登陆注册
26931200000123

第123章 Religion(14)

Accepting Mill's view,it is remarkable that the great error of his own school,which professed to be based upon experience,was the rejection of history;and the great merit of the a priori and 'intuitionist'school was precisely their insistence upon history.To this I shall have to return hereafter.Meanwhile,Mill proceeds to show how Coleridge,by arguing from the 'idea'of church and state,had at least recognised the necessity of showing that political and social institutions must have a sufficient reason,and be justified by something more than mere obstinate prejudice.Men like Pitt and Sir Robert Peel,if they accepted Coleridge's support,would have to alter their whole position,Coleridge's defence of his ideal church was at once the severest satire upon the existing body and a proof,as against Bentham and Adam Smith,of the advantages of an endowed class for the cultivation and diffusion of learning.Coleridge,moreover,though he objected to the Reform Bill,showed himself a better reformer than Lord John Russell.He admitted what the Whigs refused to see,the necessity of diminishing the weight of the landowner interest.Landowners were not to be ultimate sources of power,but to represent one factor in a reasoned system.In short,by admitting that all social arrangements in some sense were embodiments of reason,he admitted that they must also be made to conform to reason.

Coleridge and Bentham,then,are not really enemies but allies,and they wield powers which are 'opposite poles of one great force of progression.'31the question,however,remains,how the philosophy of each leader is really connected with his practical conclusions.Mill's view would apparently be that Coleridge somehow managed to correct the errors or fill the gaps of the Utilitarian system --a very necessary task,as Mill admits --while Coleridge would have held that those errors were the inevitable fruit of the whole empirical system of thought.The Reason must be restored to its rightful supremacy over the Understanding,which had been working its wicked will since the days of Locke and the eighteenth century.The problem is a wide one.Imust be content to remark the inevitable antithesis.Whether enemies or allies,the Utilitarians and their antagonists were separated by a gulf which could not be bridged for the time.The men of common-sense,who had no philosophy at all,were shocked by the immediate practical applications of Utilitarianism,its hostility to the old order which they loved,its apparent helplessness in social questions,its relegation of all progress to the conflict of selfish interests,its indifference to all the virtues associated with patriotism and local ties.By more reflective minds,it was condemned as robbing the world of its poetry,stifling the religious emotions,and even quenching sentiment in general.The few who wished for a philosophy found the root of its errors in the assumptions which reduced the world to a chaos of atoms,outwardly connected and combined into mere dead mechanism.The world,for the poet and the philosopher alike,must be not a congeries of separate things,but in some sense a product of reason.

Thought,not fact,must be the ultimate reality.Unfortunately or otherwise,the poetical sentiment could never get itself translated into philosophical theory.Coleridge's random and discursive hints remained mere hints --a suggestion at best for future thought.Mill's criticism shows how far they could be assimilated by a singularly candid Utilitarian.To him,we see,they represented mainly the truth that his own party,following the general tendency of the eighteenth century,had been led to neglect the vital importance of the constructive elements of society;that they had sacrificed order to progress,and therefore confounded progress with destruction,and failed to perceive the real importance in past times even of the institutions which had become obsolete.Social atomism or individualism,therefore,implied a total misconception of what Mill calls the 'evolution of humanity.'

同类推荐
  • Ancient Poems

    Ancient Poems

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 唐御史台精舍题名考

    唐御史台精舍题名考

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

    闲居编

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

    周朝秘史

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

    东塘日札

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

    权志龙之再次相遇

    一次分开,让他们变得更加成熟,再次相遇是他们冰封的心再次荡起涟漪,她能否放下当初的选择和他重归于好……
  • 绝世盛宠:王爷的霸气狐妃

    绝世盛宠:王爷的霸气狐妃

    她,堂堂的21世纪特工,打算金盆洗手的时候,打算之前来一个环球旅游,好好的飞机却坠毁了!还穿越了!穿越也就罢了,别人都是什么小姐啊,公主的!就算是个乞丐!也好歹是个人!她为毛是一只狐狸啊!狐狸也就算了!那为毛她好好的逛个街,都有人会觊觎她的美貌来抓她啊!喂喂喂!说你呢!它只是借一下你的怀里躲一下而已!用得着把她拎回去嘛!抱回去会死吗!好不容易修成人形了,想逗一下他,为毛被轻而易举的发现了!她长得有那么像狐狸吗!还说什么“我认识你的眼睛”!为什么心会跳的那么快啊喂!当放荡不羁的超强特工遇到无人能敌的霸气王爷,会擦出怎样的火花呢?敬请期待!
  • 他就在你身边

    他就在你身边

    相信很多人都相信这个世界是有鬼魂的存在的,只是我们都喜欢自我安慰减少我们的恐惧,接下来我将会写出我经历过的和听到的真实的故事兴许你曾经也遇到过。
  • 幽默说话智慧做人

    幽默说话智慧做人

    本书荟萃了大量精彩的中外名人的幽默故事,帮你了解幽默、认识幽默,更好地掌握和使用幽默。
  • 百花齐放在网游

    百花齐放在网游

    人就是那个样子,修仙了也不该本性。照样你争我夺,在虚拟游戏,无所谓的东西也会争,说到底呢?时为了面子。人就那样,要真没了七情六欲,那就不是人了,是神仙了,可惜我没见过。不过大千世界无奇不有,可能真有神吧。这是一个百家争鸣的时代,我是要成王这个世界最强王者的男人。
  • 凌天魔神

    凌天魔神

    平凡的少年身怀上古魔剑,凭借着自己的信念,一心想要证明自己,实力为尊的世界,只有在魔武道路上走得更远,才能够真正的证明自己,保护自己想要保护的人,他终究是踏上了修炼的道路。对友谊的渴望,对亲情的眷恋,对爱情的迷茫迫使他只能无条件的变强,却又被无情的卷入了上古神魔之战,背负起拯救世界的使命,人神魔三界的一一征战。三界众生,人挡杀人,神挡弑神,即便是那无情的苍天,也要将其扭转于手中!
  • 十圣归真录

    十圣归真录

    仙侣常相伴,乾坤任逍遥。带领兄弟,携手佳人,共战无极,称霸天地。
  • 人生三味茶:智者眼中的人生三境界

    人生三味茶:智者眼中的人生三境界

    王国维在《人间词话》中提炼出的三种人生境界犹如人生的三味茶,我们用清茶、花茶、普洱茶隐喻人生的三重境界,作为上、中、下三篇的标题,意在对人生过程有所概括,而每篇的第一节均采用蒋捷的《虞美人·听雨》:“少年听雨歌楼上,红烛昏罗帐。壮年听雨客舟中,江阔云低,断雁叫西风。而今听雨僧庐下,鬓已星星也。悲欢离合总无情,一任阶前点滴到天明。”意在描述人生从青春到壮年到晚年的自然过程。细心的读者将会发现本书每篇的最后一节则采用了王国维《人间词话》的概括,分别用“昨夜西风凋碧树,独上高楼,望尽天涯路”,“衣带渐宽终不悔,为伊消得人憔悴”,“众里寻他千百度,蓦然回首,那人却在灯火阑珊处”描绘了人生的三重境界。
  • 就这样爱你吧

    就这样爱你吧

    “我曾爱你,至生死、入骨髓,痛、彻心扉!”“你不知道我爱你失去一切。或者是,我本来便是一无所有。”“你忘了,我没忘。我不是忘记一切,我是一无所有。”“有一个人,他将你抛在原地,你痛到不能呼吸,你痛到什么都感觉不到,你痛到你以为你已经死了!你为他行尸走肉的活着。很久很久,你下定决心要将他忘了。你以为你做到了,可是原来你根本没做到……”“……他一出现,你便知道,你所以为的忘记是那么可笑,他的一举一动,依然可以对你产生巨大的影响,让你的整个世界为他慌乱,他无意的过失,便让你的整个世界崩塌……”我从不去设想,如果没有遇见你该多好……若所有的偶然才能促成一个必然,我多希望那个必然是我能够遇见你……
  • 我自倾心君且随意

    我自倾心君且随意

    “悔吗?”“无悔。”自古情郎美人,命运多舛,自是他们无悔此生。自此,天下太平。