It seems strange to me, said cleanthes,
that you, DEMEA, who are so sincere in the cause of
religion, should still maintain the mysterious, incomprehensible
nature of the Deity, and should insist so strenuously
that he has no manner of likeness or resemblance to
human creatures. The Deity, I can readily allow,
possesses many powers and attributes of which we can
have no comprehension: But if our ideas, so far
as they go, be not just, and adequate, and correspondent
to his real nature, I know not what there is in this
subject worth insisting on. Is the name, without
any meaning, of such mighty importance? Or how
do you mystics, who maintain the absolute incomprehensibility
of the Deity, differ from Sceptics or Atheists, who
assert, that the first cause of all is unknown and
unintelligible? Their temerity must be very great,
if, after rejecting the production by a mind, I mean
a mind resembling the human, (for I know of no other,)
they pretend to assign, with certainty, any other specific
intelligible cause: And their conscience must
be very scrupulous indeed, if they refuse to call
the universal unknown cause a God or Deity; and to
bestow on him as many sublime eulogies and unmeaning
epithets as you shall please to require of them.
Who could imagine, replied DEMEA,
that cleanthes, the calm philosophical cleanthes,
would attempt to refute his antagonists by affixing
a nickname to them; and, like the common bigots and
inquisitors of the age, have recourse to invective
and declamation, instead of reasoning? Or does
he not perceive, that these topics are easily retorted,
and that Anthropomorphite is an appellation as invidious,
and implies as dangerous consequences, as the epithet
of Mystic, with which he has honoured us? In
reality, cleanthes, consider what it is you assert
when you represent the Deity as similar to a human
mind and understanding. What is the soul of man?
A composition of various faculties, passions, sentiments,
ideas; united, indeed, into one self or person, but
still distinct from each other. When it reasons,
the ideas, which are the parts of its discourse, arrange
themselves in a certain form or order; which is not
preserved entire for a moment, but immediately gives
place to another arrangement. New opinions, new
passions, new affections, new feelings arise, which
continually diversify the mental scene, and produce
in it the greatest variety and most rapid succession
imaginable. How is this compatible with that
perfect immutability and simplicity which all true
Theists ascribe to the Deity? By the same act,
say they, he sees past, present, and future:
His love and hatred, his mercy and justice, are one
individual operation: He is entire in every point
of space; and complete in every instant of duration.
No succession, no change, no acquisition, no diminution.
What he is implies not in it any shadow of distinction
or diversity. And what he is this moment he ever
has been, and ever will be, without any new judgement,
sentiment, or operation. He stands fixed in one
simple, perfect state: nor can you ever say, with
any propriety, that this act of his is different from
that other; or that this judgement or idea has been
lately formed, and will give place, by succession,
to any different judgement or idea.
I can readily allow, said cleanthes,
that those who maintain the perfect simplicity of
the Supreme Being, to the extent in which you have
explained it, are complete Mystics, and chargeable
with all the consequences which I have drawn from
their opinion. They are, in a word, Atheists,
without knowing it. For though it be allowed,
that the Deity possesses attributes of which we have
no comprehension, yet ought we never to ascribe to
him any attributes which are absolutely incompatible
with that intelligent nature essential to him.
A mind, whose acts and sentiments and ideas are not
distinct and successive; one, that is wholly simple,
and totally immutable, is a mind which has no thought,
no reason, no will, no sentiment, no love, no hatred;
or, in a word, is no mind at all. It is an abuse
of terms to give it that appellation; and we may as
well speak of limited extension without figure, or
of number without composition.
Pray consider, said Philo, whom
you are at present inveighing against. You are
honouring with the appellation of Atheist all the sound,
orthodox divines, almost, who have treated of this
subject; and you will at last be, yourself, found,
according to your reckoning, the only sound Theist
in the world. But if idolaters be Atheists, as,
I think, may justly be asserted, and Christian Theologians
the same, what becomes of the argument, so much celebrated,
derived from the universal consent of mankind?
But because I know you are not much
swayed by names and authorities, I shall endeavour
to show you, a little more distinctly, the inconveniences
of that Anthropomorphism, which you have embraced;
and shall prove, that there is no ground to suppose
a plan of the world to be formed in the Divine mind,
consisting of distinct ideas, differently arranged,
in the same manner as an architect forms in his head
the plan of a house which he intends to execute.
It is not easy, I own, to see what
is gained by this supposition, whether we judge of
the matter by Reason or by Experience. We are
still obliged to mount higher, in order to find the
cause of this cause, which you had assigned as satisfactory
and conclusive.
If Reason (I mean abstract reason,
derived from inquiries a priori) be not alike mute
with regard to all questions concerning cause and effect,
this sentence at least it will venture to pronounce,
That a mental world, or universe of ideas, requires
a cause as much, as does a material world, or universe
of objects; and, if similar in its arrangement, must
require a similar cause. For what is there in
this subject, which should occasion a different conclusion
or inference? In an abstract view, they are entirely
alike; and no difficulty attends the one supposition,
which is not common to both of them.
Again, when we will needs force Experience
to pronounce some sentence, even on these subjects
which lie beyond her sphere, neither can she perceive
any material difference in this particular, between
these two kinds of worlds; but finds them to be governed
by similar principles, and to depend upon an equal
variety of causes in their operations. We have
specimens in miniature of both of them. Our own
mind resembles the one; a vegetable or animal body
the other. Let experience, therefore, judge from
these samples. Nothing seems more delicate, with
regard to its causes, than thought; and as these causes
never operate in two persons after the same manner,
so we never find two persons who think exactly alike.
Nor indeed does the same person think exactly alike
at any two different periods of time. A difference
of age, of the disposition of his body, of weather,
of food, of company, of books, of passions; any of
these particulars, or others more minute, are sufficient
to alter the curious machinery of thought, and communicate
to it very different movements and operations.
As far as we can judge, vegetables and animal bodies
are not more delicate in their motions, nor depend
upon a greater variety or more curious adjustment
of springs and principles.
How, therefore, shall we satisfy ourselves
concerning the cause of that Being whom you suppose
the Author of Nature, or, according to your system
of Anthropomorphism, the ideal world, into which you
trace the material? Have we not the same reason
to trace that ideal world into another ideal world,
or new intelligent principle? But if we stop,
and go no further; why go so far? why not stop at
the material world? How can we satisfy ourselves
without going on in infinitum? And, after all,
what satisfaction is there in that infinite progression?
Let us remember the story of the Indian philosopher
and his elephant. It was never more applicable
than to the present subject. If the material world
rests upon a similar ideal world, this ideal world
must rest upon some other; and so on, without end.
It were better, therefore, never to look beyond the
present material world. By supposing it to contain
the principle of its order within itself, we really
assert it to be God; and the sooner we arrive at that
Divine Being, so much the better. When you go
one step beyond the mundane system, you only excite
an inquisitive humour which it is impossible ever
to satisfy.
To say, that the different ideas which
compose the reason of the Supreme Being, fall into
order of themselves, and by their own nature, is really
to talk without any precise meaning. If it has
a meaning, I would fain know, why it is not as good
sense to say, that the parts of the material world
fall into order of themselves and by their own nature.
Can the one opinion be intelligible, while the other
is not so?
We have, indeed, experience of ideas
which fall into order of themselves, and without any
known cause. But, I am sure, we have a much larger
experience of matter which does the same; as, in all
instances of generation and vegetation, where the
accurate analysis of the cause exceeds all human comprehension.
We have also experience of particular systems of thought
and of matter which have no order; of the first in
madness, of the second in corruption. Why, then,
should we think, that order is more essential to one
than the other? And if it requires a cause in
both, what do we gain by your system, in tracing the
universe of objects into a similar universe of ideas?
The first step which we make leads us on for ever.
It were, therefore, wise in us to limit all our inquiries
to the present world, without looking further.
No satisfaction can ever be attained by these speculations,
which so far exceed the narrow bounds of human understanding.
It was usual with the PERIPATETICS,
you know, cleanthes, when the cause of any phenomenon
was demanded, to have recourse to their faculties or
occult qualities; and to say, for instance, that bread
nourished by its nutritive faculty, and senna purged
by its purgative. But it has been discovered,
that this subterfuge was nothing but the disguise of
ignorance; and that these philosophers, though less
ingenuous, really said the same thing with the sceptics
or the vulgar, who fairly confessed that they knew
not the cause of these phenomena. In like manner,
when it is asked, what cause produces order in the
ideas of the Supreme Being; can any other reason be
assigned by you, Anthropomorphites, than that it is
a rational faculty, and that such is the nature of
the Deity? But why a similar answer will not
be equally satisfactory in accounting for the order
of the world, without having recourse to any such intelligent
creator as you insist on, may be difficult to determine.
It is only to say, that such is the nature of material
objects, and that they are all originally possessed
of a faculty of order and proportion. These are
only more learned and elaborate ways of confessing
our ignorance; nor has the one hypothesis any real
advantage above the other, except in its greater conformity
to vulgar prejudices.
You have displayed this argument with
great emphasis, replied cleanthes: You seem
not sensible how easy it is to answer it. Even
in common life, if I assign a cause for any event,
is it any objection, Philo, that I cannot assign
the cause of that cause, and answer every new question
which may incessantly be started? And what philosophers
could possibly submit to so rigid a rule? philosophers,
who confess ultimate causes to be totally unknown;
and are sensible, that the most refined principles
into which they trace the phenomena, are still to them
as inexplicable as these phenomena themselves are
to the vulgar. The order and arrangement of nature,
the curious adjustment of final causes, the plain use
and intention of every part and organ; all these bespeak
in the clearest language an intelligent cause or author.
The heavens and the earth join in the same testimony:
The whole chorus of Nature raises one hymn to the
praises of its Creator. You alone, or almost alone,
disturb this general harmony. You start abstruse
doubts, cavils, and objections: You ask me, what
is the cause of this cause? I know not; I care
not; that concerns not me. I have found a Deity;
and here I stop my inquiry. Let those go further,
who are wiser or more enterprising.
I pretend to be neither, replied Philo:
And for that very reason, I should never perhaps have
attempted to go so far; especially when I am sensible,
that I must at last be contented to sit down with the
same answer, which, without further trouble, might
have satisfied me from the beginning. If I am
still to remain in utter ignorance of causes, and can
absolutely give an explication of nothing, I shall
never esteem it any advantage to shove off for a moment
a difficulty, which, you acknowledge, must immediately,
in its full force, recur upon me. Naturalists
indeed very justly explain particular effects by more
general causes, though these general causes themselves
should remain in the end totally inexplicable; but
they never surely thought it satisfactory to explain
a particular effect by a particular cause, which was
no more to be accounted for than the effect itself.
An ideal system, arranged of itself, without a precedent
design, is not a whit more explicable than a material
one, which attains its order in a like manner; nor
is there any more difficulty in the latter supposition
than in the former.