It must be a slight fabric, indeed,
said DEMEA, which can be erected on so tottering a
foundation. While we are uncertain whether there
is one deity or many; whether the deity or deities,
to whom we owe our existence, be perfect or imperfect,
subordinate or supreme, dead or alive, what trust
or confidence can we repose in them? What devotion
or worship address to them? What veneration or
obedience pay them? To all the purposes of life
the theory of religion becomes altogether useless:
and even with regard to speculative consequences, its
uncertainty, according to you, must render it totally
precarious and unsatisfactory.
To render it still more unsatisfactory,
said Philo, there occurs to me another hypothesis,
which must acquire an air of probability from the
method of reasoning so much insisted on by cleanthes.
That like effects arise from like causes: this
principle he supposes the foundation of all religion.
But there is another principle of the same kind, no
less certain, and derived from the same source of
experience; that where several known circumstances
are observed to be similar, the unknown will also
be found similar. Thus, if we see the limbs of
a human body, we conclude that it is also attended
with a human head, though hid from us. Thus,
if we see, through a chink in a wall, a small part
of the sun, we conclude, that, were the wall removed,
we should see the whole body. In short, this
method of reasoning is so obvious and familiar, that
no scruple can ever be made with regard to its solidity.
Now, if we survey the universe, so
far as it falls under our knowledge, it bears a great
resemblance to an animal or organised body, and seems
actuated with a like principle of life and motion.
A continual circulation of matter in it produces no
disorder: a continual waste in every part is
incessantly repaired: the closest sympathy is
perceived throughout the entire system: and each
part or member, in performing its proper offices,
operates both to its own preservation and to that of
the whole. The world, therefore, I infer, is
an animal; and the Deity is the soul of the world,
actuating it, and actuated by it.
You have too much learning, cleanthes,
to be at all surprised at this opinion, which, you
know, was maintained by almost all the Theists of
antiquity, and chiefly prevails in their discourses
and reasonings. For though, sometimes, the ancient
philosophers reason from final causes, as if they
thought the world the workmanship of God; yet it appears
rather their favourite notion to consider it as his
body, whose organisation renders it subservient to
him. And it must be confessed, that, as the universe
resembles more a human body than it does the works
of human art and contrivance, if our limited analogy
could ever, with any propriety, be extended to the
whole of nature, the inference seems juster in favour
of the ancient than the modern theory.
There are many other advantages, too,
in the former theory, which recommended it to the
ancient theologians. Nothing more repugnant to
all their notions, because nothing more repugnant
to common experience, than mind without body; a mere
spiritual substance, which fell not under their senses
nor comprehension, and of which they had not observed
one single instance throughout all nature. Mind
and body they knew, because they felt both: an
order, arrangement, organisation, or internal machinery,
in both, they likewise knew, after the same manner:
and it could not but seem reasonable to transfer this
experience to the universe; and to suppose the divine
mind and body to be also coeval, and to have, both
of them, order and arrangement naturally inherent
in them, and inseparable from them.
Here, therefore, is a new species
of Anthropomorphism, cleanthes, on which you
may deliberate; and a theory which seems not liable
to any considerable difficulties. You are too
much superior, surely, to systematical prejudices,
to find any more difficulty in supposing an animal
body to be, originally, of itself, or from unknown
causes, possessed of order and organisation, than
in supposing a similar order to belong to mind.
But the vulgar prejudice, that body and mind ought
always to accompany each other, ought not, one should
think, to be entirely neglected; since it is founded
on vulgar experience, the only guide which you profess
to follow in all these theological inquiries.
And if you assert, that our limited experience is
an unequal standard, by which to judge of the unlimited
extent of nature; you entirely abandon your own hypothesis,
and must thenceforward adopt our Mysticism, as you
call it, and admit of the absolute incomprehensibility
of the Divine Nature.
This theory, I own, replied cleanthes,
has never before occurred to me, though a pretty natural
one; and I cannot readily, upon so short an examination
and reflection, deliver any opinion with regard to
it. You are very scrupulous, indeed, said Philo:
were I to examine any system of yours, I should not
have acted with half that caution and reserve, in
starting objections and difficulties to it. However,
if any thing occur to you, you will oblige us by proposing
it.
Why then, replied cleanthes,
it seems to me, that, though the world does, in many
circumstances, resemble an animal body; yet is the
analogy also defective in many circumstances the most
material: no organs of sense; no seat of thought
or reason; no one precise origin of motion and action.
In short, it seems to bear a stronger resemblance
to a vegetable than to an animal, and your inference
would be so far inconclusive in favour of the soul
of the world.
But, in the next place, your theory
seems to imply the eternity of the world; and that
is a principle, which, I think, can be refuted by the
strongest reasons and probabilities. I shall suggest
an argument to this purpose, which, I believe, has
not been insisted on by any writer. Those, who
reason from the late origin of arts and sciences, though
their inference wants not force, may perhaps be refuted
by considerations derived from the nature of human
society, which is in continual revolution, between
ignorance and knowledge, liberty and slavery, riches
and poverty; so that it is impossible for us, from
our limited experience, to foretell with assurance
what events may or may not be expected. Ancient
learning and history seem to have been in great danger
of entirely perishing after the inundation of the barbarous
nations; and had these convulsions continued a little
longer, or been a little more violent, we should not
probably have now known what passed in the world a
few centuries before us. Nay, were it not for
the superstition of the Popes, who preserved a little
jargon of Latin, in order to support the appearance
of an ancient and universal church, that tongue must
have been utterly lost; in which case, the Western
world, being totally barbarous, would not have been
in a fit disposition for receiving the Greek language
and learning, which was conveyed to them after the
sacking of Constantinople. When learning
and books had been extinguished, even the mechanical
arts would have fallen considerably to decay; and it
is easily imagined, that fable or tradition might
ascribe to them a much later origin than the true
one. This vulgar argument, therefore, against
the eternity of the world, seems a little precarious.
But here appears to be the foundation
of a better argument. Lucullus was the first
that brought cherry-trees from Asia to Europe;
though that tree thrives so well in many European
climates, that it grows in the woods without any culture.
Is it possible, that throughout a whole eternity, no
European had ever passed into Asia, and thought
of transplanting so delicious a fruit into his own
country? Or if the tree was once transplanted
and propagated, how could it ever afterwards perish?
Empires may rise and fall, liberty and slavery succeed
alternately, ignorance and knowledge give place to
each other; but the cherry-tree will still remain
in the woods of Greece, Spain, and Italy,
and will never be affected by the revolutions of human
society.
It is not two thousand years since
vines were transplanted into France, though there
is no climate in the world more favourable to them.
It is not three centuries since horses, cows, sheep,
swine, dogs, corn, were known in America.
Is it possible, that during the revolutions of a whole
eternity, there never arose a Columbus, who might
open the communication between Europe and that
continent? We may as well imagine, that all men
would wear stockings for ten thousand years, and never
have the sense to think of garters to tie them.
All these seem convincing proofs of the youth, or
rather infancy, of the world; as being founded on the
operation of principles more constant and steady than
those by which human society is governed and directed.
Nothing less than a total convulsion of the elements
will ever destroy all the European animals and
vegetables which are now to be found in the Western
world.
And what argument have you against
such convulsions? replied Philo. Strong
and almost incontestable proofs may be traced over
the whole earth, that every part of this globe has
continued for many ages entirely covered with water.
And though order were supposed inseparable from matter,
and inherent in it; yet may matter be susceptible of
many and great revolutions, through the endless periods
of eternal duration. The incessant changes, to
which every part of it is subject, seem to intimate
some such general transformations; though, at the same
time, it is observable, that all the changes and corruptions
of which we have ever had experience, are but passages
from one state of order to another; nor can matter
ever rest in total deformity and confusion. What
we see in the parts, we may infer in the whole; at
least, that is the method of reasoning on which you
rest your whole theory. And were I obliged to
defend any particular system of this nature, which
I never willingly should do, I esteem none more plausible
than that which ascribes an eternal inherent principle
of order to the world, though attended with great
and continual revolutions and alterations. This
at once solves all difficulties; and if the solution,
by being so general, is not entirely complete and
satisfactory, it is at least a theory that we must
sooner or later have recourse to, whatever system
we embrace. How could things have been as they
are, were there not an original inherent principle
of order somewhere, in thought or in matter?
And it is very indifferent to which of these we give
the preference. Chance has no place, on any hypothesis,
sceptical or religious. Every thing is surely
governed by steady, inviolable laws. And were
the inmost essence of things laid open to us, we should
then discover a scene, of which, at present, we can
have no idea. Instead of admiring the order of
natural beings, we should clearly see that it was
absolutely impossible for them, in the smallest article,
ever to admit of any other disposition.
Were any one inclined to revive the
ancient Pagan Theology, which maintained, as we learn
from hesiod, that this globe was governed by
30,000 deities, who arose from the unknown powers of
nature: you would naturally object, cleanthes,
that nothing is gained by this hypothesis; and that
it is as easy to suppose all men animals, beings more
numerous, but less perfect, to have sprung immediately
from a like origin. Push the same inference a
step further, and you will find a numerous society
of deities as explicable as one universal deity, who
possesses within himself the powers and perfections
of the whole society. All these systems, then,
of Scepticism, Polytheism, and Theism, you must allow,
on your principles, to be on a like footing, and that
no one of them has any advantage over the others.
You may thence learn the fallacy of your principles.