登陆注册
14365900000009

第9章

By these limits, accordingly, Bentham's knowledge of human nature is bounded. It is wholly empirical; and the empiricism of one who has had little experience. He had neither internal experience nor external; the quiet, even tenor of his life, and his healthiness of mind, conspired to exclude him from both. He never knew prosperity and adversity, passion nor satiety. he never had even the experiences which sickness gives; he lived from childhood to the age of eighty-five in boyish health. He knew no dejection, no heaviness of heart. He never felt life a sore and a weary burthen. He was a boy to the last.

Self-consciousness, that daemon of the men of genius of our time, from Wordsworth to Byron, from Goethe to Chateaubriand, and to which this age owes so much both of its cheerful and its mournful wisdom, never was awakened in him. How much of human nature slumbered in him he knew not, neither can we know. He had never been made alive to the unseen influences which were acting on himself, nor consequently on his fellow-creatures. Other ages and other nations were a blank to him for purposes of instruction. He measured them but by one standard; their knowledge of facts, and their capability to take correct views of utility, and merge all other objects in it. His own lot was cast in a generation of the leanest and barrenest men whom England had yet produced, and he was an old man when a better race came in with the present century. He saw accordingly in man little but what the vulgarest eye can see; recognized no diversities of character but such as he who runs may read. Knowing so little of human feelings, he knew still less of the influences by which those feelings are formed: all the more subtle workings both of the mind upon itself, and of external things upon the mind, escaped him; and no one, probably, who, in a highly instructed age, ever attempted to give a rule to all human conduct, set out with a more limited conception either of the agencies by which human conduct is, or of those by which it should be, influenced.

This, then, is our idea of Bentham. He was a man both of remarkable endowments for philosophy, and of remarkable deficiencies for it: fitted, beyond almost any man, for drawing from his premises, conclusions not only correct, but sufficiently precise and specific to be practical: but whose general conception of human nature and life furnished him with an unusually slender stock of premises. It is obvious what would be likely to be achieved by such a man; what a thinker, thus gifted and thus disqualified, could do in philosophy. He could, with close and accurate logic, hunt half-truths to their consequences and practical applications, on a scale both of greatness and of minuteness not previously exemplified; and this is the character which posterity will probably assign to Bentham.

We express our sincere and well-considered conviction when we say, that there is hardly anything positive in Bentham's philosophy which is not true: that when his practical conclusions are erroneous, which in our opinion they are very often, it is not because the considerations which he urges are not rational and valid in themselves, but because some more important principle, which he did not perceive, supersedes those considerations, and turns the scale. The bad part of his writings is his resolute denial of all that he does not see, of all truths but those which he recognizes. By that alone has he exercised any bad influence upon his age; by that he has, not created a school of deniers, for this is an ignorant prejudice, but put himself at the head of the school which exists always, though it does not always find a great man to give it the sanction of philosophy.

thrown the mantle of intellect over the natural tendency of men in all ages to deny or disparage all feelings and mental states of which they have no consciousness in themselves.

The truths which are not Bentham's, which his philosophy takes no account of, are many and important; but his non-recognition of them does not put them out of existence; they are still with us, and it is a comparatively easy task that is reserved for us, to harmonize those truths with his. To reject his half of the truth because he overlooked the other half, would be to fall into his error without having his excuse. For our own part, we have a large tolerance for one-eyed men, provided their one eye is a penetrating one: if they saw more, they probably would not see so keenly, nor so eagerly pursue one course of inquiry. Almost all rich veins of original and striking speculation have been opened by systematic half-thinkers: though whether these new thoughts drive out others as good, or are peacefully superadded to them, depends on whether these half-thinkers are or are not followed in the same track by complete thinkers. The field of man's nature and life cannot be too much worked, or in too many directions; until every clod is turned up the work is imperfect; no whole truth is possible but by combining the points of view of all the fractional truths, nor, therefore, until it has been fully seen what each fractional truth can do by itself.

What Bentham's fractional truths could do, there is no such good means of showing as by a review of his philosophy: and such a review, though inevitably a most brief and general one, it is now necessary to attempt.

The first question in regard to any man of speculation is, what is his theory of human life? In the minds of many philosophers, whatever theory they have of this sort is latent, and it would be a revelation to themselves to have it pointed out to them in their writings as others can see it, unconsciously moulding everything to its own likeness. But Bentham always knew his own premises, and made his reader know them: it was not his custom to leave the theoretic grounds of his practical conclusions to conjecture. Few great thinkers have afforded the means of assigning with so much certainty the exact conception which they had formed of man and of man's life.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 红日青天白云下

    红日青天白云下

    这世道很玄很难很怪百口无言当画面中没有对白之时或已了然
  • 倒置的时空

    倒置的时空

    这是一个关于梦境与现实的话题,主要描述主人公内心世界与生活的故事。
  • 女扮男装:奔跑吧偶像

    女扮男装:奔跑吧偶像

    为了让自己的偶像重回赛道,决定女扮男装进男校,鼓励偶像
  • 三国萌物语

    三国萌物语

    你见过哪个穿越到异世界的人不是个个呼风唤雨、无所不能的,再不济也是后宫成群、能力非凡的吧~可是他真不是。。。你见过有谁TM刚出门就撞上不明物体,竟然还TM的穿越了啊???!!!他什么都不想,他就想回家,回到原来的世界去——你看看这个乱七八糟的异世界,都是些啥玩意啊:马超,马梦琪——这个三国时期蜀国有名的西凉死神。这个糟点先不提,关键是:竟然是她而不是他?这是搞啥玩意啊?这是个性转的异世界么?那关他什么事?其实,还真不关他什么事,因为全程就没过多描写过我们的猪脚多少O(∩_∩)O
  • 故事与他

    故事与他

    那一年夏季,她15岁时遇见了美好如他的17岁,整整十年,他们从相知,相识,走到了相爱。见过海的人不会太喜欢山见过雪的人不会太喜欢冰,所以当夏霏桐遇见了于晨阳,他就是她的海,他就是她的雪。自从遇见他,她在没有爱过任何一个人。最后他对她说,爱你没有后悔过,只是应该结束了。然后就突然没有了那份非要留下他的执拗。夏霏桐曾经以为他们能够在一起,可是他却给了她最大的错觉。他们的爱情经过时间的折磨,经过生活的磨练,经过所有的物是人非,最终她离开了他。
  • 权卿天下:蛇王小娇妻

    权卿天下:蛇王小娇妻

    “死女人,你抓到本尊重要部位了。”某女看着面前的小黑色,好奇的提起了它的尾巴,“哟呵,你还会说话啊!”某女将它高高提起,伸出修长的手指弹了一下它的脑袋。“死女人”某蛇暴怒的在某女的手上乱动着,可惜还是不能逃开她的魔爪。“相公,你摸到人家重要部位了。”某女眨巴眨巴大眼睛看着面前的妖孽男人。“没事,让为夫再摸会儿。”某蛇猥琐的伸出自己的手。“你去死。”某女一脚不小心把它踹下了床……
  • 大日如来剑印

    大日如来剑印

    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。
  • 蝶羽

    蝶羽

    天生面目丑陋的南夕颜,从小就有阴阳眼,一直以来没有朋友,遭受排挤。一次偶然的机会,放出了封印千年的一只蝴蝶妖,以失去珍贵的东西为代价,有了俊俏的面貌。原本以为能过上普通人一样生活的他,却发现事情并不那么简单……开始不断有妖会围在他的身边,身边的朋友一个个遭遇危险,看似偶然的相遇与遭遇,或许都是命中注定……
  • 罪蓉颜

    罪蓉颜

    十里红妆,火红嫁衣,她十七岁奉旨成婚,不懂情爱,不知阴谋,理所当然的用她的死换亲人的生。当长孙佳蓉死而复生,她换了身份容颜,为寻亲人踏上了这场诡异的和亲之旅。初尝情爱,首开心扉,然而变故突生。从此为家族生为家族死成了她摆不脱的宿命。她为家族生存尽忠守护,他为国之存亡尽忠死守。当爱情遇上国仇家恨,一切阴谋接肘而至。她的重生究竟是为爱为恨?这是一条不归路,踏上了就注定不能回头。
  • 唯仙是魔

    唯仙是魔

    浩荡仙路,崎岖何惧?杀戮何惧?地球末法,异界修行。持本心,转战浩荡天地。为长生,为超脱,为自在逍遥。