Logic
Logic
Logic
FROM
THE
GERMAN
OF
DOCTOR AND
EMMANUEL
LATE REGIUS PROFESSOR OF
KANT,
PURE PHILOSOPHY
M.
A.
Iff THX
VNIFERSITY
OF
KONINGSBERG,
OF SCIENCES
AND
MEMBER
OF
THE
ROYAL
ACADEMY
OF
BERLIN',
TO
WHICH
IS
ANNEXED
S"etd)
SHftrittngg
BY
JOHN
INQUIRY
OF
RICHARDSON,
INTO THE GROUNDS OP PROOF fOR
AUTHOR
OF
CRITICAL
THE
EXISTENCE
GOD,
AND
INTO
THE
THEODICY.
JLonuort
PRINTED FOR W. SIMPK1N
AND R.
:
STATIONERS' COURT,
MARSHALL,
LUDGATE-STREET.
1819.
PREFACE
BY THE
TRANSLATOR.
IT is not
augmenting
For
the
sciences,but disfiguring
are
them, when
on
a one
allowed and
to encroach
as
another.
reason,
logicis
and
science,
wherein
but the
nothing
formal
is
fully shewn
in it from their free
strictly proved
and
as we
thinking,
all ence, differfrom
by
consequence
as
of knowledge, objects
our
well
us
as
from
author
has
left
his of
logic
every
or
extraneous
admixture
either
ontological,
matter.
has
but
clear and
this
distinct
conception
soon
nature
of
science, will
between
the
more
cover dis-
great difference
treatises
on
Kant's
Logic
same
not subject,
only by
being
purer
and
of of
by
its being
divested and
of the The
tinsel
of
figure.
translator
in
conceives
himself
warrantable
ing present-
English public.*
This
Treatise
a
on
Logic,
which
is intended
for
manual
for
lectures, is
posthumous
work,
and
it is the
editor Gottlob
PREFACE.
He
trusts
and
numerous
a
competent judges
not (unfortunately
very
body
in any
a
nation) will
system,
which
not
on repudiate,
review, slight
taught and
of
sities jprotestantuniver-
any
lightthat
may
have
on
science
been
ing studyshall
Germany
deserve
home,
hereafter
those
be found
approbation of
Benjamin Fesche
the
of
(doctorand privateteacher
of the
of
philosophy
in
of Koningsberg,fellow university
Learned
and
Society
friend of
Francfort
whom his
on we
the have
Kant)
for
having thus
lished pubfaithfully
The doctor has has in
illustrious
us
master's
manuscript.
he
promised
his in
likewise
manuscript
comes
Kant's
writing,and which,
intends
to turn
the moment
to
it
to
we
hand,
the translator
and
publish:
this
when
shall have
incomparably great
with which scraps,
be
any
mutilated his
extracts, and
sense or
imperfect quotations,
only
serve
cannot
convey
and spirit,
a
to
ceive deof
the
public by givingthem
false
notion
ples princi-
system
to
of prattle superficially
a
his
and
by making
mere
dogmatic jargon
science.
PREFACE*
When
and
the
arts
and
the
sciences
are
improved
words, than those which more enlarged, many become sufficed in their infancy, necessary, Nulli quibus ea$ qui res ignorarent,nomina, unquam,
The exprimerent qucesierunt.
.
author
found and
terms
the
or
rather
of
to coin
The
translator of
course
is reduced that
to
the
same
languageis not
tongue
;
and
circumlocution
periphrastical
enfeeble
ing. reasonphilosophical
Should
any
critic,however,
or
philosopher,
to
whose
province it more
words
or
immediatelyis, deign
more
suggest
terms
the in,
meaning, than his may be, he, as his author's thoughts in an clothing
is, to render
of their
sense
aim,
Englishdress,
any mite fectation afto
without faithfully
to contribute
and novelty,
his
propagate
and
diffuse useful
this work
and
sublime the
ledge, knowto
will,should
have
fortune
those
more
adopt
appositewords
; for
and
terms
with
than
a
mere
or logomachy,
about dispute
True
logic(saysWatts) does
words
to amuse
detail of hard
VI
PREFACE.
up
the mind
with
some
empty
sounds
and
prideof
false
are
; yet learning
terms
of art
necessary
to to
range
in conception
its proper
class,and
keep
confusion.
Though
like Mr.
we
may and
in conversation
Jourdain
who
(inMoliere's
prose it.
homme),
spoke in
for
"
than
forty
years, without An
knowing
with the school form of ratiocination, acquaintance to every man however, is indispensable of
a
not
liberal education.
now
The wise
world
as
is doctor)
grown
so
not
valuable science to be
so
engrossed
age,
by
the schools.
man
In
and polite
covet
so some
knowing an
every with
of
reason
will
it renders
acquaintance
dom to wisto
its
service daily
virtue, and
is subservient
as
the affairs
of
common
life,as well
to the sciences.
In
quarantine(so to say),which
a
has
error
mind
and
prejudice of more into the territory enlightened of the sciences, must perform.
to
go out
of the land of
It is to be
hoped,
of
that
Kant's
accurate
and
found pro-
method
PREFACE.
Vll
of
which
is
exhibited
from
in
this
work,,
will
meet
better
reception
doctrine
For who
our
philosophers, beginning,
that the
no
than from
did,
Hume
at
the
our
sicians. phyin
relates,,
reached
physician
of
Europe,
to
had his of
age
forty,
doctrine
ever,
the
end
of
life,
the
adopted
blood,
Harvey's
and that
of
the
circulation London
his
practice reproach
So
"
in
diminished
extremely
great
of and
from
the
incurred
by
is the
this
signal
in
discovery.
science,,
or
slow
when
progress
truth either
every
even
not
opposed
I
"
by
tf
factious
tious supersti-
prejudices
The
So
slow
is
growth
of
what
excellent
this
so
hard
T'attain
perfection
in
nether
world1/'
CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTION.
Page
f. It.
of
Logic.
a
Propounding
of
in it
Use
of
this
-
Science. ///.
of
History
17
Conception
considered mundane
of Philosophy according
to
General. the
Philosophy
and the
both Essential
scholastic
Conception.
and Requisites
Ends
of Philosophising.
Problems
The
most
general
-
and
the
chief
25
-
of
Sketch
in
this
Science.
a
IV. y.
Light
of
History of Philosophy
Intuitive
and
32
Cognition
;
general.
and
Discursive
and
their
Intuition
in
Conception)
particular.
Logical
and
Esthetical
-
fection of Cognition
VI.
Particular
A.
to
Quantity*
Relation
52
B. G. D.
Do.
Do. Do.
6? 79
91
Quality*. Modality of
om
".
Probability.
Explanation
the
Probable.
of Probability ft
and both and
Verisimilitude.
Philosophical
objective.
Probability.
subjectiveand
Critical Cast
Sceptical, Dogmatical,
Method
of
Mind
or
of
phising. Philoso115
Hypotheses
b
CONTENTS.
APPENDIX.
Ofthe
Distinction
of
theoretical
and
of practical
Cognition
122
LOGIC.
PART
THE
FIRST.
General
Doctrine
of
-
Elements.
125
See*
L II.
Of
Conceptions
~*
.141
of Judgments
of
160
-
III.
Syllogism
PART
THE
SECOND.
General
Doctrine
of
Method.
I.
Promoting
Definition,
the
logical
Perfection
and
of
the
Cognition
by
the
Jhe
Exposition^
~
Description
-
of
197
Conceptions.
APPENDIX.
//.
Promdting
Division the
the
Perfection Conceptions.
of
Cognition
by
the
logical
209
of
Sketch
of
Author's
-
Life
-
and
Writings
.
by
the
lator. Trans216
.
INTRODUCTION.
I.
Conception of
EVERY
as
thing in
the animated
to
nature,
as
well
in
the
or
inanimat
is done
cording* ac-
in
world,
happens
we
rules, though
falls the
do
to
not
always
laws is of
them.
Water and
according
of
the
motion
to
walking
The
performed
fish
to
by
animals
the
according
bird in the
rules.
in
the
water,
air, moves
according
but
;
we
a
rules. of
is
no
All nature,, in
general,is nothing
to
coherence there
we
phenomena
where that rules The
according
want
we can
rules When
and
any
of rule.
think
find the
want,
are
only
to
us.
say
that, in
this case,
unknown exercise
to
of
our
powers
too
we
takes
observe
we
place
cording ac-
certain of
rules, which
them essays
at
without attain it
our
knowledge
first, till
a
by degrees by
powers, ourselves think for nay,
at
and
longer
use
of
make
them
we
(the rules) so
have
easy
to
last, that
in the
to great difficulty
of them
abstract. form of
a
Universal
grammar^
in
;
instance, is the
we
language
grammar
general.
and
But
speak
without
knowing
he,
10
who
INTRODUCTION.
and
not
sensible.
all other
powers
rules,which
in its operationsto is bound general, standing we can Yes, the underinvestigate. considered
as
is to be
the
source
and
the
of rules in general. For, as of conceivingfaculty the sensitive faculty(sensualithe sensitivity, or of intuitions, the understanding tas*),is the faculty that is to say, of reducingthe is that of thinking, of representations desirous when the of ihe
senses
to rules.
It
fore is theresatisfied
looking for
them. The
source
rules, and
it has found
understanding is the
there
is not
use
rules,
on
what
rules it proceedsitself.
For the
our
least
doubt, but
we
can,
neither think,nor
than
otherwise, understanding
rules. But
we can
accordingto
rules of
certain
think
of these
conceive
the abstract.
these
proceeds, are,
The former
are
cither
necessary, which
contingent.
use
those, without
be
of the
possible;the
use
certain determinate
As
the in
word
our
from
its
original
meaning
leave
to
substitute
the word
to Sensitivity
express
the intuitive
faculty.
INTRODUCTION.
11
not
take upon
place. The
a
determinate the
manifold there is
as
a
objectsthemselves.
of the moral
example,,
the matics, mathe-
use
understanding in
in The
metaphysics, in
the
philosophy,"c.
use are
rules of this
of
the
in understanding
;
gent contin-
because of that
this
or
have reference.
But, when
we
we
set
aside the of
all the
cognition,which
reflect ral, gene-
must
borrow
from
the
use
entirely upon
we
discover
those
rules of
ly absolute-
necessary
any without
in every
respect
without
ing regardcan
particularobjectsof
them
we
a
thinking;because
at all.
could
not
think
Hence
they be
known
all
experience;
of of the be
because
they comprise,
the condition
without of the
tinction disuse
merely objects,
it (theuse) whether in general, understanding it follows, that hence pure or empirical. And and the necessary its form rules of
the universal
thinking in
no
general
its matter.
can
regard
merely, by
|dConsequentlythe science,
these universal and
which
necessary
rules, is
our
merely a
of the And
of cognition
we can
or understanding,
thinking.
as
frame
to ourselves
an
idea of the
same manner
of a possibility that of
a
science of
universal
12
which of
INTRODUCTION.
grammar,
bare that
contains in
nothing
more
than
the
form
language
the matter
belong to
science and
general,without of language.
laws of in
words
This
of the necessary of
same reason
general,or
mere
(what
amounts
to the
thing) the
name
form
ing of think-
in As
we general, a
Logic.
extends
to
science,, which
all
thinking in
of
without general,,
as regarding objects,
the matter
the foundation
of
all the
sciences, and
all
use
the the
propedeytic (pre-exerciunderstanding.
But it all
tation)of
cannot,
of of
because
its
objects,
2, be
an
organon organon
of the sciences.
we
By
how
a
an
understand
to
we
the
direction
certain
cognitionis
the
be
brought about.
know previously
But, thereto it is
the of object according to
that required,
is to be
produced
of the sciences it the
certain
is
An
mere
organon
therefore
logic, because
gives to
The
presuppose their
the
exact
knowledge
of their
as
a
of
sciences, of
objects,and
for the
sources.
mathematics,
instance,
science
which
of
our
comprises
ground
respect
organon.
of
to
a
the
enlarging
use
cognition with
are
an
certain Whereas
of
reason,
as
excellent
logic,
of the
not be
it, the
universal
and understanding
INTRODUCTION.
13
made
to
go
and
to
matter, is but
universal
art of
Epicuri)
the form this view however for the
to make
of the
only to
serves,
organon,
which
enlarging,but merely
our
judging
a
and
regulatingof
laws
ledge. know-
3.
As
of
ing, think-
without
or
understanding
are
of
reason
place, and
itself
by
quence conse-
the sole
can
conditions,on
or
agree
laws
with and
consistent, the
its rightuse
a canon
"
cessary ne-
conditions
of
logic,
derstanding un-
however, is
canon.
And
reason,
it,as
must
of the
not
and
of
of
course
row borfrom
thing no-
from
\
any it
must
are
science, or
experiencewhatever
but laws
to the
a
comprehend
necessary
and
which priori,
pertain ap-
Some
in those
such
as principles
to take to
moral
life.
Were
take
philosophy principles
from
our
goes
that is, from the observations on psychology, should but see how thinkingwe understanding, and how it is under the various subjective on, and
to
impediments
lead
conditions; this
the
would
quently conse-
knowledge
of
merely
gent contin-
laws.
In
however, logic,
the
inquiryis after,
INTRODUCTION.
not
necessary
are
rules; not
Hence the
how
must
we
think, but
rules but of
to
the
not
use
contingent,
from
necessary
in
to
us
understanding,
which
is found
want
without
not
logicwe
is and
know,
how
thinks, and
how the
O
it has
hitherto
it shall
proceed
of the
thinking.
us use
right use
3
understanding,
the
the other
science,
it is, science
mere
41, a
as
of form
reason ;
as
to the
matter,
are
not not
to
the from
because
its
rules it has
taken
and experience,
because
reason
of the
as
ever how-
as entirely
form.
ask,
much
what
can
does it know
the
;
understandingknow,
or
cognition For that were with regard to self-cognition go ? its material use, and consequently belongsto metaphysic. In logic there is but the question,how itself? know does the understanding
how far does its As the
a
rational
science,
as
to both
the matter
and
5,
doctrine,or demonstrated
about the
common
theory. For, as
and,
as
it is
not occupied,
such, mere-
INTRODUCTION.
15 of
Jy empiricaluse
but laws
of
the
and understanding
son, rea-
about the universal and the necessary entirely it depends upon in general, of thinking
a priori,from which all its rules can principles, all nition be derived and proved to be that,to which cog-
of
reason
must
be
conformable.
a a
being, as By logic's
a
science
canon
priori or
use
as
doctrine,
to
be
held
is
mere
of
the
of the
it understanding, esthetic
canon
which,
as
not
(a pattern,or
consists the in rules of the the of
rule
merely
judging),which
with cognition the
universal
the
agreement.
contains
agreement
of the
tive sensi-
on faculty ; logic,
hand,
rules
agreement
of of
with cognition
reason.
and understanding
That
can we
but be
rical empia
and principles
or a a
of
course
ence sci-
understand
on
by
derstanding un-
doctrine
dogmatical instruction
which without
principles by
the
priori,in
every any
thingis known
other information
received
from
experience,and
the yields
which desired
observance
poets, have
been
tempted at-
taste, but
on a
able to
the
as
a
givea
decisive
judgment
formed has
it.
Baumgarten,
an
has philosopher,
plan of
esthetic
science.
But the
Home
the distinguished
righter by
of Criticism, as appellation
16
INTRODUCTION.
the give any rules a priori,which determine but takes its rules like logic, judgment sufficiently, the empiricallaws, acand renders cording a posteriori,
not to which
we
know
the
more
imperfect and
the
more
generalby
criticism
parison com-
only.
Logic,then, is more
canon,
than
mere
it is
which
afterwards
serves
for
that criticism,
use
of
of itsrightit is (logic)
respect
organon
to
as
the
mere
form,
as
little an Universal
universal grammar.
the of propedeytic all
use
as logic,
of
the
another which
transcendental
in logic.,
an
objectitself is representedas
whereas understanding, in general. objects
object logic
universal
to all
which
pertain
conceptionof logic,
it :
to the matter, not
a
must
Logic,as
form, but
a
as
of reason; of
science
prioriof
the
consequence
and standing
not ]y, that is,
science
reason
of the in
use right
of the under^
of
on
how that
the
is,on
ly, objectivethink.
it must
INTRODUCTION,
17
II.
LOGIC
is
divided^
1,
into
the
analyticand
which
we
the
general.
of the
It
form
understanding and
the
and
necessary
our
which
is, cognition
in
a
regard
to
the
jects, ob-
untrue
more
itself. of
is nothing consequently
(ofthe formal dijudication of. our rightness cognition). trine Should this merely theoretical and universal docbe used as a practical art.,that is,as an orgait would of appearbecome a logic a dialectic, non, ance
than
canon
which
abuse
bare
of the
when, analytic,
the appearance
to the true
form, logical
marks
with the
must
however
be
taken
from
from In
agreement
times
consequently objects,
was
studied with
false
were principles
18
INTRODUCTION.
propounded
it
was
under
the
appearance
of
truth, and
to
tain mainthe
in appearance. thing-s
Among
counsellors
as
dialecticians who
could the
were
the the
lead
people
they pleased;
people can
it was logic, of the art of all
be deceived
at that
by
the
Dialectic,then, was
In
time
a
art
for
time
propounded
so
the
all
name
long was
certain But
thing no-
and logic
to
philosophythe
every
of
praters,
can
fabricate
more an
appearance.
a
be
unworthy of
be
the culture
of
it must therefore, of
exploded;and, totally
it, a
into
logic.
two
: parts of logic
We
the
shall
have consequently
which analytic,
;
propounds
the formal
criteria of
marks
and
the
which dialectic,
we
can
comprises the
this
a
the
not
rules,by which
agree
with be of
them.
the
lectic dia-
would
great
use
as
cathartic
of the
sci-en-
improper.
is not
as
For
natural
an
logic,
that of
common
sense,
but logic,
pological anthrorules of
science, which,
the
it handles
the
natural
use
of the
and understanding
of reason,
INTRODUCTION.
19 out with-
that
are
known
course
consciousness
abstract,has
but
only
or
artificial
then, logic,
as
science
of the
necessary
rules of
use
natural
and
of reason,
jnust
by
the observation
a
in the abstract
3.
of
logic.
Yet and
another
is,that logic
But practical.
Universal from
as
which, logic,
a
a
mere
canon,
abstracts
have
presuppose
knowledge
of
it is applied, to which were objects, minate denoin adjecto. Hence a contradiction we may logic ; for in every every science practical science we sal have a form of thinking. Univermust therefore be considered can as practical, logic in general, than a technic of learning nothingmore
certain sort of
an
organon
of the scholastic
of this division
dogma
thod. me-
technical part.The
of
former
be termed
the doctrine
The
art logical
or practical
part of logic is a
and of the by there-
arrangement
the
terms logical
in order distinctions,
to facilitate the
of operations
understanding.
the
In
neither
of the
20
INTRODUCTION.
be
paid,either
to
the
or object,
to
the
thinking. In
divided,
A, into
we logic
the
latter reference
of subject logicmay be
pure
and
applied or
and consider
mixed.
In
pure
from the other separate the understanding of the mind what it does
powers itself.
as
by
Applied logicconsiders
with the other powers
the
understanding
mind, which direction,
the false
mixed
of the
give it a
not to
\vhich
lawrs,
appliedlogicmust
logic. It
how
our on.
is
how
must
go
At
to make a impedimentsand limitations, the understanding learn from it ; besides, we may \vhat promotes the rightuse of the understanding, its helpsor the correctors of logical faults and errors.
But
it is
not
"which
a
every
part of the
be the It is
must
from psychology, be taken,is must thingin appliedlogic sciences,to which logic philosophical propedeytic. of
structing con-
propedeytic. For
science, must
be
logic.But
In that have materials
that is in
case we
the applied
cious. perniwe
begin to
must
before
and
givethe form,
be
is
\vanting.The
every science.
technic
propounded
in
INTRODUCTION.
21
that of the
common
that of the
we speculative understanding,
have be thus
can
by no
means
divided. It cannot be
a
science
as a
of
the the
standing. underspeculative
For,
or
of the
tion cognispeculative
it were
an mere
of reason,
not
a
organon
of other
propedeyto
tic,or
must
extend of
reason.
all
use possible
Just
sense.
as
littlecan
sense
of production
common
This
rules of
in cognition
of knowing the faculty But logic must concrete. in thinking the abstract.
be
science
The
universal
understandingmay
ever how-
of logic;and in it we object rules of speculathe particular from then abstract tive it is consequentlydistinguished and reason, of the speculative from the logic understanding. it may As to the propounding of logic, be, either or scholastic, popular. It,when it is suitable to the desire for knowledge, and to the culture of those, who to the capacities to treat the knowledge of the logical have a mind be assumed the rules
as a
science, is scholastic.
to
But the
it,when
wants
it of
descends
the have
to
a
capacities and
mind,
not
those, who
a
to
to
science, but
use
it in order
is popular. understandings,
In
scholastic
22
INTRODUCTION.
propoundingthe in or universality,
the other
be
;
exhibited in the
in their
popular, on
concrete.
The
scholastic
do it more
ly profound-
conclude,
method.
a
we
here
method
distinguish propounding
we
from
By
be
understand
the way
in which be
certain
to object,
whose
is to applied., from
as
taken
course,
the nature
an
order
of
determined thinkingthereby be
and
necessary,
cannot
altered.
Propounding communicating or
order to
der ren-
doctrine
what
intelligible.
we
From
end of
have
and the
of the
use
the logic,
of
its studymay
a
be estimated
accordingto
and right
determinate
scale.
a
Logic is not
not
an
or
covery; of dis-
of
truth;
nor
is it algebra,
by
whose
assistance
hidden
truths
may
be
vered. disco-
Yet
it
on as
is useful (logic)
and for
as indispensable
ticism cri-
cognition ;
of
or
as judging,
well of order
mon, com-
reason, speculative
in
not
to
it correct,
and
to
make
it
consistent,, or
agree
the
logical
INTRODUCTION.
23
of
of principle
truth is,the
agreement
the understanding
universal laws.
of logic, with we regardto the history Finally, what follows : shall only mention The logicof the present day derives its origin from Aristotle's Analytic. That philosopher may be
considered
an
as
of
He propounds logic.
it into
it as
organon,
His
divides
analyticand
and
tends ex-
dialectic.
to the
scholastic
unfoldingof
form the basis there
case
which
however,
every
is
runs
use
because
almost
thingin
this
into
of various
operationsof
is taken from it. understanding since the times of the Stagyrite, Besides, logic, it of matter; nor in point has not gainedmuch can But it may gain with redo so from its very nature. spect
to
accuracy,
but few
as
There
are
attain any
more.
manent per-
state,so
those both has
altered
To
we understanding; in or orderly
but
more
the science
of
logic. Organon
would
cept nothing ex-
It
was
believed, that
Lambert's But
it contains
tilties, rightsub-
of
no
material
24
INTRODUCTION.
Among
Leibnitz
the
and
modern
philosophers
who have
there
are
two,
Wolf,
introduced
sal univer-
logic.
Malebranche
matter not treat
and and
Locke,
the in the
as
they
of
handle
the do
of
cognition
of any
origin
proper best
conceptions,
sense.
logic
Wolfs
have
universal
logic
is the
we
have. for
Some instance
conjoined
it with
Aristotle's
logic,
Reusch.
Baumgarten,
respect,
made has
man,
who
has Wolfs
great
merit and
in
this
concentrated
on
logic,
Mayer
comments too
Baumgarten.
among
reflect For and his the modern the
is numbered did
not
he
sufficiently on logic
contains
of
science.
physical meta-
principles,
bounds of of
consequently
he establishes and therefore
passes
a
the
logic
;
can
besides,
be
criterion
truth,
which
free
none,
gives
in
this In
respect
the
to
all
extravagancies.
is
not
one
present
and
we
there
no
logician,
occasion
it
for
coveries dis-
for
logic
because
comprises
form
of
thinking only.
INTRODUCTION.
25
in.
losophy of Philosophyin general. PhiConception considered according to both the scholastic and the mundane tion. Concepand Ends Essential Requisites of Philosophising. The most general and the chief Problems of this Science.
IT is sometimes
difficult 4o
what explain
is
derstood un-
by n science. But the science gainsin of its determinate pointof precision by the establishing and faults, which slip conception, many in when be distinguished the science cannot from
the sciences
allied to it,are
avoided.
to our Previously attempt to give a definition of the cha^ must however, we investigate philosophy, racter of the various cognitions themselves, and, as the philosophical of ones belongto the cognitions in particular, what is to be understood explain, reason, by the latter. The of reason torical are opposed to the hiscognitions from prinThose are cognitions ciples; cognitions. from data. But a cognition these, cognitions
may for
arise from
reason man
and of of
yet be
historical the
when,
example, a
letters learns
tions of the
reason
others,his
is merely historical.
Cognitions may
be
distinguished,
D
26
to 1, according
INTRODUCTION.
their which
only source,
this
from
empirical ;
2,
according to
in which Considered
their
a
the way,
men.
under either
point
of
view,
the
are, cognitions
rational,or
may
in historical, have
be
a
whatever their
way
they
in themselves
may
it is but
cal histori-
subjectively. rational cognitions It is pernicious to know some but indifferent to know others merely historically,
so.
The
the rules of
from his tables; and that is historically navigation But, when the lawyer knows law enough for him. only, he is rendered very unfit indeed historically for a legislator. fora good judge, and utterly so the adduced distinction between the objecFrom tively it is and the subjectively rational cognitions, learn philosophy in a certain obvious, that one may By respect without being able to philosophise. he, who would become a philosopher, consequence exercise himself in making a free and not must merely an imitative and, so to say, a mechanical
use
of his
reason.
We
have
reason
as
from cognitions
hence
are
it
follows*
two
that
they must
be
priori.
But there
spe-
INTRODUCTION.
27'
cies of
which
the mathematics and philosophy, cognitions, and yet very considerably both a priori, are
distinct. It is
the mathematics of
and
treats
the quantity,
one
distinct
from
as
is however
cannot to
false.
tinction disthe
sciences
depend
every
sequently conthing1,
quanta too,
far the
as
and
the mathematics
do
so
likewise,as
every distinct
use
thing-has
sort
reason
quantum.
Nothing
reason
or
but
of
the in
cognition of
the mathematics
of the
of
and between
of
in
makes philosophy
sciences. from the other
mere
the
distinction specific
these
reason
on
nition cog-
of
reason
from
construct
a
the construction
conceptions.
we
We
conceptionswhen priori,without
intuition the
by
we
intuition
exhibit
our use
experience,, or
which object,
The
by
corres*
ponds to
never
can
conceptionof
his
reason
it.
mathematician
mere
to according
the
of used
his
by
the
mathematics
is
in the
concrete
we
; the
intuition however
case
is not
but empirical,
in
this
make
for ourselves
this advantage
cognitions are
INTRODUCTION.
of it are
but
discursive.
on
/Vticl.
of
our
more reflecting*
in quantities be
structed con-
the mathematics
is,that
a
by
cannot
intuition
qualities
be exhibited
by
intuition.
Philosophyis
or
the
system
of the
of cognitions
reason
tions. concep-
That
Accordingto
is the
reason.
science
of the ultimate
This
an is,
sublime
a digconception,gives nity,
that
absolute
it is
that is of
gives a
It is
to all other
cognitions.
is the
use
of
its scope
"
philosophyeven
the school
science
according to
sense
In
this
scholastic
to
of
the but
address
only ;
philosophy to it,relatively
word
to
conception,extends
the
In utility.
a
the former
is therefore respectphilosophy
doctrine
of address; in the
this
reason.
latter, a
and
doctrine the
of
wisdom;
of legislatrix
reason,
in philosopher,
view,
not
the
but artificer,
the
of legislator
The
artificer of
reason
or,
as
Socrates
names
him,
the
philodox,endeavours
to the
knowledge, without
kaowlcdge contributes
INTRODUCTION.
29
of
son
he of
gives rules
ends. The teacher
for
the
use
reason
for all
the
sorts
practicalphilosopher or
of wisdom both
sage,
and
sense.
the
by
doctrine
is the philosopher in the proper by example,, For philosophyis the idea of a perfect that shews
us
wisdom
reason.
the
final ends
of
human
To
are
in philosophy
the scholastic
sense
two
things
: requisite
The
reason
one,
;
the
other,
their
or cognitions,
whole.
not Philosophy, only allows a strictly systematic the only science, which coherence, but is even
in the and
proper
sense
has
coherence
of
that
sort,
givesall
sense
other
sciences
unity. systematic
cosmicoj,
it may of the
(in
sensu
be
use a
reason,
provided
internal
that
we
understand
by
maxim,
various For
the ends.
principleof
this of all
choice
between
is the signification,
and cognition
reason,
ence sciuse
of all
to
of
as
reason
to
the
scope other
of human ends
are
a
which,
the
all highest,
subordinated,and
in which
they must
field of
to conjoin
unity.
this
The
sense,
in philosophy,
cosmopolitical
may
be
reduced
to the
: following questions
30
INTRODUCTION.
f 1. What
2.
can
we
know
What What
ought we
may is
man we
to do ?
S.
hope
?
for ?
4.
The the and
What
first
by metaphysic,
third
second
by religion,
might
last one.
The
because
must philosopher
therefore
be able
to
mine,, deter-
1, the
sources
%, the
use
geous advanta-
3,
The
most
necessary, which
the
as
well
as
the
gives philodox
himself
trouble.
: requisite chiefly
To
1, culture
use
of his
of
;
address, in order
to
them
2, habit
of all be
means
to whatever
Both hepleases.
one
must
never
will
become
a
philosopher ;
knowledge alone,
all and cognitions into their human the
reason
unless
proper
a
abilities in with
agreement
the
of
be
superadded,will
constitute
philosopher.
INTRODUCTION.
31
In
name
cannot
cannot cannot philosophise, generalwhoever himself a philosopher. But philosophising and by the use be learned but by exercise,,
own reason.
of one's And
how
should ?
of philosophybe susceptible
ing be-
learned
go
builds,
another;
to say, his
a
work
upon
the ruins
of
but
work,
never
executed.
therefore, Philosophy,
be learned. But should
as
it is not there
given,cannot
one
suppose
learn
extant,
nobody, who
could be but
then of it
say, that he is a
never
philosopher ; for
it is otherwise.
knowledge
science
in
so
some
degree be
it may, laid up would
learned
for the
proofs in
it of
convinced
them
as
account
of and
its
a
evidence, be,
stable doctrine.
on
it were,
certain
Whoever
must, philosophise
the
contrary,consider
histories of the
the exercise The for
true
use
systems
of
as philosophy
as
only,and
of objects
of
his
talent. philosophic
as
thinker
not
a
himself, make
use
free
use
of
his reason,
But
not
an
imitative
use,
an
in
servile
a
manner. one
as
lectic dia-
that
is,such
tends
to
give cognitions
of wisdom. solutely ab-
appearance
only of
of the
mere
truth
and
This
is the business
with incompatible
as a
the
the
pher, philoso-
knower
and
teacher
of wisdom.
32
INTRODUCTION.
For science is of
of wisdom
an
intrinsic value
as
as
an
organoa
only. But,
science is
to such, it is indispensable
it; so
without
we
that it may
well be maintained,
a
that
wisdom
shadow
of
which perfection
never
Who
not love
wisdom
the
lesson
commonly arisesfrom
and from
a
want
of scientificknowledge,
certain sort of
vanitytherewith
at
And
sometimes with
no
those, who
first cultivated
success,
sciences end
found
fall knowledge,
can
yield
so
us
closes,
to
then
tain ob-
first, by it,order
We
therefore in
to
and
cohesion.
the behoof of the
ercise ex-
shall
have, for
one's
for thinking
of self, 01 of
our
philosophising,
use
consider,more
the
the method
of
we
reason,
than
themselves,at propositions
IV.
which
arrive
by
it.
Light
IT
Sketch
occasions
of
some
Historyof Philosophy.
to difficulty
use
determine
the
bounds, where
ends
common
the the
common
of
the understanding
and
of speculative
reason case
a
becomes
philosophy.
criterion :
Yet
prettysure
The
knowledgeof
INTRODUCTION.
CK"
that of the universal in the concrete speculative, isspecognition "Philosophical cognition. common, and of reason, consequentlyit culative cognition
commences
when
the
common
use
of
reason
begins
in
to
make
essays in the
"
knowledge of
of the
the universal
this
common
determination
and the
use speculative
be
judged what
nation
made
the the
ning beginGreeks
philosophising. Of
the first to
all nations
began
the
philosophize.
For
they began
not
of cognitions
reason,
;
by
of
the clew
images, but
nations
in the abstract
instead
to
which
other
never
endeavoured but
render
to themselves conceptionsintelligible
by images
of
in the concrete.
the Chinese and
And
a
there
are
nations,for instance,
treat
few
Indians,who
such the
as
things
not
taken
merely
of the
to
from
reason,
God,
soul,and
many
like,but
of
the investigate
nature to
no
these in
objects
the stract. abtween bein
according to conceptionsand
In this the
use case reason
rules
they make
the
of
in the concrete
the abstract.
some
Among
Persians
of
reason
the
bians Ara;
use speculative
is to be found
but from
they have
Aristotle,of
Zend-Avesta
be
course
the Greeks.
trace
not
the smallest
discovered.
That
holds
good
Egyptian wisdom
INTRODUCTION.
which,
mere
in
comparison
of the Greek
is philosophy,
trifle. With
regard to
after
the
mathematics this
too
the
Greeks
are
the
reason
of
they
But
arose
have
demonstrated
every
theorem
from
ments. ele-
when
and the
where
the
first philosophicspirit be
among
Greeks,
cannot
properly
of
mined. deter-
The
reason,
the first
use
speculative
derived, is
understanding
Thales,
was a
scientific of the
too,
culture
the author
Tonic sect
He, though he
in
mathematician have
general
by
in
the
of
physicus.
every
thing
but than
even
a
images.
of
For
poetry, which
is
more
nothing
thoughts in images, is
Hence
were men
ancient,
first to use,
obligedat
are
pure
language
of
imagery
poetic
that
style.Pheretzydes is
wrote
said to be
The
principle
the
of the Eleatic
philosophy and
In the
senses
phanes, is,
source
'
there
understanding only/
INTRODUCTION.
35
Among
Elea
the
of philosophers both
this school
as as a man a
Zeno
of
of
himself, distinguishes
acumen,
great
understandingand
Dialectic pure in the
and
the art of the signified beginning stract with regard to abof the understanding use conceptions separated from all sensitivity. the many commendations of this art among those
Hence
Afterwards, when
philosophers,
the senses,
cessarily ne-
dialectic subtilties,
generated de-
every
a mere
pugning maintainingand of improposition. And thus did itbecome of for the who sophisters, had
a
exercise
on
mind
to reason
every
thing,and
of
name
studied to
give appearance
white.
a
the colour
truth, to make
of
black
For
man
which
reason
the
sophist, by
with
a
which
that could
proper
is become it the
knowledgeof
hated
name
every
and
of the
is introduced.* philosopher
At
time
a
of the
man
school
there
arose
in
Great
erected
Greece
a
parts, who,
and It is
not
only
ject pro-
school,but formed
never
a accomplished
that
was
had
its like. He
born
in Samos. who
were
founded
in
an
united
alliance with
and Sophist
one
*In
Englishwe
was a
between distinguish
Sophister;
cious spe-
the former
or
teacher of wisdom
a
in
Athens,the latteris a
T.
but plausible
false reasoner.
36 another
INTRODUCTION.
by
the
law
of secrecy.
He
of hear
divided
his
auditors into
two
were
classes; those
allowed to
acusmatists
who (axsoyjux"xoo,
only,
and
those of acromatists
to ask
who (axwapaSowj),
were
ted permithe
too. questions
few
were
which exoteric.,
others
were
body ;
the
secret
of his alliance
an
he conceived
intimate
separated them
the and physics
He
made
of his secret
doctrines, by consequence
of the invisible.
doctrine
Besides, he had
were thing nosymbols,which in all probability the Pythagoreansto but certain signs serving
communicate
The end
to their thoughts
one
another.
to have
of his alliance
to
seems
been
no
other,than
to moderate
tyranny, and
But this afraid
loyalty
into states.
to be
the
gan tyrantsbe-
the
little before a destroyed society death, and this philosophical Pythagoras' dissolved, partly by the execution, partlyby of and the exile of the greater number flight
of, had
the allied.
The
few
were
novices.
much
say
of
determinate been
of them.
to
Many
doctrines
was
since
an
ascribed
Pythagoras,who
besides
are
excellent
certainly
counterfeited.
INTRODUCTION.
37
the Greek For it is
The
most
epoch of important
with Socrates.
commences
gave
heads
the
all the
speculative
And whose
a
quitea
the
he
duct con-
is
almost
only one
mankind,
approaches nearlyto
Of in the his doctrines practice.!
;
sage.
more
Socrates, is
the
most
eximious
and the
of
(founderof
hand
The
sworn
and
the
Stoics, who
were
the
another, followed
chief
Plato and
in
a
Aristotle
Those which
place the
good
ful cheer-
heart,
found
they term
these voluptuousness;
it in the
by
which
sweets
of
life, maybe
cal; dialecti-
with. dispensed
In
Stoics
are
shew
in their
sown
were
cal practi-
principles, by
the most sublime
they have
that
sentiments
ever
uncommonly
of
great dignity.The
of Cittium. The the Greek
founder
most
celebrated
among
Cleanthes
Chrysippus.
never
The
Epicurean school
Stoics had.
could
reputationthe
said of the
But is
whatever
Epicureans,it
enjoyment, and
38
INTRODUCTION.
were
of philosophers
all the
thinkers
remark, that
chief
Greek
of of
schools
Plato is
particular names.
he the
denominated, Academy,
in which that of
Academus,
taught;
the
Aristotle,
a (orovj),
Lyceum ;*
covered
;
Stoics, Porticus
passage,
from
which
the school of
Epicurus, Horti;
Plato's
taught in gardens.
academy
were
was
followed
by
his
three
other
academies,
which
founded
by
disciples.Speusippusfounded
and Carneades These
the
Arcesifirst,
the third.
to
academies
inclined
were was
scepticism.
of the On
Both
Speusippusand
of
Arcesilaus
cast sceptical
so.
mind,
and the
Carneades
yet
more
this
account
dialectic
The
phers, philoso-
were
academics
then his
followed
successors.
Their
occasion
to that
by propounding
that reasons and contra so dialogically, pro without his decidingon them, though adduced were he was at other times very dogmatical. from Pyrrho, If we begin the epoch of scepticism
we
have
whole
school
of
are
rially mate-
in distinguished
their
thinking and
de
The
Lyceum
from
(AyxsjovJ, says
to
Lucianus
Gymnasiis, is
T.
named
Apollo Luceus,
whom
it was
sacred.
I
INTRODUCTION".
39
by their making dogmatists, of reason, of all philosophical it the first maxim us" the To suspend one's judgment notwithstanding the of truth ; and laying down greatest appearance That philosophyconsists in the equili-* principle, and teaches us to discover illusion. brium of judging, of these sceptics But nothing more remains,than the
their method from the
two
works
of
Sextus
Empiricus, wherein
he
has
philosophyafterward
to the
never
passed from
the
Romans, it was
were
not
enlarged ;
for the
but scholars.
Cicero is a disciple of philosophy speculative Antoninus the Plato, in moral a stoic. Epictetus, and philosopher,
Seneca
belongedas
There
were
the most
no
nent emiof
teachers
natural
the
philosophy among
has left
us a
except Pliny
the Romans gan, be-
elder,who
history.
Arabians
Culture
too, and
to apply centuries,
and to revive of
Aristotle. The
sciences
and then
West,
but he
was
followed
In the eleventh
and
they
Aristotle and carry his subtiltiesto infinite. explain but mere They occupied themselves about nothing
abstractions.
was
This
scholastic method
the
of
false
losophis phire-
at supplanted
time of the
40
formation that
no
INTRODUCTION.
; and
then there
were
eclectics in
is, thinkers for themselves, who school, but seek truth, and
it. its amendment the in
adopt it where
they find
But
owes philosophy
more
dern mo-
times,
to partly
greater study
has been these
of
nature,
with
mathematics
ed occasionhas
thinkingby
in the proper
the the
study of
sciences of
sophy philo-
sense.
the
greatest
and
natural
times.
the the
path of
and
perience, ex-
importance
of
It is however of speculative
and
the
of indispensableness the
experiments to
of discovery the
philosophy
not
comes.
Descartes
to
acquired
his
little merit
to
with
regard
he
it
by contributing
erected clearness
much
puts in the
knowledge.
and
Leibnitz, however,
among
reformers endeavours
to shew
Locke,
are
to be
bered num-
the
greatest and
our
meritorious
The latter
of
in philosophy
and understanding,
and what
what
powers
of the mind
or
tions opera-
to
that of
cognition. But
and
his
the work
his
INTftODUfcTION.
41
have
that philoof this advantage, sophers productive ter begin to studythe nature of the mind betand more profoundly. As to the particular phising dogmaticmethod of philosobeen
to Wolf, it is very to Leibnitz and peculiar faulty. And there is so much illusion in it,that it is absolutely necessary to suspend the whole procedure, to introduce and, instead of it,
another
"
the
sists con-
method
of the
in this, ' To
and
to
try how
may
tend/* ex-
In
our
age the
are physics
in the most
indeed
flourishing
among the Later
state,and there
natural
are
great names
cannot philosophers
be mentioned at preproperly sent and cause beas distinguished permanent names; in this science is,so to say, in a every thing
continual
down. pulls In
flux.
What
the
one
moral
we philosophy
have
not
as
made
to
greater
the metaphysics,
progress
than
the
as
ancients.
if we
were
But,
at
a
it seems
*
loss with
regard
It may
not be
here to mention, that Kant himself improper the criticalphilosophy, a system, which begins and
a
most
accurate
but
which, though it
former systems in
has obtained
matising dogT.
be sophists
in
our
island !
42
to the
a
INTRODUCTION.
At present
of indifference
seem
prevails ;
since
many
to
of contemptuously
pridethemselves
in
And speculations. brains-beating is true philosophy. laphysic useless Our and age is that of criticism, of the critical essays and philosophy
to
we
must
our
see
what with
"willbecome
of
time
respect
to
in particular/ metaphysic
V.
Cognition in general. Intuitive and dis~ cursive Cognition ; Intuition and ception, Conand their Distinction in particular. Logical and Esthetical Perfection of Cognition.
has a two- fold reference ; first, cognition ject. reference to the object, secondly,that to the subALL
our
.a
to
tion; representauniversal
to consciousness,the latter,
condition of all
or knowledgein the genecognition ral is a representa(and which, properly speaking, tion that another representation is in us, T.)..
Those
who
do
not
read
German
will find
Kant's
critical
works
as
Borne by professor
of
Leipsic. But,
better to
they are
study
to be
them
in German.
age
just title
INTRODUCTION.
43 that
In "nd
every
matter, cognition
that be
at
is,the object,
we
form,
in which
a
know for
use
the
ample, ex-
must object,
sees
If distinguished.
a a
savage
house, whose
he
does
not
know,
he
same
knows of
to determinately
be the
habitation
But,
as
to
form,
this
knowledge
It with the
once
of the
one
is distinct object
in both.
is
the other at
intuition
and
conception.
distinction of the form
a
The upon
condition,which
If
consciousness.
*I am
conscious
am
to
not
myselfof
condition
the
it is clear; if I representation,
As
it is obscure. of
consciousness
of
is the
essential
self, cognitions, logic can occupy itmust do so, with clear representations with obscure ones. consider in logic, We
how
arise,but representations
form. logical And
in
how
they agree
mere
the as syllogisms, is performed. It is means by which all thinking comes betrue, something precedesbefore a representation
conceptions,judgments, and
conception.
And
we
that
we
will
shew
in
its proper
place. But
arise.
shall not
How inquire
treats
presentations re-
Logic indeed
of kaow-
44
INTRODUCTION.
ing* ; because
tion however
in itthinking has
is not
place. Representa^
can
but cognition ways alcognition, to presuppose gives representation.And this ways not be explained.* For it would alabsolutely be
necessary
is
by
another
representation
to which representations, only the lobe applied, rules can be distinguished gical may with regardto distinctness and to indistinctness. If
we
are
All clear
conscious
tion, representain
For
the diluciinr
dation tuition We
we are
of the
:
example by
a
discover conscious
distance.
If
have
did not
could
not to
see
the house
itself. But
not
conscious
ourselves
hence
of this is
our
of representation of representation
its various
parts,and
the
itselfan object
we
indistinct
an
one.
If
wish to have
instance
of indistinctness
in
the conception of beauty may serve conceptions, for the purpose. Everyone has a clear conception
occur
in this conception
must
-"
-
among
.
beautiful
"
-
be
"
"
ifi
it is Internal determination
of the
INTRODUCTION.
45
of the senses, and that somethingthat is an object If we these cannot disentangle universally. pleases
and the various of it is An
term
a
other marks
never
ception con-
but indistinct.
confused
the
one.
But this
is not epithet
proper ;
because
oppositeof
that
confusion is an
but order.
Distinctness of
and
indistinctness
confusion;
an
every
one.
confused But
not
is of cognition
does proposition indistinct
course
indistinct
the
not
hold
a
conversely ,"
confused
no
every
is cognition
one.
For in
in cognitions,
which
there
is
multifarious
nor
to be met
sion. confu-
That which
is the
never
case
with all
simplerepresentations,
;
become
no
distinct
not
because
be
met
sion, confu-
is to multifarious, therefore be
with
fused, con-
They
in
must
termed,
not
indistinct.
the
which
of variety
marks
indistinctness often
not
as
proceedsfrom weakness
There
to
confusion.
maybe
ness distinctbe
scious con-
to the to
form, that is
say, I may
myselfas
;
in the representation
but
as
decrease
when
the
degreeof
smaller,though perfectorder
the
case
that is
with abstract
representations.
INTRODUCTION.
be two-fold consists
one.
This
in the
sciousness con-
of the
see,
multifarious
by
as a
intuition.
whitish
We
galaxy
the
streak ;
cessarily ne-
the rays of
stars single
in it must
have
was
into the
eye.
becomes
But
its representation
but
clear, and
first by the
distinct ; because discover the now we telescope in the galaxy: stars contained gingle Secondly,an intellectual one : Distinctness in distinctness of the understanding. or conceptions, This depends upon the dissection of the conception with it
that is for
as
comprised
marks,
in
are,
tained example,con-
conception of
virtue
1
,
the
2, that of the adherence conception of liberty, to rules (of duty),and 3, that of the overcoming when of the inclinations, of the power pugnant they are reto those
rules.
When
we
of conception
render But
it distinct to ourselves
justby
this
analysis.
distinct we add nothing rendering to a are conception; we but explain it. Hence in distinctness, amended to the not as conceptions
by
this act of
matter, but
If
two
we
as
to the form.
our
reflect on
understanding,
tween beour
whence
they arise,we
intuitions and
conceptions. All
cogni*
INTRODUCTION.
47
are
either
intuitions,
source
conceptions. The
former
have
their
in
the
the power of intuitions ; the latter, sensitivity, in the understanding, the facultyof conceptions. the understanding This is the logical distinction between
and the
this
tinction disto which sensitivity, according that, on nothing but intuitions, yields Both conceptions. be considered mental fundain
ther ano-
however
pointof view and defined in another way ; the the understanding as a passivity or sensitivity receptibility, But self-active power. as a spontaneity, or of explication this mode is metaphysical, not logical. is usually And the sensitivity named the inferior faculty, the other hand, the the understanding, on the sensitivity superior gives the mere ; because materials for thinking, but the understanding poses disof them
and
reduces
them
to rules
or
tions. concep-
intuitive
and
between
the
intuitions and
of the esthetical and variety is founded. of cognition of the logical perfection either to A cognition naay be perfectaccording, laws of the sensitive faculty, to those of the cogior tative it is esthetically case perfect, ; in the former esthetical perfection in the latter logically The so. and the logical therefore are of a discrepant sort; the latter the former* has relation to the sensitivity, of cognito the intellect. The perfection logical here
adduced,
INTRODUCTION.
object ; By
can
upon
of
judged accordingto rules a priori. The consists in the agreement of esthetical perfection and bottoms the cognition with the subject, upon the sensitive capacity peculiarto every single son. perIn the esthetical perfection, then, no objectively
be and
it would
manner
If,however,
which
in
an
universal laws of
sensitivity,
hold
for all thinking beings good,not objectively, for all humankind, general, yet subjectively,
esthetical
a
of
conceived.
This
is
beauty
"
what
and can be the object intuitively the laws of of a universal complacence3 because intuition are universal laws of sensitivity. By this agreement with the universal laws of the proper self-sufficient the sensitive receptibility
pleasesthe
Beautiful, whose
is
essence
consists in the
the
mere
form
Agreeable^
charms
or
which
merely in pleases
can
on
the sensation be
by
nothingbut the private complacency. ground of a mere which And it is this essential esthetical perfection, and admits of perfection, comports with the logical
moving, and
that account
INTRODUCTION.
49
perfection may
another
with regardto that advantageous, But it, in to the logical essential beautiful, perfection. be
to it, if we respect,is disadvantageous
sider conessential un-
in the esthetical
perfection nothingbut
the
beautiful-^the
which in pleases the
mere
charming
or
the
moving,
ty. sensitivi-
sensation and
of the
not refers,
to the bare
form, but
and
to the matter
For
charms
in our perfection there alwaysremains between In general the esthetical and the logical of our cognition a sort perfection be fully of contest, which cannot put an end to. The wants to be informed, the sensitivity understanding ter desires insight, the latto be animated ; the former if theyare to instruct, capability. Cognitions, to entertain, be solid or profound must ; if theyare tiful, they must be beautiful. If a propounding is beaubut the sensitivity, but shallow, it may please is prothe understanding cannot found, ; if it conversely but dry, it can pleasethe understanding
not only,
the
sensitivity.
of human
should
of cognition require,that we popularity must endeavour to unite both perfections, we with an esthetical cognitions in generalcapableof it, and are scholastic logically perfect cognition those
render
vour But in this endeapopularby the esthetical form. to jointhe esthetical and the logical perfection the following in our cognitions not neglect \ye must
G
50 rules
INTRODUCTION.
the basis of
not
;
all other
must
be
quite postponedor
the formal
with cognition the
sacrificed to
other
2, that
esthetical
considered; because
which
can
be
logical
tious cau-
consists;3, perfection,
with
acts
must
very
a
charms
and
moving,by
obtains
which
an
tion cogni-
upon
sensation and
interest for
drawn herebythe attention is so easily then a which from the objectto the subject ; from influence the logical on fection pervery disadvantageous arise. of cognition must obviously which have place In order to make the distinctions, between the logical and the esthetical perfections of still more knowable, not only in the cognition, but in various particular points of view, general, them with regard to the shall compare \ve together of quantity, of quality, of relation, four chief points which the stress lies in the and of modality, upon of cognition. judgment on the perfection is perfect, when it A cognition 1, as to quantity, is universal ; 2, as to quality, when it (a cognition)
it; because
is distinct; 3, 4 and
as lastly,
as
to
relation, when
it is true; and
to
when modality,
it is certain.
Considered
in those
points of view, a
when quantity,
cognition
it (a
to as is logically perfect,
tion) cogni-
of the universality (universality objective when it has or of the rule) 3 as to quality, conception has
INTRODUCTION.
51
in the concepdistinctness (distinctness objective tion) it has objective to relation, when truth; ; as it has objective when and finally to modality, as
certainty.
To those esthetithe following logical perfections those
cal main
four
1, the
the
esthetical
This universality.
a
in of
of applicableness
serve
to cognition
which objects,
can
for
examples,to by
which
its application
be
made, and
of
it may
also be
used
popularity ;
This is the distinctness
an
2,
by intuition,whereby
conceptionis
or
formed abstractly
by examples,
illustrated ;
3, the
truth.
but in
A the
merely subjective
agreement
of the with the laws of the is nothing
truth,which
with cognition
subjectand
and
appearance
more
of sense,
a
by consequence
than
universal
appearance;
4,
what
certainty.This
consequence
of what is, is confirmed
depends
the
upon
testimony
sation sen-
by both
parts,mul-
tifariousness and
With
whose harmonious unity, tion conjuncconstitutes perfection in general, alwaysoccur. the understanding the unity lies in the conception, with the
senses
in the intuition.
52
Mere
us.
INTRODUCTION;
multifariousness without
And hence
it is truth
unitycannot
of all of
our
fy satis-
the chief
tions; perfec-
because
to the
is,by
the reference
tion cognieven
in the
the
the chief
condition, negative
in the
pleasetaste universally.
to
make
progress
his
founded
as
in cognition
as
well
genius, betrays
of the
itself in
greatest
esthetical
possible union
is intended
with logical
the such
knowledge,
at
once
to
and edify
to entertain.
VI.
Particular
A.
Logical Perfectionof Cognition as to and Extensive Quantity. Greatness. Greatness. intensive Copiousness and lity Profoundness or Importance and Fertiof Cognition. Determination of the Horizon of our Cognition.
.
THE
of
cognition may
extensive,
be
or
taken
two-fold
sense,
as,
either
intensive.
The
former
refers to the
sphere of
nition cog-
anci
consists consequently
in its abundance
INTRODUCTION.
53
to its (or multifariousness) ; the latter, variety contents, which regardthe great value ( Vielgultigof a importance and fertility keit) or the logical
and
provided cognition,
that of
it
is considered
as
the
ground
multa In the
them
of many
and
great consequences
( non
sed
multum).
enlarging of
to
our
or cognitions
in advancing
as perfection,
to their
extensive far
a
tum, quan-
it is
good
our
to
calculate
and
our
how
cognition
flection re-
agrees
with
ends the
capacities. This
of the horizon the is to
concerns
determination
horizon
of
our
cognitions, by
The the
which
be understood, of
adequateness of
quantum
the
all the
of the
to cognitions
and capacities
ends
subject.
The horizon may
be
determined,
to
the interest
to
of
the far
derstanding. un-
We
can
have
here
judge
far
we
how
shall
we
go
in and
our
go in
with
a
them,
how for
cognitionsserve
these
;
or
view logical
to
to
those
pal princi-
as cognitions,
our
ends
2, esthetically, according
the interest of
to
taste
with
regard
his
to
feeling.
of the
in
Who
determines
to
zon horithe
accommodate
is to say, to
it popular, or
acquire
such
5*
and
INTRODUCTION.
as
are
pleasethe
3,
to
in which
"
they
and
interested
to practically, according-
the
with utility
regard
the
The
to
practical
the ence^ influ-
horizon, if it is determined
which
a
according
has
on our
cognitbn
of the
is morality,
pragmaticaland
The horizon
greatest moment*
concerns
man
then
the
can
judgment
know,
of
to know.
and
what
the determination
he may
As
of what of what
know,
to the
and
he
ought
or theoretically
horizon
in
it
in hand
place" we
the
in,
of
either
view. With
the
or objective,,
subjective, point
horizon
regard
to the
the objects
is,either
wider
rational. historical, or
than the
The
former
is much
latter, nay,
it is has be
immensely great ;
no
for
our
historical
knowledge
may
bounds.
Whereas
the
rational horizon
be
fixed ; it for
of
determined
to that
sort
mathematical
cognition cannot
to
And
son, rea-
with respect
how far
the
philosophical cognitionof
can
reason
go
in it
priori, without
any
_.
experience.
:
.
it
serves
for
accomplishing
our
fare. wel-
INTRODUCTION.
55
to Relatively
the
the subject
a
horizon
is,either
ditional con-
absolute, or
and particular
one. (a private)
By
and
universal horizon
of the
is to be of
congruence
those
boundaries
to cognitions
of all human
general.
as man
And in
therefore the
?
man,,
The
determination
upon
privatehorizon
and
pends de-
various
conditions empirical
special
the
gard re-
business
or
the
and profession, of
men
like.
has,
special powers
of
stations
to peculiar
it ; every
the
its
its station,
of
a
may
one
conceive
horizon of
latter
reason
and
of
of
science,which
to
in requiresprinciples, them
we
order
determine
to according
what
we
can
know
ly) (scientificalour
and
what
we we
cannot.
What what
cannot not
our
know know
is above
or
horizon occasion
need
have The
no
to
know,
tan
without
horizon.
latter however
with regard to this or to that relatively, of which privateend, to the attaining particular certain thing, cognitions might, not only contribute nohold but but
even
we
be
an
impediment.
not
For
no
tion, cognisee
though
may
always
be able
to
its
in every
respect. It is
56 therefore both
with
INTRODUCTION.
an
unwise
and who
an
unjustreproach,
the
which
great men;
cultivate
sciences
shallow
with
laborious
are industry,
charged by
is the
use
pates, when
This
who
of
doingso?
about
means
be
put by those
the
a
have
mind A
to
occupy
themselves
it could
sciences.
science, suppose
throw
then useful on possible light matter, were any one ways is alperfect cognition enough. Every logically of some use which, though hitherto possible
unknown
to us,
will
perhaps be
ever
found
out
by
terity. pos-
Had
nothing been
should have,
considered
in the
their gain,
nor
neither
arithmetic,
geometry.
is so ordered, understanding and thatit finds satisfaction in the mere insight, that arises from it. than in the advantage yet more made This observation was so early as by Plato.
man
Besides, our
A he
feels his
the
own
excellence
of
on
the
occasion
sees
meaning
see
having understanding.
envy
the brutes. of by are. cognitions be compared with their
Men,
The
who
do not
that, must
which
to
internal
value,
external
As not
value -that
in.the
application.
our
horizon, if we views,
as
need
know
according to
us,
no
our
not
being
relative
necessary
sense
is to
means
be
understood
in
only,by
in the if
absolute
we
one, not
that,
know
our
horizon,
should
so
us, is to be
likewise.
INTRODUCTION.
57
With
view
to
the
of the boundaries
tobe recommended
1, determine
than
not
he
can
do
happen
not
2,
alter it
(notgo by
from
one
thingto another);
3,
nor
not
measure
of others
no use
his own,
:
hold be
is of
to him
it
would horizon
pretend to
one
determine
the
of others
because
does not
sufficiently
For
extend
it, nor
too
limit
it,too much.
knows
would who
concern
on
know
the him
much,
nothingat
some
contrary thinks
often
deceives
things
as can
himself;
he
when,
for
do without and
we
history ;
should
endeavour,
determine
race
5,
to previously
horizon
of the whole
ture
human in
(asto
time), and
to
particular,
the
6,
determine
place,which
of all
a
our
cupies oc-
in the horizon
knowledge.
map
;
a
encyclopedy,as
serves
universal
of the
7, in the
to
determination what
of
horizon particular of
branch
knowledgehe
58
has the
INTRODUCTION.
and greatestcapacity is
in what
or
what greatestdelight;
more ;
with
regard to
certain
duties
;
what
consist
duties
and
finally,
than
to contract
our
horizon.
In the For
be
apprehensivefrom
d'Alembert but
we are on
of what
us,
is.
at
son, reaa
not
our
oppress
loss for
on
for
knowledge. Criticism
sal and on historical works, a univerhistory which extends to human knowledge in spirit, nish gross, and not merely in detail,will always dimithing Nothe spherewithout lessening the matter. but the dross falls from the metal
or
was
necessary
tain cer-
the
enlargingof
new
natural
mathematics, "c.
matter
the old
and
render
great
out.
of books the
unnecessary,
will be
Upon
of such new and prinmethods ciples discovery it will depend that we, without cloggingthe find every thing with their at pleasure can memory assistance. will he, who, like a genius Hence shall comprise history ways under ideas, which can al,
remain, deserve
To the
well of it.
of knowledge,with regard logical perfection to its sphere, ignorance, a negativeimperfection, of want, which, on aeor an imperfection remains.in,r "ountofthe limits of our understanding,
from separable
our
is opposed. knowledge,
INTRODUCTION*
59
jective sub-
We
may
and
consider under
an
terial, maa
formal
The
former that
consists in of
want
of
rational,
any
cognitions.One
branch, but he
be
in quite ignorant
may
by
to
all
means
knowledge
or
in order
apply the
to the
tional, ra-
conversely.
a
a
2, In
learned,
subjective sense,
scientific, or
the limits of
a
common
Who
tinctly dis-
sees
and
proves
how
tle litof
with
respect
to the
structure
of the thereto data, requisite gold for want in a learned or manner. scientifically.,
on
is
norant igHe,
the
other
hand;
who of
is the
ignorant without
bounds
on
per-
of
ignorance
account,
Such knows himself like
to
a
givinghimself
in
a
any
a
trouble
that
is
a thing no-
vulgar,not
not
so
scientific, manner.
as can
does For
much
never
know,
that
he
to
one
represent
his
blind
who
cannot
represent darkness
of
himself
knowledge
to
one's
ignorayce
makes
therefore
one mo*
givesus
crates'
presuppose
science,and
dest, whereas
So*
ignorance was
commendable
one
pro*
60
INTRODUCTION.
of knowledge,
quently Conseof knowledge,
those, who
and of what
are
possess
great
at the
quantum
they
know,
cannot
be
reproached
with
In
ignorance.
in things, whose ledge knowgeneralthe ignorance ; and it goes above our horizon, is inculpable be allowed (thoughbut in the relative sense) may of our with regard to the speculative use cognitive not above our lie, providedthat the objects faculty, horizon, but without it. But ignoranceis disgraceful it is very necessary which in things, to know
and
even
easy for
us. a
There
is however of
distinction between
being ignorant
notice of of
any
thing and
take
no
taking no
of
a
it.
It is good to
notice
us
great deal
that which
is not
good
for
to know.
Abstracting
abstract from
both.
no
We
take
we
notice of its
it in the
tion, applicaabstract
obtain
and
as
then
consider
from what abstracting does not belongto our purpose in the knowledge of is useful and praiseworthy. a thing Logicians commonly are historically ignorant. Historical knowledgewithout determinate bounds is polyhistory Polymathyis occupied ; this puffs up. in the cognition of reason. Both historical knowledge extended without determiand knowledge of reason,
principle.Such
INTRODUCTION.
6l
nate
pansophy.To
hia"
knowledge the science of the instruments of which comprehends a critical learning-, philology, knowledge of books and of languages (literature and linguistic), belongs. which is Mere is,so to say, learning, polyhistory that of philosophy; wants or an eyclopic, eye and a cyclops of a mathematician, a historian,a is a schonatural historian, lar, a philologer or a linguist,
torical who that all The
ancients is
great
branches,
be
but
holds,
on philosophy
may
the
humaniora,
by
which
that favours
the union
of science
and rudeness,and promotes communicability polishes is understood. wherein humanity consists, urbanity, then regardan instruction in what The humaniora for -the culture of taste conformablyto the serves To them, eloquence, patterns of the ancients. sical poetry,the knowledge acquiredby readingthe clasauthors, and many similar acquirements tain. perAll this humanistical sidered knowledgemay be conwhich to that part of philology, as belonging
is and practical, tends the
most
to the formation
mere
of
taste.
But, if we
separate the
in
the
humanist, we
from
one
another the
this,that
seeks
in
the
ancients
instruments those
the learning, of
latter, on
taste.
the other
hand,
of the formation
The
62
INTRODUCTION;
accordingto contemporary patterns in'the livifrg; of learning? languages. He is therefore, not a man
"for
none ones"
languages
dilettante
are
at
present
learned of the
(connoisseur)
the He
knowledge
the
as
of
taste
according td
The
mode,
in \yithout standing
need
of the ancients.
might
be named
torian
most
ape
a
of the humanist
a
polyhis*
a man
be philologer
as a
and linguist
a
humanist,
classical scholar
expounder
is
of the classics.
a
He,
as
lologist phi-
cultivated,as
humanist,, civilized.
With
neracies regard to the sciences there are two degeof the reigning taste, pedantry and gallantry.
The
one
appliesto
the
for the
school
to their
with respect
for
to applies
nothing
them
but
or society
and
therebyconfines
is of letters, is
a
pedant, as
man
opposed
of
of the world
and
man puflfed-up
the
or
he is to be
general,but
and the end.
;
in forms
only,not
sense
sence es-
In the latter
he is
picker
of
is
of forms
limited
with
regard to
the
substance
he things,
considers
nothingbut
Hence
the outside.
He
a
the unfortunate of
a
man
methodical head.
the
pedantrybe
nominated de-
and painfulness
INTRODUCTION*
6S
forms. And form of
or
in nicety(micrology)
out
of the school
things.
or etiquette,
ceremony
of courts, in
society-^in
versation, con-
is it but
it is not
In the army
But
in often And
dantry pe-
reigns.
in forms
exactness
affected
ness, profoundthe
as gallantry,
courting of
probation apof
affectation
but to render
not
so
agreeableto
as
therefore word.
to offend
with
To
avoid
extensive pedantry,
regard to
himself
a
their
is
man
required.
of true is
For
which
can
reason
nobody
but
the
erudition
detach
from
which pedantry,
limited
understanding.
In the endeavour
at perfection
once
procure
to
our
of the
scholastic
of
fault,either
an
of
an
effected
must
profundity,or
above
our
"
affected
we popularity,
all
things
"
of perfection of
i cognitio
the methodical
form
profundity and
then
first
64
take
care
INTRODUCTION.
how
we
can
render
the methodical
nition cog-
to communicable others, universally that the profundity be supplantedby the not may without popularity.For, the scholastic perfection,
easy
and
which
all science
were
nothingbut
toy, must
not
popular perfection,
to
pleasethe people
must we popularity the ancients, for instance, Cicero's philosophical "e. ; the poets, Horace, Virgil, writings, the moderns, Hume, and many Shaftesbury,
to
But read
in order
learn
true
among
Others
men,
who
had
great intercourse
which intercourse
true
with
the
it is not
be
popular. For
quires repopularity
much
knowledge of
bition and
to
even
the
world,
of
taste, and
constant popularity,
bepacity ca-
towed.
condescendence
to the
of the publicand
which but
the scholastic of the
"
expressions, by
undervalued,
as
is perfection
not
the dress
thoughtsso
be
seen we
ordered,
and
draw
not
to
let the of
that
scaffold
what
"
is methodical
technical with
then
a
perfection
(as we
which
write, and
rub
great
and
rare
which perfection,
trays be-
in insight
science.
And
it has, besides
INTRODUCTION.
65
that it
many
other
merits, this
one,
can
give a
into a thing. For the proofof the complete insight of a cognition leaves merely scholastic examination behind the
doubt, Whether
the
the examination
be not
itselfbe of a value cognition school, like every body. The has its prejudices. proves imThe one common-sense, the other. It is therefore importantto try a with men, whose do not cognition understandings adhere This
to any
universal
might also
or
the external
the extensive
providedthat
among As
one a
great number
are so
there
many
to
and
a
so
various
cognitions, they
to
tural na-
would
to
do
well
make
which
he
so
orders
the
sciences,as
and
may
his ends
contribute
a
promote them.
connexion after
have cognitions
one
certain the
another.
If,in
vour endea-
rence cohe-
is not
to, the
result
of all
great
and
knowledge will
But if
one
considers
rhapsody.
his end
complish only to acsystematical
it,he
character
to
introduces
certain
into his
knowledge.
our
And
in order
to
go
work, in
the
of enlarging
j
accordcognitions,
C6
INTRODUCTION.
is well ordered
must
and
suitable to the
try
one
to
cognitions among
is
another.
guidance
ences, the sci-
given by
regard to
the
architectonic
with
their
a
matical systeof
whole
intensive
greatness of
its
is to
say, its in
weight or
great
as
value have
which, particular,
is
we
the few
-
mere
shall make
remarks 1, A
it
which cognition,
in the
use
that greatness,
is,the whole
be
from distinguished
the
crology). that promotes the logical 2, Every cognition perfection, for to the form, is logically as important, proposition, example, every mathematical every Jaw of nature known, losophic right phidistinctly every importance explication. The practical
cannot
be
foreseen, but
must
be waited
3, A cognition maybe
and neither of
a
difficult without
vice
versa. nor
for,
greatness
The
more
or
or
cognition.This depends upon the of the consequences. the plurality the greater consequences a cognition
INTRODUCTION.
67
bo miu'e of the it,
is productive of,the
more
more
use
may
importantit is.
is
a
consequences
useless
VII.
B.
to as Logical Perfection of Cognition, Relation. Truth. Material and formal Criteria or logical Truth. of logical Truth. Falsity and Error. ance, Appearthe Source Means to as of Error.
avoid
TRUTH
Errors.
is
a
condition indispensable
it is
of all in the
said, consists
the
agreement
of
with cognition
mere
object.
as
In
quence conse-
of this
nominal
to
can
definition,our
cogni
hold
good
than
must
object.But
no
we
compare
way,
the
objectwith
our
our
other
by
knowing
For,
us,
we as
it.
confirm
is out object
can
of
and
the
in cognition
our
never
but
judge
circle
agrees
Such
lele.
ject cognitionof the obwith the cognition of the object. in explaining the ancients named diawere logicians
whether
And
the
by
the
68 it is with
should
to
a
INTRODUCTION.
that
a
definition of
truth
a
as just*
if
one
make
before deposition
court
and
appeal
has
a
witness, whom
to render
nobody
knows
but who
mind
himself
has
worthy of
called him
belief
as a
by
ing, maintainan
witness, is
The
accusation
indeed
is well founded.
Only the solution of the aforementioned problem is absolutely impossible. The here is,Whether and how far there question
is
a
universal, and
For that is the
fit to be
used
meaning'
of the To
must
is truth ? this
important question,we
in
our
longs becognition
from object,
its matter
and
refers to
the
as
that which
the regards
a
mere
form,
that
condition,
no
without
which
would cognition
in
general be
the
at cognition
all. With
the
material objective in
our
subjective
tion ques-
formal
reference
the cognition,
ones particular
above
:
two
universal
a
material
criterion of truth ?
one
and 2. Is there
A
universal
formal
universal material
;
criterion of truth
is not
sible posas a
it is even
in contradictory
itself. For,
itwould
need
to totally
a
abstract from
material
to criterion,
whether
that
ob-
INTRODUCTION.
69
and not with to which it is referred, ject, any one in general nothingat all is said. ; by which object that deterIn this agreement of a cognitionwith minate object, to which it is referred, material consist. For a cognition, which truth must however is true, may with regard with regard to one object It is therefore be false. absurd to to other Objects require a universal material criterion of truth,
which
must
at once
abstract and
not
difference of
But,
if
after universal
there
formal may
teria criall
by
be
such, is easy.
the
For
of
formal
truth
consists
itself and
in entirely
agreement
from
cognition with
whatever objects And the
with from
total abstraction
all
all difference
criteria of
of them.
truth
universal
formal
but
consequently are
nothing
marks of the logical agreement of with itself, or (which is the same thing) cognition and of with the universal laws of the understanding universal
reason.
These
for
to be
considered
its
the
must
with the
is the province of
The formal
criteria of truth in
70
INTRODUCTION.
By
the former
the
\vhich
is
repugnant
to
it
always
true ;
and,
that
is,
quences. conse-
This
second
truth, logical
with cognition of
relative to the
of
of the rationalness
the
rules following
hold
here:
1, From
of the
the
truth
a as ground may be inferred, but cognition false consequence flows : when one only negatively the cognition itself is false. For, from a cognition, would the groundtrue, the consequence be so -were
likewise
the
; because
the consequence
is determined
by
a
ground.
we
But
cannot
infer flows
draw
false consequenqe
true
;
is
for
we
can
true
inferences
from
false
ground.
2, When
true, the
all the
consequences
is true.
of
also cognition
INTRODUCTION.
71
false in the cognition, a false consequence something have place. too would
From the but consequence
we
may
to
then
infer
ground,
We
can
without
infer from
a
being
the
able
determine
it.
only
one,
determinate
ground,
all the
that it
conse*
is the true
complex of
former
mode
of
can
inference, accordingto
be but
a
the consequence
sufficient indirectly in
criterion
of the
is termed cognition,
tollens).
This
procedure, of
has the
which
great
use
we
is made
need
in
geometry,
but
one
advantage, that
from
a
derive
prove
to cognition
example,
in order
to
evince,that
flat, we
need, without
but infer
adducingpositive
and
direct
reasons,
conclude
thus: Were the earth or apagogically, indirectly, be flat,the polestarwould equallyhigh everywhere
;
but
the
case
therefore the
earth In
is not the
mode the
of
ference in-
(modus
that the
ponens),
there
occurs
culty, diffi-
of the consequences be cannot totality known and that we therefore are not apodictically, led by this mode of illation but to a probable and a true cognition hypothetically (ahypothesis)according to the presupposition, quences consethat, when many
are
be
so
likewise.
72 We then
INTRODUCTION.
may
laydown
here
three
as principles,
universal
of
truth;
they are,
1, the
of principle
the for internal contradiction and
of
identity,
by
which
is of a cognition possibility
Hetermined
problematical judgments ;
%,
the
which of sufficient reason, principle upon of a cognition depends ; that reality (logical;
the
as
it is founded,
matter
of 3, the principle
(principium
which
;
inter duo
in contradictoria),
founded
not
wise, other-
is,that
the
is opposite
false
"
for apo-
is falsehood An
which, if
it is
error.
as a
erroneous
(forerror
well
such
truth is
one,
as
only in
the
is therefore
How
acts
truth is
on
here how
the
But
error
of
the
word,
of
thinkingcontrary
difficult to
to be
the
is is possible, understanding it is in
be
comprehended, as
how
own
generalnot
should
can
any
one
power We
deviate
essential laws.
errors
therefore
seek
ground of
itself and
just as
little in the
as
understanding
itsessential laws,
in
INTRODUCTION.
73
the of
cause
ignorance,
Had
we no
error,
lies.
cognitive power,
never err.
than there
the
we understanding,
us
But of with
lies in
yet another
source indispensable
which
us supplies
matter
accordingto
does. But
error by itself,
other from
laws,
the
than
the
understanding
in and
considered sensitivity
arise
cannot
neither; because
the
senses
never
judge.
of
The
ground
influence
the
of origin
no
all
error
must
"*on-
be sequently
looked
for
where
but
of the
on sensitivity
the intellect
more
on accurately speaking,
makes
us
in
by
consequence
take For
the
mere
appearance consists
is for
on
therein which
the
of
appearance
as
a
that
account
to
be
considered
ground
What
holdinga
error
false
true. cognition
makes
therefore
the
pearance, ap-
accordingto
in the In
a
merely subjective
judgment
certain
is
exchanged
the of the
for the
objective.
to that
sense
that influence
it,for
of the
want
is led by sensitivity,
from arising of
it to hold
to
admit
that,
sen-
which
but
accordingto
K
laws
of, the
74
to ity,
INTRODUCTION.
be
trtie
accordingto
errors.
its own
laws, maybe
made
the author
of
Only
of the attribute
the fault of
ignorance then
the fault of
lies in the
error
we
limits
have
to
understanding ;
to ourselves.
Nature
us
has
denied
us
much
knowledge, she
of
our so
leaves
she
in the inevitable
not
ignorance
To
even
much
own
we
yet
does
occasion
and
to
error.
it
propensityto judge
are
decide of the
when
not
able
to do
so,
us.
because
tation limi-
of
our
faculties, leads
All
error
however,
can
the
human
standing undererro-
is fall,
and partial,
must
in every be
n^ous
true.
judgmentthere
For
a
always
an
something against
in
a
total
error
were
oppugnancy
of
reason.
the laws
With
of the
understandingand
what is true and
an distinguish
regard to
erroneous
our
Cognition, we cognition.
A
exact
from
crude
when cognition,
it is adequate to its
to its
; not object
when
with
has
respect
place,is
exact to
when it,
errors
be in it
with
an
impediment
distinction
of
the
is design,
This
regardsthe larger or
our
determinateness sometimes
cognition,
determine
a
At
necessary
to
in cognition
historical
things. But
be
every
In the
thing
must
exactly
large determination
prater, propter.
it is said, a
is determined cognition
INTRODUCTION.
75
of
It
alwaysdepends
it shall be
upon
the purpose
cognition
whether
or crudely
exactlydetermined.
a
The
error,
largedetermination
but which has may
still leaves
latitude for
have
its determinate
a
bounds.
tion determinaters mat-
Error
wide
is taken of
for
strict one,
for
instance, in
in morality,
which
every
thingmust
do
so are
ly be strict-
determined. the
Who
do not
named,
by
latitudinarians. English,
the
"
Prom
of
exactness,
as
cognition
congruent
to the
perfection objective is fully the cognition in this case as a subjective object the subtilty
as an
"
in it
usually escapes
It
a
the attention
Many
blame
subtilty ; because
it is
they
cannot
attain it.
applied to might be
and
of
an
object worthy
necessary.
with
observation,
it,when
the and
even
meritorious
end
and
tained at-
But
same
less attention
effort of
than
fall into
which subtilties,
but difficult,
the crude
is
opposed to
of error,
subtile.
the nature
From
in whose
conception,
76 have
INTRODUCTION.
as
we
remarked, already
of truth
besides
as
an
appearance
is contained is
mark,
the
truth of
important to
itself :
error
In order
avoid
errors
(and no
at
is at least
so
be
relatively
ing, err-
in which for
to
us
it is,even
to
the risk of
must
unavoidable
to discover
or
and
endeavour
"
of them
pearance ap-
semblance.
that few
philosophers
to
have
done. the
They
errors
only
endeavoured
termine de-
themselves, without
shewing the
discovering
is of
appearance,
and much of be because the
whence
they
the
to
arise.
The
of solving
appearance,
however,
greater service
errors
themselves, by which
nor can
stopped up,
it is not
errors
the
appearance,
known,
in other
be
cases.
prevented from
For, if we
stillremains
leading
are even
again to
convinced
of
to us,
our
if the appearance
error,
forms
the basis of
we can
is not
to their
little as removed,.scruples,
duce ad-
we
do the will
sort
of
ance appeardeceived
; because
of the
affair
rests upon
grounds. subjective
when
the appearance
is obvious
to
com-
An
error,
INTRODUCTION.
nion
sense,
is termed of
must
an
or insipidity
The
one,
reproach
which of
we
errors.
For
to
him, who
which
an
pearance, ap-
basis
evident first
to
is -not falsity,
obvious.
to him.
appearance
must
be made maintain
more
can
obvious
If he
;
nothing
of
him.
He
has
himself
incapableand unworthy
and
all
farther instruction
refutation.
For
we
cannot,
is absurd
that he
in vain. When
prove
the
we absurdity
speak
the
no
longer to
man.
the
erring person,
however,
ad
the
but
to
the
rational
Then,
of discovery
(deductio absurdity
be
even
absurdwri)is not
An
error insipid
necessary. may
so
likewise
much
;
as a as
named
such
one
serves
as
nothing, not
it for evinces
an
excuse
appearance,
error
gross
is
that,
a
which
want
ignorance in
attention.
common
or cognition
of
common
Error
in
is greater principles
than
that
in their
application.
An
the
external mark
our
or
an
external
test
of truth those
not
is
of herent in-
comparisonof
j
own
judgments
is
with
others
because
same
that
which in all
is subjective
way may
others,by consequence
be
therebyexplained. Hence
INTRODUCTION.
is the with
error,
incompatibilityof
ours
the
as
judgments
an
of
others
mark
to
be
a
considered
hint
to
external
our
of in
and
as
investigate
to
proceeding
it
on
judging,
account.
but
not
immediately
may
manner
reject right
that in
that
For
in
we
perhaps
be
the
thing
pounding, pro-
and
wrong
the
only,
is, the
Common-sense
discover the that faults
is of
in
the
itself
too
touchstone,
of the
to
artificial
to
use
standing, under-
is to the
say,
put
use
one's
self
reason
right
by
in
thinking
or
in when
speculative
the
common
of
mon-sense, com-
understanding
of
is used
as
test
for
the
purpose
judging
of
the
Tightness
of
the
speculative.
rules
are.,
Universal
and
conditions
think the for
of
avoiding
error
in
general
l,To
self
in
one's of
self, 2, To
and The
conceive
one's
to
place
another,
one's self.
3,
Always
maxim
think
consistently with
for
one's
of the
thinking
may
be
ed distinguishway
of
by
denomination
that of of
of
enlightened
self, in
;
thinking;
the
putting
the
thinking,
and that
in
of
place
another,
enlarged
with
always
thinking
or
consistently
solid.
one's
self,
the
consequential
IMTRODUCTION.
79
VIII.
C.
of Cognition as to logical Perfection Conception of a Quality. Clearness. Various Mark sorts in general. of Determination Marks. of the logical Essence of a Thing. Its Distinction Distinctness a from the real Essence. Estheti* higher Degree of Clearness. pance Discrecal and Logical Distinctness. between analytic and synthetic
9
Distinctness.
THE
human is cognition discursive
means
on
the side
of the
derstanding un-
that
is, it
is
acquiredby
a
of
make
to
ground
such. We
of
is common of
several
as
thing*,
marks,
know
A
thingsthen by
mark is in
a
marks
only.
makes
to the
up
part
a
of its
cognition ; ground By
and
means
(what
amounts
same)
ed it is considerrepresen-
of
of cognition all
the whole
our
tion.
conceptions are
a
marks
nothing but
by
view:
Every mark
may
be
considered
in two
80
INTRODUCTION.
\
First, as
to the
as a
whole
of representation of of cognition
as
ground
of
a
this
All
are
marks, considered
twofold
The
to
use
either of
use
internal,or
in
of
an
external. in order
internal
consists
derivation,
the thing itself by marks, as its cognise grounds of cognition. The external consists in that we a can thing comparison,provided compare of marks according to with other things by means and of distinction.* the rules of identity tinctions, disAmong the marks there are many specifical classificationof the following in which those
are
founded
Those
are
tial par-
conception(which we
ourselves
of the
conception by
a
(which must
be consequently
of several
parts).
The
all
of reason,
those
of
perience. ex-
2,
marks
Co-ordinate
or
subordinate. connexion
This
or
division of
under
one
regardstheir
marks,
beside
another.
The
*
if each
of
them
is
as represented
an
Not
but diversity,
sameness;
distinction
or
contrary
or
of
or identity
is that diversity
ness. like-
Many
of
our
authors confound
these contraries. T.
INTRODUCTION.
81
co-ordinate
means
immediate
if
one
mark
is
of the
are thing,
and,
ther ano-
mark in the
only by represented
marks
of
subordinate. thing-,
so as
The
to amount
an
tion conjuncto
of the co-ordinate
the
whole
the
of
the
conceptionis
named
aggregate;
a
of conjunction the
the subordinate
ones,
series*
That,
makes
with
never
of the co-ordinate marks, aggregation of the conception, but which, up the totality empiricalconceptions, regard to synthetic
can
be
completed
of
The
series
or on
subordinate
marks
falls, a parte
insolvable
ante,
grounds, upon
on
account
dissected
a it, parlepost.
with
is
respect
infinite
to the
consequences,
we
on
the other
hand,
because
.
have
highest genus,
but not
lowest With
species.
the
the
or as
manner
farther
of
of analysis marks
the
in conceptions intensive
or
the series
subordinate does.
the of
deep
as
distinctness
This
for the
sort
distinctness,
it
serves necessarily
or profundity solidity
the business of philosophy is chiefly cognition, in metaphysical ried carand, particularly perquisitions, to the highestpitch. marks. 3, Affirmative or negative By those we know what the thingis, by these what it is not. The negative marks.serve to keep us from/errors. of
INTRODUCTION.
Hence
are
theywhen
necessary
it is impossible to and of
err
sary, unneces-
and
cases
only, when
regard to
the
we
with
the
ment
f
negativemarks
very necessary
and
of
mo*
By affirmative marks
we
have
then
mind
to
derstand un-
marks
only not
to
err
in
it, even
should
we
learn to know
or
empty
and
portant unim-
important
aud
fertile when
it is
of great and of numerous sequences, conground of cognition with regard to its internal use partly (the in the derivation.) use provided that it is sufficient,
iu order
to know
by
it
great
the
use
thing
(the
to
in the
as
it
serves
know,
other
well
similitude
of
thingto
many
as things,
Besides,we
and
others. from many diversity the logical importance here distinguish must from the practical utility. fertility
"
5, Sufficient and
necessary
or
insufficient and
it suffices
all other
always
to
thing from
is things,
example,
INTRODUCTION.
83 But the
the mark
of
of barking
the
dog.
sufficiency
of marks,
termined is to be deimportance, with reference to in a relative sense only, intended by a cognition. the ends, which are those, which must are Necessary marks finally alwaysbe to be met with in the thing represented.
as
well
as
their
Such
marks
to
are
termed
stand
posed op-
the
unnessential
the
may
be
But
the necessary
yet a
distinction. Some
other
as
of
them of
belongto
the very
the
marks
same
consequences
The former
strictissimo )
the latter
are
attributes
to
(consectaria,rationata),
the
essence
pertain likewise
of the
thing,
but
onlywith
from three
first be derived
the from
angles in
the
of conception
triangle
;
a
The
also
are
of
twofold sort
of For
determinations relations.
an
ample, ex-
determination
internal
a
or
servant,
onlyan
The
or or
external
relation of him.
complex of all the essential parts of a thing, the sufficiency of its marks to co-ordination as is the ssence subordination, notarum (complexus
84
INTRODUCTION.
primitivarum, interne conceptuidato siifficientium ; s complexus notarwn, conceptum aliquem primitive constituentiumj think But in this definition we must by no means
.
essence
we
or
the
can
essence
of
nature
as
of
things,which
abstracts from
never
know. of
For,
logic
but
the
quence cognition, by consefrom the thingitself, in this science nothing be on the logical of things can essence possibl} know. For can easily carpet, And this we
hereto
of all
farther than the knowledge belongs nothing ject obthe predicates, with regard to which an
by
its
conception; whereas
the
to
knowledge of those predicates, as upon which, all that belongs determinative to its essence a depends,is required, If we chuse, for instance, to determine the logical
of the
thing(esserev
essence
of
body, we
marks
have
;
we
no
occasion need
to
seek for
our
but turn
flection re-
which,
as
conception.
but
The
first
the necessary marks of a thing(esse conceptusj. The firststep of the perfection of our cognition,
as
to
is then quality,
the clearness
of the
a
The
is a second distinctness
step,or
cognition. higherdegree
of clearness.
marks.
In the firstplace, we here the
must
in
distinguish general
the estheticaJL
distinctness logical
from
INTRODUCTION.
85
The
upon is
a
former the
depends upon
the
latter
That
by
tuition. in-
speciesof
distinctness
consist^
then
in
a a
mere mere
to say, in
by examples
are
in the
con^
crete
(formany
thingsthat
not
distinct may
be
are
things
with
that
difficultto be
to remote not
understood, because
whose
a
they refer
be
back
marks,
connexion
intuition is
but by possible
distinct).
jective subis the
advantage the dis-
The
occasions
conversely. Hende
but possible
to
logicaldistinctness
of the esthetical distinctness
seldom
esthetical,and, vice
versa,
the
by examples
often
and
likenesses,
which
to
a
are
not
taken
according
to
certain
hurtful
the
logical.And besides, examples in generalare not marks, and belong, not as parts to the conception, for the use intuitions of the but as conception intelonly. A distinctness by examples (themere is therefore of quiteanother sort, than ligibleness) marks. the distinctness as by conceptions cuity Perspiof both, the estheconsists in the conjunction tic tinctness. disor popular, with the scholastic or logical, head we understand For, by a perspicacious
the talent of and of
a
luminous
exhibition of abstract
to
the
city capa-
of
86
In the second
INTRODUCTION.
as place,
to the
distinctness logical
in
the
marks,, which
collectively
reached A
ception, con-
taken
have conception.,
a
clearness, may
on
complete one.
may be of The
the
other
to
hand,
the
tinct,, completelydisits
ordinate, co-
with
or
regard
either totality
of its subordinate
marks.
complete or
which
sufficient distinctness of
termed of the
is also
marks.
stitutes con-
The
total clearness
the
of
the
marks
"
distinctness
the
species of
the the
the
distinctness logical
be denominated
completenessof
This
reason can
clearness
the pure
be
obtained
from
not
The
greatness
or
quantum abundant,
the
of distinctness, is named
it is not
amplitude and
the
adequate intensively cognition in the profundityconjoined with the in the adequate one extensively amplitude and of a the perfection precision,the consummate (consummata cognitionis perfectio}(as cognition consists. to quality) it is the business of logic Since (as we have alqua
rem
adcequat);and
INTRODUCTION.
87
readyremarked)to render clear conceptionsdistinct, it does so. the question now is, In what manner school place all the of the Wolfian The logicians section. rendering of cognitionsdistinct in their mer.e disBut the all distinctness
a
does
not
depend
It
upon
analysisof
in the
given conception.
those
thereby
are
arises with
regard to
marks,
marks
only, which
no
thought of
regard
conception,but by
which
are
means
with
to the
to the
first added
conceptionas parts of
That
sort of
the whole
possibleconception.
not by the arises,
which distinctness,
the of synthesis
but by analysis,
the is
marks,
is synthetic
distinctness.
And
there the
an consequently
: propositions
two
distinct
conceptionand,
distinct
To
render
a conception
distinct.
For,
with
when
we
form
we conception, begin
the
parts and
case
means no
proceed
yet
the the
from exist
them
j we
to the
whole.
them
In this
first
marks of
obtain
this
by
synthesis. From
tic synthe-
procedure then
which,
as
to
the
that,which
or
is superadded to it as Both
mark
in the
(pure
empirical)intuition.
the natural in
the this
mathematician
and
philosopheruse
synthetic procedure
For well upoa
as
properlymathematical,
of
all other
88
INTRODtCTlOH.
an
enlargementof
marks.
when
we
no
it of
this sort
by
of synthesis
the
But,
render
means
cognition by by
same
increases,
The
to the
matter,
the
this
;
mere
dissection* form
matter
remains
only the
is altered
by our
doing nothingknow
with
but
a
clearer consciousness
As
lies in the
a
given
map the
by
the
to
colouring of
itself;so
is added
the map
by
of the
not
increased
in the least.
of
objectsdistinct belongs to the the making of conceptions distinct, to the synthesis, In the latter the whole precedes the parts, analysis.
in the former the
The
making
The
but
tinct. givenconceptionsdis-
one
even proceedssynthetically,
which conception,
he is
has
mind
to
der ren-
alreadygiven.
marks
This
that
satisfied with
the
tained alreadycon-
in
given conception.
order
to
The
procedure.,in analytic
about
which
is the occupied,
our
first and
distinct. cognitions
a
For
dis^
tinct
our
of cognition
INTRODUCTION*
89
be.
the
must
more
efficacious it can go
so
Only
the
not
far,as
at
last to
occasion
conscious could
our
to not
know,
the
cognitions. As to the objective value of our cognitionin the following general, accordingto which degrees, it (our cognition) be increased in this respect, can
multitude
of
maybe
conceived:
is the first to one's self, something or degree of cognition knowledge ; self with consciousness or to one's Representing the second ;* PERCEIVING (percipere) something, KENNING' f something,or represent(noscere) ing to one's self something in comparison of other well as to distinction, to identity, the as as things
REPRESENTING
third
Kenning with consciousness,that is, COGNISING (cognoscerejsomething,the fourth. The brute kens objects, them. but does not cognize that is, cognising UNDERSTANDING (intelligerej, of conceptions, or by the understanding by means is the fifth. This is very of something, conceiving
*
Should
not
APPREHENDING,
a
or
into receiving
the
cal empiri-
consciousness have
f Must
not
we use
placehere
and
? T. precedeperceiving order
to
Kenning here, in
and cognition
or
tween bedistinguish
the
j? Knowing (scirc
T.
what
other
in
lish Eng-
$0
INTRODUCTKm.
distinct
many for
from
comprehending.
we
We
can
conceive
of
cannot
comprehend
whose
them,
perpetuwn
in the mechanics.
mobile,
bility impossi-
Cognising
fperspicerej
We
reach
something
or
by
an
reason,
or
PERSPECTIN"
having
in
insight
into
it, is the
our
sixth.
this and
few
things,
the
more
and
cognitions
them
grow
towards
fewer
fewer,
in
we
advance
perfection
point
of
value.
that
COMPREHENDING
something,
priori,
seventh is but in the
is, cognising
sufficient
to
our
it
by
reason
degree
the
purpose,
is the
and
last.
that
For is to
all
our
Comprehending
for
a
relative,
;
we
say,
certain
purpose
comprehend
than what
absolutely.
mathematician for
Nothing
more
the
demonstrates
that all the he lines
can
be
in
comprehended;
circle
are
instance,
the
And
it
yet
so
does
a
not
comprehend
as
a
happens,
that
simple
Hence
figure
field
circle
these
or
properties.
the that
is the
of much
conceiving
greater,
of
understanding
of
in
general
or
than
comprehending
of
reason.
INTRODUCTION'
91
IX.
Logical Perfectionof Cognition as to Modality. Certainty. Conception of of Holding-true in general. Modes Believing, Holding-true Opining and suasion. PerConviction and Knowing. Reserving and Suspending a Judgment. Previous Judgments. Pre+ judices, their Sources and their chief
.
Sorts.
property of cognition; objective the judgment, by which something is represented true to an as understanding and (the reference therefore is subjective, to a particular a subject), holding-true.
TRUTH
is
an
HOLDING-TRUE
a
is in
an
of general
twofold
certain the
nature
certain
or
and
uncertain.
The
holdingness conscious-
true
of
or
the other
hand,
of the
or contingency,
of possibility either
or
contrary.
The
latter
again is,
well as objectively as insufficient, subjectively cient. suffibut insufficient, subjectively objectively That is termed opinion this must be named
-,
belief.
There
are
three consequently
sorts or
modes
of
92
INTRODUCTION.
and : holding-true opining-, believing, knowing. The first is a problematical, the second an assertive, and
we
the third
an
what
merelyopine we
but
judginghold
we
with
ness conscious-
problematical;what
for (valid one's
believe,, assertive,
but
as
jnot
as
objectively necessary,
so
however,
jectively sub-
only); and what we know, a^odictically and certain,that is, universally for every body) ; even objectively (valid necessary
suppose
ing-true this certain holdto which itself, object truth. For refers, were a merely empirical distinction of the holding-true according to the the modes
concerns
self
this
three the
of
nothing
but
the
rules.*
Our
for
as
instance, is
if
we
if we merely problematical,
were
immortal;
we
are
but and
assertive, provided we
it
were
believe,that
we
so;
if apodictical
all
knew,
Between
there is
a
distinction,which
we
shall here
explain more
and more at large. closely 1. OPINING, or holding-true on a ground of neither subjectively, ficient, sufnor cognition, objectively
may
be
considered
as
previousjudging,
Sirbsumpting is?rankingunder
T.
INTRODUCTIDN.
93
not can-
well be
we an assume
dispensedwith.
and than
We
be
must
aware
opine before
of
maintain, but
a
holding
our
opinion more
mere
opinion
In all
we cognising
Sometimes
truth ; truth
;
a
have
an
presagement*
contain
of
thing seems
are
to
us
to
marks
we
of
we
sensible of
nise cog-
it with
determinate
has
mere
certainty. opiningplace?
"
But
when
Not
in any
of the sciences
a priori; by cognitions
consequence
neither in
nor
in the
nor metaphysics,,
empirical
think of
be
cognitions only, in
such
the
a
in psychology,and physics,
like; for it is
to palpableabsurdity
opining a priori.
more
And
to
in
fact
nothing would
the
than laughable, In
opine only
as
them,
as
well
in
metaphysics
to
and
or
never
in moral
not to
know,
know.
but
Hence
can
matters
of
opinion
which
to
us
of a cognition of experience, objects in itself, but impossible is possible cognition tions only from the empiricallimitations and condibe of
our
degree of
The
it
depending
of the
upon
them,
which
we
ether
modern
natural
philoso-
The
the Translator
fers pre-
sagement
more referring
to the
understanding, by
which
onlywe
can
discover truth.
T,
y*
INTRODUCTION.
of opinion. matter phers, for example, is a mere For of this, of every opinion in general, ever whatas it may be, we perspect, that the contrary may
perhaps be proved :
is therefore
Our
be though it,considered in itself, may rendered complete. 2. BELIEVING, or holding-true 'on a ground
which
is
subjectively
to
has sufficient,
reference
not not
to
which
we
can,
only
so
know
as
nothing,but opine
nothing,nay,
but be
to think rest is
a
much that
merely certain,
of such
free
a
do.
The
is not
a
necessary
but
with
a
practicalview given
moral
which
as
assume
on
to
be
certain,
that the
contrarynever
not
a
can
be
proved.*
of
is Believing of
source particular
cognition. It
is
sort
incomplete holding-truewith
when
consciousness, and
a
tinguished, dis-
considered
those the
as
limited to
sort particular
of
or objects(credibilia
of belief
only),from
it as
a
not opining,
by
the
degree,but by
The
which relation,
bears cognition
a
acting.
niust
not
to make
bargain,
something to be gainedby
the
at undertaking
a
theoretical
(of cognition
with
the
which which
we
can
attain
name
and certainty,
regard to
be
we
can
human
possible* We
INTRODUCTION.
95
I/
not
of objects
pirical em-
cognition.Hence
but these
al-e
can
Bounded
in
as a prnciple(liberty), supersensible
in ourselves,
an
i'ut
reason practical
is a
chief power,
good, which
yet nature
as
is not the
in possible
our
by
our
of object
must
or
monize har-
the consequence
ef*
We
ought therefore
We
we
to act
of
wisdom
of art ; and
that believe,
too to
good.
This is a
We
which holding-true,
stand in
no
need
accordingto acting,
reason
givenby practical
a
only; but
Wisdom
we
stand in need
assumption of
preme Su-
for the
objectof
our
besides the
our
mere
actions,cannot
a
ends.
not objectively
necessary
our
the chief
good
is
subjectively necessarily
the
cognition by experience(u
is
no
and
the
by
mean.
But
of cognition
and object
the
an
mere
of presupposition
a
either
ground, or empirical
reference to
a
ground
whose
of
reason
to assume
cessary ne-
of extending
the field of
us.
obtain
but when
by
for, to
assume
any
mere
is alwayscontingent. Thi* enlargementof theoretical cognition, of an object is that of the practically necessary presupposition of the chief good as the object of the arbitrament, possibility by
consequence
(God, possibility
li-
96
INTRODUCTION.
commonly
proper
so
named,
and
as
not
be termed be
in the belief,
*
sense,
such
opposedto knowing
to necessity, subjective
is
sume as-
account
casus
extraordinariust without
itself with is of
use
which
reason practical
cannot
maintain
regard to
its
necessary its
own
end, and
the It
favor necessitatis
can no acquire
to it here iii
judgment.
what
oppose
it
impedes it in
the
use
of
practically.
This belief is the of assuming the objective of f eality necessity chief
the possibility ject of its obgood),that is,
conception (ofthe
as
an
of the object
arbitrament have
no
necessary d
priori* When
we
consider actions
we
only,we
to
we
But if
the end
have
mind
reach
must
by
actions the
possessionof
possible by them,
I
can
assume,
only say,
laws I
that I find
to liberty
myself necessitated by
a
accordingto
as
of
can
assume
chief else
good
in the world
but possible,
necessitate
nobody
by grounds(belief
extend
is
free)*
The belief of
reason can consequently never
to
cal theoreti-
in it the
It is
of merely a presupposition
with
The
mind-
accordingto
determinate
moral
laws
leads to
an
of object
by
pure
reason.
The
assuming of
the
a
fainableness of this
cause
of reality
of
moral
a
belief,or
which
is free and
with
moral
view ^p the
of its ends.
Fides
in
pacto,
or
confidence in
other"
one
will
the
it is to be concluded.
IHTEODUCTION.
97
knowing. Holding-tru* neither as to the degree, on testimonyis distinguished, from true by to the species, as nor holdingone's own experience. of the cogof belief,II, objects Nor are matters nition oretical either of theof reason a priori), (cognition for example,, in the mathematics cognition, in moral and the metaphysics, of the practical^ or philosophy.
because it may
a
itselfbe
Mathematical
on
truths of
error
reason
may
be believed is partly
because testimonies,,
in this case,
not
but
be easily can discovered; easily possible, partly phical Philosothey cannot be known in this manner. truths of
reason,
on
the other be
mere
hand,
cannot
;
be
so
much
as
only known
for
does philosophy
as
admit
of
persuasion.
of the practical of objects cognition in moral philosophy in particular, the rights reason and the duties, a mere belief can just as little have be quitecertain whether must place. We thing someis rightor wrong, to duty or conconsonant trary licit or illicit. In moral things to it, nothing be done at a venture can at ; nothing resolved on the risk of infringing the law. For instance, it is not enough for a judge merely to believe,that one accused of havingcommitted has committed a crime
to the
And,
is (so to say) the proreason According to analogy practical from the act, the good expected miser,man, the proiniesarjr, \\wprommum.
N
98 it. He
must
1KTRODUCTIOK.
know
it (juridically), or he
is not
fluenced in-
by
III. is
Only
by
ent independobjectively
and
subject,
merely
may be
matters
Hence
afford,because
of
the
subjective grounds, no
communicated and
conviction,which
universal from
commands
assent, like
the
conviction
which
proceeds
knowing.
a
only can
be certain of
or
of the
and validity
my
the
thing
which,
a
with
regard to
without
who
to
nition, cog-
beingitself a cognition.
not
assume
He,
does
that, which
it is impossible
is
know
but
always forms
The
man
of
dulity. increof
a
greater the
the all
his belief
that, which
interest to
he finds himself
assume or
forced
from in
a
the
moral
presuppose
practically necessary
view.
a
3. KNOWING
fscirejis holding-true on
is both
ground
and subjecobjectively tively or sufficient, it is as certainty, accordingly founded, either in experience (one's own, as well that of others communicated), as in reason, is or
of
which cognition,
INTRODUCTION.
cither empirical, or
rational:
refers to both
reason,
the sources,
our
experienceand
knowledgeis drawn. of The rational certainty (or rather the certainty phical reason) is again,either mathematical, or philosofrom which all
;
The because
mathematical
an
is certainty
named
ETIDENCE;
is clearer, than a cognition discursive one. Though the mathematical and the of reason in themselves are philosophical cognitions of certainty the species is distinct equallycertain, intuitive in them.
one., prooriginal vided from our own that we are certain of something if we and a derived one, so are by the experience, minated denoexperienceof others; the latter is usually
The
is an empirical certainty
certainty. of rational certainty The (or rather the certainty from the empirical reason) isdistinguished bytheconrs that isconjoined sciousness of the necessity with it;it is therefore an apodictical whereas theemcertainty, is but an assertive one. We are rationally tain cerpirical of what we would have perspected of a priori, without all experience. Hence course tions may our cogniof experience, and yet their certainty regardobjects
and rational, provided empirical that we certain proposition an cognise empirically from principles a priori. of reason of every thing we cannot Certainty have ; but, when it is possible for us to have it, must it to the empirical we prefer certainty. be
at
once
the historical
INTRODUCTION.
either
mediate,
or
an
diate imme-
a proof, requires is capable and stands in need of none. or Though in our is certain but mediately, 3o much cognition be something that is, onlyby a proof,there must certain, and all our indemonstrable,or immediately certain promust set out from immediately cognition positions.
that is to say,
it either
proofs, upon' which all the mediate certainty rect, of a cognition depends, are either direct,or inditruth by its we a apagogical.When prove of it; and when we we givea direct proof grounds, of the contrary infer the truth of from the falsity an a apagogical.But if the latter proposition, torily be contradicshall hold good, the propositions must For or diametrically opposedto one another. but contrarily ther two propositions opposedto one anois the may be both false. A proof,which
The
groundof mathematical
is termed a DEMONSTRATION, certainty, and that, which is the ground of philosophical The essential an ACROMATICAL proof. certainty,
generalare
the
its matter
and
consequence.* the complexof cognition, as a sysBy a SCIENCE Jt is opposed to the common Utn, is to be understood. that is,the complex of cognition, cognition, a mere as aggregate. A system dependsupon an idea of the whole, which precedes the parts ; in
the
argument and
is the
ting the
Hcrvvt
of
probandi. T.
IHTRODUCTIOX.
101
the other hand, or in the on cognition, the parts precede the mere aggregate of cognitions,, historical sciences and science^ There whole. are
the
common
of
reason.
In
but
not
often know
the
may
is not
be
a
science of that
our
tion cogni-
of which The
nature
knowing.
has
been
said of the
all When
our
cognitionis
we
practical.
of all subjective
know,
that
divested
is suffi* holding-true cient, we are CONVINCED or on objective logically, grounds (theobjectis certain).
that the
The
however,
which
in
view practical
ones,
is likewise
conviction practical
or
moral
belief
is
knowing we listen, do not, in believing to contrary grounds, but we because in it objective grounds are not concerned, is.* but the moral interest of the subject
*
This
then
is the belief of
reason,
as
whicb such
only,in
in
must
be
named
belief and
opposed to knowing
the belief
and
conviction logical
general;because it never
be raised to
knowing. Whereas
we
have
already
it, as
a
because
itself be
102
To conviction
INTRODUCTION.
on holding-true
PERSUASION,
insufficient ther
game
they are
Persuasion conscious
such
reasons
a
precedes
of
we
conviction.
We
are
to
ourselves that
many
cannot
but cognitions
in
the jective. subable
flect, re-
manner,
judge whether
or objective,
of We
our
are holding-true
therefore
must,
reach
in
order
to
be
from
mere
to persuasion
conviction, first
that
is, see
to what
and belongs,
then
are
whether
with
the
reasons
insufficient,
satisfied with
rest
few
investigate.
Whoever
neither
nor
easilyconfound
himself
to to be
allow
persuaded.
There
is
terminati deis
which approbation,
determinative
composed
and this do
of both
mixed
not
effect the
greater number
to
of
kind man-
the
form
(for-
We
can
assume
an
empirical truth
if
we
on
the
testimony
with
own
the
same
as certainty,
had
sort
attained it
of
by
experience.
as
or
In the
former
empirical
the
knowing,
The
as
well
historical
of requisites
an
tionable unexcep-
integrity belong.
INTRODUCTION.
103
seems cognition
maliterjis, if
to
an
uncertain
to
by
it
be certain, false,it, as
be
true.
(materia-
liter), may
from
And
distinguished
an certain un-
opinion,which,
if it is held certain,is
cognition. The of holding-true (in believing) sufficiency either by betting, or by may be put to the test to the making oath. To the former comparative, is of objective latter absolute,sufficiency reasons however, when they necessary, instead of which sufficient do not exist,an absolutely subjectively is valid or holds good. holding-true We often use the phrases, To yield to one's judgment; to reserve, to suspend or to give up one's note, to deseem judgment. Those and similar phrases that there is somethingarbitrarious in our judging,by our holding somethingtrue, because The question have a mind to do so. here therefore we
is,Whether
? judgments
volition have
an
influence
on
our
The
will has
;
no
influence
it were
on
diately immeholding-true
When it is
otherwise
very absurd.
we
said, We
but
our
believe
what willingly
wish, it signifies
the
father
an
good wishes, for instance, those of with regardto his children. Had the
influence be
and
on
wHl
we
immediate
we
our
conviction of what
wish,
a
should
of
happy state,
are
true.
contest
our
hold them
which
contraryto
wishes
tions. inclina-
.HH'
INTRODUCTION,
But, as
far
to the
as
the
will
of a truth,or withholds investigation it from it, we must grant it (thewill) an influence the use of the understanding, and quence i"n by conseit depends conviction itself, on as mediately BO much upon the use of the understanding But as to the suspending of our judgor reserving ment in particular, it consists in the intention not to allow a merely previous judgment to become a is a judgA'PREVI. us JUDGMENT one. determining ment, that there are by which I represent to myself, for the truth of a thing, than reasons more against
but it,
that these
or
reasons
do
not
suffice
to
we
mining deter-
definitive judgment,
by
which
decide
a
Previous judgingthen is for truth. directly with consciousness. merelyproblematical The with
a
ing judgplace
sons reaver ne-
reservation
twofold
of
judgment
either
to
may
take
design;
of the
to
determining judgment
the former
a case
in order
judgfr. In
the
one
of suspension
the
judgment is named
scepticdisclaims
critical
for sufficient reasons if he has not philosopher,, somethingtrue., but suspends his judgment. holding Tosuspend one's judgment accordingto maxims, which is not found but at an exercised judgment, an reservation of our advanced age, is required. The approbation is in general a very difficult thing, is so desirous of because our understanding partly
INTRODUCTION/
105
itself with knowitselfand of enriching ledge enlarging have alwaysa because we parti} by judging, than to others. to certajnthings, greater propensity his apto retract has been often obliged But whoever probation spect and is therebygrown prudentand circumfor fear of it so does not bestow quickly, of retracting his judgment beingunder the necessity
afterward. and
a
This
reason
retraction
of
is
always
tion, mortifica-
being diffident
here
of all other
knowledge.
We
have stillto notice
that,
to
let one's in
judgment
suspense,
an
remain
are
in
dubio, and
to let it remain
we
not
identical.
In this
alwaystake*
interest in the
our
thing;
and
or
always
suitable to the
end
thingis true
to
not.
Previous
judgments are
the all
use
very necessary,
nay,
dispensable in-
meditation
and
of the
all
to
guide it
means
in them
and
to
furnish
it with
various
When
we
meditate
on
an
we object
must
always
of jects obways al-
get
And
inventions
a
and
he discoveries,
make
else his
may
be
too;
106
,
INTRODUCTION.
merit
of
it. and
Such
even
knows
what
must
determine
therefore
an
of
great utility ;
judge of
previously object
might be given.
be distinguished must from Prejudices previous judgments. Previous judgments; if adopted as principles, dered are PREJUDICES. Every prejudiceis to be consiof erroneous as a principle judgment, and not but erroneous prejudices, judgments arise from prejudices. The false cognition, arises from a which therefore be distinguished must from its prejudice, the prejudice. The bodement of dreams, source, for example, is in itself not a prejudice, but an error, which arises from the received general rule : falls out according What to expectation a few times, does so always or is for ever And* to be held true. this principle, from of dreams which the bodement flows, is a prejudice. sometimes true are previous judgPrejudices ments for principles for us or ; only their serving The reason determiningjudgments, is wrong. of this illusion is to be looked for in subjective held objective from a grounds' being falsely ones, of reflection that must want precede all judging. several cognitions, for For, though we may assume certain propositions, out withthe immediately instance, them, that is, without provingthe investigating out withconditions of their truth, we judge of nothing that is to say, without comparinga reflecting,
INTRODUCTION.
107
with 'cognition
or
the
we
IF
faculty(thesensitivity cognitive whence it must needs arise. understanding) this reflection, assume judgments without
the
even
has investigation For judging for subor jective principles place,prejudices, held reasons, Falsely objectiveones, arise
which
is
necessary
when
no
thereFrom. The
fountains principal
custom
or
oF
prejudices are,
inclination.
on
our
tation,, imi-
and assuetude,
a a
Imitation
has
universal
influence
to to
ments; judgthat,
Mie
strong
reason
hold
so.
true
have
What does is right. As to prejudice, arise From which the prejudices, custom, they can. be extirpated derstanding, lay length oF time only,by the untle stoppedand detained by littleand litin judging standing's by contrary reasons; by the underbeing therebybrought by degrees to an opposite way oF thinking. But iF a prejudiceoF in imitation custom too, it is difficult to originates the person who is filled with it. A prejudice cure From imitation
to
be
Hence
may
likewise
oF
be
reason
named,
or
propenchanism me-
sion
the
passive use
instead
to the
oF reason, under
oF its
(reason's)spontaneity
must
laws.
an
Reason
is From
active
the
use
which principle,
take
nothing
when
But the
its pure
indolence
great many
makes
them
108
INTRODUCTION.
their exercising
never can
own
ual intellect-
faculties.
Such
men
be but
copiesof
others, and
would remain
were
every
ever
body
upon
of the
for
spot without
cessary nehighly youth, as it is
making farther
and
progress.
It therefore is
to confine
important not
to
so mere
done, usually
There
accustom
are us
imitating.
which things,
of imitation
many
contribute
and
to
to
the maxim
a
thereby
To
to make
reason
soil fertile in
! predudices
such
1.
aids of imitation
pertain,
are
FORMULES,
serves
which
a
rules, whose
for imitation. of the
ease
sion expres-
for
very
pattern
Besides,
in tricate in-
they are
endeavour
2
and propositions,
to find out
or
most
acute
SAYINGS,
sense
which aphorisms,
so
nant pregthe
with be
it seems
sense
cannot
in fewer comprised
must
These
ings say-
which (dicta},
to whom
a
alwaysbe
a
taken from
others,
cause be-
certain
is ascribed,serve, infallibility
of this
for authority,
are
or
rule and
xar'
la-w.
The
denominated
s"o%ryy sayings.
as
propositions, which,
ductions pro-
contain, maintain
4
CA.VONS, which
that
serve
for
express
sublime.
That
INTRODUCTION.
109
be
they
in
a
may
pleasethe
more,
they may
and,
expressed
sententious
manner,
or
5.
PKOVERBS,
common-sense,
rules of
judgments.
serve
none
As
adages, which are popular of its or expressions lar popusuch merely provincial sitions propothe
but
not
vulgarfor
among
sentences
and
more
canons,
they are
the
used
those
of
liberaleducation.
From aforesaid
three
universal
sources
of ticular par-
their
issue.
We
shall here
common
on
the
following only,as
the most
I.
this head
may
be ranked,
a,
a
the
person.
of arisingfrom the authority prejudice in things When that depend upon we,
upon
experience and
upon
on
testimonies, build
other persons, of
our we
the
of authority be this
that
account
accused
sort
any
prejudice;
a
for
in
things
must,
as
of
we
the
authority of
ing, understandwhen
person
cannot
ourselves and
embrace
it with of
our
be the foundation
we
judgments. But,
of others the ground of our authority with of reoson, holding-true regard to cognitions these cognitions we assume mere a on prejudice. For truths of reason hold anonymously ; relatively
to them
make
the
the
questionis,not
Who
is said (non
quis,sed quid)?
110 whether
INTRODUCTION.
quence
or
not;
but
from arising
common,
own
the
is very of one's
partlybecause
is described
to
the
limitation
partlyfrom insight,,
us
desire of
that, imitating
thority au-
which
of the person
an
serves
indirect
a
manner.
As, for
of
proud
being
treated
himself
are
all
so thing no-
alike far
by him,
in
consider both
equalwith
of them'
comparison
admirers the
of
their
ruler; the
great
man
if equal,
merits, which
to
among
in
themselves, are
be considered
cant insignifiHence do
comparisonof
to the
his
pre-eminence.
great
the
men
the
highlyfinished
a
extolled
of prejudice
more
of authority
person
not
little on
b_,The
multitude.
are
ground. of a from the authority arising prejudice To this prejudice the populace in particular
one
than
inclined. the
judge of
man,
on
to
a
rather the
abide
by
the
judgment
What
of
multitude,
that, presupposition
be
true. to
every
body
says
must
Yet
this
with
them of
terested, in-
the
judgment of
are ignorant
the learned.
in
general
INTRODUCTIONS
111
in prepossessed
on sense.
favor of
and learning,
are
so
the
other
hand,
in favor
When he has
of
man
of letters,after
circle of the
pretty well
not
gone him
through the
the of
sciences,do
heat
afford
proper
satisfaction,
last grows
diffident those be
learning,particularly
which the whose
taphysics. me-
with
regard
to
speculations,in
rendered
conceptionscannot
foundation
is not
sensible, and
But,
must objects
he thinks the be
to
key
to truth
in
tain cer-
be it
found
so
somewhere,
in vain in
he,
the
after
having
looked
for
long
way
of the scientific
seeks investigation,
it in
mon-sense. com-
But
this
hope
the
is very
reason
the
cultivated
with
of faculty
effectuate
certain
nothing Every
in But
regard to
in the
cognitionof
things,the
little. the decisions
",
uncultivated
where of
will
do certainly
it just as
metaphysicsthe appeal to
is
can
common-sense
no case
quiteinadmissible
exhibited
so.
because
them
be
in moral the
reason
rules
concrete,
moreuse
reveals
itself in
general
common
clearlyand
of
derstanding, un-
by rightly
does the
of the that
by
of the
Hence speculative.
common
of matters
of
speculative.
112 The
INTRODUCTION.
"
c.
of prejudice
the
In
this class of of
to
a
the prejudices
is one
reason
the
principal ones.
for
too
doubt
have it is
only
bounds
reason
we
moderate pass,
reverence,
whose
but
to
often
by
of
ancients, so
the
say, treasurers
the of
relative value
of their writings
absolute
one., and
ourselves trusting
esteem
blind^
so
ly to
their
guidance.
to
To
the
ancients
is, to excessively
years of
reduce
the
understanding to
use
its
infancyand
And
we
neglectthe
lie under all the
a
of one's
mistake
own
talent.
we
would
great
if
so
should
a
believe/that
manner,
as
ancients
wrote
in
those, whose
As time
us,
have
done. but
nothing
that
that, which
may
no
is of
value, is preserved,we
reason,
we
presume,
not
possess
of writings
the
but the
best.
are
There
the
several
reasons
for the
begettingand
to
universal
this is the find
rule, one
at
first wonders
passes
to to
at
it and
then That
we
wondering
case
often
admiration.
with
regard
the
ancients, when
in
them of
circumstances
they lived, we
lies in
did not
look for.
Another
this
cir-
INTRODUCTION.
113
knowledge of the ancients and and having read much; of antiquity shews learning that and insignificant which, common as the things
cumstance,
that the have
study of the ancients respect. may be in themselves, always procures the ancients A third reason is,the gratitude we owe for havingbroken the ice for us to much knowledge.
been drawn from the For which it should
seem
to equitable
hold them
we
in
whose
measure
often
fourth of
cannot
with
is to be sought in finally one's contemporaries. Whoever the moderns, praises at their expense
reason
the
moderns him.*
may
not
above
The
The
is the contraryto that of novity prejudice of antiquity and the prejudice in its authority and then
;
the celebrated
Fontenelle
With
respect to
is very natural
to
put
more
confidence
But this
in the
onlya
we
foundation it a
as
mere
If
make
determining one,
judice. pre-
This
last
reason
seems
to quite applicable
our
author's
of their is
now
own
enemies,
into the
and
envy
to
be the
as
only
secret
spring
old
man
this venerable
Envy
will
stern-
melt."
T.
P
114
INTRODUCTION.
2, Prejudices
from
one
self-love,
holds the
or
logicalegotism,,
agreement
of others
as
according
own
to
which with
of
an
his
necessary un-
judgment
the
judgments
criterion themselves
a
of truth.
a
They,
they
fest manirs
by
of
own
certain
own
predilection to understanding,
are
what
production
one's
one's
system,
opposed
to
judices pre-
of
authority.
is it
or
Whether
good
even
and
to
adviseable
favor them
?
to
let It
remain,
that this
one
in
our
age
to
such
questions,especially
with
regard
favoring prejudices,should
one's
still be much
as
put.
Favoring
one
prejudices, is just
a
as
deceiving
with
good
may
view.
be
To
leave
for
prejudices untouched,
\vho
can
however,
about of
to
done;
himself
discovering and
every
labour "is
at
about But
pation extir-
removing
\vhether
prejudices
adviseable
body?
their
all one's
might?
are
another difficult
to
question.
be and
come; over-
Old
and
rooted because
prejudices
they exculpate
own
themselves
are,
as
it were,,
their
judge.
to
And excused
remain mischief
be
occasioned
by
"
extirpation.
But, admitting
will be
mischief;
it (this
extirpation)
hereafter.
INTRODUCTION;
115
X.
Probability. Explication of the Proba* Distinction billties. of Probability Mathematical and from Verisimilitude. PhilosophicalProbability. Doubt both and objective. Sceptical, subjective Dogmatical, and Critical ing Way of ThinkMethod or of Philosophising. Hypothesi
THE
doctrine
are
of the
knowledge of
as an
the
ties probabili-
which
to
to be
considered
approximation
of
knowledge.
PROBABILITY,,
a on holdiug-true a
By
insufficient
to
grounds,but
ones,
which the
have
greater relation
cient suffi-
than
understood. from
likelihood, a
on holding-true
insufficient
the
they are
The
greater,than
grounds of
contrary.
either that of the be
ground
or
of
holding-true may
of the two
jectively ob-
subjectively, greater,
Which
contrary.
out
it is cannot
found
but the
with
by comparing the grounds of holding-true sufficient grounds ; for then the groundsof
those of the contrary
116
be.
INTRODUCTION.
can
In
therefore holds
other
is
have
scale.
For,
with is
as
we
are
to compare
grounds
know
how
much
the
sufficient ones,
must
no
to certainty.But requisite
mere
to
verisimilitude
because
the
insufficient grounds,not
those of of the
with
but with
contrary.
the
in
the
they must
the
be numbered
; if the
in the mind.
but
The
onlythe
relation
verisimilitude to
only
grounds phical philosoon
determine
the
relation of insufficient
the
to the sufficient
estimated
account
of heterogeneity
to
the
grounds; stamped.
in it In the
the
weights,so
say,
are
not
all
strict
it can propriety,
therefore
be said but of
than that it is more the probability, half of certainty. But of probability. Much has been said of a logic the relation of the injjt is not possible ; for,when
mathematical
INTRODfFCTHW.
lit
be
mathematically weighed,no
And
ever
can
rules of
are
of any
ance. assist-
no
universal
rules that
a
what* probability
error
be
on
given, except
one
the
does
not
happen
must
side, but
ground
of
agreement
two
be in the sides
err
object;as
in
posite opan
both
equal number
for
and
equaldegree,the
DOUBT
mere
is
contrary reason
impediment to it,which
or
may
be
either
jectively, sub-
considered. is someDoubt times objectively taken subjectively state of an irresolute a as the knowledge of the insufficienc as mind, and objectively of the reasons for holding-true. In the
an
OBJECTION,
that
afi is,
of
true
false. valid contrary reason merely subjectively is a SCRUPLE. As to it, does one holding-true
A
for
not
know
whether
the
impediment
to
is holding-true
but subjectively, for instance, or grounded objectively, in custom, and suchlike. onlyin inclination,
We
and
doubt
without
being able
to
explainourselves
doubtingand
this
reason
of regard to the reason being able toperspectwhether but in the subject. such
ples, scru-
lies in the
If it shall be
they must
determinateness
the
objection. For
to
is certainty
broughtto
distinctness and
completenessby
Ob-
118
INTRODUCTION.
be
certain of it can
or
less thingun-
contrary
how
far
one
reasons,
by
the
which
truth
be determined
near
is from And
;
how
it,are
answer
assigned.
every
must
arose.
it is not it must be
enough merely to
resolved the
doubt be
too, that
is,it
made
comprehensible how
; the
cases
scruple
If that is not
not removed
but off,
of
mains. doubtingstillrewe
In whether the
many
cannot
know
us
impediment
holding-truein
ha*
or objective grounds, and consequently subjective the scruple the false cannot remove by discovering because can our we tions, cognicompare appearance; but often with one not always with the object,
another
one's
only.
It is therefore
modest
not
to
offer
but as doubts. objections of doubting,which There is a principle consists with the view of in the maxim, to treat cognitions uncertain and of shewing the im* them rendering of coining of at certainty/ This method possibility of mind, or is the scepticalcast philosophising of It is opposed to the dogmatic way SCEPTICISM. dence which is, a blind confithinking,or DOGMATISM, in the facultyof reason's enlarging itself a priori by mere conceptions,barely from the seeming success."
* '
Both
methods,
For
we
when
they
become
universal,are
faulty
to
there is much
cannot
which
the on scepticisai,
other hand,
INTRODUCTION.
119 efforts to
our
quire ac-
knowledge of the certain. But pernicious this scepticism is, the sceptical as farther is understood method, providedthat nothing than the mode of treating as uncertain by it, something in and of reducing it to the greatest uncertainty the hope of thus tracingtruth, is both useful and suitable to the end proposed. This method then is., a mere correctly suspensionof judging. speaking, It is very useful to the CRITICAL procedure,by that method which of philosophising, whereby we the sources assertions or of our of our investigate and the grounds upon which pend/ objections they de'
is to
a
be understood
;"
method,
which
fords af-
physicsscepticism has which is not place. Only that cognition, neither mathematical,nor empirical, phy, pure philosocould it. Absolute have occasioned cism sceptiIt gives out every thing for appearance, from truth and of therefore distinguishes appearance
course
In
truth. the
must
have
a
mark
of distinction ; truth ;
ly consequent-
presuppose
knowledge of
of
by
which
it
contradicts itself.
We
is
a
have
mere
noticed already
that probability,
it
that
is likewise the
with
arrive
by
which
we
in certainty
120 A
INTRODUCTION.
HYPOTHESIS
is A
true
;
as
of holding
truth of
aground
of the consequences
true presupposition
judgmentof the for the sake of the sufficiency of a or, shorter, The holding
a
the
ground.
All founded
true holding
in the
in
For in that
from
case
ground
of
But, as
cannot
an
this mode
inference,as above-mentioned,
criterion of truth and
but certainty
an
lead to
when
all the
possible consequences
all the
assumed
never
ground are
can
true, it is obvious
that, as
we
that
never
quences, consepossible hypotheses, hypotheses always remain full certainty at whose we is,presuppositions, The arrive. of a hypothesis, can probability
determine
however,
have
the
may,
when occurred
all the
to us,
consequences,
can
which
hitherto
be
on explained
ground,increase and raise itself to presupposed For in such a case there an analogonof certainty. is no reason why we should suppose, that all the from it. be explained cannot possible consequences therefore submit to the hypothesis, In this case we if it were as quite certain, though it is not so but by
induction.
And in every
yet somethingmust
be
certain apodictically
hypothesis ; itself. The of the presupposition I. possibility When, for example, we suppose a subterraneous
fire for the of earthquakes and explication of vol-
INTRODUCTION.
121
canos
; a
fire of that
an
sort must
be
if possible,
But
not
as justas flaming1,
ardent
body.
of certain
of the internal
other in
phenomena
which the
to make
mal ani-
earth,
the circulation
of
a
the
mere
fluids
not
causes
a
heat, is
to erect
fiction and
but feigned,
not
realities may
must
be
be certain.
2. flow
The
consequence.
rightfrom
becomes
mere
chimera.
an
3.
The
unity.
It is
essential
of requisite
in need
and stand that it be but one hypothesis, for its support. no hypotheses subsidiary
we
of
hypothesi the necessity under of calling in. are it thereof several other hypotheses, by much of its probability For the more
a
If in
consequences
that
the
may
more
be
inferred from
thesis hypofewer,
it is ; probable
the
improbable.
for
The
of Tycho hypothesis
not
;
Brahe,
instance, did
suffice to the
he therefore
ex
of planation several
new
many
phenomena
it may be
used
hypothesesfor
case
the purpose
of
ting1. complethe
In this
that conjectured,
be the
genuine ground.
is
a
Whereas
from
the
Copernical system
(so far
as
hypothesis,
to
be
ex.
plainedby
us)
of may
occurred
no
to
explained. In
sciences, which
it we
occasion
subsidiary hypotheses.
There
are
do not allow of
hypo-
123
INTRODUCTION.
theses;
as,
for
example,
and
the
philosophy
indispensable.
APPENDIX.
Of
A
the Distinction
of theoretical practicalCognition*
denominated
not
and
of
is cognition
to
in practical
distinction contra-
the
culative spe-
are,
Imperativesand
in
this view
opposed
to
the
itheoretical
cognitions comprise, ; or 2. the grounds to possible and are imperatives, in this view opposed to the speculative cognitions. in general that By IMPERATIVE every proposition free action, by which a certain expresses a possible is to be realized, is to be understood. end Every is then, which contains cognition, imperatives,
PRACTICAL
and
to
be
termed
so
in contradistinc-
The
in the critical
between philosophy,
what
is practical and
to.
belongs to
the
praxis,must
be well
we
attended in view
when
we
We
consider
have
that
only, which
on
pertainsto
thing,but practically,
it
reflect
what
ought to pertainto
through liberty.
the
in experience. A occurring
he endeavours
to cure
his
cording acpatients
medicine.
INTRODUCTION,
tton
to the
theoretical
such
cognition.
as
For
not
CAL THEORETI-
are cognitions
express, what
what
must
be
and for
have
an
is ;
existing.
Jf
on
contrary we
oppose
c'ognit practical
ical be theoret-
be deduced
in this
re?-
then,
considered
or
spect,
to
the value
(in polentia)
practical. By
stand
SPECULATIVE
those,from
or
which
no
rules of conduct
be
derived,
which
imperatives.In
great number
of
of Speculative cognitions
always
considered
same
theoretical ;
but
not not
conversely ; speculative ;
every
theoretical
cognitionis
under
it may,
another
pointof view,
the
be at the
time
practical.
at last to
our
practical ;
and
cognitionconsists
is theoretical and their
use.
one
in this
which
of all value
the
This
inconditional
use practical
but
when
end,
to which
the
of the
is cognition
directed, is an
inconditional
and
end.
MORALITY
end
is the
only
which
inconditional every
ultimate
of
on our
use practical
to (scope), cognitionmust
we
that account
denomi-
124
IK1RODUCTION.
nate
morality
philosophy,
therefore
the
absolute which
has
practical. morality
way
of
And
for
that
part
of
its
object,
named
must
be,
by
;
eminence,
every
its other
PRACTICAL
PHILOSOPHY
though
have
sophical philopart,
use
science that
may
a
always
direction
for
practical practical
ends.
is, may
the And erected thus
contain theories
much
to
the
of
realizing
to
certain
with
regard
of
cognition,
now
as
pre
to
paratory
to
the
study
logic.
a
We
proceed
logic
itself,
dry,
but
short
science.
PART
THE
FIRST.
General
Doctrine
of
Elements.
SECTION
THE
FIRST.
Conceptions.
Conception
in
general
and
its Distinction
from
ALL with
Intuition.
to
an
object,are
either
tions, intui-
conceptions.
is
a
An
intuition
notas
single,a conception
or
sal univer-
(per
communes)
reflected-on
(disur-
siva), representation..
The
termed
cognition
or
knowledge by conceptions
opposed
the
ii
Scholion
conception
is
to
in"
aforesaid, is a universal
that
sentation repreis
com-
representationof
which
Very
little
to
very
slightknowledge
of
logic
will suffice of
shew
treatingPerception hi
of
this section T.
the Doctrine
of Elements
instead
Conceptions,
126
mon
LOGIC.
to several
ones.
2. It is
of
common
mere
in
wrong
division
of
and particular,
single. Not
use,
can
themselves,but their
be thus divided.
2.
Matter
Matter
and
and
form
Form
are
of Conceptions.
be in every distinguished the
matter
to
conception. The
j
object is
of the
ception con-
the
3.
Empirical and
is conception one. (intellectualis) A
Pure
an
Conceptions.
which
to
the
An
cannot
or a empirical, pure A pure conception is one, is not taken from experience, but arises, as matter too, from the understanding1. idea is a conceptionof reason, whose object be met with in experience.*
either
As
in
our
language
far
too
vague
sense
is affixed to
the
word
in the
its proper
meaning
internal
CONCEPTIONS.
127
Scho. I. An
senses
form
arises out of the conception empirical of experience, by the comparison of the objects and obtains by the understanding merely the of these concepof universality. The reality tions whence they, depends upon actual experience,
are
as are
to their matter,
drawn.
the
But, whether
thera
pure
conceptionsof
of all
which, understanding,
the
as
lead of reason, or ideas, can conceptions all these must be at all ; because to no real objects comprehended in a possible experience. But they of reato guidethe understanding son serve by means and to the use of its with regard to experience 2. The
our
mind in any relation of time, in general, is the genus. ranks. consciousness, the
Under
sation Sen-
which perception,
refers to
Cognition,an
Conception*The
be
diate imme-
objectand is single ;
mark, which
as
by
means
of
may
to
several
things,
in origin
conception is,
pure, and
a
mentioned
in the
text, either
it has its
or empirical,
pure
understanding only (not in the pure image of the is styled sensitive faculty) A conception from notions, a Notion.
fthich surmounts
the
the
a
nf possibility
the reach
of
is experience, accustomed
hear
termed
an
Idea, or
conceptionof
reason.
To
one
to this accurate
distinction it must
be
to insupportable
an
the
so
idea ; it cannot
be named
notion,
un
or
Criticism
pure
Reason). T.
128
LOGIC.
to
and that of experience, thingsare not objects the principles of its possibility do not hold of things in themselves, of objects of experience as nor even in themselves (in se). things An idea contains the
archetypeof
idea
as
the
use
of
a
the
be necessary, not
constitutive
for the empirical of the understanding, use principle but as a regulative in behalf of the thorough one herence coof the empirical of our intellect. It is use then
to
be
considered order
as
necessary
fundamental
in conception,
or
either to
complete objectively.,
And
an
interminate
be obtained
or
unbounded.
idea
cannot
by composition ; for
part.
Yet
there
are
in it
the whole
to which
case
is before the
an
ideas,
is the
with
ideas,or
the the
those of the
are
mathematical
dynamical ones that are heterogeneous to all concrete conceptions'; because the whole is distinct from these conceptions^ not as to quantity (as in the mathematical tions), concepbut as to quality.
We
cannot
whole, which
of any reality objective it theoretical idea, but the idea of liberty ; because is the condition of the moral law whose is, reality of the idea of God axiom. The reality so to say, an
or reality
cannot
be
therefore
CONCEPTIONS.
with
there
to
act,
as
if
God
consequentlyfor
those especially
this
jpurpose
the
;
only.
In all
sciences,
of reason,
or
sketch
contour
of
course
the
sphere of
an
long befirst
to
it.
Such
to
idea
whote, the
consider in
a
thingwe
is
have
ence, sciof
architectonic,as, for
of law.
example, the
idea
the science
humanity, that of a perfect comthat of many other momv^alth, that of a happy life, is wanting to most men. things, Many men have the common idea of (to use whit no expression) ing they would be at; hence do they proceedaccordto instinct and to authority.
idea
The
of
4.
All
or
conceptions are,
ones.
a
as
to
given,
a
factitious
The
former
given either
or priori,
posteriori.
those
All
given a posteriori,
named
I. The
form
of
sive discur-
130
LOGIC.
5.
the
mere
form,,
from
depends upon
abstraction
constitute a of the understanding operations to the same thing) conception, or (which amounts of a conceptionfrom given belong to the begetting ? naturally occurs representations here.
abstracts from all the logic all the of cognition matter or from by conceptions, it cannot of thinking, matter weigh the conception but with regardto its form, that is,but subjectively how it determines an object by a mark, but 5 not be referred to several objects. Universal it can how has to investigate not the by consequence logic how of conceptions, not source conceptions arise but how given representations as representations, in thinking; it is 'all one ther whebecome conceptions these conceptions contain any thing either
Sch.o, I, As universal
taken
from
or experience,or fictitious,
taken
from
the nature of
"
gin oriunderstanding. This logical the origin to their mere form as conceptions" the
a
of
tion representacom-
to
several
that
objects(conceptus
form,
which is
munis)
to
arises,as
In
require^
but
judgment.
logic
therefore
nothing
CONCEPTIONS.
131 is considered
the
distinction of
reflection
in the
conceptions.
2. The
matter,
or empirical/
arbitrable,or
it is fhe intellectual,
of metapliysic to province
consider.
6.
The
1,
the
sentations
by which understanding, form are engendered, are, comparison, or the comparing of reprewith one another jn relation to the unity
the
'
of consciousness;
2,
the
various
in
one
presentations may
comprehended
the
by which
from
one
the
another.
Scho.
1.
In
order
to
we
form
must
presentations re-
then,
to
compare,
reflect,and
to
abstract; for
three the
logical
essential
operationsof
and
the
are understanding
the universal
conditions of the
of engendering
see,
every
a
for
we
ple, exam-
When
first
compare
mark,
that
they
132
arc
IOGIC.
different from
arms,
one
another
in
respect to
the
stract ab-
trunk,the
"c. ; ifi this figure, obtain the conception manner of a tree. we % The word abstraction is not alwaysused right stract, (inGerman) in logic. We must say, not to abbut to abstract from, something. When,
for
from
instance, we cloth,We
from
onlyof
we
scarlet
abstract
the cloth ; if
abstract
a
conceive
substance in
abstract from
and determinations,
our
yet more
the
abstract. For
of the differences of
or
greaterthe number of the determinations in it abstracted from, is,the more abstract the conception.
in abstracting conceptions, strict propriety, be termed abstracting o"es, that is to say, conceptions, in which several abstractions The conception of body,for instance, Is, occur. abstract not an piroperly speaking, conception; from body itself we can by no means for, abstract, eke we Jhoufd not have a conception of it. But, ia order to have it, we abstract must by all means from the size, the colour, the rigidity or the fluidity,
iita
Hence
should
word, from
specialdeterminations
most
of
bodies. particular
is
abstract
common
conception
with any
that,which
has
nothing in
of sornev thingdistinct from it It is the conception is distinct from rt, and of course tiling ; for nothing with it. not any thingin common lias
CONCEPTIONS.
condition, on negative be genecan which universally Valid representation rated the positive reflection are ; comparison and straction conditions. For no conceptionis produced by ab3. Abstraction
is but the
;
confines it witb*
in its determinate
bounds.
7.
Matter
EVERY
in
of
and
Sphere of Conceptions.
a
is contained partial one, the representation of things;but, as the ground that is, the mark, these things are cognition,
as conception,
contained
under
it.
matter
In
the
former
has conception
; in
the
The
one
matter
a
and
the
sphere of
bear conception
more
another
converse
-relation. The
conceptioncontains
and itself, vice
versa.
under
the universal validity or universality, of a conception,depends upon the conception's not a partial being, one, but a ground of cognition.
Scho.
The
8.
Greatness
THE
sphere of
conception is
of that things it is.
a
the
greater, the
under it and
rank
be
of by thought
Scho.
As
it is said of
ground
in
that general,
IS*
it contains
10GIC.
the consequence
a
be said of
contains cognition,
which
by
it
means
for in stance
conceptionof
under
metal
as
silver, copper,
as a
"c.
For,
valid representation, universally comprises that which several representations of different things have in common, all these things,, which are in this view "contained under it,may be representedby it. of a conception. And justthat constitutes the utility The greater the 'Wumber be reof thingsthat can presented is,the greater its sphere. by a conception The conceptionof body, for example, has a greater than that of metal1 ": sphere,
"
9.
"
;;00
iSil;
Superiorand InferiorConceptions*
Conceptions,if they
'which conceptions,
inferior ones,
are a
have
under
them
are
other itamed
in
relation to them
denominated
remote
marjt of
mark,
; a
an
in respect to conception,
remote
mark,
inferior one.
Scho.
As
superiorand
but in various
an
inferior
so
termed taken
the respectively,
very
tion, concepat
once a
references, may
one.
be
and superior
man,
inferior
i The
conception of
of conception
CONCEPTIONS.
135
that of animal,
centaur,
an
inferior
10.
Kind
A
to its inferior, is, superior conception relatively named to its superior, an inferior, relatively genus
-y
species.
Generic
and
to
one
their
ther ano-
ftermine subordination.
quo,
or
ad
quod)
in the
logical
11.
Highest
That genus,
summumnon
a
Genus
which
and
is not
lowest
a
Species.
(genus
which
est
is not
genus,
is the lowest
(species, qua
non
est genus,
est
infimaj.
to
According
there
can
the
law
a
of
however, continuity,
nor
a
be
neither
lowest,
proxime
species.
Scho. If
we
conceive
to
of
one
series of several
con*
subordinated ceptions
another, for example, iron, metal, body, substance, thing, we may obtain
for every
a
is always, species
be considered
as
genus
with
regard
to
136
LOGIC.
of
that
conception of a philosopher,
that cannot
we
tillwe
arrive at
one
genus
be
species again.
And
of that sort
at
must
a
last be
such, nothing
the
be
whole
ception's con-
vanishing. But
in
the
whole
series of
there is no and of genera such thingas a species fowest conception under which a lowest species, or is contained; beother conception or species cause no
one
of that sort
could not
a
nmied.
For,
if
we
have
dp
not
or notice,
to which to
we
attention,may
are no
exist with
respect
it.
but comparatively conceptions for use, which have obtained this signification, it as by convention,providedthat we are agreed were, in a certain matter. not to go deeper of the special to the determination Relatively and of the generic then, this universal conceptions,
lowest
faw-^There
but species;
is a
genus
are
"
that
no
cannot
be any
more
there
but species
what
may
come be-
genera
again
holds
good,
12.
Larger
A
and
Conceptions.
is also named conception superior narrower. a stricter or inferior,
a
larger ;
an
"
"
.'.
CONCEPTIONS.
137
"
which Conceptions,
J .orlsS
have the
same
sphere, are
ones.
distinguished by the
name
of alternate
"n"3
j3
en
Relation
the
The
inferior
conceptionis
more
not
contained
in the the
perior su-
superior;for
;
in itselfthan
but
under of
it ; because
the
superior contains
inferior.
ground
of cognition
the
Again, the
not
one
the
we
other,
not can-
because
it contains that
"
under
it" for
know
other
it contains
under
it the
and conception
than it.
14.
Universal
Rules
relative
to
the Subordination
of Conceptions.
With
it, the c 11
regard to
-
the
u
logical sphere
:
of
conceptions
rules following
u hold
J, What
agrees
with
or
likewise conceptions,
to all the
is
inferior ones,
ed contain-
under
those
and,
agrees with
or
2,
to
What conversely,
is
repugnant
or
is
repugnant
LOGIC.
Because
that,in
which
things agree,
particular ones,
with
or
flows
which
we
their universal
they are
cannot to
or
from different,
their
conclude
an
that,What
agrees
is repugnant
inferior
agrees
with
is
repugnant
it to
to other
a
which conceptions,
belongwith
we
superiorone.
Exempli gratia,
does not agree
cannot
with man,
"Ufi
angelsneither.
15.
Conditions
Determination.
By continued logicalabstraction higher and higher conceptionsarise; and, on the other hand, determination lower and lower by continued logical The greatest possible abstraction yields the ones. abstract the most or conception that one, highest
"
from
of
as
which
away.
no
can
be
thought
highestfinished
deter
no
determination
would
conception
that
(conceptum
be conceived
minatum),
is,a
can
to conception^,
farther
determination
to be
added.
single thingsonly or individuals are intuitions only, as determined, cognitions thoroughly but not as mined deterbe thoroughly can conceptions, deterlogical ; in regard to the latter the
As
Scho.
CONCEPTIONS.
"
139 finished
niinatiori
(fi
never
can
be
considered
as
15
II n.
wj.
/? i 10.
MS
in of Conceptions
"
the Abstract
and
in
the Concrete.
Every conceptionmay be used both universally and particularly (in abstracto and in concrete!). The inferior conception is used in the abstract in the conto its superior crete relatively ; the superior, to its inferior. relatively
Scho.
not
so
1. The
to
refer
much
conceptions in
abstract different
themselves
to their
(for
use*
every And
is an conception
this may
one),as
again have
accordr degrees,
then inglyas a conception is treated,now more, id est, accordingly or less, abstractedly concretely,
as
sometimes either
a
more,
sometimes
fewer, determinations
the abstract
are
use
omitted,or superadded. By
nearer
conceptioncomes
on
the
highestgenus,
nearer
by
the concrete,
the other
hand,
the individual.
2. Which
use
of
the conceptions,
"
abstract
or
the
concrete, is the
on
this
? preferable Nothing can point. The value of the one that of the other.
be decided
is not to
be
estimated
than less,
abstract
we conceptions
cognisein
ones,
many
By very things
;
we a
little; by very
the other.
concrete
we
in few
much things
what consequently
on
lose
great
140
LOGIC,
sphere,is
many
in it.
we
so
very useful,as
then
there
it
can
be
appliedto
do not conceive
3. The
art
much,
as
in that of chalk. in
of
the hitting
abstract
relation between
and that
representationin
in
the
in the
concrete
the
same
; cognition
therefore between
the
conceptionsand
of
as
whereby the
regard
as
maximum
with cognition, to
well
to
the
sphere
the
matter
is
attained,
"
"
141
GENERAL
DOCTRINE SECTION
THE
OP
ELEMENTS,
FIRST.
Judgments.
17.
Explication of
A
JUDGMENT
Judgment
in General.
the
is the
of representation
of the
consciousnes
of various
unity or representations
the
Matter
Matter
and
and
form
Form
of Judgments.
every
to pertain
judgment as
its
The
matter
of consciousness
judgment, in the determination of the way in which the various representations, as such, belongto one
consciousness.
19.
the
mere
abstracts from every real or objective logic it can occupy distinction of cognition, itself as little about the matter of judgments,as about that of consider has to conceptions. It consequently
As
142
LOGIC.
merelythe
distinction of
The
distinctions of
may
to
their form
of
be reduced
four
main
points
of relation, of quality, and of modality, quantity, with regard to which justas many various sorts
of judgmentsare
determined.
St.
As
or
in
quantity, judgments are either universal, the subject as or single; particular, accordingly in the the judgment is either quite included
to
or predicate,
"
notion of the
excluded
from
it,or
but
to Relatively
the
distinction
of
:
judgments
How
many
as
to their mere
form
are
the
following questionsoccur
with the of this
representations
as
compared
not? What
unity ?
Are
they exhibited
With
conjoined degree
two
or
sort
conjunction is it?
what The
two
of
is holding-true
conjunction conceived
of the
of?
last
another,and
rather have
Plurative.
judgmentsto
the cognitive
faculty.
f Our
in
T. these
author would
judgments, when
on reasoning
used
See his
this subject
of paragraph
his PROLEGOMENA
turned
by the
Translator.
JUDGMENTS.
143 from
it. In
in
judgment the sphere of one conception is comprehended quite .within that of another; in the particular is coma prehended part of one conception under the sphere of another; and ia the which has no sphere at all,is a conception, single consequently comprehended merelyas a part under the sphereof another conception.
to the form, are as Single judgments, to be esteemed in the use equalto universal ; for in both the predicate holds with regardto the subject without exception.For example,in the single proCaius is mortal, an exception can have position, All men as little, as in the universal place just one,
are
the universal
Scholion I.
mortal. 2. With
For
there
to
is but the
one
Caius.
of a cogniuniversality tion, sal a real distinction between generaland univerdoes not conhas place,but which cern propositions axe those which logic. General propositions
respect
contain and
somethingof
therefore
not
the
universal
of certain of
jects obthe
sufficient conditions
Proofs for instance, the proposition, subsumption, in a solid manner must be made tions ; universal proposiare such, as maintain something of an object
universally.
3. Universal
rules are
either
or synanalytically, thetically
universal.
;
Those
to
abstract them
from of
these
attend
and
determine
an
The more simple regardto them. sality univeris cogitated, the sooner analytical object is possible. in consequence of a conception
with
144 4. When
universal
LOGIC.
without propositions,
*
know.
*"
ing them in the concrete, cannot be perspectedin their universality, they cannot serve for a rule, and
hold lieuristically in the apcannot consequently plication, but are only problems for the universal in particular grounds of that which is firstknown Whoever has For example,tlie proposition, cases. the truth,speaks interest in lying and knows no in is not to be perspected truth ; this proposition know tation the limibecause its universality; cannot we
to
the
condition
of the
disinterested
person
lie from can by experience ; namely,that men interested motives ; which proceedsfrom their lying observation to morality. An not adhering firmly of human that teaches us to know the frailty na-
but
ture.
5. Of
and
therefore
have
rational,not
be Let
-_
^.
subject
|_1,thus:
.
it is a
to
ing judgment; for somethingbelongparticular that flows from reason"But a is b, somethingnot b"
let it be thus:
JUDGMENTS.
145
b, but
not when
greater,can
it is but
be contained
by consequence
particular. fortuitously
quality, judgments are either affirmative, indefinite. In an affirmative or or or negative, the subject is thoughtof under the one positive is placed sphere of a predicate negative, ; it, in a without the sphere; anil, in an indefinite, in put withthe sphereof a conception, which lies without the sphereof another conception.
to
As
Scho.
1.
The
indefinite
judgment
shews
not
is not contained under the sphere only that a subject its sphere of a predicate,but that it lies without somewhere in the indefinite sphere; this judgment therefore
as represents the sphere of the predicate
limited.
we
Every possible thingis either A, or not A. If say, Something is not A, exempti gratia,The
soul is not mortal. indefinite Some
men are
human
not
terati. li-
judgment. For by it it is determined beyond the definite sphere of A but that not to what conceptionthe object belongs,
it perly belongsto the sphere without A, which is,probut the bordering not a sphere at all, speaking, of a sphere on the indefinite or bounding itself.
T
This is an
146
LOGIC.
Though
of
a
the exclusion
is
a
is
negation,the
of limited
limitation
Hence
are
conception
positiveoperation.
bounds 2.
positive conceptions
objects.
of every
exclusion
one
third
conception
exclusive,or inclusive.
the form of the
Rut,
as
logichas
with
to
do
merely with
as conceptions
judgment, not
the
the
to their matter,
distinction of the
does
not
indefinite
from
to this
the
negative
judgments
3.
appertain
science.
In
negative judgments
copula ;
in
the
negation always
the
affects the
but the
indefinite, not
copula,
stance circum-
predicate
is
is affected the
by
it ; which
expressed
best in Latin.
23.
Relation
of Judgments:
pothet hyCategorical,
eithei
disjunctive.
As
pr
to
relation, judgments
are
categorical,
given
either
or hypothetical,
The disjunctive.
are
sentations repreone
in another in the
judgment
unity
of
or subject, as
a
subordinated
to
as
consciousness
as
the
predicateto
antecedent*
divided
the
or
the of
consequent
the division
to the
to
member the
the
conception. By
are
first relation
cal categori-
judgments
and
determined,
third
by
the
second
thetical hypo-
by
the
disjunctive.
JUDGEMENTS.
147
Judgments. Categorical
In these the
their matter
;
the
make predicate
the
up
form, by which
relation
(of
the subject between agreement or of disagreement) is and is determined and the predicate expressed, termed the
copula.
up
must
Scho.
of other
as
the matter
not
and hypothetical ent than differjudgments are nothingmore disjunctive therefore and dresses of categorical can ones, pend be all reduced All the three judgmentsdeto them. functions of distinct logical essentially upon cussed the understanding, and consequentlymust be disdistinction. to their specific according
think,
25.
Judgments. Hypothetical
The
which
matter
are
of these
consists of
two
judgments,
and
connected
togetheras
one
antecedent
consequent.
contains the
The
of these
ground,is the
stands
other, which
to
in the relation of
of both
ments judg-
of togetherformingthe unity
consciousness
148
LOGIC.
is named
the
consequence,
which
makes
up
the
form
of
Scho.
consequence
is to
hypothetical ones,
a
their form.
2, Some
think it easy
a
to transform
to proposition
;
because In
in
the consequence tive ones, hypothetical onlyis asserIn the latter we therefore or positive. may false judgments together in this two connect ; for affair is the tightness in the conthe whole case nexion"the form
of the consequence
of these
upon
which
the There
logicaltruth
is
an
judgments depends.
these
two
All bodies : are divisible, and, If propositions bodies are composed, they are divisible. In former the
all
the
the
thing is
maintained
on a
directly ; it in
latter is maintained
problematically expressed
condition
only.
26.
Modes
of Connexion
:
in
ments Judghypothetical
and
in
Modus
of
:
ponens
connexion the
Modus
tolkns.
The
form
hypothetical judgments
(modus ponens)
is twofold and
layingdawn
the
fmodus annulling
tollensj.
JUDGMENTS.
149
or
I. When
the antecedent
determined
ground
is true, the
consequent
When
or
by
it is likewise true.
This
is denominated
%.
ponens
is
consequent
false,the
dent antece-
ground
fallens.
27.
DisjunctiveJudgments.
A
judgment,
to
when
the
given* conception
whole
or
a
determine
as
another
in
the
whole
complements, is disjunctive.
28.
Matter
and
Form
of
"x
disjunctive Judg"/
C5
and
named
the
members
of
or disjunction
opposition.lathe
determination
as
is,in the
various
members
sphere of
cognition excludingone
these
of
then of
represent
a
sphere
the limitation
produce
any
judgment regardto
but
by
the whole
sphere;
they consequentlydetermine
150
LOGIC.
judgment
to
to
the
whole
sphere, and
of member but
relation, which
one
these
members
one
another.
Not
therefore
determines
another
are
proviso,
a
in
commerce
parts of
sphere
of
without cognition,
can
which
nothing
certain reference
be
thoughtof.
29.
.
Peculiar
Character
of disjunctive Judg*
i/
*/
merits.
character of all disjunctive peculiar ments, judgto distinction, as whereby their specific the pointof relation, from the others,in particular from the categorical is determined, consists ones, in this, that all the members of disjunction are blematical projudgments, of which nothing else is thought, than that they, as parts of the sphere of each the complement of the other to a cognition, the whole (complementum ad totum), taken together, are equal to that sphere. And hence it foh
The
truth
must
be
contained
in
one
of
to problematical judgments or (what amounts same thing)that one of them must hold assertively
;
because
besides
them
the
on
sphere of cognition
the
ditions given consequence by concan
comprehends nothingmore
and the
one
but
one
of them,
be
JUDGMENTS.
151
Scho.
In
categorical judgment
as a
the
thing,whose
of the
is considered representation
part
sphere
of
another
as
subordinate
contained
;
consequently
here the the
subordination
the
of
pared com-
the
spheres
with
we
part
But
part
is
whole.
ments judgdisjunctive
all the parts taken
the
go
from
together.
the
must
What
under
sphere of
a"y
one
conception,is likewise
parts of
be the
a
contained
under
of
this
first divided.
for
instance,
man
a
form either
judgment, disjunctive
mere
'a
learned
is
thematician/ ma-
historian,or
we
or philosopher,
determine
by it, that
parts
of
these the
one
ceptions, con-
as
to the
sphere,are
no
sphere
ther, ano-
of the
learned, but by
and that
means
parts of
are
plete. com-
That
in
the in
sphere of
the
the divided
of the
sphere
under
one
conception,as
of
contained
of
is considered, division,
following
scheme
of the
comparison
between render
categorical judgments,
b,
and
is what
is contained
likewise under
152
In
ones disjunctive
toaic.
x,
contained
or
tinder
so
a,
is
tained con-
under
either
b"
c, and
on
# The shews
j"
therefore
of the
division in
not
disjunctive judgments
all the
the co-ordination
conception,but
these
judgmentswe
in
cogitate many
things by
conception;
for
those, one
example, the
marks
of co-ordination.
30.
As
to
modality, by
which
pointthe
relation
of
the whole
is determined, faculty judgment to the cognitive or judgments are either problematical, The ones, assertive,or apodictical. problematical
are mere
accompanied
and the
with
the
of
the
lity, rea-
of the
the
necessity
the
of
judging.
Scho. I.
The
modality consequentlyshews
way
only,in
with
nied something is maintained or dein a judgment : whether nothing is nwle out ment, regard to the truth or the untruth of a judgin the problematical as judgment, The soul
which
JUDGMENTS.
may
or
whether in
;
mined deter-
regard to it, as
soul is immortal
is
ment, judgtruth
cessity, ne-
or
of
judgment
as
expressed with
This
actual the
or
of dignity
in the immortal.
apodictical judgment,The
determination of
soul the
must
be
or merely possible
necessary truth
quently conseno
means
2.
judgment itself only,by the thing, which is judged of. In problematical judgments, which may
concerns
be
said to be
those, whose
between
matter
is
given
with
the
the
and predicate
the subject,
must subject always have a the predicate. Upon the distinction between
smaller
sphere,
and
probable
judgments the true distinction between tinction, judgments and propositionsdepends, which diswith in falsely which
we
assertive
the
could
judge at
all.
In
judgment
the
to representations
of consciousness
in
a
is conceived
on proposition,
of
merely as
other
the
hand,
assertive.
diction contra-
inadjecto
must
have much
we proposition,
judge ;
out,
a
and
we
judge of
we
that
we
cannot
we
make
but
which
must
do
the moment
determine
It is however judgment as a proposition. before we sume asgood to judge problematically the judgment as assertive, in order to prove
y
154. And
LOGIC.
it in this" way.
our
it is not assertive
%
always
necessary
to
purpose
to have
judgments.
31.
Expoundable Propositions.
and a both an affirmation in which Propositions, but in an occult manner, negationare comprised, but the that the affirmation is made distinctly, so
are expoundable. negationcryptically, stance), In the expoundable proposition Scho. (for in-
Few
a
men
are
hidden
are men
manner,
the
men
not
Some
are
able expoundconditions
language,
on
which
we
can
express
laconically
may
pounded, ex-
judgments at once, the remark, that there be in our language judgments,which must be belongsto grammar, not to logic.
32.
Theoretical
Theoretical
an
and
practicalPropositions.
refer to does
not
objectand
to
belong
express
it ;
practicalones3
as
again, those,
the necessary
which
dition con-
the of
an
action, whereby,
Scho.
JUDGMENTS.
155
as
to
the form
only,which
ones.
in this
respect
are
posed op-
to the theoretical
as
propositions
distinct from
to
the
matter,
and
in
ones, speculative
belong to
33.
philosophy.
Indemonstrable
and
Demonstrable
sitions. Propothose
Demonstrable
or
evincible
not
so
are propositions
are
named
strable. indemon-
are
ble,, indemonstraas
be
considered
elemental
propositions.
34.
Principles.
certain judgments Immediately
termed
a
priorimay
be
fundamental
that other
or propositions can
positions, provided
judgments
cannot
be
evinced
by them,
to any
but
they themselves
be
subordinated
are
other
minated deno-
Intuitive
and Axioms
Discursive and
Principles:
Acroams.
are Principles
156
LOGIC.
former
or
may
of
course
be
exhibited
are
by intuition,
axioms;
immediate
and representation, be
named
and
may
be
acroams.
Analytic and
Those
the with of identity the notion the
Synthetic Propositions.
dependsupon certainty conceptions(of the predicate
are subject),
whose propositions,
of the
analytical.
in tity, that iden-
Those,
whose
is not certainty
founded
must
be named every
synthetical.
x, to
Seho. I. To
which
the
every
x,
to
which
the
conception of body
attraction (c) too belongs (a 4- b)belongs, ; is an The synthetic one. example of a synthetic sitions propoincrease the cognition rnaterialiter ; the analytic
merely formaliter.Those comprehend determinations; these, nothing but logical cates. prediones,
not
intuitive. 37.
Tautological Propositions.
The of identity may the be either
JUDGMENTS.
157
are analyticpropositions
In
the
former
case
the
virtually
of
no
for
they are
For if
whatever.
the tautological
we a
A proposition.
man.
can
say
we
nothing more
know
of
than
that he is
man,
Whereas
not
void of consequence
useless ; for
predicate,which
of the
lies infolded
the
ception con-
of consequence void of
sense,
must
be
are
tinguished disso
which
they regard
named
the
determination
of what
is
commonly
occult
qualities.
38.
Postulate
A
and
Problem.
is a practical immediatelycertain postulate determines which a a or principle, proposition, action, whereby it is presupposed,that the possible certain. it is immediately way of performing
Some
to
modern
German the
have philosophasters
had
the
rance assu-
layclown
which
T.
I/
as
ciple, prinbe
from
all science
and
all human
knowledge must
derived.
158
,
LOGIC.
Problems
a
are
demonstrable
or a
that propositions
quire re-
direction
an
solution,or those
of
action, whose"
beingperformed
immediately certain.
may be theoretical
too postulates
Scho.
I. There of of
reason. practical
Such
as
those of
a
God,
are
of
moral
and liberty,
theoretical
cessary hypothesesne-
view. practical
To
problem
what
there
belong, I,
be
the
question,
the in which
which
contains
is to
performed, 2,
manner,
which resolution,
what is be
comprises the
performed can
that, when
what
shall have
proceeded
be formed. per-
in such
manner,
is
required will
39.
Theorems,
Corollaries, Lemmas,
Scholia.
and
Theorems
and
are
theoretical
need of
a
propositions capable
proof ;
Corollaries and of
a
standingin
immediate consectaries,
consequences
proposition ; Lemmas,
in the
as mere
not propositions
science, in
but
which
they are
presupposed
;
evinced,
taken from
other
sciences
Scholia,
illustrativepropositions, which
do consequently
of the
not
belongas
Scho. The
to
the whole
system.
are es-
the
demonstration
JUDffMEKTS.
*
1,59
every
and these
sential and
distinction
universal between
points of
theorems
theorem. corollaries
are
The may
besides be
immediately
concluded,
drawn
from
certain immediately
propositions by
series of consequences.
40.
Judgments of Perception
A
an
and
Experience.
judgment of perception is merely subjective; objective judgment from perceptionsis a judgment of experience.
A
Scho.
judgment
from one's In
on
mere
perceptions
is
representation's being
perception.
red this
perceivinga steeple,
it ; but
cannot
perceivethe
For
a
colour
not
say,
it is red.
were
but
judgment
of
judgment, by
the warmth is warm, is
on
which
conceptionof
stone
we
feel
stone
judgment
of
perception;
a
the of
hand,
judgment
is
In
must
latter, what
considered of
as
merely
in
the
not
a
be
belonging to
is the the
for
judgment
the
experience
whence
conception of
luminous
or
objectarises,for
in the holder. of the be-
instance, Whether
moon,
or
points move
in the eye
in the
atmosphere,
160
LOGIC.
General
.
Doctrine
of
THIRD.
Elements.
SECTION
THE
Syllogisms.
41.
" .
Syllogism
BY
we syllogising
in
.general*
that
understand
one
function
of from
thinking, by
another.
A
which
judgment
deduction
is derived
syllogism(or an
argumentation) in
of
one
neral ge-
is consequently the
judgment
from
another.
Immediate
All
An
and
Mediate
either
Syllogisms.
or
syllogismsare
immediate
immediate,
mediate.
diata) is
the deduction
an
judgment judgment.
from A
a
ther ano-
without
intermedial
the
when,
besides other
conception, which
are
contains,
purpose of
conceptions
used
them,
SYLLOGISMS.
i
161
43.
son, Rea-
Immediate
or
of
judgment.
first.
We
shall
ones
Peculiar
Nature
The
essential character
and the
judgments: of the judgments (thesubwhile the matter ject and the predicate) remains invariably the same. Scholium I. By the form, only and by no means by the matter of the judgments'being altered in the immediate these syllogisms guished distinare syllogisms,
an
in
alteration of the
form
of the
from
are new
all mediate
as an
ones,
in vfhich
too
;
the
ments judga a as
distinct
to
the matter
because
as conception
intermedial
judgment, or
to
middle
term,, must
survene
in order
iafer tlieone
we example,,
judgment from
argue,, All This
men
the other.
are
an
When,
;
for
mortal
is not
"*
immediate
x
syllogism.For
we,
"'...'
162
for the
LOGIC.
stand inference,
in need
man;
of the intermedial
judgment,
2. An
Caius
is
but
by
this
new
ception con-
the matter
of the
judgments is altered.
judgment, it is true, may be thrown in the syllogisms of the understanding too; but then it is merelytautological. As, for instance, in the immediate All men are mortal; syllogism:
some men are
men
intermedial
therefore
is
a
some
men
are
tal. mor-
The
middle
term
tautological proposition.
45.
Moods
of
the
Syllogisms of
the
the
standing. Under-
"understanding go through all the classes of the logical functions of judging, and are in their principal determined consequently moods or forms by the pointsof quantity, of quality* of relation,and of modality. Upon that the following division of these syllogisms depends :
46.
The
of syllogisms
I
.
of the understanding both the syllogisms and the particular judgmentsare distinct as to quantity,
from
SYLLOGISMS.
163
lar from
fab universali
.
ad particulars
valet Scho.
A
consequential
it is contained
;
judgment, when
subaltern
under
another, is termed
as,
for
ones
judgments under
is fallible ;
some some man man
universal
is fallible.
"
No
lible; is infal-
47. 2.
opposita.
of this form of the understanding syllogisms of the judgments the quality the alteration regards considered with respect to opposition.As this opposition the particular may be a threefold one, it yields division of the immediate tradictorily by consyllogising vand by opposed judgments,by contrary ones. subcontrary of the understandingby equiScho. Syllogisms pollent in strict proprietybe judgments cannot named has place syllogisms ; for no consequence in them ; they are rather to be considered as a mere
substitution
same
of
the
words,
which
means
denote the
as
the
very
conception, by which
remain
are
judgments
the
themselves
unaltered
even
to
form.
Not
men
all
are
men
not
virtuous.
judgments
express
the
very
same
thing.
1 64
LOGIC.
48.
a.
Syllogismsof
Judicia
In
of syllogisms
are
understanc^ngby judgments
contradictorily opposed to one another, and, as such,,constitute the genuinepure opposition, the truth of the one of the contradictory ments judgwhich
is inferred from the
conversely.
has
For
the
neither contains syllogisms, nor less,than what belongs to opposition. more, of the exclusive third to the principle Agreeably, be true; but both repugnant judgments cannot fore therethey can justas littlebe. both false. When
'place in
these
the
one
is true, the
other
same
is
false, and
"
versely con-
the
repetitionsome
gic lo-
T,). repetition.
49.
b.
per
one
of
versally uni-
expresses
more,
than than
other, and
mere
as
in,what
the
it expresses
more,
of negation
never can
may
lie, they
be
true, but
SYLLOGISMS.
1'65
may
be
both
false.
With
the
regard
inference
to
trary con-
judgments then,
of the
not
one
of
other
man
falsity
;
from
the
truth
of
the
but
divested of
of
enlightened man
is divested
T.). prejudices.
50.
c.
Syllogisms of
Judicia
the
Understanding
per
subcontrarieopposita.
are
Subcontrarilyopposed judgments
the
one
judgments,
affirms
or
or
denies
what particularly
the
other
affirms
particularly.
but
cannot
As
they
be
both
true,
be
with
both
gard re-
false, only
to
following
When
the
;
conclusion
one
holds
them the In
of these
not
propositions
is
false,
Scho,
other the
is true
but
conversely.
no
subcontrary judgments
;
pure
or
strict
oppositionobtains
of the
same
for
it is the
not
denied what is
firmed af-
objects in
one
affirmT
in
ed
or
denied
of the other.
men are
Exempli
learned;
which
gratia,
therefore
the
syllogism:Some
men
are
some
notJearned
"
that,
is denied of the
same
in
the
men
latter in the
judgment,
former.
is not
maintained
166
IOGIC.
51.
*
3. Syllogisms of the
(with Understanding
regard
per sionem.
to
the Relation
conversa,
of Judgments)
sive per
Judicia
Cower-
8}THogisms by conversion regardthe and consist in the transposirelation of judgments tion and of the predicate of the subject in both judgments of the one ; so that the subject judgment is of the other,and conversely made the predicate No virtue is vice ; no vice is virtue. T.) (thus,
Immediate
.
52,
Pure
and Altered
either the
Conversion.
of quantity the
In conversion
ments judgas
is altered, or former
case
it remains
unaltered.
In the is
to
(conversum)
altered
case
(convertentej, converting
an
conversion
is termed
one
(conversion con-
versio per
in the accidens);
a
latter
the
is named
pure
one
(conversio simpliciter
is
"
tails) (Take
B is A. No
A
this is B
example,Every A
;
some
B;
some
B is not A A is not B
Every A
is
B^ every B A. T.).
is A.
Some
; some
B is not
53.
Universal
Rules
of Conversion.
of the understanding to the syllogisms Relatively rules hold: by conversion the following
SYLLOGISMS.
167
cannot be affirmative judgments Universally converted but per accidens ; for in them the predicate and consequently is a larger some conception, in the conceptionof the of it only is contained subject. 2. But all Universally negative judgmentsmaybe the subject converted ; for in them is simpliciter taken out of the sphereof the predicate. Just so 1. are,
affirmative propositions pliciter simparticularly convertible;for in these judgmentsa part is subsumpted under the of the sphereof the subject the sphere of a part of predicate, by consequence the predicate may be subsumpted under the subject. affirmative judgments Scho. 1. In universally the it is contained under the sphereof the as subject, of the preis considered as a contentum predicate, dicate.
3. All
We
but thus, All
therefore cannot
men
argue,
for
instance,
mortal
are
mortal ;
the of
some consequently
of those contained
are men.
under
reason
of conception
But
the
negative universally
convertible is, that two being simpliciter judgments' conceptions universally repugnant to one another,
repugn
one
another in the
same
sphere.
assertive judgments may universally be simply converted. But the ground of that lies not in their form, but in the peculiar of their quality for example, the judgments: All that matter; which
is immutable is necessary, and
2. Several
is necessary is immutable.
168
.
tosic.
54.
4.
Syllogisms of the Understanding (with regard to the Modality of Judgments} per Judicia tfontraposita.
The form
of the immediate
position by contrasyllogism consists in that metathesis of the judgments, by which the quantityremains the same, but the is altered. These syllogisms, ing quality by their turnassertive judgment to an apodictical an gard one, reof judgments. nothingbut the modality
55.
Universal
With
Rule
of Contraposition.
ply affirmative judgmentsmay be simuniversally that as contraposed. For, when the predicate, which contains the subjectunder it, consequently the wh61e
All
sphere,is denied,
likewise be
so
must subject,
(Every A
non
is
thus
non
is
non
B, may be A; 2, No
(Scho I.
that
one
of
sion conver-
far opposed
another,
that
alters
the
quantity
the
T.), quality,
SYLLOGISMS.
16(J
refer syl log-isms
(2. These
forms
of immediate
Syllogismsof
56.
Reason.
Syllogism of
A of syllogism of condition
reason
Reason
is the
in General.
cessity ne-
its
Universal
Principle of
Reason.
all
Syllogisms of
which the be
The
of all
universal
principle, upon
this formula
validity
deter-
syllogising by reason
depends,
:
may
minatelyexpressedin
While in
we
have
bare
form
of the
these
same,
while
two
their matter
the mentS)
than
other
of affinity
judghypothetical
the
what
consists in
thesis, is
smoke
can
cogitable. For
if there between affinity
and
no
is smoke,
a
But
there
be
another
ment. judg-
In
to quality
nor quantity
As
they bear
one
another, is that of
one
of which
excludes T.
other, it allows of
no
cal logi-
distinction.
170
What under ranks under
LOGIC.
condition
of
rule, ranks
Scho.
We the and
versal of reason premisesa unisyllogism its condition. rule and a subsumption under thereby cognisethe conclusion a priori not in
as on
but single,
as
comprehended
a
in the
universal
And
necessary
certain under
condition.
this,
and is
that every
thing ranks
by
the universal
determinable
of
universal
ple princi-
or of necessity. rationality
08.
Constituents
To
of
Syllogism of
reason
Reason.
every
of syllogism
the
three following
essential
parts belong:
rule, which
is named
1,
universal
the
major
sub-
proposition ;
2, the proposition, by which
a
is cognition
sumpted
and
under
the condition
rule,
which
is denominated the
proposition
denies
(and sometimes
the of predicate
assumption); and,
either affirms the
or
subsumpted cognition,
or
isnamedtheconclusion
The the
two
(orinference
illation).
termed
first
propositions conjoinedare
,
premises.
is mutable
(major); bodies
are
are
dies bo-
mutable
(conclusion). T ).
SYLLOGISMS.
Scho.
A The
rule
is
an
assertion of the
or
universal
to the
tion. condi-
relation
say, the how rule.
condition
under
assertion,
ponent ex-
that
is to of
this
ranks
that, is the
By
the
the
subsumption
has
we
mean,,
the
knowledge
that
condition The
place (somewhere).
is,the conjunction of
under the
1
consequence
been
that
which with
has the
subsumpted
of the
rule.
condition
assertion
59.
Hatter
The
the that
and
matter
Form
of
;
of Syllogisms of
of
reason
Reason.
in
syllogisms
form,
the
consists
premises
it
the
in the
conclusion,
provided
comprises
I.
consequence.
In
every
syllogism
must
of first
reason
then and
pudiation re-
truth
the
of the
premises
of the
be
proved,
In the the
Tightness
of but
a
consequence*
reason never
syllogism of
the
clusion, con-
either the
premises, or rejected.
of
reason
the
consequence,
must ".
always be
In every the
first
syllogism
moment
the and
conclusion
the
quence conse-
is
given
the
premises
are.
172
LOGIC.
60.
Division
to
of the Syllogisms of Reason (as Relation} into categorical, cal, hypothetiand disjunctive.
rules
contain objective (judgments) unityof the consciousness of the multifarious of cognition ; a condition,on which one cognition consequently Only belongswith another to one consciousness. either three conditions of this unity are cogitable the subject of the inherence of the marks,,or as as the ground of the dependence of one cognition of the parts in upon another, or as the conjunction division ) There therefore be can a whole (logical
All
sorts of universal rules (proposias just many of one tiones majoresj,by which the consequence judgment from another is obtained. And in that the division of all syllogisms of reason into categorical, and disjunctive, is founded. hypothetical, Scho. I. The vided be diof reason can syllogisms neither to quantity for as every major is a rule, by consequence something universal whether as to nor quality for it is equipollent the conclusion is affirmative or negative to modality for the conclusion is always nor as companied acwith the consciousness of necessity, and of course has the dignity of an apodictical tion. proposiNothing therefore but the relation,as the only possible ground of division (fundamentum diof the syllogisms of reason, remains. visionisj
" " "
but
"
"
SYLLOGISMS.
2. of
the and
categorical syllogisms
all the others foundation
and
extra*
ordinary.
For
it is without
false.
all these
three
functions another.
are
syllogism*lies in
; in
major proposition.In
a
hypothetical ones,
one;
or hypothetical
and
in
a disjunctive. disjunctive,
62.
every
are
three
predicate in
the the
conclusion
which
because
ception con-
is denominated has
a
major
the
term;
it
greater sphere
than
subject ;
Whenever
Syllogism
is
simply mentioned,
reason or a
we
by
it a
of syllogism
ratiocination.
T.
174
LOGIC.
2,
the
in (subject)
the
conclusion, whose
term
;
tion concep-
is named
the minor
and,
receives the
3,
an
intermedia]
mark,
term
which
of the middle
;
(and sometimes
it
a
of the
because
by
is subsumpted cognition
under
Scho.
distinction
has
not
place but
they
in the
only
conclude
of
a,
middle
a
term
but by others,
subsumption of
the
major and
stiled the
and
(2. The
matter;
and the
three
are propositions
proxime
the three
the
major
minor, the
T.).
63.
Principle of categoricalSyllogismsof
Reason.
The
and the
:
principle, upon
which
both
the
possibility
is this
What
with the of
agrees
with the
and
mark what
of
is
thing,agrees
to the
thingitseJf ;
a
repugnant
mark
thing,is repugnant to the thing itself rei ipsius (nota notce est nota nota, ; repugnans
rei From
repugnat
Scho.
ipsi).
the
principle justlaid
be
down
the
tum Dicand it
de omniet
/ZM//O may
deduced, easily
SYLLOGISMS.
175
for
can
therefore
hold
as
of reason, for categorical in nor ones syllogisms particular. The genericand the special versal uniare conceptions marks of all the thing's that rank under them. the rule,, What Consequently agrees or is repugnant the species, to the genus or agrees or is repugnant
to all the
or
contained
under
the genus
And
Dictum
nullo. 64.
Rules
for
the
CategoricalSyllogisms of
Reason.
and the
From
the nature
of categorical principle
rules for them flow : the following syllogisms neither 1. In every categorical syllogism
nor
more,
; for
fewer terms,
we
than
three, can
be contained
in it
two conceptions (thesubject conjoin and the predicate) by an intermedial mark. 2. The premises must not be all negative (ex purls negativisnihil sequitur ); for the subsumption in the minor proposition, that a cognias it expresses, tion must
ranks
under
the condition
of the
rule,must
be
affirmative.
2.
Nor
must
all the
neither
;
else there
versal uni-
particular cognition
the
be inferred.
The
conclusion
always follows
weaker
176
LOGIC.
that is, the negative and the premises, in the premises, particular as it is named proposition the weaker
part of
the
part of the
if,
of the
5,
one
premisesis
the conclusion
must
likewise be
6,
if one
of the
particular; the major must be 7) In all categorical syllogisms the minor universal, a particular, proposition ;
it follows
:
the conclusion
and hence
8, and
to
that the conclusion must relatively finally, follow the major, to quanbut, relatively quality tity, the minor proposition.
Scho. That
and negative
the conclusion
the
must
alwaysfollow
the
in particular proposition
the premises,
is easy to be If
we
make
the
say, Some
is contained
can
say
in the conclusion
but nothing
some
of predicate
we
the
because
have
not
And when under the rule. subsumptedany more for the rule (the have a negativeproposition we major),we must make the conclusion too negative. For, when the majorproposition says, Of all that which
one
ranks under
the
condition
;
of the rule
some
must predicate
be denied
the
conclusion
must
likewise
deny
the
of predicate
that
(the subject),
which
has been
subsumpted under
the condition of
the rule.
SYLLOGISMS.
177
65.
Ptire
and
simplewhen
is
in
it neither
nor
immediate
consequence
of the
are
intermixed,
the
instance, Those,
cannot
cannot
an
be be
acceptableto acceptableto
a
God
him
hypocrites
otherwise it is termed
impure or
complex
one
(ratiocinium impurum,
s*
hybridum).
66.
order
considered
impure.
This
case
occurs
in what
is
commonly
named
the three
gorical cate-
ratiocinations.
67.
Four
Figures of Syllogisms.
four modes of the
whose syllogising,
by
disposition particular
are conceptions,
of the
of their
to
understood.
178
LOGIC.
68.
Determinative
various
The
by
the
Term.
middle
whose
great stress
either and subject in both the
of the
business
depends, may
1, in the
in
the place of the major proposition the minor that of the predicate ; or 2, the
premisesthe place of
predicate ; or finally,
the place of the predicate major proposition that of the subject.By these in the minor
cases
the distinction
of the
the
four
Let S
denote
M.
the
:
scheme
of these four
figures may
be thus erected
69. Rule
for
the
first"as
the
only legitimate.
the
Figure.
The
a
major be
the universal,
affirmative
proposition.
SYLLOGISMS.
179
rule of all categorical the
And,
as
that must
be the universal
form*
others, and
to
they, if by
the
they
shall
have of the
must validity,
be
metathesis Scho.
premises.
have
a
The
conclusion
of
every
and quantity
are
quality. In
of
a
there figures
some
but conclusions
are
certain
moods
of them
here
not
excluded.
That
that vent preas
are figures
perfect,but
moods,
in them
certain
the
in
a
is rational is therefore
the spirit ;
soul is rational
"
the human
a
gative ne-
spirit or
the
this (take
instance of
can
immutable
of God
cannot
be
sured mea-
duration God
is immutable measured
be
by
time.
T.)
70.
Condition
three
The
condition of the
a
three of
last
tiocinating ra-
on figures,
in each is possible
them, is,That
the
middle
term
obtain
in
the
a propositions place,
LOGIC.
order
may
arise
by
means
of
mediate im-
consequences
first figure. Hence the three last
accordingto
have
we
the
rules following
: figures
71.
Rule
In the second
of
the second
minor
Figure.
stands
so
the figure
major
remain
must
therefore
be converted That
universal.
it
however
is not
possible
but In both
but when
contraposed.
the conclusion
negative(sequitur partem
That, is, figure
is
to
debiliorem.)
Scho. the mark the
The
of
a
rule of this
which
to
thingis repugnant,
Here
a
repugnant
and is
thing itself.
to
we
must
convert
say,
That,
which
; or
mark
we
is
must
repugnant,
convert
repugnant
conclusion
to this mark
the
a
thus, That,
the
to
which
the mark
of
thingis
nant, repug-
to ;
consequently
thing (For example, Nothing is simple; of course perishable nothing simple is soul is simple; therefore perishable; the human
the here human is not soul what
to be
it is repugnant to the
is not is
perishable. The
what
there is
question right
said, but
bly indispensaa
necessary consequence,
of the
thoughtif
illative
or
shall be
The
conclusive
capacity
in the sim-
SYLLOGISMS.
181
ply
converted
member
in
italics, by whose
T.).
72.
Rule
In the third
of the
the minor
Third
Figure.
stands
right;by
from
consequence
be
converted; yet so
result
fhat
This
an
affirmative
proposition may
but possible
it.
however
is not
when
the conis particular clusion proposition ; consequently is particular. What rule of this figure Scho. The is,, agrees or is
repugnant
to
mark,, agrees
which
or
or
is
repugnant
We
to
some
under things,
firstsay
:
this mark
is contained.
must
agrees
is contained
are
under
this mark
men
are
sinners; all
some
rational
beings are
men;
therefore
ing reasonmeans
some
rational
is not
of
T.).
73.
Rule
When
in this it
same manner
may
particular ; consequently the conclusion is negative. Whereas the major, if it is universally be converted cannot affirmative,
the minor
182
but pei\ accidens
LOGIC.
or
contraposed;
either
the
conclusion
If the of
therefor*
"
is either is not
a
or negative. particular,
conclusion
the
converted
metathesis
or premises,
conversion
take
place.
In this
to
we figure
Scho.
dicate pre-
adheres
the
middle
predicate ;
converse
which
however In order
is not
the case,
but
follows.
to render
be
made
the
minor,
vice
in
jor ma-
and
the
conclusion
converted
; because to the
run
the former
term
is turned
(The negativesyllogismmust
is learned
some ;
no consequently
thus:
man quently conse-
No
is
a
dunce
learned
dunce;
some
learned
are
men
are
pious;
; therefore
piousmen
are
learned
some
pious men
in this
to be
not
dunces.
not
Affirmative
syllogisms
ed attempt-
are figure
framed, all
are
into
useless, and
have
properly been
long-
T.).* repudiated.
The
ancient
to
and logicians
out
used
of
their utmost
in syllogizing
endeavours
these
find
all the
four
which figures,
whose
SYLLOGISMS.
183
74.
Universal
From
Result
Figures.
last
the adduced
figures
sion concluis
it is obvious,
1,
that there
is
affirmative universally
that the
in neither of either
them, and
conclusion
or particular ; negative an
immediate
consequence,
be is implied,
syllogizing must,
Asserit A, negat E ;
Asserit
verum
universaliter ambo.
I, negat O
a
sed
Whoever
has
mind
to admire
and diligent
see
to
regret the
and
Art
fruitless labours
of the
ancients, will
in Watts's author
the
moods
the of
discussed
Logic and
errs
in Kanie's
But
the former
are
when
that
vowels At E, t/iefour
A
regardediu
words. artificial
proof of
the
C and
F, shew
to what
of
of syllogism
is figure
natural order of
conclusion is
the
in conceptions, The
knowledge of
the
the
begotten.
consonant,
words
else,denotes
simpleconversion
metathesis. what
of the
the p, in
Darapti
to have
and
Fefapton
the
the conversion
per
them,
doctor either
seems
in
Camestres,
That
then the
ignored or,
is more
probable,
T.
184
can syllogism
LOGIC.
as
no
pure named
have but
more
be
not
pure,
hyb.J*
75.
2.
A
HypotheticalSyllogismsof Reason
ratiocination hypothetical
a
is, as
tioned, above-men-
that syllogism
has
positions, proin
antecedent
and
consequent;
it
or
argue
to according
the modus
either ponens,
toltens.
Scho. 1. then Hypothetical syllogisms have
no
It
is,says
our
author
in his treatise
on
The
false
of subtilty of
to discover
a
the firstoccasion
He, subtilty.
another, considered
the
result
was
chess-hoard
the he
be
of the
as
of transposition
when surprised
a
the middle
a
tional ra-
term,
and
sense
much
perceived,that
an
was
produced, as
as especially
person
that discovers
the
gram anaas
is.
It isjust as
childish to be
it is
with over-joyed
one,
in
only an
indistinctness is introduced.
to
But
understanding either
or impertinencies,
be
iously anx-
to catch
one
rashly
half
at
of the multitude
of thinkers
animals
number
666,
the
the other
either the
originof
The the
plants,"r
both
of mysteries
cording fall, is,ac-
Providence.
to
error,
into
which
classes
a
difference of their
heads,of
very
different
sort.
T.
SYLLOGISMS.
18.5
them but the
another.
In
major
is of the
of two
propositions,
latter
a a clusion, con-
the former
of which
premiss, the
minor is in
expressed. The
If A
tion transformaa
condition problematical
cal categori-
proposition (Thus,
B
is.
And,
If A
is, B is ;
B is not ; ergo
A is not
2.
T,).
the
From
but of two
without propositions,, be
seen,
middle
term, it may
not
a
of syllogism
rather
an
an
mediate im-
evincible
as
antecedent
or
consequent,
to
either
matter
the
(consequentiaimmediata
et
demons
trab His
mater
[ex
iam
antecedents
vel
v el quoad consequente"]
reason
must
be
the of
in it the
argument.
be
a
it is Consequently
reason,
clear, that
it cannot
of syllogism
76.
The
The
Principleofhypothetical Syllogisms.
of principle
;
"
tionatum
the
ratione
ad
ra-
ad
negationem
of hyprinciple potheti
syllogisms.
186
LOGIC.
77.
3.
In and
major
is
disjunctiveproposition
must
consequently, as such,
or
have
members
of
division
In
disjunction.
argue
of the either from the
syllogisms we disjunctive
of the
the
one
the
truth
member
or
disjunctionto
of falsity of this
one.
of falsity
members is done
others,
one
from
all the
except
to the
truth
That
by
the
the
modus
ponens
this
by
modus
All taken of
tollcns the
(or tollendo
of
Scho.
1.
members
one disjunction,
excepted,
together, make
this
to
one.
up
the
tory contradica
opposite
Consequently
when
the
one
tomy, dicho-
according
true
which be
of them
versa,
is
has
the
other
must
false and
form
or
vice
place here
What
is
(The
A,
C.
universal
of this
;
is, syllogism
13 ; it is
is either
B,
is not
therefore 2:
members
T.).
of
more
All
ratiocinations disjunctive
of then disjunction
a
than
two
are,
true
For polysyllogistic.
but
more
be
bimembris,
than
are
and
the
;
logicaldivision
but the the membra
nothing
subdivifor
bimembris
dentia
the sake
put among
membra
dividentia
of
brevity.
SYLLOGISMS.
187
78.
third
ne-
gatione unius
mationem
contradictorie
;
"
alterius alterius
"
positions unius
tionem
valet
consequentia.
79.
Dilemma.
A dilemma
is a
consequent
is
junctive dis-
judgment.
whose
The
consequent
;
is
the
minor
consequent conclusion,
consequentia). conse-
(per omnia
that the
membra)
false,and
so.
antecedent
(A
remotione valet
(The
universal
or
form
how
of
lemma,
tetralemma,
there
many
members
soever or
may
C,
A
or
G,
nor
fore is ; there-
is not. and
T.)
The it the
ancients
much
named
to
cornutus. syllogismus
They by
tioning men-
knew
how
put
an
opponent
he could
to
straits
every
thingthat
have possibly
course re-
it all to him.
In every
188
LOGIC.
he adoptedthey pointed out many ties difficulopinion to him. artifice not to reBut it is a sophistical fute ties; but to point out difficulpropositions directly, which
most
artifice may
be
used
in many,,
nay,
in
things.
we
If
chose
immediatelyto
declare
false
every
it is an easy thing,in which there are difficulties, the playto reject every thing. It is good to shew lusory ilof the contrary ; but it is somewhat impossibility when the incomprehensibility of the contrary is held its impossibility. dilemmas The therefore, snaring. are captiousor enthough consequential, very They may be used not only to defend culties true propositions, but to impugn true ones by diffistarted against them.
SO.
Formal
A
and cry
of reason in due* form (ratiocinlum syllogism which not onlycontains every formate) is a syllogism to the matter, but is properly as thing requisite The and completely expressed as to the form* are opposed to the formal ones. cryptical syllogisms placed, disAll those, in which either the premises are
or one
of them
is
omitted,
the
or
the
middle be
term
only conjoinedwith
as
conclusion, may
A
considered
the second
or cryptical
hidden.
one
of syllogism
sort, in which
reserved
of the
is not premises
but expressed
in the mind,
is
defective
SYLLOGISMS.
189
mutilated)one,
or
an
enthy-
truncatus). (syllogismus
a
That
of the third
sort, is
contracted
me
instances
of
an
Anthony
for it does
a
must
murder
not
die. any
The
soul
-9
is
an
indivisible,
occupy
space
is
example of
contracted
syllogism. T.).
III.
of Judgment. Syllogisms
81.
Determining'and ReflectingJudgment.
The of Judgment faculty the is twofold
;
the
deter-
terminingand
from
The reflecting.
to the
former
goes
the universal
to particular
the
This
is but
of subjective it proceeds
validity ; for
from
a mere
universal,to which
an
the
cal, empiri-
analogon of
universality. logical,
82.
certain
modes argumentative
of
arriving
universal
They
functions
not
of
the and
judgment; reflecting
not
determining, consequently
the
they
determine
the
object, but
way
of it.
in of it, thinking
knowledge of
190
LOGIC,
83.
The
The
are
Principleof
which
these
the
Syllogisms.
of judgment syllogisms many do not
in principle,
founded,
a
is
That this.,
agree
longs be-
in
one
without
to many
common
ground, but
is necessary
that what
on
a
in this way
common
ground.
Scho, As the
that
of judgment bottom syllogisms principle, theycannot be held immediate upon
ones.
84.
Induction
Judgment, whilst
to the
it
general,in
order
from
experience, of
many and
either from
of all things
sort,
or
from
many
determinations the
same
sort
agree,
same
pertain to
the
in which things of properties, that they the others, provided principle.The former species the
of inference
is named
by induction, syllogism
infers ad particulari
accordingto analogy.
then the
a
Scho.
I.
Induction
universale
accordingto
of rendering principle
What
to
agrees
the
rest
to too.
resemblance particular
SYLLOGISMS.
of two
of specification things, accordingto the principle : Things of a sort, of which we know many agreeingmarks, agree in the other marks that we know in some of this sort,but do not perceive things in other things. Induction extends the empirically given from the particular to the universal with the other hand, on regardto many objects ; analogy, of a thing to several of the very the given properties
same
thing.
;
One
one
in many,
therefore in others
in all
tion induc-
many
in
(thatis
too),therefore
the
the
rest
in it:
analogy.
For
the
example,
of
ment argu-
for of is a the
from immortality,
completeunfolding
every
of predispositions
nature
creature,
In the the
however, according to analogy, syllogism is not required, of the ground (per ratio) identity
conclude
to analogynothingbut according
tional rawe
We
inhabitants of
cannot
the moon,
not
men.
And
conclude
tertium 2.
the
of Every syllogism
are
must
yield necessity.
Hence
of analogy not syllogisms but logical reason, presumptionsor empirical gisms; sylloand by induction we obtain general, but not universal propositions. of judgment are 3. These useful and syllogisms for the purpose of enlarging our indispensable nition cogof experience. But, as they afford empirical tion, only,we must use them with great caucertainty
iril
induction
and
193
LOGIC.
85.
.
Simple
and
of Compound Syllogisms
Reason.
it consists of but
of several
one
gism, syllo-
pound.* comsyllogisms,
86.
Ratiocination. Polysyllogistic
A in compound syllogism,
are
which
mere
the various
logisms syl-
not conjoined
by
a
co-ordination,
but
consequences,
(ratiocinatio poh/syllogistica).
87.
twofold
the consequences,
or
from
these up to
those.
The
former
is
done
prosyllogisms.
in the series of syllogisms, is that episyllogism, whose syllogism, premissis the conclusion of a proof a syllogism, which has the syllogism of course
"
An
premissof
*
the former
contracted
gisms, syllo-
T. Epichireme.
SYLLOGISMS.
193
Sorites.
of several abridgedsyllogisms consisting syllogism conclusion, is named a rites soproducing one or (or heap),which may be either progressive, ascend (Goclenian),accordinglyas we regressive from the more remote grounds proxime to the more A
or
descend
from
the
more
remote
ones
to
the
more
proxime,
89.
series of
a
gressive or) re(retrograde or again be either categorical, consists of categorical tions proposipredicates ; this, of hypothetical
as
well
the
series of consequences,
90.
\
Fallacy. Paralogism.
A
Sophism.
which, though it has the appearance syllogism, of a rightone for it,is false in point of form, is of that nature, when termed a fallacy. A syllogism himself deceives with one it, is a paralogism; and
when
he endeavours
to deceive
others with
it,a
phism.* so-
There
use
the treatise
means
of the
art : by syllogistic
of it to
puzzlethe
ques-
1 94
,
LOGIC.
i
Scho. about
are
The
the
art
ancients
of
much Hence
so-
there
many
of them
for which
;
instance, the
the middle
a
term
in
different
sense
the
sophisma
dicto the
quid ad
which
dictum
wherein simpliciter,
;
necessary
limitation
one
is omitted decides
a
acci(the fallacia
dentis, in
with
regardto
the
sential es-
of properties
subjectaccording to
;
thing some-
vel in
a
sophisma amliguitatis
four pro
terms causa,
are
concealed
or
the
signing as-
false
(post hoc,
ergo
propter
hoc); sophisma sensus compositiet divisi or the of the context, when two are expressions falsifying
used tionis the in
a
different
merely pretended contrary conclusion (quithe insidious or proquo); sophysma polyzeteseos, difference sophisma heterozcteseos,or the inquestioning;
and finally the by importunity; assuming of a false argument (sophisma falsii medii s. fallacia the ut causcej,wherein non causa is faulty. T.). consequence obtained
tion
so
as
to
in
learned
the
not
contest..
But,
as
this
belongs to
be
the
very
gymnastics of
learned (an
contribute
art which
may
otherwise
useful,but does
much
to the
it by in silence. T.
SYLLOGISMS.
195
91.
Leap
A
in
Syllogising.
in syllogising or provingis the leap(saltus) conjunction of the one premiss with the conclusion,
so
is left out.
leap
of this
sort,
add the wanting premiss body may easily the in thought,is regular (legitimus] ; but, when (illegitimus). subsumption is not clear, irregular mark is connected with a thingwith? In it a remote when
out
an
intermedial niark.
Petitio
Principii.
Circulm
in Probando.
stand under-
for the purpose of an argument, assuming, certain one, though a proposition as an immediately he it requires when a proof. And lays the one, which proposition, foundation
to its own
he
has
mind
to
prove,
a
as
of proof,is guilty
circle in
proving.
Scho. Acirclein
;
provingis often
difficult to be detected
the oftenest
and
committed usually
justwhen example,
word
proofsare
the
to scriptures
proved to
church,
the
be the
and the
of God
by
the
the
of authority
to
of authority
as
church
be be
a
proved by
tures scrip-
the word
of God"
196
LOGIC.
93.
Probatio
plus
et
minus
probans.
well
too
proof
It,
in
may the
prove
latter
too
much,
proves
as
as
tle. litof
case,
part
only
what what
is
is
to
be
proved,
but,
in
the
former,
extends
to
false. A
Scho.
and
proof
that is not
?
proves
to
too
little
may
be
true,
does it
consequently
too
be
rejected.
more
But,
is
true
prove
that is
it
proves For
than
the
and
;
then
'
instance,
has
not
proof life,
this
against
cannot
suicide,
take it
whoever
given
;
away/
not
proves
too
much
for,
It
on
ground,
false.
we
could
kill
any
animal.
is
therefore
PART
THE
SECOND.
General
Doctrine
of
Method.
94.
Manner
ALL
must
and
Method.
and
cognition
be of
or
knowledge
to
a
whole
of
of rule
it
is
conformable
rule.
rule
(Want
is
either
want
manner
reason). (free),
or
And
this
that
of
that
of method
(coactive).
(Scholion. propounding,
which
has in
no
Manner
that other
(modus
aestheticus) is,
of
one's
in
conjunction
standard,
than
thoughts,
the
the
feeling of
unity
the
exhibition.
T.).
95.
Form
of
as
Science.
must
Method.
be
a
Cognition,
method.
science,
as
arranged
is
as a
after whole
For,
a
aforesaid,
and
science
of
cognition as
It
system
not
merely
a
an
gate. aggrewhich is
to
therefore
requires
cognition,
systematical, consequently
digested rules.
disposed according
198
LOGIC.
96.
Doctrine
of
Method
"
its
Object and
in has logic
End.
As the doctrine
of elements the elements
a
the doctrine
to treat
of
method,
of
as a
of the form of
of the
way
proceeding in cognitionin
a
order
to connect
the multifarious of
science.
97.
Means
The
which
must
shew
the
way,
in
tematical sysof
a
order, so
science. The
to
make
of
up
the
whole
doctrine
method
therefore
has
these perfections
98.
Conditions
of
the
Distinctness
of Cognition.
The
in
distinctness of
a
METHOD.
199
is
tinctness of the
contained The
as
well in them
under
them.
of
ceptions con-
distinct is
consciousness
of the matter
promoted by
their
their
definition
on
sphere,
We tinctness dis-
the
contrary, by
the of
division. logical
of
means
promoting
the
their matter.
I, Promotion
nition
by
the
99.
Definition.
distinct and adequate sufficiently conception (conceptus rei adequatus in minimis terminis ; complete determinatusj. Scho. A definition only is to be considered as a conception; for in it the two most logically perfect essential perfections of a conception, distinctness and the completeness and the precision in distinctness of distinctness), united. are (thequantity
A
definition is a
100.
Analytic and
All definitions are
SyntheticDefinition.
either of
or synthetical. analytical,
a
The
former
are
those
a
givenconception \
the
those latter,
of
factitious one.
200
LOGIC.
101.
Given
and
Factitious
and
a
The
are
of given conceptions
an
definition analytic
the factitious
so
either
ones
of
formed
likewise. 102.
from conceptions,
that
definitions synthetic
arise,is either
that of
tion. construc-
The
formed,
former
that is, from given phenomena, as their empirically, vel per synmatter vel a priori (conceplus factitii thesin empiricam). The mathematical conceptions formed ate the arbitrariously ones.
Scho.
and
tions concep-
if definitions
"
could of the
empirical conceptions
must
as
to
the
water, of fire,
lies
like, we
have
not
to dissect what
them, but
to learn to know
what by experience
be-
METHOD.
to iong-s
them.
All
therefore
be considered
factitious ones,
but whose
lioiiqoono','
103.
v
As
not
of the empirical conceptions is synthesis and as such never but empirical, arbitrable, can the
be
more
complete (becausewe
marks of
a
may
discover
more
and
cannot
be defined.
Scho.
are
None
but the
conceptionsthen
definitions of necessary, and
as
which
is said
by
means
of
an
arbitrable
conception,mightbe
we
named
tions, declara-
declare
of what
case
our we
thoughts by
understand
them
a
or
give an
And
account
by
word.
that is the
with mathematicians-
104.
No
or
a
whether given conceptions, given a prior* be defined but by analysis Foi can posteriori,
LOGIC.
be
made
are
rendered
marks
of
clear,
and
if it does
comprise
this
a
too
many
from
definition of the As
we
conceptionarises.
be certain
Scho.
whether
we
cannot
by
any of
a
trial
have
a
exhausted
given
conception by
are
to be
105.
Expositions and
All conceptions therefore
must
Descriptions.
cannot
be defined,
nor
they be
are
so.
There
to approximations
the definition of
tain cer-
which are approximations partly conceptions, descriptions. expositions, partly The expounding of a conceptionconsists in the of its marks coherent (successive) representation provided that they are found by analysis. of a conception The is its exposition, description that it is not precise. provided Scho.
or
1.
We
can
expound
former
either
conception,
by J
analysis,
experience.
f
,
The
":"-:.."
is done
the
latter
2.
by synthesis.
has not
Exposition therefore
to
place but
are
with
regard
distinct
given conceptions,which
is
rendered de-
by it; therebyit
from distinguished
M.ETHOD,
203 of representation
titious fac-
duration, which
is
distinct
conceptions.
As
it is not
to always possible
as
a
make
the
analysis
ere
complete; and
it becomes
dissection
in
generalmust,,
an
a
complete, be incomplete ;
of of
a
a
incomplete
true
as part exposition,,
definition,is
and
useful
never
exhibition
remains which
we
conception.
the idea of
a
definition
here
but
logical perfection
with respect
has
not
must
endeavour
to reach.
3.
to
any
terials ma-
determinate
rules and
contains
nothingbut
the
for definition.
106, Nominal
"
and
Real
Definitions.
we
By
have which of its other
are
mere
nominal
definitions
contain the
understand
those
we
which definitions,
chosen
to
that signification
name
give a
certain
and arbitrarily,
therefore denote
nothingbut .merely to
objectorserve
the
hand,
those the
suffice to the
cognition
of
of its internal
tions, determina-
they
shew
the
of it (theobject) possibility
from
internal
marks.
a
Scho.
to
I. When
is so a distinguish thing, it certainly but it, when not internally externally; sufficient,
204 nevertheless be
LOGIC.
may
namely, in
with other is not
2.
ence, referso in a certain externally the comparison of the definite the illimited external the internal. of ciency suffi-
things. But
without possible
Objectsof experienceadmit
1 he nominal logical the
merelynominal given
definitions.
definitions of
taken from an are understanding attribute or adjunct; the real definitions,again, from the essence of the thing, from the firstground of possibility. latter therefore comprehend, The what always belongs to a thing,its real essence. be named real Merely negativedefinitions cannot because ones; negativenotes may, justas well as
of conceptions
thing from other things, but cannot for the cognition of to its internal possibility. a thing as In moral philosophyreal definitions must al~ ways be soughtfor ; and all our endeavours must be directed to that object. In the mathematics there
serve
a
affirmative ones,
are
real
for definitions;
the definition of
an
trable arbi-
it
the
of this nature.
107.
the universal
of requisites
be
the
of perfection
definition in
general,may
cons:-
METHOD
205
of pointsof quantity,
dered
under
the
four
main
and of modality of relation, ; quality, with regard to the sphere of 1, as to quantity, a definite (definitum) a definition and a definition,
must
be alternate
wider,
nor
narrower,
than
its
2,
well
as as as
to
a
must
be
an
ample as
be tautological
as
3,
to
;
not
that
its
it; and
be necessary
such
as
are
by experience.
The the
and
condition, That
genericconception
and
conceptionof
distinction specific
(genus
the
make must specificaj* differentia up finitions deto the nominal definition,holds but relatively in the comparison, and not to the real ones
Rules
In
for
the
Proving of Definitions.
four
are operations
proving definitions
words, distinction
even
to
be
The
and
difference,
In
a
are
usually con*
ever, howstyle the
founded,
in
works. philosophical
is
never
correct
the former
aad
of treating
objects
when
of the
of operations
sense.
cf those ef
T.
206
LOGIC.
performed;
it must
be
whether investigated
finition, de-
1, considered
2,
as as as
a
as
is true proposition,,
;
;
conception,distinct
distinct
3,
4,
a an
conception,ample
and,
that
ample conception,determinate,
the
is,
to adequate
thingitself.
109.
Rules
The
to the
for
very
the
"
Framing
of Definitions.
are
same
which operations,
to
requisite performed
I, seek
be
in the
true
framing of
them.
To
this end
then
2, propositions,
do not
we predicate
always presuppose
conception of
and
not
of the them
3, thing,
with the
whether whether
they be adequate;
the
one
4 and
mark
does
lie in the
is not subordinated
to it. to
Scho.
these
1. It is
hardlynecessary
ease we
mention, that
rules hold
As in that
only.
the forth
were
be
certain
must
of
set
as
an
essay
but
we
as
if it
use rollaries co-
With
a
may
draw
it
as
true
conception and
We
its marks.
may
say,
That,
to
which
the
of conception
the de-
METHOD
20?
the
fmition exhaust 2.
agrees
to, but,
as
definition does
not
the whole
definite,not conversely.
the
of the definite in the definition the conception Using* in the definite as a foundation laying; ; or is defining; definition, by a circle (circulus in
.
) definiendo
We
now come
to
treat
of the
means
of
ting; promo-
of
sphere. of
the Division logical
II. Promotion
by
the
110.
Conceptionof
the
Logical
under
Division.
it
;
a
ous, multifari-
provided that
with which that
it is concordant The
and
provided
of
a
determination
ception con-
regard to
are
all the
contained
one
under
proviso
tinct is, dis-
they are
from
one
opposed to
another,
name
that
logical division of the conception. The ception superiorconis termed the divided conception(divisum),
and the inferior
are conceptions
of the
termed
the members
of division
(membra
dwidentia)
a
Scho.
it
are
1. To
dissect
conception and
to
divide
the
therefore
a
very
distinct
operations.By
dissection of
in
is contained
consider what
LOGIC.
is contained
under
it.
In
this
case
we
divide the
sphere of
The
of
the
conception,not
so
the
conception itself.
division is therefore
a
far from
the members
beinga
tion dissec-
conception,that
more
of division
ception. con-
rather contain
in
2.
We
and
ascend
from
may
"
afterwards
ferior ones
by division.
in.
Universal
In every
Rules
division of
care conception
must
be
taken,
1, tliatthe members
or
of division exclude
one
one
ther ano-
be
opposed to
a
another
that
they,
(conceptum superior conception and that they, cwnmunum), 3, collectively taken, make up the sphereof the
divided
or conception
2, rank under
be
equalto
it. be
Scho. The
from
one
members
not
of division must
separated
a
another
contrary,but by
Codimsion
The
are
and
Subdivision.
"
various with
divisions of
various
made
METHOD.
209
and the division of the
a
the
name
of
codivisions
members
of division is denominated
1. A
;
subdivision.
to
Scho.
subdivision may
be
be
continued
definite in-
but it may
experience;for
? conceptions be
who
can
exhaust
all the
relationsof
2. A
codivision
may
said
to
be
division
of the conceptionsof the to the variety accordingof view), and a subdivision same (thepoints object
that of the
pointof
view itself.
113.
Dichotomy
A division into two
of
more
and
Polytomy.
pellation goes under the apof consisting
members
but
name
dichotomy ;
it,when
of
than
By
consequence
For
the
members
and than
2.
non
contrary of
it a
be
A.
in
of knowledge
the
object
tomy taughtin logic. But dichoof contradiction only, requiresthe principle without knowing the conception, which we have a be
mind
to
divide,as
to the
matter.
stands Polytomy
a
in need
as priori,
in
210
the mathematics
or sections),
LOGIC.
(forexample,
empiricalintuition,as
of nature
to
(physiography).Yet
of principle the
the division
the
a priori synthesis
has
the
condition,
ter of the lat-
J14.
Various
As to method and several
treatment
Divisions
of Method.
the elaboration
are
in particular, in itself,
chief
shall here
:
duce ad-
to according
the
division following
115.
I.
The
or Popular Scientific
Method.
guished is distinit sets out
or
scholastic
method
popularin this,that
and
from
fundamental
elemental
propositions ; the
That ones. interesting aims at solidity and therefore removes or profundity, in view. ; this has entertainment every thingforeign These two methods then are distinguished Scho. and not as to the mere ing propoundas to the species, is consequently in the method ; and popularity
latter, again,from
usual and
distinct from
that in the
propounding.
METHOD,
21 1
116. 2.
or Fragmentary Systematical
Method.
The
or
the
one
to a method, and when his method is then accordingexpressed in the propounding and the transition made and from one to another distinctly proposition delivered, he has treated a cognition systematically. Whereas, though one has thoughtafter a method,
arranged the propounding methodically, is rhapsodistical. such a method Scho. The systematical propounding is opposed the methodical is to the to the fragmentary, as just thinks methodically tumultuary, Who may pound pronot
but
either
way.
The
but methodical
1 17
IT
3.
The
Analyticor SyntheticMethod.
method .iscontradistinguished to the analytic That begins with the conditionate and the synthetic. founded and proceedsto the principles (a principiatis ad principia) the other hand, goes ; this, on
from
the
to principles
the consequences
or
from the
be nominated de-
simpleto
the
the
compound.
The
former
may
the
latter
LOGIC.
analyticmethod
or
is
or
usually named
and discovery, the end of popularity but
To
method analytic
adequate ;
to
elaboration systematical
so.
of
118.
4.
The science
of
a
or Syllogistic
Tabellary Method.
which
a
former is
is that
method, accordingto
in
a
propounded
series
or
concatenation
The syllogisms.
whole
119. 5.
The
or
Erotematic
teaches
Method.
one
is acroamaonly, erotematical.
questionstoo,
into the
latter may
and
divided
or dialogical
So-
cratical
are
catechetical, accordinglyas
either
to
the questions
directed
to the
the
or understanding,
merely
Scho.
memory.
cannot
One
teach
but erotematically
by
and procally; reci-
the
Socratic
must
so
dialogue,in questionand
that it
seems
which
answer
both
one
master
scholar
another if the
in
it
as
scholar
were
himself
the master.
This
dialogueinstructs
METHOD.
Q13
by
means
of
questions,
his
own
by
making
of
the
disciple
and But
quainted ac-
with
principles
attention
to
reason,
by
one
calling;
cannot
and
fixing
by
the
his
them. of
teach
common
mode
catechising;
which catechetic he has
he
can
only
interrogate
about
that
taught
acroamatically. adapted
to
Hence
is
the
thod me-
empirical
to
and
historical
of
knowledge
reason.
only;
but
the
dialogic,
cognitions
120.
Meditation.
By
it
or
methodical
Meditation
thinking
must
or
tation cogi-
is
accompany
to
all
reading
that
as
as
all
learning
make in after
and
;
it
it
is
quisite, re-
we
should
previous
order
or
inquiries,
methodize
and
then
that
put is,
our
thoughts
them
them,
conjoin
method.
ib
dd)
^fli^bsm
1o
vd
^noitestfp
to
)Iw
enesr
aoeaai
gdfqianh
"notts
e
b"l
";:
yl leaiioiaid
buB
ifiDiiim^
ol
;v!no
-igoo
to
^gfii^nidj
luolboriiom
10
noi^oftai laiabnc/
Ji
noitoiibol/:
.
ei
;gnin*:
'iq
10
^"i
to
9"Ifim
ni
bfnoda
9w
JsriJ
wbio
atdguoriJ
ai^d?
100
fi
aailii
niono-j)
APPENDIX.
SKETCH
OP
THE
O8
AUTHORS
LIFE
AND
WRITINGS
lo'tnj.,
BY
THE
TRANSLATOR. rfT
"
De
mortuis
nil nisi
verum.
EMMANUEL
KANT of the
of
was
born
of the
in
Koningsberg,
on
the
metropolis
kingdom
April
in
Prussia,
year
one
the
twen*
ty-second day
seven
thousand low
were
hundred
but his
and
twenty-three* ;
of
tion; extrac-
parents,
industrious.
though obscure,
both
and
father
name
(descendent
with
a
of
a
Scotch saddler
not
C)
was
very
in the
small en silk-
; our
hero, consequently,
of
nursed
lap
affluence,
but
himself
tlie sole
architect
of his fortune.
See
page
on
xliii of
the
Preface
to
the
second
edition
of
his
Criticism
pure
Reason.
QI6
APPENDIX.
"
Let
highBirth triumph!
but
What in
a
can
be
more
great?
Nothing
He school
Merit
low
estate.0
was
taught to
received,
at
read the
and
to
write of of
at
free*
j
a
expense
his
maternal
uncle,
shoemaker,
the rudiments
education
one
at Frederic's
seven
thousand
hundred
the
where he was in his native city, entirely university bred, and from which, as he in his Anthropology informs
us,
he
never
travelled
farther
than
to
Pil-
law
once
by
water.
The
most
early part of
men
his
like life,
that of
the lives of
of
deep learningand
abstract
science,
tion, havingbeen passed in hard studyand close applicaof incident but few materials and littlevariety yields for the biographer. His was intended for the church, studied originally and took orders. divinity accordingly, His regular he began finished, course academical the world as a private tutor in a clergyman's family,
and
count
was
afterwards
a appointed
titular governor
we
to
for, as
of
have
been
told, he
the
more
care
of any of
thenr,though
tender and principles
"
nobody
minds,
could
or
be
capable
them of virtue.
forming
the
of
into instilling
and
the Yet
abilities are
but
As
not
render
man
he
was
of
of disposition,
APPENDIX.
217
equal temper or good-humour,modest, of great manners, well-bred, or of polished affable, equanimity, cheerful, an agreeablefacetious companion, and of of the feast of reason fond of conviviality, extensive reading the flow of soul," and, from and an possessed uncommonly retentive memory,
"e
of
the
an
and
vated cultielegantin manners, and enlightened themselves,in whose society in general, well as in that of modest women he as took great delight, desirous of his were naturally
^
and instructive conversation,conceived entertaining became his patrons, /or him, generously a friendship and gave him that sinecure,partlywith a view of the pleasure of his excellent society(fbr enjoying Kant was the vital principle the enlivener of or every that partly society),
to
he
might have
sufficient leisure
cultivate his
rare
vigorous, penetrating,and
mind. And his he
comprehensive
did not
eat
the bread
of idleness with
or
bury
unwearied
attention
and gone
the whole
master
circle of
the sciences
and
made
himself and
of them
all, he found
the
mathematics
physic)the
gave
up the confined
and metaphilosophy(logic to his cast of mind; and most congenial of theology, as a sphere too profession pure
energy,
range
thought.
AFPtNDIX.
His
j^.
custom
was
to
employ
the
morning
and
noon forethe
an
in
withdraw
amuse
early in
for
himself
hour
and
or
two
in
readingsometimes
then
a
memoirs history,
travels, sometimes
now
a
poetry,
and
son,
even
a
and
good novel,such
which he often
Grandi-
work
an
read
praisedmuch.
taste
Hehad
very correct
nor
turn
leisure
for
acquirement
one
of
superficial accomplishments.
seven
thousand
hundred
of
on
and
fifty-
took
the
gave
degree
of Master
Arts,* opened
the mathema-
class,and
on
public lectures
on
matics,
was
and logic,
both
easy and
the
art
not
only of commanding
but
of and his
impressinghis
lectures
doctrines
on
deeply
in
their minds;
and
on
moral
philosophy
moral and
natural
and
acquired, was
mentioned.
talents he
long eclipsed by
name
of very
to
does Kant's
not
deserve
was
be
But
were
time
not
expanding continually
themselves, and
"
was
"
constantlyrumi" ,
_ "
In
Germany
the
the
degree of M.
A. is
us.
much
greater
dignity
among
APPENDIX
219
It
'on nating
his
new
system.
solar forth
at
was
(to use
what some-
florid the
sun,
a allegory)
eclipse. And
"
he, like
shone
full meridian
their
diminished
were
doctrines He
persed, dis-
like vapour.
rays.
called
to
lengthour
of and
philosopherwas
a
fillthe
wisdom,
station which
so
his
ties superiorabilihe in
talents had
afterwards
the year
was one
graced so
thousand doctor the
hundred
and
seventy,
pure
created
and
of regius professor
in philosophy
of Koningsberg. university
one
And,
and
in
the
year
thousand
seven
hundred of
no
of Sciences
Berlin
of their members.
They
on
doubt
intended
to
confer
soon
mark
of honor
the
but professor;
it
was
fellow of their
redounded
to
their honor.
Having now reached the summit of his ambition* and wishing for nothing than leisure to digest more his critical system, of science to gain the heights
"
and
of
and
So
seven THE
earlyas
he
TRUE WITH
his published
d'essai,THOUGHTS
LIVING ON
ESTIMATION
A FEW
OF
POWERS;
THE
OBSERVATIONS
POWER
220
BODIES
at
PREFACE
IN
GENERAL
; in
of these the thoughts the age of foiir-and-twenty, the two celebrated men, Leibnitz, Wolf, Bulfinger,
Herman Barnoullis,
be the most
acute
and
others, proves
himself
to
tural na-
metaphysician and
the ablest is
of his time. His motto philosopher Seneca),Nihil magis prcestandum est pecorum
(from
ne
quam
ritu
gregen%,
pergentes, non
No
name,
however
famous, should
to
it oppose
the
lue va-
the track of
reason
is the
only one
are
to
at tacks personal
not Kant's
will
see
from
these
in
his
cluding con-
words few
one errors
I have
succeeded
a perceiving am
in this
Leibnitz's
of
great
man's
effectuated
law of
way
matter
out
of
this
favor, the
small, that
herself
so
share I
am
as
of honor
not to
that remains
is so
afraid of Ambition's
demeaning
far
grudge me
it.
Both
this work
and
his
subsequent publications
the
latent truth ledge know-
of discovery
of human reserved
sought longin
for him.
APPENDIX*
221
His
GENERAL
or
an
PHYSIOGONY
AND
THEORY
OP
THE
me-
HEAVENS,
chanical
Essay on
the Constitution
of the
ton's Originof the Universe accordingto NewPrinciples, appeared in the year one thousand
hundred In which work he fifty-five. profound astronomical knowledge, coaand there and
are more
seven
evinces his
planetsmore
thus
Saturn, by consequence
Herschel
nearer
and
on foretells,
theoretical
discovered
sixlescope, te-
existence
of
Uranus
(the Georgian
theory by
with
regard to
recent
Saturn's
ring too
is confirmed
Herschel's
It cannot
discoveries.
to interesting
men
but
be
of
science to
one
compare
the construction
of the
to
heavens, which
say, with the
great
man
has
perceived,so
copic teles-
construction
has
the
heavens
as
another
great
This
was
exhibited it according to
telescopic
abstruse,
Lamthis
observations.
and
but littleknown
of
first; the
celebrated
bert is accused
havingtaken
the
advantageof
reason
circumstance; and
very the
same
for the
of
of theory the
of universe,
galaxy,of
nebula, "c.
is
APPENDIX,
advanced
in his
CosmologicalLetters, which
seventeen
so
he
publishedin
one,, and
the year
hundred
with which
he made
one
great a
this
sixtyfigure.
that the
and
Kant
himself, in
of
of his
works, says,
agreement
the
thoughtsof
very
smallest
strokes, increases
my
that
more
this delineation
will hereafter ad
confirmation.
Sic redit
dominum,
thousand
seven
hundred THE
and
ONLY
OF
ARGUMENT
OF
FOR
THE
DEMONSTRATION
this which treatise,
EXISTENCE
of his
GOD.
In
is
only a
station in
work, CRITICISM
ON
PURE
SON); REA-
in this
nothingbut
support of
wherein extremelyrecondite treatise, an argument (or ground of proof) in of the existence of the
the demonstration
or Deity is pretended to, the greatest acuteness is possible all that which and to be persubtility, formed and by the theoretical by mere conceptions of proof of the existence mode of that Being,will be found ; in which field nothing speculative apobe concertain on this head can dictically possibly
contained. He
two here methods does of
not
allow
but of the
of possibility
proofof
APPENDIX.
223
cient
When
and the cosmological. Being,the Ontological in and completeness exactness are logical
the former mode of
hand,
when
proof
is the
better, but,
justconcepcomprehension to the common tion, and the power liveliness of impression,, beauty,
nature
are
of
latter.
in this
beaten un-
that
proof is
to
not
to be
or
found
path (the
we
theoretical
the broad
speculative field),
of
must
turn or,
highway
have is
a
practical
to
reason,
in other
;
words,
God
recourse
the
moral
argument
it is
for, as
can
moral be
a
the being,
moral
one.
proof of
his existence
only
not
Though
absolutely necessary
existence, it is
be
demonstrated.
to convince
one's
self of His
equally necessary
Indeed
it is not, that strictness
of intuitive is
which
to requisite
of mathematical
demonstration. the
use speculative
Nor
of
our
it
by
any
effort of
ther. nei-
reason
be confuted
The this
have
men
teteological contemplations in interspersed work are and edifying, highly interesting and a great tendency to corroborate (the minds of in general)in the belief in the Eternal Bein"\
later doctrine and
more
Kant's
on
profound sentiments
all
are subjects
of important
to be
found
in the
aforementioned
Criticism and
in
his
other
works, systematical
moral
wherein
essential service to
224
APPENDIX.
of truth and
to mankind.
seventeen
seventy,
the
thinking part of
MUNDI
"T
lic pub-
SENSI-
ATQUE
INTELLTGIBILIS
FoRMA
PlllNCIPHS
the most
remarkable
phenomenon
Newton's
in the
philosophic
NATURAwith said,
prises com-
hemisphere since
LIS
PHILOSOPHISE
It may be
greattruth,that,in
the creative
of Kant, which
idea and
architectoric
complete
a
foundation
of profundity
Newton,
of
systematic ment arrangeit perfect.It of a Wolf to render conspire niches in alone entitles his statue to distinguished "Others the temples of Science and of Fame.
Hume,
are
and
TICISM CRI-
REASON
one
made
in
the
year
thousand
most
was
hundred
and
eighty-one.This, the
work
that
ever
abstract
physical metaprofound
the
Germans,
cism, The Critiby way of eminence, name, is unquestionably the triumph of intellect. It comprehends, in one of eight volume octavo
hundred "whole
of the
close-printed eighty-four pages, his theoretical system, the complete investigation of the sensitive faculty, of the understanding, procedure
and of the of faculty
reason
and
itself.
APPENDIX.
825
philosophy wingsof all false speculative above the sphere of possible that attemptsto soar trines are clipped.Tn it the doceffectually experience of atheism, of free thinking of materialism, all of and of unthinking superstition, jncredulity, to society, be universally which pernicious may well as those of idealism and of scepticism, as to the schools which are dangerousmore especially to the public and can hardly be ever communicated in general, overthrown. are quite from his other This single abstracting publication, of Morals ; Criticism on Judgworks (Metaphysic ment Criticism on Reason ; "c. ; all practical ; this perspicacious me^ distinguishes masterpieces), critic as both and subtile philosophical taphysician of his native country,and the pride the ornament of letters.* And of the republic informs history us, that Nature, though bountiful to the human to produce a as race, is not so lavish of her favors, of mental powers every of such supereminence man
In it the
century.
His
were
METAPHYSICAL
ELEMENTS
OF
THE
PHYSICS
in the year seventeen hundred and published of They contain the pure principles eighty-six. of corporeal nature Somatology.The metaphysic is first treated of 5 then the mathematics are applied
to
cannot
become
tural na-
them.
In this inimitable
informed
me,
The made
of Rostock
master
that Kant
bad
much
of his
before subject
nor
he
transcribed it to
sent
it sheet
2 F
by sheet
as
he wrote
APPENDIX,
fullyexhausted
the
of subject
metaphysical somatology.
The
table of the
of Aristotle,
that
but his
predicates,*
for the
own)
has
only
scheme
completenessof
He
modesty
as
names)
to
elements
four
heads
Under
the first of
which, motion,
its
pure
quantum,
any
is considered what
of qiiality
is
moveable,
my;
the under
is denominated
Phorono-
the second
it (motion), as is considered
belongingto
the
name
of quality
an
matter,
under
of
head under
motive and hence is this originally power, of Dynamics ; distinguished by the appellation with the third, matter that quality is considered motion in relation to itself, and this by its own is termed
or
head
and under
the
fourth,
the motion
with
is determined of
reference
the
mode
merely or representation,
is Phenomenology-
and modality,
On
perhaps the
men
of all his
works,
the
none
but who
of
science, and
pronounce;
rnatia. and the
few
reason,
seem
venture
mere
to
to all others
it will
gallihundred
to be
book
of
but
one
author fifty-eight pages proves its eminent only man that ever possessedmathematical
*
and
Amieus
APPENDIX.
profoundlyon
And thus much
as
the and
first of of
writingsof
this
prince of
works what has
mathematicians
philosophers.A
all his
or completedescription
review fill a
cal systematiBut
that
would been
extant
alone here in
thick
volume.
said may
suffice to shew,
it is to be
they are
too to
Germany, and,
do
not to stand
hoped,
ready al-
will induce
those,who
think
themselves
of
more
knowing
in need
ledge, knoweasy,
studythem.
The
task indeed
is not
but
it will reward
abundantly.*
CRITICAL
Kant
so
is the founder
to
PHILOSOPHY,
other it from distinguish systems or of philosophising, modes tillit shall be universally be but one allowed, that there cannot (true) sophy. philoAs
constant
named
this vast
system,
the
rich harvest
fifty years,
and
which
now
embraces
is sphere of philosophy,
taught in
and
Germany,
but
"
To the
be advisable
to
low fol-
plan, which
Descartes
holds
so
to indispensable
:
the at*
which
is this
To
forget,during
one
study of
new
doctrine,
all the
conceptions that
the
same
may
to
to formerlyacquired relatively
on
and subject,
mere
the
road
of
truth
without
any
guide but
sane
reason.
APPENDIX.
yet in Great
Britain
and
Ireland, it
it
in
be
It
new
of
philosophising,
is founded of faculty of this
SOPHY; PHILO-
methods,
most
accurate
which
set out.
mental
anatomy
all true
sophy philo-
This choked
method
of
of all former
the
systems and
tinue (tocon-
the research.
cleaned figure)
ground
seem
This
assertion
not
j
may
to those
as
much
conversant
quisitions per-
these
but
the destruction
of all false
accurate
and
of deep philosophy
It is
to know, interesting
that Hume's
cause
to
the
conceptionof the
roused Kant from
gave
connexion
of
and
what
first
he
to
calls
dogmatic
reform
man's
nor
of many
years, and
means
this total
in
philosophy, by
on
of which
that
celebrated
doubt,
which
any of
neither
Reid,
nor
tie,nor
throw of
Oswald,
nor Priestly,
ever
the least
common-sense
however
with
the
aid
they extol
so
much,
but with
that of pure
reason
of the critical
philosophising.
APPENDIX.
229
Whoever
reads
Kant's transcendental
philosophy Metaphysics*
with the
quisite re-
degree
allow,
that his that
ever
of attention
and
mind
firmly
todo,
to
established.He
his but and subject,
to
to
have
exhausted fully
for
us
read,
to
understand,
to
admire, and
be
his
not
useful
of afl
me. thing no-
it not
laid as
foundation, no
could
recur
we possible,
to
reach,
in the
sophic philo-
Fontaine's
fable, has
difficultand
can
fine head.*
brains.
the most
;
It is however
the
more
most
stract ab-
for what
be
so, than
eye inwards
is learning
not
a
its
own
? operations
A little
taste
dangerous thing ;
drink
deep or
of the Pierian
intoxicate the
for
superfi-
Tranglated into
be
English by
the author
of
xv
ill soon
published.
230
APPENDIX.
or
puffs up,
reason
but
profound (by
oar
shewing
and
the
faculties,
with
re.
cannot,
gard to the essential ends of humanity, advance a standing) undersingle step farther,than the most common abates our ches pride or arrogance, and teaus modestyand humility.
In this admirable
a quite new
theoryof taste,of
both of
nature
the
beautiful,
vanced art, is ad-
and
of the
sublime,of
and
; and
the doctrine
ends, handled
In the Groundwork
the Criticism
on
for the
rals, Mothe
Metaphysicof Morals,
moral
which philosophy and
of his
system of
and
he divides
law,
of
laysdown
principles
morality.
In those
works it is clearly evinced, incomparable that the Heteronomy of the arbitrament is, (that the dependence upon laws of nature, to follow some
one
incentive
not
or
self itgives
the law.
the rational
can
observance
of
com-
the universally prise form, and not only legislative be the basis of any obligation, cannot but is, though the action,which results from the maxim of heteronomy, should be legal, even contrary to the of pure quently conseprinciple practical reason,
to the moral
mindedness.
APPENDIX.
the
matter
of
rules practical
ever
depends
it nothing conditions, which yield subjective for rational beings, conditional universality all those conditions turn on the pivot of the
one's
own
of principle
happiness.
The
of principle
were can
the such
ones,
All
determinatives possible
will
are
either
or
therefore
empirical,
ternal. in-
and objective
all principles of heteronomy are following : education the constitution (accordingto Montaigne), (after Mandeville), the physical sense cording (acthe moral sense to Epicurus), Hutche(after to the Stoics and Wolf,) (according son), perfection and the will of the Deity (after Crusius and other moralists).All material principles theological are unfit for the supreme moral law. totally
In the aforementioned
The
works
it is likewise
proved,
Autonomy (the universal self-legislation will is the only principle of all moral laws
The but maxim
the
of law
a us
self-love of
(prudence) advises
what
merely;
not
commands. morality
Is there
however
for
is advisable do?
we
are
to obliged
It is difficult
to know
-,
and
a knowledgeof requires
the world
how
to act
on
the
of heteronomy principle
but
quite
APPENDIX.
common
understanding to
autonomy.
pure In
reason a
know
that
of
word, The
is the
formal
of principle practical
only
fitfor practical laws (whichmake principle possible of moraand for the principle lity a duty of actions) in
general.*
This
new
system, which
is
reallythe victoryof
takes the of liberty
"
human
mending recom-
reason,
the author
once
of this Sketch
to the
our
more
notice
of the learned.
In
cal politiThis,
pointof
us, but in
a
view
insular situation
and literary
our
scientific one,
however,
not
were
literatiless
them
accuse unjustly
of Does
world
less
tional, na-
might
made in the The
as we so
be
not
the
commonwealth
of
are
learningembrace
Whatever
to
conquests
kingdom
Germans
of truth,
are
as
they belong
to justice
humanity
our
in general.
well
literature But it is
are
fortunately, un-
ourselves, and
with
us;
we
do it the in
it.
not
know general
ignorantof totally
the German
their best
For,
nothingbut
press, with
a
of productions
our
is transplanted to exceptions,
were printers were men
island. could
were
of
letters,
It for
interested in science.
to learn German
British of
a
while philosopher's
language,as Latin,would
it is
or
certainly repay
I
am
him
his time be
labour.
wards to-
Mean-while, if
fortunate
enough
instrumental
of that of
to philosophy
this
essentially contributing
therefore of
not
APPENDIX.
233
the Bounds of bare is
Arid in The
Religionwithin
Reason,
sublime signally
there publication,
doctrine philosophical worthy of taught a purified the notice of enlightened rational beings. Kant, in this work, shews, that the New Testament, explained
agreeably to
contains
a
established
moral
principles,
can
pure
moral
religion.No
or
other
a
sibly poshave
stand
have
right to
universal
monkish
confessors in the
this and
none
cause
of any
belief; and
views
but
those
influenced
by
blind zeaor lots,, bigots, who all deaf, or unwilling to listen, to the are sacred dictates of reason of morality, or obligations can possibly deny. sectaries and
Many
divines
and by profession
all
theological
a
heteronomists,,make
use
of
reason
that
pervertsit,and thereby,thoughnot
subvert
tentional inof
morality.* But
the author
havingtravelled
useless member
*
in vainer of
of not
society.
we
By
moralists theological
understand
those who,
ously previlaw
assuming
from
the existence of
God,
mediately im-
his
will; by which
the procedure
is
on
universal self-
legislative power
The moral
of pure
reason practical
quitedestroyed.
its
on theologist,
hand,
law
indispensable
abso-
moral
out
of the universal
of man,
and
God postulates
and
as immortality
APPENDIX.
the
as
great work
under
review
himself distinguishes
but moral
a
not
only
strict
autonomist
a
pure
list rationa-
in matters
as
of
belief,or
most
and theologist,
reasoner,
as
the
and justest
profound
well of
as
the most
any
of
of those, who
and morality of
treated
of the
subjects
more
positors, ex-
religion.
and than
The
space
of
Platonic
had
and
the
Aristotelian
centuries.
united
during
many
in
both
the
annals
the
progress
of the human
understanding.
every
and competent judge will join us with unprejudiced pleasurein paying this gratefultribute of praise
(that
f(
envy
dare
not
the
manes
:
of the matchless
founder
of this noble of
system
That
metaphysicas
as
science, and
the
discoverer
of pure
as
well
the
as
first
no
teacher other
of the doctrine
man ever
and morality,
left
so posterity
valuable
legacy,
lately necessary
The and
Ethics
conditions
not
of
the
of possibility
the
its fulfilment.
man
do
extend
beyond
even
reciprocalduiies of
the idea of the
subsist
by
themselves
without
Supreme
sublimation
of
morality,
ments, command-
dischargingour
which
crowns
Divine
and
morality.
APPENDIX.
235
has
to just right
be held the
the
luminaryof
the learned
world,
and
to bear
palm of
science unrivalled
perhaps for
cannot
ever.
it is
stubborn
fact,that
of critical philo-
philosophical unacquaintedwith it, systems, can one, any himself with the title of philosoventure to dignify pher,
all former in the proper
so sense
of the be
word
? If he
sumes pre-
to
do,
it must and
an
indeed,
t(
Seest thou
more
man
wise
in his
conceit ? There
is
hope
what
of
fool,than
From
or
has
easily gathered,
that
means
he,
a
to his
manners a
or
behaviour, was
teacher
by
no
or cynic,
churlish snarling
was
of virtue,
and, though he
stoic,had
ness.
in
some
essential
or severity
was
a points morosean
not
The
not
gredient in-
neither
lived in
self him-
secluded but
habitually
he
was
best company,
of which
the
well aware,
happinessand
The from
Cynics,
or
the
followers
of
Diogenes,derived their
in which Cynosarges,
name
the suburb
theytaught.
236
true
are philosophy
APPENDIX.
of the
was
kind."
persons
Besides, he
,
of
rank, by
men
all travellers of
well
as
by all
of the
of eminence
in every
whose line,
admiration
conversation
every
never topic,
failed to
excite,
from
always received the tribute of due all proud of havinghad an esteem, and who were tinguished with so disof seeing and of conversing opportunity
whom he
a
character.
That
our
sublime master
could
sometimes
unbend
in
the husband
were
and
the wife
obey, we,
nature,
it not
St. Paul's
by
have
of his miscellaneous I, says Kant, in one works, would, in the languageof gallantry (yetnot
without
truth), say,
govern.
that the
wife
the husband
must
The
conduct
all
heart.
But, as
like
he must much
know
money
afford to
spend, he,
with the orders of his monarch, who thinks complies of nothing but pleasure and perhaps wishes to build in a palace ; onlythat at present there is no money
the
that treasury,
certain
be
must wants pressing ever that her majesty may do whatthat her this condition only, on
more
means.
APPENDIX.
_
237
it evinces
as a
And
noble and the
this
incident,as biographical
of
as spirit,
independence
inflexible
well that
manly
pion cham-
firmness
of
mind
characterises
zealous
of
religion,
:
we
conceive, deserves
of
be
here
recorded and
The
present king
Prussia's
a
father
predecessor,
for
timents sen-
by
the
of instigation
clerical he would
on
Kant, and
that desired,
in expressed
his work
Your
moral
dutiful
earth
vant. ser-
control
to recant
my
a
or thoughts
has
right to compel
any
or
sentiment single
reason or
my
I
to
"
deny
To
even
to conceal
deem
truth.
No be it related,
to
was interruption
given,
the free
of publication
of the Prussian
Socrates. His
having led
to
another
ous illustri-
instance
remark
relative to
and
bachelors
Certainlythe
for the
or
works,
those of from
greatest merit
the unmarried
were
childless
a
All Kant's
pursuits
ture. na-
of obviously He devoted
or metaphysical
intellectual
himself
we,
to
even
the sciences
in this
and
to
literature. But
a
have
had
proof of
his
having made
his
par-
238
ticuJar addresses lie
APPENDIX.
to
Philosophy,
to
"'
the
fair/' whom
throne of
has certainly
elevated
the
very
reason.
delicate constitutional a Notwithstanding very with frame of body (for he was by no means gifted with those of the mind),* and as corporalqualities
a
studyand
intense
tion, medita-
and of going to bed early, betimes, of constant occupation,of temperance^ rising of regular exercise on foot, of tranquillity
he,
by
means
of
of
mind, and
of cheerful
retained society,
the
use
of his mental
vigour,almost unimpaired
and
seventy,
life of
had
attained
the
advanced
period of
eighty years and upwards before he, on the twelfth day of February in the year one thousand eight hundred and with an seized four, was apoplexy that occasioned his speedy dissolution, ed and numberwith the purified that live bis freed spirit spirits
for
ever.
He
was
of
or
chest
so
narrow
as
scarce
to leave
a
room
play of
his
ing walk-
alone, in
^
thoughtfulmood,
of
the
decline
life." The
sketched portrait
is the
which is the
by Lips of
likeness of Kant
Weimar
from
an
at the age
of seventy-one,by Wernet
to peculiar
of Berlin.
he
f The
nwde way, but
we
only circumstance
one
Kant's
a
diet,is,that
meal
habit,which, by the
do not
think conducive
longevity*.
APPENDIX.
While
Kant
that
stood upon
terrors
the verge
to the
of this
world,
not
Death,
armed
king of
any
He
was guilty,
with
to
the
prince of
to
peace,
time the
or a
him.
to
from eternity,
world, intelligible
composure of with
a
with with
mind,
the
wise
man,
of
virtuous mind
reason
deeplypenetrated with
Supreme
to
in the
Intelligence,
longation pro"
future of
our
state, the
moral
life
the or spiritual,
existence death."
infinite.
tue Vir-
alone On that
has
majestyin
melancholyoccasion by
which
an
the decease
whole of that
so
city of
lent exceltained they sus-
man,
a
they conceived
national and
loss,went irreparable
of all ranks and the
into
of all
ing neighbourhood,bewailwith
catastrophe and
flocked
was more
settled
sorrow
in.
countenances,
interment, which
of
an a
proud
emperor,
than
the
plain funeral
fine medal
ments endowthe
one
of
humble
Soon
philosopher.
after that mournful
event
a
in
honor
of his
was
great
worth
and
uncommon on
side
his
on
image and
the
reverse
of his
and nativity,
Pallas in her
is
and representedsitting
an holding
owl
hand, right
240 Altius
of his field volantem
APPENDIX.
arcuit
an
allegorical designation
boundaries
the
to the
proper
determined
restrained
to the
sphere of
speculative philosophy, or
use speculative
the
experience.
-"
What
boots it o'er
dust
pileor laurePd bust ? Since by thy hands, already rais'd on high, We to the sky." see a fabric tow'ring
.
To
heap
the graven
The
as
on
true most
criticism sublime
he
on
his moral
character,as well
can
the
panegyric that
be
made
the
moral
of
For, his
to say,
comment
and
almost
to
exemplifiedit,or
as
led
nearlyup
of
a
and
or
by example, came
the wise perfectly inherent frailty
he
the idea of
man,
a as
sage,
and
perhaps
allows.
in
a
nature
So that
sibility proofof the feaconspicuous of acting (asfar perhaps as a mortal is capable of acting) moral principle on ; by his pure
givesus
active,useful,and
how
to
immaculate
life he
teaches
us
lessons how
wiser and
better,and
by
his
APPENDIX.
241
die.
memorable
death
how
to
Quid virtus
et
emplar ex-
excel
et
quccque
in
exempla
imitandum
yet it,
man,
the conduct
any
how
good
soever we
it may
be, but
the
by
or as
which
should strive to
lives.
direct
actions of it
man
to
our regulate
Not
the
conduct
it is,
but therefore, be
a
the idea
of what
ought
up
as
to
be,
can
or patternfor imitation,
set
the
standard
as
But,
bad
us,
as as
our
judgment or comparison. in generalare neither so good nor so we friends or our enemies usually represent
of moral
or
the virtue
is but
to
the
of the best of us goodness does not fall, for absolute perfection relative, man huin this transitory lot of man as no life, moral
can portrait
we
have
envious
paintedwithout some shade, made inquiryamong those every possible fame and of Kant's well-earned hating
be
"
they
cannot
no
enemies, but
was
esteemed
beloved by
find
every
out
a
body
spot
who
was
acquaintedwith him) to
character
in his
or reputation,
in the
of the world, and all that they can layto opinion bordered on avahis charge is,that his economy rice, this imputasordid parsimony. But even tion or and his friends deny, say it is an aspersion, or stricteconomy maintain, that his rigidfrugality but in early the effect of urgent necessity, lifewas
242
APPENDIX.
that, at
means,
or
of possessed
the
to contract
harden
his heart
to
(for an
and
ample
to
fortune
the
is sometimes
apt
so on
contract
harden
heart), but,
was
far from
wanting brotherlylove,
occasions, beneficent
not to
generous
honest
to
proper
the
men,
industrious
be
poor,
however
"
before
vanityor ostentation, but from motive his of duty, bestowed a sense or in private, denied them charity nothing but his name/' and that his principles not only laid were
seen/'
out
f"
of
down heart.
in his
head, but
as was
written
a man
and
settled in his
For,
he
was
of
his
good heart,
or
his
benevolence
active, and
but
sympathy
low-feelin fel-
warm,
by
reason,
his
which
or always regulated verned gounderstanding,always ruled by hi^ the study of superiorfacultyit was
his whole
on
life to
and cultivate,
on
to
exercise
freely
all
and subjects
all occasions, to
the utmost
of his power.
et
Virum
In
fine,it is easy
grateful posterity, edified and enlightened sophy, by the critical philoand not biassed by the jealousy or rivalry
to
a
that foretell,
but
too
prevalent among
Kant's be
contemporary authors,
and
will, when
illiberal opponents
buried
superficial writingsshall
and time
in utter
shall have
allayed envy,
embalm
APPENDIX.
243
him
in
their
remembrance,
and,
not
actuated
of
by
nerous ge-
emulation
his
only,
of
fail
acknowledging
works
great
merit,
and
doing
his his
invaluable due
full
justice,
of
bearing
memory
respect
THE
END.
ERRATA.
P.
as
"
10
1. 30
1.
insert
T.
"[p.
of
reason
12
1. 29
not
as
after
to
as
p. 16 the
22
read
science
on
the
mere
but there
matter;"
not
1. 28 be
a
for
"
read
according
1. 24 read
insert
to
"
p. 30
1. 22
should
paragraph
p. 48 1. 10
a comma
"
p. 34
Pherecydes
a
of
"
Syros
p" 33
1. 7 read methods
(TTQa," insert
after general
1. 24.
"
comma
p. 58
"
1. 18 p. 59
ma com-
qfter
1. 7
after genius
read 85
insert
comma
insert 1.
comma
p. 73 1. 29
are
"
which
anderase
the
p. 76
14/or
is read
"
p.
1. 25
rest
after both
insert
insert this
"
of" p. 100
p.
931.28
read
preaagement
"
p.
94
1. 15
after
in
1. 30
readperspecting
insert
p. 108
"
1. 10 read
prejudices
"
p.
117
1. 23
distinctly
p.
125
1. 19
1. 5 insert
erase
star
after Conceptions
"
p.
132 8.
I. 17 read
erase
abstract"
comma
p. 133
the
comma
after being
1. 5 177
"
p.
t in
"
135.1.
the
after distinguished"
p. 162 p.
after
in inset
;
p. 174i
1. 1 read "p.
212
the
1. 9
after him
read He"
insert
T.)
1.
a
"
1. 17
read
comma
he"
p. 216
"
1. 17 1.9
a
for His
p.
204
24
after concrete
"
insert
p. 205
insert
after conception
comma
"
insert
1. 11
p. 222
after tautological
1. 23 colon read and is
"
p. 206
p. 223
1. 17 1. 1
for
be
are"
subtilty"
read
1. 30
read
"
All-suffi" p. 244
after
"
insert
Cosmological
a
1. 11 read eundum
"
Kant's
p. 222
comma
p. 22S
'. 4
read
Bernoulli
dele
the
1. 9 insert
"
comma
1. 10
"
after
p. 233
"
dominum 1. 27
comma
p. 240
1. 9
hands
on
dele the
after hand,
read
nnfolds
the moral
its
a
indispensable condition
"
liberty, out
Kaims'"
"e."
p. 234
1. 24
after man
insert
^comma
p.
183 1. 16 read
Hamblin,
Printer, Garlick-hiH.