登陆注册
19914600000242

第242章

9. Because maxims or axioms are not the truths we first knew. First, That they are not the truths first known to the mind is evident to experience, as we have shown in another place. (Bk. I. chap. i.) Who perceives not that a child certainly knows that a stranger is not its mother; that its sucking-bottle is not the rod, long before he knows that "it is impossible for the same thing to be and not to be?" And how many truths are there about numbers, which it is obvious to observe that the mind is perfectly acquainted with, and fully convinced of, before it ever thought on these general maxims, to which mathematicians, in their arguings, do sometimes refer them?

Whereof the reason is very plain: for that which makes the mind assent to such propositions, being nothing else but the perception it has of the agreement or disagreement of its ideas, according as it finds them affirmed or denied one of another in words it understands; and every idea being known to be what it is, and every two distinct ideas being known not to be the same; it must necessarily follow, that such self-evident truths must be first known which consist of ideas that are first in the mind. And the ideas first in the mind, it is evident, are those of particular things, from whence, by slow degrees, the understanding proceeds to some few general ones; which being taken from the ordinary and familiar objects of sense, are settled in the mind, with general names to them. Thus particular ideas are first received and distinguished, and so knowledge got about them; and next to them, the less general or specific, which are next to particular. For abstract ideas are not so obvious or easy to children, or the yet unexercised mind, as particular ones. If they seem so to grown men, it is only because by constant and familiar use they are made so. For, when we nicely reflect upon them, we shall find that general ideas are fictions and contrivances of the mind, that carry difficulty with them, and do not so easily offer themselves as we are apt to imagine. For example, does it not require some pains and skill to form the general idea of a triangle, (which is yet none of the most abstract, comprehensive, and difficult,) for it must be neither oblique nor rectangle, neither equilateral, equicrural, nor scalenon; but all and none of these at once. In effect, it is something imperfect, that cannot exist; an idea wherein some parts of several different and inconsistent ideas are put together. It is true, the mind, in this imperfect state, has need of such ideas, and makes all the haste to them it can, for the conveniency of communication and enlargement of knowledge; to both which it is naturally very much inclined. But yet one has reason to suspect such ideas are marks of our imperfection; at least, this is enough to show that the most abstract and general ideas are not those that the mind is first and most easily acquainted with, nor such as its earliest knowledge is conversant about.

10. Because on perception of them the other parts of our knowledge do not depend. Secondly, from what has been said it plainly follows, that these magnified maxims are not the principles and foundations of all our other knowledge. For if there be a great many other truths, which have as much self-evidence as they, and a great many that we know before them, it is impossible they should be the principles from which we deduce all other truths. Is it impossible to know that one and two are equal to three, but by virtue of this, or some such axiom, viz. "the whole is equal to all its parts taken together?" Many a one knows that one and two are equal to three, without having heard, or thought on, that or any other axiom by which it might be proved;and knows it as certainly as any other man knows, that "the whole is equal to all its parts," or any other maxim; and all from the same reason of self-evidence: the equality of those ideas being as visible and certain to him without that or any other axiom as with it, it needing no proof to make it perceived. Nor after the knowledge, that the whole is equal to all its parts, does he know that one and two are equal to three, better or more certainly than he did before.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 创世未来者

    创世未来者

    斯莱斯坦利大陆是一个科技高度发达的世界,各各国家在斯莱斯坦利大陆屹立;国家也以科技为发展中心开始了之间的较量……
  • 我的抗日大队

    我的抗日大队

    我不是一个兵,但我却穿越而来!为民族而战!我失败了,我成为了一个苟延馋喘的背叛者!但我又成功了,我成为了,令敌人恐惧到骨子里的杀手,我又成为了,令日寇闻风丧胆的疯子队长!于是‘牙狼’出现了,我手中的利刃,定要斩杀敌人三千六百刀才死!……PS:群号:463386207,书亦新书《抗日大英雄》《抗日之铁血兵魂》已签约,期待您的支持!
  • 长春洞天

    长春洞天

    世间一切的罪恶,都是心灵之火产生的灼烧。在看不见的阴影处,已经在蠢蠢欲动。天道的抉择,似乎没有抉择。人类的生死存亡,是重启,还是清洗…一切都从李文清得到这个洞天开始。众生蝼蚁中一个普普通通的他,能否撬得动这一场变革。这是使命,还是抗争,他自己也无从说起。
  • 说好就牵手:走进现代都市走婚群落

    说好就牵手:走进现代都市走婚群落

    本书透视了现代都市所谓“走婚”的现象,从同居、试婚、周末婚姻、外遇、网婚五个方面向人们展示了现代都市人的婚姻、婚外恋情及网络恋情等感情生活,反映了现代都市人的婚恋观,警示人们正确处理和把握好事业、亲情、友情、爱情的问题。
  • 媚影仙踪

    媚影仙踪

    大学毕业生外加北漂小白领宁潇雅童鞋穿越到犀利仁师中,变身刘瑶瑶,从此开启了一段新的旅程,宫斗,美男,犀利仁师……,蓬莱、昆仑、修仙,虾米?她是蓬莱仙岛第一修仙世家血脉传承者?空间;上古至宝;血脉传承?呃,这个世界,凌乱了......在这场奇幻的旅程中,所有美好的执着,只为有你。。。
  • 爆宠娇妻:总裁别乱来

    爆宠娇妻:总裁别乱来

    安然在最后一个亲人离世时,被安家接了回去,成为了安家二小姐。原本是收养的戏码,却变了味道成了私生女。她在充满恶意的生活中举步维艰,直到遇见他。他貌美多金,是这个城市中的王者,唯独有个小毛病就是看谁都是一张脸,却唯独对她免疫。从此,他一边打怪升级,一边护妻虐渣,将一个薄凉清冷的人养得娇蛮任性有多不容易只有他自己知道。却不想,还没给一个完整的结局,便踏入了一场精心谋划的布局之中。爱人便仇人,故人变敌人,爱是否还能继续……
  • 踏天无痕

    踏天无痕

    大燕帝国三十六王侯之族的姚氏宗子姚兴犯下大罪,修为被废,记忆抹除,流放到边陲投靠舅父,从天之骄子如日中天的云端跌落,沦为二流宗门太微宗最低级的道兵弟子,在一次意外中摔落山崖而死
  • 鸿蒙主宰

    鸿蒙主宰

    异世重生,拥有造化玉碟的秦朗一跃而起,打破废材的传说,从此天堑宏图,摧神灭魔,成就万古至尊。
  • 静候锦年

    静候锦年

    S市苏氏集团总裁苏锦年,在2015年除夕之夜,收到了一个神秘的礼物。一个自称是妹妹的女孩子从天而降,任凭他再三说明自己目前父母已过世,父亲更不可能有私生女这件事,女孩仍是闯入了他的生活。当女孩的身世之谜被解开,苏锦年又有着怎样难以忘怀的过去?两人又会擦出怎样的火花?
  • 魔力公众演讲:顶级演讲者养成全书

    魔力公众演讲:顶级演讲者养成全书

    本书内容详尽,它能使你循序渐进地获得极致的演讲效果。书里的方法源自对现代社会1000位顶尖演讲者的悉心研究,并且得到了数百位职业演讲家的亲身验证。你会了解到如何做才能持续地抓住听者的心。作者选用了许多真实的演讲案例,不仅浅显易懂,而且饶有兴味。它将使你的每一次登台都大放异彩。