登陆注册
19860900000024

第24章

and, paradoxical as it may seem to say so, he must distinguish it with great accuracy from others like it, in order to remain blind to it when the others are brought near.He discriminates it, as a preliminary to not seeing it at all.

Again, when by a prism before one eye a previously invisible line has been made visible to that eye, and the other eye is thereupon closed or screened, its closure makes no difference; the line still remains visible.But if then the prism be removed, the line will disappear even to the eye which a moment ago saw it, and both eyes will revert to their original blind state.

We have, then, to deal in these cases neither with a blindness of the eye itself, nor with a mere failure to notice, but with something much more complex; namely, an active counting out and positive exclusion of certain objects.It is as when one 'cuts' an acquaintance, 'ignores'

a claim, or 'refuses to be influenced' by a consideration.But the perceptive activity which works to this result is disconnected from the consciousness which is personal, so to speak, to the subject, and makes of the object concerning which the suggestion is made, its own private possession and prey.

The mother who is asleep to every sound but the stirrings of her babe, evidently has the babe-portion of her auditory sensibility systematically awake.Relatively to that, the rest of her mind is in a state of systematized anaesthesia.That department, split off and disconnected from the sleeping part, can none the less wake the latter up in case of need.So that on the whole the quarrel between Descartes and Locke as to whether the mind ever sleeps is less near to solution than ever.On a priori speculative grounds Locke's view that thought and feeling may at times wholly disappear seems the more plausible.As glands cease to secrete and muscles to contract, so the brain should sometimes cease to carry currents, and with this minimum of its activity might well coexist a minimum of consciousness.On the other hand, we see how deceptive are appearances, and are forced to admit that a part of consciousness may sever its connections with other parts and yet continue to be.On the whole it is best to abstain from a conclusion.

The science of the near future will doubtless answer this question more wisely than we can now.

Let us turn now to consider the RELATIONS OF CONSCIOUSNESS TO SPACE.This is the problem known in the history of philosophy as the question of the seat of the soul.It has given rise to much literature, but we must ourselves treat it very briefly.Everything depends on what we conceive the soul to be, an extended or an inextended entity.If the former, it may occupy a seat.If the latter, it may not; though it has been thought that even then it might still have a position.Much hair-splitting has arisen about the possibility of an inextended thing nevertheless being present throughout a certain amount of extension.We must distinguish the kinds of presence.In some manner our consciousness is 'present' to everything with which it is in relation.I am cognitively present to Orion whenever I perceive that constellation, but I am not dynamically present there, I work no effects.To my brain, however, I am dynamically present, inasmuch as my thought and feelings seem to react upon the processes thereof.If, then, by the seat of the mind is meant nothing more than the locality with which it stands in immediate dynamic relations, we are certain to be right in saying that its seat is somewhere in the cortex of the brain.

Descartes, as is well known, thought that the inextended soul was immediately present to the pineal gland.Others, as Lotze in his earlier days, and W.Volkmann, think its position must be at some point of the structureless matrix of the anatomical brain-elements, at which point they suppose that all nerve-currents may cross and combine.The scholastic doctrine is that the soul is totally present, both in the whole and in each and every part of the body.This mode of presence is said to be due to the soul's inextended nature and to its simplicity.Two extended entities could only correspond in space with one another, part to part, - but not so does the soul, which has no parts, correspond with the body.Sir Wm.Hamilton and Professor Bowen defend something like this view.I.H.Fichte, Ulrici, and, among American philosophers, Mr.J.E.Walter, maintain the soul to be a space-filling prin- ciple.Fichte calls it the inner body, Ulrici likens it to a fluid of non-molecular composition.These theories remind us of the 'theosophic' doctrines of the present day, and carry us back to times when the soul as vehicle of consciousness was not discriminated , as it now is, from the vital principle presiding over the formation of the body.Plato gave head, breast, and abdomen to the immortal reason, the courage, and the appetites, as their seats respectively.Aristotle argues that the heart is the sole seat.Elsewhere we find the blood, the brain, the lungs, the liver the kidneys even, in turn assigned as seat of the whole or part of the soul.

The truth is that if the thinking principle is extended we neither know its form nor its seat; whilst if unextended, it is absurd to speak of its having any space-relations at all.Space-relations we shall see hereafter to be sensible things.The only objects that can have mutual relations of position are objects that are perceived coexisting in the same felt space.A thing not perceived at all, such as the inextended soul must be, cannot coexist with any perceived objects in this way.No lines can be felt stretching from it to the other objects.It can form no terminus to any space-interval.It can therefore in no intelligible sense enjoy position.

Its relations cannot be spatial, but must be exclusively cognitive or dynamic, as we have seen.So far as they are dynamic to talk of the soul being 'present'

同类推荐
  • 观总相论颂

    观总相论颂

    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。
  • 三劫三千佛缘起

    三劫三千佛缘起

    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。
  • 青崖集

    青崖集

    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。
  • 脉诀考证

    脉诀考证

    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。
  • The Deion of Wales

    The Deion of Wales

    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
  • 重回高三

    重回高三

    女主一觉醒来,回到了高中时代。理解了亲情的她帮助父母充实感情;珍惜友情的她选择留下,汲取温暖,给予温暖;懂得时光的她,珍惜时光,充实自己;重拾温暖知心的她收获了一份爱情。
  • 娇妻难宠:老公,别嚣张

    娇妻难宠:老公,别嚣张

    阴差阳错,她被人送到他的身边。被他吃干抹净不说,竟然还要做他的女仆?欺负人也不带这样的!绿茶婊陷害,家人百般刁难,简小白终于爆发了自己的洪荒之力。老虎不发威你当我是HELLOKITTY?这么多事,姐还不伺候了!于是,韩大少开始了他的漫漫追妻路……
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 圣皇弑天

    圣皇弑天

    他是家丁,却拳打纨绔少爷,揍翻天才弟子!身为大势神体,吸收太古神印,化印为玄,越阶杀敌!说他是大逆不道的奴才?嗜杀成魔?纯属扯淡!他自诩为薄面小郎君,只有对陷害他的疯女人和仇家才寸步不让,杀他们个人仰马翻……
  • 对不起:我爱你

    对不起:我爱你

    这是我的第一次写文,过程很纠结,构思还行,希望你们喜欢,一个以第一人称的小说其实说不怎么样
  • 末日重生种田去

    末日重生种田去

    前世她死在实验室的手术台上重生回到末日来临前一个月末日是否能过着种田的悠闲生活!?那可是很遥远的目标...===================================新書《书萝莉养萌夫》書號:2429036重生机甲世纪,还成为豪门子弟,虽然拥有强大精神力,体质却孱弱,天才与废材只在一线之隔重生后,目标是养成一位好丈夫,绝不重复前世的错误但萌夫上哪去?养成游戏才玩到一半怎么落跑了?此文是半機甲半養文成,前面會有較長的舖陳,請耐心收看,謝謝!
  • 创新思维的来源

    创新思维的来源

    个人都应该去寻找并发现自己能比别人做得好的领域。打个比方,不是谁都可以当大企业家。有人觉得自己适合做企业家,那是因为他们还没有失业的缘故。不过,这并不能表示你就能做大企业家。要想做一名成功的企业家,你必须有远见、有抱负、不怕挫折,忍受孤独寂寞才行。
  • 农家娘子自带招夫属性

    农家娘子自带招夫属性

    她意外穿越成农家未婚妈妈,带着两个包子被亲生父亲和继母赶出家门,本以为是一个农家女翻身做主人的故事,却发现原来这是在一个恋爱攻略游戏里。县太爷、王爷、富商、皇上、丞相,还有傲娇系统......居然都是攻略对象!顾潭衣不想玩游戏,只想现代。可谁知道系统却告诉她,必须要找到两个包子的爸爸才能回去。好吧,她信了。但爸爸找到了,系统却又说:“游戏升级,你必须要爱上我,才能离开。”她风中凌乱,看向那五人,你们当中到底谁是系统?!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 陪润州薛司空丹徒桂

    陪润州薛司空丹徒桂

    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。
  • 邪帝坏宠:霸气贪财妃

    邪帝坏宠:霸气贪财妃

    『暹罗猫.club』“站住!快交出你戒指里的钱!不然...呵呵”林筱奸诈地笑了笑“...好好好,都给你。”陌修祈很是自觉的交出了戒指唉,看着面前这一尘不变的打劫方式,路人表示很幸苦啊!对于陌修祈来说这根本就无所谓好吗?天大地大老婆最大!但对此林筱却表示很无奈,因为她本该可以好好的当一名路人甲的,可就是因为自己手贱救了这个受了伤的男子,于是乎她的生活开始由路人甲慢慢走向了女主……“苍天啊大地啊!快派人收了这个妖孽吧!”“NoNoNo,这个妖孽只有你能收的了!”可爱的上帝爷爷摸摸林筱的头“……”