登陆注册
15365600000012

第12章 OF REASON AND SCIENCE(2)

I have said before,in the second chapter,that a man did excel all other animals in this faculty,that when he conceived anything whatsoever,he was apt to enquire the consequences of it,and what effects he could do with it.And now I add this other degree of the same excellence,that he can by words reduce the consequences he finds to general rules,called theorems,or aphorisms;that is,he can reason,or reckon,not only in number,but in all other things whereof one may be added unto or subtracted from another.

But this privilege is allayed by another;and that is by the privilege of absurdity,to which no living creature is subject,but men only.And of men,those are of all most subject to it that profess philosophy.For it is most true that Cicero saith of them somewhere;that there can be nothing so absurd but may be found in the books of philosophers.And the reason is manifest.For there is not one of them that begins his ratiocination from the definitions or explications of the names they are to use;which is a method that hath been used only in geometry,whose conclusions have thereby been made indisputable.

1.The first cause of absurd conclusions I ascribe to the want of method;in that they begin not their ratiocination from definitions;that is,from settled significations of their words:as if they could cast account without knowing the value of the numeral words,one,two,and three.

And whereas all bodies enter into account upon diverse considerations,which I have mentioned in the precedent chapter,these considerations being diversely named,diverse absurdities proceed from the confusion and unfit connexion of their names into assertions.

And therefore,2.The second cause of absurd assertions,I ascribe to the giving of names of bodies to accidents;or of accidents to bodies;as they do that say,faith is infused,or inspired;when nothing can be poured,or breathed into anything,but body;and that extension is body;that phantasms are spirits,etc.

3.The third I ascribe to the giving of the names of the accidents of bodies without us to the accidents of our own bodies;as they do that say,the colour is in the body;the sound is in the air,etc.

4.The fourth,to the giving of the names of bodies to names,or speeches;as they do that say that there be things universal;that a living creature is genus,or a general thing,etc.

5.The fifth,to the giving of the names of accidents to names and speeches;as they do that say,the nature of a thing is its definition;a man's command is his will;and the like.

6.The sixth,to the use of metaphors,tropes,and other rhetorical figures,instead of words proper.For though it be lawful to say,for example,in common speech,the way goeth,or leadeth hither,or thither;the proverb says this or that (whereas ways cannot go,nor proverbs speak);yet in reckoning,and seeking of truth,such speeches are not to be admitted.

7.The seventh,to names that signify nothing,but are taken up and learned by rote from the Schools,as hypostatical,transubstantiate,consubstantiate,eternal-now,and the like canting of Schoolmen.

To him that can avoid these things,it is not easy to fall into any absurdity,unless it be by the length of an account;wherein he may perhaps forget what went before.For all men by nature reason alike,and well,when they have good principles.For who is so stupid as both to mistake in geometry,and also to persist in it,when another detects his error to him?

By this it appears that reason is not,as sense and memory,born with us;nor gotten by experience only,as prudence is;but attained by industry:first in apt imposing of names;and secondly by getting a good and orderly method in proceeding from the elements,which are names,to assertions made by connexion of one of them to another;and so to syllogisms,which are the connexions of one assertion to another,till we come to a knowledge of all the consequences of names appertaining to the subject in hand;and that is it,men call science.And whereas sense and memory are but knowledge of fact,which is a thing past and irrevocable,science is the knowledge of consequences,and dependence of one fact upon another;by which,out of that we can presently do,we know how to do something else when we will,or the like,another time:because when we see how anything comes about,upon what causes,and by what manner;when the like causes come into our power,we see how to make it produce the like effects.

Children therefore are not endued with reason at all,till they have attained the use of speech,but are called reasonable creatures for the possibility apparent of having the use of reason in time to come.And the most part of men,though they have the use of reasoning a little way,as in numbering to some degree;yet it serves them to little use in common life,in which they govern themselves,some better,some worse,according to their differences of experience,quickness of memory,and inclinations to several ends;but specially according to good or evil fortune,and the errors of one another.For as for science,or certain rules of their actions,they are so far from it that they know not what it is.Geometry they have thought conjuring:but for other sciences,they who have not been taught the beginnings,and some progress in them,that they may see how they be acquired and generated,are in this point like children that,having no thought of generation,are made believe by the women that their brothers and sisters are not born,but found in the garden.

But yet they that have no science are in better and nobler condition with their natural prudence than men that,by misreasoning,or by trusting them that reason wrong,fall upon false and absurd general rules.For ignorance of causes,and of rules,does not set men so far out of their way as relying on false rules,and taking for causes of what they aspire to,those that are not so,but rather causes of the contrary.

To conclude,the light of humane minds is perspicuous words,but by exact definitions first snuffed,and purged from ambiguity;reason is the pace;increase of science,the way;and the benefit of mankind,the end.And,on the contrary,metaphors,and senseless and ambiguous words are like ignes fatui;and reasoning upon them is wandering amongst innumerable absurdities;and their end,contention and sedition,or contempt.

As much experience is prudence,so is much science sapience.For though we usually have one name of wisdom for them both;yet the Latins did always distinguish between prudentia and sapientia;ascribing the former to experience,the latter to science.But to make their difference appear more clearly,let us suppose one man endued with an excellent natural use and dexterity in handling his arms;and another to have added to that dexterity an acquired science of where he can offend,or be offended by his adversary,in every possible posture or guard:the ability of the former would be to the ability of the latter,as prudence to sapience;both useful,but the latter infallible.But they that,trusting only to the authority of books,follow the blind blindly,are like him that,trusting to the false rules of a master of fence,ventures presumptuously upon an adversary that either kills or disgraces him.

The signs of science are some certain and infallible;some,uncertain.Certain,when he that pretendeth the science of anything can teach the same;that is to say,demonstrate the truth thereof perspicuously to another:uncertain,when only some particular events answer to his pretence,and upon many occasions prove so as he says they must.Signs of prudence are all uncertain;because to observe by experience,and remember all circumstances that may alter the success,is impossible.But in any business,whereof a man has not infallible science to proceed by,to forsake his own natural judgment,and be guided by general sentences read in authors,and subject to many exceptions,is a sign of folly,and generally scorned by the name of pedantry.And even of those men themselves that in councils of the Commonwealth love to show their reading of politics and history,very few do it in their domestic affairs where their particular interest is concerned,having prudence enough for their private affairs;but in public they study more the reputation of their own wit than the success of another's business.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 异界的存在

    异界的存在

    异界,一个未知的区域。异界侦查事务所的侦探苏羽,在经历重重危机,各种死离死别之后,成功的揭开了一个又一个谎言下的真相,不管你是谁,从哪里来,我都不会退却,我就是我,我是苏羽。
  • EXO之浅涩

    EXO之浅涩

    李菲雨,EXO你们给我等着,我墨梓惜总有一天会回来的。两年后黄子韬:哟,这不是墨梓惜吗。鹿晗:惜惜,你回来了(你知道这两年我有多想你吗)张艺兴:惜惜我相信你没有伤害李菲雨。朴灿烈:你回来干嘛,我是不会让你伤害菲雨的。李菲雨:惜姐姐,你回来了(这个贱女人怎么回来了)边伯贤:小雨我们走,不要理这个贱女人。
  • 重生氪星人

    重生氪星人

    在这个世界里有英雄有反派,也有所谓的神明还有邪恶的恶魔,但是他们都害怕一个人!为了保护我爱的人即便屠尽世界!——超人群号:193343996
  • 五宗原

    五宗原

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 若你不离我便不弃

    若你不离我便不弃

    簪绾青丝红妆落,木嫁芳华君思索,惘忆故事旧情却,今生只怕念缠身,这乱世,总不回,葬红尘。
  • 倾世一梦:惊世情劫

    倾世一梦:惊世情劫

    她与他相遇,是命运轮回,还是天意使然,亦或是人为操纵?一切冥冥之中,自有定数。向来缘浅,奈何情深;向来意薄,奈何缠绵。动情便是劫,放手心难安。忆殇情,莫失莫忘。前世今生,为何总是寻不到彼此的身影,时空中阡陌交错,千年来,孤独终生。痴缠越深,坠得越狠;渴望越深,伤得越疼。那曾让她不顾一切的,终于在镜中狠狠破灭。是啊,执迷不悟,不过是灵魂的痴缠,她曾那样深切地追寻过,却终将如水中泡影般真切清醒。旧恩情不堪追念,自此情义两断。只是,当她对一切都心灰意冷之时,却发现——蓦然回首,那人却在灯火阑珊处。
  • 萌萌杀手闯天下

    萌萌杀手闯天下

    呵呵,她虽然是一个顶级杀手,可是为啥长得这么。。。。萌,腹黑,扮猪吃老虎当她到一个弱肉强食的世界时,看她如何玩转异世界!
  • 情意绵绵【出版+全本】

    情意绵绵【出版+全本】

    【出版+全本】多年感情突生变故,江曼对他付出了十年,却没有抵得过那个女人的十天,他最终娶了富家小姐插足者为妻。在无血缘关系的大哥江斯年升级为人上人的无限风光之下,少有人知,他只是一个她父母从医院捡回并辛苦养大的弃婴。婚后的江斯年霸道偏执,隔三差五便带着新婚妻子去她的家里吃饭留宿,纠缠江曼。公司的一个谈单任务,正在疗情伤的江曼负责去接触那位37岁的项目投资人。从接下他高额提成的工装设计单,再到接下他本人的家装设计单,在这个合作的过程中江曼惊醒,她险些就把自己设计到这个极会调情的腹黑老男人怀里!!江曼不要陆存遇,她怕他的体温是毒,一沾蚀骨……【建筑装饰工程公司失恋女设计师江曼,因承接装修项目与37岁离异腹黑男客户发生的爱情故事】
  • 有缘千年来相会

    有缘千年来相会

    时空的千年迢递,造就一段大唐盛世的别样爱情。真爱的薰神染骨,谱成一曲为爱痴狂的浪漫乐章。一场车祸后,苏珊一缕魂魄悠悠醒转,居然已经来到了千年以前的--大、唐、盛、世。长安商贾之女阮若弱,因庶出身份被正室母女所欺凌,胡乱为其择一品性不良的纨绔子弟为婚配。为反抗这不如意的姻缘,她自悬三尺白绫欲一死百了。也不知冥冥中什么天意注定,让苏珊一缕离魂入了她的身体。代替她继续走人生路。她又会走的如何呢?新版阮若弱当然不肯听从父母之命被安排着嫁给一个唐朝的家庭暴力分子,于是决定三十六计走为上计,先逃出阮府再说。这一逃,一连串妙趣横生的故事由此展开了……(本文已由珠海出版社出版)
  • 盛京明珠

    盛京明珠

    一朝醒来,卫瑜带着现代的记忆归位,发现从前日子过的是如此酸楚与委屈。本为盛京明珠,奈何爱上了一个心里没有她的男人,生生将自己活成了一味迁就。好在她还年轻,一切都还来得及。和离后的卫瑜决心洗心革面做一个胸怀天地的明媚女纸,却悲剧的发现,自己已然成为了一块被虎视眈眈盯住的肉……