登陆注册
19881600000007

第7章

or the soul was like a little child (for the soul was then in its infancy) who, holding in his hand small bits of straw or wood, sees them in a vague and superficial way without being able to count or distinguish them. But let some one attach a kind of banner, or standard, to this bit of wood (which perhaps is called a mast), and another banner to another similar object; let the first be known by the symbol 1, and the second by the symbol or number 2, then the child will be able to count the objects, and in this way he will learn all of arithmetic. As soon as one figure seems equal to another in its numerical sing, he will decide without difficulty that they are two different bodies, that 1+1 make 2, and 2+2 make 4, etc.

This real or apparent likeness of figures is the fundamental basis of all truths and of all we know. Among these sciences, evidently those whose signs are less simple and less sensible are harder to understand than the others, because more talent is required to comprehend and combine the immense number of words by which such sciences express the truths in their province. On the other hand, the sciences that are expressed by the numbers or by other small signs, are easily learned; and without doubt this facility rather than its demonstrability is what has made the fortune of algebra.

All this knowledge, with which vanity fills the balloon-like brains of our proud pedants, is therefore but a huge mass of words and figures, which form in the brain all the marks by which we distinguish and recall objects. All our ideas are awakened after the fashion in which the gardener who knows plants recalls all stages of their growth at sight of them. These words and the objects designated by them are so connected in the brain that it is comparatively rare to imagine a thing without the name or sign that is attached to it.

I always use the word ``imagine,'' because I think that everything is the work of imagination, and that all the faculties of the soul can be correctly reduced to pure imagination in which they all consist.

Thus judgment, reason, and memory are not absolute parts of the soul, but merely modifications of this kind of medullary screen upon which images of the objects painted in the eye are projected as by a magic lantern.

But if such is the marvelous and incomprehensible result of the structure of the brain, if everything is perceived and explained by imagination, why should we divide the sensitive principle which thinks in man? Is not this a clear inconsistency in the partisans of the simplicity of the mind? For a thing that is divided can no longer without absurdity be regarded as indivisible. See to what one is brought by the abuse of language and by those fine words (spirituality, immateriality, etc.) used haphazard and not understood even by the most brilliant.

Nothing is easier than to prove a system based, as this one is, on the intimate feeling and personal experience of each individual. If the imagination, or let us say, that fantastic part of the brain whose nature is as unknown to us as its way of acting, be naturally small or weak, it will hardly be able to compare the analogy or the resemblance of its ideas, it will be able to see only what is face to face with it, or what affects it very strongly;

and how will it see all this! Yet it is always imagination which apperceives, and imagination which represents to itself all objects along with their names and symbols; and thus, once again, imagination is the soul, since it plays all the roles of the soul.

By the imagination, by its flattering brush, the cold skeleton of reason takes on living and ruddy flesh, by the imagination the sciences flourish, the arts are adorned, the wood speaks, the echoes sigh, the rocks weep, marble breathes, and all inanimate objects gain life. It is imagination again which adds the piquant charm of voluptuousness to the tenderness of an amorous heart; which makes tenderness bud in the study of the philosopher and of the dusty pedant, which, in a word, creates scholars as well as orators and poets. Foolishly decried by some, vainly praised by others, and misunderstood by all; it follows not only in the train of the graces and of the fine arts, it not only describes but can also measure nature. It reasons, judges, analyzes, compares, and investigates. Could it feel so keenly the beauties of the pictures drawn for it, unless it discovered their relations?

No, just as it cannot turn its thoughts on the pleasures of the senses, without enjoying their perfection or their voluptuousness, it cannot reflect on what it has mechanically conceived, without thus being judgment itself.

The more the imagination or the poorest talent is exercised, the more it gains in embonpoint, so to speak, and the larger it grows. It becomes sensitive, robust, broad, and capable of thinking.

The best of organisms has need of this exercise.

Man's preeminent advantage is his organism. In vain all writers of books on morals fail to regard as praiseworthy those qualities that come by nature, esteeming only the talents gained by dint of reflection and industry. For whence come, I ask, skill, learning, and virtue, if not from a disposition that makes us fit to become skillful, wise, and virtuous? And whence again, comes this disposition, if not from nature? Only though nature do we have any good qualities; to her we owe all that we are. Why then should I not esteem men with good natural qualities as much as men who shine by acquired and as it were borrowed virtues?

Whatever the virtue may be, from whatever source it may come, it is worthy of esteem; the only question is, how to estimate it.

同类推荐
  • 信心铭

    信心铭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 龙图公案

    龙图公案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古刻丛钞

    古刻丛钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南华真经注疏

    南华真经注疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 消摇墟经

    消摇墟经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 帮主大银:夫银是个吃货

    帮主大银:夫银是个吃货

    为什么我会来到这鸟不拉屎的破地方,家不仅穷还有一帮极品,满满的都是嫌弃的说。好吧,既来之则安之,吼!努力奋斗吧,让全家走上富贵的道路。咦,那美男子是谁,近看更帅了,呀!别..别动手动脚啊!啊娘,啊爹,赶紧来救你亲亲女儿啊,啊哥你还笑........
  • 加速世界真正的加速

    加速世界真正的加速

    WhyfeelfearWhyfeellonelyWhyfeelsadWhynoonefeelswhyalways......加速たい速くの世界に行くか少女注目されるだろう
  • 戏红尘之:玩转高冷皇叔

    戏红尘之:玩转高冷皇叔

    一个绝色女间谍穿越到古代,戏和尚弄皇叔,睿智狡猾,腹黑能辨,妖娆千姿,风情万种。清心和尚追着走,神样皇叔抱着不放手。女主:和尚哥哥,你撑着,对佛祖要一心一意,不离不弃。你叫离尘,远离凡尘,懂不?女主:高冷神皇叔大人,您不是不近女色吗?呜呜,还说我躲一次就强我一次。放马过来,令你头疼的商盟是我搞定的,你穷得噹噹响的国库是我填满的。还有离尘为我抛弃菩萨,舍命相护。我怕谁?四国皇家之杰想娶我?没问题!来个现代足球比赛版的蹴鞠比赛,谁赢我嫁谁。皇叔非常难缠,我21世纪神勇天才女间谍,打不过,色诱不敢。但我有古今几千年的智慧底蕴在手,就不信玩你不过???
  • City Woman②:杠上麻辣俏红娘

    City Woman②:杠上麻辣俏红娘

    妈呀!薄唇、白脸、细长阴狠的倒三角眼,他那张白面无常讨命脸不只会吓坏善良百姓,只怕连作恶多端的坏人也不敢轻易招惹他!偏偏她开车撞伤他,惹来这个甩不掉的麻烦。他提出打官司和充当打字员两条路让她选。家里没金山银山赔给他,她只好舍命赔小人,放着红娘正职不干,跑去接受他的使唤荼毒……她和他铁定八字犯冲才会相看两相厌,任何鸡毛蒜皮的小事都能让他们争吵不休。怪的是他们整天吵吵闹闹,感情却愈吵愈好。虽然他长得离英俊还有段距离,不过酷劲十足,依她家红娘簿的规矩将他的条件列一列,他就算不是极品也算得上是高档货了。既然有这么好的货色当然要留着自己用,俊男配美女没啥稀奇,美女配野兽才叫绝配!
  • 脱口秀

    脱口秀

    本书是流行于欧美港台新口才训练方法。这种新的训练方法是将技巧方法和情景对话与典范人物的成长、成功的心灵激励相互穿插,融合起来,获得一种快速训练、事半功倍的效果。愿大家都来脱口秀,提高生活的品质和趣味,获得一份好收入和一份好心情!
  • 陆小凤传奇系列(四)

    陆小凤传奇系列(四)

    陆小凤,一个有着四条眉毛(其实只是嘴上多了两撇胡须)的人。喜欢喝酒,欣赏美女。更重要的是他重情义,但风流成性,半生桃花不断。表面上对什么事都漫不经心。但却十分在意。他总能遇到十分稀奇的事,也总能逢凶化吉。
  • 缚灵镜

    缚灵镜

    一块古镜,竟然在众目睽睽之下合二为一。我为了它几次差点搭上性命。我爱的人,为了它变成飞沫。我以为他就这样的离开了我的世界,却不曾想,还能再见他。然而,他却变得让我既熟悉又陌生。
  • 楚留香之帅气无罪

    楚留香之帅气无罪

    踏月不留痕,盗帅楚留香。香帅楚留香与其师傅小李飞刀李寻欢切磋武功,两人都是江湖中鼎鼎大名的人物,高手中的高手。虽是切磋,但两人都用尽全力,同时发出飞刀,两把飞刀碰到了一起,刹那间风云变色。两人发功过度无意间打开了时空之门,穿越到了现代的2015年,且看他如何玩转都市.......
  • 开国战将

    开国战将

    《开国战将》提供了许多经作者之手发掘的重要史料。其中较为珍贵的,有辽沈战役中和“文革”中有关林彪的史实(本书被访问者多为“四野”的老人),有诸多将领庐山会议后被卷入批判彭德怀、黄克诚“军事俱乐部”的激流旋涡的情况,有的文章还涉及了1958年对刘伯承的所谓“教条主义”的批判,涉及了一些将领在“文革”中忽浮忽沉的人世跌宕。这样的将军命运在中国不是个别。他们不是西方意义上的职业军人,他们每个人都有一条“政治生命”,他们每个人都是政治的密切参加者,旋涡裹挟,身不由己。他们举手投足,皆受制于那个控制力巨大的历史氛围。
  • 天狐灵探

    天狐灵探

    失势的豪门少爷,一次改变命运的转机,一片无垠的广阔天地,一场场尽心策划的阴谋,一个庞大背后势力,一个惊天动地的邪恶计划。