OF REASON.
1. Various Significations of the word Reason.
The word reason in the English
language has different significations: sometimes
it is taken for true and clear principles: sometimes
for clear and fair deductions from those principles:
and sometimes for the cause, and particularly the
final cause. But the consideration I shall have
of it here is in a signification different from all
these; and that is, as it stands for a faculty in
man, that faculty whereby man is supposed to be distinguished
from beasts, and wherein it is evident he much surpasses
them.
2. Wherein Reasoning consists.
If general knowledge, as has been
shown, consists in a perception of the agreement or
disagreement of our own ideas, and the knowledge of
the existence of all things without us (except only
of a God, whose existence every man may certainly
know and demonstrate to himself from his own existence),
be had only by our senses, what room is there for
the exercise of any other faculty, but outward
sense and inward perception? What
need is there of reason? Very much:
both for the enlargement of our knowledge, and regulating
our assent. For it hath to do both in knowledge
and opinion, and is necessary and assisting to all
our other intellectual faculties, and indeed contains
two of them, viz. sagacity and illation.
By the one, it finds out; and by the other, it so
orders the intermediate ideas as to discover what connexion
there is in each link of the chain, whereby the extremes
are held together; and thereby, as it were, to draw
into view the truth sought for, which is that which
we call illation or inference, and consists
in nothing but the perception of the connexion there
is between the ideas, in each step of the deduction;
whereby the mind comes to see, either the certain
agreement or disagreement of any two ideas, as in demonstration,
in which it arrives at knowledge; or their probable
connexion, on which it gives or withholds its assent,
as in opinion. Sense and intuition reach
but a very little way. The greatest part of our
knowledge depends upon deductions and intermediate
ideas: and in those cases where we are fain to
substitute assent instead of knowledge, and take propositions
for true, without being certain they are so, we have
need to find out, examine, and compare the grounds
of their probability. In both these cases, the
faculty which finds out the means, and rightly applies
them, to discover certainty in the one, and probability
in the other, is that which we call reason.
For, as reason perceives the necessary and indubitable
connexion of all the ideas or proofs one to another,
in each step of any demonstration that produces knowledge;
so it likewise perceives the probable connexion of
all the ideas or proofs one to another, in every step
of a discourse, to which it will think assent due.
This is the lowest degree of that which can be truly
called reason. For where the mind does not perceive
this probable connexion, where it does not discern
whether there be any such connexion or no; there men’s
opinions are not the product of judgment, or the consequence
of reason, but the effects of chance and hazard, of
a mind floating at all adventures, without choice
and without direction.
3. Reason in its four degrees.
So that we may in reason consider
these four degrees: the first and highest
is the discovering and finding out of truths; the second,
the regular and methodical disposition of them, and
laying them in a clear and fit order, to make their
connexion and force be plainly and easily perceived;
the third is the perceiving their connexion; and the
fourth, a making a right conclusion. These several
degrees may be observed in any mathematical demonstration;
it being one thing to perceive the connexion of each
part, as the demonstration is made by another; another
to perceive the dependence of the conclusion on all
the parts; a third, to make out a demonstration clearly
and neatly one’s self; and something different
from all these, to have first found out these intermediate
ideas or proofs by which it is made.
4. Whether Syllogism is the great Instrument
of Reason.
There is one thing more which I shall
desire to be considered concerning reason; and that
is, whether syllogism, as is generally thought,
be the proper instrument of it, and the usefullest
way of exercising this faculty. The causes I
have to doubt are these:
First Cause to doubt this.
First, Because syllogism serves
our reason but in one only of the forementioned parts
of it; and that is, to show the connexion of
the proofs in any one instance, and no more;
but in this it is of no great use, since the mind
can perceive such connexion, where it really is, as
easily, nay, perhaps better, without it.
Men can reason well who cannot make a Syllogism.
If we will observe the actings of
our own minds, we shall find that we reason best and
clearest, when we only observe the connexion of the
proof, without reducing our thoughts to any rule of
syllogism. And therefore we may take notice,
that there are many men that reason exceeding clear
and rightly, who know not how to make a syllogism.
He that will look into many parts of Asia and America,
will find men reason there perhaps as acutely as himself,
who yet never heard of a syllogism, nor can reduce
any one argument to those forms: [and I believe
scarce any one makes syllogisms in reasoning within
himself.] Indeed syllogism is made use of, on occasion,
to discover a fallacy hid in a rhetorical flourish,
or cunningly wrapt up in a smooth period; and, stripping
an absurdity of the cover of wit and good language,
show it in its naked deformity. But the mind
is not taught to reason by these rules; it has a native
faculty to perceive the coherence or incoherence of
its ideas, and can range them right without any such
perplexing repetitions. Tell a country gentlewoman
that the wind is south-west, and the weather lowering,
and like to rain, and she will easily understand it
is not safe for her to go abroad thin clad in such
a day, after a fever: she clearly sees the probable
connexion of all these, viz. south-west wind,
and clouds, rain, wetting, taking cold, relapse, and
danger of death, without tying them together in those
artificial and cumbersome fetters of several syllogisms,
that clog and hinder the mind, which proceeds from
one part to another quicker and clearer without them:
and the probability which she easily perceives in
things thus in their native state would be quite lost,
if this argument were managed learnedly, and proposed
in mode and figure. For it very often
confounds the connexion; and, I think, every one will
perceive in mathematical demonstrations, that the
knowledge gained thereby comes shortest and clearest
without syllogism.
Secondly, Because though syllogism
serves to show the force or fallacy of an argument,
made use of in the usual way of discoursing, by
supplying the absent proposition,
and so, setting it before the view in a clear light;
yet it no less engages the mind in the perplexity of
obscure, equivocal, and fallacious terms, wherewith
this artificial way of reasoning always abounds:
it being adapted more to the attaining of victory
in dispute than the discovery and confirmation of truth
in fair enquiries.
5. Syllogism helps little in
Demonstration, less in Probability.
But however it be in knowledge, I
think I may truly say, it is of far less,
or no use at all in probabilities.
For the assent there being to be determined by the
preponderancy, after due weighing of all the proofs,
with all circumstances on both sides, nothing is so
unfit to assist the mind in that as syllogism; which
running away with one assumed probability, or one
topical argument, pursues that till it has led the
mind quite out of sight of the thing under consideration;
and, forcing it upon some remote difficulty, holds
it fast there; entangled perhaps, and, as it were,
manacled, in the chain of syllogisms, without allowing
it the liberty, much less affording it the helps, requisite
to show on which side, all things considered, is the
greater probability.
6. Serves not to increase our
Knowledge, but to fence with the Knowledge we suppose
we have.
But let it help us (as perhaps may
be said) in convincing men of their errors and mistakes:
(and yet I would fain see the man that was forced
out of his opinion by dint of syllogism,) yet still
it fails our reason in that part, which, if not its
highest perfection, is yet certainly its hardest task,
and that which we most need its help in; and that is
the finding out of proofs,
and making new discoveries.
The rules of syllogism serve not to furnish the mind
with those intermediate ideas that may show the connexion
of remote ones. This way of reasoning discovers
no new proofs, but is the art of marshalling and ranging
the old ones we have already. The forty-seventh
proposition of the first book of Euclid is very true;
but the discovery of it, I think, not owing to any
rules of common logic. A man knows first and then
he is able to prove syllogistically. So that
syllogism comes after knowledge, and then a man has
little or no need of it. But it is chiefly by
the finding out those ideas that show the connexion
of distant ones, that our stock of knowledge is increased,
and that useful arts and sciences are advanced.
Syllogism, at best, is but the art of fencing with
the little knowledge we have, without making any addition
to it. And if a man should employ his reason
all this way, he will not do much otherwise than he
who, having got some iron out of the bowels of the
earth, should have it beaten up all into swords, and
put it into his servants’ hands to fence with
and bang one another. Had the King of Spain employed
the hands of his people, and his Spanish iron so,
he had brought to light but little of that treasure
that lay so long hid in the dark entrails of America.
And I am apt to think that he who shall employ all
the force of his reason only in brandishing of syllogisms,
will discover very little of that mass of knowledge
which lies yet concealed in the secret recesses of
nature; and which, I am apt to think, native rustic
reason (as it formerly has done) is likelier to open
a way to, and add to the common stock of mankind,
rather than any scholastic proceeding by the strict
rules of mode and figure.
7. Other Helps to reason than Syllogism should
be sought.
I doubt not, nevertheless, but there are ways to be found to
assist our reason in this most useful part; and this the judicious Hooker
encourages me to say, speaks thus: ’If there might be added
the right helps of true art and learning, (which helps,
I must plainly confess, this age of the world, carrying
the name of a learned age, doth neither much know nor
generally regard,) there would undoubtedly be almost
as much difference in maturity of judgment between
men therewith inured, and that which men now are, as
between men that are now, and innocents.’
I do not pretend to have found or discovered here
any of those ‘right helps of art,’ this
great man of deep thought mentions: but that
is plain, that syllogism, and the logic now in use,
which were as well known in his days, can be none of
those he means. It is sufficient for me, if by
a Discourse, perhaps something out of the way, I am
sure, as to me, wholly new and unborrowed, I shall
have given occasion to others to cast about for new
discoveries, and to seek in their own thoughts for
those right helps of art, which will scarce be found,
I fear, by those who servilely confine themselves to
the rules and dictates of others. For beaten tracks
lead this sort of cattle, (as an observing Roman calls
them,) whose thoughts reach only to imitation, non
quo EUNDUM EST, sed quo ITUR. But
I can be bold to say, that this age is adorned with
some men of that strength of judgment and largeness
of comprehension, that, if they would employ their
thoughts on this subject, could open new and undiscovered
ways to the advancement of knowledge.
8. We can reason about Particulars;
and the immediate object of all our reasonings is
nothing but particular ideas.
Having here had occasion to speak
of syllogism in general, and the use of it in reasoning,
and the improvement of our knowledge, it is fit, before
I leave this subject, to take notice of one manifest
mistake in the rules of syllogism: viz.
that no syllogistical reasoning can be right and conclusive,
but what has at least one general proposition
in it. As if we could not reason, and have knowledge
about particulars: whereas, in truth, the matter
rightly considered, the immediate object of all our
reasoning and knowledge, is nothing but particulars.
Every man’s reasoning and knowledge is only
about the ideas existing in his own mind; which are
truly, every one of them, particular existences:
and our knowledge and reason about other things, is
only as they correspond with those our particular
ideas. So that the perception of the agreement
or disagreement of our particular ideas, is the whole
and utmost of all our knowledge. Universality
is but accidental to it, and consists only in this,
that the particular ideas about which it is are such
as more than one particular, thing can correspond
with and be represented by. But the perception
of the agreement or disagreement of our particular
ideas, and consequently our knowledge, is equally clear
and certain, whether either, or both, or neither of
those ideas, be capable of representing more real
beings than one, or no.
9. Our Reason often fails us.
Reason, though it penetrates
into the depths of the sea and earth, elevates our
thoughts as high as the stars, and leads us through
the vast spaces and large rooms of this mighty fabric,
yet it comes far short of the real extent of even
corporeal being. And there are many instances
wherein it fails us: as,
First, In cases when we have no Ideas.
I. It perfectly fails us, where our
ideas fail. It neither does nor can extend itself
further than they do. And therefore, wherever
we have no ideas, our reasoning stops, and we are
at an end of our reckoning: and if at any time
we reason about words which do not stand for any ideas,
it is only about those sounds, and nothing else.
10. Secondly, Because our Ideas
are often obscure or imperfect.
II. Our reason is often puzzled
and at a loss, because of the obscurity, confusion,
or imperfection of the ideas it is employed about;
and there we are involved in difficulties and contradictions.
Thus, not having any perfect idea of the least
extension of matter, nor of infinity,
we are at a loss about the divisibility of matter;
but having perfect, clear, and distinct ideas of number,
our reason meets with none of those inextricable difficulties
in numbers, nor finds itself involved in any contradictions
about them. Thus, we having but imperfect ideas
of the operations of our minds, and of the beginning
of motion, or thought how the mind produces either
of them in us, and much imperfecter yet of the operation
of God, run into great difficulties about free
created agents, which reason cannot well
extricate itself out of.
11. III. Thirdly, Because
we perceive not intermediate Ideas to show conclusions.
Our reason is often at a stand, because
it perceives not those ideas, which could serve to
show the certain or probable agreement or disagreement
of any other two ideas: and in this some men’s
faculties far outgo others. Till algebra, that
great instrument and instance of human sagacity, was
discovered, men with amazement looked on several of
the demonstrations of ancient mathematicians, and could
scarce forbear to think the finding several of those
proofs to be something more than human.
12. IV. Fourthly, Because
we often proceed upon wrong Principles.
The mind, by proceeding upon false
principles, is often engaged in absurdities and difficulties,
brought into straits and contradictions, without knowing
how to free itself: and in that case it is in
vain to implore the help of reason, unless it be to
discover the falsehood and reject the influence of
those wrong principles. Reason is so far from
clearing the difficulties which the building upon false
foundations brings a man into, that if he will pursue
it, it entangles him the more, and engages him deeper
in perplexities.
13. V. Fifthly, Because we often employ doubtful
Terms.
As obscure and imperfect ideas often
involve our reason, so, upon the same ground, do dubious
words and uncertain signs, often, in discourses and
arguings, when not warily attended to, puzzle men’s
reason, and bring them to a nonplus. But these
two latter are our fault, and not the fault of reason.
But yet the consequences of them are nevertheless
obvious; and the perplexities or errors they fill men’s
minds with are everywhere observable.
14. Our highest Degree of Knowledge
is intuitive, without Reasoning.
Some of the ideas that are in the
mind, are so there, that they can be by themselves
immediately compared one with another: and in
these the mind is able to perceive that they agree
or disagree as clearly as that it has them. Thus
the mind perceives, that an arch of a circle is less
than the whole circle, as clearly as it does the idea
of a circle: and this, therefore, as has been
said, I call intuitive knowledge; which is
certain, beyond all doubt, and needs no probation,
nor can have any; this being the highest of all human
certainty. In this consists the evidence of all
those maxims which nobody has any doubt about,
but every man (does not, as is said, only assent to,
but) knows to be true, as soon as ever they are
proposed to his understanding. In the discovery
of and assent to these truths, there is no use of
the discursive faculty, no need of
reasoning, but they are known by a superior and
higher degree of evidence. And such, if I may
guess at things unknown, I am apt to think that angels
have now, and the spirits of just men made perfect
shall have, in a future state, of thousands of things
which now either wholly escape our apprehensions,
or which our short-sighted reason having got some
faint glimpse of, we, in the dark, grope after.
15. The next is got by Reasoning.
But though we have, here and there,
a little of this clear light, some sparks of bright
knowledge, yet the greatest part of our ideas are such,
that we cannot discern their agreement or disagreement
by an immediate comparing them. And in all these
we have need of reasoning, and must,
by discourse and inference, make our discoveries.
Now of these there are two sorts, which I shall take
the liberty to mention here again:
First, through Reasonings that are Demonstrative.
First, Those whose agreement or disagreement,
though it cannot be seen by an immediate putting them
together, yet may be examined by the intervention
of other ideas which can be compared with them.
In this case, when the agreement or disagreement of
the intermediate idea, on both sides, with those which
we would compare, is plainly discerned:
there it amounts to demonstration whereby knowledge
is produced, which, though it be certain, yet it is
not so easy, nor altogether so clear as intuitive
knowledge. Because in that there is barely one
simple intuition, wherein there is no room for any
the least mistake or doubt: the truth is seen
all perfectly at once. In demonstration, it is
true, there is intuition too, but not altogether at
once; for there must be a remembrance of the intuition
of the agreement of the medium, or intermediate idea,
with that we compared it with before, when we compare
it with the other: and where there be many mediums,
there the danger of the mistake is the greater.
For each agreement or disagreement of the ideas must
be observed and seen in each step of the whole train,
and retained in the memory, just as it is; and the
mind must be sure that no part of what is necessary
to make up the demonstration is omitted or overlooked.
This makes some demonstrations long and perplexed,
and too hard for those who have not strength of parts
distinctly to perceive, and exactly carry so many
particulars orderly in their heads. And even
those who are able to master such intricate speculations,
are fain sometimes to go over them again, and there
is need of more than one review before they can arrive
at certainty. But yet where the mind clearly
retains the intuition it had of the agreement of any
idea with another, and that with a third, and that
with a fourth, &c., there the agreement of the first
and the fourth is a demonstration, and produces certain
knowledge; which may be called rational knowledge,
as the other is intuitive.
16. Secondly, to supply the narrowness
of Demonstrative and Intuitive Knowledge we have nothing
but Judgment upon probable reasoning.
Secondly, There are other ideas, whose
agreement or disagreement can no otherwise be judged
of but by the intervention of others which have not
a certain agreement with the extremes, but an usual
or likely one: and in these is that the
judgment is properly exercised; which is the
acquiescing of the mind, that any ideas do agree, by
comparing them with such probable mediums. This,
though it never amounts to knowledge, no, not to that
which is the lowest degree of it; yet sometimes the
intermediate ideas tie the extremes so firmly together,
and the probability is so clear and strong, that assent
as necessarily follows it, as knowledge does
demonstration. The great excellency and use of
the judgment is to observe right, and take a true
estimate of the force and weight of each probability;
and then casting them up all right together, choose
that side which has the overbalance.
17. Intuition, Demonstration, Judgment.
Intuitive knowledge is the
perception of the certain agreement or disagreement
of two ideas immediately compared together.
Rational knowledge is the
perception of the certain agreement or disagreement
of any two ideas, by the intervention of one or more
other ideas.
Judgment is the thinking or taking
two ideas to agree or disagree, by the intervention
of one or more ideas, whose certain agreement or disagreement
with them it does not perceive, but hath observed to
be frequent and usual.
18. Consequences of Words, and Consequences of
Ideas.
Though the deducing one proposition
from another, or making inferences in words,
be a great part of reason, and that which it is usually
employed about; yet the principal act of ratiocination
is the finding the agreement or
disagreement of two ideas one
with another, by the intervention
of A third. As a man, by a yard, finds
two houses to be of the same length, which could not
be brought together to measure their equality by juxta-position.
Words have their consequences, as the signs of such
ideas: and things agree or disagree, as really
they are; but we observe it only by our ideas.
19. Four sorts of Arguments.
Before we quit this subject, it may
be worth our while a little to reflect on four
sorts of arguments, that men, in their
reasonings with others, do ordinarily make use of
to prevail on their assent; or at least so to awe
them as to silence their opposition.
First, Argumentum ad verecundiam.
I. The first is, to allege the opinions
of men, whose parts, learning, eminency, power, or
some other cause has gained a name, and settled their
reputation in the common esteem with some kind of authority.
When men are established in any kind of dignity, it
is thought a breach of modesty for others to derogate
any way from it, and question the authority of men
who are in possession of it. This is apt to be
censured, as carrying with it too much pride, when
a man does not readily yield to the determination
of approved authors, which is wont to be received
with respect and submission by others: and it
is looked upon as insolence, for a man to set up and
adhere to his own opinion against the current stream
of antiquity; or to put it in the balance against
that of some learned doctor, or otherwise approved
writer. Whoever backs his tenets with such authorities,
thinks he ought thereby to carry the cause, and is
ready to style it impudence in any one who shall stand
out against them. This I think may be called
argumentum ad verecundiam.
20. Secondly, Argumentum ad Ignorantiam.
II. Secondly, Another way that
men ordinarily use to drive others, and force them
to submit their judgments, and receive the opinion
in debate, is to require the adversary to admit what
they allege as a proof, or to assign a better.
And this I call argumentum ad Ignorantiam.
21. Thirdly, Argumentum ad hominem.
III. Thirdly, A third way is
to press a man with consequences drawn from his own
principles or concessions. This is already known
under the name of argumentum ad hominem.
22. Fourthly, Argumentum ad justicium.
The Fourth alone advances us in knowledge and judgment.
IV. The fourth is the using of
proofs drawn from any of the foundations of knowledge
or probability. This I call argumentum ad
justicium. This alone, of all the four,
brings true instruction with it, and advances us in
our way to knowledge. For, 1. It argues not
another man’s opinion to be right, because I,
out of respect, or any other consideration but that
of conviction, will not contradict him 2. It
proves not another man to be in the right way, nor
that I ought to take the same with him, because I
know not a better 3. Nor does it follow that
another man is in the right way, because he has shown
me that I am in the wrong. I may be modest, and
therefore not oppose another man’s persuasion:
I may be ignorant, and not be able to produce a better:
I may be in an error, and another may show me that
I am so. This may dispose me, perhaps, for the
reception of truth, but helps me not to it: that
must come from proofs and arguments, and light arising
from the nature of things themselves, and not from
my shamefacedness, ignorance, or error.
23. Above, contrary, and according to Reason.
By what has been before said of reason,
we may be able to make some guess at the distinction
of things, into those that are according to, above,
and contrary to reason 1. According to
reason are such propositions whose truth we can
discover by examining and tracing those ideas we have
from sensation and reflection; and by natural deduction
find to be true or probable 2. Above reason
are such propositions whose truth or probability we
cannot by reason derive from those principles 3.
Contrary to reason are such propositions
as are inconsistent with or irreconcilable to our
clear and distinct ideas. Thus the existence of
one God is according to reason; the existence of more
than one God, contrary to reason; the resurrection
of the dead, above reason. Above reason
also may be taken in a double sense, viz. either
as signifying above probability, or above certainty:
and in that large sense also, contrary to
reason, is, I suppose, sometimes taken.
24. Reason and Faith not opposite,
for Faith must be regulated by Reason.
There is another use of the word reason,
wherein it is opposed to faith:
which, though it be in itself a very improper way of
speaking, yet common use has so authorized it, that
it would be folly either to oppose or hope to remedy
it. Only I think it may not be amiss to take notice,
that, however faith be opposed to reason, faith is
nothing but a firm assent of the mind: which,
if it be regulated, as is our duty, cannot be afforded
to anything but upon good reason; and so cannot be
opposite to it. He that believes without having
any reason for believing, may be in love with his
own fancies; but neither seeks truth as he ought, nor
pays the obedience due to his Maker, who would have
him use those discerning faculties he has given him,
to keep him out of mistake and error. He that
does not this to the best of his power, however he
sometimes lights on truth, is in the right but by
chance; and I know not whether the luckiness of the
accident will excuse the irregularity of his proceeding.
This at least is certain, that he must be accountable
for whatever mistakes he runs into: whereas he
that makes use of the light and faculties God has
given him, and seeks sincerely to discover truth by
those helps and abilities he has, may have this satisfaction
in doing his duty as a rational creature, that, though
he should miss truth, he will not miss the reward
of it. For he governs his assent right, and places
it as he should, who, in any case or matter whatsoever,
believes or disbelieves according as reason directs
him. He that doth otherwise, transgresses against
his own light, and misuses those faculties which were
given him to no other end, but to search and follow
the clearer evidence and greater probability.
But since reason and faith are by some men opposed,
we will so consider them in the following chapter.