DISCOURSE ON THE METHOD OF RIGHTLY CONDUCTING THE REASON
AND SEEKING TRUTH IN THE SCIENCES
Rene Descartes
Prefatory Note by the Author
If this Discourse appear too long to be read at once, it may be divided
into six parts: and, in the first, will be found various considerations
touching the Sciences; in the second, the principal rules of the Method which
the Author has discovered, in the third, certain of the rules of Morals which
he has deduced from this Method; in the fourth, the reasonings by which he
establishes the existence of God and of the Human Soul, which are the foundations
of his Metaphysic; in the fifth, the order of the Physical questions which
he has investigated, and, in particular, the explication of the motion of
the heart and of some other difficulties pertaining to Medicine, as also
the difference between the soul of man and that of the brutes; and, in the
last, what the Author believes to be required in order to greater advancement
in the investigation of Nature than has yet been made, with the reasons that
have induced him to write.
Part One
Good sense is, of all things among men, the most equally distributed;
for every one thinks himself so abundantly provided with it, that those even
who are the most difficult to satisfy in everything else, do not usually
desire a larger measure of this quality than they already possess. And in
this it is not likely that all are mistaken the conviction is rather to be
held as testifying that the power of judging aright and of distinguishing
truth from error, which is properly what is called good sense or reason,
is by nature equal in all men; and that the diversity of our opinions,
consequently, does not arise from some being endowed with a larger share
of reason than others, but solely from this, that we conduct our thoughts
along different ways, and do not fix our attention on the same objects. For
to be possessed of a vigorous mind is not enough; the prime requisite is
rightly to apply it. The greatest minds, as they are capable of the highest
excellences, are open likewise to the greatest aberrations; and those who
travel very slowly may yet make far greater progress, provided they keep
always to the straight road, than those who, while they run, forsake it.
For myself, I have never fancied my mind to be in any respect more perfect
than those of the generality; on the contrary, I have often wished that I
were equal to some others in promptitude of thought, or in clearness and
distinctness of imagination, or in fullness and readiness of memory. And
besides these, I know of no other qualities that contribute to the perfection
of the mind; for as to the reason or sense, inasmuch as it is that alone
which constitutes us men, and distinguishes us from the brutes, I am disposed
to believe that it is to be found complete in each individual; and on this
point to adopt the common opinion of philosophers, who say that the difference
of greater and less holds only among the accidents, and not among the forms
or natures of individuals of the same species.
I will not hesitate, however, to avow my belief that it has been my singular
good fortune to have very early in life fallen in with certain tracks which
have conducted me to considerations and maxims, of which I have formed a
method that gives me the means, as I think, of gradually augmenting my knowledge,
and of raising it by little and little to the highest point which the mediocrity
of my talents and the brief duration of my life will permit me to reach.
For I have already reaped from it such fruits that, although I have been
accustomed to think lowly enough of myself, and although when I look with
the eye of a philosopher at the varied courses and pursuits of mankind at
large, I find scarcely one which does not appear in vain and useless, I
nevertheless derive the highest satisfaction from the progress I conceive
myself to have already made in the search after truth, and cannot help
entertaining such expectations of the future as to believe that if, among
the occupations of men as men, there is any one really excellent and important,
it is that which I have chosen.
After all, it is possible I may be mistaken; and it is but a little copper
and glass, perhaps, that I take for gold and diamonds. I know how very liable
we are to delusion in what relates to ourselves, and also how much the judgments
of our friends are to be suspected when given in our favor. But I shall
endeavor in this discourse to describe the paths I have followed, and to
delineate my life as in a picture, in order that each one may also be able
to judge of them for himself, and that in the general opinion entertained
of them, as gathered from current report, I myself may have a new help towards
instruction to be added to those I have been in the habit of employing.
My present design, then, is not to teach the method which each ought to
follow for the right conduct of his reason, but solely to describe the way
in which I have endeavored to conduct my own. They who set themselves to
give precepts must of course regard themselves as possessed of greater skill
than those to whom they prescribe; and if they err in the slightest particular,
they subject themselves to censure. But as this tract is put forth merely
as a history, or, if you will, as a tale, in which, amid some examples worthy
of imitation, there will be found, perhaps, as many more which it were advisable
not to follow, I hope it will prove useful to some without being hurtful
to any, and that my openness will find some favor with all.
From my childhood, I have been familiar with letters; and as I was given
to believe that by their help a clear and certain knowledge of all that is
useful in life might be acquired, I was ardently desirous of instruction.
But as soon as I had finished the entire course of study, at the close of
which it is customary to be admitted into the order of the learned, I completely
changed my opinion. For I found myself involved in so many doubts and errors,
that I was convinced I had advanced no farther in all my attempts at learning,
than the discovery at every turn of my own ignorance. And yet I was studying
in one of the most celebrated schools in Europe, in which I thought there
must be learned men, if such were anywhere to be found. I had been taught
all that others learned there; and not contented with the sciences actually
taught us, I had, in addition, read all the books that had fallen into my
hands, treating of such branches as are esteemed the most curious and rare.
I knew the judgment which others had formed of me; and I did not find that
I was considered inferior to my fellows, although there were among them some
who were already marked out to fill the places of our instructors. And,
in fine, our age appeared to me as flourishing, and as fertile in powerful
minds as any preceding one. I was thus led to take the liberty of judging
of all other men by myself, and of concluding that there was no science in
existence that was of such a nature as I had previously been given to believe.
I still continued, however, to hold in esteem the studies of the schools.
I was aware that the languages taught in them are necessary to the understanding
of the writings of the ancients; that the grace of fable stirs the mind;
that the memorable deeds of history elevate it; and, if read with discretion,
aid in forming the judgment; that the perusal of all excellent books is,
as it were, to interview with the noblest men of past ages, who have written
them, and even a studied interview, in which are discovered to us only their
choicest thoughts; that eloquence has incomparable force and beauty; that
poesy has its ravishing graces and delights; that in the mathematics there
are many refined discoveries eminently suited to gratify the inquisitive,
as well as further all the arts an lessen the labour of man; that numerous
highly useful precepts and exhortations to virtue are contained in treatises
on morals; that theology points out the path to heaven; that philosophy affords
the means of discoursing with an appearance of truth on all matters, and
commands the admiration of the more simple; that jurisprudence, medicine,
and the other sciences, secure for their cultivators honors and riches; and,
in fine, that it is useful to bestow some attention upon all, even upon those
abounding the most in superstition and error, that we may be in a position
to determine their real value, and guard against being deceived.
But I believed that I had already given sufficient time to languages,
and likewise to the reading of the writings of the ancients, to their histories
and fables. For to hold converse with those of other ages and to travel,
are almost the same thing. It is useful to know something of the manners
of different nations, that we may be enabled to form a more correct judgment
regarding our own, and be prevented from thinking that everything contrary
to our customs is ridiculous and irrational, a conclusion usually come to
by those whose experience has been limited to their own country. On the
other hand, when too much time is occupied in traveling, we become strangers
to our native country; and the over curious in the customs of the past are
generally ignorant of those of the present. Besides, fictitious narratives
lead us to imagine the possibility of many events that are impossible; and
even the most faithful histories, if they do not wholly misrepresent matters,
or exaggerate their importance to render the account of them more worthy
of perusal, omit, at least, almost always the meanest and least striking
of the attendant circumstances; hence it happens that the remainder does
not represent the truth, and that such as regulate their conduct by examples
drawn from this source, are apt to fall into the extravagances of the
knight-errants of romance, and to entertain projects that exceed their powers.
I esteemed eloquence highly, and was in raptures with poesy; but I thought
that both were gifts of nature rather than fruits of study. Those in whom
the faculty of reason is predominant, and who most skillfully dispose their
thoughts with a view to render them clear and intelligible, are always the
best able to persuade others of the truth of what they lay down, though they
should speak only in the language of Lower Brittany, and be wholly ignorant
of the rules of rhetoric; and those whose minds are stored with the most
agreeable fancies, and who can give expression to them with the greatest
embellishment and harmony, are still the best poets, though unacquainted
with the art of poetry.
I was especially delighted with the mathematics, on account of the certitude
and evidence of their reasonings; but I had not as yet a precise knowledge
of their true use; and thinking that they but contributed to the advancement
of the mechanical arts, I was astonished that foundations, so strong and
solid, should have had no loftier superstructure reared on them. On the
other hand, I compared the disquisitions of the ancient moralists to very
towering and magnificent palaces with no better foundation than sand and
mud: they laud the virtues very highly, and exhibit them as estimable far
above anything on earth; but they give us no adequate criterion of virtue,
and frequently that which they designate with so fine a name is but apathy,
or pride, or despair, or parricide.
I revered our theology, and aspired as much as any one to reach heaven:
but being given assuredly to understand that the way is not less open to
the most ignorant than to the most learned, and that the revealed truths
which lead to heaven are above our comprehension, I did not presume to subject
them to the impotency of my reason; and I thought that in order competently
to undertake their examination, there was need of some special help from
heaven, and of being more than man.
Of philosophy I will say nothing, except that when I saw that it had been
cultivated for many ages by the most distinguished men, and that yet there
is not a single matter within its sphere which is not still in dispute, and
nothing, therefore, which is above doubt, I did not presume to anticipate
that my success would be greater in it than that of others; and further,
when I considered the number of conflicting opinions touching a single matter
that may be upheld by learned men, while there can be but one true, I reckoned
as well-nigh false all that was only probable.
As to the other sciences, inasmuch as these borrow their principles from
philosophy, I judged that no solid superstructures could be reared on foundations
so infirm; and neither the honor nor the gain held out by them was sufficient
to determine me to their cultivation: for I was not, thank Heaven, in a
condition which compelled me to make merchandise of science for the bettering
of my fortune; and though I might not profess to scorn glory as a cynic,
I yet made very slight account of that honor which I hoped to acquire only
through fictitious titles. And, in fine, of false sciences I thought I knew
the worth sufficiently to escape being deceived by the professions of an
alchemist, the predictions of an astrologer, the impostures of a magician,
or by the artifices and boasting of any of those who profess to know things
of which they are ignorant.
For these reasons, as soon as my age permitted me to pass from under the
control of my instructors, I entire y abandoned the study of letters, and
resolved no longer to seek any other science than the knowledge of myself,
or of the great book of the world. I spent the remainder of my youth in
traveling, in visiting courts and armies, in holding intercourse with men
of different dispositions and ranks, in collecting varied experience, in
proving myself in the different situations into which fortune threw me, and,
above all, in making such reflection on the matter of my experience as to
secure my improvement. For it occurred to me that I should find much more
truth in the reasonings of each individual with reference to the affairs
in which he is personally interested, and the issue of which must presently
punish him if he has judged amiss, than in those conducted by a man of letters
in his study, regarding speculative matters that are of no practical moment,
and followed by no consequences to himself, farther, perhaps, than that they
foster his vanity the better the more remote they are from common sense;
requiring, as they must in this case, the exercise of greater ingenuity and
art to render them probable. In addition, I had always a most earnest desire
to know how to distinguish the true from the false, in order that I might
be able clearly to discriminate the right path in life, and proceed in it
with confidence.
It is true that, while busied only in considering the manners of other
men, I found here, too, scarce any ground for settled conviction, and remarked
hardly less contradiction among them than in the opinions of the philosophers.
So that the greatest advantage I derived from the study consisted in this,
that, observing many things which, however extravagant and ridiculous to
our apprehension, are yet by common consent received and approved by other
great nations, I learned to entertain too decided a belief in regard to nothing
of the truth of which I had been persuaded merely by example and custom;
and thus I gradually extricated myself from many errors powerful enough to
darken our natural intelligence, and incapacitate us in great measure from
listening to reason. But after I had been occupied several years in thus
studying the book of the world, and in essaying to gather some experience,
I at length resolved to make myself an object of study, and to employ all
the powers of my mind in choosing the paths I ought to follow, an undertaking
which was accompanied with greater success than it would have been had I
never quitted my country or my books.
Part Two
I was then in Germany, attracted thither by the wars in that country,
which have not yet been brought to a termination; and as I was returning
to the army from the coronation of the emperor, the setting in of winter
arrested me in a locality where, as I found no society to interest me, and
was besides fortunately undisturbed by any cares or passions, I remained
the whole day in seclusion, with full opportunity to occupy my attention
with my own thoughts. Of these one of the very first that occurred to me
was, that there is seldom so much perfection in works composed of many separate
parts, upon which different hands had been employed, as in those completed
by a single master. Thus it is observable that the buildings which a single
architect has planned and executed, are generally more elegant and commodious
than those which several have attempted to improve, by making old walls serve
for purposes for which they were not originally built. Thus also, those
ancient cities which, from being at first only villages, have become, in
course of time, large towns, are usually but ill laid out compared with the
regularity constructed towns which a professional architect has freely planned
on an open plain; so that although the several buildings of the former may
often equal or surpass in beauty those of the latter, yet when one observes
their indiscriminate juxtaposition, there a large one and here a small, and
the consequent crookedness and irregularity of the streets, one is disposed
to allege that chance rather than any human will guided by reason must have
led to such an arrangement. And if we consider that nevertheless there have
been at all times certain officers whose duty it was to see that private
buildings contributed to public ornament, the difficulty of reaching high
perfection with but the materials of others to operate on, will be readily
acknowledged. In the same way I fancied that those nations which, starting
from a semi-barbarous state and advancing to civilization by slow degrees,
have had their laws successively determined, and, as it were, forced upon
them simply by experience of the hurtfulness of particular crimes and disputes,
would by this process come to be possessed of less perfect institutions than
those which, from the commencement of their association as communities, have
followed the appointments of some wise legislator. It is thus quite certain
that the constitution of the true religion, the ordinances of which are derived
from God, must be incomparably superior to that of every other. And, to
speak of human affairs, I believe that the pre-eminence of Sparta was due
not to the goodness of each of its laws in particular, for many of these
were very strange, and even opposed to good morals, but to the circumstance
that, originated by a single individual, they all tended to a single end.
In the same way I thought that the sciences contained in books (such of
them at least as are made up of probable reasonings, without demonstrations),
composed as they are of the opinions of many different individuals massed
together, are farther removed from truth than the simple inferences which
a man of good sense using his natural and unprejudiced judgment draws respecting
the matters of his experience. And because we have all to pass through a
state of infancy to manhood, and have been of necessity, for a length of
time, governed by our desires and preceptors (whose dictates were frequently
conflicting, while neither perhaps always counseled us for the best), I farther
concluded that it is almost impossible that our judgments can be so correct
or solid as they would have been, had our reason been mature from the moment
of our birth, and had we always been guided by it alone.
It is true, however, that it is not customary to pull down all the houses
of a town with the single design of rebuilding them differently, and thereby
rendering the streets more handsome; but it often happens that a private
individual takes down his own with the view of erecting it anew, and that
people are even sometimes constrained to this when their houses are in danger
of falling from age, or when the foundations are insecure. With this before
me by way of example, I was persuaded that it would indeed be preposterous
for a private individual to think of reforming a state by fundamentally changing
it throughout, and overturning it in order to set it up amended; and the
same I thought was true of any similar project for reforming the body of
the sciences, or the order of teaching them established in the schools:
but as for the opinions which up to that time I had embraced, I thought that
I could not do better than resolve at once to sweep them wholly away, that
I might afterwards be in a position to admit either others more correct,
or even perhaps the same when they had undergone the scrutiny of reason.
I firmly believed that in this way I should much better succeed in the conduct
of my life, than if I built only upon old foundations, and leaned upon principles
which, in my youth, I had taken upon trust. For although I recognized various
difficulties in this undertaking, these were not, however, without remedy,
nor once to be compared with such as attend the slightest reformation in
public affairs. Large bodies, if once overthrown, are with great difficulty
set up again, or even kept erect when once seriously shaken, and the fall
of such is always disastrous. Then if there are any imperfections in the
constitutions of states (and that many such exist the diversity of constitutions
is alone sufficient to assure us), custom has without doubt materially smoothed
their inconveniences, and has even managed to steer altogether clear of,
or insensibly corrected a number which sagacity could not have provided against
with equal effect; and, in fine, the defects are almost always more tolerable
than the change necessary for their removal; in the same manner that highways
which wind among mountains, by being much frequented, become gradually so
smooth and commodious, that it is much better to follow them than to seek
a straighter path by climbing over the tops of rocks and descending to the
bottoms of precipices.
Hence it is that I cannot in any degree approve of those restless and
busy meddlers who, called neither by birth nor fortune to take part in the
management of public affairs, are yet always projecting reforms; and if I
thought that this tract contained aught which might justify the suspicion
that I was a victim of such folly, I would by no means permit its publication.
I have never contemplated anything higher than the reformation of my own
opinions, and basing them on a foundation wholly my own. And although my
own satisfaction with my work has led me to present here a draft of it, I
do not by any means therefore recommend to every one else to make a similar
attempt. Those whom God has endowed with a larger measure of genius will
entertain, perhaps, designs still more exalted; but for the many I am much
afraid lest even the present undertaking be more than they can safely venture
to imitate. The single design to strip one's self of all past beliefs is
one that ought not to be taken by every one. The majority of men is composed
of two classes, for neither of which would this be at all a befitting resolution:
in the first place, of those who with more than a due confidence in their
own powers, are precipitate in their judgments and want the patience requisite
for orderly and circumspect thinking; whence it happens, that if men of this
class once take the liberty to doubt of their accustomed opinions, and quit
the beaten highway, they will never be able to thread the byway that would
lead them by a shorter course, and will lose themselves and continue to wander
for life; in the second place, of those who, possessed of sufficient sense
or modesty to determine that there are others who excel them in the power
of discriminating between truth and error, and by whom they may be instructed,
ought rather to content themselves with the opinions of such than trust for
more correct to their own reason.
For my own part, I should doubtless have belonged to the latter class,
had I received instruction from but one master, or had I never known the
diversities of opinion that from time immemorial have prevailed among men
of the greatest learning. But I had become aware, even so early as during
my college life, that no opinion, however absurd and incredible, can be imagined,
which has not been maintained by some on of the philosophers; and afterwards
in the course of my travels I remarked that all those whose opinions are
decidedly repugnant to ours are not in that account barbarians and savages,
but on the contrary that many of these nations make an equally good, if not
better, use of their reason than we do. I took into account also the very
different character which a person brought up from infancy in France or Germany
exhibits, from that which, with the same mind originally, this individual
would have possessed had he lived always among the Chinese or with savages,
and the circumstance that in dress itself the fashion which pleased us ten
years ago, and which may again, perhaps, be received into favor before ten
years have gone, appears to us at this moment extravagant and ridiculous.
I was thus led to infer that the ground of our opinions is far more custom
and example than any certain knowledge. And, finally, although such be the
ground of our opinions, I remarked that a plurality of suffrages is no guarantee
of truth where it is at all of difficult discovery, as in such cases it is
much more likely that it will be found by one than by many. I could, however,
select from the crowd no one whose opinions seemed worthy of preference,
and thus I found myself constrained, as it were, to use my own reason in
the conduct of my life.
But like one walking alone and in the dark, I resolved to proceed so slowly
and with such circumspection, that if I did not advance far, I would at least
guard against falling. I did not even choose to dismiss summarily any of
the opinions that had crept into my belief without having been introduced
by reason, but first of all took sufficient time carefully to satisfy myself
of the general nature of the task I was setting myself, and ascertain the
true method by which to arrive at the knowledge of whatever lay within the
compass of my powers.
Among the branches of philosophy, I had, at an earlier period, given some
attention to logic, and among those of the mathematics to geometrical analysis
and algebra, three arts or sciences which ought, as I conceived, to contribute
something to my design. But, on examination, I found that, as for logic,
its syllogisms and the majority of its other precepts are of avail- rather
in the communication of what we already know, or even as the art of Lully,
in speaking without judgment of things of which we are ignorant, than in
the investigation of the unknown; and although this science contains indeed
a number of correct and very excellent precepts, there are, nevertheless,
so many others, and these either injurious or superfluous, mingled with the
former, that it is almost quite as difficult to effect a severance of the
true from the false as it is to extract a Diana or a Minerva from a rough
block of marble. Then as to the analysis of the ancients and the algebra
of the moderns, besides that they embrace only matters highly abstract, and,
to appearance, of no use, the former is so exclusively restricted to the
consideration of figures, that it can exercise the understanding only on
condition of greatly fatiguing the imagination; and, in the latter, there
is so complete a subjection to certain rules and formulas, that there results
an art full of confusion and obscurity calculated to embarrass, instead of
a science fitted to cultivate the mind. By these considerations I was induced
to seek some other method which would comprise the advantages of the three
and be exempt from their defects. And as a multitude of laws often only
hampers justice, so that a state is best governed when, with few laws, these
are rigidly administered; in like manner, instead of the great number of
precepts of which logic is composed, I believed that the four following would
prove perfectly sufficient for me, provided I took the firm and unwavering
resolution never in a single instance to fail in observing them.
The first was never to accept anything for true which I did not clearly
know to be such; that is to say, carefully to avoid precipitancy and prejudice,
and to comprise nothing more in my judgement than what was presented to my
mind so clearly and distinctly as to exclude all ground of doubt.
The second, to divide each of the difficulties under examination into
as many parts as possible, and as might be necessary for its adequate solution.
The third, to conduct my thoughts in such order that, by commencing with
objects the simplest and easiest to know, I might ascend by little and little,
and, as it were, step by step, to the knowledge of the more complex; assigning
in thought a certain order even to those objects which in their own nature
do not stand in a relation of antecedence and sequence.
And the last, in every case to make enumerations so complete, and reviews
so general, that I might be assured that nothing was omitted.
The long chains of simple and easy reasonings by means of which geometers
are accustomed to reach the conclusions of their most difficult demonstrations,
had led me to imagine that all things, to the knowledge of which man is
competent, are mutually connected in the same way, and that there is nothing
so far removed from us as to be beyond our reach, or so hidden that we cannot
discover it, provided only we abstain from accepting the false for the true,
and always preserve in our thoughts the order necessary for the deduction
of one truth from another. And I had little difficulty in determining the
objects with which it was necessary to commence, for I was already persuaded
that it must be with the simplest and easiest to know, and, considering that
of all those who have hitherto sought truth in the sciences, the mathematicians
alone have been able to find any demonstrations, that is, any certain and
evident reasons, I did not doubt but that such must have been the rule of
their investigations. I resolved to commence, therefore, with the examination
of the simplest objects, not anticipating, however, from this any other advantage
than that to be found in accustoming my mind to the love and nourishment
of truth, and to a distaste for all such reasonings as were unsound. But
I had no intention on that account of attempting to master all the particular
sciences commonly denominated mathematics: but observing that, however different
their objects, they all agree in considering only the various relations or
proportions subsisting among those objects, I thought it best for my purpose
to consider these proportions in the most general form possible, without
referring them to any objects in particular, except such as would most facilitate
the knowledge of them, and without by any means restricting them to these,
that afterwards I might thus be the better able to apply them to every other
class of objects to which they are legitimately applicable. Perceiving further,
that in order to understand these relations I should sometimes have to consider
them one by one and sometimes only to bear them in mind, or embrace them
in the aggregate, I thought that, in order the better to consider them
individually, I should view them as subsisting between straight lines, than
which I could find no objects more simple, or capable of being more distinctly
represented to my imagination and senses; and on the other hand, that in
order to retain them in the memory or embrace an aggregate of many, I should
express them by certain characters the briefest possible. In this way I
believed that I could borrow all that was best both in geometrical analysis
and in algebra, and correct all the defects of the one by help of the other.
And, in point of fact, the accurate observance of these few precepts gave
me, I take the liberty of saying, such ease in unraveling all the questions
embraced in these two sciences, that in the two or three months I devoted
to their examination, not only did I reach solutions of questions I had formerly
deemed exceedingly difficult but even as regards questions of the solution
of which I continued ignorant, I was enabled, as it appeared to me, to determine
the means whereby, and the extent to which a solution was possible; results
attributable to the circumstance that I commenced with the simplest and most
general truths, and that thus each truth discovered was a rule available
in the discovery of subsequent ones Nor in this perhaps shall I appear too
vain, if it be considered that, as the truth on any particular point is one
whoever apprehends the truth, knows all that on that point can be known.
The child, for example, who has been instructed in the elements of arithmetic,
and has made a particular addition, according to rule, may be assured that
he has found, with respect to the sum of the numbers before him, and that
in this instance is within the reach of human genius. Now, in conclusion,
the method which teaches adherence to the true order, and an exact enumeration
of all the conditions of the thing .sought includes all that gives certitude
to the rules of arithmetic.
But the chief ground of my satisfaction with thus method, was the assurance
I had of thereby exercising my reason in all matters, if not with absolute
perfection, at least with the greatest attainable by me: besides, I was conscious
that by its use my mind was becoming gradually habituated to clearer and
more distinct conceptions of its objects; and I hoped also, from not having
restricted this method to any particular matter, to apply it to the difficulties
of the other sciences, with not less success than to those of algebra. I
should not, however, on this account have ventured at once on the examination
of all the difficulties of the sciences which presented themselves to me,
for this would have been contrary to the order prescribed in the method,
but observing that the knowledge of such is dependent on principles borrowed
from philosophy, in which I found nothing certain, I thought it necessary
first of all to endeavor to establish its principles. .And because I observed,
besides, that an inquiry of this kind was of all others of the greatest moment,
and one in which precipitancy and anticipation in judgment were most to be
dreaded, I thought that I ought not to approach it till I had reached a more
mature age (being at that time but twenty-three), and had first of all employed
much of my time in preparation for the work, as well by eradicating from
my mind all the erroneous opinions I had up to that moment accepted, as by
amassing variety of experience to afford materials for my reasonings, and
by continually exercising myself in my chosen method with a view to increased
skill in its application.
Part Three
And finally, as it is not enough, before commencing to rebuild the house
in which we live, that it be pulled down, and materials and builders provided,
or that we engage in the work ourselves, according to a plan which we have
beforehand carefully drawn out, but as it is likewise necessary that we be
furnished with some other house in which we may live commodiously during
the operations, so that I might not remain irresolute in my actions, while
my reason compelled me to suspend my judgement, and that I might not be prevented
from living thenceforward in the greatest possible felicity, I formed a provisory
code of morals, composed of three or four maxims, with which I am desirous
to make you acquainted.
The first was to obey the laws and customs of my country, adhering firmly
to the faith in which, by the grace of God, I had been educated from my childhood
and regulating my conduct in every other matter according to the most moderate
opinions, and the farthest removed from extremes, which should happen to
be adopted in practice with general consent of the most judicious of those
among whom I might be living. For as I had from that time begun to hold
my own opinions for nought because I wished to subject them all to examination,
I was convinced that I could not do better than follow in the meantime the
opinions of the most judicious; and although there are some perhaps among
the Persians and Chinese as judicious as among ourselves, expediency seemed
to dictate that I should regulate my practice conformably to the opinions
of those with whom I should have to live; and it appeared to me that, in
order to ascertain the real opinions of such, I ought rather to take cognizance
of what they practised than of what they said, not only because, in the
corruption of our manners, there are few disposed to speak exactly as they
believe, but also because very many are not aware of what it is that they
really believe; for, as the act of mind by which a thing is believed is different
from that by which we know that we believe it, the one act is often found
without the other. Also, amid many opinions held in equal repute, I chose
always the most moderate, as much for the reason that these are always the
most convenient for practice, and probably the best (for all excess is generally
vicious), as that, in the event of my falling into error, I might be at less
distance from the truth than if, having chosen one of the extremes, it should
turn out to be the other which I ought to have adopted. And I placed in
the class of extremes especially all promises by which somewhat of our freedom
is abridged; not that I disapproved of the laws which, to provide against
the instability of men of feeble resolution, when what is sought to be
accomplished is some good, permit engagements by vows and contracts binding
the parties to persevere in it, or even, for the security of commerce, sanction
similar engagements where the purpose sought to be realized is indifferent:
but because I did not find anything on earth which was wholly superior to
change, and because, for myself in particular, I hoped gradually to perfect
my judgments, and not to suffer them to deteriorate, I would have deemed
it a grave sin against good sense, if, for the reason that I approved of
something at a particular time, I therefore bound myself to hold it for good
at a subsequent time, when perhaps it had ceased to be so, or I had ceased
to esteem it such.
My second maxim was to be as firm and resolute in my actions as I was
able, and not to adhere less steadfastly to the most doubtful opinions, when
once adopted, than if they had been highly certain; imitating in this the
example of travelers who, when they have lost their way in a forest, ought
not to wander from side to side, far less remain in one place, but proceed
constantly towards the same side in as straight a line as possible, without
changing their direction for slight reasons, although perhaps it might be
chance alone which at first determined the selection; for in this way, if
they do not exactly reach the point they desire, they will come at least
in the end to some place that will probably be preferable to the middle of
a forest. In the same way, since in action it frequently happens that no
delay is permissible, it is very certain that, when it is not in our power
to determine what is true, we ought to act according to what is most probable;
and even although we should not remark a greater probability in one opinion
than in another, we ought notwithstanding to choose one or the other, and
afterwards consider it, in so far as it relates to practice, as no longer
dubious, but manifestly true and certain, since the reason by which our
choice has been determined is itself possessed of these qualities. This
principle was sufficient thenceforward to rid me of all those repentings
and pangs of remorse that usually disturb the consciences of such feeble
and uncertain minds as, destitute of any clear and determinate principle
of choice, allow themselves one day to adopt a course of action as the best,
which they abandon the next, as the opposite.
My third maxim was to endeavor always to conquer myself rather than fortune,
and change my desires rather than the order of the world, and in general,
accustom myself to the persuasion that, except our own thoughts, there is
nothing absolutely in our power; so that when we have done our best in things
external to us, all wherein we fail of success is to be held, as regards
us, absolutely impossible: and this single principle seemed to me sufficient
to prevent me from desiring for the future anything which I could not obtain,
and thus render me contented; for since our will naturally seeks those objects
alone which the understanding represents as in some way possible of attainment,
it is plain, that if we consider all external goods as equally beyond our
power, we shall no more regret the absence of such goods as seem due to our
birth, when deprived of them without any fault of ours, than our not possessing
the kingdoms of China or Mexico, and thus making, so to speak, a virtue of
necessity, we shall no more desire health in disease, or freedom in imprisonment,
than we now do bodies incorruptible as diamonds, or the wings of birds to
fly with. But I confess there is need of prolonged discipline and frequently
repeated meditation to accustom the mind to view all objects in this light;
and I believe that in this chiefly consisted the secret of the power of such
philosophers as in former times were enabled to rise superior to the influence
of fortune, and, amid suffering and poverty, enjoy a happiness which their
gods might have envied. For, occupied incessantly with the consideration
of the limits prescribed to their power by nature, they became so entirely
convinced that nothing was at their disposal except their own thoughts, that
this conviction was of itself sufficient to prevent their entertaining any
desire of other objects; and over their thoughts they acquired a sway so
absolute, that they had some ground on this account for esteeming themselves
more rich and more powerful, more free and more happy, than other men who,
whatever be the favors heaped on them by nature and fortune, if destitute
of this philosophy, can never command the realization of all their desires.
In fine, to conclude this code of morals, I thought of reviewing the different
occupations of men in this life, with the view of making choice of the best.
And, without wishing to offer any remarks on the employments of others,
I may state that it was my conviction that I could not do better than continue
in that in which I was engaged, viz., in devoting my whole life to the culture
of my reason, and in making the greatest progress I was able in the knowledge
of truth, on the principles of the method which I had prescribed to myself.
This method, from the time I had begun to apply it, had been to me the source
of satisfaction so intense as to lead me to, believe that more perfect or
more innocent could not be enjoyed in this life; and as by its means I daily
discovered truths that appeared to me of some importance, and of which other
men were generally ignorant, the gratification thence arising so occupied
my mind that I was wholly indifferent to every other object. Besides, the
three preceding maxims were founded singly on the design of continuing the
work of self- instruction. For since God has endowed each of us with some
light of reason by which to distinguish truth from error, I could not have
believed that I ought for a single moment to rest satisfied with the opinions
of another, unless I had resolved to exercise my own judgment in examining
these whenever I should be duly qualified for the task. Nor could I have
proceeded on such opinions without scruple, had I supposed that I should
thereby forfeit any advantage for attaining still more accurate, should such
exist. And, in fine, I could not have restrained my desires, nor remained
satisfied had I not followed a path in which I thought myself certain of
attaining all the knowledge to the acquisition of which I was competent,
as well as the largest amount of what is truly good which I could ever hope
to secure Inasmuch as we neither seek nor shun any object except in so far
as our understanding represents it as good or bad, all that is necessary
to right action is right judgment, and to the best action the most correct
judgment, that is, to the acquisition of all the virtues with all else that
is truly valuable and within our reach; and the assurance of such an acquisition
cannot fail to render us contented.
Having thus provided myself with these maxims, and having placed them
in reserve along with the truths of faith, which have ever occupied the
first place in my belief, I came to the conclusion that I might with freedom
set about ridding myself of what remained of my opinions. And, inasmuch
as I hoped to be better able successfully to accomplish this work by holding
intercourse with mankind, than by remaining longer shut up in the retirement
where these thoughts had occurred to me, I betook me again to traveling before
the winter was well ended. And, during the nine subsequent years, I did
nothing but roam from one place to another, desirous of being a spectator
rather than an actor in the plays exhibited on the theater of the world;
and, as I made it my business in each matter to reflect particularly upon
what might fairly be doubted and prove a source of error, I gradually rooted
out from my mind all the errors which had hitherto crept into it. Not that
in this I imitated the sceptics who doubt only that they may doubt, and seek
nothing beyond uncertainty itself; for, on the contrary, my design was singly
to find ground of assurance, and cast aside the loose earth and sand, that
I might reach the rock or the clay. In this, as appears to me, I was successful
enough; for, since I endeavored to discover the falsehood or incertitude
of the propositions I examined, not by feeble conjectures, but by clear and
certain reasonings, I met with nothing so doubtful as not to yield some
conclusion of adequate certainty, although this were merely the inference,
that the matter in question contained nothing certain. And, just as in pulling
down an old house, we usually reserve the ruins to contribute towards the
erection, so, in destroying such of my opinions as I judged to be Ill-founded,
I made a variety of observations and acquired an amount of experience of
which I availed myself in the establishment of more certain. And further,
I continued to exercise myself in the method I had prescribed; for, besides
taking care in general to conduct all my thoughts according to its rules,
I reserved some hours from time to time which I expressly devoted to the
employment of the method in the solution of mathematical difficulties, or
even in the solution likewise of some questions belonging to other sciences,
but which, by my having detached them from such principles of these sciences
as were of inadequate certainty, were rendered almost mathematical: the
truth of this will be manifest from the numerous examples contained in this
volume. And thus, without in appearance living otherwise than those who,
with no other occupation than that of spending their lives agreeably and
innocently, study to sever pleasure from vice, and who, that they may enjoy
their leisure without ennui, have recourse to such pursuits as are honorable,
I was nevertheless prosecuting my design, and making greater progress in
the knowledge of truth, than I might, perhaps, have made had I been engaged
in the perusal of books merely, or in holding converse with men of letters.
These nine years passed away, however, before I had come to any determinate
judgment respecting the difficulties which form matter of dispute among the
learned, or had commenced to seek the principles of any philosophy more certain
than the vulgar. And the examples of many men of the highest genius, who
had, in former times, engaged in this inquiry, but, as appeared to me, without
success, led me to imagine it to be a work of so much difficulty, that I
would not perhaps have ventured on it so soon had I not heard it currently
rumored that I had already completed the inquiry. I know not what were
the grounds of this opinion; and, if my conversation contributed in any measure
to its rise, this must have happened rather from my having confessed my Ignorance
with greater freedom than those are accustomed to do who have studied a little,
and expounded perhaps, the reasons that led me to doubt of many of those
things that by others are esteemed certain, than from my having boasted of
any system of philosophy. But, as I am of a disposition that makes me unwilling
to be esteemed different from what I really am, I thought it necessary to
endeavor by all means to render myself worthy of the reputation accorded
to me; and it is now exactly eight years since this desire constrained me
to remove from all those places where interruption from any of my acquaintances
was possible, and betake myself to this country, in which the long duration
of the war has led to the establishment of such discipline, that the armies
maintained seem to be of use only in enabling the inhabitants to enjoy more
securely the blessings of peace and where, in the midst of a great crowd
actively engaged in business, and more careful of their own affairs than
curious about those of others, I have been enabled to live without being
deprived of any of the conveniences to be had in the most populous cities,
and yet as solitary and as retired as in the midst of the most remote deserts.
Part Four
I am in doubt as to the propriety of making my first meditations in the
place above mentioned matter of discourse; for these are so metaphysical,
and so uncommon, as not, perhaps, to be acceptable to every one. And yet,
that it may be determined whether the foundations that I have laid are
sufficiently secure, I find myself in a measure constrained to advert to
them. I had long before remarked that, in relation to practice, it is sometimes
necessary to adopt, as if above doubt, opinions which we discern to be highly
uncertain, as has been already said; but as I then desired to give my attention
solely to the search after truth, I thought that a procedure exactly the
opposite was called for, and that I ought to reject as absolutely false all
opinions in regard to which I could suppose the least ground for doubt, in
order to ascertain whether after that there remained aught in my belief that
was wholly indubitable. Accordingly, seeing that our senses sometimes deceive
us, I was willing to suppose that there existed nothing really such as they
presented to us; and because some men err in reasoning, and fall into
paralogisms, even on the simplest matters of geometry, I, convinced that
I was as open to error as any other, rejected as false all the reasonings
I had hitherto taken for demonstrations; and finally, when I considered that
the very same thoughts (presentations) which we experience when awake may
also be experienced when we are asleep, while there is at that time not one
of them true, I supposed that all the objects (presentations) that had ever
entered into my mind when awake, had in them no more truth than the illusions
of my dreams. But immediately upon this I observed that, whilst I thus wished
to think that all was false, it was absolutely necessary that I, who thus
thought, should be somewhat; and as I observed that this truth, I think,
therefore I am (Cogito Ero Sum), was so certain and of such evidence that
no ground of doubt, however extravagant, could be alleged by the sceptics
capable of shaking it, I concluded that I might, without scruple, accept
it as the first principle of the philosophy of which I was in search
In the next place, I attentively examined what I was and as I observed
that I could suppose that I had no body, and that there was no world nor
any place in which I might be; but that I could not therefore suppose that
I was not; and that, on the contrary, from the very circumstance that I thought
to doubt of the truth of other things, it most clearly and certainly followed
that I was; while, on the other hand, if I had only ceased to think, although
all the other objects which I had ever imagined had been in reality existent,
I would have had no reason to believe that I existed; I thence concluded
that I was a substance whose whole essence or nature consists only in thinking,
and which, that it may exist, has need of no place, nor is dependent on any
material thing; so that " I," that is to say, the mind by which I am what
I am, is wholly distinct from the body, and is even more easily known than
the latter, and is such, that although the latter were not, it would still
continue to be all that it is.
After this I inquired in general into what is essential I to the truth
and certainty of a proposition; for since I had discovered one which I knew
to be true, I thought that I must likewise be able to discover the ground
of this certitude. And as I observed that in the words I think, therefore
I am, there is nothing at all which gives me assurance of their truth beyond
this, that I see very clearly that in order to think it is necessary to exist,
I concluded that I might take, as a general rule, the principle, that all
the things which we very clearly and distinctly conceive are true, only
observing, however, that there is some difficulty in rightly determining
the objects which we distinctly conceive.
In the next place, from reflecting on the circumstance that I doubted,
and that consequently my being was not wholly perfect (for I clearly saw
that it was a greater perfection to know than to doubt), I was led to inquire
whence I had learned to think of something more perfect than myself; and
I clearly recognized that I must hold this notion from some nature which
in reality was more perfect. As for the thoughts of many other objects external
to me, as of the sky, the earth, light, heat, and a thousand more, I was
less at a loss to know whence these came; for since I remarked in them nothing
which seemed to render them superior to myself, I could believe that, if
these were true, they were dependencies on my own nature, in so far as it
possessed a certain perfection, and, if they were false, that I held them
from nothing, that is to say, that they were in me because of a certain
imperfection of my nature. But this could not be the case with-the idea
of a nature more perfect than myself; for to receive it from nothing was
a thing manifestly impossible; and, because it is not less repugnant that
the more perfect should be an effect of, and dependence on the less perfect,
than that something should proceed from nothing, it was equally impossible
that I could hold it from myself: accordingly, it but remained that it had
been placed in me by a nature which was in reality more perfect than mine,
and which even possessed within itself all the perfections of which I could
form any idea; that is to say, in a single word, which was God. And to this
I added that, since I knew some perfections which I did not possess, I was
not the only being in existence (I will here, with your permission, freely
use the terms of the schools); but, on the contrary, that there was of necessity
some other more perfect Being upon whom I was dependent, and from whom I
had received all that I possessed; for if I had existed alone, and independently
of every other being, so as to have had from myself all the perfection, however
little, which I actually possessed, I should have been able, for the same
reason, to have had from myself the whole remainder of perfection, of the
want of which I was conscious, and thus could of myself have become infinite,
eternal, immutable, omniscient, all-powerful, and, in fine, have possessed
all the perfections which I could recognize in God. For in order to know
the nature of God (whose existence has been established by the preceding
reasonings), as far as my own nature permitted, I had only to consider in
reference to all the properties of which I found in my mind some idea, whether
their possession was a mark of perfection; and I was assured that no one
which indicated any imperfection was in him, and that none of the rest was
awanting. Thus I perceived that doubt, inconstancy, sadness, and such like,
could not be found in God, since I myself would have been happy to be free
from them. Besides, I had ideas of many sensible and corporeal things; for
although I might suppose that I was dreaming, and that all which I saw or
imagined was false, I could not, nevertheless, deny that the ideas were in
reality in my thoughts. But, because I had already very clearly recognized
in myself that the intelligent nature is distinct from the corporeal, and
as I observed that all composition is an evidence of dependency, and that
a state of dependency is manifestly a state of imperfection, I therefore
determined that it could not be a perfection in God to be compounded of these
two natures and that consequently he was not so compounded; but that if there
were any bodies in the world, or even any intelligences, or other natures
that were not wholly perfect, their existence depended on his power in such
a way that they could not subsist without him for a single moment.
I was disposed straightway to search for other truths and when I had
represented to myself the object of the geometers, which I conceived to be
a continuous body or a space indefinitely extended in length, breadth, and
height or depth, divisible into divers parts which admit of different figures
and sizes, and of being moved or transposed in all manner of ways (for all
this the geometers suppose to be in the object they contemplate), I went
over some of their simplest demonstrations. And, in the first place, I observed,
that the great certitude which by common consent is accorded to these
demonstrations, is founded solely upon this, that they are clearly conceived
in accordance with the rules I have already laid down In the next place,
I perceived that there was nothing at all in these demonstrations which could
assure me of the existence of their object: thus, for example, supposing
a triangle to be given, I distinctly perceived that its three angles were
necessarily equal to two right angles, but I did not on that account perceive
anything which could assure me that any triangle existed: while, on the
contrary, recurring to the examination of the idea of a Perfect Being, I
found that the existence of the Being was comprised in the idea in the same
way that the equality of its three angles to two right angles is comprised
in the idea of a triangle, or as in the idea of a sphere, the equidistance
of all points on its surface from the center, or even still more clearly;
and that consequently it is at least as certain that God, who is this Perfect
Being, is, or exists, as any demonstration of geometry can be.
But the reason which leads many to persuade them selves that there is
a difficulty in knowing this truth, and even also in knowing what their mind
really is, is that they never raise their thoughts above sensible objects,
and are so accustomed to consider nothing except by way of imagination, which
is a mode of thinking limited to material objects, that all that is not
imaginable seems to them not intelligible. The truth of this is sufficiently
manifest from the single circumstance, that the philosophers of the schools
accept as a maxim that there is nothing in the understanding which was not
previously in the senses, in which however it is certain that the ideas of
God and of the soul have never been; and it appears to me that they who make
use of their imagination to comprehend these ideas do exactly the some thing
as if, in order to hear sounds or smell odors, they strove to avail themselves
of their eyes; unless indeed that there is this difference, that the sense
of sight does not afford us an inferior assurance to those of smell or hearing;
in place of which, neither our imagination nor our senses can give us assurance
of anything unless our understanding intervene.
Finally, if there be still persons who are not sufficiently persuaded
of the existence of God and of the soul, by the reasons I have adduced, I
am desirous that they should know that all the other propositions, of the
truth of which they deem themselves perhaps more assured, as that we have
a body, and that there exist stars and an earth, and such like, are less
certain; for, although we have a moral assurance of these things, which is
so strong that there is an appearance of extravagance in doubting of their
existence, yet at the same time no one, unless his intellect is impaired,
can deny, when the question relates to a metaphysical certitude, that there
is sufficient reason to exclude entire assurance, in the observation that
when asleep we can in the same way imagine ourselves possessed of another
body and that we see other stars and another earth, when there is nothing
of the kind. For how do we know that the thoughts which occur in dreaming
are false rather than those other which we experience when awake, since the
former are often not less vivid and distinct than the latter? And though
men of the highest genius study this question as long as they please, I do
not believe that they will be able to give any reason which can be sufficient
to remove this doubt, unless they presuppose the existence of God. For,
in the first place even the principle which I have already taken as a rule,
viz., that all the things which we clearly and distinctly conceive are true,
is certain only because God is or exists and because he is a Perfect Being,
and because all that we possess is derived from him: whence it follows that
our ideas or notions, which to the extent of their clearness and distinctness
are real, and proceed from God, must to that extent be true. Accordingly,
whereas we not infrequently have ideas or notions in which some falsity is
contained, this can only be the case with such as are to some extent confused
and obscure, and in this proceed from nothing (participate of negation),
that is, exist in us thus confused because we are not wholly perfect. And
it is evident that it is not less repugnant that falsity or imperfection,
in so far as it is imperfection, should proceed from God, than that truth
or perfection should proceed from nothing. But if we did not know that all
which we possess of real and true proceeds from a Perfect and Infinite Being,
however clear and distinct our ideas might be, we should have no ground on
that account for the assurance that they possessed the perfection of being
true.
But after the knowledge of God and of the soul has rendered us certain
of this rule, we can easily understand that the truth of the thoughts we
experience when awake, ought not in the slightest degree to be called in
question on account of the illusions of our dreams. For if it happened that
an individual, even when asleep, had some very distinct idea, as, for example,
if a geometer should discover some new demonstration, the circumstance of
his being asleep would not militate against its truth; and as for the most
ordinary error of our dreams, which consists in their representing to us
various objects in the same way as our external senses, this is not prejudicial,
since it leads us very properly to suspect the truth of the ideas of sense;
for we are not infrequently deceived in the same manner when awake; as when
persons in the jaundice see all objects yellow, or when the stars or bodies
at a great distance appear to us much smaller than they are. For, in fine,
whether awake or asleep, we ought never to allow ourselves to be persuaded
of the truth of anything unless on the evidence of our reason. And it must
be noted that I say of our reason, and not of our imagination or of our senses:
thus, for example, although we very clearly see the sun, we ought not therefore
to determine that it is only of the size which our sense of sight presents;
and we may very distinctly imagine the head of a lion joined to the body
of a goat, without being therefore shut up to the conclusion that a chimaera
exists; for it is not a dictate of reason that what we thus see or imagine
is in reality existent; but it plainly tells us that all our ideas or notions
contain in them some truth; for otherwise it could not be that God, who is
wholly perfect and veracious, should have placed them in us. And because
our reasonings are never so clear or so complete during sleep as when we
are awake, although sometimes the acts of our imagination are then as lively
and distinct, if not more so than in our waking moments, reason further dictates
that, since all our thoughts cannot be true because of our partial imperfection,
those possessing truth must infallibly be found in the experience of our
waking moments rather than in that of our dreams.
Part Five
I would here willingly have proceeded to exhibit the whole chain of truths
which I deduced from these primary but as with a view to this it would have
been necessary now to treat of many questions in dispute among the earned,
with whom I do not wish to be embroiled, I believe that it will be better
for me to refrain from this exposition, and only mention in general what
these truths are, that the more judicious may be able to determine whether
a more special account of them would conduce to the public advantage. I
have ever remained firm in my original resolution to suppose no other principle
than that of which I have recently availed myself in demonstrating the existence
of God and of the soul, and to accept as true nothing that did not appear
to me more clear and certain than the demonstrations of the geometers had
formerly appeared; and yet I venture to state that not only have I found
means to satisfy myself in a short time on all the principal difficulties
which are usually treated of in philosophy, but I have also observed certain
laws established in nature by God in such a manner, and of which he has impressed
on our minds such notions, that after we have reflected sufficiently upon
these, we cannot doubt that they are accurately observed in all that exists
or takes place in the world and farther, by considering the concatenation
of these laws, it appears to me that I have discovered many truths more useful
and more important than all I had before learned, or even had expected to
learn.
But because I have essayed to expound the chief of these discoveries in
a treatise which certain considerations prevent me from publishing, I cannot
make the results known more conveniently than by here giving a summary of
the contents of this treatise. It was my design to comprise in it all that,
before I set myself to write it, I thought I knew of the nature of material
objects. But like the painters who, finding themselves unable to represent
equally well on a plain surface all the different faces of a solid body,
select one of the chief, on which alone they make the light fall, and throwing
the rest into the shade, allow them to appear only in so far as they can
be seen while looking at the principal one; so, fearing lest I should not
be able to compense in my discourse all that was in my mind, I resolved to
expound singly, though at considerable length, my opinions regarding light;
then to take the opportunity of adding something on the sun and the fixed
stars, since light almost wholly proceeds from them; on the heavens since
they transmit it; on the planets, comets, and earth, since they reflect it;
and particularly on all the bodies that are upon the earth, since they are
either colored, or transparent, or luminous; and finally on man, since he
is the spectator of these objects. Further, to enable me to cast this variety
of subjects somewhat into the shade, and to express my judgment regarding
them with greater freedom, without being necessitated to adopt or refute
the opinions of the learned, I resolved to leave all the people here to their
disputes, and to speak only of what would happen in a new world, if God were
now to create somewhere in the imaginary spaces matter sufficient to compose
one, and were to agitate variously and confusedly the different parts of
this matter, so that there resulted a chaos as disordered as the poets ever
feigned, and after that did nothing more than lend his ordinary concurrence
to nature, and allow her to act in accordance with the laws which he had
established. On this supposition, I, in the first place, described this
matter, and essayed to represent it in such a manner that to my mind there
can be nothing clearer and more intelligible, except what has been recently
said regarding God and the soul; for I even expressly supposed that it possessed
none of those forms or qualities which are so debated in the schools, nor
in general anything the knowledge of which is not so natural to our minds
that no one can so much as imagine himself ignorant of it. Besides, I have
pointed out what are the laws of nature; and, with no other principle upon
which to found my reasonings except the infinite perfection of God, I endeavored
to demonstrate all those about which there could be any room for doubt, and
to prove that they are such, that even if God had created more worlds, there
could have been none in which these laws were not observed. Thereafter,
I showed how the greatest part of the matter of this chaos must, in accordance
with these laws, dispose and arrange itself in such a way as to present the
appearance of heavens; how in the meantime some of its parts must compose
an earth and some planets and comets, and others a sun and fixed stars.
And, making a digression at this stage on the subject of light, I expounded
at considerable length what the nature of that light must be which is found
in the sun and the stars, and how thence in an instant of time it traverses
the immense spaces of the heavens, and how from the planets and comets it
is reflected towards the earth. To this I likewise added much respecting
the substance, the situation, the motions, and all the different qualities
of these heavens and stars; so that I thought I had said enough respecting
them to show that there is nothing observable in the heavens or stars of
our system that must not, or at least may not appear precisely alike in those
of the system which I described. I came next to speak of the earth in
particular, and to show how, even though I had expressly supposed that God
had given no weight to the matter of which it is composed, this should not
prevent all its parts from tending exactly to its center; how with water
and air on its surface, the disposition of the heavens and heavenly bodies,
more especially of the moon, must cause a flow and ebb, like in all its
circumstances to that observed in our seas, as also a certain current both
of water and air from east to west, such as is likewise observed between
the tropics; how the mountains, seas, fountains, and rivers might naturally
be formed in it, and the metals produced in the mines, and the plants grow
in the fields and in general, how all the bodies which are commonly denominated
mixed or composite might be generated and, among other things in the discoveries
alluded to inasmuch as besides the stars, I knew nothing except fire which
produces light, I spared no pains to set forth all that pertains to its nature,
the manner of its production and support, and to explain how heat is sometimes
found without light, and light without heat; to show how it can induce various
colors upon different bodies and other diverse qualities; how it reduces
some to a liquid state and hardens others; how it can consume almost all
bodies, or convert them into ashes and smoke; and finally, how from these
ashes, by the mere intensity of its action, it forms glass: for as this
transmutation of ashes into glass appeared to me as wonderful as any other
in nature, I took a special pleasure in describing it. I was not, however,
disposed, from these circumstances, to conclude that this world had been
created in the manner I described; for it is much more likely that God made
it at the first such as it was to be. But this is certain, and an opinion
commonly received among theologians, that the action by which he now sustains
it is the same with that by which he originally created it; so that even
although he had from the beginning given it no other form than that of chaos,
provided only he had established certain laws of nature, and had lent it
his concurrence to enable it to act as it is wont to do, it may be believed,
without discredit to the miracle of creation, that, in this way alone, things
purely material might, in course of time, have become such as we observe
them at present; and their nature is much more easily conceived when they
are beheld coming in this manner gradually into existence, than when they
are only considered as produced at once in a finished and perfect state.
From the description of inanimate bodies and plants, I passed to animals,
and particularly to man. But since I had not as yet sufficient knowledge
to enable me to treat of these in the same manner as of the rest, that is
to say, by deducing effects from their causes, and by showing from what elements
and in what manner nature must produce them, I remained satisfied with the
supposition that God formed the body of man wholly like to one of ours, as
well in the external shape of the members as in the internal conformation
of the organs, of the same matter with that I had described, and at first
placed in it no rational soul, nor any other principle, in room of the vegetative
or sensitive soul, beyond kindling in the heart one of those fires without
light, such as I had already described, and which I thought was not different
from the heat in hay that has been heaped together before it is dry, or that
which causes fermentation in new wines before they are run clear of the fruit.
For, when I examined the kind of functions which might, as consequences
of this supposition, exist in this body, I found precisely all those which
may exist in us independently of all power of thinking, and consequently
without being in any measure owing to the soul; in other words, to that part
of us which is distinct from the body, and of which it has been said above
that the nature distinctively consists in thinking, functions in which the
animals void of reason may be said wholly to resemble us; but among which
I could not discover any of those that, as dependent on thought alone, belong
to us as men, while, on the other hand, I did afterwards discover these as
soon as I supposed God to have created a rational soul, and to have annexed
it to this body in a particular manner which I described.
But, in order to show how I there handled this matter, I mean here to
give the explication of the motion of the heart and arteries, which, as the
first and most general motion observed in animals, will afford the means
of readily determining what should be thought of all the rest. And that
there may be less difficulty in understanding what I am about to say on this
subject, I advise those who are not versed in anatomy, before they commence
the perusal of these observations, to take the trouble of getting dissected
in their presence the heart of some large animal possessed of lungs (for
this is throughout sufficiently like the human), and to have shown to them
its two ventricles or cavities: in the first place, that in the right side,
with which correspond two very ample tubes, viz., the hollow vein (vena cava),
which is the principal receptacle of the blood, and the trunk of the tree,
as it were, of which all the other veins in the body are branches; and the
arterial vein (vena arteriosa), inappropriately so denominated, since it
is in truth only an artery, which, taking its rise in the heart, is divided,
after passing out from it, into many branches which presently disperse themselves
all over the lungs; in the second place, the cavity in the left side, with
which correspond in the same manner two canals in size equal to or larger
than the preceding, viz., the venous artery (arteria venosa), likewise
inappropriately thus designated, because it is simply a vein which comes
from the lungs, where it is divided into many branches, interlaced with those
of the arterial vein, and those of the tube called the windpipe, through
which the air we breathe enters; and the great artery which, issuing from
the heart, sends its branches all over the body. I should wish also that
such persons were carefully shown the eleven pellicles which, like so many
small valves, open and shut the four orifices that are in these two cavities,
viz., three at the entrance of the hollow veins where they are disposed in
such a manner as by no means to prevent the blood which it contains from
flowing into the right ventricle of the heart, and yet exactly to prevent
its flowing out; three at the entrance to the arterial vein, which, arranged
in a manner exactly the opposite of the former, readily permit the blood
contained in this cavity to pass into the lungs, but hinder that contained
in the lungs from returning to this cavity; and, in like manner, two others
at the mouth of the venous artery, which allow the blood from the lungs to
flow into the left cavity of the heart, but preclude its return; and three
at the mouth of the great artery, which suffer the blood to flow from the
heart, but prevent its reflux. Nor do we need to seek any other reason for
the number of these pellicles beyond this that the orifice of the venous
artery being of an oval shape from the nature of its situation, can be adequately
closed with two, whereas the others being round are more conveniently closed
with three. Besides, I wish such persons to observe that the grand artery
and the arterial vein are of much harder and firmer texture than the venous
artery and the hollow vein; and that the two last expand before entering
the heart, and there form, as it were, two pouches denominated the auricles
of the heart, which are composed of a substance similar to that of the heart
itself; and that there is always more warmth in the heart than in any other
part of the body -- and finally, that this heat is capable of causing any drop
of blood that passes into the cavities rapidly to expand and dilate, just
as all liquors do when allowed to fall drop by drop into a highly heated
vessel.
For, after these things, it is not necessary for me to say anything more
with a view to explain the motion of the heart, except that when its cavities
are not full of blood, into these the blood of necessity flows, - - from
the hollow vein into the right, and from the venous artery into the left;
because these two vessels are always full of blood, and their orifices, which
are turned towards the heart, cannot then be closed. But as soon as two
drops of blood have thus passed, one into each of the cavities, these drops
which cannot but be very large, because the orifices through which they pass
are wide, and the vessels from which they come full of blood, are immediately
rarefied, and dilated by the heat they meet with. In this way they cause
the whole heart to expand, and at the same time press home and shut the five
small valves that are at the entrances of the two vessels from which they
flow, and thus prevent any more blood from coming down into the heart, and
becoming more and more rarefied, they push open the six small valves that
are in the orifices of the other two vessels, through which they pass out,
causing in this way all the branches of the arterial vein and of the grand
artery to expand almost simultaneously with the heart which immediately
thereafter begins to contract, as do also the arteries, because the blood
that has entered them has cooled, and the six small valves close, and the
five of the hollow vein and of the venous artery open anew and allow a passage
to other two drops of blood, which cause the heart and the arteries again
to expand as before. And, because the blood which thus enters into the heart
passes through these two pouches called auricles, it thence happens that
their motion is the contrary of that of the heart, and that when it expands
they contract. But lest those who are ignorant of the force of mathematical
demonstrations and who are not accustomed to distinguish true reasons from
mere verisimilitudes, should venture. without examination, to deny what
has been said, I wish it to be considered that the motion which I have now
explained follows as necessarily from the very arrangement of the parts,
which may be observed in the heart by the eye alone, and from the heat which
may be felt with the fingers, and from the nature of the blood as learned
from experience, as does the motion of a clock from the power, the situation,
and shape of its counterweights and wheels.
But if it be asked how it happens that the blood in the veins, flowing
in this way continually into the heart, is not exhausted, and why the arteries
do not become too full, since all the blood which passes through the heart
flows into them, I need only mention in reply what has been written by a
physician of England, who has the honor of having broken the ice on this
subject, and of having been the first to teach that there are many small
passages at the extremities of the arteries, through which the blood received
by them from the heart passes into the small branches of the veins, whence
it again returns to the heart; so that its course amounts precisely to a
perpetual circulation. Of this we have abundant proof in the ordinary experience
of surgeons, who, by binding the arm with a tie of moderate straitness above
the part where they open the vein, cause the blood to flow more copiously
than it would have done without any ligature; whereas quite the contrary
would happen were they to bind it below; that is, between the hand and the
opening, or were to make the ligature above the opening very tight. For
it is manifest that the tie, moderately straightened, while adequate to hinder
the blood already in the arm from returning towards the heart by the veins,
cannot on that account prevent new blood from coming forward through the
arteries, because these are situated below the veins, and their coverings,
from their greater consistency, are more difficult to compress; and also
that the blood which comes from the heart tends to pass through them to the
hand with greater force than it does to return from the hand to the heart
through the veins. And since the latter current escapes from the arm by the
opening made in one of the veins, there must of necessity be certain passages
below the ligature, that is, towards the extremities of the arm through which
it can come thither from the arteries. This physician likewise abundantly
establishes what he has advanced respecting the motion of the blood, from
the existence of certain pellicles, so disposed in various places along the
course of the veins, in the manner of small valves, as not to permit the
blood to pass from the middle of the body towards the extremities, but only
to return from the extremities to the heart; and farther, from experience
which shows that all the blood which is in the body may flow out of it in
a very short time through a single artery that has been cut, even although
this had been closely tied in the immediate neighborhood of the heart and
cut between the heart and the ligature, so as to prevent the supposition
that the blood flowing out of it could come from any other quarter than the
heart.
But there are many other circumstances which evince that what I have alleged
is the true cause of the motion of the blood: thus, in the first place,
the difference that is observed between the blood which flows from the veins,
and that from the arteries, can only arise from this, that being rarefied,
and, as it were, distilled by passing through the heart, it is thinner, and
more vivid, and warmer immediately after leaving the heart, in other words,
when in the arteries, than it was a short time before passing into either,
in other words, when it was in the veins; and if attention be given, it will
be found that this difference is very marked only in the neighborhood of
the heart; and is not so evident in parts more remote from it. In the next
place, the consistency of the coats of which the arterial vein and the great
artery are composed, sufficiently shows that the blood is impelled against
them with more force than against the veins. And why should the left cavity
of the heart and the great artery be wider and larger than the right cavity
and the arterial vein, were it not that the blood of the venous artery,
having only been in the lungs after it has passed through the heart, is thinner,
and rarefies more readily, and in a higher degree, than the blood which proceeds
immediately from the hollow vein? And what can physicians conjecture from
feeling the pulse unless they know that according as the blood changes its
nature it can be rarefied by the warmth of the heart, in a higher or lower
degree, and more or less quickly than before? And if it be inquired how
this heat is communicated to the other members, must it not be admitted that
this is effected by means of the blood, which, passing through the heart,
is there heated anew, and thence diffused over all the body? Whence it happens,
that if the blood be withdrawn from any part, the heat is likewise withdrawn
by the same means; and although the heart were as-hot as glowing iron, it
would not be capable of warming the feet and hands as at present, unless
it continually sent thither new blood. We likewise perceive from this, that
the true use of respiration is to bring sufficient fresh air into the lungs,
to cause the blood which flows into them from the right ventricle of the
heart, where it has been rarefied and, as it were, changed into vapors, to
become thick, and to convert it anew into blood, before it flows into the
left cavity, without which process it would be unfit for the nourishment
of the fire that is there. This receives confirmation from the circumstance,
that it is observed of animals destitute of lungs that they have also but
one cavity in the heart, and that in children who cannot use them while in
the womb, there is a hole through which the blood flows from the hollow vein
into the left cavity of the heart, and a tube through which it passes from
the arterial vein into the grand artery without passing through the lung.
In the next place, how could digestion be carried on in the stomach unless
the heart communicated heat to it through the arteries, and along with this
certain of the more fluid parts of the blood, which assist in the dissolution
of the food that has been taken in? Is not also the operation which converts
the juice of food into blood easily comprehended, when it is considered that
it is distilled by passing and repassing through the heart perhaps more than
one or two hundred times in a day? And what more need be adduced to explain
nutrition, and the production of the different humors of the body, beyond
saying, that the force with which the blood, in being rarefied, passes from
the heart towards the extremities of the arteries, causes certain of its
parts to remain in the members at which they arrive, and there occupy the
place of some others expelled by them; and that according to the situation,
shape, or smallness of the pores with which they meet, some rather than
others flow into certain parts, in the same way that some sieves are observed
to act, which, by being variously perforated, serve to separate different
species of grain? And, in the last place, what above all is here worthy
of observation, is the generation of the animal spirits, which are like a
very subtle wind, or rather a very pure and vivid flame which, continually
ascending in great abundance from the heart to the brain, thence penetrates
through the nerves into the muscles, and gives motion to all the members;
so that to account for other parts of the blood which, as most agitated and
penetrating, are the fittest to compose these spirits, proceeding towards
the brain, it is not necessary to suppose any other cause, than simply, that
the arteries which carry them thither proceed from the heart in the most
direct lines, and that, according to the rules of mechanics which are the
same with those of nature, when many objects tend at once to the same point
where there is not sufficient room for all (as is the case with the parts
of the blood which flow forth from the left cavity of the heart and tend
towards the brain), the weaker and less agitated parts must necessarily be
driven aside from that point by the stronger which alone in this way reach
it I had expounded all these matters with sufficient minuteness in the treatise
which I formerly thought of publishing. And after these, I had shown what
must be the fabric of the nerves and muscles of the human body to give the
animal spirits contained in it the power to move the members, as when we
see heads shortly after they have been struck off still move and bite the
earth, although no longer animated; what changes must take place in the brain
to produce waking, sleep, and dreams; how light, sounds, odors, tastes, heat,
and all the other qualities of external objects impress it with different
ideas by means of the senses; how hunger, thirst, and the other internal
affections can likewise impress upon it divers ideas; what must be understood
by the common sense (sensus communis) in which these ideas are received,
by the memory which retains them, by the fantasy which can change them in
various ways, and out of them compose new ideas, and which, by the same means,
distributing the animal spirits through the muscles, can cause the members
of such a body to move in as many different ways, and in a manner as suited,
whether to the objects that are presented to its senses or to its internal
affections, as can take place in our own case apart from the guidance of
the will. Nor will this appear at all strange to those who are acquainted
with the variety of movements performed by the different automata, or moving
machines fabricated by human industry, and that with help of but few pieces
compared with the great multitude of bones, muscles, nerves, arteries, veins,
and other parts that are found in the body of each animal. Such persons
will look upon this body as a machine made by the hands of God, which is
incomparably better arranged, and adequate to movements more admirable than
is any machine of human invention. And here I specially stayed to show that,
were there such machines exactly resembling organs and outward form an ape
or any other irrational animal, we could have no means of knowing that they
were in any respect of a different nature from these animals; but if there
were machines bearing the image of our bodies, and capable of imitating our
actions as far as it is morally possible, there would still remain two most
certain tests whereby to know that they were not therefore really men. Of
these the first is that they could never use words or other signs arranged
in such a manner as is competent to us in order to declare our thoughts to
others: for we may easily conceive a machine to be so constructed that it
emits vocables, and even that it emits some correspondent to the action upon
it of external objects which cause a change in its organs; for example, if
touched in a particular place it may demand what we wish to say to it; if
in another it may cry out that it is hurt, and such like; but not that it
should arrange them variously so as appositely to reply to what is said in
its presence, as men of the lowest grade of intellect can do. The second
test is, that although such machines might execute many things with equal
or perhaps greater perfection than any of us, they would, without doubt,
fail in certain others from which it could be discovered that they did not
act from knowledge, but solely from the disposition of their organs: for
while reason is an universal instrument that is alike available on every
occasion, these organs, on the contrary, need a particular arrangement for
each particular action; whence it must be morally impossible that there should
exist in any machine a diversity of organs sufficient to enable it to act
in all the occurrences of life, in the way in which our reason enables us
to act. Again, by means of these two tests we may likewise know the difference
between men and brutes. For it is highly deserving of remark, that there
are no men so dull and stupid, not even idiots, as to be incapable of joining
together different words, and thereby constructing a declaration by which
to make their thoughts understood; and that on the other hand, there is no
other animal, however perfect or happily circumstanced, which can do the
like. Nor does this inability arise from want of organs: for we observe
that magpies and parrots can utter words like ourselves, and are yet unable
to speak as we do, that is, so as to show that they understand what they
say; in place of which men born deaf and dumb, and thus not less, but rather
more than the brutes, destitute of the organs which others use in speaking,
are in the habit of spontaneously inventing certain signs by which they discover
their thoughts to those who, being usually in their company, have leisure
to learn their language. And this proves not only that the brutes have less
reason than man, but that they have none at all: for we see that very little
is required to enable a person to speak; and since a certain inequality of
capacity is observable among animals of the same species, as well as among
men, and since some are more capable of being instructed than others, it
is incredible that the most perfect ape or parrot of its species, should
not in this be equal to the most stupid infant of its kind or at least to
one that was crack-brained, unless the soul of brutes were of a nature wholly
different from ours. And we ought not to confound speech with the natural
movements which indicate the passions, and can be imitated by machines as
well as manifested by animals; nor must it be thought with certain of the
ancients, that the brutes speak, although we do not understand their language.
For if such were the case, since they are endowed with many organs analogous
to ours, they could as easily communicate their thoughts to us as to their
fellows. It is also very worthy of remark, that, though there are many animals
which manifest more industry than we in certain of their actions, the same
animals are yet observed to show none at all in many others: so that the
circumstance that they do better than we does not prove that they are endowed
with mind, for it would thence follow that they possessed greater reason
than any of us, and could surpass us in all things; on the contrary, it rather
proves that they are destitute of reason, and that it is nature which acts
in them according to the disposition of their organs: thus it is seen, that
a clock composed only of wheels and weights can number the hours and measure
time more exactly than we with all our skin.
I had after this described the reasonable soul, and shown that it could
by no means be educed from the power of matter, as the other things of which
I had spoken, but that it must be expressly created; and that it is not
sufficient that it be lodged in the human body exactly like a pilot in a
ship, unless perhaps to move its members, but that it is necessary for it
to be joined and united more closely to the body, in order to have sensations
and appetites similar to ours, and thus constitute a real man. I here entered,
in conclusion, upon the subject of the soul at considerable length, because
it is of the greatest moment: for after the error of those who deny the
existence of God, an error which I think I have already sufficiently refuted,
there is none that is more powerful in leading feeble minds astray from the
straight path of virtue than the supposition that the soul of the brutes
is of the same nature with our own; and consequently that after this life
we have nothing to hope for or fear, more than flies and ants; in place of
which, when we know how far they differ we much better comprehend the reasons
which establish that the soul is of a nature wholly independent of the body,
and that consequently it is not liable to die with the latter and, finally,
because no other causes are observed capable of destroying it, we are naturally
led thence to judge that it is immortal.
Part Six
Three years have now elapsed since I finished the treatise containing
all these matters; and I was beginning to revise it, with the view to put
it into the hands of a printer, when I learned that persons to whom I greatly
defer, and whose authority over my actions is hardly less influential than
is my own reason over my thoughts, had condemned a certain doctrine in physics,
published a short time previously by another individual to which I will not
say that I adhered, but only that, previously to their censure I had observed
in it nothing which I could imagine to be prejudicial either to religion
or to the state, and nothing therefore which would have prevented me from
giving expression to it in writing, if reason had persuaded me of its truth;
and this led me to fear lest among my own doctrines likewise some one might
be found in which I had departed from the truth, notwithstanding the great
care I have always taken not to accord belief to new opinions of which I
had not the most certain demonstrations, and not to give expression to aught
that might tend to the hurt of any one. This has been sufficient to make
me alter my purpose of publishing them; for although the reasons by which
I had been induced to take this resolution were very strong, yet my inclination,
which has always been hostile to writing books, enabled me immediately to
discover other considerations sufficient to excuse me for not undertaking
the task. And these reasons, on one side and the other, are such, that not
only is it in some measure my interest here to state them, but that of the
public, perhaps, to know them.
I have never made much account of what has proceeded from my own mind;
and so long as I gathered no other advantage from the method I employ beyond
satisfying myself on some difficulties belonging to the speculative sciences,
or endeavoring to regulate my actions according to the principles it taught
me, I never thought myself bound to publish anything respecting it. For
in what regards manners, every one is so full of his own wisdom, that there
might be found as many reformers as heads, if any were allowed to take upon
themselves the task of mending them, except those whom God has constituted
the supreme rulers of his people or to whom he has given sufficient grace
and zeal to be prophets; and although my speculations greatly pleased myself,
I believed that others had theirs, which perhaps pleased them still more.
But as soon as I had acquired some general notions respecting physics, and
beginning to make trial of them in various particular difficulties, had observed
how far they can carry us, and how much they differ from the principles that
have been employed up to the present time, I believed that I could not keep
them concealed without sinning grievously against the law by which we are
bound to promote, as far as in us lies, the general good of mankind. For
by them I perceived it to be possible to arrive at knowledge highly useful
in life; and in room of the speculative philosophy usually taught in the
schools, to discover a practical, by means of which, knowing the force and
action of fire, water, air the stars, the heavens, and all the other bodies
that surround us, as distinctly as we know the various crafts of our artisans,
we might also apply them in the same way to all the uses to which they are
adapted, and thus render ourselves the lords and possessors of nature. And
this is a result to be desired, not only in order to the invention of an
infinity of arts, by which we might be enabled to enjoy without any trouble
the fruits of the earth, and all its comforts, but also and especially for
the preservation of health, which is without doubt, of all the blessings
of this life, the first and fundamental one; for the mind is so intimately
dependent upon the condition and relation of the organs of the body, that
if any means can ever be found to render men wiser and more ingenious than
hitherto, I believe that it is in medicine they must be sought for. It is
true that the science of medicine, as it now exists, contains few things
whose utility is very remarkable: but without any wish to depreciate it,
I am confident that there is no one, even among those whose profession it
is, who does not admit that all at present known in it is almost nothing
in comparison of what remains to be discovered; and that we could free ourselves
from an infinity of maladies of body as well as of mind, and perhaps also
even from the debility of age, if we had sufficiently ample knowledge of
their causes, and of all the remedies provided for us by nature. But since
I designed to employ my whole life in the search after so necessary a science,
and since I had fallen in with a path which seems to me such, that if any
one follow it he must inevitably reach the end desired, unless he be hindered
either by the shortness of life or the want of experiments, I judged that
there could be no more effectual provision against these two impediments
than if I were faithfully to communicate to the public all the little I might
myself have found, and incite men of superior genius to strive to proceed
farther, by contributing, each according to his inclination and ability,
to the experiments which it would be necessary to make, and also by informing
the public of all they might discover, so that, by the last beginning where
those before them had left off, and thus connecting the lives and labours
of many, we might collectively proceed much farther than each by himself
could do.
I remarked, moreover, with respect to experiments, that they become always
more necessary the more one is advanced in knowledge; for, at the commencement,
it is better to make use only of what is spontaneously presented to our senses,
and of which we cannot remain ignorant, provided we bestow on it any reflection,
however slight, than to concern ourselves about more uncommon and recondite
phenomena: the reason of which is, that the more uncommon often only mislead
us so long as the causes of the more ordinary are still unknown; and the
circumstances upon which they depend are almost always so special and minute
as to be highly difficult to detect. But in this I have adopted the following
order: first, I have essayed to find in general the principles, or first
causes of all that is or can be in the world, without taking into consideration
for this end anything but God himself who has created it, and without educing
them from any other source than from certain germs of truths naturally existing
in our minds In the second place, I examined what were the first and most
ordinary effects that could be deduced from these causes; and it appears
to me that, in this way, I have found heavens, stars, an earth, and even
on the earth water, air, fire, minerals, and some other things of this kind,
which of all others are the most common and simple, and hence the easiest
to know. Afterwards when I wished to descend to the more particular, so
many diverse objects presented themselves to me, that I believed it to be
impossible for the human mind to distinguish the forms or species of bodies
that are upon the earth, from an infinity of others which might have been,
if it had pleased God to place them there, or consequently to apply them
to our use, unless we rise to causes through their effects, and avail ourselves
of many particular experiments. Thereupon, turning over in my mind I the
objects that had ever been presented to my senses I freely venture to state
that I have never observed any which I could not satisfactorily explain by
the principles had discovered. But it is necessary also to confess that
the power of nature is so ample and vast, and these principles so simple
and general, that I have hardly observed a single particular effect which
I cannot at once recognize as capable of being deduced in man different modes
from the principles, and that my greatest difficulty usually is to discover
in which of these modes the effect is dependent upon them; for out of this
difficulty cannot otherwise extricate myself than by again seeking certain
experiments, which may be such that their result is not the same, if it is
in the one of these modes at we must explain it, as it would be if it were
to be explained in the other. As to what remains, I am now in a position
to discern, as I think, with sufficient clearness what course must be taken
to make the majority those experiments which may conduce to this end: but
I perceive likewise that they are such and so numerous, that neither my hands
nor my income, though it were a thousand times larger than it is, would be
sufficient for them all; so that according as henceforward I shall have the
means of making more or fewer experiments, I shall in the same proportion
make greater or less progress in the knowledge of nature. This was what I
had hoped to make known by the treatise I had written, and so clearly to
exhibit the advantage that would thence accrue to the public, as to induce
all who have the common good of man at heart, that is, all who are virtuous
in truth, and not merely in appearance, or according to opinion, as well
to communicate to me the experiments they had already made, as to assist
me in those that remain to be made.
But since that time other reasons have occurred to me, by which I have
been led to change my opinion, and to think that I ought indeed to go on
committing to writing all the results which I deemed of any moment, as soon
as I should have tested their truth, and to bestow the same care upon them
as I would have done had it been my design to publish them. This course
commended itself to me, as well because I thus afforded myself more ample
inducement to examine them thoroughly, for doubtless that is always more
narrowly scrutinized which we believe will be read by many, than that which
is written merely for our private use (and frequently what has seemed to
me true when I first conceived it, has appeared false when I have set about
committing it to writing), as because I thus lost no opportunity of advancing
the interests of the public, as far as in me lay, and since thus likewise,
if my writings possess any value, those into whose hands they may fall after
my death may be able to put them to what use they deem proper. But I resolved
by no means to consent to their publication during my lifetime, lest either
the oppositions or the controversies to which they might give rise, or even
the reputation, such as it might be, which they would acquire for me, should
be any occasion of my losing the time that I had set apart for my own
improvement. For though it be true that every one is bound to promote to
the extent of his ability the good of others, and that to be useful to no
one is really to be worthless, yet it is likewise true that our cares ought
to extend beyond the present, and it is good to omit doing what might perhaps
bring some profit to the living, when we have in view the accomplishment
of other ends that will be of much greater advantage to posterity. And in
truth, I am quite willing it should be known that the little I have hitherto
learned is almost nothing in comparison with that of which I am ignorant,
and to the knowledge of which I do not despair of being able to attain; for
it is much the same with those who gradually discover truth in the sciences,
as with those who when growing rich find less difficulty in making great
acquisitions, than they formerly experienced when poor in making acquisitions
of much smaller amount. Or they may be compared to the commanders of armies,
whose forces usually increase in proportion to their victories, and who need
greater prudence to keep together the residue of their troops after a defeat
than after a victory to take towns and provinces. For he truly engages in
battle who endeavors to surmount all the difficulties and errors which prevent
him from reaching the knowledge of truth, and he is overcome in fight who
admits a false opinion touching a matter of any generality and importance,
and he requires thereafter much more skill to recover his former position
than to make great advances when once in possession of thoroughly ascertained
principles. As for myself, if I have succeeded in discovering any truths
in the sciences (and I trust that what is contained in this volume 1 will
show that I have found some), I can declare that they are but the consequences
and results of five or six principal difficulties which I have surmounted,
and my encounters with which I reckoned as battles in which victory declared
for me. I will not hesitate even to avow my belief that nothing further
is wanting to enable me fully to realize my designs than to gain two or three
similar victories; and that I am not so far advanced in years but that, according
to the ordinary course of nature, I may still have sufficient leisure for
this end. But I conceive myself the more bound to husband the time that
remains the greater my expectation of being able to employ it aright, and
I should doubtless have much to rob me of it, were I to publish the principles
of my physics: for although they are almost all so evident that to assent
to them no more is needed than simply to understand them, and although there
is not one of them of which I do not expect to be able to give demonstration,
yet, as it is impossible that they can be in accordance with all the diverse
opinions of others, I foresee that I should frequently be turned aside from
my grand design, on occasion of the opposition which they would be sure to
awaken.
It may be said, that these oppositions would be useful both in making
me aware of my errors, and, if my speculations contain anything of value,
in bringing others to a fuller understanding of it; and still farther, as
many can see better than one, in leading others who are now beginning to
avail themselves of my principles, to assist me in turn with their discoveries.
But though I recognize my extreme liability to error, and scarce ever trust
to the first thoughts which occur to me, yet-the experience I have had of
possible objections to my views prevents me from anticipating any profit
from them. For I have already had frequent proof of the judgments, as well
of those I esteemed friends, as of some others to whom I thought I was an
object of indifference, and even of some whose malignancy and envy would,
I knew, determine them to endeavor to discover what partiality concealed
from the eyes of my friends. But it has rarely happened that anything has
been objected to me which I had myself altogether overlooked, unless it were
something far removed from the subject: so that I have never met with a
single critic of my opinions who did not appear to me either less rigorous
or less equitable than myself. And further, I have never observed that any
truth before unknown has been brought to light by the disputations that are
practised in the schools; for while each strives for the victory, each is
much more occupied in making the best of mere verisimilitude, than in weighing
the reasons on both sides of the question; and those who have been long good
advocates are not afterwards on that account the better judges.
As for the advantage that others would derive from the communication of
my thoughts, it could not be very great; because I have not yet so far prosecuted
them as that much does not remain to be added before they can be applied
to practice. And I think I may say without vanity, that if there is any
one who can carry them out that length, it must be myself rather than another:
not that there may not be in the world many minds incomparably superior
to mine, but because one cannot so well seize a thing and make it one's own,
when it has been learned from another, as when one has himself discovered
it. And so true is this of the present subject that, though I have often
explained some of my opinions to persons of much acuteness, who, whilst I
was speaking, appeared to understand them very distinctly, yet, when they
repeated them, I have observed that they almost always changed them to such
an extent that I could no longer acknowledge them as mine. I am glad, by
the way, to take this opportunity of requesting posterity never to believe
on hearsay that anything has proceeded from me which has not been published
by myself; and I am not at all astonished at the extravagances attributed
to those ancient philosophers whose own writings we do not possess; whose
thoughts, however, I do not on that account suppose to have been really absurd,
seeing they were among the ablest men of their times, but only that these
have been falsely represented to us. It is observable, accordingly, that
scarcely in a single instance has any one of their disciples surpassed them;
and I am quite sure that the most devoted of the present followers of Aristotle
would think themselves happy if they had as much knowledge of nature as he
possessed, were it even under the condition that they should never afterwards
attain to higher. In this respect they are like the ivy which never strives
to rise above the tree that sustains it, and which frequently even returns
downwards when it has reached the top; for it seems to me that they also
sink, in other words, render themselves less wise than they would be if they
gave up study, who, not contented with knowing all that is intelligibly explained
in their author, desire in addition to find in him the solution of many
difficulties of which he says not a word, and never perhaps so much as thought.
Their fashion of philosophizing, however, is well suited to persons whose
abilities fall below mediocrity; for the obscurity of the distinctions and
principles of which they make use enables them to speak of all things with
as much confidence as if they really knew them, and to defend all that they
say on any subject against the most subtle and skillful, without its being
possible for any one to convict them of error. In this they seem to me to
be like a blind man, who, in order to fight on equal terms with a person
that sees, should have made him descend to the bottom of an intensely dark
cave: and I may say that such persons have an interest in my refraining
from publishing the principles of the philosophy of which I make use; for,
since these are of a kind the simplest and most evident, I should, by publishing
them, do much the same as if I were to throw open the windows, and allow
the light of day to enter the cave into which the combatants had descended.
But even superior men have no reason for any great anxiety to know these
principles, for if what they desire is to be able to speak of all things,
and to acquire a reputation for learning, they will gain their end more easily
by remaining satisfied with the appearance of truth, which can be found without
much difficulty in all sorts of matters, than by seeking the truth itself
which unfolds itself but slowly and that only in some departments, while
it obliges us, when we have to speak of others, freely to confess our ignorance.
If, however, they prefer the knowledge of some few truths to the vanity
of appearing ignorant of none, as such knowledge is undoubtedly much to be
preferred, and, if they choose to follow a course similar to mine, they do
not require for this that I should say anything more than I have already
said in this discourse. For if they are capable of making greater advancement
than I have made, they will much more be able of themselves to discover all
that I believe myself to have found; since as I have never examined aught
except in order, it is certain that what yet remains to be discovered is
in itself more difficult and recondite, than that which I have already been
enabled to find, and the gratification would be much less in learning it
from me than in discovering it for themselves. Besides this, the habit which
they will acquire, by seeking first what is easy, and then passing onward
slowly and step by step to the more difficult, will benefit them more than
all my instructions. Thus, in my own case, I am persuaded that if I had
been taught from my youth all the truths of which I have since sought out
demonstrations, and had thus learned them without labour, I should never,
perhaps, have known any beyond these; at least, I should never have acquired
the habit and the facility which I think I possess in always discovering
new truths in proportion as I give myself to the search. And, in a single
word, if there is any work in the world which cannot be so well finished
by another as by him who has commenced it, it is that at which I labour.
It is true, indeed, as regards the experiments which may conduce to this
end, that one man is not equal to the task of making them all; but yet he
can advantageously avail himself, in this work, of no hands besides his own,
unless those of artisans, or parties of the same kind, whom he could pay,
and whom the hope of gain (a means of great efficacy) might stimulate to
accuracy in the performance of what was prescribed to them. For as to those
who, through curiosity or a desire of learning, of their own accord, perhaps,
offer him their services, besides that in general their promises exceed their
performance, and that they sketch out fine designs of which not one is ever
realized, they will, without doubt, expect to be compensated for their trouble
by the explication of some difficulties, or, at least, by compliments and
useless speeches, in which he cannot spend any portion of his time without
loss to himself. And as for the experiments that others have already made,
even although these parties should be willing of themselves to communicate
them to him (which is what those who esteem them secrets will never do),
the experiments are, for the most part, accompanied with so many circumstances
and superfluous elements, as to make it exceedingly difficult to disentangle
the truth from its adjuncts- besides, he will find almost all of them so
ill described, or even so false (because those who made them have wished
to see in them only such facts as they deemed conformable to their principles),
that, if in the entire number there should be some of a nature suited to
his purpose, still their value could not compensate for the time what would
be necessary to make the selection. So that if there existed any one whom
we assuredly knew to be capable of making discoveries of the highest kind,
and of the greatest possible utility to the public; and if all other men
were therefore eager by all means to assist him in successfully prosecuting
his designs, I do not see that they could do aught else for him beyond
contributing to defray the expenses of the experiments that might be necessary;
and for the rest, prevent his being deprived of his leisure by the unseasonable
interruptions of any one. But besides that I neither have so high an opinion
of myself as to be willing to make promise of anything extraordinary, nor
feed on imaginations so vain as to fancy that the public must be much interested
in my designs; I do not, on the other hand, own a soul so mean as to be capable
of accepting from any one a favor of which it could be supposed that I was
unworthy.
These considerations taken together were the reason why, for the last
three years, I have been unwilling to publish the treatise I had on hand,
and why I even resolved to give publicity during my life to no other that
was so general, or by which the principles of my physics might be understood.
But since then, two other reasons have come into operation that have determined
me here to subjoin some particular specimens, and give the public some account
of my doings and designs. Of these considerations, the first is, that if
I failed to do so, many who were cognizant of my previous intention to publish
some writings, might have imagined that the reasons which induced me to refrain
from so doing, were less to my credit than they really are; for although
I am not immoderately desirous of glory, or even, if I may venture so to
say, although I am averse from it in so far as I deem it hostile to repose
which I hold in greater account than aught else, yet, at the same time, I
have never sought to conceal my actions as if they were crimes, nor made
use of many precautions that I might remain unknown; and this partly because
I should have thought such a course of conduct a wrong against myself, and
partly because it would have occasioned me some sort of uneasiness which
would again have been contrary to the perfect mental tranquillity which I
court. And forasmuch as, while thus indifferent to the thought alike of fame
or of forgetfulness, I have yet been unable to prevent myself from acquiring
some sort of reputation, I have thought it incumbent on me to do my best
to save myself at least from being ill-spoken of. The other reason that
has determined me to commit to writing these specimens of philosophy is,
that I am becoming daily more and more alive to the delay which my design
of self-instruction suffers, for want of the infinity of experiments I require,
and which it is impossible for me to make without the assistance of others:
and, without flattering myself so much as to expect the public to take a
large share in my interests, I am yet unwilling to be found so far wanting
in the duty I owe to myself, as to give occasion to those who shall survive
me to make it matter of reproach against me some day, that I might have left
them many things in a much more perfect state than I have done, had I not
too much neglected to make them aware of the ways in which they could have
promoted the accomplishment of my designs.
And I thought that it was easy for me to select some matters which should
neither be obnoxious to much controversy, nor should compel me to expound
more of my principles than I desired, and which should yet be sufficient
clearly to exhibit what I can or cannot accomplish in the sciences. Whether
or not I have succeeded in this it is not for me to say; and I do not wish
to forestall the judgments of others by speaking myself of my writings; but
it will gratify me if they be examined, and, to afford the greater inducement
to this I request all who may have any objections to make to them, to take
the trouble of forwarding these to my publisher, who will give me notice
of them, that I may endeavor to subjoin at the same time my reply; and in
this way readers seeing both at once will more easily determine where the
truth lies; for I do not engage in any case to make prolix replies, but only
with perfect frankness to avow my errors if I am convinced of them, or if
I cannot perceive them, simply to state what I think is required for defense
of the matters I have written