A Sketch of The Development of Philosoph - Ludwig Noire
A Sketch of The Development of Philosoph - Ludwig Noire
A Sketch of The Development of Philosoph - Ludwig Noire
A SKETCH
LUDWIG NOIRE
ILontion
MACMILLAN AND
NEW
ICjOO
to
Professor
Max
Mutter
translation of
"Kant s
(Macmillan, 1881).
INTRODUCTION,
THE
salle 1
,
history of philosophy has ceased, says Lasto count as a mere collection of curiosities,
an assemblage of arbitrary or accidental opinions. Thought too is seen to be an historical product and the history of philosophy a representation of the
;
course
self-development in necessary con And if the history of philosophy, like all tinuity. other historical development, is governed by inner
of
its
necessary laws, then surely, here if anywhere, in this history of knowledge, the law of the development of
following historical introduction, although they are not free from the obscurity and confusion of thought
which flourished under the rule of Hegelianism. For the History of History of Philosophy and the Knowledge are very far from being identical. If our
conception of philosophy includes all those reflections which the human mind has at different times in dulged in respecting its own nature, then the history
of philosophy will be a history of these reflections,
and
form only a portion, though an important of the History of Knowledge, and this only so one, far as it satisfies the true test of value by exercising
will
1
i.
p. xii.
VOL.
INTRODUCTION.
lasting
influence
It is thought. of knowledge as the chief or sole object of history if such a view has not philosophical research, and has at yet received the adherence of the majority, it
been formulated by one authority of weight, in All future philosophy must be a philoso these terms
least
:
phy of language.
Notwithstanding this obvious confusion of terms, I have chosen the above words of Lassalle as a motto for the present work, first, because of the great truth
which they do contain, and, secondly, because of their appropriateness at the present day, when, more than at any previous time, the conviction is gaining
ground that in order to understand any fact or pheiiomenon any manifestation of human opinion, feel ing or belief, we must first familiarise ourselves with
3
its
and its past development. And I may that the two great camps in which the men hope the empiricists and of science and the philosophers
origin
are drawn up will be reconciled and meet a-priorists here as upon neutral ground. For the former, the motto promises a discussion of development, and of development according to natural, impartial reason
ing
it
mar
and incomprehensible faculty distinguishing mankind, reason, towards which no Darwinian has
vellous
as yet succeeded in the least degree in establishing a bridge from out the animal world 1
.
Critik der Beinen Vernunft represents the greatest revolution which has ever taken place in
Instead of this, human reason has been imported into the animal world, and the problem, so far from being cleared up, has thus been rendered doubly obscure, as, for instance, by Sir J.
1
Kant s
Lubbock
INTRODUCTION.
the realms of speculation.
It has often been com and among others by the author himself, with pared, the Copernican system. Not less truly it has been likened by Roserikranz to the head of Jan vis in the
itself all
the
conquests of preceding labours, while all further pro To do full gress has to take its departure thence.
justice to its significance requires therefore a retro spective survey of all that has been done in this
first
existence of philosophy.
first
with curiosity about themselves it around them begins therefore when primitive which appears as the earliest and most religion, natural interpretation of the universe, is no longer
them with the imaginative language They do not guess that it is their ow n reason which drives them to seek for new ex the double problem of world and mind planations
able to satisfy of mythology.
7
;
appears as a simple one, and they seek to attain the desired explanation from the world and in the
still
world.
An
takes
widest flights in search of its proper in the course of cen object, which go on narrowing turies till at last they only embrace a narrow spot within which the self and its own nature appears to the astonished gaze as the true Archimedean point
whence everything
else is to
be explained.
In the following pages I have endeavoured to trace in broad outline the course which has been this goal. pursued from the earliest beginnings to In order to carry out the programme laid down I
INTRODUCTION.
to a single idea as simple as the nature of know It is to be hoped that this sim ledge itself.
plicity
will
not
prove
stumbling-block.
The
grounds upon which it rests will not become ap parent till we reach the beginning of the sketch of For the present it is suffi mediaeval philosophy.
reason set up by
cient to observe in reference to the ideal of pure Kant that the essence of the ancient
philosophy was cosmology, that of the mediaeval, theology, and that of the modern, psychology.
meaning only the great currents of thought, which had received a decisive direction
I say the essence,
towards a certain quarter, in each principal epoch of development, notwithstanding the apparently oppo site bent of minor tributaries, of isolated thoughts and opinions whose true value and significance can only be estimated at a later date when a new theory However high of the universe has been accepted.
the summit of a tree
may reach,
its
root
is
in the soil
beneath, and philosophers too are children of their age and can never wholly free themselves from the
ideas,
them:
Yet it is an interesting spectacle to watch the truths and theories of a future day germinating in
on a foreign soil. And of this we need only say that there is no tendency of modern thought which has not its prototype in Greek philo sophy, none except that which must be called the
earlier times as
modern tendency K.O.T e^o^v the Ego of Descartes. At the same time it must be obvious to every thoughtful mind that it is just this latest develop ment which has made all the ancient systems and
forecasts to appear in a
new
light, so that
even when
INTRODUCTION.
the original hue of the stream remains to testify to its origin, still in the new current with which it mingles, it struggles onwards under quite different conditions and in a fresh direction. The doctrines of
Kant may be recognised, as we shall see, in the views of Herakleitos and Protagoras, but in a form which bears the same relation to his work as the
of the Pythagoreans about the earth s motion do to the calculations of Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton. Kant himself seems to have foreseen the chance of such insinuations, for he appeals to
guesses
those
who
take the
History of Philosophy
till
for phi
losophy
itself,
to wait
his
it
become
fore.
historical, after
which
Otherwise nothing could ever be said which had not, in their opinion, been said already, and in deed this saying itself may be a trustworthy pro phecy of what is to be said hereafter. For, since
occupied
objects
itself
for
in
various
ways, it would be almost strange if something old 1 could not be found to resemble every novelty / Schopenhauer s answer to those who, after ignoring
his
work
),
stalled
in
is
sentence
of
Schelling
:
Wollen
ist
Ursein
He
only,
who
has
discerned the
quences of a truth, who has developed its whole content and surveyed its whole scope, and who has then with full consciousness of its worth and weightiness given clear and coherent expression to
it,
he and he only
1
is its
Prolegomena, Preface.
Parerga und Paralipomena,
i.
144.
INTRODUCTION.
Kant
its
then, who analysed the human reason into ultimate elements and so first made it fully in
to
itself,
marks the close of a period of which now lies spread out as a whole development, before our eyes, and which we have to trace through its origin and its progress, its uncertain steps and
telligible
tentative searchings, its confident struggles and. its anxious doubts, its apparent retrogression and its
gallant
who has plunged into the obscurest abysses of the human mind and, with almost superhuman calm, has
in his hand.
succeeded in emerging with the key to the mystery In Kant, in the truest sense of the He has made an reason has come to herself. words,
all
mystical admixtures,
all
all
un
justifiable pretensions,
forbidden regions. If, as no one has yet questioned, reason is the true and only tool and means to which
man owes
inward nobility, Kant must be recognised with equal un reserve as the greatest benefactor of humanity. May the seed which he has scattered ripen everywhere may the light of day which rose with him spread over every region of thought and conduct and above all, may the broils, at once so empty and embittered, and the logomachies of the school which have already
his high place, his successes
and
his
to damage philosophy in the estima some of the good and wise, may these at length be silenced, and the name of Kant become a rallying-poirit of union for all genuine and honest lovers of truth in every science and among every nation. This is the only worthy return which our
clone so
much
tion of
gratitude to this great thinker can bring to celebrate the jubilee of his immortal work.
INTRODUCTION.
Perikles said that
7
is
the tomb of
the great, and we may say of Kant, Time and Space Of him, more cannot limit the action of great men. than of any child of man, the poet s words are true
Es kann
Nicht
in
die
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
Ei/
avrl TrdfTcov.
OiTdOS ov.
THE
character of ancient
objective.
distinction,
by Descartes, between the and the object of thought, which thinking subject
is
now
all
recognised as the necessary starting-point of What we think and have philosophical enquiry.
to think,
liow
was
still
the question
we think had not yet presented itself. Even the highest achievement of ancient philosophy, the Platonic Idealism, did not escape these fetters of objectivity; the rational soul was conceived to be
capable of discerning ideas in their purity and clear ness, but objective reality was attributed to the
ideas.
Philosophical questions in antiquity were accord ingly ontological ; in other words, Being was every
where presupposed and further investigation was directed only towards the nature of being, and how many kinds there were of being, whether one or many. While we have been in the habit, since Des cartes, of starting from the knowing subject, and,
Kant, of deducing thence the conception of being, such an idea seldom presented itself to the ancients they could only explain the nature of reason by assuming the mind to be a real entity,
since
;
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
and then enquire further whether it was a special kind of being, or whether it was identical with matter whether it was a kind of sensibility, or whether it was a part of the general world-soul. The true path of idealism was still undiscovered.
;
Reason, however, in obedience to its natural bent, was striving everywhere towards unity, little sus pecting in its search after unity that the true source thereof lay in itself, and that all the w hile it was
r
but projecting its own nature outwards into the world of Being. It may be said then of the philosophy of the
cients that it consisted of attempts to
ai>
explain the
world by means of a single principle which was ex pected to furnish an explanation of reason and the human soul. This is the natural course of the de
velopment
thing that
arid
man
the
last
the outer
world
alwavs the most certain and the most In this sense Sokrates observes in his eyes. original Do you then believe that one may in the Phaedros understand the nature of the soul without discern ment of nature as a whole V
is
:
The
The
Greeks therefore
childish beginnings of philosophy among the all take the form of naturalism.
ilself in
mind, and
for this
;
day who
at the present seeing how many there are themselves from this cannot emancipate and persist in raising such ques
is
material,
is
which
is
about
if
quadrangular or
a mathematical triangle
is
green or blue.
10
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
The first attempt to place the One at the summit of a theory of the universe was made by the Eleatics. They were inspired by the dim consciousness that
rational
knowledge
is
The op pleteness, duration, and unchangeableness. or incompatibility between this desired unity position
and the manifold variety in the outer world called for some compromise of conciliation, and hence we find first in the Eleatic school the opposition between per and thought, between the Phenomenon and the ception
Noumenon.
is
The
it
unchangeable, immoveable, ever resting the world of sense, on the contrary, is vacillating, deceptive, ever
The appearances of sensibility, or pheno must therefore be reconciled or corrected by mena, the really Existing which can only be conceived in But the confusion between the real and thought.
in motion.
the ideal
is
very strikingly apparent here when we master of this school, the univer
Parmenides, asserting that Being and Thought are one and the same. What may pass for lofty wisdom in those early days of the laborious struggles of the reason towards self-know
ledge,
it
revered
must be condemned as dull absurdity when appears after Kant and Descartes in the Hegelian
direct opposite to the Eleatic school is found in the former we welcome the first
;
Dialectic.
The
in Herakleitos
glimpses of the idea of substance, of the principle of the indestructibility of force, as well as of the sub
sequent
investigations
of Geulinx
and Locke
re
specting the difference between real or primary and sensibly perceptible qualities, or between the intuitions
of sense and reason
;
we
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
.
II
achievements of Kant 1 Herakleitos too was seeking for a secure and durable principle that should be
applicable every whefe~and always, and only need to be expressed to furnish the key to the nature of the He finds this durable and eternal principle, world. not like the Eleatics in rest, but, on the contrary, in.
The true Being incessant flux and change. an eternal Becoming-, a state between being and not being. His famous saying of the universal flux
strife,
is
of things rests upon the self-evident aptness of the of a stream to which he appeals, show description
ing
it
same
always
The latest conclusion which was to be deduced from this fruitful idea is that the nature of substance must remain eternally unknowable by us, as it will always be impossible to distinguish whether the phenomenon before us proceeds from the identical same atoms as before or whether others have taken
Our reason is in any case compelled to matter as the persistent element, but this picture same matter remains for ever incomprehensible to us. For the rest, the positive side of this profound thinker s suggestion is from many points of view
their place.
J
whom
was the
be a particular number over and above which there might be always one more, the latter because of the well-known property of time and space by which they admit
the former because the
many must
of infinite division.
finitely
The arrow
in
its
it
flight
is
is
always in one in
a definite space be traversed, because first the half, and then the half of the half, and so on ad infinitum, has to elapse or be passed through, which gives an endless series
12
still
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
intelligible.
The change
,
of matter
of
the principle of substitution 1 these all point towards that original idea as to their germ. There
can be no doubt that Herakleitos himself fully com prehended the significance of his own thought, as
the key to the knowledge of the world and life. This appears especially from the fact that he saw
in motion, in restless activity and change, the real This is clear from a passage that principle of life.
runs,
the world
Herakleitos banished rest and stability from for these are the qualities of corpses 2
;
.
In
reference
to
rational
knowledge or
percep
degree interesting to find that Herakleitos had a presentiment of its being constituted by means of two factors. At least, it is
3 that according to reported by Sextus Empiricus soul attains to rational thought by Herakleitos, the receiving into itself the divine Logos which presides
,
On waking
An important application of this principle, with obvious re ference to Herakleitos, occurs in Aristotle (Polit. iii, c. 3), who says, that we call a city the same as long as one and the same race
born, as
although there are always some dying and others being are accustomed to call rivers and springs the same, in the one case water is always pouring in and in the although other flowing away. And the remark is transferred by Seneca to
inhabits
it,
we
the
human organism
(Ep.
Iviii)
No
one
is
man
that he was as a youth, no one is to-day what he was yester Our bodies change as streams do, and everything flows away day. as time does nothing endures. This was the opinion of Hera
;
kleitos,
the
name
This
2
clearer in all other things than in the case of too are borne along in equally rapid course."
is
man, but we
vii.
3
i.
23.
Adv. Math.
129.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
however,
sense
itself
13
portals
looking
forth
through
the
of
as through
window
again with the outer world, the soul recovers the faculty of thinking. Our nature is in fact es from the universe, and only as we approach tranged
it
become anew assimilated to the All, as coals ap proached to the fire become fiery themselves. All
truth, according to Herakleitos, resides in this uni versal and divine Logos, by which we become
thinkers (\oytKofy ourselves. This is indeed still all very obscure and mysterious, but we see through the dark abysses points Avhere future truth is
crystallising already.
We
mediate relationship of sensibility between the soul, still in a state of rest, and the outer world by which it is to be enkindled. The window apertures by which the soul shines forth remind us of the phrase of Leibniz the monads have no windows through
see in.
We
indications of a perception that the criterion of truth must be objective, and it agrees with this that
and eyes mere sensible appearance of things in the always deceives us. It is true the Logos lies world without (in the Trepi^ov], and our own being is too far estranged from the world to furnish in itself o
Herakleitos
is
the central starting-point of all knowledge. Another truth that in our days is forcing
into
its
way
ex daylight is foreshadowed with his full harmony pressed by Herakleitos in fundamental principle that all things proceed from
in the thought
fire,
and
It
may
by
reflecting
upon organic
life
14
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
and the degree to which it is determined by light and heat, even though it may not be necessary to exclude all trace of oriental doctrine and influence.
recognise pure Herakleitean profundity in the view that the whole of life is a similar process
But we
of opposing movements which are constantly beingtransformed into their own opposites like a flame or One of the Christian fathers, Gregory of river.
Nyssa
spirit
:
1
,
gives an interpretation conceived in the same With regard to the body, the case is thus
:
as long as
life
remains in
it,
;
there
is
an unceasing
up and down flow of change rest only begins when life has left it. But as long as it is alive, there is no repose, only alternate growth and decay, or rather
After all its an incessant intermixture of the two. progress, contemporary physiology can hardly give a better definition of life than this one couched in
Herakleitean phraseology.
Now if we assume that Herakleitos only saw in fire the freest and most rapid form of motion, and in ferred thence that combustion must represent the
things, so that they were always passing through a course of change, now solid and at rest, then again dissolved into their
primitive
condition
of
all
constituent elements, w e shall certainly have to re cognise in the views of this powerful thinker, whose
r
profundity met with unanimous recognition among the ancients, the first expression of the fundamental ideas which underlie the modern theory of the uni
verse, namely,
(1) That the primitive condition of the world a state of motion, not of rest.
is
That the material substratum of all pheno mena is an infinitely subtle substance, out of which
(2)
1
De Anim.
Krab.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
all
15
again into simplicity. (3) That the real objective Being is nothing but motion, whatever phenomenal differences may be thrust upon our notice by the senses.
which is at the same time the foundation of contemporary science and the essence
latter view,
The
Mayer s theories, is v/arranted by many from ancient writers, including Aristotle and passages Thus in the Plato, to be genuinely Herakleitean. Thesetetos we read That everything is motion, and nothing else exists and again, According to Homer and Herakleitos all things move like streams. In Aristotle it is said, That he (Herakleitos) believed
1
,
of Robert
same opinion ~l
Again
is
Some say that of existing things there not one in motion and another at rest, and we
:
perceive this
The influence of this powerful thinker was the more considerable because all subsequent systems had either to attach themselves to his doctrine or
to deal with
rection, in
it
in the
way
of development or cor
some
cases
retaining and
exaggerating
what
was one-sided
its
due proportion.
Supposing the general estimate of the Herakleitean flux to be correct, in the form in which it has always
been reproduced by later writers, namely, that no to thing really is, but rather is always beginning be or to cease to be, an eternal becoming, a middle
1
1563.
3
De Anim.
i.
2.
Phys. Auscult.
viii. c. 3.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
,
between being and not being 1 then reason would be in some danger of yielding to the temp tation of playing with its own paradoxes, and the dialectic trifling and tours de force of the sophists, who can prove of anything at the same time that it is and that it is not, might seem nearly related
state
to the
Epicharmos of Kos was credited with the well-known subtleties about the Delian galley which had been the same since the days of Theseus though every fragment of its wood had been renewed that the debtor was not bound to pay anything to his creditor because both were no longer the same as when the debt was incurred, or that an invited guest is not invited, for the same reason, and the like. The exaggerations of Kratylos belong
Herakleitean doctrine.
;
to the
same class he believed himself to surpass whose dictum as to the impossibility of bathing twice in the same river was improved upon, so that he contended it was impossible to bathe in it even once, since by the time the rest of the body had followed the feet, the water would have run away;
;
his master,
he maintained,
it is
finally,
2 according to Aristotle
that
name anything, or to maintain the utmost possible is to point to a thing anything with the finger, for everything is in a constant state of change. It is true that Aristotle gives this as
impossible to
;
the most extreme opinion of the ^acr/covrcoi/ qpaK\eiTithe professed Herakleitizers. CeLv, or
However
this
may
be, the
change or motion as the sole principle of creation led necessarily to this kind of exaggeration, and hence
1
"E*
fie
8r/
re KOI
<$>opas
Kivfjcrecat
Kal Kpdcreus
eori
fj.ei>
del
<ro(poi.
ir\r)i>
vn<pepeo-6oi>,
Metaph.
c.
5.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
to the spontaneous breaking up of the Herakleitean system by the absurdity of the consequences deduced
was a concealed contra diction in the doctrine itself which made a direct correction necessary by means of the nature of human reason, though it is possible that in his own mind Herakleitos had silently effected that correction. All change and transition, all alteration constantly and
from
it.
Besides
this,
there
continuously beginning, necessarily presupposes a something, some being that changes, transforms and
modifies
itself,
otherwise
all
But
if
we may
trust
Herakleitos
of this
One, underlying all change, al though this assurance is rather weakened, in the 1 passage referred to, by the words he seems to wish to say. If, as many ancient writers bear witness, Hera 2 kleitos regarded fire as the primaeval being underf 1
existence
De
Caelo,
iii. I
Ot be ra pev nXXa -navra ylvtffdai re $acn KOI pelv, 8e Ti p.oi Oi vTroplvew, e ov ravra Trdvra /xerao-^Tj(cat
irefpvKev
Hpa/cXftroy 6 E^eVto?.
2
The passage
in Plutarch
important in reference to this view aTa KC irvp airdvrcav, axnrfp ^puo-oC xPW
is
transformed into
is
fire
and
for
fire
just as gold
exchanged
cer
the fragmentary form of those tainly difficult, especially considering of his sayings which have been preserved, always to know exactly what was the real opinion, the actual thought in the mind of this of insight is revealed by this com great ancient; yet such a depth of the world and the national economy parison between the nature of the commercial world that I do not hesitate to rank this notion
among
sophy of antiquity.
the most important aper^us transmitted us from the philo has It is the more remarkable seeing that it
VOL.
I.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
lying all appearances, which produces by its trans formations (rpoTrcu) and its conversions into the op
posite (evavTiorpoTra i] all things and their differences, including life and thought, so that the life of one
thing
is
to honour in
the death of another \ we should then have him the first prophet of the monistic
theory of the universe, and the ideal which modern science, with its fundamental belief in the unity and
indestructibility of natural forces, necessarily sets before itself. The defects and incompleteness of his
lie on the same side as the incompleteness and defects of contemporary monistic naturalism, namely in what I may call, with Schopenhauer, the
doctrine
antinomy of matter.
sible to
It is absolutely
incomprehen
the
primitive being or substance makes up the content of the whole world, the changes or transformations
of this substance could either
first
originate or con
tinue to take place. Whence could the checks upon the universal uniform motion be imposed, whence
fire
into
air,
of air into water, of water into solid bodies ? Or, to use more modern language, whence the number
and
of
whence the varying properties of chemical elements and the like ? What more is accomplished with the rpOTrai and evavriorpOTrai, the
notwithstanding that
the
it forms, as I shall show in another place, best bridge to or preparation for the Kantian truths, and furnishes, according to the analogy indicated, the easiest means
towards a comprehension of the Kantian doctrine. 1 Fire lives by the death of earth and air lives by the death of
fire,
water.
ap.
lives by the death of air, and earth by the death of Max. Tyr., diss. xxv. p. 230. Similarly Plutarch. De El Delph. 392 C Hvpbs ddvaros depi yevecris KOI depos 6d.va.TOS Zban
water
yevtais.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
19
modifications and conversions of things into their opposites, than the multiplication of phrases which
explain nothing ? We have no answer to this ques tion the utmost justification we can offer for Herakleitos and the modern naturalists is to say, They
;
cannot explain the world, they cannot penetrate to they can only record the fact that
thus and thus only. They describe the consti tution of the world as it reveals itself after attentive
and diligent attempts at rational ex planation, going beyond the obvious aspect of the
observation
phenomena of sense. And if it is asked, after this, what reason there is assumed to be only one primary substance, the answer must be, because of
for
the nature of
sistible natural
human
reason,
which obeys an
irre
More than
needed
impulse in its strivings after unity. twenty centuries of fruitless search was
this
before
answer could be
found
and
those contradictions reconciled, before the only true and possible method verification or criticism of the
reason itself
discovered by an eminent genius and pointed out to all posterity as the en If now, trance porch to all philosophical research.
to be
was
Kantian truth, we are enabled to discern the grandeur and depth of the Herakleitean doctrine, we shall find that in the latter the two poles of all knowledge, the a priori and the em form a kind of image of the universe, pirical, unite to in which there appears, on the one hand, as the portion of reason, the permanent, eternal, funda mental essence of all things, and on the other, eternal change and motion, the restlessness of the
by the
light of
It becoming, as the result recorded by experience. is true this was rather an intuition than a clear find for, as might be expected, we do not
perception,
20
in Herakleitos
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
much
and
the roots from whence they spring. His successors sought in various ways to obviate the one-sidedness which the doctrine was but vaguely
felt,
known
to exhibit.
first,
Among
as
He put
in the
by
the admixture and dispersion of which all things in the world were to be constituted. These four elements
correspond to what we should call at the present day rather conditions or aggregate states, adding to our
present classification of solid, bodies a fourth class, to include
fluid,
and gaseous
It may be said of this view, called imponderables. by which all later generations were dominated, that
made more
intelligible
by
it,
but the
explanation itself was in the highest degree unphiloThe correction of Herakleitos is only Fophical apparent. The conclusions were taken for granted
in the premisses,
and the very point calling for ex was assumed at starting as self-evident. planation
Predicates of a general
nature, characterising the sensible qualities perceived in all things and the transitions which are also apparent, were assumed to
be original things, the fundamental essence of the whole world, which consists of these elements the different varieties of things were explained by the
;
different
intermixture
of
the
elements.
This
is
as if the chemists of the present day were to say their sixty-four elements had existed from eternity, or even, as an apostle of the most modern
somewhat
wisdom has delivered himself, In the beginning there was carbon. A schoolboy familiar with the most elementary physical truths would laugh nowa-
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
days
if
21
long succeeded up to a certain point in satisfying the demands of human reason 1 were to be
,
seriously
propounded, and would exclaim, These are not se parate things, but only different phenomenal forms taken by the same thing How many centuries will still have to elapse before the Kantian doctrine becomes common property in the same way, and such utterances as the above come to be recognised as
!
palpable absurdities only fitted to excite laughter ? This doctrine of Empedokles may have had a certain
scientific
own
age, as
it
certainly re
ceived
on account of its simplicity and its agreement with obvious recurring facts widespread and long:
but we should not on that enduring recognition account attribute to it any higher philosophic value or regard it as a real progress of philosophic thought.
1
deduced from and explained by them. The doctrine of the four temperaments, in which the moist, the dry, the cold, or the hot was
dominant, has been made to explain innumerable physiological and psychological problems, from the days of Aristotle down to modern
times.
And how
to
instructive
is it
assume the presence, in single things, of a quinta essentia over and above the others, with which the ingenuity of the abstracteurs de quintessence might have free scope
was impelled
honour of England, that her men of science have preserved more of their mental independence, and shown more genuine philosophic instinct even in the realms of physics
2
It
must be
said, to the
and chemistry, than those of any other country. It is only neces and the latest con sary to name the chemical theories of Graham, It should also be tributions of Crookes and Norman Lockyer. remembered that Schopenhauer and Robert Mayer, so long ignored or ridiculed in their own country, first received due recognition of the latter especially from Professor Tyntheir worth in England
dall.
this
note the
and thus to
fulfilling.
fulfil
should delight in
22
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
Much greater significance must be assigned to the other chief doctrine of the same thinker, namely, that all phenomena are determined by love and hate,
that by these two principles all things are formed and effected, and that by them the boundaries of the whole phenomenal world are established and main This at all events was a profound aperpu, tained.
a transfer of the directly conscious but obscure de sires and impulses of man to the rest of the world
and the Greek is so far a precursor of Schopen hauer, and receives his due meed of praise from the
latter as ein ganzer deed deserve credit
Mann
1
.
Empedokles does
first
in
for this
discernment and
description of the inner side of things, in contra distinction to the generally prevailing naturalism. It is true that Anaxagoras had already done some
thing; of O
when he
all things by selection, so that separate existences constituted themselves from out of the universal
This was naturally most agreeable to the Sokratic school, which dwelt above all others on
confusion.
the spiritual side of things, and Aristotle says in When he maintained for the praise of Anaxagoras
:
first
time that an intelligence presided over nature and was the cause of the order of things, he seemed
a
like
man who
.
stood
alone
in possession of his
midst of all the rest and their idle 2 chatter Neither Sokrates nor Aristotle, it is true, were edified with the way in which Anaxagoras made use of his vovs or intelligent principle. The latter
senses in the
observes
He
1
2
uses
it
when he
p. 38.
Metaph.
i.
3. p.
984.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
doubts what
is
23
the cause of anything, he introduces this, but otherwise any natural cause is preferred to his j/oi;? 1 That consciousness plays a considerable in all natural part change or growth is an un
.
errors
questionable truth involved in this idea, but fatal were introduced by assimilating this mani
of
it
human intellect and to its which even Plato and Aristotle operation, themselves were not altogether able to avoid. Scho
festation
to the
modes of
2 penhauer is right in pointing out how much more important it was to recognise, with Empedokles,
i.e.
the
will,
as
an inward agent, than knowledge or perception, which is given at a much later stage, and falls to the share of comparatively few beings. The two above-named thinkers sought obviously to extend the sphere of philosophical speculation,
while they strove tentatively to assign to intelli gence its share in the natural order. It was reserved
to the Sokratic school to develope this aspect of the The other side was developed with rigorous truth.
logic
its
materialistic-mechanical
main
the atomic theory of Demokritos. nature, Herakleitos had called the human eye and ear
because they represent before us continuous being, whereas there is really only change and and with regard to that motion, an eternal flux
liars,
;
untrustworthiness of our sense-perceptions, Demo kritos fully concurred with him, saying our senses deceive us as they suggest to us the presence of In truth nothing ex different qualities in things.
ists
1
Sweetness
i.
Mctaph.
i.
3. p.
985.
Parerg.
p. 38.
24
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
heat,
and hardness,
colour
and the
like, are
only
in reality all this is merely sensible appearances, a variously ordered assemblage of atoms 1 , the move
ments of which are rendered possible by the void spaces interspersed between them. We must admire the theory which struck out at once in firm and decided outline a purely dynamic natural theory of the world and the powerful minds of the one who first conceived and the two Epikuros and Lucretius who continued and carried out the same. Here for the first time the demands of the reason are satisfied with a more or less quantitative
;
inexplicable
appearances
myriad-formed,
phenomena.
to
say naturalistic, explanation has always thus reverted to the atomic theory, although the nature and the modus operandi of the atoms may appear
in a very different light, as conceptions of this kind have become clearer. But the ideal of the man of
student of nature, is, and remains, to reduce all the multiplicity of phenomena to the motion of the minutest parts.
science, the
Before dealing with the importance of the Demokritean doctrine, and its place in the great process of the evolutionary struggles of reason towards self-
knowledge,
be
tween
1
it
urrep
i>o/uercu
SoaTai rot
aXXa
TO.
Sext. Empir.
adv. Math.
These words contain the programme of the 135. future views and conclusions of Locke, Leibniz, and Robert Mayer. The metaphysical truth underlying them, however, forms the sub
vii.
work
of
Kant.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
25
were often named together in antiquity and that in opposition to each other, and there may be a deeper reason for this, which the foolish anecdotes about the laughing and the weeping philosopher
only serve to disguise. The root of this antagonism must naturally be sought in the fundamental prin ciple of each, and this is not hard to find with the
philosophers of antiquity, all of whom directed their investigations towards the nature of being, and con
sidered as their principal business to discover being under the veil of appearance, or to distinguish be-tween phenomena and noumena, or, in other words, to discover by the aid of reason the veritable being
(TO
OVTW
ov).
We
according to each of these philosophers, was mere appearance, born of the senses, and what was real
being ? The answer would run very differently Herakleitos would say, Change, transition, eternal motion is the true reality; Demokritos, on the
:
other hand, that which continues through all transi tions, that whereby and wherein this eternal change and eternal motion is effected, that is to say, the
atoms.
The progress is unmistakeable, it is the same step that in modern philosophy was taken by Leibniz in advance of Spinoza. For, as already observed, the substance of Hera
kleitos accomplishes all its transformations without not the 1 any place being allotted to the
Why
such as is for ever questioning after a causa prima human reason, for this is just what inaccessible to the Herakleitean substance with its eternal flux
presents us with,
of their existence, parate phenomena, the ground and of the connection subsisting between them. It
26
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
Kantian doctrine has
of
made
kleitos,
its
revelations,
how much
the
metaphysical
doctrine of Hera-
and how much more depth there is beneath obscurity than behind the broad daylight of
materialism.
Both philosophers seem to take their start from the same truth, to which they give however very
tive
different expression, clearly indicating their respec The world/ standpoints by that difference.
says Herakleitos, the one which embraces all things, was not created by any God or man, but it was and is and will be for ever a living fire which is kindled and extinguished in alternate measure V The saying
on which Demokritos bases his doctrine is, on the other hand Nothing can proceed out of nothing and The negative structure nothing can be annihilated.
:
of the greatest importance, for it is the narrow bridge which leads from the world of
is
of the sentence
appearance or experience into the world of a priori or metaphysical truth. This a priori truth is indeed
contained in the Herakleitean principle, but it had not made terms, once for all, with experience and every
;
thing conceivable was supposed to be produced by change, without any firm foothold being given to reason, whence it could proceed to conquer wider
realms.
trary,
The sentence of Demokritos, on the con promotes each single phenomenon, even the
;
most ephemeral, to metaphysical honours it does not proceed from and cannot pass away into nothing. This saying, observes Lange 2 which in principle
,
C.
14, p.
ovTf
dv6pu>nu>v
KUI
eunv
Trvp deifcoov,
Vfj.fVov p-erpa.
i.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
contains the two chief doctrines of the principle of the
27
modern physics
indestructibility of matter and the conservation of force, reappears in substance in Kant, as the first analogy of experience Through
:
phenomenal changes substance persists, and the quantum of it in nature neither increases nor di minishes. Kant holds that at all times the persist
all
ence of substance has been assumed, not merely by The latter is philosophers, but by common opinion. doubted by Lange, who thinks that, under the guidance of the imagination, men have often pic
tured to themselves a beginning out of nothing. And this perhaps is true but wherever men have
;
thought
cated
collected and communi rationally, the results of their experience, the propo
and
as an axiom, though perhaps an unconscious one, that has not yet found verbal ex An experiment might be made without pression.
sition has passed
having been admitted, but it could and brought into connection with other data of experience. Ex mere particularibus nihil sequitur ; there can be no science of particulars. Experimental science therefore is without philoso
phical foundation until the universal truths bearing on it have been discovered and formulated. And it is
late times, significant that all the chief thinkers of to deepen the foundations of
empiricism and to indicate its proper position in rela tion to philosophical thought, have always reverted to Demokritos and the foundations firmly laid down by him. It was Bacon who, after a long period of
neglect, once
more drew attention to the name of and awarded him the palm for genuine Demokritos,
interesting
scientific inquiry, in contradiction to the current dei also to learn It is fication of Aristotle.
28
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
used in tating on his great and fruitful principle, conversation, according to Klimelin, to repeat again Ex niJiilo niJiil fit Nihil fit ad niand again
:
Jiilum.
We
might
father of the
empiricism.
a priori philosophy and Demokritos of But as the two principles are after all
indissolubly connected, notwithstanding the opposite standpoints of the two thinkers, they necessarily meet
sometimes upon
Herakleitos
kritos
all
common
ground.
According
to
things change; things remain; and yet both mean the Demokritos started from particular same thing. and brought these into relation with the phenomena
all
according to
Demo
universe as a whole by means of the negative version of the proposition. Herakleitos, on the other hand, began with the general principle, and to bring this
into
it
was
necessary to find a speculative ground for the nega tive principle of change. All the while the mutable
T objectively identical w ith the permanent all things of Demokritos. Only the starting-points are different.
all
things of Herakleitos
is
for the
spreading stream of empirical science, which, fed by a thousand tributaries, was to pursue its course through ages towards the great ocean of human
knowledge, which
and more
inner principles
upon to give an ever more and its of coherence. Two things were ab
is
called
solutely necessary for this result (i) the sensible, dis crete, particular had to be taken for the starting:
point,
and
and fixed by
means of number,
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
which
raises
;
29
them
of phenomena (2) the causal connection had to be recognised as invariable and unbroken
sciences
:
Nothing happens without a cause, but everything with a cause and by necessity/ The atomic theory proceeded from the first re quirement, and though modern science forms a very different conception of the atoms from that of Demokritos, still all exact study of nature points to some thing of this kind. The second proposition proclaims
the principle of natural causality, the invariable law that every effect must be preceded by a cause, as the
true key to the knowledge of nature. But the defects and weakness of the atomic theory in its original form must not be overlooked. Demo-
motion of the atoms by their falling .through space he maintained that the atoms were of infinitely varied form, and that all changes in the natural order of things were produced because the larger atoms fell more rapidly than the smaller ones. This detracts nothing from the magnitude of his main idea, that all the qualities which are brought before us by sensible perception may be reduced to quantitative differences in the atoms, which are only distinguishable by their extension and weight, and which act only by way of impact and pressure. Des cartes, Leibniz, and Locke will return to this prin ciple hereafter, and Kant will submit it to a searching criticism and trace its justification home, namely
kritos explained the
;
in the nature of the pure reason. In all this there is an implicit assumption that mathematics, the theory of the pure relations of space
and number,
available
for
world.
the explanation of the phenomenal Yet ancient materialism did not rise to a
30
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
and formularisation
of this truth
;
distinct recognition
still less
attained to the application of mathe matics to the interpretation of experimental science. Mathematics were still too immature, and the circle
had
it
must of experimental knowledge too restricted. wait for the enunciation of this truth till the days of Descartes, who, living among the triumphs of
the empirical method, was himself a great mathe But the importance of mathematics, their matician. exceptional place among the remaining sciences, and
its relation to
We
these points at least did not escape the theoretical consideration of antiquity. It will be sufficient here to refer to the Pythago
all,
them
reans,
influence on
the views of Demokritos, a school which had already discerned the important truth that number played
the final and decisive part in all things, and that the true ultimate nature of things could only be ex I do not know that, pressed in terms of number.
even at the present day, we are in a position to utter anything more profound or more true than the say The wisest of all ing attributed to Pythagoras is Number, and next to this the things Name-giver. Just where the chemist fails to proceed any farther
:
in numerical description,
i.
e.
at the boundary-lines of
his exact knowledge, he necessarily begins the use of words to describe the problem, and meanwhile re
many
truth must lead. To him, as to the physicist, to the mineralogist, and even to the biologist, a mental ideal hovers before the mind, according to which all
differences are to be reduced at last into pure relations of number, so that the whole universe, at least on its
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
31
outer side, presents itself as a mathematico-mechanical know too little of Pythagoras and the problem.
We
drew for his inspiration. But however much he may have owed to Egypt, we can
sources on which he
much admire the profound originality of the man who forestalled the ripest conclusions of modern
not too
and was penetrated by the conviction that there was the same principle underlying the har monies of music and the motion of the heavenly bodies, and that the essential element in all things was ever their numerical relation. It is true that, neither in ancient nor modern philosophy, was any one, before Kant, able to explain the nature and origin of number and the possibility of its genesis. But even among the ancients there was some doubt and hesitation as to the relation of number to actual Thus things and the real opinion of Pythagoras. Not ly number, but according to we are told number, Pythagoras maintained all things to have The Pytha been originated V And Aristotle says
science,
:
goreans maintain that things exist only by a kind of In other imitation of the relations of number 2 / places he says, on the contrary, that the Pythago
reans considered
base of
number
3
.
all creation
It
is
rean thought was dominated by the fundamental view, that the truth was only to be found in number, and it is also certain that by the application of this
principle
to
physical problems,
the
discoveries,
Pythagoreans which
Stob.
Ed.
i.
i.
p.
302
Hvdayopas OVK
rd ovrn
*<"
Metaph.
3
Mt/u^frfi
"
dpi6p.>v.
Ibid.
i.
Apxnv
us
Apidpov
criav
32
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
slumbered through oblivion and neglect for ages, and confirmed by the same method, matured and perfected in later genera
It is well
known
Copernicus him anticipated the Copernican system. l and Philolaos 2 This cor self refers to Nicetas
rect insight was withheld from mankind for some fifteen centuries through the authority of Aristotle.
For the
rest,
matics were held by the Socratic school appears from the famous dictum of Plato, M^el? a yewjmerp^TOS eicriTU),
as well as from
many
other passages,
among which
the following is especially instructive, as it complains of the neglect of this science among the Hellenes and
praises its cultivation
vii.
among
All freemen, I conceive, should learn as of these various disciplines as every child in Egypt is taught when he learns his alphabet. In
819):
much
that country, systems of calculation have been actually invented for the use of children, which they learn as
a pleasure and amusement ... I have late in life heard with amazement of our ignorance in these
appear to be more like pigs than men, and I was ashamed, not only on my own behalf, but on that of all Hellenes 3 It might have been supposed that the numberphilosophy of the Pythagoreans would have entered into alliance with the atomic theory of Demokritos, and that the empirical sciences, on exact or ma thematical principles, would have begun at once to flourish among the Greeks. This however was not
matters
;
to
me we
As quoted by
Plutarch,
ii.
39.
2
3
De
Jowett
Translation.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
Socratic
school.
*
33
Undoubtedly remarkable results would have been reached in this way by classical antiquity, had it not been for the reaction which proceeded from Athens against the tendency of phi losophy towards natural science, and which so de cidedly obtained the upper hand V
This
the
may be
re
action itself
and
The more or less avowed hostility against Aristotle his method entertained by the philosophical re
presentatives of empiricism, from Bacon down to our own times, may have for one of its chief reasons that they saw how, in more than one way, he set aside or
the strict principle of natural necessity, the one firm foundation of all empirical knowledge. The introduction of an immaterial element, teleology, or
falsified
the doctrine of final causes, which took up so large a place in the sciences of organic life founded by him, and
more
and reasoning
from ready-made formal propositions, the importation of logical mental processes into the sober observation of sensible perceptions in the phenomenal world all
this
was
scientific
method.
is
ing controversy sage of a distinguished anti- Aristotelian, who was able, nevertheless, to admire the intellectual great
ness of his adversary 2 In the old world the greatest and most merito rious student of nature would resort to utterances like
:
Lange, Geschichte des Materialismus, i. 15. Robert Mayer, Die Mechanik der "Warme, p. 247.
I.
VOL.
34
this to explain,
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
e.
the properties of the lever the circle is such a marvellous thing that it is easily con ceivable how the motions which produce a circle should also present the most remarkable phenomena.
g.
:
talents to meditations
If Aristotle, instead of applying his extraordinary upon the stationary point and
the revolving line, as he called the circle, had investi gated the numerical proportion between the length of
the lever and the pressure exercised, he would have become the founder of an important branch of human
knowledge. o
have been
followed in order to lay the foundations of natural knowledge in the shortest conceivable space of time
The most obvious and frebe briefly stated. of natural phenomena should have been sub querifc
may
jected,
by the help of the senses, to a careful investigation, which should have been continued until the chief conditions, which may be expressed in numbers, had been elicited. These numbers are the sought-for foundation of an exact study of
nature.
The
influence of Sokrates
is
generally represented
as an energetic reaction against the doctrine and The Greek Sophists bear a practice of the Sophists.
striking family likeness to the French revolutionary thinkers of the last century. The vital characteristic of both is a kind of intoxicated self-exaltation of
intelligent
sense
an overweening
it
casts
off
the
bandages of the old religious conceptions. It is as true of the age of the Greek Sophists as of that of the French Encyclopaedists, that the morals, which had grown up together with the religious dogmas,
were impaired with them, that individualism, sen sualism, and a superficial rationalism put an end to
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
all
35
and in the
until at
life,
an all-destroying scepticism, a dialectic and rhe which everything was mere sport, threatened to take possession of the popular consciousness. The old dogmas had lost their power, truth and morality needed to be built afresh on deeper foundations. The threatening danger roused among the Greeks, Sokrates, and in the eighteenth century, Kant. Between Sokrates and Kant, says Schopenhauer
toric to
1
,
there are
many
points of resemblance.
Both
reject
dogmatism, both profess complete ignorance as to things metaphysical, and the speciality of both lies in their consciousness of this ignorance. Both maintain, on the contrary, that the practical question as to what men should do or leave undone may be ascer tained with certainty, and this by themselves without
all
further theoretical preparation. It was the fate of both to have immediate successors and declared dis
ciples,
who
in
ciples
their prin
cultivating
metaphysics, introduced entirely dogmatic systems of their own and further, that notwithstanding the O
; r
great divergence of their several systems, all pro fessed themselves to be derived respectively from the
i^-
doctrine of Sokrates, or of Kant. My plan only allows me to deal with the theo
retical side of the Sokratic philosophy, and that of his successors, in order to show wherein the opposition
to the
earlier doctrine
consists, together
with the
deepening of philosophic thought and its increasing tendency in the direction of what is the principal
subject of this work.
1
i.
46.
*J
-26
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
The substance
is
a rational
psychology, educed from the conviction that human reason is a principle that may be opposed to the powers of nature, which had hitherto received almost
exclusive attention, or was at least altogether distinct from these that we possess in it a source of eternal truth, amid the deceptions of the senses, a firm and
;
lasting resting-place amid the eternal changes and transformations of all things, and hence too a secure and irremovable basis for moral action and all the
higher possessions of mankind, the existence of which was questioned by the Sophists, because they derived
all
i.e.
human convention
or ordinances,
subjective inclination. This explains why Sokrates occupied himself principally with definitions of moral
ideas,
what he meant by the often repeated assertion that virtue was knowledge.
.and
be seen also from particular illustrations. The opposition to the doctrine of strict natural neces
This
may
an established external causal chain, appears most clearly in the well-known passage l in which J O
sity of
Sokrates speaks of Anaxagoras, who first made the modest attempt to introduce a rational principle, the
vovs,
an explanation of the nature of the world and in which he describes his disappointment on
as
;
finding, instead of what he expected, e. g. explana tions why the earth is like a dish, why it is best for
it
so, &c. only explanations from natural This was, according to Sokrates, as if some one were to be asked why Sokrates was sitting in prison and then began to explain the act of sitting
to
be
causes.
which
of speaking of the condemnation had brought him there and of the thoughts
1
instead
Phaedros, 97.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
which had led him to reject the means of await his destiny where he was l
.
37
flight
and
The incompleteness of materialism, or the expla nation of the world by external mechanical causes,
is
and
more important
principle,
which
it
becomes
necessary to investigate.
There is hardly any mention in Plato s works of Demokritos and the theory of atoms, but the omis
well supplied by Aristotle. The latter fully the one-sidedness of the materialistic view recognised
sion
is
and pointed it out with great force, apropos of the manner in which Demokritos conceived the soul as
the vital principle of the body. According to this explanation, the soul was to consist of subtle, smooth, round atoms, like those of fire these atoms were extra
:
ordinarily mobile, penetrating the whole universe, and bringing about all the vital motions in human
beings. are tivo
subtle
If this be so, says Aristotle, then there bodies in every one, and if the infinitely atoms may be conceived as the cause of
motion, there is no reason why the same effect should But not be ascribed to the larger and coarser parts.
this, as
he expressly
insists,
nay cannot
much
as be
an accident of it. The essence of the soul consists in choosing and knowing, and mechanical explanations, mere causes of motion, can never afford the slightest
explanation of the proper functions of the soul,
1
i.e.
the laws says one might explain Caesar s crossing the Eubicon by whereas to the true un of mechanics, contraction of muscles, derstanding of Caesar s step, the whole history of Rome, psycho
logical insight into the
much
else,
were indispensable.
^ o8
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
Upon
this
tains that Aristotle failed to understand the greatness of Demokritos, which consisted precisely in the
rigorous logic with which he brought all actions back into the orderly chain of mechanical causation. Any
system of philosophy which aims seriously at com prehension of the phenomenal world must return to The special case of those motions which this point. rational must be explained by the universal we call
laws of
all
explained. ends with this explanation, just where the highest problems of philosophy begin. But any one who, re
lying on imaginary rational knowledge, should dabble in would-be explanations of external nature, including
the rational actions of
mankind, is working to upset the whole foundations of our knowledge, whether his name be Aristotle or Hegel 2 This is an outbreak
.
referred
to
as
between
positive and
scientific thinkers
memory
of Aristotle.
Lange
is
certainly
the
right from the standpoint of the external contem plation of things, but when we are dealing with the soul, with reason, in a word, with consciousness, the
mechanical theory has to submit it has a right to be heard, but it is no longer dominant, in fact it
;
is
its
own
to
laws.
It
have clearly
seen and proclaimed this. further and more considerable merit may be claimed for Aristotle, in opposition to the material istic school, namely, his insistence upon the final
Arist. de
Anima,
cap. 5.
i.
p. 20.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
causes
39
or adaptation of means to ends in nature. vast portion of the whole realm of natural ex
istence
against those
and development remains absolutely closed who fail to recognise this. These things
can only be understood, or indeed exist, with the assumption of an intelligent principle, which does not, of course, mean to say that a maker or creator
outside the world has
suit his
made
:
own purposes
Three great men have Schopenhauer observes or the theory of design," wholly rejected teleology, and many little men have chanted in echo after them. They are Lucretius, Bacon of Verulam, and
But in all three we see clearly the source Spinoza. of their denial, namely, that they imagined teleology to be inseparable from speculative theology, of which
they had so great a dread as to wish to get out of its way. when they scented its approach from afar. The attack of Lucretius (iv. 824-858) upon teleology Bacon does is so crass and crude as to answer itself. not distinguish between organic and inorganic nature (which is the point in dispute), but mixes them in his illustrations indiscriminately together. He then
.
. .
banishes final causes from physics into metaphysics, which is to him, as to many even at the present
synonymous with speculative theology. could think of no other expedient to bar the Spinoza way against the physico-theological proof and the view based upon it, that nature exists for the sake of man,
day, almost
than the desperate one of denying any adaptation in the works of nature, a contention which must appear monstrous in the eyes of all who have any knowledge
of organic nature. Aristotle contrasts very favourably with these later philosophers, and indeed appears in
his
most
brilliant colours
on this occasion.
He
goes
40
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
straight to nature, and is untroubled by any physical theology. The idea has never entered his mind, and
does not occur to him to look at the world with a view to deciding whether it is a bit of machinery or But after honest and diligent study of nature, no. he discovers that she works everywhere towards Nature does no some purpose, and he concludes,
it
"
1 thing in vain
."
And
De
Partibus
At every turn we say that such a thing exists for the sake of such another, whenever we see an end
towards which the movement tends. We gather from this that there is something of the kind that we call nature. But the body is a tool (organ), for
is
is
At
there for some purpose, and so also the end of the books De Gene-
Animalium he expressly recommends tele ology, and blames Demokritos for having denied it, which is just what Bacon, in his prejudice, selects for In point of fact any sane and normally con praise. stituted mind would arrive at teleology from the
ratione
observation of organic nature, but, unless under the influence of inherited opinions, by no means equally
at natural theology, nor at the anthropo-teleology condemned by Spinoza. With regard to Aristotle, it
it
deals
with inorganic nature, is full of errors, as he is guilty of the most serious blunders in the rudimentary con
But it is quite ceptions of mechanics and physics. otherwise in his treatment of organic nature this
;
is his
proper
field,
of knowledge, his
insight/
and here we can admire his wealth keen observation, and his profound
1
De
Respir.
c.
10.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
All
tliis
41
accomplish
:
Aristotle
was able
to
lie
might have become the founder of Natural History, because he saw and recognised the sway of intelli gence in nature and assigned its due place thereto. But if we compare with the above lucid exposition of Schopenhauer the following passage from a
generally sound and serious thinker, we shall see what a vast confusion of ideas still prevails with regard to the interpretation of nature, making the
inquiry and a return to the metaphysical principles of knowledge an irresistible
for
demand
serious
necessity.
Lange says
We
find in
Demokritos no trace of
enemv
tr
may
:
but
we
also
find
no
attempt to explain the development of design ly the blind sway of natural necessity (!!). We know that
fundamental proposition, common to all materialism, took its rise, in a clear though somewhat rugged shape, from the Hellenic philosophy. What Darwin, with all the abundance of positive know ledge at his command, has done for the present
this
last
was done for antiquity by Empedokles, in the simple and momentous suggestion that cases of adaptation abound, because in the nature of things it happens that what serves its purpose is preserved,
generation,
and what
fails to do so perishes at once. a chaos, a medley of opposite and irrecon cilable conceptions 1 And yet the fallacy here in-
What
Still
tit.
plainer
i.
and more
the
startling
is
the
of
(loc.
72)
about
materialism
sounds
sufficiently
materialistic,
wanting
ligence,
to this materialism
and yet the decisive feature is the pure material nature of matter ;
the origination of
by
the
all phenomena, including adaptation and intel motion of matter in accordance with universal laws
42
volved
is
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
no other than the very programme of the
:
To explain Darwinians majority of contemporary me everything without exception by exclusively chanical causes.
While
kritos,
Aristotle
we
with Herakleitos, whose depth received due recog The nition in a well-known utterance of Sokrates. reaction against naturalism and sensualism, which
led naturally, under his guidance, to
human
reason as
all
disciple to the conviction that it belonged to the nature of reason to be able to separate and re tain what is durable and persistent, as a fixed pole
amid
is
the
universal
flight
of
phenomena.
This
first condition required for the existence of any kind of knowledge. For the idea of change itself presupposes that the earlier condition is held
the
by the mind the content or matter of know ledge is always something new, but never something We could not take for granted even the different. possibility of knowledge, says Sokrates in the Kra1 if tylos everything were changing and had no For if, for instance, this idea, know persistence.
fast
;
,
ledge, remains
unchanged
in
all
that constitutes
it
knowledge, then knowledge has permanence arid exists. But if the idea of knowledge itself is
changed, it becomes transformed into an idea other than the idea of knowledge and it is therefore no longer knowledge. But if it were always changing,
;
including weight and all inorganic movements, by intelligent prin and the ciples in accordance with the universal laws of thought,
Kratylos (Jowett
translation), 440.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
.
43
there would never be any knowledge at all 1 And for the same reason there could be neither an object nor a subject of knowledge. If however there exists
a subject and an object of knowledge, if moreover the Beautiful, the Good, and every other kind of being exists, these ideas obviously bear no resem
blance, as
we maintain now, to
see from this passage, which also contains the of the Platonic theory of Ideas, that the func germ tion of the reason is virtually that which Goethe
We
its conceptions constitute the firm of true knowledge in the whirlpool starting- point of the phenomenal world, sensible impressions, and
Reason and
vicissitudes. Arid this great truth is of such sig nificance that its discovery may also be said to have opened the way for the first time to self-examination
and self-knowledge.
Reason, or the rational principle (TO votjriKoi^, is possession of the ideas, e.g. of the good, the true, the beautiful this possession is lasting and un
;
the ideas are recognisable everywhere, and always as the property of the reason. The question is how to find a bridge which will unite
questionable
these ideas and the phenomenal world of sense and matter. For as to the latter Plato held the Herakleitean view of the eternal flux, alternate growth and decay, to be unassailable.
At
1
AVhat Plato was the first to express clearly and convincingly was to be thoroughly established by Kant. If time and space were not original possessions of the intelligent subject, there could
be no such thing as experience.
44
doctrine and
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
materialism
first
presents
itself.
To
Plato, reason is an active faculty of the human soul. Materialism leads necessarily to sensualism, as soon,
incompleteness, and wishes to take the spiritual side of things into It explains the latter, like everything else, account. as an effect. In other words, the senses are stimulated and agitated from without, they feel, and then from out
that
is,
as
it
discerns its
own
themselves, the whole intellectual life accomplishing Sensible perception is itself mechanically, of itself. not the source of knowledge, but knowledge itself.
In the age of Sokrates this view was represented by Anaxagoras, and it was subsequently developed with The images strict materialistic logic by Epikuros. in the understanding are produced by a constant emanation of irifmitesimally small and subtle parts from the surfaces of bodies. In this way copies of the things enter materially into us their frequent rise to the images of memory, and so repetition gives
;
the soul, without itself knowing how, attains to thought and a perception of universals, by the sole
constant action of the outer world.
sensibility
then
remain,
(i.
tinctly spiritual
e.
nature,
of sense,
is
accom
plished, are themselves objectively perceptible, i.e. material. Hence even Plato ascribes the perceptions
of sense directly to the organs, the eyes, ears, and other bodily instruments, while he shows with vic
torious cogency the necessity of an intellectual prin
ciple,
the
which combines, compares, and distinguishes common element in all perceptions, and so
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
45
For, penetrates to the essential qualities of things. no one can suppose that we are savs Sokrates, Trojan horses, in whom are perched several uncon
nected senses, not meeting in some one nature, of which they are the instruments, whether you term this soul or not, with which through these we per
and
by what power or
instrument, asks Sokrates, does that sense take effect which indicates the common qualities of things per
ceived bv different senses, such as being and not* o being, likeness and unlikeness, sameness and differ
Theretetos is ence, unity and other numbers, etc. to reply that there is no separate organ compelled the soul perceives the unifor these things, but
The soul perceives the touch the hardness of that which is equally by hard and the softness of that which is soft. But
versals of all things
2 by herself
.
their existence
sition to
and what they are, and their oppo one another, and the essential nature of this opposition, the soul herself endeavours to de
cide for us, reviewing them and with one another. The simple
comparing them
sensations which
reach the soul through the body are given at birth to men and animals by nature, but their reflections
on these and on their relations to being and use are slowly and hardly gained, if they are ever gained, No one can by education and long experience. attain truth who fails of attaining being, and he who misses the truth of anything can have no know
ledge of that thing
therefore knowledge does not consist in impressions of sense, but in reasoning about them, and the two are not identical V
;
Thesetetus (Jowett
translation), 184.
Ib. 185.
Ib. 186.
46
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
which Leibniz and Kant were to take as startingpoints hereafter, Plato proceeded towards fresh and pregnant discoveries, a part of which still under lies our whole mode of thought, whilst the onesidedness of some of his preconceived views has also endured as a legacy of hampering oppression to
subsequent generations.
The him is
its
first
great truth for which we are indebted to that, in order to direct human knowledge to
proper goal in the interpretation of the true nature of things, we must start from knowledge
from the peculiar gift of reason which has been allotted to mankind. The Know Thyself of the Delphian God is the master-key of which in a happy hour Sokrates and his great disciple have possessed themselves. The student s gaze is turned
itself,
inwards
Es Es
1st niclit
ist in dir,
du bringst
es
ewig
liervor.
theory of knowledge is now possible and neces sary; it was created by Plato and completed by
Aristotle with the addition of Logic. This is the positive side. On the negative side must be set the premature conclusion that this reason
to
its
speciality. again the ineradicable realism of the whole ancient world. Philosophy is striving after
This
being,
it
insists
it
pure thought, thinking substance. Plato indeed has an easy task in dealing with materialism. For though he could O not persuade the Giants and Gods who were fighting about the nature of essence 1 and who contended that
<
Sophist, 244.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
47
the tilings only which can be touched or handled have being or essence, yet all thinkers would certainly be
on his side when he maintained that justice, reason, virtue, etc. are not material entities, and that the soul to which these qualities belong must therefore also be immaterial. But it is one thing for the soul to exist and another for it to be self-existent, and the problem had to wait till Kant came to give it its due form. Plato exalted the soul into a self-sub sisting subject of pure thought, free from all de lusions of sense. He maintained its immortality, and that after death, when released from the anticipated obscuration and fetters of a material body, it would know with far more perfect knowledge the true nature of things. This is set out more at length in the Phaado (10) and Timseos. The summary of his expo sition in the latter dialogue is given by Sextus EmIt is an old adage, accepted piricus in these words too by the physicists, that like can only be explained by like. Plato has used this argument in the Tirnaeos to prove that the soul is immaterial. Light, he which perceives light, is of the nature of light, says, hearing which catches the vibrations of the air must correspond to the nature of air, and similarly the sense of smell by which vapours are perceived must be vaporous, and the sense of taste which receives And fluidity must partake of the nature of fluids. the soul too, which conceives things immaterial, such as the number and limitations within which bodies The are contained, must itself be immaterial 1 /
:
passage
interesting because the reference here is only to the pure forms of mathematics, which Kant
is
1
Adv.
i.
48.)
48
will
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
show
to be the
reason.
The second great truth is that thought is accom plished by means of conceptions arid ideas, and that
represent something uni versal, different both from material things and from that these abstract, general sensible perceptions
these always contain
or
;
ideas are the true object of rational thought or in tellectual activity, and that in them the reason dis
cerns the permanent, essential, and eternal amid the stream of appearances. This great truth, the doctrine
of abstract ideas, or universals, sways the whole aftertime, remaining as an apple of discord throughout
the history of mediaeval philosophy. It was received as an established fact by all modern philosophy,
and, as Locke was the first to see, it will one day yet come to be of the greatest significance for a knowledge of the nature of human reason, namely,
that the history of the origin and development of the human reason may be written at last by the help of the philo sophy and history of language.
The darker
which otherwise can hardly be overpraised, is due to the ontological ambition which here again over reaches itself by transforming these ideas into real,
essential, self-subsisting things.
We
see plainly
all
how
Like
the other
philosophers of antiquity, he regarded as the final problem the question, What is real Being in contra
distinction to appearance, to
phenomena
He saw
the material world with the correlated sensible per ceptions in eternal flux and change, he felt that the reason aspired after permanency, such as it pos sessed within itself. And thus the material world
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
49
was degraded
into a seeming existence, a darkening veil, while truth and reality were attributed only
First,
he says,
that which always is and has no becoming, and what is that which is always
is
becoming and has never any being. That which is apprehended by reflection and reason always is, and is the same that, on the other hand, which is conceived by opinion with the help of sensation and without reason, is in a process of becoming and perishing, but never really is The ideas are the eternal elements to which true being must be conceded.
;
1 .
While
single beings or material individuals pass fleetingly by, arise and decay, we see that their kind lasts on, or, to express it in the more drastic language
of Schopenhauer, the ardent adherent of the doctrine of ideas, It is the same cat that plays in your yard to-day as played and felt and was 4000 years ago.
The
ideas
of things, disguised
and obscured by matter in the phenomenal world, which stands with Plato for the manifold, the uncon
ditioned,
indefinite, fluctuating, the
relative,
or
in
Even the soul imprisoned in a body may however emancipate itself from this dark ness and attain gradually to a comprehension, or
fact for the not-being.
For
all
knowledge
is
recollection.
luminous and
The
of existence with the eternal gods, has beheld in direct vision these ideas or prototypes of things, the creations of the gods. shall see hereafter how
We
much
disguise.
is,
that
if
meta-
Translation).
VOL.
I.
50
physics
is
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
the
science
of the
inconceivable,
which
by cautiously and all logical empirical knowledge eliminating then, it must be admitted, the sphere of deduction, metaphysics is made too conveniently wide and com
itself,
which the
prehensive.
To claim
every
everything that presents itself as a distinct being in the phenomenal world, whether it be hairs, dust and
and chairs and benches, as an a priori of the soul, and to foist it upon the ever possession lasting gods, is tantamount to reducing the whole
dirt, or tables its chief
of philosophy to a matter of religious faith whereas aim has always been to attain independent
;
and knowledge in the strength of its own To avoid mistakes and misjudgments we nature. must keep before our minds the whole grandeur of
existence,
time at the
Other objections and qualifications of equal weight have been urged even in antiquity, some of which
did not escape
menides
The chasm between the world of ideas and of phenomena, a difficulty which presents the real crux of modern Plato s plan was to allow the phe philosophy. nomena to become absorbed in the ideas, while the material world was banished into the realms of nonexistence. But this is evading, not solving the
Plato himself predicates of matter we recognise qualities that only belong to something which has a real existence. That matter
difficulty,
Plato himself, if indeed the Parby his hand. Platonic dualism served to accentuate the
is
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
51
opposes itself to the formative power of ideas, tliat it is that wherein the maker of the world reproduces
the ideas as a mechanic works upon his material, that it is not merely an impediment to knowledge
mutability and diffusion in space, but that it actually sets itself as a bad, ungodly principle in direct antagonism to the creative cosmic forces
by
its
these are too grave accusations to be directed against what does not exist. Matter may be the negation
of knowledge, but on that account to deny its ex istence is to identify being and knowing, a course
which
is
easily accounted
for
by the predominance
of the old ontological phantom at this as well as at every other stage in the history of ancient philo
sophy. This difficulty is brought out by Parmenides in the Dialogue 1 when Sokrates makes a cautious at
tempt to distinguish between ideas as thoughts of the soul, and ideas as they constitute the unity of
Either the phe nomenal world must be endowed with intelligence, so that all things think, or it must be able to bear within it thoughts, without however thinking. And
things in the phenomenal world.
when
Sokrates suggests that the ideas might be the patterns existing in the realm of being, and single
things only copies of them, Parmenides replies, with justice Copies exist because of their resemblance
:
and if the original pattern is an each the copies cannot be anything different idea, idea therefore must presuppose another and then
to the original,
;
And
he concludes his
As yet you objections by admonishing Sokrates: understand a small part of the difficulty which is
1
c. 6.
52
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
from them/ things, which are distinct The limits within which logical idealism is con If the mind fined have remained always impassable.
all
is
self-existing,
its
all
functions
intellectual kind,
and there
is
no possible transition to
The only
alternatives are, either To attribute true, external reality to intellectual done by the greatest objects, i. e. to the ideas, as was of ancient idealism, Plato, who left representative ancient philosophy as ontological as he found it
;
doubt the reality of external objects and to conceive them either as the product of the mind as it were a true kind of dream itself or, again, to bring them into relation with the conscious in and this latter path has telligence by a miracle
to
;
Or
been followed by modern philosophy since it ac cepted, with Descartes, the intelligent subject as the sole starting-point of all our knowledge. Deliverance from the insoluble dilemma was only
to be brought to the
The
by
reality outside the thinking subject claimed Plato for the ideas, rightly roused the antagonism
of his great pupil Aristotle, whom we have to re cognise as the greatest representative in the old
world of empiricism and the scientific method not withstanding the repudiation and hostility which he has met with from the modern representatives of the
;
same tendency. He showed how the ideas constituted a second world by the side of the actual one, how they must
necessarily remain eternally stationary, disconnected,
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
53
ineffective and motionless, how there could be no causative power in the bare idea, since the cause of events lay always in something moving, i. e. in me
chanical
natural
force
in
word,
all
genesis
of
things from one another, all connection of things one with another, becomes impossible as soon as the
ideas are supposed to be self-subsisting, individual substances.
fairly
accepted
as the
foundation on
which
all
knowledge must be
rooted.
In reality
single things do exist, this particular horse, this par ticular tree ; always and under all circumstances
thought must proceed from the particular substance, the roSe Ti, as to which a general statement must be made. The real being is that which is and can be subject only, never predicate. At the same time Aristotle is far from acquiescing in the disintegration of the world according to Demokritos, and seeking for explanation among the phe nomena alone. He is a worthy follower of Sokrates, and knows that we must begin with reason and its
He functions, with general truths and principles. demands a prima philosophia whence everything else is to be derived by the mind, but which must serve first as a base for the conception of nature and its
He enunciates the great principle general features. that there can be no science of particulars, and also
no science of single sensations
universals, abstract ideas, are the necessary factors of the faculty of knowledge. He says, in agreement with his great
;
and that
master,
Ap^
KO.\
reAo?
1
vov<?
origin of these abstract ideas, he from the latter, and enters upon an opposite diverges
as to the
1
But
Eth. Nic.
vi.
12.
54
course.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
These ideas are not the original possession of reason, but the latter has only potentia, a dis and to develope these general position to frame
notions.
They
contain,
it
is
the
essential
retaining these essentials, souls of brutes. And, in thus following the reasoning 1 of -Plato, Aristotle ascribes separate existence, im-
materialness
which is capable of this special rational thought. But he restricts this concession by saying that if thought is not possible without perception and
imagination, the soul cannot be conceived apart from the body. And Schopenhauer 2 says with truth,
that in other passages, e.g. De Aniina, iii. 8, he lays down what has been since formulated in the pro Nihil est in intellectu quod non prius position,
fuerit in sensibus
;
an independent being. The relationship between Aristotle and Plato may be stated thus, in order to do justice to both After Plato had accomplished the task of tracing the organisation and functions of the reason to a certain depth and so casting the light of this one spiritual principle upon the world as it presents itself to the human mind, Aristotle next began to
:
by the light of this knowledge, for the path from Platonic metaphysics to physics he sought to
seek,
;
vindicate the rights of the actual, of the material world, of sensible perception, and particular ex istences, and he thus became the philosophical
1
De Anima,
i.
i.
Parerga,
i.
48.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
55
founder of the inductive method, which starting from the given particulars proceeds by abstraction to the universal arid regular. He allowed the rights of
reason, but
demanded
also
due regard
;
and
sensible, which,
hauer points out, that all pure and abstract thought has borrowed its original substance from direct ex
perience or intuition. And what constituted in his eves the essence of
/
things, the universal which was to be apprehended by the reason, the TO ri tjv elvai, which makes every
His answer is, the Form; thing what it isa truth which remained long as a dormant germ in the human mind, till at last it unfolded itself witli Kant in a rich growth of philosophic clearness. This
?
form however clearly demanded as a preliminary the corresponding notion of matter, and Aristotle has the
further merit of having grasped the full significance of this important conception and having assigned
place in the general scheme of nature. the permanent, unchangeable all changes take place in it, but they are only changes in the
to
it
its
Matter
is
form mere formless matter (materia prima) and pure form do not exist, the two are everywhere united
;
knowledge apprehends pure form, form of forms. There is a series of beings, so that the one which from one point of view is form, in another is matter. The importance of these luminous principles is evident, and no less so what was incomplete and con tradictory, and continued to torment posterity ac
(a-woXov).
it
"Rational
and
is
in so far the
To the latter category belongs the con cordingly. tradiction that anything so external as pure form
can constitute the essence of anything, the exaltation
56
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
1 of matter to the dignity of self-existence (or false realism again), and lastly, the conception of matter
as a pure, formless, passive substance, which must receive its motive impulse and its form from without,
i.
from the world-creating, absolute Intelligence. The latter is a false conclusion a priori, the origin of which must be pointed out.
e.
The Universals
to Aristotle, educed by the human intellect, which is alone capable of this kind of knowledge, from
amongst the things presented; the reason comes in contact with the Divine Maker, whose thoughts it
The thinks again by conceiving their pure forms. difference between Aristotle and Plato shows itself
here also, the former conceiving human reason more as an intellectus ectypus, the latter as an intellectus
arclietypus.
With
its
forms on
the one hand, and of matter with its forms on the other, the philosophy of antiquity had reached its utmost accomplishment. Plato and Aristotle are the
electric poles which gave this direction to the current of thought for the next two thousand years.
closing period of ancient philosophy may be briefly characterised by a summary of its results. Four elements present themselves as the ultimate
The
elements of being, and must be opposed or reconciled as realities. As it has been the tendency of philoso
phy
until
Kant
show
to set
side the
self-existent, or
table will
1
The
Stoics.
Real existence
the soul,
material.
meets us jarringly in the doctrine of the always material, and therefore, God, the virtues, the affections, in a word all ideas, must be
is
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
57
THE THIXG
Idealism.
IN ITSELF.
Realism.
(Empiricism).
Aristotle.
(Apriorism).
Plato.
B.
a.
Matter.
b.
Form.
We
the
shall see
how
task
of eliminating the
and Bb, and disputing their self-subsistence. There remained then the two chief opposites, which remained unreconciled till the advent of Kant.
In conclusion, I will briefly attempt to show, by the light of a truer theory as to the origin of reason, how the first attempts of this faculty at self-examina
tion
Ab
The obscure consciousness of this origin and the method conditioned by it served as a guiding star
to these great Greeks, who succeeded in carrying to a considerable distance their investigation of the action, nature, and function of reason. Having
reached a certain limit, they were unable to proceed further, and assumed some forms of thought to exist
a priori, and to be incapable of further solution, which are known by us to be empirical, i. e. capable But the Greeks did not of historical explanation. distinguish between innate and a priori, they took for granted the rational man with all his gifts, and
did not dream of seeking for his origin, or the stages of his earlier incomplete development. Epikuros
alone,
58
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
race are contained in the fifth
is
an honourable
exception to this rule. But as his explanation of the origin of language is throughout materialistic and sensual istic, while the nature of the reason was not
recognised as an object of investigation, no further
progress was
made beyond
of
this
feeble,
though me
linguistic
ritorious beginning.
more extensive
material and the important results which comparative philology has placed at the service of the philosophy
of language enable us to affirm that human reason into existence with and ly language. General 7 ideas were made possible by W ords, and they originate
came
reason has sprung is the common activity of men and the creations due thereto. In proportion as the latter are multiplied, light is thrown upon the two dark regions, the inner consciousness of man, and the hitherto uncomprehended outer world which is acces
all
sensitive, conscious subject is necessarily pre supposed in all knowledge, but for a length of time this fact remains obscure. By a peculiarity of human reason the objective or external world is intelligible at an earlier stage than what is within. The former serves even as a to the latter. Before the dawn key
.
The
is
an object of
desire, fear, and hatred, but not of knowledge. But what first made Reason possible 1 The action of the feeling and conscious being upon the external
world.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
59
between two otherwise separate and mutually unin telligible worlds, the worlds of feeling and of matter. This boundary is the proper domain of reason and of the spiritual formative will what is formed reappears in consciousness as perception, but as something well known, familiar, and intelligible. This is the origin
;
faculty of representation or imagina tion, which grows along with reason, strengthens it, and continues uninterruptedly to act, and to be acted
of the
human
upon by
some eminent thinkers (e. g. Berkeley and Hume) have taken both to be iden tical, and have held all conceptions to be the same as intuitions or ideas, in the sense in which the word is used by Locke, i. e. mental representations
it,
so
that
through
its
tinuous progress towards perfection. And this was the help of language. only possible by Language is the echo within of what has been done without, and
in this too
internal.
it
But
authority of the
much more than this, it obeys the human will, it is at the present day
an instrument upon whose keys (i. e. words) the human mind plays with marvellous skill so as to This power, which bring out enchanting harmonies. now seems to call for such astonished admiration, arose from very trifling and apparently insignificant beginnings from the circumstance that in the few and unimportant pursuits which were carried on in
:
primitive groups of men, certain sounds associated themselves with the action, which dif
common by
and gradually acquired the power of recalling to mind these actions and the The sensible image of their phenomenal effects.
ferentiated themselves
60
cries
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
thus acquired a meaning, and so became the germs or roots whence all human speech has been
all
differences
the origin of words, and it is at the same For words and ideas are time the origin of ideas. like body and mind ; they are the same inseparable,
This
is
whose dependence upon language he did not the whole work of human reason is conjecture
tions
accomplished/
session of this
What
is
same reason \ Surely that which it can ever form and produce again and again at will, its own creations, whereby the contemplative faculties too are constituted, so that the mind learns gradually
to conceive the remaining objects of the outer world also in their appropriate forms and to designate them
by names.
to this origin of his doctrine of ideas. That which Plato adds to his doctrine as an
dix, or as
appen something merely incidental namely that human manufactures too, such as tables or beds, are formed in accordance with eternal ideas appears to us as undoubtedly, what it was unconsciously with
him, the starting-point of his theory of the universe. This appears too from the expression which he often makes use of as the equivalent of ideas, patterns
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
),
after
are supposed to be made and again from what he says of the relations between matter and ideas, showing
how the
ively to put their idea of a shuttle or an awl into the iron or wood and so realise it 2 The iron and the wood,
.
i.
e.
is
little
Thus
its infancy,
the world of
to
interpret the
world to human reason. We can now understand the connection with the universalia ante rem, and the recollection of a former state of existence. If we start, as Plato does, from
reason as an ultimate datum, as an original property of the human soul admitting of no further explanation,
follows necessarily that the smith produces his awl and the carpenter his shuttle in accordance with the
it is present to his reason. But the question remains how the men of to-day have become familiar with these ideas how it comes that they are now
idea that
really creative so that countless objects are formed in accordance with them ? Certainly only because in
the dim remotest past, the thing itself and the idea of it were formed at once by our ancestors, or rather developed out of some still earlier creation. This
being, when first created and first thought, passes by tradition into the thought and action of unnumbered
1 The more probable Parmenides, 132 (Jowett s Translation). view of these ideas is that they are patterns fixed in nature, and
that other things are like them and resemblances of them ; and that what is meant by the participation of other things in the ideas, is really assimilation to them.
2
Kratylos, 389.
62
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
is there constantly renewed, and in does only become present to the mind of indi viduals through a reminiscence of the former condition o
generations, and
fact
of the race.
In the same
knows
familiarly all
beings, because from ancient times the image of them has been imprinted on the mind and thoughts in this
manner and under these particular forms. Language has wrought this miracle this much is certain, and at the present day there is little diffi culty in recognising the fact. But we must concede to Plato that this would have been impossible with out reminiscence, and this is exactly the chief and most fruitful miracle, that the thought and feeling of
particular
:
remotest ages, borne along, as upon a stream, by language, should make its presence felt, on and on
in
every
member
of an
ever-growing,
ever- new
humanity.
Aristotle too shows clearly in all the features of his doctrine the impress which the origin of reason
has stamped upon its whole later development. As he differs from Plato in removing the centre of
gravity, of being and knowledge, more towards the objective or actual world, we should expect him to
seek his principles also on the objective side of the boundary we have indicated. And this is in fact the
case.
He
gives the
name
of Matter to the
unknown
on
its
Somewhat, lying
in that direction, to
which he as
or materia is
The name
its
itself bears
"YA??
origin.
human
most various objects and implements. Generalised the word comes to mean the raw material which is the necessary substratum of all that is done or wrought. o That which human intelligence lends to this material
/
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
is
63
form, which is the second most essential and important principle for the comprehension of the whole world. But matter is not merely formed and modified by human energy; by some force to us un
its
always active and creative of new effects, which forthwith distinguish themselves in form. This matter, which is imperish able through ah the changes of its form, appears properly as a substance, though the active, creative, and formative element is the world-spirit, the Deity.
known,
it is itself
And
here
we come
Human
make them
its
experience, which becomes possible through reason for feeling is the form of what is felt, but the reason is the form of the forms. For the rest, it
;
own by
may be observed that our theory of the origin of reason goes as far to justify the views of Aristotle as those of Plato for although the creations of man kind indeed proceeded from obscure impulses of the
;
they only grew into thoughts and conceptions the sensible perception and contemplation of what by was created. They were thus in the beginning more
will,
post rem, and afterwards more frequently ante rem. In many passages of Aristotle we see clearly how the
true
germs of
his
this
unconsciousness of the origin of human reason and the properties which it has derived from its origin.
Thus
soul
especially in the
famous passage
is
l
:
But the
hand
is
may
is
a profound reason for this parallel between the hand wilich shapes all things and the mind which All things that become/ he comprehends all forms.
There
De Anima,
iii.
8.
64
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
says in another place, must become something as 1 something out of something / This is just the
But the form is the The nature essential part of the thing, as he says without the matter is what I call the essence of a
action.
:
scheme of human
thing
be observed that Aristotle, as he and a theory of knowledge with the logic explanation from natural causes, reconciled a greater number of principles than Plato, who never passed beyond the sphere of rational thought. His classifi cation of causes under four categories, which bears a Fourfold remote resemblance to Schopenhauer s
It has still to
combined
a case in point. They are, matter, motion, form, and purpose but here too the a priori form of human action is unmistakable. As form is the
Boot,
is
;
essential point, it becomes the aim of action, and in so far it precedes as (imagined) cause the real effective I have expressed my action (or motive cause).
agreement with Schopenhauer in reckoning it among Aristotle s chief merits that he introduced the con
It ception of design into the philosophy of nature. is self-evident that here also human action could only
serve as a type and lantern. He observes, with the obvious intention of explaining one by the other, If architecture were in the wood itself, it would then
work
into
as nature does.
It still remains to note the false a priori track which Aristotle was beguiled by his point of
departure.
itself
Because the idea of matter had presented to him in the original scheme of human activity,
he was led to conceive this as throughout passive and without qualities for his highest ideal was naturally
;
Metaph.
2
vi. 7.
Loc.
cit.,
Ae yw
TJV
eivai.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
a kind of matter, which the formative
65
human mind
might modify and work upon at will, since the form was the essential part of the thing. This separation
of the inseparable gave rise subsequently to great The ques contradictions and confusion of thought.
tion arose
to matter.
Aristotle himself only attempted to fill in the gap by the most forced and laboured explanations, or
he was obliged to have recourse to a deus when he assumed the existence, beyond the starry spheres, of God as the primus motor, the irpwTov KIVOVV aKivtjrov, that maintained all things in eternal motion. We shall see how this funda mental error of a self-subsisting quality-less matter weighed upon Descartes and his successors until Leibniz at last threw daylight on the point, by showing that the true essence of matter lay in
rather,
ex machina,
action or force.
have seen how the two greatest philosophers of antiquity had sounded the problem of metaphysics to a certain depth, though they were still far from the really final question, considering that one assumed those functions of the reason which admit of histo
rical
We
explanation to be ultimate truths, while the other believed himself to have attained the source of
all reality
and
its
and believed themselves to have penetrated its inmost nature, and so to have drawn back the veil which shrouded the mystery of being. They took man for granted, and after his image made
the world.
They were
still
Much
VOL.
66
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY.
dare to boast of having penetrated to the very sanc tuary and to ask the decisive questions
:
the last inalienable and unquestionable of reason ? possession And why does it necessarily think in this wise, i. e.
is
What
with the fundamental conceptions of matter and form 1 And can we after all ever learn anything respect Are we not rather confined within ing being itself? the bounds of the original forms of reason, and doomed never to escape from them \
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
Ev
apxfi
ijv
%(t>p\S
iravra 81
avrov ryc
i.
Ev. JOH.
I.
A THE
There is no word of scorn or which has not been hurled at the philosophy contempt
the subject of fable.
This lay in the nature of things. in its youthful pride of life thinks itself Every age justified in picking holes in the work of its bygone,
of the Schools.
wiser labours.
still
later
day
its progress by riding on the shoulders of the and that even the fiercest opposition directed
is
only a phase of
its
continued
And famong
accordingly it is now freely admitted that the rnuch-despised Schoolmen there were
first
thinkers of the
rank, whose
names may be
set
by
the side of the most brilliant philosophers of ancient or modern timesJ But with this we are not now con
cerned.
Every age should be measured by its own standard. ^The human mind was not, as has been imagined, asleep during the thousand years of medi evalism still less was it sunk in the rigidity of death .) There was development, albeit the slow development
;
68
of autumn,
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
when
all
food and garnered up to nourish in the coming spring the fresh green, luxuriant growth, and supply mate rial for a new and blooming world.
Any
one
development of philosophy as the thought of the world and its relation to mankind, will see in the tranquil intellectual industry of the Middle Ages a great and significant mental crisis, an important and indispensable link between ancient and modern
philosophy. It will be necessary to indicate, as has not I think been done before, the boundaries which separate
these three great epochs.
is the same as repeats itself to-day in the growth and development of every human child in its in The objective is the truly ex dividual existence. towards this all thought and reflection are isting directed as to the pole-star of true philosophy. The
;
Sojihists.
who
.
first
exalted
tlift
subjective element in
and described man as the were unmasked by the wisest of the Greeks as dangerous, immoral, deniers of truth and virtue, deceivers of men, and given up to ridicule as devisers of verbal snares and entanglements.
*>
achievements of ancient philosophy sprang, characteristically, from the reaction against The Beautiful. tVm subjectivism.
greatest
are something real, not
The
mere thoughts
is
or images of
human
tool
fancy.
Sensation
by which the thinking mind receives the actual world into itself, or it is itself thought, the im Even the pression or product of reality in man.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
highest discovery achieved in antiquity, that knowledge has universals, not individuals, for
object,
69
all
its
only to the spreading out of these objects in the world of reality either as Platonic ideas or Aristotelian entelechies. Language and
leads
It occurred to
as something audible should be separated from the idea as something intelligible nor did any one so
;
as guess at the origin of ideas, as human concepts, and their connection with sensible stimuli
much
and perceptions.
ceivable to antiquity; on the contrary, the effort to objectivise, to lend being and reality to all things,
prevailed
everywhere.
The
universals
had hardly
been discovered to be the true objects of human thought, when they themselves became realised
either, according to
tities, side
or,
with the material things of sense, by according to Aristotle, as the essential forms of
side
things.
exist
as perception such a conjecture never pre the ancients. sented itself to the minds Hence
human.jsouL. only
sentative, Cjmsciousness
"of
;ill
All the philosophical systems of antiquity bear this stamp of objectivity. The Godhead is, pvfvn for
and
PJato, the T)eminro;os by whom the world! is formorlj for Aristotle the first motionless movpr e
fl>
r>f
The enigmatic metaphysical conceptions spheres. with which the Middle Ages tormented themselves were curtly set aside. Time is in Plato s eyes rov identical with the motion of the sun (xpovo?
f]
And in the Tim. 3?) ovpavov same way lie identifies space with matter. Accord ing to Aristotle, space is something like a vessel,
Kivrja-i?
or
r/Xiov Kivycris,
70
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
it
separable from the things which therefore neither matter nor form:
it is
which which
Time
place of place ; it is that lies beyond the limits of the terrestrial sphere. is, to him, the number of motion, considered as
is
therefore the
earlier
and
later.
insight, that it
only once observes, with deep might be doubted whether there would
He
be any time,
if there were no soul (Phys. iv. c. 14), and that if soul or mind is alone able to count, decides there would be no time without mind. rpsnUpd The development of
logical
on Fe
QTTg__hgjid
Imdividualism.
objpHviviam mntfrinlipm^ and on the other in From the first beginnings of Greek
in
philosophy we see the two tendencies distinguish ing themselves, when Thales proposes water as the base of creation and at the same time assumes
for gods the gods are individuals who act in or behind phe The two principles could only lead to nomena.
filled
;
the
whole
world
to
be
with
irreconcilable
conflicts,
for
powers were only determined by their own will and therefore could never become objects of scientific knowledge, while with the conception of matter strict necessity or natural law had been introduced. For this reason Demokritos and his successors are counted as mortal enemies of religion. Hence too the lofty enthusiasm with which Lucretius proclaims the doctrine of Epikuros, and soars above the re ligious delirium which still enveloped the world in its gloom. It was an enthusiasm proceeding from
reason
first
self-consciousness, when it to recognise in the broad world spread began out before it such law and order as constituted its
s
attainment of
own very
1
nature.
<f^0Q
Eeason
6f>v
for the
first
time bei.
QdXrjs
irdvTa Trhypr)
fivai.
Al ist. de Anima,
5.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
held
its
71
own image
istence.
And
proper did
little in
growth and
decay, the seeming disappearance and unexplained renewal of matter, to a single all-embracing, so to
speak, tangible principle was itself something like Columbus s egg in the natural knowledge of an
All the divine and daemonic goblin array tiquity. was set aside at a single stroke, and whatever
naturally profound minds might be inclined to think of what lay behind the phenomenal world, this world itself now lay unclouded before the spectator s gaze.
Even genuine
disciples
of Plato
and Pythagoras
experimentalised or meditated on the processes of nature without confounding the world of ideas or
mystical numbers with the immediate data of sense. This confusion, which has been so marked in the philosophy of some modern Germans, only began to
appear in Classical antiquity with the general decay of culture in the time of the Neo-Platonic and Neo-
Pythagorean rhapsodies.
Lange accounts
for this
intellectual sobriety by the admixture everywhere of materialistic elements ; but in opinion it is due
my
ancient
mode
of
thought, to the naive, unhesitating objectivity which always starts from and proceeds towards the actually
existing.
The greatest achievement of the old world in moral or practical philosophy, the doctrine of the Stoics, which aspired to make men independent of to destiny, and by throwing them upon themselves
raise
i.
95.
72
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
stamp of tins character. Notwithstanding their affinity with Christianity, which allows some Stoical views to be called distinctly Christian, the Stoics were unable to free themselves from the objective delusion and the supremacy of words and they maintained accord
;
ingly the material nature of the Deity, of the human soul, and even of the virtues and abstract concep
tions, relying
must be
debo.
on the argument that everything real Primum exponam, says Seneca, corporeal.
;
quid Stoicis videatur, turn dicere sententiam auPlacet nostris quod bonum est, esse corpus quia quod bonum est, facit quidquid facit, corpus
;
est.
Quod bonum
;
autem aliquid
Sapientiam
sit
oportet, ut possit
facit,
corpus
est.
bonam
way,
esse
dicunt, sequitur, ut
esse.
necesse
illam
(Epist. 106.) justice, courage, soul, virtue, arts, errors, affec tions, discourse, thoughts, even silence and walking,
corporalem quoque
In the same
are corporeal things (Epist. 113). No greater proof of absolute objectivism can be imagined than that
the school which taught monotheism, the inamor^ of man, tality_p^_the_soul, the universal brotherhood
and recognised virtue and wisdom as the only true good, should, have been able fo_go.nr,pi vft all hnmnr)
rMr ___bodies^ The conceptions only as g Christian dogma of the resurrection of the body and
corresp<">T
much in common with this and among the Fathers of the Church w$ doctrine,
of transubstantiation had
accordingly find Tertullian adopting as his own the views of the Stoics. The world, according to the Stoics, is the embodied, or objective Logos (XoyiKov
an uninterrupted causal mechanism presides every wEere7 and all things accomplish their predestined^ work in accordance with this order.^ It is in a sense an anticipation of Spinoza s monism.
6
/cdor/Apy),
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
Briefly
:
73
has no objective existence is no the ruling idea of ancient philo thing. sophy, ancTTience we see that Plato goes so far as to doubt ^he existence of matter because of its
%
What
is
This
while Aristotle ridi mutability and perishableness cules the Platonic ideas as phantasms, and in all
;
his investigations into metaphysical conceptions, such as the infinitude of space, etc., always contrives to state the question in this way Is it anything Real
:
or not
sistent
when he maintains
Diksearchos, his disciple, is thus quite con Nihil esse omnino ani:
mnm,
et hoc esse
malia et
animum
vel
agamus quid vel sentiamus in omnibus corporibus vivis sequabiliter esse fusam/ etc. (Cicero, Tusc. i. 10.)
Wfi_JiaYe__seen that the
philosophy are possible upon the foundation of ob Mai^riiilism, Idealism, Realism or In jectivity
dividualism,
Monism, and
all
the
other
systems
known
soil.
philosophy, grow out of this Their significance and their connection with the
principle of their foundation
all
to_jus ui In.ter
common
only appears the different principles set up agree in possessing the character of reality Matter,
Ideas, Forms, or Individuals, spiritualised bodies, agree in having only a real existence.
etc.,
When it brings together the conclusions of the different dogmatic schools and says, All philosophical wisdom is nought, this does not
from this mental fashion.
mean
that the reality of things is called in question, but rather, on the contrary, that man should content himself with realities and not dream of reaching a
satisfactory explanation
or true knowledge
of the
74
reasons
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
for what exists. There is an existing but the thoughts of men are error and de reality, lusion. (X^The sceptics urge as a crushing argument
against
objective
thought and reality, the relativity of knowledge, and so to a certain extent the share of the know
ing subject in cognition. With the same Aveapon at a later date Hume will take up the struggle and give a decisive bent to the course of modern philosophy. The objective points of view had been fairly ex
hausted in the old worlfl nothing new remained to be_deduced from it. At the same time it had failed
;
between different views at its and most seriously so in the most prostrongest, fouiuU i.e. the Platonic_doctrine, in which scarcely any allowance was made for the essential element
the
antagonism
in
the objective theory of the universe, namely,. rnatter_and individualism. II. With the decay of the old culture a new
doctrine announced
itself,
which was to
start
from
the opposite standpoint and thence attempt to com prehend and explain the universe by a single prin the Christian philosophy, namely, which i& ciple,
properly speaking a pure Subjectivism, and might be best characterised as the doctrine of the Absolute,
Mind.
__
I say pure Subjectivism, this must not be understood in the sense in which the idea has been
When
made
"ing
familiar to us
by Descartes.
There was no
Jgo.as_the snnrnft of all knowledge nor of the greatjbruth which followed on the discovery of the
f
Subject to supplement .it^jwith its necessary com plement the Object^ nor therefore of the polarity^
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
or
relativity
75
of
human knowledge.
But human
thought had begun to turn, with an irresistible and growing motion towards the other pole, in order to win there a firm standing-point from whence it might subdue all things to itself. The world was made
subjective in the person of a
God
As formerly the objective outer world, so now tin s God is recognised as the source of all being and all knowledge^ The highest truths are revealed by Tiim to the human mind, the latter must listen to
the voices
that
speak
within,
he must learn to
l^gjhira
understand Wie spricht ein Geist zum andern Geist. is still h^i]nted_by the shades of the old
gods, and^
and
>wn
therefore sinful/subject to evil spirits, full of snares and temptations. To turn away
is
HH
a.nd asceticism,
solitary
inter
The renunciation
objective _ world
of the
bright
leads
realms of the
naturally
to
see these accordingly co-operating_ ^ mysticism^ with the first dawn of Christian philosophy to trans
We
mystery and
form and
its
own
souye
__
t
period,
mentand ~the
GocTas the source of all enlightenresting on his heart as the sole and
highest wisdojm. the philosophic systems of antiquity there were only two that were akin to the new doctrine
and allowed themselves to be interpreted in its these were the Platonic Idealism, and the spirit
:
76
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
We
see
Neo-Platonists
and
Neo-Pythagoreans
rising out of the ruins of the systems which had perished in the universal flood of scepticism and erecting their new constructions upon the plan and in the spirit of the new truth that is being
everywhere proclaimed.
become powerful and strive towards the ideal which the revolutions of time have brought to birth and before which the
radiance of earlier ideals
is
extinguished as stars in
the
sunlight, towards the unchangeable, eternal unity, towards the primal being, the pure Christ,
whom
it is only possible to behold, to divine, to feel immediatelv, and whose existence the dialectic of the reason will in vain endeavour to deduce from the
/
fleeting
sible
and illusory world of phenomena. The sen and the intelligible world are opposed to each
;
other
the latter
is
alone true
the world of ideas above the changes of time and the differences of space. Everything has proceeded by emanation from the eternally one but by sin
:
tTuTsouls havefallen into the fragmentary condition belonging to life in the material world. The soul
therefore has a longing to reunite itself to its source. 1 Schopenhauer is certainly right in pointing out the
and especially Indian or Egyptian dogmas of Neo-Platonism which became associated with the Platonic doctrine of ideas. For the first time in Western philosophy, we
traces of Oriental,
influences
in the
find
idealism
says,
iii.
7.
10),
where he
Parerga,
i.
p. 63.
MEDIJEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
is
77
Time must not be assumed to exist The soul thus became the creator of all this side of the world, when it passed out of Hence the goal of all desire is to eternity into time.
the soul, and
outside the soul.
escape from this temporal birth, this metempsychosis, by renunciation of the things of sense, to take re fuge in the region where there is no more change or
transformation, rising to the pure world of ideas, and thence to unite itself in direct contemplation with
God, the world-soul, the eternally Perfect One, to be being and so elude the bondage of imperfect, ever-restless individualism. On the whole, it may be said of Neo-Platonism that it was completely dominated by the new tendency
lost in the abysses of his
of thought, the opposition of the purely spiritual a more pregnant sign of everything material which can hardly be given than the mention that
to
;
ashamed of having a body would never say from what parents he was and
Plotinos professed to be
descended.
The__thought peculiar to
The_jworld
suitable
is
Hebrew monotheism,
a creation of the Spirit/ offered a nha,nrie1 into which all the longing and
itself,
thus determin-
materialism, Christian mono theism was now to banish the daemons and magic terrors of the natural world, which was thus left
ancient
free,
against tranquil investigation or aesthetic contem One nature served the one God, it was the plation.
work
of his hands.
v.
says A.
Hebrews
is a notable characteristic/ of the nature poetry of the Humboldt, that by a reflection of the national mono-
It
78
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
it
theism
its
It seldom dwells upon particular phe but rejoices in flights concerning great nomena, masses. One_might say that in the iO4th Psalm alone the image of the whole Kosmos is traced out. .ATmore intimate feeling for nature first became possible in Christianity as men allowed themselves to rejoice in the beauty of nature and to imagine and discern the providence and handiwork of the
of earth
as well as
the glittering-
Deity within
fulfilled,
it, until at length when the days are the time would come when they no more
needed to seek in
it
The latter was The Gods of nature had been driven awav from the old
tf
world by the advancing knowledge of nature the conflict between faith and reason had resulted, as it
;
always does, in the discomfiture of faith. The heart of man was burning for a new object of reverence, for a new faith that should lend true value to this
f^ fleeting Jife__and bring it into relation with aTL It turned away therefore from the cor
in
purity of
after
of spirit, in
aspiration
the Godhead, for truth and illumination. From gene ration to generation the chasm_3ajLjilIowed to grow
and widen between mind and matter, and men learned thus to look upon the whilom one and undivided as two distinct Beings of different natures. The whole of modern philosophy has been perplexed and tor mented over the consequences of this antagonism. For the Christian consciousness the reconciliation
was effected from the first. Was it notjthe Spirit which knows and creates and produces ail things? Poor Pla^Tjpoor Aristotle, say the Fathers, you were
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
79
world behind the veil of his works, whereas he reveals Himself directly to the soul of every Christian. For a Christian, faith was knowledge and wisdom. To seeST for knowledge in nature was to tread the old dark ways, asking wisdom of devils instead of God. As the life of the mind is hidden and can only be
expressed by symbols, i. e. by sensible images which must be interpreted in another spirit, it is easy to
understand that the first attempts at a Christian philosophy, which were made by the_Gnostics, conof allegorical and phantastical creations oj* mvs_tical ideas compounded out of oriental mysticism
sisted
and adaptations from Greek philosophy. They agree in one point, that an invisible, inconceivable,
incomprehensible, immutable, primaeval Being is the cause and foundation of all things. This primal monad (/u.ova$ a-yyej/i^ros) has given birth to all things.
He
is
whom
the con-
substantial Silence
Hence (viyrj} was impregnated. proceeded Knowledge (you?) and Truth, and these four
compose the Pythagorean
things,
etc.
Metaphysical numbers, asons, emana tions, beings intermediate between God and the world, but all of a purely spiritual nature, play a And we see clearly how a spiritual great part. mythology might have been developed, from the
unity of the Absolute Spirit, at the root of Chris tianity, which would have differed radically from the
its allegorical and mvstical form as disv O from the objective and personal character tinguished of the former. Schopenhauer observes with justice 1 that the attempt of the Gnostics to introduce middle
ancient one by
/
Parerga,
i.
65.
80
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
beings like the Pleroma, the ^Eons, the Hyle or Sophia, between the spiritual first cause and the
world was analogous to that made afterwards by Descartes to attenuate the contradictions which the assumption of connection and reciprocal influence between a material and immaterial substance carried
with
it,
animal
spirits,
nerve-aether,
explain.
The sound
Apologists and Fathers of the Church sought to pre serve in its purity the simple Christian doctrine, as containing all wisdom in itself and transcending the vain and subtle imaginations of the human wisdom God is a supernatural being^ of ancient philosophy.
jTTnojTniprehensible_jto_the reason.
rvnjy
j
What we know
this,
of
is is
which There
but one God from whom all things have proceeded aiidbyjwhom ah were created. We can under
stand
how
in
that age
of passionate
enthusiasm,
young ardour, and unbroken energy, Tertullian s faith should have exclaimed, in scorn of reason and all the wisdom of philosophy, Credo quia absurdum
est
:
rights, and fact that the Christian apologists were very obliged to represent the false gods of antiquity as
the
absurd and irreligious, compelled them to have re course to grounds of reason to make their con victions accessible to others. Thus the views of the
old philosophers, and especially of Plato, were re ferred to to show in how many points they approached
to tEe Christian doctrine.
They had
striven
by the
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
light of reason towards that which known by supernatural revelation
81
They had V
as it
But everywhere the opposition between temple. the mind and body was insisted upon as the most important argument. Just as the human mind is one and rules the body with its many members,
but one God to rule the world. Deus autem qui est seterna mens ex omni utique parte perfectse consummatseque virtutis est ... Deus
so
there can be
vero, si perfectus est, ut esse debet, nisi unus. (Lact. Inst. i. 3.)
It
non potest
esse
has often been said, that the great idea of Descartes upon which modern philosophy is founded,
to be met with in St. Augustine, who appeals to the certainty of self-consciousness in refutation of
is
scepticism.
Tu
?
1
Scio.
Unde
scis
Nescio.
Scio.
Moveri
(Sol.
ii.
te scis
i.)
Nescio.
Cogi-
tare te scis
And
again
Omnis
et de
qui se dubitantem
intelligit,
verum
intelligit,
hac re
quam intelligit certus est. Omnis igitur qui utrum sit veritas dubitet, in se ipso habet verum unde non dubitet, nee ilium verum nisi veritate verum
itaque oportet eum de veritate dubitare qui potuit undecumque dubitare/ (De Vera Rel. 73.) Doubt may prevail as to whether our son Is are fire
est.
Non
to doubt that, doubt itself prcthey supposes alL_tHs. The soul has no pertain know Nihil enim tarn novit ledge except that of itself mens quam id quod sibi praesto est, nee menti magis
or
air,
but
it
is
impossible for
men
feel^jwilJLjbhink
and judge,
:
for
quidquam
xiv.
7.)
external
(De Trinit. ipsa sibi. can only believe in the existence of bodlesr~and we depend in the same way
praesto est
quam
We
upon
^Belief as to the
i.
VOL.
82
other men.
itself is
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
believe
belief
There are
important
and remarkable
points of agreement between these statements and the fundamental principle and reasoning of Des It may be said that Augustine who so^ cartes.
1
emphatically indicated the direct certitude of self-, consciousness, and recognised it as the foundation whence all other certainty must be derived, is the
real ancestor of Christian philosophy and Christian Scholasticism, and all that has sprung from these roots.
He
which subjectivity was synonymous, with insecurity and deception, and which accordingly strove with all its might towards objectivity or being. But we must not overlook the vast divergences between the Augustinian and Cartesian doctrines, if we are to form a correct estimate of the course of
phil osophy, in
philosophical development. Augustine uses his own consciousness only as a step from which to raise himself up to eternal truth, the certainty of God s
existence.
C
begin
therefore
Your thought and consciousness are you J therefore certain/ But now Augustine continues \ As certainly as you live and think, so certainly
think.
:
God
.self.
lives
a Single Being, a spirit like yourDescartes takes the reverse wav and says
is
:
"
and
\As
I
as
God
my
The
drew
;
from the world the proof of the existence of God Descartes deduced from the existence of God the This indeed certainty of the existence of the world. is certainly his weakest point, but we see already
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
83
was
jective Intelligence,
The knowledge
knowledge of God.
This
is
portant and strongest point of contrast between the age of Christendom and the preceding ancient and sub
Augustine expresses this thought, as at once the Deum et rule and the aim of all spiritual research Nihil omnino. animam scire cupio. Nihilne plus Deus semper idem, noverim me, (Soliloq. i. 7.)
:
noverim
te.
(Ib.
ii.
4.)
reit
that
is_changeable r perishable, and subject to many errors. Thissupreme. eternal, unchangeable truth is God, and
Theology and
the place pf the fl.ncient ontology. ThgO-SOpiiy All the incomprehensibility of the world and our own
nature is-th.rown into the shade by the incomprehenwhich embraces and includes sibility of the Godhead, it.splf bp riptp.rmi npri or nnriall that -is* Vm^narynpf -nnmhpr spn.cp or time, by ditioned-hy a-ny "a/m^ any knowledge under any attribute. And these ques which by tions as to the nature of the human mind its union with the body is confined within the limits
of space and time, while at the same time it par ticipates in the nature of the unconditioned eternal
Deity
assumed
present everywhere the world, so the one soul is present throughout of the body. It is there p.very part,
im^vigijjIyjiTi
character.
As the_one God
fore a_spprjn1 fipirifiml smbatflTif^ which has nothing in common with the corporeal nature.^ Questions G 2
84
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
as to the nature of time, space, number, divisibility and the like, had now become inevitable; their import
But other
directly connected with the fundamental principle of monotheism or the Absolute Intelligence, presented
themselves as well.
decided tendency towards materialism as the prin ciple of unity and intelligibility, treating individualism
as the principle of separation and incomprehensibility, Christian monotheism leads conversely towards the
and takes as its standpoint the unity )f the mind, from which and by which all things are 3i*eated, governed and interpreted, while the foreign and incomprehensible element lies in the manifold
opposite pole,
multiplicity, divisibility, arid passivity of matter. The scholastic explanation is thus strictly logical in treating time and space, in which all things material
are presented, as the real principia individuationis. Still more startling is the contrast between the eternal,
unchangeable All Spirit, or God, and the individual spirits which are created arid called into being by him: although, in accordance with the principle operari sequitur esse/ they cannot be conceived to confront with independent energy the abyss of Omni potence and creative power of the One. This diffi culty becomes of the utmost importance because the cardinal question of practical Christianity deals with
the
responsibility
of mankind,
w hich presupposes
r
Antiquity might
by conditions
1
l
.
Velleius Paterculus
fj/uv
TO (rnovSaiovs fivai
(fruvXovs.
(Eth. mag.
i.
9.)
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
divine nature consist in
says of Cato
:
85
its
necessity, as
when he
:
Homo
diis
omnia genio
quam hominibus
proprior
qui
nunquam
quia
non poterat. (ii. 35.) But in a yet higher whether by his omnipotence or the irresistidegree, bleness of his working, the Christian God must still more inevitably have put an end to all possibilities of individual liberty. The finest minds accordingly at once to torment themselves over th s prob begin lem, how to reconcile the divine foreknowledge with
aliter facere
human
agent.
The
logical and candid ones, like Augustine, Calvin and Luther, arrive at the impossibility of human freedom. While the two first hold fast to this, that a great part of
the
ire
human race proedestinati surit in seternum ignem cum diabolo/ the latter speaks without disguise
Concessa prsescientia et omnipotentia, sequitur naturaliter, irrefragabili consequentia, nos per nos ipsos non esse factos, nee vivere, nee agere quidquam, sed
per illius omnipotentiam. (De Servo Arbitrio.) And do not exist by free-will, but in another place of necessity; we ourselves do not act, but God acts
:
We
un
wisdom
confession.
resistible
In other words, Christian monotheism has an ir tendency towards Pantheism in both the individual existence is completely swallowed in the absolute mind. There is therefore no greater con trast than that between the ancient polytheism and the rjantheism of Vanini, Giordano Bruno, and Spinoza, and only a complete misconception of their nature
;
could lead to an affiliation or even comparison of the In the first the individual will breaks through two.
86 everywhere
;
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
in the latter it is wholly eliminated.
knowledge of nature, which only be comes possible by the denial of the first, had to
The
scientific
in
antiquity;
the
in the renaissance
of natural science, as the fundamental principle of new theory of the universe which had become
According to antiquity the gods dis necessary. played their power by breaking through the laws of
causation, as
lightens from
a cloudless sky Pantheism is the definite expression of a complete natural order, the completed interpenetration of mind and body, God and the world.
was naturally furnished by mono the belief in the Absolute Intelligence, the theism, creator and ruler of the world, who has ordered all things well and wisely, whose thoughts we think
The
transition
as
we
learn to
;
and kinds
fore
the laws of nature, its classes and whose power reveals itself there
know
mighty and
terrible
con
of nature, though these, together with the miraculous contraventions of the natural order, vulsions
but also most profoundly bear witness to him too, in the harmonies of things, in the and most purely
marvellous structure of every living thing, by the side of which all human art and skill seems the
coarsest bungling. It is therefore not surprising that we should be encountered at the very beginning of the Scholastic
philosophy by an attempt to reconcile Pantheism and Monotheism, in the writings, namely, of Johannes
Scotus Erigena, who flourished in the ninth century, and who received his impulse from the pseudo-
them
considerable in-
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
87
In Dionyfluence on the philosophy of the West. siup, who was also a favourite authority with the
mediaeval mystics, and had himself been much under the influence of Neo-Platonism, attention was for the first time turned to the formation of ideas and
forms, a subject the study of which was destined to elicit in the future of Scholasticism so
logical
much
intellectual
acuteness
wrangling.
:
According to
so
is
much
futile
an affirmative
theology (KaracpariK^ and a negative, abstract one the first descends from God to created (cnro(pariKri} things, which multiply and specialise as we proceed (in which he is approaching Aristotle) the latter pur sues the opposite course, and by continuously think ing away, attains to higher and higher abstractions, till at last it reaches the One which embraces all things in itself, being and not-being together, the Un-named, of which nothing may be predicated, the highest knowledge of which consists in negations and is thus the ignorance of mysticism. In Johannes Scotus, who carried out the ideas of Dionysius with closer logic and profounder genius, the difficulty of reconciling the existence of sin and
;
with the divine beneficence presents itself as a source of tormenting doubts, and with infinite pains
evil
and ingenuity he seeks to lessen the difficulty by penitus treating evil and sin as properly nothing: The other expedient incausale et in substantial that God created men/ree has been shown by Scho l penhauer in many passages to be a case of wooden since liberty and createdness are essentially iron,
!
irreconcilable notions.
For the
rest,
we
1
man s
E.
g.
Parerga,
i.
67.
88
writings the
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
germ of
all
come the subject of the most far-reaching speculation and the most embittered controversy. It is interest ing to observe here the first rise of these questions, and
to see
how
sion as harmless which the authority of the Church was to condemn and anathematise a little later. The
fact was that in those days of living faith neither the authors nor the Church had any conception of the danger of these views and their subsequent
destructive effect.
philosophy; that accordingly true reason and au thority could never contradict each other, and that
whenever the authority of the Fathers, who had themselves been guided by reason only, seemed to conflict with the verdict of true reason, the latter was
to be followed.
ratio vero
world has proceeded from God his beholding is an God is the substance act, his act a contemplation Man sums up all preceding existence, of all things. he is a mikrokosm. spiritual and corporeal The conflict between ideas and things forms the real
;
:
substance of the debates arid investigations of Scholas ticism at the same time the Middle Ages were called
;
upon
period of transition between ancient and modern philosophy, and to prepare the
to
serve
as
minds of men
for the
is
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
that what constitutes our
rp.fl.lify
89
is
mental representations.
by
start
Aristotle s doctrine of the Categories the utmost importance in Scholasticism the acquired l Categories are properly kinds of affirmation. Lange
:
observes that instead of seeking for the highest wisdom behind the Categories, the fact should have
been recognised that Aristotle in establishing them was endeavouring to lay down how many principal ways there were of saying about anything what itwas^and that he was misled by the authority of language into confusing kinds of propositions with kinds of being. He then continues Without enter here into the question how far he may have been ing justified in treating forms of thought and forms of being as parallel, and in assuming a more or less exact correspondence between the two, it must be observed that the confusion of objective and subjective elements in_QuiL.CQiiception of things, which became in its crassest form the very foundation of Scholast^cism, is among the most characteristic traits of Aristotelian thought. The confusion was not introO cluced into philosophy by him, on the contrary, he it was who began to distinguish between what the
(
:
unscientific
always inclined to But Aristotle did not get beyond the identify. very imperfect beginnings of such a distinction and exactly those elements in his Logic and Metaphysics, which in consequence of this were most perverse,
;
consciousness was
were seized upon by the untutored nations of the West as the corner-stone of wisdom, just because they
1
i.
159.
9O
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
to
their
undeveloped under
Truth and error are most strangely intermingled and the most important problems and achievements of philosophy are altogether ignored
or treated as incidental.
Aristotle did not distinguish between the objective and subjective elements of knowledge, because this
distinction is the ripest fruit of modern philosophy; because the whole of ancient philosophy was essen and because while the distinction tially objective
;
between sensible perception and thought (phenomena and noumena) had been established, that between On the thought and being was still unknown
!
contrary, in the eyes of all antiquity the points at which thought was held to aim was (and could not
conceivably have been anything but) actual Being (TO oj/T(o? of). Logic, dialectic, and the rest were only the sails and mill-stones by the help of which the pure
flour of reality
the grain.
Philosophy therefore had to pass through a great convulsion before the question of the relation of all preceding thought to being could be stated had to assume another aspect, as it were problems
;
turning their shadow side into the light. This great revolution was rendered possible by the Christian
philosophy.
question, sion at the outset of Scholasticism
Hence the interest and promise of the which provokes Lange s shrugs of compas
:
notions
whether the five which Porphyry extracted from the logical writings of Aristotle, and his ten Categories, were
l
names, that
1
is
to
Genus,
differentia, species,
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
91
entities. The whole question of the Universals, with which the Middle Ages were to occupy themselves so much, connected itself with this problem. Thus
while
antiquity, at its height, could only discern true copies of things in the Platonic ideas, it was reserved for the Middle Ages to consider the nature
for the thoughts of God were itself, and to formulate the problem How do we pass from thought to being After which the final question becomes possible, What is the relation of thought to being 1 which has been an swered by Kant. Christian philosophy is thus an important and indispensable link in the development
of thought in
creative too,
"?
of
thought. cannot therefore agree with Lange in seeing only a sign of the barbarism of the western nations
human
We
in the disciple and follower of Alcuin, Fredegisus, and his treatise De Nihilo et Tenebris/ when he argues
that Nothing cannot be a pure negation, but must indicate something real, as darkness does, because
every name means something, and therefore Nothing itself must have some kind of being, which is further
confirmed by the suggestion that Nothing was the material out of which God created the world.
We
and welcome
tive essays of a healthy vital impulse which compares ideas and things, and can therefore proceed to dis tinguish them. On this untrodden path then Erigena
proceeded boldly forward, explaining darkness/ si lence, and the rest as conceptions of the thinking mind. Not less significant is his contention that the
absentia of a thing and the thing itself are generically and silence. alike, as light and darkness, sound
Aristotle
this
when he
distin
guished the
92
a-TEpiia-is
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
or real negation.
relation
Here the problem of the between thought and being obtrudes itself already ; and this important question, which here only appears in the form of an aperpu, will meet us again at the period of its approaching solution, in the im portant work of Kant, Versuch den Begriff cler negativen
1763-
hemisphere from that of ancient philo has been reached when we find ourselves sur sophy rounded by such questions as, Nothing must be
different
mean some
Darkness and Silence are negative in there must be some real negation an thought to them/ We are here at the antipodes swering of the state of mind which accepted as the most positive of certainties that there must be some thing in the mind, and that no other starting-point could lead towards the world of things and its re The new generation was already accustomed lations.
or
;
to imagine the creative world-spirit surrounded by heavenly beings of a purely spiritual nature, with
Seraphim and Cherubim, Thrones, Dominions, Virtues, Powers and Principalities, Angels and Archangels. And as early as Claudianus Mamertus (ob. 477) meta
physical enquiries began as to the immaterial nature of the soul, to which quantity, in the way of exten
whose only magnitude is virtue and wisdom, whose motion is only in time not space, and so forth, in confutation of the antique
sion,
cannot be attributed
materialism of Tertullian
views.
But the most important conception which mewas to originate and bequeath di^ejval_^hilQSQpliyL. foinodern times, was that of the concept (conceptus) itself; something purely intellectual, an object
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
born of
vellous
thft
93
unipd itsp]f
to reality, the full unexplained elucidation of which remained for a still remote future. To discover these relations began hence
relations
forward to count as the chief business of philo All the controversies of Scholasticism turn sophy.
upon the Universals these universals are repre sented in modern philosophy by concepts, or general
;
ideas.
These considerations were aroused, as has been shown, by the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle. The
Pantheistic turn of Scotus Erigena, for whom all things proceed from the Deity as the true substance,
and strive to be reabsorbed again in him, who held the highest abstractions to be the highest truths, who understood by the mystical Nothing the supreme superessential, incomprehensible nature of God him
self,
God
the
sum
this Pantheistic bent beings and all realities the antagonism from becoming sensible as prevented yet it is needless to add that according to him the
of
all
(i.e.
in
God) as
familiarity with the works of Aristotle lent to Scholas so highly revered as an authority The dialectic method, its peculiar character. ticism
The growing
of
starting
pro and
lieved
contra, deducing true conclusions, was the It was congenial to an epoch which be favourite.
knowledge could only be derived from the and wholly despised nature, reality, and ex mind,
perience.
It is unquestionable that the discussion of the con tradictions between Plato and Aristotle, in the Chris
its
own
94
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
problem with a degree of unity and comprehensive ness which it could not otherwise have attained. The incurable pluralism of Greek philosophy was
really got rid of
attributes and accidents were investigated, and the idea was actually so boldly generalised as to include within itself the worlds of matter and spirit. The
when
themselves in a posi tion to realise to themselves the growth of ideas a clue for all future philo of view a passage from Henpoint sophy ricus of Auxerre (in the Qth century) is of great interest, as it contains a kind of theory as to the
within the
!
men found
soul,
origin of reason, and seems partly, though of course imperfectly, to forestall some of the views of Locke
Sciendum autem quia propria nomina sunt innumerabilia ad qua? cognoscenda intellectus nullus seu memoria sufficit, hasc ergo omnia coartata
and Leibniz
:
species comprehendit et facit primum gradum qui latissimus est, scilicet hominem, equum, leonem et
species
rursus
incomprehensibilia, gradus angustior jam, qui constat in genere, quod est animal, surculus et lapis iterum hsec genera, in unum coacta nomen, tertium fecerunt
alter factus est
:
innumerabilia
et
et angustissimum, utpote
qui uno nomine solum constet quod est usia V This is but what a change in the genuine Nominalism with that of Aristotle and the standpoint compared The latter saw the Universal in things, ancients and cared for nothing else the human soul had only
!
TJeberweg,
125.
ii.
p.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
;
95
a special power of perceiving the Universal but here we find Christian philosophy, unconcerned about the
nature of actual things, were they not all the work of God ? boldly maintaining that the soul itself ori ginates an orderly course of intuition and designation.
Christian belief in an immortal, independent, divine soul, was also connected with the avowed ab
solute subjectivity which permitted the development of extreme nominalism and made it possible to say
:
The
my
own mouth, flatus vocis! A passage quoted by Cousin from the Commentary on Porphyry attributed to
Rabanus Maurus
;
my
1
is characteristic in this respect the of thought is expressly distinguished from the object actual things which alone have real existence Genus
:
est
quod
hoc
;
prsedicatur.
Res enim
:
non prxdicatur.
Quod
dicitur
modo probant
;
res
sed res proferri non potest nihil enim profertur nisi vox, neque enim aliud est prolatio quam aeris plectro
linguae percussio.
It
is
is
crude,
but the thoughtful reader will detect in it the im plication of a great truth, which was wholly unknown
to the ancients.
Realists
i.
e.
who
or (Platonic) Ideas
tical
authority on the occasion of the public decision of the controversy at the Council of Soissons (1092), when the representative of Nominalism was compelled to recant, was no doubt to a foreboding of the
owing
1
Ueberweg,
1.
c.
p. 126.
96
relationship
out,
felt
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
between Nominalism, logically carried The Church and Naturalism or Materialism.
that its own strength lay in the rigid upholding of The Nominalist doctrine the pure spiritual element. shown itself dangerous to the first and had already
highest doctrine, the mystery of the Trinity. If only single beings possess reality, tritheism becomes un
avoidable,
and
this
Every age tests the truth of a new doctrine by apply ing it to that which it has most at heart ; in the ages
of faith this was the Christian doctrine, as in our own day we ask whether the tendency of Darwinism is
aristocratic (as Haeckel assures us), or social-demo cratic (as Virehow inclines to think). The arguments
which Anselm of Canterbury brought to bear against nominalism all turn upon the impropriety of judging
spiritual natures by the coarse standards of ordinary ridicules those dialecticians who think sense.
He
that words, the flatus vocis, exhaust the nature of the univeisal substances, who imagine that colour
must be
soul,
who, wholly
swayed by their imagination, can only believe in the existence of that which is immediately before their
eves.
He
calls
them
by
reason arid dogma, while earlier times had remained unshaken in the belief that revelation was completely
in
by the
His Credo ut
:
intelligam,
thus assumes a
:
peculiar character
it
may
be supplemented
I believe
things transcending my powers of comprehension, but which show me the wav by which I mav attain to ^
*/
i/
true knowledge.
The
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
necessary
:
97
Qui enim nondum intelligit quomodo plures homines in specie sint homo unus, qualiter in ilia secretissima natura comprehcndet, quomodo
plures
est
quarum singula quseque est perDeus unus \ et cujus rnens obscura ad discernendum inter equum suum et colorem
unum Deum
et plures
rationes
esse
liget
hominem hominem
c.
denique qui non potest intelligere aliud nisi individuum, nullatenus intelnisi humanam personam. (De Fide
fact that in the
Trin.
2.)
The very
whom
we now
were called Realists, is signifi It shows the assumption from which opinion started. The Spiritual was taken for granted, and from thence men proceeded towards
call Idealists
reality,
asking
mind, these Universals, actual things I For Plato and Aristotle they were only reflections, ei^, iSeai, in the human soul, derived either from memory of a
former state or the direct contemplation of real beings in the present. The one view is objective, the other
subjective. If the doctrine of Absolute Intelligence forms the real substance of mediaeval philosophy, the summit
of
unimpaired existence was reached in the wellknown cosmological and ontological proof of the existence of a deity furnished by this same Anselm of Canterbury in his Monologium and Proslogium which, although their weak points were indicated in the author s lifetime by the monk Gaunilo, yet stood for centuries, like citadels, commanding the whole realm of philosophy, until at last the mine kindled by Kant exploded and blew them into the air. The assumption underlying this demonstration is that it
its
;
VOL.
I.
96
is
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
possible to proceed by dialectic inferences from think the. good, the lofty, the thought to being. therefore these universals have an existence true,
We
independent of things. But we must then also neces sarily think a supreme good, a supreme truth, a
God, the absolute Being all individual existences are conditioned, and prove by the very fact that there must exist an ultimate source, a causa prima, with nothing superior to itself. This Absolute Intelligence has created the world, and
supreme
justice,
and
this is
continues to
existed
reality.
first
things thoughts, before they attained In individuals nothing is just, good, or true,
:
preserve
it
in
existence
all
in his
except in so far as it participates in the absolute This is the cosmoloJustice, Goodness, and Truth. reasons from our relative thought gical proof^^which
ontological proof, on the con trary, derives~T.ts conclusion from the definition of It is possible to think of a Greatest, the idea itself.
fo^the Absolute.
The
therefore this
must
For if it did not, it would be only in it would therefore not be really Greatest, intellectu, id quod non cogitari potest non esse. It is Highest, the same proof as that which will meet us again under many disguises in Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, whose dependence upon mediaeval thought is shown in nothing more clearly than in this. The ens realissimum, necessarium, the causa sui, id quod non cogitari
potest nisi existens, the causa prima, all trace their origin to the scholastic argument according to which
reality, like
is
included in the
idea of substance, and then by analytical judgment discovered to belong to it of right. No doubt was
felt at this
MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
the impossibility of this
99
to
the
world by Kant.
The first attempts at reconciliation between the extremes of Nominalism and Realism were made in the twelfth century, by Abelard, so famous for his His keen intellect eloquence and his ill-fated love. was the first to discern the important distinction be
tween words, as mere sounds, and the conceptual content corresponding to them. Ixemusat desciibes his attitude as follows Ce n est pas le mot, la
l
:
expression
quoique les discours soient des mots, ce ne sont pas les mots mais les discours (meaning clearly the sense of the words) qui sont universels. Quant aux choses, s il etait vrai qu une chose put s affirmer de plusieurs choses, une
seule et
du mot qui
meme
He had thus a clearer in plusieurs, ce qui repugne/ sight into the nature of language than any of his
predecessors, while he agreed with John of Salisbury (Metal, ii. 1 7) in thinking, rem de re prsedicari mon-
strum
esse.
The
is
Concep-
tualism, and it seems as if the important determination of the meaning attached to conceals, notion or It was only in harmony idea, was also due to him. of things, and of mediaeval with the natural course
thought, that he should first locate this conceptiis mentis in the Spirit of the Trinity, where its effects
must be
rebus.
creative,
it
is,
and
one of the most im modern philosophy that all human thought takes place by means of ideas, that these are purely mental objects, which however have
If as
we
portant discoveries
of
Aboard,
ii.
105
(ap.
Ueberweg,
ii.
152).
IOO
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
is
derived from
the objective world of sense, it will be easy to estimate the importance and the fruitfulness of this
In the same way as he dis discovery of Abelard s. the word as sound from the idea, he tinguished
it refers,
distinguished the latter also from the things to which and gives it thus a really intermediate place
fact,
intellectualis
and
realis,
and says
ratum secundum significationem vocabuhim. The pro gress is undeniable from antiquity w hich sought to translate things into ideas, to scholasticism which translates ideas direct into things. For the rest, was already astir in Abelard s mind, as is scepticism shown by his work Sic et Non, in which he brings together all the contradictory propositions which have emanated from authority, and by the utterance Dubitando ad inquisitiowhich is bold for his age nem venimus, inquirendo veritatem percipimus. His doctrines were condemned in two synods. The great schoolmen of the next age, among whom Albert of Bollstadt (Albertus Magnus) and Thomas
r
:
Aquinas stand out pre-eminent in comprehensive learning and acuteness, accepted the former versions of the problem of the Universals, and admitted their existence in a threefold sense, as ante rem in the
according to the Aristo telian conception, and also as post rem as ideas arrived at by abstraction. To Thomas Aquinas the univtrsale
re,
mind
of the Creator, as in
in re
the quiddity, or substantial form, which is ab stracted by the reason, and is distinguished from the For the accidental forms or non-essential qualities.
is
rest,
the?e great thinkers are not unaware of the in compatibility between reason and the ecclesiastical
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOrHY.
dogmas.
IQI
Albert the Great, whose researches were directed towards the hitherto proscribed or despised natural sciences, passed beyond the limits of the
when he recognised that there were dogmas inaccessible to the natural light of reason, and therefore necessarily objects of faith. He distinguished between philosophic and theological
credo ut intelligam
truth,
sidered philosophically, and professing in matters of religion to prefer the authority of Augustine to that of
Aristotle, while in matters of natural science Aristotle
was
most of the dogmas of the Church to be unattainable by natural reason this can at most prove that they are not contrary to reason, it can never reach them by its own unaided principles and
confesses
who
can therefore not demonstrate their truth. On that very account they are matter of revelation, and faith
becomes a merit, a virtue, an affair of will rather Natural theology, as set forth than of intelligence.
were, only a preparation for the higher knowledge of Christianity, and in the same way the light of nature is a handmaid to faith.
in Aristotle,
is,
as
it
Here we
a
little
itself.
find demarcations
later
the general and the particular, the one and many, reason and sense, which lies at the root of all knowledge, is also at the bottom of
this
that there could be no science of par nor therefore of affections of sense, and the ticulars, fact was clearly and precisely enuntiated by both
selves
knew
his
own
1O2
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
standpoint, and under the influence of the prevailing Plato attributed reality to ideas ex objectivism.
ternal to the phenomena, Aristotle to forms within the phenomena. This was the irreducible remainder
of ancient philosophy what is posited as real cannot be reduced to other elements, it remains individual,
;
and pluralism
the world, the
is
the result.
all
mover of
mere expedient.
remains to be seen what answer to the question regarding the individual was given by the doctrine of
It
Absolute Intelligence, or Christian philosophy. The most logical reply would have been, as has been said
already, that the individual should be absorbed in the But the profound ethical former, i. e. Pantheism.
spirit of Christianity
is
was opposed
to this
morality
e.
i.
indivi
dualism.
The
ence of separate things by and outside the general, universal spirit, is therefore what has to be explained, and of this problem Scholasticism gives various
solutions.
i. St. Thomas, inspired by Aristotle and his com mentator Avicenna, placed the principium individuationis in matter. It is only by this that species turn to individual beings, and assume material existence in a determinate place and time, liic et mine. Matter is always undetermined, and has only a quantitas determinata, it is the substratum w hich receives the form, the vTro/tei/meisov or subject. There are, it is true, also immaterial forms, formee separatee, God, angels, human souls, but everything perceivable by sense is a form inseparably bound up with matter. These views include the antithesis of matter and mind, the recognition of matter as the universal substance with
r
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
103
only quantitative differences, space and time as their essential conditions, form inseparable from matter all of light pointing to the path Descartes and rays
In Aquinas too we find ideas as to the nature of human knowledge that seem to belong to a later age than his. Human
are to follow in the future.
Kant
knowledge is only possible by the action of the objects on the knowing soul one who is deprived of a sense, like those born blind, is without the corresponding
:
concepts;
the senses cannot grasp the nature of but only their external accidents, and yet the things, human intellect requires the phantasms of them, which it renders intelligible by its power of abstrac
tion.
as
it is
qui est conjunctus corporis, proprium objectum est quidditas, sive natura in mateiia corporali existens,
et per hujusmodi natura s visibilium
cle
rerum etiam
in
Si absque materia corporali. nostri intellectus esset forma separata, vel si forma? rerum sensibilium subsisterent non in particularisms secundum Platonicos, non oporteret, quod intellectus noster semper intelligendo converteret ad phantas-
mata/
2.
(Sum. Theol.
i.
qu. 84.)
In contradistinction to St. Thomas, Duns Scotus places the essence of Individualism in form, rather than matter. All beings except God have a material,
is
however
indefinitely
more ex
alted in the case of spiritual than of corporeal beings. But from out of this universal existence, the par ticular existence of individual beings constitutes itself
accession of positive conditions, so that the individual nature, the Tisecceitas, is superadded to the
by the
IO4
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
universal nature, the quidditas. are generally accustomed to regard these abstractions as the acme
We
of Scholastical absurdity.
But
it
should
be
re
membered that
means no more
than what Aristotle had maintained against Plato, namely, that nothing really exists except the in Duns Scotus has done nothing dividual, roSe rt. but carry the reality of Aristotle into the higher region of ideas, which is surely an important pro
gress
:
where
else
can
it
belong
When Kant
comes to explain the case as to this haecceitas, will he show it to be something real ? The analysis of the idea as such and its accurate investigation are due
and without this careful anatornv of mental processes modern philosophy would never have become possible. Even Lange does not hesitate to recognise a progress even in the subtleties of the 1 scholastic (Byzantine) logic Any one who at the
to Scholasticism
;
/
:
present day
is
still
and
logic,
would
inclined to identify grammar (!) at least derive some profit from the
logicians of that century, for the latter tried seriously to make a logical analysis of the whole of Grammar,
in
the
course
creating a new language, the horrors of which were held to be past exaggeration by the Humanists. But the fundamental intention of all this diligence
. . .
and sooner or later the whole problem (of language and thought) will have to be reconsidered, though it may be with a very different bearing and purpose. Duns Scotus was an acute but very hierarchicallyminded man. He believed himself to be serving the authority of the Church by restricting the rights of
perfectly serious,
1
was
Geschiclite
cles
Materialismus,
i.
p.
177.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
reason
105
even more than his predecessors, and de claring the truths which had formerly been recog nised as the subject of natural theology, such as the creation of the world and the immortality of the
soul, to be incapable of proof.
Knowledge according
;
to his view has nothing to do with faith theology has more practical than theoretical significance, the
will of
is the only cause of the truths of faith the duty of man is to believe, i.e. to submit willingly to the authority of the Church. The will of man
;
God
not dependent on his knowledge, but he is able to determine it without rational grounds voluntas est
is
:
superior intellect!!.
and knowledge was com pleted by the Franciscan William of Occam (d. 1347),
faith
According to him there no truth of theology, not even the existence of God, that can be proved bv rational arguments. He throws a new light upon the enquiry into the nature
and of the individual. Tilings are allowed once more to come within the field of vision.
of Universal s
In the golden age of the Christian philosophy the Absolute Intelligence, God, is the source of all truth, the quintessence of all reality, the only true postulate
needed
to.
for
Now
knowledge, and leading necessarily there however the long-despised and disregarded
on the horizon in
all its
enigmatic
Thomas Aquinas, God commands what is good, because it is good: according to Duns Scotus, good is good because God wills it. The domain of reason grows more and more
According
to
St.
restricted.
We shall
see
its
claims grew in
the same matters in an opposite direction. According to Descartes, a mathematical proposition is true (an seterna veritas) because God
so wills
;
according to Spinoza,
it
is
it is
106
obscurity,
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
and
its
even attempt. no means a simple resumption of the Aristotelian In the interval the whole nature of the standpoint.
and which theological wisdom, by re the domain of faith, could no longer But the return to Nominalism is by
question had undergone a change corresponding to the intellectual work accomplished, and though the
aspect was the same as from the earlier standpoint, the outlook was from a higher elevation commanding
Gradually, and perhaps still con and unconsciously, the true objects of the fusedly mind, ideas, had been substituted for the Aristotelian
a wider prospect.
objects.
Occam
hits the
weak point
trine of ideas, its pluralism. If we make the Universals into real things, existing outside our thought,
And
it is
just as impossible to attribute separate existence to the Universals within the things, for this would also
be multiplying them.
It is
we
ourselves,
our ab
stracting intelligence, that so surveys the really ex isting single things that the common element belong
ing to them
detaches
itself
and
is
conceived and
comprehended by the mind, only however as an Idea, conceptus mentis except in the mind, this idea has
;
Thus, according to Occam, the principle of individuation resides in the individual itself, which
independently and must be accepted as a preliminary part of the problem to be solved. The individuals alone are truly real, quaelibet res ex eo
exists
ipso
quod
est,
est hsec
res/
We
think and
know
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
107
by means of
that
universals, but it
by no means follows
they therefore possess reality. The real in dividuals are represented in due order and connection
:
verbal equivalents are called termini, and hence the adherents of Occam were rightly called Terminists, to distinguish them from the extreme Nominalists, who
saw
in Universals
mera nomina
or arbitrary signs
first
l
.
dawning ray
time
the relation of the subject to the object is conceived as the starting-point and fundamental principle of knowledge. For though the termini as such exist
only in the percipient mind, they are not arbitrary, like conventional signs or sounds, but they arise bv natural necessity out of the intercourse of the mind
with things,
idea,
as an effect of the latter. i. e. Word, and thing seem for the first time to be sharply distinguished and their interdependence shown the reason has been forbidden to overshoot herself, while all that follows from the distinction was reserved for
;
future philosophy to explore. The transformation of things into concepts, the origin of concepts, of language and similar problems, may henceforward
all
her
Abstraction, the capacity the mind has of forming general ideas, is not an active power of the under standing or the will, but it accomplishes itself na
turally
it
and inevitably as our perception leaves behind an image in memory (habitus derelictus ex primo
See Prantl, Geschichte der Logik im Abcndlande,
iii.
344
ff.
IO8
actu
l
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
),
and thus the similar perceptions consolidate It follows from this characteristic of our knowledge that it is all founded upon intuition which is of two kinds, external and or perception
or melt in one.
;
internal.
the judgment is Abstract knowledge warrants no judgment as ing. The to the existence or non-existence of a thing.
senses give us no certain knowledge of things, they only acquaint us with certain signs, which have in
deed a certain relation to them as smoke to fire, or Just so words are crwOtjKi], arbitrary, sighs to pain. conventional signs of ideas, of the conceptus mentis they are thus signs of signs, and indirectly of things. Any one who appreciates the significance of these words will feel that a new age has begun since the speculations of Plato and Aristotle, or the words in which Cicero summed up the general theory of an 2 tiquity, vocabula sunt notas rerum Our mind is most exposed to error in the judg
;
.
ment respecting
external things, suggested by the external kind of intuition. The senses are less to be
depended on than the intuitive knowledge of our own inward states. Intellectus noster pro statu isto non tantum cognoscit sensibilia, sed etiam in particulari
et
intuitive cognoscit
aliqua
intellectibilia
qua3 nullo
intellectiones,
1
voluntatis,
own
This expression is much more just than those current in our day, such as Zuriickbleiben von Resten, or, worse still, Narin particular.
any meaning activity and habit showing once more how much we have to learn from the despised dark ages of medievalism.
2
schwingende Vorstellungen, words without Occam touches the two real points,
still
last century.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
109
et hujusraodi quse potest homo experiri inesse sibi, quse tamen non sunt sensibilia nobis, nee sub aliquo
sensu cadunt. But it is only the states, not the nature or essence of the soul which is to be known in Whether the sensations and emotions, the this way.
acts of
thought and
uncertain 1
.
will proceed
from an immaterial
being
is
Granted that these are only loose blocks rather than a complete edifice, they are the blocks with
which the greatest thinkers of modern philosophy, Descartes, Locke, Hume and Kant, have constructed their great erections. Especially in the two English writers the above argument will meet us in almost As Occam did not shrink from the the same words. ultimate consequences of his views and was prepared to trace back to principles which could only be de rived from experience, even the syllogistic thought which was supposed to lead to necessary truth and self-evident knowledge, it may be asked whether Locke and Hume are not really restorers of his view according to which experience was implicitly made and whether the the sole source of knowledge O whole English philosophy of the present day, that of John Stuart Mill, Lewes, and the rest included, as the is not really standing at the very same point
r
,
; *
of the fifteenth century. The Church had thus renounced the attempt to regard the truths of salvation as fitted for the illuo
Franciscan
monk
mination of reason, or to seek proofs for them in The attempt of Raymond de Sabunde, the latter. which has been immortalised by one of Montaigne s
most interesting essays, to prove the doctrines of continued to stand Christianity by natural revelation,
1
Uebenveg, Grundriss,
ii.
235.
IIO
alone.
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
Eeligious faith drew back into its original Dis starting-place, the depths of the human soul. with the dry intellectual refinements and gusted
disputes of the Schoolmen, the finer minds of the age took refuge in inward revelations, the direct
intercourse of the soul with God, and the holy calm The subject seeks with all the powers of mysticism.
of the soul to reach and mingle with the Absolute Intelligence, to rest in it, to know and to behold the
The separation between subject and object had accomplished itself in the conscious ness of the age, and modern philosophy was heralded. The aspirations of the whole preceding period con
supernatural truth.
centrated themselves in the souls of the chosen few.
In union with the object, they said, is true know ledge only to be found let us become one with God.
;
This longing finds its most touching expression in the exhortation of Master Eckhart, the mystic Ach lieber Mensch, was schadet es dir, dass du
:
dir
Gott
sei
To sum up briefly the results of the intellectual work accomplished by Occidental humanity in the
Middle Ages, we find j. By starting from the Absolute Intelligence, the chief cravings of the reason, after unity and spirit uality, receive due satisfaction. The individual Gods of popular belief, the in dividual atoms of Demokritos, the individual ideas
:
of Plato, the individual substances of Aristotle, dis appear, and in their place there reigns the one God,
Metaphysic,
Ob
The material and the possible. jective, The elements of the former spiritual are separated. are investigated. The way is prepared for Descartes
becomes
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOrHY.
distinction
stance.
3.
I I
between
extended
and thinking
sub
are attentively
and assiduously observed. The place of the objects and Platonic ideas is taken by concepts.
The special onesidedness of mediaeval philosophy consisted in the absorption of all individuality by the
Absolute Intelligence.
The
crisis
announced
itself
by the threatening
re-
But the
point of departure must be spiritual but it is not the absolute but the individual intelligence that
;
Descartes proclaims as the first and only certainty. In the Cogito the relation of subject and object
is
implied as the primary condition of all knowledge. It is the vital principle of modern philosophy.-
relation, to lay
down
to
exactly
object,
subject,
what
the
and how they act upon each other, these are the problems for modern times. We shall see grave oscillations towards one or other extreme, till at last the key to the problem is found by Kant we shall see the systems of antiquity revive for a time and then, one after the other, pass
;
away
for ever.
when the
And
error is only reached source of the error has been discovered. therefore, in the whole history of the world, no
had the
is
emancipating
power
of that of Kant.
will
He
an element of truth
112
in
MEDIAEVAL PHILOSOPHY.
he every system, but that all are incomplete show that they have their origin in the nature
;
will
lay bare the nature of this reason to its very roots, and so put an end for ever to the controversies of the schools.
of the
human
reason
and he
will
Thus
the
development
of
modern
philosophy
stretches itself before us as a clearly defined problem at the outset, with a complete solution at the close.
The Cartesian Cogito corresponds to the Kantian We have now to trace the path lead Dianoiology.
ing from the one to the other.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
DESCARTES.
(1596-1650.)
Nouy opa
rXXa
EPICHABMOS.
DESCARTES
rests
is
the whole
From him,
as from their
common
root,
proceed the
fruitful
developments.
idealistic,
which connects
Kant and Schopenhauer, and the mechanico-physical, which through Hobj^jg, Locke, and fEeTrench school leads likewise to Kant, ancl, after being tested and purified by him, has since become accepted as the only legitimate method of all scientific observation and research. No doubt even before Descartes Lord Bacon must be mentioned with due honour as the reformer and founder of a truly scientific method of research. But
his methodical
work
is restricted
made
Thus the heavy burden of Aristo thrown off, and a new beginning observation and independent ap
For, in spite of his inclination preciation of facts. to the empirical, Aristotle started invariably from
causse. primse,
from jprincipia
I
et
VOL.
I.
114
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
from axioms, while his followers, starting from the same ground, thought that they might arrive at truth by means of such syllogisms as Aristotle had
taught in his Organum.
In his
his
Novum Organum
in the very
method
opposite direction, representing the perceptions of the senses and experiment as the real sources of
truly scientific knowledge, which ought never to follow preconceived opinions or so-called idols, but
all
faithful copy of the real world. but the image of truth, for truth nothing and truth of knowing are the same, and do of being not differ otherwise than as the direct ray differs That alone will be the true from the reflected ray. philosophy which renders the voices of the world as
strive to
become a
Science
is
were, writes down what the world dictates, adding nothing of its own, but only repeating and, so to say, re-echoing. It is clear from such passages that Bacon cared less
faithfully as possible,
it
and which, as
about a philosophical establishment of his method, for, in that case, he could not have passed over the questions of the essence of the mind and the nature
knowledge, than for laying down certain rules according to which all scientific knowledge should He was therefore little quoted and dis proceed. cussed by real philosophers, while students of natural science often appealed to him as the highest au thority, he having, if not opened, at all events for
of
its
tified
and secured the empirical method as the true method of all scientific work. The vital point of his doctrine, however, namely, that the material of all knowledge must be given by
experience,
also, for it
well claim philosophical significance indicates both the legitimate extent and
may
diffi-
DESCARTES.
culties
115
with regard to the mere reflexio, and Bacon s iterat et resonat, has to be proved by real philosophy, which, in its inmost and truest nature, is not merely a doctrine of method, but Metaphysic. The practical tendency of Bacon shows itself in his representation of the sciences, both by his giving advice as to the making of discoveries, and by his famous saying that
Knowledge
is
Power/
said,
that
for physics was done by Descartes for metaphysics, l namely, to begin at the beginning
.
To doubt everything became for Descartes as well and Kant the means of discovering and most significant truths! Doubt as the greatest
as for Sokrates
is
be explained only as the fermentation of a newtruth striving to rise to the surface. Doubt is a
disease of privileged spirits only, for ordinary mortals are satisfied with the nearest and most trivial causes,
such
as,
that a
man walks
legs.
If only the power of the intellect is sufficient and the love of truth pure and vigorous, then, though often after a thousand pains and travails, truth rises
to the light, or rather
becomes
ating the world, and changing the pale and indefinite glimmer of the moon into the brightest splendour of the sun. If this is not so, if the power of the striving
intellect fails, then a chasm remains open, philosophy succumbs to scepticism, though always waiting and watching for a coming deliverer. I cannot understand how the apple falls to the I cannot understand thus said Newton. ground how man can movelnmseTf thus said Kobert Mayer.
;
i.
72.
11 6
1
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
cannot understand
;
how we can
I
assert
anything
with_^ertaLnty
And was
he not right
Was
which had lasted for many thousand years, which had satisfied all requirements, namely, testimony of
the senses, consensus gentium, rational explanation, a truth that formed a foundation not only of theo
speculation, but of aU practical institutions, which not long ago had been completely wrecked, namely, that the sun and the planets turned round the earth \ Surely, if at any time, it was then that in everything, even in the most certain of doubt And yet there was certainties, became justified. a still voice that whispered that reason had no For cause to despair of the discovery of final truth. had she not just achieved one of her grandest and most marvellous triumphs in the establishment of the Copernican system of the world ? And did not
retic
the fact that, in spite of the hitherto universally accepted opposite view, men had quickly and readily acknowledged the absolute truth of that new system,
confirm the
conclusion that
reason
must possess
r principles of certainty and criteria of truth w hich have only to be brought to light from the depth of our inmost nature in order to command universal
acceptance \ With the clearest insight into his purpose did Descartes undertake the solution of this problem. He wished to become the Copernicus of the inner world
and to discover the Archimedean point, which by its immovableness would allow the lever to be brought to bear, by means of which everything else could be I moved. might count upon great things/ he says,
if I
nevejLsg small,
which
absolutely certain
and
unassailable.
DESCARTES.
Cogitp.
1 1
on "which long and energetic strivings his powerful mind had reached this goal, and well it behoved him to shout for he had found the principle unknown to evprjKa the whole of antiquity, and which in future should become the only starting-point of all philosophy. He had discovered the .Zfao. The only immediate certainty and immovable truth, he thought, is our own consciousness, everything else being derivative and secondary. Even to doubt this truth can only serve to confirm it. ~ The whole world with all that lives and moves in What then justifies it is my representation only!
;
This was the firm^goint, this the basis everything else had to be built up. After
Ine in ascribing to these representations reality ar|d And how does it happen that besides true" existence ?
T
mental processes and states, we accept and believe in a material world and cor Such poreal beings, in fact a world without us ?
these, the only certain
they could not be ignored, and they led of necessity to a Critique of Pure Reason.
questions
possible,
now became
In order to appreciate fully the greatness and strength of the position conquered or occupied by Descartes (alas, such is the confusion of thought in judging of this man, that even Lange does not hesi
stim 1
tate to speak slightingly of the notorious Cogito, ergo it will be useful to compare his doctrine with }
,
it,
and especially
shall
his idealism
We
progress that Descartes has made beyond Plato, who, it may be objected, had likewise taken human reason
as the starting-point of his investigations. to this however it may be observed
:
In reply
i.
198.
Il8
1
.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
That Plato,
like the other writers of
antiquity,
proceeds ontologically and takes man as a genus, together with his reason as a faculty, requiring no In his eyes, this or that man is further explanation.
and endowed with the same facul on the contrary, proceeds critically, Uescartes, and concentrates all the rays of our knowledge tending towards an outer world, till he arrives in the end at the central point, the infinitely small, which he had sought, and which is the most certain of all, and the
as real as himself,
ties^
foundation of everything else, namely, his own Egjo. his self-consciousness, the true subject of all know
ledge, before which the whole outer world, with all men belonging to it, nay, in the end our own reason, had to produce their credentials, in order
to gain a recognition of their existence claims.
2.
and their
According to Plato, reason is the only true quality of the human soul, given to it immediately by the gods, and belonging to it with her whole
the ideas. The perceptions of the senses are illusive, and through the darkness of the organs of sense, which are but tools of sensation, the ra^_ tional soul sees the true entities, that which is
apparatus
universal
and
Descartes, on the
contrary, though he retainer] t.hft word coQJto, I think, yet used it only in this case as a denominatio a,
potiori,
and wished
it
to
comprehend
all affections
of
We
can
nostras,
saltern
Nihil esse omnino in nostra potestate prseter cogitationes non mihi videtur figmentum sed veritas a nemine neganda ;
sumendo vocem
cogitationis
meo
non solum
DESCARTES.
119
easily perceive the great importance of this extension of the meaning of cogito, through which it is for the first time possible to bring the mysterious gift of
thinking in connection with the lower functions of the soul and the perceptions of the senses to deter mine their mutual relations, and to prepare for the
;
the riddles attending the the origin, of thought. My may be, self-consciousness and all that is contained in it, that
future a solution of
it
all
nature and,
f
mytrue Ego? Thus was the great truth proclaimed wKichhad been discovered by Descartes. With this discovery the unity of the spiritual being was re stored, which had been broken up by Aristotle into a
is
and a thinking soul. even our pity, if we see nay what pains it cost Descartes to give to his contem poraries and friends a clear perception both of the truth and the importance of his discovery. Again and again he has to repeat and to explain it, and to answer such silly objections as, why one might not as well say respire ergo sum, ambulo ergo sum, in stead of cogito ergo sum. It is but another illustration
nutritive, a sentient, a motive,
of the difficulty with which a great and important truth gains general recognition. One of the most fortunate results was the sharp
distinction applied consistently, and everywhere de^ termmately carried through, between self-conscious
ness on one side and the soulless, purely corporeal, i.e. strictly mechanical outer world, on the othej:. By
these two great spheres were protected against mutual encroachments the spiritual, psychological, and logical questions were approached from their spiritual side only, while none but purely mechanical
it
:
quam ad
tiones.
ilium
motum, quatenus ab
ii.
Cartesii Epistolse,
4,
I2O
principles
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
were applied to the material world. Here more than anywhere we see the greatness and
the persistent influence of Descartes, in his opposi tion to ancient philosophy, and still more to that
false definitions
and quibbles of
their
petrified
of
whom
in
than their name. Was it not indeed an echo of Plato s doctrine of ideas, this playing with entities which repre sented unintelligible words and mere abstractions as causes and explanations of the unintelligible phe nomena of the world, and was satisfied with these,
as if the
mind of men required nothing more \ Was it not by the baneful influence of the Aristotelian dogma, that everything was imported into the formse substantiates, that the concepts of substance and
and the potential, and all the were violently tossed about, so that in categories this everlasting vortex no one could find his way out
accident, of the actual
of the
mazy
labyrinth of his
own thoughts 1
Philo
sophers were wandering round and round, while they imagined they were advancing. The real and ma terial world did not exist for them, or was despised
by them
in the
philosophy and claimed everything for the spirit and looked upon matter as worthless and sinful.
The sharp line of demarcation, which Descartes drew between consciousness and the material world
advantage, that the latter became completely unspiritualised and ruled one principle only, namely, the mechanical, that by of motion by pressure and impulse. For
without, produced this
great
although
Aristotle
as to represent it in
DESCARTES.
its
21
prima, nevertheless the Greek thinker had introduced by a back door the entelechies, the potential powers or forms, and recognised in them the true essence of things, and thus invested them with substantiality. It was in this artificial forti
as materia
fication that Descartes effected a breach, by showing that these very forms are the unreal, the illusive, the purely phenomenal, and that in order to arrive
at the true essence of things the whole outer world must be conceived as one mechanical problem, to be
The different quali by mathematics only ties must therefore in the end be reducible to one, in which all depends on a more or less, or in other Here we per words, on quantitative distinctions. ceive clearly the connection between Descartes and Locke, and the important distinction established by the. latter between primary and secondary qualities.
solved
l
.
We
also perceive
how
Demo-
and the Pythagoreans which were kept se the former upholding the parate in ancient times,
kritos
strictly
mechanical
principle,
all
the
latter
making
knowledge,
were com
bined in the mind of Descartes, and how the Aris totelian concept of matter was thus enclosed within
clear
and
How much new light was thus thrown on old problems may best be seen by the fact that Descartes admits no difference between organic and inorganic beings, but perceives clearly that, taken simply as external phenomena, the whole material world must be conceived as a thoroughly homogeneous substance, obeying mechanical laws only, and
elements.
Omnis
materise variatio sive
omnium
ejus
ii.
formarum
diver-
sitas peiidet a
motu.
23.
122
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
all its
to be explainer! in
modification^
by thpsp laws
How much
independence of thought was required in order to arrive at this view and to apply it con
sistently to an explanation of nature, we, reaping the fruit of the seed thus sown
who
are
by Des
and accustomed to think his thoughts, can We must transport ourselves into his hardly with its mystic and theosophic tendencies, when age, spirits of all kinds, vital and animal, having their seats in different parts of the body, sympathies and antipathies, good and evil demons, influences of the stars, and similar fancies were running riot (all this being supported even by Bacon in submission to the
cartes
realise.
phantoms of mysticism, together with the whole rubbish of scholastic formulas, and thus cleared the field for the true scientific method which has since from century to century led to new and then unthought of triumphs, and by uninterrupted and faithful labour collected both the material and
the plans for the gigantic structure of exact natural
science.
need not wonder therefore that the strictest materialists, for instance the French author of L Homme Machine, appealed to Descartes, and pre tended to be Cartesians, because that philosopher had been the first to frame a consistent conception of matter, and in consequence to declare his conviction
that the
We
body of animals and that of man, with all its wonderful and delicate organs and vital functions, must be solely and en
life
of the
plant,
the
tirely explained
as
moved
s
matter, that
is,
strictly
first
mechanically.
to accept fully
Harvey
much
contested discovery
DESCARTES.
of the circulation of the blood.
123
Hence
also
we may
understand
why great thinkers who advanced the study of natural science and rescued it from the
all
which it had lost itself, drew their in from him. Even in modern times what spiration was it but a vigorous application of the Cartesian principle, when the great discoverer of the mechanical equivalent of heat, Robert Mayer, delivered science from the old mystic Imponderabitia, in words clearly reminding us of Descartes, there is no immaterial matter; glorying, as he well might, that in banishing these Imponderabilia he had banished the last of the Gods of Greece from the temple of science. This leads me back to the grand continuity of philosophic thought, and I must once more endeavour to show, from this new point of view, the opposition and at the same time the development of the views of Plato and Aristotle in their relation to modern
mazes
in
truth.
It
to
is
make us see the development sophy thought, and we shall never be able
and appreciate the present, unless we fully and clearly apprehend the merits of our own intellectual ancestors on whose shoulders we stand, and on whose
thoughts
we
still
feed.
Plato, starting from a rational psychology and looking into the depth of the nature of spirit, per ceived clearly that all which is known by spirit can
shall return to only be of a spiritual nature. this point when treating of Descartes, and shall find that it forms an unshaken conviction with all great
We
thinkers,
and that they only differ in the way in which they tried to reach the material world, and in their endeavours to bridge the gulf which they had made. Plato did not look for that bridge, but pushed
124
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
forward the boundaries so far that the whole ex ternal world was included within the spiritual do
realised spiritual objects only his ideas existence in reality.
main.
He
and
lent to
same point as that he also recognises spirit as a substance Plato, But he defines its totally different from matter.
Descartes remains so far at the
it
more precisely by generalising spirit into consciousness and representing thought only as a In oppo special, though the highest function of it.
essence far
denied.
sition to Plato the reality of the ideas is completely Descartes tries to show that these ideas
rather veil the true nature of the external world, and keep our reason in perpetual self-deception by
believe that if she has only found a word for the explanation of phenomena, these phenomena
making her
themselves have been explained. This is the true character of the Cartesian battle against the empty words of the schoolmen, and the true meaning of his demand that the whole outer world should be con
ceived as a mechanical problem, that is, as one infinite natural force. How untenable the Platonic ideas
became with such a philosophy was apparent as soon as attention began to be directed to the origin and formation of thoughts and their psychological
centre,
that
of which Aristotle himself required should be always Subject, and never Predicate. Aristotle makes the conception of matter include
it
DESCARTES.
sification of things in
125
from one point of view is form, from another again is only matter as, for instance, hewn building stones in themselves represent form, while in relation to the house to be built with them they are only matter. Thus the conception of matter was sophisticated by the intrusion of special and universal forms (i.e. of intellectual elements) and hence became incapable of It may be said accord strictly scientific treatment.
;
ingly that Plato turned the Predicates, or forms of thought, into realities, while Aristotle transported Predicates and mental concepts into the realms of
reality,
to their
own
Descartes, on the other hand, grasped principles. both principles in their purity, renounced the ontological
reality of Ideas
and Forms
and formse substantiales, and Essences or qualitates occultse), and contrasted instead the two Substances
the substantia cogitans and the substantia extensa.
He
placeolth_two
worlrls nf
in direct
opposition, in the full conviction that each must be studied in itselt, according to its own special law~s and
nature, and" that it only remains to discover in what wav these act one upon the other, as our conscious
In other words, us that they do. Descartes professecT an explicit Dualism, having dis cerned thatthe efforts of Plato and Aristotle to break^
ness"
itself assures
down ihe
"""Before
barriers between the two regions bad only ended^m over-clouding them.
Enquiring how Descartes proceeded to bring these two distinct and yet parallel and inseparable worlds into such a relation of connection and inter action as should be comprehensible to the most com
first
126
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
of tins great thinker towards the age which gave him birth, and the connection between his ideas and
For as soil and the tide of contemporary thought. determine the life of plants, atmospheric conditions so, at least in part, the general conditions of the time
determine the range and purport of the greatest thinker s achievements. The mighty synthesis completed in Descartes
mind, uniting mathematical thought with the external sensible world in the one idea of matter, was rendered possibleby the revival of the natural
and especially by the discoveries of hia. great contemporary Galileo, who opened to enquiring minds the pfospedTof penetrating, bv the help of his_
sciences,
mathematical constructions, into the remotest depths of the universe, and explaining the laws of its^ phenootherwise, all study of the universe is grounded upon one or other of two fun damental views, the astronomical or that of celestial
n^ejia.
Consciously,
^>r
phenomena, and the religious or that of the spiritual world. Both are intimately concerned in the first beginnings of the intellectual life, the latter however
predominating, so that the stars appear as higher powers ruling the life of men, as in fact they did at
that period in the history of humanity. In propor tion as the two realms become separated, one assumes
the marks of the strictest necessity, and the other of free consciousness determining all action. The course
of the stars, unchangeable from age to age, the great world- time-piece which pursues its even course, un
alterable
by an outer
will,
the action of any human influence all these are sources whence eternal nourishment is drawn, as by direct perception, for the concepts first of necessity,
of fate, and later, with fuller knowledge of enforced
DESCARTES.
127
movements, of a vast mechanism. Although all motion becomes intelligible to us at first by the light of our own movements (as the idea of Force, the highest and most general in physics, undoubtedly proceeds from the effort made by our own bodies in order to move any object, so that even at the present day we fail to find any apter or more expressive phrase to denote the effect of force than the genuine
human word
nomena supply
work), yet those vast astronomical phe a fixed and permanent ground of in
terpretation for the daily manifold motions of which it is not always easy to recognise the permanence the variations of sensible appearance. As cer among
tainly as the starry firmament preaches to the re ligious consciousness Credo in umim Deum, so surely
for the
astronomical consciousness
its
utterance
is
Credo in
unum motum!
fundamental
ledge
is
same time tested and acquired, also explains why this most difficult science is yet the first to be vigorously developed among all races and
peoples.
/
time
it
men
for
to count
of the
number
thus distinguished from all other physical sciences by the fact that in it alone motion can be dealt with in its purity, that is to say, in the simple forms of mathematics, apart from the
further circumstance that
templation, because
its
128
MODERN PHILOSOPHY
sphere of the will and affections, and thus final causes do not suggest themselves, unless artificially. We
stimulus, to which
we owe
Descartes
great philoso
phical synthesis, in the previous important revolution effected in astronomical ideas by the Copernican
system
clergy),
(all
obliterated
open recognition of which however was by Descartes to avoid a conflict with the and more especially in the giant strides which
of Galileo.
We
in precisely the
same
way, the Newtonian theory acted upon the philoso phical consciousness of the succeeding generation, and
it
development of Kant. elucidate and complete the conception, which Des cartes, under the influence of Aristotle s definition, had left imperfect, namely, that of the relation be tween motion and matter. We must not, however, omit to note the im
portant influence exercised by the religious theory upon the birth of Cartesian Dualism, and derivatively, upon the luminous and fruitful separation effected
between the world of pure mechanical matter and the spiritual world. The thousand years supremacy of Christianity had effected something in the highest degree favourable to this separation it had effected
:
a revolution in the
common
which was only possible to the most enlightened minds. Nature was robbed at once of life and of divinity, and so became for the first time a possible
The object of cold, sternly mechanical investigation. fundamental idea of Christianity, a Creator whose work the whole world is, at once annihilates the
countless apparitions of deities, living and revealing
DESCARTES.
themselves in nature
it
29
banished the play of per sonal self-will and prepared the way for the concep tion of a natural order, moving according to the laws
;
ordained from eternity by an eternal will. And in this the Christian theory agreed with the highest
conceptions of Greek philosophy.
took refuge, to prolong their days, in the popular belief in demons and magic, and so continued, for
years to come, to haunt the writers on natural philo It may therefore fairly be assumed that sophy.
lines of Christian
Descartes believed himself to be strictly within the dogma, and indeed to be supporting
philosophical arguments a dualism which lay at This appears clearly the very heart of Christianity. from the second part of the title of his Meditationes
by
de prima philosophia, in quibus Dei existentia et But the animse a corpore distinctio demonstratur. both the Jesuits had a keen scent and detected
dangerous truth and future consequences of the They put his books upon the Index arguments. after they had long embittered the author s life, and and com finally drove him into many inconsistencies of his better judgment and con promises unworthy
victions.
The
definition of the
two substances
twin
intellec
which brings about the junction and interaction of the two substances, so that the special, mechanical motion of our sense-organs produces the idea of an
external object in the soul s consciousness, wr hile con versely an act of will by the soul is able to move the
body consciously
unity VOL.
is
I.
in a determined way,
this highest
God.
The miracle
is
worked by divine
130
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
power, for without a constant, continuous miracle, renewed at every moment, this co-operation and two radically diverse sub reciprocal influence of
stances
is
wholly inconceivable.
here the question arises, whether by the in troduction of this idea the chain of exact knowledge
And
on which Descartes insists is broken and his certainty thereby reduced to an illusion, whether, after having at last, with much labour, discovered the first link of the chain in the immediate facts of consciousness, he has forthwith unaccountably introduced a foreign element, a mere hypothesis, the creature of his own imagination I Or was there some necessary connec tion to be found leading from the immediate certainty
of the individual consciousness to the assumption of a supreme Being, whose existence again might serve
to
explain
it to
what w as otherwise
T
inexplicable
We
owe
an
God
is
way
ligious feeling of his contemporaries, or even because he himself was still entangled in the network of theo
logical
dogma; as a compatriot has said of him, H commence par douter de tout etfinit par tout croire. We are at least bound first to enquire seriously whether his assumption really rested on substantial grounds, and whether we should not see in it the result of rational irresistible conviction rather than a mere ex pedient in which case it would have to be acknow
;
ledged as a natural phase in the development of subsequent forms of philosophic thought. In his argument in support of the existence of God
starts
(Meditationes de Prima Philosophia, iii) Descartes from the conception of Substance, and lays
that the ideas in our minds
down
or
DESCAKTES.
less reality, so that,
e.
31
g. ideas for
which substances
supply the material are obviously more real and perfect than ideas which refer only to qualities or
modes of substance. Now the greatest possible reality of which an idea admits belongs to the idea of an But infinite, eternal, immutable, omniscient God. the effect cannot possibly possess more reality than and in so far as the reality of an idea the cause
:
nature, its cause cannot the latter, but in something external, that is to It is true these are to some say in the being itself. extent argutise scholastics, which remind us of the
transcends that of
lie in
my own
and contain
the fallacy of arguing from conceptual to real exist ence indeed the argument ends in a vicious circle,
:
quently demonstrated from the existence of God, while here the existence of God is proved from our He then con idea of him as the most perfect being.
tinues:
idea of a substance
is
in
my mind, because I am a substance myself, this would not give me the idea of an infinite substance,
because I myself am finite, and this idea must there fore be derived from some other substance that is
Neither can I believe that the actually infinite. Infinite is conceived, not as a true idea, but as the mere negation of limit, as we conceive rest and dark
ness to be the negation of motion and light. On the I declare openly that an infinite substance contrary,
possesses more reality than a finite one, and therefore the idea of the infinite in a certain sense must pre
cede that of the finite, or in other words, the idea of God is antecedent in me to the idea of myself.
In this sentence, the central point of the argument, truth and error are intermingled its weakness arises &
;
132
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
still
from the
prevailing idea of substance with its consequent hypostasis of the Deity. All serious thinkers however will agree that the idea of Infinity
is
not negative, that it cannot possibly be derived from any finite being, not even by the action of sense and reason, which are in their nature conditioned, and
that accordingly the source of the conception must lie without and beyond the limits of rational knowledge.
It
is
in
harmony with
this that
Max
Miiller, in his
important book on the Origin and Growth of Heligion, takes this conception as the starting-point
of
his explanation,
religion arose
with
the pressure of the Infinite upon the finite subject, and how all religious systems are but progressive phases
of the endeavour to give a rational expression, a sen sible and intelligible garb to what is super-sensible,
transcendental, and irrational in that consciousness of the Infinite which every sensible perception forces on
us.
And
and
to this writer
we
clear
ficult matter.
the point at which metaphysics, or the doctrine of the inconceivable, comes in con
This
is
expression, thus justifying Schopenhauer s dictum that all religions alike only seek to satisfy men s own
own
and the succeeding passage proves that we are led by our own existence, through the idea of causation and a regressus in infinitum
through infinite time to a causa prima, or God let us assume, I say, that the idea of substance, as to which Descartes certainly had no doubts, became in this way associated in his mind with the absence of limit in time and space (though to conceive the latter transcends our powers) still we may perhaps feel some
;
DESCARTES.
surprise when anchor at last
133
we
unknown
is
other existence.
reached, there
no escape from the logical consequence of a substance without end in space or time. We shall meet this
substantia infinita seterna, quse per se est et per se concipitur. shall find also that, until just before the composition of the Critik, Kant
again in Spinoza
We
himself had no other explanation to offer of the re lation between individuals and the universal course
of things than the omniprsesentia and seternitas rerum in the Godhead. It is not to be wondered at that
Descartes substance should
of the Christian Divinity
still
bear
all
the features
wisdom, goodness, justice, Old fetters are not to be broken in a moment, and as the germ passes through slow and
and
truth.
then by divine power that the co-operation of external or bodily substance with spiritual con And thus the reality of the sciousness is effected. or its agreement with the inner external world,
It is
world of thought, is proved by the divine truthfulness, which would not suffer us to be perpetually deluded
by
false
We
for
see in this only a desperate expedient solving or evading the final difficulty of the
may
;
system
it
must be confessed
that the difficulty is one with which all later gener ations have had to wrestle, without their labours having hitherto led to any satisfactory issue. At
the present day
it is
134
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
men of science to be impossible by any means at our command to span the gulf which ever separates the
world of consciousness, of mind, of unity, and free self-determination from the world of mechanical ne
of external inter-action, and cessity, of subdivision, causal sequence. The whole apparatus the strictest of the most advanced natural science fails altogether to explain the simplest and commonest sense-per ception, fails, that is to say, in deriving it from the mechanical principles of matter in motion. No arts
avail us here
take refuge in the imagination of such intermediate entities between matter and spirit
:
we may
as
vital spirits,
nervous fluid/
nerve-aether,
and
the like, we may attenuate and dilute matter itself until it eludes the senses and becomes a mere shadow
or thing of the mind, but matter continues matter, and remains for evermore unable to create from itself
the opposite principle of consciousness. This is as impossible as it would be for mind or consciousness
to produce the smallest possible effect on matter, for however infinitesimal ly small its range, as soon as a place in space is assigned to it and the power of
acting upon matter, we are forthwith dealing with As long as matter, no longer with feeling or mind. we are compelled by the constitution of our minds
to conceive matter and
mind
as independent, self-
existent beings, i. e. as substances, there can be no bridge to connect them, and it is only possible to resolve the two principles into one, by sacrificing
what
It
is
may
materialists,
thus be said, on the one hand, as by the We seem to feel, to think, to will, we
seem
but in truth there is nothing anywhere except the motion of minute, inter-acting atoms, following strict and unvarying
to exist as individuals,
DESCARTES.
laws
:
135
it may be said, as by and the idealists, that the whole Bishop Berkeley seemingly real outer world can be nothing but an
or,
image proceeding from the mind, from the intellectual substance itself, which cannot possibly be generated by anything so radically different from itself as The whole outer world is appearance. matter.
is
by a
salto
mortals, like that accomplished by Descartes, in the assumption of divine intervention and a constant
continuous miracle.
It
his
logic and the keenness of his insight, far in advance of his contemporaries, which made him discern one matter, one force, one single mechanism in the whole of nature, with its infinite variety and endless Pro tean metamorphoses, in which the same objects assume a thousand forms, and appear, now freely varying, now subject to law; and thus after sound ing the depths of the insoluble problem he was
com
promise. Before proceeding to those points in regard to which Descartes inconsistencies and one-sided dogmatism
required correction by his successors, we may shortly enumerate those contributions to the sum of knowledge
which have entitled him to the name of a restorer of philosophy and a precursor of the Kantian doctrine.
i. As already observed, the greatest achievement of Descartes was to have started from the study of
tKeTknowing subject without preliminary assumptions. For it is here alone, from what is directly known and given, that light can be cast either upon the
degree of certainty or the legitimacy of everything else. The problem which has occupied all philoso
phers since, and indeed must be regarded as lying at
136
MODEKN PHILOSOPHY.
;
the root of every other, now comes into existence the question, namely, of the relation between the
ideal
and what is objective in our knowledge, between what belongs to our knowledge as such, i. e. in virtue of its innate force, and what must be attributed to
and the
real,
is
between what
subjective
things external to ourselves, of which the image is present to our mind. In a word, it raises the great
question of the difference or agreement between the world of thought and the world of things. have seen that the weakness of ancient 2.
We
its
mind, but only its fofm~7~~said Aristotle, and, upon this, forms were transformed into entities (ova-tat, etSij). The stone is but only the idea of the stone, de not in my mind,
stone
The
not in
my
and forthwith a separate reality was in the world of things. It was Descartes merit to have conceded real existence only fb the universalprinciples of matter and thought
clared Plato,
assigned to
ideas
real separate existence of objects derived from these and their title_to__ the quality of things i n them selves? TEeprogress involved in this step is too
on.
is
ation of another opposition which confronts us irre concilably in the future, from Leibniz to Kant, that
namely between the individual and the general. The latter alone can be the object of reason, to which it is akin, on this alone can reason operate and found
its
It is principle of causality. exactly their character of generality or universality which invests ideas or forms of thought with their
corner-stone, the
DESCARTES.
137
value and significance. But reason must not stop short at these or exalt them into special or individual
must press on toward higher principles of universality, from whence these derive their true nature and origin. And this is what Descartes himself did, by exhibiting the two substances together as the true source from whence all intellectual and
existences, it
material
forms
derive
their
being
There
is
no
organised body, however elaborate its structure, but what must be conceived as a modification of extended
substance^ i.e. of matter working according to strict This alone will serve to make mechanical laws?!
It is true that a substance may Descartes, Princ. Phil. i. 53 be perceived by means of any attribute, but there is always one quality which more especially constitutes its nature and essence and
:
to
which all others may be referred (the quality which Spinoza afterwards called par excellence attribute in contradistinction to modes ). Thus the nature of all material bodies consists of ex
1
tension in three dimensions, as thought constitutes the nature of the thinking substance or mind. For anything that can be pre dicated of a body presupposes extension, and is only a state of
extended substance
only be a special condition of thought. Thus we can only conceive figure as something extended, or motion as taking place in extended space; and similarly imagination, perception, and will can only
occur in an intelligent, i. e. a conscious being. On the other hand, extension can be conceived without figure or motion, and thought, or consciousness, without imagination or perception ; and the same holds
good of the remainder, as every attentive reader will perceive. 2 In the whole of Nature there is thus only one and the same
material, to be
known
it is
extended.
All its
:
it is
parts are movable, and therefore it is capable of all the states which may follow from the movement of its parts.
its
and
For a merely imaginary division effects no change, all the variety and differentiation of its form depend upon motion. And this has been already observed from time to time by philosophers, who have maintained that Nature is the principle of motion and rest. For
they
all
138
MODEKN PHILOSOPHY.
it
remains
incomprehensible itself. Similarly as to ideas. Ideas themselves are but modes of the thinking substance,
of which the only true attribute or quality is thought, including under that term all forms of consciousness. A
broader space
is
ment of forms, of which Aristotle could only indicate the general outline, by breaking down the wall of
separation between organic arid inorganic being. Descartes suggests, animals are mere machines.
in the
As
And
same way it became possible to trace the de velopment of ideas, and the connection (by favour of the concursus divinus) between them and sensations, or the organs of perception a thought upon which it was possible to erect subsequently a system of empirical psychology, tracing the evolution of mind and the intellectual faculties, in opposition to the
;
with the aboriginal of certain truths and presuppositions from possession which all thought necessarily proceeds e.g. Ex
:
nihilo liihil
etc.
fit
These dowed with certain innate idea.^ such as Uod. suB7 stance, thought, truth, extension and the like \ There
is Jeast
; impossibile est idem esse et non esse, are eeternge veritates. It is also en
roorn for deception in regard to_ the truths of mathematics, which are not derived jfrom_ sensible
experiencgT^ahd theT superior certainty universally material bodies assume the forms under which we perceive them/
Ib.
1
ii.
23.
These views gave rise subsequently to the violent controversy directed against innate ideas, and Locke who, as a decided em piricist, never leaves the ground of realism, and wishes to deduce
everything from sense-perceptions was impelled by that very fact towards the true and very important discovery, that the origin of
ideas
investigation.
DESCARTES.
139
coDceded^to the conclusions _of_gQmetry arises from borh pa or)]y as the_jact that geometricians consider
magnitudes occupying space. We enumerate different parts in space, and ascribe size, form, and local movement to the parts, and a certain duration to the movements. Meanwhile we are not only fully we with all these general conditions acquainted are also able to discern, on directing our attention to them, innumerable special facts concerning forms, number, motion, and the like, the truth of which is so completely in accord with our own nature that
;
discovery does not affect us as something new, but rather as something formerly known and now
its
remembered, or as
if
was in us
before,
though
the eyes of the mind had not yet been directed to it. And the most remarkable thing is that we find in ourselves innumerable ideas of things, which,
although not to be observed without difficulty, yet cannot be treated as non-existent and whatever we may choose to think of them, they possess a true and
;
unchangeable nature, and therefore cannot be the creatures of our inventive fancy. Thus, for instance, different properties of a triangle may be demonstrated
so that
had
to admit their truth, although we never thought of them before as belonging to the
we have
idea of a triangle.
(Meditationes,
i.)
On
the whole
we
must recognise
an im
perfect expression of the doctrine, afterwards laid down by Kant, of the a priori, or the metaphysical
postulates of
4.
human knowledge.
r
;
in accordance
"roeha
Everything in the material world is accomplished with mechanical law s hence all pheno-
must be
is
The~soul
powerless to
any change,
since the
140
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
quantity both of matter and motion in the universe remains eternally the same 1
.
In this connection (Princip. Philos. ii. 36) Descartes enunciates for the first time the principle of the conservation of force sub
sequently developed and demonstrated
this
by Robert Mayer
For
only a state of the matter moved, it yet although forms a fixed and definite quantum, which may very well remain
is
motion
same in its totality throughout the world, notwithstanding the changes in single parts, as when the rapid motion of a small body communicates slower motion to a large body, so that in propor
the
tion to the loss of motion in one
body
is
is
conveyed to another.
And
God
it
that an immutable being God who has allotted different motions to the various portions of
as
matter at their creation, should also maintain the same amount of motion therein, as he maintains the matter itself of the same kind
and
in the
same
relations as
when
created.
The
relation of motion
to rest
clearly developed by Descartes (Princip. Philos. ii. 26) in the same sense as the Leibnizian formula, that rest is only a kind of motion, which has given rise to the distinction, of also
was
in modern science, between vis viva and For I must observe/ he says, that we labour under a great prejudice when we assume that more energy is required for so
tension.
much importance
rest.
We
hood onwards, because our own bodies are moved by an act of will, of which we are always conscious, while they are fixed to the
ground when in a state of rest, by their own weight, of the action of which we are unconscious. For weight and other causes unus resist the motion we wish to communicate to our perceived by limbs and produce the feeling of weariness, and thus we imagine a
greater degree of activity and force to be required in initiating motion than in arresting it, since we attribute to other bodies the
same kind of effort with action as we are conscious of in our own members. But we may easily disabuse ourselves of this prejudice by reflecting that we have to make this effort, not merely in order Thus it to move, but also to arrest the motion, of external bodies.
requires no greater exertion to push off a boat lying in still water tban it does suddenly to stop the same boat when it is moving, or at least scarcely any greater, for we must allow for the action of
gravitation and the resistance of the water, which by themselves would cause the motion to come gradually to an end.
DESCAKTES.
14!
well
able
to
The mind
however
is
perfectly
determine the direction of the movement, by making use of the efficient causes, under favour, of course, of This is an important truth, the concursus divinus.
and serves
of man over all other beings. in proportion as, after continual experiments And, and attempts, men s technical capacity culminated in
the acquisition of tools, whereby, in accordance with mathematical principles, their insight into the nature
was enlarged in the same pro were enabled increasingly to direct the portion they motions of nature towards their own purposes, and to rule and regulate an ever increasing quantity of natural force. But, at the present day it is hardly ne cessary to observe, that amidst the enormous changes wrought by man over the whole surface of the globe, no particle of motive force is either created or destroyed. Another important and fruitful discovery is 5. that of the relativity of all motion the bearing of which upon the Critik der Reinen Vernunft may be indicated here. For if the chief merit of the latter work lies in its having demonstrated the relativity of all human knowledge, and shown the impossibility of passing thence to the Absolute, an important step towards the truth was surely won, when it came to be seen that in the whole of this objective outer world no change can be conceived by itself, but
of efficient causes
;
:
In order to only in relation to something else. determine the place of a thing, we must look at other bodies which we assume to be stationary, and
as
we
look at
it
we may
say that
it is
both in motion
and at rest.
If a ship is sailing on the sea, a man seated in the cabin remains in the same place, if he
142
considers the
lation has not
is
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
parts of the ship, to which his re changed, but at the same time he
constantly changing his place in relation to the shores which he is leaving and those to which he And if we assume further that the is approaching.
and proceeding just as far from west to east as the ship is sailing from east to west, we must say again that the man in the ship does
earth
is
in motion
not change his place, as determined in relation to fixed points in the heavens. If however we further
assume that there are no such fixed points in the universe, we may conclude that no spot in any object is really motionless, but is only arbitrarily so
considered.
6.
(Princip. Phil.
ii.
13.)
have already observed that the systems of Demokritos and Epikuros show a direct relationship to the purely mechanical conception of nature but it was als o an important advance upon their doctrines when Descartes dispensed with the idea of a vacuum, which theyhad assumed as the only other requisite for the universal dance of atoms, and which he showed to rest on prejudices_irnplanted by common experience. In point of fact, the rarity or density of bodies depends
;
We
upon the
interstices or pores
occupied by other matter of greater and greater This conception requires one important cor rarity.
rection,
really
which was supplied by Kant, that bodies are only so many spaces, filled with force, but that
there
is no intellectual impossibility in the way of our conceiving such force to become gradually in
and consequently enfeebled. Still Pescartesjmi st be allowed the merit of having been thefirstto oppose the crude atomic theory^ which was obviously derived from the prejudice above
definitely diffused,
referred
to.
DESCARTES.
143
turn to those sides of the Cartesian system which contain obvious weaknesses and incon sistencies, which the future development of philosophy
We may now
called
first
was
these
i
.
upon
of
all
:
to reconcile or eliminate.
And
of
The
definition of body.
it
Extension
is
the
extended substance, or the material world. We must know, he says, that the nature of matter or body in general does not consist in hard
ness,
or weight,
or colour,
or
and height. For weight, colour, and all such qualities which are perceived in matter, may be set aside, as well as hardness, and yet the material thing con tinues to exist, and therefore its nature cannot be de termined by any of these qualities. (Princ. Phil. ii. 4.)
Nothing obliges us
sensibly
to
regard
(Ib.
all
perceptible.
7.)
thought, not in reality, that magnitudes are distin guished from extended substance/ (Ib. 8.) We shall
easily see that it is the self-same extension which constitutes the nature of body and the nature of
and that one can no more be distinguished from the other than the nature of the species from
space,
the nature of individuals, if we abstract, e. g. from, our idea of a stone everything that does not belong
In the first place we may to its nature as a body. eliminate the idea of hardness, which the stone loses,
without ceasing to be a body, if it is fused by heat or ground to powder. Colour may be eliminated, as
there are transparent or colourless stones weight, for there is nothing lighter than fire, which is nevertheless
;
counted as a body ;
finally, cold
all
other
144
qualities,
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
because
affect
the stone, or
we may not have observed them in may know that their loss or change
the material nature of the stone.
see that in the idea of the stone,
would not
We
shall thus
except extension in
length, breadth,
and depth, which exists equally in whether occupied by matter or void/ (Ib. n.) space For this reason too a vacuum is impossible, because the extension of space, or a place enclosed by the ex tension of matter, are the same thing, and because it would be absurd to attribute extension to nothing. If God removed all the bodies contained in (Ib. 1 6.) a vessel, its sides would touch because there would be nothing more between them. (Ib. 18.) In a word, ex tension, space, and matter are the same, or nearly the same they are substantia extensa. It is apparent how even this lucid thinker was led to confuse sub stance with its sole attribute, extension, to such an
extent
as to ascribe reality to non-existence
the
mere form or possibility of extension only because the same word was used as in characterising really ex In many passages however isting extended objects. he seems on the verge of truth, as when he discerns that there is a material difference between the exten sion of bodies, of which the forms may change with out involving more than a change of place, and the extension of space, which is always assumed to be universally one and unalterable. (Princ. Phil. ii. i o, 1 2.) But he concludes the section which is devoted to this
consideration with the express declaration, I recog nise no other matter in the bodies of things than that
and moveable substance which geometers magnitude and take as the subject of their demonstrations, and I recognise nothing as real in this matter except such divisions, figure, and
divisible,
figured,
call
DESCARTES.
145
motion, and whatever may be deduced with mathe matical certainty from those universal ideas. And as
all
phenomena may be explained from these, cannot consider any other principles of natural
natural
(Princ.
The
central truth
is
by the accompanying
error.
plained mathematically, cannot be explained at all the mathematical is the only method applicable to reality, and to make the use of it possible, it must
this
dimension, a mode of extension. If at the present day we have just ideas as to the nature of body, if we have learnt to regard impene
trability
it,
and weight as inseparable from the idea of we are still bound to remember that all these
qualities are based in the last resort upon the idea of space, and that the latest result of the Critique of pure
reason applied to bodies is to define the objective world as that which moves in space. We shall then
admire the vigour of the intellect which first grasped the idea that the true reality of all existing things must be deduced from the ideas of space. The dif ference may be stated thus Descartes, starting from
:
the idea of substance, and believing accordingly in the external world, was compelled to look on space as something real, otherwise all those bodies which
existed as space-ideas would lose their reality also, while Kant, who was deeply convinced of the ideality
of space, was compelled to transform the things Both how existing in space also into ideal forms.
ever saw clearly the prime necessity which only one nature and one science of nature
sible.
made
pos
VOL.
I.
146
2.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY,
The assumption
of specific
differences
in
the
bodies originally created by God i. e. in different was a grievous burden, parts of extended substance left by earlier schools of thought, and impaired con
siderably the simplicity of the mechanical theory and the possibility of explaining everything by a single
principle.
external superficial extension (its apparent volume), and an internal extension which is limited by the size
of its interstices or pores. As there is no vacuum, each of these spaces is again filled by some thinner
bodies
how they can be so is not exactly explained and changes of form only take place by means of changes in this inner space, that is to say by the con traction or expansion of the walls of the pores. There
is
thus given us a multiplicity of material beings, even though their differences may be only modes
of extension.
But
of the original substances, and the wholesome prin ciple of transition, of the rise of one form from
another, because of the essential unity of matter, has its action interfered with. A new kind of pluralism,
therefore, is introduced in the midst of the material
world, and
is left
of.
Accord
modes of extended ing substance were created by God, who at the same time set each of them in motion. Both the material sub stances and the quantum of motion in the whole re main the same for ever there are only changes of place and form, effected by the communication of
to Descartes, the different
;
This unexplained opposition between matter and motion arises from the necessity of our nature to imagine a subject for every
activity,
and therefore
And
DESCARTES.
147
past Leibniz to Kant, who will show us that bodies, in relation to our thought, can be nothing more than an x
of which
or
we can only predicate one quality, viz. motion, change of place. But we must not overlook the
between matter and motion,
is
in a certain sense pre liminary to the attainment of greater clearness ; for on the one hand, the conception of motion in its sim
as laid
down by
Descartes,
and on the other the conception of matter as a purely space-idea, seem in a measure to involve the elements of Kantian thought.
plicity,
3.
and substantia extensa not only jars upon the most general and wide-spread convictions, but it results
tans
Not even the and dreariest materialist, not the most fanatical theologian would be willing at the present day to iden tify himself with Descartes reiterated view that ani mals are nothing but very skilfully constructed, soul
also in obvious internal contradictions.
driest
Further, the destruction of the human of the human body, is followed by death, machine, disturbance or confusion in the machine is followed
less
machines.
i.
e.
will
dependent cannot well be regarded as a self-subsisting thing in itself, a substantia cogitans. In spite of this Descartes remains faithful to the great truth that the body can never be conceived as the
ledge.
But
if
the soul
it
is
cause of the soul, or the latter explained by its help. 4. Notwithstanding the simplification undergone
by the idea of substance, it still remains a heavy burden, imposed by the past and acting as a drag upon all real progress towards the goal of philosophical
reflection.
speculation
The persuasion of antiquity that all must take its start from Being, was L 2
148
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
shaken to its roots by Descartes deep and searching doubts, and in its place the notion dawned that the true point of departure was to be found in the thinking subject, a ground that has never since been
of
consciousness
as
as
something
unquestionable, forthwith presented itself, as the existing support and subject of the predicate, and hence arose the
substantial
the
of
substance
of everything external, manifold, various, or divisible, as given in extension and space relations, from the uniform,
cogitans.
The exclusion
inward, unextended region proper to consciousness, necessitated the assumption of a second substance,
a chasm that
bridged.
special difficulty is placed in our way by the substantial cogitans, which, according to the ex For pression of Descartes, has dived into the body. it may be easy to recognise in extended although
matter stretching itself, in all directions through space the one united self-sustaining substance con
ditioned in all
its
parts
mechanical connections, a similar connection between different minds, as parts of a single substance, is abso lutely inconceivable, the rather as the minds must be
shown
exist in definite places, while they are from each other by intervening bodies. separated This spiritualistic tendency of Descartes, if logically followed up and developed, led with necessity to
to
who speaks
of
God
as the
place of spirits, and consequently adds, Nous voyons But what is the place of spirits 1 tout en Dieu.
Obviously only a mythological expression, suggested by the idea of a spiritual substance, and serving to
DESCARTES.
reinstate
149
the
The idea of
speculation
is
under one fundamental disadvantage, a disadvantage that lies in the nature of human thought and its opposition to the real, individual world which is its
the chronic tendency, in a word, to raise the predicate into a subject, to place a corresponding
object,
side of the thought. But the lines of the conditions of limitation, to which demarcation, ideas owe their origin, have no counterpart in nature and on the other hand it is the peculiarity of general
tiling
by the
ideas that in forming them we disregard the differences and demarcations of nature, that is to say, of individual
and consider everything rather from the point of view of universal qualities or predicates. By this road of generalisation, thought arrives at an ultimate idea in which predicates disappear and
existence,
individual differences are absorbed, namely the idea of Being. When this idea comes to be realised, it
seems to include
all
actual
existence,
and
thus
It is however originates the idea of substance. evident that nothing can be made of this concep
tion, for it is only in proportion as it
becomes invested acquires reality and interest for the mind. Nevertheless this seems to be the of contact between what is thought and what point exists, and accordingly the misguided reasoning which imagines it can derive all knowledge from itself, often mystifies those who trust it with empty tautologies, such as, Being is what is, is, and it is so because so
it
;
it is.
As soon
the necessary support of all predicates, it abdicates its sceptre in favour of another source of knowledge,
150
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
is
and deal with realities. For bare Being can give no food for thought the ab sence of predicates is the absence of any describable or cogitable nature, and here therefore the individual, the perfectly- determined but unknowable existence,
which
able to accept
upon its rights. The individual alone really is. Hence the development of philosophy con sists in a constant struggle between predicates and reality, or between thought and words, in so far as the latter assume to themselves equivalence with
enters again
true,
independent reality
1
.
energetic and victorious attack of Kant was the first which finally disposed of the idea of sub but it should be remembered that Des stance cartes view of it marked an important stage upon For while he assigned to it the road to this goal. the widest predicates, which are taken for granted in
;
The
men s minds
ontological proof of the existence of Grod, which occupied for so long, until its nullity was demonstrated by Kant, rests upon the delusion that existence in thought is identical with
The
may
source.
the causa sui, cujus essentia involvit existentiam, are all only so many vain attempts to found existence upon thought, and to dis cover in the latter certain principles from which the world of reality
may be
deduced.
These
circular
its
windings of
creations,
human
reason,
with
own
condemned by Aristotle (Analyt. Post. ii. 7), TO 817 elvai OVK ova-la ov&evi, Being cannot constitute the essence of any existing thing. Yet Aristotle himself believed that knowledge must start from Hobbes seems to have been the first to Being or Substance. protest energetically against this idea (Lev. cap. 46), and to have
pointed to the root of the evil as lying in the confusion of words with things. Hobbes, observes Lange, undoubtedly hits the right nail upon the head when he regards the hypostasising of
the copula the word
is as
made
"
Be
designated by
into a thing, as if there were some object in nature, the word Being! (Geschichte des Haterialisnius, i. 2 4 1 .)
"
DESCARTES.
all
151
became evident which were the citadels against which attacks would have to be directed. The multiplicity of substances had only confused the mind and given occasion to unproductive struggles but when all external phenomena were treated as modifications of the one substantia extensa, and all internal affections as modes of the one substantia cogitans, a regular campaign became strategically possible and secure of victory.
thought,
it
;
Descartes himself betrays in one place his con sciousness of the emptiness and want of matter in the bare idea of substance, as well as of the task
still
further
number
of
things in themselves.
The passage
account of the connection with the Kantian doctrine, which here appears with especial clearness Thought and extension may be con sidered as that which is constituted by the nature of thinking and material substance. They ought then only to be conceived as the actual thinking and extended substance, i.e. only as mind and body 1 in this way they are most clearly and correctly con It is also easier to conceive extended or ceived. thinking substance than substance by itself without thought or extension. For it is somewhat difficult to separate the idea of substance from the ideas of thought and extension, as the distinction can only take place in thought, and an idea does not become clearer by having less included in it, but only by having what is included clearly distinguished from
:
may be quoted on
everything
1
else.
i.e.
Kant
mind and
and there
sense,
fore respectively, thought (or, according to Descartes, affections of consciousness) and extension.
152
MODEHN PHILOSOPHY.
Thought and extension may
also
be regarded as
same mind may have different thoughts, and the same body, without changing its mass, may be vari ously extended, sometimes more in length, sometimes more in breadth or depth, and again conversely. In
they are modally different from the sub stance, and can be conceived as distinctly as it can, provided only they are not regarded as substances, or things distinct from each other, but as different
this case
conditions of the
same
thing.
For inasmuch as we
substances whose states they we distinguish them from those substances, and are, discern what they truly are. If, on the other hand, we attempted to consider them apart from the sub
consider
in the
them
which they dwell, we should have to think of them as self-subsisting things and thus confound our ideas of states and substances/ (Princ. Phil. i.
stances in
We
In Spinoza
it
istences
are
Kant
will finally
follows inevit
ably from the nature of thought, that there is an absolute distinction between the worlds of thought
and
reality,
qualities
Descartes to be alone truly real, fore exalted into substances, are after
only ideas of the subject, and therefore reducible to no other foundation than the Cartesian cogito.
have above noticed Descartes claim to re cognition for having advocated the mathematical as
5.
We
DESCARTES.
153
the only true method of interpretation for the phe nomena of the external world, which in all cases have to be reduced to quantitative differences. It is well
known
that
Descartes,
like
;
Leibniz,
was
dis
the foundation of ana tinguished mathematician alone would have established his lytical geometry It is not therefore surprising that his mind, fame. when dissatisfied with the principles of metaphysics, should have turned with longing to physics and physiology for the interpretation of the world-me chanism, as it appeared in his grand and simple con 1 Here stern necessity rules with unbroken ception and the visible relationship of cause and effect. sway,
.
2O3)in<leed
maintains that
Descartes attached
importance to the
name, than to his investigations in mathematics and natural science and his mechanical theory of natural processes. I must confess that I cannot share this opinion, which the passage quoted by no means seems to bear out.
Lange by
The passage
pleased But as soon as I had attained some general notions in physics and on applying them to divers problems had observed how far they
in question (Discours de la Methode, i. p. 191, Cousin) runs as follows Although I was well pleased with speculations, I believed that others had been not less well with theirs.
:
my
reached and how different they were from those commonly accepted, I thought I could not allow them to remain concealed, without a breach of that law which binds us to care for the general welfare
of
mankind
so far as in us
is.
me
the
the
life of men, and that, instead of the speculative scholastic philo sophy, a practical one may be established whereby the forces of fire, water, air, the stars, the heavens, and all other bodies around us
may be known as clearly as the work of our own artificers, so that we may be in a position to apply them, like these, to our own pur poses, and in this way make ourselves lords and proprietors of
nature.
What
literally
Descartes
fulfilled.
here
The high
now
154
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
for the idea of causa
tion to be tested and, together with the whole sum of mathematical knowledge, to be traced back to its
real source.
The
idea of cause
lation
an unassailable possession, seemed to be only to discover the corre sponding members, and to connect each thing with its
cause.
We know
that
among the
ancients Aristotle
attempted
to investigate
the important difference between material cause and Aristotle however did good ser intelligible reason.
vice
by
calling
attention
to the
to
the matter
he con
stantly appeals
an important part of the task of philosophy. His distinction between final and efficient causes (oVo rpoTroi T*?? cuY/a? TO ov
treats the theory of perception as
ei/e/ca
/ecu
TO
the knowledge that real necessitating belongs only to the latter of these.
the vast transformation of practical life effected by its help, these only became possible through the strict application of the mechanical
of
human
And the latter is a philosophical idea, a fruit of Descartes speculation. What he relies upon in this passage is the scriptural A philosophy which saying, By their fruits ye shall know them.
principle.
enables
its
difficult
Cum exown main principles maximam effectuum istorumpartem certissimam esse arguat perientia
of explanations derived from his
causse a quibus illos elicio
;
Us probandis quam explicandis inserviunt contraque ijjsce ab illis probantur. (De Methodo, ad fin.) How vast has been the influence of Kant upon all the sciences
non
tarn
!
How
has the philosophising of Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Herbart, and the rest produced except empty words 1 Die vierfache Wurzel des Satzes vom zureichenden Grund,
little
!
p. 8.
DESCARTES.
155
The
and especially his increasing pre with the organic world in which adap occupation
tation
is
the reflection.
mathematico-mechamcal treat ment of the phenomenal world constrains the mind there is but one kind of cause, or like to confess the Schoolmen Non inquirimus an causa sit, quia
It seerns as if the
:
which starts with construction, and existence proceed at once from the knowledge same cause. The conception of the world as a single
for
in
geometry,
extended moving substance accustomed the mind to recognise everywhere similar compelling causes, ad mitting of no further investigation. Fatal consequences followed from this promi nent recognition of the mechanical necessity of all
and the equally stringent intellectual neces of mathematics, both for Descartes himself and sity his successors, especially Spinoza, as the various
events,
kinds of causes became confused and, e.g., reason was substituted for cause, an error of which numerous
and striking exalnples have been taken by Schopen hauer from Spinoza s works (loc. cit. p. 12-15). Hence too the same kind of necessity which prevails
in mathematical
thought is transferred to all other and mathematical constructions are ap reasoning, An plied to ideas that have a very different origin. is offered the ontological proof and the example by ens necessario exist ens ; and as the keystone of his system, Spinoza asserts the mathematical necessity of events, because it follows from the idea of God that
everything should necessarily happen
as
it
does
156
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
way as
it
right
angles
philosophical conclusions in mathematical forms which by no means suit them, an example set by Descartes
Appendix to the Meditations, and followed, unfortunately, by Spinoza in his Ethics, where in
in the
stead of allowing his ideas to express themselves with natural freedom, they are imprisoned in the apparatus of propositions, demonstrations, scholia,
and corollaries. For the rest, here too Descartes abandoned further
metaphysical research, or investigation of the data of consciousness, in favour of mathematical truths,
which he held to be derived, as eternal truths, from the will of God I say it would be as possible for
:
God
circle
to cause
it
was
for
him
to create the
this point however Spinoza, in open opposition to his predecessor, energetically defends the rights
At
of reason, observing It is held to be certain that the judgments of God altogether transcend human comprehension, and this would suffice to make truth
:
eternally inaccessible to mankind, if another norm of truth were not provided for them by mathe matics, which do not inquire after ends or pur
poses,
of figures 2 This assumption of a single, universal, strict causal nexus, such as the phenomenal world suggests to the reflective mind, leads necessarily to a one-sided and
erroneous conception of the intelligible principle in the world. For although in this also laws and internal
1
Spinoza, Eth.
i.
Ib.
i.
Prop. 36.
DESCARTES.
157
necessity prevail, these are of a quite different kind from the necessity of nature. Every intellectual
force struggles after freedom, and attains the same in proportion as it develops and spiritualises itself, and hence the highest kind of freedom known to us
The decisive principle that of human knowledge. then should have been found in this, and failing such
is
denying mind and conceding only natural necessity, and Spinoza s union of a causally determined substance at the same time material and
reaction,
intellectual.
LANGE
verse 1
.
Hobbes
as
whom
the
first
was
to
some
extent an antagonist of Descartes, while the latter attached himself to Bacon, were yet powerfully in fluenced by the new ideas, so that the materiali sm
founded by them bears clearly the imprint of Car tesian thought. The doctrines of Epikuros and Lucretius were brought up again by Gassendi (trimmed with a little Christianity as the taste of the time and his status as a Catholic priest demanded) and opposed in their clear simplicity to Aristotle and the Schoolmen. Gassendi is the founder of the modern atomic theory.
enquire, does modern ma terialism differ from the doctrines of Demokritos and
And
wherein,
we may
Epikuros
"?
again revert to the materialism of antiquity and its relation to other systems, and especially to the opposition between
this clear
To make
we must
change
1
(vTroKel/mevov),
rational
p.
223
ff.
GASSENDI.
HOBBES.
159
principle of unity in the foreground, while to nature and experience he grants only this eternal flux or
Demokritos, on the other hand, conceives change. the many, the infinity, multiplicity and variety, that
is
as the to say the material principle of nature, essential. Philosophically or rationally speaking, the
sameness of nature among the infinite and manifold atoms, that is to say, weight and form, out of which all the various appearances given by sense-perceptions
arise, is
The
individual
is the most important postulate with Demokritos, while according to Herakleitos and the Eleatics it is entirely swallowed up by the One. It corresponds
with this contrast that Demokritos was regarded by the ancients as a great polyliistor, and himself boasts of the extent of his travels and the range of his ex while the significant saying, TroXv/maOtt} perience
1
oov ov
Si8d<TKi,
is
ascribed to Herakleitos.
similar
meets us in modern philosophy, between who plunges into the abysses of pure being and despises the world of ex perience and empiricism, and Leibniz, the represen tative of individualism, the travelled and accomplished man of the world, and a writer admired for his uni
contrast
versal genius.
nature
expression of the mechanical theory of observed, in the doctrine of Demokritos. All that happens follows
first
is
The
to be found, as before
from the pressure and impact of moved, i.e. falling, atoms in the void. A strict, unbroken causal chain, together with the character of necessity, predomin ates in this view, and hence in antiquity as now, the absolute necessarianism became associated with
1
fie
Eyo>
TU>V
toro-
TO. fj.rjKi(TTa.
p.
304.
l6o
materialism as
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
its especial characteristic,
it
though at
was regarded as an unworthy of what we feel to be highest in our infringement our freedom and our responsibility. It is selves however a rigidly logical consequence from the
the
same time
thought that recognises only one kind of cause. And it must not be forgotten that this same necessity
only firm foundation to the study of nature, which has always to deal with appearances, and that
gives
its
without
it
What
stood in the
way
of the development of
materialism in antiquity was that the doctrine of atoms was not connected with mathematics and so
made
to serve, as it is peculiarly adapted for doing, The as the foundation of exact scientific research.
physical explanations of Demokritos and Epikuros are indeed often ingenious and acute, and remind us
of modern views, but they remain in the region of hypotheses, because they despise or disregard observation and experiment and the nu
in
many ways
merical proportions to be learnt therefrom. Larger and smaller atoms, collisions producing vortices of motion or motion in the line of impact, fine, smooth
spiritual atoms present in the pores of all bodies and emitted from every surface, hook-shaped atom s that attach themselves and the like, these are the only
principles of explanation
elicit
by which
is
it
is
sought to
Thus
GASSENDI.
HOBBES.
61
l And in fact this desperate union same time must be entered upon as long as number fails to supply fixed points at which the individual can be brought under the general law, as long as falling atoms in continuous succession offer it is true a chain of causes, but no general principle of explanation
.
r^
Like Tantalos, human reason in view of the rushing stream of phenomena I see indeed necessity, but for me it could only say
for the thread of causation.
:
always accidental As the product of remote antiquity this theory of atoms may claim our admiration, but important transformations awaited it at the hands of Baconian
is
!
empiricism before it could come to life again after the deathlike rest of centuries, and then, in the mathe matical era of Descartes, take its place in the front
rank
an ally against the decaying Scholastic philosophy and its unfruitful trifling with ideas that exact science showed to be unfounded. Fertilised by experience, observation, and especially by the strict mathematical theory of Descartes, Atomism was destined to become the mould in which all vigorous
as
speculation regarding the natural world was to be cast, and to render the most intricate, evanescent, almost imperceptible of phenomena at once clearly
intelligible
as laid
down by
combined by Gassendi with the idea oi They are the permanent element, the form of the changeable. Another great advance was made by GassendTs identification of the atoms weight
Descartes
atoms.
By
efficient
causes,
e.
ends.
the ground of
all
VOL.
I.
62
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
with their proper motion, so that the long-lived error oTmrponderability, which lasted even to 6ur_own day. was virtuallrcoflfuted, the erroneous theory of matter found in Descartes was rectified, and the true essence
material existence, motion, was clearly appre hended. The atoms (created and set in motion by
of
all
God) are the seed of all things, from them, by generation and destruction, everything has been formed and fashioned and still continues so to be. All growth and decay is but the union and separation When a fagot is burnt, the aggregation of atoms. of atoms is dissolved, and the atoms reappear in new forms and combinations as flame, smoke, ash, &c.
It is plain that the preliminary conditions of a healthy system of physics and chemistry are contained in
these views.
It
is
Gassendi explained the jfall of bodies by the earth s attraction^ jmd yet, like Newton himself, held actio
in distans to be impossible. He assumed in all such as in magnetism &c., the necessary presence processes,
of some direct material intervention, a view which, however much it may run counter to contemporary
opinion, will hereafter reveal its full truth and force in new and clearer ideas.
And
of Gassendi,
may
space and time as something distinct from_m atter neither substance nor accident^. When all things end,
Space extends into infinity; Time was before 1 creation, and flowed on then as now
.
all
snnpft
of
i.
231.
GASSENDI.
that one region of by Descartes.
effects or
it,
HOBBE8.
163
circumscribed and
marked
off
According to Hobbes philosophy is, Knowledge of jplienomena derived from correct conclusions.
about their causes, or the same knowledge of causey derived from their observed effects. The aim of.
phiTosophy is to enable us to predict effects, so that we may be able to utilise them in life. Lange
serves that, this use of the
ol>_
word philosophy
is
so
deeply rooted in English that it scarcely corresponds to what is understood by the name in other languages.
natural philosopher
has come to
mean
a student
mere interpretation of
nature, is Hobbes sjdiscernment of the infinite simplicity of the course of human reason. All reasoning is
and all calculation is reducible to addition and subtraction^ In other words, for the human
calculation,
reason, all qualitative differences reduce themselves to quantitative ones, the question is everywhere only
may
note his
superiority to the danger of deception arising when the human reason is entangled in verbal fetters, as
in the case quoted above (p. 150, note), where he attacks the Aristotelian Being. He says of the Co-
pernican theory, the truth and importance of which he unreservedly admitted, that it had been strangled in antiquity in a noose of words.
His utterances on the subject of speculative theology are also significant, arid show that he had attained a clear view of the boundary line of transcendentalism.
effects
leads
64
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
necessarily to the recognition of a causa prima, an ultimate source of all motion, only the determination
of
its
it
contradicts the nature of thought, which consists in At this point, where addition and subtraction.
reasonis arrested, religious faith assumes her rights. The onesidedness of materialism that is~Eo say
the introduction of mechanical causation into regions where the mind has to be taken into account re
appears plainly in the political theories of Hobbes, to One which he attached the highest importance.
cannot but admire the iron consistency with which the theory of rigidly mechanical causation is applied, and the way in which the statics and dynamics of
single forces alone are recognised in what we are accustomed to consider the highest intellectual or
ganisation
The
is
to
remarkable that Hobbes does not even concede men the social impulses or instincts of ants, bees, &c.,and so rejects the woi/ TTO\ITIKOV of Aristotle. The state of nature for mankind is one of war. It seems as if he was dimly influenced by the thought that the rational principle, which obtains in the state, is something far higher than brute instinct, and that
the absolute supremacy of the state, which
ideal, is indifferent to
is
his
sympathy, but allots to each which indeed only comes to be right right, because of the might behind it. For right and wrong, good and evil, virtue and vice have no meaning in
his
themselves
they originate in the political order, by the supreme will of the state. The Contrat social with him, as with Rousseau, supplies the original foundation for the state s constitution. Every man
;
convey to that
man
or this
GASSENDT.
institution
HOBBES.
165
that you
my
Thus the omnipotent authority of the yourself. the sole will that puts state rises out of atomism
;
kingdom of reason
magni
illius
The Leviathan, vel ut dignius loquar, mortalis Dei! state only punishes in order to maintain itself; religion
or the
fear of invisible
political
expedients.
must be confessed that such a positive relation ship between might and right, in which everything which the state ordains is good, reasonable, and
It
sacred, while criticism, in the
name
the
of higher prin
commonweal
view agrees perfectly with the simple materialistic, mechanical theory of the universe in which also no thing is recognised but the necessary working of real
forces.
the system of Hobbes is certainly the most Its complete expression of rigorous materialism. in the fact that he dependence^orTDescartes appears
discerned the
And
incompleteness
of the Baconian
em
the piricism, and by no means desired to restrict sen activity of the mind to the mere analysis of sible facts, but assumed, with Descartes, that the synthetic method should be applied in all cases, according the due place of honour to mathematics
in the interpretation of nature. According to Hobbes, there is only one substance,
namely matter
tradiction in jterms.
speaking, does not exist, it is properly bodies that realism and individualism thus meet, as they, exist
;
do in
all
genuine materialism.
1 66
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
reached only by abstraction, it is only a name for The accidents the conception of bodies in general. of matter have no real existence, they are only the
is
way in which
is
The only
reality
space and is coextensive with it. Extension and form are the only qualities without which we are unable to imagine bodies as existing
that which
;
other accidents, such as motion, rest, colour, hard Such change how ness and the rest, may change. ever is only an alteration in the representation given
all
quantum of the body continues Here however we are constantly de unalterable. ceived by the counters of our verbal currency, which lead us to imagine that something quite different is before us, that from one thing another quite different In fact all change is simply has been produced.
senses, the
by our
We
the
part of the subject in the perception of things is set forth strongly for the first time, an idea which,
rendered possible by Descartes, leads through Locke to the final investigations of the Kantian Critik. And in this Hobbes not only rises above material
ism, he points, unconsciously, to a fixed point from whence it will hereafter be upheaved and destroyed.
It is only necessary to bring together the various conclusions he maintains, and this will become ir
resistibly
plain
Matter
is
nothing
real,
but a
general notion derived from the principal qualities of bodies. The accidents do not belong to body as such or in itself, they have no objective existence,
but are
l)y
the
bodies.
Even
GASSEND1.
HOBBES.
i.e.
167
and the
words
they are throughout relative. If we say, here a new thing has come into existence, we make use of the mental form of substance ; if, on the contrary,
we judge
new
that a pre-existing body has acquired a quality, we still remain within the limits of
the conception of accident. These few sentences are enough to show the ad mirable intellectual vigour of the English thinker and the extent to which he was in advance of his
The knowledge of the dependence of thought on words, the importance of which is even still too generally neglected, would alone suffice to stamp him a great thinker. In all the sentences above quoted there are germs and intimations of the it may even be said that the Kantian Idealism of substance was already partially divested idea of its reality and assigned to the sphere of the but Hobbes pursued his conquests no subject further, he thought that the task of philosophy was accomplished with the completeness of realism, and to him nothing"~was real but bodies and their
age.
; ;
motions^
throughout his description of perception, he does not concern himself about what is internal in the process, i.e. the sensitive subject, his only object is to bring this branch of phenomena to take its place
"Thus,
logically in his
Hence
he regards
sensible perceptions as movements of small atoms that act upon the organs of infinitely From this re sense and cause reaction in them.
all
sistance there arises the disposition to conceive the ex ea readione aliobject as something external,
quamdiu durante ipsum existet phantasma, quod propter conatum versus externa semper videtur tanquam
68
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
.
1 What a simple solu aliquid situm extra organum tion is offered here of the psychological problem of
the externalisation
of our
mental representations,
which
things,
in our
!
rhetoric
i.e.
time has been so obscured by mystical Sensible qualities thus do not belong to bodies in themselves, but only exist sub
jectively.
minute
Light and sound are only motions of particles, which are perceived by us, and
they can only be perceived by us because they pro duce analogous movements in the particles of our for like can only act upon like, and ob organism, and it jects in motion only upon moveable objects, is only our resistance, reaction or counter movement which leads us to refer the effect to an external
object as its starting-point. It will be seen from this explanation how much Hobbes assigned to the thinking and feeling subject,
viz.
the sensible affections with their qualitative vari ations, the apprehension of the different accidents of
things, and of the difference
between substance and and division, synthetic conclusions accident, analysis he passes by all this indifferently, and conjunction and so far as appears treats it as the plainest thing in the world, while all the time he was on the verge of raising the question, how it comes to pass, for
;
instance, that the subject takes the various accidents of things for essential qualities of things, if not indeed for things in themselves.
This follows however from the rigorous carrying out of the one mechanical principle from which
everything was to be derived and by which every thing was to be explained. Only one kind of cause
was recognised the old difference between the phe nomenal and the real world of rational thought was
; 1
De
Corpoi e,
iv.
25.
GASSENDI.
HOBBES.
169
again brought out, and the world of moveable matter or rather of moving bodies was declared to be
the true real world, in so far as its determination was calculable arithmetically or mathematically, so that the highest product of reason was necessarily the
self-knowledge of matter in motion. It is indubitable that the spirit of this doctrine
is
but
directly descended from Demokritos and Epikuros, it is also certain that the spirit of Cartesianism
has penetrated and fertilised it, so as to the first time philosophically productive.
make
it
for
Modern materialism
is
mathematical.
While
in
mote
celestial bodies and the mysteries of organic nature might be made as intelligible as the handi work of mechanics and labourers.
But meanwhile the law of necessity comes more and more into the foreground for in proportion as
;
the hidden mysteries of nature are laid bare to the scientific eye and proved to be mathematically re
in the
mere forms of motion, same proportion the mind learns to recognise everywhere order and regularity, the supremacy of simple natural laws, which are the same in every time and place. It is thus enabled to extend the chain
ducible to the simple element of
of causation forwards
corners
of
space, backwards into the remotest past, by the light of science to look forward into the events of future
ages and to determine confidently what befell millions of years ago, before any human spirit breathed or
170
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
Demokritos chance (ri/x ?), by means of and for scientific purposes, turns more and science more clearly into necessity (avdymj). But to see through this necessity and to discern that it lay in the nature of knowledge itself, this was O
Thus
reserved for the greatest of philosophers, for quired the sagacity of a Kant.
it re^
THE
istic.
starting-point
of Cartesian philosophy
was
emphatically
idealistic, its
The
transition
accomplished not to say necessitated by means of the idea of God. The keys of true knowledge, true understanding of the universe, bestowed by the Deity upon mankind are the sdernse, veritates, and
among
these we must understand more especially mathematical knowledge. Only what man discerns in this way, and with this help dare et distincte
intelligit,
that alone
else is
everything
its systemthe base of certainty thus indicated by Des upon cartes, without troubling itself further about the
premisses from which this proof of certainty was de rived by metaphysical reasoning.
might have been foreseen that other minds would occupy themselves anew with these premisses, and attempt a profounder and more consistent develop
It
ment
foundations of the Cartesian system. Among these minds, Geulirix and Malebranche call principally for remark.
of the
One
is
to overcome, in a
inind,
tlic
ditliculties
by Descartes
in
his
172
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
For, separation of mental and physical processes. notwithstanding the hypothesis of divine co-opera tion, the mutual influence (inftuxus physicus) remains
incomprehensible. Hence_nothing^ remained except to make God the real author of all mental and
bodily_cHanges!
Un
God
in
calls
up an idea in
will,
an act of
God
causes a corresponding
movement
my
But
body.
this interesting thinker really deserves most attention for his attempt to erect a new theory of
and to trace direct to the primitive spring of consciousness some things which Descartes had only thought it possible to explain by his theory of divine intervention \ Descartes had derived the truths of mathematics, upon which all clear and distinct knowledge rests, as Plato had derived his Ideas, wholly and solely from the will of God. The pure thought, made possible by mathematical ideas, which was contrasted with sensible representations (imaginatio), makes use
knowledge on
Cartesian
principles,
it
God.
victims
Even
of a
in
regard
to
2+3
supernatural
by a
malignant
spirit.
way that it had been objected against the reality of the Platonic ideas that they stand to each other in a relation of superiority and inferiority;
in the same way Geulinx pointed out with regard to mathematical notions that they stood in an order of logical dependence, one of them being derived from another, whence it followed that all alike must be
1
In the same
Cf.
casionalismus.
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
BERKELEY.
173
deduced from the nature of our thought itself. He instances several truths which could not be altered
in
any way by the will of God, e.g. that A = A. Such truths are the foundation of ah mathematical demonstration. To maintain the falsehood of the
1
and 3, in other words, that A is not equal to A to admit the possibility of the radii of a circle not being equal is to admit that the straight line, by the revolution of which round one end the circle is Such truths as these formed, is not equal to itself.
;
= 5 is to maintain that the meaning proposition 2 + 3 of two and three does not equal the meaning of 2
God
These truths, says their seat in our understanding, in Geulinx, so far as our understanding is in harmony with the divine, when we perceive them in God, and God after this manner. Here plainly the origin of innate
his intellect.
and have
ideas
is
faculties,
it sell
instead
of to
a material step in advance. In regard to the definition of matter also, Geulinx endeavoured to attain a higher degree of clearness
is
than Descartes, whose weakness on this point has If space and matter are the already been noticed. same as to their essence (extension), how can they be distinguished by us \ And how, on the other hand, can they be identical when space is infinite and indivi
sible
and matter
finite
and
divisible
idea of matter, as a
mode
itself.
It is accomplished
Equally
fine observations
174
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
All the be given of mental processes do may not deserve this name they occur really by means of
;
a figure, metaphor, or comparison. Quid sit amor, res ea nobis per conscientiam et dici non debet
;
intimam experientiam quam notissima est. Et id generatim obtinet in iis omnibus, quse ad cogitationes nostras, ad intellectum atque sensum, voluntatem item et animi affectus pertinent ha9c enim omnia
;
doctrine of Schopenhauer, that what appears in our imagination as external motion, is internally will
:
membra
nostri corporis
movemus)
sentimus nempe et clarissime nobis conscii sumus, hoc solo membra nostra moveri (in quorum scilicet motibus imperium habemus) quod moveri ea velimus, licet interim ignari simus quo modo motus ille fiat. Here occasionalism
nihil aliud est
quam
volitio,
falls
quite into the background, which elsewhere rests upon the erroneous assumption that an activity
who
is
discerns
how
it
introduced as the
that Geulinx
summus
the
first
opifex.
is
is
among
vindicate
philosophers to feel called upon to the rights of the much contemned and
GEULINX,
MALEBRANCBE.
BERKELEY.
175
that of sensible perception. Which however is the more beautiful, the more honourable of the two 1 I
find
existing, gives occasion for the existence of the other. far There is no change but that of motion.
How
I
Here
all
behold
vault above
me
the glory of varied colouring, I listen to the soughing of their the waves, the murmuring air, and clamour of the
doubt this world is the fairest, the most We gaze with admira worthy of its divine author tion upon the Deity, whose unspeakable magic takes occasion of our bodily motions to call up this world in us and we look up to him with still deeper admi
storm.
!
No
ration
discern the spell running through this God-created nature. The world of ideas resembles
r
when w e
a dry treatise ; the world of sense, on the contrary, a 1 poem of phantasy (Phys. Vera, Introd.) Still more important are the investigations initiated
.
by Geulinx,
in which, it may really be said, that he the Kantian conception of the problem of approaches knowledge. Amongst these must be placed first of all the question, whether there can be any know
ledge of things apart from the forms of our thought, that is to say, in Kantian phrase, any knowledge of
things in themselves ? Such a question, uttered for the first time, breathes the whole spirit of modern
philosophy. as follows
:
answer to the question runs think and judge for judg ment is the soul of thought we use a subject and a The subject must be conceived, by means predicate. of a fundamental internal faculty of our mind, which
Geulinx
s
When we
a,
Being
(ens).
I conceive
Ed. Grimm,
176
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
the thing thus contemplated as one, by including all its parts, and excluding the thing itself from
This unity does not belong to, e.g. everything else. a table as it is in itself, but is completed only in our
mind
about
it is
(totatio).
must further ascribe the predi e. we must declare something Every subject only becomes a subject when
i.
We
conceived as being
(ens).
This
is
jecti.
When we
add
this note to
an adjective,
:
becomes a subject (the good, the sweet) when we subtract this note from a substantive, it becomes a
The great question predicate (the man is a judge). concerning substance and accident thus reduces itself
to the o grammatical distinction between substantive Such a sense of the dependence of and adjective.
our thought upon the forms of speech betrays a pro found insight into the nature of knowledge and
perception.
it
that
certain qualities are chiefly indicated by substantives and others by adjectives 1 The distinction seerns to
have arisen because certain things appeared perma nent and durable, such as bodies, and others again more fugitive and variable, such as heat and cold, Out of the light and darkness, colour and sound. durable ones in the first instance substantives and substances were formed, and out of the fugitive and
changeable ones adjectives or accidents.
tinction itself proceeds
tion,
But the
dis
wholly from sensible percep which the human mind is almost always by
is
accepted in our
thought as something actually existing. Thus nothing appears more permanent to our sensible perceptions than the body; the mind however altogether eludes their glance. And therefore we need not be surprised
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
BERKELEY.
177
that there have been people who held the soul to be an accident of the body, and characterised man as a
corpus animatum rationale Credit has already been given to Hobbes for having divined that the true source and form of thought was
1
.
and the same praise, only in yet higher measure, must be conceded to Geulinx. It was reserved for the present age and the rapid strides which comparative philology has made in it to discover
to be found in language,
the immeasurable importance of the study of language But honour and admiration to all sound philosophy.
are none the less due to the first heralds of the scarcely dawning day. Geulinx made use of the new knowledge
to drive the countless categories
and
field.
of thought, to which everything is referred, are those of Substantive and Adjective, or Subject and Predi
cate.
He
at seeing their highly praised metaphysical chrysalis appear in its perfect form as pure Grammar. But they need not be ashamed of this science ; indeed there is nothing more
(the
Aristotelians)
were indignant
this
same grammar,
for
forms of thought
By the help of these premises, the main question, as to the possibility of a knowledge external to the
forms of thought, answers itself. Knowledge neces sarily declares something about things, and therefore must be clothed in words. But as soon as the under
standing conceives any object as a something, it has already invested it with the form of its own thought,
that of the subject.
1
are
Ed. Grimm,
VOL.
I.
178
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
introduced in the same way, and thus the forms of two mental activities are applied to the thing. In
other words, no knowledge of things side the forms of thought.
is
possible out
Reason is superior to sense. Knowledge of things, apart from sensible perception, only becomes possible by means of a higher faculty, which brings them be fore us, namely, reason. If there were a still higher faculty than this, we could reject all rational as well as sensible knowledge and rely only upon it. Bat no such faculty exists, and we must therefore con ceive things under the mental forms of our reason for things in themselves can never become the objects
;
of cognition.
This view itself is valuable, and will preserve us from many errors. If I see a stick in water as bent, error only begins there is no error about the fact when I maintain that the external reality corresponds
;
to
my
sensible perception.
And
similarly,
men
are
not in error so long as they conceive things in the forms of human thought, but only when they ascribe To these same forms to the things in themselves.
conceive the things under these forms is a necessity which the wisest cannot escape, but he may refrain
from judging the forms to pertain to the things in l themselves, and herein indeed his wisdom consists We see in ah this a worthy prelude to the Kantian Critik of pure Reason the same clearness and caution, the same method, the same insight that all human truth and certainty must be derived from reason, that j
. 1
the task of philosophy is to establish the limiting conditions of this faculty, and that human knowledge
Ed. Grimm,
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
BERKELEY.
179
forms of judg
insignifi
ment, which
in themselves are
;
empty and
cant in his eyes and side by side with them he allows innate ideas to subsist, treating these through out as substantial. And hence he repeatedly maintains, that nlfhrmg-h we can only know in accordance witJL. the forms of thought^ and must tfanslate_every thing into these forms, still J3ody and mind_are_self-snbor _suljstances a contention which sisting objects,
:
enaEles us to measure the depth of the abyss into which Kant still had to plunge to rescue truth.
Malebranche
may
briefly.
His
penetrating mind
too fejt oppressed by the UP mitigated opposition of the two substances as presented by D^snrrrhg^ He too rejected as inconceivable the
influxus physicus, since mind could never act on matter, nor matter on mind. Schopenhauer however is right in observing that he forgot that the influxus
pliysicus
had already been assumed in the creation and government of the material world by a spiritual God. Malebranche s attempt to reconcile the two opposites is inspired rather
by the
spirit of
Platonism than
He
enquires,
how
?
the
mind
attains to ideas of material things and of an external world existing independently of itself For it is certain that what is conceived intellectual by the
nature must itself be of a spiritual kind, belonging to the forms of consciousness the material can never
:
soul to
ascribe reality to ideas, or reality to enter the soul The view is here clearly in the form of ideas ?
that of Plato, combined with the Cartesian limita tion to subjective consciousness and the two sole
substances.
l8o
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
substantia cogitans as a whole, apart from its connec for as the substantia tion with the material world
;
exten&a subsists throughout space in a constant, inde structible relationship of material interaction, in the
same way an inward, uninterrupted connection of cause and effect binds all intelligences to the causa prima, i. e. the Deity. The Deity then is the Abso
the thinking Principle which bears and comprehends all ideas within itself,
lute, Intellectual Substance,
all
The human
to the
dium
soul only attains through this nieknowledge of things, and so to the world. see everything
We
mCrod.
Cod
is
see here not only the affinity with Plato, but also a sincere attempt to reach a logical and satis
We
factory solution by starting from the Cartesian pre mises. At the same time, in a way rather dangerous
Christian opinions of the author, the indi viduality of spirits is swallowed up in the absolute,
to the
intellectual abyss of the
Godhead
if
Pantheism. In general
it
may
not easily avoidable according to the principles laid down by Descartes. In proportion as the idea of
substance was extended and
include
all reality, it
to
which, though it determination of parts, postulated a complete unconditionedness for the whole, from whence every thing else was to result as from the causa prima.
and
there, as
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
BERKELEY.
l8l
for himself.
he wanders in obscurity without finding any outlet Thus he says, in the fifth proposition of
the second part of the Ethics, that the formal ex istence of ideas has its cause in God alone in so far
as his nature
is
is
intellectual,
conceived under any other attribute. That is to say/ he adds explanatorily, both the ideas of the
divine attributes, and those of individual things, are caused, not by their objects, or the things represented,
God
is
in so far as he is
an intellectual
The
efforts
of the
reconcile theidealistic
broke down nithesarnejvvay as Descartes explanation. There is no method by which we can combine in the idea at once all that it has been assumed as exclud but there always remains ing and as containing as a last resource an appeal to the Deity by whose intervention all impossibilities are rendered possi Both Geulinx and Malebranche endeavoured so ble.
;
human
foi\_and consciousness angl_jjQtelligence. They were fn this more consistent Cartesians than Descartes
himself,
far as possible to lighten the labours of Divinity, to leave as few impossibilities as possible to be so accounted accordingly to allow more for
and pursued the road he had so boldly entered upon for another long stage in advance, before thev too gave way and began to resort to a supernatural explanation of the connection between The road of the material and the immaterial world. both was that of Idealism, but they did not pursue it to the end. This was reserved for another thinker, whose work must be noticed here because of its
relation to theirs, although he belongs to a later date
82
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
than Spinoza, Locke, and Leibniz, and was to a certain extent influenced by their speculations. This
Bishop Berkeley (1684-1753). 1 Schopenhauer observes Berkeley, although later, and knowing Locke, followed the track of the Cartesians to its furthest logical conclusion, and so Became the author of the only real and true system of Idealism, which maintains that the ex tended matter tilling space, i. e. the sensible world Irfgeneral, can have no existence as such except in mind, and aBsurd, indeed contradictory, such an existence outside omto ascribe to it thought and independent of the knowing subject, and consequently to assume the existence of a selfsubsisting; matter^ This profound and just notion constitutes the sum and substance of his philosophy. He has hit upon and clearly distinguished the ideal element, but the real escaped him, indeed he con cerned himself little about it, and only offers occasional, partial, and incomplete utterances on this subject.
:
thinker
is
"our
that" "rETs
"as
The_will and,.omnipotence of God is the direct cause of all the phenomena of the perceptible_wprld,;
that
to say, the real existence of all the objects of our thought is Attributable to knowing and willing
is
T
beings only, such as we are ourselves and therefore, these together with (rod make up reality l They are
that is to say, knowing and willing beings he maintains will and knowledge to be inseparable. He has also in common with his predecessors the belief that God is better known than the apparent world, so that any reference to him appears as an explanation. It may be that his clerical and episcopal
spirits,
;
for
heavy shackles and limited him a narrow range of thought, beyond which he was
Parerga und Paraliporuena,
i.
p.
4.
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
stray.
BERKELEY.
183
on no account to
further way, and the true and the false had to keep house together in his brain as best they might. This applies indeed to the works of all these philosophers,
with the exception of Spinoza. The matter may also be stated in the following way According to Descartes, the highest a priori idea is that of being or substance. He did not originate
:
He
attributed being
equally to both,
hence his
successors,
siibstantia cogitans
standpoint. Berkeley was the first to doubt the reality of extended, material substance, and indeed to transfer all things into the realm of
the same
all ideas of external objects as or even functions of the latter. And this products alone is true idealism, the logical development of the
fundamental truth of Cartesianism and at the same time the overthrow of Cartesian dualism, by the substitution of Henism the assumption of but one kind of substance. The salutary effects of the Berkeley an train of thought, together with its weaknesses and onesided;
ness,
i.
may
be easily
summed
up.
Its
merits are
That the idea of substance at least on one sidewas completely done away with, and the fallaciousness of the inference was shown, which concludes from affections and representations of consciousness to actual things existing outside consciousness, and then attributes equal reality to these. The cumbrous
legacy of scholasticism, the idea of substance, with
184
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
which Descartes and his successors were weighted, was at least diminished by half. 2. Chief stress was laid upon the point towards y which modern philosophy was first directed by Cartesian insight, and from whence alone sure results are found attainable, namely consciousness, A criticism of the processes or the thinking mind. of consciousness might lead ultimately to an ex planation of how and by what right this consciousness assumed the existence at the same time of its own ideas and of external objects corresponding, to them. And from this point of view Berkeley also may be reckoned among the precursors of Kant.
of this
theory
is
at least
When
certain sense, spin everything out of its own sub The stance, the gates are shut upon experience. and genesis of ideas, which contradict them growth
selves, are in conflict
all
more
with an existing reality outside ourselves, all this becomes wholly incomprehensible and unintelli
Berkeley, like all his predecessors, is obliged to take refuge with the Deity, who is the true author of all mental processes, by which these ideas are called up in our minds and made to follow each
gible.
other in orderly sequence. The only difference between his doctrine and that of Geulinx and Malebranche is
according to the latter, the material world, which by the divine co-operation we think of as real, does also actually and really exist, while according to Berkeley it is a mere phantasm.
that,
Berkeley
terialism.
theory is the direct opposite of ma As the latter assumes matter to be the only
s
GEULINX.
MALEBRANCHE.
BERKELEY.
185
self-subsisting reality, so Berkeley assumes mind or consciousness. The being of matter consists only in its being presented in thought. Esse percipi. And it
is
these
not to be denied that if the choice lay only between two extremes, the spirit of Cartesianism and of
view to the larger share of truth, for con sciousness alone is directly given and certain. And yet Berkeley too is unfaithful to the true starting-point of the Cartesian philosophy, which
consists in the conscious Ego, the thinking subject.
The idea of
self
substance, from which he has freed him on the material side, still holds him prisoner upon the other, immaterial side, and forces him into For if true being consists illogical conclusions.
only in being perceived, by what right can my con assume the existence of beings distinct from myself, but able like me to think, imagine, and
sciousness
will
How can I ascribe actual reality to them, or \ even to the Deity, since I have no assurance of their existence save from my own thought and imagination. Must we not, with strict remorseless logic, applv also
to the existence of these spiritual beings the doctrine that the ideas of the conscious subject have no reality
Ich weiss,
"Werd,
class
ich zu nicht, er
all, Berkeley s chief merit consists in his been the first to give utterance to the funda having mental truth of idealism, which Schopenhauer, at
After
the beginning of his chief work, has formulated as follows The world is my idea this is a truth
:
86
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
man
alone
is
able
it
:
to reach
if
a reflective
so,
abstract consciousness of
and
he really does
he has already attained philosophical discretion. It will then be clear to him that he knows no sun, no earth, only an eye which sees the sun, a hand which feels the earth that the world which surrounds him
;
is
lation
self.
to say, only in re the thinker, he him something else, namely, If there is any truth that may be enunciated
is it is
a priori
this.
The
subdivision into
object
and subject is the only form under which any kind of mental representation whatsoever, abstract or
intuitive,
pure
or
or thinkable.
No
more independent of any others, and less in need of that everything which demonstration, than this exists for our perception, and thereforejthe wTiole
:
world,
tuition
is
in.
IdeaJ_
no way new. It was involved in the sceptical considerations from which Descartes But Berkeley was the first to give it de started. cided utterance he has won thereby undying fame in philosophy, even though the rest of his doctrine cannot be maintained V
This truth
in
;
Schopenhauer, Welt
als
i.
p. i.
WE
or
substantia
cogitans,
it,
to
existence
either
alone conceded
.side
was
when
Materialism reposed contentedly upon the couch prepared for it by Descartes, a strictly causal, me
chanical theory of the universe and its rest was untroubled by the alarming certainty that matter,
;
extension, number, cause, in short the whole real and palpable external world, necessarily presupposed a sensitive and intelligent .consciousness, without which it could have no existence for mankind.
began to force itself irre on the minds of serious and conscientious sistibly thinkers, they sought with despairing energy to find in their one acknowledged principle some point d appui towards the other side, an endeavour in which they naturally shared the fate of the archliar Mtinchhaiisen, when he tried to lift himself and his horse out of the morass by his own pigtail. Among these impossible attempts may be reckoned
As soon
as this truth
88
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
with variations by Lange 1 ) and characterised by him as one of the highest and most important that can occupy the human intelligence, What kind of motion can it be that produces the feeling and imagination
of living creatures?
1
One might
as well ask:
How
Geschichte
ties
p. 41, note.
Whenever Lange
Mateiialismus,i. 237. Cf.the passage quoted above, gives expression to the opinion that the
processes of thought and sensation may be explained as a special occurrence arising out of universal mechanical natural necessity,
he
falls
into that
same materialistic
self-deception.
It
must
hosv-
ever be acknowledged that in many, nay in most passages, this excellent writer fully recognises the infinite difficulty of the problem, and points to the direction in which the solution must
actually be sought.
him.
forms
a fatal blow at the root of the study of nature, while Demokritos had been on his guard against following these clues into further
Here the Kantian Critik metaphysical depths, Lange observes of Reason was needed, to cast a first faint ray of light (!) into the
:
is
still,
it
was
p.
is
judice
Another crude expression of the materialistic pre 19.) to be found in Dubois-Reymond s Grenzen des Naturer-
The theory of descent, taken together with that of p. 34: natural selection, forces the idea upon the student, that the soul has come into existence as the gradual product of certain material com
kennens,
To exhibit still more clearly the helplessness of science in the face of the dualism which seems innate in
binations!
modern
human
nature, it may be noted that Ueberweg is driven to the assumption that the law of the conservation of force will reappear in psychical
Lange he resigned himself to the despairing confession If you can help me out of the strait I shall be your debtor indeed but it will not be enough for you to
processes, until at last in a letter to
: ;
show me the improbability of what I myself see to be very little probable in itself, but you must open some other outlook to me, / know no that shall at least strike me as moderately plausible.
such.
(Lange,
loc. cit.
ii.
p. 518.)
SPINOZA.
189
mucli thought and imagination will suffice to set a mill-wheel or a steam-engine in motion V o
Spiritualism too needed equally to be inspired by a stronger faith than that which removes mountains, in order, after scornfully rejecting that stupid
known as matter into the thoughtless somewhat O realm of nothingness, calmly to resist the stormy force with which the outer world proclaims its ex
istence
content of knowledge into an airy appearance, or a mere dream with which a cunning magician mocks
our slumbers.
stress
distinguished tremes, shows of itself the enormous difficulty and perplexity of the problem, and should lead us to
men
more modest
is
dualism than
usually indulged
There was only one other path left open, and this was trodden by Spinoza, that namely of endeavouring to restore to its original natural unity what had been
separated in thought.
In this
human
reason returned
truth
really something quite there are always three stages visible in the progress of human reason, from confounding to distinguishing,
was
different.
newly-won For
On
The human reason pursues its course forwards and sideways, and often returns upon the point from whence it started, only with a change so that when its action seems to have become the same as before,
:
cler
Vernunft,
p. 91.
IQO
there
is
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
a difference in
its
mode
same operation.
Man
strides
doubt to knowledge, and often after a long course of experience he reaches the goal of convictions which were taken for granted from the first by the unthinking. And yet this circuitous course cannot be looked upon as superfluous, for its accomplish ment leaves the mind enriched with the boon of
consciousness.
times mind and body were held to be one and the same, and if the sight of
earliest
death made
it necessary to assume a separation., the soul was still imagined with a new kind surviving of material existence, a body only of a finer and more
airy substance, in
which the
spirit
dwelt as before,
Hence
Ancestor or Manes worship. The busy and fertile fancy of the earliest races was also penetrated with the
conviction, that
all
now
sea
class as soulless,
conscious beings like ourselves, only immortal and furnished with superior
all living,
might
wiiat
hence mythology and polytheism. But it was another and far harder task to reunite
by Descartes,
of
many
Spinoza himself indeed was not altogether without precursors, and among these has rightly been reckoned
the profound Pantheist, Giordano Bruno (b. 1550, burnt 1600), who in high poetic flights divines again a soul within the universe, and instead of regarding
matter as something merely passive, or in Aristotelian phrase, as the bare possibility of becoming, maintains
rather that everything proceeds from
it
and
is
pro-
SPINOZA.
:
IQI
dnced by separation and development and there fore matter is not destitute of the forms, but, on the and as it unfolds what contrary, contains them all has secretly been borne within it, it appears in truth as the whole of nature and the mother of all that
;
lives.
forget the distance from these which emancipated thought first tried its wings, under the stimulus of the Copernican theory of the universe, between the profoundest conjectures of a Giordano Bruno, a Campanella or the like, and essays in
the pupil of Descartes, trained in the strictest dis cipline of mathematical thought, and fully conscious of the difficulty of the problem before him recog
;
nising on the one hand the strict mechanical depend ence or irrevocable antecedents of all material change, o 7 and on the other the irreconcilability of the latter with
we meet with in our own consciousness, and which is more certain, that is to say more primitive, than any other. No doubt
that other kind of causation which
Spinoza would have remained faithful to Cartesian dualism but for the logical necessity which compelled him to perceive a gap in his master s system, an
internal contradiction, a false deduction from imper This, together fectly defined or conceived ideas. with the revolt of those secret convictions which
rest
upon the common sense of mankind and for which a philosophical foundation had been laid by the Humanists, and even some free-thinkers amonoo
the Schoolmen, e.g. Pomponatius, who denied the immortality of the soul and disclosed the incon
between the idea of the divine omnipotence and human free-will, this all combined to show him the urgent need for some correction of or some point of view beyond the former doctrine.
sistency
IQ2
It
is
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
again the idea of substance from which every to depart and into which everything is to thing As we see, this idea embraces, according to revert. and by a fallacy, Descartes, the whole of existence
is
;
a violent transition from the imagined to the actual, the character of necessary existence is added to it.
Now
Spinoza raises no objection to this necessity, on the contrary, he accepts it as a starting-point, ob Per substantiam intelligo id quod in se serving
:
est et per se concipitur/ after this idea has already been introduced as causa sui; of which it is said,
per causam sui intelligo id cujus essentia involvit existentiam; sive id cujus natura non potest concipi
1
nisi existens.
But Descartes, while including all existence under the idea of substance, at the same time distinguished two kinds of existences, to both of which the honour
able
name
of substance
was
to be accorded.
The
philosophical conscience of Spinoza revolted against this. It is impossible, he held, that existence should
be one, and then again at the same time two there can only be one substance, which is by nature eternal,
;
infinite, indivisible,
fections,
i.e.
qualities or attributes.
he too
calls Deus, though most frequently with the addition sive natura, and of this it is said, Praeter Deum nulla dari, neque concipi potest substantia
(Eth.
est
i.
et
(Prop.
5)
Quidquid est in Deo Deo esse neque concipi potest This God is the immanent cause of all
sine
things
his existence
20).
and
unum
et
idem (Prop.
Philosophical speculation is here straining towards the same heights as the Eleatics sought for, the But here too eternal, unchangeable one (ey KOI Tray).
SPINOZA.
there
is
193
Eleatics
a wide difference.
as
The
acknow
ledged unity unable to proceed from it to the manifoldness of the world, and hence the phenomenal world was dis posed of offhand by Parmenides as the not-being,
the
rational
while Zeno pointed out the inner contradiction into which reason fell in conceding reality to the many.
prehending
in which all single existences and may be conceived as grasped find their place in connection with the whole by its necessity and rationality, while apart from this connection, con
reality,
l
,
sidered as existing in themselves, they can only be the objects of erroneous, i. e. imperfect, incomplete
perception.
Imagination is the greatest foe to true knowledge we imagine single things, characterise them with words, and withdraw them by abstraction from their place in the great general order, we bestow
;
for while
the character of substance upon accidents, and sever and divide what in nature is undivided and con
can only attain to true knowledge by the universe as one, and considering it as conceiving existing, not in time but sub specie seternitatis.
nected.
We
predicates, thought
and
This error revenged itself by making the union or interaction of the two substances perma In fact the two nently impossible and inexplicable. extension and thought, are only two attri predicates,
extension.
The
attributes
qualities
of substance,
v.
24
Quo magis
res singulares
intelligimus, eo magis
Deum
intelligimus.
VOL
I.
194
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
which experience does not make known to us, but which themselves underlie all our experience l Medi
.
upon these attributes leads to true, pure know ledge, which consists in this, that everything is brought into connection with the prime source of all
tation
to say, with God, in whom all Human things live and move and have their being. to perfection in proportion as it thought approaches
existence,
that
is
its
upward
AU separate exist struggles are directed. individual men, are only modifications ences, mankind, of the infinite substance, comparable to the curling
waves, which form and vanish again upon the surface All separate existences, alike material of the ocean. or spiritual, are held together by the rigid iron bond
of causality. It is only in the All that freedom and necessity are the same, for God creates and causes all
things ex necessitate naturae suse, for he is infinite, untrammelled, and hence cannot be determined by Omnis determinatio anything else to act or work.
est negatio.
The great problem of matter and mind is thus solved by Spinoza in the simplest, the most startlingly simple way, to which the saying simplex sigillum veri
is
As Goethe, Spinoza s greatest There is no mind without body, no body disciple, says, without mind. Both are one, they are a Monon, which our thought grasps by abstraction now on one
surely applicable.
side,
now on the
other,
modo sub
attribute extensionis,
1 Nulla experientia id (quod ad essentiam pertinet) unquam nos edocere poterit. Nam experientia nullas rerum essentias docet, sed summum, quod efficere potest, est mentem nostram determinare, ut
circa certas
tantum
essentias cogitet.
Quare,
cum
existentia at-
poterimus assequi.
SPINOZA.
195
modo
by
cogitationis ; and then because they are denoted different words, it is hastily assumed that different
independent beings exist corresponding to their names. In reality instead of one matter and one mind, there is a single Something, which is both at once. Each taken in itself is imperfect the two qualities are distinguishable but not separable.
:
causal nexus
should not ask if necting the two attributes. and how thought can act upon the body or the body in the world of extension everything on thought
;
We
accomplished in accordance with stern, mechanical laws, while the mind proceeds only by the inward only because the two worlds are linking of ideas
is
:
is
responding every material one, and conversely. Hence the fundamental perversity of such questions
as are propounded as the greatest problems in one sided henistic systems, e. g. How can mind and con
How
can mind produce out of itself our ideas of bodies and the things themselves \ In relation to man the essentials of the monistic view may be formulated as follows. Our body presents itself to us in twofold
fashion
objects,
(all
;
first as external, material, an object among and then again as consciousness, feeling, will
these expressions must be used together to characterise the nature of mind), or in a word as in
ternal. It is only himself that man knows immediately in this twofold character everything else in nature
:
appears before him as external, as object. But he soon acquires, by intercourse with his kind, the obser vation of kindred lives, and finally, from irresistible
rational grounds, the conviction that there is life in the whole of nature, that this inward property does not
o 2
196
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
less
de These
degrees of consciousness constitute the degrees in the variety of things, and supply the standard of
perfection
clearly
laid
down
i.
in
Spinoza
e.
plus agere,
Schopenhauer himself was compelled to recognise the latter truth, although with him consciousness was only a subordinate variety of animal life, subject to He says in the Pathe wholly unconscious Will.
rerga \ Thus the degree of clearness in consciousness, or of reflection, may be regarded as degrees of reality
in existence.
But even
in the
human
degrees of reflection or clear consciousness of personal or other existence are very numerous and gradually
shaded.
It
must be admitted
that
tenfold the intensity of being of others, are ten times The majority of men only perceive things as much. as they are in relation to the will of the moment,
.
they do not
in their
reflect
own
;
general in a certain sense they exist without being aware of it. Hence the existence of the thoughtless
proletaire or slave,
who
lives
proaches materially nearer to that of brutes, who are altogether restricted to the present, than our own
does.
Or we may compare
it
with the
life
of a
cautious, intelligent merchant, who spends his time in speculation, in the careful execution of maturely
a family, provides for his wife, children, and posterity, and moreover takes an active part in the affairs of the commonwealth.
considered plans,
who founds
Obviously such a man possesses far more of conscious existence than the former, that is to say his existence
1
Vol.
ii.
p.
630.
SPINOZA.
197
And if we turn now reality. who investigates, let us say, the history of the past, we find him possessing a consciousness of existence as a whole which extends beyond his own
has a higher degree of
to the student
All
this is implied in Spinoza s words Quo unaquseque res plus perfectioiiis (or realitatis) habet, eo magis
agit et
minus patitur
est.
et contra
quo magis
agit, eo
perfectior
seemed to show that the monistic theory of the universe, which first received its clear expression in the West at the hands of Spinoza (though in the East it had spread long before), would soon become generally prevalent, while dualism would be wrecked on the rock of its own inconsistency and irreconcilableness with science, and Henism, which in our day means practically materialism, would be con demned by its obvious incompleteness, and denial of the noblest and most essential qualities of humanity. The only difficulty still left for monism to surmount lies in the inveterate prejudice, which has grown in
Everything
the course of ages into a second nature, according to
which we distinguish between an animate and in animate world, or even think of matter as something purely passive. We can only clearly and completely comprehend the nature of any being, by endeavouring to understand, not merely its outside, or the way in which it presents itself to our imagination as an ob But at this ject in space, but also its inner nature.
inner, derived, like all our notions, from the ex ternal world, and only applied metaphorically to the
point
we
are
met by the
word
which
is
mind,
is
usually misunderstood
by those
;
votaries of
natural science whose only object of investigation is this phenomenal world, i.e. matter for they imagine
198
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
themselves to penetrate by these processes into the very heart of organic things, and do not consider that all the while they are still only dealing with what is
external.
first
in the laborious
to ascribe all that they know best and as consciousness, feel most directly in themselves and will to all other existing things, and only ing, then will the veil begin to lift itself which conceals
endeavour
the o great secret. My task is here only to show the place occupied by Spinoza s doctrine in the course of the develop ment of philosophical thought down to Kant s doc
trine of knowledge,
and to indicate, as before, what were contributed and what progress made by his help, as well as what was one-sided and
new
truths
incomplete.
substance,
which put an end to the unnatural separation be tween thought and extension. It was now possible to conceive every sensible process as at the same time a material modification of the organs of sense and as
a variety or mode of consciousness. This salutary combination, arising out of the former no less salutary distinction or differentiation, lends clearly a double
aspect to every question, i. e. quatenus res consideratur sub attribute extensionis, or sub attribute cogitationis. It is only a development of Spinoza s thought that
leads Tyndall to give the characteristic title to his valuable work, Heat considered as a mode of motion,
i.
according to Spinoza, as a modus extensionis. Everybody always knew that heat was also a modus
e.
cogitationis,
2.
i.
e.
a sensation.
Besides this, the notion of substance, as the last residuum of the old ontology, tended to evaporate
SPINOZA.
199
into a single final unity, which strictly speaking amounted to nothing but pure, i. e. empty being, as to which men could know nothing whatever, except
they themselves participate in that complete change of front was thus effected. being. Hitherto the whole expenditure of strength had been directed to effecting conquests from the realm of one or other substance, but now it was both possible and necessary for the thoughtful intelligence to bring all its forces into the field against the idea of substance
in
so
far
as
and to show that this also was the creation of reason and must have its existence justified thereby. This, which was accomplished by Kant, is the turningpoint in the history of philosophy: before him it was ontology, after him and through him it became diaitself,
duced the conception of an absolute and perfect knowledge, such as the reason always aspires after, in contradistinction to that which is limited, sub ject to the course of causation in space and time, and
therefore conditioned
knowledge. which considers things in their eternal, infinite con nection in God^i. e. sub specie seternitatis, and with out the limitations of space and cause, and refers
them
and
all
ground of
all things,
the
causa sui
all
are the true principles of all being knowledge here the two flow into one. They are eternal truths, which not only explain and are
;
Here
Intettectus res
non
tarn
sub duratione,
numero
infinite
vel potius
ad res
percipiendas nee ad
attendit;
cum
autem res imaginatur eas sub certo numero, determinate duratione De Intellectus Emeudatione, sub fin. et quantitate percipit.
2OO
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
presupposed by appearances and modi, but also lead us to necessary existence and reveal to us its true This true, perfect knowledge is opposed to essentia.
n/
the limited, which only conceives things in their component parts, as under the limitations of time, and
The latter occupies itself only the modi of substance, not with its affectiones, true essentia 1 Spinoza overlooked at this point that,
space,
and number.
.
with the
own definition, man himself was only an ephemeral modus of the infinite substance, and that it was as impossible for a transitory intellect,
according to his
hemmed
by
limitations, to conceive
infinite substance sub specie seternitatis, as it would be to thrust out from some rapidly moving body a lever that was to uproot the fixed world from its seat. Still this contrast between true, absolute, and uni versal knowledge, and that which was limited by time, space, and causation, served to show the way to a clearer insight. It led to the salutary recognition
of the limits of our reason, which forms the real task of metaphysics. Starting from this view, Kant was enabled to show that the first kind, absolute
knowledge, is the unattainable ideal of human reason, which always strives after perfection while the latter
;
Seriem rerum singularium mutabilium impossibile foret humanse imbecillitati assequi, cum propter earum omnem numerum superantem multitudinem, turn propter infinitas circumstantias in una et eadem re, quarum unaquseque potest esse causa ut res existat aut non existat. Quandoquidem earum existentia nullam habet connexiouem cum earundem essentia sive (ut jam diximus) non est seterna veritas Intima rerum essentia tantum est
1
petenda a
fixis atque seternis rebus et simul a legibus in iis rebus in suis veris codicibus inscriptis, secundum quas omnia tanquam singularia et fiunt et ordinantur ; imo hsec mutabilia singularia
adeo intime et essentialiter (ut ita dicam) ab iis fixis pendent, ut sine iis nee esse nee concipi possint. De Tntellectus Emendat.
SPINOZA.
2O I
kind represents its necessary process, its one final possession, the forms into which it must translate the whole phenomenal world. 4. In many passages, and especially in his Tractatus de Intellectus Emendations, Spinoza displays a clear and penetrating insight into the true nature of
it
must be reached,
namely, a criticism of the intellectual faculties. He is clearly feeling for what Kant subsequently de
signated as the a priori element in human know In order to distinguish true and false ideas, ledge.
we must/ he
liarities
says,
of
the intellect/
True thought
is
that
which embraces objectively in itself the essence of a principle which needs no cause and can be known in and by itself. The form of true thought must
hence be sought in itself, not in its relation to other forms and it must not be derived from its own object, as if it were caused by that, but from the
;
He
which
sought He geometrical figure, the circle, for the purpose. then adds: Unde sequitur simplices cogitationes non posse non veras esse, ut simplex semi-circuli,
He speaks in the same motus, quantitatis, etc., idea. at the beginning of the Tractatus, of the vis way,
of the intellect, which he explains as illud quod in nobis a causis externis non causatur and he characterises as an important task
nativa,
or
native
force
the attempt to enumerate all those ideas which are derived from the pure inteUect and to separate them
from the ideas of the imagination. At the same time he warns the student against drawing any con-
202
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
when he is dealing with actual things, and not to confound what belongs to the nature of the intellect with the real facts about
elusions from abstractions
1
particular things
Finally, he insists, as
upon the
foundation of
first
all
virium
the cognitio intellectus ej usque proprietatum et and at the same time he points out that in
;
is
sponding methods, while as to the intellect we are left without any further test or standard, so that the correct
definition
must be
self-evident
quod
vel definitio
intellectus per se debet esse clara vel nihil intelligere possumus. All these are so many finger-posts, point
ing and preparing the way to a future examination of the pure intellect, or pure reason, its vis nativa,
proprieties, and the like. 5. Lastly, it should be noticed that Spinoza, like all considerable thinkers, was well aware of _the_
source of error lying in words and the self-deception 6T"tEe~human mincLwhicb, as soon as it meets with a
or as
1
word, forthwith imagines that some equivalent thing For "reality must exist to correspond with it~
much
is,
Principia
Philos.
more
Geometrico Demonstrata (1663) Spinoza insists, almost in the very words of Kant, upon the difference between the entia rationis or
Ex omnibus
Unde etiam
Aliud enim
res a
est inquirere in rerum naturam, aliud in modes quibus no bis percipiuntur. Haec vero si confundantur, neque modos percipiendi, neque naturam ipsam intelligere poterimus ; imo vero,
quod maximum
est,
in causa erit,
quod
in
magnos
errores inci-
accidit.
SPINOZA.
2O3
since we form many conceits, according as words are framed in the memory, at random, by reason of some bodily state so it is not to be doubted that words like the imagination may be the cause of many errors unless we guard ourselves against them with
;
much
care.
Add
are only signs of things as they are in the imagination, not as they are in the intellect, which is evident
all
and not
are
always imposed
truly affirmative
men
un
created, independent, infinite, immortal, etc., because the contraries of these are much more easily imagined;
men and
affirm and usurped the place of positive names. deny many things because the nature of words, rather
We
and
something
we might
easily take
principal Spinoza s system lies n aturally in his idea of substance and ihe wayliii which it is educed: so that in the tirst prelimi nary conception existence is tacitly imputed to the subject, and then analytically deduced from it, like the con juror s trick in which, to the astonishment of the public, an article is discovered where the performer has secretly had it placed beforehand. This leap from the mere idea, or what is thought, into the actual world is the most violent and break-neck salto mortals to be met with in any system of philosophy. If Spinoza had remained faithful to his demand,
1
The
defect
of
De
88.
2O4
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
spirit,
that enquiry should start with the nature and properties of the
intellect,
just as time, space and number, by which all things are explained, are yet themselves only modi cogitandi *, similarly the idea of cause or causality is an
original, not to
our reason
in all its
and must therefore be first investigated, varieties, ramifications and functions, before
;
application may be made of it to the or the degree of its certainty or reality. He world, a first cause of all ought therefore, before inferring beings, and thence deducing his ideas of substance
any
direct
or G-od, to have verified the idea of causation within the subject itself, and then only have proceeded to
how
enter on this verification, and the omission proved fatal at once to the first foundations of his system, and (at least in part) to its further development.
been noticed already how persistently Spinoza confounds and identifies cause with reason in the obvious intention of arguing from ideas to realities 2 In this indeed he was only following iri the wake of Descartes, with his ontological proof of the existence of God. But in Descartes there was still some approach to a rational sequence, and the
It
has
idea of
God appears
Spinoza, on the other hand, creates at once a cause, by describing God, or what comes to the same thing,
substance, as causa sui, which
1
2
is
as great a
con-
"Wurzel
des Satzes
collected.
vom
zureich-
enden Grande,
SPINOZA.
tradiction or non-sense, as if it
205
out
which objects and definitions have their rise together, so that he began to dream of applying the same method with equal results to philosophical Hence his frequent comparison as it follows ideas. from the nature of the triangle that the sum of its 1 so, with the same angles equals two right angles
:
necessity, it follows from the idea of the deity both that it exists and that it contains and produces all things.
This
is
(i.
6),
Ex
attributes
may
be deduced.
At
That the efficient cause of all things. Deity mathematical certainty is the norm of truth, that its
is also
decisions are eternal truths, equally valid in all times and places, that its laws supply the firmest founda
everything
is
and
definitions,
s ideal
s
this
contributed
to
make
it
Spinoza
Spinoza
may
also be
The latter took refuge characterised in this way. in the transcendental idea of the Deity, to whom all things are possible, in order to prove the reality of
the material world and the equivalence of the two substances. Spinoza took this equivalence seriously,
attendimus ad naturam trianguli, invenimus ejus tres si talem habemus cognitionem ; De Dei qualem habemus trianguli, turn omnis dubitatio tollitur.
Intellectus Emendatione.
1
Cum
2O6
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
possibility became realised the transcendental idea and made
He
the Deity into an immanent cause, by identifying God and the world and combining extension and
thought in the same substance. However much of o truth there mav have been in the fundamental
>
thought, its execution was laboured and confused O all the more so because Spinoza, while postulating
;
the idea of causation, everywhere assumed the ex istence of only one kind of causation, and en
deavoured in consequence to represent thought as subject to the same kind of strict causal sequence as material changes, both being independent in themselves, and yet held together in necessary re A thought can only be limited by a lationship. thought, a body by a body; each thought must be deduced from another thought, and so on to infinity, while a body can only be determined to rest or motion by another body. Spinoza s attempt to make it clear to himself and others how these two attributes, extension and
thought, in complete causal independence of each other, can yet be so joined together in the same being
as to be regarded as qualities of it must be held to have failed altogether ;
this attempt and again for the same reason; namely because it did not start from a thorough and exhaustive theory of knowledge, but only aimed at translating everything into reality. Attention should be paid more especially to the contradiction involved in assuming extension to be a quite special quality, altogether independent from
thought,
when in fact we can never know anything about this extension except what is contained in our thought concerning it, so that at last every thing must be referred to that one quality. Spinoza
SPINOZA.
207
Sic etiam modus extensionis et idea modi una eademque est res/ which, as Scho penhauer well observes, can only mean that our idea of bodies and the bodies themselves are one and the same thing. And all the while no proof is given of
himself says 1
illius
real,
it.
We
have
2 a complete realism in thus/ Schopenhauer continues Spinoza s doctrine, so far as the existence of things corresponds to the idea of them in our minds, for the
two
and therefore we know things as they are in themselves. They are extended in themselves
are one
;
they present themselves in our minds, when they become the objects of thought (cogitata). Spinoza draws the line altogether on the ideal side, and stops short at the world as pre
(extensa)
just as
. .
sented in thought the latter, as characterised by its form, extension, he holds to be the real, which exists moreover independently of its presentation in
;
thought.
He
is
extended and what is thought of, i.e. our idea of bodies and the bodies themselves, are one and the same. For things are only extended as they are thought and only thought of as extended the world as idea and the world in space are una eademque res. We have no difficulty in conceding this. If extension were a quality of things in themselves, then our perception of it would be a knowledge of
is
;
what
things in themselves
he assumes this, and herein consists his realism. But as he has not laid its foundations by showing how a world of space exists,
;
corresponding to the independent world thought of as extended, the fundamental problem remains un solved. Spinoza s bias towards the ideal side
. . .
Ethics,
ii.
Prop.
7,
Schol.
Parerga,
i.
pp. 10-13.
2O8
MODEEN PHILOSOPHY.
shows itself in his readiness to believe that reality was to be found in the extension pertaining thereto, and the consequent acceptance of the perceptible world as the only reality outside ourselves, and the
knowing subject
us.
same way, on the other hand, he reduces the only true reality, the will, into an ideal, by making it a mere modus cogitandi, and indeed iden
in the
And
Prop. 48, voluntatem intelligo affirmaiidi et negandi facultatem and again, concipiamus singularem ali(Eth.
49,
"per
"
tifying
it
ii.
cogitandi, quo mens affirmat, tres angulos trianguli sequales esse duobus
quam
volitionem,
nempe modum
rectis;"
which
is
et intellectus
unum
"Voluntas
This severe criticism, which is just enough, so far as it refers to the object of knowledge, must be qualified by the consideration that Spinoza was the
venture upon treating things, which presented themselves to our faculties of perception as alto gether heterogenous, as qualities of one and the same
first to
being and to say, this thinking subject is at the same time matter and mind, these two are therefore only
;
All drawbacks properties, not independent things. this was an important progress. notwithstanding,
successors of Descartes of
cogitatio,
shown, was used by himself to characterise all the modifications of consciousness, in the widest possible
sense.
clearer
exactly in
is it
pro
is
portion
we approach
the
question,
\
What
distinguished
first
SPINOZA.
2O9
Spinoza indeed contrasts reason and imagination, and says that the interchange of words and images with rational ideas is the cause of most errors, and
accounts for this in the following words l Verborum et imaginum essentia a solis motibus cornamque
:
poreis constituitur qui cogitationis conceptum minime involvunt but he makes no attempt to investigate
:
imagination and sensible perception, contenting him self with the most superficial explanations. The
nature of ideas at least should have been clearly set forth, but on this point too he remains thoroughly
Sometimes, as in the passage quoted above these ideas are identified with the simplest (p. 201), and most general conceptions, such as time, space,
obscure.
motion, mathematical figures, &c. Sometimes he tells us ideam quatenus est idea affirmationem aut ne2 gationem involvere which puts the idea on the same level as judgment. Then again he speaks of an idea rei singularis actu existentis 3 Sometimes mind is the idea corporis 4 sometimes mentis idea and mens are una eademque res 5 sometimes the idea?
,
.
affectionum corporis are what the mind perceives 6 and sometimes, in his own words, idea mentis (hoc est idea ideoe) nihil aliud est quarn forma ideae quate
,
scit
quod scit, word is used with the most fatal want of pre cision, and resembles anything rather than an idea
the
clara
et distincta.
The reason
1 3
is
2
Eth.
ii.
4
6
VOL.
2IO
line is
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
not sharply drawn between the Ideal, as the intelligent principle in the subject, and the Real, as
the
matter of thought. Do minated by his leading idea, that the worlds of extension and thought are parts of the same sub
objective
world,
or
upon
sometimes of the thinking subject, sometimes of the matter of thought, i. e. the material world. The only
result
of which
idea,
is
increasing confusion as
to the
notion
Platonic theory, the intellectual plan in accordance with which the material form of things is realised,
sometimes the representation which the intelligent subject has of this plan, and, finally, sometimes the
inner spiritual side of the subject,
i.e.
consciousness
and thought. If the mind is the idea of the human body, it makes a considerable difference whether I
understand by this mind, the living active principle which finds its adequate expression in the body, or the thinking being itself, or, lastly, the conscious
ness that this
of the body.
mind has of
itself
and of the
affections
jective and subjective constrained Spinoza to have recourse always to his God, as the sole possessor of adequate ideas of all things, whose ideas are com
pletely realised in the material world, so that is plainly in this connection that the proposition
laid
it
is
down
est
idem
Ordo
et
connexio idearum
Geometrical
by being thought, supply the illustrations here also. really existing circle and the idea of this circle,
which
is
so far as it is
solelv from
the
SPINOZA.
I I
idea of the circle, on the other hand, must be derived from the next idea, and this again from another idea,
and
so
tained within the intellectual nature of the Deity. Here we should be justified in asking Spinoza to ex
plain how it comes to pass that two quite different causal series, the ordo et connexio idearum and the
ordo totius naturae per extensionis attributum, con tinue to subsist in complete parallelism, and why
they can only be attributes of the same being. But we are told only, nee in praBsentiarum hsec
clarius
ii.
7,
Schol.)
This
be explained.
(Eth. of its
ii.
increasingly obvious when human thought has to The true principle indeed is laid down
19) that the
human mind
is
not conscious
own
affected
body, and only knows it in so far as it is by other bodies. But instead of deducing
thence the difference between thought or objective knowledge and mere dim consciousness or impulse, we are simply referred again to the Deity in whom,
as an intellectual being, the true idea of our body and its modifications is to be found.
s zeal
of
human
ideas
to
notwithstanding his protestations that good and bad, perfect and imperfect, ideas of design and such like, are absolutely inapplicable to the world as such,
notwithstanding his care to eliminate altogether the idea of personality from his God, there is still an
undeniable touch of anthropomorphism in his re presentation of God as a thinking being, and the
his
He
human thought
p 2
212
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
we
nature of other thought necessarily presupposes an individual being, and an external world contrasted
therewith, by which it is affected and supplied with the material for its thought. In the One, which is at
the same time the All, difference and consequently consciousness and thought necessarily disappear.
Thought
human
not a fundamental property of the world thought and human reason have been pro
is
duced as an accident of
is finite, its
this
world
had a beginning, would be pre to ask what may come after it. But sumptuous Spinoza attributes infinite thought to his God-World his God is like an architect, whose living stones are and
will not
it
it
individual beings,
men included
responds accordingly to
but imperfectly informed itself as to its nearest re lations, and only able to attain adequate ideas of things by thinking them in their relation to God. Confused and imperfect ideas only arise from our
having a partial consciousness of consequences apart from their premisses *. Before closing this section it will be well to enumerate once more the points of most value to later generations of thinkers, which have been be
queathed to us by this seemingly obscure arid per plexing doctrine. And of these, first, the conception of nature as something living. There is nowhere
1
Etli.
ii.
28, 29.
Cf.
De
sit,
Intellectus
uti
Emendatione
Quod
si
de
prima froate videtur, cogitationes adtequatas formare, certum est, ideas inadsequatas eo
oriii, quod pars sumus alicujus entis cogitantis, queedam cogitationes ex toto, qu?edam ex parte tantum nostrum nientem coiiittituunt.
tanturn in nobis
cujus
SPINOZA.
bare matter or passive machinery. All things, in cluding apparently inanimate matter, have some inner quality. The degrees of consciousness may be thought
there is no consciousness so but what it might become still fainter, no clear reflectiveness but what may aspire after still higher
of as infinitely various
faint
It is true Spinoza should have placed this which seems so incompatible with our re doctrine, clearness.
ceived notions, in the foreground, instead of only re ferring to it occasionally and as it were by the way:
omnia, quamvis diversis gradibus animata, &c. (Eth. ii. The fundamental principle of Monism should 13.)
more exclusion or isolation, the less conscious ness. This idea was indeed first made possible by Leibniz, who made due allowance for what is in dividual, and made that his starting-point, while
be, the
efforts
the thinking
an especially clear ray of light upon the great mystery of human thought. While antiquity failed to recognise any distinction between words and ideas or thought and speech, the
casts
Spinoza showed the general and not yet extinct belief that thought is antecedent to speech, and that the soul is thus first in possession of ideas which it subsequently denotes or expresses in words. Down
to the second half of the present century we meet with no trace of a perception of the dependence of
214
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
the fulcrum and adminiculum, but the very body of And vet it is a thought quite in harmony thought.
with the
spirit
of Spinozism,
that language
and
thought are one and the same thing, only viewed from different sides, i. e. once quatenus res est extensa,
est cogitans, or as ex
that the two are distinguishable, but not separable; that it is just as impossible to
Not
thought,
e.
that which
we
characterising as the matter, or content of thought, could have no existence without this two-sidedness
For there
no external world capable of being grasped at once by our thought, without a preliminary idealising
transformation, so that all external existence must undergo a kind of transsubstantiation just as every thing internal or spiritual, before it can be spoken or
;
thought, must be converted into something material or sensibly perceptible. This proceeding of language,
as the metaphorical or tropical, used to be generally regarded as a mere rhetorical ornament, although a glance at any dictionary would have
is
which
known
sufficed to
prove that
it
of language. The idea of matter has as much of an ideal character as the idea of spirit has of a material
and sensible origin (spiritus, anima, ruach). Neither are things in themselves, but both objects of thought ; and in this the philosophy of language agrees entirely
with the Transcendental philosophy. 3. Objects, says Spinoza (Eth. ii. 5), are not the cause of ideas the enchainment of ideas depends and solely upon the intellectual nature of the wholly
;
SPINOZA.
preceding idea, and so on in infinite succession. An element of profound truth must be recognised here, however strange and repugnant it may seem to us to assume strict causation between ideas, without any
reference to their objects. I will not insist here upon its transcendental result, that thought must necessarily contain within itself the principles of truth, since ii
cannot possibly receive them from external objects, which virtually establishes the independence of the intellectual principle from the external material
Neither will I point out here that the whole development of the universe, in which one form always proceeds from a kindred form, can never be made intelligible by means of mechanical causes but must be pertaining to the world of extension
world.
;
regulated by the intelligent principle, though indeed neither the Platonic, nor the immanent ideas of
Spinoza adequately elucidate the problem. It will be enough to show the validity of this proposition of Spinoza s in regard to the creative energy of the especially the development of lan guage and concepts. For the activity of mankind, the revolutions effected by men on the world s surface, are
not caused by external objects, but wholly and solely by the inner, active intellectual nature of mankind
;
through an immeasurable chain of past races, during whose transitory existence in like manner thought has proceeded from thought and creation from creation in a spiritual sequence of the same continuous causal character as the illimitable It is also one of the generations of animal species. most certain discoveries of the science of language that never, in the whole course of linguistic develop ment, has a word or notion been educed from an
their origin is traceable
2l6
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
external object, but always uninterruptedly an idea from an idea, as in the outward activity of men
creation follows creation,
a literal confirmation of
ideaa
Spinoza
ipsa
s proposition,
Kerum singularium
non
ideata,
sive
res
ngnoscunt, sed
ipsumDeum, quatenus
instead of Deus. Geiger ob with Spinoza, Language and agreement thought are only made intelligible to us when we discern that our will is not a contemporary offspring of a given stimulus, nor our belief of an intuition, our
conception of a phenomenon, or our thought of an from the beginning object but that it is the past,
;
when down
to the present
the All emerged from primaeval nothingness, moment, when an atom of the
eternal world-force has constituted this ego of ours, which lives, believes, thinks and feels in us; and that therefore it is behind, not around us, that wr e
must look for the key to the riddle within and with The out and the source and origin of all true being.
. . .
forms of thought do not proceed either from us or from things from field and wood, as the poet has
but each one of them had its rise and origin from a preceding form, as one animal generation gives birth to another 1 Thus the nature of thought consists not in perceptions of objects, but in conceptions, re
it
;
.
ceding in unbroken filiation through an immeasurable past, in an order which science must trace back to
the hoar antiquity in which thought and language had their beginning. This holds good not only of
all
p.
108.
SPINOZA.
The same as a consequence of this mental activity. truth must even be applied to the sensible perceptions of the lower animals, which are also impossible with
out some germs of thought. We and they perceive things as we do, because of the immeasurable suc
cession of intuitions and perceptions which has gone before us in the past, and which is being continued, through the present generation to future ages and
races.
consciousness consciousness,
perceptio ex perceptione, conceptus ex conceptu, idea ex idea. Isolated mechanical existences afford us no explanation we can only admit that such and such
;
mental phenomena would be impossible without such and such material ones. And it is easy to see what tragical results must follow, from the confusion and
interchange of the two elements,
if
we
glance at the
numerous and ill-fated theories of the origin of language, which have attempted to establish a causal connection between the mental content of ideas and
the audible sounds of words.
4. It appears from many passages, both in the Ethics and in his letters, that Spinoza was fairly on the way towards Transcendental Idealism, and therefore to the Kantian doctrine, according to which phenomena must be distinguished from things in themselves. In the interests of clearness he should at this point have
freed himself from the Cartesian ideas of substance, cause, &c., or rather have subjected them to careful
He says (Eth. ii. 16) that the way in investigation. which we are affected by external things depends
much more upon
the constitution of our body than on
:
the nature of the external things. In the Scholium to the seventeenth Proposition he adds Corporis humani affectiones quarum idese corpora externa velut nobis praesentia reprsesentant, rerum imagines
2l8
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
;
and vocabimus, tametsi rerum figuras non referunt the mind does not err so long as it continues that
stops short at imagination error only begins when He these things are assumed to exist objectively. even admits that the self-knowledge of the mind can
;
not proceed further than a conception of the affections of the body (prop. 23). Similarly he observes (prop. 25)
that an adequate knowledge of the foreign bodies acting on our own cannot be derived from the affec
tions of the latter, which
is
impossible, for
actu existens percipit, nisi per ideas affectionum sui And in the corollary to prop. 29, the con corporis.
clusion of the whole matter
up, that the human soul, in so far as it contemplates things accord ing to the common order of nature, cannot attain to adequate but only to confused and partial knowledge
is
summed
itself, its own body, or external things. In reference to Space and Time, Spinoza also gives expression to views which seem like a faint fore
either of
shadowing of the Kantian doctrine. Even in the Cogitata Metaphysica he says (cap. 4) that the duration of a thing is non nisi ratione distinguishable from its existence, and that this accordingly is a token of In its existence, but by no means of its essence. like manner he observes in the passage above quoted (p. 202, note) that there can be no real agreement between actual things and the modi imaeinandi O O
;
.and he includes
among
si
numerus, mensura et
tempus,
He
Letter
is
expresses himself most clearly in the 29th where he distinguishes the -knowledge which
,
limited
Opera,
eel.
princ. p. 467.
SPINOZA.
219
winch deals with the eternal, infinite, and indivisible substance l Moreover since we can determine du ration and quantity at will, conceiving the latter apart from substance, and the former apart from its relation to things eternal, time and measure (space) come into being time to determine duration, and measure to determine quantity, in order that we may
:
imagine them as easily as possible. Then because we separate the affections of substance from the substance
itself,
and
classify
we may imagine
whereby
easily,
number
originates,
we determine
be seen that
but modes of thought, or rather of imagination (i. e. Where according to Kant, forms of sensibility). fore it is not strange that all who, by the help of similar notions, and these moreover badly under stood, have attempted to interpret the course of nature, entangled themselves marvellously in such wise as to be unable to extricate themselves without
violence and the admission of absurdities, yea of the very utmost absurdity. For there are many things which are not accessible to the imagination, but to
the intellect alone, such as substance, eternity, and others. And if any one endeavours to explain such things by means of notions which are only auxiliaries
of the imagination, he
is
only as
it
make
1
his
abstracte scilicet,
si ad quantitatem prout est in imaginatione attendimus, quod ssepissime et facilius fit, ea divisibilis, finita, ex partibus composita et
multiplex reperitur. Sin ad eandem, prout est in intellectu, attendamus, et res ut in se est, percipiatur, quod difficillime Jit, turn
ut satis demonstravi, infinita, indivisibilis et unica reperietur.
22O
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
auxiliaries
For the
example
:
If
clearer apprehension of which, take this any one were conceiving duration in
1
,
the abstract
proceeded to
it
with time,
understand
how
g.
in order that an hour should pass away, first the half must pass and then the half of the remainder, and
then the half of that remainder, and if one continues thus dividing to infinity one will never come to the end of the hour. Therefore many who are not accustomed
to distinguish the things of the mind from realities maintain duration to be composed of moments, and so
fall into
For to same as
Scylla in their desire of avoiding Charybdis. make duration consist of moments is the
to
make number
it appears sufficiently that neither number, nor measure, nor time, since they are but aids to the imagination, can be infinite
otherwise number would not be number, nor measure measure, nor time time) hence too is clearly
(for
;
to be seen
actual things, because they are ignorant of the true nature of things, actually deny the existence of the
Infinite.
It only remains now to indicate summarily the great stride in the progress of philosophical thought marked by Spinoza s doctrine. It is true that his
1
i. e.
in itself, apart
from
its
relation to eternity.
SPINOZA.
221
conception of substance seems on the one hand to make all knowledge impossible, and on the other to
make
experience superfluous ; for if our appre hension of things in time and space is only an illusion
all
human mind, which has no resource but in these forms, scale the height from which it is o to view the universe sub specie aeternitatis ? But all
this notwithstanding, it should be remembered that Spinoza was the first to realise that ideal of Reason
all
determination
is
negation,
by what
towards the unity and completeness of which others had aspired in vain, and that thus through him
scientific knowledge, in the special sense of the
first
word,
became
is
possible.
is
It
a shock
to reason,
and that a multiplicity of fundamental principles represents only so many unsolved and incomprehen sible riddles. As in religion primitive polytheism
naturally passes
nature of things, must end by attaining to a unity in which all these principles meet and harmonise.
This
is
the
way
it
in
by
its
nature to proceed.
arrested if
pauses on
nature,
is
amine
its
own
and
is
The order and regularity in phenomena, which we call nature, supplied by ourselves, and we should not find them there unless
had
first
AVC
imported them.
it
may
seem
nature, and therewith of the formal unity of nature, such an as sertion is as correct as it is conformable to its object, namely ex
perience.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
offer it
discovers that
in
teaching
Quid valeant humeri, quid
Spinoza represents the culminating point in this endeavour to find unity in the world of reality. It
undeniable that ancient philosophy ended in plural ism. The Platonic ideas stand in no such relation to
is
in
each other as that one generates or conditions another any way that would enable them to be combined
in a regular system, explanatory of the actual order of the world. In like manner the Aristotelian Forms,
or Entelechies, have an
unavowed
multiplicity,
which
cannot receive the slightest elucidation from the con ception of matter, from which they were all formed. These ideas only cease to be unintelligible, as the
whence
which
this
reached on the day when Descartes consigned to philo sophy, as a secure and inalienable possession, the one
future.
is
Descartes
complete the one namely by which he swept away the Aristotelian forma? substantiates, the occult
qualities, quintessences, &c., and established once for all a solid base for science the principle of mechani cal causality.
Something however of the unsatisfactory incom pleteness belonging to pluralism, still adhered to the
surviving unqualified dualism.
The
labours of the
SPINOZA.
223
The lessened, but not wholly relieved. mathematical method had introduced the strict rule of law in the external world, but where were the laws of the immaterial substance to be found The
"?
mind were
to be in possession of certain
was maintained that whatever by the mind had a claim to certainty; but where was the criterion of certainty, where the system which is to deduce every thing here from the uniform nature of thought and
it
and
was dare
distincte discerned
were an unfounded
a concealed pluralism. Geulinx alone, priori, to the form of judgments, endeavoured by attending for the first time to trace the operations of the mind, i.e. the nature of thought, and, as w e have seen,
i.e.
r
disclosed
the
real
substance.
Another weakness on the same side of the Cartesian dualism must also be noted. The only thing which is really us, which is in our own power, is our thought, by which Descartes understands all forms of con
sciousness, knowledge, will, imagination, sensible per ception. &c. This is, from one point of view, the great
truth of idealism, that the source of all direct know ledge is to be found in consciousness but from another
;
latet
much
Or
are
we
and overruled by countless influences which have their source in the thought of
our contemporaries and, still more, in that of an ? And even if thought were really thus inde tiquity pendent, if furthermore the will were subject to its
dominion,
this
224
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
1
Does it not tend to become a mythological entity, which so far from being arid working in subjection to universal laws, would just think and act because it chooses \ In other words, in spite of the apparent simplicity of the two prin
spiritual substance
?
ciples, is
here, on one
which
there are numerous gaps and inconsistencies. This is especially obvious in the traces of its effects upon
contemporary thought. The two substances, which have nothing in common with each other and there fore cannot act on each other, are mutually indif ferent and may subsist tranquilly side by side, so
long as neither takes any notice of the other.
But
approach, great confusion and excitement is produced. The born man of science, a mathematician and me
chanician, is distracted when reminded that there is such a thing as immaterial causation, and cries out,
the mechanical.
There There
is is
The
genuine philosopher, on the other hand, to whose share the higher problems of the mind have fallen (not an apprentice escaped from the surgery or the chemist s laboratory), vexes his soul continuously over this stupid, lumpish matter, which notwith
standing
its
phantasmal
nothingness
persists
in
thrusting staggeringly upon him at every turn. Spinoza delivered the human mind once and for
itself
SPINOZA.
225
who
suffers from them still, may turn confidently to his writings as a healing fontaine de jouvence. The universe has no outlaws strict causality rules every
;
where as much in the world of mind and thought and conscience as in the material world where its
;
presence
this
is
Why
should
seem an unwelcome infringement of the freedom of the will 1 Does not all rational and moral con duct obey an internal compulsion ex necessitate natura3 suse, while fools and wild beasts own no such law and therefore seem in one sense more free I Science only becomes possible by this means, since the succession of things and events can only be
explained
if
Only between thought or consciousness and the attribute of extension in the material world no causal connection is conceivable they are two quite different properties, and there is no reducing them to an equa
;
All serious
thinkers, such as Descartes, Geulinx, Malebranche, and soon afterwards Leibniz, saw this plainly, and
sought for a third and higher cause which might be the common condition of the unquestionable parallel ism between the two worlds. They all agreed in
having recourse to the Deity as this third cause, while they overlooked or disregarded the simplest solution of the problem, namely, that the differing elements were one and the same. Why should they not be so 1 Are not we ourselves walking instances of a similar possibility ? Have we not all an inward and an outward property the former will and con sciousness, the latter motion t
Daylight dawns upon the widening prospect
sunrise crimsons the far horizon
; ;
the
226
suggested by
carded.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
false
How
?
creation
the same time an extended or material one, able to act upon the outer world in accordance with me
chanical laws.
How
organs, which are moved by strange bodies, and by their own sensitiveness act as intermediaries of per
Thus there are creative ideas answering ception. to natura naturans, and ideas which reproduce and
reflect
creation,
natura
naturata.
thing partakes rather of its own nature, is flesh of its flesh and soul of its soul. Hence sensible per
ceptions have their place in the material world, and motion its significance for the world of spirits.
The points where Spinoza s doctrine needed to be continued, developed, and corrected by his im mediate successors may be enumerated as fol lows i. In the first place, Spinoza s substance, or Godworld, had swallowed up all difference and multi
:
plicity in its
own
unity;
proper place in the general order to each This is done by the separate and special existence.
Because we think, we E.g. I move my arm because I will. speak clothe our thoughts in words. We first perceive an object and then project it externally. The mind is the cause of the
1
development of the world, the world is the cause of the develop ment of the mind, and so on. In all these examples, the applica
tion of the causal idea
is
is
not
SPINOZA.
227
recognition of Individualism, which constitutes the true essence of all separate existence. The propo sition that all determination is negation is thus only
partially true. (Leibniz.)
uniform application of the notion of of thought and matter alike without distinction, must be set aside object and subject melt into one with him, and hence arises
2.
Spinoza
frequent interchange of causa and ratio, the material cause and the mental reason. This essential
the
distinction
(Leibniz.)
3. The beginning made by Spinoza, in recognising the causal dependence of spiritual phenomena, cleared the way for an attempt to examine more closely into
clearly
defined.
human knowledge and its connection with sensible perception, an attempt which will throw light upon the importance and necessity of
the nature of
becomes
self-evident,
and a
criti
cism of sensible perceptions becomes possible in its turn, as we ask, what, in the last resort, is purely subjective, and what qualities belong to the object
as such.
between qualitates primariae and secundarise is contributed by Locke. of human knowledge is due to 5. The superiority its possession of a special class of objects which we call ideas or conceptions. By and with their help
distinction
The
In order there accomplished. fore to decide upon their substance and reliability, the origin of ideas must necessarily be investigated,
all
is
human thought
have neither existed from eternity nor been implanted by a miracle in man. (Locke.)
since they
6.
228
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
was but
partial and apparent needs to be further His recognition of the greater and less carried out.
degree of reality possessed by these beings must be joined on to the perception, in all things, of gradual development and transition, by which the infinite
variety
is
to be
accounted for and explained. This principle of the continuity of forms must be applied also to the
serve to verify its pre the origin of man, his higher way liberty and intellectual superiority, becomes for the first time the object of investigation and a not in
causal sequence
will
and
tensions.
In
this
substance, as laid
from one grave imper to Spinoza the universe is life fection. According and activity; plus agere, minus pati is his measure of perfection, and thus he nowhere gives us anything
Descartes, suffers
really passive ; the true essence of things consists rather in their effective activity. Hence the mere
down by
insufficient
;
some other
and
is
for
material sub
of
mankind
is
man.
have seen that Geulinx was the first to for mulate the demand which it is the great merit of the Kantian Criticism to have satisfied and this
;
WE
demand, that philosophy should ascertain and trace the limits of human knowledge and understanding, was now clearly and expressly repeated by Locke. He says in the Introduction to his Essay concern I thought the first step ing human understanding towards satisfying several enquiries, the mind of man was very apt to run into, was to take a survey of our own understandings, examine our own powers, and see Till that was to what things they were adapted. I suspected we began at the wrong end, and done, in vain sought for satisfaction. Thus men, ex their enquiries beyond their capacities, and tending letting their thoughts wander into those depths where tis no wonder that they they can find no sure footing raise questions and multiply disputes, which never
: .
.
coming
to any clear resolution are proper only to continue and increase their doubts, and to confirm them at last in perfect scepticism. Whereas, were
our understandings well considered, the extent of our knowledge once discovered, and the horizon found, which set the bounds between the
the capacities of
2?O
\j
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
enlightened and dark parts of things, between what is and what is not comprehensible by us ; men would perhaps with less scruple acquiesce in the avowed
ignorance
and employ their thoughts and discourse with more advantage and satisfaction
of the
one,
in the other.
was plain that the Cartesian startingpoint, the Cogito, must lead ultimately to this view, we must grant to Locke the same kind of praise as
Although
it
first
that accorded by Aristotle to Anaxagoras for having recognised intelligence (fo?) in the world, since he first distinguished reason, as a special faculty in
so-
modi cogitandi, will, feeling, imagination, etc. He saw plainly that the essence of human superiority lay in this point, and that on it must rest the lever by which all the rest was to be upheaved. Since it is the understanding that sets man above the rest of sensible beings, and gives him all the advantage and dominion which he has over them, it is certainly a subject, even for its nobleness, worth
our labour to enquire into. A certain degree of mysticism or illuminism always lurked among the opinions of Descartes and his suc
cessors, since the
and the clear and distinct understanding, which are assumed with out foundation, can only be finally explained by a
8eterna3 veritates,
by natural and explicable by natural processes this means, conception constitutes an undying title of honour for Locke, even when due weight is given to his obli gations to Descartes, whose conception of the unity of all consciousness under the general idea Cogito had paved the way for a juxtaposition of sense and
LOCKE.
reason, in
231
which the latter could appear as lineally descended from the former. Now at last Empiricism had found the true course. The material world is no longer the only object of observation and intelligent examination the con nection between it and immaterial nature, the in creasing volume of the latter as it is fed by all the
:
streams of sensibilitv, in a word the O growth and of the mind itself, has become an open development
tl
secret,
of which
any who
will
may henceforward
sumptuous claims of the reason to contain within itself a treasure of facts and conclusions fit to solve all problems presented from without. Locke rendered the same service to the inner world. No Innate Ideas was the device under which he fought, repelling numerous and vigorous assaults. As, before Descartes, all matter was occupied by and formse substantiales, spirits, qualitates occultse from their entrenchments all reasonable ex scaring planations, so, before Locke, innate ideas held un The attack disputed sway over the minds of men. had to be directed against these, and only a life and death struggle could decide whether rational ex planation or mysticism was to have the right of
explaining the nature of reason itself. Compromise was impossible, and, as we know, Locke emerged victorious from the affray.
If ideas are innate they are a mystery, not to be Throughout the con investigated or explained.
troversy Locke follows the same route as nature, and begins by appealing to what is known of children.
are these
ideas innate,
232
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
already in the
soul
makes men know what they knew already. And then, where is the limit to be drawn
If
mathematical truths are innate, all relations of space and number must be so equally; if all self-evident propositions are innate, such truths as that sweet is
not bitter, black
also.
is
Locke to deny that much in the child was really innate, but everything upon which past philosophy had laid most stress, ideas,
It did not occur to
eternal truths of the understanding, as well as reli gion and morality, in a word, rational thought and
the highest peculiar faculties of humanity, are not innate, but, on the contrary, the product of develop ment and individual acquisition, subject of course
to the influence of education, without
which indeed
man
can scarcely grow up human. If however the human child does not come into the
world with an inborn treasure of certainties, truths, and conceptions, where then is the true origin, the sole prime source of all our ideas and knowledge, to
be sought In experience alone, which we receive ? nihil est in intellectu the gates of the senses by
:
fuerit in sensu.
The
soul
is
originally
a tabula rasa, a blank sheet upon which experience and sensation write at will.
On account of this empirical bent, Locke has been treated as a mere disciple of Bacon, while the views of the French materialistic school, and more par
ticularly of Condillac,
LOCKE.
logical
233
outcome of his doctrine. In both these cases The external injustice is done to the philosopher. connection indeed cannot be denied, but by the philo sophical substance of his doctrine, Locke belongs
group of leading thinkers who approached seriously the greatest problems of nature and mind. The method of observation and experiment advocated by Bacon dealt only with nature, Locke s doctrine endeavours by the same method to solve the mystery
to the
of the Cogito. He is thus a worthy successor of from whom he had learnt much. As to Descartes, the French materialists, our estimate of their in
significance
is
shown
sufficiently
by the
fact that it
all in
sketch, since their work consisted of wire-drawn reproductions of a few scraps simply and fragments of Lockian doctrine. Condillac s ex
planation of thought as line sensation transformee and the ingenious allegory of the animated statue
have no claim to
originality.
French materialism
was simply a
logical
Cartesian thought, combined with Epicurean sensual ism and Lockian empiricism. All hinges on the two
ideas
of
c est
sentir
1
.
Cabanis (1757-1808), Destutt de Tracy (1754-1836), and Maine de Biran (i 766-1824) were the first of the
1 Diderot and Voltaire are exceptions ; the first too profound, the latter too clear-headed to rest satisfied with the empty hollow-
The former was by conviction a monist, the same view, although it was not his nature to Je suis corps et je pense : lose himself in philosophical depths. voila tout ce que je sais, Voltaire writes in his Letters from Eng
ness of materialism.
latter inclined to the
land,
and he expressly declares that any one who maintains mere material movements to be sufficient to produce feeling and thinking beings, must have lost all traces of sound human under Rousseau stands apart in his century. standing.
234
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
French school whose efforts call for recognition. As o a whole the school remained unfruitful, stopping short of the all-important truth, the connection between thought and language. The greatness of Locke is shown by his recognising this truth so much in advance of his age, even though
the true source of the dependence, the identity of thought and speech, had not yet dawned on him.
But his eagerness to probe the nature of human reason to the bottom, and the analytical skill needed to found this chief human gift upon a scientific basis,
led
him naturally
of language, and are full of new and luminous points of view which contain some truth already, and the promise of more.
Locke
original certainty and extent of human knowledge, together with the grounds and degrees of belief, and to consider the discerning opinion and assent,
. . .
employed about the objects (i. e. ideas) which they have to do with. And 1 shall imagine, I have not wholly misemployed myself in the thoughts I shall have on this occasion,
faculties of a
this historical, plain method, I can give any account of the ways, whereby our understandings come to attain those notions of things we have, and can set down any measures of the certainty of our
if in
knowledge on the grounds of those persuasions which are to be found amongst men, so various, different and w holly contradictory. Locke reckons sensible perceptions among simple
r
ideas.
the mind.
The organs are the channels leading them to The soul is as little able to create ideas
out of nothing or to destroy those which have been framed as a man is to create or to destroy the
LOCKE.
smallest
235
sunbeam. No idea of colour can be given to the blind, nor of sound to the deaf. The latter is Reflection is opposed to sensation. of the external world, the former of the experience
mote
in the
inner one,
this is
i.
e.
ception is the representation of things external given by sensible impressions. The mind in this is purely
passive, it is as powerless to escape or alter these im pressions as a mirror to change the objects reflected in
Retention is the revival of former representations, the important power of memory and recollection, and the mind in this is not wholly passive. There is a
it.
human mind,
associated with
the faculty of recollection, namely, that the latter Whereas we only recalls its objects in succession
:
which in this faculty may so far excel man that they mav have constantlv in view the whole scene of all V V their former actions, wherein no one of the thoughts All they have ever had may slip out of their sight.
these functions belong also to the lower animals. The highest property of the reason is the power to
and in compare, distinguish, unite, and separate of brutes, in this the human mind far surpasses that
;
virtue of the gift of abstraction, or universal notions, which he alone possesses, and of which anon.
In all this we see a general outline of the analysis of mental operations, and their dependence on the world of sense, subsequently carried out with so much
clearness
and precision by Kant. Kant will modify and correct he will show that even in mere percep tion or representation some active co-operation of the mind is necessary, such as is still more apparent in reproduction or recollection but the main outline was
;
;
236
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
drawn by Locke. The opposition insisted on by Kant between mere receptivity, or passivity of sensibility, and the activity of thought, is hinted at in Locke, though the real weakness and one-sidedness of his o
doctrine has
its
Another important distinction, that is drawn by Locke, is that between sensations and the real, essential qualities of bodies, or the distinction between If we can qualitates prim arise and secund arise. learn by experience of the external world as only much as affections of our senses tell us, it becomes a question how much of the data of experience is due to this subjective element, and must be allowed for accordingly, if we wish to attain to knowledge of the
thing as it is in itself. It is obvious, for instance, that the sweetness of honey exists in our palate, not
in the
itself; heat, light, colour, sound are only in me, not qualities in things, and can only feelings be regarded as the effects produced by them on
honey
my
organs of sense.
What then
? Obviously those primary which are inseparable from the qualities idea of matter, which are the same under all circum stances and present in the smallest atoms, that is to say, solidity, extension, figure, position and number
and original
of parts, motion, &c. l The ideas of primary qualities of bodies are resemblances of them, and their patterns
but the ideas, directly exist in the bodies themselves in us by these secondary qualities, have no produced resemblance of them at all. There is nothing like
;
our ideas existing in the bodies themselves. They are in the bodies, we denominate from them, only a power to produce those sensations in us, and what
1
Essay
i.
cap. 8.
11-15.
LOCKE.
is
237
but the certain
sweet, blue or
warm
in idea, is
bulk, figure and motions of the insensible parts in the bodies themselves which we call so/ see
We
the passage from the sub l And this jective or represented to the real world also was a prelude to the great leading separation
here
The
cation of matter with space extension, introduced by Locke substitutes for it the Descartes, is set aside. idea of solidity 2 , which we receive by our touch, and
which
arises
in
body
There is no idea, which we receive more constantly from sensation, than This, of all other, seems the idea most solidity. intimately connected with and essential to body.
has
left it.
.
.
But space and solidity are distinct ideas, as are body and extension. Space therefore may be imagined either as filled with solid parts, so that another body cannot come there, without displacing and thrusting out the body that was there before, or else as void of
*
solidity, so that a
to that
without the
was there. and number are three simple stock ideas, capable of endless modifications, from which accordingly innumerable modal ideas can be derived. We obtain the idea of space by means of sight and
touch
1
;
it
may
rest
be conceivably
would be
really in
and
the world, as they are, whether there were any sensible being to 2. Essay ii. cap. 21. perceive them or not.
2
Ib. cap. 4.
i; cap. 13.
u.
238
increased,
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
and
it
leads thus to the idea of infinity. The position of an object can only be determined in relation to something else ; the place of the universe
cannot be determined, it is identical with formless, im measurable space. Without space naturally neither solidity nor motion are possible, but the latter, the
true qualities of matter, differ toto Material atoms may be divided and
:
cselo
from space.
in various
moved
The parts of space are likewise imnot separation. moveable. But to the question, whether space then
is
We
substance or accident, there is no shame in replying, do not knoiv. Only let all beware of the mislead
ing sophistries in which one is entangled if one begins to take words for things. O O It is equally hard to say what time is. St. Augus tine s answer to the question is clever Si rogas quid
:
non
rogas, intelligo.
We
reach
the conception by reflecting upon our feelings and thoughts in the order in which they succeed each
other in the mind without enduring perceptions, we should not have the idea of duration or time. The
:
on
the contrary, the latter has to be translated into a mental sequence. The succession of feelings or
thoughts always occupies a perceptible portion of time, even when its rapid passage leaves us uncon scious of the fact, while the movement of the hourhand or the growing grass is too slow for us to ob
Time and its measurement are something Time in itself always follows the same But we can never say of any even, uniform course.
serve.
different.
particular measure that we adopt, that its parts or Certain irregularities periods are perfectly equal.
LOCKE.
239
have been detected in the motion of the sun, which passed for so long as the most reliable measure of
time.
subject
The movements of the pendulum also are to variations arising from unknown causes.
prove with absolute certainty the exact equality of two immediately successive periods,
It is not possible to
and we have to
rest satisfied
cessarily to that of infinity, i. e. to the idea of eternity. The idea of time, then, also springs from the two
universal sources of knowledge, feeling and reflection. The disappearance and return of ideas in the mind
gives us the notion of succession the perception of identical existence, by the abstraction of these repre
;
by
this
unrestrained
multiplication attain the idea of eternity 1 Time and space have much in common both are infinite and cannot be limited by the world of matter.
addition
and
of
.
given duration
we
always possible to think away bodies and motion, but the most perfect mind would be unable to con I can imagine space ceive limits to space and time.
It
is
The portions of time and space which we the measurement of things are only dis
boundless uniform ocean of eternity infinity. Everything has its when and where, Time relation only to other known existences. in and space consist indeed of parts, but are reckoned
and
is itself time,
each portion of
have as little conception of their space, space. smallest atoms as of their limits, we can always
diminish or increase the unit thought
1
We
of.
The parts
Essay
ii.
cap. 14
and
17.
240
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
;
of both are absolutely indivisible continuity necessary property of space and time.
is
The
directions, while
The
none so simple,
so familiar,
and so peculiar to humanity as that of unity and number. Angels and men, objects, thoughts, things temporal and extended, all are united in number. Everything that the senses and the ideas derived from them are unable to grasp, on account of its im perceptible or overwhelming size, becomes fixed and definite as soon as it is conceived numerically, and here no limit is assigned. Numeration consists only of addition and subtraction, and both operations may be continued to infinity. Words seem even more necessary and indispensable for numerical combina tions than for the formation of any of our other ideas to a tribe that has no word for six, everything above five appears as an indefinite many, and the difficulty, which children have in learning to reckon, arises partly from inability to group their ideas in the strict logical order which has to be established among
:
ideas of
number 2
of space and time and the infinite of matter depend upon this unbounded divisibility power of addition and subtraction. Such infinity
infinity
The
transcends
all
existence of God,
human comprehension. Hence the who fills the infinite space and en
dures throughout eternity, is an object of faith only. For our reason eternity and infinity are negative ideas,
1
Essay
ii.
cap. 15.
LOCKE.
241
significance
has only resulted in controversy and contradictory opinions, since our limited powers of comprehension
before the overwhelming elevation of the object l In regard to the idea of Force, Locke was still much under the influence of the Cartesian distinction.
fail
.
The modifications of things lead us to assume every where active and passive potentialities. Properlv
wholly passive, while the supreme everywhere active. We cannot ac quire the idea of action from sensation, but from reflection, for there are in general two kinds of action The idea of thought only, motion and thought. cannot possibly be derived from bodies, and as for motion, bodies always receive it from without it is For even when, therefore passive rather than active. one body imparts to another the movement it has itself received, this only spreads and communicates
is
speaking, matter
infinite
mind
is
passively received.
Sensation
gives us therefore a very obscure impression of the first beginning of action, as the origin of motion. If
we attend to the processes of our own mind, we see much more clearly and accurately that it is we our
selves that originate
ourselves produce or arrest various kinds of motion, in accordance with our thoughts, in other words, accord
ing to our arbitrary choice. The understanding is the faculty of perception and intelligence, but the power of self-determination
towards motion or
called
will.
We
against assuming the existence of separate activities or regions of the mind, corresponding to these names. The power of acting, in accordance with one s own
1
Essay
ii.
cap.
1 7.
VOL.
I.
242
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
Its
:
choice or mental inclination, is called liberty. opposite is not necessity, but the want of freedom
if I will
for
what
is
necessary, I
am free. The
;
soul,
when
awake,
always thinking something and concentrate its thoughts and order them in regular sequence towards what is So far as a man s power of acting or agreeable to it. not acting, in accordance with his own thought and choice, extends, so far extends his freedom. Freedom thus concerns action onlv, not will. It is a direct conV tradiction to speak of the freedom of the will. What manner of thing could that be which had equal free dom to will and not to will ? Clearly a monstrosity,
far as it is able to direct
*
is
it is
free in so
a chimsera. On the contrary, the more precisely the will is determined or conditioned, the more it struggles after freedom and the less it submits to be determined from without 1
.
also wrestled gallantly with the idea of substance, showing it to be an obscure, unknown
,
Locke
something, in which
we combine
gate of qualities or predicates. what is the subject in which this weight and that colour reside, and was told, These solid and extended
he might ask again, What is the subject of parts these extended parts ? which would place us in the same difficulty as the Indian, who, after saying that
the world rested on the great elephant and the elephant upon a great tortoise, could only suppose the tortoise
to rest on
children,
Something, I know not what/ We are like and always seek some substitute, when clear
Material substance
are something which
porting,
and
immaterial substance
now
cap. 21.
LOCKE.
external objects,
243
now
But what this thing may perceive in ourselves. be, we know as little in the one case as in the other.
ideas of substance
fire
we
Forces and effects constitute the major part of our the magnet draws the iron, the
:
But we know
substance as of the substance of mind. The qualities of bodies, such as cohesion and weight, are just as in
comprehensible as the thought and will of the mind and the simplest mechanical principle of the com munication of motion by impulse from one body to
;
another,
is
equally incomprehensible.
On
the other
side, however, though we cannot possibly conceive the production of the effect, we have constant ex
perience of all our voluntary motions, as produced in us, by the free action or thought of our own minds
1
only
it is
It
of matter to be passive. And as all created spirits at once active and passive, it might be con jectured that created spirits are not totally separate
are
from matter 2 / In a word, all our ideas of substance are but col lections of simple ideas with a supposition of some thing to which they belong and in which they sub sist; and most of the simple ideas that make up our
complex ideas of substances, are not positive qualities, but powers, a fitness or capacity to operate and be
*
1
An
sounds at least like a relapse into the old errors. 2 28. The Leibnizian doctrine of monads Essay ii. cap. 23.
is
244
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
mark Locke
as
worthy fore-runner of Kant. He led vigorous on slaughts against the strongholds of the ancient dog matism, and that at the very points where Kant was
to force
walls,
an entrance afterwards.
laid
Kant
them
in ruins.
a recognition which and virtually establishes the relativity of knowledge he proceeded lastly to trace back all our knowledge
elements of
human knowledge,
and to propose the origin of ideas as the chief problem of philosophy. In all this he was reintroducing into philosophy a principle which had threatened to disappear altogether before the doctrine of substance, and especially of the una
to sensation
reflection,
and
namely, the principle of indi It is not substance that thinks, vidual existence. but the individual being, opposed to the whole re
substantial of Spinoza,
it
man
himself
Self of a thing is that proper particular exist ence of it in space and time whereby it is absolutely
The
separated and distinguished from other things as a This applies to finite things. The existence unit.
;
of God, without beginning or end or limit, can have no relation to space or time. But everything except God, whether bodies or spirits, must have a definite
beginning in time and space, permanence, unity, con ditioned throughout in time and space, an untransfer able existence of their own all this is the principium
:
individuationis.
it is
LOCKE.
necessary to distinguish carefully what
it is
245
that pro
mere mass consists perly constitutes their unity. of so many material atoms, and continues the simply same however
but
it is
differently they
may
be intermingled,
quite otherwise with the unity of organisms, In these the material particles or animals. plants, change continuously, there is continuity and com
life, of organic movements or functions. Personal identity consists of continuity of con sciousness, whereby a rational being can bring his
munity of
present existence into connection with his former action and thoughts, and consider itself as itself, the same thinking thing in different times and places.
thus quite indif Continuous consciousness, whether it sub ferent. sists in one and the same undivided substance, or in
is
substances, received successively into the organisation, this alone is the essence of personal
several
Just as animal identity exists, notwith standing the continuous change and succession of the material particles which compose the animal body, so
identity.
personal identity
may
succession and change of substance. Besides, why not several particular spirits unite together to may
make up one
is
single consciousness, as many particular Person bodies are united to build up a common life.
a judicial term, and personality the foundation of all responsibility. Every action outside the present
moment
must, in so far as the doer is to be held accountable for it, be brought into the unity of con sciousness, and be recognised by himself as belonging
and so united with his actual self 1 This im portant and new manner of view is completed and
to him,
.
Essay
ii.
cap. 27.
246
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
in conclusion to
highest and most admirable merit, his insight into the nature of general ideas, and the connection between the latter
s
We now come
Locke
and language. The faculty of abstraction and the general ideas arising from it are proper to man alone and form the
true nature of his reason.
Abstraction
certain
name
the faculty of generalising under a the ideas received from single things.
is
real existence of
these single things, such as time and place and other concomitant qualities, must be separated, and the
idea alone presented to the understanding apart, and made applicable, under a particular name, to all the
The same colour which things in which it is met. I perceive here in milk, there in snow, becomes under
the
name
this colour
white a general idea for all things in which may at any time be found. Even if it
might be doubted whether animals do not, up to a certain point, combine and extend their perceptions,
this faculty of abstraction at all events constitutes a great advantage or superiority possessed by man.
to
make use
other signs to express any kind of general idea, it is impossible to conclude otherwise than that they are destitute of the power of forming
general ideas by abstraction. Imperfection of the organs cannot be the cause of the want of speech, for
many
animals can
clearly,
several
organs, is unable to speak, finds means of expressing certain general ideas by the use of other si^ns. J O
Perhaps the true and peculiar distinction between the human species and other animals consists in this
faculty of abstraction.
Among
other
animals the
LOCKE.
247
activity of the mind is restricted within the narrow circle of isolated impressions from external objects, and their ideas are incapable of widening by abstraction.
origin of all general ideas is to be found in sensible perceptions 1 The simple ideas thence de
.
But the
No explanation will convey idea of colour to the blind. Words cannot help, any for they are only sounds. To endeavour with words
rived cannot be defined.
to
make any
one,
who has
visible
and white colour, is the same as trying to make sound and colour audible, or rather to make hearing
all
a substitute for
taste, smell,
and
The things themselves, and the ideas which we have of them and which we characterise by general names, are naturally altogether different. The former Gold is to us are real, the latter nominal essences.
something yellow, heavy, solid, but we are far from exhausting its inner qualities by this conception. How If I different is our idea of man from the real being. had such an idea of man as the divine Artificer, who beholds all the inmost springs of his bodily and
1
Essay
stellung,
i.
ii.
cap. 2.
p.
48)
Cf. Schopenhauer ("Welt als Wille und VorAlthough conceptions differ fundamentally and
materially from sensible intuitions, they stand in a necessary re lation to the latter, without which they could not exist, a relation
which accordingly makes their whole nature and essence. Reflection is necessarily an imitation, a repetition of the primitive images of the world of intuition, though an imitation of an unique kind in a
wholly heterogeneous material.
of reflection rests
upon that
2
Essay
cap. 3
and
4.
Compare with
372, ninth
ed.).
248
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
spiritual nature, this would bear the same sort of relation to present notion as the conception of the artist who executed the Strassburg clock does to
my
that of the peasant who stands gaping at it from The true reality of things, the so-called below.
for mas substantiates themselves must always remain incomprehensible to us. In nature herself there are innumerable transitional links connecting different species, which escape us, but which make a con
.
to man.
tinuous chain from the lowest inorganic being up We only classify them according to the
predicates and qualities which we regard as belong ing to the essence of each, without knowing whether question which has to be they are so really.
answered in reference to all classification according and species is this Was it the intention of nature to elaborate her works according to a definite number of unalterable forms or types, and
to genera
:
is
this
number
\ As long remains unanswered, our classi question fications cannot be founded upon realities, but are only arranged in accordance with certain sensible
throughout the
as
this
maintained
phenomena.
The
is
difference
between
real
I can say, An extended but I cannot say, Extension and body moves, solidity move, though my conception of body includes no other predicates than these. Similarly I can say, A rational animal is capable of sociability and speech, but not, Reason and animality are capable of sociabi 1 Our thought therefore, as embodied lity and speech in language, distinguishes itself between the abstract and the concrete.
indicated by language.
solid
Essay
iii.
cap. 6.
LOCKE.
249
too, are
types which
we en
deavour to embrace in our general ideas, without however succeeding in ever reaching their individual Ideas of mixed modes, on the other hand, may ity.
include the utmost variety of objects, furnished
by
the widest experience. What a vast variety of different ideas does the word triumphus hold toge ther and deliver to us as one species and so of
!
procession, inquisition,
kind
1
.
The following acute remark, if logically followed out, would have led to very important conclusions From what has been before said, we may see the
:
reason why, in the species of artificial things, there is generally less confusion and uncertainty than in
natural species. Because an artificial thing, being the production of a man, which the artificer designed,
of,
the
name
of
it
supposed to stand for no other idea, nor to import any other essence, than what is certainly to be known
and easy enough to be apprehended. Why should we not think a watch and pistol as distinct species one from another as a horse and a dog, they being expressed in our minds by distinct ideas, and to
. . .
2 The conclusion appellations ? that the earliest and most natural ideas of men, and
others
by
distinct
so also their earliest vocal expressions, must originated from their own creations might have
have been
deduced from this observation. In another passage too Locke seems to skirt unconsciously the edge of the discovery that language originated from action, and
1
Essay
iii.
cap. 5.
Ib. cap. 6.
40, 41.
250
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
more particularly from common action. It is worth our observing, he says, which of all our simple ideas have been most modified, and had most mixed modes made out of them, with names given to them and those have been these three thinking and motion are the two ideas which comprehend in them (which all action) and power, from whence these actions are conceived to flow. For action being the great business of mankind, arid the whole matter about which all laws are conversant, it is no wonder that the several modes of thinking and motion should be taken notice of, the ideas of them observed, and laid up in the memory, and have names assigned to them without which laws could be but ill made, or vice and disorder repressed. Nor could any com munication be well had amongst men, without such complex ideas with names to them The following remark is equally profound, that many words which seem to express some action,
;
;
. . .
modus operandi
at
all,
effect.
to import some action, yet truly it signifies nothing but the effect, viz. that water, that was before fluid,
become hard and consistent 2 Locke begins by professing his own ignorance how the ideas of our minds are framed, of what materials they are made, whence they have their light, and how they come to make their appearances, and appeals to experience as his only guide but this initial doubt prevailed on him to direct the illumina ting power of his genius towards this obscure region, in which he cast new and important light upon
is
.
the origin of ideas, or the function of the thinking 2 1 Ib. n. Essay ii. cap. 22. 10.
LOCKE.
faculty, so furnishing at once for future enquirers.
251
Language and ideas are thus the two inestimable means of all human knowledge. But in them too and their imperfection the true causes of most errors, false or premature opinions, and endless em bittered and profitless controversies, are to be found. Among these causes the first and most important is, that the majority of men imagine that whenever a word has been given them, a sufficient explanation
has been given also. Instead therefore of subjecting the content of the idea to a careful examination, they utter like parrots the words they have glibly
learnt
To
this
from childhood, and do not think at all. must be added the difficulty, not to say
two men shall think No the same thing, when using the same words. man has the power to make others have exactly the same ideas in their minds that he has, when they In regard to use the same words that he does.
impossibility, of securing that
the most
we
important ideas, those of morals, do not learn the words before we have the least con
ception of the things, and then afterwards join to them some idea as best we can \
religion,
faith,
grace, etc., while every one believes he must make his own ideas, clear or hazy as the case may be, the
who
standard of the meaning of the words. Most of those o are readiest to dispute about religion and con
church and creed, might and right, would be if they were summoned to keep to the and not to words with which they perplex matter themselves and others. Most controversies are mere
science,
silenced
logomachies, in which
each side thinks something different or nothing at all apropos of the words they
252
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
agree in using. By paying close attention to the meaning and the matter itself, without attaching
men would soon an understanding, were it not that passion come and interest withhold them from confessing the truth.
Language ought to serve for the acquisition of know Words without ledge and its ready communication. clear and definite ideas are empty sound. And he
who
with obscure, unintelligible words, would gain as little knowledge as any one who studied the titles and not the contents of the books
fill
did but
folios
in a large library. Language and ideas belong es to one another. He that has complex sentially
without particular names for them, would be in no better case than a bookseller, who had in his warehouse, volumes, that lay there unbound, and with
ideas,
which he could therefore make known to by showing the loose sheets, and can communicate them only by tale 1 / The man is un able to communicate his complex ideas for want of words, and therefore has to use words for all the simple ideas which go to make up the complex one. Locke also pronounces a severe sentence of con demnation upon the obscure and unintelligible discourses and disputes of scholastic philosophy, words of righteous indignation which are just as crushingly applicable to modern scholasticism as to that of the Middle Ages. He speaks of the practical curious and inexplicable web of inutility of the perplexed words with which these profound doctors win commendation, all the more because they could
out
titles
others only
Kant has used the Essay iii. cap. 10. 27. illustrate the relationship of ideas and intuitions.
was
clearly floating in
Locke
LOCKE.
*
:
253
not be understood, and continues Nevertheless, this artificial ignorance, and learned gibberish, pre vailed mightily in these last ages, by the interest
and
that
artifice
of those,
who found no
easier
way
to
and dominion they have by answering the men of business and with hard words, or employing the ingenious ignorant and idle in intricate dispute about unintelligible terms, and holding them perpetually entangled in that endless labvrinth retreats more like the
pitch attained than
of authority
dens of robbers or holes of foxes, than the fortresses which if it be hard to get them out it is not for the of, strength that is in them, but the briars and thorns, and the obscurity of the thickets
of fair warriors
;
they are beset with. For untruth being unacceptable to the mind of man, there is no other defence left for
absurdity, but obscurity One of the greatest
error,
1
.
which seems almost unavoidable as long as is associated with words and ideas, lies in the confusion of words with things, i. e. the illusion that there must necessarily be a self-subsisting Thus the Peri reality corresponding to the word.
human thought
and even the categories for actual beings, while the Platonists did the same with their ideas, and the other sects with their fundamental
souls, the horror vacui,
principles.
really in nature, distinct from body! and yet this distinction only exists in our imagination, for body
stands for a solid, extended, figured substance, whereof matter is but a partial and more confused conception,
leaving
The
principal
Essay
iii.
cap. 10.
8; 9.
254
cause
of
this
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
eternal
It
error is as Locke acutely would be difficult to persuade any one that the words which were used by his father or schoolmaster, the parson of the parish or some
saw
tradition.
The method of the schools, to lay down the most general principles, and then to deduce the rest from
these, as
from eternal truths, is uncongenial to Locke. Nothing, he holds, can be inferred from these proposi
tions; everything turns upon the correctness of the ideas involved in them. The principle of identity (what is, is) and of contradiction (the same thing cannot at
the same time both be and not be) may lead in that way to the most contradictory results. If any one agrees with Descartes in defining body to be nothing
may
e.
;
maxim what
to the
is, is
easily demonstrate that there no space void of body) by the but if the note of solidity is added
conception of body, the existence of space without body will be as easily demonstrated as the
^.
which are extolled as the bulwarks of truth, can afford no protection against errors arising from the
careless or confused use of ideas.
Locke s endeavour was to give in all cases a fixed and definite sense to the ideas which have been handed down to us by the tradition of generations and by means of language, and which have been so far obscured and confused by the countless accidents attendant on their origin as to be unavailable for
profound philosophic use without such revision. into the nature of speech and reason must insight
convince us that this
1
is
Essay
iii.
cap. 10.
15, 16.
Essay
iv. cap. 7.
n,
14.
LOCKE.
that in
fact
255
is
bound up with
these forms, and accomplishes itself according to them by a kind of natural necessity, so that it is
only a matter of development, of slowly ripening in telligence, when the human mind frees itself grad ually from the prejudices and conceptions of the past,
and substitutes
contained
solar
all
which
more adequate,
wheel which, revolving in or with the heavens, was for long millenniums among the most certain
facts of the primitive races, the chariot of the sun, driven by Helios above the brazen vault, succeeded it then a vast fiery disk, and, lastly, a huge central
;
body round which our earth revolves, held by the And now we have to invisible band of attraction. confess that this last power, attraction, is no more
intelligible to us to-day than the divinities of the past, and will have no doubt in time to make way
for a clearer
and more complete conception. Thus the growth, reformation, and transformation of ideas, constitutes itself the very process of rational develop ment. We, however, whether we choose or no, are subject to this rule, and the sum and substance of all
the ideas of a period is only the expression of the prevailing view as to the world at large.
The great problem of the connection and relation between the spiritual and the material world is likewise touched upon by Locke and expounded upon
All power relating to action, Cartesian principles and there being but two sorts of action, whereof we have any clear idea, viz. thinking and motion let us consider whence we have the clearest ideas of the powers which produce these actions. Of thinking, body affords us no idea at all, it is only from reflection
:
256
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
that
we have
in the world, that man knows or conceives. First, such as are purely material, without sense, perception
Secondly, sensible, thinking, perceiving beings, such as we find ourselves to be. ... It is as impossible to conceive, that ever bare, incogitative matter should produce a thinking intelligent being,
as that nothing should of itself produce matter. Matter by its own strength cannot produce in itself so much as motion the motion it has must also be from eternity, or else be produced and added to matter, by some other being more powerful than matter yet matter, incogitative matter and motion, whatever changes it might produce of figure and bulk, could never produce thought. ... If we suppose bare matter, without motion eternal motion can never begin to be if we suppose only matter and motion first, or eternal thought can never to be 2 But if we suppose matter itself to be begin
.
.
or thought.
cogitative,
fresh
difficulties
arise,
for the
question
presents thinks?
itself,
And
question remains, how a composition of particles of matter, each whereof is incogitative, is to form a The only whole, possessing the faculty of thought. remaining hypothesis is that of an eternal intelligent
created matter out of nothing. If that we cannot conceive this, he replies, objected neither can we conceive how our bodily limbs are moved by our own will. This is matter of fact which
Being,
who has
it is
cannot be denied explain this and make it intelligible, and then the next step will be to understand creation.
:
For the giving a new determination to the motion of the animal spirits (which some make use of to explain
1
Essay
ii.
cap. 21.
4.
Essay
iv.
cap. 10.
9, 10.
LOCKE.
257
voluntary motion) clears not the difficulty one jot. ... If you do not understand the operations of your own
mind, that thinking thing within you, do not deem it strange that you cannot comprehend the
finite
who made
and governs
all
things, and
whom
the heaven of
Here Locke,
the Deity,
is
who
and repeated eulogy from Voltaire, and violent attacks from bigots, he admits the possibility of matter being endowed by God with the property of thought We have the ideas of matter and thinking, but, possibly, shall never be able to know whether any mere material being thinks, or no. ... We know not wherein thinking consists, nor to what sort of substances the Almighty has been pleased to give that power, which cannot be in any created being, but merely by the good pleasure and bounty of the Creator. For I see no contradiction
has called
loud
:
eternal thinking being should, if he pleased, give to certain systems of created matter, put together as he thinks fit, some degree of sense,
in
it
that the
first
What certainty of and thought. can any one have that sense-perceptions, knowledge such as e.g. pleasure and pain, should not be in some bodies themselves, after a certain manner modified
perception,
. .
.
and moved, as well as that they should be in an immaterial substance upon the motion of the parts of body ? Body as far as we can conceive, being able only to strike and affect body and motion to the utmost reach of our ideas, being able according so that when we to produce nothing but motion
; ;
1
Essay
iv.
cap. 10.
iS
18, 19.
VOL.
I.
258
allow
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
it to produce pleasure, or pain, or the idea of a colour or sound, we are fain to quit our reason, go beyond our ideas, and attribute it wholly to the
good pleasure of our Maker. ... It becomes the modesty of philosophy not to pronounce magisterially, where we want that evidence, that can produce knowledge. And therefore it is not of such mighty necessity to determine one way or the other, as some
over-zealous for or against the immateriality of the soul have been forward to make the world believe.
Who
either,
on the one
side,
their thoughts, immersed altogether in matter, can allow no existence to what is not material or who
;
not cogitation within the natural powers of matter, examined over and over again by the utmost intention of mind, have the
side, finding
on the other
confidence to conclude that omnipotency itself cannot give perception and thought to a substance which
solidity.
He
that considers
how hardly
sensation
hath no extension at all, will confess that he is very It is a far from certainly knowing what his soul is. point which seems to me to be put out of the reach of our knowledge. Since on whichever side he views it, either as an unextended substance, or as a thinking, extended matter the difficulty to conceive
.
.
.
drive
him
An
unbiassed understanding
1
V
iv. cap. 3.
6.
Essay
LOCKE.
259
This argument serves Locke as an illustration to prove that our knowledge is limited, not only by the
scanty number and imperfect nature of our ideas, but also by its failure to come up even to these.
the contrary, in the attempt at their application entangled in doubts, difficulties, and con Locke might have drawn hence the tradictions.
On
we become
conclusion that the merely empirical origin of our ideas was not to be accepted unreservedly, since mere experience, even in the condensed form of ideas, can
never
fall
into self-contradictions.
Some
other ele
ment must
and
comparison of ideas, some interpreting and explaining faculty must co-operate, the unconscious postulates
of which are the subject of metaphysics. The in compatibility of the ideas dealt with here may
however be
easily explained. It proceeds from the fact that something has been included in each of the con
Locke ceptions which the other absolutely excludes. conceived matter as extended, consisting of parts, moveable, passive, and mind as alone conscious,
thinking, perhaps also moving, in any case active. Such ideas must naturally and for ever exclude each
Truth can only be reached when it is seen that thought has separated, by abstraction, what in reality never appears as separate, or in other words, that not one of our ideas corresponds to a true reality, but that all are woven with a woof of ideality. Locke did not go beyond this modest attempt to assert the possibility that a material being might at the same time be a sensitive one. Indeed he seems to have looked with surprise at his own audacity, for in the tenth chapter of the same book he weakens the force
other.
of his argument by proving the opposite. To sum up once more the great achievements of
s 2
26O
this fertile
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
and vigorous thinker, we have to reckon and novel additions to the store of philosophic
as real
consciousness,
empirical, observant study of the human reason, as the gift most characteristic of mankind
1.
The
all higher knowledge. The per that general ideas are the true objects of ception the reason that they originate naturally, and are
;
men by abstraction an intimation of the the connection between them and language statement of the problem as to the origin of these ideas the tracing them back to sensible impressions,
perfected in
; ; ;
From what
All his ideas and thoughts proceed knowledge. equally from individual perceptions or contact with
all
knowledge
follows.
To
it
appreciate the new truths at both these points needs but to contrast the undeterminate sub-
stantia cogitans with its innate ideas and eternal The reality of the individual is maintained truths.
in
reason obviously passes through a course of develop ment. And thought, represented by Spinoza as ac
strict causal
laws as
fertilised
and
per to
S.
3.
itself.
The idea of
was shown
^
to
be in
accessible to
its origin
was
LOCKE.
^x
26l
4.
sions
tates
The distinction between our sensible impres and the true qualities of objects, between qualiprimarisR and secundarise, points the way to
the future distinction between things as thought or imagined, and things by themselves.
hesitation between individualism pure and which can only conceive things as they are simple, 1 given by the senses and imagination and can there fore never go beyond its subjective standpoint, and the assumption of an objective world, actually existing in itself in space and time. 2. This indecision prevented Locke from entering upon a more thorough investigation of the nature of reason, and showing what is originally proper to reason and what nature and characteristics have grown up and been developed through the reception of sense-impressions. To Locke 1\he mind appeared as an originally dark room, into which rays of light from the outer world penetrate by certain rifts and cracks, and so increase and complete the thinking faculty.
1.
,
The
active side of this faculty, however, is much neglected and often wholly overlooked, while the
The
analysis of reason
most with
this
has obviously to occupy itself the nature of the senses and conjec
tures as to the true nature of the outer world being of comparatively little consequence.
3.
1
rational
as an individual,
it is
am
fixed
knowledge, and
in
itself,
much
con indirectly, in so far as they come within the range of sciousness, in so far as they are represented in rny sensations and
my
my
thoughts.
262
MODEKN PHILOSOPHY.
knowledge appears as a process effected from and by the world of sense without. According to Locke,
the real, i.e. matter, generates images or the ideal in the knowing mind by impulse or shock.
We
massive realism, which, pro contradiction by its very exorbitance, occa voking sioned the idealism of Berkeley 1 And as Locke, in accordance with his strict empiricism, represented the law of causality itself as a discovery from experience,
fine
.
Hume s doubt, who declared the whole causal conception to be unreal and naught, and so in his turn gave occasion directly to the profound
he suggested
investigations of Kant.
profound and important view that general ideas are the true objects of thought was not as much
4.
Locke
and developed by him as the importance of the subject and the simplicity of the principle allowed and required. It was necessary, and he himself held it to be the chief task of philosophy, to examine carefully into the origin of ideas, and that not only by means of sensible perceptions or self-observation the origin of ideas from preceding ideas as revealed in the history of human language should have been set forth too.S-It is true that in the age of Locke such an undertaking would have been difficult, not
utilised
;
as
to
man
can form
ideas without words, and that the latter are only conventional signs for ideas already existing in
thought
2
.
Clearer knowledge on this point would have en abled Locke to define the concepts of thought and
1
Schopenhauer, Parerga, i. p. 16. See Max Miiller, Lectures on the Science of Language,
ii.
p. 75.
LOCKE.
263
of ideas far more sharply, and he would not then have ascribed to mere sense-impressions the character and value of ideas. It is certain that the mind is able to retain and receive distinct ideas long before it has the use of words, or comes to that, which we commonly call the use of reason. For a child knows
*
as certainly, before it can speak, the difference be tween the ideas of sweet and bitter (i. e. that sweet
is
not bitter), as
it
it
comes
to speak) that
are not
the same thing 1 The discovery that the key to the of thought lies hid in language was not to mystery
ripen till a much later day. The first clear indication, besides those given by Geulinx and Locke, is to be met
with in Schopenhauer, in various passages of his chief work, Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung, especially vol. i. pp. 566-70, where he hazards the conjecture that the real categories of thought will be found
in the partes orationis, that
is
to say in
grammar.
Very
Locke
is
his
observation about
It is very surprising that no 45) philosopher has yet traced all the various mani festations of reason back to one simple function,
p.
:
which might be recognised in them all, bv which ^ O O all be and which would there they might explained,
fore
be seen to constitute the proper, inner nature The admirable Locke, indeed, describes of reason.
abstract universal ideas quite rightly, as marking the distinction between man and beast, and Leibniz
repeats
Locke comes,
But when complete assent. to the explana Book, tion of reason itself, he loses sight of this chief characteristic altogether, and falls into an hesitating,
this
with
in
his fourth
Locke, Essay
i.
cap.
i.
15.
Cf. the
of this view
by
Max
264
indefinite,
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
fragmentary expression of incomplete and second-hand opinion, and the same must on the whole be said of Leibniz in the corresponding passage
A
of his work.
Locke s intellectual greatness, and the extent of his influence upon the subsequent development of philosophy, is duly recognised by Scho Locke was the penhauer, in the following passage
timel
:
At the same
who
must
wishes to prove or derive anything from ideas first investigate the origin of these ideas, as
their content and everything thence deducible must be determined by their origin, as the source of all the knowledge attainable through them. The history of the development of human ideas is in fact the most important, if not the only task of the 1 philosophy of the future )
.
As this truth is still only just beginning to dawn upon the general consciousness, the following utterances of a distinguished thinker, who obviously had some perception of its truth, may be
Locke s Critique of Reason eventuates, accordingly, in quoted here a criticism of language, which, according to its leading idea, is of The important higher value than any other part of his system.
:
but apart from the preparatory labour of philologists, little material progress has been made since. And yet by far the greater number
of the conclusions which are applied in philosophic science only go, as it were, upon all fours because ideas and words are being con
tinuously interchanged.
mutation continuelle de
et
la matiere.
De
Vie
de
Intelligence.
WE
reinstated in his rights, the Cartesian starting-point renewed, and the cogito referred with increased clear
ness and precision to human thought properly so called. Our study of the individual thinking man
is
the
source
whence
all
information respecting
the value, limits, and origin of knowledge must be derived. Though the matter of knowledge proceeds from particulars, i.e. from single perceptions, enquiry only confirmed the truth enunciated by Aristotle,
that thought depends upon general conceptions, and that accordingly predicates and their combinations
constitute the essence of all our intellectual opera
tions.
to himself
was
to give the individual a place in the self-subsisting world outside our knowledge, and to attempt an
interpretation of the universe in which, starting from individuals and particulars, whose dependence from
and co-operation with the whole should be recognised, a certain independence and self-subsistence should also be recognised as constituting their true essence.
finds
266
its
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
first expression in the atomic theory of Demokritos and Epikuros. This corresponds to the natural course uniformly taken by the human reason,
which always begins by looking for its principles in the objective world, and only discovers at a later
time their true source within
itself.
It is there
fore nothing strange that the multiplicity of senseperceptions should receive their first explanation
But
what lends
is
its real
the unity of nature, unconsciously underlying the multiplicity of individuals and recognised by the process of abstraction, in which reality is conceded
only to those sensible qualities of things which admit of quantitative determination, such as form, position,
And these are the same qualities which constitute the base of the mathematical view of nature, and form, in other words, the true nature,
motion, weight.
the qualitates prim arise of matter, recognised by all true science and all later philosophy, including that
of Descartes, Spinoza, Locke, Leibniz, and Kant. thinker like Leibniz, who early recognised the profound significance of individual existence, was
naturally attracted towards the atomic theory, while yet he could not fail to discern its incompleteness, and
its collapse at
diffi
culties of the philosophic problem begin. From this point of view his own account of his earlier days,
given in a letter to
:
Remond de Montmort
1
,
is
inter
remember that, for days together, I used esting to walk up and down in a little wood near Leipzig, called the Rosenthal, considering whether I should retain the substantial forms. The mechanical view gained the upper hand at last, and led me to matheI
1
Leibnitii
Opera Philosophica,
ed.
Erdmann,
p. 702.
LEIBNIZ.
matics.
ciple
267
of the
But when I sought for the ultimate prin mechanism in the laws of motion I
returned to metaphysic, from the material to the formal, to the assumption of Entelechies, and at last
discerned, after often revising and developing ideas, that monads, or simple substances, are the only
my
real substances,
and
must the significance of the Leibnizian system. recall the vast contradictions and inconsistencies in
which human thought had landed itself before him, in order to do justice to his philosophy as the last vigorous attempt at a reconciliation of the real and
the ideal worlds, instead of regarding it as a laborious concatenation of self-made difficulties.
We
uni-
opposites,
which may be
Freedom and
self-determination
and
of
Passivity of matter.
Infinite divisibility of matter.
Unity and
Intellectual
causes.
indestructibility
and always with some degree of creative power, upon every field of human knowledge. His attachment to Aristotle has its root in a certain in
entering,
tellectual affinity.
less
The resemblance
lies
in the rest
its
268
flashes
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
and reveals new views and possibilities, but never endures long enough for a complete structure to be developed out of a single principle. Hence with him, as with Aristotle, repetitions are frequent,
and abrupt transitions which disappoint expectation at the most critical moment. Kant says of him
:
real insight,
by the
help of which the sciences were enriched, but he was still more fertile in conceptions for the complete
With
such a temperament it is not surprising if his pre mises were often vacillating and insecure. He says
himself in a letter to
describing O
Demokritos: Cependant j ai change et rechange sur de nouvelles lumieres et ce n est que depuis douze
ans environ que je me trouve satisfait. The name of Leibniz is however indissolubly as
sociated with
two
of
ideas,
in
his
own
Harmony.
former, though only a germ, is a lasting and valuable philosophical possession, of which we shall
The
development until various an have passed away. The latter, on tiquated prejudices the contrary, is a mere dogmatic artifice for evading a question which has been so stated as not to admit
hardly see the
full
of solution.
As however
was most attached to his least hopeful offspring, and he was wont, especially in his later years, to return again and again to this favourite error, when in his
controversy with English philosophers he wished to accentuate the agreement between his doctrine and
the dogmas of Christianity. Leibniz, who was committed to a reconstruction
LEIBNIZ.
269
of the real world, logically starts, like Spinoza, from the idea of substance. He summarily dismisses the
this
The idea of substance is not so obscure, conception. he thinks, as people imagine. What is necessary may be known of it as much as of other things ;
nay the knowledge of the concrete always precedes that of the abstract and people learn to know hot
;
V
by
itself to
show that
the essential characteristic of substance, that is to say existence, was educed from concrete particulars,
or, in
the
in single things.
was necessary in
revert always to les natures explaining things simples ; Leibniz discerns the true substances simples in individual units whose true nature consists in
their existence in
his
first
and determination,
Dissertation, in
Schoolmen,
individuatur.
is thus, according to Scholastic a decided Nominalist, and holds that the par ideas, ticular has a claim to actual real existence.
Omne He
are each
These original units are the monads. The monads its own independent world, simple, inde structible, and exclusive of all remaining existence
their qualities are described as follows.
destructible,
:
altogether passive
for action
result, it
must be penetrated by these infinitesimal, unextended, infinitely numerous units of which per1
liumain, p. 238,
Erdmuim.
270
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
For it is impossible ception and will are properties. that merely mechanical causes should produce any thing like consciousness and perception. The monads
might
idea
is
by
far the
most
perfect.
The dim
.
our perceptions in syncope may serve as an image of the simple monad l It is certain that Leibniz conceived the whole
world
to be penetrated
and, pro tanto, as organic, so that nothing could exist without secret properties, individual character, and
self-determination.
that
expression, II fa,ut reunir Democrite et Spinoza ; is to say, everything is individualised and every
is
2
,
thing
animated.
zeaux
You
He
substances there are besides animals, whose complete annihilation has hitherto been erroneously assumed.
But if there are in nature other living organised bodies besides the lower animals, as is very probable, as the example of plants may show, these bodies must
have simple substances or monads, which give them life, i. e. perception and will, although this per There are obviously ception need not be sensation. an infinite number of possible degrees of perception, and that also among living beings. 3 There is Similarly in the Monadologie, he says a world of creatures, of living things, animals, entealso
:
Opera, ed. Erdmann, p. 676. He expresses his views still Natura clearly in the letter to Wagner, Erdmann, p. 466 ubique organica est, et a sapientissimo auctore ad certos fines
more
ordinata, nihilque in natura incultum censeri debet, etsi interdum non nisi rudis massa nostris sensibus apparet.
3
Monadologie,
66-70.
LEIBNIZ.
lechies,
271
minutest particle of matter. Every part of matter may be considered as a garden full of plants, or a tank full of fishes. But every branch of the plant, every member of the animal,
souls
in
the
is is
nothing unfruitful, nothing dead in the universe, no chaos, no disorder. Every living body has a central monad or ruling entelechy, but the members of the
living
body are
full
each of which again has its own entelechy. When the time comes for describing the connection
or concomitance of the
the same obscurity appears in Leibniz as in Spinoza, when he attempts to explain at once the unity and the independence of the two causal series, of
(p.
206
ante).
unextended immaterial nature, endued with perception and appetite, contain the true indestruct ible essence of substance, and so far Leibniz starts
upon the
whom consciousness
of Descartes, according to the most certain and primitive of qualities, while matter and extension sink into the rank of phenomena. Leibniz frequently expresses
original line
is
himself in this sense, and so to some extent, as Scho l penhauer observes anticipates both his own and the
,
Kantian doctrine, quas velut trans nebulam vidit. Thus much is certain, that there can be no direct action of monads upon matter or of matter upon monads, and accordingly an appeal to the Deity as the central monad becomes necessary here. This power has so ordered everything in both worlds from the beginning, that through the whole course of time the correspondence between the two is unfailingly exact,
1
Parerga,
i.
80.
272
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
is
attended by a
modification of material substance, answering to it as if tine connection between the two were causal. There
Leibniz
are three alternative explanations, as in the case of s well-known illustration of two clocks keep
.
ing exact time together, i That the same mechanism regulates the motion of both ; 2. that some one from
time to time readjusts their works so as to bring them again into agreement or 3. that both were from the
;
first
so perfectly constructed as to
make divergence
The influxus physicus would correspond impossible. to the first case, but is inadmissible, since it is incon ceivable that mind should act upon matter or matter
upon mind. The second hypothesis corresponds to the occasional causes of Malebranche and Geulinx, which presuppose continuous divine intervention; the
third hypothesis alone is worthy of the Deity, and this is the doctrine of the pre-established harmony. The points of contact between Leibniz and Des
and Spinoza, as well as those of divergence, The Cartesian cogito involves the are easily visible.
cartes
being whose original properties are thought, feeling, and will. As Leibniz, and subse quently Schopenhauer, used this ego as a key to inter
an
intellectual
pret the universe, they necessarily attributed to the innumerable other egos the same attributes that they had met with in their own. Leibniz is thus to a
and his sub method, and with Spinoza s broad universalism. jective
certain extent at one with Descartes
latter brings the manifold into unity, treating it as a mere ripple on the surface, while Leibniz saw
The
J
.
to Spinoza
The metaphor used by Leibniz is characteristic of his opposition that the monads are rays (figurations) of the Deity.
LEIBNIZ.
273
as an
exaggerated individualism, Spinoza extreme universalism. Human thought is carried on within the universe, and is only to be explained by the help of abstraction and opposition, i. e. by indi vidualism. Hence human thought can never succeed in looking at the world from without, still less has it
the right to impose
its
doctrine as an
est res
own
capital error to reduce everything to individual ex istence, and to assume the latter to subsist as an
unchangeable entity through all eternity, as if all ideas, strivings, and effects crystallised in unextended points, without considering that this indivi duality itself is a product, however mysterious and unfathomable one of its elements may be, of an im measurable world of forces around, and an equally
immeasurable duration of forms of consciousness and intellectual effort, which must be taken to
gether to account for the present constitution of the
individual, its thought, and will, as actually existing. It may be said Spinoza represents the world as
:
were no individuals, Leibniz, on the other The former hand, as if there were no universals. leaves unexplained the way in which particular things detach themselves from the universal sub stance and assume an independent existence, while
if there
Leibniz
is compelled to resort to miracles to explain the coexistence and interaction of the monads or in
dividual existences
l
.
between
VOL.
I.
274
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
out
The opposition between matter and mind is worked much more profoundly by Leibniz than by Des
According to the latter, matter is identified with extension, and becomes, together with motion, the object of purely mechanical explanation. Leib niz, on the contrary, discerns that although motion,
cartes.
as associated with matter, appears to us as passive and mechanical, yet, viewed in itself and traced to its
true source orfons mechanismi, there is also an element of activity in it, the interpretation of which is to be
sought in our own consciousness, and not without. Hence he distinguishes the materia prima, to which form is properly opposed, from the materia secunda, which is already moulded. Materia est quod consistit
in antitypia seu
quod penetranti resistit, atque ideo nuda materia mere passiva est V Bodies possess a their nature certain vis activa apart from matter includes some entelechy, soul, or something analogous to a soul. Every monad has an organised body, but there are endless grades of animation, and the lowest escape our observation as infinitely slight movements do. Les corps agissent selon les lois des causes efficiLes ames agissent selon entes ou des mouvements.
;
les lois
moyens.
Et
les
deux regnes,
autres des le
commencement des choses ait regard a elle. Car puisqu une monade creee ne saurait avoir une influence physique sur I interieur de 1 autre, ce n est que par ce moyen que 1 une peut avoir de la dependence de 1 autre. Or cette liaison ou cet 56. accommodement de toutes les choses creees a chacune et de chacune
a toutes les autres,
fait
par consequent un
p.
678.
LEIBNIZ.
entre eux
1
275
Everything occurs in the world of mind as if there were no bodies, and in the world of matter as if there were no soul.
.
a foreshadowing of the truth that in the slightest and most rudimentary modifica tions of material phenomena an immaterial principle
is
involved, which naturally never becomes apparent to the senses, but to which we have a key in ourselves,
will.
way the order of beings, according to their of animation, or in other words, according to degree the elaborateness of their organisation, with its attend ant of heightened consciousness, becomes intelligible to us. Leibniz is clear on this point in the letter
to Wagner (Erdmann, p. 466) The modifications of the antitypy (impenetrability) are only changes of place, the modifications of extension are only changes
:
In this
of magnitude and form in all this matter appears as purely passive but in motion itself there must
:
reside an internal principle which is quite different from the matter that is moved. Schopenhauer calls
this principle Will, and does not ascribe consciousness to it ; Leibniz, after Aristotle, calls it Entelechy, and
it something analogous to the human soul, and therefore some kind of consciousness, which may
sees in
be conceived at
with
far
more
many
I reply, thirdly, accordingly the name of perception. he says, that this active principle, this prime Ente
which, in the case of animals, I regard as their souls. In assuming matter to be in all cases attended with
1
Monadologie,
79.
276
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
assume
also
everywhere vital principles which perceive, or monads, so to speak metaphysical atoms, which are indivisible and inde
principles of activity, I
As to what regards the soul, this may structible. be taken either in a wider or a narrower sense. In the first sense, it is the same as life itself, a principle
of inward activity existing in a simple thing or and corresponding to its external activity.
monad
This
parallelism between the outward and the inward, or representation of the former in the latter, of the com
many
this is
and
possession of animals, but is shared by all perceivingIn the more restricted sense, the soul is a beings.
life, a life of feeling, not the bare for perception, but conscious feeling, with capacity which attention is associated. The third and high
whose essence
ral conclusions ita
consists in the
:
human, the anima rationalis, power of drawing gene ut ergo mens est anima rationalis,
est vita sensitiva et vita est principium There is also a perceptio insensibilium, perceptivum.
anima
as I should be unable
I e. g. to perceive green, unless could at the same time perceive yellow and blue, by A soul or an a mixture of which colours it is made.
animal before
those
its
birth
and
after its
death
differs
from
living, not in its nature, but only in its in the order of things and its degree of perfec place tion. Matter, or the outer garment, changes con tinuously ; it is a natural mechanism, always in flux ;
now
the organism
is
w hich
r
every part had been renewed ; the organic form is Genii cannot constantly renewed from the monads.
exist without bodies, but have far more perfect ones, and perhaps have the power of changing their bodies.
LEIBNIZ.
277
The same analogies run through the whole of nature, and it is easy to distinguish the finer from the coarser elements, both of which follow the same kind of
course.
true substance, without material admixture, since he is always actus purus, not like All matter, endowed with the power of suffering.
alone
is
God
clothed with matter, thev v have the property of the antitypy, which effects by natural means that one thing shall always be external to another and not penetrated by the
other.
He
mentatio de
one will believe that there is any power of perception in a mill, a watch, or similar artificial
machines.
No
However
mechanism
en
may
be,
we
can
still
imagine
it
indefinitely
larged, parts as
so
that
we
could
we do
in a mill,
everywhere parts only, not perception. Hence it follows certainly that it would be impossible to deduce either perception, activity, or motion from
mere mechanism or materia nuda. It is therefore necessary to assume something in addition to matter which shall serve to explain at once the inner ac or mo tivity or perception, and the outer activity
tion.
We
call
this
mitiva, Entelechy
These passages show us the salient points of the One admires the intellectual Leibnizian theory.
is naturally application expended in separating what so that throughout motion represents the united,,
fleeting, ephemeral,
278
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
this,
having nothing in common with the motion but so perfectly regulated corresponds, by the Divine watchmaker that the two continue in And perfect correspondence throughout eternity. human freedom is to be preserved at the same time, notwithstanding the regular course of the world on its mechanical side alone makes all divergence from
with
to
which
it
who
Schopenhauer, seldom quite just to Leibniz, speaks on this 1 The monstrous absurdity point with great severity of his assumption was promptly pointed out by a contemporary, Bayle, who placed the necessary con But he adds Yet sequences in the clearest light. the very absurdity of the hypothesis which a thought
impossible
:
!
is
to accept, itself proves the magnitude, the intricacy, and the difficulty of the problem attempted, and how impossible it is to evade
ful
its
existence, as has
his
which have since his day system were become exploded, and partly truths which have not even yet received due recognition. I reckon among
the former:
i. The view established by Locke arid Newton, with the concurrence of the Cartesians, that matter is something purely passive, which received its first impulse from the divine hand and continues to re
volve soul-lessly, retaining always the same quantum of motion as at first, and forming thus an invari
able
to
mathema
tical rules.
2.
necessarily simple,
1
and therefore
It is thus
p. 8.
LEIBNIZ.
79
itself,
and the
individuals
the
Platonic
ideas,
only in countless numbers, must all continue to It is true that exist through eternity. continuity
of individual consciousness is only attributed to man, both on account of the higher dignity whereby he enters into communion with the spirits who have intercourse with God, and because of the theological
recognition of an inner active principle co-operating or rather operating in everything which stirs or moves.
dogma of rewards and punishments. The truths are 1. The animation of all things; the
:
The emphasising of the individual, as to which we feel and are taught by nature that it constitutes
2.
all things, which are ever striving not only after subsistence, but after
and developed being. Two prevalent were herewith corrected (a) That of Spinoza, whose one substance swallowed up .all particular existences and made them incom
heightened
errors
:
prehensible.
This
is
disproved,
as
Schopenhauer
observes, by the unspeakable sufferings of the world and the ruthlessness of nature.
that universals, the elements of thought, can ever include or express what is indivi dual. This error flourished down to our own day in
(b)
The
error
the natural sciences, where it was assumed that all so-called natural forces were entities, things in them selves, until the pregnant word was spoken by Robert
Mayer,
said
:
On
280
ils
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
1
comme
autre chose que la pensee, disent que la matiere n est quand Car 1 ame est un sujet, autre chose que 1 etendue.
disent que aussi
ils
ame n est
la
L Ecole
agit
3.
The problem of
sensible
perception
and the
inner structure of the organism can only be solved by assuming universal and particular animation, ex
i.
tending throughout the most minute material atoms, e. by the perceptions infiniment petites of Leibniz.
Philosophy of the Unconscious, which has been proclaimed in our days with oracular preten
so-called
The
tiousness and a bombastic waste of crude phraseology, contains a slender kernel of truth, long ago discovered
by Leibniz and clearly traced out into all its ramifying consequences. There are innumerable infinitely small perceptions of the body which do not attain the clearness of the intellectual principle which attends
principally to the action of the chief organs of sense (the central monad of the rational human mind), and
they remain therefore in the obscurity of an apparent unconsciousness. Leibniz correctly uses these dim per
ceptions to explain not only the vegetative functions of the body, but also the so-called mechanical or
instinctive
actions
of men,
i.
e.
those
which have
to be performed unconsciously. It is impossible to close our the presence of a eyes to element in such acts as walking, dancing, perceptive
writing, or playing the piano, quite independent of the central consciousness, and indeed only liable to have its accuracy disturbed by having the attention
it.
Lettre a
Eemond
de Montmort,
736, Erdmanu.
LEIBNIZ.
so far as I
28l
aware, has never received its due con should be associated with the Darwinian sideration, doctrine of development as one of the most important
principles of explanation. 4. This idea is closely connected with the thought of those continuous, gradual transitions which meet
am
us everywhere in nature, and laugh at the rigid lines of demarcation which men lay down for their own
guidance in dealing with isolated kinds or species. Leibniz s two favourite and fundamental axioms are
Natura non
formarurn.
facit
saltus,
All
changes
upon
which
the
all
infinitely little,
in
is
organisation supplies material for an infinite multi The same gradation obtains plicity of living beings.
in the case of
is
minds
There
a great difference between the feeling of animals and the reflection of human thought. II est raisonnable
aussi qu il y ait des substances capables de perception au-dessous de nous, comme il y en a au-dessus, et que notre ame, bien loin d etre la derniere de toutes, se
trouve dans un milieu dont on puisse descendre et E monter autremerit ce serait un defaut d ordreV
;
that there
is
this
is
no
vacuum
in the material world, so the greatest possible multiplicity and variety exists amongst reasonable
creatures.
There
is
only infinitesimally inferior to the last, until we reach the lowest of natural objects with the least possible measure of organisation V Especially interest
ing
1
is
Hermann,
6.
Sur
p.
431.
iii.
Entendemeut Humain,
12.
282
in
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
which the subsequent discovery of zoophytes and I should marvel less at the polypi is forestalled discovery of such animal plants, because I am con vinced that such things must have an existence in
:
creation.
They
will
by
naturalists,
when
creatures, that escape ordinary observation by their minute size or their concealment in the recesses of
earth and water, come to be investigated. Observa tion is a thing of yesterday how then can we deny
:
a priori the existence of that which we have as yet Another striking had no opportunity of seeing 1
observation refers to the
essentise reales,
much debated
question of
which in
fact
problem of the nature of kinds and species, and by which throughout the middle ages philosophers were divided into the two camps of Nominalism and Realism If the essentise reales are taken to be only substantial patterns, or types such as a body and nothing else, an animal without other special qual one ities, a horse without individual characteristics
:
might
fairly
condemn them
as chimseras
1
.
And
believe that no one, even of the chief realists, has main tained that there are as many purely generic sub
stances, as there are genera. that the essentise reales were
But
mere
prove
I have often
pointed out that there are possibilities of resemblance. One cannot form too vast an image of nature s
. . .
liberality, it
transcends all human thought, and all conceivable possibilities find themselves realised upon her great theatre. There were formerly two axioms
in philosophy:
That
is
LEIBNIZ.
283
that Nature did nothing in vain. Rightly understood both principles are true. Nature is lavish in her effects, and economical in the means or causes
oneself involuntarily how it was that Leibniz failed to formulate the Darwinian theory of development, when his sketch of the processes and
One
asks
action of nature
was so
entirely in
modern theory of descent, and one might even say based on more profound insight than our short
sighted estimate of the primaeval cell.
He
living things, and their type, starts from the idea that all
animated and organised. The only ex planation of his having stopped short where he did, seems to be his preoccupation (i) with the religious dogma that the world and all living creatures were created, and (2) with the dogma of the Pre-established harmony, derived from the former, and the conviction of the impossibility of union between mind and
nature
is
matter.
After this cursory abridgement of the Leibnizian philosophy we may proceed to consider his important
suggestions in isolated fields of thought, and to begin
I.
The theory of
first
intellectual perception.
i.
The
:
Lockian in sensu
to
point to notice is his addendum to the Nihil est in mtellectu quod non prius fuerit
to
significant
words
this
We
that Leibniz had undertaken to champion the cause of the innate ideas/ which Locke had
1
mean
Nouveaux
Eisais,
iii.
6.
32. p. 320,
Erdmaun.
284
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
7 struggled so hard and so successful!} to banish from The resume which he gives, in a letter philosophy.
on Locke in the Nouveaux would warrant such a view Locke wanders far from the truth in the chief matter, and he has failed to discern the nature of the mind and of truth. If he had rightly weighed the difference between necessary truths and those which we reach to a certain extent by the way of induction, he would
to Bierling, of his criticism
Essais
have seen that necessary truths can only be de monstrated by principles implanted in the mind,
the so-called innate ideas
ivhat
;
He
happens, but not what happens necessarily. has also omitted to consider that the idea of
Being, of Substance, of Ideality, of the True and the Good must have been innate in our mind, be cause it is itself innate, and comprehends all these
things in
itself.
In reality however Leibniz approaches steadily towards the Kantian doctrine of a priori elements in knowledge, as when he shows that mere experience cannot reveal necessary or universal truths, in which there is always something contributed from our own
inner nature
The senses, though necessary for all our actual knowledge, are not sufficient to have given the necessary or universal truths, since the senses
l
:
give only instances, that is to say, particular or But the examples, which con individual truths. firm a general truth, do not suffice to establish the
universal necessity of this same truth for not follow that what has happened, will
;
it
does
always
appears
in
happen
that
in the
same way.
truths,
necessary
1
pure
in arithmetic
and geo-
Essais, Avant-propos,
Erdmaun,
p. 195.
LEIBNIZ.
285
metry, must have principles of which the truth does not depend on the examples, nor, therefore, on the evidence of the senses, though without the senses no
This one would have begun to think of them. distinction must not be neglected, as was seen by
Euclid,
evident by experience and sensible images. Logic, are full of such truths, morals, and metaphysics and their proof can only proceed from internal
.
principles
it
is
It
is
true that
reason can be read in the soul, as in an open book, as the praetor s edict may be read in his album
without trouble or research but it is sufficient that they can be discovered in us by dint of attention, of which the senses furnish occasions. The success
;
of experiments serves to confirm the conclusions of reason, as in arithmetic a sum is proved, to avoid
the risk of error in a long calculation. In answer to the objection that particular pro positions are accepted as indubitable truths by those
particular
perceiving begin with the coarsest and most composite ideas but this does not prevent its being a fact, that the order of nature begins
truths,
as
It is true that
we begin by
we
with
what
is
simplest,
and
that
the
reason
of
the most particular truths depends upon the more general ones, of which they are only examples. And when any one desires to consider what is
in us
is
and prior to all apperception, he to begin with what is most simple. For right general principles enter into our thoughts, of which
virtually,
They
p. 211.
are
Nouveaux
Essais, Avant-propus,
Erdmann,
286
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
as muscles
and tendons are in The walking, though we do not think of them. mind rests constantly upon these principles, though it is not able easily to disentangle and represent them to itself distinctly and separately, because that requires close attention, and most people, being little accustomed to meditation, have none to give.
as necessary there
Have not
have, and
writing,
it
the
Chinese
articulated
sounds
as
we
yet, having adopted another manner of has not yet occurred to them to make an
Thus it is we possess many The opponents of this view understand by innate truths those which would be instinctively approved, and these ought not to be But what is called the light of naconfounded o
alphabet of these sounds. things without knowing
it.
.
.
ture supposes distinct knowledge, and very often the consideration of the nature of things is nothing else than the knowledge of the nature of our mind and
of those innate ideas wilich. have not to be sought for without. When challenged to produce a pro
position of which the ideas are innate, name the propositions of arithmetic and
truths.
*
should
geometry,
en tant qu elles sont en nous, quand meme on n y pense point, sont des habitudes ou des dis positions et nous savons bien des choses auxquelles nous ne pensons guere V In a certain sense it may be said that all arithmetic and geometry are innate, since we can realise their truths without any re ference to experience, as Plato has shown in a Dialogue, when he introduces Sokrates leading a
verites,
;
Nouveaux
Essais, Avant-propos,
Erdmann,
p.
212.
LEIBNIZ.
child to abstruse truths
287
by questions only, without ever teaching him anything. A man might therefore form these sciences in his library, and even with
closed eyes, without learning by sight or even by touch the truths he needed; though it is true that
all, if
we
had not seen and touched things V As to the eternal truths, it should be remembered that they are always at bottom hypothetical, and only say, If the first is so, then the other is (necessarily) so also. These passages are sufficient to show that Leibniz
did not await the sanction of experience to maintain those truths which the mind derived de son propre
fonds,
or to point to a source of
knowledge which
indeed required the stimulus of the senses, but was His propositions are essentially separate from them.
laid
down
that the
human
thing of its own something which experience and the continual influence of the outer world through
the senses may strengthen and develope, and which meanwhile grows into clearer consciousness of itself.
Kant s great discovery of the a priori possessions of the human reason, which make experience possible,
has the ground prepared for it here. As Kant introduced mathematics as the
most
brilliant confirmation of
it its
great classification of human proved for the first time, what had been only guessed by the great thinkers of the past, from Pythagoras
to Aristotle
the
peculiar
1
to the ultimate
Avant-propos, Erdmann,
288
conditions of
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
human
and
to its true, natural boundaries. 2. Leibniz laid down as the primary logical prin ciples those of identity, of contradiction, and of the
sufficient reason.
two
demonstrations, he says, I make use of principles, of which one is that everything is the second, that false which involves a contradiction
In
all
every truth, so far as it is not immediate or identical, must always have a sufficient reason, that is to say, the idea of the predicate must be expressly or im
plicitly contained in the idea of the subject
;
and this
holds
things good referring external as well as to internal ones, to contingent as well as necessary truths 1 /
of demonstrations
to
between necessary and contingent truths is very much the same as that between measur able and immeasurable magnitudes. As we can reduce commensurable numbers to a common measure, so a
difference
The
demonstration or reduction to identical propositions In the takes place in the case of necessary truths.
case of surd numbers, on the other hand, the solution may be indefinitely approached, but the figures re
peat themselves in a circular series without end. In the same way, contingent truths require a progressus in infinitum, an infinitesimal analysis which Hence they are only known only God can complete.
with certainty and a priori by God. For the reason of the consequence is always to be found in its an tecedent, which follows from another antecedent, and
this progressus in in finitum is a reason in itself, as this must be found,
so in infinite succession.
But
thought would be an analysis of composite which would reach its goal when it had arrived at conceptions,
this rate all
At
simple notions.
LEIBNIZ.
289
outside the series, in God, the author of all things, on whom, much more than on their own causal con
nection, the
earlier
as
weU
as
assumed to depend.
not admit of complete analysis, cannot be demon strated by reasons of their own, but derive their ultimate reason and certainty from the divine spirit, and have not the character of necessity. All these I
call
truths of fact
and
tingency, before 1
.
which has
not, I believe,
In
this
statement the
is
landing on
distinction
and a
its
principles of thought, its inner logical form, contents, as originating from elsewhere. The new truths set forth are
a.
and
All knowledge of fact has an empirical, con tingent side, which can never be referred back to
necessity.
All certainty rests, in the last resort, upon the proposition, of identity that is to say, reason is only
1).
;
fully satisfied
when
its
ment of
identity,
terms of
A=A
rests, on the con on the principle of contradiction what is A, trary, cannot at the same time be not-A. This propo;
Scientia Universal!, p. 83, Erdmann. Direct experience, such as that of our own existence, feeling, &c., and a priori truths, rest on the proposition of identity, these because subject and predicate agree directly, those because subject
2
De
Nouveaux
VOL.
I.
2QO
sition,
all
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
according to Leibniz,
lies
at the foundation of
mathematical or necessary truths. The only principle of union between the thought which is on the one hand striving after unity and necessity, and on the other gathering in the mani
d.
by the principle of the and most certain pos session of the human mind. Ce principe est celui du besoin d une raison suffisante pour quune chose existe, un evenement arrive, quune verite ait lieu.
fold
diverse, is afforded
sufficient reason, the clearest
and
Est-ce
un
"?
The perception is dawning more and more clearly that, what has hitherto been sought in the world,
such as unity and multiplicity, cause and effect, really lies at the root of the mental operations themselves,
and must be sought out anatomically from the nature of the thinking mind and its primitive conditions. Philosophical investigation tends more and more to withdraw from what is objective and to take the
Cartesian anchorage, the Cogito, for the starting-point of rational thought to see, in fact, more and more
;
clearly that not Ontology, but Dianoiology is the This is true in regard to the pro thing required.
positions of identity and contradiction as well as to that of the sufficient reason, if we compare them with
their doubles, the seternae veritates, set cartes himself:
up by Des
Ex
nihilo nihil
est
fit.
Impossible
idem
esse et
non
esse.
These predicate being, while identity and contra diction refer to the reason itself and its elements, i.e. ideas. Three great thinkers repeat the same ontological proof of the existence of God, but we can
1
LEIBNIZ.
still
291
the
and
last cause
of
all
made from objective being to the of thought. The reader will feel this by com
:
paring the following three propositions Descartes : Per substantiam nihil aliud intelligere possumus quarn rem quse ita existit, ut nulla alia re
indigeat ad existendum.
Spinoza
est et
Per substantiam
se concipitur,
intelligo id
est,
quod
in se
per
hoc
id cujus conceptus
alterius rei a
existence
du
monde qui
est
tingentes, et il faut la chercher dans la substance qui porte la raison de son existence avec elle, et laquelle
Descartes holds fast to the cause, Spinoza separates cause and reason, but allows them to be inter changed ; Leibniz alone attains to the conception of
the reason or the rational ground. Leibniz is still far from equalling the depth of the Kantian researches. He still considers the analytic
method
as the only one proper to human thought ; he does not realise that in every judgment, even the
most ordinary one, synthesis and a priori certainty But the way on which he had are involved as well. entered led surely in the direction where the deepest mysteries of thought lay hid. The way was opened for the distinction between necessary and empirical for the first time that which is the knowledo-e mind s, was given to mind, in contradistinction to what belongs to the world or to reality. But the most important and most pregnant dis:
2Q2
tinction
is
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
that,
contained in the principle of the sufficient reason, between reason and cause. saw above in the philosophy of Spinoza, how much error
We
and deception followed and could not but follow from the use of these principles as convertible. The prin of causality, upon which all earlier systems built ciple
which is indeed the blindly and unconditionally, sole possession of human reason, and yet broke down
was to be applied to the last problems, had to be had to the causa sui, the causa prima, the Deus sive natura, this principle re
it
whenever
so that recourse
ceives
tion,
now
an object of investigation. first entered on by Hume, whose doubt as to the reliability of the causal law made him act as the awakener of Kant. But the mere proclamation of this principle, as the primitive
and becomes
The
latter indeed
was
property of reason, was a progress not to be exagger ated in the history of philosophic thought, of which the aim, since Descartes, has been to emancipate itself
more and more from the external world, and to seek its sources within, where alone they are to be found, since what is given directly, i.e. in consciousness, must be more certain than what is given mediately through
the other, viz. matter, or the external world. The self-deception of reason, in regarding objec tive existence as the most certain and self-sufficing,
also.
The
causal
relation
pre
sents itself as a process accomplishing itself in the outer world and given thereby, so that at last the
mind
in
falls into the fundamental error of empiricism, which Locke has shared, namely, that reason learns the fact of causality from the frequent re
It cannot indeed petition of successive occurrences. be ignored that reason itself plays an influential
LEIBNIZ.
293
the causal
links,
uniting
is
to
the steps of practical conduct to be taken in ac cordance with the conclusions regarding the future,
based upon a knowledge of the causal series of the Thus its own proper name, ratio, ragione, past.
raison, reason, is characteristic of the only case of its activity, i.e. the causal relation, which it applies to
any
it.
But
it is
long before
it
distinguish correctly between cause and reason, and indeed, as we have seen, it continues still inclined to confound the two.
learns
to
It is only necessary to look closely at the analysis
by
antiquity,
and
held fast in the Middle Ages, to convince ourselves that the preponderance of the objective element
made
it impossible to conceive causality under the most important aspect of the rational ground (causa
The classification into or principium cognoscendi). formal efficient causes and final causes (to which
and
real
material
causes
may
be added)
leaves
the
ground
of
reason
quite
upon each
in
man
things
latter case, that of the final causes, a certain place is indeed allotted to reason, and scholasticism ap
proaches to a real insight Causa finalis non movet secundurn suum esse reale, sed secundum suum esse
:
there
cognitum ; but of the causa or the causse cognoscendi, This most important is never any mention. point of view was only reached by Descartes, when,
the root and starting from the intelligent subject, of the knowledge of this subject came to be ground
investigated,
294
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
it.
The
as a special gift, necessarily presupposed in all know ledge, led to a more attentive consideration of its
operations, and this again could not but result in bringing into view what was everywhere silently as
sumed,
The
the principle of the sufficient reason. Leibnizian principle of the sufficient reason
viz.
first
time, albeit
somewhat
tentatively,
relegates the principle of causality to the realm of The old pro the knowing subject, or to reason. in the world must have a cause, position, Everything
now, In virtue of the principle of the suffi cient reason no fact will be admitted as true or really existing, no judgment as correct, unless a sufficient reason is forthcoming why it is thus and not other
will read
wise 1
works and gives himself airs of great importance, as if it was he who had invented it and. yet he has nothing more to say about it than that each and all things must have a sufficient reason which the world
;
knew already/ This sneer, however, does not hit the mark, for we have not to do with the invention of
a rational principle, but with the discovery of
place and importance. scious of himself, was
its
is
true
con
known
that everything is perceived in space and time was known long before Kant; and similarly the principle
of the sufficient reason has always been
in thought, just as
of
in
walking.
1 2
But that
32.
p.
T 6.
LEIBNIZ.
295
and indeed the most important of rational principles, knowledge that one ball forces away another was first derived from it this was not known before Leibniz, and his great merit is to have put the fact
since the
thought.
Hume
will add,
and ought not to be transferred to the outer world. Causality is in us and is of value and significance only in so far as it is applied to experience and reality,
will be the conclusion of Kant.
According to Leibniz there are three kinds of knowledge (i) intuitive, which has a priori or
3.
:
innate
truths
is
x
;
for
its
object
(2)
demonstrative,
which
reason
obscure
of knowledge.
For
this
reprimanded
by Schopenhauer
says,
All abstract knowledge, he flows from intuition, and all its value and
.
significance lies only in its relation to intuitive per For this reason the natural man always ception.
attaches
much more
;
value to
what
is
known by direct
what
is
merely he prefers empirical to logical knowledge. But those who live more among words than deeds, who look more into books and papers than the real world, are of the opposite mind, and in their worst degeneracy turn into pedants and slaves of the letter.
thought
La Raison
consistant dans
Her encore
celles
que
:
conclusions mixtes
1
experience,
2
na a
faire
qu a des
la foi
ve>ites
Discours de la conformite de
avec
la raison,
Erdmann, 479.
i.
Schopenhauer, Welt
als
p. 101.
296
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
This is the only explanation of how Leibniz, together with Wolf, and all their successors, could go so far
astray
as, like
knowledge
ledge.
To
Scotus, to pronounce intuitive only a confused form of abstract know the honour of Spinoza it must be said,
Duns
that his juster mind, on the contrary, declared all general ideas to have arisen by the confusion of what
was
intuitively
known.
is
(Eth.
ii.
i.)
unjust, and the passage cited from Spinoza refers only to the first and original way in which general ideas were formed, as appears clearly from the scholium immediately following, where he Ex his says, in complete agreement with Leibniz, omnibus, clare apparet nos multa percipere et no-
tiones universales formare primo ex singularibus nobis per sensus mutilate, confuse et sine ordine ad intel-
When Leibniz represents reprsesentatis/ as confused, he is placing it in sensible knowledge opposition to that which Spinoza, in the last-named
lectum
scholium, calls
scientia intuitiva,
quod cognoscendi
genus procedit ab adaequata idea essentias formalis quorundam Dei attributorum ad adsequatam cogniThe relation of sensible tionem essential rerum. perceptions to the true nature of the things which
excite
them
is
way by
Leibniz.
Sensible
are
dependent on single
forms and motions, and express these exactly, al though we are unable to recognise the particular
elements in the confusion of the infinite number and
minute
details
of mechanical actions.
all
But
if
we
body
according to Locke its qualitates primaa clear knowledge of its pro ria?), which might then be traced back to it by perties, even though we might never be intelligible reasons
(i.
e.
we should have
;
LEIBNIZ.
297
in a position actually to perceive them with our senses. rapidly revolving wheel with long teeth presents a kind of transparency to the view at its
A
;
periphery such
confused sensible knowledge, while intellectual intuition, the clear conception of the thing itself, easily distinguishes the teeth
is
1
.
so far justified that Schopenhauer Leibniz does not expressly distinguish between ra tional and sensible knowledge, but regards both as
s
criticism is
generically alike, the latter being only a less perfect But notwithstanding all this, variety of the former.
an important truth was beginning to dawn at this point upon the mind of Leibniz, namely, that our sensible perceptions, considered objectively, are no This idea, like thing but unconscious numeration.
the Lockian primary qualities, is only a natural conse quence of the doctrines alike of Atoms and of Monads,
but Leibniz seems, as was not unnatural, to have first been led to it by his reflections on the na
ture of music, which consists in rhythmic intervals, He describes listening to or harmonic successions.
music as an exercitium arithmeticum nescientis se numerare animi, and says: Music delights us, although its beauty consists only in regularity of numbers and in a numeration (of which we are not conscious) of
the vibrations of resonant bodies, following each other at regular intervals. The pleasure of sight from pro remain portion is of the same nature, and that of the
ing senses no doubt will be reducible to something similar, though we cannot so easily explain them V If the pleasure which we receive by the senses, the
Agreeable and the Beautiful, only rests upon the un conscious numbers of regular rhythm, it necessarily
1
Nouveaux
2Q8
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
follows tliat sensations in general can be nothing but a similar unconscious numeration, a view in perfect
For the nature of the mind consists of perceptions, and as we perceive the body as a whole, but do not perceive the infinitely little parts of which it consists, so the infinitely slight perceptions which
motions.
are caused
by the
1
.
latter
of consciousness
odours,
it is
When we
only a perception of infinitely small forms and motions, so that our mind cannot possibly per
ceive the
its
same
distinctly,
is
and
of infinitely small percep perception as in a mixture of yellow and blue powder, tions; just
made up
the separate particles are not seen, but the whole appears to us as green, so that we believe we see a
thing (ens) V Natural science, it is well known, has given brilliant confirmation to Leibniz s conjec ture, so far as colour is concerned, since the latter has
new
been explained by vibrations of different duration but as to the two more deeply-rooted senses, taste and smell, the empirical proof has still to be given, and
:
The theory of sensible perceptions as unconscious numeration, which was at least first imagined and
suggested by Leibniz, is of very great metaphysical Some ultimate and decisive questions significance.
If the perceptions naturally attach themselves to it. of sense are the original material of all further know
ledge, is this can arrive ?
still
numeration the
Is
Epistola ad Bierling,
p.
Meditat de Cognit.
Erdmann.
LEIBNIZ.
299
human mind \
minuteness, the last and only goal of the enquiring Hume will answer in the affirmative.
Kant, on the other hand, will penetrate much further at this very point, and show that, in this very primary and original form of knowledge, in number,
or perceptions in time, synthesis and the a priori form of time is presupposed, and by it alone experience rendered possible. Thus the ultimate boundary, the
ne plus ultra of
all
II. Physics.
It
is
down
as the
fundamental
conception for the study of nature. nature at the present day, in all his experiments and
inferences, starts
,
If the student of
from and returns to this idea, if in all the varying phenomena and manifold magic of the outer world, his endeavour is always to grasp the one natural force and to bring it into subjection to thought and law, this mode of viewing things traces He founded the dynamic its origin to Leibniz. conception of nature, which has since continued to
prevail.
Descartes, as we have seen, placed the nature of matter in bare extension, so that formally it became identified with space, and the most curious contra
Locke, seeing these contradictions, introduced the idea of solidity as the primary quality of matter, to which all other primary qualities were attached. Leibniz, on the other hand, put forward the
dictions ensued.
one correct conception of force, maintaining that it and is only in action that being makes itself felt,
reveals its existence
:
quod non
agit,
non
existit.
3OO
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
Nothing is purely passive id quod passivum est, any nunquam solum reperitur aut per se subsistit thing that was so would be unable even to receive or to 1 We only retain an impulse of motion from without and so far everything happens only perceive motion, in accordance with mechanical laws, but the cause of
;
.
the active Force, must always be presupposed, and this is not to be 2 I was explained mechanically, but metaphysically
i.e.
.
delighted with the fine methods of mathematicians for explaining everything mechanically, and I justly despised the methods of those who explained all things by forms and faculties, from which nothing was to be But as soon as I sought to understand the learnt. principles of mechanics themselves, I saw at once that mere extended magnitude would not suffice to enable me to comprehend the laws of nature shown by ex perience, but that the conception of Force must be invoked, which is very intelligible, although it belongs to the region of metaphysics 3 The most important, understood truths are hitherto little known or little associated with the idea of substance, the true nature of which can only be conceived by starting from the
.
idea of force.
rate
work on the
great difference between active force and the so-called potentia activa or facultas of scholasticism the latter
;
of which
a mere possibility of acting, if an. external influence is brought to bear. But the vis activa is
is
1
Epistola ad
Hoffmannum,
fuit sententia
p. 161,
Erdmann.
in corporibus fieri mechanice,
:
Mea semper
non semper
omnia
etsi
distincte explicare possimus singulos mechanismos vero principia mechanismi generalia ex altiore fonte profluere. ipsa
8
Ib. p. 161.
Systeme Nouveau de
la
Nature,
p. 124,
Erdmann.
LEIBNIZ.
3OI
an Entelechy, intermediate between the mere facultas agendi and the actus itself, and needs no farther in citement to action than the removal of hindrances in the way. It is thus with the stone hanging by a strained rope, or a bent bow. The ultimate source of all motion is the original force lying in all bodies, which may be limited or restricted in various ways
by the
from
This force
lies in all
it.
substances, and a certain action always arises No bodily substance ever ceases to act, and
been sufficiently recognised by those who have supposed its nature to consist of extension and impenetrability only, and have imagined that it was possible for a body to be ever entirely at rest. Thus no created substance can ever receive the vis agendi from another, but only conditions and limita
this has not
tions of its
It
own
action 1
3
.
was through Leibniz that the conception of matter first became clear and serviceable for men of science, after its chief quality had been compared and assimilated with what was best known and most familiar to man, namely his own bodily force, which is the measure of everything else. This step must have shed a degree of light in the days of Leibniz o o to that thrown in our own days by the comparable discovery that force can only be measured by its effect, and the consequent estimate of natural forces by the work done. It is interesting, and helps to explain the develop ment of the most important conceptions in natural science, to compare the utterances of Descartes and Leibniz on the subject of matter and its nature. We shall see from this more clearly how fluctuating and
/
indefinite
1
De
3O2
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
times speaks the language of Leibniz, while Leibniz continues to hamper himself with the Cartesian
Descartes Qui autem dicunt, actionem ab agente auferri posse, recte dicunt, si omnem per actionem motum solum intelligant, non autem si omnem vim sub nomine actionis velint comprehendere, ut longitude, latitude, profunditas et vis recipiendi omnes figuras et motus a materia sive quandefinition.
:
non possunt. (Epistolae, i. 86.) Leibniz: Principium activum non tribuitur a me materiae nudge sive primag, quse mere passiva est, et in sola antitypia et extensione consistit. (Epist. ad Wagnerum,
titate tolli
Erd. 466.) Here, where we can observe the intermingling of the conceptions of force and extension, where Descartes
calls
antitypy, something purely passive, we can see too the difficulty of the birth-struggles of clear
and how everywhere the new is entangled with the old, how it developes with slow but steady growth, and how something of the earlier impression is always carried on into the new. For even Leibniz himself,
ideas,
who
first yielded to the conviction that the nature of matter must be sought in force alone, still retained some remnants of the former view. He still separated
in thought the traditional conception of matter as the subject, the support of force, as that in which force
or at least a appears, and thus he ascribed a real existence to a mere thing of the mind, phenomenal
to pass that he was obliged to attribute to it certain qualities which he derived from the dominant opinions ; in
it
Hence
came
other words, his clear insight was obscured, and much which should have been deduced from the nature
of force alone, as extension, impenetrability, resist-
LEIBNIZ.
ance,
still
303
seemed to him an original property of which in itself was purely passive. Hence matter, contradictory expressions and assertions, such as Matter is that which resists penetration the first
: ;
matter
is is
which
like.
therefore purely passive : ; the vis inertire defined as vis passiva resistendi et impene-
and the
The which
of in
fact,
is
so exclusively
however, remains that the idea of Force, and so effectively made use
physics, because
modern
by
it
alone the
two
qualities of mutability (the transitional) and per manence can be reconciled without contradiction, had
origin in the mind of the great Leibniz. The conservation of force. With the growing prominence of the idea of force, and the increasing tendency to deduce all changes revealing themselves in matter from it, as a phenomenon bene fundatum, the discovery of the great law of the indestructibility of energy was coming nearer and nearer. The primi tive conviction which had always instinctively assumed the presence of something permanent, that law which
its first
2.
was first formulated in the materialistic doctrine of Demokritos and Epikuros (ex nihilo nihil fit and nihil fit ad nihilum), was now advancing rapidly towards the clear and definite expression which in our days
it
of the idea of matter were absorbed in the concep tion of force, or, more accurately, of motion.
which force
300), according to inseparable from the idea of matter, so that motion is by no means always to be looked on as something communicated, tended to
definition
(p.
The
above quoted
itself is
Erdmann.
De
Ipsa Natura,
ib. p.
157.
304
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
accelerate the conclusion according to which (appa rent) rest is only a restriction of the innate force
within the body, which only awaits the removal of these obstacles in order to manifest itself in life.
Leibniz
knew very
must
exist
a priori ; that it could not possibly proceed from experience, a view which seems not as yet to have
of science, who lose themselves in such phrases as that Natural science has proved the law of the conservation of force As
of our
men
anything could be proved by experience, which has to be taken for granted before the slightest experience
if
The universal mechanism of nature can be acquired is the firm and indispensable base of all natural
!
is
Spinoza
(I
am
Leibniz says, with great point not afraid of quoting him when he
says what is true) in a letter to Oldenburg makes a similar remark about a work of Sir Robert Boyle, who, to tell the truth, delays too long over a number of line experiments without drawing from them any
other conclusion than that which he might have taken as his premiss, namely, that everything in na ture is accomplished mechanically, a principle which can only be proved by reason, and never by experi ments, however numerous they may be V I can only briefly mention the controversy as to the measure of force, which was so long connected with the names of Descartes and Leibniz, dividing the learned world into two camps, and to which Kant him self contributed in one of his youthful works 2 Des cartes said that the measure of force is the quantity of
.
Nouveaux Essais, iv. 12. Gedanken von der wahren Schatzung der lebendigen Krafte,
1747-
LEIBNIZ.
305
motion, mv,
said forces
velocities
i.e. mass multiplied by velocity. Leibniz were proportioned as the square of the
2
.
mv
motion or quantum of movement in the universe while Leibniz asserted, always remains the same that it was not the quantity of on the contrary, motion but that of vis viva which remained the same. Descartes took the imparted motion as the unit of measurement, and this agrees with his funda
;
mental view, according to which matter is something self-subsisting (extended) to which the determined motion is communicated from without by God 1 Leibniz, on the contrary, placed the cause of motion
.
in matter
itself,
standard the most universal manifestation of force, the one which underlies all natural science, gravity,
my view/ he says, forces stand in the proportion of the heights from which the heavy bodies must fall to attain
According to
their
and the
But as the force in the universe remains the same and is sufficient to ascend to a
velocity.
corresponding height or produce any other similar effect, it follows thence that the amount of living
force in the universe
1
is
maintained unimpaired
V
;
25, Primo statui esse in tota materia creata certain motus quse neque augeatur neque minuatur unquam quantitatem atque ita, quum corpus unum movet aliud, tantundem motus sui Motion for Descartes ipsius decedere quantum in aliud transfert.
Epistol.
ii.
not a real quality, only a mode. 2 Je ne connais point ces masses vaines, inutiles et dans 1 inaction dont on parle. II y a, de Faction partout, et je 1 etablis plus que la philosophic refue parceque je crois qu il n y a point de corps sans
is
:
mouvement,
ni
de
substance
sans
effort.
Eclaircissement
du
193.
VOL.
I.
306
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
I will here only observe that in modern science the Leibnizian standard -~ has been accepted as the base of the principle of the conservation of force in
The sum of the vis viva and static formula, Leibniz force in the world remains the same always.
the
less clearly in
The idea of Force is very different from that of One motion, the latter of which is more relative. must measure the force by the quantity of its effects
[in
modern English, work]. There is an absolute, a All maintain them directing, and a respective force. selves in the universe, or in any machine which does not communicate with others the two latter together compose the first, absolute force. But the same
;
quantity of motion is not maintained, otherwise the perpetuum mobile would be found, and the effect
its
cause
1
.
same quantity of motion was preserved in bodies. It has been shown that he was in error in this; but I have proved that it is true that the same amount of moving force is preserved, which is what he confounded with the quantity of motion V A passage in the correspondence between Leibniz and Clarke is very interesting for its bearing on this subject, as we gather from it, (i) the difficulty which this idea of the conservation of force met with at its birth, since even so clear-headed a man as Clarke
Descartes believed that the
could not disabuse himself of the
as to the genesis of force
;
prejudice Leibniz, first of all mortals, caught a glimpse of the great truth which
(2)
common
how
Lettre a
Eclaircissement du
132,
Erdmann.
LEIBNIZ.
307
ranks
viz.
among
and conversely.
Clarke writes 1
in the
It
is
is not a mistake, it is a of the inertness of matter. For this consequence inertness not only causes the diminution of velocity in proportion as the quantity of matter increases
is no diminution of the quantity of but it also causes solid bodies which are motion), quite hard and un-elastic to lose all their motion and active force, if they encounter an equal and opposing force; another cause is therefore needed to impart new motion to them (i. e. reparation by means of
(which indeed
the great Artificer). Leibniz replies I had maintained that the vis
:
continues the
if
same.
It
is
two
inelastic bodies
some or
all
of their force.
wholes lose it in relation to their collective movements, but the parts receive this
No.
It is true that the
forces
The as they are moved internally by the shock. are not destroyed, but distributed amongst
the particles.
The
effect is
the same as
.
when one
is
2 changes large coins into small The application of these ideas to heat
found
in the
Nouveaux Essais With regard to the opera tion of most natural substances, analogy is the great What cannot be verified can rule of probability.
3
:
in so far as it
Erdmann,
p.
785.
3
Ib. p. 775.
iv. 1 6.
12.
3O8
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
to appear, we judge that fire consists in a violent 1 &c. agitation of imperceptible particles
,
have shown above that Descartes was penetrated with the sense of the unchangeableness and invari ability of the mechanical principle in the world of matter he expresses the great truth that the soul is not in a position to produce or to destroy the least atom of motion. He sought some way of giving a foundation to the universal and positive certainty that by means of and in consequence of our feeling, thought, and will, we can move our limbs in ac cordance with our conscious purpose and he found the right way, which makes freedom possible within the bounds of an invariable mechanism for he saw that given forces, combined by superior intelli
I
;
:
would be able to make other forces subject to them, by giving them the desired and serviceable
gence,
direction.
This
is
be
effect
a revolu
tion in the whole theory of nature, are to be met with in antiquity also ; the whole doctrine of Herakleitos appears to us to-day as
a kind of anticipatory divination of the mechanical theory of heat. Plato is clearly reproducing Herakleitean ideas in the following
remarkable passage of the Thesetetos (ix. 153) Sok. For fire and warmth, which are supposed to be the parent and nurse of all things, are born of friction, which is a kind of
:
motion
is
fire ?
TJiecet.
Yes.
is
/Sok.
And
way 1
interprets
Thecet. Certainly.
the Homeric golden chain by which all the gods failed to move Zeus, as the sun by whose motion in the heavenly space all life on earth and heaven was preserved, while its arrest would bring the
destruction of
all things.
LEIBNIZ.
soluble, viz.
309
subsist in
how
liberty can
the midst
of universal natural necessity. It is true this so lution did not agree with Descartes assumption
of
in
common with
with the agreed equally of Spinoza, with the una substantia, for it is only possible with individual beings which act upon each other, i.e. with relative forces it is in
each other.
it
And
little
Monism
Spinoza accordingly, consist with his own assumptions, assumes everywhere ently the strictest necessity, while Descartes gave expres
sion to the truth which forced itself
sciousness,
though
in doing so he
to his
principles; he had recourse to the spiritus animales, an infinitely subtle material which (not indeed without divine assistance) is moved direct
own
from the
soul,
i.
e.
is
directed
by
its
own proper
motion, and causes the motion of our members in ac cordance with the will, i.e. gives them their direction. This inconsistency did not escape Leibniz s pene
tration,
and
it
with
but
or
his
nouilli
He
also
the
same
directing force
directiva)
ad quantity of direction (quantitas directionis easdem partes, or quantitas progressus) is preserved in the universe; and this is not measured as the but as the simple product of the mass and the
square,
For when two bodies moving from opposite meet together, the Cartesian law only says of the quantity of motion that the two motive forces must be added together, whereas it is only from the between the two that the quantity of difference
velocity. directions
Erdmann,
p. 108.
310
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
:
In another passage he says x Descartes was per about the bodily changes which follow upon plexed modifications of the soul, because these do not obey
his law.
hit accordingly upon a very ingenious and said, one must distinguish between invention, The soul is unable the motion and the direction.
He
to alter the
motive force in any way, but it can change the determination or direction of the vital o it is thus that our arbitrary movements spirits, and are produced. It is true he was careful not to explain
how
since this
quite
as incomprehensible as its
im
parting motion to the body, since he does not, like me, refer to the pre-established harmony as an ex
another important natural law, which I have discovered and of which Descartes was not aware, namely, that not only is the same
planation.
is
But there
same quantity of direction, in whatever direction we may turn. That is to say, if one draws a straight line and assumes such and so many bodies moving
in that direction,
progress on
we shall find that the quantity of the Hoes parallel to this straight line will always remain the same so that one can calcu late the quantum of progress by deducting the force
all
;
of the bodies tending in the opposite direction from that of the bodies moving in the direction of the
line
1
2
.
is
as beautiful
and universal
clu Nouveau Systems, p. 132, Erdmann. This permanence of the direction in the universe follows from the principle Actio par est reaction!, which holds good for the
Eclaircissement
the universe.
Cartesian measure of force (mv) of each movement beginning in Newton expresses the principle as follows Action!
:
duorum
actiones in se
mutuo semper
sequales esse
et in
partes
contrarias dirigi.
iii.)
LEIBNIZ.
as the other,
is
1 I
my
the conservation of force and of direction. If one contemplates the vast multiplicity of motions, the play of vital forces on our own small planet, if one
on the one hand how winds and waves seem in their motions subject to 110 law but chance, while, on the other, in the animal world, movements seem to originate by unrestrained arbitrary choice, and both
sees
we
wonder at the error of which Epikuros furnishes the most striking example in
shall
cease to
antiquity, the error of supposing that the direction of motion is determined without cause, by mere
arbitrary will,
mechanical causation.
might fly without wings, or birds without a resisting medium, i. e. without air. According to Epikuros, the atoms fall with equal velocity in parallel direc
tions,
In
this
he has
the
advantage of Demokritos, whose atoms have different velocities because of their different weights.
is
Whence then
com
binations and separations 1 Epikuros helps himself out of the difficulty as modern Darwinism with the
cell
hypothesis
with an apparently small and insig Once, at some undeter found themselves induced
x
!
men and
discerned
other animals.
all this to
But Leibniz
keen gaze
in the
be so
much contraband
causation. strictly knit system of physical Everything in the human body/ he writes,
1
down
ii.
251, 293.
312
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
phenomena, happens just as
;
the false doctrine of Epikuros and Hobbes, which as sumes the soul to be a material being, were true that
is,
only a body, an automaton. The view of Descartes concerning animals (that they are only machines) has been transferred to men and attempts
as if
to show that the latter, with all their reason, are only the passive playthings of images and mo And the endeavour to refute this error only tions.
man were
made
it is
served to prepare a triumph for it, for upon this side unanswerable. The Cartesians were almost as
unlucky as Epikuros with the declension of atoms, of which Cicero makes such fun, when they tried to
make out
that though the soul was unable to impart motion to the body, it was able to give it direction. In fact it can do neither the one nor the other, and
nothing external to
man
capable of refuting
their doctrine
these difficulties
According to Leibniz there was but one issue from and unavoidable contradictions be tween the direct consciousness and the a priori cer tainty of mathematical and physical axioms and this
;
was the assumption of his pre-established harmony, which on that very ground seemed to acquire more
He believed him irrefragable certainty in his eyes. self to have been the first to solve the eternal op
position
He
failed to see
that he himself too had given his system a dogmatic base in his divine Creator, that he had made the elephant stand upon the tortoise, while he had no
answer to the objection already referred to, addressed to him by Clarke in his last letter (1716, imme On dit qu il n est pas diately before Leibniz s death)
:
p. 185.
LEIBNIZ.
possible de concevoir comment une substance iramaMais Dieu n est-il pas terielle agit sur la matiere.
et
agit-il
pas sur la
III.
Metaphysics.
In answer to his Lockian opponent, who pro nounces metaphysics to be mere empty chaffering with words, which experimental knowledge is destined to supersede, Leibniz declares that we are now only
at the beginning of the foundation of true meta physics and we find already many truths founded
;
and confirmed by experience which refer I hope myself to have to substances in general. contributed something to the general knowledge of the soul and of spirits. Such a metaphysic was demanded too by Aristotle it is the science which he calls fyrovpevij, the Sought, which must stand to the theoretical sciences in the same relation as the science of happiness does to those arts of which it makes use, and as the architect to the masons. There fore it is, said Aristotle, that the other sciences must depend on metaphysics as the most general, and ought to borrow from her the principles which she has de
in reason
;
monstrated
V
;
opposite side, starting, not like Kant, from the sub ject, but, like Aristotle and the Schoolmen, from Being, or Substance. Metaphysica agit turn de ente,
turn de entis affectionibus
alis affectiones
1
p.
372.
314
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
.
The
matical sciences on
being occupied with the most general relations was Scholasticism had main clearly established by him.
tained that
substances.
number was only an interruption of and therefore did not apply to immaterial continuity,
This Leibniz denied, for number is also, as it were, an immaterial figure, formed by the com bination of the most various beings. God, angels,
man, motion are four things. As number is there fore something universal, it certainly belongs to metaphysics. We may thus call metaphysics the
doctrine
of all
that
is
common
to
all
kinds
of
Beings.
lasticism.
This was approximately the standpoint of Scho Leibniz, like Descartes and Spinoza, was
mathematically, and so reduced to mathematical cer He blames those who measure heaven and tainty. earth by this method and do not apply it to the
more important knowledge of God, the Soul and the Good. Sunt qui mathematicum vigorem extra ipsas scientias quas vulgo mathematicas appellamus, locum habere non putant. Sed illi ignorant, idem esse
mathematice scribere quod in forma, ut logici vo2 cant, ratiocinari / Yet Leibniz seems to have under stood by this a higher kind of mathematics, to which arithmetic and geometry stand in the relation of parts to a whole, a method of calculation which was to deal with the analysis of ideas and from which he J ai insinue ailleurs qu il y a hoped great things un calcul plus important que ceux de 1 arithmetique et de la geometric et qui depend de Tanalyse des
*
:
p.
no.
LEIBNIZ.
idees.
315
Ce
serait
la formation
me
une caracteristique universelle dont parait une des plus importantes choses
c
qu on pourrait entreprendre V In regard to metaphysical conceptions, in the Epistola ad Thomasium (i669) Leibniz still reckoned four
kinds of Entities, namely, Mens, Spatium, Materia,
and Motus. Space is with him mathematical exist ence or mere extension, while matter has the further qualities of resistance, occupation of space, and im
2
penetrability
he had reached a much Thus he greater depth of metaphysical insight. 3 says in the Keplique aux Keflexions de M. Bayle
But
Replique aux Reflexions de Bayle, p. 191, Erdmann. Leibniz s new art, which was to reduce everything to
ad expressionem cogita-
tionum per characteres (De Scientia Universal! seu Calculo philoas the only method for putting an end sophico, p. 83, Erdmann) to the controversies of the schools and the barren outcry of the sects. All paralogisms would then be shown to be mere errors of calcula tion, and the disputes of philosophers would be ended by their sitting down to a table and saying Calculemus. It is true this art, like
:
geometry, is only available in so far as it starts from data, but these will be provided for it by all the sciences, medicine, jurisprudence, He promises that, with the help of this novum politics, &c.
as the range of vision has been by the telescope and microscope. This scientia universalis was thus to accomplish for knowledge in
This great general what geometry and mechanics do for physics. of a Characteristica universalis, which was associated with the plan
idea of a universal language,
it
remained only a
project.
At
dependence of thought on language and the impossibility of re ducing human thoughts by mere analysis to mathematical precision,
we
can see the impossibility of its execution. The attempt made Wilkins (1668) to found a universal language failed, as by Bishop all others of a similar nature since made have done also.
2
p. 53,
Erdmann.
Ib. p. 189.
316
(1702)
:
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
I admit that time, space, motion and con in general, as assumed by mathematicians, are tinuity only ideal entities, that is to say, they express possi
bilities,
as
numbers
a
do.
space
as
phantasma
more
precisely, extension is as time is the order of possible changes, which, however, are so definitely connected, that
existences,
these orders refer not only to real but also to pos sible things, such as may take their place, just as number stands in a relation of absolute indifference
to the res mimerata.
in nature with such absolutely identical changes as mathematics assume in dealing with motion, or with
absolutely regular figures, such as geometry supposes yet there will be found nothing in nature in the least
contrary to the law of continuity or any other exact rule of mathematics indeed it is only by these rules that all things can become generally intelligible.
;
.
.
It is
of existing things, but of those which possibly might exist. But its truth and reality are founded on God,
like all eternal truths.
in reference to
Locke
of ideas gives us the conception of time A succes sion of perceptions rouses in us the idea of duration, but does not create it. Our perceptions never have
constant and regular succession to correspond to that of time, which is a uniform and
sufficiently
1
ii. 2
13.
ii.
Ib.
p. 241,
Erdmann. Erdmann.
LEIBNIZ.
simple continuum, like a straight line. The change in our perception gives occasion to think of time, and
it by uniform changes but if there were uniform in nature, time would not therefore nothing cease to be determined, just as space would still be determined though there were no fixed or motionless bodies. It is because we know the rules of multiform motions that we can refer these to uniform, intelli
;
we measure
gible
will follow
:
by taking these
movements together
1
.
characteristic instance of the superior insight of Leib niz as compared with the standpoint of Lockian
empiricism
is
furnished
:
lethes (Locke)
It
is
by the
visibly measure time by the motion of the celestial bodies, they should nevertheless define time as the measure of motion - and its refutation.
We
1
Xewton
definitions
and point
also
approach very closely to those of Leibniz, towards the coming light of Kantian truth. Tenet
alioque nomine Rel.atirum, apparens et vulgare est sensibilis et externa quaevis Durationis per motum mensura (seu accurata seu inaequabilis) qua vulgus rice veri temporis utitur, ut Hora, Dies.
fluit
Accelerari et retardari possnnt motus omnes, Mensis, Annus sed fluxus temporis absoluti mutari nequit. Philos. Xat. Princ.
. . .
Math. Defiu.
viii.
Schol.
He
Absolute
and without regard to anything external, remains eternally the same and immoveable. Relative space is any moveable dimension or measure of absolute space determined by our senses Nothing need be said of the attack by the position of bodies.
space, in itself
subsequently made upon Xewton by Leibniz because the former maintained Space to be the sensorium of the Deity, for Xewton
either used the
God
s
word metaphorically to signify the Omnipresence of or attached no very definite idea to it.
Essais,
ii.
Xouveaux
14.
22, p. 242,
Erdmann.
318
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
true metaphysical path at the end of which the great discovery of the ideality of space and time was to be letter to des Bosses (1709) shows still reached.
clearly the severance of the ideal space from Space, like time, is a certain order (i. e. the reality.
more
order of coexistence) which embraces not only the It is therefore indeter real but also the possible.
minate, like every continuum, the parts of which are thought arbitrarily, not in reality, like the parts of
unity or fractions.
of real things in the world, there would be other monads, other masses, but space would remain the same. For space is a continuum, but an ideal one.
The mass is something divided, an actual number, an aggregate of infinite units. But in real things the units exist before the grouping, in ideal ones on The the contrary the whole is before the parts. of this consideration has always led into an neglect
endless labyrinth 1 The parts of time and space, said Leibniz in his
.
2
,
taken in themselves
are ideal things, they are therefore perfectly similar, two abstract units. But this is not the case with
real periods of time, two real portions of occupied space, these are actual. I have shown that space is nothing but the order
two concrete
units,
two
of the existence of things, which are considered as Thus the fiction of a finite, mateexisting together.
rial universe, moving through infinite space cannot be admitted. It is unreasonable and useless, for apart from the fact that there is no real space outside
would work without having anything to agendo iiihil agere. These are the fancies of
1
p. 461,
Erdmann.
p.
766, Erdmann.
LEIBNIZ.
319
who make
Leibniz had thus clearly grasped the ideality of space and time but instead of remaining faithful to
;
principle and relegating the ideal to dwelling-place, in the feeling and thinking
this
its
true
subject,
he transferred these two forms or categories to the world or substance unconditionally presupposed by himself, and explained space as the order of coexist
ing things and time as the order of changes in things. But here the question had first to be asked, how such
an idea as order in general came into existence, whether it is an original possession of human thought for it is certainly only an abstract or intellectual idea or whether the forms of space and time are not rather much the earlier and more primitive and
serving rather to make the other conception possible. The same kind of vicious circle, or rather petitio prin-
meets us here as in the pseudo-definitions of post-Kantian philosophers, who explain space as the measure of contiguous and time as the measure of suc cessive things, and then imagine themselves to have
cipii,
as if measure, contiguity, and suc cession were possible without the primary forms of space and time.
told us something,
Order can only exist for a mind. The principle of the order of things can therefore be sought or found in the thinking mind alone. If Leibniz had fami
liarised himself
with this thought, instead of assuming an order of things imposed from without, he would have remained within the true field of inquiry and would perhaps have forestalled Kant. He would then have enquired what primary possession unites the mind through the senses with a real or outer world, and thence first deduced the order of things in the mind.
32O
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
Clarke was right in objecting that there was nothing about quantity in the idea of order. In his last
letter
The author says now that he observes l is not an order or place, but an order of places, space is taken for granted]. That does [so that space again not prevent the same objection from holding good, And when he that the order of places is no quantity. says, time is only the order of successive things, and at the same time maintains that it is the quantity
:
of duration existing
things, this
is
obviously contradictory/
For the rest, in his later works Leibniz clearly shows his insight into the nature of metaphysics and the distinction beween them and mathematics and Thus he says 2 To ap their respective methods.
:
ply the geometric method to metaphysical objects is praiseworthy, but the attempt has met with little
success.
tellect,
Descartes,
in
spite
of his powerful
in
made use
one gets
has never accomplished less than when he For of it in his answers to objectors.
off
more
figures, and calculations are a protec tion against the errors lurking in words but in metaphysics, where this aid is wanting, the strict ness of the reasoning and the exact definition of
numbers,
ideas should supply the want but here is to be * found neither of these requisites. According to the
;
usual expression, mathematical principles are those which we meet with in pure mathematics, such as
But metaphysical
and
Erdmann,
785.
la
p. 684,
Erd
LEIBNIZ.
321
that nothing happens without a sufficient reason for 1 its happening thus and not otherwise
.
this highest possession of human and from this point of departure establish his
own
If
of the Leib-
nizian philosophy and its place in the development of philosophic thought, we shah find in it a peculiar agreement with the philosophy of Locke, and at
the same time a direct opposition to the same. The agreement lies in the insistence upon the individual.
Locke started from the individual thinking being, and asked, How does this being attain knowledge 1 His theme is An enquiry into the nature of under Nature means, like its Greek equivalents, standing. or Genesis, the becoming, and the becoming of Physis knowledge was to enlighten Locke as to its being. His answer ran All knowledge is derived from sen sation. Now sensation always presents things mani which the human understanding has to arrange fold, in classes. It does so by means of general ideas, which
:
human, as compared with all other knowledge. But instead of examining more closely into this contrast of conceptions and per ceptions, Locke contented himself with having pointed it out dazzled by the discovery that all the mate rial of knowledge is derived from without by means
:
of sensibility, he conceived
it
all knowledge to be as were a mechanical product, and, like his great pre decessor in Empiricism, Bacon, he turned the reflec tive faculty into an automatic mirror, which, without
1
p.
751, Erdmann.
VOI.
I.
322
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
further inner principles, just iterat et resonat at the stimulus of reality. Metaphysical principles lie out
learn by side the scope of human knowledge. If any to know time, space, and infinity. experience
We
one asks
What
too
is
space
is
do
not know.
Leibniz
starts
raises
from
a
While Locke
ceptive
sensation
element into
universal
which
all subsequent knowledge is Leibniz on the contrary places the active element Like Descartes, he is in the foreground everywhere.
penetrated with the great truth that thought, con sciousness, will are We ourselves ; all the rest is
Instead of the one subonly indirect knowledge. stantia cogitans of Descartes, he accordingly as sumed an infinity of small substances, to which this
The in property of thought essentially belonged. ternal or representative faculty thus constitutes the
proper nature of all substances. Kant points out that Leibniz attributed everything exclusively to the conceptions of the understanding and Locke to sen
sation,
which have
at
all.
whereas these are the two sources of knowledge to unite, before we can know anything He shows that the fundamental error of the
treating the concep as the true matter of understanding sensible intuitions as a similar, only less
(i) his
thought, and
perfect
(2) his
regarding phenomena as things in themselves, which could be comprehended by means of these conceptions.
Kant
Transl. vol.
ii.
p. 2 3 1 .
LEIBNIZ.
323
substances in space through the forces which are active in space, by either drawing
We
only
know
it (attraction) or by preventing others from penetrating into it (repulsion and impenetra Other properties constituting the concept bility). of a substance appearing in space, and which we call matter, are unknown to us. As an object of the pure understanding, on the contrary, every substance must have internal determinations and forces bearing
others near to
on the internal
reality.
internal acci
dents can I think, except those which my own internal sense presents to me, namely, something which is
either itself thought, or something analogous to it 1 Hence Leibniz represented all substances, as he con
them as noumena, even the component parts of matter (after having in thought removed from them everything implying external relation, and there
ceived
fore composition also), as simple subjects endowed with powers of representation, in one word, as monads!
their representations.
and the community of their states, that is, In this way space and time
were possible only, the former through the relation of substances, the latter through the connection of
their determinations
among
and
effects.
And
so it
would be indeed,
understanding could be applied immediately to ob jects, and if space and time were determinations of But if they are sensuous things by themselves. intuitions only, in which we determine all objects merely as phenomena, then it follows that the form
comes before
of intuition (as a subjective quality of sensibility) all matter (sensations), that space
324
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
and time therefore come before all phenomena, and before all data of experience, and render in fact all As an intellectual philosopher experience possible. Leibniz could not endure that this form should come before things and determine their possibility, a cri ticism quite just when he assumed that we see things
as they are
V
all
things with each other by means of concepts only, and naturally found no other differ ences but those by which the understanding distin
He compared
pure concepts from each other. ... In one word, Leibniz intellectualised phenomena, just as
guishes
its
Locke, according to his system of Noogony (if I may use such an expression), sensualised all concepts of the
understanding, that is, represented them as nothing but empirical, though abstract, reflective concepts.
Instead of regarding the understanding and sensibi lity as two totally distinct sources of representations,
which however can supply objectively valid judg ments of things only in conjunction with each other, each of these great men recognised but one of them, which in their opinion applied immediately to things by themselves, while the other did nothing but to
produce either disorder or order in the representations of the former 2
.
all
the keynote
is
the
elimination of the idea of substance, to which these like all the rest return, after attempted flights, as
to the only sure
This contrast
alone shows the eagle strength of wing with which Kant s genius was to bear him into the pure heights
of idealism, where gravity no longer chains his flight.
1
Loc.
cit.
p. 232.
Loc.
cit. p.
235.
LEIBNIZ.
325
To sum up once more the connection between modern philosophy and these its two great repre
sentatives
I.
:
The
jective (individual), (2) the idealistic starting-point. The material world presents itself as substantia ex-
one uniform system, while the substantia a complete enigma. cogitans IT. Materialism and idealism build on the founda tion of one or other substance. Subjectivity and indi
tensa, as
is
viduality threaten to disappear (the spiritual through the atoms, the material by means of ideas) they will be completely absorbed
;
III.
itself.
By means
of the
una
substantia,
Monism
IV. After the idea of unity, a fruit of the Car tesian idealism, has been sufficiently invigorated by the revision and development of the idea of sub
stance, the rights of the manifold assert themselves again, and individualism revives in a new and more
perfect form.
LOCKE
Founds
it
LEIBNIZ
Starts from the multiplicity of substances to which he at-
multiplicity
sions.
of
sense
impresis
As they are tributes thought. things in themselves and indestructible, it is the task of reason
The understanding
only
orderly sensation.
The reader
will see
how
the standpoints are changed in the course of deve lopment, how irreconcilable opposites melt into one,
and how
by
tone and character were borrowed by Descartes, the most realistic of systems. For there can be no
326
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
doubt that Locke, the realist and empiricist, here combines Platonic and Herakleitean ideas, the eternal flux and change of sense-impressions with the dura tion and permanence of ideas and yet he is all the
:
idealistic philosopher, that which Plato and Herakleitos be and assigns lieved themselves to see in the objective world to its true birthplace, the feeling and thinking subject.
i.
e.
Leibniz, on the contrary, the pure idealist, for whom the material world and space were but phenomena,
incapable of any interaction with spiritual substances, combines, as he himself savs, Demokritos and ArisV totle, by spiritualizing the atoms of the former into
*
monads and retaining the formaB substantiales of the latter, which come into existence by means of the monads and their organic power, for every organism
has a central monad.
that of the
most
in even the and meagre perception. This opposi trifling tion proceeds from the difference of the startingpoints, and a higher unity had to be discovered to reconcile the two. Locke represents everything as coming into the understanding from without, Leibniz represents everything as developing from within. Both are obviously right both see the same object, but from opposite sides. The errors and narrowness of great men reveal themselves most clearly in their successors and in the schools which found a system on their principles. Locke s empiricism led De Condillac to the sensation transformee, to the axiom, penser cest sentir, and the extreme consequences of French materialism, which
;
may
LEIBNIZ.
327
Non
ragioniam di
lor,
ma
guarda
e passa.
The
sessed
school of Wolff, which for a long time pos universal popularity on account of its in
and
its
apparent conIt
clusiveness,
was thoroughly
realistic in character.
was the philosophy of enlightenment, and this was its title to recognition and victory. Keason and its
process is the highest type of judgment concerning truth. It has been pointed out often enough that
philosophy degenerated into a dry and empty formalism, that he was the founder of a new scholasti cism, dogmatising unintelligently over the profounds
Wolff
and illustrating with the whole methodical apparatus of philosophy. The idea of
est metaphysical ideas of Leibniz, the most trivial matters at length
Leibniz, that the reason develops everything out of itself, is established as a principle ; then the true possession of the reason, ideas, are taken as the
and then, by the help of the principle of the sufficient reason, (which is to correspond to the principle of identity), and the principle of contra
starting-point,
developed by analysis out of no question as to the origin or authority of these ideas they are there, and every thing that was in them already is evolved from them at leisure. Things in themselves and ideas are treated o
diction, everything these ideas. There
is
is
;
as exactly equal, for nihilum est cui nulla respondet notio, and aliquid est cui aliqua respondet notio, are As however, in Wolffs ontological starting-points.
spite of the distinction between a priori and a post eriori truths, which he inherited from Leibniz, the
important distinction between empirical and a priori knowledge was not made, his whole philosophy ran
328
to
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
seed with
empty
and unfounded
chief divisions, rational psychology, rational cosmo logy, and rational theology, the great objects of which God, the world, the soul and its ideas, were to
be demonstrated thence.
proclaimed its oracles in syllogisms, arguments, axioms, and defi nitions received a violent shock from the scepti
cism of
Kant penetrated into the citadel that had so long been held impregnable, and destroyed the whole in
genious fabric by showing that it consisted entirely of the self-created illusions of reason, travelling beyond
THE SKEPSIS.
HUME
(17111776).
Nasce per
Appi&
del vero
dubbio
ed e natura
Ch
al
sommo
DANTE.
of the most earnest, pro and honest thinkers who have ever occupied found, themselves with the great problem of the universe and the human mind. The honest doubt, which
gave so much scandal to his contemporaries, was more helpful and productive than thousands of folios filled with the dogmatism that had passed for ages as the highest wisdom, and with the fullest and most confident accounts of God, the world, and the human soul, which reason, operating upon its own manu
factured notions, could construct. When it occurred to reason to inquire into the grounds for these notions and to test its own assumptions, the dog
fell
to
pieces, like a
house
instigated
Kant s
:
scepticism of Pure Keason. Kant Critique I confess frankly, it was the warning
that
first,
Hume s
Hume
1
me
33O
to
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
investigations in the field of speculative philo I was far from yielding assent to his con sophy.
my
clusions,
his not
having conceived
result
his
to a single portion, as to
which no satisfactory
to
the whole.
one starts from a thought that has been estabHshed, but not carried out to all its consequences, by another, one may reasonably hope by continued
it a step further than the man to whose genius we owe the first spark of such light. Hume s attack was directed against the central the point of reason, its true and sole possession
When
meditation to carry
idea
pos which, without it, would be a mere aggregate of observations and curious inquiries. Even true opinions, says Plato, are of little value when they
sible,
of causation.
science
mind/
that
;
upon reasons which hold them together And Aristotle says The empiricists
:
know
something
theorists
wherefore
is, but they do not know the on the contrary know the why And Schopenhauer calls Why 1
sciences.
:
Before this serious Schopenhauer says of Hume thinker no one had doubted that the principle of the
sufficient reason, in
ality, stood
first
"
other words, the law of caus and foremost in earth and heaven.
For
eternal truth," subsisting independ to the gods or destiny ently, superior everything else, the understanding which apprehends the prin
it
:
was an
ciple, as
there
well as the world at large and whatsoever may be which is the cause of the world, such as atoms, motion, a creator, or the like, exists only
1
Oi
fj.ev
Ston
i.
OVK
I.
"ivacriv
ol 8f
Sidn Kal
Metapll.
HUME.
in conformity
331
this.
Hume
was the
this
first
whom
it
occurred to
its
ask whence
authority, and to
demand
credentials
all
its
knowledge
self-delusive.
Locke, in tracing all knowledge to experience, had deduced the causal relation from the same root; he laid down that the effect of the wih upon the
1
resistance of bodies
were the origin of the idea of cause. All knowledge, including this most important, is
therefore purely empirical. Leibniz, on the other hand, accorded its due place in the system of human knowledge to the idea of
cause,
or rather to the
reason.
He
indicated
it
duties of metaphysics to investigate and explain the primary ideas from which human thought takes its
Besides this, start, and notably this idea of cause. Leibniz had established the important distinction
between necessary and accidental truths, and had referred the latter, which include all actual matters of fact, to an endless causal series, while the former
may
tingent,
penetrating glance
concilable,
Hume
whence he concluded that causation and experience were incompatible, and that our as1
p. 20.
332
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
sumption of things happening necessarily which still meant their happening because of something else rested accordingly on self-deception. Here too it is really the eternal contrast between the manifoldness of the world and the craving of our reason after unity which encounters us as we get to
the root of the
itself to
difficulty. Necessity only reveals our thought by the perception of identity, and this therefore, as formal and logical certainty, under
But whence lies all the most elementary truths. comes the assumption that this formal logical equi valence corresponds to the world of fact and will find If sensible and rational know its application there 1 ledge is nothing more than a highly improved method of analysis, then there remains at last nothing but the infinite multiplicity of individual existences, whose co-existence and co-operation can only be explained by a miracle, i.e. the monads and the pre-established harmony. If, on the other hand, reason assumes, with vain self-sufficiency, that its notions correspond exactly to the nature of existing things, it will ima gine itself able to explain the latter by merely ana lysing its own conceptions and it must soon become
;
apparent that any such reasoning revolves in a neverending circle. Empiricism can never lead to unity and necessity, for experience is only of the manifold, whether within ourselves or in the external world. No artifices of reason can convince us that different things are
one,
less
i.
e.
than this
too.
is,
therefore
must be
can ever
And this is more than rational thought know or admit concerning the self-subsisting
HUME.
333
On
to the multiplicity and diversity of real things ; for all these truths are at bottom merely identical pro and what store of knowledge can be derived positions
;
from identical propositions ? The idea of cause and effect involves fundamentally incompatible assumptions regarding our reason, by
applying the formal logical unity to the multiplicity of sense perceptions, and by attributing universality and necessity to things which are by nature single,
the objective
had recognised the importance of the question and pointed out some of the in consistencies involved, and had deduced thence the impossibility of any certain knowledge grounded on
necessity. mainly in
In the old world naturally this wT as done the form of aperpus, while in modern
philosophy, which had found the true starting-point of all knowledge in the thinking subject, this on
slaught of
Hume s
dealt a
home
thrust.
Among the earlier sceptics ^Enesidemus denied the possibility of making the sequence of one thing
from another
is
intelligible to the reason, saying that the cause of anything else, and they who nothing seek after causes delude themselves 1
.
The later sceptics gave five reasons which should determine suspense of judgment (eTroyrj}. i. CCTTO the uncertainty of words; there Sicxjxavias,
is
1
[j.r]8fvos
ainov
flvai,
cf.
rjTTaTrj<j6ai
Se
rovs al
i.
<pdo-K(6i>.
also Sext.
80.
334
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
be assured that the same thoughts are at tached by different persons to the same word. the progreSSUS in 2. tt7ro r79 et? aTreipov e/CTrrwa-eojf,
we can
every cause has a cause, and this another and yet another ad infinitum. 3. cnro rov Trpos n, the relativity of all things ; we know in what relations a thing stands towards
infiniturn,
the
fact that
other things,
7TOO? TY\V d)V/JlV.
we
cannot
know what
it
is
in itself
viroOea-ew, because dogmatists always start 4. e from something that has been taken for granted.
5.
The argument
sought for
l
,
in a circle,
sion
is
leading to it
has language because he has reason, while reason impossible without language.
Other reasons against causality preserved for us by Sextus Empiricus (Adv. Mathem. ix. 207) are interesting, as they agree with those brought forward by Hume, thus giving one more proof of the im possibility of finding any thought that has not been at least partially and accidentally forestalled. Cause/
say the sceptics, is a relation. The cause of the cut ting of meat is a knife the knife and the meat are
;
real,
but the cause is not real, only a Trpo? n, a thing of the mind. There are three conceivable causal
:
relations
i.
other (TO
ov rov
ay.a.
oWo?).
This
is
perfectly
unthinkable, for if two things exist at the same time, one cannot be thought of as originating (yew^TIKOV) the other.
2.
That the
1
As long
as
i.
A stands alone,
Sext.
164.
HUME.
it is
335
not a cause, for the effect is wanting to complete is no the relation as soon as B has appeared, there, and the cause is absent. longer
;
3.
That the
is
later
earlier
inconceivable
alleged,
and according
sane judgment. Moreover a true cause, a causa agens, properly so called, must always produce the effect out of
itself
;
it
something passive (TO Trao-^oi/). The dogmatist who assumes cause to be a relation, a Trpos TI, ac cording to which the cause may be known by the nature of the passive effect and the effect by the nature of the cause, commits the error of using two words to designate the same thing (AU ewoia l for how can there be a doing ovofj.aT(av rev^erat] without a suffering, or a suffering without a doing V
or
<$volv
objectivism of antiquity, which saw and sought for everything in the external world, in the unquestioned
reality of things
and secondly, the scepticism which naturally sprang from the incompleteness of this standpoint, and so led to a presentiment of the ideality of causation, while it was supposed to be Such con relegated to the regions of nothingness.
;
siderations can only serve to illustrate the real great ness of Descartes and his work.
1
illustration of a chariot
is
and
its
driver,
the latter of
former.
whom at the same time moves and And though at the present day we need
moved by the
not be perplexed
by
this difficulty, there remain other similar ones undisposed of, e. g. in a moving mass what is to be regarded as active or impart
336
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
The significance and force of Hume s scepticism could only be appreciated by an intellectual equal, while others raised the cry of heresy and appealed
to
common
sense.
It is
amusing
to note
how most
of his adversaries imagined themselves to have de molished Hume, when they had shown how in one chapter (Essay vii) he denies the necessity of the
causal sequence, and hence inferred the uncertainty of knowledge, while in the following chapter human freedom is called in question, because everything
happens by way of cause and effect. They forgot that a similar inconsistency had lurked for centuries in human thought itself, which assumed at the same time the strict necessity of all cognition, and the unlimited freedom of all action, so that it was a real service to reverse the point of view, as it was ob viously fair to do. and so rouse the slumbering reason from its lethargy. Kant says with great force and justice l Since the attempts of Locke and Leibniz, or indeed since the origin of metaphysics, as far back as we can trace its history, there has been no incident so decisive of the possible fate of the whole science as the onslaught of David Hume. He brought no new to this branch of knowledge, but he kindled a light spark whence light might have been derived, if it
:
had
fallen
upon
fitting tinder.
took his start principally from a single but important metaphysical conception, namely that
of the connection of cause and effect (together with the consequent conception of force and action) and
;
Hume
he summoned the reason, which professed to be its author, to give an answer for herself and declare by
1
Prolegomena, Vorwort.
HUME.
337
what
right she supposes that anything of such a nature can exist, that whenever it exists, something for this is what the else necessarily exists forthwith
;
conception of cause involves. He proved conclusively that it was impossible for the reason to construct a
priori such a connection which involves necessity for it is impossible to see how because one thing is, another thing should necessarily also be, or how
;
the conception
that the reason
of such
He
was entirely deceived as to this idea, in error in regarding it as its own offspring, seeing that it was really a bastard child born of was
the imagination and experience.
certain
From
this alliance
which were brought under sprang the law of association, and the subjective neces
ideas
sity arising thence,
i.e.
served objective necessity. From this he inferred that the reason possessed no power of thinking such connections, even in a general form, because its con ceptions would then be pure fictions, and that all its
vainly subsisting
a priori knowledge was nothing but common experience under a false brand, which is much the same as saying there neither is nor can be such a thing as metaphysic \
1
Hume
name
of metaphysic to this
destructive philosophy, and attached a great value to it. Meta physic and morals/ he says, are the most important branches of
knowledge
valuable/
With
Hume
positive help to be derived from moderating the exaggerated claims of speculative reason, so as to do away with the endless, intolerant
tive injury arising
disputes which perplex the human race ; he lost sight of the posi when the most important truths are taken out of
left to
propose to the
Kant s
note.
VOL.
I.
338
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
However premature and incorrect his conclusion may have been, it was at least based upon investiga
tions
which deserved the co-operation of the ablest minds of his generation in the attempt to solve the problem in the sense he indicated, an attempt which must have resulted in a complete intellectual
reform.
to
But unfortunately the malevolent fate which seems watch over metaphysics had decreed that no one
One cannot ob
how
all his
op
ponents Keid, Oswald, Beattie, and even Priestley, all without exception miss the point of his con tention by taking for granted the very thing which he is calling in question, at the same time that they demonstrate with great violence and hardihood points which it had never occurred to him to doubt, and so
misunderstood his invitation to improvement that everything remained just as it was before. The ques tion was not whether the conception of cause was just,
serviceable,
and indispensable in relation to all na had never been disputed by Hume but whether it could be conceived a priori by the reason, and thus possessed an internal truth independent of experience which would make it admit of more extended application, not limited to matters of experience. This was the point as to which Hume demanded information. The question was only as to
tural sciences, for this
;
the origin of the conception, not as to its practical indispensableness if only the former point were cleared up, the conditions and limitations of its validity would
;
follow of themselves.
His opponents, to deal satisfactorily with their task, would have had to penetrate deeply into the
nature of reason, in so far as
it
is
occupied with
HUME.
339
;
pure thought, and this they found inconvenient it was easier to assume a defiant bearing and simply refer the matter to common sense. Sound, or as it is sometimes called, plain common sense, is in fact a very rare and precious gift of heaven. But its possession must be proved by deeds, by deliberation
in thought and speech, not by to it as an oracle, when the speaker has appealing nothing else sensible to allege.
and reasonableness
To appeal
to
human common
sense just
when
knowledge and insight begin to fail, is one of the most ingenious inventions of our age, and one which enables any shallow babbler to hold his own against thinkers of depth and thorough
ness.
So long, however, as any fragment of insight remains, this expedient need not be resorted to and looked at in the right light, such an appeal is simply a reference to the judgment of the masses, a kind of sanction which makes philosophers blush, while I should popular witlings boast of it triumphantly. have thought that the claims of Hume to a healthy common sense were as strong as those of Beattie, while he certainly possessed, what the other as cer tainly did not, the critical reason by which common sense is held in check, and not allowed to lose itself
;
upon questions involving principles which it is unable to verify; for in this way only can it continue to deserve the name it
claims.
a job of car
pentry, but the engraver requires a needle for his art. Thus both common sense and speculative intelligence are useful in their way, the former when we have to do with judgments with a direct practical application, the latter when general conclusions have to be de duced from abstract conceptions, as, for instance, in
Z 2
340
metaphysics,
antiphrasis)
all.
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
where the
self-styled
(sometimes by
common
sense has
no jurisdiction at
Notwithstanding this crushing attack upon the opponents of Hume, there still seem to be some writers who do not understand what is the issue This appears from the irrelevant remarks involved. with which Mr. Lewes, in his Problems of Life and Mind (ii. pp. 408-412), aims at controverting Hume, which should serve as a warning to all those who oc cupy themselves with philosophy, without having first penetrated into the spirit of Kant s writings, and having learnt from them what must be accepted as the foundation and starting-point of all true philo
To neglect Kant is the same as to amuse oneself after Lavoisier with expe thing riments in alchemy, or after Bopp with the ancient
sophy in the future.
etymological trifling based on casual resemblances of sound.
proceed to reproduce in brief outline the simple and yet convincing course of Hume s ar
I will
now
guments.
Surely/ he says,
objects,
it is
which
it
founded all our reasonings concerning matter of fact or ex istence. By means of it alone we attain any assur ance concerning objects which are removed from the The present testimony of our memory and senses. immediate utility of all sciences is to teach us only
this are
On
how
to control
causes.
are therefore, every moment, employed about this relation ; yet so imperfect are the ideas which we form concerning it,
that
it
is
HUME.
cause
341
Most writers on the subject either employ un intelligible terms or such as are synonymous to the term which they endeavour to define. Thus, if a cause be defined that which produces anything, it is
easy to observe, that producing is synonymous to In like manner, if a cause be defined that causing.
l>y
which anything
?
exists,
is
objection.
For what
been said that a cause is that after exists, we should have this constancy forms the very essence of necessity, nor have we any other
it
which
Had
idea of
We
Our inner
satisfied
get here at the root of the whole enquiry. consciousness tells us that we are not
arises
may
substitute
the word necessarily for constantly. Hume denies this positively, and from the empirical standpoint
occupied by himself and Locke, no other answer was
possible.
If everything
is
must be so derived also. If there were nothing but change and uncertainty in nature, the idea of But instead of causality would never have arisen.
of cause
actually observe a certain uniformity in do not find any power the sequences of events.
this
we do
We
or necessary connection binding the effect to the cause, we only find that the one does in fact follow
the other.
1
Hence
it is
that
men
acquire
by long
Enquiry Concerning
Ib. sect. viii. i.
Human
Understanding,
342
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
habit such, a turn of mind, that upon the appearance of the cause they immediately expect with assurance its usual attendant, and hardly conceive it possible that any other event could result from it.
But were the power or energy of any cause dis coverable by the mind, we could foresee the effect even without experience, and might at first pro nounce with certainty concerning it, by the mere dint In reality, there is no of thought and reasoning.
4
part of matter that does ever, by its sensible qualities, discover any power or energy, or give us ground to
imagine that it could produce anything, or be fol lowed by any other object, which we could deno
minate
in
its effect.
continually shifting,
The scenes of the universe are and one object follows another
;
an uninterrupted succession but the power or force which actuates the whole machine is entirely concealed from us, and never discovers itself in any
of the sensible qualities of body. have no idea of this connexion, nor even any distinct notion what it is we desire to know, when
We
we endeavour
at a conception of it. We say, for that the vibration of this string is the cause instance, of this particular sound. But what do we mean by
that affirmation
is
We
either
mean
followed
this
l>y
sound, and
l>y
tions have lieen followed similar sounds ; or, that this vibration is followed by this sound, and that upon the appearance of one the mind anticipates the senses,
and forms immediately an idea of the other. We may consider the relation of cause and effect in either of these two lights, but beyond these we have no
idea of
it.
But there
still
. . .
this conclusion.
HUME.
is
343
impossible for us, by any sagacity or penetration, to discover or even conjecture, with out experience, what event will result from it, or to
presented, it
is
carry our foresight beyond that object which mediately present to the memory and senses.
after one instance
is
im Even
experiment, where we have observed a particular event to follow upon another, we are not entitled to form a general rule or foretell
or
what will happen in like cases, it being justly es teemed an unpardonable temerity to judge of the whole course of nature from one single experiment, however accurate or certain. But when one par
ticular species of event has always, in all instances,
been conjoined with another, we make no longer any scruple of foretelling one upon the appearance of tho other, and of employing that reasoning which can
alone assure us of any matter of fact or existence. We then call the one object, Cause ; the other, Effect.
is some connexion between some power in the one by which it infallibly produces the other, and operates with the greatest certainty and strongest necessity.
We
them
Shall
we then
assert that
we
are conscious of a
power or energy in our own minds, when, by an act or command of our will, we raise up a new idea, fix the mind to the contemplation of it, turn it on aU sides, and at last dismiss it for some other idea, when we think that we have surveyed it with sufficient But do we pretend to be acquainted accuracy 1 with the nature of the human soul and the nature of an idea, or the aptitude of the one to produce the This is a real creation, a production of some other ? which implies a power so out of nothing l thing
.
And
cf.
ante, the
344
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
at first sight beyond the great that it may seem reach of any being less than infinite. At least it must be owned that such a power is not felt, nor
known, nor even conceivable by the mind. We only feel the event, namely the existence of an idea con will but the manner sequent to a command of the
;
in
which this operation is performed, the power by which it is produced, is entirely beyond our com
prehension.
itself is limited,
The latter the body. (which Locke had brought forward as the prototype of the idea of Cause) eludes our discernment as much The influence of volition over the as all the rest.
command over
is
fact.
which this
is
But
performs so extraordinary an operation, of this we are so far from being immediately conscious, that it must for ever escape our most diligent enquiry.
.
.
any principle in all nature more mysterious than the union of soul with body, by which a sup posed spiritual substance acquires such an influence over a material one, that the most refined thought Were we is able to actuate the grossest matter ? empowered by a secret wish to remove mountains
Is there
The immediate ob beyond our comprehension. of power in voluntary motion is not the mem ject ber itself which is moved, but certain muscles and nerves and animal spirits, and perhaps something still more minute and unknown, through which the motion is successively propagated. That the motion of the limbs follows the command of the will
.
. .
is
a matter of
common
HUME.
events.
345
as the vulgar do in the case of what is apparently miraculous, so philosophers think them selves obliged in all cases to have resort to some
invisible intelligent principle as the
And
immediate cause
unexplained. sentiments and passions is much weaker than that over our ideas and even the latter authority is cir
;
of
what
is
cumscribed within very narrow boundaries. Will one pretend to assign the ultimate reason of any
these boundaries, or show why the power is deficient in one case and not in another I This self-command
too
is
A man
in
health possesses more of it than one languishing with sickness. are more master of our thoughts
We
in the
morning than
in the evening
Can we
give any
by
itself
has no knowledge of
own powers
or
their source.
that of which
we
such extraordinary effects do ever result from a simple act of volition. To sum up the argument in his own words Every idea is copied from some preceding impres sion or sentiment and when we cannot find any we may be certain that there is no idea. impression
:
In
single instances of the operation of bodies or minds, there is nothing that produces any impression
all
nor consequently can suggest any idea of power or But when uniform instances necessary connexion.
appear, and the same object is always followed by the same event, we then begin to entertain the
notion
new sentiment
or connexion. then feel a or impression, to wit, a customary connexion in the thought or imagination between of cause
We
346
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
one object and its usual attendant ; and this sen timent is the original of that idea which we seek
for.
But the
up
to
a certain point supplies no logical ground for the expectation that the regularity must continue. Ex
perience can tell us nothing of the inner nature of
bodies,
their sensible qualities. It is useless to say that own conduct invalidates the doubt ; as a practical agent I may have no such difficulties, but as a
my
philosopher I
am
hope of seeing it removed. It is certain that the most ignorant and stupid peasants, nay infants, nay, even brute beasts, improve by experience, and learn the qualities of natural objects by observing the effects which result from
though
may
have
When a child has felt the sensation of pain from touching the flame of a candle, he will be care ful not to put his hand near any candle but will a similar effect from a cause, which is similar expect
them.
;
in
its sensible If you qualities and appearance. assert therefore that the understanding of the child
by any process of argu ment and ratiocination, I may justly require you to produce that argument, nor have you any pretence
is
to refuse so equitable a
demand.
You
cannot say
it
is
is
abstruse
escape your enquiry, since you confess that obvious to the capacity of a mere infant 1
But there
is
eifect
met
with in the animal world and ministering to the preservation of the organism, which is not based These we denominate upon practice or experience
:
Enquiry Concerning
Human
Understanding,
sect. iv.
HUME.
instincts,
347
and are so apt to admire as something very extraordinary and inexplicable by all the disquisi tions of human understanding. But our wonder will,
perhaps, cease or diminish
when we
experimental reasoning itself, which we possess in common with beasts and on which the whole conduct
of
life
depends,
or mechanical
ourselves,
by any
in its chief operations is not directed such relation or comparison of ideas as are the
and
proper objects of our intellectual faculties. Though the instinct be different, yet still it is an instinct, which teaches a man to avoid the fire as much as
that which teaches a bird with such exactness the
art of incubation,
of
its
nursery
practical and our speculative antici of natural events thus display a kind of pations pre-established harmony between the course of na
Both our
verned be wholly unknown to us, yet our thoughts and conceptions have still, we find, gone on in the same train with the other works of nature. Custom
is
that principle
by which
been
of our
species and the regulation of our conduct in every circumstance and occurrence of human life. Had not the presence of an object instantly excited the idea of these objects commonly conjoined with it, all our knowledge must have been limited to the narrow and we should sphere of our memory and senses never have been able to adjust means to ends, or
;
employ our natural powers either to the producing Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, sect. ix.
1
348
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
.
.
like effects
from
like causes,
and
all
human creatures, it is not probable that it could be trusted to the fallacious deductions of our reason, which is slow in its operations appears not, in any degree, during the first years of infancy; and
;
and period of human and mistake. It is life, extremely more conformable to the ordinary wisdom of nature to secure so necessary an act of the mind by some instinct or mechanical tendency, which may be in
at
best
is,
in
every age
liable to
error
may
appearance of life and thought, and may be in dependent of all the laboured deductions of the un
derstanding.
As nature has taught us the use of our without giving us the knowledge of the muscles limbs, and nerves by which they are actuated, so has she implanted in us an instinct which carries forward the thought in a correspondent course to that which she has established among external objects, though we are ignorant of those powers and forces on which
this regular course
depends
1
.
Hume had
Greek sceptics, that the purpose of knowledge was the preservation of human existence, and that it should therefore never venture beyond its proper
boundaries and presume to fathom the eternal truths of metaphysics, among which the investigation of
causes
itself,
was
is
of
Enquiry Concerning
Human
HUME.
349
man
by meddle with the tedious methods of logical inferences or deduction. The Greek sceptics had substantially the same meaning when they contested the signum demonstrativum and accepted and extolled the signum In the latter, according to them, the memoriale. whole force of human knowledge was to be found, and beyond this it cannot go smoke brings fire,
;
to reproduce in thought the sequences given experience in a corresponding order, and not to
is
wounds death
into
remembrance.
The mistake of
the dogmatists is to see, in all these things, signs, which are to enable them to pierce into the im
The germ of Hume s penetrable nature of things. is thus contained in this fundamental view of theory
theirs.
But
it
is
sceptics should have been right in placing the seat of human superiority over brutes in these signa memorialia, and thus, perhaps, for the first time, virtually
l indicating the importance of language to thought Human thought could reach no other than these
.
negative results, from the starting-point of mere em If, as Locke assumed, the idea of cause, as piricism. well as everything else, was derived from without,
itself is contingent, not necessary, and therefore self-destructive. The scepticism of Hume in fact determined the disintegration of empiricism,
and
so prepared the
We
Pa.TiK.fj
must now
e
way
8ia(pfpeiv
T>V
oXXo>z>
<oa>v
TOV avdptanov,
Xoyw
re KOI p.fTa-
dAA OVTOI ye
dveniKpircas
<Tvyxa>pr]crop.fV
(patvofievois TriprjTiKTjV
nva
nva
/zero
riva, (K rrjs
rS>v
Trporfviii.
vTTOTrrwcreeos dvaveovrai
ra
XotTrd.
Sext. Empir.
Adv. Math.
288.
350
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
higher knowledge which lie outside experience, and deal therefore with a priori truths, with speculative
impart dog matic instruction concerning the nature of things. Hume has rendered some services to the doctrine of knowledge, in pursuing the path opened by Locke, and further developing the relation of sensible per
to
Locke caUed the ceptions to the formation of ideas. ordinary affections of sense, as well as the inner
movements of the feelings, i. e. the passions, by the name of ideas. Hume saw what was erroneous in
this view,
and distinguished between impressions of and the thoughts the expression is his own, sense, which are formed thence. He had thus taken a step which might have led him far in advance if he had
followed the admirable advice of Locke, to inves But instead of doing this, tigate the origin of ideas.
for
All the objects of human reason or enquiry may naturally be divided into two kinds, to wit, Relations
Of the first kind are of Ideas, and Matters of Fact. the sciences of Geometry, Algebra, and Arithmetic. Propositions of this kind are discoverable by the mere
. .
is
operation of thought, without dependence on what anywhere existent in the universe. Though there
never were a
the truths
demonstrated by Euclid, would for ever retain their certainty and evidence. Matters of fact are not ascertained in the same manner, nor is our evidence of their truth, however
*
The
con-
HUME.
351
trary of every matter of fact is still possible ; because That the sun it can never imply a contradiction
.
no less intelligible a propo and implies no more contradiction, than the sition, there is no logical affirmation that it will rise 1
will not rise to-morrow is
;
we
find ourselves entangled in so many contradictions that we are in danger of falling into scepticism. Ask
when he pronounces
and he will appeal from The principles deduced from to intuition. reasoning the ideas of space and time seem full of absurdity No priestly dogmas, invented on and contradictions. purpose to tame and subdue the rebellious reason of mankind, ever shocked common sense more than
two quantities
to be equal,
with
its
played by all geometricians and metaphysicians with a kind of triumph and exaltation. All men and even animals take for granted the
reality of the external world
and regulate their acts and wishes upon the assumption. Yet philosophy furnishes the most unquestionable proof that all this imaginary external reality is and can be nothing more than modification of our consciousness, i. e. forms of
the Cartesian appeal to the veracity of the Deity to prove the veracity of our senses is of little avail, seeing that we are certainly in many cases
sensibility.
And
deceived by our senses. Indeed, it is universally allowed by modern enquirers, that all the sensible
qualities of objects, such as hard, soft, hot, cold, white, black, etc., are merely secondary, and exist not in the
Enquiry Concerning
Human
Understanding,
sect. iv.
352
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
without any external archetype or model, which they If this be allowed, with regard to represent.
secondary qualities, it must also follow, with regard to the supposed primary qualities of extension and solidity ; nor can the latter be any more entitled to
that denomination than the former.
sion
is
feeling ...
an extension that
is
that the ideas of these primary qualities are attained by abstraction is unintelligible, and even absurd.
is
our enquiries to such subjects as are best adapted to While the narrow capacity of human understanding.
. .
we
after a
cannot give a satisfactory reason why we believe, thousand experiments, that a stone will fall,
ing
any
we
regard to the origin of worlds, and the situation of nature, from, and to eternity By keeping within narrow and reasonable limits
"?
we
what are the proper subjects of science and enquiry. The only objects of the abstract sciences or of demonstration are quantity and number, and all attempts to extend this more perfect species of know ledge beyond these bounds are mere sophistry and illusion. As the component parts of quantity and number are entirely similar, their relation becomes intricate and involved and nothing can be more
shall find
* ;
by a variety
from each other, we can never advance further, by our utmost scrutiny, than to observe this diversity, and, by an obvious reflection,
HUME.
.
353
.
All those pronounce one thing not to be another. pretended syllogistical reasonings, which may be found in every other branch of learning, except the sciences of quantity and number, are indeed nothing
but imperfect definitions, and those sciences may safely, I think, be pronounced the only proper objects of knowledge and demonstration. All other enquiries of men regard only matter of
fact
and existence
of demonstration.
gation of a fact can involve a contradiction ... it is only experience, which teaches us the nature and
effect.
When we
run over
libraries, persuaded of these principles, what havoc must we make 1 If we take in our hand any volume, of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance, let us
contain any abstract reasoning concern ing quantity or number ? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and
it
ask, Does
existence ?
it
No.
Commit
it
for
.
can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion The conclusion leaves nothing to be desired in
we have mathematics,
intel
lectual processes in the realm of the a priori, whereby truth is developed, step by step, sometimes in a highly
complicated manner. The matter of reasoning is only the relation of ideas referring to quantity and number. We are reminded of Hobbes saying that all thought
is
all
other hand, the empirical sciences, where syllogistic procedure, all the refinements and
On the
artifices of subtle
for it is
Enquiry Concerning
Human
Understanding,
sect. xii.
VOL.
1.
354
not, reason,
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
but experience alone that can teach us anything about causes and effects. Who could have discovered a priori the explosive power of gunpowder,
the direction of the magnetic needle, and the like ? Even in the case of complicated mechanism, experi
ence alone can enlighten us. Who would ever attempt to derive from first principles the fact that milk arid
bread are proper nourishment for a man, and not for a lion or tiger \ We may regard the empirical enthusiasm which breathes in all Hume s writings, as the last outbreak
animosity against the scholastic method, which imagined that it had established a claim to the explanation of reality, when it had
of a concentrated
simply first separated and then recombined its own forms of thought in various shapes. The example of such eminent thinkers as Descartes, Spinoza, and
Leibniz, shows that in theological
and philosophical
largely prevailed, notwith standing the light already won. They all sought to bridge the interval between thought and fact with o o
writings this
method
still
the ens maxime necessarium, which was also the ens realissimum. Hume s fundamental idea and profound
conviction
is,
let
who
light upon any road to reality, since they cannot see or value its one true source experience.
have already spoken, apropos of Spinoza s Ethics, of the perverse attempt to apply mathematical methods to other conceptions. One example taken from Wolff s works may suffice to show what a fruit
less
We
made
of
it
in the writings
In the
Anfangsgriinde
HUME.
der Baukunst we find the proposition must be wide enough for two persons to
ably in
to
lie
it
it.
:
355
A
lie
window
comfort
Demonstration.
in a
the architect ought in all things to consult the wishes of the landlord, he ought to make
of
and as
i)
lie
com
Hume
is
passage quoted above from the Prolegomena, and the same passage shows plainly wherein the great philo sopher conceived the gist of Hume s scepticism, which
he characterises as incontrovertible, to
consist.
Since the acceptance of the Cartesian cogito as the starting-point of philosophy, the chief preoccupation
both of
1
its
author and
all his
This kind of professorial philosophy, which lay like an incubus s mind, when he made Mephistopheles describe the nature of logic in the well-known verses which tell how
what seemed
so simple as eating
necessary.
and drinking, One, two, three was same philosophy, when he writes
:
nicht friert,
Und Und
Lichtenberg s persiflage supplies an excellent pendant it can hardly be called a parody to the above passage of Wolff: When a house is on fire, the first thing to be done is to cover the right side
of the house on the left hand,
:
and the
left side
Demonstration For supposing on the contrary one right hand. were first to cover the right side of the right-hand house and the left side of the left-hand house, the right side of the left-hand
house and the
flames than the
side of the right-hand house are nearer to the of the left-hand house and the right side of the right-hand house. If, then, one were to cover the latter
left
left side
rather than the former, one would be protecting what is further from the flames sooner than what is nearest them, which is mani
festly contrary to reason.
Ergo
&c., Q.
E. D.
a 2
356
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
discover some explanation or excuse for the assump tion of a real external world, when everything is only thought, ideal, a mode or modes of consciousness.
The only thinkers who have affected a real recon-. ciliation of the two opposites, Spinoza and Leibniz, go beyond the Cartesian standpoint and construct a
world,
it
is
is
but
:
is
Bishop Berkeley, whose idealism may stagger not to be confuted. It is of him that Hume
says
among
the ancient
or
modern
He
book against the sceptics as well as against the atheists and free-thinkers. But that all his argfuO
ments, though otherwise intended, are, in reality, merely sceptical, appears from this, that they admit of
Their only
the result of
to cause that
irresolution
scepticism.
and importance of Hume in the stream of philosophical thought may be estimated from this. Both standpoints, he said, the idealistic and the realistic, are unassailable. But, instead of endeavour ing, like all his predecessors, to combine or reconcile them, or to subordinate one to the other, he admitted the claims of both, and recognised both as completely in harmony with rational thoaght. But he added,
The
place
HUME.
they contradict
357
each other, and there is no higher court of appeal to decide the controversy, nothing therefore remains for mankind but Doubt.
If
we
we
have before us the magnificent spectacle of human thought proceeding by way of premisses and conclu sion in Mathematics. Thought there arrives, by an alysing itself, at necessary truths, which hold good everywhere and always, and require no experience to
verify or confirm them.
But what do we
see underlying
?
An abyss
of
contradictions, exceeding that has ever been hatched by the craziest anything human imagination. Iri this abyss madness may be
found to lurk, but certainly not a metaphysical solu tion of the nature of things. In mathematics, where the relation only of our
ideas
is
cause
we
concerned, there is so much clearness, be are dealing there with quantity alone, the
most abstract of conceptions, with a more or less, in fact, and not with anything real, which would neces sarily presuppose some quality by which it is deter The simplest consideration, however, will mined. suffice to show that there is no road leading from
mathematical ideas to the reality of things that in consequence this ideal region is altogether isolated and cut off from actual fact, although it is not improbable, as hinted by Hume, that these ideas themselves are derived from sensible perception and
;
(The latter view again destroys the and necessity of mathematical science.) universality If, on tae other hand, we betake ourselves to the
experience.
region of realism, we are referred to experience alone ; and here everything remains for ever a riddle to the analytic reason. Our reason seems to recognise causes
358
MODERN PHILOSOPHY.
effects
and
pirical facts into an equivalent series of ideas, with success. Even the formation of ideas,
meets which takes places in our mind, and is in harmony with the things of the outer world, is as great and insoluble a
mystery to us as the nature of our soul. It is as in conceivable to our reason as the mysterious mechanism of our bodies, of which we seem to make use through
the
will.
It follows thence that the ideal is just as incom prehensible as the real ; we can give no explanation,
the
effect
cession.
ciples
With the coordination of these two prin human knowledge which for practical pur
is
takes its rise. complete the wherefore of real se ideas, quences, the wherefore of the harmony between the this remains for ever unknown real and the ideal, poses
sufficient
and
The wherefore of
and inconceivable.
reason,
rational thought had destroyed the claims of and reason itself seemed to have committed suicide. The Cartesian Dubito was reinstated in all All the conclusions of past its rigour and severity. were called in question. The philosophic speculation systems built up with so much labour and acuteness by the dogmatists were arrayed against each other, and had met in a mutually destructive shock. Organic structures had been reduced to chaotic elemental forces. Dark clouds and gloomy mist overhang the intellectual world, and seem to hinder every outlook towards the lights of certain knowledge. But this
v
Thus
HUME.
359
twilight gray announced the morning glow of the star was to rise from above the approaching day.
philosophic horizon, whose radiance was to obscure all previous achievements. It was reserved for Kant
to sound the furthest depths of human reason, and so for ever to disperse the anxious doubts by which it
beset, to establish its just and inalienable claims, as well as to determine for all time the boundaries
was
beyond which
losing itself
it
upon the shoreless ocean of vain imagina tions and wild and empty speculation. He was to show why all earlier speculation had broken down, and must have broken down he alone succeeded in solving all the contradictions and para doxes in which the reason was entangled and in ex plaining them completely in accordance with their
;
nature, as he dropped the sounding line into depths which as yet no mortal mind had dared to fathom, and brought up from thence to the light of
own
highest achievement of
human wisdom.
_
NOIRE
?2614i
B
72
.N6
DATE
acs* ISSUED
TO