登陆注册
15299900000125

第125章

Locke has put into her mouth is mere stammering, and is, in my opinion, as contemptible as the matter which be has made her utter.Mr.Hobbes I am not so well acquainted with; but as be is of the same heresy, that is, one of those who pretend to philosophize, without the assistance of the ancients, I suppose he has succeeded as ill.As for myself, I am meditating great things in the literary way, but I am not sure that Iwill ever execute any thing.I have one work in view, which I think would not make a bad second part, if it were executed, to your I Hermes,'-- I mean a work showing the origin and progress of this most wonderful of all the arts of man, the art of speech.What set me upon this train of thinking was the study of some most barbarous and imperfect languages, spoken in America, from grammars and dictionaries which I had {250} out of the King's Library, when I was last at Paris.Besides the curiosity of seeing the process of so wonderful an art, in tracing the progress of language, you at the same time trace the progress of the human understanding, and I think I have already collected materials from which a very good history of the human mind might be formed,-- better, at least, than that which Mr.Locke has given us.This, if I had leisure, Iwould make part of a much greater work which I project, viz., a History of fan; in which I would propose to trace him through the several stages of his existence;for there is a progression of our species from a state little better than mere brutality to that most perfect state you describe in ancient Greece, which is really amazing, and peculiar to our species.But the business of a laborious profession will, I'm afraid, prevent me from executing this, and several other projects which Ihave had in my head.But with respect to you, being now eased of the care of public affairs, the world will certainly exact from you an account of your leisure;especially as you have given them such pledges of your capacity to instruct and entertain them.You have done enough upon grammar.But I would have you do something upon logic, to show an ignorant age that the greatest discovery in science ever made by any one man is the discovery of the Syllogism by Aristotle."

He has two great philosophic works.The first is "Ancient Metaphysics, or the Science of Universals; with an Appendix containing an Examination of the Principles of Sir Isaac Newton's Philosophy." It is in six quarto volumes, averaging four hundred pages each.He treats first of metaphysics and then of man.The proper subject of metaphysics is " mind pure and separate from all matter." In nature, all is either body or mind or their accidents.There is not in the universe, so far as our knowledge extends, any body without mind; they are never separated in the material world." What is moved I call body, what moves is called mind." " Under mind in this definition I include, 1st, the rational and intellectual; 2d, the animal life; 3d, the principle in the vegetable by which it is nourished, grows, and produces its like, and which, therefore, is commonly called the vegetable life; and 4th, the motive principle, which I understand to be in all bodies, even such as are thought to be inanimate." He says the Greek word denotes the three first kinds; the fourth, the motive, is not commonly in Greek called , but Aristotle says it is .He makes moving or producing motion an essential property of mind.In respect of quality, motion applies to mind as well as {251} body.By motion the whole business of nature above, below, and round about us is carried on." It is impossible that any thing can be generated, come to maturity, or be extinguished without passing from one state to another.Now that passage is motion." He proves the immateriality of mind in general, (1)from the nature of motion, (2) from the nature of body, (3)from the nature of mind.He establishes the two first <a priori>, and the third by a demonstration <ex absurdo>.He has then <a posteriori> proof." Sensation cannot be produced by a material cause; reasoning and consciousness far less."Coming to minds, he adopts the Aristotelean distinction between the gnostic and orective powers.The gnostic powers are sense, phantasy, and comparison.In sense, the mind is not conversant with the visible object itself, but with the image or , as the Epicureans called it, thrown off from the object.The essential distinction between sense and phantasia is, that what we perceive by the sense is present and operating upon the sense, whereas the object of the imagination is not present.Phantasy is only of sensible objects.Memory is only of ideas, and belongs exclusively to man." Brutes have no idea of time, or of first and last.

Phantasy serves to them the purpose of memory." The object is painted on the brute's phantasia, but without any perception of the time when he first saw it.Sense and phantasy perceive particular things, -- comparison, generals or ideas.He thinks that brutes possess the comparative faculty, and that here the mind of the brute acts without the assistance of the body.As to will, he reckons " all will as free, and, at the same time, it is necessary; but of a necessity very different from material or physical." Much of this psychology is avowedly taken from Aristotle, but at the same time exhibits traces of shrewdness and independence, and, it has to be added, of eccentricity.

He criticises Locke's theory of the origin of ideas.He acknowledges no innate ideas, if we mean ideas present to the mind, and contemplated before they are excited by objects; but they are there though "latent and unproductive," and are there even before our existence in this world.Nature, however, has so ordained it, that they can only be excited by the impulse of objects upon our organs of sense." It should be noticed here, that notwithstanding the prominence given to it by {252} Locke, Lord Monboddo has no recognition of reflection or consciousness as a separate source of ideas.

同类推荐
  • 圣妙吉祥真实名经

    圣妙吉祥真实名经

    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。
  • 六十种曲种玉记

    六十种曲种玉记

    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。
  • 困学纪闻

    困学纪闻

    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。
  • 莅蒙平政录

    莅蒙平政录

    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。
  • 罗天大醮早朝科

    罗天大醮早朝科

    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
  • 凯爷我对你动了心

    凯爷我对你动了心

    (本书中的男主是王俊凯,不喜欢本小说的人请勿打开,此书献给四叶草和小螃蟹,当然也希望有更多的读者支持我。)他是娱乐圈一颗冉冉升起的新星,而她是刚从国外回来的富家女,是缘分还是天意让他们两个认识彼此。(介绍中不多透露了,喜欢点开观看吧。)
  • 我的公主休想跑

    我的公主休想跑

    其实每个女孩都希望自己是一个公主吧?每个女孩子都有一个公主梦......这里写了3个公主记录了她们的生活,直到她们一个个的遇到自己的另一半,她们完美的生活才就此开始......
  • 掌中论

    掌中论

    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。
  • 基督山伯爵(上卷)

    基督山伯爵(上卷)

    小说主要讲述的十九世纪一位名叫爱德蒙·堂泰斯的大副受到陷害后的悲惨遭遇以及日后以基督山伯爵身份成功复仇的故事。
  • 九天剑君

    九天剑君

    闷骚宅男叶天上网无意间穿越,并成了上清门徒前往异世历练,得法诀《九天剑典》!破红尘、斩妖兽、驱邪魔!猥琐难掩其霸道的本性,无耻遮盖不住其风骚的人生!前世压抑的情感得以释放,且看这世他将带你感受不一样的精彩人生。
  • 华人十大科学家:丁肇中

    华人十大科学家:丁肇中

    丁肇中(Samuel Chao ChungTing)(1936年1月27日-),1936年出生,美国实验物理学家。汉族,祖籍山东省日照市涛雒,华裔美国人,现任美国麻省理工学院教授,曾获得1976年诺贝尔物理学奖。他曾发现一种新的基本粒子,并以物理文献中习惯用来表示电磁流的拉丁字母“J”将那种新粒子命名为“J粒子”。《丁肇中》由冯蓓佳、冯成奇编著,是“华人十大科学家”系列丛书之一。
  • 穿越之明朝当皇帝

    穿越之明朝当皇帝

    李亮作为一个来自21世纪理工半学霸,只因用脑过渡意外穿越到明朝有明的木匠皇帝身上,作为21世纪的宅男加学霸突然是选择随波逐流还是佳丽三千还是争霸天下呢?
  • 石头的春天

    石头的春天

    石小春,她也不知道自己这名字到底是谁起的,都说起二狗啊丫蛋啊这样的贱名字孩子好养,她石小春还是高出那么0.01单位的档次的(她自认为),但是命硬倒是真的。苑新醇----------一语天然万古新,豪华落尽见真淳,人家连名字都是古风古韵的,好比十八档悬疑惊悚狗血伦理言情小说里的男主角之名……..扯远了,总之三十八杆子也碰不到边儿的两个人竟然打破了两条平行线不可能相交的定理直冲冲的碰撞了,至于擦没擦出火花……
  • 校花的极品预言师

    校花的极品预言师

    【火爆新书】一场考试,改变了我的人生,让我拥有一种预知未来的资本。考试提前知道答案,全部满分。买彩票,百分百必中。清纯校花,看穿心思,成就一代魅力天王!
  • 远方.南方北方

    远方.南方北方

    人生之感,怕是竟无处落笔。点滴生活,诉尽人生之苦乐。随笔。