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Introduction
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
As thou knowest not what is the way
of the
Spirit, nor how the bones do grow in
the
womb of her that is with child: even
so thou
knowest not the works of God, who maketh
all things.- Eccles. 11. 5. Quam bellum
est
velle confiteri potius nescire quod
nescias,
quam ista effutientem nauseare, atque
ipsum
sibi displicere.- Cicero, de Natur.
Deor.
l. i.
Introduction
1. An Inquiry into the understanding,
pleasant
and useful. Since it is the understanding
that sets man above the rest of sensible
beings, and gives him all the advantage
and
dominion which he has over them; it
is certainly
a subject, even for its nobleness,
worth
our labour to inquire into. The understanding,
like the eye, whilst it makes us see
and
perceive all other things, takes no
notice
of itself; and it requires art and
pains
to set it at a distance and make it
its own
object. But whatever be the difficulties
that lie in the way of this inquiry;
whatever
it be that keeps us so much in the
dark to
ourselves; sure I am that all the light
we
can let in upon our minds, all the
acquaintance
we can make with our own understandings,
will not only be very pleasant, but
bring
us great advantage, in directing our
thoughts
in the search of other things.
2. Design. This, therefore, being my
purpose-
to inquire into the original, certainty,
and extent of human knowledge, together
with
the grounds and degrees of belief,
opinion,
and assent;- I shall not at present
meddle
with the physical consideration of
the mind;
or trouble myself to examine wherein
its
essence consists; or by what motions
of our
spirits or alterations of our bodies
we come
to have any sensation by our organs,
or any
ideas in our understandings; and whether
those ideas do in their formation,
any or
all of them, depend on matter or not.
These
are speculations which, however curious
and
entertaining, I shall decline, as lying
out
of my way in the design I am now upon.
It
shall suffice to my present purpose,
to consider
the discerning faculties of a man,
as they
are employed about the objects which
they
have to do with. And I shall imagine
I have
not wholly misemployed myself in the
thoughts
I shall have on this occasion, if,
in this
historical, plain method, I can give
any
account of the ways whereby our understandings
come to attain those notions of things
we
have; and can set down any measures
of the
certainty of our knowledge; or the
grounds
of those persuasions which are to be
found
amongst men, so various, different,
and wholly
contradictory; and yet asserted somewhere
or other with such assurance and confidence,
that he that shall take a view of the
opinions
of mankind, observe their opposition,
and
at the same time consider the fondness
and
devotion wherewith they are embraced,
the
resolution and eagerness wherewith
they are
maintained, may perhaps have reason
to suspect,
that either there is no such thing
as truth
at all, or that mankind hath no sufficient
means to attain a certain knowledge
of it.
3. Method. It is therefore worth while
to
search out the bounds between opinion
and
knowledge; and examine by what measures,
in things whereof we have no certain
knowledge,
we ought to regulate our assent and
moderate
our persuasion. In order whereunto
I shall
pursue this following method:-
First, I shall inquire into the original
of those ideas, notions, or whatever
else
you please to call them, which a man
observes,
and is conscious to himself he has
in his
mind; and the ways whereby the understanding
comes to be furnished with them.
Secondly, I shall endeavour to show
what
knowledge the understanding hath by
those
ideas; and the certainty, evidence,
and extent
of it.
Thirdly, I shall make some inquiry
into the
nature and grounds of faith or opinion:
whereby
I mean that assent which we give to
any proposition
as true, of whose truth yet we have
no certain
knowledge. And here we shall have occasion
to examine the reasons and degrees
of assent.
4. Useful to know the extent of our
comprehension.
If by this inquiry into the nature
of the
understanding, I can discover the powers
thereof; how far they reach; to what
things
they are in any degree proportionate;
and
where they fail us, I suppose it may
be of
use to prevail with the busy mind of
man
to be more cautious in meddling with
things
exceeding its comprehension; to stop
when
it is at the utmost extent of its tether;
and to sit down in a quiet ignorance
of those
things which, upon examination, are
found
to be beyond the reach of our capacities.
We should not then perhaps be so forward,
out of an affectation of an universal
knowledge,
to raise questions, and perplex ourselves
and others with disputes about things
to
which our understandings are not suited;
and of which we cannot frame in our
minds
any clear or distinct perceptions,
or whereof
(as it has perhaps too often happened)
we
have not any notions at all. If we
can find
out how far the understanding can extend
its view; how far it has faculties
to attain
certainty; and in what cases it can
only
judge and guess, we may learn to content
ourselves with what is attainable by
us in
this state.
5. Our capacity suited to our state
and concerns.
For though the comprehension of our
understandings
comes exceeding short of the vast extent
of things, yet we shall have cause
enough
to magnify the bountiful Author of
our being,
for that proportion and degree of knowledge
he has bestowed on us, so far above
all the
rest of the inhabitants of this our
mansion.
Men have reason to be well satisfied
with
what God hath thought fit for them,
since
he hath given them (as St. Peter says)
pana
pros zoen kaieusebeian, whatsoever
is necessary
for the conveniences of life and information
of virtue; and has put within the reach
of
their discovery, the comfortable provision
for this life, and the way that leads
to
a better. How short soever their knowledge
may come of an universal or perfect
comprehension
of whatsoever is, it yet secures their
great
concernments, that they have light
enough
to lead them to the knowledge of their
Maker,
and the sight of their own duties.
Men may
find matter sufficient to busy their
heads,
and employ their hands with variety,
delight,
and satisfaction, if they will not
boldly
quarrel with their own constitution,
and
throw away the blessings their hands
are
filled with, because they are not big
enough
to grasp everything. We shall not have
much
reason to complain of the narrowness
of our
minds, if we will but employ them about
what
may be of use to us; for of that they
are
very capable. And it will be an unpardonable,
as well as childish peevishness, if
we undervalue
the advantages of our knowledge, and
neglect
to improve it to the ends for which
it was
given us, because there are some things
that
are set out of the reach of it. It
will be
no excuse to an idle and untoward servant,
who would not attend his business by
candle
light, to plead that he had not broad
sunshine.
The Candle that is set up in us shines
bright
enough for all our purposes. The discoveries
we can make with this ought to satisfy
us;
and we shall then use our understandings
right, when we entertain all objects
in that
way and proportion that they are suited
to
our faculties, and upon those grounds
they
are capable of being proposed to us;
and
not peremptorily or intemperately require
demonstration, and demand certainty,
where
probability only is to be had, and
which
is sufficient to govern all our concernments.
If we will disbelieve everything, because
we cannot certainly know all things,
we shall
do muchwhat as wisely as he who would
not
use his legs, but sit still and perish,
because
he had no wings to fly.
6. Knowledge of our capacity a cure
of scepticism
and idleness. When we know our own
strength,
we shall the better know what to undertake
with hopes of success; and when we
have well
surveyed the powers of our own minds,
and
made some estimate what we may expect
from
them, we shall not be inclined either
to
sit still, and not set our thoughts
on work
at all, in despair of knowing anything;
nor
on the other side, question everything,
and
disclaim all knowledge, because some
things
are not to be understood. It is of
great
use to the sailor to know the length
of his
line, though he cannot with it fathom
all
the depths of the ocean. It is well
he knows
that it is long enough to reach the
bottom,
at such places as are necessary to
direct
his voyage, and caution him against
running
upon shoals that may ruin him. Our
business
here is not to know all things, but
those
which concern our conduct. If we can
find
out those measures, whereby a rational
creature,
put in that state in which man is in
this
world, may and ought to govern his
opinions,
and actions depending thereon, we need
not
to be troubled that some other things
escape
our knowledge.
7. Occasion of this essay. This was
that
which gave the first rise to this Essay
concerning
the understanding. For I thought that
the
first step towards satisfying several
inquiries
the mind of man was very apt to run
into,
was, to take a survey of our own understandings,
examine our own powers, and see to
what things
they were adapted. Till that was done
I suspected
we began at the wrong end, and in vain
sought
for satisfaction in a quiet and sure
possession
of truths that most concerned us, whilst
we let loose our thoughts into the
vast ocean
of Being; as if all that boundless
extent
were the natural and undoubted possession
of our understandings, wherein there
was
nothing exempt from its decisions,
or that
escaped its comprehension. Thus men,
extending
their inquiries beyond their capacities,
and letting their thoughts wander into
those
depths where they can find no sure
footing,
it is no wonder that they raise questions
and multiply disputes, which, never
coming
to any clear resolution, are proper
only
to continue and increase their doubts,
and
to confirm them at last in perfect
scepticism.
Whereas, were the capacities of our
understandings
well considered, the extent of our
knowledge
once discovered, and the horizon found
which
sets the bounds between the enlightened
and
dark parts of things; between what
is and
what is not comprehensible by us, men
would
perhaps with less scruple acquiesce
in the
avowed ignorance of the one, and employ
their
thoughts and discourse with more advantage
and satisfaction in the other.
8. What "Idea" stands for.
Thus
much I thought necessary to say concerning
the occasion of this Inquiry into human
Understanding.
But, before I proceed on to what I
have thought
on this subject, I must here in the
entrance
beg pardon of my reader for the frequent
use of the word idea, which he will
find
in the following treatise. It being
that
term which, I think, serves best to
stand
for whatsoever is the object of the
understanding
when a man thinks, I have used it to
express
whatever is meant by phantasm, notion,
species,
or whatever it is which the mind can
be employed
about in thinking; and I could not
avoid
frequently using it.
I presume it will be easily granted
me, that
there are such ideas in men's minds:
every
one is conscious of them in himself;
and
men's words and actions will satisfy
him
that they are in others.
Our first inquiry then shall be, --
how they
come into the mind.
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