shorter logic-第16部分
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of composition。 But the fact is; that in abstract simplicity we have a category; which as little
corresponds to the nature of the soul; as that of compositeness。
One word on the relation of rational to empirical psychology。 The former; because it sets itself to
apply thought to cognise mind and even to demonstrate the result of such thinking; is the higher;
whereas empirical psychology starts from perception; and only recounts and describes what
perception supplies。 But if we propose to think the mind; we must not be quite so shy of its special
phenomena。 Mind is essentially active in the same sense as the Schoolmen 'Scholastics' said that
God is 'absolute actuosity'。 But if the mind is active it must as it were utter itself。 It is wrong
therefore to take the mind for a processless ens; as did the old metaphysic which divided the
processless inward life of the mind from its outward life。 The mind; of all things; must be looked at
in its concrete actuality; in its energy; and in such a way that its manifestations are seen to be
determined by its inward force。
§35
The third branch of metaphysics was Cosmology。 The topics it embraced were
the world; its contingency; necessity; eternity; limitation in time and space: the
laws (only formal) of its changes: the freedom of man and the origin of evil。
To these topics it applied what were believed to be thoroughgoing contrasts: such
as contingency and necessity; eternal and internal necessity; efficient and final
cause; or causality in general and design; essence or substance and phenomenon;
form and matter; freedom and necessity; happiness and pain; good and evil。
The object of Cosmology comprised not merely Nature; but Mind too; in its external complicating
in its phenomenon…in fact; existence in general; or the sum of finite things。 This object however it
viewed not as a concrete whole; but only under certain abstract points of view。 Thus the questions
Cosmology attempted to solve were such as these: Is accident or necessity dominant in the world?
Is the world eternal or created? It was therefore a chief concern of this study to lay down what
were called general cosmological laws: for instance; that Nature does not act by fits an starts。 And
by fits and starts (saltus) they meant a qualitative difference or qualitative alteration showing itself
without any antecedent determining mean: whereas; on the contrary; a gradual change (of quantity)
is obviously not without intermediation。
In regard to Mind as it makes itself felt in the world; the questions which Cosmology chiefly
discussed turned upon the freedom of man and the origin of evil。 Nobody can deny that these are
questions of the highest importance。 But to give them a satisfactory answer; it is above all things
necessary not to claim finality for the abstract formulae of understanding; or to suppose that each
of the two terms in an antithesis has an independent subsistence or can be treated in its isolation as
a complete and self…centred truth。 This however is the general position taken by the
metaphysicians before Kant; and appears in their cosmological discussions; which for that reason
were incapable of compassing their purpose; to understand the phenomena of the world。 Observe
how they proceed with the distinction between freedom and necessity; in their application of these
categories to Nature and Mind。 Nature they regard as subject in its workings to necessity; Mind
they hold to be free。 No doubt there is a real foundation for this distinction in the very core of the
Mind itself: but freedom and necessity; when thus abstractly opposed; are terms applicable only in
the finite world to which; as such; they belong。 A freedom involving no necessity; and mere
necessity without freedom; are abstract and in this way untrue formulae of thought。 Freedom is no
blank indeterminateness: essentially concrete; and unvaryingly self…determinate; it is so far at the
same time necessary。 Necessity; again; in the ordinary acceptation of the term in popular
philosophy; means determination from without only … as in finite mechanics; where a body moves
only when it is struck by another body; and moves in the direction communicated to it by the
impact。 This however is a merely external necessity; not the real inward necessity which is identical
with freedom。
The case is similar with the contrast of Good and Evil…the favourite contrast of the introspective
modern world。 If we regard Evil as possessing a fixity of its own; apart and distinct from Good;
we are to a certain extent right: there is an opposition between them; nor do those who maintain
the apparent and relative character of the opposition mean that Evil and Good in the Absolute are
one; or; in accordance with the modern phrase; that a thing first becomes evil from our way of
looking at it。 The error arises when we take Evil as a permanent positive; instead of…what it really
is…a negative which; though it would fain assert itself; has no real persistence; and is; in fact; only
the absolute sham…existence of negativity in itself。
§36
The fourth branch of metaphysics is Natural or Rational Theology。 The notion of
God; or God as a possible being; the proofs; of his existence; and his properties;
formed the study of this branch。
(a) When understanding thus discusses the Deity; its main purpose is to find what
predicates correspond or not to the fact we have in our imagination as God。 And
in doing it assumes the contrast between positive and negative to be absolute; and
hence; in the long run; nothing is left for the notion as understanding takes it; but
the empty abstraction of indeterminate Being; of mere reality or positivity; the
lifeless product of modern 'Deism。'
(b) The method of demonstration employed in finite knowledge must always lead
to an inversion of the true order。 For it requires the statement of some objective
ground for God's being; which thus acquires the appearance of being derived
from something else。 This mode of proof; guided as it is by the canon of mere
analytical identity; is embarrassed by the difficulty of passing from the finite to
the infinite。 Either the finitude of the existing world; which is left as much a fact
as it was before; clings to the notion of Deity; and God has to be defined as the
immediate substance of that world…which is Pantheism: or he remains an object
set over against the subject; and in this way; finite…which is Dualism。
(c) The attributes of God which ought to be various and precise had; properly
speaking; sunk and disappeared in the abstract notion of pure reality; of
indeterminate Being。 Yet in our material thought; the finite world continues;
meanwhile; to have a real being; with God as a sort of antithesis: and thus arises
the further picture of different relations of God to the world。 These; formulated
as properties; must; on the one hand; as relations to finite circumstances;
themselves possess a finite character (giving us such properties as just; gracious;
mighty; wise; etc。); on the other hand they must be infinite。 Now on this level of
thought the only means; and a hazy one; of reconciling these opposing
requirements was quantitative exaltation of the properties; forming them into
indeterminateness…into the sensus eminentior。 But it was an expedient which
really destroyed the property and left a mere name。
§36n
The object of the old metaphysical theology was to see how far unassisted reason could go in the
knowledge of God。 Certainly a reason derived knowledge of God is the highest problem of
philosophy。 The earliest teachings of religion are figurate conceptions of God。 These conceptions;
as the Creed arranges them; are imparted to us in youth。 They are the doctrines of our religion;
and in so far as the individual rests his faith on these doctrines and feels them to be the truth; he
has all he needs as a Christian。 Such is faith: and the science of this faith is Theology。 But until
Theology is something more than a bare enumeration and compilation of these doctrines ab extra;
it has no right to the title of science。 Even the method so much in vogue at present…the purely
historical mode of treatment…which for example reports what has been said by this or the other
Father of the Church…does not invest theology with a scientific character。 To get that; we must go
on to comprehend the facts by thought…which is the business of philosophy。 Genuine theology is
thus at the same time a real philosophy of religion; as it was; we may add; in the Middle Ages。
And now let us examine this rational theology more narrowly。 It was a science which approached
God not by reason but by understanding; and; in its mode of thought; employed the terms without
any sense of their mutual limitations and connections。 The notion of God formed the subject of
discussion; and yet the criterion of our knowledge was derived from such an extraneous source as
the materialised conception of God。 Now thought must be free in its movements。 It is no doubt to
be remembered that the result of independent thought harmonises with the import of the Christian
religion: for the Christian religion is a revelation of reason。 But such a harmony surpassed the
efforts of rational theology。 It proposed to define the figurate conception of God in terms of
thought; but it resulted in a notion of God which was what we may call the abstract of positivity or
reality; to the exclusion of all negation。 God was accordingly defined to be the most real of all
beings。 Anyone can see however that this most real of beings; in which negation forms no part; is
the very opposite of what it ought to be and of what understanding supposes it to be。 Instead of
being rich and full above all measure; it is so narrowly conceived that it is; on the contrary;
extremely poor and altogether empty。 It is with reason that the heart craves a concrete body of
truth; but without definite feature; that is; without negation; contained in the notion; there can only
be an abstraction。 When the notion of God is apprehended only as that of the abstract or most
r