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the critique of pure reason-第115章

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contrary; the empirical synthesis and the series of conditions in

the phenomenal world… subsumed in the minor… are necessarily

successive and given in time alone。 It follows that I cannot

presuppose in the minor; as I did in the major; the absolute

totality of the synthesis and of the series therein represented; for

in the major all the members of the series are given as things in

themselves… without any limitations or conditions of time; while in

the minor they are possible only in and through a successive

regress; which cannot exist; except it be actually carried into

execution in the world of phenomena。

  After this proof of the viciousness of the argument commonly

employed in maintaining cosmological assertions; both parties may

now be justly dismissed; as advancing claims without grounds or title。

But the process has not been ended by convincing them that one or both

were in the wrong and had maintained an assertion which was without

valid grounds of proof。 Nothing seems to be clearer than that; if

one maintains: 〃The world has a beginning;〃 and another: 〃The world

has no beginning;〃 one of the two must be right。 But it is likewise

clear that; if the evidence on both sides is equal; it is impossible

to discover on what side the truth lies; and the controversy

continues; although the parties have been recommended to peace

before the tribunal of reason。 There remains; then; no other means

of settling the question than to convince the parties; who refute each

other with such conclusiveness and ability; that they are disputing

about nothing; and that a transcendental illusion has been mocking

them with visions of reality where there is none。 The mode of

adjusting a dispute which cannot be decided upon its own merits; we

shall now proceed to lay before our readers。



  Zeno of Elea; a subtle dialectician; was severely reprimanded by

Plato as a sophist; who; merely from the base motive of exhibiting his

skill in discussion; maintained and subverted the same proposition

by arguments as powerful and convincing on the one side as on the

other。 He maintained; for example; that God (who was probably

nothing more; in his view; than the world) is neither finite nor

infinite; neither in motion nor in rest; neither similar nor

dissimilar to any other thing。 It seemed to those philosophers who

criticized his mode of discussion that his purpose was to deny

completely both of two self…contradictory propositions… which is

absurd。 But I cannot believe that there is any justice in this

accusation。 The first of these propositions I shall presently consider

in a more detailed manner。 With regard to the others; if by the word

of God he understood merely the Universe; his meaning must have

been… that it cannot be permanently present in one place… that is;

at rest… nor be capable of changing its place… that is; of moving…

because all places are in the universe; and the universe itself is;

therefore; in no place。 Again; if the universe contains in itself

everything that exists; it cannot be similar or dissimilar to any

other thing; because there is; in fact; no other thing with which it

can be compared。 If two opposite judgements presuppose a contingent

impossible; or arbitrary condition; both… in spite of their opposition

(which is; however; not properly or really a contradiction)… fall

away; because the condition; which ensured the validity of both; has

itself disappeared。

  If we say: 〃Everybody has either a good or a bad smell;〃 we have

omitted a third possible judgement… it has no smell at all; and thus

both conflicting statements may be false。 If we say: 〃It is either

good…smelling or not good…smelling (vel suaveolens vel

non…suaveolens);〃 both judgements are contradictorily opposed; and the

contradictory opposite of the former judgement… some bodies are not

good…smelling… embraces also those bodies which have no smell at

all。 In the preceding pair of opposed judgements (per disparata);

the contingent condition of the conception of body (smell) attached to

both conflicting statements; instead of having been omitted in the

latter; which is consequently not the contradictory opposite of the

former。

  If; accordingly; we say: 〃The world is either infinite in extension;

or it is not infinite (non est infinitus)〃; and if the former

proposition is false; its contradictory opposite… the world is not

infinite… must be true。 And thus I should deny the existence of an

infinite; without; however affirming the existence of a finite

world。 But if we construct our proposition thus: 〃The world is

either infinite or finite (non…infinite);〃 both statements may be

false。 For; in this case; we consider the world as per se determined

in regard to quantity; and while; in the one judgement; we deny its

infinite and consequently; perhaps; its independent existence; in

the other; we append to the world; regarded as a thing in itself; a

certain determination… that of finitude; and the latter may be false

as well as the former; if the world is not given as a thing in itself;

and thus neither as finite nor as infinite in quantity。 This kind of

opposition I may be allowed to term dialectical; that of

contradictories may be called analytical opposition。 Thus then; of two

dialectically opposed judgements both may be false; from the fact;

that the one is not a mere contradictory of the other; but actually

enounces more than is requisite for a full and complete contradiction。

  When we regard the two propositions… 〃The world is infinite in

quantity;〃 and; 〃The world is finite in quantity;〃 as contradictory

opposites; we are assuming that the world… the complete series of

phenomena… is a thing in itself。 For it remains as a permanent

quantity; whether I deny the infinite or the finite regress in the

series of its phenomena。 But if we dismiss this assumption… this

transcendental illusion… and deny that it is a thing in itself; the

contradictory opposition is metamorphosed into a merely dialectical

one; and the world; as not existing in itself… independently of the

regressive series of my representations… exists in like manner neither

as a whole which is infinite nor as a whole which is finite in itself。

The universe exists for me only in the empirical regress of the series

of phenomena and not per se。 If; then; it is always conditioned; it is

never completely or as a whole; and it is; therefore; not an

unconditioned whole and does not exist as such; either with an

infinite; or with a finite quantity。

  What we have here said of the first cosmological idea… that of the

absolute totality of quantity in phenomena… applies also to the

others。 The series of conditions is discoverable only in the

regressive synthesis itself; and not in the phenomenon considered as a

thing in itself… given prior to all regress。 Hence I am compelled to

say: 〃The aggregate of parts in a given phenomenon is in itself

neither finite nor infinite; and these parts are given only in the

regr
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