4638 lines
211 KiB
Plaintext
4638 lines
211 KiB
Plaintext
Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous
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George Berkeley
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1713
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Copyright 1996, James Fieser (jfieser@utm.edu). See end note for
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details on copyright and editing conventions. This text file is
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based on the 1910 Harvard Classics edition of Berkeley's <Three
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Dialogues>. Pagenation follows T.E. Jessop's 1949 edition of
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<Three Dialogues>, in <The Works of George Berkeley>, Vol. 2.
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This is a working draft; please report errors.[1]
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* * * *
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THREE DIALOGUES
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Between
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HYLAS AND PHILONOUS
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The Design of which is Plainly to Demonstrate the Reality and
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Perfection of
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HUMAN KNOWLEDGE
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The Incorporeal Nature of the
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SOUL
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And the Immediate Providence of a
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DEITY
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In Opposition to
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SCEPTICS AND ATHEISTS
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Also to Open a Method for Rendering the Sciences More Easy,
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Useful, and Compendious
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{171}
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THE FIRST DIALOGUE
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<Philonous>. Good morrow, Hylas: I did not expect to find
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you abroad so early.
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<Hylas>. It is indeed something unusual; but my thoughts
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were so taken up with a subject I was discoursing of last night,
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that finding I could not sleep, I resolved to rise and take a
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turn in the garden.
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<Phil>. It happened well, to let you see what innocent and
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agreeable pleasures you lose every morning. Can there be a
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pleasanter time of the day, or a more delightful season of the
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year? That purple sky, those wild but sweet notes of birds, the
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fragrant bloom upon the trees and flowers, the gentle influence
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of the rising sun, these and a thousand nameless beauties of
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nature inspire the soul with secret transports; its faculties too
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being at this time fresh and lively, are fit for those
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meditations, which the solitude of a garden and tranquillity of
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the morning naturally dispose us to. But I am afraid I interrupt
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your thoughts: for you seemed very intent on something.
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<Hyl>. It is true, I was, and shall be obliged to you if you
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will permit me to go on in the same vein; not that I would by any
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means deprive myself of your company, for my thoughts always flow
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more easily in conversation with a friend, than when I am alone:
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but my request is, that you would suffer me to impart my
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reflexions to you.
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<Phil>. With all my heart, it is what I should have
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requested myself if you had not prevented me.
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<Hyl>. I was considering the odd fate of those men who have
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in all ages, through an affectation of being distinguished from
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the vulgar, or some unaccountable turn of thought, pretended
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either to believe nothing at all, or to believe the most
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extravagant things in the world. This however might be borne, if
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their paradoxes and scepticism did not draw after them some
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consequences of general disadvantage to mankind. But the mischief
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lieth {172} here; that when men of less leisure see them who are
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supposed to have spent their whole time in the pursuits of
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knowledge professing an entire ignorance of all things, or
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advancing such notions as are repugnant to plain and commonly
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received principles, they will be tempted to entertain suspicions
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concerning the most important truths, which they had hitherto
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held sacred and unquestionable.
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<Phil>. I entirely agree with you, as to the ill tendency of
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the affected doubts of some philosophers, and fantastical
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conceits of others. I am even so far gone of late in this way of
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thinking, that I have quitted several of the sublime notions I
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had got in their schools for vulgar opinions. And I give it you
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on my word; since this revolt from metaphysical notions to the
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plain dictates of nature and common sense, I find my
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understanding strangely enlightened, so that I can now easily
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comprehend a great many things which before were all mystery and
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riddle.
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<Hyl>. I am glad to find there was nothing in the accounts I
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heard of you.
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<Phil>. Pray, what were those?
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<Hyl>. You were represented, in last night's conversation,
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as one who maintained the most extravagant opinion that ever
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entered into the mind of man, to wit, that there is no such thing
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as <material substance> in the world.
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<Phil>. That there is no such thing as what <philosophers
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call material substance>, I am seriously persuaded: but, if I
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were made to see anything absurd or sceptical in this, I should
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then have the same reason to renounce this that I imagine I have
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now to reject the contrary opinion.
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<Hyl>. What I can anything be more fantastical, more
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repugnant to Common Sense, or a more manifest piece of
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Scepticism, than to believe there is no such thing as <matter>?
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<Phil>. Softly, good Hylas. What if it should prove that
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you, who hold there is, are, by virtue of that opinion, a greater
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sceptic, and maintain more paradoxes and repugnances to Common
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Sense, than I who believe no such thing?
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<Hyl>. You may as soon persuade me, the part is greater than
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the whole, as that, in order to avoid absurdity and Scepticism, I
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should ever be obliged to give up my opinion in this point.
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<Phil>. Well then, are you content to admit that opinion for
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true, which upon examination shall appear most agreeable to
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Common Sense, and remote from Scepticism?
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<Hyl>. With all my heart. Since you are for raising disputes
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{173} about the plainest things in nature, I am content for once
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to hear what you have to say.
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<Phil>. Pray, Hylas, what do you mean by a <sceptic>?
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<Hyl>. I mean what all men mean -- one that doubts of
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everything.
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<Phil>. He then who entertains no doubts concerning some
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particular point, with regard to that point cannot be thought a
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sceptic.
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<Hyl>. I agree with you.
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<Phil>. Whether doth doubting consist in embracing the
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affirmative or negative side of a question?
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<Hyl>. In neither; for whoever understands English cannot
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but know that <doubting> signifies a suspense between both.
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<Phil>. He then that denies any point, can no more be said
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to doubt of it, than he who affirmeth it with the same degree of
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assurance.
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<Hyl>. True.
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<Phil>. And, consequently, for such his denial is no more to
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be esteemed a sceptic than the other.
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<Hyl>. I acknowledge it.
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<Phil>. How cometh it to pass then, Hylas, that you
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pronounce me <a sceptic>, because I deny what you affirm, to wit,
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the existence of Matter? Since, for aught you can tell, I am as
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peremptory in my denial, as you in your affirmation.
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<Hyl>. Hold, Philonous, I have been a little out in my
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definition; but every false step a man makes in discourse is not
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to be insisted on. I said indeed that a <sceptic> was one who
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doubted of everything; but I should have added, or who denies the
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reality and truth of things.
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<Phil>. What things? Do you mean the principles and theorems
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of sciences? But these you know are universal intellectual
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notions, and consequently independent of Matter. The denial
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therefore of this doth not imply the denying them.
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<Hyl>. I grant it. But are there no other things? What think
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you of distrusting the senses, of denying the real existence of
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sensible things, or pretending to know nothing of them. Is not
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this sufficient to denominate a man a <sceptic>?
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<Phil>. Shall we therefore examine which of us it is that
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denies the reality of sensible things, or professes the greatest
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ignorance of them; since, if I take you rightly, he is to be
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{174} esteemed the greatest <sceptic>?
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<Hyl>. That is what I desire.
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<Phil>. What mean you by Sensible Things?
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<Hyl>. Those things which are perceived by the senses. Can
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you imagine that I mean anything else?
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<Phil>. Pardon me, Hylas, if I am desirous clearly to
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apprehend your notions, since this may much shorten our inquiry.
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Suffer me then to ask you this farther question. Are those things
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only perceived by the senses which are perceived immediately? Or,
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may those things properly be said to be <sensible> which are
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perceived mediately, or not without the intervention of others?
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<Hyl>. I do not sufficiently understand you.
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<Phil>. In reading a book, what I immediately perceive are
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the letters; but mediately, or by means of these, are suggested
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to my mind the notions of God, virtue, truth, &c. Now, that the
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letters are truly sensible things, or perceived by sense, there
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is no doubt: but I would know whether you take the things
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suggested by them to be so too.
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<Hyl>. No, certainly: it were absurd to think <God> or
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<virtue> sensible things; though they may be signified and
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suggested to the mind by sensible marks, with which they have an
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arbitrary connexion.
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<Phil>. It seems then, that by <sensible things> you mean
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those only which can be perceived <immediately> by sense?
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<Hyl>. Right.
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<Phil>. Doth it not follow from this, that though I see one
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part of the sky red, and another blue, and that my reason doth
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thence evidently conclude there must be some cause of that
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diversity of colours, yet that cause cannot be said to be a
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sensible thing, or perceived by the sense of seeing?
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<Hyl>. It doth.
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<Phil>. In like manner, though I hear variety of sounds, yet
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I cannot be said to hear the causes of those sounds?
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<Hyl>. You cannot.
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<Phil>. And when by my touch I perceive a thing to be hot
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and heavy, I cannot say, with any truth or propriety, that I feel
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the cause of its heat or weight?
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<Hyl>. To prevent any more questions of this kind, I tell
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you once for all, that by <sensible things> I mean those only
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which are perceived by sense; and that in truth the senses
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perceive nothing which they do not perceive <immediately>: for
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they make no {175} inferences. The deducing therefore of causes
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or occasions from effects and appearances, which alone are
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perceived by sense, entirely relates to reason.
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<Phil>. This point then is agreed between us -- That
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<sensible things are those only which are immediately perceived
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by sense>. You will farther inform me, whether we immediately
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perceive by sight anything beside light, and colours, and
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figures; or by hearing, anything but sounds; by the palate,
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anything beside tastes; by the smell, beside odours; or by the
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touch, more than tangible qualities.
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<Hyl>. We do not.
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<Phil>. It seems, therefore, that if you take away all
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sensible qualities, there remains nothing sensible?
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<Hyl>. I grant it.
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<Phil>. Sensible things therefore are {250} nothing else but
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so many sensible qualities, or combinations of sensible
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qualities?
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<Hyl>. Nothing else.
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<Phil>. <Heat> then is a sensible thing?
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<Hyl>. Certainly.
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<Phil>. Doth the <reality> of sensible things consist in
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being perceived? or, is it something distinct from their being
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perceived, and that bears no relation to the mind?
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<Hyl>. To <exist> is one thing, and to be <perceived> is
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another.
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<Phil>. I speak with regard to sensible things only. And of
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these I ask, whether by their real existence you mean a
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subsistence exterior to the mind, and distinct from their being
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perceived?
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<Hyl>. I mean a real absolute being, distinct from, and
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without any relation to, their being perceived.
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<Phil>. Heat therefore, if it be allowed a real being, must
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exist without the mind?
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<Hyl>. It must.
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<Phil>. Tell me, Hylas, is this real existence equally
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compatible to all degrees of heat, which we perceive; or is there
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any reason why we should attribute it to some, and deny it to
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others? And if there be, pray let me know that reason.
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<Hyl>. Whatever degree of heat we perceive by sense, we may
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be sure the same exists in the object that occasions it.
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<Phil>. What! the greatest as well as the least?
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<Hyl>. <I> tell you, the reason is plainly the same in
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respect of both. They are both perceived by sense; nay, the
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greater degree of heat is more sensibly perceived; and
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consequently, if there is {176} any difference, we are more
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certain of its real existence than we can be of the reality of a
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lesser degree.
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<Phil>. But is not the most vehement and intense degree of
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heat a very great pain?
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<Hyl>. No one can deny it.
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<Phil>. And is any unperceiving thing capable of pain or
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pleasure?
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<Hyl>. No, certainly.
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<Phil>. Is your material substance a senseless being, or a
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being endowed with sense and perception?
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<Hyl>. It is senseless without doubt.
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<Phil>. It cannot therefore be the subject of pain?
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<Hyl>. By no means.
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<Phil>. Nor consequently of the greatest heat perceived by
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sense, since you acknowledge this to be no small pain?
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<Hyl>. I grant it.
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<Phil>. What shall we say then of your external object; is
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it a material Substance, or no?
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<Hyl>. It is a material substance with the sensible
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qualities inhering in it.
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<Phil>. How then can a great heat exist in it, since you own
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it cannot in a material substance? I desire you would clear this
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point.
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<Hyl>. Hold, Philonous, I fear I was out in yielding intense
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heat to be a pain. It should seem rather, that pain is something
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distinct from heat, and the consequence or effect of it.
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<Phil>. Upon putting your hand near the fire, do you
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perceive one simple uniform sensation, or two distinct
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sensations?
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<Hyl>. But one simple sensation.
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<Phil>. Is not the heat immediately perceived?,
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<Hyl>. It is.
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<Phil>. And the pain?
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<Hyl>. True.
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<Phil>. Seeing therefore they are both immediately perceived
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at the same time, and the fire affects you only with one simple
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or uncompounded idea, it follows that this same simple idea is
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both the intense heat immediately perceived, and the pain; and,
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consequently, that the intense heat immediately perceived is
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nothing distinct from a particular sort of pain.
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<Hyl>. It seems so.
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<Phil>. Again, try in your thoughts, Hylas, if you can
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conceive a vehement sensation to be without pain or pleasure.
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{177}
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<Hyl>. I cannot.
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<Phil>. Or can you frame to yourself an idea of sensible
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pain or pleasure in general, abstracted from every particular
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idea of heat, cold, tastes, smells? &c.
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<Hyl>. I do not find that I can.
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<Phil>. Doth it not therefore follow, that sensible pain is
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nothing distinct from those sensations or ideas, in an intense
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degree?
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<Hyl>. It is undeniable; and, to speak the truth, I begin to
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suspect a very great heat cannot exist but in a mind perceiving
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it.
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<Phil>. What! are you then in that sceptical state of
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suspense, between affirming and denying?
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<Hyl>. I think I may be positive in the point. A very
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violent and painful heat cannot exist without the mind.
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<Phil>. It hath not therefore according to you, any <real>
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being?
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<Hyl>. I own it.
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<Phil>. Is it therefore certain, that there is no body in
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nature really hot?
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<Hyl>. I have not denied there is any real heat in bodies. I
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only say, there is no such thing as an intense real heat.
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<Phil>. But, did you not say before that all degrees of heat
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were equally real; or, if there was any difference, that the
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greater were more undoubtedly real than the lesser?
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<Hyl>. True: but it was because I did not then consider the
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ground there is for distinguishing between them, which I now
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plainly see. And it is this: because intense heat is nothing else
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but a particular kind of painful sensation; and pain cannot exist
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but in a perceiving being; it follows that no intense heat can
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really exist in an unperceiving corporeal substance. But this is
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no reason wh' we should deny heat in an inferior degree to exist
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in such a substance.
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<Phil>. But how shall we be able to discern those degrees of
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heat which exist only in the mind from those which exist without
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it?
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<Hyl>. That is no difficult matter. You know the least pain
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cannot exist unperceived; whatever, therefore, degree of heat is
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a pain exists only in the mind. But, as for all other degrees of
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heat, nothing obliges us to think the same of them.
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<Phil>. I think you granted before that no unperceiving
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being was capable of pleasure, any more than of pain.
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<Hyl>. I did. {178}
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<Phil>. And is not warmth, or a more gentle degree of heat
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than what causes uneasiness, a pleasure?
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<Hyl>. What then?
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<Phil>. Consequently, it cannot exist without the mind in an
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unperceiving substance, or body.
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<Hyl>. So it seems.
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<Phil>. Since, therefore, as well those degrees of heat that
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are not painful, as those that are, can exist only in a thinking
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substance; may we not conclude that external bodies are
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absolutely incapable of any degree of heat whatsoever?
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<Hyl>. On second thoughts, I do not think it so evident that
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warmth is a pleasure as that a great degree of heat is a pain.
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<Phil>. <I> do not pretend that warmth is as great a
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pleasure as heat is a pain. But, if you grant it to be even a
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small pleasure, it serves to make good my conclusion.
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<Hyl>. I could rather call it an <indolence>. It seems to be
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nothing more than a privation of both pain and pleasure. And that
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such a quality or state as this may agree to an unthinking
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substance, I hope you will not deny.
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<Phil>. If you are resolved to maintain that warmth, or a
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gentle degree of heat, is no pleasure, I know not how to convince
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you otherwise than by appealing to your own sense. But what think
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you of cold?
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<Hyl>. The same that I do of heat. An intense degree of cold
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is a pain; for to feel a very great cold, is to perceive a great
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uneasiness: it cannot therefore exist without the mind; but a
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lesser degree of cold may, as well as a lesser degree of heat.
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<Phil>. Those bodies, therefore, upon whose application to
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our own, we perceive a moderate degree of heat, must be concluded
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to have a moderate degree of heat or warmth in them; and those,
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upon whose application we feel a like degree of cold, must be
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thought to have cold in them.
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<Hyl>. They must.
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<Phil>. Can any doctrine be true that necessarily leads a
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man into an absurdity?
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<Hyl>. Without doubt it cannot.
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<Phil>. Is it not an absurdity to think that the same thing
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should be at the same time both cold and warm?
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<Hyl>. It is.
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<Phil>. Suppose now one of your hands hot, and the other
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cold, and that they are both at once put into the same vessel of
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{179} water, in an intermediate state; will not the water seem
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cold to one hand, and warm to the other?
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<Hyl>. It will.
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<Phil>. Ought we not therefore, by your principles, to
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conclude it is really both cold and warm at the same time, that
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is, according to your own concession, to believe an absurdity?
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<Hyl>. I confess it seems so.
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<Phil>. Consequently, the principles themselves are false,
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since you have granted that no true principle leads to an
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absurdity.
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<Hyl>. But, after all, can anything be more absurd than to
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say, <there is no heat in the fire>?
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<Phil>. To make the point still clearer; tell me whether, in
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two cases exactly alike, we ought not to make the same judgment?
|
|
|
|
.<Hyl>. We ought.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When a pin pricks your finger, doth it not rend and
|
|
divide the fibres of your flesh?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It doth.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And when a coal burns your finger, doth it any more?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It doth not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Since, therefore, you neither judge the sensation
|
|
itself occasioned by the pin, nor anything like it to be in the
|
|
pin; you should not, conformably to what you have now granted,
|
|
judge the sensation occasioned by the fire, or anything like it,
|
|
to be in the fire.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Well, since it must be so, I am content to yield this
|
|
point, and acknowledge that heat and cold are only sensations
|
|
existing in our minds. But there still remain qualities enough to
|
|
secure the reality of external things.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But what will you say, Hylas, if it shall appear
|
|
that the case is the same with regard to all other sensible
|
|
qualities, and that they can no more be supposed to exist without
|
|
the mind, than heat and cold?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Then indeed you will have done something to the
|
|
purpose; but that is what I despair of seeing proved.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Let us examine them in order. What think you of
|
|
<tastes>, do they exist without the mind, or no?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Can any man in his senses doubt whether sugar is
|
|
sweet, or wormwood bitter?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Inform me, Hylas. Is a sweet taste a particular kind
|
|
of pleasure or pleasant sensation, or is it not? {180}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And is not bitterness some kind of uneasiness or
|
|
pain?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I grant it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. If therefore sugar and wormwood are unthinking
|
|
corporeal substances existing without the mind, how can sweetness
|
|
and bitterness, that is, Pleasure and pain, agree to them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Hold, Philonous, I now see what it was delude time.
|
|
You asked whether heat and cold, sweetness at were not particular
|
|
sorts of pleasure and pain; to which simply, that they were.
|
|
Whereas I should have thus distinguished: those qualities, as
|
|
perceived by us, are pleasures or pair existing in the external
|
|
objects. We must not therefore conclude absolutely, that there is
|
|
no heat in the fire, or sweetness in the sugar, but only that
|
|
heat or sweetness, as perceived by us, are not in the fire or
|
|
sugar. What say you to this?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I say it is nothing to the purpose. Our discourse
|
|
proceeded altogether concerning sensible things, which you
|
|
defined to be, <the things we immediately perceive by our
|
|
senses>. Whatever other qualities, therefore, you speak of as
|
|
distinct from these, I know nothing of them, neither do they at
|
|
all belong to the point in dispute. You may, indeed, pretend to
|
|
have discovered certain qualities which you do not perceive, and
|
|
assert those insensible qualities exist in fire and sugar. But
|
|
what use can be made of this to your present purpose, I am at a
|
|
loss to conceive. Tell me then once more, do you acknowledge that
|
|
heat and cold, sweetness and bitterness (meaning those qualities
|
|
which are perceived by the senses), do not exist without the
|
|
mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I see it is to no purpose to hold out, so I give up
|
|
the cause as to those mentioned qualities. Though I profess it
|
|
sounds oddly, to say that sugar is not sweet.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, for your farther satisfaction, take this along
|
|
with you: that which at other times seems sweet, shall, to a
|
|
distempered palate, appear bitter. And, nothing can be plainer
|
|
than that divers persons perceive different tastes in the same
|
|
food; since that which one man delights in, another abhors. And
|
|
how could this be, if the taste was something really inherent in
|
|
the food?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge I know not how.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. In the next place, <odours> are to be considered.
|
|
And, with regard to these, I would fain know whether what hath
|
|
{181} been said of tastes doth not exactly agree to them? Are
|
|
they not so many pleasing or displeasing sensations?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Can you then conceive it possible that they should
|
|
exist in an unperceiving thing?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Or, can you imagine that filth and ordure affect
|
|
those brute animals that feed on them out of choice, with the
|
|
same smells which we perceive in them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. By no means.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. May we not therefore conclude of smells, as of the
|
|
other forementioned qualities, that they cannot exist in any but
|
|
a perceiving substance or mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I think so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Then as to <sounds>, what must we think of them: are
|
|
they accidents really inherent in external bodies, or not?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That they inhere not in the sonorous bodies is plain
|
|
from hence: because a bell struck in the exhausted receiver of an
|
|
air-pump sends forth no sound. The air, therefore, must be
|
|
thought the subject of sound.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What reason is there for that, Hylas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Because, when any motion is raised in the air, we
|
|
perceive a sound greater or lesser, according to the air's
|
|
motion; but without some motion in the air, we never hear any
|
|
sound at all.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And granting that we never hear a sound but when
|
|
some motion is produced in the air, yet I do not see how you can
|
|
infer from thence, that the sound itself is in the air.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is this very motion in the external air that
|
|
produces in the mind the sensation of <sound>. For, striking on
|
|
the drum of the ear, it causeth a vibration, which by the
|
|
auditory nerves being communicated to the brain, the soul is
|
|
thereupon affected with the sensation called <sound>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What! is sound then a sensation?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I tell you, as perceived by us, it is a particular
|
|
sensation in the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And can any sensation exist without the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No, certainly.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How then can sound, being a sensation, exist in the
|
|
air, if by the <air> you mean a senseless substance existing
|
|
without the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You must distinguish, Philonous, between sound as it
|
|
is {182} perceived by us, and as it is in itself; or (which is
|
|
the same thing) between the sound we immediately perceive, and
|
|
that which exists without us. The former, indeed, is a particular
|
|
kind of sensation, but the latter is merely a vibrative or
|
|
undulatory motion the air.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I thought I had already obviated that distinction,
|
|
by answer I gave when you were applying it in a like case before.
|
|
But, to say no more of that, are you sure then that sound is
|
|
really nothing but motion?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Whatever therefore agrees to real sound, may with
|
|
truth be attributed to motion?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It may.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is then good sense to speak of <motion> as of a
|
|
thing that is <loud>, <sweet>, <acute>, <or grave>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. <I> see you are resolved not to understand me. Is it
|
|
not evident those accidents or modes belong only to sensible
|
|
sound, or <sound in> the common acceptation of the word, but not
|
|
to <sound> in the real and philosophic sense; which, as I just
|
|
now told you, is nothing but a certain motion of the air?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then there are two sorts of sound -- the
|
|
one vulgar, or that which is heard, the other philosophical and
|
|
real?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Even so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And the latter consists in motion?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I told you so before.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Tell me, Hylas, to which of the senses, think you,
|
|
the idea of motion belongs? to the hearing?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No, certainly; but to the sight and touch.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It should follow then, that, according to you, real
|
|
sounds may possibly be <seen or felt>, but never <heard>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Look you, Philonous, you may, if you please, make a
|
|
jest of my opinion, but that will not alter the truth of things.
|
|
I own, indeed, the inferences you draw me into sound something
|
|
oddly; but common language, you know, is framed by, and for the
|
|
use of the vulgar: we must not therefore wonder if expressions
|
|
adapted to exact philosophic notions seem uncouth and out of the
|
|
way.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it come to that? I assure you, I imagine myself
|
|
to have gained no small point, since you make so light of
|
|
departing from common phrases and opinions; it being a main part
|
|
of our inquiry, to examine whose notions are widest of the {183}
|
|
common road, and most repugnant to the general sense of the
|
|
world. But, can you think it no more than a philosophical
|
|
paradox, to say that <real sounds are never heard>, and that the
|
|
idea of them is obtained by some other sense? And is there
|
|
nothing in this contrary to nature and the truth of things?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To deal ingenuously, I do not like it. And, after the
|
|
concessions already made, I had as well grant that sounds too
|
|
have no real being without the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And I hope you will make no difficulty to
|
|
acknowledge the same of <colours>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Pardon me: the case of colours is very different. Can
|
|
anything be plainer than that we see them on the objects?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The objects you speak of are, I suppose, corporeal
|
|
Substances existing without the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And have true and real colours inhering in them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Each visible object hath that colour which we see in
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How! is there anything visible but what we perceive
|
|
by sight?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. There is not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And, do we perceive anything by sense which we do
|
|
not perceive immediately?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. How often must I be obliged to repeat the same thing?
|
|
I tell you, we do not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Have patience, good Hylas; and tell me once more,
|
|
whether there is anything immediately perceived by the senses,
|
|
except sensible qualities. I know you asserted there was not; but
|
|
I would now be informed, whether you still persist in the same
|
|
opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray, is your corporeal substance either a sensible
|
|
quality, or made up of sensible qualities?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What a question that is! who ever thought it was?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. My reason for asking was, because in saying, <each
|
|
visible object hath that colour which we see in it>, you make
|
|
visible objects to be corporeal substances; which implies either
|
|
that corporeal substances are sensible qualities, or else that
|
|
there is something besides sensible qualities perceived by sight:
|
|
but, as this point was formerly agreed between us, and is still
|
|
maintained by you, it is a clear consequence, that your
|
|
<corporeal substance> is nothing distinct from <sensible
|
|
qualities>. {184}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You may draw as many absurd consequences as you
|
|
please, and endeavour to perplex the plainest things; but you
|
|
shall never persuade me out of my senses. I clearly understand my
|
|
own meaning.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I wish you would make me understand it too. But,
|
|
since you are unwilling to have your notion of corporeal
|
|
substance examined, I shall urge that point no farther. Only be
|
|
pleased to let me know, whether the same colours which we see
|
|
exist in external bodies, or some other.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The very same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What! are then the beautiful red and purple we see
|
|
on yonder clouds really in them? Or do you imagine they have in
|
|
themselves any other form than that of a dark mist or vapour?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I must own, Philonous, those colours are not really
|
|
in the clouds as they seem to be at this distance. They are only
|
|
apparent colours.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <Apparent> call you them? how shall we distinguish
|
|
these apparent colours from real?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Very easily. Those are to be thought apparent which,
|
|
appearing only at a distance, vanish upon a nearer approach.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And those, I suppose, are to be thought real which
|
|
are discovered by the most near and exact survey.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is the nearest and exactest survey made by the help
|
|
of a microscope, or by the naked eye?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. By a microscope, doubtless.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But a microscope often discovers colours in an
|
|
object different from those perceived by the unassisted sight.
|
|
And, in case we had microscopes magnifying to any assigned
|
|
degree, it is certain that no object whatsoever, viewed through
|
|
them, would appear in the same colour which it exhibits to the
|
|
naked eye.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And what will you conclude from all this? You cannot
|
|
argue that there are really and naturally no colours on objects:
|
|
because by artificial managements they may be altered, or made to
|
|
vanish.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I think it may evidently be concluded from your own
|
|
concessions, that all the colours we see with our naked eyes are
|
|
only apparent as those on the clouds, since they vanish upon a
|
|
more close and accurate inspection which is afforded us by a
|
|
microscope. Then' as to what you say by way of prevention: {185}
|
|
I ask you whether the real and natural state of an object is
|
|
better discovered by a very sharp and piercing sight, or by one
|
|
which is less sharp?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. By the former without doubt.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not plain from <Dioptrics> that microscopes
|
|
make the sight more penetrating, and represent objects as they
|
|
would appear to the eye in case it were naturally endowed with a
|
|
most exquisite sharpness?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently the microscopical representation is to
|
|
be thought that which best sets forth the real nature of the
|
|
thing, or what it is in itself. The colours, therefore, by it
|
|
perceived are more genuine and real than those perceived
|
|
otherwise.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I confess there is something in what you say.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Besides, it is not only possible but manifest, that
|
|
there actually are animals whose eyes are by nature framed to
|
|
perceive those things which by reason of their minuteness escape
|
|
our sight. What think you of those inconceivably small animals
|
|
perceived by glasses? must we suppose they are all stark blind?
|
|
Or, in case they see, can it be imagined their sight hath not the
|
|
same use in preserving their bodies from injuries, which appears
|
|
in that of all other animals? And if it hath, is it not evident
|
|
they must see particles less than their own bodies; which will
|
|
present them with a far different view in each object from that
|
|
which strikes our senses? Even our own eyes do not always
|
|
represent objects to us after the same manner. In the jaundice
|
|
every one knows that all things seem yellow. Is it not therefore
|
|
highly probable those animals in whose eyes we discern a very
|
|
different texture from that of ours, and whose bodies abound with
|
|
different humours, do not see the same colours in every object
|
|
that we do? From all which, should it not seem to follow that all
|
|
colours are equally apparent, and that none of those which we
|
|
perceive are really inherent in any outward object?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It should.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The point will be past all doubt, if you consider
|
|
that, in case colours were real properties or affections inherent
|
|
in external bodies, they could admit of no alteration without
|
|
some change wrought in the very bodies themselves: but, is it not
|
|
evident from what hath been said that, upon the use of
|
|
microscopes, upon a change happening in the burnouts of the eye,
|
|
or a variation of distance, without any manner of real alteration
|
|
{186} in the thing itself, the colours of any object are either
|
|
changed, or totally disappear? Nay, all other circumstances
|
|
remaining the same, change but the situation of some objects, and
|
|
they shall present different colours to the eye. The same thing
|
|
happens upon viewing an object in various degrees of light. And
|
|
what is more known than that the same bodies appear differently
|
|
coloured by candle-light from what they do in the open day? Add
|
|
to these the experiment of a prism which, separating the
|
|
heterogeneous rays of light, alters the colour of any object, and
|
|
will cause the whitest to appear of a deep blue or red to the
|
|
naked eye. And now tell me whether you are still of opinion that
|
|
every body hath its true real colour inhering in it; and, if you
|
|
think it hath, I would fain know farther from you, what certain
|
|
distance and position of the object, what peculiar texture and
|
|
formation of the eye, what degree or kind of light is necessary
|
|
for ascertaining that true colour, and distinguishing it from
|
|
apparent ones.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own myself entirely satisfied, that they are all
|
|
equally apparent, and that there is no such thing as colour
|
|
really inhering in external bodies, but that it is altogether in
|
|
the light. And what confirms me in this opinion is, that in
|
|
proportion to the light colours are still more or less vivid; and
|
|
if there be no light, then are there no colours perceived.
|
|
Besides, allowing there are colours on external objects, yet, how
|
|
is it possible for us to perceive them? For no external body
|
|
affects the mind, unless it acts first on our organs of sense.
|
|
But the only action of bodies is motion; and motion cannot be
|
|
communicated otherwise than by impulse. A distant object
|
|
therefore cannot act on the eye; nor consequently make itself or
|
|
its properties perceivable to the soul. Whence it plainly follows
|
|
that it is immediately some contiguous substance, which,
|
|
operating on the eye, occasions a perception of colours: and such
|
|
is light.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Howl is light then a substance?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>.. I tell you, Philonous, external light is nothing but
|
|
a thin fluid substance, whose minute particles being agitated
|
|
with a brisk motion, and in various manners reflected from the
|
|
different surfaces of outward objects to the eyes, communicate
|
|
different motions to the optic nerves; which, being propagated to
|
|
the brain, cause therein various impressions; and these are
|
|
attended with the sensations of red, blue, yellow, &c.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then the light doth no more than shake the
|
|
optic nerves. {187}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Nothing else.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And consequent to each particular motion of the
|
|
nerves, the mind is affected with a sensation, which is some
|
|
particular colour.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And these sensations have no existence without the
|
|
mind.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They have not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How then do you affirm that colours are in the
|
|
light; since by <light> you understand a corporeal substance
|
|
external to the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Light and colours, as immediately perceived by us, I
|
|
grant cannot exist without the mind. But in themselves they are
|
|
only the motions and configurations of certain insensible
|
|
particles of matter.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Colours then, in the vulgar sense, or taken for the
|
|
immediate objects of sight, cannot agree to any but a perceiving
|
|
substance.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is what I say.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Well then, since you give up the point as to those
|
|
sensible qualities which are alone thought colours by all mankind
|
|
beside, you may hold what you please with regard to those
|
|
invisible ones of the philosophers. It is not my business to
|
|
dispute about <them>; only I would advise you to bethink
|
|
yourself, whether, considering the inquiry we are upon, it be
|
|
prudent for you to affirm -- <the red and blue which we see are
|
|
not real colours>, <but certain unknown motions and figures which
|
|
no man ever did or can see are truly so>. Are not these shocking
|
|
notions, and are not they subject to as many ridiculous
|
|
inferences, as those you were obliged to renounce before in the
|
|
case of sounds?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I frankly own, Philonous, that it is in vain to
|
|
longer. Colours, sounds, tastes, in a word all those termed
|
|
<secondary qualities>, have certainly no existence without the
|
|
mind. But by this acknowledgment I must not be supposed to
|
|
derogate, the reality of Matter, or external objects; seeing it
|
|
is no more than several philosophers maintain, who nevertheless
|
|
are the farthest imaginable from denying Matter. For the clearer
|
|
understanding of this, you must know sensible qualities are by
|
|
philosophers divided into <Primary> and <Secondary>. The former
|
|
are Extension, Figure, Solidity, Gravity, Motion, and Rest; {188}
|
|
and these they hold exist really in bodies. The latter are those
|
|
above enumerated; or, briefly, <all sensible qualities beside the
|
|
Primary>; which they assert are only so many sensations or ideas
|
|
existing nowhere but in the mind. But all this, I doubt not, you
|
|
are apprised of. For my part, I have been a long time sensible
|
|
there was such an opinion current among philosophers, but was
|
|
never thoroughly convinced of its truth until now.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You are still then of opinion that <extension> and
|
|
<figures are> inherent in external unthinking substances?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But what if the same arguments which are brought
|
|
against Secondary Qualities will hold good against these also?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Why then I shall be obliged to think, they too exist
|
|
only in the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it your opinion the very figure and extension
|
|
which you perceive by sense exist in the outward object or
|
|
material substance?
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Have all other animals as good grounds to think the
|
|
same of the figure and extension which they see and feel?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without doubt, if they have any thought at all.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Answer me, Hylas. Think you the senses were bestowed
|
|
upon all animals for their preservation and well-being in life?
|
|
or were they given to men alone for this end?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I make no question but they have the same use in all
|
|
other animals.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. If so, is it not necessary they should be enabled by
|
|
them to perceive their own limbs, and those bodies which are
|
|
capable of harming them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Certainly.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. A mite therefore must be supposed to see his own
|
|
foot, and things equal or even less than it, as bodies of some
|
|
considerable dimension; though at the same time they appear to
|
|
you scarce discernible, or at best as so many visible points?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I cannot deny it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And to creatures less than the mite they will seem
|
|
yet larger?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They will.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Insomuch that what you can hardly discern will to
|
|
another extremely minute animal appear as some huge mountain?
|
|
{189}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. All this I grant.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Can one and the same thing be at the same time in
|
|
itself of different dimensions?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That were absurd to imagine.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, from what you have laid down it follows that
|
|
both the extension by you perceived, and that perceived by the
|
|
mite itself, as likewise all those perceived by lesser animals,
|
|
are each of them the true extension of the mite's foot; that is
|
|
to say, by your own principles you are led into an absurdity.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. There seems to be some difficulty in the point.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Again, have you not acknowledged that no real
|
|
inherent property of any object can be changed without some
|
|
change in the thing itself?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I have.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, as we approach to or recede from an object, the
|
|
visible extension varies, being at one distance ten or a hundred
|
|
times greater than another. Doth it not therefore follow from
|
|
hence likewise that it is not really inherent in the object?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own I am at a loss what to think.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Your judgment will soon be determined, if you will
|
|
venture to think as freely concerning this quality as you have
|
|
done concerning the rest. Was it not admitted as a good argument,
|
|
that neither heat nor cold was in the water, because it seemed
|
|
warm to one hand and cold to the other?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It was.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not the very same reasoning to conclude, there
|
|
is no extension or figure in an object, because to one eye it
|
|
shall seem little, smooth, and round, when at the same time it
|
|
appears to the other, great, uneven, and regular?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The very same. But does this latter fact ever happen?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You may at any time make the experiment, by looking
|
|
with one eye bare, and with the other through a microscope.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I know not how to maintain it; and yet I am loath to
|
|
give up <extension>, I see so many odd consequences following
|
|
upon such a concession.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Odd, say you? After the concessions already made, I
|
|
hope you will stick at nothing for its oddness. [But, on the
|
|
other hand, should it not seem very odd, if the general reasoning
|
|
{190} which includes all other sensible qualities did not also
|
|
include extension? If it be allowed that no idea, nor anything
|
|
like an idea, can exist in an unperceiving substance, then surely
|
|
it follows that no figure, or mode of extension, which we can
|
|
either perceive, or imagine, or have any idea of, can be really
|
|
inherent in Matter; not to mention the peculiar difficulty there
|
|
must be in conceiving a material substance, prior to and distinct
|
|
from extension to be the <substratum> of extension. Be the
|
|
sensible quality what it will -- figure, or sound, or colour, it
|
|
seems alike impossible it should subsist in that which doth not
|
|
perceive it.][2]
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I give up the point for the present, reserving still
|
|
a right to retract my opinion, in case I shall hereafter discover
|
|
any false step in my progress to it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That is a right you cannot be denied. Figures and
|
|
extension being despatched, we proceed next to <motion>. Can a
|
|
real motion in any external body be at the same time very swift
|
|
and very slow?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is not the motion of a body swift in a reciprocal
|
|
proportion to the time it takes up in describing any given space?
|
|
Thus a body that describes a mile in an hour moves three times
|
|
faster than it would in case it described only a mile in three
|
|
hours.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree with you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And is not time measured by the succession of ideas
|
|
in our minds?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And is it not possible ideas should succeed one
|
|
another twice as fast in your mind as they do in mine, or in that
|
|
of some spirit of another kind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently the same body may to another seem to
|
|
perform its motion over any space in half the time that it doth
|
|
to you. And the same reasoning will hold as to any other
|
|
proportion: that is to say, according to your principles (since
|
|
the motions perceived are both really in the object) it is
|
|
possible one and the same body shall be really moved the same way
|
|
at once, both very swift and very slow. How is this consistent
|
|
either with common sense, or with what you just now granted?
|
|
{191}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I have nothing to say to it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Then as for <solidity>; either you do not mean any
|
|
sensible quality by that word, and so it is beside our inquiry:
|
|
or if you do, it must be either hardness or resistance. But both
|
|
the one and the other are plainly relative to our senses: it
|
|
being evident that what seems hard to one animal may appear soft
|
|
to another, who hath greater force and firmness of limbs. Nor is
|
|
it less plain that the resistance I feel is not in the body.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own the very <sensation> of resistance, which is
|
|
all you immediately perceive, is not in the body; but the <cause>
|
|
of that sensation is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But the causes of our sensations are not things
|
|
immediately perceived, and therefore are not sensible. This point
|
|
I thought had been already determined.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own it was; but you will pardon me if I seem a
|
|
little embarrassed: I know not how to quit my old notions.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. To help you out, do but consider that if <extension>
|
|
be once acknowledged to have no existence without the mind, the
|
|
same must necessarily be granted of motion, solidity, and
|
|
gravity; since they all evidently suppose extension. It is
|
|
therefore superfluous to inquire particularly concerning each of
|
|
them. In denying extension, you have denied them all to have any
|
|
real existence.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I wonder, Philonous, if what you say be true, why
|
|
those philosophers who deny the Secondary Qualities any real
|
|
existence should yet attribute it to the Primary. If there is no
|
|
difference between them, how can this be accounted for?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is not my business to account for every opinion
|
|
of the philosophers. But, among other reasons which may be
|
|
assigned for this, it seems probable that pleasure and pain being
|
|
rather annexed to the former than the latter may be one. Heat and
|
|
cold, tastes and smells, have something more vividly pleasing or
|
|
disagreeable than the ideas of extension, figure, and motion
|
|
affect us with. And, it being too visibly absurd to hold that
|
|
pain or pleasure can be in an unperceiving substance, men are
|
|
more easily weaned from believing the external existence of the
|
|
Secondary than the Primary Qualities. You will be satisfied there
|
|
is something in this, if you recollect the difference you made
|
|
between an intense and more moderate degree of heat; allowing the
|
|
one a real existence, while you denied it to the other. But,
|
|
after all, there is no rational ground for that distinction; for,
|
|
surely an indifferent sensation is as {191} truly <a sensation>
|
|
as one more pleasing or painful; and consequently should not any
|
|
more than they be supposed to exist in an unthinking subject.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is just come into my head, Philonous, that I have
|
|
somewhere heard of a distinction between absolute and sensible
|
|
extension. Now, though it be acknowledged that <great> and
|
|
<small>, consisting merely in the relation which other extended
|
|
beings have to the parts of our own bodies, do not really inhere
|
|
in the substances themselves; yet nothing obliges us to hold the
|
|
same with regard to <absolute extension>, which is something
|
|
abstracted from <great> and <small>, from this or that particular
|
|
magnitude or figure. So likewise as to motion; <swift> and <slow>
|
|
are altogether relative to the succession of ideas in our own
|
|
minds. But, it doth not follow, because those modifications of
|
|
motion exist not without the mind, that therefore absolute motion
|
|
abstracted from them doth not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray what is it that distinguishes one motion, or
|
|
one part of extension, from another? Is it not something
|
|
sensible, as some degree of swiftness or slowness, some certain
|
|
magnitude or figure peculiar to each?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I think so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. These qualities, therefore, stripped of all sensible
|
|
properties, are without all specific and numerical differences,
|
|
as the schools call them.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That is to say, they are extension in general, and
|
|
motion in general.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Let it be so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But it is a universally received maxim that
|
|
<Everything which exists is particular>. How then can motion in
|
|
general, or extension in general, exist in any corporeal
|
|
substance? {193}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I will take time to solve your difficulty.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But I think the point may be speedily decided.
|
|
Without doubt you can tell whether you are able to frame this or
|
|
that idea. Now I am content to put our dispute on this issue. If
|
|
you can frame in your thoughts a distinct <abstract idea> of
|
|
motion or extension, divested of all those sensible modes, as
|
|
swift and slow, great and small, round and square, and the like,
|
|
which are acknowledged to exist only in the mind, I will then
|
|
yield the point you contend for. But if you cannot, it will be
|
|
unreasonable on your side to insist any longer upon what you have
|
|
no notion of.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To confess ingenuously, I cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Can you even separate the ideas of extension and
|
|
motion from the ideas of all those qualities which they who make
|
|
the distinction term <secondary>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What! is it not an easy matter to consider extension
|
|
and motion by themselves, abstracted from all other sensible
|
|
qualities? Pray how do the mathematicians treat of them?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I acknowledge, Hylas, it is not difficult to form
|
|
general propositions and reasonings about those qualities,
|
|
without mentioning any other; and, in this sense, to consider or
|
|
treat of them abstractedly. But, how doth it follow that, because
|
|
I can pronounce the word <motion> by itself, I can form the idea
|
|
of it in my mind exclusive of body? or, because theorems may be
|
|
made of extension and figures, without any mention of <great> or
|
|
<small>, or any other sensible mode or quality, that therefore it
|
|
is possible such an abstract idea of extension, without any
|
|
particular size or figure, or sensible quality,[3 ] [should be
|
|
distinctly formed, and apprehended by the mind? Mathematicians
|
|
treat of quantity, without regarding what other sensible.
|
|
qualities it is attended with, as being altogether indifferent to
|
|
their demonstrations. But, when laying aside the words, they
|
|
contemplate the bare ideas, I believe you will find, they are not
|
|
the pure abstracted ideas of extension.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But what say you to <pure intellect>? May not
|
|
abstracted ideas be framed by that faculty?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Since I cannot frame abstract ideas at all, it is
|
|
plain I cannot frame them by the help of <pure intellect>; {194}
|
|
whatsoever faculty you understand by those words. Besides, not to
|
|
inquire into the nature of pure intellect and its spiritual
|
|
objects, as <virtue>, <reason>, <God>, or the like, thus much
|
|
seems manifest -- that sensible things are only to be perceived
|
|
by sense, or represented by the imagination. Figures, therefore,
|
|
and extension, being originally perceived by sense, do not belong
|
|
to pure intellect: but, for your farther satisfaction, try if you
|
|
can frame the idea of any figure, abstracted from all
|
|
particularities of size, or even from other sensible qualities.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Let me think a little -- I do not find that I can.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And can you think it possible that should really
|
|
exist in nature which implies a repugnancy in its conception?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. By no means.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Since therefore it is impossible even for the mind
|
|
to disunite the ideas of extension and motion from all other
|
|
sensible qualities, doth it not follow, that where the one exist
|
|
there necessarily the other exist likewise?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It should seem so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently, the very same arguments which you
|
|
admitted as conclusive against the Secondary Qualities are,
|
|
without any farther application of force, against the Primary
|
|
too. Besides, if you will trust your senses, is it not plain all
|
|
sensible qualities coexist, or to them appear as being in the
|
|
same place? Do they ever represent a motion, or figure, as being
|
|
divested of all other visible and tangible qualities?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You need say no more on this head. I am free to own,
|
|
if there be no secret error or oversight in our proceedings
|
|
hitherto, that all sensible qualities are alike to be denied
|
|
existence without the mind. But, my fear is that I have been too
|
|
liberal in my former concessions, or overlooked some fallacy or
|
|
other. In short, I did not take time to think.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. For that matter, Hylas, you may take what time you
|
|
please in reviewing the progress of our inquiry. You are at
|
|
liberty to recover any slips you might have made, or offer
|
|
whatever you have omitted which makes for your first opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. One great oversight I take to be this -- that I did
|
|
not sufficiently distinguish the <object> from the <sensation>.
|
|
Now, though this latter may not exist without the mind, yet it
|
|
will not thence follow that the former cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What object do you mean? the object of the senses?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is then immediately perceived? {195}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Make me to understand the difference between what is
|
|
immediately perceived and a sensation.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The sensation I take to be an act of the mind
|
|
perceiving; besides which, there is something perceived; and this
|
|
I call the <object>. For example, there is red and yellow on that
|
|
tulip. But then the act of perceiving those colours is in me
|
|
only, and not in the tulip.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What tulip do you speak of? Is it that which you
|
|
see?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And what do you see beside colour, figure, and
|
|
extension?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Nothing.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What you would say then is that the red and yellow
|
|
are coexistent with the extension; is it not?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is not all; I would say they have a real
|
|
existence without the mind, in some unthinking substance.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That the colours are really in the tulip which I see
|
|
is manifest. Neither can it be denied that this tulip may exist
|
|
independent of your mind or mine; but, that any immediate object
|
|
of the senses, -- that is, any idea, or combination of ideas --
|
|
should exist in an unthinking substance, or exterior to <all>
|
|
minds, is in itself an evident contradiction. Nor can I imagine
|
|
how this follows from what you said just now, to wit, that the
|
|
red and yellow were on the tulip <you saw>, since you do not
|
|
pretend to <see> that unthinking substance.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You have an artful way, Philonous, of diverting our
|
|
inquiry from the subject.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I see you have no mind to be pressed that way. To
|
|
return then to your distinction between <sensation> and <object>;
|
|
if I take you right, you distinguish in every perception two
|
|
things, the one an action of the mind, the other not.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And this action cannot exist in, or belong to, any
|
|
unthinking thing; but, whatever beside is implied in a perception
|
|
may? {196}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is my meaning.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. So that if there was a perception without any act of
|
|
the mind, it were possible such a perception should exist in an
|
|
unthinking substance?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I grant it. But it is impossible there should be such
|
|
a perception.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When is the mind said to be active?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. When it produces, puts an end to, or changes,
|
|
anything.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Can the mind produce, discontinue, or change
|
|
anything, but by an act of the will?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The mind therefore is to be accounted <active> in
|
|
its perceptions so far forth as <volition> is included in them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. In plucking this flower I am active; because I do it
|
|
by the motion of my hand, which was consequent upon my volition;
|
|
so likewise in applying it to my nose. But is either of these
|
|
smelling?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. <No>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I act too in drawing the air through my nose;
|
|
because my breathing so rather than otherwise is the effect of my
|
|
volition. But neither can this be called <smelling>: for, if it
|
|
were, I should smell every time I breathed in that manner?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Smelling then is somewhat consequent to all this?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But I do not find my will concerned any farther.
|
|
Whatever more there is -- as that I perceive such a particular
|
|
smell, or any smell at all -- this is independent of my will, and
|
|
therein I am altogether passive. Do you find it otherwise with
|
|
you, Hylas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No, the very same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Then, as to seeing, is it not in your power to open
|
|
your eyes, or keep them shut; to turn them this or that way?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without doubt.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, doth it in like manner depend on <your> will
|
|
that in looking on this flower you perceive <white> rather than
|
|
any other colour? Or, directing your open eyes towards yonder
|
|
part of the heaven, can you avoid seeing the sun? Or is light or
|
|
darkness the effect of your volition?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No, certainly.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You are then in these respects altogether passive?
|
|
{197}
|
|
<Hyl>. I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Tell me now, whether <seeing> consists in perceiving
|
|
light and colours, or in opening and turning the eyes?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without doubt, in the former.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Since therefore you are in the very perception of
|
|
light and colours altogether passive, what is become of that
|
|
action you were speaking of as an ingredient in every sensation?
|
|
And, doth it not follow from your own concessions, that the
|
|
perception of light and colours, including no action in it, may
|
|
exist in an unperceiving substance? And is not this a plain
|
|
contradiction?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I know not what to think of it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Besides, since you distinguish the <active> and
|
|
<passive> in every perception, you must do it in that of pain.
|
|
But how is it possible that pain, be it as little active as you
|
|
please, should exist in an unperceiving substance? In short, do
|
|
but consider the point, and then confess ingenuously, whether
|
|
light and colours, tastes, sounds, &c. are not all equally
|
|
passions or sensations in the soul. You may indeed call them
|
|
<external objects>, and give them in words what subsistence you
|
|
please. But, examine your own thoughts, and then tell me whether
|
|
it be not as I say?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge, Philonous, that, upon a fair
|
|
observation of what passes in my mind, I can discover nothing
|
|
else but that I am a thinking being, affected with variety of
|
|
sensations; neither is it possible to conceive how a sensation
|
|
should exist in an unperceiving substance. But then, on the other
|
|
hand, when I look on sensible things in a different view,
|
|
considering them as so many modes and qualities, I find it
|
|
necessary to suppose a <material substratum>, without which they
|
|
cannot be conceived to exist.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <Material substratum> call you it? Pray, by which of
|
|
your senses came you acquainted with that being?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is not itself sensible; its modes and qualities
|
|
only being perceived by the senses.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I presume then it was by reflexion and reason you
|
|
obtained
|
|
|
|
the idea of it?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do not pretend to any proper positive <idea> of it.
|
|
However, I conclude it exists, because qualities cannot be
|
|
conceived to exist without a support.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then you have only a relative <notion> of
|
|
it, or that you conceive it not otherwise than by conceiving the
|
|
relation it bears to sensible qualities? {198}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Be pleased therefore to let me know wherein that
|
|
relation
|
|
|
|
consists.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Is it not sufficiently expressed in the term
|
|
<substratum>, or <substance>?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. If so, the word <substratum> should import that it
|
|
is spread under the sensible qualities or accidents?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And consequently under extension?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is therefore somewhat in its own nature entirely
|
|
distinct
|
|
|
|
from extension?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I tell you, extension is only a mode, and Matter is
|
|
something that supports modes. And is it not evident the thing
|
|
supported is different from the thing supporting?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. So that something distinct from, and exclusive of,
|
|
extension is supposed to be the <substratum> of extension?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Just so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Answer me, Hylas. Can a thing be spread without
|
|
extension? or is not the idea of extension necessarily included
|
|
in <spreading>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Whatsoever therefore you suppose spread under
|
|
anything must have in itself an extension distinct from the
|
|
extension of that thing under which it is spread?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It must.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently, every corporeal substance, being the
|
|
<substratum> of extension, must have in itself another extension,
|
|
by which it is qualified to be a <substratum>: and so on to
|
|
infinity. And I ask whether this be not absurd in itself, and
|
|
repugnant to what you granted just now, to wit, that the
|
|
<substratum> was something distinct from and exclusive of
|
|
extension?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Aye but, Philonous, you take me wrong. I do not mean
|
|
that Matter is <spread> in a gross literal sense under extension.
|
|
The word <substratum> is used only to express in general the same
|
|
thing with <substance>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Well then, let us examine the relation implied in
|
|
the term <substance>. Is it not that it stands under accidents?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The very same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, that one thing may stand under or support
|
|
another, must it not be extended?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It must. {199}
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is not therefore this supposition liable to the same
|
|
absurdity with the former?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You still take things in a strict literal sense. That
|
|
is not fair, Philonous.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I am not for imposing any sense on your words: you
|
|
are at liberty to explain them as you please. Only, I beseech
|
|
you, make me understand something by them. You tell me Matter
|
|
supports or stands under accidents. How! is it as your legs
|
|
support your body?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No; that is the literal sense.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray let me know any sense, literal or not literal,
|
|
that you understand it in. -- How long must I wait for an answer,
|
|
Hylas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I declare I know not what to say. I once thought I
|
|
understood well enough what was meant by Matter's supporting
|
|
accidents. But now, the more I think on it the less can I
|
|
comprehend it: in short I find that I know nothing of it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then you have no idea at all, neither
|
|
relative nor positive, of Matter; you know neither what it is in
|
|
itself, nor what relation it bears to accidents?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And yet you asserted that you could not conceive how
|
|
qualities or accidents should really exist, without conceiving at
|
|
the same time a material support of them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I did.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That is to say, when you conceive the real existence
|
|
of qualities, you do withal conceive Something which you cannot
|
|
conceive?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It was wrong, I own. But still I fear there is some
|
|
fallacy or other. Pray what think you of this? It is just come
|
|
into my head that the ground of all our mistake lies in your
|
|
treating of each quality by itself. Now, I grant that each
|
|
quality cannot singly subsist without the mind. Colour cannot
|
|
without extension, neither can figure without some other sensible
|
|
quality. But, as the several qualities united or blended together
|
|
form entire sensible things, nothing hinders why such things may
|
|
not be supposed to exist without the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Either, Hylas, you are jesting, or have a very bad
|
|
memory. Though indeed we went through all the qualities by name
|
|
one after another, yet my arguments or rather your concessions,
|
|
nowhere tended to prove that the Secondary Qualities did not
|
|
subsist each alone by itself; but, that they were not {200} <at
|
|
all> without the mind. Indeed, in treating of figure and motion
|
|
we concluded they could not exist without the mind, because it
|
|
was impossible even in thought to separate them from all
|
|
secondary qualities, so as to conceive them existing by
|
|
themselves. But then this was not the only argument made use of
|
|
upon that occasion. But (to pass by all that hath been hitherto
|
|
said, and reckon it for nothing, if you will have it so) I am
|
|
content to put the whole upon this issue. If you can conceive it
|
|
possible for any mixture or combination of qualities, or any
|
|
sensible object whatever, to exist without the mind, then I will
|
|
grant it actually to be so.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. If it comes to that the point will soon be decided.
|
|
What more easy than to conceive a tree or house existing by
|
|
itself, independent of, and unperceived by, any mind whatsoever?
|
|
I do at this present time conceive them existing after that
|
|
manner.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How say you, Hylas, can you see a thing which is at
|
|
the same time unseen?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No, that were a contradiction.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not as great a contradiction to talk of
|
|
<conceiving> a thing which is <unconceived>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The, tree or house therefore which you think of is
|
|
conceived by you?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. How should it be otherwise?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And what is conceived is surely in the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without question, that which is conceived is in the
|
|
mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How then came you to say, you conceived a house or
|
|
tree existing independent and out of all minds whatsoever?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That was I own an oversight; but stay, let me
|
|
consider what led me into it. -- It is a pleasant mistake enough.
|
|
As I was thinking of a tree in a solitary place, where no one was
|
|
present to see it, methought that was to conceive a tree as
|
|
existing unperceived or unthought of; not considering that I
|
|
myself conceived it all the while. But now I plainly see that all
|
|
I can do is to frame ideas in my own mind. I may indeed conceive
|
|
in my own thoughts the idea of a tree, or a house, or a mountain,
|
|
but that is all. And this is far from proving that I can conceive
|
|
them <existing out of the minds of all Spirits>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You acknowledge then that you cannot possibly
|
|
conceive how any one corporeal sensible thing should exist
|
|
otherwise than in the mind? {201}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And yet you will earnestly contend for the truth of
|
|
that which you cannot so much as conceive?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I profess I know not what to think; but still there
|
|
are some scruples remain with me. Is it not certain I <see things
|
|
at> a distance? Do we not perceive the stars and moon, for
|
|
example, to be a great way off? Is not this, I say, manifest to
|
|
the senses?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Do you not in a dream too perceive those or the like
|
|
objects?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And have they not then the same appearance of being
|
|
distant?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They have.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But you do not thence conclude the apparitions in a
|
|
dream to be without the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. By no means.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You ought not therefore to conclude that sensible
|
|
objects are without the mind, from their appearance, or manner
|
|
wherein they are perceived.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge it. But doth not my sense deceive me in
|
|
those cases?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. By no means. The idea or thing which you immediately
|
|
perceive, neither sense nor reason informs you that it actually
|
|
exists without the mind. By sense you only know that you are
|
|
affected with such certain sensations of light and colours, &c.
|
|
And these you will not say are without the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True: but, beside all that, do you not think the
|
|
sight suggests something of <outness or distance>?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Upon approaching a distant object, do the visible
|
|
size and figure change perpetually, or do they appear the same at
|
|
all distances?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are in a continual change.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Sight therefore doth not suggest, or any way inform
|
|
you, that the visible object you immediately perceive exists at a
|
|
distance, or will be perceived when you advance farther onward;
|
|
there being a continued series of visible objects succeeding each
|
|
other during the whole time of your approach.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It doth not; but still I know, upon seeing an object,
|
|
what object I shall perceive after having passed over a certain
|
|
distance: {202} no matter whether it be exactly the same or no:
|
|
there is still something of distance suggested in the case.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Good Hylas, do but reflect a little on the point,
|
|
and then tell me whether there be any more in it than this: from
|
|
the ideas you actually perceive by sight, you have by experience
|
|
learned to collect what other ideas you will (according to the
|
|
standing order of nature) be affected with, after such a certain
|
|
succession of time and motion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Upon the whole, I take it to be nothing else.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Now, is it not plain that if we suppose a man born
|
|
blind was on a sudden made to see, he could at first have no
|
|
experience of what may be <suggested> by sight?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. He would not then, according to you, have any notion
|
|
of distance annexed to the things he saw; but would take them for
|
|
a new set of sensations, existing only in his mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is undeniable.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, to make it still more plain: is not <distance>
|
|
a line turned endwise to the eye?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And can a line so situated be perceived by sight?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Doth it not therefore follow that distance is not
|
|
properly and immediately perceived by sight?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It should seem so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Again, is it your opinion that colours are at a
|
|
distance?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It must be acknowledged they are only in the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But do not colours appear to the eye as coexisting
|
|
in the same place with extension and figures?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They do.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How can you then conclude from sight that figures
|
|
exist without, when you acknowledge colours do not; the sensible
|
|
appearance being the very same with regard to both?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I know not what to answer.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, allowing that distance was truly and
|
|
immediately perceived by the mind, yet it would not thence follow
|
|
it existed out of the mind. For, whatever is immediately
|
|
perceived is an idea: and can any idea exist out of the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To suppose that were absurd: but, inform me,
|
|
Philonous, can we perceive or know nothing beside our ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. As for the rational deducing of causes from effects,
|
|
{203} that is beside our inquiry. And, by the senses you can best
|
|
tell whether you perceive anything which is not immediately
|
|
perceived. And I ask you, whether the things immediately
|
|
perceived are other than your own sensations or ideas? You have
|
|
indeed more than once, in the course of this conversation,
|
|
declared yourself on those points; but you seem, by this last
|
|
question, to have departed from what you then thought.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To speak the truth, Philonous, I think there are two
|
|
kinds of objects: -- the one perceived immediately, which are
|
|
likewise called <ideas>; the other are real things or external
|
|
objects, perceived by the mediation of ideas, which are their
|
|
images and representations. Now, I own ideas do not exist without
|
|
the mind; but the latter sort of objects do. I am sorry I did not
|
|
think of this distinction sooner; it would probably have cut
|
|
short your discourse.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Are those external objects perceived by sense or by
|
|
some other faculty?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are perceived by sense.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Howl Is there any thing perceived by sense which is
|
|
not immediately perceived?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Yes, Philonous, in some sort there is. For example,
|
|
when I look on a picture or statue of Julius Caesar, I may be
|
|
said after a manner to perceive him (though not immediately) by
|
|
my senses.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then you will have our ideas, which alone
|
|
are immediately perceived, to be pictures of external things: and
|
|
that these also are perceived by sense, inasmuch as they have a
|
|
conformity or resemblance to our ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is my meaning.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And, in the same way that Julius Caesar, in himself
|
|
invisible, is nevertheless perceived by sight; real things, in
|
|
themselves imperceptible, are perceived by sense.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. In the very same.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Tell me, Hylas, when you behold the picture of
|
|
Julius Caesar, do you see with your eyes any more than some
|
|
colours and figures, with a certain symmetry and composition of
|
|
the whole?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Nothing else.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And would not a man who had never known anything of
|
|
Julius Caesar see as much? {204}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. He would.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently he hath his sight, and the use of it,
|
|
in as perfect a degree as you?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree with you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Whence comes it then that your thoughts are directed
|
|
to the Roman emperor, and his are not? This cannot proceed from
|
|
the sensations or ideas of sense by you then perceived; since you
|
|
acknowledge you have no advantage over him in that respect. It
|
|
should seem therefore to proceed from reason and memory: should
|
|
it not?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It should.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently, it will not follow from that instance
|
|
that anything is perceived by sense which is not, immediately
|
|
perceived. Though I grant we may, in one acceptation, be said to
|
|
perceive sensible things mediately by sense: that is, when, from
|
|
a frequently perceived connexion, the immediate perception of
|
|
ideas by one sense <suggests> to the mind others, perhaps
|
|
belonging to another sense, which are wont to be connected with
|
|
them. For instance, when I hear a coach drive along the streets,
|
|
immediately I perceive only the sound; but, from the experience I
|
|
have had that such a sound is connected with a coach, I am said
|
|
to hear the coach. It is nevertheless evident that, in truth and
|
|
strictness, nothing can be <heard but sound>; and the coach is
|
|
not then properly perceived by sense, but suggested from
|
|
experience. So likewise when we are said to see a red-hot bar of
|
|
iron; the solidity and heat of the iron are not the objects of
|
|
sight, but suggested to the imagination by the colour and figure
|
|
which are properly perceived by that sense. In short, those
|
|
things alone are actually and strictly perceived by any sense,
|
|
which would have been perceived in case that same sense had then
|
|
been first conferred on us. As for other things, it is plain they
|
|
are only suggested to the mind by experience, grounded on former
|
|
perceptions. But, to return to your comparison of Caesar's
|
|
picture, it is plain, if you keep to that, you must hold the real
|
|
things, or archetypes of our ideas, are not perceived by sense,
|
|
but by some internal faculty of the soul, as reason or memory. I
|
|
would therefore fain know what arguments you can draw from reason
|
|
for the existence of what you call <real things or material
|
|
objects>. Or, whether you remember to have seen them formerly as
|
|
they are in themselves; or, if you have heard or read of any one
|
|
that did. {205}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I see, Philonous, you are disposed to raillery; but
|
|
that will never convince me.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. My aim is only to learn from you the way to come at
|
|
the knowledge of <material beings>. Whatever we perceive is
|
|
perceived immediately or mediately: by sense, or by reason and
|
|
reflexion. But, as you have excluded sense, pray shew me what
|
|
reason you have to believe their existence; or what <medium> you
|
|
can possibly make use of to prove it, either to mine or your own
|
|
understanding.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To deal ingenuously, Philonous, now I consider the
|
|
point, I do not find I can give you any good reason for it. But,
|
|
thus much seems pretty plain, that it is at least possible such
|
|
things may really exist. And, as long as there is no absurdity in
|
|
supposing them, I am resolved to believe as I did, till you bring
|
|
good reasons to the contrary.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What! Is it come to this, that you only <believe>
|
|
the existence of material objects, and that your belief is
|
|
founded barely on the possibility of its being true? Then you
|
|
will have me bring reasons against it: though another would think
|
|
it reasonable the proof should lie on him who holds the
|
|
affirmative. And, after all, this very point which you are now
|
|
resolved to maintain, without any reason, is in effect what you
|
|
have more than once during this discourse seen good reason to
|
|
give up. But, to pass over all this; if I understand you rightly,
|
|
you say our ideas do not exist without the mind, but that they
|
|
are copies, images, or representations, of certain originals that
|
|
do?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You take me right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. They are then like external things?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Have those things a stable and permanent nature,
|
|
independent of our senses; or are they in a perpetual change,
|
|
upon our producing any motions in our bodies -- suspending,
|
|
exerting, or altering, our faculties or organs of sense?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Real things, it is plain, have a fixed and real
|
|
nature, which remains the same notwithstanding any change in our
|
|
senses, or in the posture and motion of our bodies; which indeed
|
|
may affect the ideas in our minds, but it were absurd to think
|
|
they had the same effect on things existing without the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How then is it possible that things perpetually
|
|
fleeting and variable as our ideas should be copies or images of
|
|
anything fixed and constant? Or, in other words, since all
|
|
sensible {206} qualities, as size, figure, colour, &c., that is,
|
|
our ideas, are continually changing, upon every alteration in the
|
|
distance, medium, or instruments of sensation; how can any
|
|
determinate material objects be properly represented or painted
|
|
forth by several distinct things, each of which is so different
|
|
from and unlike the rest? Or, if you say it resembles some one
|
|
only of our ideas, how shall we be able to distinguish the true
|
|
copy from all the false ones?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I profess, Philonous, I am at a loss. I know not what
|
|
to say to this.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But neither is this all. Which are material objects
|
|
in themselves -- perceptible or imperceptible?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Properly and immediately nothing can be perceived but
|
|
ideas. All material things, therefore, are in themselves
|
|
insensible, and to be perceived only by our ideas.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Ideas then are sensible, and their archetypes or
|
|
originals insensible?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Right.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But how can that which is sensible be like that
|
|
which is insensible? Can a real thing, in itself <invisible>, be
|
|
like a <colour>; or a real thing, which is not <audible>, be like
|
|
a <sound>? In a word, can anything be like a sensation or idea,
|
|
but another sensation or idea?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I must own, I think not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it possible there should be any doubt on the
|
|
point? Do. you not perfectly know your own ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I know them perfectly; since what I do not perceive
|
|
or know can be no part of my idea.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consider, therefore, and examine them, and then tell
|
|
me if there be anything in them which can exist without the mind:
|
|
or if you can conceive anything like them existing without the
|
|
mind.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Upon inquiry, I find it is impossible for me to
|
|
conceive or understand how anything but an idea can be like an
|
|
idea. And it is most evident that <no idea can exist without the
|
|
mind>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You are therefore, by your principles, forced to
|
|
deny the <reality> of sensible things; since you made it to
|
|
consist in an absolute existence exterior to the mind. That is to
|
|
say, you are a downright sceptic. So I have gained my point,
|
|
which was to shew your principles led to Scepticism. {207}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. For the present I am, if not entirely convinced, at
|
|
least silenced.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I would fain know what more you would require in
|
|
order to a perfect conviction. Have you not had the liberty of
|
|
explaining yourself all manner of ways? Were any little slips in
|
|
discourse laid hold and insisted on? Or were you not allowed to
|
|
retract or reinforce anything you had offered, as best served
|
|
your purpose? Hath not everything you could say been heard and
|
|
examined with all the fairness imaginable? In a word have you not
|
|
in every point been convinced out of your own mouth? And, if you
|
|
can at present discover any flaw in any of your former
|
|
concessions, or think of any remaining subterfuge, any new
|
|
distinction, colour, or comment whatsoever, why do you not
|
|
produce it?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. A little patience, Philonous. I am at present so
|
|
amazed to see myself ensnared, and as it were imprisoned in the
|
|
labyrinths you have drawn me into, that on the sudden it cannot
|
|
be expected I should find my way out. You must give me time to
|
|
look about me and recollect myself.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Hark; is not this the college bell?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It rings for prayers.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. We will go in then, if you please, and meet here
|
|
again tomorrow morning. In the meantime, you may employ your
|
|
thoughts on this morning's discourse, and try if you can find any
|
|
fallacy in it, or invent any new means to extricate yourself.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Agreed. {208}
|
|
|
|
THE SECOND DIALOGUE
|
|
|
|
<Hylas>. I beg your pardon, Philonous, for not meeting you
|
|
sooner. All this morning my head was so filled with our late
|
|
conversation that I had not leisure to think of the time of the
|
|
day, or indeed of anything else.
|
|
|
|
<Philonous>. I am glad you were so intent upon it, in hopes
|
|
if there were any mistakes in your concessions, or fallacies in
|
|
my reasonings from them, you will now discover them to me.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I assure you I have done nothing ever since I saw you
|
|
but search after mistakes and fallacies, and, with that view,
|
|
have minutely examined the whole series of yesterday's discourse:
|
|
but all in vain, for the notions it led me into, upon review,
|
|
appear still more clear and evident; and, the more I consider
|
|
them, the more irresistibly do they force my assent.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And is not this, think you, a sign that they are
|
|
genuine, that they proceed from nature, and are conformable to
|
|
right reason? Truth and beauty are in this alike, that the
|
|
strictest survey sets them both off to advantage; while the false
|
|
lustre of error and disguise cannot endure being reviewed, or too
|
|
nearly inspected.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own there is a great deal in what you say. Nor can
|
|
any one be more entirely satisfied of the truth of those odd
|
|
consequences, so long as I have in view the reasonings that lead
|
|
to them. But, when these are out of my thoughts, there seems, on
|
|
the other hand, something so satisfactory, so natural and
|
|
intelligible, in the modern way of explaining things that, I
|
|
profess, I know not how to reject it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I know not what way you mean.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I mean the way of accounting for our sensations or
|
|
ideas.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How is that?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is supposed the soul makes her residence in some
|
|
part of the brain, from which the nerves take their rise, and are
|
|
thence extended to all parts of the body; and that outward
|
|
objects, by the different impressions they make on the organs of
|
|
sense, communicate certain vibrative motions to the nerves; and
|
|
these being filled with spirits propagate them to the brain {209}
|
|
or seat of the soul, which, according to the various impressions
|
|
or traces thereby made in the brain, is variously affected with
|
|
ideas.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And call you this an explication of the manner
|
|
whereby we are affected with ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Why not, Philonous? Have you anything to object
|
|
against it?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I would first know whether I rightly understand your
|
|
hypothesis. You make certain traces in the brain to be the causes
|
|
or occasions of our ideas. Pray tell me whether by the <brain>
|
|
you mean any sensible thing.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What else think you I could mean?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Sensible things are all immediately perceivable; and
|
|
those things which are immediately perceivable are ideas; and
|
|
these exist only in the mind. Thus much you have, if I mistake
|
|
not, long since agreed to.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do not deny it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The brain therefore you speak of, being a sensible
|
|
thing, exists only in the mind. Now, I would fain know whether
|
|
you think it reasonable to suppose that one idea or thing
|
|
existing in the mind occasions all other ideas. And, if you think
|
|
so, pray how do you account for the origin of that primary idea
|
|
or brain itself?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do not explain the origin of our ideas by that
|
|
brain which is perceivable to sense -- this being itself only a
|
|
combination of sensible ideas -- but by another which I imagine.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But are not things imagined as truly <in the mind>
|
|
as things perceived?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I must confess they are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It comes, therefore, to the same thing; and you have
|
|
been all this while accounting for ideas by certain motions or
|
|
impressions of the brain; that is, by some alterations in an
|
|
idea, whether sensible or imaginable it matters not.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I begin to suspect my hypothesis.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Besides spirits, all that we know or conceive are
|
|
our own ideas. When, therefore, you say all ideas are occasioned
|
|
by impressions in the brain, do you conceive this brain or no? If
|
|
you do, then you talk of ideas imprinted in an idea causing that
|
|
same idea, which is absurd. If you do not conceive it, you talk
|
|
unintelligibly, instead of forming a reasonable hypothesis. {210}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I now clearly see it was a mere dream. There is
|
|
nothing in it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You need not be much concerned at it; for after all,
|
|
this way of explaining things, as you called it, could never have
|
|
satisfied any reasonable man. What connexion is there between a
|
|
motion in the nerves, and the sensations of sound or colour in
|
|
the mind? Or how is it possible these should be the effect of
|
|
that?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But I could never think it had so little in it as now
|
|
it seems to have.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Well then, are you at length satisfied that no
|
|
sensible things have a real existence; and that you are in truth
|
|
an arrant sceptic?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is too plain to be denied.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Look! are not the fields covered with a delightful
|
|
verdure? Is there not something in the woods and groves, in the
|
|
rivers and clear springs, that soothes, that delights, that
|
|
transports the soul? At the prospect of the wide and deep ocean,
|
|
or some huge mountain whose top is lost in the clouds, or of an
|
|
old gloomy forest, are not our minds filled with a pleasing
|
|
horror? Even in rocks and deserts is there not an agreeable
|
|
wildness? How sincere a pleasure is it to behold the natural
|
|
beauties of the earth! To preserve and renew our, relish for
|
|
them, is not the veil of night alternately drawn over her face,
|
|
and doth she not change her dress with the seasons? How aptly are
|
|
the elements disposed! What variety and use [in the meanest
|
|
productions of nature]![4] What delicacy, what beauty, what
|
|
contrivance, in animal and vegetable bodies I How exquisitely are
|
|
all things suited, as well to their particular ends, as to
|
|
constitute opposite parts of the whole I And, while they mutually
|
|
aid and support, do they not also set off and illustrate each
|
|
other? Raise now your thoughts from this ball of earth to all
|
|
those glorious luminaries that adorn the high arch of heaven. The
|
|
motion and situation of the planets, are they not admirable for
|
|
use and order? Were those (miscalled <erratic>) globes once known
|
|
to stray, in their repeated journeys through the pathless void?
|
|
Do they not measure areas round the sun ever proportioned to the
|
|
times? So fixed, so immutable are the laws by which the unseen
|
|
Author of nature actuates the universe. {211} How vivid and
|
|
radiant is the lustre of the fixed stars! How magnificent and
|
|
rich that negligent profusion with which they appear to be
|
|
scattered throughout the whole azure vault! Yet, if you take the
|
|
telescope, it brings into your sight a new host of stars that
|
|
escape the naked eye. Here they seem contiguous and minute, but
|
|
to a nearer view immense orbs of fight at various distances, far
|
|
sunk in the abyss of space. Now you must call imagination to your
|
|
aid. The feeble narrow sense cannot descry innumerable worlds
|
|
revolving round the central fires; and in those worlds the energy
|
|
of an all-perfect Mind displayed in endless forms. But, neither
|
|
sense nor imagination are big enough to comprehend the boundless
|
|
extent, with all its glittering furniture. Though the labouring
|
|
mind exert and strain each power to its utmost reach, there still
|
|
stands out ungrasped a surplusage immeasurable. Yet all the vast
|
|
bodies that compose this mighty frame, how distant and remote
|
|
soever, are by some secret mechanism, some Divine art and force,
|
|
linked in a mutual dependence and intercourse with each other;
|
|
even with this earth, which was almost slipt from my thoughts and
|
|
lost in the crowd of worlds. Is not the whole system immense,
|
|
beautiful, glorious beyond expression and beyond thought! What
|
|
treatment, then, do those philosophers deserve, who would deprive
|
|
these noble and delightful scenes of all <reality>? How should
|
|
those Principles be entertained that lead us to think all the
|
|
visible beauty of the creation a false imaginary glare? To be
|
|
plain, can you expect this Scepticism of yours will not be
|
|
thought extravagantly absurd by all men of sense?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Other men may think as they please; but for your part
|
|
you have nothing to reproach me with. My comfort is, you are as
|
|
much a sceptic as I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. There, Hylas, I must beg leave to differ from you.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What! Have you all along agreed to the premises, and
|
|
do you now deny the conclusion, and leave me to maintain those
|
|
paradoxes by myself which you led me into? This surely is not
|
|
fair.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <I> deny that I agreed with you in those notions
|
|
that led to Scepticism. You indeed said the <reality> of sensible
|
|
things consisted in <an absolute existence out of the minds of
|
|
spirits>, or distinct from their being perceived. And pursuant to
|
|
this notion of reality, <you> are obliged to deny sensible things
|
|
any {212} real existence: that is, according to your own
|
|
definition, you profess yourself a sceptic. But I neither said
|
|
nor thought the reality of sensible things was to be defined
|
|
after that manner. To me it is evident for the reasons you allow
|
|
of, that sensible things cannot exist otherwise than in a mind or
|
|
spirit. Whence I conclude, not that they have no real existence,
|
|
but that., seeing they depend not on my thought, and have all
|
|
existence distinct from being perceived by me, <there must be
|
|
some other Mind wherein they exist>. As sure, therefore, as the
|
|
sensible world really exists, so sure is there an infinite
|
|
omnipresent Spirit who contains and supports it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What! This is no more than I and all Christians hold;
|
|
nay, and all others too who believe there is a God, and that He
|
|
knows and comprehends all things.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Aye, but here lies the difference. Men commonly
|
|
believe that all things are known or perceived by God, because
|
|
they believe the being of a God; whereas I, on the other side,
|
|
immediately and necessarily conclude the being of a God, because
|
|
all sensible things must be perceived by Him.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, so long as we all believe the same thing, what
|
|
matter is it how we come by that belief?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But neither do we agree in the same opinion. For
|
|
philosophers, though they acknowledge all corporeal beings to be
|
|
perceived by God, yet they attribute to them an absolute
|
|
subsistence distinct from their being perceived by any mind
|
|
whatever; which I do not. Besides, is there no difference between
|
|
saying, <There is a God>, <therefore He perceives all things>;
|
|
and saying, <Sensible things do really exist>; <and>, <if they
|
|
really exist>, <they are necessarily perceived by an infinite
|
|
Mind>: <therefore there is an infinite Mind or God>? This
|
|
furnishes you with a direct and immediate demonstration, from a
|
|
most evident principle, of the <being of a God>. Divines and
|
|
philosophers had proved beyond all controversy, from the beauty
|
|
and usefulness of the several parts of the creation, that it was
|
|
the workmanship of God. But that -- setting aside all help of
|
|
astronomy and natural philosophy, all contemplation of the
|
|
contrivance, order, and adjustment of things -- an infinite Mind
|
|
should be necessarily inferred from the bare <existence of the
|
|
sensible world>, is an advantage to them only who have made this
|
|
easy reflexion: that the sensible world is that which we perceive
|
|
by our several senses; and that nothing is perceived by the
|
|
senses beside ideas; and that no {213} idea or archetype of an
|
|
idea can exist otherwise than in a mind. You may now, without any
|
|
laborious search into the sciences, without any subtlety of
|
|
reason, or tedious length of discourse, oppose and baffle the
|
|
most strenuous advocate for Atheism. Those miserable refuges,
|
|
whether in an eternal succession of unthinking causes and
|
|
effects, or in a fortuitous concourse of atoms; those wild
|
|
imaginations of Vanini, Hobbes, and Spinoza: in a word, the whole
|
|
system of Atheism, is it not entirely overthrown, by this single
|
|
reflexion on the repugnancy included in supposing the whole, or
|
|
any part, even the most rude and shapeless, of the visible world,
|
|
to exist without a mind? Let any one of those abettors of impiety
|
|
but look into his own thoughts, and there try if he can conceive
|
|
how so much as a rock, a desert, a chaos, or confused jumble of
|
|
atoms; how anything at all, either sensible or imaginable, can
|
|
exist independent of a Mind, and he need go no farther to be
|
|
convinced of his folly. Can anything be fairer than to put a
|
|
dispute on such an issue, and leave it to a man himself to see if
|
|
he can conceive, even in thought, what he holds to be true in
|
|
fact, and from a notional to allow it a real existence?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It cannot be denied there is something highly
|
|
serviceable to religion in what you advance. But do you not think
|
|
it looks very like a notion entertained by some eminent moderns,
|
|
of <seeing all things in God>?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I would gladly know that opinion: pray explain it to
|
|
me.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They conceive that the soul, being immaterial, is
|
|
incapable of being united with material things, so as to perceive
|
|
them in themselves; but that she perceives them by her union with
|
|
the substance of God, which, being spiritual, is therefore purely
|
|
intelligible, or capable of being the immediate object of a
|
|
spirit's thought. Besides the Divine essence contains in it
|
|
perfections correspondent to each created being; and which are,
|
|
for that reason, proper to exhibit or represent them to the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I do not understand how our ideas, which are things
|
|
altogether passive and inert, can be the essence, or any part (or
|
|
like any part) of the essence or substance of God, who is an
|
|
{214} impassive, indivisible, pure, active being. Many more
|
|
difficulties and objections there are which occur at first view
|
|
against this hypothesis; but I shall only add that it is liable
|
|
to all the absurdities of the common hypothesis, in making a
|
|
created world exist otherwise than in the mind of a Spirit.
|
|
Besides all which it hath this peculiar to itself; that it makes
|
|
that material world serve to no purpose. And, if it pass for a
|
|
good argument against other hypotheses in the sciences, that they
|
|
suppose Nature, or the Divine wisdom, to make something in vain,
|
|
or do that by tedious roundabout methods which might have been
|
|
performed in a much more easy and compendious way, what shall we
|
|
think of that hypothesis which supposes the whole world made in
|
|
vain?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But what say you? Are not you too of opinion that we
|
|
see all things in God? If I mistake not, what you advance comes
|
|
near it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. [Few men think; yet all have opinions. Hence men's
|
|
opinions are superficial and confused. It is nothing strange that
|
|
tenets which in themselves are ever so different, should
|
|
nevertheless be confounded with each other, by those who do not
|
|
consider them attentively. I shall not therefore be surprised if
|
|
some men imagine that I run into the enthusiasm of Malebranche;
|
|
though in truth I am very remote from it. He builds on the most
|
|
abstract general ideas, which I entirely disclaim. He asserts an
|
|
absolute external world, which I deny. He maintains that we are
|
|
deceived by our senses, and, know not the real natures or the
|
|
true forms and figures of extended beings; of all which I hold
|
|
the direct contrary. So that upon the whole there are no
|
|
Principles more fundamentally opposite than his and mine. It must
|
|
be owned that][5] I entirely agree with what the holy Scripture
|
|
saith, "That in God we live and move and have our being." But
|
|
that we see things in His essence, after the manner above set
|
|
forth, I am far from believing. Take here in brief my meaning: --
|
|
It is evident that the things I perceive are my own ideas, and
|
|
that no idea can exist unless it be in a mind: nor is it less
|
|
plain that these ideas or things by me perceived, either
|
|
themselves or their archetypes, exist independently of my mind,
|
|
since I know myself not to be their author, it being out of my
|
|
power to determine at pleasure what particular ideas I shall be
|
|
affected with upon opening my eyes or ears: they must therefore
|
|
exist in some other Mind, whose {215} Will it is they should be
|
|
exhibited to me. The things, I say, immediately perceived are
|
|
ideas or sensations, call them which you will. But how can any
|
|
idea or sensation exist in, or be produced by, anything but a
|
|
mind or spirit? This indeed is inconceivable. And to assert that
|
|
which is inconceivable is to talk nonsense: is it not?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without doubt.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, on the other hand, it is very conceivable that
|
|
they should exist in and be produced by a spirit; since this is
|
|
no more than I daily experience in myself, inasmuch as I perceive
|
|
numberless ideas; and, by an act of my will, can form a great
|
|
variety of them, and raise them up in my imagination: though, it
|
|
must be confessed, these creatures of the fancy are not
|
|
altogether so distinct, so strong, vivid, and permanent, as those
|
|
perceived by my senses -- which latter are called <red things>.
|
|
From all which I conclude, <there is a Mind which affects me
|
|
every moment with all the sensible impressions I perceive>.
|
|
<And>, from the variety, order, and manner of these, I conclude
|
|
<the Author of them to be wise>, <powerful>, <and good>, <beyond
|
|
comprehension>. <Mark> it well; I do not say, I see things by
|
|
perceiving that which represents them in the intelligible
|
|
Substance of God. This I do not understand; but I say, the things
|
|
by me perceived are known by the understanding, and produced by
|
|
the will of an infinite Spirit. And is not all this most plain
|
|
and evident? Is there any more in it than what a little
|
|
observation in our own minds, and that which passeth in them, not
|
|
only enables us to conceive, but also obliges us to acknowledge.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I think I understand you very clearly; and own the
|
|
proof you give of a Deity seems no less evident than it is
|
|
surprising. But, allowing that God is the supreme and universal
|
|
Cause of an things, yet, may there not be still a Third Nature
|
|
besides Spirits and Ideas? May we not admit a subordinate and
|
|
limited cause of our ideas? In a word, may there not for all that
|
|
be <Matter>?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How often must I inculcate the same thing? You allow
|
|
the things immediately perceived by sense to exist nowhere
|
|
without the mind; but there is nothing perceived by sense which
|
|
is not perceived immediately: therefore there is nothing sensible
|
|
that exists without the mind. The Matter, therefore, which you
|
|
still insist on is something intelligible, I suppose; something
|
|
that may be discovered by reason, and not by sense.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You are in the right. {216}
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray let me know what reasoning your belief of
|
|
Matter is grounded on; and what this Matter is, in your present
|
|
sense of it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I find myself affected with various ideas, whereof I
|
|
know I am not the cause; neither are they the cause of
|
|
themselves, or of one another, or capable of subsisting by
|
|
themselves, as being altogether inactive, fleeting, dependent
|
|
beings. They have therefore <some> cause distinct from me and
|
|
them: of which I pretend to know no more than that it is <the
|
|
cause of my ideas>. And this thing, whatever it be, I call
|
|
Matter.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Tell me, Hylas, hath every one a liberty to change
|
|
the current proper signification attached to a common name in any
|
|
language? For example, suppose a traveller should tell you that
|
|
in a certain country men pass unhurt through the fire; and, upon
|
|
explaining himself, you found he meant by the word fire that
|
|
which others call <water>. Or, if he should assert that there are
|
|
trees that walk upon two legs, meaning men by the term <trees>.
|
|
Would you think this reasonable?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No; I should think it very absurd. Common custom is
|
|
the standard of propriety in language. And for any man to affect
|
|
speaking improperly is to pervert the use of speech, and can
|
|
never serve to a better purpose than to protract and multiply
|
|
disputes, where there is no difference in opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And doth not <Matter>, in the common current
|
|
acceptation of the word, signify an extended, solid, moveable,
|
|
unthinking, inactive Substance?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It doth.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And, hath it not been made evident that no <such>
|
|
substance can possibly exist? And, though it should be allowed to
|
|
exist, yet how can that which is <inactive> be a <cause>; or that
|
|
which is <unthinking> be a <cause of thought>? You may, indeed,
|
|
if you please, annex to the word <Matter> a contrary meaning to
|
|
what is vulgarly received; and tell me you understand by it, an
|
|
unextended, thinking, active being, which is the cause of our
|
|
ideas. But what else is this than to play with words, and run
|
|
into that very fault you just now condemned with so much reason?
|
|
I do by no means find fault with your reasoning, in that you
|
|
collect a cause from the <phenomena>: <but> I deny that <the>
|
|
cause deducible by reason can properly be termed Matter.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. There is indeed something in what you say. But I am
|
|
{217} afraid you do not thoroughly comprehend my meaning. I would
|
|
by no means be thought to deny that God, or an infinite Spirit,
|
|
is the Supreme Cause of all things. All I contend for is, that,
|
|
subordinate to the Supreme Agent, there is a cause of a limited
|
|
and inferior nature, which <concurs> in the production of our
|
|
ideas, not by any act of will, or spiritual efficiency, but by
|
|
that kind of action which belongs to Matter, viz. <motion>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I find you are at every turn relapsing into your old
|
|
exploded conceit, of a moveable, and consequently an extended,
|
|
substance, existing without the mind. What! Have you already
|
|
forgotten you were convinced; or are you willing I should repeat
|
|
what has been said on that head? In truth this is not fair
|
|
dealing in you, still to suppose the being of that which you have
|
|
so often acknowledged to have no being. But, not to insist
|
|
farther on what has been so largely handled, I ask whether all
|
|
your ideas are not perfectly passive and inert, including nothing
|
|
of action in them.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And are sensible qualities anything else but ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. How often have I acknowledged that they are not.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But is not <motion> a sensible quality?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently it is no action?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree with you. And indeed it is very plain that
|
|
when I stir my finger, it remains passive; but my will which
|
|
produced the motion is active.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Now, I desire to know, in the first place, whether,
|
|
motion being allowed to be no action, you can conceive any action
|
|
besides volition: and, in the second place, whether to say
|
|
something and conceive nothing be not to talk nonsense: and,
|
|
lastly, whether, having considered the premises, you do not
|
|
perceive that to suppose any efficient or active Cause of our
|
|
ideas, other than <Spirit>, is highly absurd and unreasonable?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I give up the point entirely. But, though Matter may
|
|
not be a cause, yet what hinders its being an <instrument>,
|
|
subservient to the supreme Agent in the production of our ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. An instrument say you; pray what may be the figure,
|
|
springs, wheels, and motions, of that instrument?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Those I pretend to determine nothing of, both the
|
|
substance and its qualities being entirely unknown to me.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What? You are then of opinion it is made up of {218}
|
|
unknown parts, that it hath unknown motions, and an unknown
|
|
shape?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do not believe that it hath any figure or motion at
|
|
all, being already convinced, that no sensible qualities can
|
|
exist in an unperceiving substance.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But what notion is it possible to frame of an
|
|
instrument void of all sensible qualities, even extension itself?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I do not pretend to have any notion of it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And what reason have you to think this unknown, this
|
|
inconceivable Somewhat doth exist? Is it that you imagine God
|
|
cannot act as well without it; or that you find by experience the
|
|
use of some such thing, when you form ideas in your own mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You are always teasing me for reasons of my belief.
|
|
Pray what reasons have you not to believe it?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is to me a sufficient reason not to believe the
|
|
existence of anything, if I see no reason for believing it. But,
|
|
not to insist on reasons for believing, you will not so much as
|
|
let me know <what it is> you would have me believe; since you say
|
|
you have no manner of notion of it. After all, let me entreat you
|
|
to consider whether it be like a philosopher, or even like a man
|
|
of common sense, to pretend to believe you know not what ' and
|
|
you know not why.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Hold, Philonous. When I tell you Matter is an
|
|
<instrument>, I do not mean altogether nothing. It is true I know
|
|
not the particular kind of instrument; but, however, I have some
|
|
notion of <instrument in general>, which I apply to it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But what if it should prove that there is something,
|
|
even in the most general notion of <instrument>, as taken in a
|
|
distinct sense from <cause>, which makes the use of it
|
|
inconsistent with the Divine attributes?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Make that appear and I shall give up the point.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What mean you by the general nature or notion of
|
|
<instrument>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That which is common to all particular instruments
|
|
composeth the general notion.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not common to all instruments, that they are
|
|
applied to the doing those things only which cannot be performed
|
|
by the mere act of our wills? Thus, for instance, I never use an
|
|
instrument to move my finger, because it is done by a volition.
|
|
But I should use one if I were to remove part of a rock, or tear
|
|
up a tree by the roots. Are you of the same mind? {219} Or, can
|
|
you shew any example where an instrument is made use of in
|
|
producing an effect <immediately> depending on the will of the
|
|
agent?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own I cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How therefore can you suppose that an All-perfect
|
|
Spirit, on whose Will all things have an absolute and immediate
|
|
dependence, should need an instrument in his operations, or, not
|
|
needing it, make use of it? Thus it seems to me that you are
|
|
obliged to own the use of a lifeless inactive instrument to be
|
|
incompatible with the infinite perfection of God; that is, by
|
|
your own confession, to give up the point.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It doth not readily occur what I can answer you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, methinks you should be ready to own the truth,
|
|
when it has been fairly proved to you. We indeed, who are beings
|
|
of finite powers, are forced to make use of instruments. And the
|
|
use of an instrument sheweth the agent to be limited by rules of
|
|
another's prescription, and that he cannot obtain his end but in
|
|
such a way, and by such conditions. Whence it seems a clear
|
|
consequence, that the supreme unlimited agent useth no tool or
|
|
instrument at all. The will of an Omnipotent Spirit is no sooner
|
|
exerted than executed, without the application of means; which,
|
|
if they are employed by inferior agents, it is not upon account
|
|
of any real efficacy that is in them, or necessary aptitude to
|
|
produce any effect, but merely in compliance with the laws of
|
|
nature, or those conditions prescribed to them by the First
|
|
Cause, who is Himself above all limitation or prescription
|
|
whatsoever.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I will no longer maintain that Matter is an
|
|
instrument. However, I would not be understood to give up its
|
|
existence neither; since, notwithstanding what hath been said, it
|
|
may still be an <occasion>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How many shapes is your Matter to take? Or, how
|
|
often must it be proved not to exist, before you are content to
|
|
part with it? But, to say no more of this (though by all the laws
|
|
of disputation I may justly blame you for so frequently changing
|
|
the signification of the principal term) -- I would fain know
|
|
what you mean by affirming that matter is an occasion, having
|
|
already denied it to be a cause. And, when you have shewn in what
|
|
sense you understand <occasion>, pray, in the next place, be
|
|
pleased to shew me what reason induceth you to believe there is
|
|
such an occasion of our ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. As to the first point: by <occasion> I mean an
|
|
inactive {220} unthinking being, at the presence whereof God
|
|
excites ideas in our minds.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And what may be the nature of that inactive
|
|
unthinking being?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I know nothing of its nature.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Proceed then to the second point, and assign some
|
|
reason why we should allow an existence to this inactive,
|
|
unthinking, unknown thing.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. When we see ideas produced in our minds, after an
|
|
orderly and constant manner, it is natural to think they have
|
|
some fixed and regular occasions, at the presence of which they
|
|
are excited.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You acknowledge then God alone to be the cause of
|
|
our ideas, and that He causes them at the presence of those
|
|
occasions.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is my opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Those things which you say are present to God,
|
|
without doubt He perceives.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Certainly; otherwise they could not be to Him an
|
|
occasion of acting.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Not to insist now on your making sense of this
|
|
hypothesis, or answering all the puzzling questions and
|
|
difficulties it is liable to: I only ask whether the order and
|
|
regularity observable in the series of our ideas, or the course
|
|
of nature, be not sufficiently accounted for by the wisdom and
|
|
power of God; and whether it doth not derogate from those
|
|
attributes, to suppose He is influenced, directed, or put in
|
|
mind, when and what He is to act, by an unthinking substance?
|
|
And, lastly, whether, in case I granted all you contend for, it
|
|
would make anything to your purpose; it not being easy to
|
|
conceive how the external or absolute existence of an unthinking
|
|
substance, distinct from its being perceived, can be inferred
|
|
from my allowing that there are certain things perceived by the
|
|
mind of God, which are to Him the occasion of producing ideas in
|
|
us?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I am perfectly at a loss what to think, this notion
|
|
of <occasion> seeming now altogether as groundless as the rest.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Do you not at length perceive that in all these
|
|
different acceptations of <Matter>, you have been only supposing
|
|
you know not what, for no manner of reason, and to no kind of
|
|
use?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I freely own myself less fond of my notions since
|
|
they have been so accurately examined. But still, methinks, I
|
|
have some confused perception that there is such a thing as
|
|
<Matter>. {221}
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Either you perceive the being of Matter immediately
|
|
or mediately. If immediately, pray inform me by which of the
|
|
senses you perceive it. If mediately, let me know by what
|
|
reasoning it is inferred from those things which you perceive
|
|
immediately. So much for the perception. Then for the Matter
|
|
itself, I ask whether it is object, <substratum>, cause,
|
|
instrument, or occasion? You have already pleaded for each of
|
|
these, shifting your notions, and making Matter to appear
|
|
sometimes in one shape, then in another. And what you have
|
|
offered hath been disapproved and rejected by yourself. If you
|
|
have anything new to advance I would gladly bear it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I think I have already offered all I had to say on
|
|
those heads. I am at a loss what more to urge.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And yet you are loath to part with your old
|
|
prejudice. But, to make you quit it more easily, I desire that,
|
|
beside what has been hitherto suggested, you will farther
|
|
consider whether, upon. supposition that Matter exists, you can
|
|
possibly conceive how you should be affected by it. Or, supposing
|
|
it did not exist, whether it be not evident you might for all
|
|
that be affected with the same ideas you now are, and
|
|
consequently have the very same reasons to believe its existence
|
|
that you now can have.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge it is possible we might perceive all
|
|
things just as we do now, though there was no Matter in the
|
|
world; neither can I conceive, if there be Matter, how it should
|
|
produce' any idea in our minds. And, I do farther grant you have
|
|
entirely satisfied me that it is impossible there should be such
|
|
a thing as matter in any of the foregoing acceptations. But still
|
|
I cannot help supposing that there is <Matter> in some sense or
|
|
other. <What that is I> do not indeed pretend to determine.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I do not expect you should define exactly the nature
|
|
of that unknown being. Only be pleased to tell me whether it is a
|
|
Substance; and if so, whether you can suppose a Substance without
|
|
accidents; or, in case you suppose it to have accidents or
|
|
qualities, I desire you will let me know what those qualities
|
|
are, at least what is meant by Matter's supporting them?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. We have already argued on those points. I have no
|
|
more to say to them. But, to prevent any farther questions, let
|
|
me tell you I at present understand by <Matter> neither substance
|
|
nor accident, thinking nor extended being, neither cause,
|
|
instrument, nor occasion, but Something entirely unknown,
|
|
distinct from all these. {222}
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems then you include in your present notion of
|
|
Matter nothing but the general abstract idea of <entity>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Nothing else; save only that I super-add to this
|
|
general idea the negation of all those particular things,
|
|
qualities, or ideas, that I perceive, imagine, or in anywise
|
|
apprehend.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray where do you suppose this unknown Matter to
|
|
exist?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Oh Philonous! now you think you have entangled me;
|
|
for, if I say it exists in place, then you will infer that it
|
|
exists in the mind, since it is agreed that place or extension
|
|
exists only in the mind. But I am not ashamed to own my
|
|
ignorance. I know not where it exists; only I am sure it exists
|
|
not in place. There is a negative answer for you. And you must
|
|
expect no other to all the questions you put for the future about
|
|
Matter.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Since you will not tell me where it exists, be
|
|
pleased to inform me after what manner you suppose it to exist,
|
|
or what you mean by its <existence>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It neither thinks nor acts, neither perceives nor is
|
|
perceived.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But what is there positive in your abstracted notion
|
|
of its existence?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Upon a nice observation, I do not find I have any
|
|
positive notion or meaning at all. I tell you again, I am not
|
|
ashamed to own my ignorance. I know not what is meant by its
|
|
<existence>, or how it exists.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Continue, good Hylas, to act the same ingenuous
|
|
part, and tell me sincerely whether you can frame a distinct idea
|
|
of Entity in general, prescinded from and exclusive of all
|
|
thinking and corporeal beings, all particular things whatsoever.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Hold, let me think a little -- I profess, Philonous,
|
|
I do not find that I can. At first glance, methought I had some
|
|
dilute and airy notion of Pure Entity in abstract; but, upon
|
|
closer attention, it hath quite vanished out of sight. The more I
|
|
think on it, the more am I confirmed in my prudent resolution of
|
|
giving none but negative answers, and not pretending to the least
|
|
degree of any positive knowledge or conception of Matter, its
|
|
<where>, its <how>, its <entity>, or anything belonging to it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When, therefore, you speak of the existence of
|
|
Matter, you have not any notion in your mind?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. None at all.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray tell me if the case stands not thus -- At
|
|
first, from a belief of material substance, you would have it
|
|
that the {223} immediate objects existed without the mind; then
|
|
that they are archetypes; then causes; next instruments; then
|
|
occasions: lastly <something in general>, which being interpreted
|
|
proves <nothing>. So Matter comes to nothing. What think you,
|
|
Hylas, is not this a fair summary of your whole proceeding?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Be that as it will, yet I still insist upon it, that
|
|
our not being able to conceive a thing is no argument against its
|
|
existence.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That from a cause, effect, operation, sign, or other
|
|
circumstance, there may reasonably be inferred the existence of a
|
|
thing not immediately perceived; and that it were absurd for any
|
|
man to argue against the existence of that thing, from his having
|
|
no direct and positive notion of it, I freely own. But, where
|
|
there is nothing of all this; where neither reason nor revelation
|
|
induces us to believe the existence of a thing; where we have not
|
|
even a relative notion of it; where an abstraction is made from
|
|
perceiving and being perceived, from Spirit and idea: lastly,
|
|
where there is not so much as the most inadequate or faint idea
|
|
pretended to -- I will not indeed thence conclude against the
|
|
reality of any notion, or existence of anything; but my inference
|
|
shall be, that you mean nothing at all; that you employ words to
|
|
no manner of purpose, without any design or signification
|
|
whatsoever. And I leave it to you to consider how mere jargon
|
|
should be treated.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To deal frankly with you, Philonous, your arguments
|
|
seem in themselves unanswerable; but they have not so great an
|
|
effect on me as to produce that entire conviction, that hearty
|
|
acquiescence, which attends demonstration. I find myself
|
|
relapsing into an obscure surmise of I know not what, <matter>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, are you not sensible, Hylas, that two things
|
|
must concur to take away all scruple, and work a plenary assent
|
|
in the mind,? Let a visible object be set in never so clear a
|
|
light, yet, if there is any imperfection in the sight, or if the
|
|
eye is not directed towards it, it will not be distinctly seen.
|
|
And though a demonstration be never so well grounded and fairly
|
|
proposed, yet, if there is withal a stain of prejudice, or a
|
|
wrong bias on the understanding, can it be expected on a sudden
|
|
to perceive clearly, and adhere firmly to the truth? No; there is
|
|
need of time and pains: the attention must be awakened and
|
|
detained by a frequent repetition of the same thing placed oft in
|
|
the same, oft in different lights. I have said it already, and
|
|
find I must still repeat and inculcate, that it is an
|
|
unaccountable licence {224} you take, in pretending to maintain
|
|
you know not what, for you know not what reason, to you know not
|
|
what purpose. Can this be paralleled in any art or science, any
|
|
sect or profession of men? Or is there anything so barefacedly
|
|
groundless and unreasonable to be met with even in the lowest of
|
|
common conversation? But, perhaps you will still say, Matter may
|
|
exist; though at the same time you neither know <what is meant>
|
|
by <Matter>, or by its <existence>. This indeed is surprising,
|
|
and the more so because it is altogether voluntary [and of your
|
|
own head],[6] you not being led to it by any one reason; for I
|
|
challenge you to shew me that thing in nature which needs Matter
|
|
to explain or account for it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. <The reality> of things cannot be maintained without
|
|
supposing the existence of Matter. And is not this, think you, a
|
|
good reason why I should be earnest in its defence?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The reality of things! What things? sensible or
|
|
intelligible?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Sensible things.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. My glove for example?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That, or any other thing perceived by the senses.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But to fix on some particular thing. Is it not a
|
|
sufficient evidence to me of the existence of this <glove>, that
|
|
I see it, and feel it, and wear it? Or, if this will not do, how
|
|
is it possible I should be assured of the reality of this thing,
|
|
which I actually see in this place, by supposing that some
|
|
unknown thing, which I never did or can see, exists after an
|
|
unknown manner, in an unknown place, or in no place at all? How
|
|
can the supposed reality of that which is intangible be a proof
|
|
that anything tangible really exists? Or, of that which is
|
|
invisible, that any visible thing, or, in general of anything
|
|
which is imperceptible, that a perceptible exists? Do but explain
|
|
this and I shall think nothing too hard for you.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Upon the whole, I am content to own the existence of
|
|
matter is highly improbable; but the direct and absolute
|
|
impossibility of it does not appear to me.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But granting Matter to be possible, yet, upon that
|
|
account merely, it can have no more claim to existence than a
|
|
golden mountain, or a centaur.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge it; but still you do not deny it is
|
|
possible; and that which is possible, for aught you know, may
|
|
actually exist.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I deny it to be possible; and have, if I mistake
|
|
not, {225} evidently proved, from your own concessions, that it
|
|
is not. In the common sense of the word <Matter>, is there any
|
|
more implied than an extended, solid, figured, moveable
|
|
substance, existing without the mind? And have not you
|
|
acknowledged, over and over, that you have seen evident reason
|
|
for denying the possibility of such a substance?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True, but that is only one sense of the term
|
|
<Matter>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But is it not the only proper genuine received
|
|
sense? And, if Matter, in such a sense, be proved impossible, may
|
|
it not be thought with good grounds absolutely impossible? Else
|
|
how could anything be proved impossible? Or, indeed, how could
|
|
there be any proof at all one way or other, to a man who takes
|
|
the liberty to unsettle and change the common signification of
|
|
words?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I thought philosophers might be allowed to speak more
|
|
accurately than the vulgar, and were not always confined to the
|
|
common acceptation of a term.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But this now mentioned is the common received sense
|
|
among philosophers themselves. But, not to insist on that, have
|
|
you not been allowed to take Matter in what sense you pleased?
|
|
And have you not used this privilege in the utmost extent;
|
|
sometimes entirely changing, at others leaving out, or putting
|
|
into the definition of it whatever, for the present, best served
|
|
your design, contrary to all the known rules of reason and logic?
|
|
And hath not this shifting, unfair method of yours spun out our
|
|
dispute to an unnecessary length; Matter having been particularly
|
|
examined, and by your own confession refuted in each of those
|
|
senses? And can any more be required to prove the absolute
|
|
impossibility of a thing, than the proving it impossible in every
|
|
particular sense that either you or any one else understands it
|
|
in?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But I am not so thoroughly satisfied that you have
|
|
proved the impossibility of Matter, in the last most obscure
|
|
abstracted and indefinite sense.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>.. When is a thing shewn to be impossible?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. When a repugnancy is demonstrated between the ideas
|
|
comprehended in its definition.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But where there are no ideas, there no repugnancy
|
|
can be demonstrated between ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree with you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Now, in that which you call the obscure indefinite
|
|
sense of the word <Matter>, it is plain, by your own confession,
|
|
there {226} was included no idea at all, no sense except an
|
|
unknown sense; which is the same thing as none. You are not,
|
|
therefore, to expect I should prove a repugnancy between ideas,
|
|
where there are no ideas; or the impossibility of Matter taken in
|
|
an <unknown> sense, that is, no sense at all. My business was
|
|
only to shew you meant <nothing>; and this you were brought to
|
|
own. So that, in all your various senses, you have been shewed
|
|
either to mean nothing at all, or, if anything, an absurdity. And
|
|
if this be not sufficient to prove the impossibility of a thing,
|
|
I desire you will let me know what is.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge you have proved that Matter is
|
|
impossible; nor do I see what more can be said in defence of it.
|
|
But, at the same time that I give up this, I suspect all my other
|
|
notions. For surely none could be more seemingly evident than
|
|
this once was: and yet it now seems as false and absurd as ever
|
|
it did true before. But I think we have discussed the point
|
|
sufficiently for the present. The remaining part of the day I
|
|
would willingly spend in running over in my thoughts the several
|
|
heads of this morning's conversation, and tomorrow shall be glad
|
|
to meet you here again about the same time.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <I> will not fail to attend you. {227}
|
|
|
|
THE THIRD DIALOGUE
|
|
|
|
<Philonous.> Tell me, Hylas,[7] what are the fruits of
|
|
yesterday's meditation? Has it confirmed you in the same mind you
|
|
were in at parting? or have you since seen cause to change your
|
|
opinion?
|
|
|
|
<Hylas>. Truly my opinion is that all our opinions are alike
|
|
vain and uncertain. What we approve to-day, we condemn to-morrow.
|
|
We keep a stir about knowledge, and spend our lives in the
|
|
pursuit of it, when, alas I we know nothing all the while: nor do
|
|
I think it possible for us ever to know anything in this life.
|
|
Our faculties are too narrow and too few. Nature certainly never
|
|
intended us for speculation.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What! Say you we can know nothing, Hylas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. There is not that single thing in the world whereof
|
|
we can know the real nature, or what it is in itself.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Will you tell me I do not really know what fire or
|
|
water is?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You may indeed know that fire appears hot, and water
|
|
fluid; but this is no more than knowing what sensations are
|
|
produced in your own mind, upon the application of fire and water
|
|
to your organs of sense. Their internal constitution, their true
|
|
and real nature, you are utterly in the dark as to <that>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Do I not know this to be a real stone that I stand
|
|
on, and that which I see before my eyes to be a real tree?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. <Know>? No, it is impossible you or any man alive
|
|
should know it. All you know is, that you have such a certain
|
|
idea or appearance in your own mind. But what is this to the real
|
|
tree or stone? I tell you that colour, figure, and hardness,
|
|
which you perceive, are not the real natures of those things, or
|
|
in the least like them. The same may be said of all other real
|
|
things, or corporeal substances, which compose the world. They
|
|
have none of them anything of themselves, like those sensible
|
|
qualities by us perceived. We should not therefore pretend to
|
|
affirm or know anything of them, as they are in their own nature.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But surely, Hylas, I can distinguish gold, for
|
|
example, {228} from iron: and how could this be, if I knew not
|
|
what either truly was?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Believe me, Philonous, you can only distinguish
|
|
between your own ideas. That yellowness, that weight, and other
|
|
sensible qualities, think you they are really in the gold? They
|
|
are only relative to the senses, and have no absolute existence
|
|
in nature. And in pretending to distinguish the species of real
|
|
things, by the appearances in your mind, you may perhaps act as
|
|
wisely as he that should conclude two men were of a different
|
|
species, because their clothes were not of the same colour.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It seems, then, we are altogether put off with the
|
|
appearances of things, and those false ones too. The very meat I
|
|
eat, and the cloth I wear, have nothing in them like what I see
|
|
and feel.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Even so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But is it not strange the whole world should be thus
|
|
imposed on, and so foolish as to believe their senses? And yet I
|
|
know not how it is, but men eat, and drink, and sleep, and
|
|
perform all the offices of life, as comfortably and conveniently
|
|
as if they really knew the things they are conversant about.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. They do so: but you know ordinary practice does not
|
|
require a nicety of speculative knowledge. Hence the vulgar
|
|
retain their mistakes, and for all that make a shift to bustle
|
|
through the affairs of life. But philosophers know better things.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You mean, they <know> that they <know nothing>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. That is the very top and perfection of human
|
|
knowledge.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But are you all this while in earnest, Hylas; and
|
|
are you seriously persuaded that you know nothing real in the
|
|
world? Suppose you are going to write, would you not call for
|
|
pen, ink, and paper, like another man; and do you not know what
|
|
it is you call for?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. How often must I tell you, that I know not the real
|
|
nature of any one thing in the universe? I may indeed upon
|
|
occasion make use of pen, ink, and paper. But what any one of
|
|
them is in its own true nature, I declare positively I know not.
|
|
And the same is true with regard to every, other corporeal thing.
|
|
And, what is more, we are not only ignorant of the true and real
|
|
nature of things, but even of their existence. It cannot be
|
|
denied that we perceive such certain appearances or ideas; but it
|
|
cannot be concluded from thence that bodies really exist. {229}
|
|
Nay, now I think on it, I must, agreeably to my former
|
|
concessions, farther declare that it is impossible any <real>
|
|
corporeal thing should exist in nature.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You amaze me. Was ever anything more wild and
|
|
extravagant than the notions you now maintain: and is it not
|
|
evident you are led into all these extravagances by the belief of
|
|
<material substance>? This makes you dream of those unknown
|
|
natures in everything. It is this occasions your distinguishing
|
|
between the reality and sensible appearances of things. It is to
|
|
this you are indebted for being ignorant of what everybody else
|
|
knows perfectly well. Nor is this all: you are not only ignorant
|
|
of the true nature of everything, but you know not whether
|
|
anything really exists, or whether there are any true natures at
|
|
all; forasmuch as you attribute to your material beings an
|
|
absolute or external existence, wherein you suppose their reality
|
|
consists. And, as you are forced in the end to acknowledge such
|
|
an existence means either a direct repugnancy, or nothing at all,
|
|
it follows that you are obliged to pull down your own hypothesis
|
|
of material Substance, and positively to deny the real existence
|
|
of any part of the universe. And so you are plunged into the
|
|
deepest and most deplorable scepticism that ever man was. Tell
|
|
me, Hylas, is it not as I say?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree with you. <Material substance> was no more
|
|
than an hypothesis; and a false and groundless one too. I will no
|
|
longer spend my breath in defence of it. But whatever hypothesis
|
|
you advance, or whatsoever scheme of things you introduce in its
|
|
stead, I doubt not it will appear every whit as false: let me but
|
|
be allowed to question you upon it. That is, suffer me to serve
|
|
you in your own kind, and I warrant it shall conduct you through
|
|
as many perplexities and contradictions, to the very same state
|
|
of scepticism that I myself am in at present.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I assure you, Hylas, I do not pretend to frame any
|
|
hypothesis at all. I am of a vulgar cast, simple enough to
|
|
believe my senses, and leave things as I find them. To be plain,
|
|
it is my opinion that the real things are those very things I
|
|
see, and feel, and perceive by my senses. These I know; and,
|
|
finding they answer all the necessities and purposes of life,
|
|
have no reason to be solicitous about any other unknown beings. A
|
|
piece of sensible bread, for instance, would stay my stomach
|
|
better than ten thousand times as much of that insensible,
|
|
unintelligible, real bread you speak of. It is likewise my
|
|
opinion that colours and other sensible qualities are on the
|
|
{230} objects. I cannot for my life help thinking that snow is
|
|
white, and fire hot. You indeed, who by <snow> and fire mean
|
|
certain external, unperceived, unperceiving substances, are in
|
|
the right to deny whiteness or heat to be affections inherent in
|
|
<them>. But I, who understand by those words the things I see and
|
|
feel, am obliged to think like other folks. And, as I am no
|
|
sceptic with regard to the nature of things, so neither am I as
|
|
to their existence. That a thing should be really perceived by my
|
|
senses, and at the same time not really exist, is to me a plain
|
|
contradiction; since I cannot prescind or abstract, even in
|
|
thought, the existence of a sensible thing from its being
|
|
perceived. Wood, stones, fire, water, flesh, iron, and the like
|
|
things, which I name and discourse of, are things that I know.
|
|
And I should not have known them but that I perceived them by my
|
|
senses; and things perceived by the senses are immediately
|
|
perceived; and things immediately perceived are ideas; and ideas
|
|
cannot exist without the mind; their existence therefore consists
|
|
in being perceived; when, therefore, they are actually perceived
|
|
there can be no doubt of their existence. Away then with all that
|
|
scepticism, all those ridiculous philosophical doubts. What a
|
|
jest is it for a philosopher to question the existence of
|
|
sensible things, till he hath it proved to him from the veracity
|
|
of God; or to pretend our knowledge in this point falls short of
|
|
intuition or demonstration! I might as well doubt of my own
|
|
being, as of the being of those things I actually see and feel.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Not so fast, Philonous: you say you cannot conceive
|
|
how sensible things should exist without the mind. Do you not?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I do.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Supposing you were annihilated, cannot you conceive
|
|
it possible that things perceivable by sense may still exist?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <I> can; but then it must be in another mind. When I
|
|
deny sensible things an existence out of the mind, I do not mean
|
|
my mind in particular, but all minds. Now, it is plain they have
|
|
an existence exterior to my mind; since I find them by experience
|
|
to be independent of it. There is therefore some other Mind
|
|
wherein they exist, during the intervals between the times of
|
|
{231} my perceiving them: as likewise they did before my birth,
|
|
and would do after my supposed annihilation. And, as the same is
|
|
true with regard to all other finite created spirits, it
|
|
necessarily follows there is an <omnipresent eternal Mind>, which
|
|
knows and comprehends all things, and exhibits them to our view
|
|
in such a manner, and according to such rules, as He Himself hath
|
|
ordained, and are by us termed the <laws of nature>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Answer me, Philonous. Are all our ideas perfectly
|
|
inert beings? Or have they any agency included in them?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. They are altogether passive and inert.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And is not God an agent, a being purely active?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I acknowledge it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. No idea therefore can be like unto, or represent the
|
|
nature of God?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It cannot.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Since therefore you have no <idea> of the mind of
|
|
God, how can you conceive it possible that things should exist in
|
|
His mind? Or, if you can conceive the mind of God, without having
|
|
an idea of it, why may not I be allowed to conceive the existence
|
|
of Matter, notwithstanding I have no idea of it?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. As to your first question: I own I have properly no
|
|
<idea>, either of God or any other spirit; for these being
|
|
active, cannot be represented by things perfectly inert, as our
|
|
ideas are. I do nevertheless know that 1, who am a spirit or
|
|
thinking substance, exist as certainly a s I know my ideas exist.
|
|
Farther, I know what I mean by the terms I <and myself>; and I
|
|
know this immediately or intuitively, though I do not perceive it
|
|
as I perceive a triangle, a colour, or a sound. The Mind, Spirit,
|
|
or Soul is that indivisible unextended thing which thinks, acts,
|
|
and perceives. I say <indivisible>, because unextended; and
|
|
<unextended>, because extended, figured, moveable things are
|
|
ideas; and that which perceives ideas, which thinks and wills, is
|
|
plainly itself no idea, nor like an idea. Ideas are things
|
|
inactive, and perceived. And Spirits a sort of beings altogether
|
|
different from them. I do not therefore say my soul is an idea,
|
|
or like an idea. However, taking the word <idea> in a large
|
|
sense, my soul may be said to furnish me with an idea, that is,
|
|
an image or likeness of God -- though indeed extremely
|
|
inadequate. For, all the notion I have of God is obtained by
|
|
reflecting on my own soul, heightening its powers, and removing
|
|
its {232} imperfections. I have, therefore, though not an
|
|
inactive idea, yet in <myself> some sort of an active thinking
|
|
image of the Deity. And, though I perceive Him not by sense, yet
|
|
I have a notion of Him, or know Him by reflexion and reasoning.
|
|
My own mind and my own ideas I have an immediate knowledge of;
|
|
and, by the help of these, do mediately apprehend the possibility
|
|
of the existence of other spirits and ideas. Farther, from my own
|
|
being, and from the dependency I find in myself and my ideas, I
|
|
do, by an act of reason, necessarily infer the existence of a
|
|
God, and of all created things in the mind of God. So much for
|
|
your first question. For the second: I suppose by this time you
|
|
can answer it yourself. For you neither perceive Matter
|
|
objectively, as you do an inactive being or idea; nor know it, as
|
|
you do yourself, by a reflex act, neither do you mediately
|
|
apprehend it by similitude of the one or the other; nor yet
|
|
collect it by reasoning from that which you know immediately. All
|
|
which makes the case of <Matter> widely different from that of
|
|
the <Deity>.
|
|
|
|
[<Hyl>. You say your own soul supplies you with some sort of
|
|
an idea or image of God. But, at the same time, you acknowledge
|
|
you have, properly speaking, no <idea> of your own soul. You even
|
|
affirm that spirits are a sort of beings altogether different
|
|
from ideas. Consequently that no idea can be like a spirit. We
|
|
have therefore no idea of any spirit. You admit nevertheless that
|
|
there is spiritual Substance, although you have no idea of it;
|
|
while you deny there can be such a thing as material Substance,
|
|
because you have no notion or idea of it. Is this fair dealing?
|
|
To act consistently, you must either admit Matter or reject
|
|
Spirit. What say you to this?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <I> say, in the first place, that I do not deny the
|
|
existence of material substance, merely because I have no notion
|
|
of it' but because the notion of it is inconsistent; or, in other
|
|
words, because it is repugnant that there should be a notion of
|
|
it. Many things, for aught I know, may exist, whereof neither I
|
|
nor any other man hath or can have any idea or notion whatsoever.
|
|
But then those things must be possible, that is, nothing {233}
|
|
inconsistent must be included in their definition. I say,
|
|
secondly, that, although we believe things to exist which we do
|
|
not perceive, yet we may not believe that any particular thing
|
|
exists, without some reason for such belief: but I have no reason
|
|
for believing the existence of Matter. I have no immediate
|
|
intuition thereof: neither can I immediately from my sensations,
|
|
ideas, notions, actions, or passions, infer an unthinking,
|
|
unperceiving, inactive Substance -- either by probable deduction,
|
|
or necessary consequence. Whereas the being of my Self, that is,
|
|
my own soul, mind, or thinking principle, I evidently know by
|
|
reflexion. You will forgive me if I repeat the same things in
|
|
answer to the same objections. In the very notion or definition
|
|
of <material Substance>, there is included a manifest repugnance
|
|
and inconsistency. But this cannot be said of the notion of
|
|
Spirit. That ideas should exist in what doth not perceive, or be
|
|
produced by what doth not act, is repugnant. But, it is no
|
|
repugnancy to say that a perceiving thing should be the subject
|
|
of ideas, or an active thing the cause of them. It is granted we
|
|
have neither an immediate evidence nor a demonstrative knowledge
|
|
of the existence of other finite spirits; but it will not thence
|
|
follow that such spirits are on a foot with material substances:
|
|
if to suppose the one be inconsistent, and it be not inconsistent
|
|
to suppose the other; if the one can be inferred by no argument,
|
|
and there is a probability for the other; if we see signs and
|
|
effects indicating distinct finite agents like ourselves, and see
|
|
no sign or symptom whatever that leads to a rational belief of
|
|
Matter. I say, lastly, that I have a notion of Spirit, though I
|
|
have not, strictly speaking, an idea of it. I do not perceive it
|
|
as an idea, or by means of an idea, but know it by reflexion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Notwithstanding all you have said, to me it seems
|
|
that, according to your own way of thinking, and in consequence
|
|
of your own principles, it should follow that <you> are only a
|
|
system of floating ideas, without any substance to support them.
|
|
Words are not to be used without a meaning. And, as there is no
|
|
more meaning in <spiritual Substance> than in <material
|
|
Substance>, the one is to be exploded as well as the other.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. How often must I repeat, that I know or am conscious
|
|
of my own being; and that <I myself> am not my ideas, but
|
|
somewhat else, a thinking, active principle that perceives,
|
|
knows, wifls, and operates about ideas. I know that I, one {234}
|
|
and the same self, perceive both colours and sounds: that a
|
|
colour cannot perceive a sound, nor a sound a colour: that I am
|
|
therefore one individual principle, distinct from colour and
|
|
sound; and, for the same reason, from aft other sensible things
|
|
and inert ideas. But, I am not in like manner conscious either of
|
|
the existence or essence of Matter. On the contrary, I know that
|
|
nothing inconsistent can exist, and that the existence of Matter
|
|
implies an inconsistency. Farther, I know what I mean when I
|
|
affirm that there is a spiritual substance or support of ideas,
|
|
that is, that a spirit knows and perceives ideas. But, I do not
|
|
know what is meant when it is said that an unperceiving substance
|
|
hath inherent in it and supports either ideas or the archetypes
|
|
of ideas. There is therefore upon the whole no parity of case
|
|
between Spirit and Matter.][8]
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own myself satisfied in this point. But, do you in
|
|
earnest think the real existence of sensible things consists in
|
|
their being actually perceived? If so; how comes it that all
|
|
mankind distinguish between them? Ask the first man you meet, and
|
|
he shall tell you, <to be perceived> is one thing, and <to exist>
|
|
is another.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. <I> am content, Hylas, to appeal to the common sense
|
|
of the world for the truth of my notion. Ask the gardener why he
|
|
thinks yonder cherry-tree exists in the garden, and he shall tell
|
|
you, because he sees and feels it; in a word, because he
|
|
perceives it by his senses. Ask him why he thinks an orange-tree
|
|
not to be there, and he shall tell you, because he does not
|
|
perceive it. What he perceives by sense, that he terms a real,
|
|
being, and saith it <is or exists>; but, that which is not
|
|
perceivable, the same, he saith, hath no being.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Yes, Philonous, I grant the existence of a sensible
|
|
thing consists in being perceivable, but not in being actually
|
|
perceived.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And what is perceivable but an idea? And can an idea
|
|
exist without being actually perceived? These are points long
|
|
since agreed between us.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, be your opinion never so true, yet surely you
|
|
will not deny it is shocking, and contrary to the common sense of
|
|
men. {235} Ask the fellow whether yonder tree hath an existence
|
|
out of his mind: what answer think you he would make?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The same that I should myself, to wit, that it doth
|
|
exist out of his mind. But then to a Christian it cannot surely
|
|
be shocking to say, the real tree, existing without his mind, is
|
|
truly known and comprehended by (that is <exists in>) the
|
|
infinite mind of God. Probably he may not at first glance be
|
|
aware of the direct and immediate proof there is of this;
|
|
inasmuch as the very being of a tree, or any other sensible
|
|
thing, implies a mind wherein it is. But the point itself he
|
|
cannot deny. The question between the Materialists and me is not,
|
|
whether things have a <real> existence out of the mind of this or
|
|
that person, but whether they have an <absolute> existence,
|
|
distinct from being perceived by God, and exterior to all minds.
|
|
This indeed some heathens and philosophers have affirmed, but
|
|
whoever entertains notions of the Deity suitable to the Holy
|
|
Scriptures will be of another opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, according to your notions, what difference is
|
|
there between real things, and chimeras formed by the
|
|
imagination, or the visions of a dream -- since they are all
|
|
equally in the mind?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The ideas formed by the imagination are faint and
|
|
indistinct; they have, besides, an entire dependence on the will.
|
|
But the ideas perceived by sense, that is, real things, are more
|
|
vivid and clear; and, being imprinted on the mind by a spirit
|
|
distinct from us, have not the like dependence on our will. There
|
|
is therefore no danger of confounding these with the foregoing:
|
|
and there is as little of confounding them with the visions of a
|
|
dream, which are dim, irregular, and confused. And, though they
|
|
should happen to be never so lively and natural, yet, by their
|
|
not being connected, and of a piece with the preceding and
|
|
subsequent transactions of our lives, they might easily be
|
|
distinguished from realities. In short, by whatever method you
|
|
distinguish <things from chimeras> on your scheme, the same, it
|
|
is evident, will hold also upon mine. For, it must be, I presume,
|
|
by some perceived difference; and I am not for depriving you of
|
|
any one thing that you perceive.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But still, Philonous, you hold, there is nothing in
|
|
the world but spirits and ideas. And this, you must needs
|
|
acknowledge, sounds very oddly.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I own the word <idea>, not being commonly used for
|
|
<thing>, sounds something out of the way. My reason for using it
|
|
was, because a necessary relation to the mind is understood to
|
|
{236} be implied by that term; and it is now commonly used by
|
|
philosophers to denote the immediate objects of the
|
|
understanding. But, however oddly the proposition may sound in
|
|
words, yet it includes nothing so very strange or shocking in its
|
|
sense; which in effect amounts to no more than this, to wit, that
|
|
there are only things perceiving, and things perceived; or that
|
|
every unthinking being is necessarily, and from -the very nature
|
|
of its existence, perceived by some mind; if not by a finite
|
|
created mind, yet certainly by the infinite mind of God, in whom
|
|
"we five, and move, and have our being." Is this as strange as to
|
|
say, the sensible qualities are not on the objects: or that we
|
|
cannot be sure of the existence of things, or know any thing of
|
|
their real natures -- though we both see and feel them, and
|
|
perceive them by all our senses?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And, in consequence of this, must we not think there
|
|
are no such things as physical or corporeal causes; but that a
|
|
Spirit is the immediate cause of all the phenomena in nature? Can
|
|
there be anything more extravagant than this?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Yes, it is infinitely more extravagant to say -- a
|
|
thing which is inert operates on the mind, and which is
|
|
unperceiving is the cause of our perceptions, [without any regard
|
|
either to consistency, or the old known axiom, <Nothing can give
|
|
to another that which it hath not itself>].[9] Besides, that
|
|
which to you, I know not for what reason, seems so extravagant is
|
|
no more than the Holy Scriptures assert in a hundred places. In
|
|
them God is represented as the sole and immediate Author of all
|
|
those effects which some heathens and philosophers are wont to
|
|
ascribe to Nature, Matter, Fate, or the like unthinking
|
|
principle. This is so much the constant language of Scripture
|
|
that it were needless to confirm it by citations.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You are not aware, Philonous, that in making God the
|
|
immediate Author of all the motions in nature, you make Him the
|
|
Author of murder, sacrilege, adultery, and the like heinous sins.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. In answer to that, I observe, first, that the
|
|
imputation of guilt is the same, whether a person commits an
|
|
action with or without an instrument. In case therefore you
|
|
suppose God to act by the mediation of an instrument or occasion,
|
|
called <Matter>, you as truly make Him the author of sin as I,
|
|
who think Him the immediate agent in all those operations
|
|
vulgarly ascribed to Nature. I farther observe that sin or moral
|
|
turpitude {237} doth not consist in the outward physical action
|
|
or motion, but in the internal deviation of the will from the
|
|
laws of reason and religion. This is plain, in that the killing
|
|
an enemy in a battle, or putting a criminal legally to death, is
|
|
not thought sinful; though the outward act be the very same with
|
|
that in the case of murder. Since, therefore, sin doth not
|
|
consist in the physical action, the making God an immediate cause
|
|
of all such actions is not making Him the Author of sin. Lastly,
|
|
I have nowhere said that God is the only agent who produces all
|
|
the motions in bodies. It is true I have denied there are any
|
|
other agents besides spirits; but this is very consistent with
|
|
allowing to thinking rational beings, in the production of
|
|
motions, the use of limited powers, ultimately indeed derived
|
|
from God, but immediately under the direction of their own wills,
|
|
which is sufficient to entitle them to all the guilt of their
|
|
actions.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But the denying Matter, Philonous, or corporeal
|
|
Substance; there is the point. You can never persuade me that
|
|
this is not repugnant to the universal sense of mankind. Were our
|
|
dispute to be determined by most voices, I am confident you would
|
|
give up the point, without gathering the votes.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I wish both our opinions were fairly stated and
|
|
submitted to the judgment of men who had plain common sense,
|
|
without the prejudices of a learned education. Let me be
|
|
represented as one who trusts his senses, who thinks he knows the
|
|
things he sees and feels, and entertains no doubts of their
|
|
existence; and you fairly set forth with all your doubts, your
|
|
paradoxes, and your scepticism about you, and I shall willingly
|
|
acquiesce in the determination of any indifferent person. That
|
|
there is no substance wherein ideas can exist beside spirit is to
|
|
me evident. And that the objects immediately perceived are ideas,
|
|
is on all hands agreed. And that sensible qualities are objects
|
|
immediately perceived no one can deny. It is therefore evident
|
|
there can be no <substratum> of those qualities but spirit; in
|
|
which they exist, not by way of mode or property, but as a thing
|
|
perceived in that which perceives it. I deny therefore that there
|
|
is <any unthinking>-<substratum> of the objects of sense, and <in
|
|
that acceptation> that there is any material substance. But if by
|
|
<material substance> is meant only <sensible body>, <that> which
|
|
is seen and felt (and the unphilosophical part of the world, I
|
|
dare say, mean no more) -- then I am more certain of matter's
|
|
existence than you or any other philosopher pretend to be. If
|
|
there be anything which makes ,die generality of mankind {238}
|
|
averse from the notions I espouse, it is a misapprehension that I
|
|
deny the reality of sensible things. But, as it is you who are
|
|
guilty of that, and not 1, it follows that in truth their
|
|
aversion is against your notions and not mine. I do therefore
|
|
assert that I am as certain as of my own being, that there are
|
|
bodies or corporeal substances (meaning the things I perceive by
|
|
my senses); and that, granting this, the bulk of mankind will
|
|
take no thought about, nor think themselves at all concerned in
|
|
the fate of those unknown natures, and philosophical quiddities,
|
|
which some men are so fond of.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What say you to this? Since, according to you, men
|
|
judge of the reality of things by their senses, how can a man be
|
|
mistaken in thinking the moon a plain lucid surface, about a foot
|
|
in diameter; or a square tower, seen at a distance, round; or an
|
|
oar, with one end in the water, crooked?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. He is not mistaken with regard to the ideas he
|
|
actually perceives, but in the inference he makes from his
|
|
present perceptions. Thus, in the case of the oar, what he
|
|
immediately perceives by sight is certainly crooked; and so far
|
|
he is in the right. But if he thence conclude that upon taking
|
|
the oar out of the water he shall perceive the same crookedness;
|
|
or that it would affect his touch as crooked things are wont to
|
|
do: in that he is mistaken. In like manner, if he shall conclude
|
|
from what he perceives in one station, that, in case he advances
|
|
towards the moon or tower, he should still be affected with the
|
|
like ideas, he is mistaken. But his mistake lies not in what he
|
|
perceives immediately, and at present, (it being a manifest
|
|
contradiction to suppose he should err in respect of that) but in
|
|
the wrong judgment he makes concerning the ideas he apprehends to
|
|
be connected with those immediately perceived: or, concerning the
|
|
ideas that, from what he perceives at present, he imagines would
|
|
be perceived in other circumstances. The case is the same with
|
|
regard to the Copernican system. We do not here perceive any
|
|
motion of the earth: but it were erroneous thence to conclude,
|
|
that, in case we were placed at as great a distance from that as
|
|
we are now from the other planets, we should not then perceive
|
|
its motion.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I understand you; and must needs own you say things
|
|
plausible enough. But, give me leave to put you in mind of {239}
|
|
one thing. Pray, Philonous, were you not formerly as positive
|
|
that Matter existed, as you are now that it does not?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I was. But here lies the difference. Before, my
|
|
positiveness was founded, without examination, upon prejudice;
|
|
but now, after inquiry, upon evidence.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. After all, it seems our dispute is rather about words
|
|
than things. We agree in the thing, but differ in the name. That
|
|
we are affected with ideas <from without> is evident; and it is
|
|
no less evident that there must be (I will not say archetypes,
|
|
but) Powers without the mind, corresponding to those ideas. And,
|
|
as these Powers cannot subsist by themselves, there is some
|
|
subject of them necessarily to be admitted; which I call
|
|
<Matter>, and you call <Spirit>. This is all the difference.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray, Hylas, is that powerful Being, or subject of
|
|
powers, extended?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It hath not extension; but it hath the power to raise
|
|
in you the idea of extension.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is therefore itself unextended?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I grant it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not also active?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Without doubt. Otherwise, how could we attribute
|
|
powers to it?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Now let me ask you two questions: <First>, Whether
|
|
it be agreeable to the usage either of philosophers or others to
|
|
give the name <Matter> to an unextended active being? And,
|
|
<Secondly>, Whether it be not ridiculously absurd to misapply
|
|
names contrary to the common use of language?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Well then, let it not be called Matter, since you
|
|
will have it so, but some <Third Nature> distinct from Matter and
|
|
Spirit. For what reason is there why you should call it Spirit?
|
|
Does not the notion of spirit imply that it is thinking, as well
|
|
as active and unextended?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. My reason is this: because I have a mind to have
|
|
some notion of meaning in what I say: but I have no notion of any
|
|
action distinct from volition, neither. can I conceive volition
|
|
to be anywhere but in a spirit: therefore, when I speak of an
|
|
active being, I am obliged to mean a Spirit. Beside, what can be
|
|
plainer than that a thing which hath no ideas in itself cannot
|
|
impart them to me; and, if it hath ideas, surely it must be a
|
|
Spirit. To make you comprehend the point still more {240} clearly
|
|
if it be possible, I assert as well as you that, since we are
|
|
affected from without, we must allow Powers to be without, in a
|
|
Being distinct from ourselves. So far we are agreed. But then we
|
|
differ as to the kind of this powerful Being. I will have it to
|
|
be Spirit, you Matter, or I know not what (I may add too, you
|
|
know not what) Third Nature. Thus, I prove it to be Spirit. From
|
|
the effects I see produced, I conclude there are actions; and,
|
|
because actions, volitions; and, because there are volitions,
|
|
there must be a <will>. Again, the things I perceive must have an
|
|
existence, they or their archetypes, out of <my> mind: but, being
|
|
ideas, neither they nor their archetypes can exist otherwise than
|
|
in an understanding; there is therefore an <understanding>. But
|
|
will and understanding constitute in the strictest sense a mind
|
|
or spirit. The powerful cause, therefore, of my ideas is in
|
|
strict propriety of speech a <Spirit>.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And now I warrant you think you have made the point
|
|
very clear, little suspecting that what you advance leads
|
|
directly to a contradiction. Is it not an absurdity to imagine
|
|
any imperfection in God?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Without a doubt.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. To suffer pain is an imperfection?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Are we not sometimes affected with pain and
|
|
uneasiness by some other Being?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. We are.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And have you not said that Being is a Spirit, and is
|
|
not that Spirit God?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I grant it.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But you have asserted that whatever ideas we perceive
|
|
from without are in the mind which affects us. The ideas,
|
|
therefore, of pain and uneasiness are in God; or, in other words,
|
|
God suffers pain: that is to say, there is an imperfection in the
|
|
Divine nature: which, you acknowledged, was absurd. So you are
|
|
caught in a plain contradiction.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That God knows or understands all things, and that
|
|
He knows, among other things, what pain is, even every sort of
|
|
painful sensation, and what it is for His creatures to suffer
|
|
pain, I make no question. But, that God, though He knows and
|
|
sometimes causes painful sensations in us, can Himself suffer
|
|
pain, I positively deny. We, who are limited and dependent
|
|
spirits, are liable to impressions of sense, the effects of an
|
|
{241} external Agent, which, being produced against our wills,
|
|
are sometimes painful and uneasy. But God, whom no external being
|
|
can affect, who perceives nothing by sense as we do; whose will
|
|
is absolute and independent, causing all things, and liable to be
|
|
thwarted or resisted by nothing: it is evident, such a Being as
|
|
this can suffer nothing, nor be affected with any painful
|
|
sensation, or indeed any sensation at all. We are chained to a
|
|
body: that is to say, our perceptions are connected with
|
|
corporeal motions. By the law of our nature, we are affected upon
|
|
every alteration in the nervous parts of our sensible body; which
|
|
sensible body, rightly considered, is nothing but a complexion of
|
|
such qualities or ideas as have no existence distinct from being
|
|
perceived by a mind. So that this connexion of sensations with
|
|
corporeal motions means no more than a correspondence in the
|
|
order of nature, between two sets of ideas, or things immediately
|
|
perceivable. But God is a Pure Spirit, disengaged from all such
|
|
sympathy, or natural ties. No corporeal motions are attended with
|
|
the sensations of pain or pleasure in His mind. To know
|
|
everything knowable, is certainly a perfection; but to endure, or
|
|
suffer, or feel anything by sense, is an imperfection. The
|
|
former, I say, agrees to God, but not the latter. God knows, or
|
|
hath ideas; but His ideas are not conveyed to Him by sense, as
|
|
ours are. Your not distinguishing, where there is so manifest a
|
|
difference, makes you fancy you see an absurdity where there is
|
|
none.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, all this while you have not considered that the
|
|
quantity of Matter has been demonstrated to be proportioned to
|
|
the gravity of bodies. And what can withstand demonstration?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Let me see how you demonstrate that point.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I lay it down for a principle, that the moments or
|
|
quantities of motion in bodies are in a direct compounded reason
|
|
of the velocities and quantities of Matter contained in them.
|
|
Hence, where the velocities are equal, it follows the moments are
|
|
directly as the quantity of Matter in each. But it is found by
|
|
experience that all bodies (bating the small inequalities,
|
|
arising from the resistance of the air) descend with an equal
|
|
velocity; the motion therefore of descending bodies, and
|
|
consequently their gravity, which is the cause or principle of
|
|
that motion, is proportional to the quantity of Matter; which was
|
|
to be demonstrated.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You lay it down as a self-evident principle that the
|
|
quantity of motion in any body is proportional to the velocity
|
|
{242} and <Matter> taken together; and this is made use of to
|
|
prove a proposition from whence the existence of <Carter> is
|
|
inferred. Pray is not this arguing in a circle?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. In the premise I only mean that the motion is
|
|
proportional to the velocity, jointly with the extension and
|
|
solidity.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, allowing this to be true, yet it will not
|
|
thence follow that gravity is proportional to <Matter>, in your
|
|
philosophic sense of the word; except you take it for granted
|
|
that unknown <substratum>, or whatever else you call it, is
|
|
proportional to those sensible qualities; which to suppose is
|
|
plainly begging the question. That there is magnitude and
|
|
solidity, or resistance, perceived by sense, I readily grant; as
|
|
likewise, that gravity may be proportional to those qualities I
|
|
will not dispute. But that either these qualities as perceived by
|
|
us, or the powers producing them, do exist in a <material
|
|
substratum>; this is what I deny, and you indeed affirm, but,
|
|
notwithstanding your demonstration, have not yet proved.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I shall insist no longer on that point. Do you think,
|
|
however, you shall persuade me that the natural philosophers have
|
|
been dreaming all this while? Pray what becomes of all their
|
|
hypotheses and explications of the phenomena, which suppose the
|
|
existence of Matter?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What mean you, Hylas, by the <phenomena>?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I mean the appearances which I perceive by my senses.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And the appearances perceived by sense, are they not
|
|
ideas?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I have told you so a hundred times.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Therefore, to explain the phenomena, is, to shew how
|
|
we come to be affected with ideas, in that manner and order
|
|
wherein they are imprinted on our senses. Is it not?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Now, if you can prove that any philosopher has
|
|
explained the production of any one idea in our minds by the help
|
|
of <Matter>, I shall for ever acquiesce, and look on all that
|
|
hath been said against it as nothing; but, if you cannot, it is
|
|
vain to urge the explication of phenomena. That a Being endowed
|
|
with knowledge and will should produce or exhibit ideas is easily
|
|
understood. But that a Being which is utterly destitute of these
|
|
faculties should be able to produce ideas, or in any sort to
|
|
affect an intelligence, this I can never understand. This I say,
|
|
though {243} we had some positive conception of Matter, though we
|
|
knew its qualities, and could comprehend its existence, would yet
|
|
be so far from explaining things, that it is itself the most
|
|
inexplicable thing in the world. And yet, for all this, it will
|
|
not follow that philosophers have been doing nothing; for, by
|
|
observing and reasoning upon the connexion of ideas, they
|
|
discover the laws and methods of nature, which is a part of
|
|
knowledge both useful and entertaining.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. After all, can it be supposed God would deceive all
|
|
mankind? Do you imagine He would have induced the whole world to
|
|
believe the being of Matter, if there was no such thing?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. That every epidemical opinion, arising from
|
|
prejudice, or passion, or thoughtlessness, may be imputed to God,
|
|
as the Author of it, I believe you will not affirm. Whatsoever
|
|
opinion we father ' on Him, it must be either because He has
|
|
discovered it to us by supernatural revelation; or because it is
|
|
so evident to our natural faculties, which were framed and given
|
|
us by God, that it is impossible we should withhold our assent
|
|
from it. But where is the revelation? or where is the evidence
|
|
that extorts the belief of Matter? Nay, how does it appear, that
|
|
Matter, <taken for something distinct from what we perceive by
|
|
our senses>, is thought to exist by all mankind; or indeed, by
|
|
any except a few philosophers, who do not know what they would be
|
|
at? Your question supposes these points are clear; and, when you
|
|
have cleared them, I shall think myself obliged to give you
|
|
another answer. In the meantime, let it suffice that I tell you,
|
|
I do not suppose God has deceived mankind at all.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But the novelty, Philonous, the novelty! There lies
|
|
the danger. New notions should always be discountenanced; they
|
|
unsettle men's minds, and nobody knows where they will end.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Why the rejecting a notion that has no foundation,
|
|
either in sense, or in reason, or in Divine authority, should be
|
|
thought to unsettle the belief of such opinions as are grounded
|
|
on all or any of these, I cannot imagine. That innovations in
|
|
government and religion are dangerous, and ought to be
|
|
discountenanced, I freely own. But is there the like reason why
|
|
they should be discouraged in philosophy? The making anything
|
|
known which was unknown before is an innovation in knowledge:
|
|
and, if all such innovations had been forbidden, {244} men would
|
|
have made a notable progress in the arts and sciences. But it is
|
|
none of my business to plead for novelties and paradoxes. That
|
|
the qualities we perceive are not on the objects: that we must
|
|
not believe our senses: that we know nothing of the real nature
|
|
of things, and can never be assured even of their existence: that
|
|
real colours and sounds are nothing but certain unknown figures
|
|
and motions: that motions are in themselves neither swift nor
|
|
slow: that there are in bodies absolute extensions, without any
|
|
particular magnitude or figure: that a thing stupid, thoughtless,
|
|
and inactive, operates on a spirit: that the least particle of a
|
|
body contains innumerable extended parts: -- these are the
|
|
novelties, these are the strange notions which shock the genuine
|
|
uncorrupted judgment of all mankind; and being once admitted,
|
|
embarrass the mind with endless doubts and difficulties. And it
|
|
is against these and the like innovations I endeavour to
|
|
vindicate Common Sense. It is true, in doing this, I may perhaps
|
|
be obliged to use some <ambages>, and ways of speech not common.
|
|
But, if my notions are once thoroughly understood, that which is
|
|
most singular in them will, in effect, be found to amount to no
|
|
more than this. -- that it is absolutely impossible, and a plain
|
|
contradiction, to suppose any unthinking Being should exist
|
|
without being perceived by a Mind. And, if this notion be
|
|
singular, it is a shame it should be so, at this time of day, and
|
|
in a Christian country.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. As for the difficulties other opinions may be liable
|
|
to,. those are out of the question. It is your business to defend
|
|
your own opinion. Can anything be plainer than that you are for
|
|
changing all things into ideas? You, I say, who are not ashamed
|
|
to charge me <with scepticism>. This is so plain, there is no
|
|
denying it.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. You mistake me. I am not for changing things into
|
|
ideas, but rather ideas into things; since those immediate
|
|
objects of perception, which, according to you, are only
|
|
appearances of things, I take to be the real things themselves.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Things! You may pretend what you please; but it is
|
|
certain you leave us nothing but the empty forms of things, the
|
|
outside only which strikes the senses.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What you call the empty forms and outside of things
|
|
seem to me the very things themselves. Nor are they empty or
|
|
incomplete, otherwise than upon your supposition -- that Matter
|
|
{245} is an essential part of all corporeal things. We both,
|
|
therefore, agree in this, that we perceive only sensible forms:
|
|
but herein we differ -- you will have them to be empty
|
|
appearances, I, real beings. In short, you do not trust your
|
|
senses, I do.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You say you believe your senses; and seem to applaud
|
|
yourself that in this you agree with the vulgar. According to
|
|
you, therefore, the true nature of a thing is discovered by the
|
|
senses. If so, whence comes that disagreement? Why is not the
|
|
same figure, and other sensible qualities, perceived all manner
|
|
of ways? and why should we use a microscope the better to
|
|
discover the true nature of a body, if it were discoverable to
|
|
the naked eye?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Strictly speaking, Hylas, we do not see the same
|
|
object that we feel; neither is the same object perceived by the
|
|
microscope which was by the naked eye. But, in case every
|
|
variation was thought sufficient to constitute a new kind of
|
|
individual, the endless number of confusion of names would render
|
|
language impracticable. Therefore, to avoid this, as well as
|
|
other inconveniences which are obvious upon a little thought, men
|
|
combine together several ideas, apprehended by divers senses, or
|
|
by the same sense at different times, or in different
|
|
circumstances, but observed, however, to have some connexion in
|
|
nature, either with respect to co-existence or succession; all
|
|
which they refer to one name, and consider as one thing. Hence it
|
|
follows that when I examine, by my other senses, a thing I have
|
|
seen, it is not in order to understand better the same object
|
|
which I had perceived by sight, the object of one sense not being
|
|
perceived by the other senses. And, when I look through a
|
|
microscope, it is not that I may perceive more clearly what I
|
|
perceived already with my bare eyes; the object perceived by the
|
|
glass being quite different from the former. But, in both cases,
|
|
my aim is only to know what ideas are connected together; and the
|
|
more a man knows of the connexion of ideas, the more he is said
|
|
to know of the nature of things. What, therefore, if our ideas
|
|
are variable; what if our senses are not in all circumstances
|
|
affected with the same appearances. It will not thence follow
|
|
they are not to be trusted; or that they are inconsistent either
|
|
with themselves or anything else: except it be with your
|
|
preconceived notion of (I know not what) one single, unchanged,
|
|
unperceivable, real Nature, marked by each name. Which prejudice
|
|
seems to have taken its rise from not rightly {246} understanding
|
|
the common language of men, speaking of several distinct ideas as
|
|
united into one thing by the mind. And, indeed, there is cause to
|
|
suspect several erroneous conceits of the philosophers are owing
|
|
to the same original: while they began to build their schemes not
|
|
so much on notions as on words, which were framed by the vulgar,
|
|
merely for conveniency and dispatch in the common actions of
|
|
life, without any regard to speculation.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Methinks I apprehend your meaning.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is your opinion the ideas we perceive by our
|
|
senses are not real things, but images or copies of them. Our
|
|
knowledge, therefore, is no farther real than as our ideas are
|
|
the true <representations> of those <originals>. But, as these
|
|
supposed originals are in themselves unknown, it is impossible to
|
|
know how far our ideas resemble them; or whether they resemble
|
|
them at all. We cannot, therefore, be sure we have any real
|
|
knowledge. Farther, as our ideas are perpetually varied, without
|
|
any change in the supposed real things, it necessarily follows
|
|
they cannot all be true copies of them: or, if some are and
|
|
others are not, it is impossible to distinguish the former from
|
|
the latter. And this plunges us yet deeper in uncertainty. Again,
|
|
when we consider the point, we cannot conceive how any idea, or
|
|
anything like an idea, should have an absolute existence out of a
|
|
mind: nor consequently, according to you, how there should be any
|
|
real thing in nature. The result of ;all which is that we are
|
|
thrown into the most hopeless and abandoned scepticism. Now, give
|
|
me leave to ask you, First, Whether your referring ideas to
|
|
certain absolutely existing unperceived substances, as their
|
|
originals, be not the source of all this scepticism? Secondly,
|
|
whether you are informed, either by sense or reason, of the
|
|
existence of those unknown originals? And, in case you are not,
|
|
whether it be not absurd to suppose them? Thirdly, Whether, upon
|
|
inquiry, you find there is anything distinctly conceived or meant
|
|
by the <absolute or external existence of unperceiving
|
|
substances>? Lastly, Whether, the premises considered, it be not
|
|
the wisest way to follow nature, trust your senses, and, laying
|
|
aside all anxious thought about unknown natures or substances,
|
|
admit with the vulgar those for real things which are perceived
|
|
by the senses?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. For the present, I have no inclination to the
|
|
answering part. I would much rather see how you can get over what
|
|
follows. Pray are not the objects perceived by the {247} <senses>
|
|
of one, likewise perceivable to others present? If there were a
|
|
hundred more here, they would all see the garden, the trees, and
|
|
flowers, as I see them. But they are not in the same manner
|
|
affected with the ideas I frame in my <imagination>. Does not
|
|
this make a difference between the former sort of objects and the
|
|
latter?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I grant it does. Nor have I ever denied a difference
|
|
between the objects of sense and those of imagination. But what
|
|
would you infer from thence? You cannot say that sensible objects
|
|
exist unperceived, because they are perceived by many.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own I can make nothing of that objection: but it
|
|
hath led me into another. Is it not your opinion that by our
|
|
senses we perceive only the ideas existing in our minds?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. It is.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But the <same> idea which is in my mind cannot be in
|
|
yours, or in any other mind. Doth it not therefore follow, from
|
|
your principles, that no two can see the same thing? And is not
|
|
this highly, absurd?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. If the term <same> be taken in the vulgar
|
|
acceptation, it is certain (and not at all repugnant to the
|
|
principles I maintain) that different persons may perceive the
|
|
same thing; or the same thing or idea exist in different minds.
|
|
Words are of arbitrary imposition; and, since men are used to
|
|
apply the word <same> where no distinction or variety is
|
|
perceived, and I do not pretend to alter their perceptions, it
|
|
follows that, as men have said before, <several saw the same
|
|
thing>, so they may, upon like occasions, still continue to use
|
|
the same phrase, without any deviation either from propriety of
|
|
language, or the truth of things. But, if the term <same> be used
|
|
in the acceptation of philosophers, who pretend to an abstracted
|
|
notion of identity, then, according to their sundry definitions
|
|
of this notion (for it is not yet agreed wherein that philosophic
|
|
identity consists), it may or may not be possible for divers
|
|
persons to perceive the same thing. But whether philosophers
|
|
shall think fit to <call> a thing the <same or> no, is, I
|
|
conceive, of small importance. Let us suppose several men
|
|
together, all endued with the same faculties, and consequently
|
|
affected in like sort by their senses, and who had yet never
|
|
known the use of language; they would, without question, agree in
|
|
their perceptions. Though perhaps, when they came to the use of
|
|
speech, some regarding the uniformness of what was perceived,
|
|
might call it the <same> thing: others, especially {248}
|
|
regarding the diversity of persons who perceived, might choose
|
|
the denomination of <different> things. But who sees not that all
|
|
the dispute is about a word? to wit, whether. what is perceived
|
|
by different persons may yet have the term <same> applied to it?
|
|
Or, suppose a house, whose walls or outward shell remaining
|
|
unaltered, the chambers are all pulled down, and new ones built
|
|
in their place; and that you should call this the <same>, and I
|
|
should say it was not the <same> house. -- would we not, for all
|
|
this, perfectly agree in our thoughts of the house, considered in
|
|
itself? And would not all the difference consist in a sound? If
|
|
you should say, We differed in our notions; for that you super-
|
|
added to your idea of the house the simple abstracted idea of
|
|
identity, whereas I did not; I would tell you, I know not what
|
|
you mean by <the abstracted idea of identity>; and should desire
|
|
you to look into your own thoughts, and be sure you understood
|
|
yourself. -- Why so silent, Hylas? Are you not yet satisfied men
|
|
may dispute about identity and diversity, without any real
|
|
difference in their thoughts and opinions, abstracted from names?
|
|
Take this farther reflexion with you: that whether Matter be
|
|
allowed to exist or no, the case is exactly the same as to the
|
|
point in hand. For the Materialists themselves acknowledge what
|
|
we immediately perceive by our senses to be our own ideas. Your
|
|
difficulty, therefore, that no two see the same thing, makes
|
|
equally against the Materialists and me.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. [Ay, Philonous,][10] But they suppose an external
|
|
archetype, to which referring their several ideas they may truly
|
|
be said to perceive the same thing.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And (not to mention your having discarded those
|
|
archetypes) so may you suppose an external archetype on my
|
|
principles; -- <external>, <I mean>, <to your own mind>: though
|
|
indeed it must be' supposed to exist in that Mind which
|
|
comprehends all things; but then, this serves all the ends of
|
|
<identity>, as well as if it existed out of a mind. And I am sure
|
|
you yourself will not say it is less intelligible.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You have indeed clearly satisfied me -- either that
|
|
there is no difficulty at bottom in this point; or, if there be,
|
|
that it makes equally against both opinions.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But that which makes equally against two
|
|
contradictory opinions can be a proof against neither.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I acknowledge it. But, after all, Philonous, when I
|
|
consider {249} the substance of what you advance against
|
|
<Scepticism>, it amounts to no more than this: We are sure that
|
|
we really see, hear, feel; in a word, that we are affected with
|
|
sensible impressions.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And how are <we> concerned any farther? I see this
|
|
cherry, I feel it, I taste it: and I am sure <nothing> cannot be
|
|
seen, or felt, or. tasted: it is therefore red. Take away the
|
|
sensations of softness, moisture, redness, tartness, and you take
|
|
away the cherry, since it is not a being distinct from
|
|
sensations. A cherry, I say, is nothing but a congeries of
|
|
sensible impressions, or ideas perceived by various senses: which
|
|
ideas are united into one thing (or have one name given them) by
|
|
the mind, because they are observed to attend each other. Thus,
|
|
when the palate is affected with such a particular taste, the
|
|
sight is affected with a red colour, the touch with roundness,
|
|
softness, &c. Hence, when I see, and feel, and taste, in such
|
|
sundry certain manners, I am sure the cherry exists, or is real;
|
|
its reality being in my opinion nothing abstracted from those
|
|
sensations. But if by the word <cherry> you, mean an unknown
|
|
nature, distinct from all those sensible qualities, and by its
|
|
<existence> something distinct from its being perceived; then,
|
|
indeed, I own, neither you nor I, nor any one else, can be sure
|
|
it exists.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, what would you say, Philonous, if I should bring
|
|
the very same reasons against the existence of sensible things
|
|
<in a mind>, which you have offered against their existing <in a
|
|
material substratum>?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When I see your reasons, you shall hear what I have
|
|
to say ,to them.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Is the mind extended or unextended?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Unextended, without doubt.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Do you say the things you perceive are in your mind?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. They are.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Again, have I not heard you speak of sensible
|
|
impressions?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I believe you may.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Explain to me now, 0 Philonous! how it is possible
|
|
there should be room for all those trees and houses to exist in
|
|
your mind. Can extended things be contained in that which is
|
|
unextended? Or, are we to imagine impressions made on a thing
|
|
void of all solidity? You cannot say objects are in your mind, as
|
|
books in your study: or that things are imprinted on it, as the
|
|
figure of a seal upon wax. In what sense, therefore, are we to
|
|
understand those expressions? Explain me this if you can: and I
|
|
shall then be able to answer all those queries you formerly put
|
|
to me about my <substratum>.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Look you, Hylas, when I speak of objects as existing
|
|
in the mind, or imprinted on the senses, I would not be
|
|
understood in the gross literal sense; as when bodies are said to
|
|
exist in a place, or a seal to make an impression upon wax. My
|
|
meaning is only that the mind comprehends or perceives them; and
|
|
that it is affected from without, or by some being distinct from
|
|
itself. This is my explication of your difficulty; and how it can
|
|
serve to make your tenet of an unperceiving material <substratum>
|
|
intelligible, I would fain know.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Nay, if that be all, I confess I do not see what use
|
|
can be made of it. But are you not guilty of some abuse of
|
|
language in this?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. None at all. It is no more than common custom, which
|
|
you know is the rule of language, hath authorised: nothing being
|
|
more usual, than for philosophers to speak of the immediate
|
|
objects of the understanding as things existing in the mind. 'Nor
|
|
is there anything in this but what is conformable to the general
|
|
analogy of language; most part of the mental operations being
|
|
signified by words borrowed from sensible things; as is plain in
|
|
the terms <comprehend>, reflect, <discourse>, &<c>., which, being
|
|
applied to the mind, must not be taken in their gross, original
|
|
sense.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You have, I own, satisfied me in this point. But
|
|
there still remains one great difficulty, which I know not how
|
|
you will get over. And, indeed, it is of such importance that if
|
|
you could solve all others, without being able to find a solution
|
|
for this, you must never expect to make me a proselyte to your
|
|
principles.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Let me know this mighty difficulty.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. The Scripture account of the creation is what appears
|
|
to me utterly irreconcilable with your notions. Moses tells us of
|
|
a creation: a creation of what? of ideas? No, certainly, but of
|
|
things, of real things, solid corporeal substances. Bring your
|
|
principles to agree with this, and I shall perhaps agree with
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Moses mentions the sun, moon, and stars, earth and
|
|
sea, plants and animals. That all these do really exist, and were
|
|
in the beginning created by God, I make no question. {251} If by
|
|
<ideas> you mean fictions and fancies of the mind, then these are
|
|
no ideas. If by <ideas> you mean immediate objects of the
|
|
understanding, or sensible things, which cannot exist
|
|
unperceived, or out of a mind, then these things are ideas. But
|
|
whether you do or do not call them <ideas>, <it> matters little.
|
|
The difference is only about a name. And, whether that name be
|
|
retained or rejected, the sense, the truth, and reality of things
|
|
continues the same. In common talk, the objects of our senses are
|
|
not termed <ideas>, but <things>. Call them so still: provided
|
|
you do not attribute to them any absolute external existence, and
|
|
I shall never quarrel with you for a word. The creation,
|
|
therefore, I allow to have been a creation of things, of <red>
|
|
things. Neither is this in the least inconsistent with my
|
|
principles, as is evident from what I have now said; and would
|
|
have been evident to you without this, if you had not forgotten
|
|
what had been so often said before. But as for solid corporeal
|
|
substances, I desire you to show where Moses makes any mention of
|
|
them; and, if they should be mentioned by him, or any other
|
|
inspired writer, it would still be incumbent on you to shew those
|
|
words were not taken in the vulgar acceptation, for things
|
|
falling under our senses, but in the philosophic acceptation, for
|
|
Matter, or <an unknown quiddity>, <with an absolute existence>.
|
|
When you have proved these points, then (and not till then) may
|
|
you bring the authority of Moses into our dispute.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. It is in vain to dispute about a point so clear. I am
|
|
content to refer it to your own conscience. Are you not satisfied
|
|
there is some peculiar repugnancy between the Mosaic account of
|
|
the creation and your notions?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. If all possible sense which can be put on the first
|
|
chapter of Genesis may be conceived as consistently with my
|
|
principles as any other, then it has no peculiar repugnancy with
|
|
them. But there is no sense you may not as well conceive,
|
|
believing as I do. Since, besides spirits, all you conceive are
|
|
ideas; and the existence of these I do not deny. Neither do you
|
|
pretend they exist without the mind.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Pray let me see any sense you can understand it in.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Why, I imagine that if I had been present at the
|
|
creation, I should have seen things produced into being -- that
|
|
is become perceptible -- in the order prescribed by the sacred
|
|
historian. I ever before believed the Mosaic account of the
|
|
creation, and now find no alteration in my manner of believing
|
|
it. When things are said to begin or end their existence, we
|
|
{252} do not mean this with regard to God, but His creatures. All
|
|
objects are eternally known by God, or, which is the same thing,
|
|
have an eternal existence in His mind: but when things, before
|
|
imperceptible to creatures, are, by a decree of God, perceptible
|
|
to them, then are they said to begin a relative existence, with
|
|
respect to created minds. Upon reading therefore the Mosaic
|
|
account of the creation, I understand that the several parts of
|
|
the world became gradually perceivable to finite spirits, endowed
|
|
with proper faculties; so that, whoever such were present, they
|
|
were in truth perceived by them. This is the literal obvious
|
|
sense suggested to me by the words of the Holy Scripture: in
|
|
which is included no mention, or no thought, either of
|
|
<substratum>, <instrument, occasion, or absolute existence. And,
|
|
upon inquiry, I doubt not it will be found that most plain honest
|
|
men, who believe the creation, never think of those things any
|
|
more than I. What metaphysical sense you may understand it in,
|
|
you only can tell.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. But, Philonous, you do not seem to be aware that you
|
|
allow created things, in the beginning, only a relative, and
|
|
consequently hypothetical being: that is to say, upon supposition
|
|
there were <men> to perceive them; without which they have no
|
|
actuality of absolute existence, wherein creation might
|
|
terminate. Is it not, therefore, according to you, plainly
|
|
impossible the creation of any inanimate creatures should precede
|
|
that of man? And is not this directly contrary to the Mosaic
|
|
account?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. In answer to that, I say, first, created beings
|
|
might begin to exist in the mind of other created intelligences,
|
|
beside men. You will not therefore be able to prove any
|
|
contradiction between Moses and my notions, unless you first shew
|
|
there was no other order of finite created spirits in being,
|
|
before man. I say farther, in case we conceive the creation, as
|
|
we should at this time, a parcel of plants or vegetables of all
|
|
sorts produced, by an invisible Power, in a desert where nobody
|
|
was present -- that this way of explaining or conceiving it is
|
|
consistent with my principles, since they deprive you of nothing,
|
|
either sensible or imaginable; that it exactly suits with the
|
|
common, natural, and undebauched notions of mankind; that it
|
|
manifests the dependence of all things on God; and consequently
|
|
hath all the good effect or influence, which it is possible that
|
|
important article of our faith should have in making men humble,
|
|
thankful, and resigned to their [great][11] Creator. I say,
|
|
moreover, that, in this naked {253} conception of things,
|
|
divested of words, there will not be found any notion of what you
|
|
call the <actuality of absolute existence>. You may indeed raise
|
|
a dust with those terms, and so lengthen our dispute to no
|
|
purpose. But I entreat you calmly to look into your own thoughts,
|
|
and then tell me if they are not a useless and unintelligible
|
|
jargon.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own I have no very clear notion annexed to them.
|
|
But what say you to this? Do you not make the existence of
|
|
sensible things consist in their being in a mind? And were not
|
|
all things eternally in the mind of God? Did they not therefore
|
|
exist from all eternity, according to you? And how could that
|
|
which was eternal be created in time? Can anything be clearer or
|
|
better connected than this?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And are not you too of opinion, that God knew all
|
|
things from eternity?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Consequently they always had a being in the Divine
|
|
intellect.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. This I acknowledge.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. By your own confession, therefore, nothing is new,
|
|
or begins to be, in respect of the mind of God. So we are agreed
|
|
in that point.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. What shall we make then of the creation?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. May we not understand it to have been entirely in
|
|
respect of finite spirits; so that things, with regard to us, may
|
|
properly be said to begin their existence, or be created, when
|
|
God decreed they should become perceptible to intelligent
|
|
creatures, in that order and manner which He then established,
|
|
and we now call the laws of nature? You may call this a
|
|
<relative>, <or hypothetical existence> if you please. But, so
|
|
long as it supplies us with the most natural, obvious, and
|
|
literal sense of the Mosaic history of the creation; so long as
|
|
it answers all the religious ends of that great article; in a
|
|
word, so long as you can assign no other sense or meaning in its
|
|
stead; why should we reject this? Is it to comply with a
|
|
ridiculous sceptical humour of making everything nonsense and
|
|
unintelligible? I am sure you cannot say it is for the glory of
|
|
God. For, allowing it to be a thing possible and conceivable that
|
|
the corporeal world should have an absolute existence extrinsical
|
|
to the mind of God, as well as to the minds of all created
|
|
spirits; yet how could this set forth either the immensity or
|
|
omniscience of the Deity, or the necessary and immediate
|
|
dependence of all {254} things on Him? Nay, would it not rather
|
|
seem to derogate from those attributes?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Well, but as to this decree of God's, for making
|
|
things perceptible, what say you, Philonous? Is it not plain, God
|
|
did either execute that decree from all eternity, or at some
|
|
certain time began to will what He had not actually willed
|
|
before, but only designed to will? If the former, then there
|
|
could be no creation, or beginning of existence, in finite
|
|
things. If the latter, then we must acknowledge something new to
|
|
befall the Deity; which implies a sort of change: and all change
|
|
argues imperfection.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray consider what you are doing. Is it not evident
|
|
this objection concludes equally against a creation in any sense;
|
|
nay, against every other act of the Deity, discoverable by the
|
|
light of nature? None of which can <we> conceive, otherwise than
|
|
as performed in time, and having a beginning. God is a Being of
|
|
transcerident and unlimited perfections: His nature, therefore,
|
|
is incomprehensible to finite spirits. It is not, therefore, to
|
|
be expected, that any man, whether Materialist or Immaterialist,
|
|
should have exactly just notions of the Deity, His attributes,
|
|
and ways of operation. If then you would infer anything against
|
|
me, your difficulty must not be drawn from the inadequateness of
|
|
our conceptions of the Divine nature, which is unavoidable on any
|
|
scheme; but from the denial of Matter, of which there is not one
|
|
word, directly or indirectly, in what you have now objected.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I must acknowledge the difficulties you are concerned
|
|
to clear are such only as arise from the non-existence of Matter,
|
|
and are peculiar to that notion. So far you are in the right. But
|
|
I cannot by any means bring myself to think there is no such
|
|
peculiar repugnancy between the creation and your opinion; though
|
|
indeed where to fix it, I do not distinctly know.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. What would you have? Do I not acknowledge a twofold
|
|
state of things -- the one ectypal or natural, the other
|
|
archetypal and eternal? The former was created in time; the
|
|
latter existed from everlasting in the mind of God. Is not this
|
|
agreeable to the common notions of divines? or, is any more than
|
|
this necessary in order to conceive the creation? But you suspect
|
|
some peculiar repugnancy, though you know not where it lies. To
|
|
take away all possibility of scruple in the case, do but consider
|
|
this one point. Either you are not able to conceive {255} the
|
|
Creation on any hypothesis whatsoever; and, if so, there is no
|
|
ground for dislike or complaint against any particular opinion on
|
|
that score: or you are able to conceive it; and, if so, why not
|
|
on my Principles, since thereby nothing conceivable is taken
|
|
away? You have all along been allowed the full scope of sense,
|
|
imagination, and reason. Whatever, therefore, you could before
|
|
apprehend, either immediately or mediately by your senses, or by
|
|
ratiocination from your senses; whatever you could perceive,
|
|
imagine, or understand, remains still with you. If, therefore,
|
|
the notion you have of the creation by other Principles be
|
|
intelligible, you have it still upon mine; if it be not
|
|
intelligible, I conceive it to be no notion at all; and so there
|
|
is no loss of it. And indeed it seems to me very plain that the
|
|
supposition of Matter, that is a thing perfectly unknown and
|
|
inconceivable, cannot serve to make us conceive anything. And, I
|
|
hope it need not be proved to you that if the existence of Matter
|
|
doth not make the creation conceivable, the creation's being
|
|
without it inconceivable can be no objection against its non-
|
|
existence.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I confess, Philonous, you have almost satisfied me in
|
|
this point of the creation.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. I would fain know why you are not quite satisfied.
|
|
You tell me indeed of a repugnancy between the Mosaic history and
|
|
Immaterialism: but you know not where it lies. Is this
|
|
reasonable, Hylas? Can you expect I should solve a difficulty
|
|
without knowing what it is? But, to pass by all that, would not a
|
|
man think you were assured there is no repugnancy between the
|
|
received notions of Materialists and the inspired writings?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. And so I am.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Ought the historical part of Scripture to be
|
|
understood in a plain obvious sense, or in a sense which is
|
|
metaphysical and out of the way?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. In the plain sense, doubtless.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When Moses speaks of herbs, earth, water, &c. as
|
|
having been created by God; think you not the sensible things
|
|
commonly signified by those words are suggested to every
|
|
unphilosophical reader?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I cannot help thinking so.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. And are not all ideas, or things perceived by sense,
|
|
to be denied a real existence by the doctrine of the Materialist?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. This I have already acknowledged.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. The creation, therefore, according to them, was not
|
|
{256} the creation of things sensible, which have only a relative
|
|
being, but of certain unknown natures, which have an absolute
|
|
being, wherein creation might terminate?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. True.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Is it not therefore evident the assertors of Matter
|
|
destroy the plain obvious sense of Moses, with which their
|
|
notions are utterly inconsistent; and instead of it obtrude on us
|
|
I know not what; something equally unintelligible to themselves
|
|
and me?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I cannot contradict you.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Moses tells us of a creation. A creation of what? of
|
|
unknown quiddities, of occasions, or <substratum>? No, certainly;
|
|
but of things obvious to the senses. You must first reconcile
|
|
this with your notions, if you expect I should be reconciled to
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I see you can assault me with my own weapons.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Then as to <absolute existence>; was there ever
|
|
known a more jejune notion than that? Something it is so
|
|
abstracted and unintelligible that you have frankly owned you
|
|
could not conceive it, much less explain anything by it. But
|
|
allowing Matter to exist, and the notion of absolute existence to
|
|
be clear as light; yet, was this ever known to make the creation
|
|
more credible? Nay, hath it not furnished the atheists and
|
|
infidels of all ages with the most plausible arguments against a
|
|
creation? That a corporeal substance, which hath an absolute
|
|
existence without the minds of spirits, should be produced out of
|
|
nothing, by the mere will of a Spirit, hath been looked upon as a
|
|
thing so contrary to all reason, so impossible and absurd! that
|
|
not only the most celebrated among the ancients, but even divers
|
|
modern and Christian philosophers have thought Matter co-eternal
|
|
with the Deity. Lay these things together, and then judge you
|
|
whether Materialism disposes men to believe the creation of
|
|
things.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own, Philonous, I think it does not. This of the
|
|
<creation> is the last objection I can think of; and I must needs
|
|
own it hath been sufficiently answered as well as the rest.
|
|
Nothing now remains to be overcome but a sort of unaccountable
|
|
backwardness that I find in myself towards your notions.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. When a man is swayed, he knows not why, to one side
|
|
of' the question, can this, think you, be anything else but the
|
|
effect of prejudice, which never fails to attend old and rooted
|
|
{257} notions? And indeed in this respect I cannot deny the
|
|
belief of Matter to have very much the advantage over the
|
|
contrary opinion, with men of a learned, education.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I confess it seems to be as you say.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. As a balance, therefore, to this weight of
|
|
prejudice, let us throw into the scale the great advantages that
|
|
arise from the belief of Immaterialism, both in regard to
|
|
religion and human learning. The being of a God, and
|
|
incorruptibility of the soul, those great articles of religion,
|
|
are they not proved with the clearest and most immediate
|
|
evidence? When I say the being of a God, I do not mean an obscure
|
|
general Cause of things, whereof we have no conception, but God,
|
|
in the strict and proper sense of the word. A Being whose
|
|
spirituality, omnipresence, providence, omniscience, infinite
|
|
power and goodness, are as conspicuous as the existence of
|
|
sensible things, of which (notwithstanding the fallacious
|
|
pretences and affected scruples of Sceptics) there is no more
|
|
reason to doubt than of our own being. -- Then, with relation to
|
|
human sciences. In Natural Philosophy, what intricacies, what
|
|
obscurities, what contradictions hath the belief of Matter led
|
|
men into! To say nothing of the numberless disputes about its
|
|
extent, continuity, homogeneity, gravity, divisibility, &c. -- do
|
|
they not pretend to explain all things by bodies operating on
|
|
bodies, according to the laws of motion? and yet, are they able
|
|
to comprehend how one body should move another? Nay, admitting
|
|
there was no difficulty in reconciling the notion of an inert
|
|
being with a cause, or in conceiving how an accident might pass
|
|
from one body to another; yet, by all their strained thoughts and
|
|
extravagant suppositions, have they been able to reach the
|
|
<mechanical> production of any one animal or vegetable body? Can
|
|
they account, by the laws of motion, for sounds, tastes, smells,
|
|
or colours; or for the regular course of things? Have they
|
|
accounted, by physical principles, for the aptitude and
|
|
contrivance even of the most inconsiderable parts of the
|
|
universe? But, laying aside Matter and corporeal, causes, and
|
|
admitting only the efficiency of an All-perfect Mind, are not all
|
|
the effects of nature easy and intelligible? If the <phenomena>
|
|
are nothing else but <ideas>; God is a <spirit>, but Matter an
|
|
unintelligent, unperceiving being. If they demonstrate an
|
|
unlimited power in their cause; God is active and omnipotent, but
|
|
Matter an inert mass. If the order, regularity, and usefulness of
|
|
them can {258} never be sufficiently admired; God is infinitely
|
|
wise and provident, but Matter destitute of all contrivance and
|
|
design. These surely are great advantages in <Physics>. Not to
|
|
mention that the apprehension of a distant Deity naturally
|
|
disposes men to a negligence in their moral actions; which they
|
|
would be more cautious of, in case they thought Him immediately
|
|
present, and acting on their minds, without the interposition of
|
|
Matter, or unthinking second causes. -- Then in <Metaphysics>:
|
|
what difficulties concerning entity in abstract, substantial
|
|
forms, hylarchic principles, plastic natures, substance and
|
|
accident, principle of individuation, possibility of Matter's
|
|
thinking, origin of ideas, the manner how two independent
|
|
substances so widely different as <Spirit and Matter>, should
|
|
mutually operate on each other? what difficulties, I say, and
|
|
endless disquisitions, concerning these and innumerable other the
|
|
like points, do we escape, by supposing only Spirits and ideas? -
|
|
- Even the <Mathematics> themselves, if we take away the absolute
|
|
existence of extended things, become much more clear and easy;
|
|
the most shocking paradoxes and intricate speculations in those
|
|
sciences depending on the. infinite divisibility of finite
|
|
extension; which depends on that supposition -- But what need is
|
|
there to insist on the particular sciences? Is not that
|
|
opposition to all science whatsoever, that frenzy of the ancient
|
|
and modern Sceptics, built on the same foundation? Or can you
|
|
produce so much as one argument against the reality of corporeal
|
|
things, or in behalf of that avowed utter ignorance of their
|
|
natures, which doth not suppose their reality to consist in an
|
|
external absolute existence? Upon this supposition, indeed, the
|
|
objections from the change of colours in a pigeon's neck, or the
|
|
appearance of the broken oar in the water, must be allowed to
|
|
have weight. But these and the like objections vanish, if we do
|
|
not maintain the being of absolute external originals, but place
|
|
the reality of things in ideas,. fleeting indeed, and changeable;
|
|
-- however, not changed at random, but according to the fixed
|
|
order of nature. For, herein consists that constancy and truth of
|
|
things which secures all the concerns of life, and distinguishes
|
|
that which is real from the <irregular visions of> the fancy.
|
|
{259}
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I agree to all you have now said., and must own that
|
|
nothing can incline me to embrace your opinion more than the
|
|
advantages I see it is attended with. I am by nature lazy; and
|
|
this would be a mighty abridgment in knowledge. What doubts, what
|
|
hypotheses, what labyrinths of amusement, what fields of
|
|
disputation, what an ocean of false learning, may be avoided by
|
|
that single notion of <Immaterialism>!
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. After all, is there anything farther remaining to be
|
|
done? You may remember you promised to embrace that opinion which
|
|
upon examination should appear most agreeable to Common Sense and
|
|
remote from Scepticism. This, by your own confession, is that
|
|
which denies Matter, or the <absolute> existence of corporeal
|
|
things. Nor is this all; the same notion has been proved several
|
|
ways, viewed in different lights, pursued in its consequences,
|
|
and all objections against it cleared. Can there be a greater
|
|
evidence of its truth? or is it possible it should have all the
|
|
marks of a true opinion and yet be false?
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I own myself entirely satisfied for the present in
|
|
all respects. But, what security can I have that I shall still
|
|
continue the same full assent to your opinion, and that no
|
|
unthought-of objection or difficulty will occur hereafter?
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. Pray, Hylas, do you in other cases, when a point is
|
|
once evidently proved, withhold your consent on account of
|
|
objections or difficulties it may be liable to? Are the
|
|
difficulties that attend the doctrine of incommensurable
|
|
quantities, of the angle of contact, of the asymptotes to curves,
|
|
or the like, sufficient to make you hold out against mathematical
|
|
demonstration? Or will you disbelieve the Providence of God,
|
|
because there may be some particular things which you know not
|
|
how to reconcile with it? If there are difficulties <attending
|
|
Immaterialism>, there are at the same time direct and evident
|
|
proofs of it. But for the existence of Matter there is not one
|
|
proof, and far more numerous and insurmountable objections lie
|
|
against it. But where are those mighty difficulties you insist
|
|
on? Alas! you know not where or what they are; something which
|
|
may possibly occur hereafter. If this be a sufficient pretence
|
|
for withholding your full assent, you should never yield it to
|
|
any proposition, how free soever from exceptions, how clearly and
|
|
solidly soever demonstrated.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. You have satisfied me, Philonous.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. But, to arm you against all future objections, do
|
|
but consider: That which bears equally hard on two contradictory
|
|
{260} opinions can be proof against neither. Whenever, therefore,
|
|
any difficulty occurs, try if you can find a solution for it on
|
|
the hypothesis of the <Materialists>. Be not deceived by words;
|
|
but sound your own thoughts. And in case you cannot conceive it
|
|
easier by the help of <Materialism>, it is plain it can be no
|
|
objection against <Immaterialism>. Had you proceeded all along by
|
|
this rule, you would probably have spared yourself abundance of
|
|
trouble in objecting; since of all your difficulties I challenge
|
|
you to shew one that is explained by Matter: nay, which is not
|
|
more unintelligible with than without that supposition; and
|
|
consequently makes rather <against than> for it. You should
|
|
consider, in each particular, whether the difficulty arises from
|
|
the <non>-<existence of Matter>. If it doth not, you might as
|
|
well argue from the infinite divisibility of extension against
|
|
the Divine prescience, as from such a difficulty against
|
|
<Immaterialism>. And yet, upon recollection, I believe you will
|
|
find this to have been often, if not always, the case. You should
|
|
likewise take heed not to argue on a <petitio principii>. One is
|
|
apt to say -- The unknown substances ought to be esteemed real
|
|
things, rather than the ideas in our minds: and who can tell but
|
|
the unthinking external substance may concur, as a cause or
|
|
instrument, in the productions of our ideas? But is not this
|
|
proceeding on a supposition that there are such external
|
|
substances? And to suppose this, is it not begging the question?
|
|
But, above all things, you should beware of imposing on yourself
|
|
by that vulgar sophism which is called <ignoratio elenchi>. You
|
|
talked often as if you thought I maintained the non-existence of
|
|
Sensible Things. Whereas in truth no one can be more thoroughly
|
|
assured of their existence than I am. And it is you who doubt; I
|
|
should have said, positively deny it. Everything that is seen,
|
|
felt, heard, or any way perceived by the senses, is, on the
|
|
principles I embrace, a real being; but not on yours. Remember,
|
|
the Matter you contend for is an Unknown Somewhat (if indeed it
|
|
may be termed <somewhat>), which is quite stripped of all
|
|
sensible qualities, and can neither be perceived by sense, nor
|
|
apprehended by the mind. Remember I say, that it is not any
|
|
object which is hard or soft, hot or cold, blue or white, round
|
|
or square, &c. For all these things I affirm do exist. Though
|
|
indeed I deny they have an existence distinct from being
|
|
perceived; or that they exist out of all minds whatsoever. Think
|
|
on these points; let them be attentively considered and still
|
|
kept in view. Otherwise you will not comprehend the state of the
|
|
question; without which your objections {261} will always be wide
|
|
of the mark, and, instead of mine, may possibly be directed (as
|
|
more than once they have been) against your own notions.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. I must needs own, Philonous, nothing seems to have
|
|
kept me from agreeing with you more than this same <mistaking the
|
|
question>. In denying Matter,. at first, glimpse I am tempted to
|
|
imagine you deny the things we see and feel: but, upon reflexion,
|
|
find there is no ground for it. What think you, therefore, of
|
|
retaining the name <Matter>, and applying it to <sensible
|
|
things>? This may be done without any change in your sentiments:
|
|
and, believe me, it would be a means of reconciling them to some
|
|
persons who may be more shocked at an innovation in words than in
|
|
opinion.
|
|
|
|
<Phil>. With all my heart: retain the word <Matter>, and
|
|
apply it to the objects of sense, if you please; provided you do
|
|
not attribute to them any subsistence distinct from their being
|
|
perceived. I shall never quarrel with you for an expression.
|
|
<Matter>, or <material substance>, are terms introduced by
|
|
philosophers; and, as used by them, imply a sort of independency,
|
|
or a subsistence distinct from being perceived by a mind: but are
|
|
never used by common people; or, if ever, it is to signify the
|
|
immediate objects of sense. One would think, therefore, so long
|
|
as the names of all particular things, with the <terms sensible>,
|
|
<substance>, <body>, <stuff>, and the like, are retained, the
|
|
word <Matter> should be never missed in common talk. And in
|
|
philosophical discourses it seems the best way to leave it quite
|
|
out: since there is not, perhaps, any one thing that hath more
|
|
favoured and strengthened the depraved bent of the mind towards
|
|
Atheism than the use of that general confused term.
|
|
|
|
<Hyl>. Well but, Philonous, since I am content to give up
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the notion of an unthinking substance exterior to the mind, I
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think you ought not to deny me the privilege of using the word
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<Matter> as I please, and annexing it to a collection of sensible
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qualities subsisting only in the mind. I freely own there is no
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other substance, in a strict sense, than <Spirit>. But I have
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been so long accustomed to the <term Matter> that I know not how
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to part with it: to say, there is no <Matter> in the world, is
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still shocking to me. Whereas to say -- There is no <Matter>, if
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by that term be meant an unthinking substance existing without
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the mind; but if by <Matter> is meant some sensible thing, whose
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existence consists in being perceived, then there is <Matter>: --
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<this> distinction gives it quite another turn; and men will come
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into your notions with {262} small difficulty, when they are
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proposed in that manner. For, after all, the controversy about
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<Matter> in the strict acceptation of it, lies altogether between
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you and the philosophers: whose principles, I acknowledge, are
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not near so natural, or so agreeable to the common sense of
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mankind, and Holy Scripture, as yours. There is nothing we either
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desire or shun but as it makes, or is apprehended to make, some
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part of our happiness or misery. But what hath happiness or
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misery, joy or grief, pleasure or pain, to do with Absolute
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Existence; or with unknown entities, <abstracted from dl relation
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to us>? It is evident, things regard us only as they are pleasing
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|
or displeasing: and they can please or displease only so far
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|
forth as they are perceived. Farther, therefore, we are not
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|
concerned; and thus far you leave things as you found them. Yet
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still there is something new in this doctrine. It is plain, I do
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not now think with the Philosophers; nor yet altogether with the
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vulgar. I would know how the case stands in that respect;
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precisely, what you have added to, or altered in my former
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notions.
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<Phil>. I do not pretend to be a setter-up of new notions.
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My endeavours tend only to unite, and place in a clearer light,
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that truth which was before shared between the vulgar and the
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philosophers: -- the former being of opinion, that <those things
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|
they immediately perceive are the real things>; and the latter,
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|
that <the things immediately perceived are ideas>, <which exist
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|
only in the mind>. Which two notions put together, do, in effect,
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|
constitute the substance of what I advance.
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<Hyl>. I have been a long time distrusting my senses:
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methought I saw things by a dim light and through false glasses.
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Now the glasses are removed and a new light breaks in upon my
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|
under standing. I am clearly convinced that I see things in their
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|
native forms, and am no longer in pain about their <unknown
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|
natures or absolute existence>. This is the state I find myself
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|
in at present; though, indeed, the course that brought me to it I
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|
do not yet thoroughly comprehend. You set out upon the same
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|
principles that Academics, Cartesians, and the like sects usually
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|
do; and for a long time it looked as if you were advancing their
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|
philosophical Scepticism: but, in the end, your conclusions are
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|
directly opposite to theirs.
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<Phil>. You see, Hylas, the water of yonder fountain, how it
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|
is forced upwards, in a round column, to a certain height; at
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{263} which it breaks, and falls back into the basin from whence
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|
it rose: its ascent, as well as descent, proceeding from the same
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|
uniform law or principle of gravitation. just so, the same
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|
Principles which, at first view, lead to Scepticism, pursued to a
|
|
certain point, bring men back to Common Sense.
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[1][Copyright: (c) 1996, James Fieser (jfieser@utm.edu), all
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rights reserved. Unaltered copies of this computer text file may
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be freely distribute for personal and classroom use. Alterations
|
|
to this file are permitted only for purposes of computer
|
|
printouts, although altered computer text files may not
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|
circulate. Except to cover nominal distribution costs, this file
|
|
cannot be sold without written permission from the copyright
|
|
holder. This copyright notice supersedes all previous notices on
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earlier versions of this text file. When quoting from this text,
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please use the following citation: <Berkeley's Three Dialogues>,
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ed. James Fieser (Internet Release, 1996).
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Editorial Conventions: Letters within angled brackets (e.g.,
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|
<Hume>) designate italics. Note references are contained within
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|
square brackets (e.g., [1]). Original pagination is contained
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|
within curly brackets (e.g., {1}). Spelling and punctuation have
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|
not been modernized. Printer's errors have been corrected without
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|
note. Bracketed comments within the end notes are the editor's.
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This is a working draft. Please report errors to James Fieser
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|
(jfieser@utm.edu).]
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[2][Text within brackets is not contained in the first and second
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|
editions.]
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[3]["Size or figure, or sensible quality" -- "size, colour, &c,"
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in the first and second
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editions.]
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[4]["In stones and minerals" -- in first and second editions.]
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[5][The passage within brackets first appeared in the third
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|
edition.]
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[6][0mitted in last edition.]
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[7]"Tell me, Hylas," -- "So Hylas" -- in first and second
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editions.]
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[8][This important passage, printed within brackets, is not found
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in the first and second editions of the Didogues. It is, by
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anticipation, Berkeley's answer to Hume's application of the
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objections to the reality of abstract or unperceived Matter, to
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the reality of the Ego or Self, of which we are aware through
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memory, as identical amid the changes of its successive states.-
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A. C. F.]
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[9][The words within brackets are omitted in the third edition.]
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[10][Omitted in authoes last edition.]
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[11][In the first and second editions only.]
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