Discourse on the Method
Rene Descartes
1637
Copyright 1996, James Fieser (jfieser@utm.edu). See end note
for details on copyright and editing conventions. This is a
working draft; please report errors.[1]
* * * *
Introductory Note
The Discourse on the Method and Essays was originally
published anonymously in 1637 by Jan Maire of Leiden, in
somewhat shabby form. It was Descartes' first published
work, the much talked of "World" or "Cosmos" having been
suppressed or destroyed on his bearing of the condemnation
of Galileo in 1632. In 1636, however, when forty years of
age, he felt that it was time to bring his views before the
public and publish them abroad. The Elzevirs naturally
suggested themselves as the publishers to be selected,
especially as they had once before made advances and as the
original member of the firm resided in Leiden, where
Descartes probably was at the time. They, however, had
become less friendly, evidently doubting the success of an
anonymous book of the kind, and consequently the author went
elsewhere. Descartes endeavored to preserve the anonymity of
his work with scrupulous care, and was annoyed by his
zealous but fussy friend Mersenne showing the work to
others, and announcing the author's name, with the
ostensible object of obtaining from the King of France
permission for its publication. In the end he found himself
compelled to avow his authorship.
The book was written in French "the language of my
country," as Descartes says, "in the hope that those who
avail themselves of their natural reason alone, may be
better judges of my opinions than those who give heed only
to the writings of the ancients." Four hundred copies were
given him for distribution to his friends and this was
probably all the remuneration that he expected; none other
seems in any case to have come to him.
The Latin version is the work of Etienne de Courcelles,
a Protestant minister at Amsterdam, and was published in
1644 by Louis Elzevir at the same time as the "Principles."
The Essays (the Dioptric, the Meteors and the Geometry)
which are termed "Essays on this Method" have not been
translated here.
Elizabeth. S. Haldane, 1911
* * * *
Discourse on the Method
Of Rightly Conducting the Reason
And Seeking for Truth in the Sciences.
If this Discourse appears too long to be read all at
once, it may be separated into six portions. And in the
first these will be found various considerations respecting
the sciences; in the second, the principal rules regarding
the method which the author has sought out; while in the
third are some of the rules of morality which he has derived
from this Method. In the fourth are the reasons by which he
proves the existence of God and of the human soul, which
farm the foundation of his Metaphysic. In the fifth, the
order of the questions regarding physics which he has
investigated, and particularly the explanation of the
movement of the heart, and of some other difficulties which
pertain to medicine, as also the deference between the soul
of man and that of the brutes. And in the last part the
questions raised relate to those matters which the author
believes to be requisite in order to advance further in the
investigation of nature, in addition to the reasons that
caused him to write.
PART I.
Good sense is of all things in the world the most
equally distributed, for everybody thinks himself so
abundantly provided with it, that even those most difficult
to please in all other matters do not commonly desire more
of it than they already possess. It is unlikely that this is
an error on their part; it seems rather to be evidence in
support of the view that the power of forming a good
judgment and of distinguishing the true from the false,
which is properly speaking what is called Good sense or
Reason, is by nature equal in all men. Hence too it will
show that the diversity of our opinions does not proceed
from some men being more rational than others, but solely
from the fact that our thoughts pass through {82}diverse
channels and the same objects are not considered by an. For
to be possessed of good mental powers is not sufficient; the
principal matter is to apply them well. The greatest minds
are capable of the greatest vices as well as of the greatest
virtues, and those who proceed very slowly may, provided
they always follow the straight road, really advance much
faster than those who, though they run, forsake it.
For myself I have never ventured to presume that my
mind was in any way more perfect than that of the ordinary
man; I have even longed to possess thought as quick, or an
imagination as accurate and distinct, or a memory as
comprehensive or ready, as some others. And besides these I
do not know any other qualities that make for the perfection
of the human mind. For as to reason or sense, inasmuch as it
is the only thing that constitutes us men and distinguishes
us from the brutes, I would fain believe that it is to be
found complete in each individual, and in this I follow the
common opinion of the philosophers, who say that the
question of more or less occurs only in the sphere of the
and does not affect the or natures of
the in the same .
But I shall not hesitate to say that I have had great
good fortune from my youth up, in lighting upon and pursuing
certain paths which have conducted me to considerations and
maxims from which I have formed a Method, by whose
assistance it appears to me I have the means of gradually
increasing my knowledge and of little by little raising it
to the highest possible point which the mediocrity of my
talents and the brief duration of my life call permit me to
reach. For I have already reaped from it fruits of such a
nature that, even though I always try in the judgments I
make on myself to lean to the side of self-depreciation
rather than to that of arrogance, and though, looking with
the eye of a philosopher on the diverse actions and
enterprises of all mankind, I find scarcely any which do not
seem to me vain and useless, I do not cease to receive
extreme satisfaction in the progress which I seem to have
already made in the search after truth, and to form such
hopes for the future as to venture to believe that, if
amongst the occupations of men, simply as men, there is some
one in particular that is excellent and important, that is
the one which I have selected.
It must always be recollected, however, that possibly I
deceive myself, and that what I take to be gold and diamonds
is perhaps no {83} more than copper and glass. I know how
subject we are to delusion in whatever touches ourselves,
and also how much the judgments of our friends ought to be
suspected when they are in our favor. But in this Discourse
I shall be very happy to show the paths I have followed, and
to set forth my life as in a picture, so that everyone may
judge of it for himself; and thus in learning from the
common talk what are the opinions which are held of it, a
new means of obtaining self-instruction will be reached,
which I shall add to those which I have been in the habit of
using.
Thus my design is not here to teach the Method which
everyone should follow in order to promote the good conduct
of his Reason, but only to show in what manner I have
endeavored to conduct my own. Those who set about giving
precepts must esteem themselves more skillful than those to
whom they advance them, and if they fall short in the
smallest matter they must of course take the blame for it.
But regarding this Treatise simply as a history, or, if you
prefer it, a fable in which, amongst certain things which
may be imitated, there are possibly others also which it
would not be right to follow, I hope that it will be of use
to some without being hurtful to any, and that all will
thank me for my frankness.
I have been nourished on letters since my childhood,
and since I was given to believe that by their means a clear
and certain knowledge could be obtained of all that is
useful in life, I had an extreme desire to acquire
instruction. But so soon as I had achieved the entire course
of study at the close of which one is usually received into
the ranks of the learned, I entirely changed my opinion. For
I found myself embarrassed with so many doubts and errors
that it seemed to me that the effort to instruct myself had
no effect other than the increasing discovery of my own
ignorance. And yet I was studying at one of the most
celebrated Schools in Europe, where I thought that there
must be men of learning if they were to be found anywhere in
the world. I learned there all that others learned; and not
being satisfied with the sciences that we were taught, I
even read through all the books which fell into my hands,
treating of what is considered most curious and rare. Along
with this I knew the judgments that others had formed of me,
and I did not feel that I was esteemed inferior to my
fellow-students, although there were amongst them some
destined to fill the places of our masters. And finally our
century seemed to me as flourishing, and as fertile in great
minds, as any which had preceded. And this made me take the
liberty of judging all {84} others by myself and of coming
to the conclusion that there was no learning in the world
such as I was formerly led to believe it to be.
I did not omit, however, always to hold in esteem those
exercises which are the occupation of the Schools. I knew
that the Languages which one learns there are essential for
the understanding of all ancient literature; that fables
with their charm stimulate the mind and histories of
memorable deeds exalt it; and that, when read with
discretion, these books assist in forming a sound judgment.
I was aware that the reading of all good books is indeed
like a conversation with the noblest men of past centuries
who were the authors of them, nay a carefully studied
conversation, in which they reveal to us none but the best
of their thoughts. I deemed Eloquence to have a power and
beauty beyond compare; that Poesy has most ravishing
delicacy and sweetness; that in Mathematics there are the
subtlest discoveries and inventions which may accomplish
much, both in satisfying the curious, and in furthering all
the arts, and in diminishing man's labor; that those
writings that deal with Morals contain much that is
instructive, and many exhortations to virtue which are most
useful; that Theology points out the way to Heaven; that
Philosophy teaches us to speak with an appearance of truth
on all things, and causes us to be admired by the less
learned; that Jurisprudence, Medicine and all other sciences
bring honor and riches to those who cultivate them; and
finally that it is good to have examined all things, even
those most full of superstition and falsehood, in order that
we may know their just value, and avoid being deceived by
them.
But I considered that I had already given sufficient
time to languages and likewise even to the reading of the
literature of the ancients, both their histories and their
fables. For to converse with those of other centuries is
almost the same thing as to travel. It is good to know
something of the customs of different peoples in order to
judge more sanely of our own, and not to think that
everything of a fashion not ours is absurd and contrary to
reason, as do those who have seen nothing. But when one
employs too much time in traveling, one becomes a stranger
in one's own country, and when one is too curious about
things which were practiced in past centuries, one is
usually very ignorant about those which are practiced in our
own time. Besides, fables make one imagine many events
possible which in reality are not so, and even the most
accurate of histories, if they do not exactly misrepresent
{85} or exaggerate the value of things in order to render
them more worthy of being read, at least omit in them all
the circumstances which are basest and least notable; and
from this fact it follows that what is retained is not
portrayed as it really is, and that those who regulate their
conduct by examples which they derive from such a source,
are liable to fall into the extravagances of the knights-
errant of Romance, and form projects beyond their power of
performance.
I esteemed Eloquence most highly and I was enamored of
Poesy, but I thought that both were gifts of the mind rather
than fruits of study. Those who have the strongest power of
reasoning, and who most skillfully arrange their thoughts in
order to render them clear and intelligible, have the best
power of persuasion even if they can bat speak the language
of Lower Brittany and have never learned Rhetoric. And those
who have the most delightful original ideas and who know how
to express them with the maximum of style and suavity, would
not fail to be the beat poets even if the art of Poetry were
unknown to them.
Most of all was I delighted with Mathematics because of
the certainty of its demonstrations and the evidence of its
reasoning; but I did not yet understand its true use, and,
believing that it was of service only in the mechanical
arts, I was astonished that, seeing how firm and solid was
its basis, no loftier edifice had been reared thereupon. On
the other hand I compared the works of the ancient pagans
which deal with Morals to palaces most superb and
magnificent, which are yet built on sand and mud alone. They
praise the virtues most highly and show them to be more
worthy of being prized than anything else in the world, but
they do not sufficiently teach us to become acquainted with
them, and often that which is called by a fine name is
nothing but insensibility, or pride, or despair, or
parricide.
I honored our Theology and aspired as much as anyone to
reach to heaven, but having learned to regard it as a most
highly assured fact that the road is not less open to the
most ignorant than to the most learned, and that the
revealed truths which conduct thither are quite above our
intelligence, I should not have dared to submit them to the
feebleness of my reasonings; and I thought that, in order to
undertake to examine them and succeed in so doing, it was
necessary to have some extraordinary assistance from above
and to be more than a mere man.
I shall not say anything about Philosophy, but that
seeing that {86} it has been cultivated for many centuries
by the best minds that have ever lived, and that
nevertheless no single thing is to be found in it which is
not subject of dispute, and in consequence which is not
dubious, I had not enough presumption to hope to fare better
there than other men had done. And also, considering how
many conflicting opinions there may be regarding the self-
same matter, all supported by learned people, while there
can never be more than one which is true, I esteemed as
well-nigh false all that only went as far as being probable.
Then as to the other sciences, inasmuch as they derive
their principles from Philosophy, I judged that one could
have built nothing solid on foundations so far from firm.
And neither the honor nor the promised gain was sufficient
to persuade me to cultivate them, for, thanks be to God, I
did not find myself in a condition which obliged me to make
a merchandise of science for the improvement of my fortune;
and, although I did not pretend to scorn all glory like the
Cynics, I yet had very small esteem for what I could not
hope to acquire, excepting through fictitious titles. And,
finally, as to false doctrines, I thought that I already
knew well enough what they were worth to be subject to
deception neither by the promises of an alchemist, the
predictions of an astrologer, the impostures of a magician,
the artifices or the empty boastings of any of those who
make a profession of knowing that of which they are
ignorant.
This is why, as soon as age permitted me to emerge from
the control of my tutors, I entirely quitted the study of
letters. And resolving to seek no other science than that
which could be found in myself, or at least in the great
book of the world, I employed the rest of my youth in
travel, in seeing courts and armies, in intercourse with men
of diverse temperaments and conditions, in collecting varied
experiences, in proving myself in the various predicaments
in which I was placed by fortune, and under all
circumstances bringing my mind to bear on the things which
came before it, so that I might derive some profit from my
experience. For it seemed to me that I might meet with much
more truth in the reasonings that each man makes on the
matters that specially concern him, and the issue of which
would very soon punish him if he made a wrong judgment, than
in the case of those made by a man of letters in his study
touching speculations which lead to no result, and which
bring about no other consequences to himself excepting that
he will be all the more vain the more they are removed from
common sense, {87} since in this case it Proves him to have
employed so much the more ingenuity and skill in trying to
make them seem probable. And I always had an excessive
desire to learn to distinguish the true from the false, in
order to see clearly in my actions and to walk with
confidence in this life.
It is true that while I only considered the manners of
other men I found in them nothing to give me settled
convictions; and I remarked in them almost as much diversity
as I had formerly seen in the opinions of philosophers. So
much was this the case that the greatest profit which I
derived from their study was that, in seeing many things
which, although they seem to us very extravagant and
ridiculous, were yet commonly received and approved by other
great nations, I learned to believe nothing too certainly of
which I had only been convinced by example and custom. Thus
little by little I was delivered from many errors which
might have obscured our natural vision and rendered us less
capable of listening to Reason. But after I had employed
several years in thus studying the book of the world and
trying to acquire some experience, I one day formed the
resolution of also making myself an object of study and of
employing all the strength of my mind in choosing the road I
should follow. This succeeded much better, it appeared to
me, than if I had never departed either from my country or
my books.
PART II.
I was then in Germany, to which country I had been
attracted by the wars which are not yet at an end. And as I
was returning from the coronation of the Emperor to join the
army, the setting in of winter detained me in a quarter
where, since I found no society to divert me, while
fortunately I had also no cares or passions to trouble me, I
remained the whole day shut up alone in a stove-heated room,
where I had complete leisure to occupy myself with my own
thoughts. One of the first of the considerations that
occurred to me was that there is very often less perfection
in works composed of several portions, and carried out by
the hands of various masters, than in those on which one
individual alone has worked. Thus we see that buildings
planned and carried out by one architect alone are usually
more beautiful and better proportioned than those which many
have tried to put in order and improve, making use of old
walls which were built with other ends in view. In the game
way also, those ancient cities which, originally mere
villages, have become in the process of time great towns,
are usually {88} badly constructed in comparison with those
which are regularly laid out on a plain by a surveyor who is
free to follow his own ideas. Even though, considering their
buildings each one apart, there is often as much or more
display of skill in the one case than in the other, the
former have large buildings and small buildings
indiscriminately placed together, thus rendering the streets
crooked and irregular, so that it might be said that it was
chance rather than the will of men guided by reason that led
to such an arrangement. And if we consider that this happens
despite the fact that from all time there have been certain
officials who have had the special duty of looking after the
buildings of private individuals in order that they may be
public ornaments, we shall understand how difficult it is to
bring about much that is satisfactory in operating only upon
the works of others. Thus I imagined that those people who
were once half-ravage, and who have become civilized only by
slow degrees, merely forming their laws as the disagreeable
necessities of their crimes and quarrels constrained them,
could not succeed in establishing so good a system of
government as those who, from the time they first came
together as communities, carried into effect the
constitution laid down by some prudent legislator. Thus it
is quite certain that the constitution of the true Religion
whose ordinances are of God alone is incomparably better
regulated than any other. And, to come down to human
affairs, I believe that if Sparta was very flourishing in
former times, this was not because of the excellence of each
and every one of its laws, seeing that many were very
strange and even contrary to good morals, but because, being
drawn up by one individual, they all tended towards the same
end. And similarly I thought that the sciences found in
books-in those at least whose reasonings are only probable
and which have no demonstrations, composed as they are of
the gradually accumulated opinions of many different
individuals-do not approach so near to the truth as the
simple reasoning which a man of common sense can quite
naturally carry out respecting the things which come
immediately before him. Again I thought that since we have
all been children before being men, and since it has for
long fallen to us to be governed by our appetites and by our
teachers (who often enough contradicted one another, and
none of whom perhaps counseled us always for the best), it
is almost impossible that our judgments should be so
excellent or solid as they should have been had we had
complete use of our reason since our birth, and had we been
guided by its means alone. {89}
It is true that we do not find that all the houses in a
town are razed to the ground for the sole reason that the
town is to be rebuilt in another fashion, with streets made
more beautiful; but at the same time we see that many people
cause their own houses to be knocked down in order to
rebuild them, and that sometimes they are forced so to do
where there is danger of the houses falling of themselves,
and when the foundations are not secure. From such examples
I argued to myself that there was no plausibility in the
claim of any private individual to reform a state by
altering everything, and by overturning it throughout, in
order to set it right again. Nor is it likewise probable
that the whole body of the Sciences, or the order of
teaching established by the Schools, should be reformed. But
as regards all the opinions which up to this time I had
embraced, I thought I could not do better than endeavor once
for all to sweep them completely away, so that they might
later on be replaced, either by others which were better, or
by the same, when I had made them conform to the uniformity
of a rational scheme. And I firmly believed that by this
means I should succeed in directing my life much better than
if I had only built on old foundations, and relied on
principles of which I allowed myself to be in youth
persuaded without having inquired into their truth. For
although in so doing I recognized various difficulties,
these were at the same time not insurmountable, nor
comparable to those which are found in reformation of the
most insignificant kind in matters which concern the public.
In the case of great bodies it is too difficult a task to
raise them again when they are once thrown down, or even to
keep them in their places when once thoroughly shaken; and
their fall cannot be otherwise than very violent. Then as to
any imperfections that they may possess (and the very
diversity that is found between them is sufficient to tell
us that these in many cases exist) custom has doubtless
greatly mitigated them, while it has also helped us to
avoid, or insensibly corrected a number against which mere
foresight would have found it difficult to guard. And
finally the imperfections are almost always more supportable
than would be the process of removing them, just as the
great roads which wind about amongst the mountains become,
because of being frequented, little by little so well-beaten
and easy that it is much better to follow them than to try
to go more directly by climbing over rocks and descending to
the foot of precipices.
This is the reason why I cannot in any way approve of
those turbulent and unrestful spirits who, being called
neither by birth {90} nor fortune to the management of
public affairs, never fail to have always iii their minds
some new reforms. And if I thought that in this treatise
there was contained the smallest justification for this
folly, I should be very sorry to allow it to be published.
My design has never extended beyond trying to reform my own
opinion and to build on a foundation which is entirely my
own. If my work has given me a certain satisfaction, so that
I here present to you a draft of it, I do not so do because
I wish to advise anybody to imitate it. Those to whom God
has been most beneficent in the bestowal of His graces will
perhaps form designs which are more elevated; but I fear
much that this particular one will seem too venturesome for
many. The simple resolve to strip oneself of all opinions
and beliefs formerly received is not to be regarded as an
example that each man should follow, and the world may be
said to be mainly composed of two classes of minds neither
of which could prudently adopt it. There are those who,
believing themselves to be cleverer than they are, cannot
restrain themselves from being precipitate in judgment and
have not sufficient patience to arrange their thoughts in
proper order; hence, once a man of this description had
taken the liberty of doubting the principles he formerly
accepted, and had deviated from the beaten track, he would
never be able to maintain the path which must be followed to
reach the appointed end more quickly, and he would hence
remain wandering astray all through his life. Secondly,
there are those who having reason or modesty enough to judge
that they are less capable of distinguishing truth from
falsehood than some others from whom instruction might be
obtained, are right in contenting themselves with following
the opinions of these others rather than in searching better
ones for themselves.
For myself I should doubtless have been of these last
if I had never had more than a single master, or had I never
known the diversities which have from all time existed
between the opinions of men of the greatest learning. But I
had been taught, even in my College days, that there is
nothing imaginable so strange or so little credible that it
has not been maintained by one philosopher or other, and I
further recognized in the course of my travels that all
those whose sentiments are very contrary to ours are yet not
necessarily barbarians or savages, but may be possessed of
reason in as great or even a greater degree than ourselves.
I also considered how very different the self-same man,
identical in mind and spirit, may become, according as he is
brought up from childhood amongst the French or Germans, or
has passed his whole life amongst Chinese or {91} cannibals.
I likewise noticed how even in the fashions of one's
clothing the same thing that pleased us ten years ago, and
which will perhaps please us once again before ten years are
passed, seems at the present time extravagant and
ridiculous. I thus concluded that it is much more custom and
example that persuade us than any certain knowledge, and yet
in spite of this the voice of the majority does not afford a
proof of any value in truths a little difficult to discover,
because such truths are much more likely to have been
discovered by one man than by a nation. I could not,
however, put my finger on a single person whose opinions
seemed preferable to those of others, and I found that I
was, so to speak, constrained myself to undertake the
direction of my procedure.
But like one who walks alone and in the twilight I
resolved to go so slowly, and to use so much circumspection
in all things, that if my advance was but very small, at
least I guarded myself well from falling. I did not wish to
set about the final rejection of any single opinion which
might formerly have crept into my beliefs without having
been introduced there by means of Reason, until I had first
of all employed sufficient time in planning out the task
which I had undertaken, and in seeking the true Method of
arriving at a knowledge of all the things of which my mind
was capable.
Among the different branches of Philosophy, I had in my
younger days to a certain extent studied Logic; and in those
of Mathematics, Geometrical Analysis and Algebra-three arts
or sciences which seemed as though they ought to contribute
something to the design I had in view. But in examining them
I observed in respect to Logic that the syllogisms and the
greater part of the other teaching served better in
explaining to others those things that one knows (or like
the art of Lully, in enabling one to speak without judgment
of those things of which one is ignorant) than in learning
what is new. And although in reality Logic contains many
precepts which are very true and very good, there are at the
same time mingled with them so many others which are hurtful
or superfluous, that it is almost as difficult to separate
the two as to draw a Diana or a Minerva out of a block of
marble which is not yet roughly hewn. And as to the Analysis
of the ancients and the Algebra of the moderns, besides the
fact that they embrace only matters the most abstract, such
as appear to have no actual use, the former is always so
restricted to the consideration of symbols that it cannot
exercise the Understanding without greatly fatiguing the
imagination; and in the latter one is so subjected to
certain rules and formulas that {92} the result is the
construction of an art which is confused and obscure, and
which embarrasses the mind, instead of a science which
contributes to its cultivation. This made me feel that some
other Method must be found, which, comprising the advantages
of the three, is yet exempt from their faults. And as a
multiplicity of laws often furnishes excuses for evil-doing,
and as a State is hence much better ruled when, having but
very few laws, these are most strictly observed; so, instead
of the great number of precepts of which Logic is composed,
I believed that I should find the four which I shall state
quite sufficient, provided that I adhered to a firm and
constant resolve never on any single occasion to fail in
their observance.
The first of these was to accept nothing as true which
I did not clearly recognize to be so: that is to say,
carefully to avoid precipitation and prejudice in judgments,
and to accept in them nothing more than what was presented
to my mind so clearly and distinctly that I could have no
occasion to doubt it.
The second was to divide up each of the difficulties
which I examined into as many parts as possible, and as
seemed requisite in order that it might be resolved in the
best manner possible.
The third was to carry on my reflections in due order,
commencing with objects that were the most simple and easy
to understand, in order to rise little by little, or by
degrees, to knowledge of the most complex, assuming an
order, even if a fictitious one, among those which do not
follow a natural sequence relatively to one another.
The last was in all cases to make enumerations so
complete and reviews so general that I should be certain of
having omitted nothing.
Those long chains of reasoning, simple and easy as they
are, of which geometricians make use in order to arrive at
the most difficult demonstrations, had caused me to imagine
that all those things which fall under the cognizance of man
might very likely be mutually related in the same fashion;
and that, provided only that we abstain from receiving
anything a8 true which is not so, and always retain the
order which is necessary in order to deduce the one
conclusion from the other, there can be nothing so remote
that we cannot reach to it, nor so recondite that we cannot
discover it. And I had not much trouble in discovering which
objects it was necessary to begin with, for I already knew
that it was with the most simple and those most easy to
apprehend. Considering also that, of all those who have
hitherto sought for the truth in the {93} Sciences, it has
been the mathematicians alone who have been able to succeed
in making any demonstrations, that is to say producing
reasons which are evident and certain, I did not doubt that
it had been by means of a similar kind that they carried on
their investigations. I did not at the same time hope for
any practical result in so doing, except that my mind would
become accustomed to the nourishment of truth and would not
content itself with false reasoning. But for all that I had
no intention of trying to master all those particular
sciences that receive in common the name of Mathematics; but
observing that, although their objects are different, they
do not fail to agree in this, that they take nothing under
consideration but the various relationships or proportions
which are present in these objects, I thought that it would
be better if I only examined these proportions in their
general aspect, and without viewing them otherwise than in
the objects which would serve most to facilitate a knowledge
of them. Not that I should in any way restrict them to these
objects, for I might later on all the more easily apply them
to all other objects to which they were applicable. Then,
having carefully noted that in order to comprehend the
proportions I should sometimes require to consider each one
in particular, and sometimes merely keep them in mind, or
take them in groups, I thought that, in order the better to
consider them in detail, I should picture them in the form
of lines, because I could find no method more simple nor
more capable of being distinctly represented to my
imagination and senses. I considered, however, that in order
to keep them in my memory or to embrace several at once, it
would be essential that I should explain them by means of
certain formulas, the shorter the better. And for this
purpose it was requisite that I should borrow all that is
best in Geometrical Analysis and Algebra, and correct the
errors of the one by the other.
As a matter of fact, I can venture to say that the
exact observation of the few precepts which I had chosen
gave me so much facility in sifting out all the questions
embraced in these two sciences, that in the two or three
months which I employed in examining them -- commencing with
the most simple and general, and making each truth that I
discovered a rule for helping me to find others -- not only
did I arrive at the solution of many questions which I had
hitherto regarded as most difficult, but, towards the end,
it seemed to me that I was able to determine in the case of
those of which I was still ignorant, by what means, and in
how far, it was possible to {94} solve them. In this I might
perhaps appear to you to be very vain if you did not
remember that having but one truth to discover in respect to
each matter, whoever succeeds in finding it knows in its
regard as much as can be known. It is the same as with a
child, for instance, who has been instructed in Arithmetic
and has made an addition according to the rule prescribed;
he may be sure of having found as regards the sum of figures
given to him all that the human mind can know. For, in
conclusion, the Method which teaches us to follow the true
order and enumerate exactly every term in the matter under
investigation contains everything which gives certainty to
the rules of Arithmetic.
But what pleased me most in this Method was that I was
certain by its means of exercising my reason in all things,
if not perfectly, at least as well as was in my power. And
besides this, I felt in making use of it that my mind
gradually accustomed itself to conceive of its objects more
accurately and distinctly; and not having restricted this
Method to any particular matter, I promised myself to apply
it as usefully to the difficulties of other sciences as I
had done to those of Algebra. Not that on this account I
dared undertake to examine just at once all those that might
present themselves; for that would itself have been contrary
to the order which the Method prescribes. But having noticed
that the knowledge of these difficulties must be dependent
on principles derived from Philosophy in which I yet found
nothing to be certain, I thought that it was requisite above
all to try to establish certainty in it. I considered also
that since this endeavor is the most important in all the
world, and that in which precipitation and prejudice were
most to be feared, I should not try to grapple with it till
I had attained to a much riper age than that of three and
twenty, which was the age I had reached. I thought, too,
that I should first of all employ much time in preparing
myself for the work by eradicating from my mind all the
wrong opinions which I had up to this time accepted, and
accumulating a variety of experiences fitted later on to
afford matter for my reasonings, and by ever exercising
myself in the Method which I had prescribed, in order more
and more to fortify myself in the power of using it. {95}
PART III.
And finally, as it is not sufficient, before commencing
to rebuild the house which we inhabit, to pull it down and
provide materials and an architect (or to act in this
capacity ourselves, and make a careful drawing of its
design), unless we have also provided ourselves with some
other house where we can be comfortably lodged during the
time of rebuilding, so in order that I should not remain
irresolute in my actions while reason obliged me to be so in
my judgments, and that I might not omit to carry on my life
as happily as I could, I formed for myself a code of morals
for the time being which did not consist of more than three
or four maxims, which maxims I should like to enumerate to
you.
The first was to obey the laws and customs of my
country, adhering constantly to the religion in which by
God's grace I had been instructed since my childhood, and in
all other things directing my conduct by opinions the most
moderate in nature, and the farthest removed from excess in
all those which are commonly received and acted on by the
most judicious of those with whom I might come in contact.
For since I began to count my own opinions as naught,
because I desired to place all under examination, I was
convinced that I could not do better than follow those held
by people on whose judgment reliance could be placed. And
although such persons may possibly exist amongst the
Persians and Chinese as well as amongst ourselves, it seemed
to me that it was most expedient to bring my conduct into
harmony with the ideas of those with whom I should have to
live; and that, in order to ascertain that these were their
real opinions, I should observe what they did rather than
what they said, not only because in the corrupt state of our
manners there are few people who desire to say all that they
believe, but also because many are themselves ignorant of
their beliefs. For since the act of thought by which we
believe a thing is different from that by which we know that
we believe it, the one often exists without the other. And
amongst many opinions all equally received, I chose only the
most moderate, both because these are always most suited for
putting into practice, and probably the best (for all excess
has a tendency to be bad), and also because I should have in
a less degree turned aside from the right path, supposing
that I was wrong, than if, having chosen an extreme course,
I found that I had chosen amiss. I also made a point of
counting as excess all the engagements by means of which we
limit {96} in some degree our liberty. Not that I hold in
low esteem those laws which, in order to remedy the
inconstancy of feeble souls, permit, when we have a good
object in our view, that certain vows be taken, or contracts
made, which oblige us to carry out that object. This
sanction is even given for security in commerce where
designs are wholly indifferent. But because I saw nothing in
all the world remaining constant, and because for my own
part I promised myself gradually to get my judgments to grow
better and never to grow worse, I should have thought that I
had committed a serious sin against commonsense if, because
I approved of something at one time, I was obliged to regard
it similarly at a later time, after it had possibly ceased
to meet my approval, or after I had ceased to regard it in a
favorable light.
My second maxim was that of being as firm and resolute
in my actions as I could be, and not to follow less
faithfully opinions the most dubious, when my mind was once
made up regarding them, than if these had been beyond doubt.
In this I should be following the example of travelers, who,
finding themselves lost in a forest, know that they ought
not to wander first to one side and then to the other, nor,
still less, to stop in one place, but understand that they
should continue to walk as straight as they can in one
direction, not diverging for any slight reason, even though
it was possibly chance alone that first determined them in
their choice. By this means if they do not go exactly where
they wish, they will at least arrive somewhere at the end,
where probably they will be better off than in the middle of
a forest. And thus since often enough in the actions of life
no delay is permissible, it is very certain that, when it is
beyond our power to discern the opinions which carry most
truth, we should follow the most probable; and even although
we notice no greater probability in the one opinion than in
the other, we at least should make up our minds to follow a
particular one and afterwards consider it as no longer
doubtful in its relationship to practice, but as very true
and very certain, inasmuch as the reason,which caused us to
determine upon it is known to be so. And henceforward this
principle was sufficient to deliver me from all the
penitence and remorse which usually affect the mind and
agitate the conscience of those weak and vacillating
creatures who allow themselves to keep changing their
procedure, and practice as good, things which they
afterwards judge to be evil.
My third maxim was to try always to conquer myself
rather than fortune, and to alter my desires rather than
change the order {97} of the world, and generally to
accustom myself to believe that there is nothing entirely
within our power but our own thoughts: so that after we have
done our best in regard to the things that are without us,
our ill-success cannot possibly be failure on our part.[2]
And this alone seemed to me sufficient to prevent my
desiring anything in the future beyond what I could actually
obtain, hence rendering me content; for since our will does
not naturally induce us to desire anything but what our
understanding represents to it as in some way possible of
attainment, it is certain that if we consider all good
things which are outside of us as equally outside of our
power, we should not have more regret in resigning those
goods which appear to pertain to our birth, when we are
deprived of them for no fault of our own, than we have in
not possessing the kingdoms of China or Mexico. In the same
way, making what is called a virtue out of a necessity, we
should no more desire to be well if ill, or free, if in
prison, than we now do to have our bodies formed of a
substance as little corruptible as diamonds, or to have
Wings to fly with like birds. I allow, however, that to
accustom oneself to regard all things from this point of
view requires long exercise and meditation often repeated;
and I believe that it is principally in this that is to be
found the secret of those philosophers who, in ancient
times, were able to free themselves from the empire of
fortune, or, despite suffering or poverty, to rival their
gods in their happiness. For, ceaselessly occupying
themselves in considering the limits which were prescribed
to them by nature, they persuaded themselves so completely
that nothing was within their own power but their thoughts,
that this conviction alone was sufficient to prevent their
leaving any longing for other things. And they had so
absolute a mastery over their thoughts that they had some
reason for esteeming themselves as more rich and more
powerful, and more free and more happy than other men, who,
however favored by nature or fortune they might be, if
devoid of this philosophy, never could arrive a& all at
which they aim.
And last of all, to conclude this moral code, I felt it
incumbent on me to make a review of the various occupations
of men in this life in order to try to choose out the best;
and without wishing to say anything of the employment of
others I thought that I could I "So that whatever does not
eventuate after we have done all in our power that it should
happen is to be accounted by us as among the things which
evidently cannot be done and which in philosophical phrase
are called impossible." Latin Version. {98} not do better
than continue in the one in which I found myself engaged,
that is to say, in occupying my whole life in cultivating my
Reason, and in advancing myself as much as possible in the
knowledge of the truth in accordance with the method which I
had prescribed myself. I had experienced so much
satisfaction since beginning to use this method, that I did
not believe that any sweeter or more innocent could in this
life be found,-every day discovering by its means some
truths which seemed to me sufficiently important, although
commonly ignored by other men. The,satisfaction which I had
so filled my mind that all else- seemed of no account. And,
besides, the three preceding maxims were founded solely on
the plan which I had formed of continuing to instruct
myself. For since God has given to each of us some light
with which to distinguish truth from error, I could not
believe that I ought for a single moment to content myself
with accepting the opinions held by others unless I had in
view the employment of my own judgment in examining them at
the proper time; and I could not have held myself free of
scruple in following such opinions, if nevertheless I had
not intended to lose no occasion of finding superior
opinions, supposing them to exist; and finally, I should not
have been able to restrain my desires nor to remain content,
if I had not followed a road by which, thinking that I
should be certain to be able to acquire all the knowledge of
which I was capable, I also thought I should likewise be
certain of obtaining all the best things which could ever
come within my power. And inasmuch as our will impels us
neither to follow after nor to flee from anything, excepting
as our understanding represents it as good or evil, it is
sufficient to judge wisely in order to act well, and the
best judgment brings the best action-that is to say, the
acquisition of all the virtues and all the other good things
that it is possible to obtain. When one is certain that this
point is reached, one cannot fail to be contented.
Having thus assured myself of these maxims, and having
set them on one side along with the truths of religion which
have always taken the first place in my creed, I judged that
as far as the rest of my opinions were concerned, I could
safely undertake to rid myself of them. And inasmuch as I
hoped to be able to reach my end more successfully in
converse with man than in living longer shut up in the warm
room where these reflections had come to me, I hardly
awaited the end of winter before I once more set myself to
travel. And in all the nine following years I did naught but
roam {99} hither and thither, trying to be a spectator
rather than an actor in all the comedies the world displays.
More especially did I reflect in each matter that came
before me as to anything which could make it subject to
suspicion or doubt, and give occasion for mistake, and I
rooted out of my mind all the errors which might have
formerly crept in. Not that indeed I imitated the skeptics,
who only doubt for the sake of doubting, and pretend to be
always uncertain; for, on the contrary, my design was only
to provide myself with good ground for assurance, and to
reject the quicksand and mud in order to find the rock or
clay. In this task it seems to me, I succeeded pretty well,
since in trying to discover the error or uncertainty of the
propositions which I examined, not by feeble conjectures,
but by clear and assured reasonings, I encountered nothing
so dubious that I could not draw from it some conclusion
that was tolerably secure, if this were no more than the
inference that it contained in it nothing that was certain.
And just as in pulling down an old house we usually preserve
the debris to serve in building up another, so in destroying
all those opinions which I considered to be ill-founded, I
made various observations and acquired many experiences,
which have since been of use to me in establishing those
which are more certain. And more than this, I continued to
exercise myself in the method which I had laid down for my
use; for besides the fact that I was careful as a rule to
conduct all my thoughts according to its maxims, I set aside
some hours from time to time which I more especially
employed in practicing myself in the solution of
mathematical problems according to the Method, or in the
solution of other problems which though pertaining to other
sciences, I was able to make almost similar to those of
mathematics, by detaching them from all principles of other
sciences which I found to be not sufficiently secure. You
will see the result in many examples which are expounded in
this volume.[3] And hence, without living to all appearance
in any way differently from those who, having no occupation
beyond spending their lives in ease and innocence, study to
separate pleasure from vice, and who, in order to enjoy
their leisure without weariness, make use of all
distractions that are innocent and good, I did not cease to
prosecute my design, and to profit perhaps even more in my
study of truth than if I had done nothing but read books or
associate with literary people. {100}
These nine years thus passed away before I had taken
any definite part in regard to the difficulties as to which
the learned are in the habit of disputing, or had commenced
to seek the foundation of any philosophy more certain than
the vulgar. And the example of many excellent men who had
tried to do the same before me, but, as it appears to me,
without success, made me imagine it to be so hard that
possibly I should not have dared to undertake the task, had
I not discovered that someone had spread abroad the report
that I had already reached its conclusion. I cannot tell on
what they based this opinion; if my conversation has
contributed anything to it, this must have arisen from my
confessing my ignorance more ingenuously than those who have
studied a little usually do. And perhaps it was also due to
my having shown forth my reasons for doubting many things
which were held by others to be certain, rather than from
having boasted of any special philosophic system. But being
at heart honest enough not to desire to be esteemed as
different from what I am, I thought that I must try by every
means in my power to render myself worthy of the reputation
which I had gained. And it is just eight years ago that this
desire made me resolve to remove myself from all places
where any acquaintances were possible, and to retire to a
country such as this,4 where the long-continued war has
caused such order to be established that the armies which
are maintained seem only to be of use in allowing the
inhabitants to enjoy the fruits of peace with so much the
more security; and where, in the crowded throng of a great
and very active nation, which is more concerned with its own
affairs than curious about those of others, without missing
ally of the conveniences of the most populous towns, I can
live as solitary and retired as in deserts the most remote.
PART IV.
I do not know that I ought to tell you of the first
meditations there made by me, for they are so metaphysical
and so unusual that they may perhaps not be acceptable to
everyone. And yet at the same time, in order that one may
judge whether the foundations which I have laid are
sufficiently secure, I find myself constrained in some
measure to refer to them. For a long time I had remarked
that it is sometimes requisite in common life to follow
opinions which one knows to be most uncertain, exactly as
though they were indisputable, as has been said above. But
because in this case {101} I wished to give myself entirely
to the search after Truth, I thought that it was necessary
for me to take an apparently opposite course, and to reject
as absolutely false everything as to which I could imagine
the least ground of doubt, in order to see if afterwards
there remained anything in my belief that was entirely
certain. Thus, because our senses sometimes deceive us, I
wished to suppose that nothing is just as they cause us to
imagine it to be; and because there are men who deceive
themselves in their reasoning and fall into paralogisms,
even concerning the simplest matters of geometry, and
judging that I was as subject to error as was any other, I
rejected as false all the reasons formerly accepted by me as
demonstrations. And since all the same thoughts and
conceptions which we have while awake may also come to us in
sleep, without any of them being at that time true, I
resolved to assume that everything that ever entered into my
mind was no more true than the illusions of my dreams. But
immediately afterwards I noticed that whilst I thus wished
to think all things false, it was absolutely essential that
the "I" who thought this should be somewhat, and remarking
that this truth "" was so certain
and so assured that all the most extravagant suppositions
brought forward by the skeptics were incapable of shaking
it, I came to the conclusion that I could receive it without
scruple as the first principle of the Philosophy for which I
was seeking.
And then, examining attentively that which I was, I saw
that I could conceive that I had no body, and that there was
no world nor place where I might be; but yet that I could
not for all that conceive that I was not. On the contrary, I
saw from the very fact that I thought of doubting the truth
of other things, it very evidently and certainly followed
that I was; on the other hand if I had only ceased from
thinking, even if all the rest of what I had ever imagined
had really existed, I should have no reason for thinking
that I had existed. From that I knew that I was a substance
the whole essence or nature of which is to think, and that
for its existence there is no need of any place, nor does it
depend on any material thing; so that this "me," that is to
say, the soul by which I am what I am, is entirely distinct
from body, and is even more easy to know than is the latter;
and even if body were not, the soul would not cease to be
what it is.
After this I considered generally what in a proposition
is requisite in order to be true and certain; for since I
had just discovered one which I knew to be such, I thought
that I ought {102} also to know in what this certainty
consisted. And having remarked that there was nothing at all
in the statement "" which assures
me of having thereby made a true assertion, excepting that I
see very clearly that to think it is necessary to be, I came
to the conclusion that I might assume, as a general rule,
that the things which we conceive very clearly and
distinctly are all true-remembering, however, that there is
some difficulty in ascertaining which are those that we
distinctly conceive.
Following upon this, and reflecting on the fact that I
doubted, and that consequently my existence was not quite
perfect (for I saw clearly that it was a greater perfection
to know than to doubt), I resolved to inquire whence I had
learnt to think of anything more perfect than I myself was;
and I recognized very clearly that this conception must
proceed from some nature which was really more perfect. As
to the thoughts which I had of many other things outside of
me, like the heavens, the earth, light, heat, and a thousand
others, I had not so much difficulty in knowing whence they
came, because, remarking nothing in them which seemed to
render them superior to me, I could believe that, if they
were true, they were dependencies upon my nature, in so far
as it possessed some perfection; and if they were not true,
that I held them from naught, that is to say, that they were
in me because I had something lacking in my nature. But this
could not apply to the idea of a Being more perfect than my
own, for to hold it from naught would be manifestly
impossible; and because it is no less contradictory to say
of the more perfect that it is what results from and depends
on the less perfect, than to say that there is something
which proceeds from nothing, it was equally impossible that
I should hold it from myself. In this way it could but
follow that it had been placed in me by a Nature which was
really more perfect than mine could be, and which even had
within itself all the perfections of which I could form any
idea -- that is to say, to put it in a word, which was God.
To which I added that since I knew some perfections which I
did not possess, I was not the only being in existence (I
shall here use freely, if you will allow, the terms of the
School); but that there was necessarily some other more
perfect Being on which I depended, or from which I acquired
all that I had. For if I had existed alone and independent
of any others, so that I should have had from myself all
that perfection of being in which I participated to however
small an extent, I should have been able for the same reason
to have had all the remainder which {103} I knew that I
lacked; and thus I myself should have been infinite,
eternal, immutable, omniscient, all-powerful, and, finally,
I should have all the perfections which I could discern in
God. For, in pursuance of the reasonings which I have just
carried on, in order to know the nature of God as far as my
nature is capable of knowing it, I had only to consider in
reference to all these things of which I found some idea in
myself, whether it was a perfection to possess them or not.
And I was assured that none of those which indicated some
imperfection were in Him, but that all else was present; and
I saw that doubt, inconstancy, sadness, and such things,
could not be in Him considering that I myself should have
been glad to be without them. In addition to this, I had
ideas of many things which are sensible and corporeal, for,
although I might suppose that I was dreaming, and that all
that I saw or imagined was false, I could not at the same
time deny that the ideas were really in my thoughts. But
because I had already recognized very clearly in myself that
the nature of the intelligence is distinct from that of the
body, and observing that all composition gives evidence of
dependency, and that dependency is manifestly an
imperfection, I came to the conclusion that it could not be
a perfection in God to be composed of these two natures, and
that consequently He was not so composed. I judged, however,
that if there were any bodies in the world, or even any
intelligences or other natures which were not wholly
perfect, their existence must depend on His power in such a
way that they could not subsist without Him for a single
moment.
After that I desired to seek for other truths, and
having put before myself the object of the geometricians,
which I conceived to be a continuous body, or a space
indefinitely extended in length, breadth, height or depth,
which was divisible into various parts, and which might have
various figures and sizes, and might be moved or transposed
in all sorts of ways (for all this the geometricians suppose
to be in the object of their contemplation), I went through
some of their simplest demonstrations, and having noticed
that this great certainty which everyone attributes to these
demonstrations is founded solely on the fact that they are
conceived of with clearness, in accordance with the rule
which I have just laid down, I also noticed that there was
nothing at all in them to assure me of the existence of
their object. For, to take an example, I saw very well that
if we suppose a triangle to be given, the three angles must
certainly be equal to two right angles; but for all that I
saw no {104} reason to be assured that there was any such
triangle in existence, while on the contrary, on reverting
to the examination of the idea which I had of a Perfect
Being, I found that in this case existence was implied in it
in the same manner in which the equality of its three angles
to two right angles is implied in the idea of a triangle; or
in the idea of a sphere, that all the points on its surface
are equidistant from its center, or even more evidently
still. Consequently it is at least as certain that God, who
is a Being, so perfect, is, or exists, as any demonstration
of geometry can possibly be.
What causes many, however, to persuade themselves that
there is difficulty in knowing this truth, and even in
knowing the nature of their soul, is the fact that they
never raise their minds above the things of sense, or that
they are so accustomed to consider nothing excepting by
imagining it, which is a mode of thought specially adapted
to material objects, that all that is not capable of being
imagined appears to them not to be intelligible at all. This
is manifest enough from the fact that even the philosophers
in the Schools hold it as a maxim that there is -nothing in
the understanding which has not first of all been in the
senses, in which there is certainly no doubt that the ideas
of God and of the soul have never been. And it seems to me
that those who desire to make use of their imagination in
order to understand these ideas, act in the same way as if,
to hear sounds or smell odors, they should wish to make use
of their eyes: excepting that there is indeed this
difference, that the sense of sight does not give us less
assurance of the truth of its objects, than do those of
seeing or of hearing, while neither our imagination nor our
senses can ever assure us of anything, if our understanding
does not intervene.
If there are finally any persons who are not
sufficiently persuaded of the existence of God and of their
soul by the reasons which I have brought forward, I wish
that they should know that all other things of which they
perhaps think themselves more assured (such as possessing a
body, and that there are stars and an earth and so on) are
less certain. For, although we have a moral assurance of
these things which is such that it seems that it would be
extravagant in us to doubt them, at the same time no one,
unless he is devoid of reason, can deny, when a metaphysical
certainty is in question, that there is sufficient cause for
our not having complete assurance, by observing the fact
that when asleep we may similarly imagine that we have
another body, and that we see other stars and another earth,
without there being anything of the kind. {105} For how do
we know that the thoughts that come in dreams are more false
than those that we have when we are awake, seeing that often
enough the former are not less lively and vivid than the
latter? And though the wisest minds may study the matter as
much as they will, I do not believe that they will be able
to give any sufficient reason for removing this doubt,
unless they presuppose the existence of God. For to begin
with, that which I have just taken as a rule, that is to
say, that all the things that we very clearly and very
distinctly conceive of are true, is certain only because God
is or exists, and that He is a Perfect Being, and that all
that is in us issues from Him. From this it follows that our
ideas or notions, which to the extent of their being clear
or distinct are ideas of real things issuing from God,
cannot but to that extent be true. So that though we often
enough have ideas which have an element of falsity, this can
only be the case in regard to those which have in them
somewhat that is confused or obscure, because in so far as
they have this character they participate in negation -that
is, they exist in us as confused only because we are not
quite perfect. And it is evident that there is no less
repugnance in the idea that error or imperfection, inasmuch
as it is imperfection, proceeds from God, than there is in
the idea of truth or perfection proceeding from naught. But
if we did not know that all that is in us of reality and
truth proceeds from a perfect and infinite Being, however
clear and distinct were our ideas, we should not have any
reason to assure ourselves that they had the perfection of
being true.
But after the knowledge of God and of the soul has thus
rendered us certain of this rule, it is very easy to
understand that the dreams which we imagine in our sleep
should not make us in any way doubt the truth of the
thoughts which we have when awake. For even if in sleep we
had some very distinct idea such as a geometrician might
have who discovered some new demonstration, the fact of
being asleep would not militate against its truth. And as to
the most ordinary error in our dreams, which consists in
their representing to us various objects in the same way as
do our external senses, it does not matter that this should
give us occasion to suspect the truth of such ideas, because
we may be likewise often enough deceived in them without our
sleeping at all, just as when those who have the jaundice
see everything as yellow, or when stars or other bodies
which are very remote appear much smaller than they really
are. For, finally, whether we are awake or asleep, we {106}
should never allow ourselves to be persuaded excepting by
the evidence of our Reason. And it must be remarked that I
speak of our Reason and not of our imagination nor of our
senses; just as though we see the sun very clearly, we
should not for that reason judge that it is of the size of
which it appears to be; likewise we could quite well
distinctly imagine the head of a lion on the body of a goat,
without necessarily concluding that a chimera exists. For
Reason does not insist that whatever we see or imagine thus
is a truth, but it tells us clearly that all our ideas or
notions must have some foundation of truth. For otherwise it
could not be possible that God, who is all perfection and
truth, should have placed them within us. And because our
reasonings are never so evident nor so complete during sleep
as during wakefulness, although sometimes our imaginations
are then just as lively and acute, or even more so, Reason
tells us that since our thoughts cannot possibly be all
true, because we are not altogether perfect, that which they
have of truth must infallibly be met with in our waking
experience rather than in that of our dreams.
PART V.
I should be very glad to proceed to show forth the
complete chain of truths which I have deduced from these
first, but because to do this it would have been necessary
now to speak of many matters of dispute among the learned,
with whom I have no desire to embroil myself, I think that
it will be better to abstain. I shall only state generally
what these truths are, so that it may be left to the
decision of those best able to judge whether it would be of
use for the public to be more particularly informed of them
or not. I always remained firm in the resolution which I had
made, Dot to assume any other principle than that of which I
have just made use, in order to demonstrate the existence of
God and of the Soul, and to accept nothing as true which did
not appear to be more clear and more certain than the
demonstrations of the geometricians had formerly seemed. And
nevertheless I venture to say that not only have I found the
means of satisfying myself in a short time as to the more
important of those difficulties usually dealt with iii
philosophy, but I have also observed certain laws which God
has so established in Nature, and of which He has imprinted
such ideas on our minds, that,, after having reflected
sufficiently upon the matter, we cannot doubt their being
accurately observed in all that exists or is done in the
world. Further, in considering the sequence {107} of these
laws, it seems to me that I leave discovered many truth,-,
more useful and more important than all that I had formerly
learned or even hoped to learn.
But because I tried to explain the most important of
these in a Treatise[5] which certain considerations
prevented me from publishing, I cannot do better, in making
them known, than here summarize briefly what that Treatise
contains. I had planned to comprise in it all that I
believed myself to know regarding the nature of material
objects, before I set myself to write. However, just as the
painters who cannot represent equally well on a plain
surface all the various sides of a solid body, make
selection of one of the most important, which alone is set
in the light, while the others are put in shadow and made to
appear only as they may be seen in looking at the former,
so, fearing that I could not put in my Treatise all that I
had in my mind, I undertook only to show very fully my
conceptions of light, Later on, when occasion occurred, I
resolved to add something about the sun and fixed stars,
because light proceeds almost entirely from them; the
heavens would be dealt with because they transmit light, the
planets, the comets and the earth because they reflect it,
and more particularly would all bodies which are on the
earth, because they are either colored or transparent, or
else luminous; and finally I should deal with man because he
is the spectator of all. For the very purpose of putting all
these topics somewhat in shadow, and being able to express
myself freely about them, without being obliged to adopt or
to refute the opinions which are accepted by the learned, I
resolved to leave all this world to their disputes, and to
speak only of what would happen in a new world if God now
created, somewhere in an imaginary space, matter sufficient
where-with to form it, and if He agitated in diverse ways,
and without any order, the diverse portions of this matter,
so that there resulted a chaos as confused as the poets ever
feigned, and concluded His work by merely lending His
concurrence to Nature in the usual way, leaving her to act
in accordance with the laws which He had established. So, to
begin with, I described this matter and tried to represent
it in such a way, that it seems to me that nothing in the
world could be more clear or intelligible, excepting what
has just been said of God and the Soul. For I even went so
far as expressly to assume that there was in it none of
these forms or qualities which are so debated in the
Schools, nor anything at all the {108} knowledge of which is
not so natural to our minds that none could even pretend to
be ignorant of it. Further I pointed out what are the laws
of Nature, and, without resting my reasons on any other
principle than the infinite perfections of God, I tried to
demonstrate all those of which one could have any doubt, and
to show that they are of such a nature that even if God had
created other worlds, He could not have created any in which
these laws would fail to be. observed. After that, I showed
how the greatest part of the matter of which this chaos is
constituted, must, in accordance with these laws, dispose
and arrange itself in such a fashion as to render it similar
to our heavens; and how meantime some of its parts must form
an earth, some planets and comets, and some others a sun and
fixed stars. And, enlarging on the subject of light, I here
explained at length the nature of the light which would be
found in the sun and stars, and how from these it crossed in
an instant the immense space of the heavens, and how it was
reflected from the planets and comets to the earth. To this
I also added many things touching the substance, situation,
movements, and all the different qualities of these heavens
and stars, so that I thought I had said enough to make it
clear that there is nothing to be seen in the heavens and
stars pertaining to our system which must not, or at least
may not, appear exactly the same in those of the system
which I described. From this point I came to speak more
particularly of the earth, showing how, though I had
expressly presupposed that God had not placed any weight in
the matter of which it is composed, its parts did not fail
all to gravitate exactly to its center; and how, having
water and air on its surface, the disposition of the heavens
and of the stars, more particularly of the moon, must cause
a flux or reflux, which in all its circumstances is similar
to that which is observed in our seas, and besides that, a
certain current both of water and air from east to west,
such as may also be observed in the tropics. I also showed
how the mountains, seas, fountains and rivers, could
naturally be formed in it, how the metals came to be in the
mines and the plants to grow in the fields; and generally
how all bodies, called mixed or composite, might arise. And
because I knew nothing but fire which could produce light,
excepting the stars, I studied amongst other things to make
very clear all that pertains to its nature, how it is
formed, how nourished, how there is sometimes only heat
without light, and sometimes light without heat; I showed,
too, how different colors might by it be induced upon
different bodies and qualities of diverse kinds, how {109}
some of these were liquefied and others solidified, bow
nearly all can be consumed or converted into ashes and smoke
by its means, and finally how of these ashes, by the
intensity of its action alone, it forms glass. Since this
transformation of ashes into glass seemed to me as wonderful
as any other process in nature, I took particular pleasure
in describing it.
I did not at the same time wish to infer from all these
facts that this world has been created in the manner which I
described; for it is much more probable that at the
beginning God made it such as it was to be. But it is
certain, and it is an opinion commonly received by the
theologians, that the action by which He now preserves it is
just the same as that by which He at first created it. In
this way, although He had not, to begin with, given this
world any other form than that of chaos, provided that the
laws of nature had once been established and that He had
lent His aid in order that its action should be according to
its wont, we may well believe, without doing outrage to the
miracle of creation, that by this means alone all things
which are purely material might in course of time have
become such as we observe them to be at present; and their
nature is much easier to understand when we see them coming
to pass little by little in this manner, than were we to
consider them as all complete to begin with.
From a description of inanimate bodies and plants I
passed on to that of animals, and particularly to that of
men. But since I had not yet sufficient knowledge to speak
of them in the same style as of the rest, that is to say,
demonstrating the effects from the causes, and showing from
what beginnings and in what fashion Nature must produce
them, I contented myself with supposing that God formed the
body of man altogether like one of ours, in the outward
figure of its members as well as in the interior
conformation of its organs, without making use of any matter
other than that which I had described, and without at the
first placing in it a rational soul, or any other thing
which might serve as a vegetative or as a sensitive soul;
excepting that He kindled in the heart one of these fires
without light, which I have already described, and which I
did not conceive of as in any way different from that which
makes the hay heat when shut up before it is dry, and which
makes new wine grow frothy when it is left to ferment over
the fruit. For, examining the functions which might in
accordance with this supposition exist in this body, I found
precisely all those which might exist in us without our
having the power of thought, and consequently {110} without
our soul-that is to say, this part of us, distinct from the
body, of which it has just been said that its nature is to
think-contributing to it, functions which are identically
the same as those in which animals lacking reason may be
said to resemble us. For all that, I could not find in these
functions any which, being dependent on thought, pertain to
us alone, inasmuch as we are men; while I found all of them
afterwards, when I assumed that God had created a rational
soul and that He had united it to this body in a particular
manner which I described.
But in order to show how I there treated of this
matter, I wish here to set forth the explanation of the
movement of heart and arteries which, being the first and
most general movement that is observed in animals, will give
us the means of easily judging as to what we ought to think
about all the rest. And so that there may be less difficulty
in understanding what I shall say on this matter, I should
like that those not versed in anatomy should take the
trouble, before reading this, of having out up before their
eyes the heart of some large animal which has lungs (for it
is in all respects sufficiently similar to the heart of a
man), and cause that there be demonstrated to them the two
chambers or cavities which are within it. There is first of
all that which is on the right side, with which two very
large tubes or channels correspond, viz. the ,
which is the principal receptacle of the blood, and so to
speak the trunk of a tree of which all the other veins of
the body are the branches; and there is the arterial vein
which has been badly named because it is nothing but an
artery which, taking its origin from the heart, divides,
after having issued from it, into many branches which
proceed to disperse themselves all through the lungs. Then
there is secondly the cavity on the left side with which
there again correspond two tubes which are as large or
larger than the preceding, viz. the venous artery, which has
also been badly named, because it is nothing but a vein
which comes from the lungs, where it is divided into many
branches, interlaced with those of the arterial vein, and
with those of the tube which is called the windpipe, through
which enters the air which we breathe; and the great artery
which, issuing from the heart, sends its branches throughout
the body. I should also wish that the eleven little
membranes, which, like so many doors, open and shut the four
entrances which are in these two cavities, should be
carefully shown. There are of these three at the entrance of
the , where they are so arranged that they can in
nowise prevent the blood which it contains {111} from
flowing into the right cavity of the heart and yet exactly
prevent its issuing out; there are three at the entrance to
the arterial vein, which, being arranged quite the other
way, easily allow the blood which is in this cavity to pass
into the lungs, but not that which is already in the lungs
to return to this cavity. There are also two others at the
entrance of the venous artery, which allow the blood in the
lungs to flow towards the left cavity of the heart, but do
not permit its return; and three at the entrance of the
great artery, which allow the blood to flow from the heart,
but prevent its return. There is then no cause to seek for
any other reason for the number of these membranes, except
that the opening of the venous artery being oval, because of
the situation where it is met with, may be conveniently
closed with two membranes, while the others, being round,
can be better closed with three. Further, I should have my
readers consider that the grand artery and the arterial vein
are much harder and firmer than are the venous artery and
the ; and that these two last expand before
entering the heart, and there form so to speak two pockets
called the auricles of the heart, which are composed of a
tissue similar to its own; and also that there is always
more heat in the heart than in any other part of the body;
and finally that this heat is capable of causing any drop of
blood that enters into its cavities promptly to expand and
dilate, as liquids usually do when they are allowed to fall
drop by drop into some very hot vessel.
After this I do not need to say anything with a view to
explaining the movement of the heart, except that when its
cavities are not full of blood there necessarily flows from
the into the right cavity, and from the venous
artery into the left, enough blood to keep these two vessels
always full, and being full, that their orifices, which are
turned towards the heart, cannot then be closed. But as soon
as two drops of blood have thus entered, one into each of
the cavities, these drops, which cannot be otherwise than
very large, because the openings by which they enter are
very wide and the vessels from whence they come are very
full of blood, rarefy and dilate because of the heat which
they find there. By this means, causing the whole heart to
expand, they force home and close the five little doors
which are at the entrances of the two vessels whence they
flow, thus preventing any more blood from coming down into
the heart and becoming more and more rarefied, they push
open the six doors which are in the entrances of the two
other vessels through which they make their exit, by this
means causing {112} all the branches of the arterial vein
and of the great artery to expand almost at the same instant
as the heart. This last immediately afterward contracts as
do also the arteries, because the blood which has entered
them has cooled; and the six little doors close up again,
and the five doors of the and of the venous
artery re-open and make a way for two other drops of blood
which cause the heart and the arteries once more to expand,
just as we saw before. And because the blood which then
enters the heart passes through these two pouches which are
called auricles, it comes to pass that their movement is
contrary to the movement of the heart, and that they
contract when it expands. For the rest, in order that those
who do not know the force of mathematical demonstration and
are unaccustomed to distinguish true reasons from merely
probable reasons, should not venture to deny what has been
said without examination, I wish to acquaint them with the
fact that this movement which I have just explained follows
as necessarily from the very disposition of the organs, as
can be seen by looking at the heart, and from the heat which
can be felt with the fingers, and from the nature of the
blood of which we can learn by experience, as does that of a
clock from the power, the situation, and the form, of its
counterpoise and of its wheels.
But if we ask how the blood in the veins does not
exhaust itself in thus flowing continually into the heart,
and how the arteries do not become too full of blood, since
all that passes through the heart flows into them, I need
only reply by stating what has already been written by an
English physician,[6] to whom the credit of having broken
the ice in this matter must be ascribed, as also of being
the first to teach that there are many little tubes at the
extremities of the arteries whereby the blood that they
receive from the heart enters the little branches of the
veins, whence it returns once more to the heart; in this way
its course is just a perpetual circulation. He proves this
very clearly by the common experience of surgeons, who, by
binding the arm moderately firmly above the place where they
open the vein, cause the blood to issue more abundantly than
it would have done if they had not bound it at all; while
quite a contrary result would occur if they bound it below,
between the hand and the opening, or if they bound it very
firmly above. For it is clear that when the bandage is
moderately tight, though it may prevent the blood already in
the arm from {113} returning to the heart by the Veins, it
cannot for all that prevent more blood from coming anew by
the arteries, because these are situated below the veins,
and their walls, being stronger, are less easy to compress;
and also that the blood which comes from the heart tends to
pass by means of the arteries to the band with greater force
than it does to return from the band to the heart by the
veins. And because this blood escapes from the arm by the
opening which is made in one of the veins, there must
necessarily be some passages below the ligature, that is to
say, towards the extremities of the arm, through which it
can come thither from the arteries. This physician likewise
proves very clearly the truth of that which he says of the
course of the blood, by the existence of certain little
membranes or valves which are so arranged in different
places along the course of the veins, that they do not
permit the blood to pass from the middle of the body towards
the extremities, but only to return from the extremities to
the heart; and further by the experiment which shows that
all the blood which is in the body may issue from it in a
very short time by means of one single artery that has been
cut, and this is so even when it is very tightly bound very
near the heart, and cut between it and the ligature, so that
there could be no ground for supposing that the blood which
flowed out of it could proceed from any other place but the
heart.
But there are many other things which demonstrate that
the true cause of this motion of the blood is that which I
have stated. To begin with, the difference which is seen
between the blood which issues from the veins, and that
which issues from the arteries, can only proceed from the
fact, that, being rarefied, and so to speak distilled by
passing through the heart, it is more subtle and lively, and
warmer immediately after leaving the heart (that is to say,
when in the arteries) than it is a little while before
entering it (that is, when in the veins). And if attention
be paid, we shall find that this difference does not appear
clearly, excepting in the vicinity of the heart, and is not
so clear in those parts which are further removed from it.
Further, the consistency of,he coverings of which the
arterial vein and the great artery are composed, shows
clearly enough that the blood beats against them with more
force than it does in the case of the veins. And why should
the left cavity of the heart and the great artery be larger
and wider than the right cavity and the arterial vein, if it
is not that the blood of the venous artery having only been
in the lungs since it had passed through the heart, is more
subtle and rarefies more effectively and {114} easily than
that which proceeds immediately from the ? And
what is it that the physicians can discover in feeling the
pulse, unless they know that, according as the blood changes
its nature, it may be rarefied by the warmth of the heart in
a greater or less degree, and more or less quickly than
before ? And if we inquire how this heat is communicated to
the other members, must it not be allowed that it is by
means of the blood which, passing through the heart, is
heated once again and thence is spread throughout all the
body? From this it happens that if we take away the blood
from any particular part, by that same means we take away
from it the heat; even if the heart were as ardent as a red
hot iron it would not suffice to heat up the feet and hands
as it actually does, unless it continually sent out to them
new blood. We further understand from this that the true use
of respiration is to carry sufficient fresh air into the
lungs to cause the blood, which comes there from the right
cavity of the heart, where it has been rarefied and so to
speak transformed into vapors, to thicken, and become anew
converted into blood before falling into the left cavity,
without which process it would not be fit to serve as fuel
for the fire which there exists. We are confirmed in this
statement by seeing that the animals which have no lungs
have also but one cavity in their hearts, and that in
children, who cannot use them while still within their
mother's wombs, there is an opening by which the blood flows
from the into the left cavity of the heart, and
a conduit through which it passes from the arterial vein
into the great artery without passing through the lung.
Again, how could digestion be carried on in the stomach if
the heart did not send heat there by the arteries, and along
with this some of the more fluid parts of the blood which
aid in dissolving the foods which have been there placed?
And is not the action which converts the juice of foods into
blood easy to understand if we consider that it is distilled
by passing and repassing through the heart possibly more
than one or two hundred times in a day? What further need is
there to explain the process of nutrition and the production
of the different humors which are in the body, if we can say
that the force with which the blood, in being rarefied,
passes from the heart towards the extremities of the
arteries, causes some of its parts to remain among those of
the members where they are found and there to take the place
of others which they oust; and that according to the
situation or form or smallness of the little pores which
they encounter, certain ones proceed to certain parts rather
than others, just as {115} a number of different sieves
variously perforated, as everyone has probably seen, are
capable of separating different species of grain? And
finally what in all this is most remarkable of all, is the
generation of the animal spirits, which resemble a very
subtle wind, or rather a flame which is very pure and very
vivid, and which, continually rising Up in great abundance
from the heart to the brain, thence proceeds through the
nerves to the muscles, thereby giving the power of motion to
all the members. And it is Dot necessary to suppose any
other cause to explain how the particles of blood, which,
being most agitated and most penetrating, are the most
proper to constitute these spirits, proceed towards the
brain rather than elsewhere, than that the arteries which
carry them thither are those which proceed from the heart in
the most direct lines, and that according to the laws of
Mechanics, which are identical with those of Nature, when
many objects tend to move together to the same point, where
there is not room for all (as is the case with the particles
of blood which issue from the left cavity of the heart and
tend to go towards the brain), the weakest and least
agitated parts must necessarily be turned aside by those
that are stronger, which by this means are the only ones to
reach it.
I had explained all these matters in some detail in the
Treatise which I formerly intended to publish. And
afterwards I had shown there, what must be the fabric of the
nerves and muscles of the human body in order that the
animal spirits therein contained should have the power to
move the members, just as the heads of animals, a little
while after decapitation, are still observed to move and
bite the earth, notwithstanding that they are no longer
animate; what changes are necessary in the brain to cause
wakefulness, sleep and dreams; how light, sounds, smells,
tastes, heat and all other qualities pertaining to external
objects are able to imprint on it various ideas by the
intervention of the senses; how hunger, thirst and other
internal affections can also convey their impressions upon
it; what should be regarded as the "common sense" by which
these ideas are received, and what is meant by the memory
which retains them, by the fancy which can change them in
diverse ways and out of them constitute new ideas, and
which, by the same means, distributing the animal spirits
through the muscles, can cause the members of such a body to
move in as many diverse ways, and in a manner as suitable to
the objects which present themselves to its senses and to
its internal passions, as can happen in our own case apart
from the direction of our free will. And this will not seem
strange {116} to those, who, knowing how many different
automata or moving machines can be made by the industry of
man, without employing in so doing more than a very few
parts in comparison with the great multitude of bones,
muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, or other parts that are
found in the body of each animal. From this aspect the body
is regarded as a machine which, having been made by the
hands of God, is incomparably better arranged, and possesses
in itself movements which are much more admirable, than any
of those which can be invented by man. Here I specially
stopped to show that if there had been such machines,
possessing the organs and outward form of a monkey or some
other animal without reason, we should not have had any
means of ascertaining that they were not of the same nature
as those animals. On the other hand, if there were machines
which bore a resemblance to our body and imitated our
actions as far as it was morally possible to do so, we
should always have two very certain tests by which to
recognize that, for all that, they were not real men. The
first is, that they could never use speech or other signs as
we do when placing our thoughts on record for the benefit of
others. For we can easily understand a machine's being
constituted so that it can utter words, and even emit some
responses to action on it of a corporeal kind, which brings
about a change in its organs; for instance, if it is touched
in a particular part it may ask what we wish to say to it;
if in another part it may exclaim that it is being hurt, and
so on. But it never happens that it arranges its speech in
various ways, in order to reply appropriately to everything
that may be said in its presence, as even the lowest type of
man can do. And the second difference is, that although
machines can perform certain things as well as or perhaps
better than any of us can do, they infallibly fan short in
others, by the which means we may discover that they did not
act from knowledge, but only from the disposition of their
organs. For while reason is a universal instrument which can
serve for all contingencies, these organs have need of some
special adaptation for every particular action. From this it
follows that it is morally impossible that there should be
sufficient diversity in any machine to allow it to act in
all the events of life in the same way as our reason causes
us to act.
By these two methods we may also recognize the
difference that exists between men and brutes. For it is a
very remarkable fact that there are none so depraved and
stupid, without even excepting idiots, that they cannot
arrange different words together, {117} forming of them a
statement by which they make known their thoughts; while, on
the other hand, there is no other animal, however perfect
and fortunately circumstanced it may be, which can do the
same. It is not the want of organs that brings this to pass,
for it is evident that ma.-Pies and parrots are able to
utter words just like ourselves, and yet they cannot speak
as we do, that is, so as to give evidence that they think of
what they say. On the other hand, men who, being born deaf
and dumb, are in the same degree, or even more than the
brutes, destitute of the organs which serve the others for
talking, are in the habit of themselves investing certain
signs by which they make themselves understood by those who,
being usually in their company, have leisure to learn their
language. And this does not merely show that the brutes have
less reason than men, but that they have none at all, since
it is clear that very little is required in order to be able
to talk. And when we notice the inequality that exists
between animals of the same species, as well as between men,
and observe that some are more capable of receiving
instruction than others, it is not credible that a monkey or
a parrot, selected as the most perfect of its species,
should not in these matters equal the stupidest child to be
found, or at least a child whose mind is clouded, unless in
the case of the brute the soul were of an entirely different
nature from ours. And we ought not to confound speech with
natural movements which betray passions and may be imitated
by machines as well as be manifested by animals; nor must we
think, as did some of the ancients, that brutes talk,
although we do not understand their language. For if this
were true, since they have many organs which are allied to
our own, they could communicate their thoughts to us just as
easily as to those of their own race. It is also a very
remarkable fact that although there are many animals which
exhibit more dexterity than we do in some of their actions,
we at the same time observe that they do not manifest any
dexterity at all in many others. Hence the fact that they do
better than we do, does not prove that they are endowed with
mind, for in this case they would have more reason than any
of us, and would surpass us in all other things. It rather
shows that they have no reason at all, and that it is nature
which acts in them according to the disposition of their
organs, just as a clock, which is only composed of wheels
and weights is able to tell the hours and measure the time
more correctly than we can do with all our wisdom.
I had described after this the rational soul and shown
that it {118} could not be in any way derived from the power
of matter, like the other things of which I had spoken, but
that it must be expressly created. I showed, too, that it is
not sufficient that it should be lodged in the human body
like a pilot in his ship, unless perhaps for the moving of
its members, but that it is necessary that it should also be
joined and united more closely to the body in order to have
sensations and appetites similar to our own, and thus to
form a true man. In conclusion, I have here enlarged a
little on the subject of the soul, because it is one of the
greatest importance. For next to the error of those who deny
God, which I think I have already sufficiently refuted,
there is none which is more effectual in leading feeble
spirits from the straight path of virtue, than to imagine
that the soul of the brute is of the same nature as our own,
and that in consequence, after this life we have nothing to
fear or to hope for, any more than the flies and ants. As a
matter of fact, when one comes to know how greatly they
differ, we understand much better the reasons which go to
prove that our soul is in its nature entirely independent of
body, and in consequence that it is not liable to die with
it. And then, inasmuch as we observe no other causes capable
of destroying it, we are naturally inclined to judge that it
is immortal.
PART VI.
It is three years since I arrived at the end of the
Treatise which contained all these things; and I was
commencing to revise it in order to place it in the hands of
a printer, when I learned that certain persons, to whose
opinions I defer, and whose authority cannot have less
weight with my actions than my own reason has over my
thoughts, had disapproved of a physical theory published a
little while before by another person.[7] I will not say
that I agreed with this opinion, but only that before their
censure I observed in it nothing which I could possibly
imagine to be prejudicial either to Religion or the State,
or consequently which could have prevented me from giving
expression to it in writing, if my reason had persuaded me
to do so: and this made me fear that among my own opinions
one might be found which should be misunderstood,
notwithstanding the great care which I have always taken not
to accept any new beliefs unless I had very certain proof of
their truth, and not to give expression to what could tend
to the disadvantage {119} of any person. This sufficed to
cause me to alter the resolution which I had made to
publish. For, although the reasons for my former resolution
were very strong, my inclination, which always made me hate
the profession of writing books, caused me immediately to
find plenty of other reasons for excusing myself from doing
so. And these reasons, on the one side and on the other, are
of such a nature that not only have I here some interest in
giving expression to them, but possibly the public may also
have some interest in knowing them.
I have never made much of those things which proceed
from my own mind, and so long as I culled Do other fruits
from the Method which I use, beyond that of satisfying
myself respecting certain difficulties which pertain to the
speculative sciences, or trying to regulate my conduct by
the reasons which it has taught me, I never believed myself
to be obliged to write anything about it. For as regards
that which concerns conduct, everyone is so confident of his
own common sense, that there might be found as many
reformers as heads, if it were permitted that others than
those whom God has established as the sovereigns of his
people, or at least to whom He has given sufficient grace
and zeal to be prophets, should be allowed to make any
changes in that. And, although my speculations give me the
greatest pleasure, I believed that others also had
speculations which possibly pleased them even more. But so
soon as I had acquired some general notions concerning
Physics, and as, beginning to make use of them in various
special difficulties, I observed to what point they might
lead us, and how much they differ from the principles of
which we have made use up to the present time, I believed
that I could not keep them concealed without greatly sinning
against the law which obliges us to procure, as much as in
us lies, the general good of all mankind. For they caused me
to see that it is possible to attain knowledge which is very
useful in life, and that, instead of that speculative
philosophy which is taught in the Schools, we may find a
practical philosophy by means of which, knowing the force
and the action of fire, water, air, the stars, heavens and
all other bodies that environ us, as distinctly as we know
the different crafts of our artisans, we can in the same way
employ them in all those uses to which they are adapted, and
thus render ourselves the masters and possessors of nature.
This is not merely to be desired with a view to the
invention of an infinity of arts and crafts which enable us
to enjoy without any trouble the fruits of the earth and all
the good things which are to {120} be found there, but also
principally because it brings about the preservation of
health, which is without doubt the chief blessing and the
foundation of all other blessings in this life. For the mind
depends so much on the temperament and disposition of the
bodily organs that, if it is possible to find a means of
rendering men wiser and cleverer than they have hitherto
been, I believe that it is in medicine that it must be
sought. It is true that the medicine which is now in vogue
contains little of which the utility is remarkable; but,
without having any intention of decrying it, I am sure that
there is no one, even among those who make its study a
profession, who does not confess that all that men know is
almost nothing in comparison with what remains to be known;
and that we could be free of an infinitude of maladies both
of body and mind, and even also possibly of the infirmities
of age, if we had sufficient knowledge of their causes, and
of all the remedies with which nature has provided us. But,
having the intention of devoting all my life to the
investigation of a knowledge which is so essential, and
having discovered a path which appears to me to be of such a
nature that we must by its means infallibly reach our end if
we pursue it, unless, indeed, we are prevented by the
shortness of life or by lack of experience, I judged that
there was no better provision against these two impediments
than faithfully to communicate to the public the little
which I should myself have discovered, and to beg all well-
inclined persons to proceed further by contributing, each
one according to his own inclination and ability, to the
experiments which must be made, and then to communicate to
the public all the things which they might discover, in
order that the last should commence where the preceding had
left off; and thus, by joining together the lives and labors
of many, we should collectively proceed much further than
any one in particular could succeed in doing.
I remarked also respecting experiments, that they
become so much the more necessary the more one is advanced
in knowledge, for to begin with it is better to make use
simply of those which present themselves spontaneously to
our senses, and of which we could not be ignorant provided
that we reflected ever so little, rather than to seek out
those which are more rare and recondite; the reason of this
is that those which are more rare often mislead us so long
as we do not know the causes of the more common, and the
fact that the circumstances on which they depend are almost
always so particular and so minute that it is very difficult
to observe {121} them. But in this the order which I have
followed is as follows: I have first tried to discover
generally the principles or first causes of everything that
is or that can be in the world, without considering anything
that might accomplish this end but God Himself who has
created the world, or deriving them from any source
excepting from certain germs of truths which are naturally
existent in our souls. After that I considered which were
the primary and most ordinary effects which might be deduced
from these causes, and it seems to me that in this way I
discovered the heavens, the stars, an earth, and even on the
earth, water, air, fire, the minerals and some other such
things, which are the most common and simple of any that
exist, and consequently the easiest to know. Then, when I
wished to descend to those which were more particular, so
many objects of various kinds presented themselves to me,
that I did not think it was possible for the human mind to
distinguish the forms or species of bodies which are on the
earth from an infinitude of others which might have been so
if it had been the will of God to place them there, or
consequently to apply them to our use, if it were not that
we arrive at the causes by the effects, and avail ourselves
of many particular experiments. In subsequently passing over
in my mind all the objects which have ever been presented to
my senses, I can truly venture to say that I have not there
observed anything which I could not easily explain by the
principles which I had discovered. But I must also confess
that the power of nature is so ample and so vast, and these
principles are so simple and general, that I observed hardly
any particular effect as to which I could not at once
recognize that it might be deduced from the principles in
many different ways; and my greatest difficulty is usually
to discover in which of these ways the effect does depend
upon them. As to that, I do not know any other plan but
again to try to find experiments of such a nature that their
result is not the same if it has to be explained by one of
the methods, as it would be if explained by the other. For
the rest, I have now reached a position in which I discern,
as it seems to me, sufficiently clearly what course must be
adopted in order to make the majority of the experiments
which may conduce to carry out this end. But I also perceive
that they are of such a nature, and of so great a number,
that neither my hands nor my income, though the latter were
a thousand times larger than it is, could suffice for the
whole; so that just in proportion as henceforth I shall have
the power of carrying out more of them or less, shall I make
more or less progress in arriving at a knowledge {122} of
nature. This is what I had promised myself to make known by
the Treatise which I had written, and to demonstrate in it
so clearly the advantage which the public might receive from
it, that I should induce all those who have the good of
mankind at heart-that is to say, all those who are really
virtuous in fact, and not only by a false semblance or by
opinion-both to communicate to me those experiments that
they have already carried out, and to help me in the
investigation of those that still remain to be accomplished.
But I have since that time found other reasons which
caused me to change my opinion, and consider that I should
indeed continue to put in writing all the things which I
judged to be of importance whenever I discovered them to be
true, and that I should bestow on them the same care as I
should have done had I wished to have them printed. I did
this because it would give me so much the more occasion to
examine them carefully (for there is no doubt that we always
scrutinize more closely what we think will be seen by many,
than what is done simply for ourselves, and often the things
which have seemed true to me when I began to think about
them, seemed false when I tried to place them on paper); and
because I did not desire to lose any opportunity of
benefiting the public if I were able to do so, and in order
that if my works have any value, those into whose hands they
will fall after my death, might have the power of making use
of them as seems best to them. I, however, resolved that I
should not consent to their being published during my
lifetime, so that neither the contradictions and
controversies to which they might possibly give rise, nor
even the reputation, such as it might be, which they would
bring to me, should give me any occasion to lose the time
which I meant to set apart for my own instruction. For
although it is true that each man is obliged to procure, as
much as in him lies, the good of others, and that to be
useful to nobody is popularly speaking to be worthless, it
is at the same time true that our cares should extend
further than the present time, and that it is good to set
aside those things which may possibly be adapted to bring
profit to the living, when we have in view the
accomplishment of other ends which will bring much more
advantage to our descendants. In the same wry I should much
like that men should know that the little which I have
learned hitherto is almost nothing in comparison with that
of which I am ignorant, and with the knowledge of which I do
not despair of being able to attain. For it is much the same
with those who little by little discover the truth in the
Sciences, as with those who, {123} commencing to become
rich, have less trouble in obtaining great acquisitions than
they formerly experienced, when poorer, in arriving at those
much smaller in amount. Or we might compare them to the
Generals of our armies, whose forces usually grow ill
proportion to their victories, and who require more
leadership in order to hold together their troops after the
loss of a battle, than is needed to take towns and provinces
after having obtained a success. For he really gives battle
who attempts to conquer all the difficulties and errors
which prevent him from arriving at a knowledge of the truth,
and it is to lose a battle to admit a false opinion touching
a matter of any generality and importance. Much more skill
is required in order to recover the position that one
beforehand held, than is necessary to make great progress
when one already possesses principles which are assured. For
myself, if I have succeeded in discovering certain truths in
the Sciences (and I hope that the matters contained in this
volume will show that I have discovered some), I may say
that they are resultant from, and dependent on, five or six
principal difficulties which I have surmounted, and my
encounter with these I look upon as so many battles in which
I have had fortune on my side. I will not even hesitate to
say that I think I shall have no need to win more than two
or three other victories similar in kind in order to reach
the accomplishment of my plans. And my age is not so
advanced but that, in the ordinary course of nature, I may
still have sufficient leisure for this end. But I believe
myself to be so much the more bound to make the most of the
time which remains, as I have the greater hope of being able
to employ it well. And without doubt I should have many
chances of being robbed of it, were I to publish the
foundations of my Physics; for though these are nearly all
so evident that it is only necessary to understand them in
order to accept them, and although there are none of them as
to which I do not believe myself capable of giving
demonstration, yet because it is impossible that they should
accord with all the various opinions of other men, I foresee
that I should often be diverted from my main design by the
opposition which they would bring to birth.
We may say that these contradictions might be useful
both in making me aware of my errors, and, supposing that I
had reached some satisfactory conclusion in bringing others
to a fuller understanding of my speculations; and, as many
can see more than can a single man, they might help in
leading others who from the present time may begin to avail
themselves of my system, to assist {124} me likewise with
their discoveries. But though I recognize that I am
extremely liable to err, and though I almost never trust the
first reflections that I arrive at, the experience which I
have had of the objections which may be made to my system
prevents my having any hope of deriving profit from them.
For I have often had experience of the judgments both of
those whom I have esteemed as my friends, and of some others
to whom I believed myself to be indifferent, and even, too,
of some whose ill-feeling and envy would, I felt sure, make
them endeavor to reveal what affection concealed from the
eyes of my friends. But rarely has it happened that any
objection has been made which I did not in some sort
foresee, unless where it was something very far removed from
my subject. In this way hardly ever have I encountered any
censor of my opinions who did not appear to me to be either
less rigorous or less judicial than myself. And I certainly
never remarked that by means of disputations employed by the
Schools any truth has been discovered of which we were
formerly ignorant. And so long as each side attempts to
vanquish his opponent, there is a much more serious attempt
to establish probability than to weigh the reasons on either
side; and those who have for long been excellent pleaders
are not for that reason the best judges.
As to the advantage which others may receive from the
communication of my reflections, it could not be very great,
inasmuch as I have not yet carried them so far as that it is
not necessary to add many things before they can be brought
into practice. And I think I can without vanity say that if
anyone is capable of doing this, it should be myself rather
than another-not indeed that there may not be in the world
many minds incomparably superior to my own, but because no
one can so well understand a thing and make it his own when
learnt from another as when it is discovered for himself. As
regards the matter in hand there is so much truth in this,
that although I have often explained some of my opinions to
persons of very good intelligence, who, while I talked to
them appeared to understand them very clearly, yet when they
recounted them I remarked that they had almost always
altered them in such a manner that I could no longer
acknowledge them as mine. On this account I am very glad to
have the opportunity here of begging my descendants never to
believe that what is told to them proceeded from myself
unless I have myself divulged it. And I do not in the least
wonder at the extravagances attributed to all the ancient
philosophers whose writings we do not possess, nor do I
judge from {125} these that their thoughts were very
unreasonable, considering that theirs were the best minds of
the time they lived in, but only that they have been
imperfectly represented to us. We see, too, that it hardly
ever happens that any of their disciples surpassed them, and
I am sure that those who most passionately follow Aristotle
now-a-days would think themselves happy if they had as much
knowledge of nature as he had, even if this were on the
condition that they should never attain to any more. They
are like the ivy that never tries to mount above the trees
which give it support, and which often even descends again
after it has reached their summit; for it appears to me that
such men also sink again-that is to say, somehow render
themselves more ignorant than they would have been had they
abstained from study altogether. For, not content with
knowing all that is intelligibly explained in their author,
they wish in addition to find in him the solution of many
difficulties of which he says nothing, and in regard to
which he possibly had no thought at all. At the same time
their mode of philosophizing is very convenient for those
who have abilities of a very mediocre kind, for the
obscurity of the distinctions and principles of which they
make use, is the reason of their being able to talk of all
things as boldly as though they really knew about them, and
defend all that they say against the most subtle and acute,
without any one having the means of convincing them to the
contrary. In this they seem to me like a blind man who, in
order to fight on equal terms with one who sees, would have
the latter to come into the bottom of a very dark cave. I
may say, too, that it is in the interest of such people that
I should abstain from publishing the principles of
philosophy of which I make use, for, being so simple and
evident as they are, I should, in publishing them, do the
same as though I threw open the windows and caused daylight
to enter the cave into which they have descended in order to
fight. But even the best minds have no reason to desire to
be acquainted with these principles, for if they wish to be
able to talk of everything and acquire a reputation for
learning, they will more readily attain their end by
contenting themselves with the appearance of truth which may
be found in all sorts of things without much trouble, than
in seeking for truth which only reveals itself little by
little in certain spheres, and which, when others come into
question, obliges one to confess one's ignorance. If,
however, they prefer the knowledge of some small amount of
truth to the vanity of seeming to be ignorant of nothing,
which knowledge is {126} doubtless preferable, or if they
desire to follow a course similar to my own, it is not
necessary that I should say any more than what I have
already said in this Discourse. For if they are capable of
passing beyond the point I have reached, they will also so
much the more be able to find by themselves all that I
believe myself to have discovered; since, not having
examined anything but in its order, it is certain that what
remains for me to discover is in itself more difficult and
more recondite than anything that I have hitherto been able
to meet with, and they would have much less pleasure in
learning from me than from themselves. Besides, the habit
which they will acquire of seeking first things that are
simple and then little by little and by degrees passing to
others more difficult, will be of more use than could be all
my instructions. For, as regards myself, I am persuaded that
if from my youth up I had been taught all the truths of
which I have since sought the demonstrations, or if I had
not had any difficulty in learning them, I should perhaps
never have known any others, or at least I should never have
acquired the habit or facility which I think I have
obtained, of ever finding them anew, in proportion as I set
myself to seek for them. And, in a word, if there is any
work at all which cannot be so well achieved by another as
by him who has begun it, it is that at which I labor.
It is true as regards the experiments which may conduce
to this end, that one man could not possibly accomplish all
of them. But yet he could not, to good advantage, employ
other hands than his own, excepting those of artisans or
persons of that kind whom he could pay, and whom the hope of
gain-which is a very effectual incentive-might cause to
perform with exactitude all the things they were directed to
accomplish. As to those who, whether by curiosity or desire
to learn, might possibly offer him their voluntary
assistance, not only are they usually more ready with
promises than with performance, planning out fine sounding
projects, none of which are ever realized, but they will
also infallibly demand payment for their trouble by
requesting the explanation of certain difficulties, or at
least by empty compliments and useless talk, which could not
occupy any of the student's time without causing it to be
lost. And as to the experiments already made by others, even
if they desired to communicate these to him-which those who
term them secrets would never do-they are for the most part
accompanied by so many circumstances or superfluous matter,
that it would be very difficult for him to disentangle the
truth. In addition to this he {127} would find nearly all so
badly explained, or even so false (because those who carried
them out were forced to make them appear to be in conformity
with their principles), that if there had been some which
might have been of use to him, they would hardly be worth
the time that would be required in making the selection. So
true is this, that if there were anywhere in the world a
person whom one knew to be assuredly capable of discovering
matters of the highest importance and those of the greatest
possible utility to the public, and if for this reason all
other men were eager by every means in their power to help
him in reaching the end which he set before him, I do not
see that they could do anything for him beyond contributing
to defray the expenses of the experiments which might be
requisite, or, for the rest, seeing that he was not deprived
of his leisure by the importunities of anyone. But, in
addition to the fact that I neither esteem myself so highly
as to be willing to promise anything extraordinary, nor give
scope to an imagination so vain as to conceive that the
public should interest itself greatly in my designs, I do
not yet own a soul so base as to be willing to accept from
anyone whatever a favor which it might be supposed I did not
merit.
All those considerations taken together were, three
years ago, the cause of my not desiring to publish the
Treatise which I had on hand, and the reason why I even
formed the resolution of not bringing to light during my
life any other of so general a kind, or one by which the
foundations of Physics could be understood. But since then
two other reasons came into operation which compelled me to
bring forward certain attempts, as I have done here, and to
render to the public some account of my actions and designs.
The first is that if I failed to do so, many who knew the
intention I formerly had of publishing certain writings,
might imagine that the causes for which I abstained from so
doing were more to my disadvantage than they really were;
for although I do not care immoderately for glory, or, if I
dare say so, although I even hate it, inasmuch as I judge it
to be antagonistic to the repose which I esteem above all
other things, at the same time I never tried to conceal my
actions as though they were crimes, nor have I used many
precautions against being known, partly because I should
have thought it damaging to myself, and partly because it
would have given me a sort of disquietude which would again
have militated against the perfect repose of spirit which I
seek. And for as much as having in this way always held
myself in a condition of indifference as {128} regards
whether I was known or was not known, I have not yet been
able to prevent myself from acquiring some sort of
reputation, I thought that I should do my best at least to
prevent myself from acquiring an evil reputation. The other
reason which obliged me to put this in writing is that I am
becoming every day more and more alive to t-he delay which
is being suffered in the design which I have of instructing
myself, because of the lack of an infinitude of experiments,
which it is impossible that I should perform without the aid
of others: and although I do not flatter myself so much as
to hope that the public should to any large degree
participate in my interest, I yet do not wish to be found
wanting, both on my own account, and as one day giving
occasion to those who will survive me of reproaching me for
the fact that I might have left many matters in a much
better condition than I have done, had I not too much
neglected to make them understand in what way they could
have contributed to the accomplishment of my designs.
And I thought that it was easy for me to select certain
matters which would not be the occasion for many
controversies, nor yet oblige me to propound more of my
principles than I wish, and which yet would suffice to allow
a pretty clear manifestation of what I can do and what I
cannot do in the sciences. In this I cannot say whether I
have succeeded or have not succeeded, and I do not wish to
anticipate the judgment of any one by myself speaking of my
writings; but I shall be very glad if they will examine
them. And in order that they may have the better opportunity
of so doing, I beg all those who have any objections to
offer to take the trouble of sending them to my publishers,
so that, being made aware of them, I may try at the same
time to subjoin my reply. By this means, the reader, seeing
objections and reply at the same time, will the more easily
judge of the truth; for I do not promise in any instance to
make lengthy replies, but just to avow my errors very
frankly if I am convinced of them; or, if I cannot perceive
them, to say simply what I think requisite for the defense
of the matters I have written, without adding the exposition
of any new matter, so that I may not be endlessly engaged in
passing from one side to the other.
If some of the matters of which I spoke in the
beginning of the and should at first
sight give offense because I call them hypotheses and do not
appear to care about their proof, let them have the patience
to read these in entirety, and I hope that they will find
themselves satisfied. For it appears to me that {129} the
reasonings are so mutually interwoven, that as the later
ones are demonstrated by the earlier, which are their
causes, the earlier are reciprocally demonstrated by the
later which are their effects. And it must not be imagined
that in this I commit the fallacy which logicians name
arguing in a circle, for, since experience renders the
greater part of these effects very certain, the causes from
which I deduce them do not so much serve to prove their
existence as to explain them; on the other hand, the causes
are explained by the effects. And I have not named them
hypotheses with any other object than that it may be known
that while I consider myself able to deduce them from the
primary truths which I explained above, yet I particularly
desired not to do so, in order that certain persons may not
for this reason take occasion to build up some extravagant
philosophic system on what they take to be my principles,
and thus cause the blame to be put on me. I refer to those
who imagine that in one day they may discover all that
another has arrived at in twenty years of work, so soon as
he has merely spoken to them two or three words on the
subject; while they are really all the more subject to err,
and less capable of perceiving the truth as they are the
more subtle and lively. For as regards the opinions that are
truly mine I do not apologize for them as being new,
inasmuch as if we consider the reasons of them well, I
assure myself that they will be found to be so simple and so
conformable to common sense, as to appear less extraordinary
and less paradoxical than any others which may be held on
similar subjects. And I do not even boast of being the first
discoverer of any of them, but only state that I have
adopted them, not because they have been held by others, nor
because they have not been so held, but only because Reason
has persuaded me of their truth.
Even if artisans are not at once able to carry out the
invention[8] explained in the , I do not for that
reason think that it can be said that it is to be condemned;
for, inasmuch as great address and practice is required to
make and adjust the mechanism which I have described without
omitting any detail, I should not be less astonished at
their succeeding at the first effort than I should be
supposing some one were in one day to learn to play the
guitar with skill, just because a good sheet of musical
notation were set up before him. And if I write in French
which is the language of my country, rather than in Latin
which is that of my teachers, that is {130} because I hope
that those who avail themselves only of their natural reason
in its purity may be better judges of my opinions than those
who believe only in the writings of the ancients; and as to
those who unite good sense with study, whom alone I crave
for my judges, they will not, I feel sure, be so partial to
Latin as to refuse to follow my reasoning because I expound
it in a vulgar tongue.
For the rest, I do not desire to speak here more
particularly of the progress which I hope in the future to
make in the sciences, nor to bind myself as regards the
public with any promise which I shall not with certainty be
able to fulfill. But I will just say that I have resolved
not to employ the time which remains to me in life in any
other matter than in endeavoring to acquire some knowledge
of nature, which shall be of such a kind that it will enable
us to arrive at rules for Medicine more assured than those
which have as yet been attained; and my inclination is so
strongly opposed to any other kind of pursuit, more
especially to those which can only be useful to some by
being harmful to others, that if certain circumstances had
constrained me to employ them, I do not think that I should
have been capable of succeeding. In so saying I make a
declaration that I know very well cannot help me to make
myself of consideration in the world, but to this end I have
no desire to attain; and I shall always hold myself to be
more indebted to those by whose favor I may enjoy my leisure
without hindrance, than I shall be to any who may offer me
the most honorable position in all the world.
[1][Copyright: (c) 1996, James Fieser
(jfieser@utm.edu), all rights reserved. Unaltered copies of
this computer text file may be freely distribute for
personal and classroom use. Alterations to this file are
permitted only for purposes of computer printouts, although
altered computer text files may not circulate. Except to
cover nominal distribution costs, this file cannot be sold
without written permission from the copyright holder. This
copyright notice supersedes all previous notices on earlier
versions of this text file. When quoting from this text,
please use the following citation: , ed. James Fieser (Internet Release, 1996).
Editorial Conventions: Letters within angled brackets
(e.g., ) designate italics. Note references are
contained within square brackets (e.g., [1]). Original
pagination is contained within curly brackets (e.g., {1}).
Spelling and punctuation have not been modernized. Printer's
errors have been corrected without note. Bracketed comments
within the end notes are the editor's. This is a working
draft. Please report errors to James Fieser
(jfieser@utm.edu).]
[2]["So that whatever does not eventuate after we have done
all in our power that it should happen is to be accounted by
us as among the things which evidently cannot be done and
which in philosophical phrase are called impossible." Latin
Version.]
[3][The Dioptrics, Meteors and Geometry were published
originally in the same volume.]
[4][i.e. Holland, where Descartes settled in 1629.]
[5][i.e. "Le Monde," supressed on hearing of Galileo's
condemnation.]
[6][Harvy (Latin Tr.).]
[7][i.e. Galileo.]
[8][Doubtless the machine for the purpose of cutting lenses
which Descartes so minutely describes.]