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Anselm of Canterbury
The father of medieval scholasticism and one of the most eminent of English prelates was born at Aost Piedmont in 1033. Anselm died at Canterbury, England on April 21, 1109. While a boy he wished to be a monk, but his father forbade it. When he was about twenty-three Anselm left home to live in Burgundy and France. After three years he went to Bec in Normandy where his celebrated countryman, Lanfranc, was prior. Here he became a monk (1060). He succeeded Lanfranc as prior in 1063, and became abbot in 1078. The abbey had possessions in England, which called Anselm frequently to that country. He was the general choice for archbishop of Canterbury when Lanfranc died (1089). However, the king, William Rufus, preferred to keep the office vacant, and apply its revenues to his own use. In 1093 William fell ill and, literally forced Anselm to receive an appointment at his hands. He was consecrated December 4 of that year. The next four years witnessed a continual struggle between king and archbishop over money matters, rights, and privileges. Anselm wished to carry his case to Rome, and in 1097, with much difficulty, obtained permission from the king to go. At Rome he was honored and flattered, but he obtained little practical help in his struggle with the king. He returned to England as soon is he heard of the death of William in 1100. But a difficulty arose over lay investiture and homage from clerics for their benefices. Thought a mild and meek man, Anselm had adopted the Gregorian views of the relation between Church and State, and adhered to them with the steadiness of conscientious conviction. The king, though inclined to be conciliatory, was equally firm from motives of self-interest. He had a high regard for Anselm, always treated him with much consideration, and personal relations between them were generally friendly. Nevertheless there was much vexatious disputing, several fruitless embassies were sent to Rome, and Anselm himself went thither in 1103, remaining abroad till 1106. His quarrel with the king was settled by compromise in 1107 and the brief remaining period of his life was peaceful. He was canonized in 1494 PROSLOGION Chapter 1:
Encouraging the Mind to Contemplate God Come
on now little man, get away from your worldly
occupations for a while, escape from your
tumultuous thoughts. Lay aside your burdensome
cares and put off your laborious exertions.
Give yourself over to God for a little while,
and rest for a while in Him. Enter into the
cell of your mind, shut out everything except
God and whatever helps you to seek Him once
the door is shut. Speak now, my heart, and
say to God, "I seek your face; your
face, Lord, I seek." Come on then, my
Lord God, teach my heart where and how to
seek you, where and how to find you. Lord,
if you are not here, where shall I find you?
If, however, you are everywhere, why do I
not see you here? But certainly you dwell
in inaccessible light. And where is that
inaccessible light? Or how do I reach it?
Or who will lead me to it and into it, so
that I can see you in it? And then by what
signs, under what face shall I seek you?
I have never seen you, my Lord God, or known
your face. What shall I do, Highest Lord,
what shall this exile do, banished far from
you as he is? What should your servant do,
desperate as he is for your love yet cast
away from your face? He longs to see you,
and yet your face is too far away from him.
He wants to come to you, and yet your dwelling
place is unreachable. He yearns to discover
you, and he does not know where you are.
He craves to seek you, and does not know
how to recognize you. Lord, you are my Lord
and my God, and I have never seen you. You
have made me and nurtured me, given me every
good thing I have ever received, and I still
do not know you. I was created for the purpose
of seeing you, and I still have not done
the thing I was made to do.
Oh, how miserable man's lot is when he has
lost what he was made for! Oh how hard and
dire was that downfall! Alas, what did he
lose and what did he find? What was taken
away and what remains? He has lost beatitude
for which he was made, and he has found misery
for which he was not made. That without which
he cannot be happy has been taken away, and
that remains which in itself can only make
him miserable. Back then man ate the bread
of angels for which he now hungers, and now
he eats the bread of griefs which he did
not even know back then. Alas for the common
grief of man, the universal lamentation of
Adam's sons! He belched in his satiety, while
we sigh in our want. He was rich, we are
beggars. He happily possessed and miserably
abandoned, we unhappily lack and miserably
desire, yet alas, we remain empty. Why, since
it would have been easy for him, did he not
keep what we so disastrously lack? Why did
he deprive us of light, and cover us with
darkness instead? Why did he take life away
from us and inflict death instead? From what
have we poor wretches been expelled, and
toward what are we being driven? From what
have we been cast down, in what buried? From
our fatherland into exile, from the vision
of God into blindness. From the happiness
of immortality into the bitterness and horror
of death. What a miserable transformation!
From so much good into so much evil! A heavy
injury, a heavy, heavy grief.
I have come to you as a poor man to a rich
one, as a poor rich to a merciful giver.
May I not return empty and rejected! And
if "I sigh before I eat" (Job 3:4),
once I have sighed give me something to eat.
Lord, turned in (incurvatus) as I am I can
only look down, so raise me up so that I
can look up. "My iniquities heaped on
my head" cover me over and weigh me
down "like a heavy load" (Ps. 37:5).
Dig me out and set me free before "the
pit" created by them "shuts its
jaws over me" (Ps. 67:16).Let me see
your light, even if I see it from afar or
from the depths. Teach me to seek you, and
reveal yourself to this seeker. For I cannot
seek you unless you teach me how, nor can
I find you unless you show yourself to me.
Let me seek you in desiring you, and desire
you in seeking you. Let me find you in loving
you and love you in finding you.
I acknowledge, Lord, and I give thanks that
you have created in me this your image, so
that I can remember you, think about you
and love you. But it is so worn away by sins,
so smudged over by the smoke of sins, that
it cannot do what it was created to do unless
you renew and reform it. I do not even try,
Lord, to rise up to your heights, because
my intellect does not measure up to that
task; but I do want to understand in some
small measure your truth, which my heart
believes in and loved. Nor do I seek to understand
so that I can believe, but rather I believe
so that I can understand. For I believe this
too, that "unless I believe I shall
not understand" (Isa. 7:9).
Chapter 2: That God Really Exists Therefore,
Lord, you who give knowledge of the faith,
give me as much knowledge as you know to
be fitting for me, because you are as we
believe and that which we believe. And indeed
we believe you are something greater than
which cannot be thought. Or is there no such
kind of thing, for "the fool said in
his heart, 'there is no God'" (Ps. 13:1, 52:1)? But certainly that same
fool, having heard what I just said, "something
greater than which cannot be thought,"
understands what he heard, and what he understands
is in his thought, even if he does not think
it exists. For it is one thing for something
to exist in a person's thought and quite
another for the person to think that thing
exists. For when a painter thinks ahead to
what he will paint, he has that picture in
his thought, but he does not yet think it
exists, because he has not done it yet. Once
he has painted it he has it in his thought
and thinks it exists because he has done
it. Thus even the fool is compelled to grant
that something greater than which cannot
be thought exists in thought, because he
understands what he hears, and whatever is
understood exists in thought. And certainly
that greater than which cannot be understood
cannot exist only in thought, for if it exists
only in thought it could also be thought
of as existing in reality as well, which
is greater. If, therefore, that than which
greater cannot be thought exists in thought
alone, then that than which greater cannot
be thought turns out to be that than which
something greater actually can be thought,
but that is obviously impossible. Therefore
something than which greater cannot be thought
undoubtedly exists both in thought and in
reality.
Chapter 3: That God Cannot be Thought Not
to Exist In fact, it so undoubtedly exists
that it cannot be thought of as not existing.
For one can think there exists something
that cannot be thought of as not existing,
and that would be greater than something
which can be thought of as not existing.
For if that greater than which cannot be
thought can be thought of as not existing,
then that greater than which cannot be thought
is not that greater than which cannot be
thought, which does not make sense. Thus
that than which nothing can be thought so
undoubtedly exists that it cannot even be
thought of as not existing. And you, Lord
God, are this being. You exist so undoubtedly,
my Lord God, that you cannot even be thought
of as not existing. And deservedly, for if
some mind could think of something greater
than you, that creature would rise above
the creator and could pass judgment on the
creator, which is absurd. And indeed whatever
exists except you alone can be thought of
as not existing. You alone of all things
most truly exists and thus enjoy existence
to the fullest degree of all things, because
nothing else exists so undoubtedly, and thus
everything else enjoys being in a lesser
degree. Why therefore did the fool say in
his heart "there is no God," since
it is so evident to any rational mind that
you above all things exist? Why indeed, except
precisely because he is stupid and foolish?
Chapter 4: How the Fool Managed to Say in
His Heart That Which Cannot be Thought How
in the world could he have said in his heart
what he could not think? Or how indeed could
he not have thought what he said in his heart,
since saying it in his heart is the same
as thinking it? But if he really thought
it because he said it in his heart, and did
not say it in his heart because he could
not possibly have thought it - and that seems
to be precisely what happened - then there
must be more than one way in which something
can be said in one's heart or thought. For
a thing is thought in one way when the words
signifying it are thought, and it is thought
in quite another way when the thing signified
is understood. God can be thought not to
exist in the first way but not in the second.
For no one who understands what God is can
think that he does not exist. Even though
he may say those words in his heart he will
give them some other meaning or no meaning
at all. For God is that greater than which
cannot be thought. Whoever understands this
also understands that God exists in such
a way that one cannot even think of him as
not existing. Thank you, my good God, thank
you, because what I believed earlier through
your gift I now understand through your illumination
in such a way that I would be unable not
to understand it even if I did not want to
believe you existed.
Anselm now proceeds to deduce God's nature
from the same basic definition of him as
something greater than which cannot be thought..
He arrives as all the standard attributes:
creative, rational, omnipotent, merciful,
unchangeable, just, eternal, etc. It is,
in effect, a theological tour de force.
Anselm's thoughts did not go unchallenged,
however. His first major critic was Gaunilo,
a monk in the abbey of Marmoutier. Gaunilo's
reply is the only bit of writing we possess
by him, which is a shame, because in it we
encounter a very perceptive mind, although
a radically different one than Anselm's.
GAUNILO: HOW SOMEONE WRITING ON BEHALF OF
THE FOOL MIGHT REPLY TO ALL THIS
Thus the example of the painter who already
has in his mind the picture he is about to
produce cannot be made to support this argument.
For that picture, before it comes into being,
exists in the art of the painter, and such
a thing existing in the art of some painter
is nothing other than a certain part of his
understanding; for as Saint Augustine says,
"If a craftsman is going to make a box,
he first has it in his art. The box he actually
produces is not life, but that in his art
is life, because the artisan's soul, in which
all such things exist before they are brought
forth, is alive. And how are these things
alive in the living soul of the artisan unless
because are nothing other than the knowledge
or understanding of the soul itself? But
leaving aside those things which are known
to belong to the nature of the mind itself,
in the case of those things which are perceived
as true by the mind through hearing or thought,
in this case there is a difference between
the thing itself and the mind which grasps
it. Thus even if it should be true that there
is something greater than which cannot be
thought, this thing, whether heard or understood,
would not be like the as-yet-unmade picture
in the painter's mind.
Moreover, there is the point already suggested
earlier, namely that when hear of something
greater than all other things which can be
thought of - and that something can be nothing
other than God himself - I can no more entertain
a thought of this being in terms of species
or genera familiar to me than I can entertain
such a thought of God himself, and for this
reason I am able to think he does not exist.
For I have not known the thing itself and
I cannot form a similitude of it from other
things. For if I hear about some man completely
unknown to me, whom I do not even know exists,
I could at least think about him through
that specific and generic knowledge by which
I know what a man is or what men are like
Yet it could be true that, because the speaker
was lying, the man I thought about actually
did not exist at all, even though I had thought
of him as an existing thing, my idea of him
being based, not on knowledge of this particular
man, but on knowledge of man in general.
But when I hear someone say "God"
or "something greater than everything
else" I cannot think of it as I thought
of that nonexistent man, for I was able to
think of the latter in terms of some truly
existing thing known to me, while in the
former case I can think only of the bare
words, and on this basis alone one can seldom
or never gain any true knowledge. For when
one thinks in this way, one thinks not so
much of the word itself - which, insofar
as it is the sound of letters or syllables
is itself a real thing, but of what is signified
by the sound heard. But a phrase like "that
which is greater than everything else"
is not thought of as one thinks about words
when one knows what they mean. It is not
thought of, that is, as one thinks about
something he knows is true either in reality
or in thought alone. It is thought of, instead,
as one does when he does not really know
what the words mean, but thinks of it only
in terms of an affection produced by the
words within his soul, yet tries to imagine
what the words mean. On this basis, though,
it would be amazing if he was ever able to
penetrate to the truth of the thing. It is
in this way and only in this way that this
being is in my mind when I hear and understand
someone saying there is something greater
than everything else that can be thought
of. So much for the claim that the supreme
nature already exists in my mind.
Nevertheless, that this being must exist
not only in my mind but in reality as well
is proved to me by the following argument:
If it did not, then whatever did exist in
reality would be greater, and thus the thing
which has already been proved to exist in
my mind will not be greater than everything
else. If it is said that this being, which
cannot be conceived of in terms of any existing
thing, exists in the mind, I do not deny
that it exists in mine. But through this
alone it can hardly be said to attain existence
in reality. I will not concede that much
to it unless convinced by some indubitable
argument. For whoever says that it must exist
because otherwise that which is greater than
all other beings will not be greater than
all other beings, that person isn't paying
careful enough attention to what he says.
For I do not yet grant, in fact I deny it
or at least question it, that the thing existing
in my mind is greater than any real thing.
Nor do I concede that it exists in any way
except this: the sort of existence (if you
can call it such) a thing has when the mind
attempts to form some image of a thing unknown
to it on the basis of nothing more than some
words the person has heard. How then is it
demonstrated to me that the thing exists
in reality merely because it is said to be
greater than everything else? For I continue
to deny and doubt that this is established,
since I continue to question whether this
greater thing is in my mind or thought even
in the way that many doubtful or unreal things
are. It would first have to be proved to
me that this greater thing really exists
somewhere. Only then will we be able to infer
from the fact that is greater than everything
else that it also subsists in itself.
For example, they say there is in the ocean
somewhere an island which, due to the difficulty
(or rather the impossibility) of finding
what does not actually exist, is called "the
lost island." And they say that this
island has all manner of riches and delights,
even more of them than the Isles of the Blest,
and having no owner or inhabitant it is superior
in the abundance of its riches to all other
lands which are inhabited by men. If someone
should tell me that such is the case, I will
find it easy to understand what he says,
since there is nothing difficult about it.
But suppose he then adds, as if he were stating
a logical consequence, "Well then, you
can no longer doubt that this island more
excellent than all other lands really exists
somewhere, since you do not doubt that it
is in your mind; and since it is more excellent
to exist not only in the mind but in reality
as well, this island must necessarily exist,
because if it didn't, any other island really
existing would be more excellent than it,
and thus that island now thought of by you
as more excellent will not be such."
If, I say, someone tries to convince me though
this argument that the island really exists
and there should be no more doubt about it,
I will either think he is joking or I will
have a hard time deciding who is the bigger
fool, me if I believe him or him if he thinks
he has proved its existence without having
first convinced me that this excellence is
something undoubtedly existing in reality
and not just something false or uncertain
existing in my mind.
In the meantime, this is how the fool answers.
If it is asserted in the first place that
this being is so great that its nonbeing
is logically inconceivable (this in turn
being proved by nothing except that otherwise
it would not be greater than all other beings),
then the fool can answer, "When did
I say that such a being, namely one greater
than all others, actually exists, thus allowing
you to proceed from there to argue that it
so really exists that its very nonexistence
is inconceivable?" It should first be
proved conclusively that some being superior
to (that is, greater and better than) all
others exists, so that on this basis we can
go on to prove the attributes such a greater
and better being must possess. When, however,
it is said that this highest being cannot
be thought of as not existing, perhaps it
would have been better to say that its nonbeing
or the possibility of its nonbeing is unintelligible.
For strictly speaking false things are unintelligible
even though they can be thought of in the
same way the fool thought God did not exist.
I am absolutely certain that I exist, although
I nevertheless know that my nonexistence
is possible. And I understand without doubting
it that the highest thing there is, namely
God, exists and cannot not exist. I do not
know, however, whether I can think of myself
as nonexistant when I know for certain that
I exist. If it turns out that I can do so
in this case, why should I not be able to
do the same concerning other things I know
with equal certainty? If I cannot, though,
the impossibility of doing so will not be
something peculiar to thinking about God.
The other parts of that book are argued with
such veracity, brilliance and splendor, and
filled with such value, such an intimate
fragrance of devout and holy feeling, that
they should in no way be condemned because
of those things which, at the beginning"it
also prove that he exists are rightly intuited
but less firmly argued. Rather those things
should be argued more robustly and the entire
work thus received with great respect and
praise.
ANSELM'S REPLY TO GAUNILO
Moreover, you imagine that although "a
being greater than which cannot be thought
of" is understood, it does not follow
that it exists in our understanding nor does
it follow that, since it is in our understanding,
it must exist in reality. I myself say with
certainty that if such a being can even be
thought of as existing, it must necessarily
exist. For "a being greater than which
cannot be thought of" cannot be thought
of except as having no beginning; but whatever
can be thought of as existing yet does not
actually exist can be thought of as having
a beginning. Therefore "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of" cannot
be thought of yet not actually exist. Therefore,
if it can be thought of, it necessarily exists.
Furthermore, if it can be thought of at all,
it must necessarily exist. For no one who
denies or doubts the existence of "a
being greater than which cannot be thought
of" denies or doubts that, if it did
exist, it would be impossible for it not
to exist either in reality or in the mind.
Otherwise it would not be "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of." But
whatever can be thought of yet does not actually
exist, could, if it did come to exist, not
existence again in reality and in the mind.
That is why, if it can even be thought of,
"a being greater than which cannot be
thought of" cannot be nonexistent.
But let us suppose that it does not exist
(if it is even possible to suppose as much).
Whatever can be thought of yet does not exist,
even if it should come into existence, would
not be "a being greater than which cannot
be thought of." Thus "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of" would
not be "a being greater than which cannot
be thought of," which is absurd. Thus
if "a being greater than which cannot
be thought of" can even be thought of,
it is false to say that it does not exist;
and it is even more false if such can be
understood and exist in the understanding.
I will go even farther. Without doubt whatever
does not exist somewhere or at some time,
even if it does exist somewhere or at some
time, can be thought of as capable of as
existing never and nowhere, just as it does
not exist somewhere or at some time. For
what did not exist yesterday and exists today
can be thought of as never existing, just
as it is thought of as not having existed
yesterday. And what does not exist here but
does exist somewhere else can be thought
of as not existing anywhere. And it is the
same with something some parts of which are
absent at times. If that is the case, then
all of its parts and thus the thing in its
entirety can be thought of as existing never
and nowhere. For if it is said that time
always exists and the world is everywhere,
it is nevertheless true that time as a whole
does not exist forever, nor does the entire
world exist everywhere. And if individual
parts of time exist when other parts do not,
they can be thought of as never existing
at all. And just as particular parts of the
world do not exist where other parts do,
so they can be thought of as never existing
at all, anywhere. And what is composed of
parts can be broken up in the mind and be
nonexistent. Thus whatever does not exist
as a whole sometime or somewhere can be thought
of as not existing, even if it actually exists
at the moment. But "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of," if
it exists, cannot be thought of as not existing.
Otherwise it is not "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of," which
is absurd. Thus it cannot fail to exist in
its totality always and everywhere.
Do you not believe that the being of which
these things are understood can be thought
about or understood or be in the thought
or understanding to some extent? For if he
is not, then we cannot understand these things
about him. If you say that he is not understood
or in the understanding because he is not
fully understood, say as well that one who
cannot look directly at the sun does not
see the light of day, which is nothing other
than the light of the sun. Certainly "a
being greater than which cannot be thought
of" is understood and exists in the
understanding at least to the extent that
these statements about it are understood.
Anselm continues as some length, but much
of what he says seems repetitive. He does
eventually note one important difference
in the way he and Gaunilo have been phrasing
the matter..
You often picture me as offering this argument:
Because what is greater than all other things
exists in the understanding, it must also
exist in reality or else the being which
is greater than all others would not be such.
Never in my entire treatise do I say this.
For there is a big difference between saying
"greater than all other things"
and "a being greater than which cannot
be thought of." If someone says "a
being greater than which cannot be thought
of" is not something actually existing
or is something which could possibly not
exist or something which cannot even be understood,
such assertions are easily refuted. For what
does not exist is capable of not existing,
and what is capable of not existing can be
thought of as not existing. But whatever
can be thought of as not existing, if it
does actually exist, is not "a being
greater than which cannot be thought of."
Anselm goes on to present his standard argument
that the nonexistence of such a being is
inconceivable. Then he adds a key observation. Translation by David Burr [olivi@mail.vt.edu]. See his home page. He indicated that the translations are available for educational use. He intends to expand the number of translations, so keep a note of his home page. Paul Halsall Jan 1996 halsall@murray.fordham.edu |
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