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| Title: The Problems of Philosophy |
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| Author: Bertrand Russell |
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| "Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5827]" |
| "Posting Date: May 2, 2009" |
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| Language: English |
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| Character set encoding: ASCII |
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| *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PROBLEMS OF PHILOSOPHY *** |
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| Produced by Gordon Keener |
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| THE PROBLEMS OF PHILOSOPHY |
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| By Bertrand Russell |
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| PREFACE |
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| In the following pages I have confined myself in the main to those |
| problems of philosophy in regard to which I thought it possible to say |
| "something positive and constructive, since merely negative criticism" |
| "seemed out of place. For this reason, theory of knowledge occupies a" |
| "larger space than metaphysics in the present volume, and some topics" |
| "much discussed by philosophers are treated very briefly, if at all." |
| "" |
| I have derived valuable assistance from unpublished writings of G. E. |
| "Moore and J. M. Keynes: from the former, as regards the relations" |
| "of sense-data to physical objects, and from the latter as regards" |
| "of sense-data to physical objects, and from the latter as regards" |
| probability and induction. I have also profited greatly by the |
| criticisms and suggestions of Professor Gilbert Murray. |
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| 1912 |
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| CHAPTER I. APPEARANCE AND REALITY |
| "" |
| Is there any knowledge in the world which is so certain that no |
| "reasonable man could doubt it? This question, which at first sight might" |
| "not seem difficult, is really one of the most difficult that can" |
| be asked. When we have realized the obstacles in the way of a |
| "straightforward and confident answer, we shall be well launched on the" |
| study of philosophy--for philosophy is merely the attempt to answer |
| study of philosophy--for philosophy is merely the attempt to answer |
| study of philosophy--for philosophy is merely the attempt to answer |
| "such ultimate questions, not carelessly and dogmatically, as we do in" |
| "ordinary life and even in the sciences, but critically, after exploring" |
| "all that makes such questions puzzling, and after realizing all the" |
| vagueness and confusion that underlie our ordinary ideas. |
| "" |
| "In daily life, we assume as certain many things which, on a closer" |
| "scrutiny, are found to be so full of apparent contradictions that only a" |
| great amount of thought enables us to know what it is that we really may |
| "believe. In the search for certainty, it is natural to begin with our" |
| "present experiences, and in some sense, no doubt, knowledge is to be" |
| derived from them. But any statement as to what it is that our immediate |
| experiences make us know is very likely to be wrong. It seems to me that |
| "I am now sitting in a chair, at a table of a certain shape, on which I" |
| see sheets of paper with writing or print. By turning my head I see out |
| of the window buildings and clouds and the sun. I believe that the sun |
| is about ninety-three million miles from the earth; that it is a hot |
| is about ninety-three million miles from the earth; that it is a hot |
| "globe many times bigger than the earth; that, owing to the earth's" |
| "rotation, it rises every morning, and will continue to do so for an" |
| "indefinite time in the future. I believe that, if any other normal" |
| "person comes into my room, he will see the same chairs and tables and" |
| "books and papers as I see, and that the table which I see is the same as" |
| the table which I feel pressing against my arm. All this seems to be |
| "so evident as to be hardly worth stating, except in answer to a man who" |
| "doubts whether I know anything. Yet all this may be reasonably doubted," |
| and all of it requires much careful discussion before we can be sure |
| that we have stated it in a form that is wholly true. |
| "" |
| "To make our difficulties plain, let us concentrate attention on the" |
| "table. To the eye it is oblong, brown and shiny, to the touch it is" |
| "smooth and cool and hard; when I tap it, it gives out a wooden sound." |
| Any one else who sees and feels and hears the table will agree with this |
| "description, so that it might seem as if no difficulty would arise;" |
| but as soon as we try to be more precise our troubles begin. Although |
| "I believe that the table is 'really' of the same colour all over, the" |
| "parts that reflect the light look much brighter than the other parts," |
| "and some parts look white because of reflected light. I know that, if" |
| "I move, the parts that reflect the light will be different, so that the" |
| apparent distribution of colours on the table will change. It follows |
| "that if several people are looking at the table at the same moment, no" |
| "two of them will see exactly the same distribution of colours, because" |
| "no two can see it from exactly the same point of view, and any change in" |
| the point of view makes some change in the way the light is reflected. |
| "" |
| "For most practical purposes these differences are unimportant, but to" |
| the painter they are all-important: the painter has to unlearn the habit |
| the painter they are all-important: the painter has to unlearn the habit |
| of thinking that things seem to have the colour which common sense says |
| "they 'really' have, and to learn the habit of seeing things as they" |
| appear. Here we have already the beginning of one of the distinctions |
| that cause most trouble in philosophy--the distinction between |
| that cause most trouble in philosophy--the distinction between |
| that cause most trouble in philosophy--the distinction between |
| "'appearance' and 'reality', between what things seem to be and what they" |
| "are. The painter wants to know what things seem to be, the practical man" |
| and the philosopher want to know what they are; but the philosopher's |
| "wish to know this is stronger than the practical man's, and is more" |
| troubled by knowledge as to the difficulties of answering the question. |
| "" |
| "To return to the table. It is evident from what we have found, that" |
| there is no colour which pre-eminently appears to be _the_ colour of the |
| there is no colour which pre-eminently appears to be _the_ colour of the |
| "table, or even of any one particular part of the table--it appears to" |
| "table, or even of any one particular part of the table--it appears to" |
| "table, or even of any one particular part of the table--it appears to" |
| "be of different colours from different points of view, and there is" |
| no reason for regarding some of these as more really its colour than |
| others. And we know that even from a given point of view the colour will |
| "seem different by artificial light, or to a colour-blind man, or to a" |
| "seem different by artificial light, or to a colour-blind man, or to a" |
| "man wearing blue spectacles, while in the dark there will be no colour" |
| "at all, though to touch and hearing the table will be unchanged. This" |
| "colour is not something which is inherent in the table, but something" |
| depending upon the table and the spectator and the way the light falls |
| "on the table. When, in ordinary life, we speak of _the_ colour of the" |
| "table, we only mean the sort of colour which it will seem to have to a" |
| normal spectator from an ordinary point of view under usual conditions |
| of light. But the other colours which appear under other conditions |
| "have just as good a right to be considered real; and therefore, to avoid" |
| "favouritism, we are compelled to deny that, in itself, the table has any" |
| one particular colour. |
| "" |
| The same thing applies to the texture. With the naked eye one can see |
| "the grain, but otherwise the table looks smooth and even. If we looked" |
| "at it through a microscope, we should see roughnesses and hills and" |
| "valleys, and all sorts of differences that are imperceptible to the" |
| naked eye. Which of these is the 'real' table? We are naturally tempted |
| "to say that what we see through the microscope is more real, but that in" |
| "turn would be changed by a still more powerful microscope. If, then, we" |
| "cannot trust what we see with the naked eye, why should we trust what we" |
| "see through a microscope? Thus, again, the confidence in our senses with" |
| which we began deserts us. |
| "" |
| The shape of the table is no better. We are all in the habit of judging |
| "as to the 'real' shapes of things, and we do this so unreflectingly that" |
| "we come to think we actually see the real shapes. But, in fact, as we" |
| "all have to learn if we try to draw, a given thing looks different" |
| in shape from every different point of view. If our table is 'really' |
| "rectangular, it will look, from almost all points of view, as if it had" |
| "two acute angles and two obtuse angles. If opposite sides are parallel," |
| they will look as if they converged to a point away from the spectator; |
| "if they are of equal length, they will look as if the nearer side were" |
| "longer. All these things are not commonly noticed in looking at a table," |
| because experience has taught us to construct the 'real' shape from the |
| "apparent shape, and the 'real' shape is what interests us as practical" |
| men. But the 'real' shape is not what we see; it is something inferred |
| from what we see. And what we see is constantly changing in shape as we |
| move about the room; so that here again the senses seem not to give us |
| "the truth about the table itself, but only about the appearance of the" |
| table. |
| "" |
| Similar difficulties arise when we consider the sense of touch. It is |
| "true that the table always gives us a sensation of hardness, and we feel" |
| that it resists pressure. But the sensation we obtain depends upon how |
| hard we press the table and also upon what part of the body we press |
| with; thus the various sensations due to various pressures or various |
| parts of the body cannot be supposed to reveal _directly_ any definite |
| "property of the table, but at most to be _signs_ of some property which" |
| "perhaps _causes_ all the sensations, but is not actually apparent in any" |
| of them. And the same applies still more obviously to the sounds which |
| can be elicited by rapping the table. |
| "" |
| "Thus it becomes evident that the real table, if there is one, is not the" |
| same as what we immediately experience by sight or touch or hearing. The |
| "real table, if there is one, is not _immediately_ known to us at all," |
| "but must be an inference from what is immediately known. Hence, two very" |
| "difficult questions at once arise; namely, (1) Is there a real table at" |
| "all? (2) If so, what sort of object can it be?" |
| "" |
| It will help us in considering these questions to have a few simple |
| terms of which the meaning is definite and clear. Let us give the name |
| of 'sense-data' to the things that are immediately known in sensation: |
| of 'sense-data' to the things that are immediately known in sensation: |
| "such things as colours, sounds, smells, hardnesses, roughnesses, and" |
| so on. We shall give the name 'sensation' to the experience of being |
| "immediately aware of these things. Thus, whenever we see a colour," |
| "we have a sensation _of_ the colour, but the colour itself is a" |
| "sense-datum, not a sensation. The colour is that _of_ which we are" |
| "sense-datum, not a sensation. The colour is that _of_ which we are" |
| "immediately aware, and the awareness itself is the sensation. It is" |
| "plain that if we are to know anything about the table, it must be" |
| "by means of the sense-data--brown colour, oblong shape, smoothness," |
| "by means of the sense-data--brown colour, oblong shape, smoothness," |
| "by means of the sense-data--brown colour, oblong shape, smoothness," |
| "by means of the sense-data--brown colour, oblong shape, smoothness," |
| "etc.--which we associate with the table; but, for the reasons which have" |
| "etc.--which we associate with the table; but, for the reasons which have" |
| "etc.--which we associate with the table; but, for the reasons which have" |
| "been given, we cannot say that the table is the sense-data, or even" |
| "been given, we cannot say that the table is the sense-data, or even" |
| that the sense-data are directly properties of the table. Thus a problem |
| that the sense-data are directly properties of the table. Thus a problem |
| "arises as to the relation of the sense-data to the real table, supposing" |
| "arises as to the relation of the sense-data to the real table, supposing" |
| there is such a thing. |
| "" |
| "The real table, if it exists, we will call a 'physical object'. Thus" |
| we have to consider the relation of sense-data to physical objects. |
| we have to consider the relation of sense-data to physical objects. |
| The collection of all physical objects is called 'matter'. Thus our two |
| questions may be re-stated as follows: (1) Is there any such thing as |
| questions may be re-stated as follows: (1) Is there any such thing as |
| "matter? (2) If so, what is its nature?" |
| "" |
| The philosopher who first brought prominently forward the reasons |
| for regarding the immediate objects of our senses as not existing |
| independently of us was Bishop Berkeley (1685-1753). His _Three |
| independently of us was Bishop Berkeley (1685-1753). His _Three |
| "Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous, in Opposition to Sceptics and" |
| "Atheists_, undertake to prove that there is no such thing as matter at" |
| "all, and that the world consists of nothing but minds and their ideas." |
| "Hylas has hitherto believed in matter, but he is no match for Philonous," |
| "who mercilessly drives him into contradictions and paradoxes, and makes" |
| "his own denial of matter seem, in the end, as if it were almost common" |
| sense. The arguments employed are of very different value: some are |
| "important and sound, others are confused or quibbling. But Berkeley" |
| retains the merit of having shown that the existence of matter is |
| "capable of being denied without absurdity, and that if there are any" |
| things that exist independently of us they cannot be the immediate |
| objects of our sensations. |
| "" |
| There are two different questions involved when we ask whether matter |
| "exists, and it is important to keep them clear. We commonly mean by" |
| "'matter' something which is opposed to 'mind', something which we think" |
| of as occupying space and as radically incapable of any sort of thought |
| or consciousness. It is chiefly in this sense that Berkeley denies |
| "matter; that is to say, he does not deny that the sense-data which we" |
| "matter; that is to say, he does not deny that the sense-data which we" |
| commonly take as signs of the existence of the table are really signs |
| "of the existence of _something_ independent of us, but he does deny" |
| "that this something is non-mental, that it is neither mind nor ideas" |
| "that this something is non-mental, that it is neither mind nor ideas" |
| entertained by some mind. He admits that there must be something which |
| "continues to exist when we go out of the room or shut our eyes, and that" |
| what we call seeing the table does really give us reason for believing |
| in something which persists even when we are not seeing it. But he |
| thinks that this something cannot be radically different in nature from |
| "what we see, and cannot be independent of seeing altogether, though it" |
| must be independent of _our_ seeing. He is thus led to regard the 'real' |
| table as an idea in the mind of God. Such an idea has the required |
| "permanence and independence of ourselves, without being--as matter would" |
| "permanence and independence of ourselves, without being--as matter would" |
| "permanence and independence of ourselves, without being--as matter would" |
| "otherwise be--something quite unknowable, in the sense that we can only" |
| "otherwise be--something quite unknowable, in the sense that we can only" |
| "otherwise be--something quite unknowable, in the sense that we can only" |
| "infer it, and can never be directly and immediately aware of it." |
| "" |
| "Other philosophers since Berkeley have also held that, although the" |
| "table does not depend for its existence upon being seen by me, it does" |
| depend upon being seen (or otherwise apprehended in sensation) by |
| "_some_ mind--not necessarily the mind of God, but more often the whole" |
| "_some_ mind--not necessarily the mind of God, but more often the whole" |
| "_some_ mind--not necessarily the mind of God, but more often the whole" |
| "collective mind of the universe. This they hold, as Berkeley does," |
| chiefly because they think there can be nothing real--or at any rate |
| chiefly because they think there can be nothing real--or at any rate |
| chiefly because they think there can be nothing real--or at any rate |
| nothing known to be real except minds and their thoughts and feelings. |
| We might state the argument by which they support their view in some |
| such way as this: 'Whatever can be thought of is an idea in the mind of |
| the person thinking of it; therefore nothing can be thought of except |
| "ideas in minds; therefore anything else is inconceivable, and what is" |
| inconceivable cannot exist.' |
| "" |
| "Such an argument, in my opinion, is fallacious; and of course those who" |
| advance it do not put it so shortly or so crudely. But whether valid or |
| "not, the argument has been very widely advanced in one form or another;" |
| "and very many philosophers, perhaps a majority, have held that there is" |
| nothing real except minds and their ideas. Such philosophers are called |
| "'idealists'. When they come to explaining matter, they either say, like" |
| "Berkeley, that matter is really nothing but a collection of ideas," |
| "or they say, like Leibniz (1646-1716), that what appears as matter is" |
| "or they say, like Leibniz (1646-1716), that what appears as matter is" |
| really a collection of more or less rudimentary minds. |
| "" |
| "But these philosophers, though they deny matter as opposed to mind," |
| "nevertheless, in another sense, admit matter. It will be remembered that" |
| "we asked two questions; namely, (1) Is there a real table at all? (2) If" |
| "so, what sort of object can it be? Now both Berkeley and Leibniz admit" |
| "that there is a real table, but Berkeley says it is certain ideas in the" |
| "mind of God, and Leibniz says it is a colony of souls. Thus both of them" |
| "answer our first question in the affirmative, and only diverge from the" |
| views of ordinary mortals in their answer to our second question. In |
| "fact, almost all philosophers seem to be agreed that there is a real" |
| "table: they almost all agree that, however much our sense-data--colour," |
| "table: they almost all agree that, however much our sense-data--colour," |
| "table: they almost all agree that, however much our sense-data--colour," |
| "table: they almost all agree that, however much our sense-data--colour," |
| "shape, smoothness, etc.--may depend upon us, yet their occurrence is" |
| "shape, smoothness, etc.--may depend upon us, yet their occurrence is" |
| "shape, smoothness, etc.--may depend upon us, yet their occurrence is" |
| "a sign of something existing independently of us, something differing," |
| "perhaps, completely from our sense-data, and yet to be regarded as" |
| "perhaps, completely from our sense-data, and yet to be regarded as" |
| causing those sense-data whenever we are in a suitable relation to the |
| causing those sense-data whenever we are in a suitable relation to the |
| real table. |
| "" |
| Now obviously this point in which the philosophers are agreed--the view |
| Now obviously this point in which the philosophers are agreed--the view |
| Now obviously this point in which the philosophers are agreed--the view |
| "that there _is_ a real table, whatever its nature may be--is vitally" |
| "that there _is_ a real table, whatever its nature may be--is vitally" |
| "that there _is_ a real table, whatever its nature may be--is vitally" |
| "important, and it will be worth while to consider what reasons there are" |
| for accepting this view before we go on to the further question as |
| "to the nature of the real table. Our next chapter, therefore, will be" |
| concerned with the reasons for supposing that there is a real table at |
| all. |
| "" |
| Before we go farther it will be well to consider for a moment what it |
| "is that we have discovered so far. It has appeared that, if we take any" |
| "common object of the sort that is supposed to be known by the senses," |
| what the senses _immediately_ tell us is not the truth about the object |
| "as it is apart from us, but only the truth about certain sense-data" |
| "as it is apart from us, but only the truth about certain sense-data" |
| "which, so far as we can see, depend upon the relations between us and" |
| "the object. Thus what we directly see and feel is merely 'appearance'," |
| which we believe to be a sign of some 'reality' behind. But if the |
| "reality is not what appears, have we any means of knowing whether there" |
| "is any reality at all? And if so, have we any means of finding out what" |
| it is like? |
| "" |
| "Such questions are bewildering, and it is difficult to know that even" |
| "the strangest hypotheses may not be true. Thus our familiar table," |
| "which has roused but the slightest thoughts in us hitherto, has become a" |
| problem full of surprising possibilities. The one thing we know about it |
| "is that it is not what it seems. Beyond this modest result, so far, we" |
| have the most complete liberty of conjecture. Leibniz tells us it is a |
| community of souls: Berkeley tells us it is an idea in the mind of God; |
| "sober science, scarcely less wonderful, tells us it is a vast collection" |
| of electric charges in violent motion. |
| "" |
| "Among these surprising possibilities, doubt suggests that perhaps there" |
| "is no table at all. Philosophy, if it cannot _answer_ so many questions" |
| "as we could wish, has at least the power of _asking_ questions which" |
| "increase the interest of the world, and show the strangeness and wonder" |
| lying just below the surface even in the commonest things of daily life. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER II. THE EXISTENCE OF MATTER |
| "" |
| "In this chapter we have to ask ourselves whether, in any sense at all," |
| there is such a thing as matter. Is there a table which has a certain |
| "intrinsic nature, and continues to exist when I am not looking, or is" |
| "the table merely a product of my imagination, a dream-table in a very" |
| "the table merely a product of my imagination, a dream-table in a very" |
| prolonged dream? This question is of the greatest importance. For if |
| "we cannot be sure of the independent existence of objects, we cannot" |
| "be sure of the independent existence of other people's bodies, and" |
| "therefore still less of other people's minds, since we have no grounds" |
| for believing in their minds except such as are derived from observing |
| their bodies. Thus if we cannot be sure of the independent existence of |
| "objects, we shall be left alone in a desert--it may be that the whole" |
| "objects, we shall be left alone in a desert--it may be that the whole" |
| "objects, we shall be left alone in a desert--it may be that the whole" |
| "outer world is nothing but a dream, and that we alone exist. This is an" |
| uncomfortable possibility; but although it cannot be strictly proved to |
| "be false, there is not the slightest reason to suppose that it is true." |
| In this chapter we have to see why this is the case. |
| "" |
| "Before we embark upon doubtful matters, let us try to find some more" |
| or less fixed point from which to start. Although we are doubting the |
| "physical existence of the table, we are not doubting the existence" |
| of the sense-data which made us think there was a table; we are not |
| of the sense-data which made us think there was a table; we are not |
| "doubting that, while we look, a certain colour and shape appear to us," |
| "and while we press, a certain sensation of hardness is experienced by" |
| "us. All this, which is psychological, we are not calling in question." |
| "In fact, whatever else may be doubtful, some at least of our immediate" |
| experiences seem absolutely certain. |
| "" |
| "Descartes (1596-1650), the founder of modern philosophy, invented a" |
| "Descartes (1596-1650), the founder of modern philosophy, invented a" |
| method which may still be used with profit--the method of systematic |
| method which may still be used with profit--the method of systematic |
| method which may still be used with profit--the method of systematic |
| doubt. He determined that he would believe nothing which he did not see |
| quite clearly and distinctly to be true. Whatever he could bring himself |
| "to doubt, he would doubt, until he saw reason for not doubting it." |
| By applying this method he gradually became convinced that the only |
| existence of which he could be _quite_ certain was his own. He imagined |
| "a deceitful demon, who presented unreal things to his senses in a" |
| perpetual phantasmagoria; it might be very improbable that such a demon |
| "existed, but still it was possible, and therefore doubt concerning" |
| things perceived by the senses was possible. |
| "" |
| "But doubt concerning his own existence was not possible, for if he did" |
| "not exist, no demon could deceive him. If he doubted, he must exist; if" |
| "he had any experiences whatever, he must exist. Thus his own existence" |
| "was an absolute certainty to him. 'I think, therefore I am,' he said" |
| "(_Cogito, ergo sum_); and on the basis of this certainty he set to work" |
| to build up again the world of knowledge which his doubt had laid in |
| "ruins. By inventing the method of doubt, and by showing that subjective" |
| "things are the most certain, Descartes performed a great service to" |
| "philosophy, and one which makes him still useful to all students of the" |
| subject. |
| "" |
| "But some care is needed in using Descartes' argument. 'I think," |
| therefore I am' says rather more than is strictly certain. It might seem |
| as though we were quite sure of being the same person to-day as we were |
| as though we were quite sure of being the same person to-day as we were |
| "yesterday, and this is no doubt true in some sense. But the real Self is" |
| "as hard to arrive at as the real table, and does not seem to have that" |
| "absolute, convincing certainty that belongs to particular experiences." |
| "When I look at my table and see a certain brown colour, what is quite" |
| "certain at once is not '_I_ am seeing a brown colour', but rather," |
| 'a brown colour is being seen'. This of course involves something (or |
| somebody) which (or who) sees the brown colour; but it does not of |
| itself involve that more or less permanent person whom we call 'I'. So |
| "far as immediate certainty goes, it might be that the something which" |
| "sees the brown colour is quite momentary, and not the same as the" |
| something which has some different experience the next moment. |
| "" |
| Thus it is our particular thoughts and feelings that have primitive |
| certainty. And this applies to dreams and hallucinations as well as to |
| "normal perceptions: when we dream or see a ghost, we certainly do have" |
| "the sensations we think we have, but for various reasons it is held that" |
| no physical object corresponds to these sensations. Thus the certainty |
| of our knowledge of our own experiences does not have to be limited in |
| "any way to allow for exceptional cases. Here, therefore, we have, for" |
| "what it is worth, a solid basis from which to begin our pursuit of" |
| knowledge. |
| "" |
| The problem we have to consider is this: Granted that we are certain of |
| "our own sense-data, have we any reason for regarding them as signs of" |
| "our own sense-data, have we any reason for regarding them as signs of" |
| "the existence of something else, which we can call the physical object?" |
| When we have enumerated all the sense-data which we should naturally |
| When we have enumerated all the sense-data which we should naturally |
| "regard as connected with the table, have we said all there is to say" |
| "about the table, or is there still something else--something not a" |
| "about the table, or is there still something else--something not a" |
| "about the table, or is there still something else--something not a" |
| "sense-datum, something which persists when we go out of the room? Common" |
| "sense-datum, something which persists when we go out of the room? Common" |
| sense unhesitatingly answers that there is. What can be bought and sold |
| "and pushed about and have a cloth laid on it, and so on, cannot be" |
| a _mere_ collection of sense-data. If the cloth completely hides the |
| a _mere_ collection of sense-data. If the cloth completely hides the |
| "table, we shall derive no sense-data from the table, and therefore, if" |
| "table, we shall derive no sense-data from the table, and therefore, if" |
| "the table were merely sense-data, it would have ceased to exist, and" |
| "the table were merely sense-data, it would have ceased to exist, and" |
| "the cloth would be suspended in empty air, resting, by a miracle, in" |
| the place where the table formerly was. This seems plainly absurd; but |
| whoever wishes to become a philosopher must learn not to be frightened |
| by absurdities. |
| "" |
| One great reason why it is felt that we must secure a physical object |
| "in addition to the sense-data, is that we want the same object for" |
| "in addition to the sense-data, is that we want the same object for" |
| "different people. When ten people are sitting round a dinner-table," |
| "different people. When ten people are sitting round a dinner-table," |
| it seems preposterous to maintain that they are not seeing the same |
| "tablecloth, the same knives and forks and spoons and glasses. But the" |
| sense-data are private to each separate person; what is immediately |
| sense-data are private to each separate person; what is immediately |
| present to the sight of one is not immediately present to the sight of |
| "another: they all see things from slightly different points of view, and" |
| "therefore see them slightly differently. Thus, if there are to be public" |
| "neutral objects, which can be in some sense known to many different" |
| "people, there must be something over and above the private and" |
| "particular sense-data which appear to various people. What reason, then," |
| "particular sense-data which appear to various people. What reason, then," |
| have we for believing that there are such public neutral objects? |
| "" |
| "The first answer that naturally occurs to one is that, although" |
| "different people may see the table slightly differently, still they all" |
| "see more or less similar things when they look at the table, and" |
| the variations in what they see follow the laws of perspective and |
| "reflection of light, so that it is easy to arrive at a permanent object" |
| underlying all the different people's sense-data. I bought my table from |
| underlying all the different people's sense-data. I bought my table from |
| "the former occupant of my room; I could not buy _his_ sense-data," |
| "the former occupant of my room; I could not buy _his_ sense-data," |
| "which died when he went away, but I could and did buy the confident" |
| expectation of more or less similar sense-data. Thus it is the fact that |
| expectation of more or less similar sense-data. Thus it is the fact that |
| "different people have similar sense-data, and that one person in a given" |
| "different people have similar sense-data, and that one person in a given" |
| "place at different times has similar sense-data, which makes us suppose" |
| "place at different times has similar sense-data, which makes us suppose" |
| that over and above the sense-data there is a permanent public object |
| that over and above the sense-data there is a permanent public object |
| which underlies or causes the sense-data of various people at various |
| which underlies or causes the sense-data of various people at various |
| times. |
| "" |
| Now in so far as the above considerations depend upon supposing that |
| "there are other people besides ourselves, they beg the very question at" |
| "issue. Other people are represented to me by certain sense-data, such as" |
| "issue. Other people are represented to me by certain sense-data, such as" |
| "the sight of them or the sound of their voices, and if I had no" |
| reason to believe that there were physical objects independent of my |
| "sense-data, I should have no reason to believe that other people exist" |
| "sense-data, I should have no reason to believe that other people exist" |
| "except as part of my dream. Thus, when we are trying to show that there" |
| "must be objects independent of our own sense-data, we cannot appeal to" |
| "must be objects independent of our own sense-data, we cannot appeal to" |
| "the testimony of other people, since this testimony itself consists of" |
| "sense-data, and does not reveal other people's experiences unless our" |
| "sense-data, and does not reveal other people's experiences unless our" |
| own sense-data are signs of things existing independently of us. We must |
| own sense-data are signs of things existing independently of us. We must |
| "therefore, if possible, find, in our own purely private experiences," |
| "characteristics which show, or tend to show, that there are in the world" |
| things other than ourselves and our private experiences. |
| "" |
| In one sense it must be admitted that we can never prove the existence |
| of things other than ourselves and our experiences. No logical absurdity |
| results from the hypothesis that the world consists of myself and my |
| "thoughts and feelings and sensations, and that everything else is mere" |
| "fancy. In dreams a very complicated world may seem to be present, and" |
| "yet on waking we find it was a delusion; that is to say, we find that" |
| the sense-data in the dream do not appear to have corresponded with such |
| the sense-data in the dream do not appear to have corresponded with such |
| physical objects as we should naturally infer from our sense-data. (It |
| physical objects as we should naturally infer from our sense-data. (It |
| "is true that, when the physical world is assumed, it is possible to" |
| "find physical causes for the sense-data in dreams: a door banging, for" |
| "find physical causes for the sense-data in dreams: a door banging, for" |
| "instance, may cause us to dream of a naval engagement. But although, in" |
| "this case, there is a physical cause for the sense-data, there is not a" |
| "this case, there is a physical cause for the sense-data, there is not a" |
| physical object corresponding to the sense-data in the way in which an |
| physical object corresponding to the sense-data in the way in which an |
| actual naval battle would correspond.) There is no logical impossibility |
| "in the supposition that the whole of life is a dream, in which we" |
| ourselves create all the objects that come before us. But although this |
| "is not logically impossible, there is no reason whatever to suppose that" |
| "it is true; and it is, in fact, a less simple hypothesis, viewed as a" |
| "means of accounting for the facts of our own life, than the common-sense" |
| "means of accounting for the facts of our own life, than the common-sense" |
| "hypothesis that there really are objects independent of us, whose action" |
| on us causes our sensations. |
| "" |
| The way in which simplicity comes in from supposing that there really |
| are physical objects is easily seen. If the cat appears at one moment in |
| "one part of the room, and at another in another part, it is natural" |
| "to suppose that it has moved from the one to the other, passing over" |
| a series of intermediate positions. But if it is merely a set of |
| "sense-data, it cannot have ever been in any place where I did not see" |
| "sense-data, it cannot have ever been in any place where I did not see" |
| it; thus we shall have to suppose that it did not exist at all while I |
| "was not looking, but suddenly sprang into being in a new place. If" |
| "the cat exists whether I see it or not, we can understand from our own" |
| experience how it gets hungry between one meal and the next; but if |
| "it does not exist when I am not seeing it, it seems odd that appetite" |
| should grow during non-existence as fast as during existence. And if the |
| should grow during non-existence as fast as during existence. And if the |
| "cat consists only of sense-data, it cannot be hungry, since no hunger" |
| "cat consists only of sense-data, it cannot be hungry, since no hunger" |
| but my own can be a sense-datum to me. Thus the behaviour of the |
| but my own can be a sense-datum to me. Thus the behaviour of the |
| "sense-data which represent the cat to me, though it seems quite natural" |
| "sense-data which represent the cat to me, though it seems quite natural" |
| "when regarded as an expression of hunger, becomes utterly inexplicable" |
| "when regarded as mere movements and changes of patches of colour, which" |
| are as incapable of hunger as a triangle is of playing football. |
| "" |
| But the difficulty in the case of the cat is nothing compared to the |
| difficulty in the case of human beings. When human beings speak--that |
| difficulty in the case of human beings. When human beings speak--that |
| difficulty in the case of human beings. When human beings speak--that |
| "is, when we hear certain noises which we associate with ideas, and" |
| simultaneously see certain motions of lips and expressions of face--it |
| simultaneously see certain motions of lips and expressions of face--it |
| simultaneously see certain motions of lips and expressions of face--it |
| is very difficult to suppose that what we hear is not the expression |
| "of a thought, as we know it would be if we emitted the same sounds. Of" |
| "course similar things happen in dreams, where we are mistaken as to the" |
| existence of other people. But dreams are more or less suggested by what |
| "we call waking life, and are capable of being more or less accounted for" |
| on scientific principles if we assume that there really is a physical |
| world. Thus every principle of simplicity urges us to adopt the natural |
| "view, that there really are objects other than ourselves and our" |
| sense-data which have an existence not dependent upon our perceiving |
| sense-data which have an existence not dependent upon our perceiving |
| them. |
| "" |
| Of course it is not by argument that we originally come by our belief in |
| an independent external world. We find this belief ready in ourselves as |
| soon as we begin to reflect: it is what may be called an _instinctive_ |
| belief. We should never have been led to question this belief but for |
| "the fact that, at any rate in the case of sight, it seems as if the" |
| sense-datum itself were instinctively believed to be the independent |
| sense-datum itself were instinctively believed to be the independent |
| "object, whereas argument shows that the object cannot be identical" |
| "with the sense-datum. This discovery, however--which is not at all" |
| "with the sense-datum. This discovery, however--which is not at all" |
| "with the sense-datum. This discovery, however--which is not at all" |
| "with the sense-datum. This discovery, however--which is not at all" |
| "paradoxical in the case of taste and smell and sound, and only slightly" |
| so in the case of touch--leaves undiminished our instinctive belief that |
| so in the case of touch--leaves undiminished our instinctive belief that |
| so in the case of touch--leaves undiminished our instinctive belief that |
| there _are_ objects _corresponding_ to our sense-data. Since this belief |
| there _are_ objects _corresponding_ to our sense-data. Since this belief |
| "does not lead to any difficulties, but on the contrary tends to simplify" |
| "and systematize our account of our experiences, there seems no good" |
| reason for rejecting it. We may therefore admit--though with a slight |
| reason for rejecting it. We may therefore admit--though with a slight |
| reason for rejecting it. We may therefore admit--though with a slight |
| "doubt derived from dreams--that the external world does really exist," |
| "doubt derived from dreams--that the external world does really exist," |
| "doubt derived from dreams--that the external world does really exist," |
| and is not wholly dependent for its existence upon our continuing to |
| perceive it. |
| "" |
| The argument which has led us to this conclusion is doubtless less |
| "strong than we could wish, but it is typical of many philosophical" |
| "arguments, and it is therefore worth while to consider briefly its" |
| "general character and validity. All knowledge, we find, must be built" |
| "up upon our instinctive beliefs, and if these are rejected, nothing" |
| is left. But among our instinctive beliefs some are much stronger than |
| "others, while many have, by habit and association, become entangled with" |
| "other beliefs, not really instinctive, but falsely supposed to be part" |
| of what is believed instinctively. |
| "" |
| "Philosophy should show us the hierarchy of our instinctive beliefs," |
| "beginning with those we hold most strongly, and presenting each as much" |
| isolated and as free from irrelevant additions as possible. It should |
| "take care to show that, in the form in which they are finally set forth," |
| "our instinctive beliefs do not clash, but form a harmonious system." |
| There can never be any reason for rejecting one instinctive belief |
| "except that it clashes with others; thus, if they are found to" |
| "harmonize, the whole system becomes worthy of acceptance." |
| "" |
| It is of course _possible_ that all or any of our beliefs may be |
| "mistaken, and therefore all ought to be held with at least some slight" |
| element of doubt. But we cannot have _reason_ to reject a belief except |
| "on the ground of some other belief. Hence, by organizing our instinctive" |
| "beliefs and their consequences, by considering which among them is most" |
| "possible, if necessary, to modify or abandon, we can arrive, on the" |
| "basis of accepting as our sole data what we instinctively believe, at an" |
| "orderly systematic organization of our knowledge, in which, though the" |
| "_possibility_ of error remains, its likelihood is diminished by the" |
| interrelation of the parts and by the critical scrutiny which has |
| preceded acquiescence. |
| "" |
| "This function, at least, philosophy can perform. Most philosophers," |
| "rightly or wrongly, believe that philosophy can do much more than" |
| "this--that it can give us knowledge, not otherwise attainable," |
| "this--that it can give us knowledge, not otherwise attainable," |
| "this--that it can give us knowledge, not otherwise attainable," |
| "concerning the universe as a whole, and concerning the nature of" |
| "ultimate reality. Whether this be the case or not, the more modest" |
| "function we have spoken of can certainly be performed by philosophy, and" |
| "certainly suffices, for those who have once begun to doubt the adequacy" |
| "of common sense, to justify the arduous and difficult labours that" |
| philosophical problems involve. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER III. THE NATURE OF MATTER |
| "" |
| "In the preceding chapter we agreed, though without being able to" |
| "find demonstrative reasons, that it is rational to believe that our" |
| "sense-data--for example, those which we regard as associated with my" |
| "sense-data--for example, those which we regard as associated with my" |
| "sense-data--for example, those which we regard as associated with my" |
| "sense-data--for example, those which we regard as associated with my" |
| table--are really signs of the existence of something independent of us |
| table--are really signs of the existence of something independent of us |
| table--are really signs of the existence of something independent of us |
| "and our perceptions. That is to say, over and above the sensations of" |
| "colour, hardness, noise, and so on, which make up the appearance of" |
| "the table to me, I assume that there is something else, of which these" |
| "things are appearances. The colour ceases to exist if I shut my eyes," |
| the sensation of hardness ceases to exist if I remove my arm from |
| "contact with the table, the sound ceases to exist if I cease to rap the" |
| table with my knuckles. But I do not believe that when all these things |
| "cease the table ceases. On the contrary, I believe that it is because" |
| the table exists continuously that all these sense-data will reappear |
| the table exists continuously that all these sense-data will reappear |
| "when I open my eyes, replace my arm, and begin again to rap with my" |
| knuckles. The question we have to consider in this chapter is: What |
| "is the nature of this real table, which persists independently of my" |
| perception of it? |
| "" |
| "To this question physical science gives an answer, somewhat incomplete" |
| "it is true, and in part still very hypothetical, but yet deserving of" |
| "respect so far as it goes. Physical science, more or less unconsciously," |
| has drifted into the view that all natural phenomena ought to be reduced |
| "to motions. Light and heat and sound are all due to wave-motions, which" |
| "to motions. Light and heat and sound are all due to wave-motions, which" |
| travel from the body emitting them to the person who sees light or feels |
| heat or hears sound. That which has the wave-motion is either aether or |
| heat or hears sound. That which has the wave-motion is either aether or |
| "'gross matter', but in either case is what the philosopher would call" |
| matter. The only properties which science assigns to it are position in |
| "space, and the power of motion according to the laws of motion. Science" |
| "does not deny that it _may_ have other properties; but if so, such other" |
| "properties are not useful to the man of science, and in no way assist" |
| him in explaining the phenomena. |
| "" |
| "It is sometimes said that 'light _is_ a form of wave-motion', but this" |
| "It is sometimes said that 'light _is_ a form of wave-motion', but this" |
| "is misleading, for the light which we immediately see, which we know" |
| "directly by means of our senses, is _not_ a form of wave-motion, but" |
| "directly by means of our senses, is _not_ a form of wave-motion, but" |
| something quite different--something which we all know if we are not |
| something quite different--something which we all know if we are not |
| something quite different--something which we all know if we are not |
| "blind, though we cannot describe it so as to convey our knowledge to a" |
| "man who is blind. A wave-motion, on the contrary, could quite well be" |
| "man who is blind. A wave-motion, on the contrary, could quite well be" |
| "described to a blind man, since he can acquire a knowledge of space by" |
| the sense of touch; and he can experience a wave-motion by a sea voyage |
| the sense of touch; and he can experience a wave-motion by a sea voyage |
| "almost as well as we can. But this, which a blind man can understand, is" |
| not what we mean by _light_: we mean by _light_ just that which a blind |
| "man can never understand, and which we can never describe to him." |
| "" |
| "Now this something, which all of us who are not blind know, is not," |
| "according to science, really to be found in the outer world: it is" |
| something caused by the action of certain waves upon the eyes and nerves |
| and brain of the person who sees the light. When it is said that light |
| "_is_ waves, what is really meant is that waves are the physical cause of" |
| "our sensations of light. But light itself, the thing which seeing people" |
| "experience and blind people do not, is not supposed by science to form" |
| any part of the world that is independent of us and our senses. And very |
| similar remarks would apply to other kinds of sensations. |
| "" |
| It is not only colours and sounds and so on that are absent from the |
| "scientific world of matter, but also _space_ as we get it through sight" |
| or touch. It is essential to science that its matter should be in _a_ |
| "space, but the space in which it is cannot be exactly the space we see" |
| "or feel. To begin with, space as we see it is not the same as space as" |
| we get it by the sense of touch; it is only by experience in infancy |
| "that we learn how to touch things we see, or how to get a sight of" |
| things which we feel touching us. But the space of science is neutral as |
| between touch and sight; thus it cannot be either the space of touch or |
| the space of sight. |
| "" |
| "Again, different people see the same object as of different shapes," |
| "according to their point of view. A circular coin, for example, though" |
| "we should always _judge_ it to be circular, will _look_ oval unless we" |
| "are straight in front of it. When we judge that it _is_ circular, we are" |
| "judging that it has a real shape which is not its apparent shape, but" |
| belongs to it intrinsically apart from its appearance. But this real |
| "shape, which is what concerns science, must be in a real space, not" |
| "the same as anybody's _apparent_ space. The real space is public, the" |
| apparent space is private to the percipient. In different people's |
| _private_ spaces the same object seems to have different shapes; thus |
| "the real space, in which it has its real shape, must be different from" |
| "the private spaces. The space of science, therefore, though _connected_" |
| "with the spaces we see and feel, is not identical with them, and the" |
| manner of its connexion requires investigation. |
| "" |
| We agreed provisionally that physical objects cannot be quite like |
| "our sense-data, but may be regarded as _causing_ our sensations." |
| "our sense-data, but may be regarded as _causing_ our sensations." |
| "These physical objects are in the space of science, which we may call" |
| "'physical' space. It is important to notice that, if our sensations" |
| "are to be caused by physical objects, there must be a physical space" |
| containing these objects and our sense-organs and nerves and brain. We |
| containing these objects and our sense-organs and nerves and brain. We |
| get a sensation of touch from an object when we are in contact with it; |
| "that is to say, when some part of our body occupies a place in physical" |
| space quite close to the space occupied by the object. We see an object |
| (roughly speaking) when no opaque body is between the object and our |
| "eyes in physical space. Similarly, we only hear or smell or taste an" |
| "object when we are sufficiently near to it, or when it touches the" |
| "tongue, or has some suitable position in physical space relatively to" |
| our body. We cannot begin to state what different sensations we shall |
| derive from a given object under different circumstances unless we |
| "regard the object and our body as both in one physical space, for it is" |
| mainly the relative positions of the object and our body that determine |
| what sensations we shall derive from the object. |
| "" |
| "Now our sense-data are situated in our private spaces, either the space" |
| "Now our sense-data are situated in our private spaces, either the space" |
| of sight or the space of touch or such vaguer spaces as other senses |
| "may give us. If, as science and common sense assume, there is one public" |
| "all-embracing physical space in which physical objects are, the relative" |
| "all-embracing physical space in which physical objects are, the relative" |
| positions of physical objects in physical space must more or less |
| correspond to the relative positions of sense-data in our private |
| correspond to the relative positions of sense-data in our private |
| spaces. There is no difficulty in supposing this to be the case. If we |
| "see on a road one house nearer to us than another, our other senses will" |
| "bear out the view that it is nearer; for example, it will be reached" |
| sooner if we walk along the road. Other people will agree that the house |
| which looks nearer to us is nearer; the ordnance map will take the |
| same view; and thus everything points to a spatial relation between the |
| houses corresponding to the relation between the sense-data which we see |
| houses corresponding to the relation between the sense-data which we see |
| when we look at the houses. Thus we may assume that there is a physical |
| space in which physical objects have spatial relations corresponding to |
| those which the corresponding sense-data have in our private spaces. It |
| those which the corresponding sense-data have in our private spaces. It |
| is this physical space which is dealt with in geometry and assumed in |
| physics and astronomy. |
| "" |
| "Assuming that there is physical space, and that it does thus correspond" |
| "to private spaces, what can we know about it? We can know _only_ what is" |
| "required in order to secure the correspondence. That is to say, we can" |
| "know nothing of what it is like in itself, but we can know the sort" |
| of arrangement of physical objects which results from their spatial |
| "relations. We can know, for example, that the earth and moon and sun" |
| "are in one straight line during an eclipse, though we cannot know what" |
| "a physical straight line is in itself, as we know the look of a straight" |
| line in our visual space. Thus we come to know much more about the |
| _relations_ of distances in physical space than about the distances |
| "themselves; we may know that one distance is greater than another, or" |
| "that it is along the same straight line as the other, but we cannot have" |
| that immediate acquaintance with physical distances that we have with |
| "distances in our private spaces, or with colours or sounds or other" |
| sense-data. We can know all those things about physical space which a |
| sense-data. We can know all those things about physical space which a |
| man born blind might know through other people about the space of sight; |
| but the kind of things which a man born blind could never know about the |
| space of sight we also cannot know about physical space. We can know the |
| properties of the relations required to preserve the correspondence with |
| "sense-data, but we cannot know the nature of the terms between which the" |
| "sense-data, but we cannot know the nature of the terms between which the" |
| relations hold. |
| "" |
| "With regard to time, our _feeling_ of duration or of the lapse of time" |
| is notoriously an unsafe guide as to the time that has elapsed by the |
| "clock. Times when we are bored or suffering pain pass slowly, times when" |
| "we are agreeably occupied pass quickly, and times when we are sleeping" |
| "pass almost as if they did not exist. Thus, in so far as time is" |
| "constituted by duration, there is the same necessity for distinguishing" |
| a public and a private time as there was in the case of space. But in so |
| "far as time consists in an _order_ of before and after, there is no need" |
| "to make such a distinction; the time-order which events seem to have is," |
| "to make such a distinction; the time-order which events seem to have is," |
| "so far as we can see, the same as the time-order which they do have. At" |
| "so far as we can see, the same as the time-order which they do have. At" |
| any rate no reason can be given for supposing that the two orders are |
| not the same. The same is usually true of space: if a regiment of men |
| "are marching along a road, the shape of the regiment will look different" |
| "from different points of view, but the men will appear arranged in the" |
| same order from all points of view. Hence we regard the order as true |
| "also in physical space, whereas the shape is only supposed to correspond" |
| to the physical space so far as is required for the preservation of the |
| order. |
| "" |
| In saying that the time-order which events seem to have is the same as |
| In saying that the time-order which events seem to have is the same as |
| "the time-order which they really have, it is necessary to guard against" |
| "the time-order which they really have, it is necessary to guard against" |
| a possible misunderstanding. It must not be supposed that the various |
| states of different physical objects have the same time-order as the |
| states of different physical objects have the same time-order as the |
| sense-data which constitute the perceptions of those objects. Considered |
| sense-data which constitute the perceptions of those objects. Considered |
| "as physical objects, the thunder and lightning are simultaneous; that is" |
| "to say, the lightning is simultaneous with the disturbance of the air in" |
| "the place where the disturbance begins, namely, where the lightning" |
| is. But the sense-datum which we call hearing the thunder does not take |
| is. But the sense-datum which we call hearing the thunder does not take |
| place until the disturbance of the air has travelled as far as to where |
| "we are. Similarly, it takes about eight minutes for the sun's light" |
| "to reach us; thus, when we see the sun we are seeing the sun of eight" |
| minutes ago. So far as our sense-data afford evidence as to the physical |
| minutes ago. So far as our sense-data afford evidence as to the physical |
| sun they afford evidence as to the physical sun of eight minutes ago; if |
| "the physical sun had ceased to exist within the last eight minutes, that" |
| would make no difference to the sense-data which we call 'seeing |
| would make no difference to the sense-data which we call 'seeing |
| the sun'. This affords a fresh illustration of the necessity of |
| distinguishing between sense-data and physical objects. |
| distinguishing between sense-data and physical objects. |
| "" |
| What we have found as regards space is much the same as what we find |
| in relation to the correspondence of the sense-data with their |
| in relation to the correspondence of the sense-data with their |
| "physical counterparts. If one object looks blue and another red, we may" |
| reasonably presume that there is some corresponding difference between |
| "the physical objects; if two objects both look blue, we may presume a" |
| corresponding similarity. But we cannot hope to be acquainted directly |
| with the quality in the physical object which makes it look blue or red. |
| "Science tells us that this quality is a certain sort of wave-motion, and" |
| "Science tells us that this quality is a certain sort of wave-motion, and" |
| "this sounds familiar, because we think of wave-motions in the space we" |
| "this sounds familiar, because we think of wave-motions in the space we" |
| "see. But the wave-motions must really be in physical space, with which" |
| "see. But the wave-motions must really be in physical space, with which" |
| we have no direct acquaintance; thus the real wave-motions have not that |
| we have no direct acquaintance; thus the real wave-motions have not that |
| familiarity which we might have supposed them to have. And what holds |
| for colours is closely similar to what holds for other sense-data. Thus |
| for colours is closely similar to what holds for other sense-data. Thus |
| "we find that, although the _relations_ of physical objects have all" |
| "sorts of knowable properties, derived from their correspondence with the" |
| "relations of sense-data, the physical objects themselves remain unknown" |
| "relations of sense-data, the physical objects themselves remain unknown" |
| "in their intrinsic nature, so far at least as can be discovered by means" |
| of the senses. The question remains whether there is any other method of |
| discovering the intrinsic nature of physical objects. |
| "" |
| "The most natural, though not ultimately the most defensible, hypothesis" |
| "to adopt in the first instance, at any rate as regards visual" |
| "sense-data, would be that, though physical objects cannot, for the" |
| "sense-data, would be that, though physical objects cannot, for the" |
| "reasons we have been considering, be _exactly_ like sense-data, yet they" |
| "reasons we have been considering, be _exactly_ like sense-data, yet they" |
| "may be more or less like. According to this view, physical objects will," |
| "for example, really have colours, and we might, by good luck, see an" |
| object as of the colour it really is. The colour which an object seems |
| "to have at any given moment will in general be very similar, though" |
| "not quite the same, from many different points of view; we might thus" |
| "suppose the 'real' colour to be a sort of medium colour, intermediate" |
| between the various shades which appear from the different points of |
| view. |
| "" |
| "Such a theory is perhaps not capable of being definitely refuted, but" |
| "it can be shown to be groundless. To begin with, it is plain that the" |
| colour we see depends only upon the nature of the light-waves that |
| colour we see depends only upon the nature of the light-waves that |
| "strike the eye, and is therefore modified by the medium intervening" |
| "between us and the object, as well as by the manner in which light is" |
| reflected from the object in the direction of the eye. The intervening |
| "air alters colours unless it is perfectly clear, and any strong" |
| reflection will alter them completely. Thus the colour we see is a |
| "result of the ray as it reaches the eye, and not simply a property of" |
| "the object from which the ray comes. Hence, also, provided certain waves" |
| "reach the eye, we shall see a certain colour, whether the object from" |
| which the waves start has any colour or not. Thus it is quite gratuitous |
| "to suppose that physical objects have colours, and therefore there is no" |
| justification for making such a supposition. Exactly similar arguments |
| will apply to other sense-data. |
| will apply to other sense-data. |
| "" |
| It remains to ask whether there are any general philosophical arguments |
| "enabling us to say that, if matter is real, it must be of such and such" |
| "a nature. As explained above, very many philosophers, perhaps most, have" |
| "held that whatever is real must be in some sense mental, or at any rate" |
| that whatever we can know anything about must be in some sense mental. |
| Such philosophers are called 'idealists'. Idealists tell us that what |
| "appears as matter is really something mental; namely, either (as Leibniz" |
| "held) more or less rudimentary minds, or (as Berkeley contended) ideas" |
| "in the minds which, as we should commonly say, 'perceive' the matter." |
| Thus idealists deny the existence of matter as something intrinsically |
| "different from mind, though they do not deny that our sense-data are" |
| "different from mind, though they do not deny that our sense-data are" |
| signs of something which exists independently of our private sensations. |
| In the following chapter we shall consider briefly the reasons--in my |
| In the following chapter we shall consider briefly the reasons--in my |
| In the following chapter we shall consider briefly the reasons--in my |
| opinion fallacious--which idealists advance in favour of their theory. |
| opinion fallacious--which idealists advance in favour of their theory. |
| opinion fallacious--which idealists advance in favour of their theory. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER IV. IDEALISM |
| "" |
| The word 'idealism' is used by different philosophers in somewhat |
| different senses. We shall understand by it the doctrine that whatever |
| "exists, or at any rate whatever can be known to exist, must be in" |
| "some sense mental. This doctrine, which is very widely held among" |
| "philosophers, has several forms, and is advocated on several different" |
| "grounds. The doctrine is so widely held, and so interesting in itself," |
| that even the briefest survey of philosophy must give some account of |
| it. |
| "" |
| Those who are unaccustomed to philosophical speculation may be inclined |
| to dismiss such a doctrine as obviously absurd. There is no doubt that |
| common sense regards tables and chairs and the sun and moon and material |
| objects generally as something radically different from minds and the |
| "contents of minds, and as having an existence which might continue if" |
| minds ceased. We think of matter as having existed long before there |
| "were any minds, and it is hard to think of it as a mere product of" |
| "mental activity. But whether true or false, idealism is not to be" |
| dismissed as obviously absurd. |
| "" |
| "We have seen that, even if physical objects do have an independent" |
| "existence, they must differ very widely from sense-data, and can only" |
| "existence, they must differ very widely from sense-data, and can only" |
| "have a _correspondence_ with sense-data, in the same sort of way in" |
| "have a _correspondence_ with sense-data, in the same sort of way in" |
| which a catalogue has a correspondence with the things catalogued. Hence |
| common sense leaves us completely in the dark as to the true intrinsic |
| "nature of physical objects, and if there were good reason to regard them" |
| "as mental, we could not legitimately reject this opinion merely because" |
| it strikes us as strange. The truth about physical objects _must_ be |
| "strange. It may be unattainable, but if any philosopher believes that" |
| "he has attained it, the fact that what he offers as the truth is strange" |
| ought not to be made a ground of objection to his opinion. |
| "" |
| The grounds on which idealism is advocated are generally grounds derived |
| "from the theory of knowledge, that is to say, from a discussion of the" |
| conditions which things must satisfy in order that we may be able to |
| know them. The first serious attempt to establish idealism on such |
| "grounds was that of Bishop Berkeley. He proved first, by arguments which" |
| "were largely valid, that our sense-data cannot be supposed to have an" |
| "were largely valid, that our sense-data cannot be supposed to have an" |
| "existence independent of us, but must be, in part at least, 'in' the" |
| "mind, in the sense that their existence would not continue if there were" |
| "no seeing or hearing or touching or smelling or tasting. So far, his" |
| "contention was almost certainly valid, even if some of his arguments" |
| were not so. But he went on to argue that sense-data were the only |
| were not so. But he went on to argue that sense-data were the only |
| things of whose existence our perceptions could assure us; and that |
| "to be known is to be 'in' a mind, and therefore to be mental. Hence he" |
| "concluded that nothing can ever be known except what is in some mind," |
| and that whatever is known without being in my mind must be in some |
| other mind. |
| "" |
| "In order to understand his argument, it is necessary to understand his" |
| use of the word 'idea'. He gives the name 'idea' to anything which |
| "is _immediately_ known, as, for example, sense-data are known. Thus a" |
| "is _immediately_ known, as, for example, sense-data are known. Thus a" |
| "particular colour which we see is an idea; so is a voice which we hear," |
| and so on. But the term is not wholly confined to sense-data. There will |
| and so on. But the term is not wholly confined to sense-data. There will |
| "also be things remembered or imagined, for with such things also we have" |
| immediate acquaintance at the moment of remembering or imagining. All |
| such immediate data he calls 'ideas'. |
| "" |
| "He then proceeds to consider common objects, such as a tree, for" |
| instance. He shows that all we know immediately when we 'perceive' the |
| "tree consists of ideas in his sense of the word, and he argues that" |
| there is not the slightest ground for supposing that there is anything |
| "real about the tree except what is perceived. Its being, he says," |
| consists in being perceived: in the Latin of the schoolmen its '_esse_' |
| is '_percipi_'. He fully admits that the tree must continue to exist |
| even when we shut our eyes or when no human being is near it. But this |
| "continued existence, he says, is due to the fact that God continues to" |
| "perceive it; the 'real' tree, which corresponds to what we called the" |
| "physical object, consists of ideas in the mind of God, ideas more or" |
| "less like those we have when we see the tree, but differing in the fact" |
| that they are permanent in God's mind so long as the tree continues |
| "to exist. All our perceptions, according to him, consist in a" |
| "partial participation in God's perceptions, and it is because of this" |
| participation that different people see more or less the same tree. Thus |
| "apart from minds and their ideas there is nothing in the world, nor is" |
| "it possible that anything else should ever be known, since whatever is" |
| known is necessarily an idea. |
| "" |
| There are in this argument a good many fallacies which have been |
| "important in the history of philosophy, and which it will be as well to" |
| "bring to light. In the first place, there is a confusion engendered by" |
| the use of the word 'idea'. We think of an idea as essentially something |
| "in somebody's mind, and thus when we are told that a tree consists" |
| "entirely of ideas, it is natural to suppose that, if so, the tree" |
| must be entirely in minds. But the notion of being 'in' the mind is |
| "ambiguous. We speak of bearing a person in mind, not meaning that the" |
| "person is in our minds, but that a thought of him is in our minds. When" |
| a man says that some business he had to arrange went clean out of his |
| "mind, he does not mean to imply that the business itself was ever in his" |
| "mind, but only that a thought of the business was formerly in his mind," |
| but afterwards ceased to be in his mind. And so when Berkeley says that |
| "the tree must be in our minds if we can know it, all that he really has" |
| a right to say is that a thought of the tree must be in our minds. To |
| argue that the tree itself must be in our minds is like arguing that a |
| person whom we bear in mind is himself in our minds. This confusion |
| may seem too gross to have been really committed by any competent |
| "philosopher, but various attendant circumstances rendered it possible." |
| "In order to see how it was possible, we must go more deeply into the" |
| question as to the nature of ideas. |
| "" |
| "Before taking up the general question of the nature of ideas, we must" |
| disentangle two entirely separate questions which arise concerning |
| "sense-data and physical objects. We saw that, for various reasons of" |
| "sense-data and physical objects. We saw that, for various reasons of" |
| "detail, Berkeley was right in treating the sense-data which constitute" |
| "detail, Berkeley was right in treating the sense-data which constitute" |
| "our perception of the tree as more or less subjective, in the sense that" |
| "they depend upon us as much as upon the tree, and would not exist if the" |
| tree were not being perceived. But this is an entirely different point |
| from the one by which Berkeley seeks to prove that whatever can be |
| immediately known must be in a mind. For this purpose arguments of |
| detail as to the dependence of sense-data upon us are useless. It is |
| detail as to the dependence of sense-data upon us are useless. It is |
| "necessary to prove, generally, that by being known, things are shown to" |
| be mental. This is what Berkeley believes himself to have done. It |
| "is this question, and not our previous question as to the difference" |
| "between sense-data and the physical object, that must now concern us." |
| "between sense-data and the physical object, that must now concern us." |
| "" |
| "Taking the word 'idea' in Berkeley's sense, there are two quite distinct" |
| things to be considered whenever an idea is before the mind. There is |
| on the one hand the thing of which we are aware--say the colour of my |
| on the one hand the thing of which we are aware--say the colour of my |
| on the one hand the thing of which we are aware--say the colour of my |
| "table--and on the other hand the actual awareness itself, the mental act" |
| "table--and on the other hand the actual awareness itself, the mental act" |
| "table--and on the other hand the actual awareness itself, the mental act" |
| "of apprehending the thing. The mental act is undoubtedly mental, but is" |
| there any reason to suppose that the thing apprehended is in any sense |
| mental? Our previous arguments concerning the colour did not prove it to |
| be mental; they only proved that its existence depends upon the relation |
| "of our sense organs to the physical object--in our case, the table. That" |
| "of our sense organs to the physical object--in our case, the table. That" |
| "of our sense organs to the physical object--in our case, the table. That" |
| "is to say, they proved that a certain colour will exist, in a certain" |
| "light, if a normal eye is placed at a certain point relatively to" |
| the table. They did not prove that the colour is in the mind of the |
| percipient. |
| "" |
| "Berkeley's view, that obviously the colour must be in the mind, seems" |
| to depend for its plausibility upon confusing the thing apprehended |
| with the act of apprehension. Either of these might be called an 'idea'; |
| probably either would have been called an idea by Berkeley. The act |
| "is undoubtedly in the mind; hence, when we are thinking of the act," |
| "we readily assent to the view that ideas must be in the mind. Then," |
| forgetting that this was only true when ideas were taken as acts of |
| "apprehension, we transfer the proposition that 'ideas are in the mind'" |
| "to ideas in the other sense, i.e. to the things apprehended by our acts" |
| "of apprehension. Thus, by an unconscious equivocation, we arrive at the" |
| conclusion that whatever we can apprehend must be in our minds. This |
| "seems to be the true analysis of Berkeley's argument, and the ultimate" |
| fallacy upon which it rests. |
| "" |
| This question of the distinction between act and object in our |
| "apprehending of things is vitally important, since our whole power of" |
| acquiring knowledge is bound up with it. The faculty of being acquainted |
| with things other than itself is the main characteristic of a mind. |
| Acquaintance with objects essentially consists in a relation between the |
| mind and something other than the mind; it is this that constitutes the |
| mind's power of knowing things. If we say that the things known must be |
| "in the mind, we are either unduly limiting the mind's power of knowing," |
| or we are uttering a mere tautology. We are uttering a mere tautology if |
| "we mean by '_in_ the mind' the same as by '_before_ the mind', i.e. if" |
| "we mean merely being apprehended by the mind. But if we mean this, we" |
| "shall have to admit that what, _in this sense_, is in the mind," |
| may nevertheless be not mental. Thus when we realize the nature of |
| "knowledge, Berkeley's argument is seen to be wrong in substance as well" |
| "as in form, and his grounds for supposing that 'ideas'--i.e. the objects" |
| "as in form, and his grounds for supposing that 'ideas'--i.e. the objects" |
| "as in form, and his grounds for supposing that 'ideas'--i.e. the objects" |
| "apprehended--must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever." |
| "apprehended--must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever." |
| "apprehended--must be mental, are found to have no validity whatever." |
| Hence his grounds in favour of idealism may be dismissed. It remains to |
| see whether there are any other grounds. |
| "" |
| "It is often said, as though it were a self-evident truism, that we" |
| "It is often said, as though it were a self-evident truism, that we" |
| cannot know that anything exists which we do not know. It is inferred |
| that whatever can in any way be relevant to our experience must be at |
| least capable of being known by us; whence it follows that if matter |
| "were essentially something with which we could not become acquainted," |
| "matter would be something which we could not know to exist, and which" |
| "could have for us no importance whatever. It is generally also implied," |
| "for reasons which remain obscure, that what can have no importance for" |
| "us cannot be real, and that therefore matter, if it is not composed of" |
| "minds or of mental ideas, is impossible and a mere chimaera." |
| "" |
| "To go into this argument fully at our present stage would be impossible," |
| since it raises points requiring a considerable preliminary discussion; |
| but certain reasons for rejecting the argument may be noticed at |
| once. To begin at the end: there is no reason why what cannot have any |
| "_practical_ importance for us should not be real. It is true that," |
| "if _theoretical_ importance is included, everything real is of _some_" |
| "importance to us, since, as persons desirous of knowing the truth about" |
| "the universe, we have some interest in everything that the universe" |
| "contains. But if this sort of interest is included, it is not the case" |
| "that matter has no importance for us, provided it exists even if we" |
| "cannot know that it exists. We can, obviously, suspect that it may" |
| "exist, and wonder whether it does; hence it is connected with our desire" |
| "for knowledge, and has the importance of either satisfying or thwarting" |
| this desire. |
| "" |
| "Again, it is by no means a truism, and is in fact false, that we cannot" |
| know that anything exists which we do not know. The word 'know' is here |
| used in two different senses. (1) In its first use it is applicable to |
| "the sort of knowledge which is opposed to error, the sense in which" |
| "what we know is _true_, the sense which applies to our beliefs and" |
| "convictions, i.e. to what are called _judgements_. In this sense of the" |
| word we know _that_ something is the case. This sort of knowledge may |
| be described as knowledge of _truths_. (2) In the second use of the word |
| "'know' above, the word applies to our knowledge of _things_, which we" |
| may call _acquaintance_. This is the sense in which we know sense-data. |
| may call _acquaintance_. This is the sense in which we know sense-data. |
| (The distinction involved is roughly that between _savoir_ and |
| "_connaitre_ in French, or between _wissen_ and _kennen_ in German.)" |
| "" |
| "Thus the statement which seemed like a truism becomes, when re-stated," |
| "Thus the statement which seemed like a truism becomes, when re-stated," |
| the following: 'We can never truly judge that something with which we |
| "are not acquainted exists.' This is by no means a truism, but on the" |
| contrary a palpable falsehood. I have not the honour to be acquainted |
| "with the Emperor of China, but I truly judge that he exists. It may" |
| "be said, of course, that I judge this because of other people's" |
| "acquaintance with him. This, however, would be an irrelevant retort," |
| "since, if the principle were true, I could not know that any one else" |
| is acquainted with him. But further: there is no reason why I should not |
| know of the existence of something with which nobody is acquainted. This |
| "point is important, and demands elucidation." |
| "" |
| "If I am acquainted with a thing which exists, my acquaintance gives" |
| "me the knowledge that it exists. But it is not true that, conversely," |
| "whenever I can know that a thing of a certain sort exists, I or some one" |
| "else must be acquainted with the thing. What happens, in cases where I" |
| "have true judgement without acquaintance, is that the thing is known to" |
| "me by _description_, and that, in virtue of some general principle, the" |
| existence of a thing answering to this description can be inferred |
| from the existence of something with which I am acquainted. In order |
| "to understand this point fully, it will be well first to deal with" |
| the difference between knowledge by acquaintance and knowledge by |
| "description, and then to consider what knowledge of general principles," |
| "if any, has the same kind of certainty as our knowledge of the existence" |
| of our own experiences. These subjects will be dealt with in the |
| following chapters. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER V. KNOWLEDGE BY ACQUAINTANCE AND KNOWLEDGE BY DESCRIPTION |
| "" |
| In the preceding chapter we saw that there are two sorts of knowledge: |
| "knowledge of things, and knowledge of truths. In this chapter we shall" |
| "be concerned exclusively with knowledge of things, of which in turn we" |
| "shall have to distinguish two kinds. Knowledge of things, when it is" |
| "of the kind we call knowledge by _acquaintance_, is essentially simpler" |
| "than any knowledge of truths, and logically independent of knowledge" |
| "of truths, though it would be rash to assume that human beings ever," |
| "in fact, have acquaintance with things without at the same time knowing" |
| "some truth about them. Knowledge of things by _description_, on the" |
| "contrary, always involves, as we shall find in the course of the present" |
| "chapter, some knowledge of truths as its source and ground. But first of" |
| all we must make clear what we mean by 'acquaintance' and what we mean |
| by 'description'. |
| "" |
| We shall say that we have _acquaintance_ with anything of which we are |
| "directly aware, without the intermediary of any process of inference" |
| or any knowledge of truths. Thus in the presence of my table I am |
| acquainted with the sense-data that make up the appearance of my |
| acquainted with the sense-data that make up the appearance of my |
| "table--its colour, shape, hardness, smoothness, etc.; all these are" |
| "table--its colour, shape, hardness, smoothness, etc.; all these are" |
| "table--its colour, shape, hardness, smoothness, etc.; all these are" |
| things of which I am immediately conscious when I am seeing and touching |
| my table. The particular shade of colour that I am seeing may have many |
| "things said about it--I may say that it is brown, that it is rather" |
| "things said about it--I may say that it is brown, that it is rather" |
| "things said about it--I may say that it is brown, that it is rather" |
| "dark, and so on. But such statements, though they make me know truths" |
| "about the colour, do not make me know the colour itself any better" |
| "than I did before so far as concerns knowledge of the colour itself, as" |
| "opposed to knowledge of truths about it, I know the colour perfectly and" |
| "completely when I see it, and no further knowledge of it itself is even" |
| theoretically possible. Thus the sense-data which make up the |
| theoretically possible. Thus the sense-data which make up the |
| "appearance of my table are things with which I have acquaintance, things" |
| immediately known to me just as they are. |
| "" |
| "My knowledge of the table as a physical object, on the contrary, is not" |
| "direct knowledge. Such as it is, it is obtained through acquaintance" |
| with the sense-data that make up the appearance of the table. We have |
| with the sense-data that make up the appearance of the table. We have |
| "seen that it is possible, without absurdity, to doubt whether there is" |
| "a table at all, whereas it is not possible to doubt the sense-data. My" |
| "a table at all, whereas it is not possible to doubt the sense-data. My" |
| knowledge of the table is of the kind which we shall call 'knowledge |
| by description'. The table is 'the physical object which causes |
| such-and-such sense-data'. This describes the table by means of the |
| such-and-such sense-data'. This describes the table by means of the |
| such-and-such sense-data'. This describes the table by means of the |
| such-and-such sense-data'. This describes the table by means of the |
| "sense-data. In order to know anything at all about the table, we must" |
| "sense-data. In order to know anything at all about the table, we must" |
| know truths connecting it with things with which we have acquaintance: |
| we must know that 'such-and-such sense-data are caused by a physical |
| we must know that 'such-and-such sense-data are caused by a physical |
| we must know that 'such-and-such sense-data are caused by a physical |
| we must know that 'such-and-such sense-data are caused by a physical |
| object'. There is no state of mind in which we are directly aware of the |
| "table; all our knowledge of the table is really knowledge of truths, and" |
| "the actual thing which is the table is not, strictly speaking, known" |
| "to us at all. We know a description, and we know that there is just one" |
| "object to which this description applies, though the object itself is" |
| "not directly known to us. In such a case, we say that our knowledge of" |
| the object is knowledge by description. |
| "" |
| "All our knowledge, both knowledge of things and knowledge of truths," |
| rests upon acquaintance as its foundation. It is therefore important to |
| consider what kinds of things there are with which we have acquaintance. |
| "" |
| "Sense-data, as we have already seen, are among the things with which" |
| "Sense-data, as we have already seen, are among the things with which" |
| "we are acquainted; in fact, they supply the most obvious and striking" |
| "example of knowledge by acquaintance. But if they were the sole example," |
| our knowledge would be very much more restricted than it is. We should |
| only know what is now present to our senses: we could not know anything |
| about the past--not even that there was a past--nor could we know any |
| about the past--not even that there was a past--nor could we know any |
| about the past--not even that there was a past--nor could we know any |
| about the past--not even that there was a past--nor could we know any |
| about the past--not even that there was a past--nor could we know any |
| "truths about our sense-data, for all knowledge of truths, as we shall" |
| "truths about our sense-data, for all knowledge of truths, as we shall" |
| "show, demands acquaintance with things which are of an essentially" |
| "different character from sense-data, the things which are sometimes" |
| "different character from sense-data, the things which are sometimes" |
| "called 'abstract ideas', but which we shall call 'universals'. We have" |
| therefore to consider acquaintance with other things besides sense-data |
| therefore to consider acquaintance with other things besides sense-data |
| if we are to obtain any tolerably adequate analysis of our knowledge. |
| "" |
| The first extension beyond sense-data to be considered is acquaintance |
| The first extension beyond sense-data to be considered is acquaintance |
| by _memory_. It is obvious that we often remember what we have seen or |
| "heard or had otherwise present to our senses, and that in such cases we" |
| "are still immediately aware of what we remember, in spite of the fact" |
| that it appears as past and not as present. This immediate knowledge by |
| memory is the source of all our knowledge concerning the past: without |
| "it, there could be no knowledge of the past by inference, since we" |
| should never know that there was anything past to be inferred. |
| "" |
| The next extension to be considered is acquaintance by _introspection_. |
| "We are not only aware of things, but we are often aware of being aware" |
| "of them. When I see the sun, I am often aware of my seeing the sun; thus" |
| 'my seeing the sun' is an object with which I have acquaintance. When |
| "I desire food, I may be aware of my desire for food; thus 'my desiring" |
| food' is an object with which I am acquainted. Similarly we may be |
| "aware of our feeling pleasure or pain, and generally of the events which" |
| "happen in our minds. This kind of acquaintance, which may be called" |
| "self-consciousness, is the source of all our knowledge of mental things." |
| "self-consciousness, is the source of all our knowledge of mental things." |
| It is obvious that it is only what goes on in our own minds that can be |
| thus known immediately. What goes on in the minds of others is known |
| "to us through our perception of their bodies, that is, through the" |
| sense-data in us which are associated with their bodies. But for our |
| sense-data in us which are associated with their bodies. But for our |
| "acquaintance with the contents of our own minds, we should be unable to" |
| "imagine the minds of others, and therefore we could never arrive at" |
| the knowledge that they have minds. It seems natural to suppose that |
| self-consciousness is one of the things that distinguish men from |
| self-consciousness is one of the things that distinguish men from |
| "animals: animals, we may suppose, though they have acquaintance with" |
| "sense-data, never become aware of this acquaintance. I do not mean" |
| "sense-data, never become aware of this acquaintance. I do not mean" |
| "that they _doubt_ whether they exist, but that they have never become" |
| "conscious of the fact that they have sensations and feelings, nor" |
| "therefore of the fact that they, the subjects of their sensations and" |
| "feelings, exist." |
| "" |
| We have spoken of acquaintance with the contents of our minds as |
| "_self_-consciousness, but it is not, of course, consciousness of our" |
| "_self_-consciousness, but it is not, of course, consciousness of our" |
| _self_: it is consciousness of particular thoughts and feelings. The |
| "question whether we are also acquainted with our bare selves, as opposed" |
| "to particular thoughts and feelings, is a very difficult one, upon which" |
| it would be rash to speak positively. When we try to look into ourselves |
| "we always seem to come upon some particular thought or feeling, and not" |
| upon the 'I' which has the thought or feeling. Nevertheless there are |
| "some reasons for thinking that we are acquainted with the 'I', though" |
| the acquaintance is hard to disentangle from other things. To make clear |
| "what sort of reason there is, let us consider for a moment what our" |
| acquaintance with particular thoughts really involves. |
| "" |
| "When I am acquainted with 'my seeing the sun', it seems plain that I am" |
| acquainted with two different things in relation to each other. On the |
| "one hand there is the sense-datum which represents the sun to me, on the" |
| "one hand there is the sense-datum which represents the sun to me, on the" |
| "other hand there is that which sees this sense-datum. All acquaintance," |
| "other hand there is that which sees this sense-datum. All acquaintance," |
| "such as my acquaintance with the sense-datum which represents the sun," |
| "such as my acquaintance with the sense-datum which represents the sun," |
| seems obviously a relation between the person acquainted and the object |
| with which the person is acquainted. When a case of acquaintance is one |
| with which I can be acquainted (as I am acquainted with my acquaintance |
| "with the sense-datum representing the sun), it is plain that the person" |
| "with the sense-datum representing the sun), it is plain that the person" |
| "acquainted is myself. Thus, when I am acquainted with my" |
| "seeing the sun, the whole fact with which I am acquainted is" |
| 'Self-acquainted-with-sense-datum'. |
| 'Self-acquainted-with-sense-datum'. |
| 'Self-acquainted-with-sense-datum'. |
| 'Self-acquainted-with-sense-datum'. |
| 'Self-acquainted-with-sense-datum'. |
| "" |
| "Further, we know the truth 'I am acquainted with this sense-datum'. It" |
| "Further, we know the truth 'I am acquainted with this sense-datum'. It" |
| "is hard to see how we could know this truth, or even understand what is" |
| "meant by it, unless we were acquainted with something which we call 'I'." |
| It does not seem necessary to suppose that we are acquainted with a more |
| "or less permanent person, the same to-day as yesterday, but it does seem" |
| "or less permanent person, the same to-day as yesterday, but it does seem" |
| "as though we must be acquainted with that thing, whatever its nature," |
| "which sees the sun and has acquaintance with sense-data. Thus, in some" |
| "which sees the sun and has acquaintance with sense-data. Thus, in some" |
| sense it would seem we must be acquainted with our Selves as opposed |
| "to our particular experiences. But the question is difficult, and" |
| "complicated arguments can be adduced on either side. Hence, although" |
| "acquaintance with ourselves seems _probably_ to occur, it is not wise to" |
| assert that it undoubtedly does occur. |
| "" |
| We may therefore sum up as follows what has been said concerning |
| acquaintance with things that exist. We have acquaintance in sensation |
| "with the data of the outer senses, and in introspection with the data of" |
| "what may be called the inner sense--thoughts, feelings, desires, etc.;" |
| "what may be called the inner sense--thoughts, feelings, desires, etc.;" |
| "what may be called the inner sense--thoughts, feelings, desires, etc.;" |
| we have acquaintance in memory with things which have been data either |
| "of the outer senses or of the inner sense. Further, it is probable," |
| "though not certain, that we have acquaintance with Self, as that which" |
| is aware of things or has desires towards things. |
| "" |
| "In addition to our acquaintance with particular existing things, we also" |
| "have acquaintance with what we shall call _universals_, that is to say," |
| "general ideas, such as _whiteness_, _diversity_, _brotherhood_, and so" |
| on. Every complete sentence must contain at least one word which stands |
| "for a universal, since all verbs have a meaning which is universal. We" |
| "shall return to universals later on, in Chapter IX; for the present, it" |
| is only necessary to guard against the supposition that whatever we can |
| be acquainted with must be something particular and existent. Awareness |
| "of universals is called _conceiving_, and a universal of which we are" |
| aware is called a _concept_. |
| "" |
| It will be seen that among the objects with which we are acquainted |
| "are not included physical objects (as opposed to sense-data), nor other" |
| "are not included physical objects (as opposed to sense-data), nor other" |
| people's minds. These things are known to us by what I call 'knowledge |
| "by description', which we must now consider." |
| "" |
| By a 'description' I mean any phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' or |
| By a 'description' I mean any phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' or |
| By a 'description' I mean any phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' or |
| 'the so-and-so'. A phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' I shall call an |
| 'the so-and-so'. A phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' I shall call an |
| 'the so-and-so'. A phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' I shall call an |
| 'the so-and-so'. A phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' I shall call an |
| 'the so-and-so'. A phrase of the form 'a so-and-so' I shall call an |
| 'ambiguous' description; a phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' (in the |
| 'ambiguous' description; a phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' (in the |
| 'ambiguous' description; a phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' (in the |
| singular) I shall call a 'definite' description. Thus 'a man' is an |
| "ambiguous description, and 'the man with the iron mask' is a definite" |
| description. There are various problems connected with ambiguous |
| "descriptions, but I pass them by, since they do not directly concern" |
| "the matter we are discussing, which is the nature of our knowledge" |
| concerning objects in cases where we know that there is an object |
| "answering to a definite description, though we are not acquainted with" |
| any such object. This is a matter which is concerned exclusively with |
| "definite descriptions. I shall therefore, in the sequel, speak simply of" |
| 'descriptions' when I mean 'definite descriptions'. Thus a description |
| will mean any phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' in the singular. |
| will mean any phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' in the singular. |
| will mean any phrase of the form 'the so-and-so' in the singular. |
| "" |
| We shall say that an object is 'known by description' when we know that |
| "it is 'the so-and-so', i.e. when we know that there is one object, and" |
| "it is 'the so-and-so', i.e. when we know that there is one object, and" |
| "it is 'the so-and-so', i.e. when we know that there is one object, and" |
| "no more, having a certain property; and it will generally be implied" |
| that we do not have knowledge of the same object by acquaintance. We |
| "know that the man with the iron mask existed, and many propositions" |
| are known about him; but we do not know who he was. We know that the |
| "candidate who gets the most votes will be elected, and in this case we" |
| are very likely also acquainted (in the only sense in which one can |
| "be acquainted with some one else) with the man who is, in fact, the" |
| candidate who will get most votes; but we do not know which of the |
| "candidates he is, i.e. we do not know any proposition of the form 'A is" |
| the candidate who will get most votes' where A is one of the candidates |
| by name. We shall say that we have 'merely descriptive knowledge' of the |
| "so-and-so when, although we know that the so-and-so exists, and although" |
| "so-and-so when, although we know that the so-and-so exists, and although" |
| "so-and-so when, although we know that the so-and-so exists, and although" |
| "so-and-so when, although we know that the so-and-so exists, and although" |
| "so-and-so when, although we know that the so-and-so exists, and although" |
| "we may possibly be acquainted with the object which is, in fact, the" |
| "so-and-so, yet we do not know any proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so'," |
| "so-and-so, yet we do not know any proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so'," |
| "so-and-so, yet we do not know any proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so'," |
| "so-and-so, yet we do not know any proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so'," |
| "so-and-so, yet we do not know any proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so'," |
| where _a_ is something with which we are acquainted. |
| "" |
| "When we say 'the so-and-so exists', we mean that there is just one" |
| "When we say 'the so-and-so exists', we mean that there is just one" |
| "When we say 'the so-and-so exists', we mean that there is just one" |
| object which is the so-and-so. The proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so' |
| object which is the so-and-so. The proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so' |
| object which is the so-and-so. The proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so' |
| object which is the so-and-so. The proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so' |
| object which is the so-and-so. The proposition '_a_ is the so-and-so' |
| "means that _a_ has the property so-and-so, and nothing else has. 'Mr." |
| "means that _a_ has the property so-and-so, and nothing else has. 'Mr." |
| "means that _a_ has the property so-and-so, and nothing else has. 'Mr." |
| A. is the Unionist candidate for this constituency' means 'Mr. A. is |
| "a Unionist candidate for this constituency, and no one else is'. 'The" |
| Unionist candidate for this constituency exists' means 'some one is a |
| "Unionist candidate for this constituency, and no one else is'. Thus," |
| "when we are acquainted with an object which is the so-and-so, we know" |
| "when we are acquainted with an object which is the so-and-so, we know" |
| "when we are acquainted with an object which is the so-and-so, we know" |
| that the so-and-so exists; but we may know that the so-and-so exists |
| that the so-and-so exists; but we may know that the so-and-so exists |
| that the so-and-so exists; but we may know that the so-and-so exists |
| that the so-and-so exists; but we may know that the so-and-so exists |
| that the so-and-so exists; but we may know that the so-and-so exists |
| when we are not acquainted with any object which we know to be the |
| "so-and-so, and even when we are not acquainted with any object which, in" |
| "so-and-so, and even when we are not acquainted with any object which, in" |
| "so-and-so, and even when we are not acquainted with any object which, in" |
| "fact, is the so-and-so." |
| "fact, is the so-and-so." |
| "fact, is the so-and-so." |
| "" |
| "Common words, even proper names, are usually really descriptions. That" |
| "is to say, the thought in the mind of a person using a proper name" |
| correctly can generally only be expressed explicitly if we replace the |
| "proper name by a description. Moreover, the description required to" |
| "express the thought will vary for different people, or for the same" |
| person at different times. The only thing constant (so long as the name |
| is rightly used) is the object to which the name applies. But so long as |
| "this remains constant, the particular description involved usually makes" |
| no difference to the truth or falsehood of the proposition in which the |
| name appears. |
| "" |
| Let us take some illustrations. Suppose some statement made about |
| Bismarck. Assuming that there is such a thing as direct acquaintance |
| "with oneself, Bismarck himself might have used his name directly to" |
| designate the particular person with whom he was acquainted. In this |
| "case, if he made a judgement about himself, he himself might be a" |
| constituent of the judgement. Here the proper name has the direct use |
| "which it always wishes to have, as simply standing for a certain object," |
| and not for a description of the object. But if a person who knew |
| "Bismarck made a judgement about him, the case is different. What this" |
| person was acquainted with were certain sense-data which he connected |
| person was acquainted with were certain sense-data which he connected |
| "(rightly, we will suppose) with Bismarck's body. His body, as a physical" |
| "object, and still more his mind, were only known as the body and the" |
| "mind connected with these sense-data. That is, they were known by" |
| "mind connected with these sense-data. That is, they were known by" |
| "description. It is, of course, very much a matter af chance which" |
| characteristics of a man's appearance will come into a friend's mind |
| when he thinks of him; thus the description actually in the friend's |
| mind is accidental. The essential point is that he knows that the |
| "various descriptions all apply to the same entity, in spite of not being" |
| acquainted with the entity in question. |
| "" |
| "When we, who did not know Bismarck, make a judgement about him, the" |
| description in our minds will probably be some more or less vague mass |
| "of historical knowledge--far more, in most cases, than is required to" |
| "of historical knowledge--far more, in most cases, than is required to" |
| "of historical knowledge--far more, in most cases, than is required to" |
| "identify him. But, for the sake of illustration, let us assume that we" |
| think of him as 'the first Chancellor of the German Empire'. Here all |
| "the words are abstract except 'German'. The word 'German' will, again," |
| have different meanings for different people. To some it will recall |
| "travels in Germany, to some the look of Germany on the map, and so on." |
| "But if we are to obtain a description which we know to be applicable," |
| "we shall be compelled, at some point, to bring in a reference to a" |
| particular with which we are acquainted. Such reference is involved in |
| "any mention of past, present, and future (as opposed to definite dates)," |
| "or of here and there, or of what others have told us. Thus it would seem" |
| "that, in some way or other, a description known to be applicable to a" |
| particular must involve some reference to a particular with which we |
| "are acquainted, if our knowledge about the thing described is not to be" |
| "merely what follows _logically_ from the description. For example, 'the" |
| "most long-lived of men' is a description involving only universals," |
| "most long-lived of men' is a description involving only universals," |
| "which must apply to some man, but we can make no judgements concerning" |
| this man which involve knowledge about him beyond what the description |
| "gives. If, however, we say, 'The first Chancellor of the German Empire" |
| "was an astute diplomatist', we can only be assured of the truth of our" |
| judgement in virtue of something with which we are acquainted--usually a |
| judgement in virtue of something with which we are acquainted--usually a |
| judgement in virtue of something with which we are acquainted--usually a |
| "testimony heard or read. Apart from the information we convey to others," |
| "apart from the fact about the actual Bismarck, which gives importance" |
| "to our judgement, the thought we really have contains the one or more" |
| "particulars involved, and otherwise consists wholly of concepts." |
| "" |
| "All names of places--London, England, Europe, the Earth, the Solar" |
| "All names of places--London, England, Europe, the Earth, the Solar" |
| "All names of places--London, England, Europe, the Earth, the Solar" |
| "System--similarly involve, when used, descriptions which start from some" |
| "System--similarly involve, when used, descriptions which start from some" |
| "System--similarly involve, when used, descriptions which start from some" |
| one or more particulars with which we are acquainted. I suspect that |
| "even the Universe, as considered by metaphysics, involves such a" |
| "connexion with particulars. In logic, on the contrary, where we are" |
| "concerned not merely with what does exist, but with whatever might or" |
| "could exist or be, no reference to actual particulars is involved." |
| "" |
| "It would seem that, when we make a statement about something only known" |
| "by description, we often _intend_ to make our statement, not in the form" |
| "involving the description, but about the actual thing described. That" |
| "is to say, when we say anything about Bismarck, we should like, if we" |
| "could, to make the judgement which Bismarck alone can make, namely," |
| the judgement of which he himself is a constituent. In this we are |
| "necessarily defeated, since the actual Bismarck is unknown to us. But" |
| "we know that there is an object B, called Bismarck, and that B was an" |
| astute diplomatist. We can thus _describe_ the proposition we should |
| "like to affirm, namely, 'B was an astute diplomatist', where B is the" |
| object which was Bismarck. If we are describing Bismarck as 'the first |
| "Chancellor of the German Empire', the proposition we should like to" |
| "affirm may be described as 'the proposition asserting, concerning the" |
| "actual object which was the first Chancellor of the German Empire, that" |
| this object was an astute diplomatist'. What enables us to communicate |
| in spite of the varying descriptions we employ is that we know there is |
| "a true proposition concerning the actual Bismarck, and that however we" |
| may vary the description (so long as the description is correct) the |
| "proposition described is still the same. This proposition, which is" |
| "described and is known to be true, is what interests us; but we are not" |
| "acquainted with the proposition itself, and do not know it, though we" |
| know it is true. |
| "" |
| It will be seen that there are various stages in the removal from |
| acquaintance with particulars: there is Bismarck to people who knew him; |
| Bismarck to those who only know of him through history; the man with |
| the iron mask; the longest-lived of men. These are progressively further |
| the iron mask; the longest-lived of men. These are progressively further |
| removed from acquaintance with particulars; the first comes as near to |
| "acquaintance as is possible in regard to another person; in the second," |
| "we shall still be said to know 'who Bismarck was'; in the third, we do" |
| "not know who was the man with the iron mask, though we can know many" |
| propositions about him which are not logically deducible from the fact |
| "that he wore an iron mask; in the fourth, finally, we know nothing" |
| beyond what is logically deducible from the definition of the man. There |
| "is a similar hierarchy in the region of universals. Many universals," |
| "like many particulars, are only known to us by description. But here," |
| "as in the case of particulars, knowledge concerning what is known by" |
| description is ultimately reducible to knowledge concerning what is |
| known by acquaintance. |
| "" |
| The fundamental principle in the analysis of propositions containing |
| descriptions is this: _Every proposition which we can understand must be |
| composed wholly of constituents with which we are acquainted_. |
| "" |
| We shall not at this stage attempt to answer all the objections which |
| "may be urged against this fundamental principle. For the present, we" |
| "shall merely point out that, in some way or other, it must be possible" |
| "to meet these objections, for it is scarcely conceivable that we can" |
| make a judgement or entertain a supposition without knowing what it is |
| that we are judging or supposing about. We must attach _some_ meaning |
| "to the words we use, if we are to speak significantly and not utter mere" |
| noise; and the meaning we attach to our words must be something with |
| "which we are acquainted. Thus when, for example, we make a statement" |
| "about Julius Caesar, it is plain that Julius Caesar himself is not" |
| "before our minds, since we are not acquainted with him. We have in mind" |
| some description of Julius Caesar: 'the man who was assassinated on the |
| "Ides of March', 'the founder of the Roman Empire', or, perhaps, merely" |
| "'the man whose name was _Julius Caesar_'. (In this last description," |
| _Julius Caesar_ is a noise or shape with which we are acquainted.) |
| "Thus our statement does not mean quite what it seems to mean, but means" |
| "something involving, instead of Julius Caesar, some description of him" |
| which is composed wholly of particulars and universals with which we are |
| acquainted. |
| "" |
| The chief importance of knowledge by description is that it enables us |
| to pass beyond the limits of our private experience. In spite of the |
| fact that we can only know truths which are wholly composed of terms |
| "which we have experienced in acquaintance, we can yet have knowledge by" |
| description of things which we have never experienced. In view of the |
| "very narrow range of our immediate experience, this result is vital, and" |
| "until it is understood, much of our knowledge must remain mysterious and" |
| therefore doubtful. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER VI. ON INDUCTION |
| "" |
| In almost all our previous discussions we have been concerned in |
| the attempt to get clear as to our data in the way of knowledge of |
| existence. What things are there in the universe whose existence is |
| "known to us owing to our being acquainted with them? So far, our answer" |
| "has been that we are acquainted with our sense-data, and, probably," |
| "has been that we are acquainted with our sense-data, and, probably," |
| with ourselves. These we know to exist. And past sense-data which |
| with ourselves. These we know to exist. And past sense-data which |
| are remembered are known to have existed in the past. This knowledge |
| supplies our data. |
| "" |
| But if we are to be able to draw inferences from these data--if we are |
| But if we are to be able to draw inferences from these data--if we are |
| But if we are to be able to draw inferences from these data--if we are |
| "to know of the existence of matter, of other people, of the past before" |
| "our individual memory begins, or of the future, we must know general" |
| principles of some kind by means of which such inferences can be drawn. |
| "It must be known to us that the existence of some one sort of thing, A," |
| "is a sign of the existence of some other sort of thing, B, either at" |
| "the same time as A or at some earlier or later time, as, for example," |
| thunder is a sign of the earlier existence of lightning. If this were |
| "not known to us, we could never extend our knowledge beyond the" |
| "sphere of our private experience; and this sphere, as we have seen, is" |
| exceedingly limited. The question we have now to consider is whether |
| "such an extension is possible, and if so, how it is effected." |
| "" |
| "Let us take as an illustration a matter about which none of us, in fact," |
| feel the slightest doubt. We are all convinced that the sun will rise |
| "to-morrow. Why? Is this belief a mere blind outcome of past experience," |
| "to-morrow. Why? Is this belief a mere blind outcome of past experience," |
| or can it be justified as a reasonable belief? It is not easy to find |
| a test by which to judge whether a belief of this kind is reasonable or |
| "not, but we can at least ascertain what sort of general beliefs would" |
| "suffice, if true, to justify the judgement that the sun will rise" |
| "to-morrow, and the many other similar judgements upon which our actions" |
| "to-morrow, and the many other similar judgements upon which our actions" |
| are based. |
| "" |
| It is obvious that if we are asked why we believe that the sun will rise |
| "to-morrow, we shall naturally answer 'Because it always has risen every" |
| "to-morrow, we shall naturally answer 'Because it always has risen every" |
| "day'. We have a firm belief that it will rise in the future, because it" |
| has risen in the past. If we are challenged as to why we believe that |
| "it will continue to rise as heretofore, we may appeal to the laws of" |
| "motion: the earth, we shall say, is a freely rotating body, and such" |
| "bodies do not cease to rotate unless something interferes from outside," |
| and there is nothing outside to interfere with the earth between now and |
| to-morrow. Of course it might be doubted whether we are quite certain |
| to-morrow. Of course it might be doubted whether we are quite certain |
| "that there is nothing outside to interfere, but this is not the" |
| interesting doubt. The interesting doubt is as to whether the laws |
| of motion will remain in operation until to-morrow. If this doubt is |
| of motion will remain in operation until to-morrow. If this doubt is |
| "raised, we find ourselves in the same position as when the doubt about" |
| the sunrise was first raised. |
| "" |
| The _only_ reason for believing that the laws of motion will remain in |
| "operation is that they have operated hitherto, so far as our knowledge" |
| of the past enables us to judge. It is true that we have a greater body |
| of evidence from the past in favour of the laws of motion than we have |
| "in favour of the sunrise, because the sunrise is merely a particular" |
| "case of fulfilment of the laws of motion, and there are countless other" |
| particular cases. But the real question is: Do _any_ number of cases |
| of a law being fulfilled in the past afford evidence that it will be |
| "fulfilled in the future? If not, it becomes plain that we have no ground" |
| "whatever for expecting the sun to rise to-morrow, or for expecting the" |
| "whatever for expecting the sun to rise to-morrow, or for expecting the" |
| "bread we shall eat at our next meal not to poison us, or for any of the" |
| other scarcely conscious expectations that control our daily lives. It |
| is to be observed that all such expectations are only _probable_; thus |
| "we have not to seek for a proof that they _must_ be fulfilled, but" |
| only for some reason in favour of the view that they are _likely_ to be |
| fulfilled. |
| "" |
| "Now in dealing with this question we must, to begin with, make an" |
| "important distinction, without which we should soon become involved" |
| "in hopeless confusions. Experience has shown us that, hitherto, the" |
| frequent repetition of some uniform succession or coexistence has been a |
| _cause_ of our expecting the same succession or coexistence on the next |
| occasion. Food that has a certain appearance generally has a certain |
| "taste, and it is a severe shock to our expectations when the familiar" |
| appearance is found to be associated with an unusual taste. Things which |
| "we see become associated, by habit, with certain tactile sensations" |
| which we expect if we touch them; one of the horrors of a ghost (in |
| many ghost-stories) is that it fails to give us any sensations of touch. |
| many ghost-stories) is that it fails to give us any sensations of touch. |
| Uneducated people who go abroad for the first time are so surprised as |
| to be incredulous when they find their native language not understood. |
| "" |
| And this kind of association is not confined to men; in animals also it |
| is very strong. A horse which has been often driven along a certain |
| road resists the attempt to drive him in a different direction. Domestic |
| animals expect food when they see the person who usually feeds them. We |
| know that all these rather crude expectations of uniformity are liable |
| to be misleading. The man who has fed the chicken every day throughout |
| "its life at last wrings its neck instead, showing that more refined" |
| views as to the uniformity of nature would have been useful to the |
| chicken. |
| "" |
| "But in spite of the misleadingness of such expectations, they" |
| nevertheless exist. The mere fact that something has happened a certain |
| number of times causes animals and men to expect that it will happen |
| again. Thus our instincts certainly cause us to believe that the sun |
| "will rise to-morrow, but we may be in no better a position than the" |
| "will rise to-morrow, but we may be in no better a position than the" |
| chicken which unexpectedly has its neck wrung. We have therefore to |
| distinguish the fact that past uniformities _cause_ expectations as to |
| "the future, from the question whether there is any reasonable ground for" |
| giving weight to such expectations after the question of their validity |
| has been raised. |
| "" |
| The problem we have to discuss is whether there is any reason for |
| believing in what is called 'the uniformity of nature'. The belief in |
| the uniformity of nature is the belief that everything that has happened |
| or will happen is an instance of some general law to which there are no |
| exceptions. The crude expectations which we have been considering are |
| "all subject to exceptions, and therefore liable to disappoint those who" |
| "entertain them. But science habitually assumes, at least as a working" |
| "hypothesis, that general rules which have exceptions can be replaced by" |
| general rules which have no exceptions. 'Unsupported bodies in air fall' |
| is a general rule to which balloons and aeroplanes are exceptions. But |
| "the laws of motion and the law of gravitation, which account for the" |
| "fact that most bodies fall, also account for the fact that balloons and" |
| aeroplanes can rise; thus the laws of motion and the law of gravitation |
| are not subject to these exceptions. |
| "" |
| The belief that the sun will rise to-morrow might be falsified if the |
| The belief that the sun will rise to-morrow might be falsified if the |
| earth came suddenly into contact with a large body which destroyed its |
| rotation; but the laws of motion and the law of gravitation would not |
| be infringed by such an event. The business of science is to find |
| "uniformities, such as the laws of motion and the law of gravitation," |
| "to which, so far as our experience extends, there are no exceptions." |
| "In this search science has been remarkably successful, and it may be" |
| conceded that such uniformities have held hitherto. This brings us back |
| "to the question: Have we any reason, assuming that they have always held" |
| "in the past, to suppose that they will hold in the future?" |
| "" |
| It has been argued that we have reason to know that the future will |
| "resemble the past, because what was the future has constantly become the" |
| "past, and has always been found to resemble the past, so that we really" |
| "have experience of the future, namely of times which were formerly" |
| "future, which we may call past futures. But such an argument really begs" |
| "the very question at issue. We have experience of past futures, but not" |
| "of future futures, and the question is: Will future futures resemble" |
| past futures? This question is not to be answered by an argument which |
| starts from past futures alone. We have therefore still to seek for some |
| principle which shall enable us to know that the future will follow the |
| same laws as the past. |
| "" |
| The reference to the future in this question is not essential. The same |
| question arises when we apply the laws that work in our experience to |
| "past things of which we have no experience--as, for example, in geology," |
| "past things of which we have no experience--as, for example, in geology," |
| "past things of which we have no experience--as, for example, in geology," |
| or in theories as to the origin of the Solar System. The question we |
| really have to ask is: 'When two things have been found to be often |
| "associated, and no instance is known of the one occurring without the" |
| "other, does the occurrence of one of the two, in a fresh instance, give" |
| any good ground for expecting the other?' On our answer to this question |
| must depend the validity of the whole of our expectations as to the |
| "future, the whole of the results obtained by induction, and in fact" |
| practically all the beliefs upon which our daily life is based. |
| "" |
| "It must be conceded, to begin with, that the fact that two things have" |
| "been found often together and never apart does not, by itself, suffice" |
| to _prove_ demonstratively that they will be found together in the next |
| case we examine. The most we can hope is that the oftener things are |
| "found together, the more probable it becomes that they will be found" |
| "together another time, and that, if they have been found together often" |
| "enough, the probability will amount _almost_ to certainty. It can" |
| "never quite reach certainty, because we know that in spite of frequent" |
| "repetitions there sometimes is a failure at the last, as in the case" |
| of the chicken whose neck is wrung. Thus probability is all we ought to |
| seek. |
| "" |
| "It might be urged, as against the view we are advocating, that we" |
| "know all natural phenomena to be subject to the reign of law, and that" |
| "sometimes, on the basis of observation, we can see that only one law" |
| can possibly fit the facts of the case. Now to this view there are two |
| "answers. The first is that, even if _some_ law which has no exceptions" |
| "applies to our case, we can never, in practice, be sure that we have" |
| discovered that law and not one to which there are exceptions. The |
| "second is that the reign of law would seem to be itself only probable," |
| "and that our belief that it will hold in the future, or in unexamined" |
| "cases in the past, is itself based upon the very principle we are" |
| examining. |
| "" |
| The principle we are examining may be called the _principle of |
| "induction_, and its two parts may be stated as follows:" |
| "" |
| (a) When a thing of a certain sort A has been found to be associated |
| "with a thing of a certain other sort B, and has never been found" |
| "dissociated from a thing of the sort B, the greater the number of cases" |
| "in which A and B have been associated, the greater is the probability" |
| that they will be associated in a fresh case in which one of them is |
| known to be present; |
| "" |
| "(b) Under the same circumstances, a sufficient number of cases of" |
| association will make the probability of a fresh association nearly a |
| "certainty, and will make it approach certainty without limit." |
| "" |
| "As just stated, the principle applies only to the verification of our" |
| expectation in a single fresh instance. But we want also to know that |
| there is a probability in favour of the general law that things of the |
| "sort A are _always_ associated with things of the sort B, provided a" |
| "sufficient number of cases of association are known, and no cases of" |
| failure of association are known. The probability of the general law is |
| "obviously less than the probability of the particular case, since if the" |
| "general law is true, the particular case must also be true, whereas" |
| the particular case may be true without the general law being true. |
| Nevertheless the probability of the general law is increased by |
| "repetitions, just as the probability of the particular case is. We may" |
| therefore repeat the two parts of our principle as regards the general |
| "law, thus:" |
| "" |
| (a) The greater the number of cases in which a thing of the sort A has |
| "been found associated with a thing of the sort B, the more probable it" |
| is (if no cases of failure of association are known) that A is always |
| associated with B; |
| "" |
| "b) Under the same circumstances, a sufficient number of cases of the" |
| association of A with B will make it nearly certain that A is always |
| "associated with B, and will make this general law approach certainty" |
| without limit. |
| "" |
| It should be noted that probability is always relative to certain data. |
| "In our case, the data are merely the known cases of coexistence of A and" |
| "B. There may be other data, which _might_ be taken into account, which" |
| "would gravely alter the probability. For example, a man who had seen a" |
| "great many white swans might argue, by our principle, that on the" |
| "data it was _probable_ that all swans were white, and this might be a" |
| perfectly sound argument. The argument is not disproved by the fact that |
| "some swans are black, because a thing may very well happen in spite of" |
| "the fact that some data render it improbable. In the case of the swans," |
| a man might know that colour is a very variable characteristic in many |
| "species of animals, and that, therefore, an induction as to colour is" |
| "peculiarly liable to error. But this knowledge would be a fresh datum," |
| by no means proving that the probability relatively to our previous data |
| "had been wrongly estimated. The fact, therefore, that things often fail" |
| to fulfil our expectations is no evidence that our expectations will not |
| _probably_ be fulfilled in a given case or a given class of cases. Thus |
| our inductive principle is at any rate not capable of being _disproved_ |
| by an appeal to experience. |
| "" |
| "The inductive principle, however, is equally incapable of being _proved_" |
| by an appeal to experience. Experience might conceivably confirm |
| the inductive principle as regards the cases that have been already |
| "examined; but as regards unexamined cases, it is the inductive principle" |
| alone that can justify any inference from what has been examined to what |
| "has not been examined. All arguments which, on the basis of experience," |
| argue as to the future or the unexperienced parts of the past or |
| "present, assume the inductive principle; hence we can never use" |
| experience to prove the inductive principle without begging the |
| question. Thus we must either accept the inductive principle on the |
| "ground of its intrinsic evidence, or forgo all justification of our" |
| "expectations about the future. If the principle is unsound, we have no" |
| "reason to expect the sun to rise to-morrow, to expect bread to be more" |
| "reason to expect the sun to rise to-morrow, to expect bread to be more" |
| "nourishing than a stone, or to expect that if we throw ourselves off" |
| the roof we shall fall. When we see what looks like our best friend |
| "approaching us, we shall have no reason to suppose that his body is not" |
| inhabited by the mind of our worst enemy or of some total stranger. All |
| "our conduct is based upon associations which have worked in the past," |
| and which we therefore regard as likely to work in the future; and this |
| likelihood is dependent for its validity upon the inductive principle. |
| "" |
| "The general principles of science, such as the belief in the reign" |
| "of law, and the belief that every event must have a cause, are as" |
| completely dependent upon the inductive principle as are the beliefs of |
| daily life All such general principles are believed because mankind have |
| found innumerable instances of their truth and no instances of their |
| "falsehood. But this affords no evidence for their truth in the future," |
| unless the inductive principle is assumed. |
| "" |
| "Thus all knowledge which, on a basis of experience tells us something" |
| "about what is not experienced, is based upon a belief which experience" |
| "can neither confirm nor confute, yet which, at least in its more" |
| "concrete applications, appears to be as firmly rooted in us as many" |
| of the facts of experience. The existence and justification of such |
| "beliefs--for the inductive principle, as we shall see, is not the only" |
| "beliefs--for the inductive principle, as we shall see, is not the only" |
| "beliefs--for the inductive principle, as we shall see, is not the only" |
| example--raises some of the most difficult and most debated problems of |
| example--raises some of the most difficult and most debated problems of |
| example--raises some of the most difficult and most debated problems of |
| "philosophy. We will, in the next chapter, consider briefly what may be" |
| "said to account for such knowledge, and what is its scope and its degree" |
| of certainty. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER VII. ON OUR KNOWLEDGE OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES |
| "" |
| "We saw in the preceding chapter that the principle of induction, while" |
| "necessary to the validity of all arguments based on experience," |
| "is itself not capable of being proved by experience, and yet is" |
| "unhesitatingly believed by every one, at least in all its concrete" |
| applications. In these characteristics the principle of induction does |
| not stand alone. There are a number of other principles which cannot be |
| "proved or disproved by experience, but are used in arguments which start" |
| from what is experienced. |
| "" |
| Some of these principles have even greater evidence than the principle |
| "of induction, and the knowledge of them has the same degree of certainty" |
| as the knowledge of the existence of sense-data. They constitute the |
| as the knowledge of the existence of sense-data. They constitute the |
| means of drawing inferences from what is given in sensation; and if what |
| "we infer is to be true, it is just as necessary that our principles" |
| of inference should be true as it is that our data should be true. The |
| principles of inference are apt to be overlooked because of their |
| very obviousness--the assumption involved is assented to without our |
| very obviousness--the assumption involved is assented to without our |
| very obviousness--the assumption involved is assented to without our |
| realizing that it is an assumption. But it is very important to realize |
| "the use of principles of inference, if a correct theory of knowledge" |
| is to be obtained; for our knowledge of them raises interesting and |
| difficult questions. |
| "" |
| "In all our knowledge of general principles, what actually happens" |
| is that first of all we realize some particular application of the |
| "principle, and then we realize that the particularity is irrelevant, and" |
| that there is a generality which may equally truly be affirmed. This is |
| of course familiar in such matters as teaching arithmetic: 'two and |
| two are four' is first learnt in the case of some particular pair of |
| "couples, and then in some other particular case, and so on, until at" |
| last it becomes possible to see that it is true of any pair of couples. |
| The same thing happens with logical principles. Suppose two men are |
| "discussing what day of the month it is. One of them says, 'At least you" |
| will admit that _if_ yesterday was the 15th to-day must be the 16th.' |
| will admit that _if_ yesterday was the 15th to-day must be the 16th.' |
| "'Yes', says the other, 'I admit that.' 'And you know', the first" |
| "continues, 'that yesterday was the 15th, because you dined with Jones," |
| "and your diary will tell you that was on the 15th.' 'Yes', says the" |
| second; 'therefore to-day _is_ the 16th.' |
| second; 'therefore to-day _is_ the 16th.' |
| "" |
| Now such an argument is not hard to follow; and if it is granted that |
| "its premisses are true in fact, no one will deny that the conclusion" |
| must also be true. But it depends for its truth upon an instance of a |
| general logical principle. The logical principle is as follows: 'Suppose |
| "it known that _if_ this is true, then that is true. Suppose it also" |
| "known that this _is_ true, then it follows that that is true.' When it" |
| "is the case that if this is true, that is true, we shall say that this" |
| "'implies' that, and that that 'follows from' this. Thus our principle" |
| "states that if this implies that, and this is true, then that is true." |
| "In other words, 'anything implied by a true proposition is true', or" |
| 'whatever follows from a true proposition is true'. |
| "" |
| "This principle is really involved--at least, concrete instances of it" |
| "This principle is really involved--at least, concrete instances of it" |
| "This principle is really involved--at least, concrete instances of it" |
| are involved--in all demonstrations. Whenever one thing which we believe |
| are involved--in all demonstrations. Whenever one thing which we believe |
| are involved--in all demonstrations. Whenever one thing which we believe |
| "is used to prove something else, which we consequently believe, this" |
| principle is relevant. If any one asks: 'Why should I accept the results |
| of valid arguments based on true premisses?' we can only answer by |
| "appealing to our principle. In fact, the truth of the principle is" |
| "impossible to doubt, and its obviousness is so great that at first sight" |
| "it seems almost trivial. Such principles, however, are not trivial to" |
| "the philosopher, for they show that we may have indubitable knowledge" |
| which is in no way derived from objects of sense. |
| "" |
| The above principle is merely one of a certain number of self-evident |
| The above principle is merely one of a certain number of self-evident |
| logical principles. Some at least of these principles must be granted |
| before any argument or proof becomes possible. When some of them have |
| "been granted, others can be proved, though these others, so long as they" |
| "are simple, are just as obvious as the principles taken for granted. For" |
| "no very good reason, three of these principles have been singled out by" |
| tradition under the name of 'Laws of Thought'. |
| "" |
| They are as follows: |
| "" |
| "(1) _The law of identity_: 'Whatever is, is.'" |
| "" |
| (2) _The law of contradiction_: 'Nothing can both be and not be.' |
| "" |
| (3) _The law of excluded middle_: 'Everything must either be or not be.' |
| "" |
| "These three laws are samples of self-evident logical principles, but" |
| "These three laws are samples of self-evident logical principles, but" |
| are not really more fundamental or more self-evident than various other |
| are not really more fundamental or more self-evident than various other |
| "similar principles: for instance, the one we considered just now, which" |
| states that what follows from a true premiss is true. The name 'laws of |
| "thought' is also misleading, for what is important is not the fact that" |
| "we think in accordance with these laws, but the fact that things behave" |
| "in accordance with them; in other words, the fact that when we think in" |
| "accordance with them we think _truly_. But this is a large question, to" |
| which we must return at a later stage. |
| "" |
| In addition to the logical principles which enable us to prove from |
| "a given premiss that something is _certainly_ true, there are other" |
| "logical principles which enable us to prove, from a given premiss," |
| that there is a greater or less probability that something is true. An |
| example of such principles--perhaps the most important example is the |
| example of such principles--perhaps the most important example is the |
| example of such principles--perhaps the most important example is the |
| "inductive principle, which we considered in the preceding chapter." |
| "" |
| One of the great historic controversies in philosophy is the controversy |
| between the two schools called respectively 'empiricists' and |
| 'rationalists'. The empiricists--who are best represented by the |
| 'rationalists'. The empiricists--who are best represented by the |
| 'rationalists'. The empiricists--who are best represented by the |
| "British philosophers, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume--maintained that all" |
| "British philosophers, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume--maintained that all" |
| "British philosophers, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume--maintained that all" |
| our knowledge is derived from experience; the rationalists--who are |
| our knowledge is derived from experience; the rationalists--who are |
| our knowledge is derived from experience; the rationalists--who are |
| "represented by the Continental philosophers of the seventeenth century," |
| "especially Descartes and Leibniz--maintained that, in addition to what" |
| "especially Descartes and Leibniz--maintained that, in addition to what" |
| "especially Descartes and Leibniz--maintained that, in addition to what" |
| "we know by experience, there are certain 'innate ideas' and 'innate" |
| "principles', which we know independently of experience. It has now" |
| become possible to decide with some confidence as to the truth or |
| "falsehood of these opposing schools. It must be admitted, for the" |
| "reasons already stated, that logical principles are known to us, and" |
| "cannot be themselves proved by experience, since all proof presupposes" |
| "them. In this, therefore, which was the most important point of the" |
| "controversy, the rationalists were in the right." |
| "" |
| "On the other hand, even that part of our knowledge which is _logically_" |
| independent of experience (in the sense that experience cannot prove |
| it) is yet elicited and caused by experience. It is on occasion of |
| particular experiences that we become aware of the general laws which |
| their connexions exemplify. It would certainly be absurd to suppose that |
| there are innate principles in the sense that babies are born with a |
| knowledge of everything which men know and which cannot be deduced from |
| "what is experienced. For this reason, the word 'innate' would not now be" |
| employed to describe our knowledge of logical principles. The phrase |
| "'_a priori_' is less objectionable, and is more usual in modern writers." |
| "Thus, while admitting that all knowledge is elicited and caused by" |
| "experience, we shall nevertheless hold that some knowledge is _a" |
| "priori_, in the sense that the experience which makes us think of it" |
| "does not suffice to prove it, but merely so directs our attention that" |
| we see its truth without requiring any proof from experience. |
| "" |
| "There is another point of great importance, in which the empiricists" |
| were in the right as against the rationalists. Nothing can be known to |
| "_exist_ except by the help of experience. That is to say, if we wish to" |
| "prove that something of which we have no direct experience exists, we" |
| must have among our premisses the existence of one or more things of |
| which we have direct experience. Our belief that the Emperor of China |
| "exists, for example, rests upon testimony, and testimony consists," |
| "in the last analysis, of sense-data seen or heard in reading or being" |
| "in the last analysis, of sense-data seen or heard in reading or being" |
| "spoken to. Rationalists believed that, from general consideration as" |
| "to what must be, they could deduce the existence of this or that in the" |
| actual world. In this belief they seem to have been mistaken. All the |
| knowledge that we can acquire _a priori_ concerning existence seems |
| "to be hypothetical: it tells us that if one thing exists, another must" |
| "exist, or, more generally, that if one proposition is true, another must" |
| be true. This is exemplified by the principles we have already dealt |
| "with, such as '_if_ this is true, and this implies that, then that is" |
| "true', or '_if_ this and that have been repeatedly found connected, they" |
| will probably be connected in the next instance in which one of them is |
| found'. Thus the scope and power of _a priori_ principles is strictly |
| limited. All knowledge that something exists must be in part dependent |
| "on experience. When anything is known immediately, its existence is" |
| "known by experience alone; when anything is proved to exist, without" |
| "being known immediately, both experience and _a priori_ principles must" |
| be required in the proof. Knowledge is called _empirical_ when it rests |
| wholly or partly upon experience. Thus all knowledge which asserts |
| "existence is empirical, and the only _a priori_ knowledge concerning" |
| "existence is hypothetical, giving connexions among things that exist or" |
| "may exist, but not giving actual existence." |
| "" |
| _A priori_ knowledge is not all of the logical kind we have been |
| hitherto considering. Perhaps the most important example of non-logical |
| hitherto considering. Perhaps the most important example of non-logical |
| _a priori_ knowledge is knowledge as to ethical value. I am not speaking |
| "of judgements as to what is useful or as to what is virtuous, for such" |
| judgements do require empirical premisses; I am speaking of judgements |
| "as to the intrinsic desirability of things. If something is useful, it" |
| "must be useful because it secures some end; the end must, if we have" |
| "gone far enough, be valuable on its own account, and not merely because" |
| it is useful for some further end. Thus all judgements as to what is |
| useful depend upon judgements as to what has value on its own account. |
| "" |
| "We judge, for example, that happiness is more desirable than misery," |
| "knowledge than ignorance, goodwill than hatred, and so on. Such" |
| "judgements must, in part at least, be immediate and _a priori_. Like our" |
| "previous _a priori_ judgements, they may be elicited by experience, and" |
| indeed they must be; for it seems not possible to judge whether anything |
| is intrinsically valuable unless we have experienced something of |
| the same kind. But it is fairly obvious that they cannot be proved by |
| experience; for the fact that a thing exists or does not exist cannot |
| prove either that it is good that it should exist or that it is bad. The |
| "pursuit of this subject belongs to ethics, where the impossibility of" |
| deducing what ought to be from what is has to be established. In the |
| "present connexion, it is only important to realize that knowledge as to" |
| what is intrinsically of value is _a priori_ in the same sense in |
| "which logic is _a priori_, namely in the sense that the truth of such" |
| knowledge can be neither proved nor disproved by experience. |
| "" |
| "All pure mathematics is _a priori_, like logic. This was strenuously" |
| "denied by the empirical philosophers, who maintained that experience was" |
| as much the source of our knowledge of arithmetic as of our knowledge of |
| geography. They maintained that by the repeated experience of seeing two |
| "things and two other things, and finding that altogether they made four" |
| "things, we were led by induction to the conclusion that two things" |
| "and two other things would _always_ make four things altogether. If," |
| "however, this were the source of our knowledge that two and two are" |
| "four, we should proceed differently, in persuading ourselves of its" |
| "truth, from the way in which we do actually proceed. In fact, a certain" |
| "number of instances are needed to make us think of two abstractly," |
| "rather than of two coins or two books or two people, or two of any other" |
| specified kind. But as soon as we are able to divest our thoughts of |
| "irrelevant particularity, we become able to see the general principle" |
| "that two and two are four; any one instance is seen to be _typical_, and" |
| the examination of other instances becomes unnecessary.(1) |
| "" |
| "(1) Cf. A. N. Whitehead, _Introduction to Mathematics_ (Home University" |
| Library). |
| "" |
| The same thing is exemplified in geometry. If we want to prove some |
| "property of _all_ triangles, we draw some one triangle and reason about" |
| it; but we can avoid making use of any property which it does not share |
| "with all other triangles, and thus, from our particular case, we obtain" |
| "a general result. We do not, in fact, feel our certainty that two and" |
| "two are four increased by fresh instances, because, as soon as we have" |
| "seen the truth of this proposition, our certainty becomes so great as" |
| "to be incapable of growing greater. Moreover, we feel some quality of" |
| "necessity about the proposition 'two and two are four', which is" |
| absent from even the best attested empirical generalizations. Such |
| generalizations always remain mere facts: we feel that there might be a |
| "world in which they were false, though in the actual world they happen" |
| "to be true. In any possible world, on the contrary, we feel that two" |
| "and two would be four: this is not a mere fact, but a necessity to which" |
| everything actual and possible must conform. |
| "" |
| The case may be made clearer by considering a genuinely-empirical |
| The case may be made clearer by considering a genuinely-empirical |
| "generalization, such as 'All men are mortal.' It is plain that we" |
| "believe this proposition, in the first place, because there is no known" |
| "instance of men living beyond a certain age, and in the second place" |
| because there seem to be physiological grounds for thinking that an |
| organism such as a man's body must sooner or later wear out. Neglecting |
| "the second ground, and considering merely our experience of men's" |
| "mortality, it is plain that we should not be content with one quite" |
| "clearly understood instance of a man dying, whereas, in the case of 'two" |
| "and two are four', one instance does suffice, when carefully considered," |
| to persuade us that the same must happen in any other instance. Also |
| "we can be forced to admit, on reflection, that there may be some doubt," |
| "however slight, as to whether _all_ men are mortal. This may be made" |
| "plain by the attempt to imagine two different worlds, in one of which" |
| "there are men who are not mortal, while in the other two and two make" |
| five. When Swift invites us to consider the race of Struldbugs who never |
| "die, we are able to acquiesce in imagination. But a world where two" |
| and two make five seems quite on a different level. We feel that such a |
| "world, if there were one, would upset the whole fabric of our knowledge" |
| and reduce us to utter doubt. |
| "" |
| "The fact is that, in simple mathematical judgements such as 'two and two" |
| "are four', and also in many judgements of logic, we can know the general" |
| "proposition without inferring it from instances, although some instance" |
| is usually necessary to make clear to us what the general proposition |
| "means. This is why there is real utility in the process of _deduction_," |
| "which goes from the general to the general, or from the general to the" |
| "particular, as well as in the process of _induction_, which goes from" |
| "the particular to the particular, or from the particular to the general." |
| It is an old debate among philosophers whether deduction ever gives |
| "_new_ knowledge. We can now see that in certain cases, at least, it does" |
| "do so. If we already know that two and two always make four, and we" |
| "know that Brown and Jones are two, and so are Robinson and Smith, we can" |
| deduce that Brown and Jones and Robinson and Smith are four. This is |
| "new knowledge, not contained in our premisses, because the general" |
| "proposition, 'two and two are four', never told us there were such" |
| "people as Brown and Jones and Robinson and Smith, and the particular" |
| "premisses do not tell us that there were four of them, whereas the" |
| particular proposition deduced does tell us both these things. |
| "" |
| But the newness of the knowledge is much less certain if we take the |
| "stock instance of deduction that is always given in books on logic," |
| "namely, 'All men are mortal; Socrates is a man, therefore Socrates is" |
| "mortal.' In this case, what we really know beyond reasonable doubt is" |
| "that certain men, A, B, C, were mortal, since, in fact, they have died." |
| "If Socrates is one of these men, it is foolish to go the roundabout way" |
| through 'all men are mortal' to arrive at the conclusion that _probably_ |
| Socrates is mortal. If Socrates is not one of the men on whom our |
| "induction is based, we shall still do better to argue straight from our" |
| "A, B, C, to Socrates, than to go round by the general proposition, 'all" |
| "men are mortal'. For the probability that Socrates is mortal is greater," |
| "on our data, than the probability that all men are mortal. (This is" |
| "obvious, because if all men are mortal, so is Socrates; but if Socrates" |
| "is mortal, it does not follow that all men are mortal.) Hence we shall" |
| reach the conclusion that Socrates is mortal with a greater approach to |
| certainty if we make our argument purely inductive than if we go by way |
| of 'all men are mortal' and then use deduction. |
| "" |
| This illustrates the difference between general propositions known _a |
| "priori_ such as 'two and two are four', and empirical generalizations" |
| "such as 'all men are mortal'. In regard to the former, deduction is the" |
| "right mode of argument, whereas in regard to the latter, induction is" |
| "always theoretically preferable, and warrants a greater confidence in" |
| "the truth of our conclusion, because all empirical generalizations are" |
| more uncertain than the instances of them. |
| "" |
| "We have now seen that there are propositions known _a priori_, and that" |
| "among them are the propositions of logic and pure mathematics, as well" |
| as the fundamental propositions of ethics. The question which must |
| next occupy us is this: How is it possible that there should be such |
| "knowledge? And more particularly, how can there be knowledge of general" |
| "propositions in cases where we have not examined all the instances, and" |
| "indeed never can examine them all, because their number is infinite?" |
| "These questions, which were first brought prominently forward by" |
| "the German philosopher Kant (1724-1804), are very difficult, and" |
| "the German philosopher Kant (1724-1804), are very difficult, and" |
| historically very important. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER VIII. HOW _A PRIORI_ KNOWLEDGE IS POSSIBLE |
| "" |
| Immanuel Kant is generally regarded as the greatest of the modern |
| philosophers. Though he lived through the Seven Years War and the |
| "French Revolution, he never interrupted his teaching of philosophy at" |
| Koenigsberg in East Prussia. His most distinctive contribution was the |
| "invention of what he called the 'critical' philosophy, which, assuming" |
| "as a datum that there is knowledge of various kinds, inquired how such" |
| "knowledge comes to be possible, and deduced, from the answer to this" |
| "inquiry, many metaphysical results as to the nature of the world." |
| Whether these results were valid may well be doubted. But Kant |
| "undoubtedly deserves credit for two things: first, for having perceived" |
| "that we have _a priori_ knowledge which is not purely 'analytic', i.e." |
| "such that the opposite would be self-contradictory, and secondly," |
| "such that the opposite would be self-contradictory, and secondly," |
| for having made evident the philosophical importance of the theory of |
| knowledge. |
| "" |
| "Before the time of Kant, it was generally held that whatever knowledge" |
| was _a priori_ must be 'analytic'. What this word means will be best |
| "illustrated by examples. If I say, 'A bald man is a man', 'A plane" |
| "figure is a figure', 'A bad poet is a poet', I make a purely analytic" |
| judgement: the subject spoken about is given as having at least two |
| "properties, of which one is singled out to be asserted of it. Such" |
| "propositions as the above are trivial, and would never be enunciated" |
| in real life except by an orator preparing the way for a piece of |
| sophistry. They are called 'analytic' because the predicate is obtained |
| by merely analysing the subject. Before the time of Kant it was thought |
| that all judgements of which we could be certain _a priori_ were of this |
| kind: that in all of them there was a predicate which was only part |
| "of the subject of which it was asserted. If this were so, we should be" |
| involved in a definite contradiction if we attempted to deny anything |
| that could be known _a priori_. 'A bald man is not bald' would assert |
| "and deny baldness of the same man, and would therefore contradict" |
| "itself. Thus according to the philosophers before Kant, the law of" |
| "contradiction, which asserts that nothing can at the same time have and" |
| "not have a certain property, sufficed to establish the truth of all _a" |
| priori_ knowledge. |
| "" |
| "Hume (1711-76), who preceded Kant, accepting the usual view as to what" |
| "Hume (1711-76), who preceded Kant, accepting the usual view as to what" |
| "makes knowledge _a priori_, discovered that, in many cases which had" |
| "previously been supposed analytic, and notably in the case of cause and" |
| "effect, the connexion was really synthetic. Before Hume, rationalists at" |
| least had supposed that the effect could be logically deduced from the |
| "cause, if only we had sufficient knowledge. Hume argued--correctly, as" |
| "cause, if only we had sufficient knowledge. Hume argued--correctly, as" |
| "cause, if only we had sufficient knowledge. Hume argued--correctly, as" |
| would now be generally admitted--that this could not be done. Hence he |
| would now be generally admitted--that this could not be done. Hence he |
| would now be generally admitted--that this could not be done. Hence he |
| inferred the far more doubtful proposition that nothing could be known |
| "_a priori_ about the connexion of cause and effect. Kant, who had been" |
| "educated in the rationalist tradition, was much perturbed by Hume's" |
| "scepticism, and endeavoured to find an answer to it. He perceived that" |
| "not only the connexion of cause and effect, but all the propositions" |
| "of arithmetic and geometry, are 'synthetic', i.e. not analytic: in" |
| "all these propositions, no analysis of the subject will reveal the" |
| predicate. His stock instance was the proposition 7 + 5 = 12. He pointed |
| "out, quite truly, that 7 and 5 have to be put together to give 12: the" |
| "idea of 12 is not contained in them, nor even in the idea of adding them" |
| "together. Thus he was led to the conclusion that all pure mathematics," |
| "though _a priori_, is synthetic; and this conclusion raised a new" |
| problem of which he endeavoured to find the solution. |
| "" |
| "The question which Kant put at the beginning of his philosophy, namely" |
| "'How is pure mathematics possible?' is an interesting and difficult one," |
| to which every philosophy which is not purely sceptical must find |
| "some answer. The answer of the pure empiricists, that our mathematical" |
| "knowledge is derived by induction from particular instances, we have" |
| "already seen to be inadequate, for two reasons: first, that the validity" |
| of the inductive principle itself cannot be proved by induction; |
| "secondly, that the general propositions of mathematics, such as 'two" |
| "and two always make four', can obviously be known with certainty by" |
| "consideration of a single instance, and gain nothing by enumeration of" |
| other cases in which they have been found to be true. Thus our knowledge |
| of the general propositions of mathematics (and the same applies to |
| logic) must be accounted for otherwise than our (merely probable) |
| knowledge of empirical generalizations such as 'all men are mortal'. |
| "" |
| "The problem arises through the fact that such knowledge is general," |
| whereas all experience is particular. It seems strange that we should |
| apparently be able to know some truths in advance about particular |
| things of which we have as yet no experience; but it cannot easily be |
| doubted that logic and arithmetic will apply to such things. We do not |
| know who will be the inhabitants of London a hundred years hence; but |
| we know that any two of them and any other two of them will make four of |
| them. This apparent power of anticipating facts about things of which |
| we have no experience is certainly surprising. Kant's solution of the |
| "problem, though not valid in my opinion, is interesting. It is, however," |
| "very difficult, and is differently understood by different philosophers." |
| "We can, therefore, only give the merest outline of it, and even that" |
| will be thought misleading by many exponents of Kant's system. |
| "" |
| What Kant maintained was that in all our experience there are two |
| "elements to be distinguished, the one due to the object (i.e. to what we" |
| "have called the 'physical object'), the other due to our own nature. We" |
| "saw, in discussing matter and sense-data, that the physical object is" |
| "saw, in discussing matter and sense-data, that the physical object is" |
| "different from the associated sense-data, and that the sense-data are to" |
| "different from the associated sense-data, and that the sense-data are to" |
| "different from the associated sense-data, and that the sense-data are to" |
| be regarded as resulting from an interaction between the physical |
| "object and ourselves. So far, we are in agreement with Kant. But what" |
| is distinctive of Kant is the way in which he apportions the shares of |
| ourselves and the physical object respectively. He considers that the |
| "crude material given in sensation--the colour, hardness, etc.--is due" |
| "crude material given in sensation--the colour, hardness, etc.--is due" |
| "crude material given in sensation--the colour, hardness, etc.--is due" |
| "crude material given in sensation--the colour, hardness, etc.--is due" |
| "crude material given in sensation--the colour, hardness, etc.--is due" |
| "to the object, and that what we supply is the arrangement in space" |
| "and time, and all the relations between sense-data which result from" |
| "and time, and all the relations between sense-data which result from" |
| comparison or from considering one as the cause of the other or in any |
| other way. His chief reason in favour of this view is that we seem |
| to have _a priori_ knowledge as to space and time and causality and |
| "comparison, but not as to the actual crude material of sensation. We can" |
| "be sure, he says, that anything we shall ever experience must show the" |
| "characteristics affirmed of it in our _a priori_ knowledge, because" |
| "these characteristics are due to our own nature, and therefore" |
| nothing can ever come into our experience without acquiring these |
| characteristics. |
| "" |
| "The physical object, which he calls the 'thing in itself',(1) he regards" |
| as essentially unknowable; what can be known is the object as we have it |
| "in experience, which he calls the 'phenomenon'. The phenomenon, being" |
| "a joint product of us and the thing in itself, is sure to have those" |
| "characteristics which are due to us, and is therefore sure to conform" |
| "to our _a priori_ knowledge. Hence this knowledge, though true of all" |
| "actual and possible experience, must not be supposed to apply outside" |
| "experience. Thus in spite of the existence of _a priori_ knowledge, we" |
| cannot know anything about the thing in itself or about what is not |
| an actual or possible object of experience. In this way he tries to |
| reconcile and harmonize the contentions of the rationalists with the |
| arguments of the empiricists. |
| "" |
| (1) Kant's 'thing in itself' is identical in _definition_ with |
| "the physical object, namely, it is the cause of sensations. In the" |
| "properties deduced from the definition it is not identical, since Kant" |
| held (in spite of some inconsistency as regards cause) that we can know |
| that none of the categories are applicable to the 'thing in itself'. |
| "" |
| "Apart from minor grounds on which Kant's philosophy may be criticized," |
| there is one main objection which seems fatal to any attempt to deal |
| with the problem of _a priori_ knowledge by his method. The thing to |
| be accounted for is our certainty that the facts must always conform to |
| logic and arithmetic. To say that logic and arithmetic are contributed |
| by us does not account for this. Our nature is as much a fact of the |
| "existing world as anything, and there can be no certainty that it will" |
| "remain constant. It might happen, if Kant is right, that to-morrow" |
| "remain constant. It might happen, if Kant is right, that to-morrow" |
| our nature would so change as to make two and two become five. This |
| "possibility seems never to have occurred to him, yet it is one which" |
| utterly destroys the certainty and universality which he is anxious |
| to vindicate for arithmetical propositions. It is true that this |
| "possibility, formally, is inconsistent with the Kantian view that time" |
| "itself is a form imposed by the subject upon phenomena, so that our" |
| real Self is not in time and has no to-morrow. But he will still have |
| real Self is not in time and has no to-morrow. But he will still have |
| to suppose that the time-order of phenomena is determined by |
| to suppose that the time-order of phenomena is determined by |
| "characteristics of what is behind phenomena, and this suffices for the" |
| substance of our argument. |
| "" |
| "Reflection, moreover, seems to make it clear that, if there is any truth" |
| "in our arithmetical beliefs, they must apply to things equally whether" |
| we think of them or not. Two physical objects and two other physical |
| "objects must make four physical objects, even if physical objects cannot" |
| be experienced. To assert this is certainly within the scope of what |
| we mean when we state that two and two are four. Its truth is just as |
| indubitable as the truth of the assertion that two phenomena and two |
| other phenomena make four phenomena. Thus Kant's solution unduly limits |
| "the scope of _a priori_ propositions, in addition to failing in the" |
| attempt at explaining their certainty. |
| "" |
| "Apart from the special doctrines advocated by Kant, it is very common" |
| "among philosophers to regard what is _a priori_ as in some sense mental," |
| as concerned rather with the way we must think than with any fact of |
| the outer world. We noted in the preceding chapter the three principles |
| commonly called 'laws of thought'. The view which led to their being so |
| "named is a natural one, but there are strong reasons for thinking" |
| that it is erroneous. Let us take as an illustration the law of |
| contradiction. This is commonly stated in the form 'Nothing can both be |
| "and not be', which is intended to express the fact that nothing can at" |
| "once have and not have a given quality. Thus, for example, if a tree" |
| is a beech it cannot also be not a beech; if my table is rectangular it |
| "cannot also be not rectangular, and so on." |
| "" |
| Now what makes it natural to call this principle a law of _thought_ |
| is that it is by thought rather than by outward observation that we |
| persuade ourselves of its necessary truth. When we have seen that a tree |
| "is a beech, we do not need to look again in order to ascertain whether" |
| it is also not a beech; thought alone makes us know that this is |
| impossible. But the conclusion that the law of contradiction is a law |
| "of _thought_ is nevertheless erroneous. What we believe, when we believe" |
| "the law of contradiction, is not that the mind is so made that it must" |
| believe the law of contradiction. _This_ belief is a subsequent result |
| "of psychological reflection, which presupposes the belief in the law of" |
| contradiction. The belief in the law of contradiction is a belief about |
| "things, not only about thoughts. It is not, e.g., the belief that if we" |
| "_think_ a certain tree is a beech, we cannot at the same time _think_" |
| that it is not a beech; it is the belief that if the tree _is_ a |
| "beech, it cannot at the same time _be_ not a beech. Thus the law of" |
| "contradiction is about things, and not merely about thoughts; and" |
| "although belief in the law of contradiction is a thought, the law of" |
| "contradiction itself is not a thought, but a fact concerning the things" |
| "in the world. If this, which we believe when we believe the law of" |
| "contradiction, were not true of the things in the world, the fact" |
| that we were compelled to _think_ it true would not save the law of |
| contradiction from being false; and this shows that the law is not a law |
| of _thought_. |
| "" |
| A similar argument applies to any other _a priori_ judgement. When we |
| "judge that two and two are four, we are not making a judgement about our" |
| "thoughts, but about all actual or possible couples. The fact that our" |
| "minds are so constituted as to believe that two and two are four, though" |
| "it is true, is emphatically not what we assert when we assert that two" |
| and two are four. And no fact about the constitution of our minds could |
| "make it _true_ that two and two are four. Thus our _a priori_ knowledge," |
| "if it is not erroneous, is not merely knowledge about the constitution" |
| "of our minds, but is applicable to whatever the world may contain, both" |
| what is mental and what is non-mental. |
| what is mental and what is non-mental. |
| "" |
| The fact seems to be that all our _a priori_ knowledge is concerned with |
| "entities which do not, properly speaking, _exist_, either in the mental" |
| or in the physical world. These entities are such as can be named by |
| parts of speech which are not substantives; they are such entities as |
| "qualities and relations. Suppose, for instance, that I am in my room. I" |
| "exist, and my room exists; but does 'in' exist? Yet obviously the word" |
| 'in' has a meaning; it denotes a relation which holds between me and my |
| "room. This relation is something, although we cannot say that it exists" |
| _in the same sense_ in which I and my room exist. The relation 'in' is |
| "something which we can think about and understand, for, if we could not" |
| "understand it, we could not understand the sentence 'I am in my room'." |
| "Many philosophers, following Kant, have maintained that relations are" |
| "the work of the mind, that things in themselves have no relations," |
| but that the mind brings them together in one act of thought and thus |
| produces the relations which it judges them to have. |
| "" |
| "This view, however, seems open to objections similar to those which we" |
| urged before against Kant. It seems plain that it is not thought which |
| produces the truth of the proposition 'I am in my room'. It may be true |
| "that an earwig is in my room, even if neither I nor the earwig nor any" |
| one else is aware of this truth; for this truth concerns only the earwig |
| "and the room, and does not depend upon anything else. Thus relations, as" |
| "we shall see more fully in the next chapter, must be placed in a world" |
| which is neither mental nor physical. This world is of great importance |
| "to philosophy, and in particular to the problems of _a priori_" |
| knowledge. In the next chapter we shall proceed to develop its nature |
| and its bearing upon the questions with which we have been dealing. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER IX. THE WORLD OF UNIVERSALS |
| "" |
| At the end of the preceding chapter we saw that such entities as |
| relations appear to have a being which is in some way different from |
| "that of physical objects, and also different from that of minds and from" |
| that of sense-data. In the present chapter we have to consider what is |
| that of sense-data. In the present chapter we have to consider what is |
| "the nature of this kind of being, and also what objects there are that" |
| have this kind of being. We will begin with the latter question. |
| "" |
| "The problem with which we are now concerned is a very old one, since it" |
| was brought into philosophy by Plato. Plato's 'theory of ideas' is an |
| "attempt to solve this very problem, and in my opinion it is one of the" |
| most successful attempts hitherto made. The theory to be advocated in |
| "what follows is largely Plato's, with merely such modifications as time" |
| has shown to be necessary. |
| "" |
| The way the problem arose for Plato was more or less as follows. Let |
| "us consider, say, such a notion as _justice_. If we ask ourselves what" |
| "justice is, it is natural to proceed by considering this, that, and the" |
| "other just act, with a view to discovering what they have in common." |
| "They must all, in some sense, partake of a common nature, which will be" |
| "found in whatever is just and in nothing else. This common nature, in" |
| "virtue of which they are all just, will be justice itself, the pure" |
| essence the admixture of which with facts of ordinary life produces the |
| multiplicity of just acts. Similarly with any other word which may be |
| "applicable to common facts, such as 'whiteness' for example. The word" |
| will be applicable to a number of particular things because they all |
| participate in a common nature or essence. This pure essence is what |
| "Plato calls an 'idea' or 'form'. (It must not be supposed that 'ideas'," |
| "in his sense, exist in minds, though they may be apprehended by minds.)" |
| The 'idea' _justice_ is not identical with anything that is just: it is |
| "something other than particular things, which particular things partake" |
| "of. Not being particular, it cannot itself exist in the world of sense." |
| Moreover it is not fleeting or changeable like the things of sense: it |
| "is eternally itself, immutable and indestructible." |
| "" |
| "Thus Plato is led to a supra-sensible world, more real than the common" |
| "Thus Plato is led to a supra-sensible world, more real than the common" |
| "world of sense, the unchangeable world of ideas, which alone gives to" |
| the world of sense whatever pale reflection of reality may belong to it. |
| "The truly real world, for Plato, is the world of ideas; for whatever" |
| "we may attempt to say about things in the world of sense, we can only" |
| "succeed in saying that they participate in such and such ideas, which," |
| "therefore, constitute all their character. Hence it is easy to pass" |
| "on into a mysticism. We may hope, in a mystic illumination, to see the" |
| ideas as we see objects of sense; and we may imagine that the ideas |
| "exist in heaven. These mystical developments are very natural, but the" |
| "basis of the theory is in logic, and it is as based in logic that we" |
| have to consider it. |
| "" |
| "The word 'idea' has acquired, in the course of time, many associations" |
| which are quite misleading when applied to Plato's 'ideas'. We shall |
| "therefore use the word 'universal' instead of the word 'idea', to" |
| describe what Plato meant. The essence of the sort of entity that Plato |
| meant is that it is opposed to the particular things that are given in |
| "sensation. We speak of whatever is given in sensation, or is of the same" |
| "nature as things given in sensation, as a _particular_; by opposition" |
| "to this, a _universal_ will be anything which may be shared by many" |
| "particulars, and has those characteristics which, as we saw, distinguish" |
| justice and whiteness from just acts and white things. |
| "" |
| "When we examine common words, we find that, broadly speaking, proper" |
| "names stand for particulars, while other substantives, adjectives," |
| "prepositions, and verbs stand for universals. Pronouns stand for" |
| "particulars, but are ambiguous: it is only by the context or the" |
| circumstances that we know what particulars they stand for. The word |
| "'now' stands for a particular, namely the present moment; but like" |
| "pronouns, it stands for an ambiguous particular, because the present is" |
| always changing. |
| "" |
| It will be seen that no sentence can be made up without at least one |
| word which denotes a universal. The nearest approach would be some such |
| statement as 'I like this'. But even here the word 'like' denotes |
| "a universal, for I may like other things, and other people may like" |
| "things. Thus all truths involve universals, and all knowledge of truths" |
| involves acquaintance with universals. |
| "" |
| Seeing that nearly all the words to be found in the dictionary stand |
| "for universals, it is strange that hardly anybody except students of" |
| philosophy ever realizes that there are such entities as universals. We |
| do not naturally dwell upon those words in a sentence which do not stand |
| for particulars; and if we are forced to dwell upon a word which stands |
| "for a universal, we naturally think of it as standing for some one of" |
| "the particulars that come under the universal. When, for example, we" |
| "hear the sentence, 'Charles I's head was cut off', we may naturally" |
| "enough think of Charles I, of Charles I's head, and of the operation" |
| "of cutting off _his_ head, which are all particulars; but we do not" |
| naturally dwell upon what is meant by the word 'head' or the word |
| "'cut', which is a universal: We feel such words to be incomplete and" |
| insubstantial; they seem to demand a context before anything can be |
| done with them. Hence we succeed in avoiding all notice of universals as |
| "such, until the study of philosophy forces them upon our attention." |
| "" |
| "Even among philosophers, we may say, broadly, that only those universals" |
| which are named by adjectives or substantives have been much or often |
| "recognized, while those named by verbs and prepositions have been" |
| usually overlooked. This omission has had a very great effect upon |
| "philosophy; it is hardly too much to say that most metaphysics, since" |
| "Spinoza, has been largely determined by it. The way this has occurred" |
| "is, in outline, as follows: Speaking generally, adjectives and common" |
| "nouns express qualities or properties of single things, whereas" |
| prepositions and verbs tend to express relations between two or more |
| things. Thus the neglect of prepositions and verbs led to the belief |
| that every proposition can be regarded as attributing a property to a |
| "single thing, rather than as expressing a relation between two or more" |
| "things. Hence it was supposed that, ultimately, there can be no such" |
| entities as relations between things. Hence either there can be only |
| "one thing in the universe, or, if there are many things, they cannot" |
| "possibly interact in any way, since any interaction would be a relation," |
| and relations are impossible. |
| "" |
| "The first of these views, advocated by Spinoza and held in our own day" |
| "by Bradley and many other philosophers, is called _monism_; the second," |
| "advocated by Leibniz but not very common nowadays, is called _monadism_," |
| because each of the isolated things is called a _monad_. Both these |
| "opposing philosophies, interesting as they are, result, in my opinion," |
| "from an undue attention to one sort of universals, namely the sort" |
| represented by adjectives and substantives rather than by verbs and |
| prepositions. |
| "" |
| "As a matter of fact, if any one were anxious to deny altogether that" |
| "there are such things as universals, we should find that we cannot" |
| "strictly prove that there are such entities as _qualities_, i.e. the" |
| "universals represented by adjectives and substantives, whereas we" |
| "can prove that there must be _relations_, i.e. the sort of universals" |
| generally represented by verbs and prepositions. Let us take in |
| illustration the universal _whiteness_. If we believe that there is such |
| "a universal, we shall say that things are white because they have the" |
| "quality of whiteness. This view, however, was strenuously denied by" |
| "Berkeley and Hume, who have been followed in this by later empiricists." |
| The form which their denial took was to deny that there are such things |
| "as 'abstract ideas '. When we want to think of whiteness, they said, we" |
| "form an image of some particular white thing, and reason concerning this" |
| "particular, taking care not to deduce anything concerning it which we" |
| cannot see to be equally true of any other white thing. As an account of |
| "our actual mental processes, this is no doubt largely true. In geometry," |
| "for example, when we wish to prove something about all triangles, we" |
| "draw a particular triangle and reason about it, taking care not to use" |
| any characteristic which it does not share with other triangles. The |
| "beginner, in order to avoid error, often finds it useful to draw several" |
| "triangles, as unlike each other as possible, in order to make sure that" |
| his reasoning is equally applicable to all of them. But a difficulty |
| emerges as soon as we ask ourselves how we know that a thing is white |
| or a triangle. If we wish to avoid the universals _whiteness_ and |
| "_triangularity_, we shall choose some particular patch of white or some" |
| "particular triangle, and say that anything is white or a triangle if it" |
| has the right sort of resemblance to our chosen particular. But then the |
| resemblance required will have to be a universal. Since there are many |
| "white things, the resemblance must hold between many pairs of particular" |
| white things; and this is the characteristic of a universal. It will be |
| "useless to say that there is a different resemblance for each pair, for" |
| "then we shall have to say that these resemblances resemble each other," |
| and thus at last we shall be forced to admit resemblance as a universal. |
| "The relation of resemblance, therefore, must be a true universal. And" |
| "having been forced to admit this universal, we find that it is no longer" |
| worth while to invent difficult and unplausible theories to avoid the |
| admission of such universals as whiteness and triangularity. |
| "" |
| Berkeley and Hume failed to perceive this refutation of their rejection |
| "of 'abstract ideas', because, like their adversaries, they only thought" |
| "of _qualities_, and altogether ignored _relations_ as universals. We" |
| have therefore here another respect in which the rationalists appear to |
| "have been in the right as against the empiricists, although, owing to" |
| "the neglect or denial of relations, the deductions made by rationalists" |
| "were, if anything, more apt to be mistaken than those made by" |
| empiricists. |
| "" |
| "Having now seen that there must be such entities as universals, the next" |
| point to be proved is that their being is not merely mental. By this is |
| meant that whatever being belongs to them is independent of their being |
| thought of or in any way apprehended by minds. We have already touched |
| "on this subject at the end of the preceding chapter, but we must now" |
| consider more fully what sort of being it is that belongs to universals. |
| "" |
| Consider such a proposition as 'Edinburgh is north of London'. Here we |
| "have a relation between two places, and it seems plain that the relation" |
| subsists independently of our knowledge of it. When we come to know that |
| "Edinburgh is north of London, we come to know something which has to" |
| do only with Edinburgh and London: we do not cause the truth of the |
| "proposition by coming to know it, on the contrary we merely apprehend a" |
| fact which was there before we knew it. The part of the earth's surface |
| "where Edinburgh stands would be north of the part where London stands," |
| "even if there were no human being to know about north and south, and" |
| "even if there were no minds at all in the universe. This is, of course," |
| "denied by many philosophers, either for Berkeley's reasons or for" |
| "Kant's. But we have already considered these reasons, and decided that" |
| they are inadequate. We may therefore now assume it to be true that |
| nothing mental is presupposed in the fact that Edinburgh is north of |
| "London. But this fact involves the relation 'north of', which is a" |
| universal; and it would be impossible for the whole fact to involve |
| "nothing mental if the relation 'north of', which is a constituent part" |
| "of the fact, did involve anything mental. Hence we must admit that the" |
| "relation, like the terms it relates, is not dependent upon thought, but" |
| belongs to the independent world which thought apprehends but does not |
| create. |
| "" |
| "This conclusion, however, is met by the difficulty that the relation" |
| 'north of' does not seem to _exist_ in the same sense in which Edinburgh |
| and London exist. If we ask 'Where and when does this relation exist?' |
| the answer must be 'Nowhere and nowhen'. There is no place or time where |
| we can find the relation 'north of'. It does not exist in Edinburgh any |
| "more than in London, for it relates the two and is neutral as between" |
| them. Nor can we say that it exists at any particular time. Now |
| everything that can be apprehended by the senses or by introspection |
| exists at some particular time. Hence the relation 'north of' is |
| radically different from such things. It is neither in space nor in |
| "time, neither material nor mental; yet it is something." |
| "" |
| It is largely the very peculiar kind of being that belongs to universals |
| which has led many people to suppose that they are really mental. We |
| "can think _of_ a universal, and our thinking then exists in a perfectly" |
| "ordinary sense, like any other mental act. Suppose, for example, that" |
| we are thinking of whiteness. Then _in one sense_ it may be said that |
| whiteness is 'in our mind'. We have here the same ambiguity as we noted |
| "in discussing Berkeley in Chapter IV. In the strict sense, it is not" |
| "whiteness that is in our mind, but the act of thinking of whiteness. The" |
| "connected ambiguity in the word 'idea', which we noted at the same time," |
| "also causes confusion here. In one sense of this word, namely the sense" |
| "in which it denotes the _object_ of an act of thought, whiteness is an" |
| "'idea'. Hence, if the ambiguity is not guarded against, we may come to" |
| "think that whiteness is an 'idea' in the other sense, i.e. an act of" |
| thought; and thus we come to think that whiteness is mental. But in so |
| "thinking, we rob it of its essential quality of universality. One man's" |
| act of thought is necessarily a different thing from another man's; one |
| man's act of thought at one time is necessarily a different thing from |
| "the same man's act of thought at another time. Hence, if whiteness were" |
| "the thought as opposed to its object, no two different men could think" |
| "of it, and no one man could think of it twice. That which many different" |
| "thoughts of whiteness have in common is their _object_, and this object" |
| "is different from all of them. Thus universals are not thoughts, though" |
| when known they are the objects of thoughts. |
| "" |
| We shall find it convenient only to speak of things _existing_ when they |
| "are in time, that is to say, when we can point to some time at which" |
| they exist (not excluding the possibility of their existing at all |
| "times). Thus thoughts and feelings, minds and physical objects exist." |
| But universals do not exist in this sense; we shall say that they |
| "_subsist_ or _have being_, where 'being' is opposed to 'existence'" |
| "as being timeless. The world of universals, therefore, may also be" |
| "described as the world of being. The world of being is unchangeable," |
| "rigid, exact, delightful to the mathematician, the logician, the builder" |
| "of metaphysical systems, and all who love perfection more than life. The" |
| "world of existence is fleeting, vague, without sharp boundaries," |
| "without any clear plan or arrangement, but it contains all thoughts and" |
| "feelings, all the data of sense, and all physical objects, everything" |
| "that can do either good or harm, everything that makes any difference to" |
| "the value of life and the world. According to our temperaments, we shall" |
| prefer the contemplation of the one or of the other. The one we do not |
| "prefer will probably seem to us a pale shadow of the one we prefer, and" |
| hardly worthy to be regarded as in any sense real. But the truth is that |
| "both have the same claim on our impartial attention, both are real," |
| and both are important to the metaphysician. Indeed no sooner have we |
| distinguished the two worlds than it becomes necessary to consider their |
| relations. |
| "" |
| But first of all we must examine our knowledge of universals. This |
| "consideration will occupy us in the following chapter, where we shall" |
| "find that it solves the problem of _a priori_ knowledge, from which we" |
| were first led to consider universals. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER X. ON OUR KNOWLEDGE OF UNIVERSALS |
| "" |
| "In regard to one man's knowledge at a given time, universals, like" |
| "particulars, may be divided into those known by acquaintance, those" |
| "known only by description, and those not known either by acquaintance or" |
| by description. |
| "" |
| Let us consider first the knowledge of universals by acquaintance. It is |
| "obvious, to begin with, that we are acquainted with such universals as" |
| "white, red, black, sweet, sour, loud, hard, etc., i.e. with qualities" |
| "which are exemplified in sense-data. When we see a white patch, we are" |
| "which are exemplified in sense-data. When we see a white patch, we are" |
| "acquainted, in the first instance, with the particular patch; but by" |
| "seeing many white patches, we easily learn to abstract the whiteness" |
| "which they all have in common, and in learning to do this we are" |
| learning to be acquainted with whiteness. A similar process will make us |
| acquainted with any other universal of the same sort. Universals of this |
| sort may be called 'sensible qualities'. They can be apprehended with |
| "less effort of abstraction than any others, and they seem less removed" |
| from particulars than other universals are. |
| "" |
| We come next to relations. The easiest relations to apprehend are those |
| which hold between the different parts of a single complex sense-datum. |
| which hold between the different parts of a single complex sense-datum. |
| "For example, I can see at a glance the whole of the page on which I" |
| am writing; thus the whole page is included in one sense-datum. But I |
| am writing; thus the whole page is included in one sense-datum. But I |
| "perceive that some parts of the page are to the left of other parts," |
| and some parts are above other parts. The process of abstraction in this |
| case seems to proceed somewhat as follows: I see successively a number |
| "of sense-data in which one part is to the left of another; I perceive," |
| "of sense-data in which one part is to the left of another; I perceive," |
| "as in the case of different white patches, that all these sense-data" |
| "as in the case of different white patches, that all these sense-data" |
| "have something in common, and by abstraction I find that what they have" |
| "in common is a certain relation between their parts, namely the relation" |
| which I call 'being to the left of'. In this way I become acquainted |
| with the universal relation. |
| "" |
| In like manner I become aware of the relation of before and after in |
| time. Suppose I hear a chime of bells: when the last bell of the chime |
| "sounds, I can retain the whole chime before my mind, and I can perceive" |
| that the earlier bells came before the later ones. Also in memory I |
| perceive that what I am remembering came before the present time. From |
| either of these sources I can abstract the universal relation of before |
| "and after, just as I abstracted the universal relation 'being to the" |
| "left of'. Thus time-relations, like space-relations, are among those" |
| "left of'. Thus time-relations, like space-relations, are among those" |
| "left of'. Thus time-relations, like space-relations, are among those" |
| with which we are acquainted. |
| "" |
| Another relation with which we become acquainted in much the same way is |
| "resemblance. If I see simultaneously two shades of green, I can see" |
| that they resemble each other; if I also see a shade of red: at the same |
| "time, I can see that the two greens have more resemblance to each other" |
| than either has to the red. In this way I become acquainted with the |
| universal _resemblance_ or _similarity_. |
| "" |
| "Between universals, as between particulars, there are relations of which" |
| we may be immediately aware. We have just seen that we can perceive |
| that the resemblance between two shades of green is greater than the |
| resemblance between a shade of red and a shade of green. Here we are |
| "dealing with a relation, namely 'greater than', between two relations." |
| "Our knowledge of such relations, though it requires more power of" |
| "abstraction than is required for perceiving the qualities of sense-data," |
| "abstraction than is required for perceiving the qualities of sense-data," |
| "appears to be equally immediate, and (at least in some cases) equally" |
| indubitable. Thus there is immediate knowledge concerning universals as |
| well as concerning sense-data. |
| well as concerning sense-data. |
| "" |
| "Returning now to the problem of _a priori_ knowledge, which we left" |
| "unsolved when we began the consideration of universals, we find" |
| ourselves in a position to deal with it in a much more satisfactory |
| manner than was possible before. Let us revert to the proposition 'two |
| "and two are four'. It is fairly obvious, in view of what has been said," |
| that this proposition states a relation between the universal 'two' and |
| the universal 'four'. This suggests a proposition which we shall |
| "now endeavour to establish: namely, _All _a priori_ knowledge deals" |
| exclusively with the relations of universals_. This proposition is |
| "of great importance, and goes a long way towards solving our previous" |
| difficulties concerning _a priori_ knowledge. |
| "" |
| "The only case in which it might seem, at first sight, as if our" |
| "proposition were untrue, is the case in which an _a priori_ proposition" |
| states that _all_ of one class of particulars belong to some other |
| "class, or (what comes to the same thing) that _all_ particulars having" |
| some one property also have some other. In this case it might seem |
| as though we were dealing with the particulars that have the property |
| rather than with the property. The proposition 'two and two are four' is |
| "really a case in point, for this may be stated in the form 'any two" |
| "and any other two are four', or 'any collection formed of two twos is a" |
| collection of four'. If we can show that such statements as this really |
| "deal only with universals, our proposition may be regarded as proved." |
| "" |
| One way of discovering what a proposition deals with is to ask ourselves |
| "what words we must understand--in other words, what objects we must be" |
| "what words we must understand--in other words, what objects we must be" |
| "what words we must understand--in other words, what objects we must be" |
| acquainted with--in order to see what the proposition means. As soon as |
| acquainted with--in order to see what the proposition means. As soon as |
| acquainted with--in order to see what the proposition means. As soon as |
| "we see what the proposition means, even if we do not yet know whether" |
| "it is true or false, it is evident that we must have acquaintance with" |
| "whatever is really dealt with by the proposition. By applying this test," |
| it appears that many propositions which might seem to be concerned with |
| particulars are really concerned only with universals. In the special |
| "case of 'two and two are four', even when we interpret it as meaning" |
| "'any collection formed of two twos is a collection of four', it is plain" |
| "that we can understand the proposition, i.e. we can see what it is that" |
| "it asserts, as soon as we know what is meant by 'collection' and 'two'" |
| and 'four'. It is quite unnecessary to know all the couples in the |
| "world: if it were necessary, obviously we could never understand the" |
| "proposition, since the couples are infinitely numerous and therefore" |
| cannot all be known to us. Thus although our general statement _implies_ |
| "statements about particular couples, _as soon as we know that there are" |
| "such particular couples_, yet it does not itself assert or imply that" |
| "there are such particular couples, and thus fails to make any statement" |
| whatever about any actual particular couple. The statement made is about |
| "'couple', the universal, and not about this or that couple." |
| "" |
| Thus the statement 'two and two are four' deals exclusively with |
| "universals, and therefore may be known by anybody who is acquainted" |
| with the universals concerned and can perceive the relation between them |
| "which the statement asserts. It must be taken as a fact, discovered" |
| "by reflecting upon our knowledge, that we have the power of sometimes" |
| "perceiving such relations between universals, and therefore of sometimes" |
| knowing general _a priori_ propositions such as those of arithmetic and |
| "logic. The thing that seemed mysterious, when we formerly considered" |
| "such knowledge, was that it seemed to anticipate and control experience." |
| "This, however, we can now see to have been an error. _No_ fact" |
| concerning anything capable of being experienced can be known |
| independently of experience. We know _a priori_ that two things and two |
| "other things together make four things, but we do _not_ know _a priori_" |
| "that if Brown and Jones are two, and Robinson and Smith are two, then" |
| Brown and Jones and Robinson and Smith are four. The reason is that this |
| proposition cannot be understood at all unless we know that there are |
| "such people as Brown and Jones and Robinson and Smith, and this we can" |
| "only know by experience. Hence, although our general proposition is _a" |
| "priori_, all its applications to actual particulars involve experience" |
| and therefore contain an empirical element. In this way what seemed |
| mysterious in our _a priori_ knowledge is seen to have been based upon |
| an error. |
| "" |
| It will serve to make the point clearer if we contrast our genuine _a |
| "priori_ judgement with an empirical generalization, such as 'all men are" |
| "mortals'. Here as before, we can _understand_ what the proposition" |
| "means as soon as we understand the universals involved, namely _man_ and" |
| _mortal_. It is obviously unnecessary to have an individual acquaintance |
| with the whole human race in order to understand what our proposition |
| means. Thus the difference between an _a priori_ general proposition |
| and an empirical generalization does not come in the _meaning_ of the |
| proposition; it comes in the nature of the _evidence_ for it. In the |
| "empirical case, the evidence consists in the particular instances." |
| We believe that all men are mortal because we know that there are |
| "innumerable instances of men dying, and no instances of their living" |
| beyond a certain age. We do not believe it because we see a connexion |
| between the universal _man_ and the universal _mortal_. It is true that |
| "if physiology can prove, assuming the general laws that govern living" |
| "bodies, that no living organism can last for ever, that gives a" |
| connexion between _man_ and _mortality_ which would enable us to assert |
| our proposition without appealing to the special evidence of _men_ |
| dying. But that only means that our generalization has been subsumed |
| "under a wider generalization, for which the evidence is still of the" |
| "same kind, though more extensive. The progress of science is constantly" |
| "producing such subsumptions, and therefore giving a constantly wider" |
| inductive basis for scientific generalizations. But although this gives |
| "a greater _degree_ of certainty, it does not give a different _kind_:" |
| "the ultimate ground remains inductive, i.e. derived from instances, and" |
| not an _a priori_ connexion of universals such as we have in logic and |
| arithmetic. |
| "" |
| Two opposite points are to be observed concerning _a priori_ general |
| "propositions. The first is that, if many particular instances are known," |
| our general proposition may be arrived at in the first instance by |
| "induction, and the connexion of universals may be only subsequently" |
| "perceived. For example, it is known that if we draw perpendiculars" |
| "to the sides of a triangle from the opposite angles, all three" |
| perpendiculars meet in a point. It would be quite possible to be first |
| led to this proposition by actually drawing perpendiculars in many |
| "cases, and finding that they always met in a point; this experience" |
| might lead us to look for the general proof and find it. Such cases are |
| common in the experience of every mathematician. |
| "" |
| "The other point is more interesting, and of more philosophical" |
| "importance. It is, that we may sometimes know a general proposition in" |
| cases where we do not know a single instance of it. Take such a case as |
| "the following: We know that any two numbers can be multiplied together," |
| and will give a third called their _product_. We know that all pairs |
| of integers the product of which is less than 100 have been actually |
| "multiplied together, and the value of the product recorded in the" |
| multiplication table. But we also know that the number of integers is |
| "infinite, and that only a finite number of pairs of integers ever have" |
| been or ever will be thought of by human beings. Hence it follows that |
| there are pairs of integers which never have been and never will be |
| "thought of by human beings, and that all of them deal with integers the" |
| product of which is over 100. Hence we arrive at the proposition: |
| "'All products of two integers, which never have been and never will" |
| "be thought of by any human being, are over 100.' Here is a general" |
| "proposition of which the truth is undeniable, and yet, from the very" |
| "nature of the case, we can never give an instance; because any two" |
| numbers we may think of are excluded by the terms of the proposition. |
| "" |
| "This possibility, of knowledge of general propositions of which no" |
| "instance can be given, is often denied, because it is not perceived" |
| that the knowledge of such propositions only requires a knowledge of the |
| "relations of universals, and does not require any knowledge of instances" |
| of the universals in question. Yet the knowledge of such general |
| propositions is quite vital to a great deal of what is generally |
| "admitted to be known. For example, we saw, in our early chapters," |
| "that knowledge of physical objects, as opposed to sense-data, is only" |
| "that knowledge of physical objects, as opposed to sense-data, is only" |
| "obtained by an inference, and that they are not things with which we are" |
| acquainted. Hence we can never know any proposition of the form 'this |
| "is a physical object', where 'this' is something immediately known. It" |
| follows that all our knowledge concerning physical objects is such that |
| no actual instance can be given. We can give instances of the associated |
| "sense-data, but we cannot give instances of the actual physical objects." |
| "sense-data, but we cannot give instances of the actual physical objects." |
| Hence our knowledge as to physical objects depends throughout upon this |
| possibility of general knowledge where no instance can be given. And the |
| "same applies to our knowledge of other people's minds, or of any other" |
| class of things of which no instance is known to us by acquaintance. |
| "" |
| "We may now take a survey of the sources of our knowledge, as they have" |
| appeared in the course of our analysis. We have first to distinguish |
| knowledge of things and knowledge of truths. In each there are two |
| "kinds, one immediate and one derivative. Our immediate knowledge of" |
| "things, which we called _acquaintance_, consists of two sorts, according" |
| "as the things known are particulars or universals. Among particulars, we" |
| have acquaintance with sense-data and (probably) with ourselves. Among |
| have acquaintance with sense-data and (probably) with ourselves. Among |
| "universals, there seems to be no principle by which we can decide which" |
| "can be known by acquaintance, but it is clear that among those that" |
| "can be so known are sensible qualities, relations of space and time," |
| "similarity, and certain abstract logical universals. Our derivative" |
| "knowledge of things, which we call knowledge by _description_, always" |
| involves both acquaintance with something and knowledge of truths. Our |
| "immediate knowledge of _truths_ may be called _intuitive_ knowledge," |
| and the truths so known may be called _self-evident_ truths. Among such |
| and the truths so known may be called _self-evident_ truths. Among such |
| "truths are included those which merely state what is given in sense, and" |
| "also certain abstract logical and arithmetical principles, and (though" |
| with less certainty) some ethical propositions. Our _derivative_ |
| knowledge of truths consists of everything that we can deduce from |
| self-evident truths by the use of self-evident principles of deduction. |
| self-evident truths by the use of self-evident principles of deduction. |
| self-evident truths by the use of self-evident principles of deduction. |
| "" |
| "If the above account is correct, all our knowledge of truths depends" |
| upon our intuitive knowledge. It therefore becomes important to consider |
| "the nature and scope of intuitive knowledge, in much the same way as," |
| "at an earlier stage, we considered the nature and scope of knowledge by" |
| "acquaintance. But knowledge of truths raises a further problem, which" |
| "does not arise in regard to knowledge of things, namely the problem of" |
| "_error_. Some of our beliefs turn out to be erroneous, and therefore" |
| "it becomes necessary to consider how, if at all, we can distinguish" |
| knowledge from error. This problem does not arise with regard |
| "to knowledge by acquaintance, for, whatever may be the object of" |
| "acquaintance, even in dreams and hallucinations, there is no error" |
| involved so long as we do not go beyond the immediate object: error can |
| "only arise when we regard the immediate object, i.e. the sense-datum," |
| "only arise when we regard the immediate object, i.e. the sense-datum," |
| as the mark of some physical object. Thus the problems connected |
| with knowledge of truths are more difficult than those connected |
| with knowledge of things. As the first of the problems connected |
| "with knowledge of truths, let us examine the nature and scope of our" |
| intuitive judgements. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER XI. ON INTUITIVE KNOWLEDGE |
| "" |
| There is a common impression that everything that we believe ought to be |
| "capable of proof, or at least of being shown to be highly probable. It" |
| is felt by many that a belief for which no reason can be given is an |
| "unreasonable belief. In the main, this view is just. Almost all our" |
| "common beliefs are either inferred, or capable of being inferred, from" |
| other beliefs which may be regarded as giving the reason for them. As a |
| "rule, the reason has been forgotten, or has even never been consciously" |
| "present to our minds. Few of us ever ask ourselves, for example, what" |
| reason there is to suppose the food we are just going to eat will not |
| "turn out to be poison. Yet we feel, when challenged, that a perfectly" |
| "good reason could be found, even if we are not ready with it at the" |
| moment. And in this belief we are usually justified. |
| "" |
| "But let us imagine some insistent Socrates, who, whatever reason we" |
| "give him, continues to demand a reason for the reason. We must sooner" |
| "or later, and probably before very long, be driven to a point where we" |
| "cannot find any further reason, and where it becomes almost certain that" |
| no further reason is even theoretically discoverable. Starting with the |
| "common beliefs of daily life, we can be driven back from point to point," |
| "until we come to some general principle, or some instance of a general" |
| "principle, which seems luminously evident, and is not itself capable" |
| of being deduced from anything more evident. In most questions of |
| "daily life, such as whether our food is likely to be nourishing and not" |
| "poisonous, we shall be driven back to the inductive principle, which we" |
| "discussed in Chapter VI. But beyond that, there seems to be no further" |
| "regress. The principle itself is constantly used in our reasoning," |
| "sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously; but there is no" |
| "reasoning which, starting from some simpler self-evident principle," |
| "reasoning which, starting from some simpler self-evident principle," |
| leads us to the principle of induction as its conclusion. And the same |
| "holds for other logical principles. Their truth is evident to us, and we" |
| "employ them in constructing demonstrations; but they themselves, or at" |
| "least some of them, are incapable of demonstration." |
| "" |
| "Self-evidence, however, is not confined to those among general" |
| "Self-evidence, however, is not confined to those among general" |
| principles which are incapable of proof. When a certain number of |
| "logical principles have been admitted, the rest can be deduced from" |
| them; but the propositions deduced are often just as self-evident as |
| them; but the propositions deduced are often just as self-evident as |
| "those that were assumed without proof. All arithmetic, moreover, can" |
| "be deduced from the general principles of logic, yet the simple" |
| "propositions of arithmetic, such as 'two and two are four', are just as" |
| self-evident as the principles of logic. |
| self-evident as the principles of logic. |
| "" |
| "It would seem, also, though this is more disputable, that there are some" |
| "self-evident ethical principles, such as 'we ought to pursue what is" |
| "self-evident ethical principles, such as 'we ought to pursue what is" |
| good'. |
| "" |
| "It should be observed that, in all cases of general principles," |
| "particular instances, dealing with familiar things, are more evident" |
| "than the general principle. For example, the law of contradiction states" |
| that nothing can both have a certain property and not have it. This is |
| "evident as soon as it is understood, but it is not so evident as that a" |
| particular rose which we see cannot be both red and not red. (It is of |
| "course possible that parts of the rose may be red and parts not red, or" |
| that the rose may be of a shade of pink which we hardly know whether to |
| call red or not; but in the former case it is plain that the rose as a |
| "whole is not red, while in the latter case the answer is theoretically" |
| definite as soon as we have decided on a precise definition of 'red'.) |
| It is usually through particular instances that we come to be able to |
| see the general principle. Only those who are practised in dealing with |
| abstractions can readily grasp a general principle without the help of |
| instances. |
| "" |
| "In addition to general principles, the other kind of self-evident truths" |
| "In addition to general principles, the other kind of self-evident truths" |
| are those immediately derived from sensation. We will call such truths |
| "'truths of perception', and the judgements expressing them we will" |
| call 'judgements of perception'. But here a certain amount of care |
| is required in getting at the precise nature of the truths that are |
| self-evident. The actual sense-data are neither true nor false. A |
| self-evident. The actual sense-data are neither true nor false. A |
| self-evident. The actual sense-data are neither true nor false. A |
| "particular patch of colour which I see, for example, simply exists: it" |
| is not the sort of thing that is true or false. It is true that there is |
| "such a patch, true that it has a certain shape and degree of brightness," |
| true that it is surrounded by certain other colours. But the patch |
| "itself, like everything else in the world of sense, is of a radically" |
| "different kind from the things that are true or false, and therefore" |
| cannot properly be said to be _true_. Thus whatever self-evident truths |
| cannot properly be said to be _true_. Thus whatever self-evident truths |
| may be obtained from our senses must be different from the sense-data |
| may be obtained from our senses must be different from the sense-data |
| from which they are obtained. |
| "" |
| It would seem that there are two kinds of self-evident truths of |
| It would seem that there are two kinds of self-evident truths of |
| "perception, though perhaps in the last analysis the two kinds may" |
| "coalesce. First, there is the kind which simply asserts the _existence_" |
| "of the sense-datum, without in any way analysing it. We see a patch" |
| "of the sense-datum, without in any way analysing it. We see a patch" |
| "of red, and we judge 'there is such-and-such a patch of red', or more" |
| "of red, and we judge 'there is such-and-such a patch of red', or more" |
| "of red, and we judge 'there is such-and-such a patch of red', or more" |
| strictly 'there is that'; this is one kind of intuitive judgement of |
| "perception. The other kind arises when the object of sense is complex," |
| "and we subject it to some degree of analysis. If, for instance, we see a" |
| "_round_ patch of red, we may judge 'that patch of red is round'. This is" |
| "again a judgement of perception, but it differs from our previous kind." |
| In our present kind we have a single sense-datum which has both colour |
| In our present kind we have a single sense-datum which has both colour |
| and shape: the colour is red and the shape is round. Our judgement |
| "analyses the datum into colour and shape, and then recombines them by" |
| stating that the red colour is round in shape. Another example of this |
| "kind of judgement is 'this is to the right of that', where 'this'" |
| and 'that' are seen simultaneously. In this kind of judgement the |
| sense-datum contains constituents which have some relation to each |
| sense-datum contains constituents which have some relation to each |
| "other, and the judgement asserts that these constituents have this" |
| relation. |
| "" |
| "Another class of intuitive judgements, analogous to those of sense and" |
| "yet quite distinct from them, are judgements of _memory_. There is some" |
| "danger of confusion as to the nature of memory, owing to the fact that" |
| "memory of an object is apt to be accompanied by an image of the object," |
| and yet the image cannot be what constitutes memory. This is easily seen |
| "by merely noticing that the image is in the present, whereas what is" |
| "remembered is known to be in the past. Moreover, we are certainly able" |
| "to some extent to compare our image with the object remembered, so" |
| "that we often know, within somewhat wide limits, how far our image is" |
| "accurate; but this would be impossible, unless the object, as opposed to" |
| "the image, were in some way before the mind. Thus the essence of memory" |
| "is not constituted by the image, but by having immediately before the" |
| mind an object which is recognized as past. But for the fact of memory |
| "in this sense, we should not know that there ever was a past at all," |
| "nor should we be able to understand the word 'past', any more than a man" |
| born blind can understand the word 'light'. Thus there must be intuitive |
| "judgements of memory, and it is upon them, ultimately, that all our" |
| knowledge of the past depends. |
| "" |
| "The case of memory, however, raises a difficulty, for it is notoriously" |
| "fallacious, and thus throws doubt on the trustworthiness of intuitive" |
| judgements in general. This difficulty is no light one. But let us |
| "first narrow its scope as far as possible. Broadly speaking, memory is" |
| trustworthy in proportion to the vividness of the experience and to its |
| nearness in time. If the house next door was struck by lightning half a |
| "minute ago, my memory of what I saw and heard will be so reliable that" |
| it would be preposterous to doubt whether there had been a flash at |
| "all. And the same applies to less vivid experiences, so long as they are" |
| recent. I am absolutely certain that half a minute ago I was sitting in |
| "the same chair in which I am sitting now. Going backward over the day," |
| "I find things of which I am quite certain, other things of which I am" |
| "almost certain, other things of which I can become certain by thought" |
| "and by calling up attendant circumstances, and some things of which I" |
| am by no means certain. I am quite certain that I ate my breakfast this |
| "morning, but if I were as indifferent to my breakfast as a philosopher" |
| "should be, I should be doubtful. As to the conversation at breakfast," |
| "I can recall some of it easily, some with an effort, some only with a" |
| "large element of doubt, and some not at all. Thus there is a continual" |
| "gradation in the degree of self-evidence of what I remember, and a" |
| "gradation in the degree of self-evidence of what I remember, and a" |
| corresponding gradation in the trustworthiness of my memory. |
| "" |
| Thus the first answer to the difficulty of fallacious memory is to say |
| "that memory has degrees of self-evidence, and that these correspond" |
| "that memory has degrees of self-evidence, and that these correspond" |
| "to the degrees of its trustworthiness, reaching a limit of perfect" |
| self-evidence and perfect trustworthiness in our memory of events which |
| self-evidence and perfect trustworthiness in our memory of events which |
| are recent and vivid. |
| "" |
| "It would seem, however, that there are cases of very firm belief in a" |
| "memory which is wholly false. It is probable that, in these cases, what" |
| "is really remembered, in the sense of being immediately before the mind," |
| "is something other than what is falsely believed in, though something" |
| generally associated with it. George IV is said to have at last believed |
| "that he was at the battle of Waterloo, because he had so often said that" |
| "he was. In this case, what was immediately remembered was his repeated" |
| assertion; the belief in what he was asserting (if it existed) would |
| "be produced by association with the remembered assertion, and would" |
| therefore not be a genuine case of memory. It would seem that cases of |
| "fallacious memory can probably all be dealt with in this way, i.e. they" |
| can be shown to be not cases of memory in the strict sense at all. |
| "" |
| One important point about self-evidence is made clear by the case of |
| One important point about self-evidence is made clear by the case of |
| "memory, and that is, that self-evidence has degrees: it is not a quality" |
| "memory, and that is, that self-evidence has degrees: it is not a quality" |
| "which is simply present or absent, but a quality which may be more or" |
| "less present, in gradations ranging from absolute certainty down to an" |
| almost imperceptible faintness. Truths of perception and some of the |
| principles of logic have the very highest degree of self-evidence; |
| principles of logic have the very highest degree of self-evidence; |
| truths of immediate memory have an almost equally high degree. The |
| inductive principle has less self-evidence than some of the other |
| inductive principle has less self-evidence than some of the other |
| "principles of logic, such as 'what follows from a true premiss must be" |
| true'. Memories have a diminishing self-evidence as they become remoter |
| true'. Memories have a diminishing self-evidence as they become remoter |
| and fainter; the truths of logic and mathematics have (broadly speaking) |
| less self-evidence as they become more complicated. Judgements of |
| less self-evidence as they become more complicated. Judgements of |
| "intrinsic ethical or aesthetic value are apt to have some self-evidence," |
| "intrinsic ethical or aesthetic value are apt to have some self-evidence," |
| but not much. |
| "" |
| "Degrees of self-evidence are important in the theory of knowledge," |
| "Degrees of self-evidence are important in the theory of knowledge," |
| "since, if propositions may (as seems likely) have some degree of" |
| "self-evidence without being true, it will not be necessary to abandon" |
| "self-evidence without being true, it will not be necessary to abandon" |
| "all connexion between self-evidence and truth, but merely to say that," |
| "all connexion between self-evidence and truth, but merely to say that," |
| "where there is a conflict, the more self-evident proposition is to be" |
| "where there is a conflict, the more self-evident proposition is to be" |
| retained and the less self-evident rejected. |
| retained and the less self-evident rejected. |
| "" |
| "It seems, however, highly probable that two different notions are" |
| "combined in 'self-evidence' as above explained; that one of them," |
| "combined in 'self-evidence' as above explained; that one of them," |
| "which corresponds to the highest degree of self-evidence, is really an" |
| "which corresponds to the highest degree of self-evidence, is really an" |
| "infallible guarantee of truth, while the other, which corresponds to" |
| "all the other degrees, does not give an infallible guarantee, but only a" |
| "greater or less presumption. This, however, is only a suggestion, which" |
| we cannot as yet develop further. After we have dealt with the nature |
| "of truth, we shall return to the subject of self-evidence, in connexion" |
| "of truth, we shall return to the subject of self-evidence, in connexion" |
| with the distinction between knowledge and error. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER XII. TRUTH AND FALSEHOOD |
| "" |
| "Our knowledge of truths, unlike our knowledge of things, has an" |
| "opposite, namely _error_. So far as things are concerned, we may know" |
| "them or not know them, but there is no positive state of mind which can" |
| "be described as erroneous knowledge of things, so long, at any rate," |
| as we confine ourselves to knowledge by acquaintance. Whatever we are |
| acquainted with must be something; we may draw wrong inferences from |
| "our acquaintance, but the acquaintance itself cannot be deceptive. Thus" |
| there is no dualism as regards acquaintance. But as regards knowledge of |
| "truths, there is a dualism. We may believe what is false as well as" |
| what is true. We know that on very many subjects different people |
| hold different and incompatible opinions: hence some beliefs must be |
| erroneous. Since erroneous beliefs are often held just as strongly |
| "as true beliefs, it becomes a difficult question how they are to be" |
| "distinguished from true beliefs. How are we to know, in a given case," |
| that our belief is not erroneous? This is a question of the very |
| "greatest difficulty, to which no completely satisfactory answer is" |
| "possible. There is, however, a preliminary question which is rather less" |
| "difficult, and that is: What do we _mean_ by truth and falsehood? It is" |
| this preliminary question which is to be considered in this chapter. In |
| this chapter we are not asking how we can know whether a belief is true |
| or false: we are asking what is meant by the question whether a belief |
| is true or false. It is to be hoped that a clear answer to this question |
| may help us to obtain an answer to the question what beliefs are |
| "true, but for the present we ask only 'What is truth?' and 'What is" |
| falsehood?' not 'What beliefs are true?' and 'What beliefs are false?' |
| It is very important to keep these different questions entirely |
| "separate, since any confusion between them is sure to produce an answer" |
| which is not really applicable to either. |
| "" |
| There are three points to observe in the attempt to discover the nature |
| "of truth, three requisites which any theory must fulfil." |
| "" |
| "(1) Our theory of truth must be such as to admit of its opposite," |
| falsehood. A good many philosophers have failed adequately to satisfy |
| this condition: they have constructed theories according to which all |
| "our thinking ought to have been true, and have then had the greatest" |
| difficulty in finding a place for falsehood. In this respect our theory |
| "of belief must differ from our theory of acquaintance, since in the case" |
| of acquaintance it was not necessary to take account of any opposite. |
| "" |
| (2) It seems fairly evident that if there were no beliefs there could |
| "be no falsehood, and no truth either, in the sense in which truth is" |
| "correlative to falsehood. If we imagine a world of mere matter, there" |
| "would be no room for falsehood in such a world, and although it would" |
| "contain what may be called 'facts', it would not contain any truths, in" |
| the sense in which truths are things of the same kind as falsehoods. |
| "In fact, truth and falsehood are properties of beliefs and statements:" |
| "hence a world of mere matter, since it would contain no beliefs or" |
| "statements, would also contain no truth or falsehood." |
| "" |
| "(3) But, as against what we have just said, it is to be observed that" |
| the truth or falsehood of a belief always depends upon something which |
| lies outside the belief itself. If I believe that Charles I died on the |
| "scaffold, I believe truly, not because of any intrinsic quality of my" |
| "belief, which could be discovered by merely examining the belief, but" |
| because of an historical event which happened two and a half centuries |
| "ago. If I believe that Charles I died in his bed, I believe falsely: no" |
| "degree of vividness in my belief, or of care in arriving at it, prevents" |
| "it from being false, again because of what happened long ago, and not" |
| "because of any intrinsic property of my belief. Hence, although truth" |
| "and falsehood are properties of beliefs, they are properties dependent" |
| "upon the relations of the beliefs to other things, not upon any internal" |
| quality of the beliefs. |
| "" |
| The third of the above requisites leads us to adopt the view--which has |
| The third of the above requisites leads us to adopt the view--which has |
| The third of the above requisites leads us to adopt the view--which has |
| on the whole been commonest among philosophers--that truth consists in |
| on the whole been commonest among philosophers--that truth consists in |
| on the whole been commonest among philosophers--that truth consists in |
| "some form of correspondence between belief and fact. It is, however, by" |
| no means an easy matter to discover a form of correspondence to which |
| there are no irrefutable objections. By this partly--and partly by the |
| there are no irrefutable objections. By this partly--and partly by the |
| there are no irrefutable objections. By this partly--and partly by the |
| "feeling that, if truth consists in a correspondence of thought with" |
| "something outside thought, thought can never know when truth has been" |
| attained--many philosophers have been led to try to find some definition |
| attained--many philosophers have been led to try to find some definition |
| attained--many philosophers have been led to try to find some definition |
| of truth which shall not consist in relation to something wholly outside |
| belief. The most important attempt at a definition of this sort is the |
| theory that truth consists in _coherence_. It is said that the mark of |
| "falsehood is failure to cohere in the body of our beliefs, and that it" |
| is the essence of a truth to form part of the completely rounded system |
| which is The Truth. |
| "" |
| "There is, however, a great difficulty in this view, or rather two great" |
| difficulties. The first is that there is no reason to suppose that |
| "only _one_ coherent body of beliefs is possible. It may be that, with" |
| "sufficient imagination, a novelist might invent a past for the world" |
| "that would perfectly fit on to what we know, and yet be quite different" |
| "from the real past. In more scientific matters, it is certain that there" |
| are often two or more hypotheses which account for all the known facts |
| "on some subject, and although, in such cases, men of science endeavour" |
| "to find facts which will rule out all the hypotheses except one, there" |
| is no reason why they should always succeed. |
| "" |
| "In philosophy, again, it seems not uncommon for two rival hypotheses" |
| "to be both able to account for all the facts. Thus, for example, it is" |
| "possible that life is one long dream, and that the outer world has only" |
| that degree of reality that the objects of dreams have; but although |
| "such a view does not seem inconsistent with known facts, there is no" |
| "reason to prefer it to the common-sense view, according to which other" |
| "reason to prefer it to the common-sense view, according to which other" |
| people and things do really exist. Thus coherence as the definition |
| of truth fails because there is no proof that there can be only one |
| coherent system. |
| "" |
| The other objection to this definition of truth is that it assumes the |
| "meaning of 'coherence' known, whereas, in fact, 'coherence' presupposes" |
| the truth of the laws of logic. Two propositions are coherent when both |
| "may be true, and are incoherent when one at least must be false. Now in" |
| "order to know whether two propositions can both be true, we must" |
| "know such truths as the law of contradiction. For example, the two" |
| "propositions, 'this tree is a beech' and 'this tree is not a beech'," |
| "are not coherent, because of the law of contradiction. But if the law of" |
| "contradiction itself were subjected to the test of coherence, we should" |
| "find that, if we choose to suppose it false, nothing will any longer" |
| be incoherent with anything else. Thus the laws of logic supply the |
| "skeleton or framework within which the test of coherence applies, and" |
| they themselves cannot be established by this test. |
| "" |
| "For the above two reasons, coherence cannot be accepted as giving the" |
| "_meaning_ of truth, though it is often a most important _test_ of truth" |
| after a certain amount of truth has become known. |
| "" |
| Hence we are driven back to _correspondence with fact_ as constituting |
| the nature of truth. It remains to define precisely what we mean by |
| "'fact', and what is the nature of the correspondence which must subsist" |
| "between belief and fact, in order that belief may be true." |
| "" |
| "In accordance with our three requisites, we have to seek a theory of" |
| "truth which (1) allows truth to have an opposite, namely falsehood, (2)" |
| "makes truth a property of beliefs, but (3) makes it a property wholly" |
| dependent upon the relation of the beliefs to outside things. |
| "" |
| The necessity of allowing for falsehood makes it impossible to regard |
| "belief as a relation of the mind to a single object, which could be said" |
| "to be what is believed. If belief were so regarded, we should find that," |
| "like acquaintance, it would not admit of the opposition of truth and" |
| "falsehood, but would have to be always true. This may be made clear" |
| by examples. Othello believes falsely that Desdemona loves Cassio. We |
| "cannot say that this belief consists in a relation to a single object," |
| "'Desdemona's love for Cassio', for if there were such an object, the" |
| "belief would be true. There is in fact no such object, and therefore" |
| Othello cannot have any relation to such an object. Hence his belief |
| cannot possibly consist in a relation to this object. |
| "" |
| "It might be said that his belief is a relation to a different object," |
| namely 'that Desdemona loves Cassio'; but it is almost as difficult to |
| "suppose that there is such an object as this, when Desdemona does not" |
| "love Cassio, as it was to suppose that there is 'Desdemona's love for" |
| Cassio'. Hence it will be better to seek for a theory of belief which |
| does not make it consist in a relation of the mind to a single object. |
| "" |
| It is common to think of relations as though they always held between |
| "two terms, but in fact this is not always the case. Some relations" |
| "demand three terms, some four, and so on. Take, for instance, the" |
| "relation 'between'. So long as only two terms come in, the relation" |
| 'between' is impossible: three terms are the smallest number that render |
| it possible. York is between London and Edinburgh; but if London and |
| "Edinburgh were the only places in the world, there could be nothing" |
| which was between one place and another. Similarly _jealousy_ requires |
| three people: there can be no such relation that does not involve three |
| at least. Such a proposition as 'A wishes B to promote C's marriage with |
| "D' involves a relation of four terms; that is to say, A and B and C and" |
| "D all come in, and the relation involved cannot be expressed otherwise" |
| than in a form involving all four. Instances might be multiplied |
| "indefinitely, but enough has been said to show that there are relations" |
| which require more than two terms before they can occur. |
| "" |
| "The relation involved in _judging_ or _believing_ must, if falsehood is" |
| "to be duly allowed for, be taken to be a relation between several terms," |
| "not between two. When Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio, he" |
| "must not have before his mind a single object, 'Desdemona's love for" |
| "Cassio', or 'that Desdemona loves Cassio ', for that would require that" |
| "there should be objective falsehoods, which subsist independently of" |
| "any minds; and this, though not logically refutable, is a theory to be" |
| avoided if possible. Thus it is easier to account for falsehood if |
| we take judgement to be a relation in which the mind and the various |
| "objects concerned all occur severally; that is to say, Desdemona and" |
| loving and Cassio must all be terms in the relation which subsists when |
| "Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio. This relation, therefore," |
| "is a relation of four terms, since Othello also is one of the terms of" |
| "the relation. When we say that it is a relation of four terms, we do not" |
| "mean that Othello has a certain relation to Desdemona, and has the same" |
| relation to loving and also to Cassio. This may be true of some other |
| "relation than believing; but believing, plainly, is not a relation which" |
| "Othello has to _each_ of the three terms concerned, but to _all_ of" |
| them together: there is only one example of the relation of believing |
| "involved, but this one example knits together four terms. Thus the" |
| "actual occurrence, at the moment when Othello is entertaining his" |
| "belief, is that the relation called 'believing' is knitting together" |
| "into one complex whole the four terms Othello, Desdemona, loving, and" |
| Cassio. What is called belief or judgement is nothing but this relation |
| "of believing or judging, which relates a mind to several things other" |
| than itself. An _act_ of belief or of judgement is the occurrence |
| "between certain terms at some particular time, of the relation of" |
| believing or judging. |
| "" |
| We are now in a position to understand what it is that distinguishes a |
| true judgement from a false one. For this purpose we will adopt certain |
| "definitions. In every act of judgement there is a mind which judges, and" |
| there are terms concerning which it judges. We will call the mind the |
| "_subject_ in the judgement, and the remaining terms the _objects_. Thus," |
| "when Othello judges that Desdemona loves Cassio, Othello is the subject," |
| while the objects are Desdemona and loving and Cassio. The subject and |
| the objects together are called the _constituents_ of the judgement. |
| It will be observed that the relation of judging has what is called a |
| "'sense' or 'direction'. We may say, metaphorically, that it puts its" |
| "objects in a certain _order_, which we may indicate by means of the" |
| "order of the words in the sentence. (In an inflected language, the same" |
| "thing will be indicated by inflections, e.g. by the difference between" |
| nominative and accusative.) Othello's judgement that Cassio loves |
| "Desdemona differs from his judgement that Desdemona loves Cassio, in" |
| "spite of the fact that it consists of the same constituents, because the" |
| relation of judging places the constituents in a different order in the |
| "two cases. Similarly, if Cassio judges that Desdemona loves Othello," |
| "the constituents of the judgement are still the same, but their order is" |
| different. This property of having a 'sense' or 'direction' is one which |
| the relation of judging shares with all other relations. The 'sense' |
| of relations is the ultimate source of order and series and a host of |
| mathematical concepts; but we need not concern ourselves further with |
| this aspect. |
| "" |
| We spoke of the relation called 'judging' or 'believing' as knitting |
| together into one complex whole the subject and the objects. In this |
| "respect, judging is exactly like every other relation. Whenever a" |
| "relation holds between two or more terms, it unites the terms into a" |
| "complex whole. If Othello loves Desdemona, there is such a complex whole" |
| as 'Othello's love for Desdemona'. The terms united by the relation may |
| "be themselves complex, or may be simple, but the whole which results" |
| from their being united must be complex. Wherever there is a relation |
| "which relates certain terms, there is a complex object formed of the" |
| "union of those terms; and conversely, wherever there is a complex" |
| "object, there is a relation which relates its constituents. When an act" |
| "of believing occurs, there is a complex, in which 'believing' is the" |
| "uniting relation, and subject and objects are arranged in a certain" |
| "order by the 'sense' of the relation of believing. Among the objects," |
| "as we saw in considering 'Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio'," |
| "one must be a relation--in this instance, the relation 'loving'. But" |
| "one must be a relation--in this instance, the relation 'loving'. But" |
| "one must be a relation--in this instance, the relation 'loving'. But" |
| "this relation, as it occurs in the act of believing, is not the relation" |
| which creates the unity of the complex whole consisting of the subject |
| "and the objects. The relation 'loving', as it occurs in the act of" |
| "believing, is one of the objects--it is a brick in the structure, not" |
| "believing, is one of the objects--it is a brick in the structure, not" |
| "believing, is one of the objects--it is a brick in the structure, not" |
| the cement. The cement is the relation 'believing'. When the belief is |
| "_true_, there is another complex unity, in which the relation which was" |
| "one of the objects of the belief relates the other objects. Thus, e.g.," |
| "if Othello believes _truly_ that Desdemona loves Cassio, then there is" |
| "a complex unity, 'Desdemona's love for Cassio', which is composed" |
| "exclusively of the _objects_ of the belief, in the same order as they" |
| "had in the belief, with the relation which was one of the objects" |
| occurring now as the cement that binds together the other objects of the |
| "belief. On the other hand, when a belief is _false_, there is no such" |
| complex unity composed only of the objects of the belief. If Othello |
| "believes _falsely_ that Desdemona loves Cassio, then there is no such" |
| complex unity as 'Desdemona's love for Cassio'. |
| "" |
| Thus a belief is _true_ when it _corresponds_ to a certain associated |
| "complex, and _false_ when it does not. Assuming, for the sake of" |
| "definiteness, that the objects of the belief are two terms and a" |
| "relation, the terms being put in a certain order by the 'sense' of" |
| "the believing, then if the two terms in that order are united by the" |
| "relation into a complex, the belief is true; if not, it is false. This" |
| constitutes the definition of truth and falsehood that we were in search |
| of. Judging or believing is a certain complex unity of which a mind is |
| "a constituent; if the remaining constituents, taken in the order which" |
| "they have in the belief, form a complex unity, then the belief is true;" |
| "if not, it is false." |
| "" |
| "Thus although truth and falsehood are properties of beliefs, yet they" |
| "are in a sense extrinsic properties, for the condition of the truth of" |
| "a belief is something not involving beliefs, or (in general) any mind" |
| "at all, but only the _objects_ of the belief. A mind, which believes," |
| believes truly when there is a _corresponding_ complex not involving the |
| "mind, but only its objects. This correspondence ensures truth, and its" |
| absence entails falsehood. Hence we account simultaneously for the two |
| "facts that beliefs (a) depend on minds for their _existence_, (b) do not" |
| depend on minds for their _truth_. |
| "" |
| We may restate our theory as follows: If we take such a belief as |
| "'Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio', we will call Desdemona" |
| "and Cassio the _object-terms_, and loving the _object-relation_. If" |
| "and Cassio the _object-terms_, and loving the _object-relation_. If" |
| "and Cassio the _object-terms_, and loving the _object-relation_. If" |
| "there is a complex unity 'Desdemona's love for Cassio', consisting of" |
| the object-terms related by the object-relation in the same order as |
| the object-terms related by the object-relation in the same order as |
| the object-terms related by the object-relation in the same order as |
| "they have in the belief, then this complex unity is called the _fact" |
| corresponding to the belief_. Thus a belief is true when there is a |
| "corresponding fact, and is false when there is no corresponding fact." |
| "" |
| It will be seen that minds do not _create_ truth or falsehood. They |
| "create beliefs, but when once the beliefs are created, the mind cannot" |
| "make them true or false, except in the special case where they concern" |
| "future things which are within the power of the person believing, such" |
| "as catching trains. What makes a belief true is a _fact_, and this fact" |
| does not (except in exceptional cases) in any way involve the mind of |
| the person who has the belief. |
| "" |
| "Having now decided what we _mean_ by truth and falsehood, we have next" |
| to consider what ways there are of knowing whether this or that belief |
| is true or false. This consideration will occupy the next chapter. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "CHAPTER XIII. KNOWLEDGE, ERROR, AND PROBABLE OPINION" |
| "" |
| "The question as to what we mean by truth and falsehood, which we" |
| "considered in the preceding chapter, is of much less interest than the" |
| question as to how we can know what is true and what is false. This |
| question will occupy us in the present chapter. There can be no doubt |
| that _some_ of our beliefs are erroneous; thus we are led to inquire |
| what certainty we can ever have that such and such a belief is not |
| "erroneous. In other words, can we ever _know_ anything at all, or do we" |
| merely sometimes by good luck believe what is true? Before we can attack |
| "this question, we must, however, first decide what we mean by 'knowing'," |
| and this question is not so easy as might be supposed. |
| "" |
| At first sight we might imagine that knowledge could be defined as 'true |
| "belief'. When what we believe is true, it might be supposed that we had" |
| achieved a knowledge of what we believe. But this would not accord |
| with the way in which the word is commonly used. To take a very trivial |
| instance: If a man believes that the late Prime Minister's last name |
| "began with a B, he believes what is true, since the late Prime Minister" |
| was Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman. But if he believes that Mr. Balfour |
| "was the late Prime Minister, he will still believe that the late Prime" |
| "Minister's last name began with a B, yet this belief, though true," |
| "would not be thought to constitute knowledge. If a newspaper, by an" |
| "intelligent anticipation, announces the result of a battle before any" |
| "telegram giving the result has been received, it may by good fortune" |
| "announce what afterwards turns out to be the right result, and it may" |
| produce belief in some of its less experienced readers. But in spite of |
| "the truth of their belief, they cannot be said to have knowledge. Thus" |
| it is clear that a true belief is not knowledge when it is deduced from |
| a false belief. |
| "" |
| "In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is" |
| "deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premisses from" |
| which it is deduced are true. If I know that all Greeks are men and that |
| "Socrates was a man, and I infer that Socrates was a Greek, I cannot be" |
| "said to _know_ that Socrates was a Greek, because, although my premisses" |
| "and my conclusion are true, the conclusion does not follow from the" |
| premisses. |
| "" |
| But are we to say that nothing is knowledge except what is validly |
| deduced from true premisses? Obviously we cannot say this. Such a |
| "definition is at once too wide and too narrow. In the first place, it is" |
| "too wide, because it is not enough that our premisses should be _true_," |
| they must also be _known_. The man who believes that Mr. Balfour was the |
| late Prime Minister may proceed to draw valid deductions from the true |
| "premiss that the late Prime Minister's name began with a B, but he" |
| cannot be said to _know_ the conclusions reached by these deductions. |
| Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge |
| "is what is validly deduced from _known_ premisses. This, however, is a" |
| circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant |
| "by 'known premisses'. It can, therefore, at best define one sort" |
| "of knowledge, the sort we call derivative, as opposed to intuitive" |
| knowledge. We may say: '_Derivative_ knowledge is what is validly |
| deduced from premisses known intuitively'. In this statement there is |
| "no formal defect, but it leaves the definition of _intuitive_ knowledge" |
| still to seek. |
| "" |
| "Leaving on one side, for the moment, the question of intuitive" |
| "knowledge, let us consider the above suggested definition of derivative" |
| knowledge. The chief objection to it is that it unduly limits knowledge. |
| "It constantly happens that people entertain a true belief, which has" |
| grown up in them because of some piece of intuitive knowledge from which |
| "it is capable of being validly inferred, but from which it has not, as a" |
| "matter of fact, been inferred by any logical process." |
| "" |
| "Take, for example, the beliefs produced by reading. If the newspapers" |
| "announce the death of the King, we are fairly well justified in" |
| "believing that the King is dead, since this is the sort of announcement" |
| which would not be made if it were false. And we are quite amply |
| justified in believing that the newspaper asserts that the King is |
| dead. But here the intuitive knowledge upon which our belief is based |
| is knowledge of the existence of sense-data derived from looking at |
| is knowledge of the existence of sense-data derived from looking at |
| the print which gives the news. This knowledge scarcely rises into |
| "consciousness, except in a person who cannot read easily. A child may be" |
| "aware of the shapes of the letters, and pass gradually and painfully to" |
| a realization of their meaning. But anybody accustomed to reading |
| "passes at once to what the letters mean, and is not aware, except on" |
| "reflection, that he has derived this knowledge from the sense-data" |
| "reflection, that he has derived this knowledge from the sense-data" |
| called seeing the printed letters. Thus although a valid inference from |
| "the-letters to their meaning is possible, and _could_ be performed" |
| "the-letters to their meaning is possible, and _could_ be performed" |
| "by the reader, it is not in fact performed, since he does not in fact" |
| perform any operation which can be called logical inference. Yet |
| it would be absurd to say that the reader does not _know_ that the |
| newspaper announces the King's death. |
| "" |
| "We must, therefore, admit as derivative knowledge whatever is the result" |
| "of intuitive knowledge even if by mere association, provided there _is_" |
| "a valid logical connexion, and the person in question could become aware" |
| "of this connexion by reflection. There are in fact many ways, besides" |
| "logical inference, by which we pass from one belief to another: the" |
| passage from the print to its meaning illustrates these ways. These |
| "ways may be called 'psychological inference'. We shall, then, admit such" |
| "psychological inference as a means of obtaining derivative knowledge," |
| provided there is a discoverable logical inference which runs parallel |
| to the psychological inference. This renders our definition of |
| "derivative knowledge less precise than we could wish, since the word" |
| 'discoverable' is vague: it does not tell us how much reflection may be |
| needed in order to make the discovery. But in fact 'knowledge' is not a |
| "precise conception: it merges into 'probable opinion', as we shall" |
| see more fully in the course of the present chapter. A very precise |
| "definition, therefore, should not be sought, since any such definition" |
| must be more or less misleading. |
| "" |
| "The chief difficulty in regard to knowledge, however, does not arise" |
| "over derivative knowledge, but over intuitive knowledge. So long as we" |
| "are dealing with derivative knowledge, we have the test of intuitive" |
| "knowledge to fall back upon. But in regard to intuitive beliefs, it is" |
| by no means easy to discover any criterion by which to distinguish |
| some as true and others as erroneous. In this question it is scarcely |
| possible to reach any very precise result: all our knowledge of truths |
| "is infected with some degree of doubt, and a theory which ignored this" |
| "fact would be plainly wrong. Something may be done, however, to mitigate" |
| the difficulties of the question. |
| "" |
| "Our theory of truth, to begin with, supplies the possibility of" |
| distinguishing certain truths as _self-evident_ in a sense which ensures |
| distinguishing certain truths as _self-evident_ in a sense which ensures |
| "infallibility. When a belief is true, we said, there is a corresponding" |
| "fact, in which the several objects of the belief form a single complex." |
| "The belief is said to constitute _knowledge_ of this fact, provided" |
| it fulfils those further somewhat vague conditions which we have been |
| "considering in the present chapter. But in regard to any fact, besides" |
| "the knowledge constituted by belief, we may also have the kind of" |
| knowledge constituted by _perception_ (taking this word in its widest |
| "possible sense). For example, if you know the hour of the sunset," |
| you can at that hour know the fact that the sun is setting: this is |
| "knowledge of the fact by way of knowledge of _truths_; but you can also," |
| "if the weather is fine, look to the west and actually see the setting" |
| sun: you then know the same fact by the way of knowledge of _things_. |
| "" |
| "Thus in regard to any complex fact, there are, theoretically, two ways" |
| "in which it may be known: (1) by means of a judgement, in which its" |
| several parts are judged to be related as they are in fact related; (2) |
| "by means of _acquaintance_ with the complex fact itself, which may (in a" |
| "large sense) be called perception, though it is by no means confined to" |
| objects of the senses. Now it will be observed that the second way of |
| "knowing a complex fact, the way of acquaintance, is only possible when" |
| "there really is such a fact, while the first way, like all judgement," |
| "is liable to error. The second way gives us the complex whole, and is" |
| therefore only possible when its parts do actually have that relation |
| "which makes them combine to form such a complex. The first way, on the" |
| "contrary, gives us the parts and the relation severally, and demands" |
| only the reality of the parts and the relation: the relation may not |
| "relate those parts in that way, and yet the judgement may occur." |
| "" |
| It will be remembered that at the end of Chapter XI we suggested that |
| "there might be two kinds of self-evidence, one giving an absolute" |
| "there might be two kinds of self-evidence, one giving an absolute" |
| "guarantee of truth, the other only a partial guarantee. These two kinds" |
| can now be distinguished. |
| "" |
| "We may say that a truth is self-evident, in the first and most absolute" |
| "We may say that a truth is self-evident, in the first and most absolute" |
| "sense, when we have acquaintance with the fact which corresponds to" |
| "the truth. When Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio, the" |
| "corresponding fact, if his belief were true, would be 'Desdemona's" |
| love for Cassio'. This would be a fact with which no one could have |
| acquaintance except Desdemona; hence in the sense of self-evidence that |
| acquaintance except Desdemona; hence in the sense of self-evidence that |
| "we are considering, the truth that Desdemona loves Cassio (if it were" |
| "a truth) could only be self-evident to Desdemona. All mental facts, and" |
| "a truth) could only be self-evident to Desdemona. All mental facts, and" |
| "all facts concerning sense-data, have this same privacy: there is only" |
| "all facts concerning sense-data, have this same privacy: there is only" |
| "one person to whom they can be self-evident in our present sense, since" |
| "one person to whom they can be self-evident in our present sense, since" |
| there is only one person who can be acquainted with the mental things |
| or the sense-data concerned. Thus no fact about any particular existing |
| or the sense-data concerned. Thus no fact about any particular existing |
| "thing can be self-evident to more than one person. On the other hand," |
| "thing can be self-evident to more than one person. On the other hand," |
| facts about universals do not have this privacy. Many minds may be |
| acquainted with the same universals; hence a relation between universals |
| may be known by acquaintance to many different people. In all cases |
| where we know by acquaintance a complex fact consisting of certain terms |
| "in a certain relation, we say that the truth that these terms are so" |
| "related has the first or absolute kind of self-evidence, and in these" |
| "related has the first or absolute kind of self-evidence, and in these" |
| cases the judgement that the terms are so related _must_ be true. Thus |
| this sort of self-evidence is an absolute guarantee of truth. |
| this sort of self-evidence is an absolute guarantee of truth. |
| "" |
| But although this sort of self-evidence is an absolute guarantee of |
| But although this sort of self-evidence is an absolute guarantee of |
| "truth, it does not enable us to be _absolutely_ certain, in the case of" |
| "any given judgement, that the judgement in question is true. Suppose" |
| "we first perceive the sun shining, which is a complex fact, and thence" |
| proceed to make the judgement 'the sun is shining'. In passing from |
| "the perception to the judgement, it is necessary to analyse the given" |
| complex fact: we have to separate out 'the sun' and 'shining' as |
| constituents of the fact. In this process it is possible to commit |
| an error; hence even where a _fact_ has the first or absolute kind of |
| "self-evidence, a judgement believed to correspond to the fact is not" |
| "self-evidence, a judgement believed to correspond to the fact is not" |
| "absolutely infallible, because it may not really correspond to the" |
| fact. But if it does correspond (in the sense explained in the preceding |
| "chapter), then it _must_ be true." |
| "" |
| The second sort of self-evidence will be that which belongs to |
| The second sort of self-evidence will be that which belongs to |
| "judgements in the first instance, and is not derived from direct" |
| perception of a fact as a single complex whole. This second kind of |
| "self-evidence will have degrees, from the very highest degree down to a" |
| "self-evidence will have degrees, from the very highest degree down to a" |
| "bare inclination in favour of the belief. Take, for example, the case of" |
| a horse trotting away from us along a hard road. At first our certainty |
| "that we hear the hoofs is complete; gradually, if we listen intently," |
| there comes a moment when we think perhaps it was imagination or the |
| blind upstairs or our own heartbeats; at last we become doubtful whether |
| "there was any noise at all; then we _think_ we no longer hear anything," |
| "and at last we _know_ we no longer hear anything. In this process, there" |
| "is a continual gradation of self-evidence, from the highest degree to" |
| "is a continual gradation of self-evidence, from the highest degree to" |
| "the least, not in the sense-data themselves, but in the judgements based" |
| "the least, not in the sense-data themselves, but in the judgements based" |
| on them. |
| "" |
| "Or again: Suppose we are comparing two shades of colour, one blue and" |
| one green. We can be quite sure they are different shades of colour; but |
| if the green colour is gradually altered to be more and more like the |
| "blue, becoming first a blue-green, then a greeny-blue, then blue," |
| "blue, becoming first a blue-green, then a greeny-blue, then blue," |
| "blue, becoming first a blue-green, then a greeny-blue, then blue," |
| there will come a moment when we are doubtful whether we can see any |
| "difference, and then a moment when we know that we cannot see any" |
| "difference. The same thing happens in tuning a musical instrument, or in" |
| any other case where there is a continuous gradation. Thus self-evidence |
| any other case where there is a continuous gradation. Thus self-evidence |
| of this sort is a matter of degree; and it seems plain that the higher |
| degrees are more to be trusted than the lower degrees. |
| "" |
| In derivative knowledge our ultimate premisses must have some degree of |
| "self-evidence, and so must their connexion with the conclusions deduced" |
| "self-evidence, and so must their connexion with the conclusions deduced" |
| from them. Take for example a piece of reasoning in geometry. It is not |
| enough that the axioms from which we start should be self-evident: it |
| enough that the axioms from which we start should be self-evident: it |
| "is necessary also that, at each step in the reasoning, the connexion of" |
| "premiss and conclusion should be self-evident. In difficult reasoning," |
| "premiss and conclusion should be self-evident. In difficult reasoning," |
| this connexion has often only a very small degree of self-evidence; |
| this connexion has often only a very small degree of self-evidence; |
| hence errors of reasoning are not improbable where the difficulty is |
| great. |
| "" |
| "From what has been said it is evident that, both as regards intuitive" |
| "knowledge and as regards derivative knowledge, if we assume that" |
| intuitive knowledge is trustworthy in proportion to the degree of its |
| "self-evidence, there will be a gradation in trustworthiness, from the" |
| "self-evidence, there will be a gradation in trustworthiness, from the" |
| existence of noteworthy sense-data and the simpler truths of logic and |
| existence of noteworthy sense-data and the simpler truths of logic and |
| "arithmetic, which may be taken as quite certain, down to judgements" |
| which seem only just more probable than their opposites. What we firmly |
| "believe, if it is true, is called _knowledge_, provided it is either" |
| intuitive or inferred (logically or psychologically) from intuitive |
| "knowledge from which it follows logically. What we firmly believe, if it" |
| "is not true, is called _error_. What we firmly believe, if it is neither" |
| "knowledge nor error, and also what we believe hesitatingly, because it" |
| "is, or is derived from, something which has not the highest degree of" |
| "self-evidence, may be called _probable opinion_. Thus the greater" |
| "self-evidence, may be called _probable opinion_. Thus the greater" |
| part of what would commonly pass as knowledge is more or less probable |
| opinion. |
| "" |
| "In regard to probable opinion, we can derive great assistance from" |
| "_coherence_, which we rejected as the _definition_ of truth, but may" |
| "often use as a _criterion_. A body of individually probable opinions," |
| "if they are mutually coherent, become more probable than any one of them" |
| would be individually. It is in this way that many scientific hypotheses |
| acquire their probability. They fit into a coherent system of probable |
| "opinions, and thus become more probable than they would be in isolation." |
| The same thing applies to general philosophical hypotheses. Often in a |
| "single case such hypotheses may seem highly doubtful, while yet, when" |
| we consider the order and coherence which they introduce into a mass of |
| "probable opinion, they become pretty nearly certain. This applies, in" |
| "particular, to such matters as the distinction between dreams and" |
| "waking life. If our dreams, night after night, were as coherent one with" |
| "another as our days, we should hardly know whether to believe the dreams" |
| "or the waking life. As it is, the test of coherence condemns the" |
| "dreams and confirms the waking life. But this test, though it increases" |
| "probability where it is successful, never gives absolute certainty," |
| unless there is certainty already at some point in the coherent system. |
| "Thus the mere organization of probable opinion will never, by itself," |
| transform it into indubitable knowledge. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER XIV. THE LIMITS OF PHILOSOPHICAL KNOWLEDGE |
| "" |
| "In all that we have said hitherto concerning philosophy, we have" |
| scarcely touched on many matters that occupy a great space in the |
| "writings of most philosophers. Most philosophers--or, at any rate, very" |
| "writings of most philosophers. Most philosophers--or, at any rate, very" |
| "writings of most philosophers. Most philosophers--or, at any rate, very" |
| "many--profess to be able to prove, by _a priori_ metaphysical reasoning," |
| "many--profess to be able to prove, by _a priori_ metaphysical reasoning," |
| "many--profess to be able to prove, by _a priori_ metaphysical reasoning," |
| "such things as the fundamental dogmas of religion, the essential" |
| "rationality of the universe, the illusoriness of matter, the unreality" |
| "of all evil, and so on. There can be no doubt that the hope of finding" |
| reason to believe such theses as these has been the chief inspiration of |
| "many life-long students of philosophy. This hope, I believe, is vain. It" |
| "many life-long students of philosophy. This hope, I believe, is vain. It" |
| would seem that knowledge concerning the universe as a whole is not to |
| "be obtained by metaphysics, and that the proposed proofs that, in virtue" |
| of the laws of logic such and such things _must_ exist and such and such |
| "others cannot, are not capable of surviving a critical scrutiny. In" |
| this chapter we shall briefly consider the kind of way in which such |
| "reasoning is attempted, with a view to discovering whether we can hope" |
| that it may be valid. |
| "" |
| "The great representative, in modern times, of the kind of view which" |
| "we wish to examine, was Hegel (1770-1831). Hegel's philosophy is very" |
| "we wish to examine, was Hegel (1770-1831). Hegel's philosophy is very" |
| "difficult, and commentators differ as to the true interpretation of it." |
| "According to the interpretation I shall adopt, which is that of many, if" |
| "not most, of the commentators and has the merit of giving an interesting" |
| "and important type of philosophy, his main thesis is that everything" |
| "short of the Whole is obviously fragmentary, and obviously incapable of" |
| existing without the complement supplied by the rest of the world. Just |
| "as a comparative anatomist, from a single bone, sees what kind of animal" |
| "the whole must have been, so the metaphysician, according to Hegel," |
| "sees, from any one piece of reality, what the whole of reality must" |
| be--at least in its large outlines. Every apparently separate piece of |
| be--at least in its large outlines. Every apparently separate piece of |
| be--at least in its large outlines. Every apparently separate piece of |
| "reality has, as it were, hooks which grapple it to the next piece;" |
| "the next piece, in turn, has fresh hooks, and so on, until the whole" |
| "universe is reconstructed. This essential incompleteness appears," |
| "according to Hegel, equally in the world of thought and in the world of" |
| "things. In the world of thought, if we take any idea which is" |
| "abstract or incomplete, we find, on examination, that if we forget" |
| "its incompleteness, we become involved in contradictions; these" |
| "contradictions turn the idea in question into its opposite, or" |
| "antithesis; and in order to escape, we have to find a new, less" |
| "incomplete idea, which is the synthesis of our original idea and its" |
| "antithesis. This new idea, though less incomplete than the idea we" |
| "started with, will be found, nevertheless, to be still not wholly" |
| "complete, but to pass into its antithesis, with which it must be" |
| combined in a new synthesis. In this way Hegel advances until he reaches |
| "the 'Absolute Idea', which, according to him, has no incompleteness," |
| "no opposite, and no need of further development. The Absolute Idea," |
| "therefore, is adequate to describe Absolute Reality; but all lower ideas" |
| "only describe reality as it appears to a partial view, not as it is" |
| to one who simultaneously surveys the Whole. Thus Hegel reaches the |
| "conclusion that Absolute Reality forms one single harmonious system, not" |
| "in space or time, not in any degree evil, wholly rational, and wholly" |
| "spiritual. Any appearance to the contrary, in the world we know, can be" |
| proved logically--so he believes--to be entirely due to our fragmentary |
| proved logically--so he believes--to be entirely due to our fragmentary |
| proved logically--so he believes--to be entirely due to our fragmentary |
| proved logically--so he believes--to be entirely due to our fragmentary |
| proved logically--so he believes--to be entirely due to our fragmentary |
| "piecemeal view of the universe. If we saw the universe whole, as we may" |
| "suppose God sees it, space and time and matter and evil and all striving" |
| "and struggling would disappear, and we should see instead an eternal" |
| perfect unchanging spiritual unity. |
| "" |
| "In this conception, there is undeniably something sublime, something to" |
| "which we could wish to yield assent. Nevertheless, when the arguments" |
| "in support of it are carefully examined, they appear to involve much" |
| confusion and many unwarrantable assumptions. The fundamental tenet |
| upon which the system is built up is that what is incomplete must be not |
| "self-subsistent, but must need the support of other things before it can" |
| "self-subsistent, but must need the support of other things before it can" |
| exist. It is held that whatever has relations to things outside itself |
| "must contain some reference to those outside things in its own nature," |
| "and could not, therefore, be what it is if those outside things did not" |
| "exist. A man's nature, for example, is constituted by his memories and" |
| "the rest of his knowledge, by his loves and hatreds, and so on; thus," |
| "but for the objects which he knows or loves or hates, he could not be" |
| what he is. He is essentially and obviously a fragment: taken as the |
| sum-total of reality he would be self-contradictory. |
| sum-total of reality he would be self-contradictory. |
| sum-total of reality he would be self-contradictory. |
| "" |
| "This whole point of view, however, turns upon the notion of the 'nature'" |
| "of a thing, which seems to mean 'all the truths about the thing'. It is" |
| of course the case that a truth which connects one thing with another |
| thing could not subsist if the other thing did not subsist. But a |
| "truth about a thing is not part of the thing itself, although it must," |
| "according to the above usage, be part of the 'nature' of the thing." |
| "If we mean by a thing's 'nature' all the truths about the thing, then" |
| plainly we cannot know a thing's 'nature' unless we know all the thing's |
| relations to all the other things in the universe. But if the word |
| "'nature' is used in this sense, we shall have to hold that the thing" |
| "may be known when its 'nature' is not known, or at any rate is not known" |
| "completely. There is a confusion, when this use of the word 'nature' is" |
| "employed, between knowledge of things and knowledge of truths. We may" |
| have knowledge of a thing by acquaintance even if we know very few |
| propositions about it--theoretically we need not know any propositions |
| propositions about it--theoretically we need not know any propositions |
| propositions about it--theoretically we need not know any propositions |
| "about it. Thus, acquaintance with a thing does not involve knowledge of" |
| its 'nature' in the above sense. And although acquaintance with a thing |
| "is involved in our knowing any one proposition about a thing, knowledge" |
| "of its 'nature', in the above sense, is not involved. Hence, (1)" |
| acquaintance with a thing does not logically involve a knowledge of its |
| "relations, and (2) a knowledge of some of its relations does not involve" |
| a knowledge of all of its relations nor a knowledge of its 'nature' in |
| "the above sense. I may be acquainted, for example, with my toothache," |
| and this knowledge may be as complete as knowledge by acquaintance ever |
| "can be, without knowing all that the dentist (who is not acquainted" |
| "with it) can tell me about its cause, and without therefore knowing its" |
| 'nature' in the above sense. Thus the fact that a thing has relations |
| does not prove that its relations are logically necessary. That is to |
| "say, from the mere fact that it is the thing it is we cannot deduce" |
| that it must have the various relations which in fact it has. This only |
| _seems_ to follow because we know it already. |
| "" |
| It follows that we cannot prove that the universe as a whole forms a |
| single harmonious system such as Hegel believes that it forms. And if we |
| "cannot prove this, we also cannot prove the unreality of space and time" |
| "and matter and evil, for this is deduced by Hegel from the fragmentary" |
| and relational character of these things. Thus we are left to the |
| "piecemeal investigation of the world, and are unable to know the" |
| characters of those parts of the universe that are remote from our |
| "experience. This result, disappointing as it is to those whose hopes" |
| "have been raised by the systems of philosophers, is in harmony with" |
| "the inductive and scientific temper of our age, and is borne out by the" |
| whole examination of human knowledge which has occupied our previous |
| chapters. |
| "" |
| Most of the great ambitious attempts of metaphysicians have proceeded by |
| the attempt to prove that such and such apparent features of the actual |
| "world were self-contradictory, and therefore could not be real. The" |
| "world were self-contradictory, and therefore could not be real. The" |
| "whole tendency of modern thought, however, is more and more in the" |
| "direction of showing that the supposed contradictions were illusory, and" |
| that very little can be proved _a priori_ from considerations of what |
| _must_ be. A good illustration of this is afforded by space and |
| "time. Space and time appear to be infinite in extent, and infinitely" |
| "divisible. If we travel along a straight line in either direction, it" |
| "is difficult to believe that we shall finally reach a last point," |
| "beyond which there is nothing, not even empty space. Similarly, if in" |
| "imagination we travel backwards or forwards in time, it is difficult to" |
| "believe that we shall reach a first or last time, with not even empty" |
| time beyond it. Thus space and time appear to be infinite in extent. |
| "" |
| "Again, if we take any two points on a line, it seems evident that there" |
| must be other points between them however small the distance between |
| "them may be: every distance can be halved, and the halves can be halved" |
| "again, and so on _ad infinitum_. In time, similarly, however little" |
| "time may elapse between two moments, it seems evident that there will be" |
| other moments between them. Thus space and time appear to be infinitely |
| divisible. But as against these apparent facts--infinite extent and |
| divisible. But as against these apparent facts--infinite extent and |
| divisible. But as against these apparent facts--infinite extent and |
| infinite divisibility--philosophers have advanced arguments tending to |
| infinite divisibility--philosophers have advanced arguments tending to |
| infinite divisibility--philosophers have advanced arguments tending to |
| "show that there could be no infinite collections of things, and that" |
| "therefore the number of points in space, or of instants in time, must" |
| be finite. Thus a contradiction emerged between the apparent nature of |
| space and time and the supposed impossibility of infinite collections. |
| "" |
| "Kant, who first emphasized this contradiction, deduced the impossibility" |
| "of space and time, which he declared to be merely subjective; and since" |
| his time very many philosophers have believed that space and time are |
| "mere appearance, not characteristic of the world as it really is. Now," |
| "however, owing to the labours of the mathematicians, notably Georg" |
| "Cantor, it has appeared that the impossibility of infinite collections" |
| "was a mistake. They are not in fact self-contradictory, but only" |
| "was a mistake. They are not in fact self-contradictory, but only" |
| contradictory of certain rather obstinate mental prejudices. Hence the |
| "reasons for regarding space and time as unreal have become inoperative," |
| and one of the great sources of metaphysical constructions is dried up. |
| "" |
| "The mathematicians, however, have not been content with showing that" |
| space as it is commonly supposed to be is possible; they have shown also |
| "that many other forms of space are equally possible, so far as logic" |
| "can show. Some of Euclid's axioms, which appear to common sense to be" |
| "necessary, and were formerly supposed to be necessary by philosophers," |
| are now known to derive their appearance of necessity from our mere |
| "familiarity with actual space, and not from any _a priori_ logical" |
| "foundation. By imagining worlds in which these axioms are false, the" |
| mathematicians have used logic to loosen the prejudices of common |
| "sense, and to show the possibility of spaces differing--some more, some" |
| "sense, and to show the possibility of spaces differing--some more, some" |
| "sense, and to show the possibility of spaces differing--some more, some" |
| less--from that in which we live. And some of these spaces differ so |
| less--from that in which we live. And some of these spaces differ so |
| less--from that in which we live. And some of these spaces differ so |
| "little from Euclidean space, where distances such as we can measure are" |
| "concerned, that it is impossible to discover by observation whether our" |
| actual space is strictly Euclidean or of one of these other kinds. |
| Thus the position is completely reversed. Formerly it appeared that |
| "experience left only one kind of space to logic, and logic showed this" |
| "one kind to be impossible. Now, logic presents many kinds of space as" |
| "possible apart from experience, and experience only partially decides" |
| "between them. Thus, while our knowledge of what is has become less" |
| "than it was formerly supposed to be, our knowledge of what may be is" |
| "enormously increased. Instead of being shut in within narrow walls, of" |
| "which every nook and cranny could be explored, we find ourselves in an" |
| "open world of free possibilities, where much remains unknown because" |
| there is so much to know. |
| "" |
| "What has happened in the case of space and time has happened, to some" |
| "extent, in other directions as well. The attempt to prescribe to the" |
| "universe by means of _a priori_ principles has broken down; logic," |
| "instead of being, as formerly, the bar to possibilities, has become the" |
| "great liberator of the imagination, presenting innumerable alternatives" |
| "which are closed to unreflective common sense, and leaving to experience" |
| "the task of deciding, where decision is possible, between the many" |
| worlds which logic offers for our choice. Thus knowledge as to what |
| exists becomes limited to what we can learn from experience--not to |
| exists becomes limited to what we can learn from experience--not to |
| exists becomes limited to what we can learn from experience--not to |
| "what we can actually experience, for, as we have seen, there is much" |
| knowledge by description concerning things of which we have no direct |
| "experience. But in all cases of knowledge by description, we need some" |
| "connexion of universals, enabling us, from such and such a datum, to" |
| infer an object of a certain sort as implied by our datum. Thus in |
| "regard to physical objects, for example, the principle that sense-data" |
| "regard to physical objects, for example, the principle that sense-data" |
| are signs of physical objects is itself a connexion of universals; and |
| it is only in virtue of this principle that experience enables us to |
| acquire knowledge concerning physical objects. The same applies to |
| "the law of causality, or, to descend to what is less general, to such" |
| principles as the law of gravitation. |
| "" |
| "Principles such as the law of gravitation are proved, or rather are" |
| "rendered highly probable, by a combination of experience with some" |
| "wholly _a priori_ principle, such as the principle of induction. Thus" |
| "our intuitive knowledge, which is the source of all our other knowledge" |
| "of truths, is of two sorts: pure empirical knowledge, which tells us of" |
| the existence and some of the properties of particular things with |
| "which we are acquainted, and pure _a priori_ knowledge, which gives us" |
| "connexions between universals, and enables us to draw inferences from" |
| the particular facts given in empirical knowledge. Our derivative |
| knowledge always depends upon some pure _a priori_ knowledge and usually |
| also depends upon some pure empirical knowledge. |
| "" |
| "Philosophical knowledge, if what has been said above is true, does not" |
| differ essentially from scientific knowledge; there is no special |
| "source of wisdom which is open to philosophy but not to science, and the" |
| results obtained by philosophy are not radically different from those |
| "obtained from science. The essential characteristic of philosophy," |
| "which makes it a study distinct from science, is criticism. It examines" |
| critically the principles employed in science and in daily life; it |
| "searches out any inconsistencies there may be in these principles," |
| "and it only accepts them when, as the result of a critical inquiry, no" |
| "reason for rejecting them has appeared. If, as many philosophers have" |
| "believed, the principles underlying the sciences were capable, when" |
| "disengaged from irrelevant detail, of giving us knowledge concerning" |
| "the universe as a whole, such knowledge would have the same claim on our" |
| belief as scientific knowledge has; but our inquiry has not revealed any |
| "such knowledge, and therefore, as regards the special doctrines of the" |
| "bolder metaphysicians, has had a mainly negative result. But as regards" |
| "what would be commonly accepted as knowledge, our result is in the main" |
| positive: we have seldom found reason to reject such knowledge as the |
| "result of our criticism, and we have seen no reason to suppose man" |
| incapable of the kind of knowledge which he is generally believed to |
| possess. |
| "" |
| "When, however, we speak of philosophy as a _criticism_ of knowledge, it" |
| is necessary to impose a certain limitation. If we adopt the attitude |
| "of the complete sceptic, placing ourselves wholly outside all knowledge," |
| "and asking, from this outside position, to be compelled to return within" |
| "the circle of knowledge, we are demanding what is impossible, and our" |
| scepticism can never be refuted. For all refutation must begin with |
| "some piece of knowledge which the disputants share; from blank doubt," |
| no argument can begin. Hence the criticism of knowledge which philosophy |
| "employs must not be of this destructive kind, if any result is to be" |
| "achieved. Against this absolute scepticism, no _logical_ argument can be" |
| advanced. But it is not difficult to see that scepticism of this kind |
| "is unreasonable. Descartes' 'methodical doubt', with which modern" |
| "philosophy began, is not of this kind, but is rather the kind of" |
| criticism which we are asserting to be the essence of philosophy. His |
| 'methodical doubt' consisted in doubting whatever seemed doubtful; in |
| "pausing, with each apparent piece of knowledge, to ask himself whether," |
| "on reflection, he could feel certain that he really knew it. This is the" |
| "kind of criticism which constitutes philosophy. Some knowledge, such as" |
| "knowledge of the existence of our sense-data, appears quite indubitable," |
| "knowledge of the existence of our sense-data, appears quite indubitable," |
| however calmly and thoroughly we reflect upon it. In regard to such |
| "knowledge, philosophical criticism does not require that we should" |
| "abstain from belief. But there are beliefs--such, for example, as the" |
| "abstain from belief. But there are beliefs--such, for example, as the" |
| "abstain from belief. But there are beliefs--such, for example, as the" |
| belief that physical objects exactly resemble our sense-data--which are |
| belief that physical objects exactly resemble our sense-data--which are |
| belief that physical objects exactly resemble our sense-data--which are |
| belief that physical objects exactly resemble our sense-data--which are |
| "entertained until we begin to reflect, but are found to melt away" |
| when subjected to a close inquiry. Such beliefs philosophy will bid us |
| "reject, unless some new line of argument is found to support them." |
| "But to reject the beliefs which do not appear open to any objections," |
| "however closely we examine them, is not reasonable, and is not what" |
| philosophy advocates. |
| "" |
| "The criticism aimed at, in a word, is not that which, without reason," |
| "determines to reject, but that which considers each piece of apparent" |
| "knowledge on its merits, and retains whatever still appears to be" |
| knowledge when this consideration is completed. That some risk of error |
| "remains must be admitted, since human beings are fallible. Philosophy" |
| "may claim justly that it diminishes the risk of error, and that in some" |
| cases it renders the risk so small as to be practically negligible. To |
| do more than this is not possible in a world where mistakes must occur; |
| and more than this no prudent advocate of philosophy would claim to have |
| performed. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| CHAPTER XV. THE VALUE OF PHILOSOPHY |
| "" |
| Having now come to the end of our brief and very incomplete review of |
| "the problems of philosophy, it will be well to consider, in conclusion," |
| what is the value of philosophy and why it ought to be studied. It is |
| "the more necessary to consider this question, in view of the fact that" |
| "many men, under the influence of science or of practical affairs, are" |
| inclined to doubt whether philosophy is anything better than innocent |
| "but useless trifling, hair-splitting distinctions, and controversies on" |
| "but useless trifling, hair-splitting distinctions, and controversies on" |
| matters concerning which knowledge is impossible. |
| "" |
| "This view of philosophy appears to result, partly from a wrong" |
| "conception of the ends of life, partly from a wrong conception of the" |
| "kind of goods which philosophy strives to achieve. Physical science," |
| "through the medium of inventions, is useful to innumerable people who" |
| are wholly ignorant of it; thus the study of physical science is to |
| "be recommended, not only, or primarily, because of the effect on the" |
| "student, but rather because of the effect on mankind in general. Thus" |
| utility does not belong to philosophy. If the study of philosophy has |
| "any value at all for others than students of philosophy, it must be only" |
| "indirectly, through its effects upon the lives of those who study it." |
| "It is in these effects, therefore, if anywhere, that the value of" |
| philosophy must be primarily sought. |
| "" |
| "But further, if we are not to fail in our endeavour to determine the" |
| "value of philosophy, we must first free our minds from the prejudices" |
| "of what are wrongly called 'practical' men. The 'practical' man, as" |
| "this word is often used, is one who recognizes only material needs, who" |
| "realizes that men must have food for the body, but is oblivious of the" |
| "necessity of providing food for the mind. If all men were well off, if" |
| "poverty and disease had been reduced to their lowest possible point," |
| there would still remain much to be done to produce a valuable society; |
| and even in the existing world the goods of the mind are at least as |
| important as the goods of the body. It is exclusively among the goods of |
| the mind that the value of philosophy is to be found; and only those who |
| are not indifferent to these goods can be persuaded that the study of |
| philosophy is not a waste of time. |
| "" |
| "Philosophy, like all other studies, aims primarily at knowledge. The" |
| knowledge it aims at is the kind of knowledge which gives unity and |
| "system to the body of the sciences, and the kind which results from a" |
| "critical examination of the grounds of our convictions, prejudices, and" |
| beliefs. But it cannot be maintained that philosophy has had any very |
| great measure of success in its attempts to provide definite answers to |
| "its questions. If you ask a mathematician, a mineralogist, a historian," |
| "or any other man of learning, what definite body of truths has been" |
| "ascertained by his science, his answer will last as long as you are" |
| "willing to listen. But if you put the same question to a philosopher, he" |
| "will, if he is candid, have to confess that his study has not achieved" |
| positive results such as have been achieved by other sciences. It is |
| "true that this is partly accounted for by the fact that, as soon as" |
| "definite knowledge concerning any subject becomes possible, this subject" |
| "ceases to be called philosophy, and becomes a separate science. The" |
| "whole study of the heavens, which now belongs to astronomy, was once" |
| included in philosophy; Newton's great work was called 'the mathematical |
| "principles of natural philosophy'. Similarly, the study of the human" |
| "mind, which was a part of philosophy, has now been separated from" |
| "philosophy and has become the science of psychology. Thus, to a great" |
| "extent, the uncertainty of philosophy is more apparent than real: those" |
| questions which are already capable of definite answers are placed in |
| "the sciences, while those only to which, at present, no definite answer" |
| "can be given, remain to form the residue which is called philosophy." |
| "" |
| "This is, however, only a part of the truth concerning the uncertainty of" |
| philosophy. There are many questions--and among them those that are of |
| philosophy. There are many questions--and among them those that are of |
| philosophy. There are many questions--and among them those that are of |
| "the profoundest interest to our spiritual life--which, so far as we" |
| "the profoundest interest to our spiritual life--which, so far as we" |
| "the profoundest interest to our spiritual life--which, so far as we" |
| "can see, must remain insoluble to the human intellect unless its powers" |
| become of quite a different order from what they are now. Has the |
| "universe any unity of plan or purpose, or is it a fortuitous concourse" |
| "of atoms? Is consciousness a permanent part of the universe, giving" |
| "hope of indefinite growth in wisdom, or is it a transitory accident on" |
| a small planet on which life must ultimately become impossible? Are good |
| and evil of importance to the universe or only to man? Such questions |
| "are asked by philosophy, and variously answered by various philosophers." |
| "But it would seem that, whether answers be otherwise discoverable or" |
| "not, the answers suggested by philosophy are none of them demonstrably" |
| "true. Yet, however slight may be the hope of discovering an answer, it" |
| is part of the business of philosophy to continue the consideration of |
| "such questions, to make us aware of their importance, to examine all the" |
| "approaches to them, and to keep alive that speculative interest in the" |
| universe which is apt to be killed by confining ourselves to definitely |
| ascertainable knowledge. |
| "" |
| "Many philosophers, it is true, have held that philosophy could establish" |
| the truth of certain answers to such fundamental questions. They have |
| supposed that what is of most importance in religious beliefs could be |
| proved by strict demonstration to be true. In order to judge of such |
| "attempts, it is necessary to take a survey of human knowledge, and to" |
| form an opinion as to its methods and its limitations. On such a subject |
| it would be unwise to pronounce dogmatically; but if the investigations |
| "of our previous chapters have not led us astray, we shall be compelled" |
| to renounce the hope of finding philosophical proofs of religious |
| "beliefs. We cannot, therefore, include as part of the value of" |
| "philosophy any definite set of answers to such questions. Hence, once" |
| "more, the value of philosophy must not depend upon any supposed body of" |
| definitely ascertainable knowledge to be acquired by those who study it. |
| "" |
| "The value of philosophy is, in fact, to be sought largely in its very" |
| uncertainty. The man who has no tincture of philosophy goes through |
| "life imprisoned in the prejudices derived from common sense, from the" |
| "habitual beliefs of his age or his nation, and from convictions which" |
| have grown up in his mind without the co-operation or consent of his |
| have grown up in his mind without the co-operation or consent of his |
| "deliberate reason. To such a man the world tends to become definite," |
| "finite, obvious; common objects rouse no questions, and unfamiliar" |
| possibilities are contemptuously rejected. As soon as we begin to |
| "philosophize, on the contrary, we find, as we saw in our opening" |
| "chapters, that even the most everyday things lead to problems to which" |
| "only very incomplete answers can be given. Philosophy, though unable to" |
| tell us with certainty what is the true answer to the doubts which it |
| "raises, is able to suggest many possibilities which enlarge our thoughts" |
| "and free them from the tyranny of custom. Thus, while diminishing our" |
| "feeling of certainty as to what things are, it greatly increases our" |
| knowledge as to what they may be; it removes the somewhat arrogant |
| dogmatism of those who have never travelled into the region of |
| "liberating doubt, and it keeps alive our sense of wonder by showing" |
| familiar things in an unfamiliar aspect. |
| "" |
| "Apart from its utility in showing unsuspected possibilities, philosophy" |
| has a value--perhaps its chief value--through the greatness of the |
| has a value--perhaps its chief value--through the greatness of the |
| has a value--perhaps its chief value--through the greatness of the |
| has a value--perhaps its chief value--through the greatness of the |
| has a value--perhaps its chief value--through the greatness of the |
| "objects which it contemplates, and the freedom from narrow and personal" |
| aims resulting from this contemplation. The life of the instinctive |
| man is shut up within the circle of his private interests: family and |
| "friends may be included, but the outer world is not regarded except" |
| as it may help or hinder what comes within the circle of instinctive |
| "wishes. In such a life there is something feverish and confined, in" |
| comparison with which the philosophic life is calm and free. The private |
| "world of instinctive interests is a small one, set in the midst of a" |
| "great and powerful world which must, sooner or later, lay our private" |
| world in ruins. Unless we can so enlarge our interests as to include the |
| "whole outer world, we remain like a garrison in a beleagured fortress," |
| knowing that the enemy prevents escape and that ultimate surrender is |
| "inevitable. In such a life there is no peace, but a constant strife" |
| between the insistence of desire and the powerlessness of will. In one |
| "way or another, if our life is to be great and free, we must escape this" |
| prison and this strife. |
| "" |
| One way of escape is by philosophic contemplation. Philosophic |
| "contemplation does not, in its widest survey, divide the universe into" |
| "two hostile camps--friends and foes, helpful and hostile, good and" |
| "two hostile camps--friends and foes, helpful and hostile, good and" |
| "two hostile camps--friends and foes, helpful and hostile, good and" |
| "bad--it views the whole impartially. Philosophic contemplation, when it" |
| "bad--it views the whole impartially. Philosophic contemplation, when it" |
| "bad--it views the whole impartially. Philosophic contemplation, when it" |
| "is unalloyed, does not aim at proving that the rest of the universe is" |
| "akin to man. All acquisition of knowledge is an enlargement of the Self," |
| but this enlargement is best attained when it is not directly sought. It |
| "is obtained when the desire for knowledge is alone operative, by a study" |
| which does not wish in advance that its objects should have this or that |
| "character, but adapts the Self to the characters which it finds in its" |
| "objects. This enlargement of Self is not obtained when, taking the Self" |
| "as it is, we try to show that the world is so similar to this Self that" |
| knowledge of it is possible without any admission of what seems alien. |
| "The desire to prove this is a form of self-assertion and, like all" |
| "The desire to prove this is a form of self-assertion and, like all" |
| "self-assertion, it is an obstacle to the growth of Self which it" |
| "self-assertion, it is an obstacle to the growth of Self which it" |
| "desires, and of which the Self knows that it is capable. Self-assertion," |
| "desires, and of which the Self knows that it is capable. Self-assertion," |
| "in philosophic speculation as elsewhere, views the world as a means to" |
| "its own ends; thus it makes the world of less account than Self, and the" |
| "Self sets bounds to the greatness of its goods. In contemplation, on" |
| "the contrary, we start from the not-Self, and through its greatness the" |
| "the contrary, we start from the not-Self, and through its greatness the" |
| boundaries of Self are enlarged; through the infinity of the universe |
| the mind which contemplates it achieves some share in infinity. |
| "" |
| For this reason greatness of soul is not fostered by those philosophies |
| which assimilate the universe to Man. Knowledge is a form of union |
| "of Self and not-Self; like all union, it is impaired by dominion, and" |
| "of Self and not-Self; like all union, it is impaired by dominion, and" |
| therefore by any attempt to force the universe into conformity with |
| what we find in ourselves. There is a widespread philosophical tendency |
| "towards the view which tells us that Man is the measure of all things," |
| "that truth is man-made, that space and time and the world of universals" |
| "that truth is man-made, that space and time and the world of universals" |
| "are properties of the mind, and that, if there be anything not created" |
| "by the mind, it is unknowable and of no account for us. This view, if" |
| "our previous discussions were correct, is untrue; but in addition to" |
| "being untrue, it has the effect of robbing philosophic contemplation of" |
| "all that gives it value, since it fetters contemplation to Self. What" |
| "it calls knowledge is not a union with the not-Self, but a set of" |
| "it calls knowledge is not a union with the not-Self, but a set of" |
| "prejudices, habits, and desires, making an impenetrable veil between" |
| us and the world beyond. The man who finds pleasure in such a theory of |
| knowledge is like the man who never leaves the domestic circle for fear |
| his word might not be law. |
| "" |
| "The true philosophic contemplation, on the contrary, finds its" |
| "satisfaction in every enlargement of the not-Self, in everything" |
| "satisfaction in every enlargement of the not-Self, in everything" |
| "that magnifies the objects contemplated, and thereby the subject" |
| "contemplating. Everything, in contemplation, that is personal or" |
| "private, everything that depends upon habit, self-interest, or desire," |
| "private, everything that depends upon habit, self-interest, or desire," |
| "distorts the object, and hence impairs the union which the intellect" |
| "seeks. By thus making a barrier between subject and object, such" |
| personal and private things become a prison to the intellect. The free |
| "intellect will see as God might see, without a _here_ and _now_," |
| "without hopes and fears, without the trammels of customary beliefs" |
| "and traditional prejudices, calmly, dispassionately, in the sole and" |
| "exclusive desire of knowledge--knowledge as impersonal, as purely" |
| "exclusive desire of knowledge--knowledge as impersonal, as purely" |
| "exclusive desire of knowledge--knowledge as impersonal, as purely" |
| "contemplative, as it is possible for man to attain. Hence also the free" |
| intellect will value more the abstract and universal knowledge into |
| "which the accidents of private history do not enter, than the knowledge" |
| "brought by the senses, and dependent, as such knowledge must be, upon" |
| an exclusive and personal point of view and a body whose sense-organs |
| an exclusive and personal point of view and a body whose sense-organs |
| distort as much as they reveal. |
| "" |
| The mind which has become accustomed to the freedom and impartiality of |
| philosophic contemplation will preserve something of the same freedom |
| and impartiality in the world of action and emotion. It will view |
| "its purposes and desires as parts of the whole, with the absence of" |
| insistence that results from seeing them as infinitesimal fragments in |
| a world of which all the rest is unaffected by any one man's deeds. The |
| "impartiality which, in contemplation, is the unalloyed desire for truth," |
| "is the very same quality of mind which, in action, is justice, and in" |
| "emotion is that universal love which can be given to all, and not only" |
| to those who are judged useful or admirable. Thus contemplation enlarges |
| "not only the objects of our thoughts, but also the objects of our" |
| "actions and our affections: it makes us citizens of the universe, not" |
| only of one walled city at war with all the rest. In this citizenship |
| "of the universe consists man's true freedom, and his liberation from the" |
| thraldom of narrow hopes and fears. |
| "" |
| "Thus, to sum up our discussion of the value of philosophy; Philosophy" |
| "is to be studied, not for the sake of any definite answers to its" |
| "questions, since no definite answers can, as a rule, be known to be" |
| "true, but rather for the sake of the questions themselves; because" |
| "these questions enlarge our conception of what is possible, enrich" |
| our intellectual imagination and diminish the dogmatic assurance which |
| "closes the mind against speculation; but above all because, through the" |
| "greatness of the universe which philosophy contemplates, the mind also" |
| "is rendered great, and becomes capable of that union with the universe" |
| which constitutes its highest good. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE |
| "" |
| The student who wishes to acquire an elementary knowledge of philosophy |
| will find it both easier and more profitable to read some of the works |
| of the great philosophers than to attempt to derive an all-round view |
| of the great philosophers than to attempt to derive an all-round view |
| from handbooks. The following are specially recommended: |
| "" |
| "Plato: _Republic_, especially Books VI and VII." |
| Descartes: _Meditations_. |
| Spinoza: _Ethics_. |
| Leibniz: _The Monadology_. |
| Berkeley: _Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous_. |
| Hume: _Enquiry concerning Human Understanding_. |
| Kant: _Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysic_. |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "" |
| "End of Project Gutenberg's The Problems of Philosophy, by Bertrand Russell" |
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