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Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous in Opposition to Sceptics and Atheists. The Harvard
Classics. 1909–14. |
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The First Dialogue |
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PHILONOUS.
Good morrow, Hylas: I did not expect to find you abroad so early. |
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Hylas. It is indeed something unusual;
but my thoughts were so taken up with a subject I was discoursing of last
night, that finding I could not sleep, I resolved to rise and take a turn in
the garden. |
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Phil. It happened well, to let you see
what innocent and agreeable pleasures you lose every morning. Can there be a
pleasanter time of the day, or a more delightful season of the year? That
purple sky, those wild but sweet notes of birds, the fragrant bloom upon the
trees and flowers, the gentle influence of the rising sun, these and a
thousand nameless beauties of nature inspire the soul with secret transports;
its faculties too being at this time fresh and lively, are fit for those
meditations, which the solitude of a garden and tranquillity of the morning
naturally dispose us to. But I am afraid I interrupt 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 will permit me to go on in the same vein; not that I
would by any means deprive myself of your company, for my thoughts always
flow more easily in conversation with a friend, than when I am alone: but my
request is, that you would suffer me to impart my reflexions to you. |
4 |
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Phil. With all my heart, it is what I
should have requested myself if you had not prevented me. |
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Hyl. I was considering the odd fate of
those men who have in all ages, through an affectation of being distinguished
from the vulgar, or some unaccountable turn of thought, pretended either to
believe nothing at all, or to believe the most extravagant things in the
world. This however might be borne, if their paradoxes and scepticism did not
draw after them some consequences of general disadvantage to mankind. But the
mischief lieth here; that when men of less leisure see them who are supposed
to have spent their whole time in the pursuits of knowledge professing an
entire ignorance of all things, or advancing such notions as are repugnant to
plain and commonly received principles, they will be tempted to entertain
suspicions concerning the most important truths, which they had hitherto held
sacred and unquestionable. |
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Phil. I entirely agree with you, as to
the ill tendency of the affected doubts of some philosophers, and fantastical
conceits of others. I am even so far gone of late in this way of thinking,
that I have quitted several of the sublime notions I had got in their schools
for vulgar opinions. And I give it you on my word; since this revolt from
metaphysical notions to the plain dictates of nature and common sense, I find
my understanding strangely enlightened, so that I can now easily comprehend a
great many things which before were all mystery and riddle. |
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Hyl. I am glad to find there was
nothing in the accounts I heard of you. |
8 |
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Phil. Pray, what were those? |
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Hyl. You were represented, in last
night’s conversation, as one who maintained the most extravagant opinion that
ever entered into the mind of man, to wit, that there is no such thing as material
substance in the world. |
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Phil. That there is no such thing as
what philosophers call material substance, I am seriously
persuaded: but, if I were made to see anything absurd or sceptical in this, I
should then have the same reason to renounce this that I imagine I have now
to reject the contrary opinion. |
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Hyl. What I can anything be more
fantastical, more repugnant to Common Sense, or a more manifest piece of
Scepticism, than to believe there is no such thing as matter? |
12 |
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Phil. Softly, good Hylas. What if it
should prove that you, who hold there is, are, by virtue of that opinion, a
greater sceptic, and maintain more paradoxes and repugnances to Common Sense,
than I who believe no such thing? |
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Hyl. You may as soon persuade me, the part
is greater than the whole, as that, in order to avoid absurdity and
Scepticism, I 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 true, which upon examination shall appear most agreeable
to Common Sense, and remote from Scepticism? |
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Hyl. With all my heart. Since you are
for raising disputes about the plainest things in nature, I am content for
once to hear what you have to say. |
16 |
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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 everything. |
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Phil. He then who entertains no doubts
concerning some particular point, with regard to that point cannot be thought
a sceptic. |
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Hyl. I agree with you. |
20 |
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Phil. Whether doth doubting consist in
embracing the affirmative or negative side of a question? |
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Hyl. In neither; for whoever
understands English cannot 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 to doubt of it, than he who affirmeth it with the same
degree of assurance. |
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Hyl. True. |
24 |
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Phil. And, consequently, for such his
denial is no more to 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 pronounce me a sceptic, because I deny what you
affirm, to wit, the existence of Matter? Since, for aught you can tell, I am
as peremptory in my denial, as you in your affirmation. |
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Hyl. Hold, Philonous, I have been a
little out in my definition; but every false step a man makes in discourse is
not to be insisted on. I said indeed that a sceptic was one who
doubted of everything; but I should have added, or who denies the reality and
truth of things. |
28 |
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Phil. What things? Do you mean the
principles and theorems of sciences? But these you know are universal
intellectual notions, and consequently independent of Matter. The denial
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 you of distrusting the senses, of denying the real
existence of sensible things, or pretending to know nothing of them. Is not
this sufficient to denominate a man a sceptic? |
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Phil. Shall we therefore examine which
of us it is that denies the reality of sensible things, or professes the
greatest ignorance of them; since, if I take you rightly, he is to be
esteemed the greatest sceptic? |
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Hyl. That is what I desire. |
32 |
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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 you imagine that I mean anything else? |
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Phil. Pardon me, Hylas, if I am
desirous clearly to apprehend your notions, since this may much shorten our
inquiry. Suffer me then to ask you this farther question. Are those things
only perceived by the senses which are perceived immediately? Or, may those
things properly be said to be sensible which are perceived mediately,
or not without the intervention of others? |
36 |
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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 the letters; but mediately, or by means of these,
are suggested to my mind the notions of God, virtue, truth, &c. Now, that
the letters are truly sensible things, or perceived by sense, there is no
doubt: but I would know whether you take the things suggested by them to be
so too. |
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Hyl. No, certainly: it were absurd to
think God or virtue sensible things; though they may be
signified and suggested to the mind by sensible marks, with which they have
an arbitrary connexion. |
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Phil. It seems then, that by sensible
things you mean those only which can be perceived immediately by
sense? |
40 |
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Hyl. Right. |
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Phil. Doth it not follow from this,
that though I see one part of the sky red, and another blue, and that my
reason doth thence evidently conclude there must be some cause of that
diversity of colours, yet that cause cannot be said to be a 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 I cannot be said to hear the causes of those sounds? |
44 |
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Hyl. You cannot. |
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Phil. And when by my touch I perceive a
thing to be hot and heavy, I cannot say, with any truth or propriety, that I
feel the cause of its heat or weight? |
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Hyl. To prevent any more questions of
this kind, I tell you once for all, that by sensible things I mean
those only which are perceived by sense; and that in truth the senses
perceive nothing which they do not perceive immediately: for they make
no inferences. The deducing therefore of causes or occasions from effects and
appearances, which alone are perceived by sense, entirely relates to reason. |
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Phil. This point then is agreed between
us—That sensible things are those only which are immediately perceived by
sense. You will farther inform me, whether we immediately perceive by
sight anything beside light, and colours, and figures; or by hearing,
anything but sounds; by the palate, anything beside tastes; by the smell,
beside odours; or by the touch, more than tangible qualities. |
48 |
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Hyl. We do not. |
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Phil. It seems, therefore, that if you
take away all sensible qualities, there remains nothing sensible? |
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Hyl. I grant it. |
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Phil. Sensible things therefore are
nothing else but so many sensible qualities, or combinations of sensible
qualities? |
52 |
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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 being perceived? or, is it something distinct from
their being perceived, and that bears no relation to the mind? |
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Hyl. To exist is one thing, and
to be perceived is another. |
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Phil. I speak with regard to sensible
things only. And of these I ask, whether by their real existence you mean a
subsistence exterior to the mind, and distinct from their being perceived? |
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Hyl. I mean a real absolute being,
distinct from, and without any relation to, their being perceived. |
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Phil. Heat therefore, if it be allowed
a real being, must exist without the mind? |
60 |
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Hyl. It must. |
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Phil. Tell me, Hylas, is this real
existence equally compatible to all degrees of heat, which we perceive; or is
there any reason why we should attribute it to some, and deny it to 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 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 respect of both. They are both perceived by sense; nay, the
greater degree of heat is more sensibly perceived; and consequently, if there
is any difference, we are more certain of its real existence than we can be
of the reality of a lesser degree. |
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Phil. But is not the most vehement and
intense degree of 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 pleasure? |
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Hyl. No, certainly. |
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Phil. Is your material substance a
senseless being, or a 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? |
72 |
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Hyl. By no means. |
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Phil. Nor consequently of the greatest
heat perceived by 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 it a material substance, or no? |
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Hyl. It is a material substance with
the sensible qualities inhering in it. |
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Phil. How then can a great heat exist
in it, since you own it cannot in a material substance? I desire you would
clear this point. |
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Hyl. Hold, Philonous, I fear I was out
in yielding intense heat to be a pain. It should seem rather, that pain is
something distinct from heat, and the consequence or effect of it. |
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Phil. Upon putting your hand near the
fire, do you perceive one simple uniform sensation, or two distinct
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? |
84 |
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Hyl. True. |
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Phil. Seeing therefore they are both
immediately perceived at the same time, and the fire affects you only with
one simple or uncompounded idea, it follows that this same simple idea is
both the intense heat immediately perceived, and the pain; and, consequently,
that the intense heat immediately perceived is 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 conceive a vehement sensation to be without pain or
pleasure. |
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Hyl. I cannot. |
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Phil. Or can you frame to yourself an
idea of sensible pain or pleasure in general, abstracted from every
particular 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 nothing distinct from those sensations or ideas, in an
intense degree? |
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Hyl. It is undeniable; and, to speak
the truth, I begin to suspect a very great heat cannot exist but in a mind
perceiving it. |
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Phil. What! are you then in that
sceptical state of suspense, between affirming and denying? |
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Hyl. I think I may be positive in the point.
A very violent and painful heat cannot exist without the mind. |
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Phil. It hath not therefore according
to you, any real being? |
96 |
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Hyl. I own it. |
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Phil. Is it therefore certain, that
there is no body in nature really hot? |
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Hyl. I have not denied there is any
real heat in bodies. I 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 were equally real; or, if there was any difference, that
the greater were more undoubtedly real than the lesser? |
100 |
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Hyl. True: but it was because I did not
then consider the ground there is for distinguishing between them, which I
now plainly see. And it is this: because intense heat is nothing else but a
particular kind of painful sensation; and pain cannot exist but in a
perceiving being; it follows that no intense heat can really exist in an
unperceiving corporeal substance. But this is no reason why we should deny
heat in an inferior degree to exist in such a substance. |
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Phil. But how shall we be able to
discern those degrees of heat which exist only in the mind from those which
exist without it? |
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Hyl. That is no difficult matter. You
know the least pain cannot exist unperceived; whatever, therefore, degree of
heat is a pain exists only in the mind. But, as for all other degrees of
heat, nothing obliges us to think the same of them. |
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Phil. I think you granted before that
no unperceiving being was capable of pleasure, any more than of pain. |
104 |
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Hyl. I did. |
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Phil. And is not warmth, or a more
gentle degree of heat 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 unperceiving substance, or body. |
108 |
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Hyl. So it seems. |
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Phil. Since, therefore, as well those
degrees of heat that are not painful, as those that are, can exist only in a
thinking substance; may we not conclude that external bodies are absolutely
incapable of any degree of heat whatsoever? |
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Hyl. On second thoughts, I do not think
it so evident that 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 pleasure as heat is a pain. But, if you grant it to be even a
small pleasure, it serves to make good my conclusion. |
112 |
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Hyl. I could rather call it an indolence.
It seems to be nothing more than a privation of both pain and pleasure. And
that such a quality or state as this may agree to an unthinking substance, I
hope you will not deny. |
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Phil. If you are resolved to maintain
that warmth, or a gentle degree of heat, is no pleasure, I know not how to
convince you otherwise than by appealing to your own sense. But what think
you of cold? |
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Hyl. The same that I do of heat. An
intense degree of cold is a pain; for to feel a very great cold, is to
perceive a great uneasiness: it cannot therefore exist without the mind; but
a 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 our own, we perceive a moderate degree of heat, must be
concluded to have a moderate degree of heat or warmth in them; and those,
upon whose application we feel a like degree of cold, must be thought to have
cold in them. |
116 |
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Hyl. They must. |
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Phil. Can any doctrine be true that
necessarily leads a 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 should be at the same time both cold and warm? |
120 |
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Hyl. It is. |
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Phil. Suppose now one of your hands
hot, and the other cold, and that they are both at once put into the same
vessel of water, in an intermediate state; will not the water seem 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 conclude it is really both cold and warm at the same time,
that is, according to your own concession, to believe an absurdity? |
124 |
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Hyl. I confess it seems so. |
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Phil. Consequently, the principles
themselves are false, since you have granted that no true principle leads to
an absurdity. |
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Hyl. But, after all, can anything be
more absurd than to say, there is no heat in the fire? |
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Phil. To make the point still clearer;
tell me whether, in two cases exactly alike, we ought not to make the same
judgment? |
128 |
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.Hyl. We ought. |
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Phil. When a pin pricks your finger,
doth it not rend and divide the fibres of your flesh? |
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Hyl. It doth. |
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Phil. And when a coal burns your
finger, doth it any more? |
132 |
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Hyl. It doth not. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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? |
136 |
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Hyl. Then indeed you will have done
something to the purpose; but that is what I despair of seeing proved. |
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Phil. Let us examine them in order.
What think you of tastes—do they exist without the mind, or no? |
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Hyl. Can any man in his senses doubt
whether sugar is sweet, or wormwood bitter? |
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Phil. Inform me, Hylas. Is a sweet
taste a particular kind of pleasure or pleasant sensation, or is it not? |
140 |
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Hyl. It is. |
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Phil. And is not bitterness some kind
of uneasiness or pain? |
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Hyl. I grant it. |
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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? |
144 |
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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? |
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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? |
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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. |
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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? |
148 |
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Hyl. I acknowledge I know not how. |
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Phil. In the next place, odours
are to be considered. And, with regard to these, I would fain know whether
what hath been said of tastes doth not exactly agree to them? Are they not so
many pleasing or displeasing sensations? |
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Hyl. They are. |
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Phil. Can you then conceive it possible
that they should exist in an unperceiving thing? |
152 |
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Hyl. I cannot. |
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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? |
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Hyl. By no means. |
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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? |
156 |
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Hyl. I think so. |
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Phil. Then as to sounds, what
must we think of them: are they accidents really inherent in external bodies,
or not? |
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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. |
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Phil. What reason is there for that,
Hylas? |
160 |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Phil. What! is sound then a sensation? |
164 |
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Hyl. I tell you, as perceived by us, it
is a particular sensation in the mind. |
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Phil. And can any sensation exist
without the mind? |
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Hyl. No, certainly. |
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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? |
168 |
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Hyl. You must distinguish, Philonous,
between sound as it is 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. |
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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? |
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Hyl. I am. |
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Phil. Whatever therefore agrees to real
sound, may with truth be attributed to motion? |
172 |
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Hyl. It may. |
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Phil. It is then good sense to speak of
motion as of a thing that is loud, sweet, acute, or grave. |
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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? |
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Phil. It seems then there are two sorts
of sound—the one vulgar, or that which is heard, the other philosophical and
real? |
176 |
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Hyl. Even so. |
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Phil. And the latter consists in
motion? |
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Hyl. I told you so before. |
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Phil. Tell me, Hylas, to which of the
senses, think you, the idea of motion belongs? to the hearing? |
180 |
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Hyl. No, certainly; but to the sight
and touch. |
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Phil. It should follow then, that,
according to you, real sounds may possibly be seen or felt, but
never heard. |
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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. |
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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 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? |
184 |
|
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? |
188 |
|
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? |
192 |
|
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. |
196 |
|
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. |
200 |
|
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? |
204 |
|
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. |
208 |
|
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. |
212 |
|
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: 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? |
216 |
|
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? |
220 |
|
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 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? |
224 |
|
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. |
|
|
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. |
228 |
|
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? |
232 |
|
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? |
236 |
|
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; 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? |
240 |
|
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. |
244 |
|
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. |
248 |
|
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. |
252 |
|
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? |
|
|
Hyl. All this I grant. |
256 |
|
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. |
260 |
|
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. |
264 |
|
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? |
268 |
|
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.
[ 1 But, on the
other hand, should it not seem very odd, if the general reasoning 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.] |
|
|
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. |
272 |
|
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. |
276 |
|
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. |
280 |
|
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? |
|
|
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. |
284 |
|
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? |
288 |
|
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 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. |
292 |
|
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. |
296 |
|
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? |
|
|
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. |
300 |
|
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, 2 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? |
304 |
|
Phil. Since I cannot frame abstract
ideas at all, it is plain I cannot frame them by the help of pure
intellect; 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. |
308 |
|
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. |
312 |
|
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. |
316 |
|
Phil. It is then immediately perceived? |
|
|
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. |
320 |
|
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. |
324 |
|
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. |
328 |
|
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? |
|
|
Hyl. That is my meaning. |
332 |
|
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. |
336 |
|
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. |
340 |
|
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. |
344 |
|
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. |
348 |
|
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. |
352 |
|
Phil. You are then in these respects
altogether passive? |
|
|
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. |
356 |
|
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. |
360 |
|
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? |
364 |
|
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? |
|
|
Hyl. Right. |
|
|
Phil. Be pleased therefore to let me
know wherein that relation consists. |
368 |
|
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? |
372 |
|
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? |
376 |
|
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? |
380 |
|
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? |
384 |
|
Hyl. The very same. |
|
|
Phil. But, that one thing may stand
under or support another, must it not be extended? |
|
|
Hyl. It must. |
|
|
Phil. Is not therefore this supposition
liable to the same absurdity with the former? |
388 |
|
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? |
392 |
|
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? |
396 |
|
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 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. |
400 |
|
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? |
404 |
|
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? |
408 |
|
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? |
412 |
|
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? |
416 |
|
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? |
420 |
|
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. |
424 |
|
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. |
428 |
|
Hyl. It doth not; but still I know,
upon seeing an object, what object I shall perceive after having passed over
a certain distance: 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? |
432 |
|
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? |
436 |
|
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? |
440 |
|
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? |
444 |
|
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? |
448 |
|
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, 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? |
452 |
|
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 Cæsar, 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? |
456 |
|
Hyl. That is my meaning. |
|
|
Phil. And, in the same way that Julius
Cæsar, 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 Cæsar, do you see with your eyes any more than some
colours and figures, with a certain symmetry and composition of the whole? |
460 |
|
Hyl. Nothing else. |
|
|
Phil. And would not a man who had never
known anything of Julius Cæsar see as much? |
|
|
Hyl. He would. |
|
|
Phil. Consequently he hath his sight,
and the use of it, in as perfect a degree as you? |
464 |
|
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 Cæsar’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. |
468 |
|
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? |
472 |
|
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? |
476 |
|
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
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? |
480 |
|
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? |
484 |
|
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. |
488 |
|
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. |
|
|
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? |
492 |
|
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. |
496 |
|
Hyl. Agreed. |
|
|
|
|
Note 1. What follows, within brackets, is not
contained in the first and second editions. [back] |
|
Note 2. ‘Size or figure, or sensible
quality’—‘size, colour, &c,’ in the first and second editions. [back] |