REESE LIBRARY ill" Till- UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. 1 . i$ a . M). : / PERSONALITY PEKSONALITY THE BEGINNING AND END OP METAPHYSICS AND A NECESSAKY ASSUMPTION IN ALL POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY BY ALFKED WILLIAMS MOMEEIE h M.A., D.SC., LL.D. SOMETIME FELLOW OF ST JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, AND PROFESSOR OF LOGIC AND METAPHYSICS IN KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON FIFTH WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS EDINBURGH AND LONDON MDCCCXCV All Eights reserved BD33 7 ' PEEFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. THE substance of the following pages was originally written as a thesis for my doctor's degree. It was the embodiment of thoughts which were uppermost in my mind, after some years of almost exclusive devotion to philosophical reading. Notwithstand- ing the favourable reception accorded to the first edition, I delayed the publication of a second, hoping that I might be able, as a friendly reviewer had suggested, to strengthen my position by en- largement. Various engagements have, however, kept me from securing enough time for this pur- pose; and as I find the book is being constantly called for, I thought it better that it should come out again in the same slight form, rather than VI PREFACE. be any longer delayed. I have revised it with considerable care, and have re-written entirely a good many paragraphs. It was suggested by an appreciative critic that matters would be much simplified for the popular reader, if I divided the essay into sections; and this I have accordingly done. One or two of my reviewers found fault with me for not having unriddled all the mysteries of life, at least they said that I should have shown, not only that an ego did exist, but how it came into existence, and in what relation it stood to- wards the Absolute. Now, in a metaphysical system which is offered as a complete explanation of the universe, we perhaps have a right to de- mand that these two great difficulties should be solved. No metaphysician, however, not even Hegel, has yet succeeded in solving them. And as for myself, I never professed I never had the slightest intention in the present essay of pro- ducing a system of metaphysics. I know, of course, that the time which reviewers have at their disposal is limited; but if, in the present instance, they could have managed to read as far PREFACE. Vll as to the end of the title, they would have seen that my aim was simply to point out how Positiv-^ ists assumed and could not but assume the existence of a certain metaphysical reality, in which however they supposed themselves to dis- believe. I have seen no attempt to refute my main con- tention, which is that the Positivists really assume what they professedly deny ; otherwise I should of course have felt bound either to modify my own arguments, or else to answer those of my opponents. Englishmen generally are said to be endowed with the gift of never knowing when they are beaten. But English Positivists seem to have a yet more remarkable talent that of never knowing when they are attacked. My little essay was published anonymously, and for that reason, as well as for its intrinsic demerits, might have appeared to be unworthy of an answer. But the late Professor Green's ' Introduction to Hume/ and Principal Caird's ' Philosophy of Keligion,' have met with the same unsatisfactory fate. The Positivists, ex- cept -on the supposition that their theories are mere moonshine, should have something to say. Why do Vlll PREFACE. they not say it ? Unless they soon set about de- fending themselves, we shall begin to think that they agree with us, not only in their metaphysi- cal assumptions, but also in the estimate which they have formed as to the value of their own philosophy. A. W. M. KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON. CONTENTS. PAGE INTRODUCTION, ... 1 SECT. I. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO, . . 24 .. II. THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO, . 47 it III. THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO, ... 63 ii IV. THE INFINITE EGO, .... 102 CONCLUSION, . . . , . . .132 PEESONALITY. INTRODUCTION. "WE have taken up the fact of this universe," says Thomas Carlyle, "as it is not. We have quietly closed our eyes to the eternal substance of things, and opened them only to the shows and shams of things. We believe this universe to be intrinsically a great, unintelligible Perhaps. Extrin- sically, clear enough, it is a great, most extensive cattle-fold, with most extensive kitchen-ranges and dining-tables, whereat he is wise who can find a place. All truth of this universe is uncertain; only the profit and loss of it the pudding and praise of it are and remain very visible to the practical man. There is no longer any God for us. God's laws are become a greatest happi- ness principle, a parliamentary expediency. The 2 PERSONALITY. heavens overarch us only as an astronomical time- keeper, a butt for Herschel's telescopes to shoot science at. Man has lost the soul out of him, and now after the due period begins to find the want of it." There is much truth in this, except, perhaps, that the last seven words are rather premature. Many of the leaders of thought believe and teach that God and the soul are no more. Professor Bain tells us that " the ego is a pure fiction, coined from nonentity : " and Mr John Morley was so anxious to show the absurdity of believing, in, or even hop- ing for, a God, that he used to write the word with a small " g." The universe has been resolved into a set of phenomena, whose sequences exhibit only such meaningless regularity as may be observed in the drawing of balls out of a ballot-box; and the skilful analysts, by way of coup de grdce, have ended by resolving themselves into a set of similar phenomena. There are only appearances without us, and nothing to be seen behind the appearances ; only appearances within us, and nothing by which the appearances can be seen. " The Universe = Phenomena." This is to be the gospel of the future. And when every man believes it, when men come to recognise themselves as merely series of sensations, and the external world as only the INTRODUCTION. 3 abstract possibility of sensation in which custom has taught them to believe, above all, when they come to feel that there is absolutely no chance of ever discovering any meaning in anything, then the true golden age will have been reached. In other . words, when the search after reason has been given up, the true reign of reason will have begun. To those who think thus, metaphysics is of course a remnant of barbarism, only a little re- moved from the fetishism that flourished in the infancy of the race; or, at the best, it is but a puerile amusement which, when one becomes a man that is to say a Positivist ought to be put away. Now it is the purpose of the present essay to offer some suggestions tending to show that this estimate of metaphysics is incorrect, that the Posi- tivists themselves are but metaphysicians in dis- guise, that pure Phenomenalism, without some admixture of metaphysical elements, is an unthink- able absurdity, and that, from the works of the most violently anti-metaphysical writers, it is easy to extract the elements of a metaphysical system. It would be well at the outset clearly to distin- guish between three words viz., Psychology, Philo- sophy, and Metaphysics which are frequently used as more or less synonymous. Language is poor enough at the best, and it is to be regretted when 4 PERSONALITY. it is made poorer by any avoidable ambiguities. Schwegler's definition of philosophy is this : " It is the thinking of the entire empirical finite in the form of an intelligently articulated system." Now, if we omit the word " intelligently," this definition will apply to the Positive philosophy, which denies the possibility of metaphysics, and restricts itself to the laws of sequence and coexistence that obtain among phenomena. And as the term philosophy is always applied to the systems of Hume, Comte, and others whose systems are pre-eminently anti-meta- physical, it is better to define it so that it will dis- tinctly include phenomenalists. Philosophy, then, should mean the search for those ultimate generali- sations which will embrace the narrower generalisa- tions of the separate sciences. Positivism deserved the name of philosophy, because it aimed at constructing a "hierarchy of the sciences," thus transforming them into an organic whole, in which each part would depend on all that preceded, and determine all that succeeded. Lewes returns to the use of the word metaphysics in his 'Problems of Life and Mind.' "The object of the sciences is laws," he says ; " the object of metaphysics the laws of laws. Metaphysics is objective logic, or the logic of the cosmos, or the codification of the laws of INTRODUCTION. 5 cause. If we understand metaphysics in its primi- tive sense as TO, /^era ra fyvcnicd that which comes after physics it will embrace the ultimate general- isations of research, and become the name for the science of the most general conceptions" Here, how- ever, he stops short. He goes a little further than Hume and Comte; since Comte denied the legiti- macy of the word cause, and Hume maintained that " the highest end of human reason is to reduce many particular effects to a few general causes, such as electricity, gravity, cohesion, &c." But Lewes does not enter into the region of meta- physics properly so called a study which he pro- poses to designate metempirics. Again, I think it would be well to draw a sharp distinction between psychology and meta- physics, because the legitimacy of psychology is admitted by anti - metaphysical writers, such as J. S. Mill and Lewes. I do not, therefore, deem it expedient to make psychology, as Mansel does, a branch of metaphysics. 1 If there be an entity call it vital principle, ego or what not that can be distinguished in thought from the passing states 1 According to Mansel, metaphysics consisted of two parts : (1) psychology, concerned with the facts of consciousness as such ; and (2) ontology, concerned with " the realities " to which those facts bear testimony. 6 PERSONALITY. of our mental life, that principle belongs to meta- physics, just as does the principle, if there be one, which underlies external phenomena. Some facts of consciousness, as we shall see, are nou- menal and metaphysical; and psychology should, in my judgment, take cognisance only of pheno- mena. For then again, as in the case of philo- sophy, we should have a word and a science in regard to which there will be little dispute. For example, both Mill and Lewes recognise the possi- bility of a science of psychology and the impor- tance of the introspective method. They differ only in this, that Mill would place it among the hierarchy of sciences, while Lewes would make it a branch of biology. Comte, it is true, denies the legitimacy of psycho- logical science, and maintains that introspection can only lead to illusion. This he makes little effort to prove. He relies on the stock arguments of Gall and others, that in order to reflect on a state of mind, we must first pass out of that state into another, and so the state .to be reflected on will be over before reflection can begin. He proposes to substitute phrenology and the study of the minds of others. But even if all the phrenological hypotheses were correct, psychological observation would still be necessary ; for, as Mill INTRODUCTION. 7 justly says, " it is impossible to ascertain the cor- respondence between two things by studying only one of them." And as for the observation of other minds, the signs by which they are manifested must be meaningless to any one who has not studied his own mind and its manifestations. This, indeed, Comte seems to admit in one pas- sage, when he says that " man at first knows only himself, and applies this knowledge as a formula to universal nature." At all events, if introspection is an impossibility, knowledge is also an impossibility. Investigating states of consciousness by introspection merely means attending to their presentations or repre- sentations. If we could not do the first, we could know nothing, not even a single sensation; if we could not do the second, we might know our passing states, but this momentary knowledge would be constantly passing into ignorance, and would thus be the most unreal of dissolving views. I hope to show presently that the denial of an ego always leads to contradictions and absurdities ; but the additional denial of introspection involves the theory of knowledge in such manifest and hopeless difficulties, that it is now accepted by very few writers of repute. According to Comte, transitory phenomena of nothing are apprehended 8 PERSONALITY. by equally evanescent phenomena of nobody ; but the latter cannot really be a mean to knowledge, for he allows no ego by which they can be cognised, and he expressly maintains that they cannot know themselves, without first ceasing to be, in which case there would be nothing left to be known. Of course, any such theory which involves the denial of knowledge is self-destructive; for if we can know nothing, we cannot know the truth of a theory which maintains that we can know nothing. A science of psychology, without any distinct recognition of metaphysical elements, has been clearly sketched by J. S. Mill. Such a science is not directly concerned with speculations regard- ing the mind's own nature. It understands, by the laws of mind, those of mental phenomena. Sen- sations, having for their immediate antecedents states of the body, would fall under physiology. 1 If all mental states were equally dependent with sensations on physical conditions, mental science, as the science of mental phenomena, might be re- garded as merely a branch of physiology. But, as Mill says, there exist uniformities among states of 1 The reader will bear in mind that I am now speaking only of the classification of feelings not their explanation. The sim- plest feeling, as we shall hereafter see, is not fully accounted for till we have postulated the existence of a subject not apprehensible by sense. INTRODUCTION. 9 mind which can be ascertained by observation and experiment, and which cannot be deduced from the laws of our nervous organism. Hence, for a long time at any rate, all knowledge of them must be sought in a direct study of the mental successions themselves. Psychology Mill defines as "the science which is concerned with the uniformities of succession the laws, whether ultimate or deriva- tive according to which mental states succeed one another." This definition I could accept, with the proviso that all our mental experience does not, in my judgment, follow in the way of necessary se- quence from preceding states. I believe that we are conscious of ourselves noumenally, and that volition is an originative activity of this noumenal ego. Hence Psychology on my view of it would include, among other things, the laws (not directly deducible from physiological observations) of sen- sation and emotion, of cognition and of reasoning, as well as the vast range of automatic processes which form so large a part of human activity ; but the consideration of the ego itself with its faculty of volition would be a subject for metaphysics. In this relegation of the noumenal ego and its nou- menal volition to metaphysics, Mill would agree, since it was only as (supposed) phenomenal states he admitted them into psychology. 10 PERSONALITY. Now if we use "physics" in a wide sense to include the psychical correlatives of neural pro- cesses, and if we include the introspective in- vestigation of mental states among the physical methods, it may be said of "the facts of consci- ousness " belonging to such a science, as Professor Huxley said of all the facts of consciousness with- out exception, that they are practically interpret- able by the method and formulae of physics ; or, as I should rather say, generalisable, for physics proper does not profess to interpret anything, except in the sense of bringing a narrower under a wider induction. The question is, Is there any- thing in our consciousness or in the universe that is not phenomenal ? If there is, it belongs to metaphysical science, and is of course not amen- able to physical methods. "If beyond and "before this phenomenalism," says Mr Grote, "we at all enter on the consideration of how we, feeling and thinking beings, come to the knowledge of the facts it embodies ; or if beyond and after it, we enter on the consideration of how we are to act or employ our phenomenal knowledge, we pass into quite a different region." In a word, the fact that I am conscious of myself, and that I ^m "capable," as Huxley admits, "within certain limits, of self- adjustment" cannot be explained nor even taken INTRODUCTION. 1 1 into consideration, by the methods and formulae of physics. The term metaphysics was applied by An- dronicus of Ehodes to those of Aristotle's treatises which were to follow the physical books, and which were therefore called TO, /xera TO, vanKd. But there is an allowable etymology which makes the word extremely suggestive. It may mean that which lies beyond the physical that is, beyond every- thing in nature and human nature to which we can apply the ordinary scientific methods of ob- servation, experiment, and generalisation. 1 Meta- physics is concerned with the one and the per- manent, as opposed to the many and the tran- sitory, and so becomes synonymous with Ontology. The former, however, is a better word than the latter, since there is no ground for denying the existence or reality of phenomena, but only their permanent and ultimate reality. Metaphysics then deals with that which lies beyond phenomena, with that which is the source or substratum of the temporarily existent. Metaphysics seeks for a principle of unity in man and in nature, a unity undiscoverable by the senses, or by mere generali- sation from anything which they can reveal. It 1 Cf. the use of the word in "Macbeth," Act I. scene v., "metaphysical aid" i.e., supernatural aid. 12 PERSONALITY. seeks a unal basis for the phenomena of nature and of human nature, and it endeavours to inter- pret and account for the many and the transitory by means of the one and the permanent. It aims at solving, or at any rate throwing light upon, the mystery of the universe, by discovering a meaning and a purpose in the ways of nature and of man. A science is a summation or generalisation of a particular set of facts ; a system of philosophy is a co-ordination of all the sciences ; metaphysics is con- cerned with their ultimate and transcendental basis. But Lewes tells us, and all writers of the Eng- lish school agree with him, that a study of the history of philosophy will prove the impossibility of metaphysics. It will be admitted, too, by many who are not inclined to Positivism, that the his- tory of metaphysics is somewhat discouraging; and this discouragement is frequently felt, even by those who see that important truths have been discovered and unfolded by almost every meta- physical writer of repute. Now I cannot attri- bute this feeling of disappointment merely to the fact that unproved and improvable theories are included in metaphysical systems ; for even " exact thinkers" do not hesitate to use unverified and unverifiable hypotheses as a means of reaching empirical truth. The dissatisfaction arises, I ap- INTEODTJCTION. 13 prehend, chiefly because these systems seem for the most part to be based on fancy. They start from propositions that are anything but axiomatic. To the end of the chapter of human life every system of metaphysics which aims at comprehensiveness will probably contain a good deal that cannot be proved ; but we seem justified in demanding, if these systems are to receive our serious consider- ation, that they should at any rate be founded upon fact, and start from propositions that are undeni- able. With this demand however metaphysicians have very seldom and very insufficiently complied. Hence their systems, as a general rule, carry with them little conviction. Their very first statements can be easily rebutted by contradictory assertions which are at least equally tenable, and any truths they may contain appear to have been guessed at rather than proved. A few illustrations may suffice. Thales per- ceived that the seeds of things were moist, and at once jumped to the conclusion that water, or rather moisture, was the First Cause. But there was just as much ground for saying that air or heat was the origin of all things, since each of these principles is essential to life ; and, as the reader is aware, they were afterwards fixed upon by Anaxi- mander and Hippanus respectively. The Eleatics, 14 PERSONALITY. proceeding on the false assumption that whatever did not exist always and everywhere could not be said to have existed at all, maintained that Ens, or the really existent, must be unum et continuum. Their opponents asserted that the really exist- ent was plura et discontinue*,, proceeding on the equally false assumption that nothing existed which could not be detected by the senses. Em- pedocles maintained that all things were formed by attraction and repulsion between earth, air, fire, and water, which, because they seemed to be elementary, he termed reWapa TWI/ irdvrwv ptw- /xara. And again, he assumed as self-evident that like can only be known by like, and that, therefore, our perception of external things is to be accounted for by the fact that the four elements, of which they are composed, enter also into the composition of our own bodies. But the reply seems obvious, that if water in the body is needed to perceive water out of the body, similar means must be necessary for the perception of a loaf of bread. The Atomists traced back the pt^w/mra to micro- scopic atoms. But their assumption that an in- finite number of material particles, falling through infinite space and time, had produced our world in other words, that life, sensation, perception, and thought had come out of plena and vacua INTRODUCTION. 15 which were dead, senseless, unperceiving, and un- thinking is a purely gratuitous assumption, neither founded on, nor even suggested by, expe- rience. Again, what could well be more fanciful from beginning to end than the fundamental as- sumption of Anaxagoras, that the primeval chaos of opoiopepfj was, so to speak, jerked into a number of distinguishable objects, by a movement which the vovs, or first mover, at the other end, to take to itself forms; all nature being thus but a graduated con- version of matter into form, an eternal passing 16 PERSONALITY. of the primeval substance into higher and higher ideal combinations. Surely this, as a foundation for a metaphysical explanation of the universe, in- volves too much imagination and too little reason, too many fancies and too few facts. But Spinoza, Mr Lewes tells us, is the crucial instance by which the worthlessness of metaphysics may best be proved. In the ' Ethics ' his theory of the universe is deduced from an arbitrary definition of substance, by the aid of other equally arbitrary definitions and some so-called axioms. " God," he says, " is the absolutely infinite being ; in other words, He is self-comprised, self-contained sub- stance, constituted by an infinity of attributes, each of which expresses an eternal and infinite essence." This definition, though Spinoza calls it an intuitive idea and a simplicissima veritas, is really so far from being simple or intuitive, that, if ever reached at all, it must be the last result of metaphysical re- flection. Hence the fact need not surprise us that the Spinozistic explanation of the universe has so seldom been accepted. It is interesting, ingenious, sublime. It discovers harmony, beauty, cosmos, and law, where most men have seen only discord, deformity, disorder, and lawlessness. It offers a solution of the perennial problem of philosophy, and extracts monism out of a seeming dualism. It INTRODUCTION. \ T ^F gives us consolation in suffering or remorse, Hoy attempting to prove that all events are the neces- sary outcome of absolute perfection. It promises us an eternal life of calm and unruffled thought. It is, moreover, the work of a man who is now uni- versally acknowledged to have lived a stainless and noble life. Yet we instinctively conclude that we cannot be Spinozists. Long before we discover any flaws in his argument, we fed that they are false. We say with Mr Froude, " It is not so ; we know it ; and that is enough." Now I apprehend the rejec- tion of Spinozism, as a system, is justified not only because, in defining man as a certus et determinates modus cogitandi, it contradicts what I shall try by- and-by to prove to be a fact of consciousness namely, human freedom ; not only because there is a want of cogency in the reasoning; but chiefly because it is deduced from an arbitrary and un- proved definition. Even if the logic were as unim- peachable as Jacobi and Mr Lewes l have main- 1 "Whoever will take the trouble to go carefully through the ' Ethics ' will find many circular reasonings, many "definitions," besides the first, which are not definitions but assumptions, as well as many alterations of language to suit the exigencies of the argu- ment. E.g., the first axiom seems to answer to its name, as stated at the beginning of the first book "Whatever is, is either in itself or in something else." But afterwards it is quoted thus : "Nothing exists but substances and modes," that is, nothing exists but self-comprised, self-conceived substances, and affections B 18 PERSONALITY. tained, the system would not necessarily carry con- viction with it, unless the existence of the thing denned were proved ; for the most rigorous deduc- tions from fancy need not lead to facts. True, after having proved that one substance cannot be pro- duced by another, he argues that therefore (Prop. 7) " Substance must be the cause of itself, or, in other words, to exist belongs to the nature of substance." But it is manifest that this tacitly assumes what it professes to prove the question, namely, as to whether substance exists at all. If it be said the existence of substance is implied in its definition, what need is there for this demonstration, any more than in Euclid for propositions proving the possi- bility of superficies and squares ? Nor is his argu- mentum palmarium for the existence of God any more conclusive. " Eeality and perfection are iden- tical : the more attributes anything has, the more real it is, or the more it exists ; and hence God, being absolutely infinite, must have an infinity of of the attributes of substance a proposition which is by no means axiomatic, and which is only another way of stating his original definition of Substance. As an instance of circular reas- oning, take the following proposition : " The more of perfection anything has, the more it acts and the less it suffers." Demon- stration : ' ' Perfection equals reality, and reality has the character of acting, not suffering." Again, what can be more false to fact, however true to theory, than such definitions as those of joy, sor- row, humility, &c. ? INTRODUCTION. 19 attributes, and so exist absolutely." At the best, this argument only proves that if there le an abso- lutely real being, he must have an infinity of attri- butes. Curiously enough, while Spinoza maintains that common notions, such as man, freedom, virtue, good and evil, are vague and indefinite, he asserts that his notions of God and substance are indisput- ably clear. Even if they were so, it is not on clear conceptions which may or may not have objective correlates but on necessary facts, that metaphysics should be based. Instead of working his way from what is really certain towards that which we can never hope more than approximately to attain, he supposes the goal to be already reached by an intui- tive and ready-made idea, setting out from which he works his way back towards, though he never actu- ally reaches, the only legitimate starting-point namely, the facts of consciousness. Mr Lewes tells us that "a serious study of the 'Ethics' may be a drastic purge, clearing the mind from all the humours and vapours of ontology." " We can only escape Spinozism," he says, " by denying the possi- bility of metaphysical science." Not so: we can escape it because it is deduced from what ought not to have been assumed. The failure of Spinozism is an argument not against metaphysics, but only against an unsound metaphysical method. 20 PERSONALITY. Once more. Though I believe there is more to be learned from Hegel than from any preceding meta- physician, though the application of certain Hegelian principles to philosophical criticism has, I think, been attended with the happiest result, in Pro- fessor Green's reductio ad absurdum of the Lockian philosophy, and Professor Caird's reductio ad Hegel of the Kantian ; yet Hegel's system, as a system, seems to me, like those of previous metaphysicians, to lack solid foundation. Mr Wallace says, in his ' Logic of Hegel/ that " the cogito ergo sum of Des- cartes must be dismissed, because the certainty does not lie at the very root of all things. To begin with the I, would only place us at a point where the severance between thought and being- was already a fait accompli. The beginning of philosophy or logic must go far deeper than this division; it must penetrate to a stage where thought and being are at one to the absolute unity of both which precedes their disruption into the several worlds of nature and mind. It must show us the very beginning of thought before it has yet come to the full consciousness of itself, when the truth of what it is still lurks in the background." Now this is what Hegel attempts to do. But what proof have we that we can get back to this point ? or that there ever was such INTRODUCTION. 21 an undifferentiated existence ? Dr Stirling admits that the Hegelian dialectic sometimes leads to grotesqueness, if not absurdity, in the field of Nature. Why may it not lead to falsehood at the opposite end of the system namely, in the theory of Being ? It appears to be founded upon fact the fact, namely, that Motion involves the union of contradictories. 1 But what proof have we that 1 The difficulties in regard to motion, as stated by Zeno, have been disposed of by Mansel, Mill, De Morgan, and others. But it is, I think, possible to state them in an unanswerable way. De Morgan and Mill seem to imagine that there is no difficulty left if motion be defined as " the passage of a thing from one place to another." The question still remains unanswered, how- ever, as to how the thing can make this passage. As Ferrier puts it, " Change cannot be explained if we regard Being and not-Being as separate conceptions, and not as essential moments of one indivisible conception. Suppose water undergoing the process of freezing, and that it has reached a certain degree of solidity (A) ; if appearance (or Being) and disappearance (or not- Being) were separate conceptions, then A's appearance would last a definite time, and also its disappearance, because our supposi- tion is that the disappearance of A is not the appearance of B. Therefore the water must have lost one degree of solidity without acquiring any other that is, it must be in no degree of solidity whatever." This mode of representing the contradictions in- volved in motion seems to me unassailable. If so, we have here a strong argument in favour of metaphysics. Since motion of some sort is connected with all forms of evolution and existence, the fact of the apparent contradictions involved in its conception points to the presence, in all phenomena, of a metaphysical ele- ment whose reality must be recognised by the Reason (Vernunft), though its mode of working cannot be grasped by the Under- standing ( Verstand). 22 PERSONALITY. it will reveal God to us " as He was in His eternal essence, before the creation of Nature or a single soul " ? As the system stands it professes to de- duce the universe from the Reine Negativitdt of the Notion, which dialectical reflection starts from pure nothing and pure being. Now either these once existed or they did not. If they did not, they can- not be the origin of all things. If they did, the deduction of the universe from them appears open to Mr Lewes's objection, that it amounts to the im- possible equation + = 1. It seems scarcely to be wondered at that scien- tific men, in their love of exactness and precision, shrink from committing themselves to what seem, at first sight, such cloud-born speculations. " There are no writers/' says De Morgan, " who give us so much 'must' with so little 'why' as metaphy- sicians." "We need not be surprised that men in despair have tried to content themselves with the knowledge of phenomena, have persuaded them- selves that there could be no such thing as a metaphysical existence. But a little more reflec- tion would have driven them from this position. For the denial of metaphysical existence involves the inconceivability /car egoxtfv, namely, how a number of states or appearances of knowing, with no connecting link between them, can cluster INTRODUCTION. 23 themselves together into a series which calls itself "I." The comparative failure of metaphysical thinkers in the past has been due simply and entirely, I take it, to their having adopted false starting-points and worked with false methods. Metaphysics, like charity, should begin at home. Though it must be metempirical in the sense of being concerned with what is not " reducible to sensation," it need not, and should not be, metempirical in the wider sense of the term experience, which embraces the whole of consciousness. The true beginning of meta- physics is personality, or the existence of an ego. Here we may find an immovable foundation. If it can be shown that feeling l could not exist with- out an ego, then it is absurd to maintain, as the Positivists do maintain, that the ego cannot exist because it is not a feeling. 1 The words "feeling" and "sensation" are throughout used as synonyms. SECTION I. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. '' Cogito ergo sum : it is necessary that I who think should be somewhat." 1 In other words, thought is inconceivable without a thinker: the existence of my thought is inconceivable without the exist- ence of myself to think it. Even if I were the work of a demon who was always imposing on me and deceiving me, I must still exist; for false thoughts, as much as true thoughts, require a thinker to think them. We may even go further and say "I feel, therefore I am; it is necessary 1 Descartes went too far when he proceeded to interpret " sum " as meaning " I am a being that has nothing in common with extension." This cannot be deduced from "sum," nor even from " memini." I had better perhaps here explain, for the sake of the non- philosophical reader, that the term subject is the technical expres- sion for Descartes' "somewhat." The terms ego, self, soul, are generally used as synonyms for the mind or subject. The word object of course stands for that which is apprehended, whether it be material or mental. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 25 that I who feel should be somewhat." Sensation, in truth, is a single abstract word for a concrete double fact. Sensation means something felt by some one. It is possible that vegetable life may result merely from a particular combination and col- location of the molecules of a body; it is impos- sible that such combination or collocation can ever account for sensibility, not to say intelli- gence. The triumphs of physiology have tended rather to obscure than to throw light upon the processes of sensation and thought. It has been argued that, because certain conditions of the brain and nerves are the invariable antecedents of certain mental states, in the former we have an explanation of the latter. So entirely has the brain been identified with consciousness, that the late Professor Clifford seemed to think the non- existence of- a divine brain sufficient argument for the non-existence of a Deity. Mill and Tyndall, it is true, have perceived clearly enough the differ- ence between sensation and neural process. The latter says, " We have not an organ, nor apparently the rudiments of an organ, by which to apprehend how a motion in the brain becomes a sensation in consciousness." Maurice puts the difficulty thus: "The casuist, having done homage to all the in- 26 PERSONALITY. structions of the physiologist, will say, ' Yes, that is very remarkable indeed ; and do all these emo- tions make me ? Did you not say I had them ? You might think it worth while to tell me who I am/ " This the physiologist cannot do, nor even the psychologist, in Mill's sense of that term, be- cause " I " am not a phenomenon. The fact that every feeling involves some one to feel it, has never been, in so many words, denied. The most zealous opponents of an ego avail themselves of ambiguities by which the existence of an ego can, at pleasure, be tacitly assumed. Mr Lewes, for instance, says that the molecular motion in the nerves, and the experienced sensation in the mind, are only the objective and subjective phases of one and the same thing. He is thus enabled, whenever necessity requires, to treat the neural process as actually identical with the sensation; and any difficulty as to how a sensation could feel itself is provided against, a sentient subject being implied in the word " subjective." As Professor Green says, "We shall not expect to find any philosophical writer who, having distinctly asked himself whether or no experience is a mere succes- sion of feelings, void of a unifying principle, has distinctly answered ' yes.' By help of sundry fam- iliar figures those of the thread, the stream, &c. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 27 our psychologists avoid the ultimate analysis by which the question is necessarily raised, and are able, by turns, to avail themselves of a virtually affirmative and a virtually negative answer to it. The phrase 'states of consciousness,' as equivalent to feelings, has come conveniently into fashion as a further shelter for the ambiguity. We cannot employ this phrase for feelings without implying the persistence of a subject throughout them, their relation to which forms their nexus with each other. Thus, by the use of it the physical psychologist can disguise that disintegration of experience, which is logically involved in its reduction to a succession of feelings corresponding to a series of occurrences in the nervous organism. The embarrassment which might be caused by a demand for a physiological account of this persistent subject, he can avoid by saying that to him experience is merely the succes- sion of feelings. The question which might then arise as to the possibility of the successive feelings being also an experience of succession, he can take out of his critic's mouth by the assumption that feelings are states of consciousness states of a subject which recognises them as its successive modes." It is sometimes ludicrous to observe how, after denying a possible ego, writers are obliged to resort to an impossible one. Mr Lewes, in his first 28 PERSONALITY. volume of ' Problems/ seems inclined to make the ego consist of a mass of " systemic " sensations those, namely, of nutrition, respiration, generation, and the muscles. These, he says, constitute a stream of sentience, upon which each external stimulus forms a ripple, and consciousness is caused by the consequent breach of equilibrium. But it is mani- fest that this illustration goes for nothing without the presupposition of a sentient observer. A mass of feeling, however large, cannot apprehend a feeling. It is the nature of a feeling to be felt, not to feel ; and no addition to the number or volume of sensa- tions can change their nature, so as to convert them from psychical objects into a psychical subject. The same may be said of Lewes's statement in ' Mind,' that the term soul is the personification of the complex of present and revived feelings, and is the substratum of consciousness (in his general sense of that word), all the particular feelings being its states. Since, then, the necessity for an ego is never denied without being tacitly assumed, it may be taken to be really a self-evident truth, the con- tradictory of which is inconceivable, that, along with every sensation or feeling of any description what- ever, there must exist a sentient principle capable of feeling it. This will suggest to the reader the opening pos- THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 29 tulate of Terrier's ' Institutes/ " Along with what- ever any intelligence knows, it must, as the ground or condition of its knowledge, have some cognisance of itself." The axiom stated in the last paragraph goes further, in one sense, than this; in another, not so far. It is as true of feeling as of knowledge, that along with the feeling there must exist, as its ground or condition, some one to feel it. The exist- ence of a self, or feeling principle, is an essential basis of all feeling; but its self-cognisance is not. This distinction between the existence and the self- consciousness of an ego, which Terrier failed to make, is important. Terrier's proposition is cer- tainly not self-evident, and perhaps not true. The result of my own reflection on the subject is that I am not always self-conscious. In solving a diffi- cult problem, for example, I seem to be entirely engrossed with the objective, and quite incognisant of myself. But though we may doubt or deny that every mental state involves a knowledge of self, we can neither doubt nor deny that every cognition or feeling involves the existence of some one to cognise or to feel it. This is of course only the old doctrine of the necessary implication of sub- ject and object : a doctrine which has been gener- ally recognised, however, more clearly as regards cognition than sensation. 30 PERSONALITY. Bain, it is true, denies the universal application of this doctrine even in cognition. In his criticism on Terrier, at the end of his ' Emotions and Will/ he says : " I dissent from the placing of self as a factor or foil in all our cognitions. I grant it to the fullest extent to the great cardinal cognition subject phis object, mind versus matter, internal and external. I maintain, however, that this is only one of the cognitions of the human mind, though a very commanding one. Things might have been known though the subject and object distinction had never emerged at all, it being enough for cog- nition that any sort of contrast should exist. I can know light simply by transition to darkness. Light-darkness is a genuine cognition. We might remain for ever at the point of being distinctly aware of a certain number of qualities, without attaining the subject-object cognition." Bain sub- stitutes for Terrier's postulate the following: "Along with whatever any intelligence knows, it must, as the ground or condition of its knowledge, have some cognisance of a quality in contrast with what is known ; " or, " whenever intelligence is concerned with anything as an object, it must, as the ground or condition of its knowledge, have some cognisance of a subject." There is great confusion here for which Ferrier THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 31 is to some extent responsible between the neces- sary existence of a cognitive subject whenever there is a cognised object, and its contingent recognition of itself as a subject. There cannot conceivably be cognition without a knowing subject, though there may be cognition without the subject cognising itself as a knowing subject. There is no other possible notion of cognition than the knowledge of something by some one: and hence a self is a necessary factor or foil in all cognition. It is true that " the cognition of the difference between sub- ject and object is only one of the cognitions of the human mind," and that " we might have been distinctly aware of many qualities without ever attaining to this distinction," but not unless there had existed a human mind to have cognitions, not unless we had existed to attain distinctions. The mind the "I," the "we," which Bain introduces as of no account is the real basis of knowledge, and ought to be taken into account quite as much as the qualities cognised. " I can know the light simply by transition to darkness." Yes, if I exist, and have the power of distinguishing and knowing. "Light-darkness is a genuine cognition." Yes, in a knower, but not per se. " It is enough for cog- nition that any sort of contrast should .exist." Surely there must be many contrasts existing in 32 PEESONALITY. uninhabited parts of the universe and among the undiscovered forces of nature, which have never yet been brought within the mental range of an ego, 1 and of which, therefore, there is as yet no cognition. Professor Bain is of course quite right in main- taining that change of impression is essential to any kind of sentient experience. We are not aware of the motion of the earth, because there is nothing with which to contrast it, and because it is always present; nor, for similar reasons, do we perceive the pressure of the atmosphere on the surface of the hody. As Hobbes puts it, " It is almost all one for a man to be always sensible of one and the same thing and not to be sensible at all of anything." Bain has done good service in insisting upon the essential relativity of knowledge ; but he forgets that two comparable qualities will not make knowledge without some one to compare them. " We are affected with surprise in passing from one impression to another." True; but we must exist in order to " pass " and " be surprised." By means of ambiguous phrases, Bain is able some- times to argue as if this were not the case, as if the brain were itself an ego. E.g., in the following sentence : " In order to produce any effect on the 1 I.e., of a. finite ego : and Bain is dealing only with the prob- lem of finite cognition. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 33 senses there must be a change, and everything in the nature of change thrills through the brain with a kind of surprise." But, strictly speaking, the molecules of the brain can be neither thrilled nor surprised; at most they can only be the occasion of a thrill or surprise in a sentient subject. Let us look at Bain's account of the origin of the cognition of subject and object. "The con- trast of subject and object springs originally from the contrast of movement, or active energy, and passive sensation. Were our impressions all move- ments, we should know nothing of movement as a whole, for want of something to contrast it with ; our knowledge would then be confined to the par- ticulars wherein movements differed." Similarly, if our impressions were all sensations. "Move- ment and sense form the most marked antithesis among all our present feelings. In the presence of the feeling of movement as a foil, we discern something common to all sensations, in spite of their varieties. The antithesis between movement and sensation is an essential preliminary to that between self and the external world. The differ- ence between the actual and ideal is this, that the actual impression changes with all our movements, and we must go through a certain amount of bodily exercise to secure and retain it. When it becomes c 34 PERSONALITY. ideal, all that is dispensed with. The transition is a marked one, and impresses the mind with a contrast or mental foil in short, with a cognition (subject and object). It is, however, an extravagance of the fancy to project one of these into the sphere of indepen- dent existence, apart from our whole mental life. 1 The real fact is, that the two greatly differing experi- ences develop between them a cognition." Now I have no wish to prove that the ego is " an independent existence, apart from our whole mental life," but only that without it there could be no mental life at all. In the foregoing argument, by which Bain supposes himself to have disproved the existence of the ego, you will observe that he speaks of " our impression," " our feeling," " our mental life : " he says, " we discern something com- mon to all sensations," and that the transition to movements " impresses the mind with a contrast or foil." In these expressions he has tacitly assumed a something which apprehends sensations and movements and the difference between them. On his own showing, therefore, we have but two alter- natives, either to suppose a separate self for each state, or the same self for all. Now, even on the 1 The italics are mine. In these words Professor Bain gives us his conception of an ego, a conception which is not that either ol metaphysics or of common-sense. See p. 39. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 35 ground of Occam's razor," Entia non sunt multi- plicanda prseter necessitatem," the latter would be the more philosophical opinion. And when it is remembered that knowledge is impossible without memory, and memory, as we shall find, is incon- ceivable unless we suppose that the same subject has been present to the remembered states, the necessity for accepting the doctrine of a permanent ego becomes more apparent. It is often said that the brain, in spite of its non- persistence, is permanent enough for practical pur- poses, since impressions may remain in the changing particles just as scars remain upon the changing skin. The ego however is and must be not only permanent, but one. Even supposing, for the sake of argument, that there could be, in the materialistic sense, a sensation of sound in one part of the brain and a sensation of light in another part, these two sensations, in order to belong to a single experience mine, yours, his must be united in an individual. To say that there exist, or did exist, a sensation of sound and a sensa- tion of light, is not the same thing as saying that I or some other person has had, or is having, both. Even if sensations and thoughts as such could arise in the brain without an ego, they could not possibly without an ego form parts of the same experience. 36 PEKSONALITY. Moreover, since it would seem that even sensation involves contrast, it follows that the simplest feel- ing is at least dual, and we are therefore compelled to postulate a unity as a sine qud non for its appre- hension. It is absolutely impossible to explain or com- prehend the continuity of consciousness, except on the supposition of a subject which continues after the transitory states have gone, and which is one and indivisible while they are multiple and com- plex. To quote an illustration of Mr Picton's "When a schoolmaster canes a row of boys one after another, they have similar feelings, but no continuous feeling. In order to the existence of the latter, the strokes must be given successively to one boy," that is, to one percipient subject. Hence, even if we grant that there may have been handed on to the molecules of which a brain is at present composed, affections similar to those which existed in the molecules that formed it years ago, the similarity can only be apprehended by a single subject that has been cognisant of both. Let us suppose two mental states not connected by any permanent underlying substratum say a state of light followed by a state of darkness in other words, let us suppose some one sentient of light followed by some one sentient of darkness, and THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 37 these two some ones different. Now, waiving the objection that, according to Bain's own theory, neither subject could be sentient of the one feeling till it had experienced a transition from the other, it is manifest that neither could be cognisant of the difference between them unless it had experienced loth. But, by hypothesis, the first state is supposed to be over when the second state has begun. Hence we must believe that there is a " shock " between two things, one of which has ceased to exist. So the doctrine of relativity, without the supposition of a permanent subject to take cognisance of the relativity, lands us in absurdity. Hundreds of sentences might be quoted in which the real mystery of the ego is quietly assumed, and then made to assist in its own assassination. " The sense of difference," Bain tells us, " is the most rudi- mentary property of our intellectual being." But what is our intellectual being ? It must either be the brain, or something different from the brain. It cannot be the latter with Bain, for that would make it a metaphysical entity. Hence we must suppose it is the brain itself. But this supposition will not explain the existence of a single sensation. " Light affects the brain in a certain way, darkness in another, and the transition between the two in a third, which may be called a shock, or surprise, 38 PERSONALITY. or thrill." This is the physiological expression of the doctrine which we looked at psychologically in the previous paragraph. It is characterised by the same confusion and inaccuracy. The cerebral affections must be, not co-existent, but consecu- tive ; for they correspond respectively to light and darkness, which at the same time cannot conceiv- ably exist together. Light must have passed away before darkness can begin ; and between their cer- ebral equivalents there can therefore be no shock or thrill. A shock is only possible between things which coexist. Once more let me ask, What does Professor Bain really mean by the following sentence ? " In per- ceiving we are subject and object by turn : object, when attending to the form and magnitude of con- flagration, e.g. ; and subject, when we give way to the emotional effect of the luminous blaze." That it is the same thing which " gives way " and which " attends," may be inferred by his applying " we " to both. Now if there has only been a state of atten- tion to form or magnitude, afterwards succeeded by a state of emotion, and if there has been nothing common to the two states, this mode of expression is surely not justifiable. If the ego be really " a fiction coined from nonentity," it is time that " exact thinkers " should help us to free ourselves from the misleading influence of language. THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 39 Bain confounds the existence of a permanent subject, related successively to different objects, with that of an absolute subject, related to no object at all. " As we can think and speak," he says, "of light by itself, without express mention of its foil darkness, so we can think of the object, while the subject is tacitly understood, and the opposite. We never could have come to the notion of externality without its contrast ; but the notion being once formed, we have the power of looking to it alone. An absolute object or subject, however, is an utter irrelevance, absurdity, and impossibility." Now the " subject " which metaphysicians insist upon is not an absolute subject. It may be as relative as you please. It may, it does, exist in an indefinite number of relations, for which very reason we maintain it to be permanent. And as for absolute objects, it is Bain himself who is guilty of believing in them, since he fre- quently talks as if mental states were self-support- ing, and did not require any sentient or cognitive subject. It is amusing to observe how the denial of the ego makes it necessary for him to assume the real existence of what all admit to be abstractions. " Knowledge," he says, " involves two notions and a belief in their connection." Bain here seems to see the necessity for some bond of union, and he tells us that the binding circumstance between the 40 PERSONALITY. two notions is " one of the comprehensive generali- sations called coexistence or succession." Now two things may be bound together in knowledge by the particular fact of their coexistence or succession, if that fact be perceived, but certainly cannot be bound together by the unperceived abstraction of coexistence or succession in general. Who would have thought it possible that such a use of abstrac- tions should be made by one who was always warn- ing us to beware of mistaking them for realities ? Et tu, Brute ! But perhaps the Professor will say that he meant the " comprehensive generalisation " to be perceived. Well, be it so. It is either per- ceived by the same ego which had the " two notions and a belief in their connection," or by a different ego. In the first case we have a subject permanent and metaphysical. In the second, instead of three things requiring a bond of union, we shall now have four; and what was brought in as an explanation of knowledge has thus only made it more unintelligible than ever. It is by an analysis of remembrance that the existence of a metaphysical ego may be most clearly demonstrated. When hard pressed, the Positivist may feel himself obliged to admit that the single word sensation does really stand for something double ; and he may even allow us, if we please, THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 41 to apply the term " soul " to one of the elements in this complex fact. But now he will insist upon it that this soul is not permanent that it is no more permanent than the feelings and the thoughts with which it correlates. Granting, he will say, that the phenomena involve two elements, both elements pass away together. Allowing that the soul exists, there is no proof that it persists. A very little reflection, however, regarding the faculty of mem- ory, will suffice to show that he is wrong. Just as sensation involves the feeling felt arid the mind or soul which feels, so a remembrance involves the fact remembered and the mind or soul which remembers. But a third element is also involved in every act of remembrance namely, the soul's consciousness or recognition of its per- manence. Let us take an illustration. I remem- ber that ten years ago many of my opinions were changed by the reading of a certain book. Now this implies (1) the object or fact remem- bered namely, the change of my opinions by the perusal of the book. (2) My soul or mind, which remembers the fact, or which, as we some- times say, has the remembrance. And (3) a con- sciousness of personal identity; that is to say, a conviction that the mind or soul which is now experiencing the remembrance of the fact, is the 42 PERSONALITY. self-same mind or soul which formerly experienced the fact itself that it is, in other words, my mind. The identity of which I am conscious, is certainly not an identity of body, for during the ten years which have elapsed my body has lost its identity. Nor is the identity an identity of phenomena, for the remembrance of the fact is something essenti- ally different from the fact itself. The identity of which I am conscious is an identity of soul. I am sure, I know, that I, who am now remembering a certain change of opinions, once actually experi- enced the change ; and that in the meantime I, one and the self -same subject, a single, indivisible, per- manent being, have been apprehending sensations, and thinking thoughts, and remembering events, and gathering up these varied experiences into the unity of a personal life. Without a permanent or persistent soul, there could be no memory ; for it is just the recognition of this permanence, which is the characteristic feature of every act of remem- brance. This you will see more clearly, perhaps, by contrasting remembrance with imagination. I may imagine my opinions being changed in certain ways ten years hence. But here no knowledge of persistence is involved ; because I am not sure that my opinions will be so changed : in other words, I am not sure that I shall ever exist in the par- THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 43 ticular state I am imagining. But in remembrance I perceive that I, who am now recollecting, did actually exist in a different state, of which the present remembrance is only a representation. In other words, in every act of remembrance I know that I have existed in at least two different states, and that therefore I have persisted between them. J. S. Mill has seen very clearly that the fact of memory, or the continuity of consciousness, " brings us face to face with the central principle of our intellectual nature." "The supposition of mental permanence," he tells us, "would admit of the same explanation as the permanence of the ex- ternal world, and mind might be regarded as a mere series of feelings, with a background of pos- sibility of feeling, were it not for memory and ex- pectation. They are in themselves present feelings, but they involve a belief in more than their own existence. They cannot be adequately expressed without saying that I myself had, or shall have them." With James Mill the belief that we have seen an object implies simply an association be- tween the idea of the object and the idea of our- selves seeing it. But, as J. S. Mill shows, this will not account for the phenomenon in question; for no arbitrary association between the idea of our- 44 PERSONALITY. selves and the idea of an object that we have not seen will lead to the belief that we have seen it. Mill acknowledges that to account for belief in external objects and experienced facts, we must "postulate both expectation and memory, as data presupposed and built on, in every attempt to ex- plain the more recondite phenomena of our being." Here he has unconsciously lighted on the ego. So in another* place he says, "'I' means he who pre- viously had such and such experience." But the fact of the ego is neither explained nor done away with by using the third personal pronoun for the first. The difficulty in regard to the matter is (in one well-known passage) most honestly and clearly stated by him. "If we speak of the mind as a series of feelings which is aware of itself as past and future, we are reduced to the alternative of believing that the mind is something different from any series of feelings, or of accepting the paradox that something which is, ex hypothesi, but a series of feelings, can be aware of itself as a series." In other words, the alternative bases of philosophy must be mystery or absurdity. This does not seem, however, to be a cogent reason for founding one's system upon the latter. Remembrance then, and with it almost the whole of our experience, would be impossible THE EXISTENCE OF THE EGO. 45 without a continuous subject to remember. Mem- ory is that faculty of the ego by which it recog- nises revived impressions as representations of its own past experience. "And without such a faculty/' as Dr Carpenter says, "reproductions of past states would only affect us like the successive phantasies in a play of the imagination." Grant- ing for a moment that feelings could be conscious of themselves, the knowledge of one another is not implied in this. Suppose that each of the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 was conscious of itself as I wrote it down, this could not give any of them a knowledge that it formed part of a series. Suppose a line of billiard-balls, each self-conscious, but with no prin- ciple of connection running through them, and suppose that motion is communicated to the first, transferred to the second, and so on, in what possible way could the last be conscious of its relation to the others ? It might as well be argued that a number of pearls could form a chain without something to bind them together, as that a number of self-conscious states could form a self-conscious series without some principle of continuity running through and connecting them. Without such a principle I see no more reason to suppose that one state could know any- thing of another, than that I, by introspection, 46 PEKSONALITY. could remember the actions rny father committed before I was born. So far we have been dealing merely with the existence of an ego. We may know that it exists, because it is presupposed throughout the whole of our sentient experience. The Positive school admit that knowledge involves remembrance and the ap- prehension of resemblances and differences ; and we have seen that these mental states are perfectly inconceivable except on the supposition of a per- manent ego present to the different phenomena re- membered and contrasted. Further, we have seen that sensations which, according to the Positivists, form the raw material of all knowledge, can only be apprehended by means of " transition." Feelings are not felt unless they are contrasted with other feelings; and this comparison is only possible if the same subject has been equally present to them all. Hence, in order to explain the existence of a single sensation, we must postulate the exist- ence of an ego which persists, while the particular feelings it apprehends change and pass away. Jacobi thought, and many seem to agree with him, that that only is proved for which there is found a condition. But I should rather say that that is pre-eminently proved which is found to be the condition of universally admitted existences. 47 SECTION II. THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. WE come now to the question, Can we, in addition to knowing that an ego must exist, know it as exist- ing ? We shall be less surprised at the difficulty which a man feels when " in quest of himself " to quote Abraham Tucker's expression if we remem- ber that he has nearly the same difficulty when trying to reflect on any present feeling or thought. Hume seems to think he has annihilated the ego by the assertion, " I can never catch myself without an impression," forgetting that if a man catches him- self with one there must be a self to catch, and that it is almost as difficult to catch the impression as the self ; for the very effort to do so tends to make it disappear. Comte says that as soon as we begin to reflect on a feeling, the feeling itself has vanished. This is a somewhat exaggerated statement, for a second's reflection on the toothache, for "example, 48 PERSONALITY. does not generally prove a complete cure. But still reflection, even upon the toothache, will diminish the previous intensity of the pain; and thus the original feeling will be changed. It is almost entirely to representations in memory that we are indebted for a knowledge of what our experience has actually been. Hamilton says we can appre- hend six things at once. I do not find the capabili- ties of my own mind nearly so great as this state- ment would make them. But even granting his position, it is still true that the whole of my ex- perience, with the exception of those six things, is past or future. Hence, practically and ulti- mately, knowledge may be said to rest on faith in memory. As memory plays such an important part in cog- nition generally, we must be prepared that it should do the same in our cognition of self. Still, if I have never had a moment's knowledge of myself, I can- not possibly remember having had it ; and we are here face to face with the problem how can the knower know himself ? Herbert Spencer, in his ' First Principles,' though he asserts that a permanent subject exists, distinctly denies that it can be known. 1 1 In his ' Psychology ' he adopts the ordinary Positive notion, that the ego is nothing but the transitory state of the moment. THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 49 First, let us see what he says to show that we are bound to believe in it. " How can conscious- ness be wholly resolved into impressions and ideas that is, into sensations and thoughts when an im- pression necessarily implies something impressed? Or again, how can the sceptic, who has decomposed his consciousness into impressions and ideas, ex- plain the fact that he considers them as his ? Or once more, if he admits (as he must) that he has an impression of his personal existence, what war- rant can he show for rejecting this impression as unreal, while he accepts all his other impressions as real ? Unless he can give satisfactory answers to these questions, which he cannot, he must aban- don his conclusions, and must admit the reality of the individual mind." But having thus shown that we must believe in the soul, he proceeds to argue that we can never know it. " Unavoidable as is this belief [in the existence of the individual soul], established though it is not only by the assent of mankind at large, endorsed by diverse philosophers and by the suicide of the sceptical argument, it is yet a belief admitting of no justification by reason ; nay, it is a belief His whole teaching on this subject is singularly confused and contradictory, His curious identification of the finite ego with "the Absolute " I have elsewhere examined. See ' Belief in God,' chap. 3. 50 PERSONALITY. which reason, when pressed for a distinct answer, rejects. The fundamental condition of all con- sciousness is the antithesis of subject and object. But what is the corollary of this doctrine, as bear- ing on the consciousness of self ? The mental act in which self is known implies, like every other mental act, a perceiving subject and an object per- ceived. If, then, the object perceived is self, what is the subject that perceives ? Or if it be the true self which thinks, what other self can be thought of ? Clearly the true cognisance of self implies a state in which the knowing and the known are one, in which subject and object are identified ; and this is the annihilation of both. So that the personality of which each is conscious, and of which the exist- ence is to each a fact beyond all others most cer- tain, is yet a thing which cannot be known at all ; knowledge of it is forbidden by the very nature of thought." There is a certain law of thought then, accord- ing to Herbert Spencer, which prevents us from knowing ourselves. Now this law, let me ask you carefully to notice, he virtually gives us in the passage I have already quoted, under two dif- ferent forms. First, thus : all knowledge involves the relation of subject and object. Second, thus : the object must always be something different from THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 51 the subject. Now these two modes of statement are not, as he imagines, different ways of express- ing the same law ; they are totally different laws. The one is a law of nature, the other is only a law of his own. To say that knowledge involves the relation of subject and object, is merely to say that the term knowledge, just like the term sensation, is a single word standing for a double fact, and means something known by some one. There can be no knowledge where there is no one to know ; and contrariwise, no one can know, and at the same time know nothing. This is of course a self-evident truth, involved in the very nature of thought. But to say that the ob- ject must always be something different from the subject in other words, that the subject can never become an object to itself, is to make a totally different assertion, an assertion which, so far from being self-evidently true, is evidently, if not self-evidently, false. It is false because, Spencer himself being witness, it is contradicted by ex- perience. Personality, he says, is " a fact of which each one is conscious." Now since consciousness is merely another name for knowledge, and personality is but another name for self, in saying we are con- scious of personality he virtually asserts that we 52 PERSONALITY. know ourselves. Nor is there any vagueness and indistinctness about this knowledge. Personality, he says again, is "the fact beyond all others the most certain." Now the things of which we are most certain are, of course, the things which we may most certainly be said to know. And yet the fact which stands first in the order of certainty, Spencer will not allow to stand even last in the order of knowledge, but declares that in regard to it we are, and must ever remain, completely ignor- ant. It follows then, you see, from Spencer's so-called law of thought, that we are sure of what is somewhat doubtful, but are not sure of that in regard to which there can be no doubt; we may be said to know things of which we are comparatively ignorant, but must be declared ignorant of that which emphatically we know; all facts are knowable except the most certain fact of all, and that is altogether unknowable: in a word, ignorance is knowledge and knowledge is ignorance. Hence it must be inferred that Spencer's supposed law of thought is merely an imagination of his own ; for the real bond fide laws of thought never land us in absurdity. Perhaps a parody of Spencer's reasoning may make its fallaciousness more evident. Just as he tries to show the impossibility of self-know- THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 53 ledge, let us try to show the impossibility of self-love. We might say " The fundamental con- dition of all love is the antithesis of subject and object. If then the object loved be self, what is the subject that loves ? or if it be the true self that loves, what other self can it be that is loved ? Self-love implies the identity of subject and object ; but, by hypothesis, they must always be different: therefore no man can love himself." Now since in point of fact most persons do love themselves, there is manifestly something wrong about this argument. The flaw lies in the hypo- thesis. It is an arbitrary and false assumption that the object must always be different from the subject. The fallacy is a case of petitio principii the assumption containing by implication the point to be proved. It may be objected a man does not love himself exactly in the same way as he loves another. But that is no argument for re- stricting the word love to the latter case. On the contrary, since the chief difference often lies in the certainty and intensity of self-love and the feebleness or doubtfulness of love for others, it might be urged, and indeed has been by Eoche- foucauld, that men never really love except when they love themselves. The doctrine of Eoche- foucauld may be open to grave question, and I 54 PERSONALITY. for one do not believe it to be true. But if his view was really confirmed by experience if men's love for others was found to be universally feeble in comparison with their love for themselves, it would follow, when we used the term in its fullest and strictest sense, we should have to say that men loved themselves alone. Similarly, if personality be, as Spencer says, " a fact above all others the most certain," and if we are going to be very strict in our use of the word knowledge so strict as to apply it only to that which is pre-eminently worthy of the name we must say that men never know anything but themselves. The opposite of Ferrier's postulate is. often assumed to be self-evidently true. Philosophical writers frequently speak as if we might justly say, "that which always knows can never, with its knowledge, have any knowledge of itself; or, in other words, that which must always be the knower can never be the known." I am not aware, however, on what ground this assumption is made. True, we cannot understand how the subject can know itself; but can we understand how it can know the object ? True, we can only dimly understand what the subject is; but can we do more in regard to the object ? " In all probability," says De Morgan in his ' Formal THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 55 Logic/ "we should need new modes of percep- tion in order to know mind as we know colour or motion." Certainly an intelligence, .for whom the reflex knowledge of itself was the same thing as the objective knowledge of its states, could not be constituted as we are ; but what reason is there to think that any such intelligence exists ? Of the two assumptions that a rational being (capable of an indefinitely progressive knowledge of objects) can never know itself, and that such a being must have some knowledge of itself, the latter hypothesis seems to be much more probable than the former, and it is supported by the consensus gentium. Men believe not only that they know, but that they know. The knowledge of self, or the relation of the subject to itself, is after all not more myste- rious than the knowledge of other things, or the relation of subject to object. Nor are we more ignorant of the ultimate nature of ourselves than we are of the ultimate nature of a pebble or a primrose. 1 " Flower in the crannied wall, I pluck you out of the crannies, Hold you there, root and all, in my hand, Little flower ; but if I could understand What you are, root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is." 1 See also my 'Agnosticism,' pp. 38-44. 56 PERSONALITY. The word consciousness, which has unhappily been employed with the greatest possible laxity, seems to me well fitted to express our know- ledge of ourselves. Bain enumerates a number of different senses in which the word has been commonly used. 1. For sentient and intelligent life, as distinguished from unsentient existence. 2. Dugald Stewart defines consciousness as the immediate knowledge which the mind has of its sensations and thoughts and present opera- tions, as opposed to the knowledge of the ex- ternal world. 3. Bain, Hamilton, Mansel, Spencer, M'Cosh, &c., speak of the mind as conscious, even when engaged with the external world itself. 4. It is often used for strong and irresistible belief. But -the word appears specially fitted for enabling us to express the knowledge we have of ourselves along with our states. In sensation we apprehend a feeling, in perception an object, in knowledge a proposition; but in consciousness we apprehend ourselves, along with these states, as their subject. In other words, we know that we know. It would be better, it seems to me, to use the word, not (as is so frequently done) for the knowledge of mental states which we have along with ourselves, but for the knowledge of ourselves which we have along with the states. THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 57 I have said that I do not think consciousness, or the apprehension of self, is combined with every mental phenomenon. In the case of pleasures and pains especially the more intense ones I seem clearly to apprehend myself as apprehending them ; whereas in perception, still more in abstruse reflec- tion, I am so engaged with the objective as to be, in the one case almost, and in the other altogether, unconscious of myself: though afterwards, if I come to think (by the aid of memory) of what happened, I can discover that there must have been an " I " to perceive and reflect, and that the same I now drawing this inference was then perceiving or reflecting. But when I do apprehend myself as the subject of a present state, I am as certain of my own existence as I am of the existence of the state. Both apprehensions are, I think, absolutely coexist- ent in time. I see no reason why the one should be called knowledge and the other ignorance. Again, I am as sure that certain events have been apprehended by me, and formed part of my per- sonal life, as I am that these events have happened. Hence " the permanent nexus, which is never itself a state of consciousness, but which holds states of consciousness together," 1 does not seem to me to be legitimately called unknown. But of course a fully 1 Mr Spencer's description of the ego. 58 PERSONALITY. developed consciousness of self such a conscious- ness as deserves the name of knowledge in the strictest sense of that word can only result from many simple apprehensions of self, from the use of memory, comparison and reflection, from a fairly developed knowledge of others, from a clear percep- tion of personal agency and aims, and especially perhaps, as Ueberweg suggests, from our sense of duty. " The baby new to earth and sky, What time his tender palm is pressed Against the circle of the breast, Has never thought that this is I. But as he grows, he gathers much. And learns the use of I and Me, And finds I am not what I see, And other than the things I touch. So rounds he to a separate mind, From whence clear memory may begin, As through the frame that bounds him in, His isolation grows defined." The fact that the complete knowledge of self is a gradual acquisition removes an objection to the existence of the ego, raised by J. S. Mill, viz., that because in the first instant of our existence we have no conception of self, therefore the ego is a gratuit- ous fiction a mere product of generalisation. Now of course we have no conception of anything in the THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 59 first instant of our existence, nor in the first instant of its apprehension ; inasmuch as a conception is only formed after several apprehensions have shown us what are the essential qualities of the object conceived. But a number of non-apprehensions of a thing could never lead to our forming a conception of it. Not even an infinite series of sensations or thoughts, in which no ego was present, could ever give us the conception of an ego that must be present to every sensation and thought. It is impossible to generalise something out of nothing. It is strange that Mill should have fallen into his present fallacy. He was a logician, and he knew well enough (though here he seems to have forgotten) that a conception what in logical lan- guage is called a concept or notion or idea can never coexist with the first apprehension of an object. It involves a comparison of various ex- amples of that object, and an abstraction of the qualities in which they agree. For instance, we conceive of a man, according to the old scholastic definition, as "a rational animal." Mill might as well have argued that man is a pure fiction because, the first time we saw a human being, we formed no such conception of him. :( Children," says Aristotle, "call all men father." It is not till after many presentations of the object, that we 60 PERSONALITY. begin to distinguish the points which they have in common from those in which they differ, and out of the former to construct our idea. It is to be observed, moreover, that picturableness is not necessary to the existence of a concept. Mill has himself strongly insisted upon the difference between imagination and conception. Conception is merely, he tells us, the attention which we pay to the common qualities of objects. The word man may suggest to our minds the image of one or more particular men; but in itself the mental conception, as he says, is nothing more than the two qualities of animality and rationality, united together, ac- cording to the laws of association, by the common term. Hence we may have conceptions not only of what is not, but of what cannot, be pictured in our minds. And, indeed, a little reflection will suffice to show that in the last resort everything of which we form a conception involves an unpicturable element. For a concept consists only of qualities ; and qualities must be the qualities of something : but that of which they are the qualities has never been seen, and therefore can never be imagined. Or, as this mode of statement would be objected to by the Positivists, who think that qualities may be the qualities of nothing, let me put it thus. The THE SELF-KNOWLEDGE OF THE EGO. 61 various parts of a concept are bound together in the mind by the associative power of the word which stands for them all collectively. But we find that the qualities, which are united in the mind by means of language, are united in fact in the actual world. They cannot be bound together by nothing. There must be something which makes and keeps the combination of qualities in a pebble different from those in a diamond or a poodle. The com- plete analysis of a material object shows us that it is a something having, or combining, certain quali- ties. The complete analysis of a natural force shows us that it is a something characterised by a certain combination of effects. The complete analy- sis of an ego shows that it is a something possessing a certain combination of faculties. The unpictur- able element is present in all three cases alike. So far as it implies ignorance in the first two, so far and only so far does it imply ignorance in the last. Hence on many grounds we maintain that the ego is a real, though not a physical, existence. Without a permanent subject there could never have existed a single remembrance or cognition, nor even a sensation. So far negatively. But further positively: we are sometimes conscious of 62 PERSONALITY. ourselves ; apprehending ourselves along with our states in the same indivisible moment of time ; and after reflection upon these past experiences, we are able to form a conception of self not less distinct, at any rate, than are our conceptions of material objects or of natural forces. 1 1 See also 'Agnosticism,' pp. 43, 44. 63 SECTION III. THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. Now comes the question, Am I, or am I not, a free agent ? Are my volitions made for me, or created by me ? Am I conscious, in willing, merely that a volition has been formed, or do I know that I have formed it ? The theory of a necessity in human actions, simi- lar to the necessity obtaining in the external phe- nomena of nature, has been maintained by writers of very different schools, and upon very different grounds. Some, like Jonathan Edwards, deduce it from the universality of the law of cause and effect ; others, like Buckle, make it a matter of Baconian observation. We have the clearest and most elaborate explanation of the sensational doc- trine of necessity in Bain's 'Emotions and Will.' The necessitarian theory of this school is based on the hypothesis that a human being consists only 64 PERSONALITY. of a series of successive states, which cause one another, or are caused by external influences ; and volition with these thinkers only means the spon- taneous rushing, into full activity of the nascent nerve-force of an idea. We have already seen that such a succession of states is impossible and con- tradictory ; but it will be instructive to study the subject from another point of view, as we must now do in examining the theory of volition. Bain's account of the development of the will is a singularly ingenious piece of reasoning. But just like his theory of cognition, it is entirely vitiated by his arguing throughout as if sensations were absolute objects not requiring and implying a cor- relative subject. The fundamental elements of will, he says, are (1) a spontaneous tendency to movement, which is the response of the system to nutrition ; and (2) the link between a present feel- ing and certain muscular actions, whereby one comes under the control of the other. " We have only to suppose movements spontaneously begun and accidentally causing pleasure, and then we can understand that a few repetitions of the fortuitous concurrence of pleasure with a certain movement, will lead to the forging of an acquired connection, so that the pleasure, or its idea, shall at once evoke the proper movement." Now when Bain says, THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 65 " Supposing such movements spontaneously begun and accidentally causing pleasure," &c., I ask, Causing pleasure to whom ? In passing from the movement to the pleasure resulting from it, Bain allows the ego of the metaphysician to slip in un- observed. And we have here an additional source of confusion. Not only are sensations and volitions commonly spoken of by writers like Bain as if they were things existing per se or absolute objects; but often, as here, the subject of the state is ima- gined to be an object under the microscope of the physiologist. Bain's transition from movement to pleasure seems to imply that he regards the matter thus. There is a visible motion in one part of the brain, and a visible pleasure not a pleasure felt by any one, but a pleasure seen by the physiologist in another part; then according to the law of brain action, by which two co-existent processes recall one another, there comes to be an inseparable association between them. But there is really no association whatever between the two things : for the motion is seen or imagined by the physiologist, while the pleasure is felt by some one else. Let us examine Bain's theory somewhat in detail. According to him, there is " no characteristic form of consciousness for volition." A volition is merely the association between a desire and the actions E 66 PERSONALITY. necessary for its accomplishment. "A simple but typical example of what takes place in all volition is to be found in the sucking infant. The sight of the breast becomes associated with the feeling of nourishment, and a volitional tie is established be- tween this and the movements necessary for ap- proaching it. The fancied unity of the voluntary power suggested by the appearance assumed by it in after-life, when we seem able to set going any action on the slightest wish, is the culmination of a vast range of detailed associations, whose history has been lost sight of. In vocal acquisitions we can see the truth of this theory the spontaneous commencement, repetition made each time with less difficulty, and lastly the link complete. The ideal exertion, and a stimulus of pleasure or pain, lead to the occurrence of the real exertion. It is the property of our intellectual nature that, for all purposes of action, the remembrance or anticipa- tion of a feeling can operate in the same way as its real presence." Now this may go far towards accounting for our being able to produce effects by means of the will, but it is no explanation at all of the nature of the will itself. I can best explain my meaning by a quotation from Dr Carpenter's 'Human Physiology.' "Even in purely volitional movements, those prompted by THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 67 a distinct effort of the will do not directly produce results, but play, as it were, on the automatic apparatus, by which the requisite nervo-muscular combination is brought into action. The training which develops the inarticulate cry of the infant into human language consists in fixing the atten- tion on the audible result desired, the selection of that one of the imitative efforts to produce it which is most nearly successful, and the repetition of this till it has become habitual or secondarily auto- matic. The will can thenceforward reproduce any sound once acquired, by calling on the automatic apparatus for the particular combination of move- ments which it has grown into the power of exe- cuting in response to each preconception. What we will is not to throw this or that muscle into contraction, but to produce a certain preconceived result. Otherwise we should need to know what the muscles are, and how to combine them in- tentionally; but even an anatomist is no better able than the completest ignoramus to execute a movement he has never practised. The relation between the automatic activity of the body and the volitional direction may be compared to the loco- motive power of a horse under guidance of a skilful rider. It is not the rider's whip and spur that furnish the power, but the nerves and muscles of 68 PERSONALITY. the horse; and when these have been exhausted, no further action can be got out of them even by the sharpest stimulation. But the rate and direc- tion of the movement are determined by the will of the rider. Sometimes, it is true, an unusual excitement calls forth the essential independence of the equine nature, and the horse runs away with his master, just as in spasms and convulsions the voluntary muscles are thrown into violent contrac- tions in spite of voluntary resistance. On the other hand, the horse can find its way home, whilst its master is lost in reverie, just as our own legs can do. And the training of the horse corresponds to the training of our automatic mechanism, the result required being indicated to the learner, every effort that tends to produce it being encouraged and fixed by repetition, and every unsuitable action repressed." Bain has really explained nothing more than this automatic element in human action "A desire for a certain pleasure," says Bain, "and an idea of how to get it, are the two ele- ments that account for and constitute volition; the first calls forth the necessary energy, the second guides it into the right channels, and the volition is the immediate connection between the two." But the mystery of volition really lies a step further back viz., in the leing who desires THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 69 an end, and has an idea of the means by which the end may be attained. How often must it be repeated that there are no such things as ideas or desires per se ? If it be said that corresponding to the desire there is a molecular motion in one part of my brain, and corresponding to the idea a molecular motion in another part, I do not deny it. But if these motions could actually be seen by the physiologist, they could not possibly account, by themselves, for their supposed effects. He would see one motion producing another; but I, the conscious subject, perceive no such motions, and were it not for the physiologist, I should never have known that there were any motions at all. It does not follow, I admit, because sentient creatures exist as the necessary percipients of desires and ideas that therefore they are free. It might be that they were only capable of receiving the effects of the cerebral movements. It might be that they were compelled to determine on attaining every object desired, by making actual the ideal representation of the means. Into this we must inquire. The will, Bain says, can suppress emotions "through the operations of its own voluntary muscles." It suppresses first the actual move- ments that accompany emotion, and this tends to 70 PEESONALITY. the suppression of the nervous currents that excite them. But he does not tell us whence the desire, or stimulation of pleasure, is to come, which, according to his own theory, is an essential prerequisite to any such attempt at suppression. There can be no association between an emotion, and an idea -that tends to suppress it ; and even if there were, it would not account for the fact that the former gradually grows weaker and the latter stronger. Can any explanation be given of this fact except that it is due to the voluntary activity of the ego ? " In attention," says Bain, " the force of the will is set in array against the power of the intellectual associations, and depends on the earnestness of my purpose that is, the strength of motive growing out of some pleasure or pain present or apprehended. As soon as the incon- gruity of an idea with what we are seeking for is seen, the tendency is for the idea to vanish forthwith from the mind. The conscious ego consists of one or more states, each of which causes other adhering states to follow, and others of which determine whether these shall remain." The ego, you will observe, according to Bain, is not something underlying and distinct from the mental states, but it " consists of " one or more of them. Hence the states, as such, must be regarded THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 71 as absolute objects; for they have no subject to apprehend them. Now, can anything be more contradictory than the conception of several of these absolute objects, none of which persist, but one of which dismisses all that are incongruous with itself ? If Professor Bain should say that this representation of his views is a misrepresenta- tion, let us suppose, for the sake of argument, that he really means by a state some one conscious of itself and its affections. Then if the ego at any moment consists of only one such state, as soon as it is past there must be another ego; (for, according to his theory, there is nothing which persists between state and state:) hence there would be nothing to connect two successive states, and so there would be no possibility of memory. On the other hand, if we say the ego consists of several such states, we involve ourselves in the difficulties that arise from supposing several egos at once, which can know nothing of one another since there is no principle of continuity running through them still less of the combination of egos that precede or follow them. " Deliberation," says Bain, " is the voluntary act under a concurrence or complication of motive- forces. During the moments of suspended action (suspended because the forces are equal) the cur- 72 PERSONALITY. rent of thought brings forward some new motive. I know from experience that it is dangerous to carry into effect the result of the first combat of opposing forces, and the apprehension of evil con- sequences is a stimulant of the will like any other pain. A well-trained intellect, at the end of the proper time, gives way to the side that then ap- pears the strongest. The well-disciplined, deliber- ative will resists the promptings of the strongest side, till nothing new any longer presents itself. An educated activity, motives to the will, and an intelligence to represent these motives, when they are not actual pleasures and pains, and to har- monise our successive operations, are the general foundation of those multifarious movements that constitute the stream of our active life." In what way it is possible to conceive myself as possess- ing an intelligence that harmonises the opera- tions of my life, without conceiving of myself as a permanent ego different from the succession of my states, I am unable to comprehend. Here, as elsewhere, the ego which is theoretically denied is practically assumed. Bain however, (and in this he is more persistent and consistent than most others of the same school), always endeavours to represent man as a passive percipient of the drama of his own life. In deliberating, he is merely the THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 73 subject of thoughts, each of which may, or may not, have other thoughts adhering to it. If they have, new motives are brought to bear upon the man, but this is only due to the spontaneously associative processes of his brain. In common however with all who support the doctrine of necessity, he sometimes contradicts himself in representing "the well- trained deliberate will" as " waiting till the proper time, and then giving way to what appears the strongest motive." Man's actions, then, cannot be said to be merely the effects of casual succession of states, exactly in the same way as the products of a machine are the result of a casual succession of forces. A machine does not wait " till the proper time," and then "give way to what appears the strongest motive." This difference between man and nature, between the physical and metaphysical, a difference that seems to me as broad as the universe itself, is mentioned by Professor Bain without his ever perceiving that it is a difference at all. And yet it is a fact which will for ever prove there is some- thing in the world other than the physical and phenomenal, and will for ever prevent the pro- duction of a consistent philosophy when man is considered merely as one of the processes of nature. Very much of our mental life, no doubt, is quite 74 PERSONALITY. independent of volition. The power of the brain to retain impressions and suggest ideas is proportional to its quality and conformation, and upon these cir- cumstances will depend, to some extent, the capa- bility of the ego, just as a workman's capability will depend largely upon the tools with which he is supplied. Further, the brain of every new- born infant has lessons, or the material for lessons, latent in it and impressed upon it. It can draw " From treasures stored by generations past, In winding chambers cf receptive sense. 5 ' The law that an impression once made is easily revived applies not only to each single brain, but to brains connected by natural descent. It is in this way, as Herbert Spencer has shown, that many truths which are a posteriori for the race, are a priori for the individual. There is an innate capacity in the brain, as he would perhaps say, for recog- nising these truths, or, as I should prefer putting it, for the reproduction of those molecular changes which are necessary to the recognition of these truths by the ego. Moreover, much of our mental work is undoubtedly carried on by the aid of unconscious cerebration. "It is possible," says Dr Carpenter, "to read or write for hours by automatic action, the will being called into play THE FEEEDOM OF THE EGO. 75 only when fatigue or distraction renders it difficult to keep the attention. Even in man, intellectual operations of a high order may go on automatically, one state of consciousness calling forth another without volition; and ideational and emotional states may express themselves in muscular action without, or against, volition." The difference between recollection and reminis- cence affords a striking illustration of the difference between automatic and volitional action. " Often," as Miss Cobbe says, " after trying in vain to recall a name, we deliberately turn away, not intending to abandon the pursuit, but as if possessed of an obedient secretary, whom we could order to hunt up what we wanted," and who, as Dr Carpenter adds, "is more likely to find what we want when we leave him to search for it in his own way, instead of worrying him to look into this, that or the other place for it." It really seems as if our conscious and volitional interference were in such a case misplaced. At any rate, we see clearly that there are two distinct ways of going to work, and two distinct kinds of remembrance viz., the involuntary (or memory), when one idea calls up another, we being merely the passive recipients or percipients of both ; and the voluntary (or remin- iscence), when we actually search for a particular 76 PERSONALITY. missing idea. This distinction is as old as Aris- totle, who used the terms fiv^rj and di/a/xv^o-ts ; but it seems to me in danger of being lost again, at any rate by Professor Bain and his school. The difference is great and important. Memory chiefly depends on the brain, as may be seen from the story that Coleridge relates of a servant-girl who was able to speak correct Hebrew in a state of fever, merely because she had formerly heard her master reciting Hebrew sentences. Eecollection, on the other hand, consists essentially in the volun- tary fixing of attention on an idea already pres- ent to the mind. This act of attention serves to intensify the idea itself, and so to intensify its associative powers. Attention, deliberation, and suspense themselves imply volitions. The ego is able not merely to resolve on initiating a course of conduct, which reflection has shown to be good or desirable, but it can determine to refrain from the initiation until reflection does show its goodness or desir- ability. It can check "the nascent nerve -force of an idea." Carpenter shows that in certain abnormal conditions of the brain, produced by disease or stimulants, and in the case of individ- uals such as Coleridge, through whose minds ideas flow in continuous streams, but unsolicited and OF THE THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. H ^ ^W^ without any fixed order, the power of volitiormt control is small or nil. In these cases the brain seems to be inefficient as an instrument of will. The difference between automatic and volitional action is sometimes strikingly shown by the dif- ference in their results. Compare, e.g., the works of Hegel with those of Coleridge. The distinction between the voluntary and in- voluntary exercise of thought, and between its physiological and psychological aspects, is well stated by K. S. Wyld, in his ' Physics and Philoso- phy of the Senses.' " 1. The brain, in order that it may be a fitting organ of the mind, has a natural tendency to repeat any series of changes which it has once acquired. 2. These cerebral actions are the symbols of thought, but they are no more thought itself than the sentences of a book. 3. We must assume the presence of an intelligent principle to interpret the symbols, or we cannot conceive thought to exist. 4. Though the brain may follow a certain involuntary course of action, and may thus suggest to the mind a train of thought, we know that the mind has the power of controlling the cerebral action. "We can inter- rupt one chain of thought and start another, and out of a variety of thoughts we can reject those that are the most pressing." 78 PERSONALITY. Now let us ask what we mean, or should mean, by freedom. Bain says "it is surprising that the connection between motives and actions should ever have been questioned, since every human being every day of his life is practically depending on its truth." The connection ought not to have been questioned. What should be denied is that there is an absolutely necessary connection between this motive and that action. So far as men possess the same nature, the influence of motives upon them will be similar. Eeason, as Mr Grote said, is "a deindividualising principle." Therefore, so far as men are rational, they will be similarly influ- enced by similar motives. When men have lost their reason or their will, their actions will of course be irrationally and involuntarily determined by motives, just as if they were mere objects in the external world. Mr Buckle's argument against freedom that a certain number of persons must always be guilty of certain crimes because a cer- tain number always are applies mainly to those who, by a long course of bad habits, have prac- tically lost that will which they once possessed, and have thus become legitimate subjects for the statistician. Mansel stoutly denies the predicta- bility of human actions. I incline to think that, THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 79 in all but absolutely perfect or absolutely imperfect beings, there would now and again be an element of caprice which could not be foreseen. But even if we allow, with Kant and others, that human actions are not essentially unpredictable, the differ- ence between freedom and necessity does not lie in the fact of predictability or unpredictability. The difference is this. I commit an action by necessity, if I am made to commit it by forces which I have no power either temporarily or permanently to resist. I commit an action freely, if I am endowed with the power of refraining from it till reflection has convinced me of its desirability, and with the power, after such reflection and conviction, of deter- mining to commit it. In the latter case, even if at last I act in accordance with the motives originally presented, the volition, and so the action, is caused not by the motives but by me. The doctrine of necessity has received its chief support from the use of the word " motive," which, when understood literally, sweeps away all oppos- ing arguments by assuming the point to be proved viz., that man is moved in the same way as a material object. What Stirling calls " a judicious playing on the word motive " has made the work of the necessitarians uncommonly easy. It is a term, 80 PERSONALITY. however, that has no business in the discussion, until, at any rate, it has been qualified by the as- sertion that it is used in a figurative sense. Sup- pose that a man is in a hurry to keep an important engagement, and that a violent wind is blowing dead against him. It seems to me simply absurd to apply the same name of motive to the physical wind which drives him back, and to the psychical remembrance of his engagement, after reflection on which he urges himself forward. There is no such analogy as the word motive suggests be- tween the movements of a machine and the action of an ego. It is said that whatever has motives brought to bear upon it, must move in proportion to the strength and direction of the motives ; which is true enough in the physical sphere, but which is the very question in dispute regarding mind. As Eeid puts it, motives cannot determine and plan and resolve, &c. If a number of forces be brought to bear upon a machine, it must at once involuntarily yield to the resultant of their com- bined influences. But when a number of motives are presented to an ego, he need not, in fact he generally does not, yield at once to any of them ; he can pause, he can reflect, he can call up new and more powerful motives. Supposing that there is a motive for me to go out of doors and a motive THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 81 for me to remain in my easy-chair, if the analogy so often insisted on were correct, the resultant of these forces might move me into the middle of the room or precipitate me from the window. But, fortunately for this human life of ours, there is no psychological parallelogram of forces. Physical and psychical motives have nothing in common. The weight of the latter is imponderable; their force is immaterial ; their effects depend not so much upon their inherent power, as upon the influence which the ego chooses to concede them. In a word, psychical motives are reasons, by re- flection upon which an ego may have recourse to self -adjustment, but not forces by which he is involuntarily adjusted. Nay, if the word motive must be used, I will go so far as to maintain that a man may sometimes act according to the weakest motive. When, for instance, a human being is influenced on the one side by a wild and delirious temptation, and on the other by the "still, small voice " of conscience, it is possible for him to act according to the suggestions of the latter ; but he who says this is the strongest motive must be will- ing to admit that the zephyr may be more power- ful than the whirlwind. "A volition," according to Herbert Spencer, "is a discharge of nervous force along a line which experience has rendered F 82 PEKSONALITY. the line of least resistance." But it is not always so. The most inveterate habits are not quite irre- sistible, for they are sometimes resisted ; and when they are conquered, the nervous force must be dis- charged along the line of greatest resistance. If the figurative sense of the word motive be taken into account, then we can say with Stirling that "a man is free because he obeys motives " i.e., because he has reasons presented to him, in accordance with which he is able, if he please, to act. This explanation removes at once several of the stock objections to human freedom. Hamilton says, for example, that if the will is not determined by motives, volitions must be motiveless, and this would give us casualism. Of course an uncaused volition is as absurd a supposition as an uncaused desire. But it does not follow that a volition is motiveless because not caused by a motive. It may be caused by an ego in accordance with a motive. Again, he says in reference to Eeid, "it makes no difference whether motives determine a man to act, or determine a man to determine himself." In the word determine there is the same sort of ambiguity which we have noticed in the word motive. It makes all the difference whether they determine a man so that he cannot but determine himself, or whether they only in- THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 83 fluence him, leaving him free to act in accordance with, or against, them. If it is in his power to wait for new motives, and to direct his attention to this motive or to that, by which process of attention the relative strength of the motives can be altered, then the " determination " of the motives, though it be influential, is certainly not irresistible. Many of the difficulties about freedom and necessity result from the careless use of abstract words. The freedom of the will is a misleading and a tautological expression. Will, if it exist, must be free. A necessitated will is a contradic- tion in terms. For will means the power of choice, .and choice cannot be necessitated. We cannot be compelled to choose one thing, while at the same time we are free to choose either of two things. This seems sufficiently evident. But the unfor- tunate phrase, "free-will," has led Hamilton and others into the fallacy mentioned in the last para- graph. It led Mansel into a yet more curious mistake. Though he traced the origin of the idea of power to " myself determining my volitions," he yet denies that our volitions can be the results of causes. He does so on this ground. Our only notions of cause are (1) the exertion of power by an intelligent being, and (2) uniform sequence; " and to say that our volitions were caused in the 84 PERSONALITY. first way would be Fatalism, and in the second Determinism." It is true that to say my volition was caused by an intelligent being other than myself would be Fatalism ; but it is equally manifest that if the intelligent being who causes it be myself, we have Freedom. Let me try to analyse my consciousness in a complex case of volition. I am affected by a cer- tain desire which prompts me to do, and to do at once, a certain thing. I am conscious that I can say to myself either, " Very well, I will do it ; " or, " Can I afford it ? Would it be right ? Would it be wise ? Would it be kind ? Would it really make me happy ? " If I take the latter course, numerous ideas spring up in my mind, each of which may be called a motive, having some rational weight in assisting me to a decision. At last I perceive that such a course would be best, or at any rate that I should really like it, whereupon I determine to set about it, though I am all the while conscious that I could still refrain, or even act in the opposite way. " I am convinced," says J. S. Mill, " that I could have chosen the other course had I preferred it, but not that I could have chosen one while I preferred the other." Be it so. But for my part I am also conscious that .1 was not obliged to choose at that particular instant, that I could have waited THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 85 a little longer, and that unless it were something which a rational being could never rationally pre- fer, I could have argued with myself till I did prefer it. Owing to the power of attention, we need never be ultimately affected by impressions exactly in proportion to their original strength. It is a law of our nature that a desire can be increased if it be attentively regarded, and diminished if at- tention be withdrawn from it. And, to a greater or less extent, every human being is capable of such an exercise of attention. The supposed consciousness of freedom has been often treated as a mental illusion. Bain is no doubt right in saying, that originally the term freedom was merely a metaphorical compliment, bestowed by the Stoics upon their ideal wise man, who was called free, just in the same way as he was called king, or beautiful, or rich. But Bain is not right, as I think, in saying that "we are no more conscious of freedom than we are conscious of the double decomposition of salts." All I can say is, I find it in my consciousness, and it does not yield to any analysis not even the able analy- sis of Professor Bain. The reason why he does not find it in his, is, I apprehend, because he does not find consciousness at all, in the sense in which I use that word viz., for the knowledge of self. 86 PEESONALITY. If there be no ego, I cannot, of course, be conscious of myself ; and if I am not conscious of myself, I cannot be conscious of myself as free. " Liberty," says Hume, " is a certain looseness or indifference which we feel in passing or not passing from the idea of one object to that of a succeeding one. Now we may observe, that though in reflect- ing on human actions we seldom feel such a loose- ness or indifference, but are commonly able to infer them from the motives and dispositions of those who perform them with considerable certainty, yet it frequently happens that in performing the actions themselves we are sensible of something like it. This has been used as a demonstration, and even an intuitive proof, of human liberty." It very well may be. For what is this "looseness or indiffer- ence" but the consciousness that we are able to act in either of two ways, and are not necessitated to either of them ? " We feel," he says, " that our actions are subject to our will on most occasions, and imagine we feel that the will itself is subject to nothing, because when by a denial of it we are provoked to try, we feel that it moves easily every way, and produces an image of itself (a velleity as it is called in the schools) even on that side on which it did not settle. This image, or faint notion, we persuade ourselves could at that time have been THE FKEEDOM OF THE EGO. 87 completed into the thing itself; because, should that be denied, we find on a second trial that at present it can. We consider not that the fantastical desire of showing liberty is here the motive of our action." As to the will being " subject to nothing," these words really convey no intelligible meaning. Wejiave seen it is the ego, and not the will, which should be spoken of as free or necessitated. At any rate, the "fantastical desire of showing liberty" is not the only thing that makes us believe in our past freedom. Eemorse bears strong testimony to the same fact. It is in vain that Hume, Spinoza and others tell us self-reproach is a mistake. We know better. We feel that we might have done the opposite of what we did. Nor is self-reproach the peculiar idiosyncrasy of fools. On the con- trary, it is to be found in the purest, the wisest, the noblest of the race, and is only altogether absent from those who have become irretrievably degraded. We never think (except in our philo- sophical systems) of attributing men's actions to desire, preference or motive, in such a way that, upon the grounds of this attribution, they them- selves must be exempted from praise or blame. As Butler shows, even if men are not free, we must always, for practical purposes, assume that they are. 88 PERSONALITY. Mr Sully, in his ' Sensation and Intuition/ denies that we have any consciousness of freedom in regard to either the present or the past. He maintains that the idea arises merely from a natural pride, which leads us to look upon our future actions as determinable by ourselves. But if we have, as I have tried to show, a consciousness of freedom in the present, and a remembrance of freedom in the past, if we have, as Hume admits, " a feeling of looseness or indifference in performing actions," our expectation of future freedom is capable of a different explanation. Kant also denied our consciousness of freedom, and maintained that the idea was only a trans- cendental deduction from the categorical imperative. There can be no doubt, however, that the whole doctrine of transcendental freedom was really sug- gested to him by his belief in his own freedom. He justly says that if there is a transcendental char- acter only behind some phenomena viz., human we must have learnt the difference from experience, and experience can give us only (so he thought) contingent truths. Hence he tells us, we must conceive of the transcendental character or free- dom as applicable to all phenomena alike. But it is manifest that our conceiving of it as applicable to all phenomena alike, does not save it from the THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 89 accusation of having been, prior to the conception, suggested by experience. It seems to me that all the attempts which have been made to disprove our consciousness of free- dom have failed, as signally as those which have sought to disprove our consciousness of our own permanence. For my own part, at any rate, I am conscious of myself as a being capable not only of feeling, and of receiving the ideas that are presented to me, but capable also of a voluntary exercise of attention, and a voluntary origination of a train of thought or a course of conduct. The free act of an ego is a creative act, and does not therefore involve, as Jonathan Edwards and Hamilton assert, an in- finite number of previous volitions. After I have reflected on what I want, what I ought to want, what I am likely to attain, and what is the best means of attaining it, I am conscious of forming a determination or volition to do certain things. Every such volition originates, or rather I, as often as I am the author of such a volition, originate, a new train of thoughts, or a new set of events, or both. This volition starts the requisite movements in the brain, which may then either go on auto- matically for a considerable time, or may require to be supplemented by fresh volitional causes and cerebral effects. What is the exact nature of the 90 PERSONALITY. connection between the will and the brain does not, for our present purpose, very much matter. Dr Carpenter says, " The intensity of any ideational state is an expression of the hyper^emic condition of some part of the cerebrum, as that of a sensational state is of the sensorium. All volitional action is based on an idea of what is to be done. It seems clear that the same vaso-motor action, which is the condition of attention to that idea, will, if excited to produce a still greater local hypersemia, give effect to it in a spontaneous motorial discharge." But it must be carefully remembered that the volition is neither the intensification of the hyper- semic condition nor the motorial discharge that is consequent thereon. It precedes both. The voli- tion is not made for an ego by motion in the brain, but is the outcome of its own activity. The ego is the creator of its own volitions. It is the consciousness of our ability to create volitions that gives us our idea of power. That we have such an idea is very evident. The ablest treatise written to disprove it assumes it as the basis of proof. Hume tries to demonstrate that we have no notion of power by attempting to show that there is something viz., habit capable of pro- ducing it. But whatever is capable of producing anything has power, according to the ordinary ac- THE FKEEDOM OF THE EGO. 91 ceptation of the word. His argument, therefore, amounts to this : we have no idea of power because there is something in which we can discover power to produce it ! Unless we had the idea, his reason- ing would be as meaningless as it is illogical. Its plausibility is due entirely to the fact that it assumes the existence of the very thing which is to be proved non-existent. It seems to me somewhat unfortunate that the upholders of human freedom have tried to trace the notion of power to the feeling of effort. " Effort," says Bain, very truly, " is the muscular conscious- ness that accompanies voluntary activity, especially in the painful stages. It has been supposed that here we have mechanical power originating in purely mental agency, and that hence volition was the source of all motive power. But it is not the consciousness of effort, but well -digested meals, that enables the labourer to do his work. The concurring consciousness of expended power is no more the cause of that power, than the illumination cast by the engine-furnace is the source of the movements generated. It is strange that the con- sciousness of effort should be deemed the cause of voluntary movements, because when the power is at its greatest the effort is null, and vice versa. The feeling of effort is the symptom of declining 92 PERSONALITY. energy, the proof that the true antecedent viz., the organic state of nerves and muscles is on the eve of exhaustion." Mill argues to the same effect that the fact of nisus or effort being in- volved in the idea of power, proves that idea to be concerned rather with the relation of our volitions to our muscles than of ourselves to our volitions. There is a good deal of weight in these objec- tions. It seems to me that the ideas of power and effort are really, as Bain says, contrary to one another. The muscular sense of effort is a sign that, though we have been exerting some power, we are not possessed of all the power that is necessary for our purpose. I have a conscious- ness of power in creating a volition, but a sense of effort in carrying it out. It is in the conflict between my power, as manifested in volition, and the resistance of my organism and its environment, that the sense of effort arises. I think it is better therefore to say that in effort we are conscious, not of power, but of insufficient power. This explanation is an answer to Mill's argument just quoted. The real mystery of the will is to be looked for not, as he thought, in the relation between the volition and the muscles but in the relation between the volition and the ego. It is as unreasonable to seek will in the muscles, as to THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 93 look for skill in an artist's brush and colours. The muscles and the colours are the instruments in either case. Herbert Spencer says that the only force we can know is the force of which we are conscious during our muscular efforts; and he thinks that there is a necessary illusion by which we are obliged to suppose similar forces behind the external phenomena that resist us. This, he says, is the only conception of causality open to us. Yet this fails ; because if the force in a chair, for example, were like my own, the chair must be conscious of sensations as I am. I have never experienced the " necessary illusion " of sup- posing " effort " in the material world. And besides, as I said just now, it is not in effort but in volition that I am conscious of power. Herbert Spencer would be the first to deny that material objects give any evidence of volition. Nor do they indi- vidually. It is suggested only by their manner of working together, and by the rational results to which this working gives rise. 1 If the doctrine of necessity were true, we must regard ourselves as merely the passive recipients of impressions and ideas. When we were in a state of what is called deliberation, we should be con- scious only of waiting to see which of several 1 See sect. iv. 94 PERSONALITY. motives would eventually be the strongest. It is possible to form a conception of a conscious being devoid of will. We can imagine a watch, e.g., that is conscious but not free. Suppose there was with- in it a sentient principle which could hear the tick- ing, and observe the motion of the wheels, and de- sire a regular kind of existence. It might be able to perceive dust accumulating in its interior, and it might remember from its past experience the periodical cleanings which the dust rendered neces- sary. Such a watch might know, and even fore- know, a good deal about its own condition, but it could in no respect alter it. Whether it went faster or slower, got dirty sooner or later, was cleaned often or seldom, &c., might be to it matters of interest and anxiety, but unless it had a faculty different from feeling or knowledge and. Bain expressly declares that volition is not different it would for ever be incapable of self -adjustment. Such a piece of mechanism is man, according to modern Positivism. " Just as the blush," we are told, "is no more than a bodily expression, so our will is no more than another kind of expression of a certain condition of the brain. Our bodily actions proceed from physical changes in our brain, just as the motion of a bell results from the touch upon the handle. As for our will, it is but the THE FKEEDOM OF THE EGO. 95 signal of what has been going on in our brain just as the sound of the bell tells you it has been moved. To say that the will causes the action is as absurd as to say that the bell's sound causes the bell's motion." If this be true, our whole existence is as much the sport of chance as the motion of the spray driven before the wind. Here we are forcibly reminded of the words of Professor Terrier : " Philosophers undisturbed have pondered over man's nature, and after all what have they made of it ? What sort of a picture have they presented to our observation ? Not the picture of a man, but the representation of an automaton that is what it cannot help being, a phantom dreaming what it cannot but dream, an engine performing what it must perform, an incarnate reverie, a weather- cock shifting helplessly in the winds of sensibility, a wretched association machine through which ideas pass linked together by laws over which the machine has no control; anything, in short, but that free and self - sustained centre of underived activity which we call man." One reason of this misrepresentation of man's nature may be found in the one - sidedness that almost always follows great success. Science has revealed to us an infinite number of invariable sequences, brought about by the operation of invol- 96 PERSONALITY. untary laws; and it has been proved that, though we search over millions of miles of space and mil- lions of years of time, we shall see the same forces producing the same phenomena. Hence many scientists have jumped to the hasty conclusion, that the same laws of invariable sequence must apply to everything in the universe, even to mind itself. "The progress of science," says Professor Huxley, " in all ages, has meant the extension of the prov- ince of what we call matter and causation, and the concomitant gradual banishment from all regions of human thought of what we call spirit and spon- taneity." But the Professor admits " that a human being is, if he be a machine, yet capable within cer- tain limits of self-adjustment ; " and it is admitted by all that he is capable within certain limits of the adjustment of the environment. If therefore the progress of science has consisted in throwing into the shade this fact of adjustment, which is the most important and significant of all facts, so much the worse for science. As Maurice very well says " Whatever may be the value of the things handled and tasted and seen, I who handle and taste and see them, am at least as interesting to myself as they." The scientific argument against the doctrine of free-will viz., that all events, except perhaps human volitions, are necessarily related to events THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 97 immediately preceding them has imposed even on so cautious a writer as Mr Sidgwick, who mentions it as an argument really favouring the necessitarian view. One would have thought that it was mani- festly an argument against that view. Man, since he is " the interpreter of Nature," might a priori be conceived of as something more, something other, than a mere part of her processes, and hence it might be expected beforehand that his actions and Nature's would not be amenable to the same canons. Scientists often lose sight of the fact that in some degree we ourselves are able to alter the course of nature, and by .com- bining its invariable laws to bring about the varia- tions in their action which we desire. Forgetting this fact, though it is the one thing which makes life of any value, some philosophers have been gradually tending towards the categorical denial of God and of man (properly so called), and of everything else that cannot be discovered " by the methods and formulae of physics." " I have swept the heavens with my telescope, and have not found a God," said Lalande. "We have ex- amined the brain with our microscopes, and have not found an ego," say the physiologists. Hence God and the ego must be declared non-existent, since they do not come within the focus of these G 98 PERSONALITY. all-devastating lenses. All-devastating, I say; for a universe that contains only necessitated and mean- ingless phenomena is "an abomination of desola- tion," worse than that spoken of by the prophet. J. S. Mill tells us what a paralysing and de- pressing effect the doctrine of necessity long had upon himself, and how he often wished that it could simply be held quasi the character of others. But he says that he eventually escaped from its injurious influences by guarding against the misleading associations of the word necessity. He distinguished necessity from fatalism. The former, he says, means only that an action will inevitably happen if our desire be sufficiently strong, and if there be nothing external to prevent it ; the latter, that it must happen whether we desire it or not. He admits, however, that though " necessity is re- mote from fatalism, most necessitarians are prob- ably fatalists." " The true doctrine of necessity," he says, " while maintaining that our character is formed by our circumstances, asserts at the same time that our desires can do much to alter our circumstances." The desire, therefore, to alter our character is one of the circumstances by which that character is being moulded. The feeling of being able to modify our character, if we wish it, is the feeling of freedom ; and this ennobling part of the THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 99 doctrine of free-will is equally implied, Mill thinks, in the doctrine of necessity. "A person is free who feels that his habits and temptations are not his masters but he theirs, who, even in yielding, knows that he could resist, that there is not re- quired for this purpose a greater desire than he is capable of feeling." But the question is, How is that desire to be obtained? If "feeling" means getting or creating, then here is the difference between a man and a machine. If, though he is capable of feeling it, he is incapable of getting it, then he is not free. JSTor on this supposition can it be explained why he feels that he is free. Freedom, properly understood, does not consist in a man's being made to act by internal motives rather than by external ; this would be merely what Kant calls " the freedom of a turnspit." Unless there be an ego, which can voluntarily attend to one idea and draw away its attention from another (irrespective of the inherent strength with which those ideas originally present themselves), and which can even call up a third idea that does not present itself at all, there is no possibility of our obtaining a desire which we have not already got, nor, therefore, of our being anything but that which we are made to be. On the whole, it seems to me that, when the errors arising from ambiguities of language have 100 PERSONALITY. been removed, when it has been clearly recognised that an ego is the necessary substratum of psychical states, and when consciousness is correctly analysed, the fact of freedom can be established. In other words, the ego is not merely passively acted on by the brain, but is also capable of voluntary self- originated action. This then is the beginning of metaphysics : to find that I am conscious of myself as a permanent being in contradistinction from my changing thoughts and feelings, conscious of myself more- over as a being capable,. not only of apprehending feelings and thoughts, but of creating volitions and originating thereby series of events. Consciousness reveals to us something more than the phenomenal, it reveals to us substance; something more than invariable sequence, it reveals to us power. This substance and power must be pre-eminently real, since without them feelings and thoughts and self- adjustments could neither be nor be conceived to be. The Positivists tell us that consciousness re- veals nothing of the kind. But their arguments, as we have seen, are based implicitly upon that very metaphysical reality which they are explicitly brought forward to disprove. Their speech "be- wrayeth " them. The theories are the theories of phenomenalists, the words are the words of meta- THE FREEDOM OF THE EGO. 101 physicians. It is from the surreptitious introduc- tion of metaphysical support that their attempt to annihilate metaphysics derives what little plausi- bility it may possess. Eestrict a Positivist to his own vocabulary, and it would be seen at once that he was talking nonsense. OF THK UNIVERSITY 102 SECTION IV. THE INFINITE EGO. UNDERLYING the fleeting phenomena of our mental life, we have discovered, it would seem, a noumenon, a permanent substance, an ego, capable not only of perceiving these phenomena, but of changing them a creative being, having power to originate events. Can any such substance and power be discovered behind those phenomena which col- lectively we call nature ? Is there an Infinite Ego ? This is the last and greatest problem of metaphysics. "We cannot here discuss the question of our per- ception of an external world ; suffice it to say that it seems altogether inconceivable how, from the mere association of sensations, the notion of exter- nality could ever have been formed. As Bain has well shown, a thing is only known by being con- trasted with its foil. Waiving the objection that THE INFINITE EGO. 103 by the sensational school sensations are asserted to be associated m nothing, or to be associated in a fluent brain, no particle of which ever long remains the same, and allowing them the benefit of that tacit assumption, which, as we have seen, they are in the habit of making, the assumption, viz., of a sentient principle by which the sensations may be received, it is still inconceivable how the co- existences and successions of sensations within could ever suggest that there was anything with- out. Yet this is the only explanation which the school has to offer. "When we seem to be carried out of ourselves to the world beyond, we are merely referred, they tell us, from one of our sensations to others, from a single member of a cluster to the rest, from what we actually feel in one sense to what, in suitable positions, we might feel in the others. When we attribute whiteness to snow, we .say that a particular sensation belongs to a group, the remainder of which colour, softness, sparkle, &c. are expressed by the word snow. Mill adopts Bain's theory that it is the muscular feelings ac- companying locomotion which give us the idea of externality, and lead us to attribute all our sensa- tions to an external cause. But even the muscular sensations are within us : and it is inconceivable how any number of associated internalities could 104 PERSONALITY. ever produce the idea of externality. Our know- ledge of the external world really arises, I think, from the consciousness of our volition having been resisted. And inasmuch as we cannot conceive of impotence resisting power, it is natural to regard the external world our own organism included, since this often resists our volition as in some way or other the seat of force. But the idea of volition involves something more than power. It is the peculiarity of will always to be exercised for the accomplishment of intelligent, or at any rate, intelligible purposes. Now let us ask When we contemplate nature as a whole, are we, or are we not, led to the supposition of such an underlying Will ? There has been for many years an increasing tendency on the part of scientific men to resolve matter into force. The secondary qualities are universally admitted to arise from differences in molecular vibrations, which produce corresponding differences in the nervous organism. Sir William Thomson has seen reason to believe that resistance also, which is the fundamental primary quality, is nothing but the result of an extremely rapid motion in something infinitely soft and yielding. Clifford, again, says : " We know with great probability that wherever there is an atom there is a small electric THE INFINITE EGO. 105 current. Very many of the properties of atoms are explained by this ; and we have vague hopes that they all will be. If so, we shall say an atom is a small current." The dynamical theory of matter the theory, viz., that matter ultimately consists of atomic centres of force is favoured by writers of very different schools : for example, Boscovitch, Newton, Faraday, Thomson, Tait, Clifford, Picton, E. S. Wyld, &c. The supposition that matter really consists of a number of centres of energy, capable of interpenetration, seems more intelligible than that which makes it consist of mutually ex- clusive particles. The doctrine of chemical equiv- alents, and the fact that when bodies unite in more than one proportion these combinations rise by exact multiples of the first, appear clearly to point to some form of the atomic theory. That a new compound could ever be produced from a mixture of atoms which were not ultimately interpenetrable, (as, for example, water from oxygen and hydrogen), seems quite inconceivable. On the dynamical theory, the effects of gravity, cohesion, &c., can be understood as resulting from the interaction or interpenetration of unextended forces ; and in adopting this theory, therefore, we avoid the special difficulties supposed to be connected with action at a distance. Further, if the human bodv 106 PERSONALITY. consist, not of a mass of forceless atoms, but of a number of centres of force mutually interacting, the connection between soul and body may be ultimately susceptible of explanation. There must still however remain an antithesis, if not between mind and matter, yet between the force of volition which I create, and the forces of my organism and its environment, which I can neither create nor alter, but only use. Mr Wallace, in his ' Contributions to Natural Selection,' says : "We have traced one force to an origin in our own will, while we have no knowledge of any other primary cause of force. It does not seem, therefore, an improbable conclusion that all force may be will-force, and that the whole universe is not merely dependent upon, but actually is, the will of higher intelligences or of one supreme intelligence." The difficulty is that will, as we know it, is incapable of producing these external forces. The force which it creates does not "correlate" with the physical forces upon which it works. It does not pass into them, nor can it be extracted out of them. It can neither increase nor diminish them. It can merely modify their effects by changing their relations. However, inasmuch as the will which created the forces of nature (if they were created) is external to our own, it is not to be expected that we should THE INFINITE EGO. 107 be capable of gauging its resources. We do not seein to have any grounds upon which to discuss the question as to whether this metaphysical Power works upon a matter coeternal with Himself, or whether He has created not only the harmony which we observe in nature, but also the very materials in which that harmony is manifested. The only ques- tion we appear capable of answering is this: Can we see, from the combined effects of these forces, that they are connected in some way with an intel- ligent and volitional ego, who is causing them to produce certain definite results ? The argument from design will hold good, if it can be shown that the forces of Nature are used by a superhuman Will. Comte says that " our power of foreseeing phe- nomena, and our power of controlling them, destroy the belief that they are governed by changeable wills." But when they are controlled by us they are governed by changeable wills wills that may be changeable even to caprice. "Comte's incon- sistency," says Martineau, " would be extraordinary, if it were not ordinary in his class the inconsist- ency, viz., of excluding all will from the universe, because there is nothing but necessity, yet insisting on necessity as an attribute of will." Necessity or no necessity, there is one thing very certain: the reign of law does not prevent us from accomplish- 108 PERSONALITY. ing purposes of our own. The Positivists often speak as if we were completely the slaves of Nature. Professor Huxley seems to regard the idea of our having any choice, with respect to the details of our own life, as a delusion surviving from primeval barbarism. "The progress of science in all ages," he says, in a passage I have already quoted, " has meant the extension of the province of what we call matter and causation, and the concomitant gradual banishment from all regions of human thought of what we call spirit and spontaneity." And yet even Professor Huxley has said that the human machine is " capable, within certain limits, of self -adjustment." If there had been but one act of " self -adjustment" on the part of but a single member of the human race from its creation until now, that act would for ever distinguish humanity from the whole material world. If therefore the progress of science has been such as the Professor asserts, it has involved the casting into the shade of a highly important fact. And so far from this spontaneity being but rarely exercised, there is scarcely any faculty which we use so frequently. In addition to our power of seZ/-adjustment, we have also the power, within certain limits, of adjust- ing the environment, and these limits are always becoming less and less contracted. Every experi- THE INFINITE EGO. 109 merit which the Professor makes is an instance of such adjustment: the forces of Nature, if left to themselves, would not teach him what he wishes to learn, and he therefore interferes to make them. Our whole life is spent in using, adapting, combin- ing, controlling and counteracting the forces of the material world. We dissipate cold by lighting a fire; we avoid a sunstroke by retiring into the shade ; we stamp out the cholera by an improved system of sanitation ; and so on, and so on. And all this we achieve, not in spite of, but because of, the inviolability of law. The Positivists generally speak as if we might perhaps do something for ourselves, were the laws of nature changeable ; but, since those laws are unchangeable, we are, they assure us, helpless. A moment's reflection might suffice to show that the exact contrary of this is- the truth. The immutability of the laws is their most valuable characteristic. If we could not count on them, we could do nothing with them. For instance, we know the destructive effects of lightning, and we know the conducting power of metals ; we therefore avoid the one by means of the other. We attach lightning-conductors to our more costly edifices, in order that the electricity may pass harmlessly into the ground, instead of linger- ing about the buildings and destroying them. But 110 PERSONALITY. if the same metal, which had been once a good con- ductor, might suddenly become a non-conductor, if it might at any time play all sorts of unexpected tricks with the lightning, we should be altogether helpless. It is because we know exactly how the laws of Nature act, that we know exactly what we must do when we wish to counteract them. Their in- violability, as the Duke of Argyll well says, is the very circumstance that makes them "subject to contrivance through endless cycles of design." Now since we see the same sort of effects i.e., rational effects produced by the non-human or supernatural combination of physical forces, that are produced by their human or natural combina- tion ; since we find, not only that these forces can be controlled by us, but that, apart from our control, they work together according to an absolutely tm- changing method, and that this method results in the evolution of higher and higher forms of existence, the most reasonable conclusion seems to be that they are connected with another Will "in whom there is no change, neither shadow of turning," and " who is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever." Of course if it be the law of the universe that atoms of all shapes and sizes have been eternally falling through space in all manner of directions and velocities, and that by their haphazard concurrence IT (( UNI THE INFINITE EGO. UNIVERSITY all things have arisen as they are, then there is no room for volition. But, on the other hand, if it is contrary to experience to believe that such a concurrence of atoms could have produced a cosmos, and certainly our experience, so far as it goes, dis- credits the hypothesis, if, further, there is reason to think that the phenomena of the universe do actually exhibit signs of a controlling will, then it follows that the hypothesis of a fortuitous con- currence of atoms must be rejected. When we remember that every force in Nature, if it worked irregularly instead of regularly, would be capable of throwing the entire universe into confusion, we seem forced to the conviction that the world in which we find oui selves is not the production of a fortuitous concurrence of atoms, but that there is .a Being working through all atoms and forces everywhere, who loves beauty, harmony, progress and joy, a Being "who maketh the winds His angels and flaming fires His messengers." Since the voice of Law is "the harmony of the world," there is positive evidence of the fact that " her seat is the bosom of God." This view is nowadays generally regarded as effete. Mr Morley, for example, says that "the argument from design, if it has not received its death-blow from Darwinism, is for the nonce at 112 PERSONALITY. least in a state of suspended animation." But the truth is, that the theory of Evolution, rightly understood, does not in the least clash with the argument from design. The theory of evolution, just like science in general, is concerned with the methods of Nature's working, and not with the question as to whether the origin of those methods be discoverable. Science is not to be blamed for failing to take their origin into consideration; it is only to be condemned when it dogmatically asserts that there is no origin, or that it cannot be discovered. Science is concerned with orderly sequences ; metaphysics with the why and wherefore of this order. The order is the same to an onlooker, whether or not he recognises the necessity of tracing it to an ultimate source. The problem of science or philosophy, as stated by Mill, is this : " What are the fewest assumptions which, being granted, the order of nature as it exists would be the result ? " But the problem of meta- physics is to ascertain on what these assumptions ultimately depend, and whether or not the present system has been brought about by " collocations " that were purely casual and accidental. To this question, it is evident, the theory of evolution can offer no reply. It may be that all things have been produced by the gradual cooling and con- THE INFINITE EGO. 113 densation of fiery vapour, by the successive "dif- ferentiations and integrations of a primordial homogeneous mass." But this " invariable opera- tion of natural law" manifestly requires to be explained. Nothing can be more ridiculous than the common belief, that the discovery of Nature's methods virtually amounts to the discovery that those methods can have had no cause. The researches of modern science have no doubt demonstrated the universality of the reign of Law. Formerly the universe was peopled with thousands of imaginary beings, and supposed to be at the mercy of their caprice and vindictiveness. It was thought that any one of them, if strong enough to prevail over the rest, might destroy the order of nature at a moment's notice ; and religion therefore consisted in appeasing these divinities, so powerful for evil, with barley, wine, or blood. In the dark- ness of an eclipse, in the rolling peal of the thunder, in the eruption of a volcano, in the devastation of a plague, and even in an unusual state of the weather, men imagined the capricious interference of super* natural powers. But observation and reflection have shown the folly of all such notions. The more that nature has been investigated, the more has her uniformity been brought to light. Eesemblances have been discovered where they were least ex- H ] 1 4 PERSONALITY. pected ; as, for example, in the fact that an almost infinite number of animal species have been formed by mere variation from a few primary types. And not only has nature been seen to be uniform in our own world, but the most remote spheres and ages, regarding which we are able to gain any informa- tion, have been found to be subject to the same laws as those which obtain here and now. We know be- yond a doubt that gravity, which causes an apple to fall to the earth, is also concerned in the revolu- tions of the most distant star ; that " the law which moulds a planet rounds a tear "; and that the light of to-day has exactly the same properties as the light of the prehistoric world. So certain are we of the universality of law, that we know apparent excep- tions are not, and cannot be, real exceptions. In fact, a seeming violation of law has not unfrequently led to fresh confirmation of its absolute inviolability. The irregularities of Uranus, e.g., suggested the exact spot where some unknown planet must exist, and where, accordingly, what is now called Neptune was soon afterwards discovered. Even in cases where, owing to the complexity of the problems, our knowledge is less exact, even where we have not been able to ascertain the precise manner in which certain results are produced, we yet feel absolutely sure that these results are brought about THE INFINITE EGO. 115 by unchanging and unchangeable laws. Epidemics of cholera and plague, which our ancestors attri- buted to the anger of Heaven, we believe to be due to a violation of the laws of health we no longer connect them with a sudden interference of Provi- dence, but we set about tracing them to the impur- ity of our springs, or to some other equally simple and natural cause. And similarly, in regard to the weather, though it is the very type of fickleness, and though our knowledge of the laws which govern it is exceedingly imperfect, yet there is not an edu- cated man in the world to-day who does not feel certain that rain and drought, heat and cold, good seasons and bad, depend upon laws as stringent and immutable as those which determine the planetary motions. In a word, to us in this nineteenth cen- tury the universe is essentially and pre-eminently a universe of order and law. But all this does not disprove the existence of a metaphysical Will. The only reign of law incom- patible with volition would be the reign of the law of chaos. Law, it may be observed, is a very mis- leading word. It is generally printed with a capital " L," which, like a grenadier's bearskin cap, (as Pro- fessor Huxley remarks in regard to the first letter of the Absolute), makes it look more formidable than it would do by nature. Law only means in- 116 PEKSONALITY. variable sequence. A law of nature is merely the fact that certain causes produce certain effects, that certain antecedents are followed by certain consequents, that under the same circumstances the same events will always happen. It is some- times said the universe is governed by laws. The universe is not governed by laws. It is governed according to laws ; but no one can suppose that the laws make themselves: no one can imagine, for example, that water determines of its own accord always to freeze at one temperature and boil at another, that snowflakes make up their minds to assume certain definite and regular shapes, or that fire burns of malice aforethought. The sequences of Nature will no't explain them- selves. The question still remains, Why are they what they are ? " Nowadays," says Comte, " the heavens declare no other glory than that of Hip- parchus, Kepler, Newton and the rest, who have found out the laws of their sequence." Yes, if the discovery of regular sequences be also the discovery that there can be no cause for their regularity. But to treat this as an axiom is the very acme of illogical flippancy. True, there is no sign of anything approaching to fickleness in Nature. True, the many gods of fetishism have been annihilated by scientific investigation. But THE INFINITE EGO. 117 the very same harmony which proves that there are not many wills, goes far to show at the same time that there is one. The cosmic results of the combined operation of natural forces testify to some unity of design and purpose. Nothing can be more absurd than Comte's theory, that an irregular and disorderly system of nature would require a super- natural explanation, but that a regular and orderly system requires none. To say this is to maintain that God could only be manifested by the attri- butes of fickleness and impotence. If He were always interfering with things, like an operative in a mill who has constantly to stop his machinery to join a broken thread, if Nature were so paltry a system that her defects required constant interposi- tion, then God would be recognised. But His existence is denied, forsooth, because it is not revealed by failures and mistakes. The regu- larity of Nature is no disproof of supernatural volition, but only of supernatural caprice. When the theory of Evolution was less firmly established than it is at present, it used to be urged in favour of it, that it was a good working hypothesis. The same may be said of the theory of design. It has often led to important scientific discoveries. Eobert Boyle tells us: "I remember that when I asked our famous Harvey what were 118 PERSONALITY. the things that induced him to think of the cir- culation of the blood, he answered me, that when he took notice of the valves in the veins of many parts of the body, so placed that they gave free passage to the blood toward the heart, but opposed the passage of the venous blood the contrary way, he was invited to think that so provident a cause as nature had not placed so many valves without a design; and no design seemed more probable than that, since the blood could not well, because of the interposing valves, be sent by the veins to the limbs, it should be sent through the arteries, and returned through the veins whose valves did not oppose its course that way." It is very remarkable, too, that purpose is always implicitly admitted even when explicitly denied. Haeckel, e.g., in the very book in which he says that "the much-talked-of purpose in Nature has no existence," defines an organic body as " one in which the various parts work together for the pur- pose of producing the phenomena of life." 1 Hartmann according to whom the universe is the outcome of unconsciousness speaks of "the wisdom of the Unconscious ; " of " the mechanical contrivances which It employs;" of "Its direct 1 For another remarkable illustration of Haeckel's admission ot purpose, see my 'Agnosticism,' pp. 141, 142. THE INFINITE EGO. 119 activity in bringing about complete adaptation to the peculiar nature of the case " ; of " Its incursions into the human brain, which determine and guide the course of history in all departments of civilisa- tion, in the direction of the goal intended by the Unconscious." And similar illustrations might be multiplied indefinitely. Let us grant that the doctrine of evolution, in its most comprehensive form, has been proved true, let us imagine it to be a demonstrated certainty that vegetable, animal, and even human life have been evolved from Oken's "primitive slime," and that there is a development of higher from lower types of existence, through an inherent tendency in the less desirable to pass away, let us grant all this, and the argument from design will remain as strong as ever. Evolution is incompatible, no doubt, with the doctrine of " creation by paroxysm," with the idea that species were made by distinct creative fiats. It is also incompatible with Paley's view that every definite organ, or portion of organ, is spe- cially adapted for a special end. But the latter notion, apart altogether from theory, has long been exploded by fact. For we find in most animals traces of abortive organs, which are manifestly not adapted to any end at all : as, e.g., the rudiments of fingers in a horse's hoof; the teeth in a whale's OF THR UNIVERSITY 120 PEKSONALITY. mouth; or the eyes in an unborn mole, which, though perfect in themselves to begin with, dry up before they can be used. Though we no longer profess however to trace design in every minute fraction of every organism, this need not hinder us from seeing it in organisms regarded in their entirety, and in Nature considered as a whole. Professor Huxley imagines, however, that he has ousted us from the second position. He maintains it to be conceivable that a watch might be made altogether without contrivance. In Paley's famous illustration, the adaptation of all parts of the watch to the function or purpose of showing the time, is held to be evidence that they were specially con- structed for that end. " Suppose however," says the Professor, " that any one had been able to show that the watch had not been made directly by any person, but that it was the result of the modifica- tion of another watch, which kept time but poorly ; and that this, again, had proceeded from a structure which could hardly be called a watch at all, seeing it had no figures on the dial, and the hands were rudimentary; and that, going back and back in time, we came at last to a revolving barrel as the earliest traceable rudiment of the whole fabric. And imagine that all these changes had resulted, first, from a tendency in the structure to vary THE INFINITE EGO. 121 indefinitely; and secondly, from something in the surrounding world which helped all variations in the direction of an accurate time-keeper, and checked all those in other directions, and then it is obvious that the force of Paley's argument would be gone. For it would be demonstrated that an apparatus, thoroughly well adapted to a particular purpose, might be the result of a method of trial and error worked out by unintelligent agents, as well as of the direct application of the means appropriate to that end." Very good. But whence come that " tendency " and that " something in the surrounding world " ? When we consider their results, it is contrary to experience to suppose that their combined working is the effect of chance. The "agents" may be " unintelligent " ; but the method of their working implies that they are directed and controlled by intelligence. The further back you trace their operation, the greater becomes the necessity for connecting them with an intelligent mind ; since the longer you suppose them to have been at work, the less likely does it become that their rational results can be the effects of irrationality. If two things by their interaction, extending over long periods of time, produce progressive results, the only legitimate hypothesis is that they were in- 122 PERSONALITY. tended and adapted for that purpose. When we consider their results, we are forbidden, hoth by experience and by reason, to suppose that their combined working is the effect of chance. So that, after all, the watch made according to the ingenious theory of the Professor, has not been made without design. He has got rid of one kind of contrivance only by substituting another. Professor Huxley's reasoning has been very neatly parodied thus. "Two ignorant men might have a controversy as to the origin of a bronze statue. Says the one, ' He must have been a great sculptor who made that statue ; ' to which the other replies, ' You are quite wrong, my friend ; 110 sculptor ever touched the statue. I saw it made myself, a form- less molten mass flow out of the furnace, disappear in the sand, and then in a while come out as you see it, a bronze statue. There was, first, " a tend- ency " in the molten metal to " vary indefinitely " ; and there was, secondly, something in the sur- rounding sand that helped all variations in the direction of a beautiful statue, and checked all those in other directions. The result is a statue made not by contrivance but by natural selection.' " The answer to this objection would not be far to seek. The molten metal and the sand, the tend- ency in the structure to vary, and the something THE INFINITE EGO. 123 outside the structure helping one kind of variation and checking other kinds, were intended and adapted to work together as they do. The purpose then which from the days of Anaxa- goras has been more or less observed in nature, is not proved to be no purpose, because it is accom- plished by means that do not constantly require readjustment. Evolution has not disproved design. It has only suggested that the Designer acts in a different way from that which we had formerly supposed. The fact that natural forces work to- gether regularly and methodically, does not prove that they have no master, it suggests rather his absolute control. Natural selection, it is often affirmed, implies the truth of the old doctrine of Lucretius : " Nil ideo quoniam natumst in corpore ut uti Possemus, sed quod natumst id procreat usum." But is there any reason why things may not be made for their circumstances, though they are partly made ly them ? " Insects," says Dr Abbott, " have not only fertilised flowers, but, attracted by the brightness, have fertilised the most beautiful. Each speck and spot in each petal of these flowers bears witness to the labours of these creatures, whom for ages we have treated as emblems of beautiful idle- 124 PERSONALITY. ness. Thus has God clothed the grass of the field year by year with increasing glory ; and surely He is none the less the Author of this glory, because He has wrought it by the joyful labours of His obedient creatures." Till it has been proved that the work- ing together of internal and external relations, so as to accomplish a progressive result, is not due to design, we are compelled to suppose that it is. Change may be due to chance, but it is contrary both to experience and to reason to maintain that there can be systematic and progressive evolution apart from intelligence and volition. Natural selection, since it produces an intelligent result, is after all but a form of contrivance. Bain's objection to the argument from design is as follows. " Instead of mind being the cause of gravity, gravity and other physical forces are the sine qud non of mind. Our only experience of mental manifesta- tions is in connection with a gravitating framework of exceedingly complicated mechanism. Mind, as known by us, is the very last thing we should set up as an independent power swaying and sustaining the forces of nature. The notion that mind must be the cause of natural changes could not have arisen from a large experience. The agency of men and animals endowed with mind is a fact to be ad- mitted ; but there are other natural agencies, such THE INFINITE EGO. 125 as gravity, each good in its sphere, without any accompaniment of mental facts." Now it is quite true, as I have already acknowledged, that our voli- tions cannot cause gravity or other physical forces ; and hence we are unable dogmatically to assert that these forces have originated from will. But it is equally true that by our volitions we are able to adjust them, and to make them work together so as to accomplish rational and desirable results; and we have no experience whatever of their com- bining to produce such results except as a conse- quence of intelligent volition. The very fact that my body is a " mechanism " drives me irresistibly to the conclusion that it is the work, directly or indirectly, of a mechanician, as much superior to a human mechanician as that body is superior to any- thing which a man can make. The argument from design is a strictly logical argument. I believe that my neighbour is a personal, free, intelligent being like myself, not because he has a body, but because of the con- sistency and purpose manifest in his words and deeds. So I believe that there is an intelligent will behind the forces of nature, because I see them exhibiting marks of adaptation, and working together for definite ends, in a similar way to that in which they work when adjusted by myself 126 PEKSONALITY. or my fellows. As Mill puts it in his ' Posthumous Essays ' : " The design argument is not drawn from mere resemblances in nature to the works of human intelligence, but from the special character of those resemblances. The circumstances in which it is alleged that the world resembles the works of man are not circumstances taken at random, but are particular instances of a circumstance which experience shows to have a real connection with an intelligent origin, the fact of conspiring to an end. The argument, therefore, is not one of mere analogy. As mere analogy it has its weight, but it is more than analogy, it is an inductive argument." It is true Mill goes on to say, that creative forethought is not absolutely the only link by which the origin of the wonderful mechanism of the eye may be connected with the fact of sight that there is another connecting link, the principle, viz., of the survival of the fittest. " This principle," Mill says, "though not inconsistent with creation, would, if proved, greatly attenuate the evidence for it." I do not see that the evidence is attenuated in the very least. The doctrine of the survival of the fittest does not account for the fact that there are fittest to survive. It does not, in other words, explain the existence of organisms, nor the existence of any measure of adaptation between organism and en- THE INFINITE EGO. 127 vironment. It merely expresses the method accord- ing to which it is supposed that this adaptation has been increased. On the other hand, the atheistical argument is most illogical. In human affairs and in human works, except within very narrow limits, we never find order or progress, harmony or adaptation, due to anything but design. To assert therefore that these attributes of nature are the result of chance, is to maintain a hypothesis which is not only un- warranted, but which is absolutely contradicted, by experience. Nor does an attempt to substitute for God an eternal evolution of matter conform to the test which materialists maintain to be the criterion of truth. The ultimate and primordial atoms, if they could be perceived, might no doubt be con- sidered as "reducible to sensations"; but since they can neither be seen nor touched, they come as far short of the proof demanded as Aristotle's w/owny vX-rj or Hegel's " pure being." The attempt to explain the regularity in nature on mathematical principles of probability seems to me as absurd as it is ingenious. This regularity, says Laplace, " which some have considered a proof of Providence, is on reflection perceived to be only the development of the respective probabilities of the simple events, which ought to occur more 128 PERSONALITY. frequently according as they are more probable." Bernoulli speaks in a similar manner. To this Mr Venn justly objects, that it is one of the relics of realism, an illustration of the tendency to ob- jectify our conceptions, even when they have no right to exist. "A uniformity is observed some- times, as in games of chance ; it is found to be so connected with the constitution of the bodies as to be capable of being inferred beforehand, (though even here the connection is not so necessary as is supposed in cases that lie beyond the range of those vouched for by experience) ; then this constitution is converted into an objective probability, supposed to develop somehow into a sequence which exhibits uniformity ; and finally, this questionable objective probability is assumed to exist in all cases in which uniformity is observed." The conception, Mr Venn adds, "is utterly inappropriate where the type changes," as in progressive evolution. Quetelet assumes that the number of males and females being equal, the chance of any one entry in the register being male is one half, and of two males running a quarter, and so on ; hence he says, " Once in a certain number of times we shall find the births of ten males happening successively." He thinks it would be " tedious " to consult the regis- ters, so he resorts to the experiment " more expe- THE INFINITE EGO. 129 ditious, and quite as conclusive " of putting forty black and forty white balls into a bag, and noting the successive colours that are drawn out. But if there be any sense or value in such an application of the doctrines of probability, why did not Quetelet go a step further, and, putting in forty speckled balls, deduce therefrom the " objective probability " of hermaphrodites ? Accepting the argument -from design is not ac- cepting anthropomorphism. Xenophanes said that if the ox could think, it would attribute bovinity to God; and Spinoza made a similar observation about the triangle and the sphere. But there is no force in these remarks, as against my present position, unless bovinity, triangularity, and sphericity are suggested by nature in the same manner as purpose or intelli- gence. In attributing an intelligent will to God, we attribute to Him Personality; but we do not attribute to Him the whole of our humanity. We do not assert that His will works by the same means of brains and nerves and muscles : and since we have no idea of the mode in which these instruments are used by our own will, there seems nothing to prevent our supposing that another will can work with other instruments, or in altogether different modes. In accepting the argument from design, we do I 130 PERSONALITY. not assert that the divine method is one which a human intelligence would have adopted. There is a sharp contrast, says Lange, between the way in which Nature, and that in which man, pursues a purpose. " If a man, in order to shoot a hare, were to discharge thousands of guns on a great moor, in all possible directions; if, in order to get into a locked-up room, he were to buy ten thousand casual keys, and try them all ; if, in order to have a house, he were to build a town, and leave all other houses to wind and weather, assuredly no one would call such proceedings purposeful. But whoever will study the modern scientific laws of the conserva- tion and propagation of species, will find every- where an enormous waste of vital germs." A little reflection, however, will suffice to show that the illustrations which Lange uses are really beside the mark. For we have learnt by experience that there are other and better ways of shooting hares and. opening doors and building houses. But, for aught we know, the method which has been adopted in the development of worlds and life and mind may have been the only possible method. 1 Waste, if such it be, was possibly unavoidable. There were, perhaps, inherent difficulties in the problem of creation which could never be completely over- 1 See my ' Inspiration,' pp. 108, 145-149. THE INFINITE EGO. come. Plato's notion of the " intractableness of matter " and its ." unwillingness to receive the ideas/' is, of course, quite compatible with Design. The question, however, as to the existence of pur- pose in Nature should be carefully distinguished and separated, from questions as to the excellence or humanness of the method by which that purpose is effected. In accepting the argument from design, we only assert, what the Positivists themselves admit, that we find ourselves living in a cosmos. If we see order and progress in human arrangements, we infer a human will a finite ego : and since we see (the Positivists themselves being judges) order and progress in Nature, it is in reality by a strictly experiential argument that we infer a superhuman will an Infinite Ego. Herbert Spencer says it is not a question whether we should apply Person- ality, or something lower, to the Unknowable ; the alternative is " between Personality and something higher." But we have no higher word. 1 1 I have further discussed the arguments in favour of the divine existence in my 'Belief in God,' and also in ' Agnosticism.' 132 CONCLUSION. THE denial of Personality is the denial of know- ledge. Without a metaphysical ego there could be neither memory nor sensation. The attempt to disprove the existence of such an ego is only rendered apparently successful by that existence being throughout assumed. Its very negation is tantamount to its affirmation ; for without this principle of permanence the concepts employed in its denial could not possibly have been formed. In other words, the personality, which should be the beginning of metaphysics, is essential to the con ception and statement of every anti-metaphysical argument. Further, since consciousness has borne such strong testimony to the unity and continuity of the ego, which is the demonstrable sine gild non of every mental state, a presumption arises in favour of the evidence it offers in regard to human freedom. But, even admitting that the supposed sense of freedom is an illusion, our necessitation CONCLUSION. 133 is allowed by all to be compatible with a certain ability to control the forces of nature and to make them subservient to our own purposes. And since, apart from our interference, these forces have worked together to form a cosmos, an order of nature, a system of things in which it is desirable to live, we are arguing strictly along the lines of experience when we infer the control of a super- human intelligence. The Personality, which is the end of metaphysics, is frequently assumed in the very books which are supposed to have done away for ever with all traces of its existence; for in these books such words as " design," " adaptation," " purpose," " meaning," " mechanism," are constantly applied to the products and processes of nature. So that, like M. Jourdain who talked prose without knowing it till informed of the fact by his tutor, the Positivists turn out to have been all along un- wittingly metaphysicians. They say there is no ego ; yet they talk of " I," " he," " we," " our mind," "our intelligence," &c., &c., which expressions are merely synonyms for the ego. They say all man's actions are mechanically necessitated ; yet they talk about his " self-adjustment," and the " control " which he exercises over external phenomena. They say there is no evidence of a Mind in nature ; yet they are everlastingly applying to natural objects 134 PERSONALITY. words which mean nothing, unless they mean that these objects have been intelligently and purposely produced. If we were to extract from the writings of anti-metaphysical thinkers everything that had a metaphysical signification, what remained would be as meaningless as a Euclid from which all the symbols had been omitted. THE END. PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. WORKS BY REV, A, W, MOMERIE, LLD. PERSONALITY; THE BEGINNING AND END OP METAPHYSICS, AND A NECESSARY ASSUMPTION IN ALL POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY. Fifth Edition, revised. Crown 8vo, 3s. " This is a little book, but it contains more sound philosophy than many pretentious treatises In an admirably lucid way the author scatters to the winds the baseless assumptions of the sense philosophy." British Quarterly Review. " It is not often that we have to complain of the brevity of a sermon or of a treatise on philosophy ; but in the case of a little book of the latter kind, recently published anonymously, we have found the arguments so cogent, the style so clear, and the matter at issue so important, that we heartily wish that the writer had allowed fcimself room for the fuller treatment of his sub- ject We confidently refer our readers to this well-reasoned volume." Modern Review. "Professor Momerie's remarks on the doctrines of the defenders of em- piricism present a close, and thoroughly scientific, examination of the views these thinkers put forth as to the nature of sensation, perception, and cog- nition The arguments are throughout conducted with marked logical power, and the conclusions are very important in relation to the present aspect of philosophical thought in England." Scotsman. "The work under our notice will well repay the careful reading of those who wish to have at their command plain answers to modern positivism." Ecclesiastical Gazette. " His discussion of these questions stamps Dr Momerie as an acute meta- physician, a philosophical scholar, and a powerful dialectician." Glasgow Herald. "When published anonymously received a very hearty welcome by all who were interested in the advent of a new writer of great power, of happy diction, and of independent thinking." Montrose Standard. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. II. THE ORIGIN OF EVIL; AND OTHER SERMONS. Eighth Edition. Crown 8vo, 5s. "Professor Homeric has done well to publish his sermons; they are good reading A real contribution to the side of common-sense religion." Saturday Review. "We decidedly recommend them to persons perplexed by the speculations of modern science." Spectator. " This is a remarkable volume of sermons. Though it consists of only about 300 pages, it contains an amount of thought and learning which might have been expanded into a bulky folio." Glasgow Mail. "These sermons are some of the very best produced in this country within the last hundred years." Inquirer. "The author is an original thinker, whose sympathies are very wide." Guardian. " Those who preach may learn much from their perusal." Christian World. " Out of the common run, they give one a refreshing sense of novelty and power." Glasgow Herald. " Die Vortrage zeigen allenthalbeneine schone Harmonic zwischen Schrift- wahrheit und Lebenswahrheit." -Deutsches Litteraturblatt. " Der Verfasser behandelt in diesen Vortriigen wichtige Fragen aus dem Gebiet des christlichen Lebens. Wir haben besonders die iiber das Leiden hervor, in denen der Verfasser tiefe beherzigenswerthe Gedanken ausspricht. Wir nehmen keinen Anstand, diese Vortrage zuin Besten zu rechnen, was iiber diesen Gegenstand gesagt worden." Christliches Biicherschatz. 11 The author of the ' Origin of Evil" will go sadly astray if he does not make his mark on the age." London Figaro. "We should almost like to have heard these sermons preached. We are willing to read them carefully, and recommend them to others for like read- ing, even though, in almost every instance, we dissent from the author's pleading." National Reformer. "These sermons are everything that sermons ought not to be." English Independent. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. III. DEFECTS OF MODERN CHRISTIANITY; AND OTHER SERMONS. Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo, 5s. " Throughout Mr Momerie's attractive little volume the morning air of the new world breathes through the dry leaves of the old theology." West- minster Review. "There is an intellectuality, spirituality, and a simplicity in Mr Momerie's sermons, that should make them models for young preachers." Christian Union. "Professor Momerie, by his former books, has already laid the foundation of a reputation as a philosophical thinker and an able expositor of religious subjects. The present volume is marked by equal ability, intellectual force, independent and original thinking, and will confirm the favourable opinion which he has already produced Whatever views readers may detect as different from their own, they will not fail to admire the author's powerful enforcement of the practical side of Christianity There follows, as the second part of the volume, nine lectures on the Book of Job ; and we have not read before, within the same compass, a more masterly and interesting exposition of that great poem There are also three admirable sermons on 'The Connection between Reason and Faith,' which will repay repeated reading The volume deserves to be widely read ; and whether readers agree or not in all respects with the author, they will not rise from the perusal without feeling that Christianity is something grander than they have ordinarily realised it to be, and that the Christian life is the bravest and most beautiful life possible." Aberdeen Journal. " Very fresh and striking." Globe. " Although he is a polished and accomplished scholar, he simply defies the conventionalities of churches and schools." Literary World. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBUIIGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. IV. THE BASIS OF RELIGION; BEING AN EXAMINATION OF 'NATURAL RELIGION.' Third Edition. Crown 8vo, 2s. 6d. " As a controversialist, Professor Momerie is no less candid than he is remorselessly severe." Scotsman. " As a revelation of the pretentiousness of that philosophy [Positivism], Dr Momerie's powerful essay is very valuable." FifesUre Journal. " The result of profound study and earnest thought This attempt to sketch out a basis for rational theology is fitted to the needs of the times. Professor Momerie has won for himself a name as one of the most powerful and original thinkers of the day." Globe. " Professor Momerie has wide views of men and things, resembling in this quality the author of ' Ecce Homo ' himself, and he has attacked from the Cambridge University pulpit the book 'Natural Religion,' accusing it of considerable vagueness of conception and of considerable misconception of critical points of its own argument. The present book presents the sub- stance of these sermons in the form of a brief essay We would recom- mend our readers to see for themselves how those confusions of thought, by which the school of writers of whom the author of ' Natural Religion ' is an eminent representative seek to save religion when supernaturalism has disappeared, are exposed. We are certain they will be charmed with the accurate philosophical thinking of Professor Momerie, with his unpretentious display of keen logical reasoning, conveyed in lucid and forcible language, which arrays and adorns it like a well-fitting garment." Eskdale Advertiser. " Greater force is given to this essay, since the author is himself an ad- vanced thinker." Christian Union. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. V. AGNOSTICISM, Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo, 5s. " To readers who do not demand that ' the scheme of salvation in its ful- ness ' should be enunciated in every sermon, this volume, which is happily free from rhetoric, and for the most part from any ostentation of the reading which it indicates, will be interesting from its acuteness, learning, and in- sight." Saturday Review. "This is a really good book. It is profound in thought, large and com- prehensive in view, liberal in spirit, and delightfully clear and simple in style. We wish that theologians and philosophers in general woiild write in Professor Momerie's manner Following the chapters on Agnosticism, there are ten other chapters on the book of Ecclesiastes. They form an ad- mirable and scholarly analysis of that strange and melancholy book." The Inquirer. " We are thankful for so masterly, so comprehensive, and so complete a vindication of the principles of Christian Theism, with its powerful refuta- tion of the main positions of Agnosticism. The book meets a real and wide- spread need, in a style as trenchant and effective as it is popular." Freeman. " Dr Momerie's breadth of intellect and sympathy, his clear thinking and well-chastened style, as well as his deep religiousness, which will, no doubt, after a time assume a more positively evangelical form, eminently adapt him to be a teacher to his generation. He has freed himself, by we know not what process, from many of the prejudices of the older schools ; but he can search into the very soul of unbelieving sophistry, and the spirit of his exhortation is always ennobling and heavenward." Methodist Times. " It is long since we have met with a volume of sermons which w ill so well repay a careful study." Ecclesiastical Gazette. " The work of a majestic intellect." Fifeshire Journal. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. VI. PREACHING AND HEARING; AND OTHER SERMONS. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo, 5s. " The author, himself one of the most eloquent preachers of the day, is eminently qualified to do justice to his subject. He has brought to it an experience and scholarly proficiency which few men could have done." Christian Union. " For such preaching as this, and for all the ample learning and wise thought by which it is fortified, the Church of God has every reason to be thankful." Literary World, " Marked by all the force, acuteness, and eloquence which we have learnt to expect from him, and in addition by a knowledge of men and manners not generally associated with philosophical research His literary style is another proof, if proof were needed, of the vast resources of the simple Anglo-Saxon. " Fifeshire Journal. " His sermons are unlike any sermons we can call to mind." Guardian. " If such sermons were often to be heard from the pulpit, preachers would not have to complain of empty pews or inattentive listeners." .Rock. " Their delivery was quite startling." Swansea Journal. " Those who would know what pulpit boldness in the present day really means should make these sermons their study." Christian World. "The present volume is more directly popular in style, and amply main- tains the reputation of the writer." Inquirer. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. VII. BELIEF IN GOD, Third Edition. Crown 8vo, 3s. "One of the most brilliant arguments for the Divine existence." Chris- tian World. "In some respects Professor Momerie is the ablest preacher of his clay. He is ever endeavouring to present recondite problems in the simplest, clearest language, and in this he is eminently successful It is not too abstruse even for mere smatterers in philosophical discussion. Considering its scope, it is indeed astonishingly lucid." Dundee Advertiser. " No preacher need be ashamed to face the most scientific sceptic with this little book in his hand." Literary World. " From the time that Professor Momerie published anonymously the vol- ume on ' The Origin of Evil,' his writings have been devoured with excep- tional keenness by intelligent readers. Many were the conjectures as to who the author of that work was, but it was universally allowed that the anony- mous writer was destined to leave his mark upon the mind of the country : he was a daring and fresh thinker, and was possessed of rare unravelling power. This little volume bears the impress of his majestic intellect It is a model of lucid style, clear and consecutive reasoning, fairness to an honourable opponent, and humility in victory." Perthshire Advertiser. " 'Belief in God ' was originally written for the 'Helps to Belief Series, but the editor, thinking it too abstruse, recommended considerable altera- tions. We are devoutly thankful the gifted Professor refused to mutilate his work, and withdrew it from the series." Nonconformist. " His criticism of Herbert Spencer's theory of the Unknowable is very acute." Glasgow Herald. "It is spread out into only eighty pages, but those eighty pages contain more material for thought than many another volume or series of volumes contain in eight hundred." Inquirer. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. VIII. INSPIRATION; AND OTHER SERMONS. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 5s. "Canon Lidclon, preaching last Sunday afternoon in St Paul's Cathedral, declared that it would be difficult to maintain the authority of Christ as a teacher of religious truth if the Book of Daniel were written in the second, and not in the sixth century B.C. Statements of this kind are as deplorable as they are unwarranted A happier and a wiser method of dealing with the relations of science and criticism to the Scriptures has been adopted by Professor Momerie in his new volume." Christian World. "The gifted Professor has broken at many points with rigid orthodoxy. He is a Broad Churchman of the Broad Churchmen. But his very breadth and catholicity of view, the unswerving steadfastness of his search after truth, and his gift of powerful expression, make him an ally whom even the narrowest sticklers for the faith without change cannot be blind enough to throw over." FifesMre Journal. " The sermons on 'Pessimism ' constitute a treatise in themselves." Irish Ecclesiastical Gazette. "The abilities of Dr Momerie, and his services with respect to those questions in which the spheres of religion and philosophy touch, are well known ; and there is much in the present volume that will repay attentive perusal. The treatment of pessimism leaves nothing to be desired." Saturday Preview. "Professor Momerie's latest volume fully bears out his reputation for originality, vigour, and lucidity." John Bull. " A unique contribution to the literature of the day." Lady's Pictorial. " Here is a bold note, boldly struck; it is only one of many in the book that deserve the attention of opponents as well as friends, and that only a brave man dared touch." Scottish Leader. " In the course of this remarkable book he passes in review many of the doctrinal questions which are now agitating the Church, and gives a rational explanation of some of the difficulties that perplex both young and old students of theology." Dundee Advertiser. " Professor Momerie has approached his work with a mental penetration and spiritual devotion worthy of so distinguished a Biblical scholar. The initial chapter, which discusses 'The Evolution of the Bible,' is a masterly exposition. There is a freshness and potency in the author's thought and reasoning that both charm and convince." Christian Union. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. IX. CPIURCH AND CREED, Third Edition. Crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. " I cannot say that I am in the habit of reading many sermons. But I did read 'Church and Creed," and I can recommend them to all those desirous of allying religion with common-sense." Truth. "Short, pithy, brilliant." World. "A remarkable book, and a sign of the times which will be noted with different feelings by various classes of thinkers." Life. "Original, fearless, reverent criticism." Yorkshire Post. "Simple yet masterly." Lincolnshire Free Press. "The discourses, one and all, in the volume before us are indeed works of art." Glasgow Herald. " His lessons on self-sacrifice are well worth careful attention." Ecclesias- tical Gazette. " Dr Momerie is a law unto himself, and is a great illustration of the free- dom of thought allowed in the English pulpit. Take for example the sermon in the present volume, entitled 'The Gods of the Bible,' and see what a new face it puts upon our cherished notions of a uniform deistic belief. The whole of the present volume overflows with similar dry, fearless, decisive, almost caustic enunciations that cut athwart hereditary faiths, and it re- quires a strong mind to follow the preacher as he advances from one startling proposition to another." Irish Ecclesiastical Gazette. " It is this cheerful and healthful view of life, combined with a hatred of all bigotry and narrowness, that makes Professor Momerie's sermons the in- spiration that crowded congregations find them. The man who can persuade people in these pessimistic days that God meant them to laugh and enjoy the life He has given them, and yet be in the truest sense of the word re- ligious, is doing a service to the age which it greatly needs." Literary World. " It is to be earnestly hoped that the great Head of the Church will raise up an Athanasius in our midst to combat and refute the errors with which it abounds." Newbery House Magazine. WILLIAM BLACK WOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. THE FUTURE OF RELIGION; AND OTHER ESSAYS. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d. "The volume is well worthy of the deepest study." Perthshire Advertiser. "The reader will find in the longer essays the dashing thought and vigor- ous language characteristic of the author. Many idols of the religion of the past he casts down and breaks to atoms without mercy. Many a noble ideal of the religion of the future he sketches with eager enthusiasm." Manchester Guardian. "Lucidity and the gift of condensation, or the power to put into a crisp sentence what many clever men require a few pages to express, are two of Dr Momerie's special gifts It is not necessary to go over the essays con- tained in this volume in detail. No one who takes it up will put it down unfinished." Lady's Pictorial. " In conclusion, it may be said that even those who dissent most from either the substance or the manner of the essayist's arguments may gain much from a careful study of this little book, and that they owe genuine and deep respect to his eminent ability, wide knowledge, philosophic culture, insight, honesty, and enthusiasm for righteousness." The Library Review. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH AND LONDON. And all Booksellers. Catalogue of Messrs Blackwood & Sons' Publications PHILOSOPHICAL CLASSICS FOR ENGLISH READERS, EDITED BY WILLIAM KNIGHT, LL.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of St Andrews. 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