登陆注册
15424600000056

第56章 Chapter II(27)

Admitting a deductive method to be necessary,Mill distinguishes the 'direct'and the 'inverse methods.'(118)The direct method is that of reasoning from one 'law of human nature,'considering,of course,the outward circumstances.This justifies the system of political economy,which considers men as acting solely from the desire of wealth.He points out that fallacies may here arise from applying to one state of society what is true of another;but he also holds that one who knows the political economy of England,or even of Yorkshire,knows that of all nations,if he have good sense enough to modify his conclusions.(119)Mill admits fully that this method can only give us 'tendencies'--results which are true if certain conditions,never fully assignable,are actually secured;and that it therefore requires to be constantly checked by verification,that is,by showing that the results are confirmed by direct observation.The admission,however,that such a method is in any case admissible separates him from Comte,who held that we must in all cases start from historical generalisations,not from independent 'laws of human nature.'(120)Comte,in fact,rejected Mill's psychology and political economy as pseudo-sciences,and the difference is really vital.Mill,however,was prepared to accept much of Comte's teaching,and in particular allows the legitimacy of the 'historical method.'Upon this he writes a chapter,(121)which shows no want of appreciation of Comte or of the great French writers by whom,as his Dissertations show,he had been deeply impressed.(122)He complains of the English want of interest in such matters.They know nothing in French literature except the novels of Balzac and Euge Sue,and are not aware that the French historians greatly surpass even the Germans.(123)He points out the importance of the conception of progress and of the great modifications of human character.Still,he charges the French with a misconception.History can never give us a 'law of nature,'only 'empirical laws,'which are not scientific till duly based upon psychology and 'ethology.'Comte alone has seen the necessity of a deeper foundation;and he proceeds to give an admiring account of some of Comte's conclusions.Especially he insists upon the necessity of connecting the social phenomena with the intellectual development of mankind.This Comte alone has attempted systematically,and he ends by emphatically adhering to the doctrine of the three stages --theological,metaphysical,and positive.The essential difference,however,remains.Comte held that we must not explain humanity by man,but man by humanity.(124)To Mill,of course,this savoured of mysticism.

In any case,it marks the divergence of the two:Mill is a thorough individualist.He thinks it absolutely necessary to base sociology upon 'ethology,'that is,a theory of the individual character,and this again must be based upon psychology.

Sympathising with Comte's general purpose,and warmly admiring some of his results,Mill adheres to a doctrine which was sure to bring him into conflict with his master.To create the moral sciences,we must start from a scientific psychology.This means that we must work on the lines of Hartley,James Mill,and his own younger contemporaries,Professor Bain and Mr Herbert Spencer.The corollary from psychology is ethology,or the science of character.This view does not conflict with the admission of the great importance of some historical method.At present,it needs only to be said that Mill accepts that method very cordially,subject to two conditions.First,he holds that some social sciences --political economy being,in fact,the only one to be clearly specified --can be deduced from ethology and psychology independently of history,though requiring verification from history.Secondly,he holds that the historical method cannot reveal true 'laws of nature'unless it is properly connected with psychological data.How far Mill really appreciated the significance of the historical method,or perceived its true relation to other departments of thought,must be left for consideration.

NOTES:

1.Autobiography,p.226.

2.Logic,p.389(bk.iii.ch.xxi,section 1).I quote from the popular edition of 1898.Book,chapter and section are generally applicable to former edition.

3.See letter in note to chapter upon Mill in Taine's History of English Literature.

4.James Mill's Analysis,i.352n.

5.See an interesting article in G.Croom Robertson's Philosophical Remains (1894),pp.28-45.

6.Logic,Introduction,section 5.

7.Ibid.p.29(bk i,ch.iii,section 1).

8.Ibid.p.8section 7.

9.See John Grote's Exploratio Philosophica (1865),p.209n.

This book is,I think,by far the most interesting comtemporary discussion of Mill,Hamilton,and Whewell.It was,unfortunately,desultory and unfinished,but it is full of acute criticism,and charmingly candid and modest.Mill's Logic is especially discussed in chapters viii and ix.Grote holds,and I think truly,that Mill's attempt to divide metaphysics from logic leads to real confusion,and especially to an untenable mode of conceiving the relation between 'things'and thoughts.I cannot discuss Grote's views;but the book is full of interesting suggestions though the result are rather vague.See the excellent account of Grote by the late Croom Robertson in the History of National Biography.

10.Mill,in his review of Whately,refers to Du Trieu (whose treatise had been privately printed by him and his friends),Crakenthorpe and Burgersdyk;and in the Examination of Hamilton's Philosophy (ch.xxii)quotes also Sanderson,Wallis,Aldrich,Keckermann,Bartholinus,and Du Hamel as the 'authorities nearest at hand'.There is nothing,as I am told by the learned,exceptionally interesting in Du Trieu;and the selection was probably accidental.

11.Logic,p.13(bk.i,ch.ii,section 1).

同类推荐
  • 解除篇

    解除篇

    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。
  • 农说

    农说

    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。
  • 北使录

    北使录

    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。
  • Wessex Poems and Other Verses

    Wessex Poems and Other Verses

    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。
  • 关中创立戒坛图经(并序)

    关中创立戒坛图经(并序)

    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。
热门推荐
  • 修仙之雷霆革命

    修仙之雷霆革命

    一个倔强女武财神误落凡尘之后展开的的故事!一本乱七八糟的修仙书,一如需要细细思量的人生。慢慢回味,杂乱中那条平淡无奇的小路,才是真正需要追求的道......ps:跟全职里的孙哲平一样,手伤,打字之慢,诸位见谅~!~
  • 七月的肖邦,为谁演奏(第一部)

    七月的肖邦,为谁演奏(第一部)

    柒月,本来只是个普通的高中生,却意外得知自己的亲生父母是死党LALA的父母,与此同时,LALA的暗恋对象莫一却对柒月产生好感,LALA会做出怎样的惊人举动,突然出现的金正皓又成为柒月人生的重大转折点。。
  • On the Soul

    On the Soul

    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。
  • EXO之遥望星空的碎影

    EXO之遥望星空的碎影

    一个有着舞魄体质的女孩,从小就很怪异,与普通人类不一样,不知为什么女孩会无缘无故的能看到已经死去的人,可以读心,却不可以控心,麻烦啊麻烦。来到韩国后,与EXO一次又一次的同甘共苦,一次又一次的暧昧,让她无缘无故的遭受了很多白眼。哒哒哒,大家可以叫小编雪涵哇(⊙o⊙)哇我很好的
  • 告别夏日

    告别夏日

    我不知道,眼前的这一切一切,是否只会定格在这一时刻。在我与青春渐行渐远的路上,成为一幅落上灰尘的画作。大学里,一个宿舍,4个人的那些事,不算轰轰烈烈,但多少年后去回忆,确是一丝温暖,一把怀恋。
  • 九月与秋

    九月与秋

    现世安稳,岁月静好。你是不是也曾经喜欢过一个人,全世界都知道或不知道,我一直在想,暗恋,带给我们的是成长多于释然,还是在浪费时间。
  • 亡尸日记尸城寻人

    亡尸日记尸城寻人

    因为一次失误,病毒研究所的生化病毒泄露了,人类一个接一个的被感染,变成了头脑简单四肢发达的丧尸,这些丧尸疯狂的散播着病毒,扩散的速度竟以城市来做单位,但有一些人却躲过了这次灾难,他们是幸运还是因为具有某种特殊的能力呢?在这个临时的团队中还有一名黑道上的老大——壁虎,顾名思义他比较擅长攀爬,但是这些并不是问题的主要,关键的是他到底有什么‘阴谋’?一双比手掌还要长的手指与令人生畏的獠牙,那滴着血的身体总是隐在黑暗处,只露出一双黄眼睛的它总是出现在时光的面前,这个‘黄眼睛’又有什么企图呢?菊小盈,是这个团队中的唯一女性,这位绝色佳人拥有着矫健的身手,但是在她那深邃的眼神中,却隐藏着一个不为人知的秘密,而她并不想说出去,因为她只是单纯的想保护她所心爱的人。那个秘密是什么?她所暗恋的人又是谁呢?一切答案由你来揭晓...
  • 我们一起混过

    我们一起混过

    我们也曾年轻,有着满腔热血,我们的青春,自己做主
  • 数据封神之我为赵公明

    数据封神之我为赵公明

    一个金仙多如狗,法宝多如草的时代,并非洪荒,而是封神。既然我是赵公明,那文财神的位置就留给别人吧。既然封神之事本是弥封无影,死后见明。那且看我如何能使弥封反转过,又将日月逆周旋。
  • 穿越之凤舞异世界

    穿越之凤舞异世界

    从卑微的舞伎到诸侯王正妃,穿越千年,不妨碍“我”过得更精彩!目标:爬得更高,过得更好。至于节操、底线、良心?呵呵,那是什么?可以吃吗?