Philonous. Tell me, Hylas, what
are the fruits of yesterday’s meditation?
Has it confirmed you in the same mind you were in at
parting? or have you since seen cause to change your
opinion?
Hylas. Truly my opinion
is that all our opinions are alike vain and uncertain.
What we approve to-day, we condemn to-morrow.
We keep a stir about knowledge, and spend our lives
in the pursuit of it, when, alas I we know nothing
all the while: nor do I think it possible for
us ever to know anything in this life. Our faculties
are too narrow and too few. Nature certainly
never intended us for speculation.
Phil. What! Say you we can know nothing,
Hylas?
HYL. There is not that single
thing in the world whereof we can know the real nature,
or what it is in itself.
Phil. Will you tell me
I do not really know what fire or water is?
HYL. You may indeed know that
fire appears hot, and water fluid; but this is no
more than knowing what sensations are produced in your
own mind, upon the application of fire and water to
your organs of sense. Their internal constitution,
their true and real nature, you are utterly in the
dark as to that.
Phil. Do I not know this
to be a real stone that I stand on, and that which
I see before my eyes to be a real tree?
HYL. Know? No, it
is impossible you or any man alive should know it.
All you know is, that you have such a certain idea
or appearance in your own mind. But what is this
to the real tree or stone? I tell you that colour,
figure, and hardness, which you perceive, are not the
real natures of those things, or in the least like
them. The same may be said of all other real
things, or corporeal substances, which compose the
world. They have none of them anything of themselves,
like those sensible qualities by us perceived.
We should not therefore pretend to affirm or know
anything of them, as they are in their own nature.
Phil. But surely, Hylas,
I can distinguish gold, for example, from iron:
and how could this be, if I knew not what either truly
was?
HYL. Believe me, Philonous,
you can only distinguish between your own ideas.
That yellowness, that weight, and other sensible qualities,
think you they are really in the gold? They are
only relative to the senses, and have no absolute
existence in nature. And in pretending to distinguish
the species of real things, by the appearances in your
mind, you may perhaps act as wisely as he that should
conclude two men were of a different species, because
their clothes were not of the same colour.
Phil. It seems, then, we
are altogether put off with the appearances of things,
and those false ones too. The very meat I eat,
and the cloth I wear, have nothing in them like what
I see and feel.
HYL. Even so.
Phil. But is it not strange
the whole world should be thus imposed on, and so
foolish as to believe their senses? And yet I
know not how it is, but men eat, and drink, and sleep,
and perform all the offices of life, as comfortably
and conveniently as if they really knew the things
they are conversant about.
HYL. They do so: but you
know ordinary practice does not require a nicety of
speculative knowledge. Hence the vulgar retain
their mistakes, and for all that make a shift to bustle
through the affairs of life. But philosophers
know better things.
Phil. You mean, they know that they
know nothing.
HYL. That is the very top and perfection of
human knowledge.
Phil. But are you all this
while in earnest, Hylas; and are you seriously persuaded
that you know nothing real in the world? Suppose
you are going to write, would you not call for pen,
ink, and paper, like another man; and do you not know
what it is you call for?
HYL. How often must I tell you,
that I know not the real nature of any one thing in
the universe? I may indeed upon occasion make
use of pen, ink, and paper. But what any one
of them is in its own true nature, I declare positively
I know not. And the same is true with regard to
every other corporeal thing. And, what is more,
we are not only ignorant of the true and real nature
of things, but even of their existence. It cannot
be denied that we perceive such certain appearances
or ideas; but it cannot be concluded from thence that
bodies really exist. Nay, now I think on it,
I must, agreeably to my former concessions, farther
declare that it is impossible any real corporeal
thing should exist in nature.
Phil. You amaze me.
Was ever anything more wild and extravagant than the
notions you now maintain: and is it not evident
you are led into all these extravagances
by the belief of material substance?
This makes you dream of those unknown natures in everything.
It is this occasions your distinguishing between the
reality and sensible appearances of things. It
is to this you are indebted for being ignorant of what
everybody else knows perfectly well. Nor is this
all: you are not only ignorant of the true nature
of everything, but you know not whether anything really
exists, or whether there are any true natures at all;
forasmuch as you attribute to your material beings
an absolute or external existence, wherein you suppose
their reality consists. And, as you are forced
in the end to acknowledge such an existence means
either a direct repugnancy, or nothing at all, it
follows that you are obliged to pull down your own
hypothesis of material Substance, and positively to
deny the real existence of any part of the universe.
And so you are plunged into the deepest and most deplorable
scepticism that ever man was. Tell me, Hylas,
is it not as I say?
HYL. I agree with you.
Material substance was no more than an hypothesis;
and a false and groundless one too. I will no
longer spend my breath in defence of it. But
whatever hypothesis you advance, or whatsoever scheme
of things you introduce in its stead, I doubt not it
will appear every whit as false: let me but be
allowed to question you upon it. That is, suffer
me to serve you in your own kind, and I warrant it
shall conduct you through as many perplexities and
contradictions, to the very same state of scepticism
that I myself am in at present.
Phil. I assure you, Hylas,
I do not pretend to frame any hypothesis at all.
I am of a vulgar cast, simple enough to believe my
senses, and leave things as I find them. To be
plain, it is my opinion that the real things are those
very things I see, and feel, and perceive by my senses.
These I know; and, finding they answer all the necessities
and purposes of life, have no reason to be solicitous
about any other unknown beings. A piece of sensible
bread, for instance, would stay my stomach better than
ten thousand times as much of that insensible, unintelligible,
real bread you speak of. It is likewise my opinion
that colours and other sensible qualities are on the
objects. I cannot for my life help thinking that
snow is white, and fire hot. You indeed, who by
snow and fire mean certain external, unperceived,
unperceiving substances, are in the right to deny
whiteness or heat to be affections inherent in them.
But I, who understand by those words the things I
see and feel, am obliged to think like other folks.
And, as I am no sceptic with regard to the nature of
things, so neither am I as to their existence.
That a thing should be really perceived by my senses,
and at the same time not really exist, is to me a
plain contradiction; since I cannot prescind or abstract,
even in thought, the existence of a sensible thing
from its being perceived. Wood, stones, fire,
water, flesh, iron, and the like things, which I name
and discourse of, are things that I know. And
I should not have known them but that I perceived
them by my senses; and things perceived by the senses
are immediately perceived; and things immediately perceived
are ideas; and ideas cannot exist without the mind;
their existence therefore consists in being perceived;
when, therefore, they are actually perceived there
can be no doubt of their existence. Away then
with all that scepticism, all those ridiculous philosophical
doubts. What a jest is it for a philosopher to
question the existence of sensible things, till he
hath it proved to him from the veracity of God; or
to pretend our knowledge in this point falls short
of intuition or demonstration! I might as well
doubt of my own being, as of the being of those things
I actually see and feel.
HYL. Not so fast, Philonous:
you say you cannot conceive how sensible things should
exist without the mind. Do you not?
Phil. I do.
HYL. Supposing you were annihilated,
cannot you conceive it possible that things perceivable
by sense may still exist?
Phil. I can; but then
it must be in another mind. When I deny sensible
things an existence out of the mind, I do not mean
my mind in particular, but all minds. Now, it
is plain they have an existence exterior to my mind;
since I find them by experience to be independent of
it. There is therefore some other Mind wherein
they exist, during the intervals between the times
of my perceiving them: as likewise they did before
my birth, and would do after my supposed annihilation.
And, as the same is true with regard to all other
finite created spirits, it necessarily follows there
is an omnipresent eternal mind, which
knows and comprehends all things, and exhibits them
to our view in such a manner, and according to such
rules, as He Himself hath ordained, and are by us
termed the laws of nature.
HYL. Answer me, Philonous.
Are all our ideas perfectly inert beings? Or
have they any agency included in them?
Phil. They are altogether passive and inert.
HYL. And is not God an agent, a being purely
active?
Phil. I acknowledge it.
HYL. No idea therefore can be like unto, or
represent the nature of
God?
Phil. It cannot.
HYL. Since therefore you have
no idea of the mind of God, how can you conceive
it possible that things should exist in His mind?
Or, if you can conceive the mind of God, without having
an idea of it, why may not I be allowed to conceive
the existence of Matter, notwithstanding I have no
idea of it?
Phil. As to your first
question: I own I have properly no idea,
either of God or any other spirit; for these being
active, cannot be represented by things perfectly
inert, as our ideas are. I do nevertheless know
that I, who am a spirit or thinking substance, exist
as certainly as I know my ideas exist. Farther,
I know what I mean by the terms I and myself;
and I know this immediately or intuitively, though
I do not perceive it as I perceive a triangle, a colour,
or a sound. The Mind, Spirit, or Soul is that
indivisible unextended thing which thinks, acts, and
perceives. I say indivisible, because unextended;
and unextended, because extended, figured, moveable
things are ideas; and that which perceives ideas,
which thinks and wills, is plainly itself no idea,
nor like an idea. Ideas are things inactive, and
perceived. And Spirits a sort of beings altogether
different from them. I do not therefore say my
soul is an idea, or like an idea. However, taking
the word idea in a large sense, my soul may be
said to furnish me with an idea, that is, an image
or likeness of God-though indeed extremely
inadequate. For, all the notion I have of God
is obtained by reflecting on my own soul, heightening
its powers, and removing its imperfections. I
have, therefore, though not an inactive idea, yet in
myself some sort of an active thinking image of
the Deity. And, though I perceive Him not by
sense, yet I have a notion of Him, or know Him by
reflexion and reasoning. My own mind and my own
ideas I have an immediate knowledge of; and, by the
help of these, do mediately apprehend the possibility
of the existence of other spirits and ideas. Farther,
from my own being, and from the dependency I find
in myself and my ideas, I do, by an act of reason,
necessarily infer the existence of a God, and of all
created things in the mind of God. So much for
your first question. For the second: I suppose
by this time you can answer it yourself. For you
neither perceive Matter objectively, as you do an inactive
being or idea; nor know it, as you do yourself, by
a reflex act, neither do you mediately apprehend it
by similitude of the one or the other; nor yet collect
it by reasoning from that which you know immediately.
All which makes the case of matter widely different
from that of the deity.
HYL. You say your own soul supplies
you with some sort of an idea or image of God.
But, at the same time, you acknowledge you have, properly
speaking, no idea of your own soul. You even
affirm that spirits are a sort of beings altogether
different from ideas. Consequently that no idea
can be like a spirit. We have therefore no idea
of any spirit. You admit nevertheless that there
is spiritual Substance, although you have no idea
of it; while you deny there can be such a thing as
material Substance, because you have no notion or
idea of it. Is this fair dealing? To act
consistently, you must either admit Matter or reject
Spirit. What say you to this?
Phil. I say, in the first
place, that I do not deny the existence of material
substance, merely because I have no notion of it’
but because the notion of it is inconsistent; or,
in other words, because it is repugnant that there
should be a notion of it. Many things, for aught
I know, may exist, whereof neither I nor any other
man hath or can have any idea or notion whatsoever.
But then those things must be possible, that is, nothing
inconsistent must be included in their definition.
I say, secondly, that, although we believe things
to exist which we do not perceive, yet we may not
believe that any particular thing exists, without
some reason for such belief: but I have no reason
for believing the existence of Matter. I have
no immediate intuition thereof: neither can I
immediately from my sensations, ideas, notions, actions,
or passions, infer an unthinking, unperceiving, inactive
Substance-either by probable deduction,
or necessary consequence. Whereas the being of
my Self, that is, my own soul, mind, or thinking principle,
I evidently know by reflexion. You will forgive
me if I repeat the same things in answer to the same
objections. In the very notion or definition of
material substance, there is included a
manifest repugnance and inconsistency. But this
cannot be said of the notion of Spirit. That ideas
should exist in what doth not perceive, or be produced
by what doth not act, is repugnant. But, it is
no repugnancy to say that a perceiving thing should
be the subject of ideas, or an active thing the cause
of them. It is granted we have neither an immediate
evidence nor a demonstrative knowledge of the existence
of other finite spirits; but it will not thence follow
that such spirits are on a foot with material substances:
if to suppose the one be inconsistent, and it be not
inconsistent to suppose the other; if the one can
be inferred by no argument, and there is a probability
for the other; if we see signs and effects indicating
distinct finite agents like ourselves, and see no sign
or symptom whatever that leads to a rational belief
of Matter. I say, lastly, that I have a notion
of Spirit, though I have not, strictly speaking, an
idea of it. I do not perceive it as an idea,
or by means of an idea, but know it by reflexion.
HYL. Notwithstanding all you
have said, to me it seems that, according to your
own way of thinking, and in consequence of your own
principles, it should follow that you are only
a system of floating ideas, without any substance
to support them. Words are not to be used without
a meaning. And, as there is no more meaning in
spiritual substance than in material
substance, the one is to be exploded as well as
the other.
Phil. How often must I
repeat, that I know or am conscious of my own being;
and that I myself am not my ideas, but
somewhat else, a thinking, active principle that perceives,
knows, wills, and operates about ideas. I know
that I, one and the same self, perceive both colours
and sounds: that a colour cannot perceive a sound,
nor a sound a colour: that I am therefore one
individual principle, distinct from colour and sound;
and, for the same reason, from aft other sensible
things and inert ideas. But, I am not in like
manner conscious either of the existence or essence
of Matter. On the contrary, I know that nothing
inconsistent can exist, and that the existence of Matter
implies an inconsistency. Farther, I know what
I mean when I affirm that there is a spiritual substance
or support of ideas, that is, that a spirit knows and
perceives ideas. But, I do not know what is meant
when it is said that an unperceiving substance hath
inherent in it and supports either ideas or the archetypes
of ideas. There is therefore upon the whole no
parity of case between Spirit and Matter.
HYL. I own myself satisfied
in this point. But, do you in earnest think the
real existence of sensible things consists in their
being actually perceived? If so; how comes it
that all mankind distinguish between them? Ask
the first man you meet, and he shall tell you, to
be perceived is one thing, and to exist
is another.
Phil. I am content, Hylas,
to appeal to the common sense of the world for the
truth of my notion. Ask the gardener why he thinks
yonder cherry-tree exists in the garden, and he shall
tell you, because he sees and feels it; in a word,
because he perceives it by his senses. Ask him
why he thinks an orange-tree not to be there, and he
shall tell you, because he does not perceive it.
What he perceives by sense, that he terms a real,
being, and saith it is or exists; but,
that which is not perceivable, the same, he saith,
hath no being.
HYL. Yes, Philonous, I grant
the existence of a sensible thing consists in being
perceivable, but not in being actually perceived.
Phil. And what is perceivable
but an idea? And can an idea exist without being
actually perceived? These are points long since
agreed between us.
HYL. But, be your opinion never
so true, yet surely you will not deny it is shocking,
and contrary to the common sense of men. Ask the
fellow whether yonder tree hath an existence out of
his mind: what answer think you he would make?
Phil. The same that I should
myself, to wit, that it doth exist out of his mind.
But then to a Christian it cannot surely be shocking
to say, the real tree, existing without his mind,
is truly known and comprehended by (that is exists
in) the infinite mind of God. Probably he
may not at first glance be aware of the direct and
immediate proof there is of this; inasmuch as the
very being of a tree, or any other sensible thing,
implies a mind wherein it is. But the point itself
he cannot deny. The question between the Materialists
and me is not, whether things have a real existence
out of the mind of this or that person, but whether
they have an absolute existence, distinct from
being perceived by God, and exterior to all minds.
This indeed some heathens and philosophers have affirmed,
but whoever entertains notions of the Deity suitable
to the Holy Scriptures will be of another opinion.
HYL. But, according to your
notions, what difference is there between real things,
and chimeras formed by the imagination, or the visions
of a dream-since they are all equally in
the mind?
Phil. The ideas formed
by the imagination are faint and indistinct; they
have, besides, an entire dependence on the will.
But the ideas perceived by sense, that is, real things,
are more vivid and clear; and, being imprinted on
the mind by a spirit distinct from us, have not the
like dependence on our will. There is therefore
no danger of confounding these with the foregoing:
and there is as little of confounding them with the
visions of a dream, which are dim, irregular, and confused.
And, though they should happen to be never so lively
and natural, yet, by their not being connected, and
of a piece with the preceding and subsequent transactions
of our lives, they might easily be distinguished from
realities. In short, by whatever method you distinguish
things from chimeras on your scheme,
the same, it is evident, will hold also upon mine.
For, it must be, I presume, by some perceived difference;
and I am not for depriving you of any one thing that
you perceive.
HYL. But still, Philonous, you
hold, there is nothing in the world but spirits and
ideas. And this, you must needs acknowledge, sounds
very oddly.
Phil. I own the word idea,
not being commonly used for thing, sounds something
out of the way. My reason for using it was, because
a necessary relation to the mind is understood to
be implied by that term; and it is now commonly used
by philosophers to denote the immediate objects of
the understanding. But, however oddly the proposition
may sound in words, yet it includes nothing so very
strange or shocking in its sense; which in effect
amounts to no more than this, to wit, that there are
only things perceiving, and things perceived; or that
every unthinking being is necessarily, and from the
very nature of its existence, perceived by some mind;
if not by a finite created mind, yet certainly by
the infinite mind of God, in whom “we five, and
move, and have our being.” Is this as strange
as to say, the sensible qualities are not on the objects:
or that we cannot be sure of the existence of things,
or know any thing of their real natures-though
we both see and feel them, and perceive them by all
our senses?
HYL. And, in consequence of
this, must we not think there are no such things as
physical or corporeal causes; but that a Spirit is
the immediate cause of all the phenomena in nature?
Can there be anything more extravagant than this?
Phil. Yes, it is infinitely
more extravagant to say-a thing which is
inert operates on the mind, and which is unperceiving
is the cause of our perceptions, without any regard
either to consistency, or the old known axiom, nothing
can give to another that which
it hath not itself. Besides,
that which to you, I know not for what reason, seems
so extravagant is no more than the Holy Scriptures
assert in a hundred places. In them God is represented
as the sole and immediate Author of all those effects
which some heathens and philosophers are wont to ascribe
to Nature, Matter, Fate, or the like unthinking principle.
This is so much the constant language of Scripture
that it were needless to confirm it by citations.
HYL. You are not aware, Philonous,
that in making God the immediate Author of all the
motions in nature, you make Him the Author of murder,
sacrilege, adultery, and the like heinous sins.
Phil. In answer to that,
I observe, first, that the imputation of guilt is
the same, whether a person commits an action with or
without an instrument. In case therefore you
suppose God to act by the mediation of an instrument
or occasion, called matter, you as truly make
Him the author of sin as I, who think Him the immediate
agent in all those operations vulgarly ascribed to
Nature. I farther observe that sin or moral turpitude
doth not consist in the outward physical action or
motion, but in the internal deviation of the will from
the laws of reason and religion. This is plain,
in that the killing an enemy in a battle, or putting
a criminal legally to death, is not thought sinful;
though the outward act be the very same with that
in the case of murder. Since, therefore, sin
doth not consist in the physical action, the making
God an immediate cause of all such actions is not
making Him the Author of sin. Lastly, I have
nowhere said that God is the only agent who produces
all the motions in bodies. It is true I have
denied there are any other agents besides spirits;
but this is very consistent with allowing to thinking
rational beings, in the production of motions, the
use of limited powers, ultimately indeed derived from
God, but immediately under the direction of their
own wills, which is sufficient to entitle them to
all the guilt of their actions.
HYL. But the denying Matter,
Philonous, or corporeal Substance; there is the point.
You can never persuade me that this is not repugnant
to the universal sense of mankind. Were our dispute
to be determined by most voices, I am confident you
would give up the point, without gathering the votes.
Phil. I wish both our opinions
were fairly stated and submitted to the judgment of
men who had plain common sense, without the prejudices
of a learned education. Let me be represented
as one who trusts his senses, who thinks he knows
the things he sees and feels, and entertains no doubts
of their existence; and you fairly set forth with all
your doubts, your paradoxes, and your scepticism about
you, and I shall willingly acquiesce in the determination
of any indifferent person. That there is no substance
wherein ideas can exist beside spirit is to me evident.
And that the objects immediately perceived are ideas,
is on all hands agreed. And that sensible qualities
are objects immediately perceived no one can deny.
It is therefore evident there can be no substratum
of those qualities but spirit; in which they exist,
not by way of mode or property, but as a thing perceived
in that which perceives it. I deny therefore
that there is any unthinking-substratum
of the objects of sense, and in that acceptation
that there is any material substance. But if
by material substance is meant only sensible
body, that which is seen and felt (and the
unphilosophical part of the world, I dare say, mean
no more)-then I am more certain of matter’s
existence than you or any other philosopher pretend
to be. If there be anything which makes the generality
of mankind averse from the notions I espouse, it is
a misapprehension that I deny the reality of sensible
things. But, as it is you who are guilty of that,
and not I, it follows that in truth their aversion
is against your notions and not mine. I do therefore
assert that I am as certain as of my own being, that
there are bodies or corporeal substances (meaning
the things I perceive by my senses); and that, granting
this, the bulk of mankind will take no thought about,
nor think themselves at all concerned in the fate
of those unknown natures, and philosophical quiddities,
which some men are so fond of.
HYL. What say you to this?
Since, according to you, men judge of the reality
of things by their senses, how can a man be mistaken
in thinking the moon a plain lucid surface, about
a foot in diameter; or a square tower, seen at a distance,
round; or an oar, with one end in the water, crooked?
Phil. He is not mistaken
with regard to the ideas he actually perceives, but
in the inference he makes from his present perceptions.
Thus, in the case of the oar, what he immediately perceives
by sight is certainly crooked; and so far he is in
the right. But if he thence conclude that upon
taking the oar out of the water he shall perceive the
same crookedness; or that it would affect his touch
as crooked things are wont to do: in that he
is mistaken. In like manner, if he shall conclude
from what he perceives in one station, that, in case
he advances towards the moon or tower, he should still
be affected with the like ideas, he is mistaken.
But his mistake lies not in what he perceives immediately,
and at present, (it being a manifest contradiction
to suppose he should err in respect of that) but in
the wrong judgment he makes concerning the ideas he
apprehends to be connected with those immediately perceived:
or, concerning the ideas that, from what he perceives
at present, he imagines would be perceived in other
circumstances. The case is the same with regard
to the Copernican system. We do not here perceive
any motion of the earth: but it were erroneous
thence to conclude, that, in case we were placed at
as great a distance from that as we are now from the
other planets, we should not then perceive its motion.
HYL. I understand you; and must
needs own you say things plausible enough. But,
give me leave to put you in mind of one thing.
Pray, Philonous, were you not formerly as positive
that Matter existed, as you are now that it does not?
Phil. I was. But here
lies the difference. Before, my positiveness was
founded, without examination, upon prejudice; but now,
after inquiry, upon evidence.
HYL. After all, it seems our
dispute is rather about words than things. We
agree in the thing, but differ in the name. That
we are affected with ideas from without
is evident; and it is no less evident that there must
be (I will not say archetypes, but) Powers without
the mind, corresponding to those ideas. And,
as these Powers cannot subsist by themselves, there
is some subject of them necessarily to be admitted;
which I call matter, and you call spirit.
This is all the difference.
Phil. Pray, Hylas, is that
powerful Being, or subject of powers, extended?
HYL. It hath not extension;
but it hath the power to raise in you the idea of
extension.
Phil. It is therefore itself unextended?
HYL. I grant it.
Phil. Is it not also active?
HYL. Without doubt. Otherwise, how could
we attribute powers to it?
Phil. Now let me ask you
two questions: First, Whether it be agreeable
to the usage either of philosophers or others to give
the name matter to an unextended active being?
And, secondly, Whether it be not ridiculously
absurd to misapply names contrary to the common use
of language?
HYL. Well then, let it not be
called Matter, since you will have it so, but some
third nature distinct from Matter and Spirit.
For what reason is there why you should call it Spirit?
Does not the notion of spirit imply that it is thinking,
as well as active and unextended?
Phil. My reason is this:
because I have a mind to have some notion of meaning
in what I say: but I have no notion of any action
distinct from volition, neither can I conceive volition
to be anywhere but in a spirit: therefore, when
I speak of an active being, I am obliged to mean a
Spirit. Beside, what can be plainer than that
a thing which hath no ideas in itself cannot impart
them to me; and, if it hath ideas, surely it must
be a Spirit. To make you comprehend the point
still more clearly if it be possible, I assert as
well as you that, since we are affected from without,
we must allow Powers to be without, in a Being distinct
from ourselves. So far we are agreed. But
then we differ as to the kind of this powerful Being.
I will have it to be Spirit, you Matter, or I know
not what (I may add too, you know not what) Third Nature.
Thus, I prove it to be Spirit. From the effects
I see produced, I conclude there are actions; and,
because actions, volitions; and, because
there are volitions, there must be a will.
Again, the things I perceive must have an existence,
they or their archetypes, out of my mind:
but, being ideas, neither they nor their archetypes
can exist otherwise than in an understanding; there
is therefore an understanding. But will and
understanding constitute in the strictest sense a mind
or spirit. The powerful cause, therefore, of
my ideas is in strict propriety of speech a spirit.
HYL. And now I warrant you think
you have made the point very clear, little suspecting
that what you advance leads directly to a contradiction.
Is it not an absurdity to imagine any imperfection
in God?
Phil. Without a doubt.
HYL. To suffer pain is an imperfection?
Phil. It is.
HYL. Are we not sometimes affected
with pain and uneasiness by some other Being?
Phil. We are.
HYL. And have you not said that Being is a Spirit,
and is not that
Spirit God?
Phil. I grant it.
HYL. But you have asserted that
whatever ideas we perceive from without are in the
mind which affects us. The ideas, therefore, of
pain and uneasiness are in God; or, in other words,
God suffers pain: that is to say, there is an
imperfection in the Divine nature: which, you
acknowledged, was absurd. So you are caught in
a plain contradiction.
Phil. That God knows or
understands all things, and that He knows, among other
things, what pain is, even every sort of painful sensation,
and what it is for His creatures to suffer pain, I
make no question. But, that God, though He knows
and sometimes causes painful sensations in us, can
Himself suffer pain, I positively deny. We, who
are limited and dependent spirits, are liable to impressions
of sense, the effects of an external Agent, which,
being produced against our wills, are sometimes painful
and uneasy. But God, whom no external being can
affect, who perceives nothing by sense as we do; whose
will is absolute and independent, causing all things,
and liable to be thwarted or resisted by nothing:
it is evident, such a Being as this can suffer nothing,
nor be affected with any painful sensation, or indeed
any sensation at all. We are chained to a body:
that is to say, our perceptions are connected with
corporeal motions. By the law of our nature, we
are affected upon every alteration in the nervous
parts of our sensible body; which sensible body, rightly
considered, is nothing but a complexion of such qualities
or ideas as have no existence distinct from being perceived
by a mind. So that this connexion of sensations
with corporeal motions means no more than a correspondence
in the order of nature, between two sets of ideas,
or things immediately perceivable. But God is
a Pure Spirit, disengaged from all such sympathy,
or natural ties. No corporeal motions are attended
with the sensations of pain or pleasure in His mind.
To know everything knowable, is certainly a perfection;
but to endure, or suffer, or feel anything by sense,
is an imperfection. The former, I say, agrees
to God, but not the latter. God knows, or hath
ideas; but His ideas are not conveyed to Him by sense,
as ours are. Your not distinguishing, where there
is so manifest a difference, makes you fancy you see
an absurdity where there is none.
HYL. But, all this while you
have not considered that the quantity of Matter has
been demonstrated to be proportioned to the gravity
of bodies. And what can withstand demonstration?
Phil. Let me see how you demonstrate that
point.
HYL. I lay it down for a principle,
that the moments or quantities of motion in bodies
are in a direct compounded reason of the velocities
and quantities of Matter contained in them. Hence,
where the velocities are equal, it follows the moments
are directly as the quantity of Matter in each.
But it is found by experience that all bodies (bating
the small inequalities, arising from the resistance
of the air) descend with an equal velocity; the motion
therefore of descending bodies, and consequently their
gravity, which is the cause or principle of that motion,
is proportional to the quantity of Matter; which was
to be demonstrated.
Phil. You lay it down as
a self-evident principle that the quantity of motion
in any body is proportional to the velocity and matter
taken together; and this is made use of to prove a
proposition from whence the existence of Carter
is inferred. Pray is not this arguing in a circle?
HYL. In the premise I only mean
that the motion is proportional to the velocity, jointly
with the extension and solidity.
Phil. But, allowing this
to be true, yet it will not thence follow that gravity
is proportional to matter, in your philosophic
sense of the word; except you take it for granted
that unknown substratum, or whatever else you
call it, is proportional to those sensible qualities;
which to suppose is plainly begging the question.
That there is magnitude and solidity, or resistance,
perceived by sense, I readily grant; as likewise,
that gravity may be proportional to those qualities
I will not dispute. But that either these qualities
as perceived by us, or the powers producing them,
do exist in a material substratum; this is
what I deny, and you indeed affirm, but, notwithstanding
your demonstration, have not yet proved.
HYL. I shall insist no longer
on that point. Do you think, however, you shall
persuade me that the natural philosophers have been
dreaming all this while? Pray what becomes of
all their hypotheses and explications of the
phenomena, which suppose the existence of Matter?
Phil. What mean you, Hylas, by the phenomena?
HYL. I mean the appearances which I perceive
by my senses.
Phil. And the appearances perceived by
sense, are they not ideas?
HYL. I have told you so a hundred times.
Phil. Therefore, to explain
the phenomena, is, to shew how we come to be affected
with ideas, in that manner and order wherein they are
imprinted on our senses. Is it not?
HYL. It is.
Phil. Now, if you can prove
that any philosopher has explained the production
of any one idea in our minds by the help of matter,
I shall for ever acquiesce, and look on all that hath
been said against it as nothing; but, if you cannot,
it is vain to urge the explication of phenomena.
That a Being endowed with knowledge and will should
produce or exhibit ideas is easily understood.
But that a Being which is utterly destitute of these
faculties should be able to produce ideas, or in any
sort to affect an intelligence, this I can never understand.
This I say, though we had some positive conception
of Matter, though we knew its qualities, and could
comprehend its existence, would yet be so far from
explaining things, that it is itself the most inexplicable
thing in the world. And yet, for all this, it
will not follow that philosophers have been doing
nothing; for, by observing and reasoning upon the
connexion of ideas, they discover the laws and methods
of nature, which is a part of knowledge both useful
and entertaining.
HYL. After all, can it be supposed
God would deceive all mankind? Do you imagine
He would have induced the whole world to believe the
being of Matter, if there was no such thing?
Phil. That every epidemical
opinion, arising from prejudice, or passion, or thoughtlessness,
may be imputed to God, as the Author of it, I believe
you will not affirm. Whatsoever opinion we father
on Him, it must be either because He has discovered
it to us by supernatural revelation; or because it
is so evident to our natural faculties, which were
framed and given us by God, that it is impossible we
should withhold our assent from it. But where
is the revelation? or where is the evidence that extorts
the belief of Matter? Nay, how does it appear,
that Matter, taken for something distinct
from what we perceive by our
senses, is thought to exist by all mankind; or
indeed, by any except a few philosophers, who do not
know what they would be at? Your question supposes
these points are clear; and, when you have cleared
them, I shall think myself obliged to give you another
answer. In the meantime, let it suffice that
I tell you, I do not suppose God has deceived mankind
at all.
HYL. But the novelty, Philonous,
the novelty! There lies the danger. New
notions should always be discountenanced; they unsettle
men’s minds, and nobody knows where they will
end.
Phil. Why the rejecting
a notion that has no foundation, either in sense,
or in reason, or in Divine authority, should be thought
to unsettle the belief of such opinions as are grounded
on all or any of these, I cannot imagine. That
innovations in government and religion are dangerous,
and ought to be discountenanced, I freely own.
But is there the like reason why they should be discouraged
in philosophy? The making anything known which
was unknown before is an innovation in knowledge:
and, if all such innovations had been forbidden, men
would have made a notable progress in the arts and
sciences. But it is none of my business to plead
for novelties and paradoxes. That the qualities
we perceive are not on the objects: that we must
not believe our senses: that we know nothing
of the real nature of things, and can never be assured
even of their existence: that real colours and
sounds are nothing but certain unknown figures and
motions: that motions are in themselves neither
swift nor slow: that there are in bodies absolute
extensions, without any particular magnitude or figure:
that a thing stupid, thoughtless, and inactive, operates
on a spirit: that the least particle of a body
contains innumerable extended parts:-these
are the novelties, these are the strange notions which
shock the genuine uncorrupted judgment of all mankind;
and being once admitted, embarrass the mind with endless
doubts and difficulties. And it is against these
and the like innovations I endeavour to vindicate
Common Sense. It is true, in doing this, I may
perhaps be obliged to use some ambages, and ways
of speech not common. But, if my notions are
once thoroughly understood, that which is most singular
in them will, in effect, be found to amount to no more
than this.-that it is absolutely impossible,
and a plain contradiction, to suppose any unthinking
Being should exist without being perceived by a Mind.
And, if this notion be singular, it is a shame it should
be so, at this time of day, and in a Christian country.
HYL. As for the difficulties
other opinions may be liable to, those are out of
the question. It is your business to defend your
own opinion. Can anything be plainer than that
you are for changing all things into ideas? You,
I say, who are not ashamed to charge me with scepticism.
This is so plain, there is no denying it.
Phil. You mistake me.
I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather
ideas into things; since those immediate objects of
perception, which, according to you, are only appearances
of things, I take to be the real things themselves.
HYL. Things! You may pretend
what you please; but it is certain you leave us nothing
but the empty forms of things, the outside only which
strikes the senses.
Phil. What you call the
empty forms and outside of things seem to me the very
things themselves. Nor are they empty or incomplete,
otherwise than upon your supposition-that
Matter is an essential part of all corporeal things.
We both, therefore, agree in this, that we perceive
only sensible forms: but herein we differ-you
will have them to be empty appearances, I, real beings.
In short, you do not trust your senses, I do.
HYL. You say you believe your
senses; and seem to applaud yourself that in this
you agree with the vulgar. According to you, therefore,
the true nature of a thing is discovered by the senses.
If so, whence comes that disagreement? Why is
not the same figure, and other sensible qualities,
perceived all manner of ways? and why should we use
a microscope the better to discover the true nature
of a body, if it were discoverable to the naked eye?
Phil. Strictly speaking,
Hylas, we do not see the same object that we feel;
neither is the same object perceived by the microscope
which was by the naked eye. But, in case every
variation was thought sufficient to constitute a new
kind of individual, the endless number of confusion
of names would render language impracticable.
Therefore, to avoid this, as well as other inconveniences
which are obvious upon a little thought, men combine
together several ideas, apprehended by divers senses,
or by the same sense at different times, or in different
circumstances, but observed, however, to have some
connexion in nature, either with respect to co-existence
or succession; all which they refer to one name, and
consider as one thing. Hence it follows that when
I examine, by my other senses, a thing I have seen,
it is not in order to understand better the same object
which I had perceived by sight, the object of one sense
not being perceived by the other senses. And,
when I look through a microscope, it is not that I
may perceive more clearly what I perceived already
with my bare eyes; the object perceived by the glass
being quite different from the former. But, in
both cases, my aim is only to know what ideas are
connected together; and the more a man knows of the
connexion of ideas, the more he is said to know of
the nature of things. What, therefore, if our
ideas are variable; what if our senses are not in
all circumstances affected with the same appearances.
It will not thence follow they are not to be trusted;
or that they are inconsistent either with themselves
or anything else: except it be with your preconceived
notion of (I know not what) one single, unchanged,
unperceivable, real Nature, marked by each name.
Which prejudice seems to have taken its rise from
not rightly understanding the common language of men,
speaking of several distinct ideas as united into
one thing by the mind. And, indeed, there is
cause to suspect several erroneous conceits of the
philosophers are owing to the same original: while
they began to build their schemes not so much on notions
as on words, which were framed by the vulgar, merely
for conveniency and dispatch in the common actions
of life, without any regard to speculation.
HYL. Methinks I apprehend your meaning.
Phil. It is your opinion
the ideas we perceive by our senses are not real things,
but images or copies of them. Our knowledge, therefore,
is no farther real than as our ideas are the true
representations of those originals.
But, as these supposed originals are in themselves
unknown, it is impossible to know how far our ideas
resemble them; or whether they resemble them at all.
We cannot, therefore, be sure we have any real knowledge.
Farther, as our ideas are perpetually varied, without
any change in the supposed real things, it necessarily
follows they cannot all be true copies of them:
or, if some are and others are not, it is impossible
to distinguish the former from the latter. And
this plunges us yet deeper in uncertainty. Again,
when we consider the point, we cannot conceive how
any idea, or anything like an idea, should have an
absolute existence out of a mind: nor consequently,
according to you, how there should be any real thing
in nature. The result of all which is that we
are thrown into the most hopeless and abandoned scepticism.
Now, give me leave to ask you, First, Whether your
referring ideas to certain absolutely existing unperceived
substances, as their originals, be not the source
of all this scepticism? Secondly, whether you
are informed, either by sense or reason, of the existence
of those unknown originals? And, in case you
are not, whether it be not absurd to suppose them?
Thirdly, Whether, upon inquiry, you find there is anything
distinctly conceived or meant by the absolute
or external existence of unperceiving
substances? Lastly, Whether, the premises
considered, it be not the wisest way to follow nature,
trust your senses, and, laying aside all anxious thought
about unknown natures or substances, admit with the
vulgar those for real things which are perceived by
the senses?
HYL. For the present, I have
no inclination to the answering part. I would
much rather see how you can get over what follows.
Pray are not the objects perceived by the senses
of one, likewise perceivable to others present?
If there were a hundred more here, they would all see
the garden, the trees, and flowers, as I see them.
But they are not in the same manner affected with
the ideas I frame in my imagination. Does
not this make a difference between the former sort
of objects and the latter?
Phil. I grant it does.
Nor have I ever denied a difference between the objects
of sense and those of imagination. But what would
you infer from thence? You cannot say that sensible
objects exist unperceived, because they are perceived
by many.
HYL. I own I can make nothing
of that objection: but it hath led me into another.
Is it not your opinion that by our senses we perceive
only the ideas existing in our minds?
Phil. It is.
HYL. But the same idea
which is in my mind cannot be in yours, or in any
other mind. Doth it not therefore follow, from
your principles, that no two can see the same thing?
And is not this highly, absurd?
Phil. If the term same
be taken in the vulgar acceptation, it is certain
(and not at all repugnant to the principles I maintain)
that different persons may perceive the same thing;
or the same thing or idea exist in different minds.
Words are of arbitrary imposition; and, since men
are used to apply the word same where no distinction
or variety is perceived, and I do not pretend to alter
their perceptions, it follows that, as men have said
before, several saw the same thing,
so they may, upon like occasions, still continue to
use the same phrase, without any deviation either
from propriety of language, or the truth of things.
But, if the term same be used in the acceptation
of philosophers, who pretend to an abstracted notion
of identity, then, according to their sundry definitions
of this notion (for it is not yet agreed wherein that
philosophic identity consists), it may or may not be
possible for divers persons to perceive the same thing.
But whether philosophers shall think fit to call
a thing the same or no, is, I conceive, of small
importance. Let us suppose several men together,
all endued with the same faculties, and consequently
affected in like sort by their senses, and who had
yet never known the use of language; they would, without
question, agree in their perceptions. Though perhaps,
when they came to the use of speech, some regarding
the uniformness of what was perceived, might call
it the same thing: others, especially regarding
the diversity of persons who perceived, might choose
the denomination of different things. But
who sees not that all the dispute is about a word?
to wit, whether what is perceived by different persons
may yet have the term same applied to it?
Or, suppose a house, whose walls or outward shell
remaining unaltered, the chambers are all pulled down,
and new ones built in their place; and that you should
call this the same, and I should say it was not
the same house.-would we not, for all
this, perfectly agree in our thoughts of the house,
considered in itself? And would not all the difference
consist in a sound? If you should say, We differed
in our notions; for that you super-added to your idea
of the house the simple abstracted idea of identity,
whereas I did not; I would tell you, I know not what
you mean by the abstracted idea of
identity; and should desire you to look into
your own thoughts, and be sure you understood yourself.-Why
so silent, Hylas? Are you not yet satisfied men
may dispute about identity and diversity, without any
real difference in their thoughts and opinions, abstracted
from names? Take this farther reflexion with
you: that whether Matter be allowed to exist or
no, the case is exactly the same as to the point in
hand. For the Materialists themselves acknowledge
what we immediately perceive by our senses to be our
own ideas. Your difficulty, therefore, that no
two see the same thing, makes equally against the
Materialists and me.
HYL. Ay, Philonous, but they
suppose an external archetype, to which referring
their several ideas they may truly be said to perceive
the same thing.
Phil. And (not to mention
your having discarded those archetypes) so may you
suppose an external archetype on my principles;-external,
I mean, to your own mind:
though indeed it must be’ supposed to exist in
that Mind which comprehends all things; but then, this
serves all the ends of identity, as well as if
it existed out of a mind. And I am sure you yourself
will not say it is less intelligible.
HYL. You have indeed clearly
satisfied me-either that there is no difficulty
at bottom in this point; or, if there be, that it makes
equally against both opinions.
Phil. But that which makes
equally against two contradictory opinions can be
a proof against neither.
HYL. I acknowledge it.
But, after all, Philonous, when I consider the substance
of what you advance against scepticism, it amounts
to no more than this: We are sure that we really
see, hear, feel; in a word, that we are affected with
sensible impressions.
Phil. And how are we
concerned any farther? I see this cherry, I feel
it, I taste it: and I am sure nothing cannot
be seen, or felt, or tasted: it is therefore
red. Take away the sensations of softness, moisture,
redness, tartness, and you take away the cherry, since
it is not a being distinct from sensations. A
cherry, I say, is nothing but a congeries of sensible
impressions, or ideas perceived by various senses:
which ideas are united into one thing (or have one
name given them) by the mind, because they are observed
to attend each other. Thus, when the palate is
affected with such a particular taste, the sight is
affected with a red colour, the touch with roundness,
softness, &c. Hence, when I see, and feel, and
taste, in such sundry certain manners, I am sure the
cherry exists, or is real; its reality being in my
opinion nothing abstracted from those sensations.
But if by the word cherry you, mean an unknown
nature, distinct from all those sensible qualities,
and by its existence something distinct from
its being perceived; then, indeed, I own, neither
you nor I, nor any one else, can be sure it exists.
HYL. But, what would you say,
Philonous, if I should bring the very same reasons
against the existence of sensible things in A
mind, which you have offered against their existing
in A material substratum?
Phil. When I see your reasons,
you shall hear what I have to say to them.
HYL. Is the mind extended or unextended?
Phil. Unextended, without doubt.
HYL. Do you say the things you perceive are
in your mind?
Phil. They are.
HYL. Again, have I not heard you speak of sensible
impressions?
Phil. I believe you may.
HYL. Explain to me now, O Philonous!
how it is possible there should be room for all those
trees and houses to exist in your mind. Can extended
things be contained in that which is unextended?
Or, are we to imagine impressions made on a thing
void of all solidity? You cannot say objects
are in your mind, as books in your study: or that
things are imprinted on it, as the figure of a seal
upon wax. In what sense, therefore, are we to
understand those expressions? Explain me this
if you can: and I shall then be able to answer
all those queries you formerly put to me about my
substratum.
Phil. Look you, Hylas,
when I speak of objects as existing in the mind, or
imprinted on the senses, I would not be understood
in the gross literal sense; as when bodies are said
to exist in a place, or a seal to make an impression
upon wax. My meaning is only that the mind comprehends
or perceives them; and that it is affected from without,
or by some being distinct from itself. This is
my explication of your difficulty; and how it can
serve to make your tenet of an unperceiving material
substratum intelligible, I would fain know.
HYL. Nay, if that be all, I
confess I do not see what use can be made of it.
But are you not guilty of some abuse of language in
this?
Phil. None at all.
It is no more than common custom, which you know is
the rule of language, hath authorised: nothing
being more usual, than for philosophers to speak of
the immediate objects of the understanding as things
existing in the mind. ’Nor is there anything
in this but what is conformable to the general analogy
of language; most part of the mental operations being
signified by words borrowed from sensible things; as
is plain in the terms comprehend, reflect, discourse,
&C., which, being applied to the mind, must not be
taken in their gross, original sense.
HYL. You have, I own, satisfied
me in this point. But there still remains one
great difficulty, which I know not how you will get
over. And, indeed, it is of such importance that
if you could solve all others, without being able
to find a solution for this, you must never expect
to make me a proselyte to your principles.
Phil. Let me know this mighty difficulty.
HYL. The Scripture account of
the creation is what appears to me utterly irreconcilable
with your notions. Moses tells us of a creation:
a creation of what? of ideas? No, certainly,
but of things, of real things, solid corporeal substances.
Bring your principles to agree with this, and I shall
perhaps agree with you.
Phil. Moses mentions the
sun, moon, and stars, earth and sea, plants and animals.
That all these do really exist, and were in the beginning
created by God, I make no question. If by ideas
you mean fictions and fancies of the mind, then these
are no ideas. If by ideas you mean immediate
objects of the understanding, or sensible things, which
cannot exist unperceived, or out of a mind, then these
things are ideas. But whether you do or do not
call them ideas, it matters little.
The difference is only about a name. And, whether
that name be retained or rejected, the sense, the
truth, and reality of things continues the same.
In common talk, the objects of our senses are not termed
ideas, but things. Call them so still:
provided you do not attribute to them any absolute
external existence, and I shall never quarrel with
you for a word. The creation, therefore, I allow
to have been a creation of things, of red things.
Neither is this in the least inconsistent with my
principles, as is evident from what I have now said;
and would have been evident to you without this, if
you had not forgotten what had been so often said
before. But as for solid corporeal substances,
I desire you to show where Moses makes any mention
of them; and, if they should be mentioned by him,
or any other inspired writer, it would still be incumbent
on you to shew those words were not taken in the vulgar
acceptation, for things falling under our senses, but
in the philosophic acceptation, for Matter, or an
unknown quiddity, with an absolute
existence. When you have proved these points,
then (and not till then) may you bring the authority
of Moses into our dispute.
HYL. It is in vain to dispute
about a point so clear. I am content to refer
it to your own conscience. Are you not satisfied
there is some peculiar repugnancy between the Mosaic
account of the creation and your notions?
Phil. If all possible sense
which can be put on the first chapter of Genesis may
be conceived as consistently with my principles as
any other, then it has no peculiar repugnancy with
them. But there is no sense you may not as well
conceive, believing as I do. Since, besides spirits,
all you conceive are ideas; and the existence of these
I do not deny. Neither do you pretend they exist
without the mind.
HYL. Pray let me see any sense you can understand
it in.
Phil. Why, I imagine that
if I had been present at the creation, I should have
seen things produced into being-that is
become perceptible-in the order prescribed
by the sacred historian. I ever before believed
the Mosaic account of the creation, and now find no
alteration in my manner of believing it. When
things are said to begin or end their existence, we
do not mean this with regard to God, but His creatures.
All objects are eternally known by God, or, which is
the same thing, have an eternal existence in His mind:
but when things, before imperceptible to creatures,
are, by a decree of God, perceptible to them, then
are they said to begin a relative existence, with respect
to created minds. Upon reading therefore the Mosaic
account of the creation, I understand that the several
parts of the world became gradually perceivable to
finite spirits, endowed with proper faculties; so
that, whoever such were present, they were in truth
perceived by them. This is the literal obvious
sense suggested to me by the words of the Holy Scripture:
in which is included no mention, or no thought, either
of substratum, instrument, occasion,
or absolute existence. And, upon inquiry,
I doubt not it will be found that most plain honest
men, who believe the creation, never think of those
things any more than I. What metaphysical sense you
may understand it in, you only can tell.
HYL. But, Philonous, you do
not seem to be aware that you allow created things,
in the beginning, only a relative, and consequently
hypothetical being: that is to say, upon supposition
there were men to perceive them; without which
they have no actuality of absolute existence, wherein
creation might terminate. Is it not, therefore,
according to you, plainly impossible the creation
of any inanimate creatures should precede that of
man? And is not this directly contrary to the
Mosaic account?
Phil. In answer to that,
I say, first, created beings might begin to exist
in the mind of other created intelligences, beside
men. You will not therefore be able to prove
any contradiction between Moses and my notions, unless
you first shew there was no other order of finite created
spirits in being, before man. I say farther, in
case we conceive the creation, as we should at this
time, a parcel of plants or vegetables of all sorts
produced, by an invisible Power, in a desert where
nobody was present-that this way of explaining
or conceiving it is consistent with my principles,
since they deprive you of nothing, either sensible
or imaginable; that it exactly suits with the common,
natural, and undebauched notions of mankind; that
it manifests the dependence of all things on God;
and consequently hath all the good effect or influence,
which it is possible that important article of our
faith should have in making men humble, thankful,
and resigned to their great Creator. I say, moreover,
that, in this naked conception of things, divested
of words, there will not be found any notion of what
you call the actuality of absolute
existence. You may indeed raise a dust with
those terms, and so lengthen our dispute to no purpose.
But I entreat you calmly to look into your own thoughts,
and then tell me if they are not a useless and unintelligible
jargon.
HYL. I own I have no very clear
notion annexed to them. But what say you to this?
Do you not make the existence of sensible things consist
in their being in a mind? And were not all things
eternally in the mind of God? Did they not therefore
exist from all eternity, according to you? And
how could that which was eternal be created in time?
Can anything be clearer or better connected than this?
Phil. And are not you too
of opinion, that God knew all things from eternity?
HYL. I am.
Phil. Consequently they always had a being
in the Divine intellect.
HYL. This I acknowledge.
Phil. By your own confession,
therefore, nothing is new, or begins to be, in respect
of the mind of God. So we are agreed in that point.
HYL. What shall we make then of the creation?
Phil. May we not understand
it to have been entirely in respect of finite spirits;
so that things, with regard to us, may properly be
said to begin their existence, or be created, when
God decreed they should become perceptible to intelligent
creatures, in that order and manner which He then
established, and we now call the laws of nature?
You may call this a relative, or hypothetical
existence if you please. But, so long as
it supplies us with the most natural, obvious, and
literal sense of the Mosaic history of the creation;
so long as it answers all the religious ends of that
great article; in a word, so long as you can assign
no other sense or meaning in its stead; why should
we reject this? Is it to comply with a ridiculous
sceptical humour of making everything nonsense and
unintelligible? I am sure you cannot say it is
for the glory of God. For, allowing it to be
a thing possible and conceivable that the corporeal
world should have an absolute existence extrinsical
to the mind of God, as well as to the minds of all
created spirits; yet how could this set forth either
the immensity or omniscience of the Deity, or the
necessary and immediate dependence of all things on
Him? Nay, would it not rather seem to derogate
from those attributes?
HYL. Well, but as to this decree
of God’s, for making things perceptible, what
say you, Philonous? Is it not plain, God did either
execute that decree from all eternity, or at some certain
time began to will what He had not actually willed
before, but only designed to will? If the former,
then there could be no creation, or beginning of existence,
in finite things. If the latter, then we must
acknowledge something new to befall the Deity; which
implies a sort of change: and all change argues
imperfection.
Phil. Pray consider what
you are doing. Is it not evident this objection
concludes equally against a creation in any sense;
nay, against every other act of the Deity, discoverable
by the light of nature? None of which can we
conceive, otherwise than as performed in time, and
having a beginning. God is a Being of transcendent
and unlimited perfections: His nature, therefore,
is incomprehensible to finite spirits. It is
not, therefore, to be expected, that any man, whether
Materialist or Immaterialist, should have exactly just
notions of the Deity, His attributes, and ways of
operation. If then you would infer anything against
me, your difficulty must not be drawn from the inadequateness
of our conceptions of the Divine nature, which is
unavoidable on any scheme; but from the denial of Matter,
of which there is not one word, directly or indirectly,
in what you have now objected.
HYL. I must acknowledge the
difficulties you are concerned to clear are such only
as arise from the non-existence of Matter, and are
peculiar to that notion. So far you are in the
right. But I cannot by any means bring myself
to think there is no such peculiar repugnancy between
the creation and your opinion; though indeed where
to fix it, I do not distinctly know.
Phil. What would you have?
Do I not acknowledge a twofold state of things-the
one ectypal or natural, the other archetypal and eternal?
The former was created in time; the latter existed
from everlasting in the mind of God. Is not this
agreeable to the common notions of divines? or, is
any more than this necessary in order to conceive the
creation? But you suspect some peculiar repugnancy,
though you know not where it lies. To take away
all possibility of scruple in the case, do but consider
this one point. Either you are not able to conceive
the Creation on any hypothesis whatsoever; and, if
so, there is no ground for dislike or complaint against
any particular opinion on that score: or you are
able to conceive it; and, if so, why not on my Principles,
since thereby nothing conceivable is taken away?
You have all along been allowed the full scope of
sense, imagination, and reason. Whatever, therefore,
you could before apprehend, either immediately or
mediately by your senses, or by ratiocination from
your senses; whatever you could perceive, imagine,
or understand, remains still with you. If, therefore,
the notion you have of the creation by other Principles
be intelligible, you have it still upon mine; if it
be not intelligible, I conceive it to be no notion
at all; and so there is no loss of it. And indeed
it seems to me very plain that the supposition of
Matter, that is a thing perfectly unknown and inconceivable,
cannot serve to make us conceive anything. And,
I hope it need not be proved to you that if the existence
of Matter doth not make the creation conceivable,
the creation’s being without it inconceivable
can be no objection against its non-existence.
HYL. I confess, Philonous, you
have almost satisfied me in this point of the creation.
Phil. I would fain know
why you are not quite satisfied. You tell me
indeed of a repugnancy between the Mosaic history and
Immaterialism: but you know not where it lies.
Is this reasonable, Hylas? Can you expect I should
solve a difficulty without knowing what it is?
But, to pass by all that, would not a man think you
were assured there is no repugnancy between the received
notions of Materialists and the inspired writings?
HYL. And so I am.
Phil. Ought the historical
part of Scripture to be understood in a plain obvious
sense, or in a sense which is metaphysical and out
of the way?
HYL. In the plain sense, doubtless.
Phil. When Moses speaks
of herbs, earth, water, &c. as having been created
by God; think you not the sensible things commonly
signified by those words are suggested to every unphilosophical
reader?
HYL. I cannot help thinking so.
Phil. And are not all ideas,
or things perceived by sense, to be denied a real
existence by the doctrine of the Materialist?
HYL. This I have already acknowledged.
Phil. The creation, therefore,
according to them, was not the creation of things
sensible, which have only a relative being, but of
certain unknown natures, which have an absolute being,
wherein creation might terminate?
HYL. True.
Phil. Is it not therefore
evident the assertors of Matter destroy the plain
obvious sense of Moses, with which their notions are
utterly inconsistent; and instead of it obtrude on
us I know not what; something equally unintelligible
to themselves and me?
HYL. I cannot contradict you.
Phil. Moses tells us of
a creation. A creation of what? of unknown quiddities,
of occasions, or substratum? No, certainly;
but of things obvious to the senses. You must
first reconcile this with your notions, if you expect
I should be reconciled to them.
HYL. I see you can assault me with my own weapons.
Phil. Then as to absolute
existence; was there ever known a more jejune
notion than that? Something it is so abstracted
and unintelligible that you have frankly owned you
could not conceive it, much less explain anything
by it. But allowing Matter to exist, and the notion
of absolute existence to be clear as light; yet, was
this ever known to make the creation more credible?
Nay, hath it not furnished the atheists and infidels
of all ages with the most plausible arguments against
a creation? That a corporeal substance, which
hath an absolute existence without the minds of spirits,
should be produced out of nothing, by the mere will
of a Spirit, hath been looked upon as a thing so contrary
to all reason, so impossible and absurd! that not
only the most celebrated among the ancients, but even
divers modern and Christian philosophers have thought
Matter co-eternal with the Deity. Lay these things
together, and then judge you whether Materialism disposes
men to believe the creation of things.
HYL. I own, Philonous, I think
it does not. This of the creation is the
last objection I can think of; and I must needs own
it hath been sufficiently answered as well as the
rest. Nothing now remains to be overcome but
a sort of unaccountable backwardness that I find in
myself towards your notions.
Phil. When a man is swayed,
he knows not why, to one side of’ the question,
can this, think you, be anything else but the effect
of prejudice, which never fails to attend old and
rooted notions? And indeed in this respect I
cannot deny the belief of Matter to have very much
the advantage over the contrary opinion, with men of
a learned, education.
HYL. I confess it seems to be as you say.
Phil. As a balance, therefore,
to this weight of prejudice, let us throw into the
scale the great advantages that arise from the belief
of Immaterialism, both in regard to religion and human
learning. The being of a God, and incorruptibility
of the soul, those great articles of religion, are
they not proved with the clearest and most immediate
evidence? When I say the being of a God, I do
not mean an obscure general Cause of things, whereof
we have no conception, but God, in the strict and
proper sense of the word. A Being whose spirituality,
omnipresence, providence, omniscience, infinite power
and goodness, are as conspicuous as the existence
of sensible things, of which (notwithstanding the
fallacious pretences and affected scruples of Sceptics)
there is no more reason to doubt than of our own being.-Then,
with relation to human sciences. In Natural Philosophy,
what intricacies, what obscurities, what contradictions
hath the belief of Matter led men into! To say
nothing of the numberless disputes about its extent,
continuity, homogeneity, gravity, divisibility, &c.-do
they not pretend to explain all things by bodies operating
on bodies, according to the laws of motion? and yet,
are they able to comprehend how one body should move
another? Nay, admitting there was no difficulty
in reconciling the notion of an inert being with a
cause, or in conceiving how an accident might pass
from one body to another; yet, by all their strained
thoughts and extravagant suppositions, have they been
able to reach the mechanical production of any
one animal or vegetable body? Can they account,
by the laws of motion, for sounds, tastes, smells,
or colours; or for the regular course of things?
Have they accounted, by physical principles, for the
aptitude and contrivance even of the most inconsiderable
parts of the universe? But, laying aside Matter
and corporeal, causes, and admitting only the efficiency
of an All-perfect Mind, are not all the effects of
nature easy and intelligible? If the phenomena
are nothing else but ideas; God is a spirit,
but Matter an unintelligent, unperceiving being.
If they demonstrate an unlimited power in their cause;
God is active and omnipotent, but Matter an inert
mass. If the order, regularity, and usefulness
of them can never be sufficiently admired; God is
infinitely wise and provident, but Matter destitute
of all contrivance and design. These surely are
great advantages in physics. Not to mention
that the apprehension of a distant Deity naturally
disposes men to a negligence in their moral actions;
which they would be more cautious of, in case they
thought Him immediately present, and acting on their
minds, without the interposition of Matter, or unthinking
second causes.-Then in metaphysics:
what difficulties concerning entity in abstract, substantial
forms, hylarchic principles, plastic natures, substance
and accident, principle of individuation, possibility
of Matter’s thinking, origin of ideas, the manner
how two independent substances so widely different
as spirit and matter, should mutually
operate on each other? what difficulties, I say, and
endless disquisitions, concerning these and innumerable
other the like points, do we escape, by supposing
only Spirits and ideas?-Even the mathematics
themselves, if we take away the absolute existence
of extended things, become much more clear and easy;
the most shocking paradoxes and intricate speculations
in those sciences depending on the infinite divisibility
of finite extension; which depends on that supposition-But
what need is there to insist on the particular sciences?
Is not that opposition to all science whatsoever,
that frenzy of the ancient and modern Sceptics, built
on the same foundation? Or can you produce so
much as one argument against the reality of corporeal
things, or in behalf of that avowed utter ignorance
of their natures, which doth not suppose their reality
to consist in an external absolute existence?
Upon this supposition, indeed, the objections from
the change of colours in a pigeon’s neck, or
the appearance of the broken oar in the water, must
be allowed to have weight. But these and the
like objections vanish, if we do not maintain the
being of absolute external originals, but place the
reality of things in ideas, fleeting indeed, and changeable;-however,
not changed at random, but according to the fixed order
of nature. For, herein consists that constancy
and truth of things which secures all the concerns
of life, and distinguishes that which is real from
the irregular visions of the fancy.
HYL. I agree to all you have
now said, and must own that nothing can incline me
to embrace your opinion more than the advantages I
see it is attended with. I am by nature lazy;
and this would be a mighty abridgment in knowledge.
What doubts, what hypotheses, what labyrinths of amusement,
what fields of disputation, what an ocean of false
learning, may be avoided by that single notion of
immaterialism!
Phil. After all, is there
anything farther remaining to be done? You may
remember you promised to embrace that opinion which
upon examination should appear most agreeable to Common
Sense and remote from Scepticism. This, by your
own confession, is that which denies Matter, or the
absolute existence of corporeal things. Nor
is this all; the same notion has been proved several
ways, viewed in different lights, pursued in its consequences,
and all objections against it cleared. Can there
be a greater evidence of its truth? or is it possible
it should have all the marks of a true opinion and
yet be false?
HYL. I own myself entirely satisfied
for the present in all respects. But, what security
can I have that I shall still continue the same full
assent to your opinion, and that no unthought-of objection
or difficulty will occur hereafter?
Phil. Pray, Hylas, do you
in other cases, when a point is once evidently proved,
withhold your consent on account of objections or
difficulties it may be liable to? Are the difficulties
that attend the doctrine of incommensurable quantities,
of the angle of contact, of the asymptotes to curves,
or the like, sufficient to make you hold out against
mathematical demonstration? Or will you disbelieve
the Providence of God, because there may be some particular
things which you know not how to reconcile with it?
If there are difficulties attending immaterialism,
there are at the same time direct and evident proofs
of it. But for the existence of Matter there
is not one proof, and far more numerous and insurmountable
objections lie against it. But where are those
mighty difficulties you insist on? Alas! you know
not where or what they are; something which may possibly
occur hereafter. If this be a sufficient pretence
for withholding your full assent, you should never
yield it to any proposition, how free soever from exceptions,
how clearly and solidly soever demonstrated.
HYL. You have satisfied me, Philonous.
Phil. But, to arm you against
all future objections, do but consider: That
which bears equally hard on two contradictory opinions
can be proof against neither. Whenever, therefore,
any difficulty occurs, try if you can find a solution
for it on the hypothesis of the Materialists.
Be not deceived by words; but sound your own thoughts.
And in case you cannot conceive it easier by the help
of materialism, it is plain it can be no objection
against immaterialism. Had you proceeded
all along by this rule, you would probably have spared
yourself abundance of trouble in objecting; since
of all your difficulties I challenge you to shew one
that is explained by Matter: nay, which is not
more unintelligible with than without that supposition;
and consequently makes rather against than for
it. You should consider, in each particular,
whether the difficulty arises from the non-existence
of matter. If it doth not, you might
as well argue from the infinite divisibility of extension
against the Divine prescience, as from such a difficulty
against immaterialism. And yet, upon recollection,
I believe you will find this to have been often, if
not always, the case. You should likewise take
heed not to argue on a petitio principii.
One is apt to say-The unknown substances
ought to be esteemed real things, rather than the
ideas in our minds: and who can tell but the unthinking
external substance may concur, as a cause or instrument,
in the productions of our ideas? But is not this
proceeding on a supposition that there are such external
substances? And to suppose this, is it not begging
the question? But, above all things, you should
beware of imposing on yourself by that vulgar sophism
which is called ignoratio elenchi. You
talked often as if you thought I maintained the non-existence
of Sensible Things. Whereas in truth no one can
be more thoroughly assured of their existence than
I am. And it is you who doubt; I should have
said, positively deny it. Everything that is
seen, felt, heard, or any way perceived by the senses,
is, on the principles I embrace, a real being; but
not on yours. Remember, the Matter you contend
for is an Unknown Somewhat (if indeed it may be termed
somewhat), which is quite stripped of all sensible
qualities, and can neither be perceived by sense, nor
apprehended by the mind. Remember I say, that
it is not any object which is hard or soft, hot or
cold, blue or white, round or square, &c. For
all these things I affirm do exist. Though indeed
I deny they have an existence distinct from being
perceived; or that they exist out of all minds whatsoever.
Think on these points; let them be attentively considered
and still kept in view. Otherwise you will not
comprehend the state of the question; without which
your objections will always be wide of the mark, and,
instead of mine, may possibly be directed (as more
than once they have been) against your own notions.
HYL. I must needs own, Philonous,
nothing seems to have kept me from agreeing with you
more than this same mistaking the question.
In denying Matter, at first glimpse I am tempted to
imagine you deny the things we see and feel:
but, upon reflexion, find there is no ground for it.
What think you, therefore, of retaining the name matter,
and applying it to sensible things?
This may be done without any change in your sentiments:
and, believe me, it would be a means of reconciling
them to some persons who may be more shocked at an
innovation in words than in opinion.
Phil. With all my heart:
retain the word matter, and apply it to the objects
of sense, if you please; provided you do not attribute
to them any subsistence distinct from their being
perceived. I shall never quarrel with you for
an expression. Matter, or material substance,
are terms introduced by philosophers; and, as used
by them, imply a sort of independency, or a subsistence
distinct from being perceived by a mind: but
are never used by common people; or, if ever, it is
to signify the immediate objects of sense. One
would think, therefore, so long as the names of all
particular things, with the terms sensible,
substance, body, stuff, and the like,
are retained, the word matter should be never
missed in common talk. And in philosophical discourses
it seems the best way to leave it quite out: since
there is not, perhaps, any one thing that hath more
favoured and strengthened the depraved bent of the
mind towards Atheism than the use of that general
confused term.
HYL. Well but, Philonous, since
I am content to give up the notion of an unthinking
substance exterior to the mind, I think you ought not
to deny me the privilege of using the word matter
as I please, and annexing it to a collection of sensible
qualities subsisting only in the mind. I freely
own there is no other substance, in a strict sense,
than spirit. But I have been so long accustomed
to the term matter that I know not how to part
with it: to say, there is no matter in the
world, is still shocking to me. Whereas to say-There
is no matter, if by that term be meant an unthinking
substance existing without the mind; but if by matter
is meant some sensible thing, whose existence consists
in being perceived, then there is matter:-This
distinction gives it quite another turn; and men will
come into your notions with small difficulty, when
they are proposed in that manner. For, after all,
the controversy about matter in the strict acceptation
of it, lies altogether between you and the philosophers:
whose principles, I acknowledge, are not near so natural,
or so agreeable to the common sense of mankind, and
Holy Scripture, as yours. There is nothing we
either desire or shun but as it makes, or is apprehended
to make, some part of our happiness or misery.
But what hath happiness or misery, joy or grief, pleasure
or pain, to do with Absolute Existence; or with unknown
entities, abstracted from all relation
to us? It is evident, things regard
us only as they are pleasing or displeasing: and
they can please or displease only so far forth as
they are perceived. Farther, therefore, we are
not concerned; and thus far you leave things as you
found them. Yet still there is something new
in this doctrine. It is plain, I do not now think
with the Philosophers; nor yet altogether with the
vulgar. I would know how the case stands in that
respect; precisely, what you have added to, or altered
in my former notions.
Phil. I do not pretend
to be a setter-up of new notions. My endeavours
tend only to unite, and place in a clearer light, that
truth which was before shared between the vulgar and
the philosophers:-the former being of opinion,
that those things they immediately
perceive are the real things;
and the latter, that the things immediately
perceived are ideas, which exist
only in the mind. Which two
notions put together, do, in effect, constitute the
substance of what I advance.
HYL. I have been a long time
distrusting my senses: methought I saw things
by a dim light and through false glasses. Now
the glasses are removed and a new light breaks in
upon my under standing. I am clearly convinced
that I see things in their native forms, and am no
longer in pain about their unknown natures
or absolute existence. This is
the state I find myself in at present; though, indeed,
the course that brought me to it I do not yet thoroughly
comprehend. You set out upon the same principles
that Academics, Cartesians, and the like sects usually
do; and for a long time it looked as if you were advancing
their philosophical Scepticism: but, in the end,
your conclusions are directly opposite to theirs.
Phil. You see, Hylas, the
water of yonder fountain, how it is forced upwards,
in a round column, to a certain height; at which it
breaks, and falls back into the basin from whence it
rose: its ascent, as well as descent, proceeding
from the same uniform law or principle of gravitation.
just so, the same Principles which, at first view,
lead to Scepticism, pursued to a certain point, bring
men back to Common Sense.