登陆注册
37276300000165

第165章

In estimating the influences exercised from without on Brown, we must further take into account, that ever since the days of Hartley there had been a great propensity in Britain to magnify the power and importance of the association of ideas.Not only habit but most of our conceptions and beliefs had been referred to it: Beattie and Alison, followed by Jeffrey, ascribed to it our ideas of beauty; and, in a later age, Sir James Mackintosh carried this tendency the greatest length, and helped to bring about a reaction, by tracing our very idea of virtue to this source.It is evident that Brown felt this influence largely.Our intelligence is resolved by him into ****** and relative suggestion.There is a flagrant and inexcusable oversight here.All that association, or, as he designates it, suggestion, can explain, is the order of the succession of our mental states; it can render no account of the character of the states themselves.It might show, for example, in what circumstances a notion of any kind arises, say our notion of time, or space, or extension, but cannot explain the nature of the notion itself.

But it will be necessary to enter a little more minutely into the system of Brown.From the affection which I bear to his memory, and remembering that his views have never been used by himself or others to undermine any of the great principles of morality, I would begin with his excellences.{327}

(1) In specifying these, I am inclined to mention, first, his lofty views of man's spiritual being.He everywhere draws the distinction between mind and body very decidedly.In this respect, he is a true follower of the school of Descartes and Reid, and is vastly superior to some who, while blaming Locke and Brown for holding views tending to sensationalism, or even materialism, do yet assure us that the essential distinction between mind and matter is now broken down.

(2) I have already referred to the circumstance, that Brown stands up resolutely for intuitive principles, and in this respect is a genuine disciple of the Scottish school.

He calls them by the very name which some prefer as most expressive, -- " beliefs; " and employs the test which Leibnitz and Kant have been so lauded as introducing into philosophy.He everywhere characterizes them as "irresistible,"-a phrase pointing to the same quality as "necessary,"-the term used by the German metaphysicians.No one, not even Cousin, has demonstrated, in a more effective manner, that our belief in cause and effect is not derived from experience." When we say, then, that B will follow Ato-morrow, because A was followed by B to-day, we do not prove that the future will resemble the past, but we take for granted that the future is to resemble the past.We have only to ask ourselves why we believe in this similarity of sequence; and our very inability of stating any ground of inference may convince us that the belief, which it is impossible for us not to feel (observe the appeal to necessity, but it is an appeal to a necessity of feeling), is the result of some other principle of reasoning." ("Cause and Effect," P.111.) " In ascribing the belief of efficiency to such a principle, we place it, then, on a foundation as strong as that on which we suppose our belief of an external world, and even of our own identity, to rest.

What daring atheist is he, who has ever truly disbelieved the existence of himself and others? For it is he alone who can say, with corresponding argument, that he is an atheist, because there is no relation of cause and effect." " The just analysis, then, which reduces our expectation of similarity in the future trains of events to intuition, we may safely admit, without any fear of losing a single argument for the existence of God." By this doctrine he has separated himself for ever from sensationalists, and given great trouble to those classifiers {328} of philosophic systems who insist, contrary to the whole history of British philosophy, that all systems must either be sensational or ideal.It is quite obvious that such men as Butler, Brown, and Chalmers, cannot be included in either of the artificial compartments, and hence one ground of their neglect by the system-builders of our age.

(3) His account of sensation is characterized by fine analysis: in particular, his discrimination of the sensations commonly ascribed to touch, and his separation of the muscular sense from the sense of touch proper.About this very time Charles Bell was establishing the distinction of the nerves of sensation and motion." I was finally enabled," says Sir Charles, to show that the muscles had two classes of nerves; that on exciting one of these the muscles contracted, that on exciting the other no action took place.

The nerve which had no power to make the muscle contract was found to be a nerve of sensation." Contemporaneously, Brown was arguing, on psychological grounds, that by the muscular sense we get knowledge which cannot be had from mere feeling or touch."The feeling of resistance is, I conceive, to be ascribed not to our organ of touch but to our muscular frame." Hamilton, by his vast erudition, has been able (note appended to Reid's works) to detect anticipations of these views; but they were not so clearly stated, and they were not conclusively demonstrated.Brown started, and carried a certain length, those inquiries regarding the variety of sensations commonly ascribed to touch, which have ever since had a place in psycho logical treatises.

同类推荐
  • 太上洞玄灵宝诚业本行上品妙经

    太上洞玄灵宝诚业本行上品妙经

    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。
  • Dark Lady of the Sonnets

    Dark Lady of the Sonnets

    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。
  • 佛说最上秘密那拏天经

    佛说最上秘密那拏天经

    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。
  • The Complete Angler

    The Complete Angler

    To the Right worshipfulJohn Offleyof Madeley Manor, in the County of Stafford Esquire, My most honoured FriendSir,-- I have made so ill use of your former favours, as by them to be encouraged to entreat, that they may be enlarged to the patronage and protection of this Book.
  • 法海遗珠

    法海遗珠

    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
  • 次元教师

    次元教师

    作为一名来自中华的次元教师,银凌的学生遍布多元宇宙,有来自平行世界的春秋战国的圣人皇帝,战舰世界的舰长,信仰世界的神女。银凌的日常有两项:一、悠闲地走上人生巅峰。二教导熊孩子们如何拯救世界。三、放开我的学生,你们这些自称男主的臭小子们。ps:最后才是重点。
  • 迟早从头来过

    迟早从头来过

    如果人生可以从新来过,你最想改变什么?池藻藻,28岁大龄单身贵族,因为一次意外,从28岁回到了18岁,她的人生重新来过了一遍。且看池藻藻如何拜托大龄剩女的命运。
  • 太玄天命

    太玄天命

    钦天之命,然罪己身,我要这世间无人敢欺我所爱之人,纵然身处炼狱也在所不惜!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 爱如此沉重

    爱如此沉重

    一个是有妇之夫的初恋情人,一个是有女儿的多情上司,面对他们,她不知道她该选择谁!
  • 天空浪客

    天空浪客

    这是一本以天空为平台的冒险类未来小说。本书区别于大部分小说不同的地方,就是刻画了一个完整的主要平台天空,这个平台相当于百分之九十九的小说中的大陆。人类文明也已走到了进化的时代,然而进化给人类带来的似乎仅仅只有凶残……*********************************友情推荐:飞刀夺魂更夺美人芳心,《清平邪刀》带给你另类的感觉,书号:80999
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 水房子

    水房子

    其实,作为演练,我在大学就已开始(如果中学地区作文比赛获奖不算的话),那时候,母校有个《三原色》诗刊,一些圆园世纪愿园年代上学的青年人主办,记得有西北师大张子选,张中定等,我记不大清楚,我是诗社的成员之一,都是以文学青年的面目出现的,在师大算是很活跃。后来,毕业了,我偶尔看见书店里有卖《师大校友诗选》的,里面的名字,也有认得几个的,但与我的生活已经很远了。圆园世纪愿园年代后期到圆园世纪怨园年代末,兰州的诗人有一批坚持写作的,像著名的九叶派诗人唐祈先生,他的得意门生我们学校的韩霞(葛根图娅,蒙古族),还有商院的,党校的,兰州师专的等。后来,经济气候变了,人们不再热衷于写诗,走的走了,散的散了。
  • 佛系小道士

    佛系小道士

    虚竹觉得自己与这个世界格格不入直到——遇见了他她的同类
  • 黑白的宇宙

    黑白的宇宙

    苍茫星空看热血少年为了希望征战一方,深邃宇宙看万物苍生为了和平唱响生命之歌。