登陆注册
4614900000005

第5章

We cannot do it any more than we can do something physically impossible. We can see the gold-fish as forming one family, and therefore as in a way united to the personality of the parents from which they sprang, and therefore as members one of another, and therefore as forming a single growth of gold-fish, as boughs and buds unite to form a tree; but we cannot by any effort of the imagination introduce the bowl and the water into the personality, for we have never been accustomed to think of such things as living and personal. Those, therefore, who tell us that "God is everything, and everything is God," require us to see "everything" as a person, which we cannot; or God as not a person, which again we cannot.

Continuing the article of Mr. Blunt from which I have already quoted, I read :-"Linus, in a passage which has been preserved by Stobaeus, exactly expresses the notion afterwards adopted by Spinoza: 'One sole energy governs all things; all things are unity, and each portion is All; for of one integer all things were born; in the end of time all things shall again become unity; the unity of multiplicity.' Orpheus, his disciple, taught no other doctrine."According to Pythagoras, "an adept in the Orphic philosophy,""the soul of the world is the Divine energy which interpenetrates every portion of the mass, and the soul of man is an efflux of that energy. The world, too, is an exact impress of the Eternal Idea, which is the mind of God." John Scotus Erigena taught that "all is God and God is all." William of Champeaux, again, two hundred years later, maintained that "all individuality is one in substance, and varies only in its non-essential accidents and transient properties." Amalric of Bena and David of Dinant followed the theory out "into a thoroughgoing Pantheism."Amalric held that "All is God and God is all. The Creator and the creature are one Being. Ideas are at once creative and created, subjective and objective. God is the end of all, and all return to Him. As every variety of humanity forms one manhood, so the world contains individual forms of one eternal essence." David of Dinant only varied upon this by "imagining a corporeal unity.

Although body, soul, and eternal substance are three, these three are one and the same being."Giordano Bruno maintained the world of sense to be "a vast animal having the Deity for its living. soul." The inanimate part of the world is thus excluded from participation in the Deity, and a conception that our minds can embrace is offered us instead of one which they cannot entertain, except as in a dream, incoherently. But without such a view of evolution as was prevalent at the beginning of this century, it was impossible to see "the world of sense" intelligently, as forming "a vast animal." Unless, therefore, Giordano Bruno held the opinions of Buffon, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, and Lamarck, with more definiteness than I am yet aware of his having done, his contention must be considered as a splendid prophecy, but as little more than a prophecy. He continues, "Birth is expansion from the one centre of Life; life is its continuance, and death is the necessary return of the ray to the centre of light." This begins finely, but ends mystically. I have not, however, compared the English translation with the original, and must reserve a fuller examination of Giordano Bruno's teaching for another opportunity.

Spinoza disbelieved in the world rather than in God. He was an Acosmist, to use Jacobi's expression, rather than an Atheist.

According to him, "the Deity and the Universe are but one substance, at the same time both spirit and matter, thought and extension, which are the only known attributes of the Deity."My readers will, I think, agree with me that there is very little of the above which conveys ideas with the fluency and comfort which accompany good words. Words are like servants: it is not enough that we should have them-we must have the most able and willing that we can find, and at the smallest wages that will content them. Having got them we must make the best and not the worst of them. Surely, in the greater part of what has been quoted above, the words are barren letters only: they do not quicken within us and enable us to conceive a thought, such as we can in our turn impress upon dead matter, and mould [sic] that matter into another shape than its own, through the thought which has become alive within us. No offspring of ideas has followed upon them, or, if any at all, yet in such unwonted shape, and with such want of alacrity, that we loathe them as malformations and miscarriages of our minds. Granted that if we examine them closely we shall at length find them to embody a little germ of truth-that is to say, of coherency with our other ideas; but there is too little truth in proportion to the trouble necessary to get at it. We can get more truth, that is to say, more coherency-for truth and coherency are one-for less trouble in other ways.

But it may be urged that the beginnings of all tasks are difficult and unremunerative, and that later developments of Pantheism may be more intelligible than the earlier ones.

Unfortunately, this is not the case. On continuing Mr. Blunt's article, I find the later Pantheists a hundredfold more perplexing than the earlier ones. With Kant, Schelling, Fichte, and Hegel, we feel that we are with men who have been decoyed into a hopeless quagmire; we understand nothing of their language-we doubt whether they understand themselves, and feel that we can do nothing with them but look at them and pass them by.

In my next chapter I propose to show the end which the early Pantheists were striving after, and the reason and naturalness of their error.

同类推荐
  • 言行龟鉴

    言行龟鉴

    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。
  • 六字课斋卑议

    六字课斋卑议

    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。
  • 普济本事方

    普济本事方

    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。
  • 佛说大乘入诸佛境界智光明庄严经

    佛说大乘入诸佛境界智光明庄严经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Resurrection

    Resurrection

    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。
热门推荐
  • 天兆传奇

    天兆传奇

    天道茫茫,自凄凉;难回望,一曲悲歌愁断肠……他身于帝王家,享尽芳华;他成于帝王家,灭亲成帝;他败于帝王家,天谴断魂;他经历了亡国之痛,尝尽了悲苦冷暖,投身在战争杀伐,谋划在尔虞我诈;他凭借胆识坐拥百万军马,他凭借人格集贤纳仕,他走于鬼门关边,与人斗,与鬼斗,书写下一段荡气回肠,可歌可泣的帝王路……
  • 所念人,所感事

    所念人,所感事

    我们真的要过很久很久,才能够明白,自己真正怀念的,到底是怎样的人,怎样的事。有时候,以为爱情可以填满人生的遗憾。然而,制造更多遗憾的却偏偏是爱情。有时候,回头看看身边的人和事儿,方能彻底理解生活,方能在旅途中长大。一个城市,几个男女,几段爱情故事,落幕!
  • 逆天铁骑

    逆天铁骑

    现代工兵李光辉穿越到明末塞外一位名叫李老二的马贼身上,大厦将倾,不愿见到亡天下的李老二改名为李国栋,国之栋梁,先是袭击晋商商队,又受卢象升招安,打造一支无敌强军,力挽狂澜,拯救天下
  • 陈立农之如果我们有如果

    陈立农之如果我们有如果

    其实我是一名农糖,写这个作品是出于对农农的喜爱,但是又怕自己写了后吃女主的醋,刚想了很久,还是写了,不喜勿喷。
  • 丑女的美人计

    丑女的美人计

    小姨拍案而怒:什么?那小妖精十几年前抢走你父亲,现在又一而再再而三来抢你男人?你忍得了?花如练咬牙道:忍不了!!小姨:走,小姨带你去找世外高人,你拜他为师,让他指点你一二,包你成为情场高手,勾谁得谁,谁也抢不走你男人。初次相见:花如练一脸惊艳,世外高人不该是七老八十的老头子吗?怎么这么年轻这么帅?哪知,绝色世外高人嫌她丑!!世外高人勉为其难道:拜我为师,我授你美人计,计计得逞,勾心得心,勾魂得魂。从此,阴差阳错,花如练成了猎手——专靠施美人计而达到目的的职业。师傅警告她:你这是玩弄感情,你在万花丛中过,能否片叶不沾身?花如练:呃,就……沾了两片……
  • 飞向蓝天的历程(趣味科学馆丛书)

    飞向蓝天的历程(趣味科学馆丛书)

    “趣味科学馆”丛书,是一套自然科学类读物。丛书包罗科学的多个领域,涉及“信息化”、“绿色革命”、“发明、“生态资源”、“航天”、“军事”、“日食、月食”等当下热门关键词,有引领读者关注热点、提升其认识水平的现实价值。刘芳主编的《飞向蓝天的历程》为丛书之一。《飞向蓝天的历程》内容涉及飞机的各个侧面,并进行合乎逻辑的排列组合。文字浅显易懂,生动活泼。
  • 萌宝来袭:总裁请签收

    萌宝来袭:总裁请签收

    某天醒来,单身妈咪苏暖表示很头疼:“遭人设计,扑了北城最尊贵的男人,怎么破?”宝宝一眨着星星眼,“帅不帅咩?帅的话,正好我还缺一个爹地。”宝宝二一脸严肃的抗议,“妈咪,你只能有我一个男人。”霍言深甩出一句真言,“身份证,户口本,民政局走一趟。”“霍先生,吃亏的人是我。”“怎么?不想负责?”“家里还有两小只,实在是不想委屈你喜当爹。”霍言深闻言,强势高冷的把她圈入怀,“娶一赠二,不委屈。”
  • 魔君霸宠,绝世妖娆妃

    魔君霸宠,绝世妖娆妃

    世分三界,又有六族,六族之外,是更多无可知的事物。原本相安无事的天地,却因为一位魔界主君与一位凡人女子发生的故事,而天下大乱。即使时光逆转,历史依旧无法彻底改变,又白白牵扯进更多的痴男怨女,爱恨情仇。神兽为伴,酒香入眠,如果时间能定格在最初的最初,那么至死不渝也并非难事了。身份枷锁,他为了她抛弃魔界;无力回天,他为了她切换时空,却仍然只能保留一时的温存。魔君与凡人,到底是缘是劫,是债是孽?情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 曾国藩家书

    曾国藩家书

    本书在体例上将曾国藩家书分为修身、劝学、治家、理财、交友、为政、用人、养生、军事诸篇。选编时对多个版本进行比较,精选其中有代表性的和对当代人极具参考价值的篇章。按时间排序,酌定标题,进行注释和点评。在內容上每篇各有不同,也各有侧重,如下所述:修身篇所选的家书旨在反映曾国藩在保身、进德修业、息心忍耐、有恒心、谨慎、自立自强等方面的內在修为。劝学篇所选的家书包括教弟写字养神、劝弟学业宜精、阐述求学之法、教弟注重看书、读书要有恒心等內容,反映了曾国藩“读书、立志、有恒”的治学思想。
  • 解放一江山

    解放一江山

    全国大陆解放后,国军的残余部队退至东南沿海部分岛屿,其企图利用这些岛屿作为拱卫台湾和对大陆实施反攻的前进基地。解放军华东军区部队发动攻岛作战,此为解放军首次陆、海、空三军协同作战。战斗历时两天,至1月19日2时,解放军占领该岛,国军一江山岛指挥官王生明阵亡。