OF A PARTICULAR PROVIDENCE
AND OF A FUTURE STATE
102. I was lately engaged in conversation with a
friend who loves sceptical paradoxes; where, though he advanced many principles,
of which I can by no means approve, yet as they seem to be curious, and to bear
some relation to the chain of reasoning carried on throughout this enquiry, I
shall here copy them from my memory as accurately as I can, in order to submit
them to the judgement of the reader.
Our conversation began with my admiring the singular good fortune of
philosophy, which, as it requires entire liberty above all other privileges, and
chiefly flourishes from the free opposition of sentiments and argumentation,
received its first birth in an age and country of freedom and toleration, and
was never cramped, even in its most extravagant principles, by any creeds,
concessions, or penal statutes. For, except the banishment of Protagoras, and
the death of Socrates, which last event proceeded partly from other motives,
there are scarcely any instances to be met with, in ancient history, of this
bigotted jealousy, with which the present age is so much infested. Epicurus
lived at Athens to an advanced age, in peace and tranquillity: Epicureans27
were even admitted to receive the sacerdotal character, and to officiate at the
altar, in the most sacred rites of the established religion: And the public
encouragement28
of pensions and salaries was afforded equally, by the wisest of all the Roman
emperors29,
to the professors of every sect of philosophy. How requisite such kind of
treatment was to philosophy, in her early youth, will easily be conceived, if we
reflect, that, even at present, when she may be supposed more hardy and robust,
she bears with much difficulty the inclemency of the seasons, and those harsh
winds of calumny and persecution, which blow upon her.
You admire, says my friend, as the singular good fortune of philosophy, what
seems to result from the natural course of things, and to be unavoidable in
every age and nation. This pertinacious bigotry, of which you complain, as so
fatal to philosophy, is really her offspring, who, after allying with
superstition, separates himself entirely from the interest of his parent, and
becomes her most inveterate enemy and persecutor. Speculative dogmas of
religion, the present occasions of such furious dispute, could not possibly be
conceived or admitted in the early ages of the world; when mankind, being wholly
illiterate, formed an idea of religion more suitable to their weak apprehension,
and composed their sacred tenets of such tales chiefly as were the objects of
traditional belief, more than of argument or disputation. After the first alarm,
therefore, was over, which arose from the new paradoxes and principles of the
philosophers; these teachers seem ever after, during the ages of antiquity, to
have lived in great harmony with the established superstition, and to have made
a fair partition of mankind between them; the former claiming all the learned
and wise, the latter possessing all the vulgar and illiterate.
103. It seems then, say I, that you leave
politics entirely out of the question, and never suppose, that a wise magistrate
can justly be jealous of certain tenets of philosophy, such as those of
Epicurus, which, denying a divine existence, and consequently a providence and a
future state, seem to loosen, in a great measure, the ties of morality, and may
be supposed, for that reason, pernicious to the peace of civil society.
I know, replied he, that in fact these persecutions never, in any age,
proceeded from calm reason, or from experience of the pernicious consequences of
philosophy; but arose entirely from passion and prejudice. But what if I should
advance farther, and assert, that if Epicurus had been accused before the
people, by any of the sycophants or informers of those days, he could
easily have defended his cause, and proved his principles of philosophy to be as
salutary as those of his adversaries, who endeavoured, with such zeal, to expose
him to the public hatred and jealousy?
I wish, said I, you would try your eloquence upon so extraordinary a topic,
and make a speech for Epicurus, which might satisfy, not the mob of Athens, if
you will allow that ancient and polite city to have contained any mob, but the
more philosophical part of his audience, such as might be supposed capable of
comprehending his arguments.
The matter would not be difficult, upon such conditions, replied he: And if
you please, I shall suppose myself Epicurus for a moment, and make you stand for
the Athenian people, and shall deliver you such an harangue as will fill all the
urn with white beans, and leave not a black one to gratify the malice of my
adversaries.
Very well: Pray proceed upon these suppositions.
104. I come hither, O ye Athenians, to justify in
your assembly what I maintained in my school, and I find myself impeached by
furious antagonists, instead of reasoning with calm and dispassionate enquirers.
Your deliberations, which of right should be directed to questions of public
good, and the interest of the commonwealth, are diverted to the disquisitions of
speculative philosophy; and these magnificent, but perhaps fruitless enquiries,
take place of your more familiar but more useful occupations. But so far as in
me lies, I will prevent this abuse. We shall not here dispute concerning the
origin and government of worlds. We shall only enquire how far such questions
concern the public interest. And if I can persuade you, that they are entirely
indifferent to the peace of society and security of government, I hope that you
will presently send us back to our schools, there to examine, at leisure, the
question the most sublime, but at the same time, the most speculative of all
philosophy.
The religious philosophers, not satisfied with the tradition of your
forefathers, and doctrine of your priests (in which I willingly acquiesce),
indulge a rash curiosity, in trying how far they can establish religion upon the
principles of reason; and they thereby excite, instead of satisfying, the
doubts, which naturally arise from a diligent and scrutinous enquiry. They
paint, in the most magnificent colours, the order, beauty, and wise arrangement
of the universe; and then ask, if such a glorious display of intelligence could
proceed from the fortuitous concourse of atoms, or if chance could produce what
the greatest genius can never sufficiently admire. I shall not examine the
justness of this argument. I shall allow it to be as solid as my antagonists and
accusers can desire. It is sufficient, if I can prove, from this very reasoning,
that the question is entirely speculative, and that, when, in my philosophical
disquisitions, I deny a providence and a future state, I undermine not the
foundations of society, but advance principles, which they themselves, upon
their own topics, if they argue consistently, must allow to be solid and
satisfactory.
105. You then, who are my accusers, have
acknowledged, that the chief or sole argument for a divine existence (which I
never questioned) is derived from the order of nature; where there appear such
marks of intelligence and design, that you think it extravagant to assign for
its cause, either chance, or the blind and unguided force of matter. You allow,
that this is an argument drawn from effects to causes. From the order of the
work, you infer, that there must have been project and forethought in the
workman. If you cannot make out this point, you allow, that your conclusion
fails; and you pretend not to establish the conclusion in a greater latitude
than the phenomena of nature will justify. These are your concessions. I desire
you to mark the consequences.
When we infer any particular cause from an effect, we must proportion the one
to the other, and can never be allowed to ascribe to the cause any qualities,
but what are exactly sufficient to produce the effect. A body of ten ounces
raised in any scale may serve as a proof, that the counterbalancing weight
exceeds ten ounces; but can never afford a reason that it exceeds a hundred. If
the cause, assigned for any effect, be not sufficient to produce it, we must
either reject that cause, or add to it such qualities as will give it a just
proportion to the effect. But if we ascribe to it farther qualities, or affirm
it capable of producing other effects, we can only indulge the licence of
conjecture, and arbitrarily suppose the existence of qualities and energies,
without reason or authority.
The same rule holds, whether the cause assigned be brute unconscious matter,
or a rational intelligent being. If the cause be known only by the effect, we
never ought to ascribe to it any qualities, beyond what are precisely requisite
to produce the effect: Nor can we, by any rules of just reasoning, return back
from the cause, and infer other effects from it, beyond those by which alone it
is known to us. No one, merely from the sight of one of Zeuxis's pictures, could
know, that he was also a statuary or architect, and was an artist no less
skilful in stone and marble than in colours. The talents and taste, displayed in
the particular work before us; these we may safely conclude the workman to be
possessed of. The cause must be proportioned to the effect; and if we exactly
and precisely proportion it, we shall never find in it any qualities, that point
farther, or afford an inference concerning any other design or performance. Such
qualities must be somewhat beyond what is merely requisite for producing the
effect, which we examine.
106. Allowing, therefore, the gods to be the
authors of the existence or order of the universe; it follows, that they possess
that precise degree of power, intelligence, and benevolence, which appears in
their workmanship; but nothing farther can ever be proved, except we call in the
assistance of exaggeration and flattery to supply the defects of argument and
reasoning. So far as the traces of any attributes, at present, appear, so far
may we conclude these attributes to exist. The supposition of farther attributes
is mere hypothesis; much more the supposition, that, in distant regions of space
or periods of time, there has been, or will be, a more magnificent display of
these attributes, and a scheme of administration more suitable to such imaginary
virtues. We can never be allowed to mount up from the universe, the effect, to
Jupiter, the cause; and then descend downwards, to infer any new effect from
that cause; as if the present effects alone were not entirely worthy of the
glorious attributes, which we ascribe to that deity. The knowledge of the cause
being derived solely from the effect, they must be exactly adjusted to each
other; and the one can never refer to anything farther, or be the foundation of
any new inference and conclusion.
You find certain phenomena in nature. You seek a cause or author. You imagine
that you have found him. You afterwards become so enamoured of this offspring of
your brain, that you imagine it impossible, but he must produce something
greater and more perfect than the present scene of things, which is so full of
ill and disorder. You forget, that this superlative intelligence and benevolence
are entirely imaginary, or, at least, without any foundation in reason; and that
you have no ground to ascribe to him any qualities, but what you see he has
actually exerted and displayed in his productions. Let your gods, therefore, O
philosophers, be suited to the present appearances of nature: and presume not to
alter these appearances by arbitrary suppositions, in order to suit them to the
attributes, which you so fondly ascribe to your deities.
107. When priests and poets, supported by your
authority, O Athenians, talk of a golden or silver age, which preceded the
present state of vice and misery, I hear them with attention and with reverence.
But when philosophers, who pretend to neglect authority, and to cultivate
reason, hold the same discourse, I pay them not, I own, the same obsequious
submission and pious deference. I ask; who carried them into the celestial
regions, who admitted them into the councils of the gods, who opened to them the
book of fate, that they thus rashly affirm, that their deities have executed, or
will execute, any purpose beyond what has actually appeared? If they tell me,
that they have mounted on the steps or by the gradual ascent of reason, and by
drawing inferences from effects to causes, I still insist, that they have aided
the ascent of reason by the wings of imagination; otherwise they could not thus
change their manner of inference, and argue from causes to effects; presuming,
that a more perfect production than the present world would be more suitable to
such perfect beings as the gods, and forgetting that they have no reason to
ascribe to these celestial beings any perfection or any attribute, but what can
be found in the present world.
Hence all the fruitless industry to account for the ill appearances of
nature, and save the honour of the gods; while we must acknowledge the reality
of that evil and disorder, with which the world so much abounds. The obstinate
and intractable qualities of matter, we are told, or the observance of general
laws, or some such reason, is the sole cause, which controlled the power and
benevolence of Jupiter, and obliged him to create mankind and every sensible
creature so imperfect and so unhappy. These attributes then, are, it seems,
beforehand, taken for granted, in their greatest latitude. And upon that
supposition, I own that such conjectures may, perhaps, be admitted as plausible
solutions of the ill phenomena. But still I ask; Why take these attributes for
granted, or why ascribe to the cause any qualities but what actually appear in
the effect? Why torture your brain to justify the course of nature upon
suppositions, which, for aught you know, may be entirely imaginary, and of which
there are to be found no traces in the course of nature?
The religious hypothesis, therefore, must be considered only as a particular
method of accounting for the visible phenomena of the universe: but no just
reasoner will ever presume to infer from it any single fact, and alter or add to
the phenomena, in any single particular. If you think, that the appearances of
things prove such causes, it is allowable for you to draw an inference
concerning the existence of these causes. In such complicated and sublime
subjects, every one should be indulged in the liberty of conjecture and
argument. But here you ought to rest. If you come backward, and arguing from
your inferred causes, conclude, that any other fact has existed, or will exist,
in the course of nature, which may serve as a fuller display of particular
attributes; I must admonish you, that you have departed from the method of
reasoning, attached to the present subject, and have certainly added something
to the attributes of the cause, beyond what appears in the effect; otherwise you
could never, with tolerable sense or propriety, add anything to the effect, in
order to render it more worthy of the cause.
108. Where, then, is the odiousness of that
doctrine, which I teach in my school, or rather, which I examine in my gardens?
Or what do you find in this whole question, wherein the security of good morals,
or the peace and order of society, is in the least concerned?
I deny a providence, you say, and supreme governor of the world, who guides
the course of events, and punishes the vicious with infamy and disappointment,
and rewards the virtuous with honour and success, in all their undertakings. But
surely, I deny not the course itself of events, which lies open to every one's
inquiry and examination. I acknowledge, that, in the present order of things,
virtue is attended with more peace of mind than vice, and meets with a more
favourable reception from the world. I am sensible, that, according to the past
experience of mankind, friendship is the chief joy of human life, and moderation
the only source of tranquillity and happiness. I never balance between the
virtuous and the vicious course of life; but am sensible, that, to a
well-disposed mind, every advantage is on the side of the former. And what can
you say more, allowing all your suppositions and reasonings? You tell me,
indeed, that this disposition of things proceeds from intelligence and design.
But whatever it proceeds from, the disposition itself, on which depends our
happiness or misery, and consequently our conduct and deportment in life is
still the same. It is still open for me, as well as you, to regulate my
behaviour, by my experience of past events. And if you affirm, that, while a
divine providence is allowed, and a supreme distributive justice in the
universe, I ought to expect some more particular reward of the good, and
punishment of the bad, beyond the ordinary course of events; I here find the
same fallacy, which I have before endeavoured to detect. You persist in
imagining, that, if we grant that divine existence, for which you so earnestly
contend, you may safely infer consequences from it, and add something to the
experienced order of nature, by arguing from the attributes which you ascribe to
your gods. You seem not to remember, that all your reasonings on this subject
can only be drawn from effects to causes; and that every argument, deducted from
causes to effects, must of necessity be a gross sophism; since it is impossible
for you to know anything of the cause, but what you have antecedently, not
inferred, but discovered to the full, in the effect.
109. But what must a philosopher think of those
vain reasoners, who, instead of regarding the present scene of things as the
sole object of their contemplation, so far reverse the whole course of nature,
as to render this life merely a passage to something farther; a porch, which
leads to a greater, and vastly different building; a prologue, which serves only
to introduce the piece, and give it more grace and propriety? Whence, do you
think, can such philosophers derive their idea of the gods? From their own
conceit and imagination surely. For if they derived it from the present
phenomena, it would never point to anything farther, but must be exactly
adjusted to them. That the divinity may possibly be endowed with
attributes, which we have never seen exerted; may be governed by principles of
action, which we cannot discover to be satisfied: all this will freely be
allowed. But still this is mere possibility and hypothesis. We never can
have reason to infer any attributes, or any principles of action in him,
but so far as we know them to have been exerted and satisfied.
Are there any marks of a distributive justice in the world? If you
answer in the affirmative, I conclude, that, since justice here exerts itself,
it is satisfied. If you reply in the negative, I conclude, that you have then no
reason to ascribe justice, in our sense of it, to the gods. If you hold a medium
between affirmation and negation, by saying, that the justice of the gods, at
present, exerts itself in part, but not in its full extent; I answer, that you
have no reason to give it any particular extent, but only so far as you see it,
at present, exert itself.
110. Thus I bring the dispute, O Athenians, to a
short issue with my antagonists. The course of nature lies open to my
contemplation as well as to theirs. The experienced train of events is the great
standard, by which we all regulate our conduct. Nothing else can be appealed to
in the field, or in the senate. Nothing else ought ever to be heard of in the
school, or in the closet. In vain would our limited understanding break through
those boundaries, which are too narrow for our fond imagination. While we argue
from the course of nature, and infer a particular intelligent cause, which first
bestowed, and still preserves order in the universe, we embrace a principle,
which is both uncertain and useless. It is uncertain; because the subject lies
entirely beyond the reach of human experience. It is useless; because our
knowledge of this cause being derived entirely from the course of nature, we can
never, according to the rules of just reasoning, return back from the cause with
any new inference, or making additions to the common and experienced course of
nature, establish any new principles of conduct and behaviour.
111. I observe (said I, finding he had finished
his harangue) that you neglect not the artifice of the demagogues of old; and as
you were pleased to make me stand for the people, you insinuate yourself into my
favour by embracing those principles, to which, you know, I have always
expressed a particular attachment. But allowing you to make experience (as
indeed I think you ought) the only standard of our judgement concerning this,
and all other questions of fact; I doubt not but, from the very same experience,
to which you appeal, it may be possible to refute this reasoning, which you have
put into the mouth of Epicurus. If you saw, for instance, a half-finished
building, surrounded with heaps of brick and stone and mortar, and all the
instruments of masonry; could you not infer from the effect, that it was
a work of design and contrivance? And could you not return again, from this
inferred cause, to infer new additions to the effect, and conclude, that the
building would soon be finished, and receive all the further improvements, which
art could bestow upon it? If you saw upon the sea-shore the print of one human
foot, you would conclude, that a man had passed that way, and that he had also
left the traces of the other foot, though effaced by the rolling of the sands or
inundation of the waters. Why then do you refuse to admit the same method of
reasoning with regard to the order of nature? Consider the world and the present
life only as an imperfect building, from which you can infer a superior
intelligence; and arguing from that superior intelligence, which can leave
nothing imperfect; why may you not infer a more finished scheme or plan, which
will receive its completion in some distant point of space or time? Are not
these methods of reasoning exactly similar? And under what pretence can you
embrace the one, while you reject the other?
112. The infinite difference of the subjects,
replied he, is a sufficient foundation for this difference in my conclusions. In
works of human art and contrivance, it is allowable to advance from the
effect to the cause, and returning back from the cause, to form new inferences
concerning the effect, and examine the alterations, which it has probably
undergone, or may still undergo. But what is the foundation of this method of
reasoning? Plainly this; that man is a being, whom we know by experience, whose
motives and designs we are acquainted with, and whose projects and inclinations
have a certain connexion and coherence, according to the laws which nature has
established for the government of such a creature. When, therefore, we find,
that any work has proceeded from the skill and industry of man; as we are
otherwise acquainted with the nature of the animal, we can draw a hundred
inferences concerning what may be expected from him; and these inferences will
all be founded in experience and observation. But did we know man only from the
single work or production which we examine, it were impossible for us to argue
in this manner; because our knowledge of all the qualities, which we ascribe to
him, being in that case derived from the production, it is impossible they could
point to anything farther, or be the foundation of any new inference. The print
of a foot in the sand can only prove, when considered alone, that there was some
figure adapted to it, by which it was produced: but the print of a human foot
proves likewise, from our other experience, that there was probably another
foot, which also left its impression, though effaced by time or other accidents.
Here we mount from the effect to the cause; and descending again from the cause,
infer alterations in the effect; but this is not a continuation of the same
simple chain of reasoning. We comprehend in this case a hundred other
experiences and observations, concerning the usual figure and members of
that species of animal, without which this method of argument must be considered
as fallacious and sophistical.
113. The case is not the same with our reasonings
from the works of nature. The Deity is known to us only by his productions, and
is a single being in the universe, not comprehended under any species or genus,
from whose experienced attributes or qualities, we can, by analogy, infer any
attribute or quality in him. As the universe shews wisdom and goodness, we infer
wisdom and goodness. As it shews a particular degree of these perfections, we
infer a particular degree of them, precisely adapted to the effect which we
examine. But farther attributes or farther degrees of the same attributes, we
can never be authorised to infer or suppose, by any rules of just reasoning.
Now, without some such licence of supposition, it is impossible for us to argue
from the cause, or infer any alteration in the effect, beyond what has
immediately fallen under our observation. Greater good produced by this Being
must still prove a greater degree of goodness: a more impartial distribution of
rewards and punishments must proceed from a greater regard to justice and
equity. Every supposed addition to the works of nature makes an addition to the
attributes of the Author of nature; and consequently, being entirely unsupported
by any reason or argument, can never be admitted but as mere conjecture and
hypothesis30.
The great source of our mistake in this subject, and of the unbounded licence
of conjecture, which we indulge, is, that we tacitly consider ourselves, as in
the place of the Supreme Being, and conclude, that he will, on every occasion,
observe the same conduct, which we ourselves, in his situation, would have
embraced as reasonable and eligible. But, besides that the ordinary course of
nature may convince us, that almost everything is regulated by principles and
maxims very different from ours; besides this, I say, it must evidently appear
contrary to all rules of analogy to reason, from the intentions and projects of
men, to those of a Being so different, and so much superior. In human nature,
there is a certain experienced coherence of designs and inclinations; so that
when, from any fact, we have discovered one intention of any man, it may often
be reasonable, from experience, to infer another, and draw a long chain of
conclusions concerning his past or future conduct. But this method of reasoning
can never have place with regard to a Being, so remote and incomprehensible, who
bears much less analogy to any other being in the universe than the sun to a
waxen taper, and who discovers himself only by some faint traces or outlines,
beyond which we have no authority to ascribe to him any attribute or perfection.
What we imagine to be a superior perfection, may really be a defect. Or were it
ever so much a perfection, the ascribing of it to the Supreme Being, where it
appears not to have been really exerted, to the full, in his works, savours more
of flattery and panegyric, than of just reasoning and sound philosophy. All the
philosophy, therefore, in the world, and all the religion, which is nothing but
a species of philosophy, will never be able to carry us beyond the usual course
of experience, or give us measures of conduct and behaviour different from those
which are furnished by reflections on common life. No new fact can ever be
inferred from the religious hypothesis; no event foreseen or foretold; no reward
or punishment expected or dreaded, beyond what is already known by practice and
observation. So that my apology for Epicurus will still appear solid and
satisfactory; nor have the political interests of society any connexion with the
philosophical disputes concerning metaphysics and religion.
114. There is still one circumstance, replied I,
which you seem to have overlooked. Though I should allow your premises, I must
deny your conclusion. You conclude, that religious doctrines and reasonings
can have no influence on life, because they ought to have no
influence; never considering, that men reason not in the same manner you do, but
draw many consequences from the belief of a divine Existence, and suppose that
the Deity will inflict punishments on vice, and bestow rewards on virtue, beyond
what appear in the ordinary course of nature. Whether this reasoning of theirs
be just or not, is no matter. Its influence on their life and conduct must still
be the same. And, those, who attempt to disabuse them of such prejudices, may,
for aught I know, be good reasoners, but I cannot allow them to be good citizens
and politicians; since they free men from one restraint upon their passions, and
make the infringement of the laws of society, in one respect, more easy and
secure.
After all, I may, perhaps, agree to your general conclusion in favour of
liberty, though upon different premises from those, on which you endeavour to
found it. I think, that the state ought to tolerate every principle of
philosophy; nor is there an instance, that any government has suffered in its
political interests by such indulgence. There is no enthusiasm among
philosophers; their doctrines are not very alluring to the people; and no
restraint can be put upon their reasonings, but what must be of dangerous
consequence to the sciences, and even to the state, by paving the way for
persecution and oppression in points, where the generality of mankind are more
deeply interested and concerned.
115. But there occurs to me (continued I) with
regard to your main topic, a difficulty, which I shall just propose to you
without insisting on it; lest it lead into reasonings of too nice and delicate a
nature. In a word, I much doubt whether it be possible for a cause to be known
only by its effect (as you have all along supposed) or to be of so singular and
particular a nature as to have no parallel and no similarity with any other
cause or object, that has ever fallen under our observation. It is only when two
species of objects are found to be constantly conjoined, that we can
infer the one from the other; and were an effect presented, which was entirely
singular, and could not be comprehended under any known species, I do not
see, that we could form any conjecture or inference at all concerning its cause.
If experience and observation and analogy be, indeed, the only guides which we
can reasonably follow in inferences of this nature; both the effect and cause
must bear a similarity and resemblance to other effects and causes, which we
know, and which we have found, in many instances, to be conjoined with each
other. I leave it to your own reflection to pursue the consequences of this
principle. I shall just observe, that, as the antagonists of Epicurus always
suppose the universe, an effect quite singular and unparalleled, to be the proof
of a Deity, a cause no less singular and unparalleled; your reasonings, upon
that supposition, seem, at least, to merit our attention. There is, I own, some
difficulty, how we can ever return from the cause to the effect, and, reasoning
from our ideas of the former, infer any alteration on the latter, or any
addition to it.
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