to pass in the days that the judges ruled, that there
was a famine in the land."
The first book of Samuel is introduced with a similar
phrase and so is the second book of Samuel. Then, before
;
suspect that lie was Ezra, and there are several strong
reasons for adopting this hypothesis.
The historian whom we already know to be but one
individual brings his history down to the liberation of
Jehoiakim, and adds that he himself sat at the king s table
all his life that is, at the table either of Jehoiakini, or of
the son of Nebuchadnezzar, for the sense of the passage is
Ambiguous hence it follows that he did not live before the
:
the law of the Lord, and to set it forth, and further that he
was a ready scribe in the law of Moses." Therefore, I
cannot find anyone, save Ezra, to whom to attribute the
sacred books.
Further, from this testimony concerning Ezra, we see
that he prepared his heart, not only to seek the law of the
Lord, but also to set it forth and, in Nehemiah viii. 8,
;
AVG read that they read in the book of the law of God
"
CHAPTER IX.
time that Judah went down from his brethren." This time
cannot refer to what immediately precede?,- but must neces
sarily refer to something else, for from
the time when
Joseph was sold into Egypt to the time when the patriarch
Jacob, with all his family, set out thither, cannot be
reckoned as more than twenty-two years, for Joseph, when
he was sold by his brethren, was seventeen years old, and
when he was summoned by Pharaoh from prison was
of plenty and
thirty if to this we add the seven years
;
three children, one after the other, from one wife, whom
he married at the beginning of the period; that the
eldest of these, when he was old enough, married Tamar,
and that after he died his next brother succeeded to her ;
that, after all this, Judah, without knowing it, had inter
course with his daughter-in-law, and that she bore him
twins, and, finally, that the eldest of these twins became a
father within the aforesaid period. As all these events
1
Sec Note 12. a
&u Note 1
13.
CHAP. THE LAST REVISER OF HISTORIC BOOKS. 135
IX.]
scarcely years
Simeon and Levi were aged respectively eleven and twelve
when they spoiled the city and slew all the males therein
with the sword.
There is no need that I should go through the whole
Pentateuch. If anyone pays attention to the way in
which all the histories and precepts in these five books are
set down promiscuously and without order, with no regard
for dates and further, how the same story is often re
;
So, too, 1Sam. 17, 18, are taken from another his-
torian, whoassigns a cause for David s first frequenting
Saul s court very different from that given in
chap. xvi.
of the same book. For he did not think that David camo
to Saul in consequence of the advice of Saul s
servants, as
is narrated in
chap, xvi., but that bein^ sent by chance to
the camp by his father on a
message to his brothers, he
was for the first time remarked by Saul on the occasion of
his victory over Goliath the Philistine, and was retained
at his court.
I suspect the same thing has taken
place in chap. xxvi.
of the same book, for the historian there seems to
repeat
the narrative given in chap. xxiv.
according to another
man s version. But I pass over this, and go on to the
computation of dates.
In 1 Kings, chap,
vi., it is said that Solomon built the
jection 20
The people was at peace subsequently
It was under subjection to Midian
It obtained freedom under Gideon for
....
for
...
. . 40
7
Ammonites
Jephthah was judge
.......
The people was in subjection to the
......
Philistines and
18
...
Ibzan, the Bethlehemite, was judge
6
7
Elon, the Zabulonite
Abdon, the Pirathonite ......
1
See Note !.">.
10
8
CSAP. IX.] THE LAST REVISER OF HISTORIC BOOKS. 137
Years.
. .
. 40
OA1
^u
. .
40
4
year,
when he began to reign, and he reigned two years over
Israel." Who, I say, does not see that the number of the
of Saul s age when he began to reign has been omitted?
years
That the record of the reign presupposes a greater number
of years is equally beyond doubt, for in the same book,
chap, xxvii. 7, it is stated that David sojourned among the
Philistines, to whom he had fled on account of Saul, a year
and four months j thus the rest of the reign must have been
1
See Note 1G
138 A THEOLOGlCO-rOLITICAL TREATISE. [oiIAP. IX.
no one
comprised in a space of eight months, which I think
Joscphus, at the end of the sixth Look
will credit. of his
1
Sec Note 17.
HO A TIIEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE.
[CHAP. IX.
Beth, Jod and Vau, Daleth and Reth, &c. For example,
the text in 2 Sam. v. 24, runs "in the time when thou
nearest," and similarly in Judges xxi. 22, "And it shall
be when their fathers or their brothers come unto us often,"
the marginal version is come unto us to complain."
"
but they say that in the five books the word for a girl is,
with one exception, written without the letter "
he," con
trary to all grammatical rules, whereas in the margin it is
written correctly according to the universal rule of
grammar.
Can thishave happened by mistake? Is it possible to
imagine a clerical error to have been committed
every time
the word occurs ? Moreover, it would have been
easy to
supply the emendation. Hence, when these readings are
not accidental or corrections of manifest mistakes, it is
sup
posed that they must have been set down on purpose by
the original writers, and have a meaning. However, it is
easy to answer such arguments as to the question of cus
;
thy servant," which does not agree with the person of the
verb. So, too, chap. xvi. 25 of the same book, we find,
As if one had inquired at the oracle of God," the margin
"
writes,
Talmud is generally in contradiction to the Massoretes."
So that we are not bound to hold that there never were
more than two readings of any passage, yet I am willing to
admit, and indeed I believe that more than two readings
are never found and for the following reasons
:
(I.) The :
CHAPTEE X.
NOW
pass on to the remaining books of the Old Tes
I tament. Concerning the two books of Chronicles I have
nothing particular or important to remark, except that
were certainly written after the time of Ezra, and pos
tl>cy
shut out from the canon the books of Wisdom, Tobit, and
the others styled apocryphal. I do not aim at disparaging
their authority, but as they are universally received I will
leave them as they are.
The Psalms were collected and divided into five books in
the time of the second temple, for Ps. Ixxxviii. was published,
according to Philo-Judceus, while king Jehoiachin was still
a prisoner in Babylon and Ps. lxxx>:. when the same king
;
1
See Note 19.
CHAP. X.] OP THE PROPHETIC BOOKS. 147
word of the Lord came often unto Ezekiel the priest, the
son of Buzi, in the land of the Chaldeans," as if to say that
the prophecies which he is about to relate are the sequel to
revelations formerly received by Ezekiel from God. Further
more, Josephus, Antiq." x. 9, says that Ezekiel prophesied
"
contents, and also the style, seem to emanate far less from
a man wretchedly ill and lying among ashes, than from one
reflecting at ease in his study. I should also be inclined
to agree with Aben Ezra that the book is a translation, for
its poetry seems akin to that of the Gentiles thus the
;
was the sixth and last high priest under the Persians. In
the same chapter of Nehemiah, verse 22, this point is clearly
brought out The Levites in the days of Eliashib, Joiada,
:
"
would be different. If, then, any error had crept into the
total, it would at once have been remarked, and easily cor
rected. This view confirmed by Nehemiah vii., where
is
this chapter of Ezra mentioned, and a total is given in
is
I return to my subject.
Besides these errors in numerical details, there are others
in the genealogies, in the history, and, I fear also in the
prophecies. The prophecy of Jeremiah (chap, xxii.), con
cerning Jechoniah, evidently does not agree with his history
as given in 1 Chronicles iii, 17-19, and
especially with the
154 A ? HEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP.
Verily, name one man for good, even he who was called
Neghunja, the son of Hezekiah: for, save for him, the
book of Ezckiel would been concealed, because it
agreed
not with the words of the law."
It is thus
abundantly clear that men expert in the law
summoned a council to decide which books should be re
ceived into the canon, and which excluded. If
any man,
therefore, wishes to be certified as to the authority of all
the books, let him call a fresh council, and ask
every
member his reasons.
1
Sec Note 23.
156 A THEOLOQICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. X.
CHAPTER XI
AN INQUIRY WHETHER THE APOSTLES WROTE THEIR EPIS
TLES AS APOSTLES AND PROPHETS, OR MERELY AS
TEACHERS AND AN EXPLANATION OF WHAT IS MEANT
;
BY AN APOSTLE.
and this was their habit not only in assemblies of the pro
phets, but also in their epistles containing revelations, as
appears from the epistle of Elijah to Jehoram, 2 Chron. xxi.
12, which begins, Thus saith the Lord."
"
yet
alive with you, this
day ye have been rebellious against the
Lord and how much more after my death," we must
;
by
no means conclude that Moses wished to convince the
Israelites by reason that
they would necessarily fall away
from the worship of the Lord after his death for the argu ;
venient time."
But, when
CHAP. XI.] OF THE APOSTOLIC MISSION. 161
method the Apostles, from what they saw and heard, and
from what was revealed to them, were enabled to form and
elicit many conclusions which they would have been able to
teach to men had it been permissible.
Further, although religion, as preached by the Apostles,
does not come within the sphere of reason, in so far as it
consists in the narration of the life of Christ, yet its essence,
which is chiefly moral, like the whole of Christ s doc
trine, can readily be apprehended by the natural faculties
of all.
the Gentiles ;
"
Yea,
so have I strived to preach the
gospel, not where Christ was
named, lest I should build upon another man s foundation."
If all the Apostles had adopted the same method of
teaching,
and had all built up the Christian religion on the same foun
dation, Paul would have had no reason to call the work of a
fellow- Apostle another man s foundation," inasmuch as
"
CHAPTER XII.
religion, as
I showed at the end of Chapter X. ; indeed,
166 A THEOLOOICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [ciIAP. XII.
men are beyond the reach of help, for nothing, as the pro
verb lias it, can be said so rightly that it cannot be twisted
into wrong. Those who wish to give rein to their lusts are
at no loss for an excuse, nor were those men of old who
possessed the original Scriptures, the ark of the covenant,
nay, the prophets and apostles in person among them, any
better than the people of to-day. Human nature, Jew as
well as Gentile, has always been the same, and in
every
age virtue has been exceedingly rare.
Nevertheless, to remove every scruple, I will here show
in what sense the Bible or any inanimate
thing should be
called sacred and Divine also wherein the law of God con
;
as it teaches what
necessary for obedience and salvation,
is
cannot have "been
corrupted. From these considerations
everyone will be able to judge that I have neither said
anything against the Word of God nor given any foothold
to impiety.
A
thing is called sacred and Divine when it is designed
for promoting piety, and continues sacred so long as it is
religiously used if the users cease to be pious, the thing
:
nofc with ink, "hut with the Spirit of the living God, not in
tables of stone, but in. the fleshy tables of the heart," let
them cease to worship the letter, and be so anxious con
cerning it.
I think I have now sufficiently &{ own in what respect
Scripture shouH be accounted sacred and Divine we may
;
cause for the division is not that the two parts are different
in doctrine, nor that they were written as
originals of the
covenant, nor, lastly, that the catholic religion (which is in
entire harmony with our nature) was new except in relation
to those who had not known it : it was in the
"
world," as
John the Evangelist says, and the world knew it
"
not."
by express command at one place for all ages, but are a for
tuitous collection of the works of men, writing each as his
period and disposition dictated. So much is clearly shown
by the call of the prophets who were bade to admonish
the ungodly of their time, and also by the Apostolic
Epistles.
II. Because it is one thing to understand the meaning of
CHAP. XII.] OF THE SACBEDNESS OF SCRIPTURE. 171
CHAPTEE
IT IS SHOWN THAT SCRIPTURE TEACHES ONLY VERY SIMPLE
DOCTRINES, SUCH AS SUFFICE FOR RIGHT CONDUCT.
division).
Lastly, we demonstrated in Chap. VLT. that the difficulty
of understanding Scripture lies in the
language only, and
not in the abstruseness of the argument.
To these considerations we may add that the Prophets
did not preach only to the learned, but to all Jews, without
exception, while the Apostles were wont to teach the gospel
doctrine in churches where there were public
meetings ;
for
the better understanding of which passage I may remark
that El Sadai, in Hebrew, signifies the God who suffices, in
that He gives to every man that which suffices for him ;
the words used are merely titles and, in truth, the other
;
his creed is
lieving what is false he becomes obedient,
pious for the true knowledge of God comes not by
;
com
mandment, bui by Divine gift. God has required nothing
from man but a knowledge of His Divine justice and
charity, and thar not as necessary to scientific accuracy,
but to obedience
182 A TITEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE. [cilAP. XIV.
CHAPTER XIV.
because He us",
I. That God or a
Supreme Being exists, sovereignly just
and merciful, the Exemplar of the true life that whosoever
;
CHAP. XIV.] DEFINITIONS OF FAITH. 187
CHAPTER XV.
THEOLOGY IS SHOWN NOT TO BE SUBSERVIENT TO REASON,
NOR REASON TO THEOLOGY: A DEFINITION OF THE REASON
WHICH ENABLES US TO ACCEPT THE AUTHORITY OF THE
BIBLE.
T^HOSE who know not that philosophy and reason arc dis-
J-
tinct, dispute whether Scripture should Le made sub
servient to reason, or reason to Scripture: that is, whether
the meaning of Scripture should made to agreed with
"be
light of the mind, and without her all things are dreams
and phantoms.
By theology, I here mean, strictly speaking, revelation,
in so far as it indicates the object aimed at -
by Scripture
namely, the scheme and manner of obedience, or the true
dogmas of piety and faith. This may truly be called the
Word of God, which does not consist in a certain number
of books (see Chap. XII.). Theology thus understood, if
we regard its precepts or rules of life, will be found in ac
cordance with reason and, if we look to its aim and object,
;
ever we may find of this sort in the Bible, which men may
be in ignorance of, without injury to their charity, has, we
may be sure, no bearing on theology or the Word of God,
and may, therefore, without blame, be viewed by every one
as he pleases.
To sum up, we may draw the absolute conclusion that
the Bible must not be accommodated to reason, nor reason
to the Bible.
Now, inasmuch as the basis of theology the doctrine
that man may be saved by obedience alone cannot be
proved by reason whether it be true or false, we may be
asked, Why, then, should we believe it? If we do so
without the aid of reason, we accept it blindly, and act
foolishly and injudiciously if, on the other hand, we settle
;
"brought
a very great consolation to mankind. All are able
to obey, whereas there are but very few, compared with the
aggregate of humanity, who can acquire the habit of virtue
under the unaided guidance of reason. Thus if we had not
the testimony of Scripture, we should doubt of the salva
tion of nearly all men.
200 A THEOLOGICO-POLIT10AL TREATISE.
[ciIAP. XVI.
CHAPTER XVI.
fore fishes enjoy the water, and the greater devour the less
by sovereign natural right. For it is certain that nature,
taken in the abstract, has sovereign right to do anything
she can in other words, her right is co-extensive with her
;
are born ignorant, and before they can learn the right way
of life and acquire the habit of virtue, the greater part of
their if they have been well
even
life, brought up, has
passed away. Nevertheless, they are in the meanwhile
bound to live and preserve themselves as far as they can
by the unaided impulses of desire. Nature has given them
no other guide, and has denied them the present power of
living according to sound reason; so that they are no
more bound to live by the dictates of an enlightened mind,
than a cat is bound to live by the laws of the nature of a
lion.
Whatsoever, therefore, an individual (considered as under
the sway of nature) thinks useful for himself, whether led
by sound reason or impelled by the passions, that he has a
sovereign right to seek and to take for himself as he best
202 A TIIEOLOGICO-rOLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. XVI.
strife, nor hatred, nor anger, nor deceit, nor, indeed, any
of
the means suggested by desire.
This we need not wonder at, for nature is not bounded
at man s
by the laws of human reason, which aims only
true benefit and preservation; her limits are infinitely
wider, and have reference to the eternal order of nature,
wherein man is but a speck it is by the necessity of this
;
I should
greater evil, which, by the ordinance of nature,
strive to avoidby every means in my power.
We may, therefore, conclude that a compact is only
made valid by its utility, without which it becomes null
and void. It is, therefore, foolish to ask a man to keep
his faith with us for ever, unless we also endeavour that
the violation of the compact we enter into shall involve
for the violator more harm than good. This consideration
should have very great weight in forming a state. However,
if all men could be easily led by reason alone, and could
he alone is free who lives with free consent under the entire
guidance of reason.
Action in obedience to orders does take
away freedom in
a certain sense, but it does not, therefore, make a man
a
slave, all depends on the object of the action. If the
object of the action be the good of the state, and not the
good of the agent, the latter is a slave and does himself no
good but in a state or kingdom where the weal of the
:
free;
that is, live with full consent under the entire
guidance of
reason.
Children, though they are bound to
obey all the com
mands of their parents, are
yet not slaves for the com-
:
thus defined. A
slave is one who is bound to
obe/ liis
master s orders, though
they are given solely in the master s
interest: a son is one who
obeys his father s orders, given
CHAP. XVI.] OF THE FOUNDATIONS OF A STATE. 207
or is bound to stand
by his compacts unless there be a hope
of some accruing
good, or the fear of some evil: if this
basis be removed the
compact therebybecomes void this:
has been
abundantly shown by experience. For although
different states make treaties not to harm one
another, they
always take every possible precaution against such treaties
being broken by the stronger party, and do not
rely on the
compact, unless there is a sufficiently obvious object and
advantage to both parties in observing it. Otherwise they
would fear a breach of faith, nor would there be
any wrong
done thereby: for who in his
proper senses, and aware of
the right of the
sovereign power, would trust in the pro
mises of one who has the will and the
power to do what he
likes, and who aims
solely at the safety and advantage of
his dominion ? Moreover, if we consult
loyalty and religion,
we shall see that no one in
possession of power outfit to
abide by his promises to the
injury of his dominion for ho
;
thinks fit all are bound to obey its behests on the subject
;
CHAPTEE XVH.
IT IS SHOWN THAT NO ONE CAN, OR NEED, TRANSFER ALL
HIS RIGHTS TO THE SOVEREIGN POWER. OF THE HEBREW
REPUBLIC, AS IT WAS DURING THE LIFETIME OF MOSES,
AND AFTER HIS DEATH, TILL THE FOUNDATION OF THE
MONARCHY ;
AND OF ITS EXCELLENCE. LASTLY, OF THE
CAUSES WHY THE THEOCRATIC REPUBLIC FELL, AND
WHY IT COULD HARDLY HAVE CONTINUED WITHOUT
DISSENSION.
though it is
impossible to govern the mind as completely
as the tongue, nevertheless minds are, to a certain extent,
under the control of the sovereign, for he can in
many ways
bring about that the greatest part of his subjects should
follow his wishes in their beliefs, their loves, and their
hates. Though such emotions do not arise at the express
command of the sovereign they often result (as experience
shows) from the authority of his power, and from his direc
tion in other words, in virtue of his right we
;
may, there
;
I, myself,
when the king enters a banquet hall, should prostrate my
body on the ground other men should do the like, espe
;
enemy : tliose who died for the sake of religion, were held
to have died for their country in fact, between civil and
;
part of God ;
in other words, held the sovereign kingship :
the fact that the people believed that the monarch was
only issuing commands in accordance with God s decree
revealed to him, make it less in subjection, but rather
more. However, Moses elected no such successor, but left
the dominion to those who came after him in a condition
which could not be called a popular government, nor an
aristocracy, nor a monarchy, but a Theocracy. For the
right of interpreting laws was vested in one man, while the
right and power of administering the state according to the
1
Sec Note 30.
222 A TiiEOLOGico-roLlTicAL TREATISE. [CHAP.
and to make use of, means for carrying them out to choose
;
e,s
many army captains as he liked to make whatever
;
were accepted by Joshua and the council, and only then had
the force of commands and decrees.
The high priest, both in the case of Aaron and of his son
Eleazar, was chosen by Moses; nor had anyone, after
Moses death, a right to elect to the office, which became
224 A TltEOLOaiCO-POLITlCAL TREATISE.
[cHAt>.
The
hereditary. general-in-chicf of the army was also
chosen by Moses, and assumed his functions in virtue of
the commands, not of the
high priest, but of Moses in- :
The captains were thus for their own sates "bound to take
great care to administer everything according to the laws laid
down, and well known to all, if they wished to be held in
high honour by the people, who would regard them as the
administrators of God s dominion, and as God s vicegerents;
otherwise they could not have escaped all the virulence of
theological hatred. There was another very important
check on the unbridled license of the captains, in the fact,
that the army was formed from the whole body of the
citizens, between the ages of twenty and sixty, without
exception, and that the captains were not able to hire any
foreign soldiery. This I say was very important, for it is
well known that princes can oppress their peoples with the
single aid of the soldiery in their pay while there is nothing
;
own land alone was considered holy, the rest of the earth
unclean and profane.
David, who was forced to live in exile, complained before
Saul as follows But if they be the children of men who
:
"
received in the Temple, and all the laws which God had
ordained.
I think I have now explained clearly, though briefly, the
main features of the Hebrew commonwealth. I must now
inquire into the causes which led the people so often to fall
away from the law, which brought about their frequent
subjection, and, finally, the complete destruction of tht-ir
dominion. Perhaps I shall be told that it sprang from
their hardness of heart but this is childish, for why
;
it by nature ?
But nature forms individuals, not peoples the latter are
;
I gave them also statutes that were not good, and judg
ments whereby they should not live and I polluted them
;
out
therefore, stirred up a tumult, and came to him, crying
that all men were equally sacred, and that he had exalted
himself above his fellows wrongfully. Moses was not ablo
to pacify them with reasons but by the intervention of a
;
and thy stiff neck: behold, while I am yet alive with you
CHAP. XVII.] OF THE HEBKEW THEOCRACY. 235
CHAPTER XYIH.
PROM THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE HEBREWS, AND THEIR
HISTORY, CERTAIN POLITICAL DOCTRINES ARE DEDUCED.
ii. 7, 8)
: For the priest s lips should keep knowledge, and
"
they should seek the law at his mouth for he is the mes
:
CHAPTER XIX.
ye have peace." Now, they could not seek the peace of the
city as having a share in its government, but only as slaves,
being, as they were, captives by obedience in all things,
;
to be doubted
by many who think that God immediately
reigns among men, and directs all nature for their
benefit.
As, then, both reason and experience tell us that the
Divine right is entirely
dependent on the decrees of secular
rulers, it follows that secular rulers are its
proper inter
preters. How
this is so we shall now for it is time
see, to
show that the outward observances of religion, and
the all
external practices of
piety should be brought into accor
dance with the public peace and
well-being if we would
obey God rightly. When this has been shown we shall
easily understand how the sovereign rulers are the
proper
interpreters of religion and piety.
It is certain that duties towards one s
country are the
highest that man can fulfil ; for, if government be taken
away, no good thing can last, all falls into
and anarchy reign unchecked amid universal dispute, anger
fear. Conse
quently there can be no d.uty towards our neighbour which
would not become an offence if it involved
injury to the
whole state, nor can there be
any offence against our duty
towards our neighbour, or
anything but loyalty in what we
do for the sake of preserving the state. For instance:
it
the abstract my
is^in duty when my neighbour quarrels
with me and wishes to take
my cloak, to him
give my
coat
also but if it be thought that such conduct is hurtful
;
to
the maintenance of the state, I
ought to bring him to trial
even at the risk of his
being condemned to death.
For this reason Manlius
Torquatus is held up to honour,
inasmuch as the public welfare
outweighed with him his
duty towards his children. This being so, it follows that
the public welfare is the
sovereign law to which all others,
Divine and human, should be made to conform.
Now, it is the function of the
sovereign only to decide
what is
necesssary for the public welfare and the safety of
the state, and to give orders
accordingly therefore it is also
;
sequently, if he does
not implicitly obey all the commands
of the sovereign. For as by God s command we are
bound
to do our duty to all men without exception, and to do no
man an injury, we are also bound not to help one man at
another s loss, still less at a loss to the whole state. Now,
110 private citizen can know what is good
for the state, ex
he learn it through the sovereign power,
who alone
cept
has the right to transact business : therefore no one
public
he
can rightly practise piety or obedience to God, unless
the s commands in all things. This
obey sovereign power
the facts of experience. For if
proposition is confirmed by
or an
the sovereign adjudge a man to be worthy of death
a or a a
enemy, whether he be citizen foreigner, private
individual or a separate ruler, no subject is allowed
to give
bour and hate thine enemy" (Matt. v. 48), but after they
had lost theirdominion and had gone into captivity in
take thought for the safety of
Babylon, Jeremiah bid them
the state into which they had been led captive
and Christ
;
(Matt. x. 28).
If this command were
imposed on everyone, governments
would be founded in vain, and Solomon s words (Prov. xxiv.
21), "My son, fear God and the king," would be impious,
which they certainly are not we must therefore admit that
;
of those who possess it. We may even say that those who
wield such authority have the most complete sway over the
popular mind.
Whosoever, therefore, wishes to take this right away
from the sovereign power, is desirous of dividing the do
minion from such division, contentions, and strife will
;
It is quite cer
tain that when sovereigns wish to follow their own
pleasure,
whether they have control over spiritual matters or not, the
254 A TIIEOLOOICO-rOLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. XIX.
CHAPTEE XX.
THAT IN A FREE STATE EVERY MAN MAT
THINK WHAT
HE LIKES, AND SAY WHAT HE THINKS.
TF men s minds were as easily controlled as their
tongues-
L
every king would sit
safely on his throne, and govern-
ment by compulsion would cease for
every subject would
;
must, therefore, now inquire, how far such freedom can and
ought to be conceded without danger io the peace of the
Ktate, or the power of the rulers ;
and this, ;is I said at the
beginning of Chapter XVI., is iny principal object.
It follows, plainly, from the explanation given above, of
the foundations of a state, that tlio ultimate aim of govern-
CHAP. XX.] FREEDOM OF THOUGHT AND SPEECH. 259
if he submits his
opinion to the judgment of the authorities
(who, alone, have the right of making and repealing laws),
and meanwhile acts in nowise contrary to that law, he has
deserved well of the state, and has behaved as a good citizen
should but if he accuses the authorities of injustice, and
;
CHAFFER I.
traordinary power.
has not bestowed on their fellows, they are not said to surpass the
bounds of human nature, unless their special qualities are such as
cannot be said to be deducible from the definition of human
nature. For instance, a giant is a rarity, but still human. The
gift ofcomposing poetry extempore is given to very few, yet it is
human. The same may, therefore, be said of the faculty pos
sessed by some of imagining things as vividly as though they
saw them before them, and this not while asleep, but while
270 A THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE.
CHAPTER III.
Note 4 (p. 47). In Gen. xv. it is written that God promised Abra
ham to protect him, and to grant him ample rewards. Abraham
answered that he could expect nothing which could be of any
value to him, as he was childless and well stricken in years.
Note 5 (p. 47). That a keeping of the commandments of the
Old Testament is not sufficient for eternal life, appears from
Mark x. 21.
CHAPTER VI.
Note 6 (;). 84). We doubt of the existence of God, and conse
quently of all else, so long as we have no clear and distinct idea of
God, but only a confused one. For as he who knows not rightly
the nature of a triangle, knows not that its three angles are equal
to two right angles, so he who conceives the Divine nature con
fusedly, does not see that it pertains to the nature of God to
exist. Now, to conceive the nature of God clearly and distinctly,
it is necessary to pay attention to a certain number of
very simple
notions, called general notions, and by their help to associate the
conceptions which we form of the attributes of the Divine nature.
It then, for the first time, becomes clear to us, that God exists
necessarily, that He is omnipresent, and that all our conceptions
involve in themselves the nature of God and are conceived
through it. Lastly, we see that all our adequate ideas are true.
Compare on this point the prolegomena to my book, "Pr/n-
ciples of Descartes 8 philosophy set forth geometrically"
CHAPTER VII.
Note 7 It is impossible to find a method which would
"
(p. 108).
enable i(S to gain a ceiiain knowledge of all the statements in Scrip
ture." I mean impossible for us who have not the habitual use of
the language, and have lost the precise meaning of its phraseology.
Note S(p. 112). "Not in things whereof tlie understanding can gain
a clear and distinct idea, and which are conceivable through tJiem-
eelves."
By things conceivable I mean not only those which are
rigidly proved, but also those whereof we are morally certain,
and are wont to hear without wonder, though they are incapable
of proof. Everyone can see the truth of Euclid s propositions
before they are proved. So also the histories of things both
future and past which do uot surpass human credence, laws,
NOTES. 271
CHAPTER VIII.
Note 9 (p. 122). "Mount Moriah is called the mount of God."
That is by the historian, not by Abraham, for he says that the
place now called "In the mount of the Lord it shall be re
vealed," was called by Abraham, the Lord shall provide."
"
CHAPTER IX.
Note 11 (p. 133). Withfeiv exceptions" One of these
"
exceptions
isfound in 2 Kings xviii. 20, where we read, Thou sayest (but
"
they are but vain words)," the second person being used. In
Isaiah xxxvi. 5, we read I say (but they are but vain
"
words) I
have counsel and strength for war," and in the twenty-second
verse of the chapter in Kings it is written, "But if
ye say," the
plural number being used, whereas Isaiah gives the singular.
The text in Isaiah does not contain the words found in 2
Kings
xxxii. 32. Thus there are several cases of various
readings where
it is impossible to distinguish the best.
Note 12 (p. 134). The expressions in the tivo passages are so
"
precedes.
allude to the time when Joseph was sold by his brethren. But
this is not all. We ma} draw the same conclusion from the age
r
reckoning of the ob
jectors, when Joseph was sixteen or seventeen years old, for
Jacob left Laban seven years after Joseph s birth. Now from
the seventeenth year of Joseph s age till the patriarch went into
Egypt, not more than twenty-two years elapsed, as we have
shown in this chapter. Consequently Benjamin, at the time of
the journey to Egypt, was twenty-three or twenty-four at the
most. Ho would therefore have been a grandfather in the
flower of his age (Gen. xlvi. 21, cf. Numb. xxvi. 38, 40, and
1 Chron. viii. 1), for it is certain that Bela,
Benjamin s eldest
son, had at that time, two sons, Addai and Naaman. This is
just as absurd as the statement that Dinah was violated at the
age of seven, not to mention other impossibilities which would
result from the truth of the narrative. Thus we see that unskil
fulendeavours to solve difficulties, only raise fresh ones, and
make confusion worse confounded.
Note 10(p. 13G). Othniel,sonoj Kcnag, ivasjudgrfor forty years."
"
Rabbi Levi Ben Gerson and others believe that these forty years
which the Bible says were passed in freedom, should be counted
NOTES. 273
from the death of Joshua, and
consequently include the eight
years during which the people were subject to Kushan Risha-
thaim, while the following eighteen years must be added on to
the eighty years of Ehud s and
Shamgar s judgeships. In this
case it would be necessary to reckon the other
years of subjection
among those said by the Bible to have been passed in freedom.
But the Bible expressly notes the number of
years of subjection,
and the number of years of freedom, and further declares
(Judges ii. 18) that the Hebrew state was prosperous during the
whole time of the judges. Therefore it is evident that Levi^Ben
Gerson (certainly a very learned man), and those who follow
him, correct rather than interpret the Scriptures.
The same fault is committed by those who assert, that
Scrip
ture, by this general calculation of years, only intended to mark
the period of the regular administration of the Hebrew
state,
leaving out the years of anarchy and subjection as periods of
misfortune and interregnum. Scripture
certainly passes over in
silence periods of anarchy, but does
not, as they dream, refuse
to reckon them or wipe them out of the
country s annals. It is
clear that Ezra, in 1 Kings vi., wished to reckon
absolutely all
the years since the flight from
Egypt. This is so plain, that no
one versed in the Scriptures can doubt it.
For, without going
back to the precise words of the text, we
may see that the
genealogy of David given at the end of the book of Ruth, and
1 Chron. ii., scarcely accounts for so
great a number of years.
For Nahshon, who was prince of the tribe of Judah
(Numb. vii.
11), two years after the Exodus, died in the desert, and his son
Salmon passed the Jordan with Joshua. Now this
Salmon, ac
cording to the genealogy, was David s great-grandfather. De
ducting, then, from the total of 480 years, four years for Solomon s
reign, seventy for David s life, and forty for the time passed in
the desert, we find that David was born 366
years after the pas
sage of the Jordan. Hence we must believe that David s father,
grandfather, great-grandfather, and great-great-grandfather be
gat children when they were ninety years old.
Note 16 (p. 137). Samson was judge for twenty years.
"
Samson was born after the Hebrews had fallen under the
dominion of the Philistines.
Note 17 (p. 139). Otherwise, they rather correct than
explain
Scripture.
Note 18 (p. 140). "Kirjafh-jearim."
Kirjath-jearim is also called
Baale of Judah. Hence Kimchi and others think that the
words
Baale Judah, which I have translated "
CHAPTER X.
the
nnclo of the first high priest, named Joshua (see Ezra vii., and
1 Chron. vi. 14), and went to Jerusalem from Babylon with
Zerubbabel (see Nehemiah xii. 1). But it appears that when
lie saw, that the Jews were in a state of anarchy, he returned
to Babylon, as also did others (Nehern. i. 2), and remained
NOTES. 275
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
Note 2G (p. 203). "No one can honestly promise fo forego the
right which he has over all things" In the state of social life,
where general right determines what is good or evil, stratagem
is rightly distinguished as of two kinds, good and
evil. But in
the state of Nature, where every man is his own judge, possess
ing the absolute right to lay down
laws for himself, to interpret
them as he pleases, or to abrogate them if ho thinks it con
be evil.
venient, it is not conceivable that stratagem should
Every inendcr of it may, if he will, be free."
"
man who knows God rightly. Obedience has regard to the will
of a ruler, not to necessity and truth. Now as we are ignorant
of the nature of God s will, and on the other hand know that
everything happens solely by God s power, we cannot, except
through revelation, know whether God wishes in any way to be
honoured as a sovereign.
NOTES. 277
God that all the Lord s people were prophets, and that the Lord
would put His spirit upon them." That is to say, would God
that the right of taking counsel of God were general, and the
was not
power were in the hands of the people. Thus Joshua
mistaken as to the right, but only as to the time for using it,
for which he was rebuked by Moses, in the same way as Abishai
was rebuked by David for counselling that Shimei, who had
undoubtedly been guilty of treason, should be put to death. See
2 Sam. xix. 22, 23.
Note 31 (p. 222). See Numbers xxvii. 21. The translators of the
Bible have rendered incorrectly verses 19 and 23 of this chapter.
The passage does not mean that Moses gave precepts or advice
to Joshua, but that he made or established him chief of the
Hebrews. The phrase is very frequent in Scripture (see Exodus,
xviii. 23 ; 1 Sam. xiii. 15 Joshua i. 9 1 Sam. xxv. 30).
; ;
Note 32 (p. 224). There ivas no judge over each of the captains
"
save God." The Eabbis and some Christians equally foolish pre
tend that the Sanhedrin, called "the great" was instituted by
Moses. As a matter of fact, Moses chose seventy colleagues to
assist him in governing, because he was not able to bear alone the
A THEOLOGIOO-POLITICAL TREATISE.
every tribe to appoint for itself, in the cities which God had given
it, judges to settle disputes according to the laws which he him
self had laid down. In cases where the opinions of the
judges
differed as to the interpretation of these laws, Moses bade them
take counsel of the High Priest (who was the chief
interpreter
of the law), or of the chief judge, to whom
they were then
subordinate (who had the right of
consulting the High Priest),
and to decide the dispute in accordance with the answer obtained.
If any subordinate judge should
assert, that he was not bound by
the decision of the High Priest, received either
directly or through
the chief of his state, such an one was to be
put to death (Dent,
xvii. 9) by the chief judge, whoever he
might be, to whom ho
was a subordinate. This chief judge would either be
Joshua,
the supreme captain of the whole
people, or one of the tribal
chiefs who had been entrusted, after the division of the
tribes,
with the right of consulting the high
priest concerning the
affairs of his tribe, of on or
deciding peace war, of fortifying
towns, of appointing inferior judges, &c. Or, again, it might be
the king, in whom all or some of the tribes had vested
their
rights.
I could cite many
instances in confirmation of what I here
advance. I will confine
myself to one, which appears to me the
most important of all. When the Shilomitish
prophet anointed
Jeroboam king, ho, in so doing, gave him the
right of cousultin"
the high priest, of
appointing judges, &c. In fact he endowed
him with all the rights over the ten tribes, which Rehoboam
retained over the two tribes.
Consequently Jeroboam could set
up a supreme council in his court with as much ri^ht as Jehosha-
pkat could at Jerusalem (2 Chron. xix. 8). For it is plain that
itlier Jeroboam, who was king by God s command, nor Jero
boam subjects, were bound by the Law of
s
Moses to accept the
judgments of Rehoboam, who was not their king. Still less were
they under the jurisdiction ot the judge, whom Rehoboam had
.
up in Jerusalem as subordinate to himself. According
lorefore, as the Hebrew dominion was
divided, so was a
supreme council set up in each division. Those who neglect the
ions in the constitution of the Hebrew
States, and confuse
ogether m one, fall into numerous difficulties.
CHAPTER XIX.
Note 33 (p 256). I must here
bespeak special attention for
what was said in Chap. XVI.
concerning rights.
BENEDICT DE SPINOZA S POLITICAL TREATISE,
AND FREEDOM OF
THE CITIZENS.
[TRACTATUS POLITICKS.}
FKOM THE EDITOK S PEEFACE TO THE
POSTHUMOUS WOEKS OF BENEDICT
DE SPINOZA.
Friend,
which may properly be prefixed to this Political
Treatise,
and serve it for a Preface :"
in
and highest end which a society can contemplate and, ;
politics.
And so, farewell."
aristocracy.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION.
1-3. Of the theory and practice of political science . . . 287
4. Of the authors design .
( 288
5. Of the force of the passions in men 289
6, 7. That we must not look to proofs of reason for the causes
and foundations of dominion, but deduce them from the
general nature or condition of mankind .... 289
,291
291
6. The vulgar opinion about liberty. Of the first man s fall . 292
Of liberty and necessity
7-iO.
11. He is free, who is led by reason ... \
294
295
12.
13.
14.
Of alliances formed between men
Men naturally enemies
.....
Of giving and breaking one s word by natural right . .
]
296
296
296
15. The more there are that come
together, the more right all
collectively have 296
16. Every one has so much the less
.
297
297
18. That in the state of nature one can do no
wrong . 297
19-21. What wrong-doing and obedience are . 298
22. The free man j 299
23. The and unjust
just man 299
24. Praise and blame 300
PAQB
11, 12. the right of supreme authorities against the world at
Of
large
13. Two commonwealths naturally hostile
14-18. Of the state of treaty, war, and peace
....
....
306
306
307
320
15,16. Of the king s counsellors
17-25. Of the supreme council s functions . . . . . 321
20-29. Of another council for administering justice . . . 323
30. Of other subordinate councils
324
31. Of the payment of the militia
324
32. Of the rights of foreigners
325
33. Of ambassadors
34. Of the king s servants and body-guard
35. Of waging war
.... 325
325
325
36. Of the king s marriage
326
32C
37,38. Of the heir to tin- dominion
39. Of the obedience of the citi/.crs
326
40. Of religion
326
......
,
25.
history ..........
Of the dangers from the
king s marriage. Evidence of
Of the right of succession to the
33g
26.
27.
Of the right of worshipping God
kingdom .
All men s nature is one and the same
.... .
339
349
340
23. Of the most durable dominion of all . .
] 341
Of hardly
"
29.
concealing the plans of the dominion . .* 342
30. Ihe example of the dominion of the
Arragonrso . . 342
81. That the multitude
enough liberty ......
may preserve under a kino- an ample
. . 344
........
.
2. An
aristocracy should consist of a large number of *patri
cians
345
3. Difference between
monarchy and aristocracy . 345 . .*
8.
.......
tocracy where one city is head of a whole dominion
Of fortifying towns
Of the military and its leaders
348 ,
348
9.
10.
11.
Of the sale of lands and farms ....
.
.
.
.".!
.
. 349
350
350
12. Of the causes of the destruction of an
351
The primary law of this dominion, toaristocracyits
. .
13.
into oligarchy
......
14, 15. Patricians to be chosen out of certain families
prevent
.
lapsing
! 351
352
16. Of the place and time of
assembling
. *.
MGl
29-33. Of the
senate or second council 358
34-36. presidents of the senate and their deputies. Consuls
Of the 361
37-41. Of the bench or college of judges 363
....
43. Judges to be appointed in every city
Kight of the neigh
366
367
44. Ministers of dominion to be chosen from the commons . 367
45. Of the tribunes of the treasury 368
46. Of freedom of worship and speech
47. Of the bearing and state of the patricians .... 368
368
48. Of the oath
49. Of academies and liberty of teaching .... 369
369
CHAPTER X. OF AUISTOCRACT.
1. Primary cause, why aristocracies are dissolved. Of a
dictator 3
^8
2. Of the supreme council 379
3. Of the tribunes of the commons among the Komans . . 380
4. Of the authority of the syndics 380
6. Sumptuary laws . . . . .381
381
6,7. Vices not to be forbidden directly, but indirectly
. .
1, 2.
3. Of the nature of democracy
4. Women to be excluded
....
Difference between democracy and aristocracy
from government
. 385
386
387
POLITICAL TREATISE.
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION.
the rest to live after his own mind, and to what he approve
approves, and reject what he rejects. And so it comes to
pass, that, as all are equally eager to be first, they fall to
strife, and do their utmost
mutually to oppress one an
other and he who comes out
;
conqueror is more proud of
the harm he has done to the other, than of the
good he has
done to himself. And although all are
persuaded, that re
ligion, on the contrary, teaches every man to love his
neigh
bour as himself, that is to defend another s
right just as
much as his own, yet we showed that this
persuasion has
too little power over the It avails, indeed, in the
passions.
hour of death, when disease has subdued the
very passions,
and man lies inert, or in temples, where men hold no
traffic, but least of all, where
is most needed, in the it
law-court or the palace. We
showed too, that reason
can, indeed, do much to restrain and moderate the
passions,
but we saw at the same time, that the road, which reason
a
herself points out, is so that such as persuade
very steep ;
"basely.
Nor does it matter to the security of a dominion,
in what spirit men are led to rightly administer its
affairs.
CHAPTER IL
OF NATURAL RIGHT.
1
Virgil, Eel. ii. 65,
294 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [OHAP. II.
with contingency.
grant me, that does not confound liberty
For liberty is a virtue, or excellence. Whatever, therefore,
convicts a man of weakness cannot be ascribed to his
liberty. And so man can by no means be called free, be
cause he able not to exist or not to use his reason, but only
is
determined in a
this order only are all individual beings
fixed manner to exist and operate. Whenever, then, any-
to ns ridiculous, absurd, or evil, it is
thing in nature seems
because we have but a partial knowledge of things, and
are in the main ignorant of the order
and coherence of
to be
nature as a whole, and because we want everything
to the dictate of our own reason;
arranged according
although, in fact, what
our reason pronounces bad, is not
bad as regards the order and laws of universal nature,
taken
but only as regards the laws of our own nature
,,
separately. .
is left in
for upon the removal of the feeling the other
dependent.
11. The judgment can be dependent
on another, only as
far as that other can deceive the mind ;
whence it follows
the mind is so far independent, as it uses reason
that
is to be reckoned
ario-ht. Nay, inasmuch as human power
it follows
less by physical vigour than by mental strength,
most whose reason is
that those men are independent
and who are most guided thereby. And so I am
strongest,
a man so far free, as he is led by
altogether for calling
reason because so far he is determined to action by suck
causes, as can be adequately understood by his unassisted
these causes he be necessarily de
nature, although by
termined to action. For liberty, as we
showed above
A POLITICAL TREATISE.
[CHAP. II.
hardly sup-
life and cultivate the mind. And so
our conclusion is,
that that natural
right, wliich is special to the human race,
SECS. 11-18. ] OF NATURAL EIGHT. 297
sound of body.
ut
wrong-doing cannot be conceived ot, r
19. Therefore
of
under dominion that is, where, by the general right
it is decided what is good and what
the whole dominion,
save what
evil and where no one does anything rightfully,
or consent
he does in accordance with the general decree
(Sec 16) For that, as we said in the last section, is
be committed, or is by
wrongdoing, which cannot lawfully
But obedience is the constant will to
law forbidden.
execute that, which by law is good,
and by the general
decree ought to be done.
that also wrc
20. Yet we are accustomed to call
and
which is done against the sentence of sound reason,
to the constant will to
to give the name of obedience
dictate of reason
moderate the appetite according to the
:
CHAPTEE in.
the matter aright, the natural right of every man does not
cease in the civil state. For man, alike in the natural and
in the civil state, acts according to the laws of his own
nature, and consults his own interest. Man, I say, in each
state is led by fear or hope to do or leave undone this or
that ;
but the main difference between the two states is
this, that in the civil state all fear the same things, and all
of religion
authority is yet so necessary to the propagating
forbidden, that without it one not only,
in places whore it is
1
but causes be-
as they say, wastes one s time and trouble,
whereof all ages have seen
Bides very many inconveniences,
wherever
most mournful examples. Everyone therefore,
can God with true religion, and mind
he may be, worship
of a private man. But
his own business, which is the duty
be left to Crod, o:
the care of propagating religion should
the supreme authorities, upon whom alone tails
contracting powers."
14. This
"
contract
motive for entering into it, that is, fear of hurt or
hope of
gain, subsists. But take away from either commonwealth
this hope or fear, and it is left
independent (Chap. II.
Sec. 10), and the link, the commonwealths were
whereby
mutually bound, breaks of itself. And therefore every
commonwealth has the right to break its contract, whenever
it chooses, and cannot be said to act
treacherously or per
fidiously in breaking its word, as soon as the motive of
hope or fear is removed. For every contracting party was
on equal terms in this respect, that whichever could first
free itself of fear should be
independent, and make use of
its independence after its own mind
and, besides, no one ;
CHAPTEE IV.
and, further, to use and order all means to war and peace,
as to found and fortify cities,
levy soldiers, assign military
posts, and order what it would have done, and, with a view
to peace, to send and give audience to ambassadors
; and,
finally, to levy the costs of all this.
3. Since, then, it is the of the supreme
right authority
310 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [cHAP. IV.
law
"
"
if by
that which, by civil law, is forbidden to be done, that
is, if these words be taken in their proper sense,
we cannot
at all say, that a commonwealth is bound by laws, or can
do wrong. For the maxims and motives of fear and
reverence, which a commonwealth is bound to observe in
its own interest, pertain not to civil jurisprudence, but to
the law of nature, since (Sec. 4) they cannot be vindicated
by the civil law, but by the law of war. And a common
wealth is bound by them in no other sense than that in
which, in the state of nature a man is bound to take heed,
that he preserve his independence and be not his own enemy,
lest he should destroy himself and in this taking heed
;
CHAPTER V.
iv. 12.
Justin, Histories, xxxii.
1
BEC3. 2-7.] OF THE BEST STATE OF A DOMINION. 315
1
In liis book called "
II Principe," or "
The Prince."
310 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [(.
HAP. VI.
CHAPTEE VI.
OF MONARCHY.
dissolve it.
2.
Accordingly, from the quarrels and seditions which
are often stirred up in a commonwealth, it never results
that the citizens dissolve it, as often happens in the case of
other associations but only that they change its form into
;
1
Cuftius, x. 1.
BECS. 5-12.] OF MONARCHY. 819
and let him let them at a yearly rent to the citizens, whether
townsmen or countrymen, and with this exception let them
all be free or exempt from every kind of taxation in time of
it is
necessary in time of peace to fortify cities against
war, and also to have ready ships and other munitions of
war.
13. After the selection of the king from one of the clans,
none are to be held noble, but his descendants, who are
therefore to be distinguished by royal insignia from their
own and the other clans.
14. Those male nobles, who are the reigning king s col
laterals, and stand to him in the third or fourth degree of
consanguinity, must not marry, and any children they may
have had, are to be accounted bastards, and unworthy of
any dignity, nor may they be recognized as heirs to their
parents, whose goods must revert to the king.
15. Moreover the king s counsellors, who are next to him
in dignity, must be numerous, and chosen out of the
citizens only;
that is (supposing there to be no more than
six hundred clans) from every clan three or four or five,
who will form together one section of this council; and not
for life, but for three, four, or five years, so that every
year a third, fourth, or fifth part may be replaced by selec
tion, in which selection it must be observed as a first con
dition, that out of every clan at least one counsellor chosen
be a jurist.
16. The selection must be made by the king himself,
who should fix a time of year for the choice of fresh coun
sellors. Each clan must then submit to the king the
names of all its citizens, who have reached their fiftieth
year, and have been duly put forward as candidates for this
office, and out of these the king will choose whom he
king at the time fixed by himself, that all may hear which
opinion of those proposed he thinks fit to adopt,
and what
he decides should be done.
26. For the administration of justice, another council is
to be formed of jurists, whose business should be to decide
824 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. VI.
expressly, privy
purse," to except the body-guard. For there should be no
other body-guard, but the citizens of the
king s city, who
should take turns to keep guard at court before the kind s
door.
35. War is made for the sake of peace, so
only to be
that, at its end, one may be rid of arms. And so, when
cities have been taken
by right of war, and terms of peace
are to be made after the enemies are
subdued, the captured
cities must not be
garrisoned and kept; but either the
enemy, on accepting the terms of peace, should be allowed
to redeem them at a
price, or, if by following that policy,
there would, by reason of the
danger of the position, remain
a constant lurking
anxiety, they must be utterly destroyed,
and the inhabitants removed elsewhere.
326 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [SECS. 36-40
CHAPTER VH.
OF MONARCHY (CONTINUATION).
1
Daniel vi. 15. Horn. "Odys.,"
xii. 156-200.
328 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [cSAP. VIl.
yields
up dominion to another," as Sallust has it in his first
1
speech to Caesar. And, therefore, it is clear, that a whole
multitude will never transfer its right to a few or to
one,
if itcan come to an agreement with itself, without
proceed
ing from the controversies, winch generally arise in large
councils, to seditions. And so the multitude does not, if
1
Chap. I. See. 4 of the speech, or rather letter, which is not now
admitted to be a genuine work of Sallust.
330 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [ciIAP. VII.
1
Ethics, iii, 29, &c.
832 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [cHAP. VII.
has most votes in such a council, will be to the interest of the greater
part of the subjects/
SECS. 10-14.] OF MONARCHY. 333
his soldiers, and
especially on their valour and faith, which
will always remain so
long enduring between men, as with
them is joined need, be that need honourable or
till. And this is why kings usually are fonder of disgrace-
exciting
than restraining their
soldiery, and shut their eyes more to
their vices than to their
virtues, and generally, to hold
under the best of them, seek out,
distinguish, and assist
with money or favour the idle, and those who
have ruined
themselves by debauchery, and shake hands with
them
and throw them kisses, and for the sake of
to every servile action. In order therefore
mastery stoop
that the citizens
may be distinguished by the king before all others, and as
tar as the civil state and
equity permit, may remain inde
pendent, it is necessary that the militia should consist of
citizens only, and that citizens should be
his counsellors
and 011 the contrary citizens are
altogether subdued and
are laying the foundations of eternal
war, from the moment
that they suffer mercenaries to be
levied, whose trade is
war and who have most power in strifes and
seditions.
13. That the king s counsellors
ought not to be elected
for but for three, four, or five
life,
years, is clear as well
from the tenth, as from what we said in the ninth
section
ot this chapter. For if they were chosen for life, not
only
could the greatest part of the citizens
conceive hardly any
hope of obtaining this honour, and thus there would" arise
a great
inequality, and thence envy, and constant murmurs,
and at last seditions, which, no
doubt, would be welcome to
kings greedy of mastery but also the counsellors, Lomo
:
1
2 Sum. xv. 31.
3
Tacitus, Histories, i., 7. TT
m
.
,
1
Chap. VI. Sec. 10.
336 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. VII.
1
were to be divided into clans,
18. I said that the citizens
and an equal number of counsellors chosen from each, in
order that the larger towns might have, in proportion to
the number of their citizens, a greater number of coun
is equitable, to contribute more
sellors, and be able, as
votes. For the power and, therefore, the right of a
dominion is to be estimated by the number of its citizens ;
Chap. VI.
1
SHI-S. 11, 15, 1C,
SECS. 18-22.] OF MOSAECH?. 33?
it is but fair to
pay them for their time. Besides, in war,
there can be no greater or more honourable inducement to
victory than the idea of liberty. But if, on the contrary, a
certain portion of the citizens be designated as soldiers, on
which account it will be necessary to award them a fixed pay,
1
Chap. VI. Sees. 27, 28. Chap. VI. Sec. 31.
38 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [ciIAP. Vlt
a 25 2 Chron. xii.
1 xiv.
Chap. VI. Sec. 36. 1 Kings ;
SECS. 22-2$.] 6? MONARCHY. 339
above all lie would have them create some supreme council,
to balance the king s power like the ephors of the Lace
daemonians, and to have absolute right to determine the
disputes, which might arise between the king and the
citizens. So then, following this advice, they established
the laws, which seemed to them most equitable, of which
the supreme interpreter, and therefore supreme judge, was
to be, not the king, but the council, which they call the
1
Seventeen, and whose president has the title of Justice.
This Justice then, and the Seventeen, who are chosen for
life, not by vote but by lot, have the absolute right of re
saying, that not without the loss of royal blood could sub
2
jects be allowed to choose their king. Yet he effected this
change, but upon this condition, That the subjects have
"
had and shall have the right of taking arms against any
violence whatever, whereby any may wish to enter upon
the dominion to their hurt, nay, against the king himself,
or the prince, his heir, if he thus encroach." By which
condition they certainly rather rectified than abolished that
right. For, as we haVe shown (Chap. IV. Sees. 5, 6), a
king can be deprived of the power of ruling, not by the
civil law, but by the law of war, in other words the sub
Sec Hallam s History of the Middle Ages," Chap. IV., for the
1 "
CHAPTER VIII.
OF ARISTOCRACY.
explicit will of the king (as we said, Chap. VII. Sec. 1),
but not every will of the king ought to be law but this
;
For we cannot doubt that the dominion rests the loss with
the patricians, the more rights the commons assert for
themselves, such as those which the corporations of artisans
in Lower Germany, commonly called Guilds, generally
possess.
6. But the commons need not apprehend any danger of
a hateful slavery from this form of dominion, merely be
cause it is conferred on the council absolutely. For the will
of so large a council cannot be so much determined by lust
as by reason because men are drawn asunder by an evil
;
fortify one or more cities, no one can doubt. But that city
is above all to be fortified, which is the head of the whole
1
Ou^ht not this reference to be to Chap. III. Sec. 6 ?
fiECS. 5-9.] OF AElSTOCBACYi g^f)
tend to the general good and, lastly, that the power of the
;
they are well known, I pass them by, and proceed now to
state the laws by which this dominion, of which we are
treating, ought to be maintained.
13. The primary law of this dominionought to be that
which determines the proportionate numbers of patricians
352 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [cflAP. Till.
arc able to transgress them, and the only ones who are to
take warning by the punishment, and must punish their
colleagues in order by fear of the same punishment to
restrain their own desire for all this involves a great ab
:
year of their age, and who are not by express law excluded,
are to have their names inscribed on a list, in presence of
the syndics, and to receive from them, at a fixed price,
some sign of the honour conferred on them, namely, that
they muv be allowed to wear a particular ornament only
permitted to them, to distinguish them and make them to
be had in honour by the rest; and, at the same time, be it
ordained, that in elections none may nominate as patrician
anyone whose name is not inscribed on the general list,
and that under a heavy penalty. And, further, let no one
be allowed to refuse the burden of a duty or oflice, which
lie is chosen to bear. Lastly, that all the absolutely funda
mental laws of the dominion may be everlasting, it must
be ordained that if anyone in the supreme council raise a
question about any fundamental law, as of prolonging the
command of any general of an army, or of diminishing the
number of patricians, or the like, he is guilty of treason,
and not only is he to be condemned to death, and his goods
confiscated, but some sign of his punishment is to remain
visible in public for an eternal memorial of the event. But
for the confirming of the other general rights of the do
minion, it is enough, if it be only ordained, that no law
can be repealed nor new law passed, unless first the college
of syndics, and then three-fourths or four-fifths of the
supreme council agree thereto.
26. Lot the right also of summoning the supreme council
and proposing the matters to be decided in it, rest with tho
syndics, and let them likewise be given the first place in
SECS. 25-28.] OF ARISTOCRACY. 357
the council, but without the right to vote. But before they
take their seats, they must swear by the safety of that
supreme council and by the public liberty, that they will
strive with the utmost zeal to preserve unbroken the
ancient laws, and to consult the general good. After which
let them through their secretary open in order the subjects
of discussion.
27. But that all the patricians may have equal authority
in making decrees and electing the ministers of the do
minion, and that speed and expedition in all matters may
be possible, the order observed by the Venetians is alto
gether to be approved, for they appoint by lot a certain
number of the council to name the ministers, and when
these have named in order the candidates for office, every
patrician signifies by ballot his opinion, approving or re
jecting the candidate in question, so that it is not after
wards known, who voted in this or that sense. Whereby
it is contrived, not
only that the authority of all the patri
cians in the decision is equal, and that business is quickly
despatched, but also, that everyone has absolute liberty
(which is of the first necessity in councils) to give his
opinion without danger of unpopularity.
28. But in the councils of syndics and the other councils,
the same order is to be observed, that voting is to be by
ballot. But the right of convoking the council of syndics
and of proposing the matters to be decided in the same
ought to belong to their president, who is to sit every day
with ten or more other syndics, to hear the complaints and
secret accusations of the commons against the ministers,
and to look after the accusers, if circumstances require, and
to summon the supreme council even before the appointed
time, any of them judge that there is danger in the
if
delay. Now this president and those who meet with him
every day are to be appointed by the supreme council and
out of the number of syndics, not indeed for life, but for
six months, and they must not have their term renewed
but after the lapse of three or four years. And these, as
we said above, are to be awarded the goods that are confis
cated and the pecuniary fines, or some part of them. The
remaining points which concern the syndics we will men
tion in their proper places.
358 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [dlAP. VIII.
1 "
This V.
Pieter do la Court (1618-85), an en incnt publicist,
II. is
who wrote under the initials J). C. (J)i la Court), V. II. (Van den Hove,
the Dutch equivalent). He was a friend of John de Witt, and opposed
to the party of the Statholders. POLLOCK S Life and Philosophy of
Spinoza, towards end of Chap. X
8ECS. 31-34.] OF ARISTOCRACY. 361
piration of this time, let the second series take the place of
the first, and so on, their turns, so that that
observing
series which was the first months may be last in
first in
the second period. Furthermore, there are to be
appointed
as many presidents as there are
series, and the same
number of vice-presidents to fill their places when re-
quired that is, two are to be chosen out of every series,
one to be its president, the other its And
vice-president.
let the president of the first series
preside in the senate
also, for the first months or, in his absence, let his vice-
;
and, if they are all of one mind about it, then let them
convoke the senate, and, having duly explained the ques
tion, let them set forth what their opinion is, and, without
waiting for another s opinion, collect the votes in their
order. But if the consuls support more than one opinion,
BECS. 34-37.] OP ARISTOCRACY. 363
the
would, on the other hand, dare everything against
commons, and daily carry off the rich among them for a
of men, and
council that is composed of so large a number
has no special profits assigned to it. And so utterly un-
8ECS. 37-41.] OF ARlSTOCfcACr. 365
which thing has been fatal to the Dutch. For this cannot
happen without exciting the jealousy of many of the
noblest. And surely we cannot doubt, that a senate, whose
wisdom is derived from the advice, not of senators, but of
officials, will be most frequented by the sluggish, and the
condition of this sort of dominion will be little better than
that of a monarchy directed by a few counsellors of the
king. (See Chap. VI. Sees. 5-7). However, to this evil
the dominion will be more or less liable, according as it
was well or ill founded. For the liberty of a dominion is
never defended without risk, if it has not firm enough
foundations ; and, to avoid that risk, patricians choose
from the commons ambitious ministers, who are slaughtered
as victims to appease the wrath of those, who are
plotting
against liberty. But where liberty has firm enough foun
dations, there the patricians themselves vie for the honour
of defending it, and are anxious that
prudence in the con
duct of affairs should flow from their own advice
only and;
B B
370 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. IX.
CHAPTER IX.
OF ARISTOCRACY. CONTINUATION.
this
turns, or a place would have to be assigned for
council, that has not the right of citizenship, and belongs
SECS. 1-5.] OF ARISTOCRACY. 371
CHAPTEE X.
OF ARISTOCRACY. CONCLUSION".
1.
Muchiavelli.
SECS. 1, 2.] OF ARISTOCRACY. 379
would be exceedingly
vague, and therefore easily neglected!
Unless, then, this authority of a dictator be
eternal and
fixed, and therefore
impossible to be conferred on one man
without destroying the form of
dominion, the dictatorial
authority itself, and consequently the
vation of the safety and preser
republic will be very uncertain.
2. But, on the other
hand, we cannot doubt (Chap VI
Sec. 3), that if without
destroying the form of dominion;
ie sword of the
dictator might be
permanent, and only
Cic. ad Quint Grat. iii.
8, 4. The better reading is
S d in 8UCh a P assa e means * he
"
party
380 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [cHAP. X.
1
Not by law, except before n.c. 287 and in the interval between tho
dictatorship of Sulla and the consulship of Pompey
and Crassus. J5ut
in the golden age of the republic the senate in fact controlled the
tribunes.
SECS. 2-6.] OF ARISTOCEACT. 381
that is to be judged
according to the individual s fortune,
so that it cannot be determined
by any general law.
6. I conclude, therefore, that the common vices of
peace,
of which we are here
speaking, are never to be directly, but
indirectly forbidden that is, by laying such foundations
;
all, as sometimes
happens, are seized by a sort of panic
terror all, without
regard to the future or the laws, approve
only that which their actual fear suggests, all turn towards
the man who is renowned for his
victories, and set him free
from the laws, and
(establishing thereby the worst of pre
cedents) continue him in command, and entrust to his
ndekty all affairs of state and this was, in fact, the cause
:
CHAPTEE XI.
OF DEMOCRACY.
1.
at length, to the third and perfectly absolute do
1PASS,
minion, which we call democracy. The difference be
tween this and aristocracy consists, we have said, chiefly
in this, that in an aristocracy it depends on the supreme
council s will and free choice only, that this or that man is
made a patrician, so that no one has the right to vote or
fill
public offices by inheritance, and that no one can by
right demand this right, as is the case in the dominion,
whereof we are now treating. For all, who are born of citizen
parents, or on the soil of the country, or who have deserved
well of the republic, or have accomplished any other con
ditions upon which the law grants to a man right of
citizenship they all, I say, have a right to demand for
;
system the result might be, that the supreme council would
be composed of fewer citizens than that of the aristocracy
of which we treated above, yet, for all that, dominions
of this kind should be called democracies, because in them
the citizens, who are destined to manage affairs of state,
are not chosen as the best by the supreme council, but are
destined to it by a law. And although for this reason
dominions of this kind, that is, where not the best, but
those who happen by chance to be rich, or who are born
o o
386 A POLITICAL TREATISE. [CHAP. XI.
1
Justin, Histories, ii. 4.
CH1SWICK RESS
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