登陆注册
19471200000146

第146章

which is an inseparable concomitant of all the present operations of the mind, to be a separate attribute; and in this he seems to be right, inasmuch as it looks at a special object, namely, self in the existing state, and gives us a distinct class of ideas, namely, the qualities of self, such as thinking and feeling.Yet it is curious that, while he gives it half a page in his " Outlines," it has no separate place in the "Elements." It is also a singular circumstance that Reid dismisses it in the same summary way.An inductive observation, with an analysis of the precise knowledge given us by self-consciousness, would give a solid foundation for the doctrine of human personality, and clear away the greater part of the confusion and error lingering in the metaphysics of our day.Nor is there any proper account given in the " Elements " of that important group of faculties which discover relations among the objects known by sense-perception and consciousness.The omission of this class of attributes has led him into a meagre nominalism, very unlike the general spirit 'of his philosophy.He restricts the word conception to the mere imaging power of the mind, and even to the picturing of bodily objects, as if we could not represent mental objects as well, as, for example, ourselves or others in joy or sorrow.In a later age, Hamilton has confined the term in an opposite direction to the logical or general notion.Stewart's classification is also redundant.Attention is not a separate faculty, but is an exercise of will, roused, it may be, by feeling, and fixing the mind on a present object.He does not seem to know what to make of reason as a distinct faculty; and, as defined by him, it ought to include abstraction, which is certainly a rational exercise.But, if the work is defective in logical grasp, it excels in its descriptions of concrete operations, and in its explanations and elucidations of phenomena presenting themselves in real life.All his works are replete with those "intermediate axioms " which Bacon commends as most useful of all, as being removed equally from the lowest axioms, which differ but little from particulars, and from the highest and most general, which are notional, abstract, and of no weight; whereas the "intermediate are true, solid, full of life, and upon them depend the business and fortune of mankind." The fine reflection and lofty eloquence of Stewart come out most pleasingly and instructively {289} in all those passages in which he treats of association and imagination.

On one important point, discussed frequently in the "Elements," the school of Reid and Stewart was led into error by their excessive caution, and by being awed so much by the authority of Locke.Reid maintained in a loose way, that we do not know substance, but qualities; and Stewart wrought this view into a system.We are not, he says, properly speaking, conscious of self or the existence of self: we are conscious merely of a sensation or some other quality, which, by a <subsequent suggestion of the understanding>, leads to a belief in that which exercises the quality.-- ("Phil.Essays," P.58, etc.) This I must regard as a radically defective doctrine.We do not know intuitively a quality of self apart from self; we know both in one primitive, concrete act, and it is only by a subsequent operation that we separate in thought the quality which may change in its action from the self or substance which abideth.Descartes erred I think, when he represented the mental process as being "<cogito, ergo sum>:" the primitive cognition is of the ego cogitans.But I look on Stewart as equally erring when he says, that there is first a sensation and then a belief in self.In a later age, Sir William Hamilton connected the <qualitative> theory of Stewart with the <phenomenal> theory of Kant.In doing so he was guilty, I must take the liberty of saying of a great and inexcusable blunder.Stewart would have repudiated the phenomenal theory of Kant as at all identical with his own.Stewart, no doubt, speaks of the phenomena of the mind; but he means by phenomena not, as Kant did, <appearances>, but individual <facts> to be referred to a law; and qualities with him were realities.But, legitimately or illegitimately, Hamilton identifying the qualitative theory with the phenomenal, deduces from them a system of relativity, which ended in nihilism, or at least in nescience.I am glad to notice that Mr.Mansel, notwithstanding his great and just admiration of Hamilton, has emancipated himself from this fundamental error.He proclaims, " I am immediately conscious of myself, seeing and hearing, willing and thinking." -- (" Proleg.

Logica," P.129; also Art.<Metaph.> in " Encyc.Brit."'.Ihave sometimes thought that, if Stewart had foreseen ail the logical consequences to be deduced from his views, he would have fallen {290} back on the same common-sense doctrine.Iregret that Mr.Mansel has not gone a step farther, and placed our cognition of matter on the same footing in this respect as our knowledge of mind.I am sure, at least, that this would be altogether in the spirit of Reid and Stewart.

I maintain that, just as by self-consciousness we know self as exercising such and such a quality, say thinking or feeling, so, by sense-perception, we know a body as extended and exercising power or energy.This is the simplest doctrine: it seems to be the only one consistent with consciousness, and is the proper doctrine of natural realism as distinguished from an artificial system of relativity.

同类推荐
  • 佛说须达经

    佛说须达经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 谈天篇

    谈天篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲节侠记

    六十种曲节侠记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 全宋文

    全宋文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • In the Cage

    In the Cage

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 荏苒旧时光

    荏苒旧时光

    故事的开端始于来不及说出口的两个字。一次意外,让陆荏的生活发生了翻天覆地的变化。带着伤痛记忆挥别北方的小城,她只身南下,投靠在异乡工作的表姐沈玖熙。本以为自己早将全部的精力与尘封的恋曲一起掩埋,无心再爱,却不想邂逅了此生命定的沧海。她该沉湎过去做困兽犹斗还是勇敢伸手握咫尺幸福?
  • 唐嵩高山启母庙碑铭

    唐嵩高山启母庙碑铭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 星月动

    星月动

    当星月移转,天地变迁,物已非物,人已非人。这天地要重新再造秩序!
  • 超级猛鬼王

    超级猛鬼王

    网聊会有很多你意想不到的事情发生,不要问我到底会发生什么?超级猛鬼王会告诉你一切的一切。网聊需谨慎,约火包有风险!
  • 塔木德密码:犹太人的传世智慧

    塔木德密码:犹太人的传世智慧

    犹太人是举世公认的智慧民族,他们几千年来亡国不亡种的坎坷际遇,以及那惊人的理财能力令全世界都为之叹服。为什么摩根、洛克菲勒、格林斯潘这样的商界巨贾和爱因斯坦等这样的思想巨擘都出身犹太入?漫长的流亡史中,犹太人究竟积累了怎样的不为人知的智慧?这本《塔木德密码:犹太人的传世智慧》将为你一一解答。
  • 极品之疯狂的石头

    极品之疯狂的石头

    以牙还牙!以眼还眼!看孤僻的小白少年如何在银河旅者的教导下成为最强王者!横扫世间之黑暗!跨越世界之界限!创造一个只属于他自己的传奇故事!
  • 不一样的温州人:揭秘温州人的创富秘密

    不一样的温州人:揭秘温州人的创富秘密

    从生意的实际运作角度,为您总结了温州人赚钱做生意的与众不同之处:不一样的思想、不一样的观念、不一样的素养、不一样的品质、不一样的胆量、不一样的创意、不一样的人脉、不一样的手段。现如今,在中国,温州人已经成为了财富的代名词。雄鸡报晓的中国版图上,温州人是一群最能赚钱、最会赚钱的商人群体。成功的经验总是值得学习和借鉴的,赚钱就应该向温州人学习。
  • The Elevator

    The Elevator

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 台湾府赋役册

    台湾府赋役册

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 超级星舰分身

    超级星舰分身

    江辰被雷劈了。不过他没穿越,没重生,也没获得超能力,只是与一艘超级文明的无主星舰意识相连,这艘超级星舰以及上面的所有设备,都成了他的分身!星舰主机能往脑子里下载东西?那好,先来个27国语言,兴许用得着。——对了,百科全书和维基词条也顺便存上吧!湮灭引擎?人工重力?超距传送?曲率驱动?——貌似太高端了些,放出去会挑起世界大战的。不过厕所变压器那两块超导材料不错,拿去造个新型磁悬浮秒杀新干线吧!(提示:托卡马克也能用哦!)咦?这颗小行星怎么亮晶晶的?——原来都是裸钻啊!那边还有一颗,黄金的?顺手开采一下好了。对了,听说美帝无人机又来监视我国南海?哎呦不错哦,够胆哦!——被UFO打下来不知道五角大楼什么心情?算了,不玩了。那边外星舰队来了,我还得保卫地球呢!