PART II.
PART III.
PART IV.
DISCOURSE ON THE METHODOF RIGHTLY CONDUCTING THE REASON,AND SEEKING TRUTH IN THE SCIENCES
SELECTIONS FROM THE PRINCIPLES OF
PHILOSOPHY
LETTER OF THE AUTHOR
Sir,—The version of my principles which you have been at pains to
make, is so elegant and finished as to lead me to expect that the
work will be more generally read in French than in Latin, and
better understood. The only apprehension I entertain is lest the
title should deter some who have not been brought up to letters, or
with whom philosophy is in bad repute, because the kind they were
taught has proved unsatisfactory; and this makes me think that it
will be useful to add a preface to it for the purpose of showing
what the MATTER of the work is, what END I had in view in writing
it, and what UTILITY may be derived from it. But although it might
be my part to write a preface of this nature, seeing I ought to
know those particulars better than any other person, I cannot
nevertheless prevail upon myself to do anything more than merely to
give a summary of the chief points that fall, as I think, to be
discussed in it: and I leave it to your discretion to present to
the public such part of them as you shall judge proper.I should have desired, in the first place, to explain in it
what philosophy is, by commencing with the most common matters, as,
for example, that the word PHILOSOPHY signifies the study of
wisdom, and that by wisdom is to be understood not merely prudence
in the management of affairs, but a perfect knowledge of all that
man can know, as well for the conduct of his life as for the
preservation of his health and the discovery of all the arts, and
that knowledge to subserve these ends must necessarily be deduced
from first causes; so that in order to study the acquisition of it
(which is properly called philosophizing), we must commence with
the investigation of those first causes which are called
PRINCIPLES. Now these principles must possess TWO CONDITIONS: in
the first place, they must be so clear and evident that the human
mind, when it attentively considers them, cannot doubt of their
truth; in the second place, the knowledge of other things must be
so dependent on them as that though the principles themselves may
indeed be known apart from what depends on them, the latter cannot
nevertheless be known apart from the former. It will accordingly be
necessary thereafter to endeavour so to deduce from those
principles the knowledge of the things that depend on them, as that
there may be nothing in the whole series of deductions which is not
perfectly manifest. God is in truth the only being who is
absolutely wise, that is, who possesses a perfect knowledge of all
things; but we may say that men are more or less wise as their
knowledge of the most important truths is greater or less. And I am
confident that there is nothing, in what I have now said, in which
all the learned do not concur.I should, in the next place, have proposed to consider the
utility of philosophy, and at the same time have shown that, since
it embraces all that the human mind can know, we ought to believe
that it is by it we are distinguished from savages and barbarians,
and that the civilisation and culture of a nation is regulated by
the degree in which true philosophy nourishes in it, and,
accordingly, that to contain true philosophers is the highest
privilege a state can enjoy. Besides this, I should have shown
that, as regards individuals, it is not only useful for each man to
have intercourse with those who apply themselves to this study, but
that it is incomparably better he should himself direct his
attention to it; just as it is doubtless to be preferred that a man
should make use of his own eyes to direct his steps, and enjoy by
means of the same the beauties of colour and light, than that he
should blindly follow the guidance of another; though the latter
course is certainly better than to have the eyes closed with no
guide except one's self. But to live without philosophizing is in
truth the same as keeping the eyes closed without attempting to
open them; and the pleasure of seeing all that sight discloses is
not to be compared with the satisfaction afforded by the
discoveries of philosophy. And, finally, this study is more
imperatively requisite for the regulation of our manners, and for
conducting us through life, than is the use of our eyes for
directing our steps. The brutes, which have only their bodies to
conserve, are continually occupied in seeking sources of
nourishment; but men, of whom the chief part is the mind, ought to
make the search after wisdom their principal care, for wisdom is
the true nourishment of the mind; and I feel assured, moreover,
that there are very many who would not fail in the search, if they
would but hope for success in it, and knew the degree of their
capabilities for it. There is no mind, how ignoble soever it be,
which remains so firmly bound up in the objects of the senses, as
not sometime or other to turn itself away from them in the
aspiration after some higher good, although not knowing frequently
wherein that good consists. The greatest favourites of
fortune—those who have health, honours, and riches in abundance—
are not more exempt from aspirations of this nature than others;
nay, I am persuaded that these are the persons who sigh the most
deeply after another good greater and more perfect still than any
they already possess. But the supreme good, considered by natural
reason without the light of faith, is nothing more than the
knowledge of truth through its first causes, in other words, the
wisdom of which philosophy is the study. And, as all these
particulars are indisputably true, all that is required to gain
assent to their truth is that they be well stated.But as one is restrained from assenting to these doctrines by
experience, which shows that they who make pretensions to
philosophy are often less wise and reasonable than others who never
applied themselves to the study, I should have here shortly
explained wherein consists all the science we now possess, and what
are the degrees of wisdom at which we have arrived. The first
degree contains only notions so clear of themselves that they can
be acquired without meditation; the second comprehends all that the
experience of the senses dictates; the third, that which the
conversation of other men teaches us; to which may be added as the
fourth, the reading, not of all books, but especially of such as
have been written by persons capable of conveying proper
instruction, for it is a species of conversation we hold with their
authors. And it seems to me that all the wisdom we in ordinary
possess is acquired only in these four ways; for I do not class
divine revelation among them, because it does not conduct us by
degrees, but elevates us at once to an infallible faith.There have been, indeed, in all ages great minds who
endeavoured to find a fifth road to wisdom, incomparably more sure
and elevated than the other four. The path they essayed was the
search of first causes and true principles, from which might be
deduced the reasons of all that can be known by man; and it is to
them the appellation of philosophers has been more especially
accorded. I am not aware that there is any one of them up to the
present who has succeeded in this enterprise. The first and chief
whose writings we possess are Plato and Aristotle, between whom
there was no difference, except that the former, following in the
footsteps of his master, Socrates, ingenuously confessed that he
had never yet been able to find anything certain, and that he was
contented to write what seemed to him probable, imagining, for this
end, certain principles by which he endeavoured to account for the
other things. Aristotle, on the other hand, characterised by less
candour, although for twenty years the disciple of Plato, and with
no principles beyond those of his master, completely reversed his
mode of putting them, and proposed as true and certain what it is
probable he himself never esteemed as such. But these two men had
acquired much judgment and wisdom by the four preceding means,
qualities which raised their authority very high, so much so that
those who succeeded them were willing rather to acquiesce in their
opinions, than to seek better for themselves. The chief question
among their disciples, however, was as to whether we ought to doubt
of all things or hold some as certain,—a dispute which led them on
both sides into extravagant errors; for a part of those who were
for doubt, extended it even to the actions of life, to the neglect
of the most ordinary rules required for its conduct; those, on the
other hand, who maintained the doctrine of certainty, supposing
that it must depend upon the senses, trusted entirely to them. To
such an extent was this carried by Epicurus, that it is said he
ventured to affirm, contrary to all the reasonings of the
astronomers, that the sun is no larger than it appears.It is a fault we may remark in most disputes, that, as truth
is the mean between the two opinions that are upheld, each
disputant departs from it in proportion to the degree in which he
possesses the spirit of contradiction. But the error of those who
leant too much to the side of doubt, was not followed for any
length of time, and that of the opposite party has been to some
extent corrected by the doctrine that the senses are deceitful in
many instances. Nevertheless, I do not know that this error was
wholly removed by showing that certitude is not in the senses, but
in the understanding alone when it has clear perceptions; and that
while we only possess the knowledge which is acquired in the first
four grades of wisdom, we ought not to doubt of the things that
appear to be true in what regards the conduct of life, nor esteem
them as so certain that we cannot change our opinions regarding
them, even though constrained by the evidence of reason.From ignorance of this truth, or, if there was any one to
whom it was known, from neglect of it, the majority of those who in
these later ages aspired to be philosophers, blindly followed
Aristotle, so that they frequently corrupted the sense of his
writings, and attributed to him various opinions which he would not
recognise as his own were he now to return to the world; and those
who did not follow him, among whom are to be found many of the
greatest minds, did yet not escape being imbued with his opinions
in their youth, as these form the staple of instruction in the
schools; and thus their minds were so preoccupied that they could
not rise to the knowledge of true principles. And though I hold all
the philosophers in esteem, and am unwilling to incur odium by my
censure, I can adduce a proof of my assertion, which I do not think
any of them will gainsay, which is, that they all laid down as a
principle what they did not perfectly know. For example, I know
none of them who did not suppose that there was gravity in
terrestrial bodies; but although experience shows us very clearly
that bodies we call heavy descend towards the center of the earth,
we do not, therefore, know the nature of gravity, that is, the
cause or principle in virtue of which bodies descend, and we must
derive our knowledge of it from some other source. The same may be
said of a vacuum and atoms, of heat and cold, of dryness and
humidity, and of salt, sulphur, and mercury, and the other things
of this sort which some have adopted as their principles. But no
conclusion deduced from a principle which is not clear can be
evident, even although the deduction be formally valid; and hence
it follows that no reasonings based on such principles could lead
them to the certain knowledge of any one thing, nor consequently
advance them one step in the search after wisdom. And if they did
discover any truth, this was due to one or other of the four means
above mentioned. Notwithstanding this, I am in no degree desirous
to lessen the honour which each of them can justly claim; I am only
constrained to say, for the consolation of those who have not given
their attention to study, that just as in travelling, when we turn
our back upon the place to which we were going, we recede the
farther from it in proportion as we proceed in the new direction
for a greater length of time and with greater speed, so that,
though we may be afterwards brought back to the right way, we
cannot nevertheless arrive at the destined place as soon as if we
had not moved backwards at all; so in philosophy, when we make use
of false principles, we depart the farther from the knowledge of
truth and wisdom exactly in proportion to the care with which we
cultivate them, and apply ourselves to the deduction of diverse
consequences from them, thinking that we are philosophizing well,
while we are only departing the farther from the truth; from which
it must be inferred that they who have learned the least of all
that has been hitherto distinguished by the name of philosophy are
the most fitted for the apprehension of truth.After making those matters clear, I should, in the next
place, have desired to set forth the grounds for holding that the
true principles by which we may reach that highest degree of wisdom
wherein consists the sovereign good of human life, are those I have
proposed in this work; and two considerations alone are sufficient
to establish this—the first of which is, that these principles are
very clear, and the second, that we can deduce all other truths
from them; for it is only these two conditions that are required in
true principles. But I easily prove that they are very clear;
firstly, by a reference to the manner in which I found them,
namely, by rejecting all propositions that were in the least
doubtful, for it is certain that such as could not be rejected by
this test when they were attentively considered, are the most
evident and clear which the human mind can know. Thus by
considering that he who strives to doubt of all is unable
nevertheless to doubt that he is while he doubts, and that what
reasons thus, in not being able to doubt of itself and doubting
nevertheless of everything else, is not that which we call our
body, but what we name our mind or thought, I have taken the
existence of this thought for the first principle, from which I
very clearly deduced the following truths, namely, that there is a
God who is the author of all that is in the world, and who, being
the source of all truth, cannot have created our understanding of
such a nature as to be deceived in the judgments it forms of the
things of which it possesses a very clear and distinct perception.
Those are all the principles of which I avail myself touching
immaterial or metaphysical objects, from which I most clearly
deduce these other principles of physical or corporeal things,
namely, that there are bodies extended in length, breadth, and
depth, which are of diverse figures and are moved in a variety of
ways. Such are in sum the principles from which I deduce all other
truths. The second circumstance that proves the clearness of these
principles is, that they have been known in all ages, and even
received as true and indubitable by all men, with the exception
only of the existence of God, which has been doubted by some,
because they attributed too much to the perceptions of the senses,
and God can neither be seen nor touched.But, though all the truths which I class among my principles
were known at all times, and by all men, nevertheless, there has
been no one up to the present, who, so far as I know, has adopted
them as principles of philosophy: in other words, as such that we
can deduce from them the knowledge of whatever else is in the
world. It accordingly now remains for me to prove that they are
such; and it appears to me that I cannot better establish this than
by the test of experience: in other words, by inviting readers to
peruse the following work. For, though I have not treated in it of
all matters- -that being impossible—I think I have so explained all
of which I had occasion to treat, that they who read it attentively
will have ground for the persuasion that it is unnecessary to seek
for any other principles than those I have given, in order to
arrive at the most exalted knowledge of which the mind of man is
capable; especially if, after the perusal of my writings, they take
the trouble to consider how many diverse questions are therein
discussed and explained, and, referring to the writings of others,
they see how little probability there is in the reasons that are
adduced in explanation of the same questions by principles
different from mine. And that they may the more easily undertake
this, I might have said that those imbued with my doctrines have
much less difficulty in comprehending the writings of others, and
estimating their true value, than those who have not been so
imbued; and this is precisely the opposite of what I before said of
such as commenced with the ancient philosophy, namely, that the
more they have studied it the less fit are they for rightly
apprehending the truth.I should also have added a word of advice regarding the
manner of reading this work, which is, that I should wish the
reader at first to go over the whole of it, as he would a romance,
without greatly straining his attention, or tarrying at the
difficulties he may perhaps meet with in it, with the view simply
of knowing in general the matters of which I treat; and that
afterwards, if they seem to him to merit a more careful
examination, and he feel a desire to know their causes, he may read
it a second time, in order to observe the connection of my
reasonings; but that he must not then give it up in despair,
although he may not everywhere sufficiently discover the connection
of the proof, or understand all the reasonings—it being only
necessary to mark with a pen the places where the difficulties
occur, and continue to read without interruption to the end; then,
if he does not grudge to take up the book a third time, I am
confident he will find in a fresh perusal the solution of most of
the difficulties he will have marked before; and that, if any still
remain, their solution will in the end be found in another
reading.I have observed, on examining the natural constitutions of
different minds, that there are hardly any so dull or slow of
understanding as to be incapable of apprehending good opinions, or
even of acquiring all the highest sciences, if they be but
conducted along the right road. And this can also be proved by
reason; for, as the principles are clear, and as nothing ought to
be deduced from them, unless most manifest inferences, no one is so
devoid of intelligence as to be unable to comprehend the
conclusions that flow from them. But, besides the entanglement of
prejudices, from which no one is entirely exempt, although it is
they who have been the most ardent students of the false sciences
that receive the greatest detriment from them, it happens very
generally that people of ordinary capacity neglect to study from a
conviction that they want ability, and that others, who are more
ardent, press on too rapidly: whence it comes to pass that they
frequently admit principles far from evident, and draw doubtful
inferences from them. For this reason, I should wish to assure
those who are too distrustful of their own ability that there is
nothing in my writings which they may not entirely understand, if
they only take the trouble to examine them; and I should wish, at
the same time, to warn those of an opposite tendency that even the
most superior minds will have need of much time and attention to
remark all I designed to embrace therein.After this, that I might lead men to understand the real
design I had in publishing them, I should have wished here to
explain the order which it seems to me one ought to follow with the
view of instructing himself. In the first place, a man who has
merely the vulgar and imperfect knowledge which can be acquired by
the four means above explained, ought, before all else, to
endeavour to form for himself a code of morals, sufficient to
regulate the actions of his life, as well for the reason that this
does not admit of delay as because it ought to be our first care to
live well. In the next place, he ought to study Logic, not that of
the schools, for it is only, properly speaking, a dialectic which
teaches the mode of expounding to others what we already know, or
even of speaking much, without judgment, of what we do not know, by
which means it corrupts rather than increases good sense—but the
logic which teaches the right conduct of the reason with the view
of discovering the truths of which we are ignorant; and, because it
greatly depends on usage, it is desirable he should exercise
himself for a length of time in practising its rules on easy and
simple questions, as those of the mathematics. Then, when he has
acquired some skill in discovering the truth in these questions, he
should commence to apply himself in earnest to true philosophy, of
which the first part is Metaphysics, containing the principles of
knowledge, among which is the explication of the principal
attributes of God, of the immateriality of the soul, and of all the
clear and simple notions that are in us; the second is Physics, in
which, after finding the true principles of material things, we
examine, in general, how the whole universe has been framed; in the
next place, we consider, in particular, the nature of the earth,
and of all the bodies that are most generally found upon it, as
air, water, fire, the loadstone and other minerals. In the next
place it is necessary also to examine singly the nature of plants,
of animals, and above all of man, in order that we may thereafter
be able to discover the other sciences that are useful to us. Thus,
all Philosophy is like a tree, of which Metaphysics is the root,
Physics the trunk, and all the other sciences the branches that
grow out of this trunk, which are reduced to three principal,
namely, Medicine, Mechanics, and Ethics. By the science of Morals,
I understand the highest and most perfect which, presupposing an
entire knowledge of the other sciences, is the last degree of
wisdom.But as it is not from the roots or the trunks of trees that
we gather the fruit, but only from the extremities of their
branches, so the principal utility of philosophy depends on the
separate uses of its parts, which we can only learn last of all.
But, though I am ignorant of almost all these, the zeal I have
always felt in endeavouring to be of service to the public, was the
reason why I published, some ten or twelve years ago, certain
Essays on the doctrines I thought I had acquired. The first part of
these Essays was a "Discourse on the Method of rightly conducting
the Reason, and seeking Truth in the Sciences," in which I gave a
summary of the principal rules of logic, and also of an imperfect
ethic, which a person may follow provisionally so long as he does
not know any better. The other parts were three treatises: the
first of Dioptrics, the second of Meteors, and the third of
Geometry. In the Dioptrics, I designed to show that we might
proceed far enough in philosophy as to arrive, by its means, at the
knowledge of the arts that are useful to life, because the
invention of the telescope, of which I there gave an explanation,
is one of the most difficult that has ever been made. In the
treatise of Meteors, I desired to exhibit the difference that
subsists between the philosophy I cultivate and that taught in the
schools, in which the same matters are usually discussed. In fine,
in the Geometry, I professed to demonstrate that I had discovered
many things that were before unknown, and thus afford ground for
believing that we may still discover many others, with the view of
thus stimulating all to the investigation of truth. Since that
period, anticipating the difficulty which many would experience in
apprehending the foundations of the Metaphysics, I endeavoured to
explain the chief points of them in a book of Meditations, which is
not in itself large, but the size of which has been increased, and
the matter greatly illustrated, by the Objections which several
very learned persons sent to me on occasion of it, and by the
Replies which I made to them. At length, after it appeared to me
that those preceding treatises had sufficiently prepared the minds
of my readers for the Principles of Philosophy, I also published
it; and I have divided this work into four parts, the first of
which contains the principles of human knowledge, and which may be
called the First Philosophy, or Metaphysics. That this part,
accordingly, may be properly understood, it will be necessary to
read beforehand the book of Meditations I wrote on the same
subject. The other three parts contain all that is most general in
Physics, namely, the explication of the first laws or principles of
nature, and the way in which the heavens, the fixed stars, the
planets, comets, and generally the whole universe, were composed;
in the next place, the explication, in particular, of the nature of
this earth, the air, water, fire, the magnet, which are the bodies
we most commonly find everywhere around it, and of all the
qualities we observe in these bodies, as light, heat, gravity, and
the like. In this way, it seems to me, I have commenced the orderly
explanation of the whole of philosophy, without omitting any of the
matters that ought to precede the last which I discussed. But to
bring this undertaking to its conclusion, I ought hereafter to
explain, in the same manner, the nature of the other more
particular bodies that are on the earth, namely, minerals, plants,
animals, and especially man; finally, to treat thereafter with
accuracy of Medicine, Ethics, and Mechanics. I should require to do
this in order to give to the world a complete body of philosophy;
and I do not yet feel myself so old,- -I do not so much distrust my
strength, nor do I find myself so far removed from the knowledge of
what remains, as that I should not dare to undertake to complete
this design, provided I were in a position to make all the
experiments which I should require for the basis and verification
of my reasonings. But seeing that would demand a great expenditure,
to which the resources of a private individual like myself would
not be adequate, unless aided by the public, and as I have no
ground to expect this aid, I believe that I ought for the future to
content myself with studying for my own instruction, and posterity
will excuse me if I fail hereafter to labour for them.Meanwhile, that it may be seen wherein I think I have already
promoted the general good, I will here mention the fruits that may
be gathered from my Principles. The first is the satisfaction which
the mind will experience on finding in the work many truths before
unknown; for although frequently truth does not so greatly affect
our imagination as falsity and fiction, because it seems less
wonderful and is more simple, yet the gratification it affords is
always more durable and solid. The second fruit is, that in
studying these principles we will become accustomed by degrees to
judge better of all the things we come in contact with, and thus be
made wiser, in which respect the effect will be quite the opposite
of the common philosophy, for we may easily remark in those we call
pedants that it renders them less capable of rightly exercising
their reason than they would have been if they had never known it.
The third is, that the truths which they contain, being highly
clear and certain, will take away all ground of dispute, and thus
dispose men's minds to gentleness and concord; whereas the contrary
is the effect of the controversies of the schools, which, as they
insensibly render those who are exercised in them more wrangling
and opinionative, are perhaps the prime cause of the heresies and
dissensions that now harass the world. The last and chief fruit of
these Principles is, that one will be able, by cultivating them, to
discover many truths I myself have not unfolded, and thus passing
by degrees from one to another, to acquire in course of time a
perfect knowledge of the whole of philosophy, and to rise to the
highest degree of wisdom. For just as all the arts, though in their
beginnings they are rude and imperfect, are yet gradually perfected
by practice, from their containing at first something true, and
whose effect experience evinces; so in philosophy, when we have
true principles, we cannot fail by following them to meet sometimes
with other truths; and we could not better prove the falsity of
those of Aristotle, than by saying that men made no progress in
knowledge by their means during the many ages they prosecuted
them.I well know that there are some men so precipitate and
accustomed to use so little circumspection in what they do, that,
even with the most solid foundations, they could not rear a firm
superstructure; and as it is usually those who are the readiest to
make books, they would in a short time mar all that I have done,
and introduce uncertainty and doubt into my manner of
philosophizing, from which I have carefully endeavoured to banish
them, if people were to receive their writings as mine, or as
representing my opinions. I had, not long ago, some experience of
this in one of those who were believed desirous of following me the
most closely, [Footnote: Regius; see La Vie de M. Descartes,
reduite en abrege (Baillet). Liv. vii., chap. vii.—T.] and one too
of whom I had somewhere said that I had such confidence in his
genius as to believe that he adhered to no opinions which I should
not be ready to avow as mine; for he last year published a book
entitled "Fundamental Physics," in which, although he seems to have
written nothing on the subject of Physics and Medicine which he did
not take from my writings, as well from those I have published as
from another still imperfect on the nature of animals, which fell
into his hands; nevertheless, because he has copied them badly, and
changed the order, and denied certain metaphysical truths upon
which all Physics ought to be based, I am obliged wholly to disavow
his work, and here to request readers not to attribute to me a
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