登陆注册
26237800000053

第53章 Chapter II(24)

We cannot observe a 'force'apart from the moving body.Force is one of Bentham's 'fictitious entities,'a word which enables us to state the relations of moving bodies accurately.It harmonises our conceptions.The old belief that all motions stop is not disproved by discovering cases in which force is absent,but by postulating the presence of force wherever we find change of motion.The real proof is not in direct experiment but in the harmonising of an indefinite number of complex statements when once the principle is systematically applied.It can reveal no fact to us,for nothing but experience can show that there are such things as the planets fortunately are,bodies moving freely,so as to illustrate the law continuously.Mill puts the first law of motion on a level with the law that the period of the earth's rotation is uniform.Both 'inductions,'he says,are accurately true.(103)In fact,however,the earth's motion is not absolutely uniform,a truth which we discover by applying the laws of motion,though no direct experiment could exhibit the fact.The law of motion has the authority derived from its rendering possible a consistent interpretation of experiences,whereas the earth's rotation is simply a particular fact which might change if the conditions were altered.The 'law'implies,therefore,a reconstruction of experience not given by ****** observation.

This applies to a controversy between Mill and Whewell as to Kepler's great discoveries.They both accept the familiar facts.

Kepler's problem was to show how a ****** configuration of the solar system would present the complex appearances which we directly observe.The old observations gave approximately correct statements of the movements of the planets,assuming the earth to be fixed,or,as we may say,neglecting the consideration of its motion.His theory shows how the apparent movements must result if we suppose the sun to be fixed,or rather (as the sun is not really fixed)if we measure from it as fixed.Whewell treats this as a case of 'induction.'It illustrates what he calls the 'colligation of facts'--a happy phrase,accepted by Mill,for the arrangement of facts in a new order,and the application to the facts of the appropriate conceptions;in this case,of the theorems of conic sections and solid geometry.The argument takes the form of a discussion as to whether this should be called induction or an operation subsidiary to induction.(104)Kepler,as Mill urges,was simply describing facts.He discovered a fact in which all the positions of the planet agreed --namely,that they were in an ellipse.If he had been somewhere in space,or the planet had left a visible track,he might have actually seen it to be an ellipse.He had only to 'piece together'his observations,as a man who sails round an island discovers its insularity.The only induction,then,was that as Mars had been in an ellipse he would stay in an ellipse.Apart from the verbal question whether the process be rightly called induction or subsidiary to induction,the real issue is in Mill's complaint that Whewell supposed a 'conception to be something added to the facts.'The conception,Mill admits,is in the mind,but it must be a conception of 'something in the facts.'The ellipse was in the facts before Kepler saw it.He did not put it,but found it there.Whether Kepler's process was inductive or deductive or subsidiary,it was an essential part of scientific investigation.

The man of science must,as Mill truly says,interpret the facts,and nothing but the facts;he must also,as Whewell truly replies,'colligate'or arrange the facts in a new order.The constructive process which justifies me in saying this is an island,or this is an ellipse,is precisely what makes scientific knowledge possible,and involves something more than a mere putting together of raw fact.Every fact,as Whewell sees,may be regarded as a case of countless laws,each of which may be true under appropriate conditions.To eliminate the irrelevant,to organise the whole system of truths,so as to make the order of nature (as Mill forcibly says (105))deducible from the smallest possible number of general propositions,is the aim of science;and Mill obscures this so far as he regards such operations as Kepler's as mere observations of fact,in such a sense as to omit the necessity of a new organisation of the data.

I have gone into some detail in order to show what was the essential characteristic of Mill's doctrine,which was itself,as I have said,an explicit statement of the principles implicitly assumed by his predecessors in the same school.To do him full justice,it would be necessary to show what was the alternative presented by his opponents.The Scottish writers and Whewell brought back 'innate ideas,'or endeavoured to connect knowledge by beliefs and intuitions arbitrarily inserted into the fabric as a kind of supernatural revelation.To explain these intuitive dogmas into effects of 'association'was the natural retort.

Meanwhile the transcendental school was taking the bolder line of rejecting experience altogether,treating it with contempt as a mere rope of sand,and inferring that the universe itself is incarnate logic --a complex web woven out of dialectic,and capable of being evolved from mixing 'is'and 'is not.'To Mill this appeared rightly,as I should say,to be mysticism and ontology,or a chimerical attempt to get rid of the inevitable conditions of all knowledge of reality.The real problem of metaphysics appears to be the discovery of the right method of statement,which will explain what appeared to be the insoluble antithesis between empiricism and intuitionism (to take Mill's phrase),and show that they are attempts to formulate correlative and essential truths.

IX.THE MORAL SCIENCES

同类推荐
  • 桐山老农集

    桐山老农集

    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。
  • 高士传

    高士传

    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。
  • 禅林宝训音义

    禅林宝训音义

    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。
  • 重黎

    重黎

    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。
  • 佛说四未曾有法经

    佛说四未曾有法经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 最终我们还,是散了

    最终我们还,是散了

    简介:岁月最美唯青春。在最美的时光,邂逅最美的你,愿至沧海桑田你依然伴我左右。
  • 星霜残月

    星霜残月

    一柄令天地变色的星霜剑,一把令日月无辉的残月刀,一名逆境中成长起来的少年,这三者结合,会发生怎样的故事?闲暇时,端一杯香茶,且听我细细道来。
  • 奇品神医

    奇品神医

    产科实习医生方逸绝对不想出风头!他可以安逸的欣赏美女,白衣护士,美丽医生,再加上顶头上司这一女神大人,生活很是惬意……但他更享受众美钦慕的小眼神儿,于是临危受命,用上古针法,使独门秘术,治病救人一路独领风骚……
  • 惊夜之晓

    惊夜之晓

    “那些逆天者们,都已经被天埋葬了。那些逆命者们,也被命运的轮盘碾碎了。死亡,就是逆乱者的归宿!”
  • 复仇:囚笼中的伪天使

    复仇:囚笼中的伪天使

    『未闻花名』『初瑶°』【已完结不入V,保证坑品,放心入坑!】【新文《复仇:王牌杀手倾世恋》火热连载中……】本是被捧在手心里的公主,一日之间竟沦为平民,原先所拥有的一切只不过是过眼云烟,亲人的宠爱,无忧无虑的生活,一夕之间竟被掠夺得无影无踪,凭什么这么对她?她不服!所有背叛她的人,所有掠夺她所拥有的人,以及杀她至亲的人,必定会付出血的代价!只是,漫漫复仇路,何时才到终结?又有谁会懂她的心?又有谁会在她落魄时继续站在她的身前?五年后,王者归来,挥手间便可覆了这天下,轻笑间又能掠了这浮华。
  • 异天记

    异天记

    羽刺风因上代恩怨,出生后被迫遗弃,预想保住这唯一血脉痛下绝命封口,为知父母努力修炼,诛神魔创异世天神
  • 醉眼看人

    醉眼看人

    主角有特殊身份吗?——没有!主角有异能吗?——没有!特长总有吧——能喝!这算什么特长?——喝醉了艳遇!
  • 最强术士

    最强术士

    小道士秦风,继承师傅的衣钵,修得绝学——乾坤动诀!能驱鬼除魔,去疑难杂症!一次偶然的救人,让他不得不还俗娶妻,从此开始混入都市之中,穿梭善恶之间!道士也有情,道士也有爱!看小道士如何打造属于他的另类人生!
  • 末日偷生

    末日偷生

    变异性流感爆发,殃及全球。当那些死去的人重新站起来,你是该感恩还是该惊恐?丧尸横行,是选择抗争、还是选择沦为同类?面对那群行尸走肉,她的选择是,孤独的活下去!
  • 十二剑工

    十二剑工

    旭日大陆,军阀混战,群魔乱舞,血流成河。自幼被银月狼族收养的少年林峰,如何在这乱世之中得以保存,并最终踏足大陆之巅峰!