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lecture18-第5章

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love; and honor; and in the second place of happiness; for the



knowledge and love of God is the mainspring of felicity。  In so



far forth one may say that God's secondary purpose in creating is



LOVE。







I will not weary you by pursuing these metaphysical



determinations farther; into the mysteries of God's Trinity; for



example。  What I have given will serve as a specimen of the



orthodox philosophical theology of both Catholics and



Protestants。  Newman; filled with enthusiasm at God's list of



perfections; continues the passage which I began to quote to you



by a couple of pages of a rhetoric so magnificent that I can



hardly refrain from adding them; in spite of the inroad they



would make upon our time。'296'  He first enumerates God's



attributes sonorously; then celebrates his ownership of



everything in earth and Heaven; and the dependence of all that



happens upon his permissive will。  He gives us scholastic



philosophy 〃touched with emotion;〃 and every philosophy should be



touched with emotion to be rightly understood。  Emotionally;



then; dogmatic theology is worth something to minds of the type



of Newman's。  It will aid us to estimate what it is worth



intellectually; if at this point I make a short digression。







'296' Op。 cit。; Discourse III。 Section 7。















What God hath joined together; let no man put asunder。 The



Continental schools of philosophy have too often overlooked the



fact that man's thinking is organically connected with his



conduct。  It seems to me to be the chief glory of English and



Scottish thinkers to have kept the organic connection in view。 



The guiding principle of British philosophy has in fact been that



every difference must MAKE a difference; every theoretical



difference somewhere issue in a practical difference; and that



the best method of discussing points of theory is to begin by



ascertaining what practical difference would result from one



alternative or the other being true。  What is the particular



truth in question KNOWN AS?  In what facts does it result?  What



is its cash…value in terms of particular experience?  This is the



characteristic English way of taking up a question。  In this way;



you remember; Locke takes up the question of personal identity。



What you mean by it is just your chain of particular memories;



says he。  That is the only concretely verifiable part of its



significance。  All further ideas about it; such as the oneness or



manyness of the spiritual substance on which it is based; are



therefore void of intelligible meaning; and propositions touching



such ideas may be indifferently affirmed or denied。  So Berkeley



with his 〃matter。〃







The cash…value of matter is our physical sensations。  That is



what it is known as; all that we concretely verify of its



conception。  That; therefore; is the whole meaning of the term



〃matter〃any other pretended meaning is mere wind of words。 



Hume does the same thing with causation。  It is known as habitual



antecedence; and as tendency on our part to look for something



definite to come。  Apart from this practical meaning it has no



significance whatever; and books about it may be committed to the



flames; says Hume。  Dugald Stewart and Thomas Brown; James Mill;



John Mill; and Professor Bain; have followed more or less



consistently the same method; and Shadworth Hodgson has used the



principle with full explicitness。  When all is said and done; it



was English and Scotch writers; and not Kant; who introduced 〃the



critical method〃 into philosophy; the one method fitted to make



philosophy a study worthy of serious men。  For what seriousness



can possibly remain in debating philosophic propositions that



will never make an appreciable difference to us in action?  And



what could it matter; if all propositions were practically



indifferent; which of them we should agree to call true or which



false?







An American philosopher of eminent originality; Mr。 Charles



Sanders Peirce; has rendered thought a service by disentangling



from the particulars of its application the principle by which



these men were instinctively guided; and by singling it out as



fundamental and giving to it a Greek name。  He calls it the



principle of PRAGMATISM; and he defends it somewhat as



follows:'297'







'297' In an article; How to make our Ideas Clear; in the Popular



Science Monthly for January; 1878; vol。 xii。 p。 286。















Thought in movement has for its only conceivable motive the



attainment of belief; or thought at rest。  Only when our thought



about a subject has found its rest in belief can our action on



the subject firmly and safely begin。  Beliefs; in short; are



rules for action; and the whole function of thinking is but one



step in the production of active habits。  If there were any part



of a thought that made no difference in the thought's practical



consequences; then that part would be no proper element of the



thought's significance。  To develop a thought's meaning we need



therefore only determine what conduct it is fitted to produce;



that conduct is for us its sole significance; and the tangible



fact at the root of all our thought…distinctions is that there is



no one of them so fine as to consist in anything but a possible



difference of practice。  To attain perfect clearness in our



thoughts of an object; we need then only consider what



sensations; immediate or remote; we are conceivably to expect



from it; and what conduct we must prepare in case the object



should be true。  Our conception of these practical consequences



is for us the whole of our conception of the object; so far as



that conception has positive significance at all。







This is the principle of Peirce; the principle of pragmatism。



Such a principle will help us on this occasion to decide; among



the various attributes set down in the scholastic inventory of



God's perfections; whether some be not far less significant than



others。







If; namely; we apply the principle of pragmatism to God's



metaphysical attributes; strictly so called; as distinguished



from his moral attributes; I think that; even were we forced by a



coercive logic to believe them; we still should have to confess



them to be destitute of all intelligible significance。 Take God's



aseity; for example; or his necessariness; his immateriality; his



〃simplicity〃 or superiority to the kind of inner variety and



succession which we find in finite beings; his indivisibility;



and lack of the inner distinctions of being and activity;



substance and accident; potentialit
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