登陆注册
26237800000039

第39章 Chapter II(10)

The complex figure may be also regarded as a combination of ******r figures.It remains precisely the same,though we perceive that besides being one figure it is also a combination of figures.This runs through all mathematical truths,and,Ithink,indicates Mill's precise difficulty.He says quite truly that to know the existence of a fact you must always have something given by observation or experience.The most complex mathematical formulae may still be regarded as equating different statements of the same experience.The difference is only that the experience is evolved into more complex forms,not by any change in the data supplied,but by an intellectual operation which consists essentially in organising the data in various ways.The reasoner does not for an instant desert fact;he only perceives that it may be contemplated in different ways,and that very different statements assert the very same fact or facts.Our experience may be increased,either by the entrance of new objects into our field of observation,or by the different methods of contemplation.The mathematician deals with propositions which remain equally true if we suppose no change whatever to take place in the world,or,as Mill puts it,'if all the objects of the universe were unchangeably fixed.'(53)His theories,in short,construct a map on which he can afterwards lay down the changes which involve time.The filling up of the map depends entirely upon observation and experience;but to make the map itself a mere bundle of accidental coexistences is to destroy the conditions of experience.The map is our own faculty of perception.

'There is something which seems to require explanation,'says Mill,(54)'in the fact that an immense multitude of mathematical truths.can be elicited from so small a number of elementary laws.'It is puzzling when you identify Newton with Diamond on the ground that they both see the same 'fact.'But it is no more puzzling than anything else,as indeed Mill proceeds to show,when we observe the method by which in arithmetic,for example,an indefinite number of relations is implied by the ****** process of counting.The fact is the same for all observers,in so far as they have the same data;but to perceive the data already implies the germ of thought from which all the demonstrative sciences are evolved.The knowledge can be transformed and complicated to an indefinite degree by simply identifying different ways of combining the data.Mill,in his anxiety to adhere to facts and experience,fails to recognise adequately the process by which ****** observation is evolved into countless modifications.The difficulty appears in its extreme form in the curious suggestion that even the principle of contradiction is a product of experience.Mill is so resolved to leave nothing for the mind to do,that he supposes a primitive mind which is not even able to distinguish 'is not'from 'is.'It is hard to understand how such a 'mind,'if it were a 'mind,'could ever acquire any 'experience'at all.So when Mill says that the burthen of proof rests with the intuitionist,he is,no doubt,quite right in throwing the burthen of proof upon thinkers who suppose particular doctrines to have been somehow inserted into the fabric of knowledge without any relation to other truths;but it is surely not a gratuitous assumption that the mind which combines experience must have some kind of properties as well as the things combined.If it knows no 'truths'except from experience,it is at least possible that it may in some way react upon the given experience.This,at any rate,should be Mill's view,who takes 'mind'and 'body'to be unknowable,and all knowledge of fact to be a combination of 'sensations.'He only requires to admit that knowledge may be increased either by varying the data or by varying the mind's action upon fixed data.

In neither case do we get beyond 'experience.'In many places,Mill seems to interpret his view in consistency with this doctrine.His invariable candour leads him to make admissions,some of which I have noticed.Yet his prepossessions lead him to the superfluous paradoxes which,for the rest,he maintains with remarkable vigour and ingenuity.

One other device of the enemy raised the troublesome question of inconceivability as a test of truth,which brought Mill into conflict not only with Whewell and Hamilton,but with Mr Herbert Spencer.I will only notice the curious illustration which it affords of Mill's tendency to confound statements of fact with the purely logical assertion that two modes of stating a fact are precisely equivalent.The existence of Antipodeans,in his favourite illustration,(55)was declared to be 'inconceivable.'

Disbelief in their existence involved the statement of fact:gravity acts here and at the Antipodes in the same direction.

That statement could of course be disproved by evidence;and there is no reason to suppose that the truth,once suggested,would be less 'conceivable'to Augustine or,say,to Archimedes,than to Newton.It also involved the assertion:men (if the direction of gravity were constant)would drop off the earth at the Antipodes as they here drop off the ceiling.The denial of that statement is still 'inconceivable,'though the statement ceases to be applicable.Mill,however,infers that,as an 'inconceivability'has been surmounted,'inconceivability'in general is no test of truth.'There is,'he says,(56)'no proposition of which it can be asserted that every human mind must eternally and irrevocably believe it,'and he tries,as Ihave said,to apply this even to the principle of contradiction.

同类推荐
  • 医学举要

    医学举要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • ARTICLES ON CHINA

    ARTICLES ON CHINA

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上清九真中经内诀

    上清九真中经内诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说无常经

    佛说无常经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重送白将军

    重送白将军

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 旅游记

    旅游记

    一部生趣盎然、充满哲思的小说。以旅游者的视角将自然山水、人文胜迹、民风民俗与人的本性、命运相结合,以此反映社会的变迁,人心的浮沉。《旅游记》可谓旅游生活的产物。在这个漫长的旅程中,与旅伴们一起,或骑毛驴骡马,或乘轮船飞机,时而若一个行者,随遇而安;时而又像一条航船,经受着大风大浪。作者于旅途中目睹耳闻了沿途景致和异闻趣事,领略了个中哲理,依着旅程的顺序,每到一处,是怎么看的,何样想的,就怎样写,便写成了这几十万言。《旅游记》主人翁胡艳丽美丽善良、年轻单纯,在旅途中,在旅伴的诱逼下与之发生关系怀孕,不得不与其结婚,而婚后丈夫却背叛了她。胡艳丽断然与背信弃义的丈夫离了婚,却陷入了生存困境。
  • 九天女帝

    九天女帝

    大泽罪将之女闵旭在毁容后假扮侄儿闵炀建立军功,后被姐姐陷害怀孕,与心上人顾源分离。在辅助人质皇子陆承恩登基后,她渐渐察觉自己一路被大泽谋士顾长安和大茂间谍安达翀利用,卷入博大陆诸多纷战尔虞我诈之境,成为亡国太后,最终黑化逆袭成为统一博大陆的女帝。
  • 火影之弑神

    火影之弑神

    前世遭到兄弟背叛的他,带着老门主的希望重新于火影的世界中,他用写轮眼和御剑诀更会创造什么奇迹,静请观看弑神,
  • 全方位世界之祸害

    全方位世界之祸害

    此书所述的是一个少年莫名来到异界,带着一个系统为祸世界的故事···斩丶赤红之瞳,魔法少女小圆脸,天使与龙的轮舞,····帝王表示很忧伤,天使表示很无奈,神大人表示你太过分了···。一个带着系统的少年为祸世界,终于,世界不能忍了··少年表示:“听说你表示不能忍了?”然后世界“和平”了。为祸了无数世界,“造福”了无数百姓之后····少年依旧没有放过那些可爱的世界~~又开始为祸世界造福苍生。
  • 少年神医

    少年神医

    原本花心的他,为了她,放弃了自己的地位,放弃了自己拥有的一切,堕入了轮回,只是耳边还一直回旋着离别前的话“如果有一天,我离开了,你还会找我吗?”
  • 如梦初醒两生醉

    如梦初醒两生醉

    她不甘心。她不甘心自己所有的爱恨情仇包括自己都只是他的一个劫。转世为人,终于得偿所愿,可原来也不过一场虚妄。改乾坤,定风波,但终究命数天定。到最后她才终于意识到,自己为了那些个镜花水月,错过了怎样的一片繁花似锦。可,晚了吧?
  • 异士天下I

    异士天下I

    异士天下,还你一个真实的世界,接地气,又任性的世界。。。修真?异世界?魔法?太虚幻缥缈了。。。不接地气。。而且太老套了,没新意。。一看就能猜到结局。。。乏味啊!异士天下,你猜得透剧情,我就不拍电影了。。当然拍电影是后话了。。。。不过,智商太低就不要看了。会烧坏脑子的。。毕竟我的脑子被烧坏很多次了。。。友情提醒,根据真实故事改编,如有雷同,那就是真的。。。是真的。。。。真的。。。。。的。。。看你智商是否爆表了。。。
  • 死亡教师

    死亡教师

    战斗?呵呵,可以,老子一掌拍飞你。群殴?开玩笑,老子底下一群徒弟小弟在那里。神灵?呵呵,不好意思,哥比你们还要高级。我是谁?怎么会这么牛逼?呵呵,我是老师而已。
  • 人海茫茫为何我们要错过

    人海茫茫为何我们要错过

    人海茫茫,为何我们要错过,是有缘无份还是只是路人,爱你的那个他已经不复存在?只有失去才知道珍惜?谁能白头偕老,谁能笑到最后?得不到的永远在骚动,被偏爱的总有持无恐?十年相伴,你若不离,我定不弃
  • 地魔祭

    地魔祭

    魔界的故事层出不穷,地魔混乱时代,每个人心中都有一个或者一段故事,每个魔兽也有自己的精彩故事,和我走进我的地魔祭,一起去看看我的地魔时代,这是个全新的概念与世界,在这个世界里什么都可能发生,你会钟爱的!!!!