登陆注册
26504600000107

第107章

Critique of Pure Reason, trans.Müller, 11, 515-17.Hume also: " When, after the ****** conception of anything, we would conceive it as existent, we in reality make no addition to, or alteration of, our first idea.Thus, when we affirm that God is existent, we simply form the idea of such a being as He is represented to us; nor is the existence which we attribute to Him conceived by a particular idea, which we join to His other qualities, and can again separate and distinguish from them....The belief of the existence joins no new idea to those which compose the ideas of the object.When I think of God, when I think of Him as existent, and when I believe Him to be existent, my idea of Him neither increases nor diminishes.But as 'tis certain there is a great difference betwixt the ****** conception of the existence of an object and the belief of it, and as this difference lies not in the facts or compositions of the idea which we conceive.it follows that it most lie in the manner in which we conceive it." (Treatise of Human Nature.pt.iii.sec.7.)

I use the notion of the Ego here, as common-sense uses it.Nothing is prejudged as to the results (or absence of results)

of ulterior attempts to analyze the notion.

Griesinger, Mental Diseases, §§

50, 98.The neologism we so often hear, that an experience 'gives us a realizing sense ' of the truth of some proposition or other, illustrates the dependence of the sense of reality upon excitement.Only what stirs us is 'realized.'

The way in which sensations are pitted against systematized conceptions, and in which the one or the other then prevails according as the sensations are felt by ourselves or merely known by report, is interestingly illustrated at the present day by the state of public belief about 'spiritualistic' phenomena.There exist numerous narratives of movement without contact on the part of articles of furniture and other material objects, in the presence of certain privileged individuals called mediums.Such movement violates our memories, and the whole system of accepted physical 'science.' Consequently those-who have not seen it either brand the narratives immediately as lies or call the phenomena' illusions' of sense, produced by fraud or due to hallucination.But one who has actually seen such a phenomenon, under what seems to him sufficiently 'test-conditions,'

will hold to his sensible experience through thick and thin, even though the whole fabric of 'science' should be rent in twain.That man would be a weak-spirited creature indeed who should allow any-blown generalities about 'the liability of the senses to be deceived' to bully him out of his adhesion to what for him was an indubitable experience of sight.a man may err in this obstinacy, sure enough, in any particular case.But the spirit that animates him is that on which ultimately the very life and health of Science rest.

Treatise of Human Nature, bk.I.pt.III.

Early Hist.of Mankind, p.108.

C See Vol.I.pp.285-8; Vol.II.pp.237

ff.

See Theory of Vision, § 59.

Classics editors note: James' Insertion Essay, bk.rv.chap.2.§ 14.In another place: " He that sees a candle burning and hath experimented the force of its flame by putting his finger into it, will little doubt that this is something existing without him, which does him harm and puts him to great pain....And if our dreamer pleases to try whether the glowing heat of a glass furnace be barely a wandering imagination in a drowsy man's fancy by putting his hand into it, he may.perhaps, be awakened into a certainty greater than he could wish, that it is something more than bare imagination.So that the evidence is as great as we can desire, being as certain to us as our pleasure or pain, i.e.happiness or misery; beyond which we have no concernment, either of knowledge or being.Such an assurance of the existence of things without us is sufficient to direct us in the attaining the good and avoiding the evil which is caused by them, which is the important concernment we have of being made acquainted with them." (Ibid.bk.iv.chap.11, § 8.)

Bagehot, 'The Emotion of Conviction,' Literary Studies, I.412-17.

Psychologie Rationnelle, ch.12.

Two examples out of a thousand:

Reid, Inquiry, ch.ii § 9: "I remember, many years ago, a white ox was brought into the country, of so enormous size that people came many miles to see him.There happened, some months after, an uncommon fatality among women in child-bearing.Two such uncommon events, following one another, gave a suspicion of their connection, and occasioned a common opinion among the country people that the white ox was the cause of this fatality."

H.M.Stanley, Through the Dark Continent, ii.388: "On the third day of our stay at Mowa feeling quite comfortable amongst the people, on account of their friendly bearing, I began to write in my note-book the terms for articles, in order to improve my already copious vocabulary of native words.

I had proceeded only a few minutes when I observed a strange commotion amongst the people who had been flocking about me, and presently they ran sway.In a short time we heard war-cries ringing loudly and shrilly over the table-land.Two hours afterwards a long line of warriors were seen descending the table-land and advancing towards our camp.There may have been between five and six hundred of them.We, on the other hand, had made but few preparations except such as would justify us replying to them in the event of the actual commencement of hostilities.But I had made many firm friends among them and I hardly believed that I should be able to avert an open rupture.When they had assembled at about a hundred yards in front of our camp, Safeni and I walked up towards them and sat down midway.Some half-dozen of the Yowa people came near, and the shauri began.,'

" 'What is the matter, my friends?' I asked.'Why do you come with guns in your hands, in such numbers, as though you were coming to fight? Fight?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 每个人的青春

    每个人的青春

    文笔不好,但希望可以通过这种方式记录青春,记录每个人的青春,然后怀念早已跟我拜拜的青春。?
  • 腹黑校草欺上:呆萌甜心

    腹黑校草欺上:呆萌甜心

    一纸婚约打破了校园的人宁静生活,“这都是搞什么?”呆萌甜心遇上了腹黑校草擦出了爱情的火花。“你是逃不出我的手掌心的,你是我的……”
  • 落星的日常

    落星的日常

    在我们的生活中,有开心,有难过,酸甜苦辣,大家一起来品尝吧!不定时跟新,搞笑为主打。摸摸大
  • 神界的陷落

    神界的陷落

    天雷降,封印破,死神出,众神灭。邪神降世,谁来救我神界。
  • 南宋情殇:宠妻难逃

    南宋情殇:宠妻难逃

    这世间,终会有个人,与你相遇,让你所牵,为你所爱,惹下最动人的诺言。熔金遇见程立雪,是在那年最美的大雪季节。他宠她,爱她,呵护她,用尽全力保护她,成为熔金生命中全部的天堂。一夕之间,往事惨烈,相恋九年的男子竟是熔金灭门惨案中的血海深仇。她远走西夏,游走商市,爱恨交织,只为让他身败名裂。他醉酒青楼,万金买妓,心痛成殇,只愿换她此生如愿。历经半世,生死之中,熔金终于懂得,死生契阔,盛宠难逃!
  • 被诅咒的好奇心

    被诅咒的好奇心

    "我"是一个普通的古玩商人,一场噩梦之后无意间看到了一张奇怪的《寻人启事》。好奇心强的"我",按照地址来到启事注明的地点,之后一步一步的进入了一个神秘的组织之中。这个以辉哥为首领的组织,自称为"反盗墓组织",并且说我很像他们要寻找的一个已投胎的朋友,他的名字叫做阿神。由于我的女友轩轩被一群神秘人绑架,所以我联手与辉哥他们一起来到了十万大山。然而在这一切的背后,居然隐藏着一个不为人知的秘密!为达目的不择手段,他们一直认为这个秘密是关于古墓的,殊不知,真正的秘密,却完全出乎所有人的预料!
  • 这么说你就被灭了

    这么说你就被灭了

    《这么说你就被灭了》这不是一本万用灵丹,更不是职场百科全书。这是一本有关于职场真话的书,在这里,与所有想褪去“幼稚”外衣的读者共勉。换下职业生涯中“幼儿“的开裆裤,一起成长成熟。作者刘同根据10年工作亲身所遇实例,精心归纳总结并整理出职场细节百分百攻略。这不是一本帮你指点大方向的道理书,而是帮你寻找出职场中的“小细节”对症下药的职场“实用工具书”。书中运用了大量网络新汇词语,使之更具有时代感语并贴近生活,文中言语诙谐、幽默,形式方便,不像是枯燥无味教学课本,不会有老师给你头头是道的传授理论,本书更像是一位老友在跟讲述自己所经历的小坎坷,小经验。本书版式新颖,书中用微博观众及粉丝的提问互动形式来吸引你的眼球。
  • 神皇令

    神皇令

    千年浩劫,尸族横行,神州萧条,生灵涂炭,人皇出世,携诸强,平天下,退尸潮,开创两百年太平盛世。天堑山上,妙手山庄,医圣宅邸,盛名天下。一夜间,血流成河,一转眼,灰飞烟灭,独留弱少白无尘,身负血海深仇,独步闯天涯,拜师剑山,从而开启了一个逆天强者的崛起征程。
  • 规划你的工作

    规划你的工作

    每一个工作着的人必须树立这样的观念:不能浑浑噩噩对待工作,因为平凡的工作正是你事业的基础,是你提升人生层次的平台。工作中稀里糊涂、过一天算一天,不仅仅是不敬业那么简单,而是对自己人生的不负责任。所以,无论你从事的是多么普通的工作,都要认真对待它,都要为它做好规划。
  • 衣香魅影

    衣香魅影

    陈依然,服装设计师,工作在大上海的小白领。因为一张巴黎时装秀的入场券而改变了命运。小白领也有大梦想。陈依然的梦想是成为一名优秀的服装设计师,有一天甚至能走向国际大舞台。在巴黎陈依然遭遇了一系列的落难,幸得阿南的帮助。阿南爱上了可爱而简单的陈依然。陆松凡,非凡集团年轻的董事长,众多女人的梦中情人。这个外表成熟英俊的男人,却有一颗冷峻的心。陆松凡一直封锁着自己的感情。苏子琪是苏氏集团的掌上明珠,苦苦爱着陆松凡三年而不果。嫉妒冲昏了苏子琪的理智,她策划了一场商业阴谋使非凡集团陷入巨大的危机。陆松凡能否带领非凡集团走出危机?陆松凡的爱情会何去何从?各种爱恨情仇都在这里上演。