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Epistle to the Reader.
I HAVE put into thy hands what has
been the
diversion of some of my idle and heavy
hours.
If it has the good luck to prove so
of any
of thine, and thou hast but half so
much
pleasure in reading as I had in writing
it,
thou wilt as little think thy money,
as I
do my pains, ill bestowed. Mistake
not this
for a commendation of my work; nor
conclude,
because I was pleased with the doing
of it,
that therefore I am fondly taken with
it
now it is done. He that hawks at larks
and
sparrows has no less sport, though
a much
less considerable quarry, than he that
flies
at nobler game: and he is little acquainted
with the subject of this treatise-
the UNDERSTANDING-
who does not know that, as it is the
most
elevated faculty of the soul, so it
is employed
with a greater and more constant delight
than any of the other. Its searches
after
truth are a sort of hawking and hunting,
wherein the very pursuit makes a great
part
of the pleasure. Every step the mind
takes
in its progress towards Knowledge makes
some
discovery, which is not only new, but
the
best too, for the time at least.
For the understanding, like the eye,
judging
of objects only by its own sight, cannot
but be pleased with what it discovers,
having
less regret for what has escaped it,
because
it is unknown. Thus he who has raised
himself
above the alms-basket, and, not content
to
live lazily on scraps of begged opinions,
sets his own thoughts on work, to find
and
follow truth, will (whatever he lights
on)
not miss the hunter's satisfaction;
every
moment of his pursuit will reward his
pains
with some delight; and he will have
reason
to think his time not ill spent, even
when
he cannot much boast of any great acquisition.
This, Reader, is the entertainment
of those
who let loose their own thoughts, and
follow
them in writing; which thou oughtest
not
to envy them, since they afford thee
an opportunity
of the like diversion, if thou wilt
make
use of thy own thoughts in reading.
It is
to them, if they are thy own, that
I refer
myself: but if they are taken upon
trust
from others, it is no great matter
what they
are; they are not following truth,
but some
meaner consideration; and it is not
worth
while to be concerned what he says
or thinks,
who says or thinks only as he is directed
by another. If thou judgest for thyself
I
know thou wilt judge candidly, and
then I
shall not be harmed or offended, whatever
be thy censure. For though it be certain
that there is nothing in this Treatise
of
the truth whereof I am not fully persuaded,
yet I consider myself as liable to
mistakes
as I can think thee, and know that
this book
must stand or fall with thee, not by
any
opinion I have of it, but thy own.
If thou
findest little in it new or instructive
to
thee, thou art not to blame me for
it. It
was not meant for those that had already
mastered this subject, and made a thorough
acquaintance with their own understandings;
but for my own information, and the
satisfaction
of a few friends, who acknowledged
themselves
not to have sufficiently considered
it.
Were it fit to trouble thee with the
history
of this Essay, I should tell thee,
that five
or six friends meeting at my chamber,
and
discoursing on a subject very remote
from
this, found themselves quickly at a
stand,
by the difficulties that rose on every
side.
After we had awhile puzzled ourselves,
without
coming any nearer a resolution of those
doubts
which perplexed us, it came into my
thoughts
that we took a wrong course; and that
before
we set ourselves upon inquiries of
that nature,
it was necessary to examine our own
abilities,
and see what objects our understandings
were,
or were not, fitted to deal with. This
I
proposed to the company, who all readily
assented; and thereupon it was agreed
that
this should be our first inquiry. Some
hasty
and undigested thoughts, on a subject
I had
never before considered, which I set
down
against our next meeting, gave the
first
entrance into this Discourse; which
having
been thus begun by chance, was continued
by intreaty; written by incoherent
parcels;
and after long intervals of neglect,
resumed
again, as my humour or occasions permitted;
and at last, in a retirement where
an attendance
on my health gave me leisure, it was
brought
into that order thou now seest it.
This discontinued way of writing may
have
occasioned, besides others, two contrary
faults, viz., that too little and too
much
may be said in it. If thou findest
anything
wanting, I shall be glad that what
I have
written gives thee any desire that
I should
have gone further. If it seems too
much to
thee, thou must blame the subject;
for when
I put pen to paper, I thought all I
should
have to say on this matter would have
been
contained in one sheet of paper; but
the
further I went the larger prospect
I had;
new discoveries led me still on, and
so it
grew insensibly to the bulk it now
appears
in. I will not deny, but possibly it
might
be reduced to a narrower compass than
it
is, and that some parts of it might
be contracted,
the way it has been writ in, by catches,
and many long intervals of interruption,
being apt to cause some repetitions.
But
to confess the truth, I am now too
lazy,
or too busy, to make it shorter.
I am not ignorant how little I herein
consult
my own reputation, when I knowingly
let it
go with a fault, so apt to disgust
the most
judicious, who are always the nicest
readers.
But they who know sloth is apt to content
itself with any excuse, will pardon
me if
mine has prevailed on me, where I think
I
have a very good one. I will not therefore
allege in my defence, that the same
notion,
having different respects, may be convenient
or necessary to prove or illustrate
several
parts of the same discourse, and that
so
it has happened in many parts of this:
but
waiving that, I shall frankly avow
that I
have sometimes dwelt long upon the
same argument,
and expressed it different ways, with
a quite
different design. I pretend not to
publish
this Essay for the information of men
of
large thoughts and quick apprehensions;
to
such masters of knowledge I profess
myself
a scholar, and therefore warn them
beforehand
not to expect anything here, but what,
being
spun out of my own coarse thoughts,
is fitted
to men of my own size, to whom, perhaps,
it will not be unacceptable that I
have taken
some pains to make plain and familiar
to
their thoughts some truths which established
prejudice, or the abstractedness of
the ideas
themselves, might render difficult.
Some
objects had need be turned on every
side;
and when the notion is new, as I confess
some of these are to me; or out of
the ordinary
road, as I suspect they will appear
to others,
it is not one simple view of it that
will
gain it admittance into every understanding,
or fix it there with a clear and lasting
impression. There are few, I believe,
who
have not observed in themselves or
others,
that what in one way of proposing was
very
obscure, another way of expressing
it has
made very clear and intelligible; though
afterwards the mind found little difference
in the phrases, and wondered why one
failed
to be understood more than the other.
But
everything does not hit alike upon
every
man's imagination. We have our understandings
no less different than our palates;
and he
that thinks the same truth shall be
equally
relished by every one in the same dress,
may as well hope to feast every one
with
the same sort of cookery: the meat
may be
the same, and the nourishment good,
yet every
one not be able to receive it with
that seasoning;
and it must be dressed another way,
if you
will have it go down with some, even
of strong
constitutions. The truth is, those
who advised
me to publish it, advised me, for this
reason,
to publish it as it is: and since I
have
been brought to let it go abroad, I
desire
it should be understood by whoever
gives
himself the pains to read it. I have
so little
affection to be in print, that if I
were
not flattered this Essay might be of
some
use to others, as I think it has been
to
me, I should have confined it to the
view
of some friends, who gave the first
occasion
to it. My appearing therefore in print
being
on purpose to be as useful as I may,
I think
it necessary to make what I have to
say as
easy and intelligible to all sorts
of readers
as I can. And I had much rather the
speculative
and quick-sighted should complain of
my being
in some parts tedious, than that any
one,
not accustomed to abstract speculations,
or prepossessed with different notions,
should
mistake or not comprehend my meaning.
It will possibly be censured as a great
piece
of vanity or insolence in me, to pretend
to instruct this our knowing age; it
amounting
to little less, when I own, that I
publish
this Essay with hopes it may be useful
to
others. But, if it may be permitted
to speak
freely of those who with a feigned
modesty
condemn as useless what they themselves
write,
methinks it savours much more of vanity
or
insolence to publish a book for any
other
end; and he fails very much of that
respect
he owes the public, who prints, and
consequently
expects men should read, that wherein
he
intends not they should meet with anything
of use to themselves or others: and
should
nothing else be found allowable in
this Treatise,
yet my design will not cease to be
so; and
the goodness of my intention ought
to be
some excuse for the worthlessness of
my present.
It is that chiefly which secures me
from
the fear of censure, which I expect
not to
escape more than better writers. Men's
principles,
notions, and relishes are so different,
that
it is hard to find a book which pleases
or
displeases all men. I acknowledge the
age
we live in is not the least knowing,
and
therefore not the most easy to be satisfied.
If I have not the good luck to please,
yet
nobody ought to be offended with me.
I plainly
tell all my readers, except half a
dozen,
this Treatise was not at first intended
for
them; and therefore they need not be
at the
trouble to be of that number. But yet
if
any one thinks fit to be angry and
rail at
it, he may do it securely, for I shall
find
some better way of spending my time
than
in such kind of conversation. I shall
always
have the satisfaction to have aimed
sincerely
at truth and usefulness, though in
one of
the meanest ways. The commonwealth
of learning
is not at this time without master-builders,
whose mighty designs, in advancing
the sciences,
will leave lasting monuments to the
admiration
of posterity: but every one must not
hope
to be a Boyle or a Sydenham; and in
an age
that produces such masters as the great
Huygenius
and the incomparable Mr. Newton, with
some
others of that strain, it is ambition
enough
to be employed as an under-labourer
in clearing
the ground a little, and removing some
of
the rubbish that lies in the way to
knowledge;-
which certainly had been very much
more advanced
in the world, if the endeavours of
ingenious
and industrious men had not been much
cumbered
with the learned but frivolous use
of uncouth,
affected, or unintelligible terms,
introduced
into the sciences, and there made an
art
of, to that degree that Philosophy,
which
is nothing but the true knowledge of
things,
was thought unfit or incapable to be
brought
into well-bred company and polite conversation.
Vague and insignificant forms of speech,
and abuse of language, have so long
passed
for mysteries of science; and hard
and misapplied
words, with little or no meaning, have,
by
prescription, such a right to be mistaken
for deep learning and height of speculation,
that it will not be easy to persuade
either
those who speak or those who hear them,
that
they are but the covers of ignorance,
and
hindrance of true knowledge. To break
in
upon the sanctuary of vanity and ignorance
will be, I suppose, some service to
human
understanding; though so few are apt
to think
they deceive or are deceived in the
use of
words; or that the language of the
sect they
are of has any faults in it which ought
to
be examined or corrected, that I hope
I shall
be pardoned if I have in the Third
Book dwelt
long on this subject, and endeavoured
to
make it so plain, that neither the
inveterateness
of the mischief, nor the prevalency
of the
fashion, shall be any excuse for those
who
will not take care about the meaning
of their
own words, and will not suffer the
significancy
of their expressions to be inquired
into.
I have been told that a short Epitome
of
this Treatise, which was printed in
1688,
was by some condemned without reading,
because
innate ideas were denied in it; they
too
hastily concluding, that if innate
ideas
were not supposed, there would be little
left either of the notion or proof
of spirits.
If any one take the like offence at
the entrance
of this Treatise, I shall desire him
to read
it through; and then I hope he will
be convinced,
that the taking away false foundations
is
not to the prejudice but advantage
of truth,
which is never injured or endangered
so much
as when mixed with, or built on, falsehood.
In the Second Edition I added as followeth:-
The bookseller will not forgive me
if I say
nothing of this New Edition, which
he has
promised, by the correctness of it,
shall
make amends for the many faults committed
in the former. He desires too, that
it should
be known that it has one whole new
chapter
concerning Identity, and many additions
and
amendments in other places. These I
must
inform my reader are not all new matter,
but most of them either further confirmation
of what I had said, or explications,
to prevent
others being mistaken in the sense
of what
was formerly printed, and not any variation
in me from it.
I must only except the alterations
I have
made in Book II. chap. xxi.
What I had there written concerning
Liberty
and the Will, I thought deserved as
accurate
a view as I am capable of; those subjects
having in all ages exercised the learned
part of the world with questions and
difficulties,
that have not a little perplexed morality
and divinity, those parts of knowledge
that
men are most concerned to be clear
in. Upon
a closer inspection into the working
of men's
minds, and a stricter examination of
those
motives and views they are turned by,
I have
found reason somewhat to alter the
thoughts
I formerly had concerning that which
gives
the last determination to the Will
in all
voluntary actions. This I cannot forbear
to acknowledge to the world with as
much
freedom and readiness as I at first
published
what then seemed to me to be right;
thinking
myself more concerned to quit and renounce
any opinion of my own, than oppose
that of
another, when truth appears against
it. For
it is truth alone I seek, and that
will always
be welcome to me, when or from whencesoever
it comes.
But what forwardness soever I have
to resign
any opinion I have, or to recede from
anything
I have writ, upon the first evidence
of any
error in it; yet this I must own, that
I
have not had the good luck to receive
any
light from those exceptions I have
met with
in print against any part of my book,
nor
have, from anything that has been urged
against
it, found reason to alter my sense
in any
of the points that have been questioned.
Whether the subject I have in hand
requires
often more thought and attention than
cursory
readers, at least such as are prepossessed,
are willing to allow; or whether any
obscurity
in my expressions casts a cloud over
it,
and these notions are made difficult
to others'
apprehensions in my way of treating
them;
so it is, that my meaning, I find,
is often
mistaken, and I have not the good luck
to
be everywhere rightly understood.
Of this the ingenious author of the
Discourse
Concerning the Nature of Man has given
me
a late instance, to mention no other.
For
the civility of his expressions, and
the
candour that belongs to his order,
forbid
me to think that he would have closed
his
Preface with an insinuation, as if
in what
I had said, Book II. ch. xxvii, concerning
the third rule which men refer their
actions
to, I went about to make virtue vice
and
vice virtue unless he had mistaken
my meaning;
which he could not have done if he
had given
himself the trouble to consider what
the
argument was I was then upon, and what
was
the chief design of that chapter, plainly
enough set down in the fourth section
and
those following. For I was there not
laying
down moral rules, but showing the original
and nature of moral ideas, and enumerating
the rules men make use of in moral
relations,
whether these rules were true or false:
and
pursuant thereto I tell what is everywhere
called virtue and vice; which "alters
not the nature of things," though
men
generally do judge of and denominate
their
actions according to the esteem and
fashion
of the place and sect they are of.
If he had been at the pains to reflect
on
what I had said, Bk. I. ch. ii. sect.
18,
and Bk. II. ch. xxviii. sects. 13,
14, 15
and 20, he would have known what I
think
of the eternal and unalterable nature
of
right and wrong, and what I call virtue
and
vice. And if he had observed that in
the
place he quotes I only report as a
matter
of fact what others call virtue and
vice,
he would not have found it liable to
any
great exception. For I think I am not
much
out in saying that one of the rules
made
use of in the world for a ground or
measure
of a moral relation is- that esteem
and reputation
which several sorts of actions find
variously
in the several societies of men, according
to which they are there called virtues
or
vices. And whatever authority the learned
Mr. Lowde places in his Old English
Dictionary,
I daresay it nowhere tells him (if
I should
appeal to it) that the same action
is not
in credit, called and counted a virtue,
in
one place, which, being in disrepute,
passes
for and under the name of vice in another.
The taking notice that men bestow the
names
of "virtue" and "vice"
according to this rule of Reputation
is all
I have done, or can be laid to my charge
to have done, towards the making vice
virtue
or virtue vice. But the good man does
well,
and as becomes his calling, to be watchful
in such points, and to take the alarm
even
at expressions, which, standing alone
by
themselves, might sound ill and be
suspected.
'Tis to this zeal, allowable in his
function,
that I forgive his citing as he does
these
words of mine (ch. xxviii. sect. II):
"Even
the exhortations of inspired teachers
have
not feared to appeal to common repute,
Philip.
iv. 8"; without taking notice
of those
immediately preceding, which introduce
them,
and run thus: "Whereby even in
the corruption
of manners, the true boundaries of
the law
of nature, which ought to be the rule
of
virtue and vice, were pretty well preserved.
So that even the exhortations of inspired
teachers," &c. By which words,
and
the rest of that section, it is plain
that
I brought that passage of St. Paul,
not to
prove that the general measure of what
men
called virtue and vice throughout the
world
was, the reputation and fashion of
each particular
society within itself; but to show
that,
though it were so, yet, for reasons
I there
give, men, in that way of denominating
their
actions, did not for the most part
much stray
from the Law of Nature; which is that
standing
and unalterable rule by which they
ought
to judge of the moral rectitude and
gravity
of their actions, and accordingly denominate
them virtues or vices. Had Mr. Lowde
considered
this, he would have found it little
to his
purpose to have quoted this passage
in a
sense I used it not; and would I imagine
have spared the application he subjoins
to
it, as not very necessary. But I hope
this
Second Edition will give him satisfaction
on the point, and that this matter
is now
so expressed as to show him there was
no
cause for scruple.
Though I am forced to differ from him
in
these apprehensions he has expressed,
in
the latter end of his preface, concerning
what I had said about virtue and vice,
yet
we are better agreed than he thinks
in what
he says in his third chapter (p. 78)
concerning
"natural inscription and innate
notions."
I shall not deny him the privilege
he claims
(p. 52), to state the question as he
pleases,
especially when he states it so as
to leave
nothing in it contrary to what I have
said.
For, according to him, "innate
notions,
being conditional things, depending
upon
the concurrence of several other circumstances
in order to the soul's exerting them,"
all that he says for "innate,
imprinted,
impressed notions" (for of innate
ideas
he says nothing at all), amounts at
last
only to this- that there are certain
propositions
which, though the soul from the beginning,
or when a man is born, does not know,
yet
"by assistance from the outward
senses,
and the help of some previous cultivation,"
it may afterwards come certainly to
know
the truth of; which is no more than
what
I have affirmed in my First Book. For
I suppose
by the "soul's exerting them,"
he means its beginning to know them;
or else
the soul's "exerting of notions"
will be to me a very unintelligible
expression;
and I think at best is a very unfit
one in
this, it misleading men's thoughts
by an
insinuation, as if these notions were
in
the mind before the "soul exerts
them,"
i. e. before they are known;- whereas
truly
before they are known, there is nothing
of
them in the mind but a capacity to
know them,
when the "concurrence of those
circumstances,"
which this ingenious author thinks
necessary
"in order to the soul's exerting
them,"
brings them into our knowledge.
P. 52 I find him express it thus: "These
natural notions are not so imprinted
upon
the soul as that they naturally and
necessarily
exert themselves (even in children
and idiots)
without any assistance from the outward
senses,
or without the help of some previous
cultivation."
Here, he says, they exert themselves,
as
p. 78, that the "soul exerts them."
When he has explained to himself or
others
what he means by "the soul's exerting
innate notions," or their "exerting
themselves"; and what that "previous
cultivation and circumstances"
in order
to their being exerted are- he will
I suppose
find there is so little of controversy
between
him and me on the point, bating that
he calls
that "exerting of notions"
which
I in a more vulgar style call "knowing,"
that I have reason to think he brought
in
my name on this occasion only out of
the
pleasure he has to speak civilly of
me; which
I must gratefully acknowledge he has
done
everywhere he mentions me, not without
conferring
on me, as some others have done, a
title
I have no right to.
There are so many instances of this,
that
I think it justice to my reader and
myself
to conclude, that either my book is
plainly
enough written to be rightly understood
by
those who peruse it with that attention
and
indifferency, which every one who will
give
himself the pains to read ought to
employ
in reading; or else that I have written
mine
so obscurely that it is in vain to
go about
to mend it. Whichever of these be the
truth,
it is myself only am affected thereby;
and
therefore I shall be far from troubling
my
reader with what I think might be said
in
answer to those several objections
I have
met with, to passages here and there
of my
book; since I persuade myself that
he who
thinks them of moment enough to be
concerned
whether they are true or false, will
be able
to see that what is said is either
not well
founded, or else not contrary to my
doctrine,
when I and my opposer come both to
be well
understood.
If any other authors, careful that
none of
their good thoughts should be lost,
have
published their censures of my Essay,
with
this honour done to it, that they will
not
suffer it to be an essay, I leave it
to the
public to value the obligation they
have
to their critical pens, and shall not
waste
my reader's time in so idle or ill-natured
an employment of mine, as to lessen
the satisfaction
any one has in himself, or gives to
others,
in so hasty a confutation of what I
have
written.
The booksellers preparing for the Fourth
Edition of my Essay, gave me notice
of it,
that I might, if I had leisure, make
any
additions or alterations I should think
fit.
Whereupon I thought it convenient to
advertise
the reader, that besides several corrections
I had made here and there, there was
one
alteration which it was necessary to
mention,
because it ran through the whole book,
and
is of consequence to be rightly understood.
What I thereupon said was this:-
Clear and distinct ideas are terms
which,
though familiar and frequent in men's
mouths,
I have reason to think every one who
uses
does not perfectly understand. And
possibly
'tis but here and there one who gives
himself
the trouble to consider them so far
as to
know what he himself or others precisely
mean by them. I have therefore in most
places
chose to put determinate or determined,
instead
of clear and distinct, as more likely
to
direct men's thoughts to my meaning
in this
matter. By those denominations, I mean
some
object in the mind, and consequently
determined,
i. e. such as it is there seen and
perceived
to be. This, I think, may fitly be
called
a determinate or determined idea, when
such
as it is at any time objectively in
the mind,
and so determined there, it is annexed,
and
without variation determined, to a
name or
articulate sound, which is to be steadily
the sign of that very same object of
the
mind, or determinate idea.
To explain this a little more particularly.
By determinate, when applied to a simple
idea, I mean that simple appearance
which
the mind has in its view, or perceives
in
itself, when that idea is said to be
in it:
by determined, when applied to a complex
idea, I mean such an one as consists
of a
determinate number of certain simple
or less
complex ideas, joined in such a proportion
and situation as the mind has before
its
view, and sees in itself, when that
idea
is present in it, or should be present
in
it, when a man gives a name to it.
I say
should be, because it is not every
one, nor
perhaps any one, who is so careful
of his
language as to use no word till he
views
in his mind the precise determined
idea which
he resolves to make it the sign of
The want
of this is the cause of no small obscurity
and confusion in men's thoughts and
discourses.
I know there are not words enough in
any
language to answer all the variety
of ideas
that enter into men's discourses and
reasonings.
But this hinders not but that when
any one
uses any term, he may have in his mind
a
determined idea, which he makes it
the sign
of, and to which he should keep it
steadily
annexed during that present discourse.
Where
he does not, or cannot do this, he
in vain
pretends to clear or distinct ideas:
it is
plain his are not so; and therefore
there
can be expected nothing but obscurity
and
confusion, where such terms are made
use
of which have not such a precise determination.
Upon this ground I have thought determined
ideas a way of speaking less liable
to mistakes,
than clear and distinct: and where
men have
got such determined ideas of all that
they
reason, inquire, or argue about, they
will
find a great part of their doubts and
disputes
at an end; the greatest part of the
questions
and controversies that perplex mankind
depending
on the doubtful and uncertain use of
words,
or (which is the same) indetermined
ideas,
which they are made to stand for. I
have
made choice of these terms to signify,
(1)
Some immediate object of the mind,
which
it perceives and has before it, distinct
from the sound it uses as a sign of
it. (2)
That this idea, thus determined, i.
e. which
the mind has in itself, and knows,
and sees
there, be determined without any change
to
that name, and that name determined
to that
precise idea. If men had such determined
ideas in their inquiries and discourses,
they would both discern how far their
own
inquiries and discourses went, and
avoid
the greatest part of the disputes and
wranglings
they have with others.
Besides this, the bookseller will think
it
necessary I should advertise the reader
that
there is an addition of two chapters
wholly
new; the one of the Association of
Ideas,
the other of Enthusiasm. These, with
some
other larger additions never before
printed,
he has engaged to print by themselves,
after
the same manner, and for the same purpose,
as was done when this Essay had the
second
impression.
In the Sixth Edition there is very
little
added or altered. The greatest part
of what
is new is contained in the twenty-first
chapter
of the second book, which any one,
if he
thinks it worth while, may, with a
very little
labour, transcribe into the margin
of the
former edition.
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