Medieval Jewish Philosophy
Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy PREFACEINTRODUCTIONCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VICHAPTER VIICHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IXCHAPTER XCHAPTER XICHAPTER XIICHAPTER XIIICHAPTER XIVCHAPTER XVCHAPTER XVICHAPTER XVIICHAPTER XVIIICONCLUSIONNOTESNOTESNOTESCopyright
Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy
Isaac Husik
PREFACE
No excuse is needed for presenting to the English reader a
History of Mediæval Jewish Philosophy. The English language, poor
enough in books on Jewish history and literature, can boast of
scarcely anything at all in the domain of Jewish Philosophy. The
Jewish Encyclopedia has no article on Jewish Philosophy, and
neither has the eleventh edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Hastings' Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics will have a brief
article on the subject from the conscientious and able pen of Dr.
Henry Malter, but of books there is none. But while this is due to
several causes, chief among them perhaps being that English
speaking people in general and Americans in particular are more
interested in positive facts than in tentative speculations, in
concrete researches than in abstract theorizing—there are ample
signs that here too a change is coming, and in many spheres we are
called upon to examine our foundations with a view to making our
superstructure deep and secure as well as broad and comprehensive.
And this is nothing else than philosophy. Philosophical studies are
happily on the increase in this country and more than one branch of
literary endeavor is beginning to feel its influence. And with the
increase of books and researches in the history of the Jews is
coming an awakening to the fact that the philosophical and
rationalistic movement among the Jews in the middle ages is well
worth study, influential as it was in forming Judaism as a religion
and as a theological and ethical system.But it is not merely the English language that is still
wanting in a general history of Mediæval Jewish Philosophy, the
German, French and Italian languages are no better off in this
regard. For while it is true that outside of the Hebrew and Arabic
sources, German books and monographs are thesine
qua nonof the student who wishes to investigate
the philosophical movement in mediæval Jewry, and the present
writer owes very much to the researches of such men as Joel,
Guttmann, Kaufmann and others, it nevertheless remains true that
there is as yet no complete history of the subject for the student
or the general reader. The German writers have done thorough and
distinguished work in expounding individual thinkers and problems,
they have gathered a complete and detailed bibliography of Jewish
philosophical writings in print and in manuscript, they have edited
and translated and annotated the most important philosophical
texts. France has also had an important share in these fundamental
undertakings, but for some reason neither the one nor the other has
so far undertaken to present to the general student and
non-technical reader the results of their researches.What was omitted by the German, French and English speaking
writers was accomplished by a scholar who wrote in Hebrew. Dr. S.
Bernfeld has written in Hebrew under the title "Daat Elohim" (The
Knowledge of God) a readable sketch of Jewish Religious philosophy
from Biblical times down to "Ahad Haam." A German scholar (now in
America), Dr. David Neumark of Cincinnati, has undertaken on a very
large scale a History of Jewish Philosophy in the Middle Ages, of
which only a beginning has been made in the two volumes so far
issued.The present writer at the suggestion of the Publication
Committee of the Jewish Publication Society of America has
undertaken to write a history of mediæval Jewish rationalistic
philosophy in one volume—a history that will appeal alike to the
scholar and the intelligent non-technical reader. Treating only of
the rationalistic school, I did not include anything that has to do
with mysticism or Kabbala. In my attempt to please the scholar and
the layman, I fear I shall have succeeded in satisfying neither.
The professional student will miss learned notes and quotations of
original passages in the language of their authors. The general
reader will often be wearied by the scholastic tone of the problems
as well as of the manner of the discussion and argument. And yet I
cannot but feel that it will do both classes good—the one to get
less, the other more than he wants. The latter will find oases in
the desert where he can refresh himself and take a rest, and the
former will find in the notes and bibliography references to
sources and technical articles where more can be had after his own
heart.There is not much room for originality in a historical and
expository work of this kind, particularly as I believe in writing
history objectively. I have not attempted to read into the mediæval
thinkers modern ideas that were foreign to them. I endeavored to
interpret their ideas from their own point of view as determined by
their history and environment and the literary sources, religious
and philosophical, under the influence of which they came. I based
my book on a study of the original sources where they were
available—and this applies to all the authors treated with the
exception of the two Karaites, Joseph al Basir and Jeshua ben
Judah, where I had to content myself with secondary sources and a
few fragments of the original texts. For the rest I tried to tell
my story as simply as I knew how, and I hope the reader will accept
the book in the spirit in which it is offered—as an objective and
not too critical exposition of Jewish rationalistic thought in the
middle ages.My task would not be done were I not to express my
obligations to the Publication Committee of the Jewish Publication
Society of America to whose encouragement I owe the impulse but for
which the book would not have been written, and whose material
assistance enabled the publishers to bring out a book
typographically so attractive.
INTRODUCTION
The philosophical movement in mediæval Jewry was the result
of the desire and the necessity, felt by the leaders of Jewish
thought, of reconciling two apparently independent sources of
truth. In the middle ages, among Jews as well as among Christians
and Mohammedans, the two sources of knowledge or truth which were
clearly present to the minds of thinking people, each claiming
recognition, were religious opinions as embodied in revealed
documents on the one hand, and philosophical and scientific
judgments and arguments, the results of independent rational
reflection, on the other. Revelation and reason, religion and
philosophy, faith and knowledge, authority and independent
reflection are the various expressions for the dualism in mediæval
thought, which the philosophers and theologians of the time
endeavored to reduce to a monism or a unity.Let us examine more intimately the character and content of
the two elements in the intellectual horizon of mediæval Jewry. On
the side of revelation, religion, authority, we have the Bible, the
Mishna, the Talmud. The Bible was the written law, and represented
literally the word of God as revealed to lawgiver and prophet; the
Talmud (including the Mishna) was the oral law, embodying the
unwritten commentary on the words of the Law, equally authentic
with the latter, contemporaneous with it in revelation, though not
committed to writing until many ages subsequently and until then
handed down by word of mouth; hence depending upon tradition and
faith in tradition for its validity and acceptance. Authority
therefore for the Rabbanites was two-fold, the authority of the
direct word of God which was written down as soon as communicated,
and about which there could therefore be no manner of doubt; and
the authority of the indirect word of God as transmitted orally for
many generations before it was written down, requiring belief in
tradition. By the Karaites tradition was rejected, and there
remained only belief in the words of the Bible.On the side of reason was urged first the claim of the
testimony of the senses, and second the validity of logical
inference as determined by demonstration and syllogistic proof.
This does not mean that the Jewish thinkers of the middle ages
developed unaided from without a system of thought and aWeltanschauung, based solely upon
their own observation and ratiocination, and then found that the
view of the world thus acquired stood in opposition to the religion
of the Bible and the Talmud, the two thus requiring adjustment and
reconciliation. No! The so-called demands of the reason were not of
their own making, and on the other hand the relation between
philosophy and religion was not altogether one of opposition. To
discuss the latter point first, the teachings of the Bible and the
Talmud were not altogether clear on a great many questions.
Passages could be cited from the religious documents of Judaism in
reference to a given problem bothproandcon. Thus in the
matter of freedom of the will one could argue on the one hand that
man must be free to determine his conduct since if he were not
there would have been no use in giving him commandments and
prohibitions. And one could quote besides in favor of freedom the
direct statement in Deuteronomy 30, 19, "I call heaven and earth to
witness against you this day, that I have set before thee life and
death, the blessing and the curse: therefore choose life, that thou
mayest live, thou and thy seed." But on the other hand it was just
as possible to find Biblical statements indicating clearly that God
preordains how a person shall behave in a given case. Thus
Pharaoh's heart was hardened that he should not let the children of
Israel go out of Egypt, as we read in Exodus 7, 3: "And I will
harden Pharaoh's heart, and multiply my signs and my wonders in the
land of Egypt. But Pharaoh will not hearken unto you, and I will
lay my hand upon Egypt, and bring forth my hosts, my people, the
children of Israel, out of the land of Egypt by great judgments."
Similarly in the case of Sihon king of Heshbon we read in
Deuteronomy 2, 30: "But Sihon king of Heshbon would not let us pass
by him: for the Lord thy God hardened his spirit, and made his
heart obstinate, that he might deliver him into thy hand, as at
this day." And this is true not merely of heathen kings, Ahab king
of Israel was similarly enticed by a divine instigation according
to I Kings 22, 20: "And the Lord said, Who shall entice Ahab, that
he may go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead?"The fact of the matter is the Bible is not a systematic book,
and principles and problems are not clearly and strictly formulated
even in the domain of ethics which is its strong point. It was not
therefore a question here of opposition between the Bible and
philosophy, or authority and reason. What was required was rather a
rational analysis of the problem on its own merits and then an
endeavor to show that the conflicting passages in the Scriptures
are capable of interpretation so as to harmonize with each other
and with the results of rational speculation. To be sure, it was
felt that the doctrine of freedom is fundamental to the spirit of
Judaism, and the philosophic analyses led to the same result though
in differing form, sometimes dangerously approaching a thorough
determinism, as in Hasdai Crescas.[1]If such doubt was possible in an ethical problem where one
would suppose the Bible would be outspoken, the uncertainty was
still greater in purely metaphysical questions which as such were
really foreign to its purpose as a book of religion and ethics.
While it was clear that the Bible teaches the existence of God as
the creator of the universe, and of man as endowed with a soul, it
is manifestly difficult to extract from it a rigid and detailed
theory as to the nature of God, the manner in which the world was
created, the nature of the soul and its relation to man and to God.
As long as the Jews were self-centered and did not come in close
contact with an alien civilization of a philosophic mould, the need
for a carefully thought out and consistent theory on all the
questions suggested was not felt. And thus we have in the Talmudic
literature quite a good deal of speculation concerning God and man.
But it can scarcely lay claim to being rationalistic or
philosophic, much less to being consistent. Nay, we have in the
Bible itself at least two books which attempt an anti-dogmatic
treatment of ethical problems. In Job is raised the question
whether a man's fortunes on earth bear any relation to his conduct
moral and spiritual. Ecclesiastes cannot make up his mind whether
life is worth living, and how to make the best of it once one finds
himself alive, whether by seeking wisdom or by pursuing pleasure.
But here too Job is a long poem, and the argument does not progress
very rapidly or very far. Ecclesiastes is rambling rather than
analytic, and on the whole mostly negative. The Talmudists were
visibly puzzled in their attitude to both books, wondered whether
Job really existed or was only a fancy, and seriously thought of
excluding Ecclesiastes from the canon. But these attempts at
questioning the meaning of life had no further results. They did
not lead, as in the case of the Greek Sophists, to a Socrates, a
Plato or an Aristotle. Philo in Alexandria and Maimonides in Fostat
were the products not of the Bible and the Talmud alone, but of a
combination of Hebraism and Hellenism, pure in the case of Philo,
mixed with the spirit of Islam in Maimonides.And this leads us to consider the second point mentioned
above, the nature and content of what was attributed in the middle
ages to the credit of reason. It was in reality once more a set of
documents. The Bible and Talmud were the documents of revelation,
Aristotle was the document of reason. Each was supreme in its
sphere, and all efforts must be bent to make them agree, for as
revelation cannot be doubted, so neither can the assured results of
reason. But not all which pretends to be the conclusion of reason
is necessarily so in truth, as on the other hand the documents of
faith are subject to interpretation and may mean something other
than appears on the surface.That the Bible has an esoteric meaning besides the literal
has its source in the Talmud itself. Reference is found there to a
mystic doctrine of creation known as "Maase Bereshit" and a
doctrine of the divine chariot called "Maase Merkaba."[2]The exact nature of these
teachings is not known since the Talmud itself prohibits the
imparting of this mystic lore to any but the initiated, i. e., to
those showing themselves worthy; and never to more than one or two
at a time.[3]But it is clear
from the names of these doctrines that they centered about the
creation story in Genesis and the account of the divine chariot in
Ezekiel, chapters one and ten. Besides the Halaka and Agada are
full of interpretations of Biblical texts which are very far from
the literal and have little to do with the context. Moreover, the
beliefs current among the Jews in Alexandria in the first century
B.C. found their way into mediæval Jewry, that the philosophic
literature of the Greeks was originally borrowed or stolen from the
Hebrews, who lost it in times of storm and stress.[4]This being the case, it was
believed that the Bible itself cannot be without some allusions to
philosophic doctrines. That the Bible does not clearly teach
philosophy is due to the fact that it was intended for the
salvation of all men, the simple as well as the wise, women and
children as well as male adults. For these it is sufficient that
they know certain religious truths within their grasp and conduct
themselves according to the laws of goodness and righteousness. A
strictly philosophic book would have been beyond their ken and they
would have been left without a guide in life. But the more
intellectual and the more ambitious are not merely permitted, nay
they are obligated to search the Scriptures for the deeper truths
found therein, truths akin to the philosophic doctrines found in
Greek literature; and the latter will help them in understanding
the Bible aright. It thus became a duty to study philosophy and the
sciences preparatory thereto, logic, mathematics and physics; and
thus equipped to approach the Scriptures and interpret them in a
philosophical manner. The study of mediæval Jewish rationalism has
therefore two sides to it, the analysis of metaphysical, ethical
and psychological problems, and the application of these studies to
an interpretation of Scripture.Now let us take a closer glance at the rationalistic or
philosophic literature to which the Jews in the middle ages fell
heirs. In 529 A.D. the Greek schools of philosophy in Athens were
closed by order of Emperor Justinian. This did not, however, lead
to the extinction of Greek thought as an influence in the world.
For though the West was gradually declining intellectually on
account of the fall of Rome and the barbarian invasions which
followed in its train, there were signs of progress in the East
which, feeble at first, was destined in the course of several
centuries to illumine the whole of Europe with its enlightening
rays.Long before 529, the date of the closing of the Greek
schools, Greek influence was introduced in the East in Asia and
Africa.[5]The whole movement
goes back to the days of Alexander the Great and the victories he
gained in the Orient. From that time on Greeks settled in Asia and
Africa and brought along with them Greek manners, the Greek
language, and the Greek arts and sciences. Alexandria, the capital
of the Ptolemies in Egypt after the death of Alexander, and
Antioch, the capital of Syria under the empire of the Seleucidæ,
were well-known centres of Greek learning.When Syria changed masters in 64 B.C. and became a Roman
province, its form of civilization did not change, and the
introduction of Christianity had the effect of spreading the
influence of the Greeks and their language into Mesopotamia beyond
the Euphrates. The Christians in Syria had to study Greek in order
to understand the Scriptures of the Old and the New Testaments, the
decrees and canons of the ecclesiastical councils, and the writings
of the Church Fathers. Besides religion and the Church, the liberal
arts and sciences, for which the Greeks were so famous, attracted
the interests of the Syrian Christians, and schools were
established in the ecclesiastical centres where philosophy,
mathematics and medicine were studied. These branches of knowledge
were represented in Greek literature, and hence the works treating
of these subjects had to be translated into Syriac for the benefit
of those who did not know Greek. Aristotle was the authority in
philosophy, Hippocrates and Galen in medicine.The oldest of these schools was in Edessa in Mesopotamia,
founded in the year 363 by St. Ephrem of Nisibis. It was closed in
489 and the teachers migrated to Persia where two other schools
became famous, one at Nisibis and the other at Gandisapora. A third
school of philosophy among the Jacobite or Monophysite Christians
was that connected with the convent of Kinnesrin on the left bank
of the Euphrates, which became famous as a seat of Greek learning
in the beginning of the seventh century.Christianity was succeeded in the Orient by Mohammedanism,
and this change led to even greater cultivation of Greek studies on
the part of the Syrians. The Mohammedan Caliphs employed the
Syrians as physicians. This was especially true of the Abbasid
dynasty, who came into power in 750. When they succeeded to the
Caliphate they raised Nestorian Syrians to offices of importance,
and the latter under the patronage of their masters continued their
studies of Greek science and philosophy and translated those
writings into Syriac and Arabic. Among the authors translated were,
Hippocrates and Galen in medicine, Euclid, Archimedes and Ptolemy
in mathematics and astronomy, and Aristotle, Theophrastus and
Alexander of Aphrodisias in philosophy. In many cases the Greek
writings were not turned directly into Arabic but as the
translators were Syrians, the versions were made first into Syriac,
and then from the Syriac into Arabic. The Syrian Christians were
thus the mediators between the Greeks and the Arabs. The latter,
however, in the course of time far surpassed their Syrian teachers,
developed important schools of philosophy, became the teachers of
the Jews, and with the help of the latter introduced Greek
philosophy as well as their own development thereof into Christian
Europe in the beginning of the thirteenth century.We see now that the impulse to philosophizing came from the
Greeks,—and not merely the impulse but the material, the matter as
well as the method and the terminology. In the Aristotelian
writings we find developed an entire system of thought. There is
not a branch of knowledge dealing with fundamental principles which
is not there represented. First of all Aristotle stands alone as
the discoverer of the organon of thought, the tool which we all
employ in our reasoning and reflection; he is the first formulator
of the science and art of logic. He treats besides of the
principles of nature and natural phenomena in the Physics and the
treatise on the Heavens. He discusses the nature of the soul, the
senses and the intellect in his "Psychology." In the "History of
Animals" and other minor works we have a treatment of biology. In
the Nikomachean and Eudemian Ethics he analyzes the meaning of
virtue, gives a list and classification of the virtues and
discusses thesummum bonumor
the aim of human life. Finally in the Metaphysics we have an
analysis of the fundamental notions of being, of the nature of
reality and of God.The Jews did not get all this in its purity for various
reasons. In the first place it was only gradually that the Jews
became acquainted with the wealth of Aristotelian material. We are
sure that Abraham Ibn Daud, the forerunner of Maimonides, had a
thorough familiarity with the ideas of Aristotle; and those who
came after him, for example Maimonides, Gersonides, Hasdai Crescas,
show clearly that they were deep students of the ideas represented
in the writings of the Stagirite. But there is not the same
evidence in the earlier writings of Isaac Israeli, Saadia, Joseph
Ibn Zaddik, Gabirol, Bahya Ibn Pakuda, Judah Halevi. They had
picked up Aristotelian ideas and principles, but they had also
absorbed ideas and concepts from other schools, Greek as well as
Arabian, and unconsciously combined the two.Another explanation for the rarity of the complete and
unadulterated Aristotle among the Jewish thinkers of the middle
ages is that people in those days were very uncritical in the
matter of historical facts and relations. Historical and literary
criticism was altogether unknown, and a number of works were
ascribed to Aristotle which did not belong to him, and which were
foreign in spirit to his mode of thinking. They emanated from a
different school of thought with different presuppositions. I am
referring to the treatise called the "Theology of
Aristotle,"[6]and that known
as the "Liber de Causis."[7]Both were attributed to Aristotle
in the middle ages by Jews and Arabs alike, but it has been shown
recently[8]that the former
represents extracts from the works of Plotinus, the head of the
Neo-Platonic school of philosophy, while the latter is derived from
a treatise of Proclus, a Neo-Platonist of later date.Finally a third reason for the phenomenon in question is that
the Jews were the pupils of the Arabs and followed their lead in
adapting Greek thought to their own intellectual and spiritual
needs. It so happens therefore that even in the case of Abraham Ibn
Daud, Maimonides and Gersonides, who were without doubt well versed
in Aristotelian thought and entertained not merely admiration but
reverence for the philosopher of Stagira, we notice that instead of
reading the works of Aristotle himself, they preferred, or were
obliged as the case may be, to go to the writings of Alfarabi,
Avicenna and Averroes for their information on the views of the
philosopher. In the case of Gersonides this is easily explained. It
seems he could read neither Latin nor Arabic[9]and there was no Hebrew
translation of the text of Aristotle. Averroes had taken in the
fourteenth century the place of the Greek philosopher and instead
of reading Aristotle all students read the works of the
Commentator, as Averroes was called. Of course the very absence of
a Hebrew translation of Aristotle's text proves that even among
those who read Arabic the demand for the text of Aristotle was not
great, and preference was shown for the works of the interpreters,
compendists and commentators, like Alfarabi and Avicenna. And this
helps us to understand why it is that Ibn Daud and Maimonides who
not only read Arabic but wrote their philosophical works in Arabic
showed the same preference for the secondhand Aristotle. One reason
may have been the lack of historical and literary criticism spoken
of above, and the other the difficulty of the Arabic translations
of Aristotle. Aristotle is hard to translate into any language by
reason of his peculiar technical terminology; and the difficulty
was considerably enhanced by the fact that the Syriac in many cases
stood between the original Greek and the Arabic, and in the second
place by the great dissimilarity between the Semitic language and
its Indo-European original. This may have made the copies of
Aristotle's text rare, and gradually led to their disuse. The great
authority which names like Alfarabi, Avicenna and Averroes acquired
still further served to stamp them as the approved expositors of
the Aristotelian doctrine.Among the Arabs the earliest division based upon a
theoretical question was that of the parties known as the
"Kadariya" and the "Jabariya."[10]The problem which was the cause
of the difference was that of free will and determinism. Orthodox
Islam favored the idea that man is completely dependent upon the
divine will, and that not only his destiny but also his conduct is
determined, and his own will does not count. This was the popular
feeling, though as far as the Koran is concerned the question
cannot be decided one way or the other, as it is not consistent in
its stand, and arguments can be drawn in plenty in favor of either
opinion. The idea of determinism, however, seemed repugnant to many
minds, who could not reconcile this with their idea of reward and
punishment and the justice of God. How is it possible that a
righteous God would force a man to act in a certain manner and then
punish him for it? Hence the sect of the "Kadariya," who were in
favor of freedom of the will. The Jabariya were the
determinists.This division goes back to a very early period before the
introduction of the Aristotelian philosophy among the Arabs, and
hence owes its inception not to reason as opposed to religious
dogma, but to a pious endeavor to understand clearly the religious
view upon so important a question.From the Kadariya, and in opposition to the Aristotelian
movement which had in the meantime gained ground, developed the
school of theologians known as the "Mutakallimun." They were the
first among the Arabs who deliberately laid down the reason as a
source of knowledge in addition to the authority of the Koran and
the "Sunna" or tradition. They were not freethinkers, and their
object was not to oppose orthodoxy as such. On the contrary, their
purpose was to purify the faith by freeing it from such elements as
obscured in their minds the purity of the monotheistic tenet and
the justice of God. They started where the Kadariya left off and
went further. As a school of opposition their efforts were directed
to prove the creation of the world, individual providence, the
reality of miracles, as against the "philosophers,"i. e., the Aristotelians, who held to
the eternity of motion, denied God's knowledge of particulars, and
insisted on the unchanging character of natural law.For this purpose they placed at the basis of their
speculations not the Aristotelian concepts of matter and form, the
former uncreated and continuous, but adopted the atomistic theory
of Democritus, denied the necessity of cause and effect and the
validity of natural law, and made God directly responsible for
everything that happened every moment in life. God, they said,
creates continually, and he is not hampered by any such thing as
natural law, which is merely our name for that which we are
accustomed to see. Whenever it rains we are accustomed to see the
ground wet, and we conclude that there is a necessary connection of
cause and effect between the rain and the wetness of the ground.
Nothing of the kind, say the Mutakallimun, or the Muʿtazila, the
oldest sect of the school. It rains because God willed that it
should rain, and the ground is wet because God wills it shall be
wet. If God willed that the ground should be dry following a rain,
it would be dry; and the one is no more and no less natural than
the other. Miracles cease to be miracles on this conception of
natural processes. Similarly the dogma of creation is easily
vindicated on this theory as against the Aristotelian doctrine of
eternity of the world, which follows from his doctrine of matter
and form, as we shall have occasion to see later.The Muʿtazila were, however, chiefly known not for their
principles of physics but for their doctrines of the unity of God
and his justice. It was this which gave them their name of the "Men
of Unity and Justice,"i. e.,
the men who vindicate against the unenlightened views of popular
orthodoxy the unity of God and his justice.The discussion of the unity centered about the proper
interpretation of the anthropomorphic passages in the Koran and the
doctrine of the divine attributes. When the Koran speaks of God's
eyes, ears, hands, feet; of his seeing, hearing, sitting, standing,
walking, being angry, smiling, and so on, must those phrases be
understood literally? If so God is similar to man, corporeal like
him, and swayed by passions. This seemed to the Muʿtazila an
unworthy conception of God. To vindicate his spirituality the
anthropomorphic passages in the Koran must be understood
metaphorically.The other more difficult question was in what sense can
attributes be ascribed to God at all? It is not here a question of
anthropomorphism. If I say that God is omniscient, omnipotent and a
living God, I attribute to God life, power, knowledge. Are these
attributes the same with God's essence or are they different? If
different (and they must be eternal since God was never without
them), then we have more than one eternal being, and God is
dependent upon others. If they are not different from God's
essence, then his essence is not a strict unity, since it is
composed of life, power, knowledge; for life is not power, and
power is not knowledge. The only way to defend the unity of God in
its absolute purity is to say that God has no attributes,i. e., God is omniscient but not
through knowledge as his attribute; God is omnipotent but not
through power as his attribute, and so on. God is absolutely one,
and there is no distinction between knowledge, power, and life in
him. They are all one, and are his essence.This seemed in opposition to the words of the Koran, which
frequently speaks of God's knowledge, power, and so on, and was
accordingly condemned as heretical by the orthodox.In the tenth century a new sect arose named the "Ashariya"
after Al-Ashari, its founder. This was a party of moderation, and
tended to conciliate orthodoxy by not going too far in the
direction of rationalistic thinking. They solved the problem by
saying, "God knows through a knowledge which is not different from
his essence."The other problem to which the Muʿtazila devoted their
attention was that of the justice of God. This was in line with the
efforts of the Kadariya before them. It concerned itself with the
doctrine of free will. They defended man's absolute freedom of
action, and insisted on justice as the only motive of God's
dealings with men. God must be just and cannot act otherwise than
in accordance with justice.In reference to the question of the nature of good and evil,
the orthodox position was that good is that which God commands,
evil that which God forbids. In other words, nothing is in itself
good or evil, the ethical character of an act is purely relative to
God's attitude to it. If God were to command cannibalism, it would
be a good act. The Muʿtazila were opposed to this. They believed in
the absolute character of good and evil. What makes an act good or
bad is reason, and it is because an act is good that God commands
it, and not the reverse.The foregoing account gives us an idea of the nature of the
Muʿtazilite discussions of the two problems of God's unity and
God's justice. Their works were all arranged in the same way. They
were divided into two parts, one dealing with the question of the
unity, and the other with that of justice. The proofs of the unity
were preceded by the proofs of God's existence, and the latter were
based upon a demonstration that the world is not eternal, but bears
traces of having come to be in time. These are the earmarks by
which a Muʿtazilite book could be recognized, and the respect for
them on the part of the philosophers,i.
e., the Aristotelians, was not great. The latter
did not consider them worthy combatants in a philosophical fight,
claiming that they came with preconceived notions and arranged
their conceptions of nature to suit the religious beliefs which
they desired to defend. Maimonides expresses a similar judgment
concerning their worthlessness as philosophical thinkers.[11]This school of the Mutakallimun, or of the more important
part of it known as the Muʿtazila, is of great interest for the
history of Jewish rationalism. In the first place their influence
on the early Jewish philosophers was great and unmistakable. It is
no discovery of a late day but is well known to Maimonides who is
himself, as has just been said and as will appear with greater
detail later, a strong opponent of these to him unphilosophical
thinkers. In the seventy-first chapter of his "Guide of the
Perplexed," he says, "You will find that in the few works composed
by the Geonim and the Karaites on the unity of God and on such
matter as is connected with this doctrine, they followed the lead
of the Mohammedan Mutakallimun.... It also happened, that at the
time when the Mohammedans adopted this method of the Kalam, there
arose among them a certain sect, called Muʿtazila. In certain
things our scholars followed the theory and the method of these
Muʿtazila."Thanks to the researches of modern Jewish and non-Jewish
scholars we know now that the Rabbanite thinker Saadia and the
Karaite writers, like Joseph Al Basir and Jeshuah ben Judah, are
indebted far more to the Mohammedan Muʿtazilites than would appear
from Maimonides's statement just quoted. The Rabbanites being
staunch adherents of the Talmud, to the influence of which they
owed a national and religious self-consciousness much stronger than
that of the Karaites, who rejected the authority of tradition, did
not allow themselves to be carried away so far by the ideas of the
Mohammedan rationalists as to become their slavish followers. The
Karaites are less scrupulous; and as they were the first among the
Jews to imitate the Muʿtazila in the endeavor to rationalize Jewish
doctrine, they adopted their views in all details, and it is
sometimes impossible to tell from the contents of a Karaite
Muʿtazilite work whether it was written by a Jew or a Mohammedan.
The arrangement of the work in the two divisions of "Unity" and
"Justice," the discussion of substance and accident, of the
creation of the world, of the existence, unity and incorporeality
of God, of his attributes, of his justice, and of human free will,
are so similar in the two that it is external evidence alone to
which we owe the knowledge of certain Karaite works as Jewish.
There are no mediæval Jewish works treating of religious and
theological problems in which there is so much aloofness, such
absence of theological prepossession and religious feeling as in
some Karaite writings of Muʿtazilite stamp. Cold and unredeemed
logic gives the tone to the entire composition.Another reason for the importance of the Muʿtazilite school
for the history of Jewish thought is of recent discovery. Schreiner
has suggested[12]that the
origin of the Muʿtazilite movement was due to the influence of
learned Jews with whom the Mohammedans came in contact,
particularly in the city of Basra, an important centre of the
school. The reader will recall that the two main doctrines of the
Muʿtazila were the unity of God and his justice. The latter really
signified the freedom of the will. That these are good Jewish views
would of course prove nothing for the origin of similar opinions
among the Mohammedans. For it is not here a question simply of the
dogmatic belief in Monotheism as opposed to polytheism.
Mohammedanism is as a religion Monotheistic and we know that
Mohammed was indebted very much to Jews and Judaism. We are here
concerned with the origin of a rationalistic movement which
endeavors to defend a spiritual conception of God against a crude
anthropomorphism, to vindicate a conception of his absolute unity
against the threatened multiplication of his essence by the
assumption of eternal attributes, and which puts stress upon God's
justice rather than upon his omnipotence so as to save human
freedom. Another doctrine of the Muʿtazila was that the Koran was
not eternal as the orthodox believed, but that it was created. Now
we can find parallels for most of these doctrines. Anthropomorphism
was avoided in the Aramaic translations of the Pentateuch, also in
certain changes in the Hebrew text which are recorded in Rabbinical
literature, and known as "Tikkune Soferim," or corrections of the
Scribes.[13]Concern for
maintaining the unity of God in its absolute purity is seen in the
care with which the men of the Agada forbid any prayer which may
have a semblance, however remote, of dualism.[14]The freedom of the will is
clearly stated in the Rabbinic expression, "All is in the hands of
God except the fear of Heaven."[15]And an apparently deterministic
passage in Job 23, 13, "But he is one and who can turn him, and
what his soul desireth, even that he doeth," is explained by Rabbi
Akiba in the following manner, "It is not possible to answer the
words of him who with his word created the world, for he rules all
things with truth and with righteousness."[16]And we find a parallel also for
the creation of the Koran in the Midrashic statement that the Torah
is one of the six or seven things created before the world.[17]These parallels alone would not be of much weight, but they
are strengthened by other considerations. The Muʿtazilite movement
seems to have developed among the ascetic sects, with the leaders
of whom its founders were in close relation.[18]The ascetic literature bears
unmistakable traces of having been influenced by the Halaka and the
Agada.[19]Moreover, there is
a Mohammedan tradition or two to the effect that the doctrine of
the creation of the Koran and also of the rejection of
anthropomorphism goes back to a Jew, Lebid-ibn Al-Aʿsam.[20]More recently still[A]C. H. Becker proved from a study
of certain Patristic writings that the polemical literature of the
Christians played an important rôle in the formation of Mohammedan
dogma, and he shows conclusively that the form in which the problem
of freedom was discussed among the Mohammedans was taken from
Christianity. The question of the creation or eternity of the Koran
or word of Allah, is similarly related to the Christian idea of the
eternal Logos, who is on the one hand the Word and the Wisdom, and
is on the other identified with Jesus Christ. And the same thing
holds of the doctrine of attributes. It played a greater rôle in
Christian dogma than it ever did in Judaism prior to the
philosophic era in the middle ages. To be sure, the Patristic
writers were much indebted to Philo, in whose writings the germ of
the mediæval doctrine of attributes is plainly evident. But the
Mohammedan schools did not read Philo. It would seem, therefore,
that Schreiner's view must be considerably modified, if not
entirely rejected, in view of the later evidence adduced by
Becker.The more extreme doctrines, however, of the more orthodox
Ashariya, such as the denial of natural law and the necessity of
cause and effect, likewise the denial of man's ability to determine
his actions, none of the Jews accepted. Here we have again the
testimony of Maimonides, who, however, is not inclined to credit
this circumstance to the intelligence and judgment of his
predecessors, but to chance. His words are, "Although another sect,
the Ashariya, with their own peculiar views, was subsequently
established among the Mohammedans, you will not find any of these
views in the writings of our authors; not because these authors
preferred the opinions of the first named sect to those of the
latter, but because they chanced first to become acquainted with
the theory of the Muʿtazila, which they adopted and treated as
demonstrated truth."[21]The influence of the Kalam is present in greater or less
degree in the philosophers up to Abraham Ibn Daud and Maimonides.
The latter gave this system its death blow in his thoroughgoing
criticism,[22]and thenceforth
Aristotelianism was in possession of the field until that too was
attacked by Hasdai Crescas.Another sect of the Mohammedans which had considerable
influence on some of the Jewish philosophical and ethical writers
are the ascetics and the Sufis who are related to them. The latter
developed their mode of life and their doctrines under the
influence of the Christian monks, and are likewise indebted to
Indian and Persian ideas.[23]In their mode of life they belong
to the class of ascetics and preach abstinence, indifference to
human praise and blame, love of God and absolute trust in him even
to the extent of refraining from all effort in one's own behalf,
and in extreme cases going so far as to court danger. In
theoretical teaching they adopted the emanatistic doctrine of the
Neo-Platonic School. This has been called dynamic Pantheism. It is
Pantheism because in its last analysis it identifies God with the
universe. At the same time it does not bring God directly in
contact with the world, but only indirectly through the powers or
δυνάμεις, hencedynamicPantheism. These powers emanate successively from the highest
one, forming a chain of intermediate powers mediating between God
and the world of matter, the links of the chain growing dimmer and
less pure as they are further removed from their origin, while the
latter loses nothing in the process. This latter condition saves
the Neo-Platonic conception from being a pure system of emanation
like some Indian doctrines. In the latter the first cause actually
gives away something of itself and loses thereby from its fulness.
The process in both systems is explained by use of analogies, those
of the radiation of light from a luminous body, and of the
overflowing of a fountain being the most common.The chief exponent of the ethics of the Sufis in mediæval
Jewish literature is Bahya Ibn Pakuda. In his ethical work "The
Duties of the Hearts," he lays the same stress on intention and
inwardness in religious life and practice as against outward
performance with the limbs on the one hand and dry scholasticism on
the other, as do the Sufis. In matters of detail too he is very
much indebted to this Arab sect from whose writings he quotes
abundantly with as well as without acknowledgment of his sources
except in a general way as the wise men. To be sure, he does not
follow them slavishly and rejects the extremes of asceticism and
unworldly cynicism which a great many of the Sufis preached and
practiced. He is also not in sympathy with their mysticism. He
adopts their teachings only where he can support them with
analogous views as expressed in the Rabbinical writings, which
indeed played an important rôle in Mohammedan ascetic literature,
being the source of many of the sayings found in the latter.[24]The systems of thought which had the greatest influence upon
Jewish as well as Mohammedan theology, were the great systems of
Plato (especially as developed in Neo-Platonism) and Aristotle.
These two philosophies not merely affected the thinking of Jew and
Mohammedan but really transformed it from religious and ethical
discussions into metaphysical systems. In the Bible and similarly
in the Koran we have a purely personal view of God and the world.
God is a person, he creates the world—out of nothing to be sure—but
nevertheless he is thought of doing it in the manner in which a
person does such things with a will and a purpose in time and
place. He puts a soul into man and communicates to him laws and
prohibitions. Man must obey these laws because they are the will of
God and are good, and he will be rewarded and punished according to
his attitude in obedience and disobedience. The character of the
entire point of view is personal, human, teleological, ethical.
There is no attempt made at an impersonal and objective analysis of
the common aspects of all existing things, the elements underlying
all nature. Nor is there any conscious effort at a critical
classification of the various kinds of things existing in nature
beyond the ordinary and evident classification found in
Genesis—heaven and earth; in heaven, sun, moon and stars; on earth,
grass, fruit trees, insects, water animals, birds, quadrupeds, man.
Then light and darkness, the seasons of the year, dry land and
water.In Greek philosophy for the first time we find speculations
concerning the common element or elements out of which the world is
made—the material cause as Aristotle later called it. The Sophists
and Socrates gave the first impulse to a logical analysis of what
is involved in description or definition. The concept as denoting
the essence of a thing is the important contribution Socrates made
to knowledge. Plato objectified the concept, or rather he posited
an object as the basis of the concept, and raised it out of this
world of shadows to an intelligible world of realities on which the
world of particulars depends. But it was Aristotle who made a
thoroughgoing analysis of thing as well as thought, and he was the
master of knowledge through the middle ages alike for Jew,
Christian and Mohammedan.First of all he classified all objects of our experience and
found that they can be grouped in ten classes or categories as he
called them. Think of any thing you please and you will find that
it is either an object in the strict sense,i.
e., some thing that exists independently of
anything else, and is the recipient of qualities, as for example a
man, a mountain, a chair. Or it is a quantity, like four, or cubit;
or a quality, like good, black, straight; or a relation like long,
double, master, slave; and so on throughout the ten categories.
This classification applies to words and thoughts as well as to
things. As an analysis of the first two it led him to more
important investigations of speech and thinking and arguing, and
resulted in his system of logic, which is the most momentous
discovery of a single mind recorded in history. As applied to
things it was followed by a more fundamental analysis of all real
objects in our world into the two elements of matter and form. He
argued as follows: nothing in the material world is permanent as an
individual thing. It changes its state from moment to moment and
finally ceases to be the thing it was. An acorn passes a number of
stages before it is ripe, and when it is placed in the ground it
again changes its form continually and then comes out as an oak. In
artificial products man in a measure imitates nature. He takes a
block of marble and makes a statue out of it. He forms a log into a
bed. So an ignorant man becomes civilized and learned. All these
examples illustrate change. What then is change? Is there any
similarity in all the cases cited? Can we express the process of
change in a formula which will apply to all instances of change? If
so, we shall have gained an insight into a process of nature which
is all-embracing and universal in our experience. Yes, we can, says
Aristotle. Change is a play of two elements in the changing thing.
When a thing affected with one quality changes into a thing with
the opposite quality, there must be the thing itself without either
of the opposite qualities, which is changing. Thus when a white
fence becomes black, the fence itself or that which undergoes the
change is something neither white nor black. It is the uncolored
matter which first had the form of white and now lost that and took
on the form of black. This is typical of all change. There is in
all change ultimately an unchanging substratum always the same,
which takes on one quality after another, or as Aristotle would
say, oneformafter another.
This substratum ismatter,
which in its purity is not affected with any quality or form, of
which it is the seat and residence. The forms on the other hand
come and go. Form does not change any more than matter. The
changing thing is the composite of matter and form, and change
means separation of the actual components of which one, the form,
disappears and makes room for its opposite. In a given case, say,
when a statue is made out of a block of marble, the matter is the
marble which lost its original form and assumed the form of a
statue. In this case the marble, if you take away both the previous
form and the present, will still have some form if it is still
marble, for marble must have certain qualities if it is to be
marble. In that case then the matter underlying the change in
question is not pure matter, it is already endowed with some
primitive form and is composite. But marble is ultimately reducible
to the four elements, fire, air, water, earth, which are simpler;
and theoretically, though not in practice, we can think away all
form, and we have left only that which takes forms but is itself
not any form. This is matter.Here the reader will ask, what kind of thing is it that has
no form whatsoever, is it not nothing at all? How can anything
exist without being a particular kind of thing, and the moment it
is that it is no longer pure matter. Aristotle's answer is that it
is true that pure matter is never found as an objective existence.
Point to any real object and it is composed of matter and form. And
yet it is not true that matter is a pure figment of the
imagination; it has an existence of its own, a potential existence.
And this leads us to another important conception in the
Aristotelian philosophy.Potentiality and actuality are correlative terms
corresponding to matter and form. Matter is the potential, form is
the actual. Whatever potentialities an object has it owes to its
matter. Its actual essence is due to its form. A thing free from
matter would be all that it is at once. It would not be liable to
change of any kind, whether progress or retrogression. All the
objects of our experience in the sublunar world are not of this
kind. They realize themselves gradually, and are never at any given
moment all that they are capable of becoming. This is due to their
matter. On the other hand, pure matter isactuallynothing. It is just capacity
for being anything, and the moment it is anything it is affected
with form.It is clear from this account that matter and form are the
bases of sublunar life and existence. No change, no motion without
matter and form. For motion is presupposed in all kinds of change.
If then all processes of life and death and change of all kinds
presuppose matter and form, the latter cannot themselves be liable
to genesis and decay and change, for that would mean that matter is
composed of matter and form, which is absurd. We thus see how
Aristotle is led to believe in the eternity of matter and motion,
in other words, the eternity of the world processes as we know
them.Motion is the realization of the potentialquapotential. This is an Aristotelian
definition and applies not merely to motion in the strict
sense,i. e., movement in
place, or motion of translation, but embraces all kinds of change.
Take as an example the warming of the air in a cold room. The
process of heating the room is a kind of motion; the air passes
from a state of being cold to a state of being warm. In its
original state as cold it is potentially warm,i.
e., it is actually not warm, but has the
capacity of becoming warm. At the end of the process it is actually
warm. Hence the process itself is the actualization of the
potential. That which is potential cannot make itself actual, for
to make itself actual it must be actual, which is contrary to the
hypothesis of its being potential. Potentiality and actuality are
contradictory states and cannot exist side by side in the same
thing at the same time in the same relation. There must therefore
be an external agent, itself actual, to actualize a potential.
Thus, in the above illustration, a cold room cannot make itself
warm. There must be some agency itself actually warm to cause the
air in the room to pass from cold to warm. This is true also of
motion in place, that a thing cannot move itself and must be moved
by something else. But that something else if itself in motion must
again be moved by something else. This process would lead us to
infinity. In order that a given thing shall be in motion, it would
be necessary for an infinite number of things to be in motion. This
is impossible, because there cannot be an infinite number of things
all here and now. It is a contradiction in terms. Hence if anything
is to move at all, there must be at the end of the finite chain a
link which while causing the next link to move, is itself unmoved.
Hence the motion existing in the world must be due ultimately to
the existence of an unmoved mover. If this being causes motion
without being itself in motion it does not act upon the bodies it
moves as one body acts upon another, for a body can move another
body only by being itself in motion. The manner in which the
unmoved mover moves the world is rather to be conceived on the
analogy of a loved object moving the loving object without itself
being moved. The person in love strives to approach and unite with
the object of his love without the latter necessarily being moved
in turn. This is the way in which Aristotle conceives of the cause
of the world's motion. There is no room here for the creation of
the world. Matter is eternal, motion is eternal, and there is an
eternal mind for the love of which all motions have been going on,
eternally.The unmoved mover, or God, is thus not body, for no body can
move another body without being itself in motion at the same time.
Besides, all body is finite,i. e., it has a finite magnitude. A body of infinite magnitude is
an impossibility, as the very essence of body is that it must be
bounded by surfaces. A finite body cannot have an infinite power,
as Aristotle proves, though we need not at present go into the
details of his proof. But a being which causes eternal motion in
the world must have an infinite power to do this. Hence another
proof that God is not corporeal.If God is not subject to motion, he is not subject to change
of any kind, for change involves motion. As matter is at the basis
of all change God is without matter, hence he is pure form,i. e., pure actuality without the
least potentiality. This means that he is what he is wholly all the
time; he has no capacities of being what he is at any time not. But
if he is not corporeal, the nature of his actuality or activity
must be Thought, pure thinking. And the content of his thought
cannot vary from topic to topic, for this would be change, which is
foreign to him. He must be eternally thinking the same thought; and
the highest thought it must be. But the highest thought is himself;
hence God is pure thought thinking himself, thought thinking
thought.The universe is in the shape of a sphere with the earth
stationary in the centre and the heavens revolving around it
exactly as appears to us. The element earth is the heaviest, hence
its place is below or, which is the same thing, in the centre. This
is its natural place; and its natural motion when away from the
centre is in a straight line toward the centre. Water is the next
heaviest element and its natural place is just above earth; hence
the water in the world occupies a position spherical in shape round
about the earth,i. e., it
forms a hollow sphere concentric with the earth. Next comes the
hollow sphere of air concentric with the other two. Its natural
motion when away from its place in the direction of the earth is in
a straight line toward the circumference of the world, not however
going beyond the sphere of the lightest element of all, namely,
fire. This has its natural place outside of the other elements,
also in the form of a hollow sphere concentric with the other
three. Its natural motion is in a straight line away from the
centre of the world and in the direction of the circumference. Our
earth, water, air and fire are not really the elements in their
purity. Each one has in it also mixtures of the other three
elements, the one which gives it the name
predominating.All minerals, plants and animals are formed from these four
elements by various combinations, all together forming the sublunar
world, or the world of generation and decay. No individual thing in
this world is permanent. All are subject to change and to ultimate
destruction, though the destruction of one thing is the genesis of
another. There is no annihilation.The causes of the various combinations of the elements and
the generation and destruction of mineral, plant and animal
resulting therefrom, are the motions of the heavenly bodies. These
are made of a purer substance than that of the four elements, the
ether. This is proven by the fact that the heavenly bodies are not
subject to change or destruction. They are all permanent and the
only change visible in them is change of place. But even their
motions are different from those of the four elements. The latter
are in a straight line toward the centre or away from it, whereas
the heavenly bodies move in a circle eternally around the centre.
This is another proof that they are not composed of the same
material as sublunar bodies.The heavens consist of transparent spheres, and the stars as
well as the planets are set in them and remain fixed. The motions
of the heavenly bodies are due to the revolutions of the spheres in
which they are set. These spheres are hollow and concentric. The
outermost sphere forming the outer limit of the universe (the world
is finite according to Aristotle) is studded with the fixed stars
and moves from east to west, making a complete revolution in
twenty-four hours. This motion is transmitted to the other spheres
which carry the planets. Since, however, we notice in the sun, moon
and the other planetary bodies motions in the contrary direction in
addition to that from east to west, there must be other spheres
having the motions apparent to us in the positions of the planets
borne by them. Thus a given body like the sun or moon is set in
more than one sphere, each of which has its own proper motion, and
the star's apparent motion is the resultant of the several motions
of its spheres. Without entering into further details concerning
these motions, it will be sufficient for us to know that Aristotle
counted in all fifty-five spheres. First came the sphere of the
fixed stars, then in order the spheres of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars,
Mercury, Venus, Sun, Moon.God himself sets the outer sphere in motion, or rather is the
eternal cause of its motion, as the object of its desire; and in
the same way each of the other motions has also its proper mover,
likewise a pure form or spirit, which moves its sphere in the same
incorporeal and unmoved manner as God.Thus we have in the supra-lunar world pure forms without
matter in God and the spirits of the spheres, whereas in the
sublunar world matter and form are inseparable. Neither is found
separately without the other.In man's soul, however, or rather in his intellect we find a
form which combines in itself the peculiarities of sublunar as well
as celestial forms. When in contact with the human body it partakes
of the nature of other sublunar forms exhibiting its activity
through matter and being inseparable from it. But it is not
destroyed with the death of the body. It continues as a separate
form after death.The soul, Aristotle defines as the first entelechy of the
body. The term entelechy which sounds outlandish to us may be
replaced by the word realization or actualization and is very close
in meaning to the Aristotelian use of the word form. The soul then,
according to Aristotle, is the realization or actualization or form
of the body. The body takes the place of matter in the human
composite. It has the composition and the structure which give it
the capacity for performing the functions of a human being, as in
any other composite, say an axe, the steel is the matter which has
the potentiality or capacity of being made into a cutting
instrument. Its cutting function is the form of the axe—we might
almost say the soul of the axe, if it were not for the circumstance
that it cannot do its own cutting; it must be wielded by someone
else.So far then the human soul forms an inseparable unit with the
body which it informs. As we do not think of the cutting function
of an axe existing apart from the axe, so neither can we conceive
of sensation, emotion or memory as existing without a body. In so
far as the soul is this it is a material form like the rest, and
ceases with the dissolution of the body. But the soul is more than
this. It is also a thinking faculty. As such it is not in its
essence dependent upon the body or any corporeal organ. It comes
from without, having existed before the body, and it will continue
to exist after the body is no more. That it is different from the
sensitive soul is proven by the fact that the latter is inherent in
the physical organ through which it acts, being the form of the
body, as we have seen. And hence when an unusually violent
stimulus, say a very bright light or a very loud sound, impinges
upon the sense organ, the faculty of sight or hearing is injured to
such an extent that it cannot thereafter perceive an ordinary sight
or sound. But in the rational faculty this is not the case. The
more intense the thought occupying the thinking soul, the more
capable it becomes of thinking lesser thoughts. To be sure, the
reason seems to weaken in old age, but this is due to the weakening
of the body with which the soul is connected during life; the soul
itself is just as active as ever.