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MEDITATIONS FULL TEXT
Rene Descartes
GENTLEMEN,
1. The motive which impels me to present
this Treatise to you is so reasonable, and
when you shall learn its design, I am confident
that you also will consider that there is
ground so valid for your taking it under
your protection, that I can in no way better
recommend it to you than by briefly stating
the end which I proposed to myself in it
2. I have always been of the opinion that
the two questions respecting God and the
Soul were the chief of those that ought to
be determined by help of Philosophy rather
than of Theology; for although to us, the
faithful, it be sufficient to hold as matters
of faith, that the human soul does not perish
with the body, and that God exists, it yet
assuredly seems impossible ever to persuade
infidels of the reality of any religion,
or almost even any moral virtue, unless,
first of all, those two things be proved
to them by natural reason. And since in this
life there are frequently greater rewards
held out to vice than to virtue, few would
prefer the right to the useful, if they were
restrained neither by the fear of God nor
the expectation of another life; and although
it is quite true that the existence of God
is to be believed since it is taught in the
sacred Scriptures, and that, on the other
hand, the sacred Scriptures are to be believed
because they come from God (for since faith
is a gift of God, the same Being who bestows
grace to enable us to believe other things,
can likewise impart of it to enable us to
believe his own existence), nevertheless,
this cannot be submitted to infidels, who
would consider that the reasoning proceeded
in a circle. And, indeed, I have observed
that you, with all the other theologians,
not only affirmed the sufficiency of natural
reason for the proof of the existence of
God, but also, that it may be inferred from
sacred Scripture, that the knowledge of God
is much clearer than of many created things,
and that it is really so easy of acquisition
as to leave those who do not possess it blameworthy.
This is manifest from these words of the
Book of Wisdom, chap. xiii., where it is
said, Howbeit they are not to be excused;
for if their understanding was so great that
they could discern the world and the creatures,
why did they not rather find out the Lord
thereof? And in Romans, chap. i., it is said
that they are without excuse; and again,
in the same place, by these words, That which
may be known of God is manifest in them--we
seem to be admonished that all which can
be known of God may be made manifest by reasons
obtained from no other source than the inspection
of our own minds. I have, therefore, thought
that it would not be unbecoming in me to
inquire how and by what way, without going
out of ourselves, God may be more easily
and certainly known than the things of the
world.
3. And as regards the Soul, although many
have judged that its nature could not be
easily discovered, and some have even ventured
to say that human reason led to the conclusion
that it perished with the body, and that
the contrary opinion could be held through
faith alone; nevertheless, since the Lateran
Council, held under Leo X. (in session viii.),
condemns these, and expressly enjoins Christian
philosophers to refute their arguments, and
establish the truth according to their ability,
I have ventured to attempt it in this work.
4. Moreover, I am aware that most of the
irreligious deny the existence of God, and
the distinctness of the human soul from the
body, for no other reason than because these
points, as they allege, have never as yet
been demonstrated. Now, although I am by
no means of their opinion, but, on the contrary,
hold that almost all the proofs which have
been adduced on these questions by great
men, possess, when rightly understood, the
force of demonstrations, and that it is next
to impossible to discover new, yet there
is, I apprehend, no more useful service to
be performed in Philosophy, than if some
one were, once for all, carefully to seek
out the best of these reasons, and expound
them so accurately and clearly that, for
the future, it might be manifest to all that
they are real demonstrations. And finally,
since many persons were greatly desirous
of this, who knew that I had cultivated a
certain Method of resolving all kinds of
difficulties in the sciences, which is not
indeed new (there being nothing older than
truth), but of which they were aware I had
made successful use in other instances, I
judged it to be my duty to make trial of
it also on the present matter.
5. Now the sum of what I have been able to
accomplish on the subject is contained in
this Treatise. Not that I here essayed to
collect all the diverse reasons which might
be adduced as proofs on this subject, for
this does not seem to be necessary, unless
on matters where no one proof of adequate
certainty is to be had; but I treated the
first and chief alone in such a manner that
I should venture now to propose them as demonstrations
of the highest certainty and evidence. And
I will also add that they are such as to
lead me to think that there is no way open
to the mind of man by which proofs superior
to them can ever be discovered for the importance
of the subject, and the glory of God, to
which all this relates, constrain me to speak
here somewhat more freely of myself than
I have been accustomed to do. Nevertheless,
whatever certitude and evidence I may find
in these demonstrations, I cannot therefore
persuade myself that they are level to the
comprehension of all. But just as in geometry
there are many of the demonstrations of Archimedes,
Apollonius, Pappus, and others, which, though
received by all as evident even and certain
(because indeed they manifestly contain nothing
which, considered by itself, it is not very
easy to understand, and no consequents that
are inaccurately related to their antecedents),
are nevertheless understood by a very limited
number, because they are somewhat long, and
demand the whole attention of the reader:
so in the same way, although I consider the
demonstrations of which I here make use,
to be equal or even superior to the geometrical
in certitude and evidence, I am afraid, nevertheless,
that they will not be adequately understood
by many, as well because they also are somewhat
long and involved, as chiefly because they
require the mind to be entirely free from
prejudice, and able with ease to detach itself
from the commerce of the senses. And, to
speak the truth, the ability for metaphysical
studies is less general than for those of
geometry. And, besides, there is still this
difference that, as in geometry, all are
persuaded that nothing is usually advanced
of which there is not a certain demonstration,
those but partially versed in it err more
frequently in assenting to what is false,
from a desire of seeming to understand it,
than in denying what is true. In philosophy,
on the other hand, where it is believed that
all is doubtful, few sincerely give themselves
to the search after truth, and by far the
greater number seek the reputation of bold
thinkers by audaciously impugning such truths
as are of the greatest moment.
6. Hence it is that, whatever force my reasonings
may possess, yet because they belong to philosophy,
I do not expect they will have much effect
on the minds of men, unless you extend to
them your patronage and approval. But since
your Faculty is held in so great esteem by
all, and since the name of SORBONNE is of
such authority, that not only in matters
of faith, but even also in what regards human
philosophy, has the judgment of no other
society, after the Sacred Councils, received
so great deference, it being the universal
conviction that it is impossible elsewhere
to find greater perspicacity and solidity,
or greater wisdom and integrity in giving
judgment, I doubt not, if you but condescend
to pay so much regard to this Treatise as
to be willing, in the first place, to correct
it (for mindful not only of my humanity,
but chiefly also of my ignorance, I do not
affirm that it is free from errors); in the
second place, to supply what is wanting in
it, to perfect what is incomplete, and to
give more ample illustration where it is
demanded, or at least to indicate these defects
to myself that I may endeavour to remedy
them; and, finally, when the reasonings contained
in it, by which the existence of God and
the distinction of the human soul from the
body are established, shall have been brought
to such degree of perspicuity as to be esteemed
exact demonstrations, of which I am assured
they admit, if you condescend to accord them
the authority of your approbation, and render
a public testimony of their truth and certainty,
I doubt not, I say, but that henceforward
all the errors which have ever been entertained
on these questions will very soon be effaced
from the minds of men. For truth itself will
readily lead the remainder of the ingenious
and the learned to subscribe to your judgment;
and your authority will cause the atheists,
who are in general sciolists rather than
ingenious or learned, to lay aside the spirit
of contradiction, and lead them, perhaps,
to do battle in their own persons for reasonings
which they find considered demonstrations
by all men of genius, lest they should seem
not to understand them; and, finally, the
rest of mankind will readily trust to so
many testimonies, and there will no longer
be any one who will venture to doubt either
the existence of God or the real distinction
of mind and body. It is for you, in your
singular wisdom, to judge of the importance
of the establishment of such beliefs, [who
are cognisant of the disorders which doubt
of these truths produces].* But it would
not here become me to commend at greater
length the cause of God and of religion to
you, who have always proved the strongest
support of the Catholic Church.
Preface to the Reader.
1. I have already slightly touched upon the
questions respecting the existence of God
and the nature of the human soul, in the
"Discourse on the Method of rightly
conducting the Reason, and seeking Truth
in the Sciences," published in French
in the year 1637; not however, with the design
of there treating of them fully, but only,
as it were, in passing, that I might learn
from the judgment of my readers in what way
I should afterward handle them; for these
questions appeared to me to be of such moment
as to be worthy of being considered more
than once, and the path which I follow in
discussing them is so little trodden, and
so remote from the ordinary route that I
thought it would not be expedient to illustrate
it at greater length in French, and in a
discourse that might be read by all, lest
even the more feeble minds should believe
that this path might be entered upon by them.
2. But, as in the " Discourse on Method,"
I had requested all who might find aught
meriting censure in my writings, to do me
the favor of pointing it out to me, I may
state that no objections worthy of remark
have been alleged against what I then said
on these questions except two, to which I
will here briefly reply, before undertaking
their more detailed discussion.
3. The first objection is that though, while
the human mind reflects on itself, it does
not perceive that it is any other than a
thinking thing, it does not follow that its
nature or essence consists only in its being
a thing which thinks; so that the word ONLY
shall exclude all other things which might
also perhaps be said to pertain to the nature
of the mind. To this objection I reply, that
it was not my intention in that place to
exclude these according to the order of truth
in the matter (of which I did not then treat),but
only according to the order of thought (perception);
so that my meaning was, that I clearly apprehended
nothing, so far as I was conscious, as belonging
to my essence, except that I was a thinking
thing, or a thing possessing in itself the
faculty of thinking. But I will show hereafter
how, from the consciousness that nothing
besides thinking belongs to the essence of
the mind, it follows that nothing else does
in truth belong to it.
4. The second objection is that it does not
follow, from my possessing the idea of a
thing more perfect than I am, that the idea
itself is more perfect than myself, and much
less that what is represented by the idea
exists. But I reply that in the term idea
there is here something equivocal; for it
may be taken either materially for an act
of the understanding, and in this sense it
cannot be said to be more perfect than I,
or objectively, for the thing represented
by that act, which, although it be not supposed
to exist out of my understanding, may, nevertheless,
be more perfect than myself, by reason of
its essence. But, in the sequel of this treatise
I will show more amply how, from my possessing
the idea of a thing more perfect than myself,
it follows that this thing really exists.
5. Besides these two objections, I have seen,
indeed, two treatises of sufficient length
relating to the present matter. In these,
however, my conclusions, much more than my
premises, were impugned, and that by arguments
borrowed from the common places of the atheists.
But, as arguments of this sort can make no
impression on the minds of those who shall
rightly understand my reasonings, and as
the judgments of many are so irrational and
weak that they are persuaded rather by the
opinions on a subject that are first presented
to them, however false and opposed to reason
they may be, than by a true and solid, but
subsequently received, refutation of them,
I am unwilling here to reply to these strictures
from a dread of being, in the first instance,
obliged to state them. I will only say, in
general, that all which the atheists commonly
allege in favor of the non-existence of God,
arises continually from one or other of these
two things, namely, either the ascription
of human affections to Deity, or the undue
attribution to our minds of so much vigor
and wisdom that we may essay to determine
and comprehend both what God can and ought
to do; hence all that is alleged by them
will occasion us no difficulty, provided
only we keep in remembrance that our minds
must be considered finite, while Deity is
incomprehensible and infinite.
6. Now that I have once, in some measure,
made proof of the opinions of men regarding
my work, I again undertake to treat of God
and the human soul, and at the same time
to discuss the principles of the entire First
Philosophy, without, however, expecting any
commendation from the crowd for my endeavors,
or a wide circle of readers. On the contrary,
I would advise none to read this work, unless
such as are able and willing to meditate
with me in earnest, to detach their minds
from commerce with the senses, and likewise
to deliver themselves from all prejudice;
and individuals of this character are, I
well know, remarkably rare. But with regard
to those who, without caring to comprehend
the order and connection of the reasonings,
shall study only detached clauses for the
purpose of small but noisy criticism, as
is the custom with many, I may say that such
persons will not profit greatly by the reading
of this treatise; and although perhaps they
may find opportunity for cavilling in several
places, they will yet hardly start any pressing
objections, or such as shall be deserving
of reply.
7. But since, indeed, I do not promise to
satisfy others on all these subjects at first
sight, nor arrogate so much to myself as
to believe that I have been able to forsee
all that may be the source of difficulty
to each ones I shall expound, first of all,
in the Meditations, those considerations
by which I feel persuaded that I have arrived
at a certain and evident knowledge of truth,
in order that I may ascertain whether the
reasonings which have prevailed with myself
will also be effectual in convincing others.
I will then reply to the objections of some
men, illustrious for their genius and learning,
to whom these Meditations were sent for criticism
before they were committed to the press;
for these objections are so numerous and
varied that I venture to anticipate that
nothing, at least nothing of any moment,
will readily occur to any mind which has
not been touched upon in them. Hence it is
that I earnestly entreat my readers not to
come to any judgment on the questions raised
in the Meditations until they have taken
care to read the whole of the Objections,
with the relative Replies.
MEDITATION ONE OF THE THINGS OF WHICH WE
MAY DOUBT.
MEDITATION I. OF THE THINGS OF WHICH WE MAY
DOUBT.
1. SEVERAL years have now elapsed since I
first became aware that I had accepted, even
from my youth, many false opinions for true,
and that consequently what I afterward based
on such principles was highly doubtful; and
from that time I was convinced of the necessity
of undertaking once in my life to rid myself
of all the opinions I had adopted, and of
commencing anew the work of building from
the foundation, if I desired to establish
a firm and abiding superstructure in the
sciences. But as this enterprise appeared
to me to be one of great magnitude, I waited
until I had attained an age so mature as
to leave me no hope that at any stage of
life more advanced I should be better able
to execute my design. On this account, I
have delayed so long that I should henceforth
consider I was doing wrong were I still to
consume in deliberation any of the time that
now remains for action. To-day, then, since
I have opportunely freed my mind from all
cares [and am happily disturbed by no passions],
and since I am in the secure possession of
leisure in a peaceable retirement, I will
at length apply myself earnestly and freely
to the general overthrow of all my former
opinions.
2. But, to this end, it will not be necessary
for me to show that the whole of these are
false--a point, perhaps, which I shall never
reach; but as even now my reason convinces
me that I ought not the less carefully to
withhold belief from what is not entirely
certain and indubitable, than from what is
manifestly false, it will be sufficient to
justify the rejection of the whole if I shall
find in each some ground for doubt. Nor for
this purpose will it be necessary even to
deal with each belief individually, which
would be truly an endless labor; but, as
the removal from below of the foundation
necessarily involves the downfall of the
whole edifice, I will at once approach the
criticism of the principles on which all
my former beliefs rested.
3. All that I have, up to this moment, accepted
as possessed of the highest truth and certainty,
I received either from or through the senses.
I observed, however, that these sometimes
misled us; and it is the part of prudence
not to place absolute confidence in that
by which we have even once been deceived.
4. But it may be said, perhaps, that, although
the senses occasionally mislead us respecting
minute objects, and such as are so far removed
from us as to be beyond the reach of close
observation, there are yet many other of
their informations (presentations), of the
truth of which it is manifestly impossible
to doubt; as for example, that I am in this
place, seated by the fire, clothed in a winter
dressing gown, that I hold in my hands this
piece of paper, with other intimations of
the same nature. But how could I deny that
I possess these hands and this body, and
withal escape being classed with persons
in a state of insanity, whose brains are
so disordered and clouded by dark bilious
vapors as to cause them pertinaciously to
assert that they are monarchs when they are
in the greatest poverty; or clothed [in gold]
and purple when destitute of any covering;
or that their head is made of clay, their
body of glass, or that they are gourds? I
should certainly be not less insane than
they, were I to regulate my procedure according
to examples so extravagant.
5. Though this be true, I must nevertheless
here consider that I am a man, and that,
consequently, I am in the habit of sleeping,
and representing to myself in dreams those
same things, or even sometimes others less
probable, which the insane think are presented
to them in their waking moments. How often
have I dreamt that I was in these familiar
circumstances, that I was dressed, and occupied
this place by the fire, when I was lying
undressed in bed? At the present moment,
however, I certainly look upon this paper
with eyes wide awake; the head which I now
move is not asleep; I extend this hand consciously
and with express purpose, and I perceive
it; the occurrences in sleep are not so distinct
as all this. But I cannot forget that, at
other times I have been deceived in sleep
by similar illusions; and, attentively considering
those cases, I perceive so clearly that there
exist no certain marks by which the state
of waking can ever be distinguished from
sleep, that I feel greatly astonished; and
in amazement I almost persuade myself that
I am now dreaming.
6. Let us suppose, then, that we are dreaming,
and that all these particulars--namely, the
opening of the eyes, the motion of the head,
the forth- putting of the hands--are merely
illusions; and even that we really possess
neither an entire body nor hands such as
we see. Nevertheless it must be admitted
at least that the objects which appear to
us in sleep are, as it were, painted representations
which could not have been formed unless in
the likeness of realities; and, therefore,
that those general objects, at all events,
namely, eyes, a head, hands, and an entire
body, are not simply imaginary, but really
existent. For, in truth, painters themselves,
even when they study to represent sirens
and satyrs by forms the most fantastic and
extraordinary, cannot bestow upon them natures
absolutely new, but can only make a certain
medley of the members of different animals;
or if they chance to imagine something so
novel that nothing at all similar has ever
been seen before, and such as is, therefore,
purely fictitious and absolutely false, it
is at least certain that the colors of which
this is composed are real. And on the same
principle, although these general objects,
viz. [a body], eyes, a head, hands, and the
like, be imaginary, we are nevertheless absolutely
necessitated to admit the reality at least
of some other objects still more simple and
universal than these, of which, just as of
certain real colors, all those images of
things, whether true and real, or false and
fantastic, that are found in our consciousness
(cogitatio),are formed.
7. To this class of objects seem to belong
corporeal nature in general and its extension;
the figure of extended things, their quantity
or magnitude, and their number, as also the
place in, and the time during, which they
exist, and other things of the same sort.
8. We will not, therefore, perhaps reason
illegitimately if we conclude from this that
Physics, Astronomy, Medicine, and all the
other sciences that have for their end the
consideration of composite objects, are indeed
of a doubtful character; but that Arithmetic,
Geometry, and the other sciences of the same
class, which regard merely the simplest and
most general objects, and scarcely inquire
whether or not these are really existent,
contain somewhat that is certain and indubitable:
for whether I am awake or dreaming, it remains
true that two and three make five, and that
a square has but four sides; nor does it
seem possible that truths so apparent can
ever fall under a suspicion of falsity [or
incertitude].
9. Nevertheless, the belief that there is
a God who is all powerful, and who created
me, such as I am, has, for a long time, obtained
steady possession of my mind. How, then,
do I know that he has not arranged that there
should be neither earth, nor sky, nor any
extended thing, nor figure, nor magnitude,
nor place, providing at the same time, however,
for [the rise in me of the perceptions of
all these objects, and] the persuasion that
these do not exist otherwise than as I perceive
them ? And further, as I sometimes think
that others are in error respecting matters
of which they believe themselves to possess
a perfect knowledge, how do I know that I
am not also deceived each time I add together
two and three, or number the sides of a square,
or form some judgment still more simple,
if more simple indeed can be imagined? But
perhaps Deity has not been willing that I
should be thus deceived, for he is said to
be supremely good. If, however, it were repugnant
to the goodness of Deity to have created
me subject to constant deception, it would
seem likewise to be contrary to his goodness
to allow me to be occasionally deceived;
and yet it is clear that this is permitted.
10. Some, indeed, might perhaps be found
who would be disposed rather to deny the
existence of a Being so powerful than to
believe that there is nothing certain. But
let us for the present refrain from opposing
this opinion, and grant that all which is
here said of a Deity is fabulous: nevertheless,
in whatever way it be supposed that I reach
the state in which I exist, whether by fate,
or chance, or by an endless series of antecedents
and consequents, or by any other means, it
is clear (since to be deceived and to err
is a certain defect ) that the probability
of my being so imperfect as to be the constant
victim of deception, will be increased exactly
in proportion as the power possessed by the
cause, to which they assign my origin, is
lessened. To these reasonings I have assuredly
nothing to reply, but am constrained at last
to avow that there is nothing of all that
I formerly believed to be true of which it
is impossible to doubt, and that not through
thoughtlessness or levity, but from cogent
and maturely considered reasons; so that
henceforward, if I desire to discover anything
certain, I ought not the less carefully to
refrain from assenting to those same opinions
than to what might be shown to be manifestly
false.
11. But it is not sufficient to have made
these observations; care must be taken likewise
to keep them in remembrance. For those old
and customary opinions perpetually recur--
long and familiar usage giving them the right
of occupying my mind, even almost against
my will, and subduing my belief; nor will
I lose the habit of deferring to them and
confiding in them so long as I shall consider
them to be what in truth they are, viz, opinions
to some extent doubtful, as I have already
shown, but still highly probable, and such
as it is much more reasonable to believe
than deny. It is for this reason I am persuaded
that I shall not be doing wrong, if, taking
an opposite judgment of deliberate design,
I become my own deceiver, by supposing, for
a time, that all those opinions are entirely
false and imaginary, until at length, having
thus balanced my old by my new prejudices,
my judgment shall no longer be turned aside
by perverted usage from the path that may
conduct to the perception of truth. For I
am assured that, meanwhile, there will arise
neither peril nor error from this course,
and that I cannot for the present yield too
much to distrust, since the end I now seek
is not action but knowledge.
12. I will suppose, then, not that Deity,
who is sovereignly good and the fountain
of truth, but that some malignant demon,
who is at once exceedingly potent and deceitful,
has employed all his artifice to deceive
me; I will suppose that the sky, the air,
the earth, colors, figures, sounds, and all
external things, are nothing better than
the illusions of dreams, by means of which
this being has laid snares for my credulity;
I will consider myself as without hands,
eyes, flesh, blood, or any of the senses,
and as falsely believing that I am possessed
of these; I will continue resolutely fixed
in this belief, and if indeed by this means
it be not in my power to arrive at the knowledge
of truth, I shall at least do what is in
my power, viz, [ suspend my judgment ], and
guard with settled purpose against giving
my assent to what is false, and being imposed
upon by this deceiver, whatever be his power
and artifice. But this undertaking is arduous,
and a certain indolence insensibly leads
me back to my ordinary course of life; and
just as the captive, who, perchance, was
enjoying in his dreams an imaginary liberty,
when he begins to suspect that it is but
a vision, dreads awakening, and conspires
with the agreeable illusions that the deception
may be prolonged; so I, of my own accord,
fall back into the train of my former beliefs,
and fear to arouse myself from my slumber,
lest the time of laborious wakefulness that
would succeed this quiet rest, in place of
bringing any light of day, should prove inadequate
to dispel the darkness that will arise from
the difficulties that have now been raised.
MEDITATION TWO OF THE NATURE OF THE HUMAN
MIND; AND THAT IT IS MORE EASILY KNOWN THAN
THE BODY.
1. The Meditation of yesterday has filled
my mind with so many doubts, that it is no
longer in my power to forget them. Nor do
I see, meanwhile, any principle on which
they can be resolved; and, just as if I had
fallen all of a sudden into very deep water,
I am so greatly disconcerted as to be unable
either to plant my feet firmly on the bottom
or sustain myself by swimming on the surface.
I will, nevertheless, make an effort, and
try anew the same path on which I had entered
yesterday, that is, proceed by casting aside
all that admits of the slightest doubt, not
less than if I had discovered it to be absolutely
false; and I will continue always in this
track until I shall find something that is
certain, or at least, if I can do nothing
more, until I shall know with certainty that
there is nothing certain. Archimedes, that
he might transport the entire globe from
the place it occupied to another, demanded
only a point that was firm and immovable;
so, also, I shall be entitled to entertain
the highest expectations, if I am fortunate
enough to discover only one thing that is
certain and indubitable.
2. I suppose, accordingly, that all the things
which I see are false (fictitious); I believe
that none of those objects which my fallacious
memory represents ever existed; I suppose
that I possess no senses; I believe that
body, figure, extension, motion, and place
are merely fictions of my mind. What is there,
then, that can be esteemed true ? Perhaps
this only, that there is absolutely nothing
certain.
3. But how do I know that there is not something
different altogether from the objects I have
now enumerated, of which it is impossible
to entertain the slightest doubt? Is there
not a God, or some being, by whatever name
I may designate him, who causes these thoughts
to arise in my mind ? But why suppose such
a being, for it may be I myself am capable
of producing them? Am I, then, at least not
something? But I before denied that I possessed
senses or a body; I hesitate, however, for
what follows from that? Am I so dependent
on the body and the senses that without these
I cannot exist? But I had the persuasion
that there was absolutely nothing in the
world, that there was no sky and no earth,
neither minds nor bodies; was I not, therefore,
at the same time, persuaded that I did not
exist? Far from it; I assuredly existed,
since I was persuaded. But there is I know
not what being, who is possessed at once
of the highest power and the deepest cunning,
who is constantly employing all his ingenuity
in deceiving me. Doubtless, then, I exist,
since I am deceived; and, let him deceive
me as he may, he can never bring it about
that I am nothing, so long as I shall be
conscious that I am something. So that it
must, in fine, be maintained, all things
being maturely and carefully considered,
that this proposition (pronunciatum ) I am,
I exist, is necessarily true each time it
is expressed by me, or conceived in my mind.
4. But I do not yet know with sufficient
clearness what I am, though assured that
I am; and hence, in the next place, I must
take care, lest perchance I inconsiderately
substitute some other object in room of what
is properly myself, and thus wander from
truth, even in that knowledge ( cognition
) which I hold to be of all others the most
certain and evident. For this reason, I will
now consider anew what I formerly believed
myself to be, before I entered on the present
train of thought; and of my previous opinion
I will retrench all that can in the least
be invalidated by the grounds of doubt I
have adduced, in order that there may at
length remain nothing but what is certain
and indubitable.
5. What then did I formerly think I was ?
Undoubtedly I judged that I was a man. But
what is a man ? Shall I say a rational animal
? Assuredly not; for it would be necessary
forthwith to inquire into what is meant by
animal, and what by rational, and thus, from
a single question, I should insensibly glide
into others, and these more difficult than
the first; nor do I now possess enough of
leisure to warrant me in wasting my time
amid subtleties of this sort. I prefer here
to attend to the thoughts that sprung up
of themselves in my mind, and were inspired
by my own nature alone, when I applied myself
to the consideration of what I was. In the
first place, then, I thought that I possessed
a countenance, hands, arms, and all the fabric
of members that appears in a corpse, and
which I called by the name of body. It further
occurred to me that I was nourished, that
I walked, perceived, and thought, and all
those actions I referred to the soul; but
what the soul itself was I either did not
stay to consider, or, if I did, I imagined
that it was something extremely rare and
subtile, like wind, or flame, or ether, spread
through my grosser parts. As regarded the
body, I did not even doubt of its nature,
but thought I distinctly knew it, and if
I had wished to describe it according to
the notions I then entertained, I should
have explained myself in this manner: By
body I understand all that can be terminated
by a certain figure; that can be comprised
in a certain place, and so fill a certain
space as therefrom to exclude every other
body; that can be perceived either by touch,
sight, hearing, taste, or smell; that can
be moved in different ways, not indeed of
itself, but by something foreign to it by
which it is touched [and from which it receives
the impression]; for the power of self-motion,
as likewise that of perceiving and thinking,
I held as by no means pertaining to the nature
of body; on the contrary, I was somewhat
astonished to find such faculties existing
in some bodies.
6. But [as to myself, what can I now say
that I am], since I suppose there exists
an extremely powerful, and, if I may so speak,
malignant being, whose whole endeavors are
directed toward deceiving me ? Can I affirm
that I possess any one of all those attributes
of which I have lately spoken as belonging
to the nature of body ? After attentively
considering them in my own mind, I find none
of them that can properly be said to belong
to myself. To recount them were idle and
tedious. Let us pass, then, to the attributes
of the soul. The first mentioned were the
powers of nutrition and walking; but, if
it be true that I have no body, it is true
likewise that I am capable neither of walking
nor of being nourished. Perception is another
attribute of the soul; but perception too
is impossible without the body; besides,
I have frequently, during sleep, believed
that I perceived objects which I afterward
observed I did not in reality perceive. Thinking
is another attribute of the soul; and here
I discover what properly belongs to myself.
This alone is inseparable from me. I am--I
exist: this is certain; but how often? As
often as I think; for perhaps it would even
happen, if I should wholly cease to think,
that I should at the same time altogether
cease to be. I now admit nothing that is
not necessarily true. I am therefore, precisely
speaking, only a thinking thing, that is,
a mind (mens sive animus), understanding,
or reason, terms whose signification was
before unknown to me. I am, however, a real
thing, and really existent; but what thing?
The answer was, a thinking thing.
7. The question now arises, am I aught besides
? I will stimulate my imagination with a
view to discover whether I am not still something
more than a thinking being. Now it is plain
I am not the assemblage of members called
the human body; I am not a thin and penetrating
air diffused through all these members, or
wind, or flame, or vapor, or breath, or any
of all the things I can imagine; for I supposed
that all these were not, and, without changing
the supposition, I find that I still feel
assured of my existence. But it is true,
perhaps, that those very things which I suppose
to be non-existent, because they are unknown
to me, are not in truth different from myself
whom I know. This is a point I cannot determine,
and do not now enter into any dispute regarding
it. I can only judge of things that are known
to me: I am conscious that I exist, and I
who know that I exist inquire into what I
am. It is, however, perfectly certain that
the knowledge of my existence, thus precisely
taken, is not dependent on things, the existence
of which is as yet unknown to me: and consequently
it is not dependent on any of the things
I can feign in imagination. Moreover, the
phrase itself, I frame an image (efffingo),
reminds me of my error; for I should in truth
frame one if I were to imagine myself to
be anything, since to imagine is nothing
more than to contemplate the figure or image
of a corporeal thing; but I already know
that I exist, and that it is possible at
the same time that all those images, and
in general all that relates to the nature
of body, are merely dreams [or chimeras].
From this I discover that it is not more
reasonable to say, I will excite my imagination
that I may know more distinctly what I am,
than to express myself as follows: I am now
awake, and perceive something real; but because
my perception is not sufficiently clear,
I will of express purpose go to sleep that
my dreams may represent to me the object
of my perception with more truth and clearness.
And, therefore, I know that nothing of all
that I can embrace in imagination belongs
to the knowledge which I have of myself,
and that there is need to recall with the
utmost care the mind from this mode of thinking,
that it may be able to know its own nature
with perfect distinctness.
8. But what, then, am I ? A thinking thing,
it has been said. But what is a thinking
thing? It is a thing that doubts, understands,
[conceives], affirms, denies, wills, refuses;
that imagines also, and perceives.
9. Assuredly it is not little, if all these
properties belong to my nature. But why should
they not belong to it ? Am I not that very
being who now doubts of almost everything;
who, for all that, understands and conceives
certain things; who affirms one alone as
true, and denies the others; who desires
to know more of them, and does not wish to
be deceived; who imagines many things, sometimes
even despite his will; and is likewise percipient
of many, as if through the medium of the
senses. Is there nothing of all this as true
as that I am, even although I should be always
dreaming, and although he who gave me being
employed all his ingenuity to deceive me
? Is there also any one of these attributes
that can be properly distinguished from my
thought, or that can be said to be separate
from myself ? For it is of itself so evident
that it is I who doubt, I who understand,
and I who desire, that it is here unnecessary
to add anything by way of rendering it more
clear. And I am as certainly the same being
who imagines; for although it may be
(as I before supposed) that nothing I imagine
is true, still the power of imagination does
not cease really to exist in me and to form
part of my thought. In fine, I am the same
being who perceives, that is, who apprehends
certain objects as by the organs of sense,
since, in truth, I see light, hear a noise,
and feel heat. But it will be said that these
presentations are false, and that I am dreaming.
Let it be so. At all events it is certain
that I seem to see light, hear a noise, and
feel heat; this cannot be false, and this
is what in me is properly called perceiving
(sentire), which is nothing else than thinking.
10. From this I begin to know what I am with
somewhat greater clearness and distinctness
than heretofore. But, nevertheless, it still
seems to me, and I cannot help believing,
that corporeal things, whose images are formed
by thought [which fall under the senses],
and are examined by the same, are known with
much greater distinctness than that I know
not what part of myself which is not imaginable;
although, in truth, it may seem strange to
say that I know and comprehend with greater
distinctness things whose existence appears
to me doubtful, that are unknown, and do
not belong to me, than others of whose reality
I am persuaded, that are known to me, and
appertain to my proper nature; in a word,
than myself. But I see clearly what is the
state of the case. My mind is apt to wander,
and will not yet submit to be restrained
within the limits of truth. Let us therefore
leave the mind to itself once more, and,
according to it every kind of liberty [permit
it to consider the objects that appear to
it from without], in order that, having afterward
withdrawn it from these gently and opportunely
[ and fixed it on the consideration of its
being and the properties it finds in itself],
it may then be the more easily controlled.
11. Let us now accordingly consider the objects
that are commonly thought to be [the most
easily, and likewise] the most distinctly
known, viz, the bodies we touch and see;
not, indeed, bodies in general, for these
general notions are usually somewhat more
confused, but one body in particular. Take,
for example, this piece of wax; it is quite
fresh, having been but recently taken from
the beehive; it has not yet lost the sweetness
of the honey it contained; it still retains
somewhat of the odor of the flowers from
which it was gathered; its color, figure,
size, are apparent ( to the sight ); it is
hard, cold, easily handled; and sounds when
struck upon with the finger. In fine, all
that contributes to make a body as distinctly
known as possible, is found in the one before
us. But, while I am speaking, let it be placed
near the fire--what remained of the taste
exhales, the smell evaporates, the color
changes, its figure is destroyed, its size
increases, it becomes liquid, it grows hot,
it can hardly be handled, and, although struck
upon, it emits no sound. Does the same wax
still remain after this change ? It must
be admitted that it does remain; no one doubts
it, or judges otherwise. What, then, was
it I knew with so much distinctness in the
piece of wax? Assuredly, it could be nothing
of all that I observed by means of the senses,
since all the things that fell under taste,
smell, sight, touch, and hearing are changed,
and yet the same wax remains.
12. It was perhaps what I now think, viz,
that this wax was neither the sweetness of
honey, the pleasant odor of flowers, the
whiteness, the figure, nor the sound, but
only a body that a little before appeared
to me conspicuous under these forms, and
which is now perceived under others. But,
to speak precisely, what is it that I imagine
when I think of it in this way? Let it be
attentively considered, and, retrenching
all that does not belong to the wax, let
us see what remains. There certainly remains
nothing, except something extended, flexible,
and movable. But what is meant by flexible
and movable ? Is it not that I imagine that
the piece of wax, being round, is capable
of becoming square, or of passing from a
square into a triangular figure ? Assuredly
such is not the case, because I conceive
that it admits of an infinity of similar
changes; and I am, moreover, unable to compass
this infinity by imagination, and consequently
this conception which I have of the wax is
not the product of the faculty of imagination.
But what now is this extension ? Is it not
also unknown ? for it becomes greater when
the wax is melted, greater when it is boiled,
and greater still when the heat increases;
and I should not conceive [clearly and] according
to truth, the wax as it is, if I did not
suppose that the piece we are considering
admitted even of a wider variety of extension
than I ever imagined, I must, therefore,
admit that I cannot even comprehend by imagination
what the piece of wax is, and that it is
the mind alone ( mens, Lat., entendement,
F.) which perceives it. I speak of one piece
in particular; for as to wax in general,
this is still more evident. But what is the
piece of wax that can be perceived only by
the [understanding or] mind? It is certainly
the same which I see, touch, imagine; and,
in fine, it is the same which, from the beginning,
I believed it to be. But (and this it is
of moment to observe) the perception of it
is neither an act of sight, of touch, nor
of imagination, and never was either of these,
though it might formerly seem so, but is
simply an intuition (inspectio) of the mind,
which may be imperfect and confused, as it
formerly was, or very clear and distinct,
as it is at present, according as the attention
is more or less directed to the elements
which it contains, and of which it is composed.
13. But, meanwhile, I feel greatly astonished
when I observe [the weakness of my mind,
and] its proneness to error. For although,
without at all giving expression to what
I think, I consider all this in my own mind,
words yet occasionally impede my progress,
and I am almost led into error by the terms
of ordinary language. We say, for example,
that we see the same wax when it is before
us, and not that we judge it to be the same
from its retaining the same color and figure:
whence I should forthwith be disposed to
conclude that the wax is known by the act
of sight, and not by the intuition of the
mind alone, were it not for the analogous
instance of human beings passing on in the
street below, as observed from a window.
In this case I do not fail to say that I
see the men themselves, just as I say that
I see the wax; and yet what do I see from
the window beyond hats and cloaks that might
cover artificial machines, whose motions
might be determined by springs ? But I judge
that there are human beings from these appearances,
and thus I comprehend, by the faculty of
judgment alone which is in the mind, what
I believed I saw with my eyes.
14. The man who makes it his aim to rise
to knowledge superior to the common, ought
to be ashamed to seek occasions of doubting
from the vulgar forms of speech: instead,
therefore, of doing this, I shall proceed
with the matter in hand, and inquire whether
I had a clearer and more perfect perception
of the piece of wax when I first saw it,
and when I thought I knew it by means of
the external sense itself, or, at all events,
by the common sense (sensus communis), as
it is called, that is, by the imaginative
faculty; or whether I rather apprehend it
more clearly at present, after having examined
with greater care, both what it is, and in
what way it can be known. It would certainly
be ridiculous to entertain any doubt on this
point. For what, in that first perception,
was there distinct ? What did I perceive
which any animal might not have perceived
? But when I distinguish the wax from its
exterior forms, and when, as if I had stripped
it of its vestments, I consider it quite
naked, it is certain, although some error
may still be found in my judgment, that I
cannot, nevertheless, thus apprehend it without
possessing a human mind.
15. But finally, what shall I say of the
mind itself, that is, of myself ? for as
yet I do not admit that I am anything but
mind. What, then! I who seem to possess so
distinct an apprehension of the piece of
wax, do I not know myself, both with greater
truth and certitude, and also much more distinctly
and clearly? For if I judge that the wax
exists because I see it, it assuredly follows,
much more evidently, that I myself am or
exist, for the same reason: for it is possible
that what I see may not in truth be wax,
and that I do not even possess eyes with
which to see anything; but it cannot be that
when I see, or, which comes to the same thing,
when I think I see, I myself who think am
nothing. So likewise, if I judge that the
wax exists because I touch it, it will still
also follow that I am; and if I determine
that my imagination, or any other cause,
whatever it be, persuades me of the existence
of the wax, I will still draw the same conclusion.
And what is here remarked of the piece of
wax, is applicable to all the other things
that are external to me. And further, if
the [notion or] perception of wax appeared
to me more precise and distinct, after that
not only sight and touch, but many other
causes besides, rendered it manifest to my
apprehension, with how much greater distinctness
must I now know myself, since all the reasons
that contribute to the knowledge of the nature
of wax, or of any body whatever, manifest
still better the nature of my mind ? And
there are besides so many other things in
the mind itself that contribute to the illustration
of its nature, that those dependent on the
body, to which I have here referred, scarcely
merit to be taken into account.
16. But, in conclusion, I find I have insensibly
reverted to the point I desired; for, since
it is now manifest to me that bodies themselves
are not properly perceived by the senses
nor by the faculty of imagination, but by
the intellect alone; and since they are not
perceived because they are seen and touched,
but only because they are understood [ or
rightly comprehended by thought ], I readily
discover that there is nothing more easily
or clearly apprehended than my own mind.
But because it is difficult to rid one's
self so promptly of an opinion to which one
has been long accustomed, it will be desirable
to tarry for some time at this stage, that,
by long continued meditation, I may more
deeply impress upon my memory this new knowledge.
Meditation Three OF GOD: THAT HE EXISTS.
1. I WILL now close my eyes, I will stop
my ears, I will turn away my senses from
their objects, I will even efface from my
consciousness all the images of corporeal
things; or at least, because this can hardly
be accomplished, I will consider them as
empty and false; and thus, holding converse
only with myself, and closely examining my
nature, I will endeavor to obtain by degrees
a more intimate and familiar knowledge of
myself. I am a thinking ( conscious ) thing,
that is, a being who doubts, affirms, denies,
knows a few objects, and is ignorant of many,--
[who loves, hates], wills, refuses, who imagines
likewise, and perceives; for, as I before
remarked, although the things which I perceive
or imagine are perhaps nothing at all apart
from me [and in themselves], I am nevertheless
assured that those modes of consciousness
which I call perceptions and imaginations,
in as far only as they are modes of consciousness,
exist in me. [ L] [ F]
2. And in the little I have said I think
I have summed up all that I really know,
or at least all that up to this time I was
aware I knew. Now, as I am endeavoring to
extend my knowledge more widely, I will use
circumspection, and consider with care whether
I can still discover in myself anything further
which I have not yet hitherto observed. I
am certain that I am a thinking thing; but
do I not therefore likewise know what is
required to render me certain of a truth
? In this first knowledge, doubtless, there
is nothing that gives me assurance of its
truth except the clear and distinct perception
of what I affirm, which would not indeed
be sufficient to give me the assurance that
what I say is true, if it could ever happen
that anything I thus clearly and distinctly
perceived should prove false; and accordingly
it seems to me that I may now take as a general
rule, that all that is very clearly and distinctly
apprehended (conceived) is true.
3. Nevertheless I before received and admitted
many things as wholly certain and manifest,
which yet I afterward found to be doubtful.
What, then, were those? They were the earth,
the sky, the stars, and all the other objects
which I was in the habit of perceiving by
the senses. But what was it that I clearly
[and distinctly] perceived in them ? Nothing
more than that the ideas and the thoughts
of those objects were presented to my mind.
And even now I do not deny that these ideas
are found in my mind. But there was yet another
thing which I affirmed, and which, from having
been accustomed to believe it, I thought
I clearly perceived, although, in truth,
I did not perceive it at all; I mean the
existence of objects external to me, from
which those ideas proceeded, and to which
they had a perfect resemblance; and it was
here I was mistaken, or if I judged correctly,
this assuredly was not to be traced to any
knowledge I possessed (the force of my perception,
Lat.).
4. But when I considered any matter in arithmetic
and geometry, that was very simple and easy,
as, for example, that two and three added
together make five, and things of this sort,
did I not view them with at least sufficient
clearness to warrant me in affirming their
truth? Indeed, if I afterward judged that
we ought to doubt of these things, it was
for no other reason than because it occurred
to me that a God might perhaps have given
me such a nature as that I should be deceived,
even respecting the matters that appeared
to me the most evidently true. But as often
as this preconceived opinion of the sovereign
power of a God presents itself to my mind,
I am constrained to admit that it is easy
for him, if he wishes it, to cause me to
err, even in matters where I think I possess
the highest evidence; and, on the other hand,
as often as I direct my attention to things
which I think I apprehend with great clearness,
I am so persuaded of their truth that I naturally
break out into expressions such as these:
Deceive me who may, no one will yet ever
be able to bring it about that I am not,
so long as I shall be conscious that I am,
or at any future time cause it to be true
that I have never been, it being now true
that I am, or make two and three more or
less than five, in supposing which, and other
like absurdities, I discover a manifest contradiction.
And in truth, as I have no ground for believing
that Deity is deceitful, and as, indeed,
I have not even considered the reasons by
which the existence of a Deity of any kind
is established, the ground of doubt that
rests only on this supposition is very slight,
and, so to speak, metaphysical. But, that
I may be able wholly to remove it, I must
inquire whether there is a God, as soon as
an opportunity of doing so shall present
itself; and if I find that there is a God,
I must examine likewise whether he can be
a deceiver; for, without the knowledge of
these two truths, I do not see that I can
ever be certain of anything. And that I may
be enabled to examine this without interrupting
the order of meditation I have proposed to
myself [which is, to pass by degrees from
the notions that I shall find first in my
mind to those I shall afterward discover
in it], it is necessary at this stage to
divide all my thoughts into certain classes,
and to consider in which of these classes
truth and error are, strictly speaking, to
be found.
5. Of my thoughts some are, as it were, images
of things, and to these alone properly belongs
the name IDEA; as when I think [ represent
to my mind ] a man, a chimera, the sky, an
angel or God. Others, again, have certain
other forms; as when I will, fear, affirm,
or deny, I always, indeed, apprehend something
as the object of my thought, but I also embrace
in thought something more than the representation
of the object; and of this class of thoughts
some are called volitions or affections,
and others judgments.
6. Now, with respect to ideas, if these are
considered only in themselves, and are not
referred to any object beyond them, they
cannot, properly speaking, be false; for,
whether I imagine a goat or chimera, it is
not less true that I imagine the one than
the other. Nor need we fear that falsity
may exist in the will or affections; for,
although I may desire objects that are wrong,
and even that never existed, it is still
true that I desire them. There thus only
remain our judgments, in which we must take
diligent heed that we be not deceived. But
the chief and most ordinary error that arises
in them consists in judging that the ideas
which are in us are like or conformed to
the things that are external to us; for assuredly,
if we but considered the ideas themselves
as certain modes of our thought (consciousness),
without referring them to anything beyond,
they would hardly afford any occasion of
error.
7. But among these ideas, some appear to
me to be innate, others adventitious, and
others to be made by myself (factitious);
for, as I have the power of conceiving what
is called a thing, or a truth, or a thought,
it seems to me that I hold this power from
no other source than my own nature; but if
I now hear a noise, if I see the sun, or
if I feel heat, I have all along judged that
these sensations proceeded from certain objects
existing out of myself; and, in fine, it
appears to me that sirens, hippogryphs, and
the like, are inventions of my own mind.
But I may even perhaps come to be of opinion
that all my ideas are of the class which
I call adventitious, or that they are all
innate, or that they are all factitious;
for I have not yet clearly discovered their
true origin.
8. What I have here principally to do is
to consider, with reference to those that
appear to come from certain objects without
me, what grounds there are for thinking them
like these objects. The first of these grounds
is that it seems to me I am so taught by
nature; and the second that I am conscious
that those ideas are not dependent on my
will, and therefore not on myself, for they
are frequently presented to me against my
will, as at present, whether I will or not,
I feel heat; and I am thus persuaded that
this sensation or idea (sensum vel ideam)
of heat is produced in me by something different
from myself, viz., by the heat of the fire
by which I sit. And it is very reasonable
to suppose that this object impresses me
with its own likeness rather than any other
thing.
9. But I must consider whether these reasons
are sufficiently strong and convincing. When
I speak of being taught by nature in this
matter, I understand by the word nature only
a certain spontaneous impetus that impels
me to believe in a resemblance between ideas
and their objects, and not a natural light
that affords a knowledge of its truth. But
these two things are widely different; for
what the natural light shows to be true can
be in no degree doubtful, as, for example,
that I am because I doubt, and other truths
of the like kind; inasmuch as I possess no
other faculty whereby to distinguish truth
from error, which can teach me the falsity
of what the natural light declares to be
true, and which is equally trustworthy; but
with respect to [seemingly] natural impulses,
I have observed, when the question related
to the choice of right or wrong in action,
that they frequently led me to take the worse
part; nor do I see that I have any better
ground for following them in what relates
to truth and error.
10. Then, with respect to the other reason,
which is that because these ideas do not
depend on my will, they must arise from objects
existing without me, I do not find it more
convincing than the former, for just as those
natural impulses, of which I have lately
spoken, are found in me, notwithstanding
that they are not always in harmony with
my will, so likewise it may be that I possess
some power not sufficiently known to myself
capable of producing ideas without the aid
of external objects, and, indeed, it has
always hitherto appeared to me that they
are formed during sleep, by some power of
this nature, without the aid of aught external.
11. And, in fine, although I should grant
that they proceeded from those objects, it
is not a necessary consequence that they
must be like them. On the contrary, I have
observed, in a number of instances, that
there was a great difference between the
object and its idea. Thus, for example, I
find in my mind two wholly diverse ideas
of the sun; the one, by which it appears
to me extremely small draws its origin from
the senses, and should be placed in the class
of adventitious ideas; the other, by which
it seems to be many times larger than the
whole earth, is taken up on astronomical
grounds, that is, elicited from certain notions
born with me, or is framed by myself in some
other manner. These two ideas cannot certainly
both resemble the same sun; and reason teaches
me that the one which seems to have immediately
emanated from it is the most unlike.
12. And these things sufficiently prove that
hitherto it has not been from a certain and
deliberate judgment, but only from a sort
of blind impulse, that I believed existence
of certain things different from myself,
which, by the organs of sense, or by whatever
other means it might be, conveyed their ideas
or images into my mind [and impressed it
with their likenesses].
13. But there is still another way of inquiring
whether, of the objects whose ideas are in
my mind, there are any that exist out of
me. If ideas are taken in so far only as
they are certain modes of consciousness,
I do not remark any difference or inequality
among them, and all seem, in the same manner,
to proceed from myself; but, considering
them as images, of which one represents one
thing and another a different, it is evident
that a great diversity obtains among them.
For, without doubt, those that represent
substances are something more, and contain
in themselves, so to speak, more objective
reality [that is, participate by representation
in higher degrees of being or perfection],
than those that represent only modes or accidents;
and again, the idea by which I conceive a
God [sovereign], eternal, infinite, [immutable],
all-knowing, all-powerful, and the creator
of all things that are out of himself, this,
I say, has certainly in it more objective
reality than those ideas by which finite
substances are represented.
14. Now, it is manifest by the natural light
that there must at least be as much reality
in the efficient and total cause as in its
effect; for whence can the effect draw its
reality if not from its cause ? And how could
the cause communicate to it this reality
unless it possessed it in itself? And hence
it follows, not only that what is cannot
be produced by what is not, but likewise
that the more perfect, in other words, that
which contains in itself more reality, cannot
be the effect of the less perfect; and this
is not only evidently true of those effects,
whose reality is actual or formal, but likewise
of ideas, whose reality is only considered
as objective. Thus, for example, the stone
that is not yet in existence, not only cannot
now commence to be, unless it be produced
by that which possesses in itself, formally
or eminently, all that enters into its composition,
[in other words, by that which contains in
itself the same properties that are in the
stone, or others superior to them]; and heat
can only be produced in a subject that was
before devoid of it, by a cause that is of
an order, [degree or kind], at least as perfect
as heat; and so of the others. But further,
even the idea of the heat, or of the stone,
cannot exist in me unless it be put there
by a cause that contains, at least, as much
reality as I conceive existent in the heat
or in the stone for although that cause may
not transmit into my idea anything of its
actual or formal reality, we ought not on
this account to imagine that it is less real;
but we ought to consider that, [as every
idea is a work of the mind], its nature is
such as of itself to demand no other formal
reality than that which it borrows from our
consciousness, of which it is but a mode
[that is, a manner or way of thinking]. But
in order that an idea may contain this objective
reality rather than that, it must doubtless
derive it from some cause in which is found
at least as much formal reality as the idea
contains of objective; for, if we suppose
that there is found in an idea anything which
was not in its cause, it must of course derive
this from nothing. But, however imperfect
may be the mode of existence by which a thing
is objectively [or by representation] in
the understanding by its idea, we certainly
cannot, for all that, allege that this mode
of existence is nothing, nor, consequently,
that the idea owes its origin to nothing.
15. Nor must it be imagined that, since the
reality which considered in these ideas is
only objective, the same reality need not
be formally (actually) in the causes of these
ideas, but only objectively: for, just as
the mode of existing objectively belongs
to ideas by their peculiar nature, so likewise
the mode of existing formally appertains
to the causes of these ideas (at least to
the first and principal), by their peculiar
nature. And although an idea may give rise
to another idea, this regress cannot, nevertheless,
be infinite; we must in the end reach a first
idea, the cause of which is, as it were,
the archetype in which all the reality [or
perfection] that is found objectively [or
by representation] in these ideas is contained
formally [and in act]. I am thus clearly
taught by the natural light that ideas exist
in me as pictures or images, which may, in
truth, readily fall short of the perfection
of the objects from which they are taken,
but can never contain anything greater or
more perfect.
16. And in proportion to the time and care
with which I examine all those matters, the
conviction of their truth brightens and becomes
distinct. But, to sum up, what conclusion
shall I draw from it all? It is this: if
the objective reality [or perfection] of
any one of my ideas be such as clearly to
convince me, that this same reality exists
in me neither formally nor eminently, and
if, as follows from this, I myself cannot
be the cause of it, it is a necessary consequence
that I am not alone in the world, but that
there is besides myself some other being
who exists as the cause of that idea; while,
on the contrary, if no such idea be found
in my mind, I shall have no sufficient ground
of assurance of the existence of any other
being besides myself, for, after a most careful
search, I have, up to this moment, been unable
to discover any other ground.
17. But, among these my ideas, besides that
which represents myself, respecting which
there can be here no difficulty, there is
one that represents a God; others that represent
corporeal and inanimate things; others angels;
others animals; and, finally, there are some
that represent men like myself.
18. But with respect to the ideas that represent
other men, or animals, or angels, I can easily
suppose that they were formed by the mingling
and composition of the other ideas which
I have of myself, of corporeal things, and
of God, although they were, apart from myself,
neither men, animals, nor angels.
19. And with regard to the ideas of corporeal
objects, I never discovered in them anything
so great or excellent which I myself did
not appear capable of originating; for, by
considering these ideas closely and scrutinizing
them individually, in the same way that I
yesterday examined the idea of wax, I find
that there is but little in them that is
clearly and distinctly perceived. As belonging
to the class of things that are clearly apprehended,
I recognize the following, viz, magnitude
or extension in length, breadth, and depth;
figure, which results from the termination
of extension; situation, which bodies of
diverse figures preserve with reference to
each other; and motion or the change of situation;
to which may be added substance, duration,
and number. But with regard to light, colors,
sounds, odors, tastes, heat, cold, and the
other tactile qualities, they are thought
with so much obscurity and confusion, that
I cannot determine even whether they are
true or false; in other words, whether or
not the ideas I have of these qualities are
in truth the ideas of real objects. For although
I before remarked that it is only in judgments
that formal falsity, or falsity properly
so called, can be met with, there may nevertheless
be found in ideas a certain material falsity,
which arises when they represent what is
nothing as if it were something. Thus, for
example, the ideas I have of cold and heat
are so far from being clear and distinct,
that I am unable from them to discover whether
cold is only the privation of heat, or heat
the privation of cold; or whether they are
or are not real qualities: and since, ideas
being as it were images there can be none
that does not seem to us to represent some
object, the idea which represents cold as
something real and positive will not improperly
be called false, if it be correct to say
that cold is nothing but a privation of heat;
and so in other cases.
20. To ideas of this kind, indeed, it is
not necessary that I should assign any author
besides myself: for if they are false, that
is, represent objects that are unreal, the
natural light teaches me that they proceed
from nothing; in other words, that they are
in me only because something is wanting to
the perfection of my nature; but if these
ideas are true, yet because they exhibit
to me so little reality that I cannot even
distinguish the object represented from nonbeing,
I do not see why I should not be the author
of them.
21. With reference to those ideas of corporeal
things that are clear and distinct, there
are some which, as appears to me, might have
been taken from the idea I have of myself,
as those of substance, duration, number,
and the like. For when I think that a stone
is a substance, or a thing capable of existing
of itself, and that I am likewise a substance,
although I conceive that I am a thinking
and non-extended thing, and that the stone,
on the contrary, is extended and unconscious,
there being thus the greatest diversity between
the two concepts, yet these two ideas seem
to have this in common that they both represent
substances. In the same way, when I think
of myself as now existing, and recollect
besides that I existed some time ago, and
when I am conscious of various thoughts whose
number I know, I then acquire the ideas of
duration and number, which I can afterward
transfer to as many objects as I please.
With respect to the other qualities that
go to make up the ideas of corporeal objects,
viz, extension, figure, situation, and motion,
it is true that they are not formally in
me, since I am merely a thinking being; but
because they are only certain modes of substance,
and because I myself am a substance, it seems
possible that they may be contained in me
eminently.
22. There only remains, therefore, the idea
of God, in which I must consider whether
there is anything that cannot be supposed
to originate with myself. By the name God,
I understand a substance infinite, [eternal,
immutable], independent, all-knowing, all-powerful,
and by which I myself, and every other thing
that exists, if any such there be, were created.
But these properties are so great and excellent,
that the more attentively I consider them
the less I feel persuaded that the idea I
have of them owes its origin to myself alone.
And thus it is absolutely necessary to conclude,
from all that I have before said, that God
exists.
23. For though the idea of substance be in
my mind owing to this, that I myself am a
substance, I should not, however, have the
idea of an infinite substance, seeing I am
a finite being, unless it were given me by
some substance in reality infinite.
24. And I must not imagine that I do not
apprehend the infinite by a true idea, but
only by the negation of the finite, in the
same way that I comprehend repose and darkness
by the negation of motion and light: since,
on the contrary, I clearly perceive that
there is more reality in the infinite substance
than in the finite, and therefore that in
some way I possess the perception (notion)
of the infinite before that of the finite,
that is, the perception of God before that
of myself, for how could I know that I doubt,
desire, or that something is wanting to me,
and that I am not wholly perfect, if I possessed
no idea of a being more perfect than myself,
by comparison of which I knew the deficiencies
of my nature ?
25. And it cannot be said that this idea
of God is perhaps materially false, and consequently
that it may have arisen from nothing [in
other words, that it may exist in me from
my imperfections as I before said of the
ideas of heat and cold, and the like: for,
on the contrary, as this idea is very clear
and distinct, and contains in itself more
objective reality than any other, there can
be no one of itself more true, or less open
to the suspicion of falsity. The idea, I
say, of a being supremely perfect, and infinite,
is in the highest degree true; for although,
perhaps, we may imagine that such a being
does not exist, we cannot, nevertheless,
suppose that his idea represents nothing
real, as I have already said of the idea
of cold. It is likewise clear and distinct
in the highest degree, since whatever the
mind clearly and distinctly conceives as
real or true, and as implying any perfection,
is contained entire in this idea. And this
is true, nevertheless, although I do not
comprehend the infinite, and although there
may be in God an infinity of things that
I cannot comprehend, nor perhaps even compass
by thought in any way; for it is of the nature
of the infinite that it should not be comprehended
by the finite; and it is enough that I rightly
understand this, and judge that all which
I clearly perceive, and in which I know there
is some perfection, and perhaps also an infinity
of properties of which I am ignorant, are
formally or eminently in God, in order that
the idea I have of him may be come the most
true, clear, and distinct of all the ideas
in my mind.
26. But perhaps I am something more than
I suppose myself to be, and it may be that
all those perfections which I attribute to
God, in some way exist potentially in me,
although they do not yet show themselves,
and are not reduced to act. Indeed, I am
already conscious that my knowledge is being
increased [and perfected] by degrees; and
I see nothing to prevent it from thus gradually
increasing to infinity, nor any reason why,
after such increase and perfection, I should
not be able thereby to acquire all the other
perfections of the Divine nature; nor, in
fine, why the power I possess of acquiring
those perfections, if it really now exist
in me, should not be sufficient to produce
the ideas of them.
27. Yet, on looking more closely into the
matter, I discover that this cannot be; for,
in the first place, although it were true
that my knowledge daily acquired new degrees
of perfection, and although there were potentially
in my nature much that was not as yet actually
in it, still all these excellences make not
the slightest approach to the idea I have
of the Deity, in whom there is no perfection
merely potentially [but all actually] existent;
for it is even an unmistakable token of imperfection
in my knowledge, that it is augmented by
degrees. Further, although my knowledge increase
more and more, nevertheless I am not, therefore,
induced to think that it will ever be actually
infinite, since it can never reach that point
beyond which it shall be incapable of further
increase. But I conceive God as actually
infinite, so that nothing can be added to
his perfection. And, in fine, I readily perceive
that the objective being of an idea cannot
be produced by a being that is merely potentially
existent, which, properly speaking, is nothing,
but only by a being existing formally or
actually.
28. And, truly, I see nothing in all that
I have now said which it is not easy for
any one, who shall carefully consider it,
to discern by the natural light; but when
I allow my attention in some degree to relax,
the vision of my mind being obscured, and,
as it were, blinded by the images of sensible
objects, I do not readily remember the reason
why the idea of a being more perfect than
myself, must of necessity have proceeded
from a being in reality more perfect. On
this account I am here desirous to inquire
further, whether I, who possess this idea
of God, could exist supposing there were
no God.
29. And I ask, from whom could I, in that
case, derive my existence ? Perhaps from
myself, or from my parents, or from some
other causes less perfect than God; for anything
more perfect, or even equal to God, cannot
be thought or imagined.
30. But if I [were independent of every other
existence, and] were myself the author of
my being, I should doubt of nothing, I should
desire nothing, and, in fine, no perfection
would be awanting to me; for I should have
bestowed upon myself every perfection of
which I possess the idea, and I should thus
be God. And it must not be imagined that
what is now wanting to me is perhaps of more
difficult acquisition than that of which
I am already possessed; for, on the contrary,
it is quite manifest that it was a matter
of much higher difficulty that I, a thinking
being, should arise from nothing, than it
would be for me to acquire the knowledge
of many things of which I am ignorant, and
which are merely the accidents of a thinking
substance; and certainly, if I possessed
of myself the greater perfection of which
I have now spoken [in other words, if I were
the author of my own existence], I would
not at least have denied to myself things
that may be more easily obtained [as that
infinite variety of knowledge of which I
am at present destitute]. I could not, indeed,
have denied to myself any property which
I perceive is contained in the idea of God,
because there is none of these that seems
to me to be more difficult to make or acquire;
and if there were any that should happen
to be more difficult to acquire, they would
certainly appear so to me (supposing that
I myself were the source of the other things
I possess), because I should discover in
them a limit to my power.
31. And though I were to suppose that I always
was as I now am, I should not, on this ground,
escape the force of these reasonings, since
it would not follow, even on this supposition,
that no author of my existence needed to
be sought after. For the whole time of my
life may be divided into an infinity of parts,
each of which is in no way dependent on any
other; and, accordingly, because I was in
existence a short time ago, it does not follow
that I must now exist, unless in this moment
some cause create me anew as it were, that
is, conserve me. In truth, it is perfectly
clear and evident to all who will attentively
consider the nature of duration, that the
conservation of a substance, in each moment
of its duration, requires the same power
and act that would be necessary to create
it, supposing it were not yet in existence;
so that it is manifestly a dictate of the
natural light that conservation and creation
differ merely in respect of our mode of thinking
[and not in reality].
32. All that is here required, therefore,
is that I interrogate myself to discover
whether I possess any power by means of which
I can bring it about that I, who now am,
shall exist a moment afterward: for, since
I am merely a thinking thing (or since, at
least, the precise question, in the meantime,
is only of that part of myself ), if such
a power resided in me, I should, without
doubt, be conscious of it; but I am conscious
of no such power, and thereby I manifestly
know that I am dependent upon some being
different from myself.
33. But perhaps the being upon whom I am
dependent is not God, and I have been produced
either by my parents, or by some causes less
perfect than Deity. This cannot be: for,
as I before said, it is perfectly evident
that there must at least be as much reality
in the cause as in its effect; and accordingly,
since I am a thinking thing and possess in
myself an idea of God, whatever in the end
be the cause of my existence, it must of
necessity be admitted that it is likewise
a thinking being, and that it possesses in
itself the idea and all the perfections I
attribute to Deity. Then it may again be
inquired whether this cause owes its origin
and existence to itself, or to some other
cause. For if it be self-existent, it follows,
from what I have before laid down, that this
cause is God; for, since it possesses the
perfection of self-existence, it must likewise,
without doubt, have the power of actually
possessing every perfection of which it has
the idea--in other words, all the perfections
I conceive to belong to God. But if it owe
its existence to another cause than itself,
we demand again, for a similar reason, whether
this second cause exists of itself or through
some other, until, from stage to stage, we
at length arrive at an ultimate cause, which
will be God.
34. And it is quite manifest that in this
matter there can be no infinite regress of
causes, seeing that the question raised respects
not so much the cause which once produced
me, as that by which I am at this present
moment conserved.
35. Nor can it be supposed that several causes
concurred in my production, and that from
one I received the idea of one of the perfections
I attribute to Deity, and from another the
idea of some other, and thus that all those
perfections are indeed found somewhere in
the universe, but do not all exist together
in a single being who is God; for, on the
contrary, the unity, the simplicity, or inseparability
of all the properties of Deity, is one of
the chief perfections I conceive him to possess;
and the idea of this unity of all the perfections
of Deity could certainly not be put into
my mind by any cause from which I did not
likewise receive the ideas of all the other
perfections; for no power could enable me
to embrace them in an inseparable unity,
without at the same time giving me the knowledge
of what they were [and of their existence
in a particular mode].
36. Finally, with regard to my parents [
from whom it appears I sprung ], although
all that I believed respecting them be true,
it does not, nevertheless, follow that I
am conserved by them, or even that I was
produced by them, in so far as I am a thinking
being. All that, at the most, they contributed
to my origin was the giving of certain dispositions
( modifications ) to the matter in which
I have hitherto judged that I or my mind,
which is what alone I now consider to be
myself, is inclosed; and thus there can here
be no difficulty with respect to them, and
it is absolutely necessary to conclude from
this alone that I am, and possess the idea
of a being absolutely perfect, that is, of
God, that his existence is most clearly demonstrated.
37. There remains only the inquiry as to
the way in which I received this idea from
God; for I have not drawn it from the senses,
nor is it even presented to me unexpectedly,
as is usual with the ideas of sensible objects,
when these are presented or appear to be
presented to the external organs of the senses;
it is not even a pure production or fiction
of my mind, for it is not in my power to
take from or add to it; and consequently
there but remains the alternative that it
is innate, in the same way as is the idea
of myself.
38. And, in truth, it is not to be wondered
at that God, at my creation, implanted this
idea in me, that it might serve, as it were,
for the mark of the workman impressed on
his work; and it is not also necessary that
the mark should be something different from
the work itself; but considering only that
God is my creator, it is highly probable
that he in some way fashioned me after his
own image and likeness, and that I perceive
this likeness, in which is contained the
idea of God, by the same faculty by which
I apprehend myself, in other words, when
I make myself the object of reflection, I
not only find that I am an incomplete, [imperfect]
and dependent being, and one who unceasingly
aspires after something better and greater
than he is; but, at the same time, I am assured
likewise that he upon whom I am dependent
possesses in himself all the goods after
which I aspire [and the ideas of which I
find in my mind], and that not merely indefinitely
and potentially, but infinitely and actually,
and that he is thus God. And the whole force
of the argument of which I have here availed
myself to establish the existence of God,
consists in this, that I perceive I could
not possibly be of such a nature as I am,
and yet have in my mind the idea of a God,
if God did not in reality exist--this same
God, I say, whose idea is in my mind--that
is, a being who possesses all those lofty
perfections, of which the mind may have some
slight conception, without, however, being
able fully to comprehend them, and who is
wholly superior to all defect [ and has nothing
that marks imperfection]: whence it is sufficiently
manifest that he cannot be a deceiver, since
it is a dictate of the natural light that
all fraud and deception spring from some
defect.
39. But before I examine this with more attention,
and pass on to the consideration of other
truths that may be evolved out of it, I think
it proper to remain here for some time in
the contemplation of God himself--that I
may ponder at leisure his marvelous attributes--and
behold, admire, and adore the beauty of this
light so unspeakably great, as far, at least,
as the strength of my mind, which is to some
degree dazzled by the sight, will permit.
For just as we learn by faith that the supreme
felicity of another life consists in the
contemplation of the Divine majesty alone,
so even now we learn from experience that
a like meditation, though incomparably less
perfect, is the source of the highest satisfaction
of which we are susceptible in this life.
MEDITATION FOUR OF TRUTH AND ERROR.
1. I HAVE been habituated these bygone days
to detach my mind from the senses, and I
have accurately observed that there is exceedingly
little which is known with certainty respecting
corporeal objects, that we know much more
of the human mind, and still more of God
himself. I am thus able now without difficulty
to abstract my mind from the contemplation
of [sensible or] imaginable objects, and
apply it to those which, as disengaged from
all matter, are purely intelligible. And
certainly the idea I have of the human mind
in so far as it is a thinking thing, and
not extended in length, breadth, and depth,
and participating in none of the properties
of body, is incomparably more distinct than
the idea of any corporeal object; and when
I consider that I doubt, in other words,
that I am an incomplete and dependent being,
the idea of a complete and independent being,
that is to say of God, occurs to my mind
with so much clearness and distinctness,
and from the fact alone that this idea is
found in me, or that I who possess it exist,
the conclusions that God exists, and that
my own existence, each moment of its continuance,
is absolutely dependent upon him, are so
manifest, as to lead me to believe it impossible
that the human mind can know anything with
more clearness and certitude. And now I seem
to discover a path that will conduct us from
the contemplation of the true God, in whom
are contained all the treasures of science
and wisdom, to the knowledge of the other
things in the universe.
2. For, in the first place, I discover that
it is impossible for him ever to deceive
me, for in all fraud and deceit there is
a certain imperfection: and although it may
seem that the ability to deceive is a mark
of subtlety or power, yet the will testifies
without doubt of malice and weakness; and
such, accordingly, cannot be found in God.
3. In the next place, I am conscious that
I possess a certain faculty of judging [or
discerning truth from error], which I doubtless
received from God, along with whatever else
is mine; and since it is impossible that
he should will to deceive me, it is likewise
certain that he has not given me a faculty
that will ever lead me into error, provided
I use it aright.
4. And there would remain no doubt on this
head, did it not seem to follow from this,
that I can never therefore be deceived; for
if all I possess be from God, and if he planted
in me no faculty that is deceitful, it seems
to follow that I can never fall into error.
Accordingly, it is true that when I think
only of God (when I look upon myself as coming
from God, Fr. ), and turn wholly to him,
I discover [in myself] no cause of error
or falsity: but immediately thereafter, recurring
to myself, experience assures me that I am
nevertheless subject to innumerable errors.
When I come to inquire into the cause of
these, I observe that there is not only present
to my consciousness a real and positive idea
of God, or of a being supremely perfect,
but also, so to speak, a certain negative
idea of nothing, in other words, of that
which is at an infinite distance from every
sort of perfection, and that I am, as it
were, a mean between God and nothing, or
placed in such a way between absolute existence
and non-existence, that there is in truth
nothing in me to lead me into error, in so
far as an absolute being is my creator; but
that, on the other hand, as I thus likewise
participate in some degree of nothing or
of nonbeing, in other words, as I am not
myself the supreme Being, and as I am wanting
in many perfections, it is not surprising
I should fall into error. And I hence discern
that error, so far as error is not something
real, which depends for its existence on
God, but is simply defect; and therefore
that, in order to fall into it, it is not
necessary God should have given me a faculty
expressly for this end, but that my being
deceived arises from the circumstance that
the power which God has given me of discerning
truth from error is not infinite.
5. Nevertheless this is not yet quite satisfactory;
for error is not a pure negation, [in other
words, it is not the simple deficiency or
want of some knowledge which is not due],
but the privation or want of some knowledge
which it would seem I ought to possess. But,
on considering the nature of God, it seems
impossible that he should have planted in
his creature any faculty not perfect in its
kind, that is, wanting in some perfection
due to it: for if it be true, that in proportion
to the skill of the maker the perfection
of his work is greater, what thing can have
been produced by the supreme Creator of the
universe that is not absolutely perfect in
all its parts? And assuredly there is no
doubt that God could have created me such
as that I should never be deceived; it is
certain, likewise, that he always wills what
is best: is it better, then, that I should
be capable of being deceived than that I
should not ?
6. Considering this more attentively the
first thing that occurs to me is the reflection
that I must not be surprised if I am not
always capable of comprehending the reasons
why God acts as he does; nor must I doubt
of his existence because I find, perhaps,
that there are several other things besides
the present respecting which I understand
neither why nor how they were created by
him; for, knowing already that my nature
is extremely weak and limited, and that the
nature of God, on the other hand, is immense,
incomprehensible, and infinite, I have no
longer any difficulty in discerning that
there is an infinity of things in his power
whose causes transcend the grasp of my mind:
and this consideration alone is sufficient
to convince me, that the whole class of final
causes is of no avail in physical [ or natural
] things; for it appears to me that I cannot,
without exposing myself to the charge of
temerity, seek to discover the [ impenetrable
] ends of Deity.
7. It further occurs to me that we must not
consider only one creature apart from the
others, if we wish to determine the perfection
of the works of Deity, but generally all
his creatures together; for the same object
that might perhaps, with some show of reason,
be deemed highly imperfect if it were alone
in the world, may for all that be the most
perfect possible, considered as forming part
of the whole universe: and although, as it
was my purpose to doubt of everything, I
only as yet know with certainty my own existence
and that of God, nevertheless, after having
remarked the infinite power of Deity, I cannot
deny that we may have produced many other
objects, or at least that he is able to produce
them, so that I may occupy a place in the
relation of a part to the great whole of
his creatures.
8. Whereupon, regarding myself more closely,
and considering what my errors are (which
alone testify to the existence of imperfection
in me), I observe that these depend on the
concurrence of two causes, viz, the faculty
of cognition, which I possess, and that of
election or the power of free choice,--in
other words, the understanding and the will.
For by the understanding alone, I [neither
affirm nor deny anything but] merely apprehend
(percipio) the ideas regarding which I may
form a judgment; nor is any error, properly
so called, found in it thus accurately taken.
And although there are perhaps innumerable
objects in the world of which I have no idea
in my understanding, it cannot, on that account
be said that I am deprived of those ideas
[as of something that is due to my nature],
but simply that I do not possess them, because,
in truth, there is no ground to prove that
Deity ought to have endowed me with a larger
faculty of cognition than he has actually
bestowed upon me; and however skillful a
workman I suppose him to be, I have no reason,
on that account, to think that it was obligatory
on him to give to each of his works all the
perfections he is able to bestow upon some.
Nor, moreover, can I complain that God has
not given me freedom of choice, or a will
sufficiently ample and perfect, since, in
truth, I am conscious of will so ample and
extended as to be superior to all limits.
And what appears to me here to be highly
remarkable is that, of all the other properties
I possess, there is none so great and perfect
as that I do not clearly discern it could
be still greater and more perfect. For, to
take an example, if I consider the faculty
of understanding which I possess, I find
that it is of very small extent, and greatly
limited, and at the same time I form the
idea of another faculty of the same nature,
much more ample and even infinite, and seeing
that I can frame the idea of it, I discover,
from this circumstance alone, that it pertains
to the nature of God. In the same way, if
I examine the faculty of memory or imagination,
or any other faculty I possess, I find none
that is not small and circumscribed, and
in God immense [and infinite]. It is the
faculty of will only, or freedom of choice,
which I experience to be so great that I
am unable to conceive the idea of another
that shall be more ample and extended; so
that it is chiefly my will which leads me
to discern that I bear a certain image and
similitude of Deity. For although the faculty
of will is incomparably greater in God than
in myself, as well in respect of the knowledge
and power that are conjoined with it, and
that render it stronger and more efficacious,
as in respect of the object, since in him
it extends to a greater number of things,
it does not, nevertheless, appear to me greater,
considered in itself formally and precisely:
for the power of will consists only in this,
that we are able to do or not to do the same
thing (that is, to affirm or deny, to pursue
or shun it), or rather in this alone, that
in affirming or denying, pursuing or shunning,
what is proposed to us by the understanding,
we so act that we are not conscious of being
determined to a particular action by any
external force. For, to the possession of
freedom, it is not necessary that I be alike
indifferent toward each of two contraries;
but, on the contrary, the more I am inclined
toward the one, whether because I clearly
know that in it there is the reason of truth
and goodness, or because God thus internally
disposes my thought, the more freely do I
choose and embrace it; and assuredly divine
grace and natural knowledge, very far from
diminishing liberty, rather augment and fortify
it. But the indifference of which I am conscious
when I am not impelled to one side rather
than to another for want of a reason, is
the lowest grade of liberty, and manifests
defect or negation of knowledge rather than
perfection of will; for if I always clearly
knew what was true and good, I should never
have any difficulty in determining what judgment
I ought to come to, and what choice I ought
to make, and I should thus be entirely free
without ever being indifferent.
9. From all this I discover, however, that
neither the power of willing, which I have
received from God, is of itself the source
of my errors, for it is exceedingly ample
and perfect in its kind; nor even the power
of understanding, for as I conceive no object
unless by means of the faculty that God bestowed
upon me, all that I conceive is doubtless
rightly conceived by me, and it is impossible
for me to be deceived in it. Whence, then,
spring my errors ? They arise from this cause
alone, that I do not restrain the will, which
is of much wider range than the understanding,
within the same limits, but extend it even
to things I do not understand, and as the
will is of itself indifferent to such, it
readily falls into error and sin by choosing
the false in room of the true, and evil instead
of good.
10. For example, when I lately considered
whether aught really existed in the world,
and found that because I considered this
question, it very manifestly followed that
I myself existed, I could not but judge that
what I so clearly conceived was true, not
that I was forced to this judgment by any
external cause, but simply because great
clearness of the understanding was succeeded
by strong inclination in the will; and I
believed this the more freely and spontaneously
in proportion as I was less indifferent with
respect to it. But now I not only know that
I exist, in so far as I am a thinking being,
but there is likewise presented to my mind
a certain idea of corporeal nature; hence
I am in doubt as to whether the thinking
nature which is in me, or rather which I
myself am, is different from that corporeal
nature, or whether both are merely one and
the same thing, and I here suppose that I
am as yet ignorant of any reason that would
determine me to adopt the one belief in preference
to the other; whence it happens that it is
a matter of perfect indifference to me which
of the two suppositions I affirm or deny,
or whether I form any judgment at all in
the matter.
11. This indifference, moreover, extends
not only to things of which the understanding
has no knowledge at all, but in general also
to all those which it does not discover with
perfect clearness at the moment the will
is deliberating upon them; for, however probable
the conjectures may be that dispose me to
form a judgment in a particular matter, the
simple knowledge that these are merely conjectures,
and not certain and indubitable reasons,
is sufficient to lead me to form one that
is directly the opposite. Of this I lately
had abundant experience, when I laid aside
as false all that I had before held for true,
on the single ground that I could in some
degree doubt of it.
12. But if I abstain from judging of a thing
when I do not conceive it with sufficient
clearness and distinctness, it is plain that
I act rightly, and am not deceived; but if
I resolve to deny or affirm, I then do not
make a right use of my free will; and if
I affirm what is false, it is evident that
I am deceived; moreover, even although I
judge according to truth, I stumble upon
it by chance, and do not therefore escape
the imputation of a wrong use of my freedom;
for it is a dictate of the natural light,
that the knowledge of the understanding ought
always to precede the determination of the
will. And it is this wrong use of the freedom
of the will in which is found the privation
that constitutes the form of error. Privation,
I say, is found in the act, in so far as
it proceeds from myself, but it does not
exist in the faculty which I received from
God, nor even in the act, in so far as it
depends on him.
13. For I have assuredly no reason to complain
that God has not given me a greater power
of intelligence or more perfect natural light
than he has actually bestowed, since it is
of the nature of a finite understanding not
to comprehend many things, and of the nature
of a created understanding to be finite;
on the contrary, I have every reason to render
thanks to God, who owed me nothing, for having
given me all the perfections I possess, and
I should be far from thinking that he has
unjustly deprived me of, or kept back, the
other perfections which he has not bestowed
upon me.
14. I have no reason, moreover, to complain
because he has given me a will more ample
than my understanding, since, as the will
consists only of a single element, and that
indivisible, it would appear that this faculty
is of such a nature that nothing could be
taken from it [without destroying it]; and
certainly, the more extensive it is, the
more cause I have to thank the goodness of
him who bestowed it upon me.
15. And, finally, I ought not also to complain
that God concurs with me in forming the acts
of this will, or the judgments in which I
am deceived, because those acts are wholly
true and good, in so far as they depend on
God; and the ability to form them is a higher
degree of perfection in my nature than the
want of it would be. With regard to privation,
in which alone consists the formal reason
of error and sin, this does not require the
concurrence of Deity, because it is not a
thing [or existence], and if it be referred
to God as to its cause, it ought not to be
called privation, but negation [according
to the signification of these words in the
schools]. For in truth it is no imperfection
in Deity that he has accorded to me the power
of giving or withholding my assent from certain
things of which he has not put a clear and
distinct knowledge in my understanding; but
it is doubtless an imperfection in me that
I do not use my freedom aright, and readily
give my judgment on matters which I only
obscurely and confusedly conceive. I perceive,
nevertheless, that it was easy for Deity
so to have constituted me as that I should
never be deceived, although I still remained
free and possessed of a limited knowledge,
viz., by implanting in my understanding a
clear and distinct knowledge of all the objects
respecting which I should ever have to deliberate;
or simply by so deeply engraving on my memory
the resolution to judge of nothing without
previously possessing a clear and distinct
conception of it, that I should never forget
it. And I easily understand that, in so far
as I consider myself as a single whole, without
reference to any other being in the universe,
I should have been much more perfect than
I now am, had Deity created me superior to
error; but I cannot therefore deny that it
is not somehow a greater perfection in the
universe, that certain of its parts are not
exempt from defect, as others are, than if
they were all perfectly alike. And I have
no right to complain because God, who placed
me in the world, was not willing that I should
sustain that character which of all others
is the chief and most perfect.
16. I have even good reason to remain satisfied
on the ground that, if he has not given me
the perfection of being superior to error
by the first means I have pointed out above,
which depends on a clear and evident knowledge
of all the matters regarding which I can
deliberate, he has at least left in my power
the other means, which is, firmly to retain
the resolution never to judge where the truth
is not clearly known to me: for, although
I am conscious of the weakness of not being
able to keep my mind continually fixed on
the same thought, I can nevertheless, by
attentive and oft-repeated meditation, impress
it so strongly on my memory that I shall
never fail to recollect it as often as I
require it, and I can acquire in this way
the habitude of not erring.
17. And since it is in being superior to
error that the highest and chief perfection
of man consists, I deem that I have not gained
little by this day's meditation, in having
discovered the source of error and falsity.
And certainly this can be no other than what
I have now explained: for as often as I so
restrain my will within the limits of my
knowledge, that it forms no judgment except
regarding objects which are clearly and distinctly
represented to it by the understanding, I
can never be deceived; because every clear
and distinct conception is doubtless something,
and as such cannot owe its origin to nothing,
but must of necessity have God for its author--
God, I say, who, as supremely perfect, cannot,
without a contradiction, be the cause of
any error; and consequently it is necessary
to conclude that every such conception [or
judgment] is true. Nor have I merely learned
to-day what I must avoid to escape error,
but also what I must do to arrive at the
knowledge of truth; for I will assuredly
reach truth if I only fix my attention sufficiently
on all the things I conceive perfectly, and
separate these from others which I conceive
more confusedly and obscurely; to which for
the future I shall give diligent heed.
MEDITATION FIVE OF THE ESSENCE OF MATERIAL
THINGS; AND, AGAIN, OF GOD; THAT HE EXISTS
1. SEVERAL other questions remain for consideration
respecting the attributes of God and my own
nature or mind. I will, however, on some
other occasion perhaps resume the investigation
of these. Meanwhile, as I have discovered
what must be done and what avoided to arrive
at the knowledge of truth, what I have chiefly
to do is to essay to emerge from the state
of doubt in which I have for some time been,
and to discover whether anything can be known
with certainty regarding material objects
2. But before considering whether such objects
as I conceive exist without me, I must examine
their ideas in so far as these are to be
found in my consciousness, and discover which
of them are distinct and which confused
3. In the first place, I distinctly imagine
that quantity which the philosophers commonly
call continuous, or the extension in length,
breadth, and depth that is in this quantity,
or rather in the object to which it is attributed.
Further, I can enumerate in it many diverse
parts, and attribute to each of these all
sorts of sizes, figures, situations, and
local motions; and, in fine, I can assign
to each of these motions all degrees of duration
4. And I not only distinctly know these things
when I thus consider them in general; but
besides, by a little attention, I discover
innumerable particulars respecting figures,
numbers, motion, and the like, which are
so evidently true, and so accordant with
my nature, that when I now discover them
I do not so much appear to learn anything
new, as to call to remembrance what I before
knew, or for the first time to remark what
was before in my mind, but to which I had
not hitherto directed my attention
5. And what I here find of most importance
is, that I discover in my mind innumerable
ideas of certain objects, which cannot be
esteemed pure negations, although perhaps
they possess no reality beyond my thought,
and which are not framed by me though it
may be in my power to think, or not to think
them, but possess true and immutable natures
of their own. As, for example, when I imagine
a triangle, although there is not perhaps
and never was in any place in the universe
apart from my thought one such figure, it
remains true nevertheless that this figure
possesses a certain determinate nature, form,
or essence, which is immutable and eternal,
and not framed by me, nor in any degree dependent
on my thought; as appears from the circumstance,
that diverse properties of the triangle may
be demonstrated, viz, that its three angles
are equal to two right, that its greatest
side is subtended by its greatest angle,
and the like, which, whether I will or not,
I now clearly discern to belong to it, although
before I did not at all think of them, when,
for the first time, I imagined a triangle,
and which accordingly cannot be said to have
been invented by me
6. Nor is it a valid objection to allege,
that perhaps this idea of a triangle came
into my mind by the medium of the senses,
through my having. seen bodies of a triangular
figure; for I am able to form in thought
an innumerable variety of figures with regard
to which it cannot be supposed that they
were ever objects of sense, and I can nevertheless
demonstrate diverse properties of their nature
no less than of the triangle, all of which
are assuredly true since I clearly conceive
them: and they are therefore something, and
not mere negations; for it is highly evident
that all that is true is something, [truth
being identical with existence]; and I have
already fully shown the truth of the principle,
that whatever is clearly and distinctly known
is true. And although this had not been demonstrated,
yet the nature of my mind is such as to compel
me to assert to what I clearly conceive while
I so conceive it; and I recollect that even
when I still strongly adhered to the objects
of sense, I reckoned among the number of
the most certain truths those I clearly conceived
relating to figures, numbers, and other matters
that pertain to arithmetic and geometry,
and in general to the pure mathematics
7. But now if because I can draw from my
thought the idea of an object, it follows
that all I clearly and distinctly apprehend
to pertain to this object, does in truth
belong to it, may I not from this derive
an argument for the existence of God? It
is certain that I no less find the idea of
a God in my consciousness, that is the idea
of a being supremely perfect, than that of
any figure or number whatever: and I know
with not less clearness and distinctness
that an [actual and] eternal existence pertains
to his nature than that all which is demonstrable
of any figure or number really belongs to
the nature of that figure or number; and,
therefore, although all the conclusions of
the preceding Meditations were false, the
existence of God would pass with me for a
truth at least as certain as I ever judged
any truth of mathematics to be
8. Indeed such a doctrine may at first sight
appear to contain more sophistry than truth.
For, as I have been accustomed in every other
matter to distinguish between existence and
essence, I easily believe that the existence
can be separated from the essence of God,
and that thus God may be conceived as not
actually existing. But, nevertheless, when
I think of it more attentively, it appears
that the existence can no more be separated
from the essence of God, than the idea of
a mountain from that of a valley, or the
equality of its three angles to two right
angles, from the essence of a [rectilinear]
triangle; so that it is not less impossible
to conceive a God, that is, a being supremely
perfect, to whom existence is awanting, or
who is devoid of a certain perfection, than
to conceive a mountain without a valley
9. But though, in truth, I cannot conceive
a God unless as existing, any more than I
can a mountain without a valley, yet, just
as it does not follow that there is any mountain
in the world merely because I conceive a
mountain with a valley, so likewise, though
I conceive God as existing, it does not seem
to follow on that account that God exists;
for my thought imposes no necessity on things;
and as I may imagine a winged horse, though
there be none such, so I could perhaps attribute
existence to God, though no God existed
10. But the cases are not analogous, and
a fallacy lurks under the semblance of this
objection: for because I cannot conceive
a mountain without a valley, it does not
follow that there is any mountain or valley
in existence, but simply that the mountain
or valley, whether they do or do not exist,
are inseparable from each other; whereas,
on the other hand, because I cannot conceive
God unless as existing, it follows that existence
is inseparable from him, and therefore that
he really exists: not that this is brought
about by my thought, or that it imposes any
necessity on things, but, on the contrary,
the necessity which lies in the thing itself,
that is, the necessity of the existence of
God, determines me to think in this way:
for it is not in my power to conceive a God
without existence, that is, a being supremely
perfect, and yet devoid of an absolute perfection,
as I am free to imagine a horse with or without
wings
11. Nor must it be alleged here as an objection,
that it is in truth necessary to admit that
God exists, after having supposed him to
possess all perfections, since existence
is one of them, but that my original supposition
was not necessary; just as it is not necessary
to think that all quadrilateral figures can
be inscribed in the circle, since, if I supposed
this, I should be constrained to admit that
the rhombus, being a figure of four sides,
can be therein inscribed, which, however,
is manifestly false. This objection is, I
say, incompetent; for although it may not
be necessary that I shall at any time entertain
the notion of Deity, yet each time I happen
to think of a first and sovereign being,
and to draw, so to speak, the idea of him
from the storehouse of the mind, I am necessitated
to attribute to him all kinds of perfections,
though I may not then enumerate them all,
nor think of each of them in particular.
And this necessity is sufficient, as soon
as I discover that existence is a perfection,
to cause me to infer the existence of this
first and sovereign being; just as it is
not necessary that I should ever imagine
any triangle, but whenever I am desirous
of considering a rectilinear figure composed
of only three angles, it is absolutely necessary
to attribute those properties to it from
which it is correctly inferred that its three
angles are not greater than two right angles,
although perhaps I may not then advert to
this relation in particular. But when I consider
what figures are capable of being inscribed
in the circle, it is by no means necessary
to hold that all quadrilateral figures are
of this number; on the contrary, I cannot
even imagine such to be the case, so long
as I shall be unwilling to accept in thought
aught that I do not clearly and distinctly
conceive; and consequently there is a vast
difference between false suppositions, as
is the one in question, and the true ideas
that were born with me, the first and chief
of which is the idea of God. For indeed I
discern on many grounds that this idea is
not factitious depending simply on my thought,
but that it is the representation of a true
and immutable nature: in the first place
because I can conceive no other being, except
God, to whose essence existence [necessarily]
pertains; in the second, because it is impossible
to conceive two or more gods of this kind;
and it being supposed that one such God exists,
I clearly see that he must have existed from
all eternity, and will exist to all eternity;
and finally, because I apprehend many other
properties in God, none of which I can either
diminish or change
12. But, indeed, whatever mode of probation
I in the end adopt, it always returns to
this, that it is only the things I clearly
and distinctly conceive which have the power
of completely persuading me. And although,
of the objects I conceive in this manner,
some, indeed, are obvious to every one, while
others are only discovered after close and
careful investigation; nevertheless after
they are once discovered, the latter are
not esteemed less certain than the former.
Thus, for example, to take the case of a
right-angled triangle, although it is not
so manifest at first that the square of the
base is equal to the squares of the other
two sides, as that the base is opposite to
the greatest angle; nevertheless, after it
is once apprehended, we are as firmly persuaded
of the truth of the former as of the latter.
And, with respect to God if I were not pre-
occupied by prejudices, and my thought beset
on all sides by the continual presence of
the images of sensible objects, I should
know nothing sooner or more easily then the
fact of his being. For is there any truth
more clear than the existence of a Supreme
Being, or of God, seeing it is to his essence
alone that [necessary and eternal] existence
pertains? [ L] [ F]
13. And although the right conception of
this truth has cost me much close thinking,
nevertheless at present I feel not only as
assured of it as of what I deem most certain,
but I remark further that the certitude of
all other truths is so absolutely dependent
on it that without this knowledge it is impossible
ever to know anything perfectly. [ L] [ F]
14. For although I am of such a nature as
to be unable, while I possess a very clear
and distinct apprehension of a matter, to
resist the conviction of its truth, yet because
my constitution is also such as to incapacitate
me from keeping my mind continually fixed
on the same object, and as I frequently recollect
a past judgment without at the same time
being able to recall the grounds of it, it
may happen meanwhile that other reasons are
presented to me which would readily cause
me to change my opinion, if I did not know
that God existed; and thus I should possess
no true and certain knowledge, but merely
vague and vacillating opinions. Thus, for
example, when I consider the nature of the
[rectilinear] triangle, it most clearly appears
to me, who have been instructed in the principles
of geometry, that its three angles are equal
to two right angles, and I find it impossible
to believe otherwise, while I apply my mind
to the demonstration; but as soon as I cease
from attending to the process of proof, although
I still remember that I had a clear comprehension
of it, yet I may readily come to doubt of
the truth demonstrated, if I do not know
that there is a God: for I may persuade myself
that I have been so constituted by nature
as to be sometimes deceived, even in matters
which I think I apprehend with the greatest
evidence and certitude, especially when I
recollect that I frequently considered many
things to be true and certain which other
reasons afterward constrained me to reckon
as wholly false
15. But after I have discovered that God
exists, seeing I also at the same time observed
that all things depend on him, and that he
is no deceiver, and thence inferred that
all which I clearly and distinctly perceive
is of necessity true: although I no longer
attend to the grounds of a judgment, no opposite
reason can be alleged sufficient to lead
me to doubt of its truth, provided only I
remember that I once possessed a clear and
distinct comprehension of it. My knowledge
of it thus becomes true and certain. And
this same knowledge extends likewise to whatever
I remember to have formerly demonstrated,
as the truths of geometry and the like: for
what can be alleged against them to lead
me to doubt of them ? Will it be that my
nature is such that I may be frequently deceived?
But I already know that I cannot be deceived
in judgments of the grounds of which I possess
a clear knowledge. Will it be that I formerly
deemed things to be true and certain which
I afterward discovered to be false ? But
I had no clear and distinct knowledge of
any of those things, and, being as yet ignorant
of the rule by which I am assured of the
truth of a judgment, I was led to give my
assent to them on grounds which I afterward
discovered were less strong than at the time
I imagined them to be. What further objection,
then, is there ? Will it be said that perhaps
I am dreaming (an objection I lately myself
raised), or that all the thoughts of which
I am now conscious have no more truth than
the reveries of my dreams ? But although,
in truth, I should be dreaming, the rule
still holds that all which is clearly presented
to my intellect is indisputably true
16. And thus I very clearly see that the
certitude and truth of all science depends
on the knowledge alone of the true God, insomuch
that, before I knew him, I could have no
perfect knowledge of any other thing. And
now that I know him, I possess the means
of acquiring a perfect knowledge respecting
innumerable matters, as well relative to
God himself and other intellectual objects
as to corporeal nature, in so far as it is
the object of pure mathematics [which do
not consider whether it exists or not]
MEDITATION SIX OF THE EXISTENCE OF MATERIAL
THINGS, AND OF THE REAL DISTINCTION BETWEEN
THE MIND AND BODY OF MAN
1. THERE now only remains the inquiry as
to whether material things exist. With regard
to this question, I at least know with certainty
that such things may exist, in as far as
they constitute the object of the pure mathematics,
since, regarding them in this aspect, I can
conceive them clearly and distinctly. For
there can be no doubt that God possesses
the power of producing all the objects I
am able distinctly to conceive, and I never
considered anything impossible to him, unless
when I experienced a contradiction in the
attempt to conceive it aright. Further, the
faculty of imagination which I possess, and
of which I am conscious that I make use when
I apply myself to the consideration of material
things, is sufficient to persuade me of their
existence: for, when I attentively consider
what imagination is, I find that it is simply
a certain application of the cognitive faculty
( facultas cognoscitiva) to a body which
is immediately present to it, and which therefore
exists.
2. And to render this quite clear, I remark,
in the first place, the difference that subsists
between imagination and pure intellection
[or conception ]. For example, when I imagine
a triangle I not only conceive
(intelligo) that it is a figure comprehended
by three lines, but at the same time also
I look upon (intueor) these three lines as
present by the power and internal application
of my mind (acie mentis), and this is what
I call imagining. But if I desire to think
of a chiliogon, I indeed rightly conceive
that it is a figure composed of a thousand
sides, as easily as I conceive that a triangle
is a figure composed of only three sides;
but I cannot imagine the thousand sides of
a chiliogon as I do the three sides of a
triangle, nor, so to speak, view them as
present [with the eyes of my mind ]. And
although, in accordance with the habit I
have of always imagining something when I
think of corporeal things, it may happen
that, in conceiving a chiliogon, I confusedly
represent some figure to myself, yet it is
quite evident that this is not a chiliogon,
since it in no wise differs from that which
I would represent to myself, if I were to
think of a myriogon, or any other figure
of many sides; nor would this representation
be of any use in discovering and unfolding
the properties that constitute the difference
between a chiliogon and other polygons. But
if the question turns on a pentagon, it is
quite true that I can conceive its figure,
as well as that of a chiliogon, without the
aid of imagination; but I can likewise imagine
it by applying the attention of my mind to
its five sides, and at the same time to the
area which they contain. Thus I observe that
a special effort of mind is necessary to
the act of imagination, which is not required
to conceiving or understanding (ad intelligendum);
and this special exertion of mind clearly
shows the difference between imagination
and pure intellection (imaginatio et intellectio
pura).
3. I remark, besides, that this power of
imagination which I possess, in as far as
it differs from the power of conceiving,
is in no way necessary to my [nature or]
essence, that is, to the essence of my mind;
for although I did not possess it, I should
still remain the same that I now am, from
which it seems we may conclude that it depends
on something different from the mind. And
I easily understand that, if some body exists,
with which my mind is so conjoined and united
as to be able, as it were, to consider it
when it chooses, it may thus imagine corporeal
objects; so that this mode of thinking differs
from pure intellection only in this respect,
that the mind in conceiving turns in some
way upon itself, and considers some one of
the ideas it possesses within itself; but
in imagining it turns toward the body, and
contemplates in it some object conformed
to the idea which it either of itself conceived
or apprehended by sense. I easily understand,
I say, that imagination may be thus formed,
if it is true that there are bodies; and
because I find no other obvious mode of explaining
it, I thence, with probability, conjecture
that they exist, but only with probability;
and although I carefully examine all things,
nevertheless I do not find that, from the
distinct idea of corporeal nature I have
in my imagination, I can necessarily infer
the existence of any body.
4. But I am accustomed to imagine many other
objects besides that corporeal nature which
is the object of the pure mathematics, as,
for example, colors, sounds, tastes, pain,
and the like, although with less distinctness;
and, inasmuch as I perceive these objects
much better by the senses, through the medium
of which and of memory, they seem to have
reached the imagination, I believe that,
in order the more advantageously to examine
them, it is proper I should at the same time
examine what sense-perception is, and inquire
whether from those ideas that are apprehended
by this mode of thinking ( consciousness),
I cannot obtain a certain proof of the existence
of corporeal objects.
5. And, in the first place, I will recall
to my mind the things I have hitherto held
as true, because perceived by the senses,
and the foundations upon which my belief
in their truth rested; I will, in the second
place, examine the reasons that afterward
constrained me to doubt of them; and, finally,
I will consider what of them I ought now
to believe.
6. Firstly, then, I perceived that I had
a head, hands, feet and other members composing
that body which I considered as part, or
perhaps even as the whole, of myself. I perceived
further, that that body was placed among
many others, by which it was capable of being
affected in diverse ways, both beneficial
and hurtful; and what was beneficial I remarked
by a certain sensation of pleasure, and what
was hurtful by a sensation of pain. And besides
this pleasure and pain, I was likewise conscious
of hunger, thirst, and other appetites, as
well as certain corporeal inclinations toward
joy, sadness, anger, and similar passions.
And, out of myself, besides the extension,
figure, and motions of bodies, I likewise
perceived in them hardness, heat, and the
other tactile qualities, and, in addition,
light, colors, odors, tastes, and sounds,
the variety of which gave me the means of
distinguishing the sky, the earth, the sea,
and generally all the other bodies, from
one another. And certainly, considering the
ideas of all these qualities, which were
presented to my mind, and which alone I properly
and immediately perceived, it was not without
reason that I thought I perceived certain
objects wholly different from my thought,
namely, bodies from which those ideas proceeded;
for I was conscious that the ideas were presented
to me without my consent being required,
so that I could not perceive any object,
however desirous I might be, unless it were
present to the organ of sense; and it was
wholly out of my power not to perceive it
when it was thus present. And because the
ideas I perceived by the senses were much
more lively and clear, and even, in their
own way, more distinct than any of those
I could of myself frame by meditation, or
which I found impressed on my memory, it
seemed that they could not have proceeded
from myself, and must therefore have been
caused in me by some other objects; and as
of those objects I had no knowledge beyond
what the ideas themselves gave me, nothing
was so likely to occur to my mind as the
supposition that the objects were similar
to the ideas which they caused. And because
I recollected also that I had formerly trusted
to the senses, rather than to reason, and
that the ideas which I myself formed were
not so clear as those I perceived by sense,
and that they were even for the most part
composed of parts of the latter, I was readily
persuaded that I had no idea in my intellect
which had not formerly passed through the
senses. Nor was I altogether wrong in likewise
believing that that body which, by a special
right, I called my own, pertained to me more
properly and strictly than any of the others;
for in truth, I could never be separated
from it as from other bodies; I felt in it
and on account of it all my appetites and
affections, and in fine I was affected in
its parts by pain and the titillation of
pleasure, and not in the parts of the other
bodies that were separated from it. But when
I inquired into the reason why, from this
I know not what sensation of pain, sadness
of mind should follow, and why from the sensation
of pleasure, joy should arise, or why this
indescribable twitching of the stomach, which
I call hunger, should put me in mind of taking
food, and the parchedness of the throat of
drink, and so in other cases, I was unable
to give any explanation, unless that I was
so taught by nature; for there is assuredly
no affinity, at least none that I am able
to comprehend, between this irritation of
the stomach and the desire of food, any more
than between the perception of an object
that causes pain and the consciousness of
sadness which springs from the perception.
And in the same way it seemed to me that
all the other judgments I had formed regarding
the objects of sense, were dictates of nature;
because I remarked that those judgments were
formed in me, before I had leisure to weigh
and consider the reasons that might constrain
me to form them.
7. But, afterward, a wide experience by degrees
sapped the faith I had reposed in my senses;
for I frequently observed that towers, which
at a distance seemed round, appeared square,
when more closely viewed, and that colossal
figures, raised on the summits of these towers,
looked like small statues, when viewed from
the bottom of them; and, in other instances
without number, I also discovered error in
judgments founded on the external senses;
and not only in those founded on the external,
but even in those that rested on the internal
senses; for is there aught more internal
than pain ? And yet I have sometimes been
informed by parties whose arm or leg had
been amputated, that they still occasionally
seemed to feel pain in that part of the body
which they had lost, --a circumstance that
led me to think that I could not be quite
certain even that any one of my members was
affected when I felt pain in it. And to these
grounds of doubt I shortly afterward also
added two others of very wide generality:
the first of them was that I believed I never
perceived anything when awake which I could
not occasionally think I also perceived when
asleep, and as I do not believe that the
ideas I seem to perceive in my sleep proceed
from objects external to me, I did not any
more observe any ground for believing this
of such as I seem to perceive when awake;
the second was that since I was as yet ignorant
of the author of my being or at least supposed
myself to be so, I saw nothing to prevent
my having been so constituted by nature as
that I should be deceived even in matters
that appeared to me to possess the greatest
truth. And, with respect to the grounds on
which I had before been persuaded of the
existence of sensible objects, I had no great
difficulty in finding suitable answers to
them; for as nature seemed to incline me
to many things from which reason made me
averse, I thought that I ought not to confide
much in its teachings. And although the perceptions
of the senses were not dependent on my will,
I did not think that I ought on that ground
to conclude that they proceeded from things
different from myself, since perhaps there
might be found in me some faculty, though
hitherto unknown to me, which produced them.
8. But now that I begin to know myself better,
and to discover more clearly the author of
my being, I do not, indeed, think that I
ought rashly to admit all which the senses
seem to teach, nor, on the other hand, is
it my conviction that I ought to doubt in
general of their teachings.
9. And, firstly, because I know that all
which I clearly and distinctly conceive can
be produced by God exactly as I conceive
it, it is sufficient that I am able clearly
and distinctly to conceive one thing apart
from another, in order to be certain that
the one is different from the other, seeing
they may at least be made to exist separately,
by the omnipotence of God; and it matters
not by what power this separation is made,
in order to be compelled to judge them different;
and, therefore, merely because I know with
certitude that I exist, and because, in the
meantime, I do not observe that aught necessarily
belongs to my nature or essence beyond my
being a thinking thing, I rightly conclude
that my essence consists only in my being
a thinking thing [or a substance whose whole
essence or nature is merely thinking]. And
although I may, or rather, as I will shortly
say, although I certainly do possess a body
with which I am very closely conjoined; nevertheless,
because, on the one hand, I have a clear
and distinct idea of myself, in as far as
I am only a thinking and unextended thing,
and as, on the other hand, I possess a distinct
idea of body, in as far as it is only an
extended and unthinking thing, it is certain
that I, [that is, my mind, by which I am
what I am], is entirely and truly distinct
from my body, and may exist without it.
10. Moreover, I find in myself diverse faculties
of thinking that have each their special
mode: for example, I find I possess the faculties
of imagining and perceiving, without which
I can indeed clearly and distinctly conceive
myself as entire, but I cannot reciprocally
conceive them without conceiving myself,
that is to say, without an intelligent substance
in which they reside, for [in the notion
we have of them, or to use the terms of the
schools] in their formal concept, they comprise
some sort of intellection; whence I perceive
that they are distinct from myself as modes
are from things. I remark likewise certain
other faculties, as the power of changing
place, of assuming diverse figures, and the
like, that cannot be conceived and cannot
therefore exist, any more than the preceding,
apart from a substance in which they inhere.
It is very evident, however, that these faculties,
if they really exist, must belong to some
corporeal or extended substance, since in
their clear and distinct concept there is
contained some sort of extension, but no
intellection at all. Further, I cannot doubt
but that there is in me a certain passive
faculty of perception, that is, of receiving
and taking knowledge of the ideas of sensible
things; but this would be useless to me,
if there did not also exist in me, or in
some other thing, another active faculty
capable of forming and producing those ideas.
But this active faculty cannot be in me [in
as far as I am but a thinking thing], seeing
that it does not presuppose thought, and
also that those ideas are frequently produced
in my mind without my contributing to it
in any way, and even frequently contrary
to my will. This faculty must therefore exist
in some substance different from me, in which
all the objective reality of the ideas that
are produced by this faculty is contained
formally or eminently, as I before remarked;
and this substance is either a body, that
is to say, a corporeal nature in which is
contained formally [and in effect] all that
is objectively [and by representation] in
those ideas; or it is God himself, or some
other creature, of a rank superior to body,
in which the same is contained eminently.
But as God is no deceiver, it is manifest
that he does not of himself and immediately
communicate those ideas to me, nor even by
the intervention of any creature in which
their objective reality is not formally,
but only eminently, contained. For as he
has given me no faculty whereby I can discover
this to be the case, but, on the contrary,
a very strong inclination to believe that
those ideas arise from corporeal objects,
I do not see how he could be vindicated from
the charge of deceit, if in truth they proceeded
from any other source, or were produced by
other causes than corporeal things: and accordingly
it must be concluded, that corporeal objects
exist. Nevertheless, they are not perhaps
exactly such as we perceive by the senses,
for their comprehension by the senses is,
in many instances, very obscure and confused;
but it is at least necessary to admit that
all which I clearly and distinctly conceive
as in them, that is, generally speaking all
that is comprehended in the object of speculative
geometry, really exists external to me.
11. But with respect to other things which
are either only particular, as, for example,
that the sun is of such a size and figure,
etc., or are conceived with less clearness
and distinctness, as light, sound, pain,
and the like, although they are highly dubious
and uncertain, nevertheless on the ground
alone that God is no deceiver, and that consequently
he has permitted no falsity in my opinions
which he has not likewise given me a faculty
of correcting, I think I may with safety
conclude that I possess in myself the means
of arriving at the truth. And, in the first
place, it cannot be doubted that in each
of the dictates of nature there is some truth:
for by nature, considered in general, I now
understand nothing more than God himself,
or the order and disposition established
by God in created things; and by my nature
in particular I understand the assemblage
of all that God has given me.
12. But there is nothing which that nature
teaches me more expressly [ or more sensibly
] than that I have a body which is ill affected
when I feel pain, and stands in need of food
and drink when I experience the sensations
of hunger and thirst, etc. And therefore
I ought not to doubt but that there is some
truth in these informations.
13. Nature likewise teaches me by these sensations
of pain, hunger, thirst, etc., that I am
not only lodged in my body as a pilot in
a vessel, but that I am besides so intimately
conjoined, and as it were intermixed with
it, that my mind and body compose a certain
unity. For if this were not the case, I should
not feel pain when my body is hurt, seeing
I am merely a thinking thing, but should
perceive the wound by the understanding alone,
just as a pilot perceives by sight when any
part of his vessel is damaged; and when my
body has need of food or drink, I should
have a clear knowledge of this, and not be
made aware of it by the confused sensations
of hunger and thirst: for, in truth, all
these sensations of hunger, thirst, pain,
etc., are nothing more than certain confused
modes of thinking, arising from the union
and apparent fusion of mind and body.
14. Besides this, nature teaches me that
my own body is surrounded by many other bodies,
some of which I have to seek after, and others
to shun. And indeed, as I perceive different
sorts of colors, sounds, odors, tastes, heat,
hardness, etc., I safely conclude that there
are in the bodies from which the diverse
perceptions of the senses proceed, certain
varieties corresponding to them, although,
perhaps, not in reality like them; and since,
among these diverse perceptions of the senses,
some are agreeable, and others disagreeable,
there can be no doubt that my body, or rather
my entire self, in as far as I am composed
of body and mind, may be variously affected,
both beneficially and hurtfully, by surrounding
bodies.
15. But there are many other beliefs which
though seemingly the teaching of nature,
are not in reality so, but which obtained
a place in my mind through a habit of judging
inconsiderately of things. It may thus easily
happen that such judgments shall contain
error: thus, for example, the opinion I have
that all space in which there is nothing
to affect [or make an impression on] my senses
is void: that in a hot body there is something
in every respect similar to the idea of heat
in my mind; that in a white or green body
there is the same whiteness or greenness
which I perceive; that in a bitter or sweet
body there is the same taste, and so in other
instances; that the stars, towers, and all
distant bodies, are of the same size and
figure as they appear to our eyes, etc. But
that I may avoid everything like indistinctness
of conception, I must accurately define what
I properly understand by being taught by
nature. For nature is here taken in a narrower
sense than when it signifies the sum of all
the things which God has given me; seeing
that in that meaning the notion comprehends
much that belongs only to the mind [to which
I am not here to be understood as referring
when I use the term nature]; as, for example,
the notion I have of the truth, that what
is done cannot be undone, and all the other
truths I discern by the natural light [ without
the aid of the body]; and seeing that it
comprehends likewise much besides that belongs
only to body, and is not here any more contained
under the name nature, as the quality of
heaviness, and the like, of which I do not
speak, the term being reserved exclusively
to designate the things which God has given
to me as a being composed of mind and body.
But nature, taking the term in the sense
explained, teaches me to shun what causes
in me the sensation of pain, and to pursue
what affords me the sensation of pleasure,
and other things of this sort; but I do not
discover that it teaches me, in addition
to this, from these diverse perceptions of
the senses, to draw any conclusions respecting
external objects without a previous [ careful
and mature ] consideration of them by the
mind: for it is, as appears to me, the office
of the mind alone, and not of the composite
whole of mind and body, to discern the truth
in those matters. Thus, although the impression
a star makes on my eye is not larger than
that from the flame of a candle, I do not,
nevertheless, experience any real or positive
impulse determining me to believe that the
star is not greater than the flame; the true
account of the matter being merely that I
have so judged from my youth without any
rational ground. And, though on approaching
the fire I feel heat, and even pain on approaching
it too closely, I have, however, from this
no ground for holding that something resembling
the heat I feel is in the fire, any more
than that there is something similar to the
pain; all that I have ground for believing
is, that there is something in it, whatever
it may be, which excites in me those sensations
of heat or pain. So also, although there
are spaces in which I find nothing to excite
and affect my senses, I must not therefore
conclude that those spaces contain in them
no body; for I see that in this, as in many
other similar matters, I have been accustomed
to pervert the order of nature, because these
perceptions of the senses, although given
me by nature merely to signify to my mind
what things are beneficial and hurtful to
the composite whole of which it is a part,
and being sufficiently clear and distinct
for that purpose, are nevertheless used by
me as infallible rules by which to determine
immediately the essence of the bodies that
exist out of me, of which they can of course
afford me only the most obscure and confused
knowledge.
16. But I have already sufficiently considered
how it happens that, notwithstanding the
supreme goodness of God, there is falsity
in my judgments. A difficulty, however, here
presents itself, respecting the things which
I am taught by nature must be pursued or
avoided, and also respecting the internal
sensations in which I seem to have occasionally
detected error, [and thus to be directly
deceived by nature]: thus, for example, I
may be so deceived by the agreeable taste
of some viand with which poison has been
mixed, as to be induced to take the poison.
In this case, however, nature may be excused,
for it simply leads me to desire the viand
for its agreeable taste, and not the poison,
which is unknown to it; and thus we can infer
nothing from this circumstance beyond that
our nature is not omniscient; at which there
is assuredly no ground for surprise, since,
man being of a finite nature, his knowledge
must likewise be of a limited perfection.
17. But we also not unfrequently err in that
to which we are directly impelled by nature,
as is the case with invalids who desire drink
or food that would be hurtful to them. It
will here, perhaps, be alleged that the reason
why such persons are deceived is that their
nature is corrupted; but this leaves the
difficulty untouched, for a sick man is not
less really the creature of God than a man
who is in full health; and therefore it is
as repugnant to the goodness of God that
the nature of the former should be deceitful
as it is for that of the latter to be so.
And as a clock, composed of wheels and counter
weights, observes not the less accurately
all the laws of nature when it is ill made,
and points out the hours incorrectly, than
when it satisfies the desire of the maker
in every respect; so likewise if the body
of man be considered as a kind of machine,
so made up and composed of bones, nerves,
muscles, veins, blood, and skin, that although
there were in it no mind, it would still
exhibit the same motions which it at present
manifests involuntarily, and therefore without
the aid of the mind, [and simply by the dispositions
of its organs], I easily discern that it
would also be as natural for such a body,
supposing it dropsical, for example, to experience
the parchedness of the throat that is usually
accompanied in the mind by the sensation
of thirst, and to be disposed by this parchedness
to move its nerves and its other parts in
the way required for drinking, and thus increase
its malady and do itself harm, as it is natural
for it, when it is not indisposed to be stimulated
to drink for its good by a similar cause;
and although looking to the use for which
a clock was destined by its maker, I may
say that it is deflected from its proper
nature when it incorrectly indicates the
hours, and on the same principle, considering
the machine of the human body as having been
formed by God for the sake of the motions
which it usually manifests, although I may
likewise have ground for thinking that it
does not follow the order of its nature when
the throat is parched and drink does not
tend to its preservation, nevertheless I
yet plainly discern that this latter acceptation
of the term nature is very different from
the other: for this is nothing more than
a certain denomination, depending entirely
on my thought, and hence called extrinsic,
by which I compare a sick man and an imperfectly
constructed clock with the idea I have of
a man in good health and a well made clock;
while by the other acceptation of nature
is understood something which is truly found
in things, and therefore possessed of some
truth.
18. But certainly, although in respect of
a dropsical body, it is only by way of exterior
denomination that we say its nature is corrupted,
when, without requiring drink, the throat
is parched; yet, in respect of the composite
whole, that is, of the mind in its union
with the body, it is not a pure denomination,
but really an error of nature, for it to
feel thirst when drink would be hurtful to
it: and, accordingly, it still remains to
be considered why it is that the goodness
of God does not prevent the nature of man
thus taken from being fallacious.
19. To commence this examination accordingly,
I here remark, in the first place, that there
is a vast difference between mind and body,
in respect that body, from its nature, is
always divisible, and that mind is entirely
indivisible. For in truth, when I consider
the mind, that is, when I consider myself
in so far only as I am a thinking thing,
I can distinguish in myself no parts, but
I very clearly discern that I am somewhat
absolutely one and entire; and although the
whole mind seems to be united to the whole
body, yet, when a foot, an arm, or any other
part is cut off, I am conscious that nothing
has been taken from my mind; nor can the
faculties of willing, perceiving, conceiving,
etc., properly be called its parts, for it
is the same mind that is exercised [all entire]
in willing, in perceiving, and in conceiving,
etc. But quite the opposite holds in corporeal
or extended things; for I cannot imagine
any one of them [how small soever it may
be], which I cannot easily sunder in thought,
and which, therefore, I do not know to be
divisible. This would be sufficient to teach
me that the mind or soul of man is entirely
different from the body, if I had not already
been apprised of it on other grounds.
20. I remark, in the next place, that the
mind does not immediately receive the impression
from all the parts of the body, but only
from the brain, or perhaps even from one
small part of it, viz, that in which the
common sense (senses communis) is said to
be, which as often as it is affected in the
same way gives rise to the same perception
in the mind, although meanwhile the other
parts of the body may be diversely disposed,
as is proved by innumerable experiments,
which it is unnecessary here to enumerate.
21. I remark, besides, that the nature of
body is such that none of its parts can be
moved by another part a little removed from
the other, which cannot likewise be moved
in the same way by any one of the parts that
lie between those two, although the most
remote part does not act at all. As, for
example, in the cord A, B, C, D, [which is
in tension], if its last part D, be pulled,
the first part A, will not be moved in a
different way than it would be were one of
the intermediate parts B or C to be pulled,
and the last part D meanwhile to remain fixed.
And in the same way, when I feel pain in
the foot, the science of physics teaches
me that this sensation is experienced by
means of the nerves dispersed over the foot,
which, extending like cords from it to the
brain, when they are contracted in the foot,
contract at the same time the inmost parts
of the brain in which they have their origin,
and excite in these parts a certain motion
appointed by nature to cause in the mind
a sensation of pain, as if existing in the
foot; but as these nerves must pass through
the tibia, the leg, the loins, the back,
and neck, in order to reach the brain, it
may happen that although their extremities
in the foot are not affected, but only certain
of their parts that pass through the loins
or neck, the same movements, nevertheless,
are excited in the brain by this motion as
would have been caused there by a hurt received
in the foot, and hence the mind will necessarily
feel pain in the foot, just as if it had
been hurt; and the same is true of all the
other perceptions of our senses.
22. I remark, finally, that as each of the
movements that are made in the part of the
brain by which the mind is immediately affected,
impresses it with but a single sensation,
the most likely supposition in the circumstances
is, that this movement causes the mind to
experience, among all the sensations which
it is capable of impressing upon it; that
one which is the best fitted, and generally
the most useful for the preservation of the
human body when it is in full health. But
experience shows us that all the perceptions
which nature has given us are of such a kind
as I have mentioned; and accordingly, there
is nothing found in them that does not manifest
the power and goodness of God. Thus, for
example, when the nerves of the foot are
violently or more than usually shaken, the
motion passing through the medulla of the
spine to the innermost parts of the brain
affords a sign to the mind on which it experiences
a sensation, viz, of pain, as if it were
in the foot, by which the mind is admonished
and excited to do its utmost to remove the
cause of it as dangerous and hurtful to the
foot. It is true that God could have so constituted
the nature of man as that the same motion
in the brain would have informed the mind
of something altogether different: the motion
might, for example, have been the occasion
on which the mind became conscious of itself,
in so far as it is in the brain, or in so
far as it is in some place intermediate between
the foot and the brain, or, finally, the
occasion on which it perceived some other
object quite different, whatever that might
be; but nothing of all this would have so
well contributed to the preservation of the
body as that which the mind actually feels.
In the same way, when we stand in need of
drink, there arises from this want a certain
parchedness in the throat that moves its
nerves, and by means of them the internal
parts of the brain; and this movement affects
the mind with the sensation of thirst, because
there is nothing on that occasion which is
more useful for us than to be made aware
that we have need of drink for the preservation
of our health; and so in other instances.
23. Whence it is quite manifest that, notwithstanding
the sovereign goodness of God, the nature
of man, in so far as it is composed of mind
and body, cannot but be sometimes fallacious.
For, if there is any cause which excites,
not in the foot, but in some one of the parts
of the nerves that stretch from the foot
to the brain, or even in the brain itself,
the same movement that is ordinarily created
when the foot is ill affected, pain will
be felt, as it were, in the foot, and the
sense will thus be naturally deceived; for
as the same movement in the brain can but
impress the mind with the same sensation,
and as this sensation is much more frequently
excited by a cause which hurts the foot than
by one acting in a different quarter, it
is reasonable that it should lead the mind
to feel pain in the foot rather than in any
other part of the body. And if it sometimes
happens that the parchedness of the throat
does not arise, as is usual, from drink being
necessary for the health of the body, but
from quite the opposite cause, as is the
case with the dropsical, yet it is much better
that it should be deceitful in that instance,
than if, on the contrary, it were continually
fallacious when the body is well-disposed;
and the same holds true in other cases.
24. And certainly this consideration is of
great service, not only in enabling me to
recognize the errors to which my nature is
liable, but likewise in rendering it more
easy to avoid or correct them: for, knowing
that all my senses more usually indicate
to me what is true than what is false, in
matters relating to the advantage of the
body, and being able almost always to make
use of more than a single sense in examining
the same object, and besides this, being
able to use my memory in connecting present
with past knowledge, and my understanding
which has already discovered all the causes
of my errors, I ought no longer to fear that
falsity may be met with in what is daily
presented to me by the senses. And I ought
to reject all the doubts of those bygone
days, as hyperbolical and ridiculous, especially
the general uncertainty respecting sleep,
which I could not distinguish from the waking
state: for I now find a very marked difference
between the two states, in respect that our
memory can never connect our dreams with
each other and with the course of life, in
the way it is in the habit of doing with
events that occur when we are awake. And,
in truth, if some one, when I am awake, appeared
to me all of a sudden and as suddenly disappeared,
as do the images I see in sleep, so that
I could not observe either whence he came
or whither he went, I should not without
reason esteem it either a specter or phantom
formed in my brain, rather than a real man.
But when I perceive objects with regard to
which I can distinctly determine both the
place whence they come, and that in which
they are, and the time at which they appear
to me, and when, without interruption, I
can connect the perception I have of them
with the whole of the other parts of my life,
I am perfectly sure that what I thus perceive
occurs while I am awake and not during sleep.
And I ought not in the least degree to doubt
of the truth of these presentations, if,
after having called together all my senses,
my memory, and my understanding for the purpose
of examining them, no deliverance is given
by any one of these faculties which is repugnant
to that of any other: for since God is no
deceiver, it necessarily follows that I am
not herein deceived. But because the necessities
of action frequently oblige us to come to
a determination before we have had leisure
for so careful an examination, it must be
confessed that the life of man is frequently
obnoxious to error with respect to individual
objects; and we must, in conclusion, ac.
knowledge the weakness of our nature.
THE END
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