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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text @@ -0,0 +1,1959 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ethics [Part I], by Benedict de Spinoza + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Ethics [Part I] + +Author: Benedict de Spinoza + +Translator: R. H. M. Elwes + +Posting Date: April 15, 2013 [EBook #919] +Release Date: May, 1997 +First Posted: May 28, 1997 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS [PART I] *** + + + + +Produced by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer. + + + + + + + + + +Benedict de Spinoza, THE ETHICS +(Ethica Ordine Geometrico Demonstrata) + +Translated by R. H. M. Elwes + + + + +PART I: CONCERNING GOD. + + +DEFINITIONS. + +I. By that which is 'self-caused' I mean that of which the +essence involves existence, or that of which the nature is only +conceivable as existent. + +II. A thing is called 'finite after its kind' when it can be +limited by another thing of the same nature; for instance, a body +is called finite because we always conceive another greater body. +So, also, a thought is limited by another thought, but a body is +not limited by thought, nor a thought by body. + +III. By 'substance' I mean that which is in itself, and is +conceived through itself: in other words, that of which a +conception can be formed independently of any other conception. + +IV. By 'attribute' I mean that which the intellect perceives as +constituting the essence of substance. + +V. By 'mode' I mean the modifications ("affectiones") of +substance, or that which exists in, and is conceived through, +something other than itself. + +VI. By 'God' I mean a being absolutely infinite--that is, a +substance consisting in infinite attributes, of which each +expresses eternal and infinite essentiality. + +>>>>>Explanation--I say absolutely infinite, not infinite after +its kind: for, of a thing infinite only after its kind, infinite +attributes may be denied; but that which is absolutely infinite, +contains in its essence whatever expresses reality, and involves +no negation. + +VII. That thing is called 'free,' which exists solely by the +necessity of its own nature, and of which the action is +determined by itself alone. On the other hand, that thing is +necessary, or rather constrained, which is determined by +something external to itself to a fixed and definite method of +existence or action. + +VIII. By 'eternity' I mean existence itself, in so far as it is +conceived necessarily to follow solely from the definition of +that which is eternal. + +>>>>>Explanation--Existence of this kind is conceived as an +eternal truth, like the essence of a thing and, therefore, +cannot be explained by means of continuance or time, though +continuance may be conceived without a beginning or end. + +AXIOMS. I. Everything which exists, exists either in itself or +in something else. + +II. That which cannot be conceived through anything else must be +conceived through itself. + +III. From a given definite cause an effect necessarily follows; +and, on the other hand, if no definite cause be granted, it is +impossible that an effect can follow. + +IV. The knowledge of an effect depends on and involves the +knowledge of a cause. + +V. Things which have nothing in common cannot be understood, the +one by means of the other; the conception of one does not involve +the conception of the other. + +VI. A true idea must correspond with its ideate or object. + +VII. If a thing can be conceived as non-existing, its essence +does not involve existence. + +PROPOSITIONS. I. Substance is by nature prior to its +modifications. + +>>>>>Proof--This is clear from Deff. iii. and v. + +II. Two substances, whose attributes are different, have +nothing in common. + +>>>>>Proof--Also evident from Def. iii. For each must exist in +itself, and be conceived through itself; in other words, the +conception of one does not imply the conception of the other. + +III. Things which have nothing in common cannot be one the cause +of the other. + +>>>>>Proof--If they have nothing in common, it follows that one +cannot be apprehended by means of the other (Ax. v.), and, +therefore, one cannot be the cause of the other (Ax. iv.). +Q.E.D. + +IV. Two or more distinct things are distinguished one from the +other, either by the difference of the attributes of the +substances, or by the difference of their modifications. + +>>>>>Proof--Everything which exists, exists either in itself or +in something else (Ax. i.),-- that is (by Deff. iii. and v.), +nothing is granted in addition to the understanding, except +substance and its modifications. Nothing is, therefore, given +besides the understanding, by which several things may be +distinguished one from the other, except the substances, or, in +other words (see Ax. iv.), their attributes and modifications. +Q.E.D. + +V. There cannot exist in the universe two or more substances +having the same nature or attribute. + +>>>>>Proof--If several distinct substances be granted, they must +be distinguished one from the other, either by the difference of +their attributes, or by the difference of their modifications +(Prop. iv.). If only by the difference of their attributes, it +will be granted that there cannot be more than one with an +identical attribute. If by the difference of their +modifications--as substance is naturally prior to its +modifications (Prop. i.)--it follows that setting the +modifications aside, and considering substance in itself, that is +truly, (Deff. iii and vi.), there cannot be conceived one +substance different from another--that is (by Prop. iv.), there +cannot be granted several substances, but one substance only. +Q.E.D. + +VI. One substance cannot be produced by another substance. + +>>>>>Proof--It is impossible that there should be in the universe +two substances with an identical attribute, i.e. which have +anything common to them both (Prop ii.), and, therefore (Prop. +iii.), one cannot be the cause of the other, neither can one be +produced by the other. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<VI. Corollary--Hence it follows that a substance cannot be +produced by anything external to itself. For in the universe +nothing is granted, save substances and their modifications (as +appears from Ax. i. and Deff. iii. and v.). Now (by the last +Prop.) substance cannot be produced by another substance, +therefore it cannot be produced by anything external to itself. +Q.E.D. This is shown still more readily by the absurdity of the +contradictory. For, if substance be produced by an external +cause, the knowledge of it would depend on the knowledge of its +cause (Ax. iv.), and (by Deff. iii.) it would itself not be +substance. + +VII. Existence belongs to the nature of substances. + +>>>>>Proof--Substance cannot be produced by anything external +(Cor., Prop vi.), it must, therefore, be its own cause--that is, +its essence necessarily involves existence, or existence belongs +to its nature. + +VIII. Every substance is necessarily infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--There can only be one substance with an identical +attribute, and existence follows from its nature (Prop. vii.); +its nature, therefore, involves existence, either as finite or +infinite. It does not exist as finite, for (by Deff. ii.) it +would then be limited by something else of the same kind, which +would also necessarily exist (Prop. vii.); and there would be two +substances with an identical attribute, which is absurd (Prop. +v.). It therefore exists as infinite. Q.E.D. + +*****Note I.--As finite existence involves a partial negation, +and infinite existence is the absolute affirmation of the given +nature, it follows (solely from Prop. vii.) that every substance +is necessarily infinite. + +*****Note II.--No doubt it will be difficult for those who think +about things loosely, and have not been accustomed to know them +by their primary causes, to comprehend the demonstration of +Prop. vii.: for such persons make no distinction between the +modifications of substances and the substances themselves, and +are ignorant of the manner in which things are produced; hence +they may attribute to substances the beginning which they observe +in natural objects. Those who are ignorant of true causes make +complete confusion--think that trees might talk just as well as +men--that men might be formed from stones as well as from seed; +and imagine that any form might be changed into any other. So, +also, those who confuse the two natures, divine and human, +readily attribute human passions to the deity, especially so +long as they do not know how passions originate in the mind. +But, if people would consider the nature of substance, they would +have no doubt about the truth of Prop. vii. In fact, this +proposition would be a universal axiom, and accounted a truism. +For, by substance, would be understood that which is in itself, +and is conceived through itself--that is, something of which the +conception requires not the conception of anything else; whereas +modifications exist in something external to themselves, and a +conception of them is formed by means of a conception of the +things in which they exist. Therefore, we may have true ideas +of non-existent modifications; for, although they may have no +actual existence apart from the conceiving intellect, yet their +essence is so involved in something external to themselves that +they may through it be conceived. Whereas the only truth +substances can have, external to the intellect, must consist in +their existence, because they are conceived through themselves. +Therefore, for a person to say that he has a clear and +distinct--that is, a true--idea of a substance, but that he is +not sure whether such substance exists, would be the same as if +he said that he had a true idea, but was not sure whether or no +it was false (a little consideration will make this plain); or if +anyone affirmed that substance is created, it would be the same +as saying that a false idea was true--in short, the height of +absurdity. It must, then, necessarily be admitted that the +existence of substance as its essence is an eternal truth. And +we can hence conclude by another process of reasoning--that there +is but one such substance. I think that this may profitably be +done at once; and, in order to proceed regularly with the +demonstration, we must premise:-- + ++++++1. The true definition of a thing neither involves nor +expresses anything beyond the nature of the thing defined. From +this it follows that-- + ++++++2. No definition implies or expresses a certain number of +individuals, inasmuch as it expresses nothing beyond the nature +of the thing defined. For instance, the definition of a triangle +expresses nothing beyond the actual nature of a triangle: it +does not imply any fixed number of triangles. + ++++++3. There is necessarily for each individual existent thing +a cause why it should exist. + ++++++4. This cause of existence must either be contained in the +nature and definition of the thing defined, or must be postulated +apart from such definition. + +It therefore follows that, if a given number of individual things +exist in nature, there must be some cause for the existence of +exactly that number, neither more nor less. For example, if +twenty men exist in the universe (for simplicity's sake, I will +suppose them existing simultaneously, and to have had no +predecessors), and we want to account for the existence of these +twenty men, it will not be enough to show the cause of human +existence in general; we must also show why there are exactly +twenty men, neither more nor less: for a cause must be assigned +for the existence of each individual. Now this cause cannot be +contained in the actual nature of man, for the true definition of +man does not involve any consideration of the number twenty. +Consequently, the cause for the existence of these twenty men, +and, consequently, of each of them, must necessarily be sought +externally to each individual. Hence we may lay down the absolute +rule, that everything which may consist of several individuals +must have an external cause. And, as it has been shown already +that existence appertains to the nature of substance, existence +must necessarily be included in its definition; and from its +definition alone existence must be deducible. But from its +definition (as we have shown, Notes ii., iii.), we cannot infer +the existence of several substances; therefore it follows that +there is only one substance of the same nature. Q.E.D. + +IX. The more reality or being a thing has, the greater the +number of its attributes (Def. iv.). + +X. Each particular attribute of the one substance must be +conceived through itself. + +>>>>>Proof--An attribute is that which the intellect perceives of +substance, as constituting its essence (Def. iv.), and, +therefore, must be conceived through itself (Def. iii.). Q.E.D. + +*****Note--It is thus evident that, though two attributes are, in +fact, conceived as distinct--that is, one without the help of the +other--yet we cannot, therefore, conclude that they constitute +two entities, or two different substances. For it is the nature +of substance that each of its attributes is conceived through +itself, inasmuch as all the attributes it has have always existed +simultaneously in it, and none could be produced by any other; +but each expresses the reality or being of substance. It is, +then, far from an absurdity to ascribe several attributes to one +substance: for nothing in nature is more clear than that each +and every entity must be conceived under some attribute, and that +its reality or being is in proportion to the number of its +attributes expressing necessity or eternity and infinity. +Consequently it is abundantly clear, that an absolutely infinite +being must necessarily be defined as consisting in infinite +attributes, each of which expresses a certain eternal and +infinite essence. + +If anyone now ask, by what sign shall he be able to distinguish +different substances, let him read the following propositions, +which show that there is but one substance in the universe, and +that it is absolutely infinite, wherefore such a sign would be +sought in vain. + +XI. God, or substance, consisting of infinite attributes, of +which each expresses eternal and infinite essentiality, +necessarily exists. + +>>>>>Proof--If this be denied, conceive, if possible, that God +does not exist: then his essence does not involve existence. +But this (Prop. vii.) is absurd. Therefore God necessarily +exists. + +>>>>>Another proof--Of everything whatsoever a cause or reason +must be assigned, either for its existence, or for its +non-existence--e.g. if a triangle exist, a reason or cause must +be granted for its existence; if, on the contrary, it does not +exist, a cause must also be granted, which prevents it from +existing, or annuls its existence. This reason or cause must +either be contained in the nature of the thing in question, or be +external to it. For instance, the reason for the non-existence +of a square circle is indicated in its nature, namely, because it +would involve a contradiction. On the other hand, the existence +of substance follows also solely from its nature, inasmuch as its +nature involves existence. (See Prop. vii.) + + But the reason for the existence of a triangle or a circle does +not follow from the nature of those figures, but from the order +of universal nature in extension. From the latter it must +follow, either that a triangle necessarily exists, or that it is +impossible that it should exist. So much is self-evident. It +follows therefrom that a thing necessarily exists, if no cause or +reason be granted which prevents its existence. + +If, then, no cause or reason can be given, which prevents the +existence of God, or which destroys his existence, we must +certainly conclude that he necessarily does exist. If such a +reason or cause should be given, it must either be drawn from the +very nature of God, or be external to him--that is, drawn from +another substance of another nature. For if it were of the same +nature, God, by that very fact, would be admitted to exist. But +substance of another nature could have nothing in common with God +(by Prop. ii.), and therefore would be unable either to cause or +to destroy his existence. + +As, then, a reason or cause which would annul the divine +existence cannot be drawn from anything external to the divine +nature, such cause must perforce, if God does not exist, be drawn +from God's own nature, which would involve a contradiction. To +make such an affirmation about a being absolutely infinite and +supremely perfect is absurd; therefore, neither in the nature of +God, nor externally to his nature, can a cause or reason be +assigned which would annul his existence. Therefore, God +necessarily exists. Q.E.D. + +>>>>>Another proof--The potentiality of non-existence is a +negation of power, and contrariwise the potentiality of existence +is a power, as is obvious. If, then, that which necessarily +exists is nothing but finite beings, such finite beings are more +powerful than a being absolutely infinite, which is obviously +absurd; therefore, either nothing exists, or else a being +absolutely infinite necessarily exists also. Now we exist either +in ourselves, or in something else which necessarily exists (see +Ax. i. and Prop. vii.). Therefore a being absolutely +infinite--in other words, God (Def. vi.)--necessarily exists. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--In this last proof, I have purposely shown God's +existence 'a posteriori,' so that the proof might be more easily +followed, not because, from the same premises, God's existence +does not follow 'a priori.' For, as the potentiality of +existence is a power, it follows that, in proportion as reality +increases in the nature of a thing, so also will it increase its +strength for existence. Therefore a being absolutely infinite, +such as God, has from himself an absolutely infinite power of +existence, and hence he does absolutely exist. Perhaps there will +be many who will be unable to see the force of this proof, +inasmuch as they are accustomed only to consider those things +which flow from external causes. Of such things, they see that +those which quickly come to pass--that is, quickly come into +existence--quickly also disappear; whereas they regard as more +difficult of accomplishment --that is, not so easily brought into +existence--those things which they conceive as more complicated. + +However, to do away with this misconception, I need not here show +the measure of truth in the proverb, "What comes quickly, goes +quickly," nor discuss whether, from the point of view of +universal nature, all things are equally easy, or otherwise: I +need only remark that I am not here speaking of things, which +come to pass through causes external to themselves, but only of +substances which (by Prop. vi.) cannot be produced by any +external cause. Things which are produced by external causes, +whether they consist of many parts or few, owe whatsoever +perfection or reality they possess solely to the efficacy of +their external cause; wherefore the existence of substance must +arise solely from its own nature, which is nothing else but its +essence. Thus, the perfection of a thing does not annul its +existence, but, on the contrary, asserts it. Imperfection, on +the other hand, does annul it; therefore we cannot be more +certain of the existence of anything, than of the existence of a +being absolutely infinite or perfect--that is, of God. For +inasmuch as his essence excludes all imperfection, and involves +absolute perfection, all cause for doubt concerning his existence +is done away, and the utmost certainty on the question is given. +This, I think, will be evident to every moderately attentive +reader. + +XII. No attribute of substance can be conceived from which it +would follow that substance can be divided. + +>>>>>Proof--The parts into which substance as thus conceived +would be divided either will retain the nature of substance, or +they will not. If the former, then (by Prop. viii.) each part +will necessarily be infinite, and (by Prop vi.) self-caused, and +(by Prop. v.) will perforce consist of a different attribute, so +that, in that case, several substances could be formed out of one +substance, which (by Prop. vi.) is absurd. Moreover, the parts +(by Prop. ii.) would have nothing in common with their whole, and +the whole (by Def. iv. and Prop. X) could both exist and be +conceived without its parts, which everyone will admit to be +absurd. If we adopt the second alternative--namely, that the +parts will not retain the nature of substance--then, if the +whole substance were divided into equal parts, it would lose the +nature of substance, and would cease to exist, which (by Prop. +vii.) is absurd. + +XIII. Substance absolutely infinite is indivisible. + +>>>>>Proof--If it could be divided, the parts into which it was +divided would either retain the nature of absolutely infinite +substance, or they would not. If the former, we should have +several substances of the same nature, which (by Prop. v.) is +absurd. If the latter, then (by Prop. vii.) substance +absolutely infinite could cease to exist, which (by Prop. xi.) is +also absurd. + +<<<<<Corollary--It follows that no substance, and consequently no +extended substance, in so far as it is substance, is divisible. + +*****Note--The indivisibility of substance may be more easily +understood as follows. The nature of substance can only be +conceived as infinite, and by a part of substance, nothing else +can be understood than finite substance, which (by Prop. viii.) +involves a manifest contradiction. + +XIV. Besides God no substance can be granted or conceived. + +>>>>>Proof--As God is a being absolutely infinite, of whom no +attribute that expresses the essence of substance can be denied +(by Def. vi.), and he necessarily exists (by Prop. xi.); if any +substance besides God were granted, it would have to be explained +by some attribute of God, and thus two substances with the same +attribute would exist, which (by Prop. v.) is absurd; therefore, +besides God no substance can be granted, or consequently be +conceived. If it could be conceived, it would necessarily have to +be conceived as existent; but this (by the first part of this +proof) is absurd. Therefore, besides God no substance can be +granted or conceived. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Clearly, therefore: 1. God is one, that is +(by Def. vi.) only one substance can be granted in the universe, +and that substance is absolutely infinite, as we have already +indicated (in the note to Prop. x.). + +<<<<<Corollary II.--It follows: 2. That extension and thought +are either attributes of God or (by Ax. i.) accidents +("affectiones") of the attributes of God. + +XV. Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or +be conceived. + +>>>>>Proof--Besides God, no substance is granted or can be +conceived (by Prop. xiv.), that is (by Def. iii.) nothing which +is in itself and is conceived through itself. But modes (by Def. +v.) can neither be, nor be conceived without substance; +wherefore they can only be in the divine nature, and can only +through it be conceived. But substances and modes form the sum +total of existence (by Ax. i.), therefore, without God nothing +can be, or be conceived. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Some assert that God, like a man, consists of body and +mind, and is susceptible of passions. How far such persons have +strayed from the truth is sufficiently evident from what has been +said. But these I pass over. For all who have in anywise +reflected on the divine nature deny that God has a body. Of this +they find excellent proof in the fact that we understand by body +a definite quantity, so long, so broad, so deep, bounded by a +certain shape, and it is the height of absurdity to predicate +such a thing of God, a being absolutely infinite. But meanwhile +by other reasons with which they try to prove their point, they +show that they think corporeal or extended substance wholly apart +from the divine nature, and say it was created by God. Wherefrom +the divine nature can have been created, they are wholly +ignorant; thus they clearly show that they do not know the +meaning of their own words. I myself have proved sufficiently +clearly, at any rate in my own judgment (Cor. Prop. vi., and Note +2, Prop. viii.), that no substance can be produced or created by +anything other than itself. Further, I showed (in Prop. xiv.) +that besides God no substance can be granted or conceived. +Hence we drew the conclusion that extended substance is one of +the infinite attributes of God. However, in order to explain +more fully, I will refute the arguments of my adversaries, which +all start from the following points:-- + +Extended substance, in so far as it is substance, consists, as +they think, in parts, wherefore they deny that it can be +infinite, or consequently, that it can appertain to God. This +they illustrate with many examples, of which I will take one or +two. If extended substance, they say, is infinite, let it be +conceived to be divided into two parts; each part will then be +either finite or infinite. If the former, then infinite +substance is composed of two finite parts, which is absurd. If +the latter, then one infinite will be twice as large as another +infinite, which is also absurd. + +Further, if an infinite line be measured out in foot lengths, it +will consist of an infinite number of such parts; it would +equally consist of an infinite number of parts, if each part +measured only an inch: therefore, one infinity would be twelve +times as great as the other. + +Lastly, if from a single point there be conceived to be drawn two +diverging lines which at first are at a definite distance apart, +but are produced to infinity, it is certain that the distance +between the two lines will be continually increased, until at +length it changes from definite to indefinable. As these +absurdities follow, it is said, from considering quantity as +infinite, the conclusion is drawn that extended substance must +necessarily be finite, and, consequently, cannot appertain to the +nature of God. + +The second argument is also drawn from God's supreme perfection. +God, it is said, inasmuch as he is a supremely perfect being, +cannot be passive; but extended substance, insofar as it is +divisible, is passive. It follows, therefore, that extended +substance does not appertain to the essence of God. + +Such are the arguments I find on the subject in writers, who by +them try to prove that extended substance is unworthy of the +divine nature, and cannot possibly appertain thereto. However, I +think an attentive reader will see that I have already answered +their propositions; for all their arguments are founded on the +hypothesis that extended substance is composed of parts, and such +a hypothesis I have shown (Prop. xii., and Cor. Prop. xiii.) to +be absurd. Moreover, anyone who reflects will see that all these +absurdities (if absurdities they be, which I am not now +discussing), from which it is sought to extract the conclusion +that extended substance is finite, do not at all follow from the +notion of an infinite quantity, but merely from the notion that +an infinite quantity is measurable, and composed of finite parts: +therefore, the only fair conclusion to be drawn is that infinite +quantity is not measurable, and cannot be composed of finite +parts. This is exactly what we have already proved (in Prop. +xii.). Wherefore the weapon which they aimed at us has in +reality recoiled upon themselves. If, from this absurdity of +theirs, they persist in drawing the conclusion that extended +substance must be finite, they will in good sooth be acting like +a man who asserts that circles have the properties of squares, +and, finding himself thereby landed in absurdities, proceeds to +deny that circles have any center, from which all lines drawn to +the circumference are equal. For, taking extended substance, +which can only be conceived as infinite, one, and indivisible +(Props. viii., v., xii.) they assert, in order to prove that it +is finite, that it is composed of finite parts, and that it can +be multiplied and divided. + +So, also, others, after asserting that a line is composed of +points, can produce many arguments to prove that a line cannot be +infinitely divided. Assuredly it is not less absurd to assert +that extended substance is made up of bodies or parts, than it +would be to assert that a solid is made up of surfaces, a surface +of lines, and a line of points. This must be admitted by all who +know clear reason to be infallible, and most of all by those who +deny the possibility of a vacuum. For if extended substance +could be so divided that its parts were really separate, why +should not one part admit of being destroyed, the others +remaining joined together as before? And why should all be so +fitted into one another as to leave no vacuum? Surely in the +case of things, which are really distinct one from the other, one +can exist without the other, and can remain in its original +condition. As, then, there does not exist a vacuum in nature (of +which anon), but all parts are bound to come together to prevent +it, it follows from this that the parts cannot really be +distinguished, and that extended substance in so far as it is +substance cannot be divided. + +If anyone asks me the further question, Why are we naturally so +prone to divide quantity? I answer, that quantity is conceived by +us in two ways; in the abstract and superficially, as we imagine +it; or as substance, as we conceive it solely by the intellect. +If, then, we regard quantity as it is represented in our +imagination, which we often and more easily do, we shall find +that it is finite, divisible, and compounded of parts; but if we +regard it as it is represented in our intellect, and conceive it +as substance, which it is very difficult to do, we shall then, as +I have sufficiently proved, find that it is infinite, one, and +indivisible. This will be plain enough to all who make a +distinction between the intellect and the imagination, +especially if it be remembered that matter is everywhere the +same, that its parts are not distinguishable, except in so far as +we conceive matter as diversely modified, whence its parts are +distinguished, not really, but modally. For instance, water, in +so far as it is water, we conceive to be divided, and its parts +to be separated one from the other; but not in so far as it is +extended substance; from this point of view it is neither +separated nor divisible. Further, water, in so far as it is +water, is produced and corrupted; but, in so far as it is +substance, it is neither produced nor corrupted. + +I think I have now answered the second argument; it is, in fact, +founded on the same assumption as the first--namely, that matter, +in so far as it is substance, is divisible, and composed of +parts. Even if it were so, I do not know why it should be +considered unworthy of the divine nature, inasmuch as besides God +(by Prop. xiv.) no substance can be granted, wherefrom it could +receive its modifications. All things, I repeat, are in God, and +all things which come to pass, come to pass solely through the +laws of the infinite nature of God, and follow (as I will shortly +show) from the necessity of his essence. Wherefore it can in +nowise be said that God is passive in respect to anything other +than himself, or that extended substance is unworthy of the +divine nature, even if it be supposed divisible, so long as it is +granted to be infinite and eternal. But enough of this for the +present. + +XVI. From the necessity of the divine nature must follow an +infinite number of things in infinite ways--that is, all things +which can fall within the sphere of infinite intellect. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition will be clear to everyone, who +remembers that from the given definition of any thing the +intellect infers several properties, which really necessarily +follow therefrom (that is, from the actual essence of the thing +defined); and it infers more properties in proportion as the +definition of the thing expresses more reality, that is, in +proportion as the essence of the thing defined involves more +reality. Now, as the divine nature has absolutely infinite +attributes (by Def. vi.), of which each expresses infinite +essence after its kind, it follows that from the necessity of its +nature an infinite number of things (that is, everything which +can fall within the sphere of an infinite intellect) must +necessarily follow. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Hence it follows, that God is the efficient +cause of all that can fall within the sphere of an infinite +intellect. + +<<<<<Corollary II.--It also follows that God is a cause in +himself, and not through an accident of his nature. + +<<<<<Corollary III.--It follows, thirdly, that God is the +absolutely first cause. + +XVII. God acts solely by the laws of his own nature, and is not +constrained by anyone. + +>>>>>Proof--We have just shown (in Prop. xvi.), that solely from +the necessity of the divine nature, or, what is the same thing, +solely from the laws of his nature, an infinite number of things +absolutely follow in an infinite number of ways; and we proved +(in Prop. xv.), that without God nothing can be nor be conceived; +but that all things are in God. Wherefore nothing can exist +outside himself, whereby he can be conditioned or constrained to +act. Wherefore God acts solely by the laws of his own nature, +and is not constrained by anyone. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I--It follows: 1. That there can be no cause +which, either extrinsically or intrinsically, besides the +perfection of his own nature, moves God to act. + +<<<<<Corollary II--It follows: 2. That God is the sole free +cause. For God alone exists by the sole necessity of his nature +(by Prop. xi. and Prop. xiv., Cor. i.), and acts by the sole +necessity of his own nature, wherefore God is (by Def. vii.) the +sole free cause. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Others think that God is a free cause, because he can, +as they think, bring it about, that those things which we have +said follow from his nature--that is, which are in his power, +should not come to pass, or should not be produced by him. But +this is the same as if they said, that God could bring it about, +that it should follow from the nature of a triangle that its +three interior angles should not be equal to two right angles; or +that from a given cause no effect should follow, which is absurd. + +Moreover, I will show below, without the aid of this +proposition, that neither intellect nor will appertain to God's +nature. I know that there are many who think that they can show, +that supreme intellect and free will do appertain to God's +nature; for they say they know of nothing more perfect, which +they can attribute to God, than that which is the highest +perfection in ourselves. Further, although they conceive God as +actually supremely intelligent, they yet do not believe that he +can bring into existence everything which he actually +understands, for they think that they would thus destroy God's +power. If, they contend, God had created everything which is in +his intellect, he would not be able to create anything more, and +this, they think, would clash with God's omnipotence; therefore, +they prefer to asset that God is indifferent to all things, and +that he creates nothing except that which he has decided, by some +absolute exercise of will, to create. However, I think I have +shown sufficiently clearly (by Prop. xvi.) that from God's +supreme power, or infinite nature, an infinite number of +things--that is, all things have necessarily flowed forth in an +infinite number of ways, or always flow from the same necessity; +in the same way as from the nature of a triangle it follows from +eternity and for eternity, that its three interior angles are +equal to two right angles. Wherefore the omnipotence of God has +been displayed from all eternity, and will for all eternity +remain in the same state of activity. This manner of treating the +question attributes to God an omnipotence, in my opinion, far +more perfect. For, otherwise, we are compelled to confess that +God understands an infinite number of creatable things, which he +will never be able to create, for, if he created all that he +understands, he would, according to this showing, exhaust his +omnipotence, and render himself imperfect. Wherefore, in order +to establish that God is perfect, we should be reduced to +establishing at the same time, that he cannot bring to pass +everything over which his power extends; this seems to be a +hypothesis most absurd, and most repugnant to God's omnipotence. + +Further (to say a word concerning the intellect and the will +which we attribute to God), if intellect and will appertain to +the eternal essence of God, we must take these words in some +significance quite different from those they usually bear. For +intellect and will, which should constitute the essence of God, +would perforce be as far apart as the poles from the human +intellect and will, in fact, would have nothing in common with +them but the name; there would be about as much correspondence +between the two as there is between the Dog, the heavenly +constellation, and a dog, an animal that barks. This I will +prove as follows. If intellect belongs to the divine nature, it +cannot be in nature, as ours is generally thought to be, +posterior to, or simultaneous with the things understood, +inasmuch as God is prior to all things by reason of his causality +(Prop. xvi., Cor. i.). On the contrary, the truth and formal +essence of things is as it is, because it exists by +representation as such in the intellect of God. Wherefore the +intellect of God, in so far as it is conceived to constitute +God's essence, is, in reality, the cause of things, both of their +essence and of their existence. This seems to have been +recognized by those who have asserted, that God's intellect, +God's will, and God's power, are one and the same. As, +therefore, God's intellect is the sole cause of things, namely, +both of their essence and existence, it must necessarily differ +from them in respect to its essence, and in respect to its +existence. For a cause differs from a thing it causes, +precisely in the quality which the latter gains from the former. + +For example, a man is the cause of another man's existence, but +not of his essence (for the latter is an eternal truth), and, +therefore, the two men may be entirely similar in essence, but +must be different in existence; and hence if the existence of one +of them cease, the existence of the other will not necessarily +cease also; but if the essence of one could be destroyed, and be +made false, the essence of the other would be destroyed also. +Wherefore, a thing which is the cause both of the essence and of +the existence of a given effect, must differ from such effect +both in respect to its essence, and also in respect to its +existence. Now the intellect of God is the cause both of the +essence and the existence of our intellect; therefore, the +intellect of God in so far as it is conceived to constitute the +divine essence, differs from our intellect both in respect to +essence and in respect to existence, nor can it in anywise agree +therewith save in name, as we said before. The reasoning would +be identical in the case of the will, as anyone can easily see. + +XVIII. God is the indwelling and not the transient cause of all +things. >>>>>Proof--All things which are, are in God, and must be +conceived through God (by Prop. xv.), therefore (by Prop. xvi., +Cor. i.) God is the cause of those things which are in him. +This is our first point. Further, besides God there can be no +substance (by Prop. xiv.), that is nothing in itself external to +God. This is our second point. God, therefore, is the +indwelling and not the transient cause of all things. Q.E.D. + +XIX. God, and all the attributes of God, are eternal. +>>>>>Proof--God (by Def. vi.) is substance, which (by Prop. xi.) +necessarily exists, that is (by Prop. vii.) existence appertains +to its nature, or (what is the same thing) follows from its +definition; therefore, God is eternal (by Def. vii.). Further, +by the attributes of God we must understand that which (by Def. +iv.) expresses the essence of the divine substance--in other +words, that which appertains to substance: that, I say, should +be involved in the attributes of substance. Now eternity +appertains to the nature of substance (as I have already shown in +Prop. vii.); therefore, eternity must appertain to each of the +attributes, and thus all are eternal. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--This proposition is also evident from the manner in +which (in Prop. xi.) I demonstrated the existence of God; it is +evident, I repeat, from that proof, that the existence of God, +like his essence, is an eternal truth. Further (in Prop. xix. of +my "Principles of the Cartesian Philosophy"), I have proved the +eternity of God, in another manner, which I need not here +repeat. + +XX. The existence of God and his essence are one and the same. + +>>>>>Proof--God (by the last Prop.) and all his attributes are +eternal, that is (by Def. viii.) each of his attributes expresses +existence. Therefore the same attributes of God which explain +his eternal essence, explain at the same time his eternal +existence--in other words, that which constitutes God's essence +constitutes at the same time his existence. Wherefore God's +existence and God's essence are one and the same. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Hence it follows that God's existence, like +his essence, is an eternal truth. + +<<<<<Corollary II.--Secondly, it follows that God, and all the +attributes of God, are unchangeable. For if they could be +changed in respect to existence, they must also be able to be +changed in respect to essence--that is, obviously, be changed +from true to false, which is absurd. + +XXI. All things which follow from the absolute nature of any +attribute of God must always exist and be infinite, or, in other +words, are eternal and infinite through the said attribute. + +>>>>>Proof--Conceive, if it be possible (supposing the +proposition to be denied), that something in some attribute of +God can follow from the absolute nature of the said attribute, +and that at the same time it is finite, and has a conditioned +existence or duration; for instance, the idea of God expressed in +the attribute thought. Now thought, in so far as it is supposed +to be an attribute of God, is necessarily (by Prop. xi.) in its +nature infinite. But, in so far as it possesses the idea of God, +it is supposed finite. It cannot, however, be conceived as +finite, unless it be limited by thought (by Def. ii.); but it is +not limited by thought itself, in so far as it has constituted +the idea of God (for so far it is supposed to be finite); +therefore, it is limited by thought, in so far as it has not +constituted the idea of God, which nevertheless (by Prop. xi.) +must necessarily exist. + +We have now granted, therefore, thought not constituting the idea +of God, and, accordingly, the idea of God does not naturally +follow from its nature in so far as it is absolute thought (for +it is conceived as constituting, and also as not constituting, +the idea of God), which is against our hypothesis. Wherefore, if +the idea of God expressed in the attribute thought, or, indeed, +anything else in any attribute of God (for we may take any +example, as the proof is of universal application) follows from +the necessity of the absolute nature of the said attribute, the +said thing must necessarily be infinite, which was our first +point. + +Furthermore, a thing which thus follows from the necessity of the +nature of any attribute cannot have a limited duration. For if +it can, suppose a thing, which follows from the necessity of the +nature of some attribute, to exist in some attribute of God, for +instance, the idea of God expressed in the attribute thought, and +let it be supposed at some time not to have existed, or to be +about not to exist. + +Now thought being an attribute of God must necessarily exist +unchanged (by Prop. xi., and Prop. xx., Cor. ii.); and beyond the +limits of the duration of the idea of God (supposing the latter +at some time not to have existed, or not to be going to exist) +thought would perforce have existed without the idea of God, +which is contrary to our hypothesis, for we supposed that, +thought being given, the idea of God necessarily flowed +therefrom. Therefore the idea of God expressed in thought, or +anything which necessarily follows from the absolute nature of +some attribute of God, cannot have a limited duration, but +through the said attribute is eternal, which is our second point. +Bear in mind that the same proposition may be affirmed of +anything, which in any attribute necessarily follows from God's +absolute nature. + +XXII. Whatsoever follows from any attribute of God, in so far as +it is modified by a modification, which exists necessarily and as +infinite, through the said attribute, must also exist necessarily +and as infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--The proof of this proposition is similar to that of +the preceding one. + +XXIII. Every mode, which exists both necessarily and as +infinite, must necessarily follow either from the absolute nature +of some attribute of God, or from an attribute modified by a +modification which exists necessarily, and as infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--A mode exists in something else, through which it +must be conceived (Def. v.), that is (Prop. xv.), it exists +solely in God, and solely through God can be conceived. If +therefore a mode is conceived as necessarily existing and +infinite, it must necessarily be inferred or perceived through +some attribute of God, in so far as such attribute is conceived +as expressing the infinity and necessity of existence, in other +words (Def. viii.) eternity; that is, in so far as it is +considered absolutely. A mode, therefore, which necessarily +exists as infinite, must follow from the absolute nature of some +attribute of God, either immediately (Prop. xxi.) or through the +means of some modification, which follows from the absolute +nature of the said attribute; that is (by Prop. xxii.), which +exists necessarily and as infinite. + +XXIV. The essence of things produced by God does not involve +existence. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition is evident from Def. i. For that of +which the nature (considered in itself) involves existence is +self-caused, and exists by the sole necessity of its own nature. + +<<<<<Corollary--Hence it follows that God is not only the cause +of things coming into existence, but also of their continuing in +existence, that is, in scholastic phraseology, God is cause of +the being of things (essendi rerum). For whether things exist, +or do not exist, whenever we contemplate their essence, we see +that it involves neither existence nor duration; consequently, it +cannot be the cause of either the one or the other. God must be +the sole cause, inasmuch as to him alone does existence +appertain. (Prop. xiv. Cor. i.) Q.E.D. + +XXV. God is the efficient cause not only of the existence of +things, but also of their essence. + +>>>>>Proof--If this be denied, then God is not the cause of the +essence of things; and therefore the essence of things can (by +Ax. iv.) be conceived without God. This (by Prop. xv.) is +absurd. Therefore, God is the cause of the essence of things. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--This proposition follows more clearly from Prop. xvi. +For it is evident thereby that, given the divine nature, the +essence of things must be inferred from it, no less than their +existence--in a word, God must be called the cause of all things, +in the same sense as he is called the cause of himself. This +will be made still clearer by the following corollary. + +<<<<<Corollary--Individual things are nothing but modifications +of the attributes of God, or modes by which the attributes of God +are expressed in a fixed and definite manner. The proof appears +from Prop. xv. and Def. v. + +XXVI. A thing which is conditioned to act in a particular +manner, has necessarily been thus conditioned by God; and that +which has not been conditioned by God cannot condition itself to +act. + +>>>>>Proof--That by which things are said to be conditioned to +act in a particular manner is necessarily something positive +(this is obvious); therefore both of its essence and of its +existence God by the necessity of his nature is the efficient +cause (Props. xxv. and xvi.); this is our first point. Our +second point is plainly to be inferred therefrom. For if a +thing, which has not been conditioned by God, could condition +itself, the first part of our proof would be false, and this, as +we have shown is absurd. + +XXVII. A thing, which has been conditioned by God to act in a +particular way, cannot render itself unconditioned. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition is evident from Ax. iii. + +XXVIII. Every individual thing, or everything which is finite +and has a conditioned existence, cannot exist or be conditioned +to act, unless it be conditioned for existence and action by a +cause other than itself, which also is finite, and has a +conditioned existence; and likewise this cause cannot in its turn +exist, or be conditioned to act, unless it be conditioned for +existence and action by another cause, which also is finite, and +has a conditioned existence, and so on to infinity. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is conditioned to exist and act, has been +thus conditioned by God (by Prop. xxvi. and Prop. xxiv., Cor.) + +But that which is finite, and has a conditioned existence, cannot +be produced by the absolute nature of any attribute of God; for +whatsoever follows from the absolute nature of any attribute of +God is infinite and eternal (by Prop. xxi.). It must, therefore, +follow from some attribute of God, in so far as the said +attribute is considered as in some way modified; for substance +and modes make up the sum total of existence (by Ax. i. and Def. +iii., v.), while modes are merely modifications of the +attributes of God. But from God, or from any of his attributes, +in so far as the latter is modified by a modification infinite +and eternal, a conditioned thing cannot follow. Wherefore it +must follow from, or be conditioned for, existence and action by +God or one of his attributes, in so far as the latter are +modified by some modification which is finite, and has a +conditioned existence. This is our first point. Again, this +cause or this modification (for the reason by which we +established the first part of this proof) must in its turn be +conditioned by another cause, which also is finite, and has a +conditioned existence, and, again, this last by another (for the +same reason); and so on (for the same reason) to infinity. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--As certain things must be produced immediately by God, +namely those things which necessarily follow from his absolute +nature, through the means of these primary attributes, which, +nevertheless, can neither exist nor be conceived without God, it +follows: 1. That God is absolutely the proximate cause of those +things immediately produced by him. I say absolutely, not after +his kind, as is usually stated. For the effects of God cannot +either exist or be conceived without a cause (Prop. xv. and Prop. +xxiv. Cor.). 2. That God cannot properly be styled the remote +cause of individual things, except for the sake of +distinguishing these from what he immediately produces, or rather +from what follows from his absolute nature. For, by a remote +cause, we understand a cause which is in no way conjoined to the +effect. But all things which are, are in God, and so depend on +God, that without him they can neither be nor be conceived. + +XXIX. Nothing in the universe is contingent, but all things are +conditioned to exist and operate in a particular manner by the +necessity of the divine nature. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is, is in God (Prop. xv.). But God cannot +be called a thing contingent. For (by Prop. xi.) he exists +necessarily, and not contingently. Further, the modes of the +divine nature follow therefrom necessarily, and not contingently +(Prop. xvi.); and they thus follow, whether we consider the +divine nature absolutely, or whether we consider it as in any way +conditioned to act (Prop. xxvii.). Further, God is not only the +cause of these modes, in so far as they simply exist (by Prop. +xxiv., Cor.), but also in so far as they are considered as +conditioned for operating in a particular manner (Prop. xxvi.). +If they be not conditioned by God (Prop. xxvi.), it is +impossible, and not contingent, that they should condition +themselves; contrariwise, if they be conditioned by God, it is +impossible, and not contingent, that they should render +themselves unconditioned. Wherefore all things are conditioned by +the necessity of the divine nature, not only to exist, but also +to exist and operate in a particular manner, and there is nothing +that is contingent. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Before going any further, I wish here to explain, what +we should understand by nature viewed as active (natura +naturans), and nature viewed as passive (natura naturata). I say +to explain, or rather call attention to it, for I think that, +from what has been said, it is sufficiently clear, that by nature +viewed as active we should understand that which is in itself, +and is conceived through itself, or those attributes of +substance, which express eternal and infinite essence, in other +words (Prop. xiv., Cor. i., and Prop. xvii., Cor. ii.) God, in so +far as he is considered as a free cause. + +By nature viewed as passive I understand all that which follows +from the necessity of the nature of God, or of any of the +attributes of God, that is, all the modes of the attributes of +God, in so far as they are considered as things which are in God, +and which without God cannot exist or be conceived. + +XXX. Intellect, in function (actu) finite, or in function +infinite, must comprehend the attributes of God and the +modifications of God, and nothing else. + +>>>>>Proof--A true idea must agree with its object (Ax. vi.); in +other words (obviously) that which is contained in the intellect +in representation must necessarily be granted in nature. But in +nature (by Prop. xiv., Cor. i.) there is no substance save God, +nor any modifications save those (Prop. xv.) which are in God, +and cannot without God either be or be conceived. Therefore the +intellect, in function finite, or in function infinite, must +comprehend the attributes of God and the modifications of God, +and nothing else. Q.E.D. + +XXXI. The intellect in function, whether finite or infinite, as +will, desire, love, &c., should be referred to passive nature and +not to active nature. + +>>>>>Proof--By the intellect we do not (obviously) mean absolute +thought, but only a certain mode of thinking, differing from +other modes, such as love, desire, &c., and therefore (Def. v.) +requiring to be conceived through absolute thought. It must (by +Prop. xv. and Def. vi.), through some attribute of God which +expresses the eternal and infinite essence of thought, be so +conceived, that without such attribute it could neither be nor be +conceived. It must therefore be referred to nature passive +rather than to nature active, as must also the other modes of +thinking. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--I do not here, by speaking of intellect in function, +admit that there is such a thing as intellect in potentiality: +but, wishing to avoid all confusion, I desire to speak only of +what is most clearly perceived by us, namely, of the very act of +understanding, than which nothing is more clearly perceived. For +we cannot perceive anything without adding to our knowledge of +the act of understanding. + +XXXII. Will cannot be called a free cause, but only a necessary +cause. + +>>>>>Proof--Will is only a particular mode of thinking, like +intellect; therefore (by Prop. xxviii.) no volition can exist, +nor be conditioned to act, unless it be conditioned by some cause +other than itself, which cause is conditioned by a third cause, +and so on to infinity. But if will be supposed infinite, it must +also be conditioned to exist and act by God, not by virtue of his +being substance absolutely infinite, but by virtue of his +possessing an attribute which expresses the infinite and eternal +essence of thought (by Prop. xxiii.). Thus, however it be +conceived, whether as finite or infinite, it requires a cause by +which it should be conditioned to exist and act. Thus (Def. +vii.) it cannot be called a free cause, but only a necessary or +constrained cause. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I--Hence it follows, first, that God does not act +according to freedom of the will. + +<<<<<Corollary II--It follows, secondly, that will and intellect +stand in the same relation to the nature of God as do motion, and +rest, and absolutely all natural phenomena, which must be +conditioned by God (Prop. xxix.) to exist and act in a particular +manner. For will, like the rest, stands in need of a cause, by +which it is conditioned to exist and act in a particular manner. +And although, when will or intellect be granted, an infinite +number of results may follow, yet God cannot on that account be +said to act from freedom of the will, any more than the infinite +number of results from motion and rest would justify us in saying +that motion and rest act by free will. Wherefore will no more +appertains to God than does anything else in nature, but stands +in the same relation to him as motion, rest, and the like, which +we have shown to follow from the necessity of the divine nature, +and to be conditioned by it to exist and act in a particular +manner. + +XXXIII. Things could not have been brought into being by God in +any manner or in any order different from that which has in fact +obtained. + +>>>>>Proof--All things necessarily follow from the nature of God +(Prop. xvi.), and by the nature of God are conditioned to exist +and act in a particular way (Prop. xxix). If things, therefore, +could have been of a different nature, or have been conditioned +to act in a different way, so that the order of nature would +have been different, God's nature would also have been able to +be different from what it now is; and therefore (by Prop. +xi.)that different nature also would have perforce existed, and +consequently there would have been able to be two or more Gods. +This (by Prop. xiv., Cor. i.) is absurd. Therefore, things +could not have been brought into being by God in any other +manner, &c. Q.E.D. + +*****Note I--As I have thus shown, more clearly than the sun at +noonday, that there is nothing to justify us in calling things +contingent, I wish to explain briefly what meaning we shall +attach to the word contingent; but I will first explain the words +necessary and impossible. + +A thing is called necessary either in respect to its essence or +in respect to its cause; for the existence of a thing +necessarily follows, either from its essence and definition, or +from a given efficient cause. For similar reasons a thing is +said to be impossible; namely, inasmuch as its essence or +definition involves a contradiction, or because no external cause + is granted, which is conditioned to produce such an effect; but +a thing can in no respect be called contingent, save in relation +to the imperfection of our knowledge. + +A thing of which we do not know whether the essence does or does +not involve a contradiction, or of which, knowing that it does +not involve a contradiction, we are still in doubt concerning +the existence, because the order of causes escapes us,--such a +thing, I say, cannot appear to us either necessary or +impossible. Wherefore we call it contingent or possible. + +*****Note II--It clearly follows from what we have said, that +things have been brought into being by God in the highest +perfection, inasmuch as they have necessarily followed from a +most perfect nature. Nor does this prove any imperfection in +God, for it has compelled us to affirm his perfection. From its +contrary proposition, we should clearly gather (as I have just +shown), that God is not supremely perfect, for if things had been +brought into being in any other way, we should have to assign to +God a nature different from that, which we are bound to +attribute to him from the consideration of an absolutely perfect +being. + +I do not doubt, that many will scout this idea as absurd, and +will refuse to give their minds up to contemplating it, simply +because they are accustomed to assign to God a freedom very +different from that which we (Def. vii.) have deduced. They +assign to him, in short, absolute free will. However, I am also +convinced that if such persons reflect on the matter, and duly +weigh in their minds our series of propositions, they will reject +such freedom as they now attribute to God, not only as nugatory, +but also as a great impediment to organized knowledge. There is +no need for me to repeat what I have said in the note to Prop. +xvii. But, for the sake of my opponents, I will show further, +that although it be granted that will pertains to the essence of +God, it nevertheless follows from his perfection, that things +could not have been by him created other than they are, or in a +different order; this is easily proved, if we reflect on what +our opponents themselves concede, namely, that it depends solely +on the decree and will of God, that each thing is what it is. If +it were otherwise, God would not be the cause of all things. +Further, that all the decrees of God have been ratified from all +eternity by God himself. If it were otherwise, God would be +convicted of imperfection or change. But in eternity there is no +such thing as when, before, or after; hence it follows solely +from the perfection of God, that God never can decree, or never +would have decreed anything but what is; that God did not exist +before his decrees, and would not exist without them. But, it +is said, supposing that God had made a different universe, or +had ordained other decrees from all eternity concerning nature +and her order, we could not therefore conclude any imperfection +in God. But persons who say this must admit that God can change +his decrees. For if God had ordained any decrees concerning +nature and her order, different from those which he has +ordained--in other words, if he had willed and conceived +something different concerning nature--he would perforce have +had a different intellect from that which he has, and also a +different will. But if it were allowable to assign to God a +different intellect and a different will, without any change in +his essence or his perfection, what would there be to prevent +him changing the decrees which he has made concerning created +things, and nevertheless remaining perfect? For his intellect +and will concerning things created and their order are the same, +in respect to his essence and perfection, however they be +conceived. + +Further, all the philosophers whom I have read admit that God's +intellect is entirely actual, and not at all potential; as they +also admit that God's intellect, and God's will, and God's +essence are identical, it follows that, if God had had a +different actual intellect and a different will, his essence +would also have been different; and thus, as I concluded at +first, if things had been brought into being by God in a +different way from that which has obtained, God's intellect and +will, that is (as is admitted) his essence would perforce have +been different, which is absurd. + +As these things could not have been brought into being by God in +any but the actual way and order which has obtained; and as the +truth of this proposition follows from the supreme perfection of +God; we can have no sound reason for persuading ourselves to +believe that God did not wish to create all the things which were +in his intellect, and to create them in the same perfection as +he had understood them. + +But, it will be said, there is in things no perfection nor +imperfection; that which is in them, and which causes them to be +called perfect or imperfect, good or bad, depends solely on the +will of God. If God had so willed, he might have brought it +about that what is now perfection should be extreme +imperfection, and vice versa. What is such an assertion, but +an open declaration that God, who necessarily understands that +which he wishes, might bring it about by his will, that he +should understand things differently from the way in which he +does understand them? This (as we have just shown) is the height +of absurdity. Wherefore, I may turn the argument against its +employers, as follows:--All things depend on the power of God. +In order that things should be different from what they are, +God's will would necessarily have to be different. But God's +will cannot be different (as we have just most clearly +demonstrated) from God's perfection. Therefore neither can +things be different. I confess, that the theory which subjects +all things to the will of an indifferent deity, and asserts that +they are all dependent on his fiat, is less far from the truth +than the theory of those, who maintain that God acts in all +things with a view of promoting what is good. For these latter +persons seem to set up something beyond God, which does not +depend on God, but which God in acting looks to as an exemplar, +or which he aims at as a definite goal. This is only another +name for subjecting God to the dominion of destiny, an utter +absurdity in respect to God, whom we have shown to be the first +and only free cause of the essence of all things and also of +their existence. I need, therefore, spend no time in refuting +such wild theories. + +XXXIV. God's power is identical with his essence. + +>>>>>Proof--From the sole necessity of the essence of God it +follows that God is the cause of himself (Prop. xi.) and of all +things (Prop. xvi. and Cor.). Wherefore the power of God, by +which he and all things are and act, is identical with his +essence. Q.E.D. + +XXXV. Whatsoever we conceive to be in the power of God, +necessarily exists. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is in God's power, must (by the last +Prop.) be comprehended in his essence in such a manner, that it +necessarily follows therefrom, and therefore necessarily exists. +Q.E.D. + +XXXVI. There is no cause from whose nature some effect does not +follow. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever exists expresses God's nature or essence +in a given conditioned manner (by Prop. xxv., Cor.); that is, +(by Prop. xxxiv.), whatsoever exists, expresses in a given +conditioned manner God's power, which is the cause of all +things, therefore an effect must (by Prop. xvi.) necessarily +follow. Q.E.D. + + APPENDIX: In the foregoing I have explained the nature and +properties of God. I have shown that he necessarily exists, +that he is one: that he is, and acts solely by the necessity of +his own nature; that he is the free cause of all things, and how +he is so; that all things are in God, and so depend on him, that +without him they could neither exist nor be conceived; lastly, +that all things are predetermined by God, not through his free +will or absolute fiat, but from the very nature of God or +infinite power. I have further, where occasion afforded, taken +care to remove the prejudices, which might impede the +comprehension of my demonstrations. Yet there still remain +misconceptions not a few, which might and may prove very grave +hindrances to the understanding of the concatenation of things, +as I have explained it above. I have therefore thought it worth +while to bring these misconceptions before the bar of reason. + +All such opinions spring from the notion commonly entertained, +that all things in nature act as men themselves act, namely, +with an end in view. It is accepted as certain, that God +himself directs all things to a definite goal (for it is said +that God made all things for man, and man that he might worship +him). I will, therefore, consider this opinion, asking first, +why it obtains general credence, and why all men are naturally so +prone to adopt it?; secondly, I will point out its falsity; +and, lastly, I will show how it has given rise to prejudices +about good and bad, right and wrong, praise and blame, order and +confusion, beauty and ugliness, and the like. However, this is +not the place to deduce these misconceptions from the nature of +the human mind: it will be sufficient here, if I assume as a +starting point, what ought to be universally admitted, namely, +that all men are born ignorant of the causes of things, that all +have the desire to seek for what is useful to them, and that +they are conscious of such desire. Herefrom it follows, first, +that men think themselves free inasmuch as they are conscious of +their volitions and desires, and never even dream, in their +ignorance, of the causes which have disposed them so to wish and +desire. Secondly, that men do all things for an end, namely, for +that which is useful to them, and which they seek. Thus it +comes to pass that they only look for a knowledge of the final +causes of events, and when these are learned, they are content, +as having no cause for further doubt. If they cannot learn such +causes from external sources, they are compelled to turn to +considering themselves, and reflecting what end would have +induced them personally to bring about the given event, and thus +they necessarily judge other natures by their own. Further, as +they find in themselves and outside themselves many means which +assist them not a little in the search for what is useful, for +instance, eyes for seeing, teeth for chewing, herbs and animals +for yielding food, the sun for giving light, the sea for +breeding fish, &c., they come to look on the whole of nature as a +means for obtaining such conveniences. Now as they are aware, +that they found these conveniences and did not make them, they +think they have cause for believing, that some other being has +made them for their use. As they look upon things as means, they +cannot believe them to be self-created; but, judging from the +means which they are accustomed to prepare for themselves, they +are bound to believe in some ruler or rulers of the universe +endowed with human freedom, who have arranged and adapted +everything for human use. They are bound to estimate the nature +of such rulers (having no information on the subject) in +accordance with their own nature, and therefore they assert that +the gods ordained everything for the use of man, in order to +bind man to themselves and obtain from him the highest honor. +Hence also it follows, that everyone thought out for himself, +according to his abilities, a different way of worshipping God, +so that God might love him more than his fellows, and direct the +whole course of nature for the satisfaction of his blind cupidity +and insatiable avarice. Thus the prejudice developed into +superstition, and took deep root in the human mind; and for this +reason everyone strove most zealously to understand and explain +the final causes of things; but in their endeavor to show that +nature does nothing in vain, i.e. nothing which is useless to +man, they only seem to have demonstrated that nature, the gods, +and men are all mad together. Consider, I pray you, the result: +among the many helps of nature they were bound to find some +hindrances, such as storms, earthquakes, diseases, &c.: so they +declared that such things happen, because the gods are angry at +some wrong done to them by men, or at some fault committed in +their worship. Experience day by day protested and showed by +infinite examples, that good and evil fortunes fall to the lot +of pious and impious alike; still they would not abandon their +inveterate prejudice, for it was more easy for them to class such +contradictions among other unknown things of whose use they were +ignorant, and thus to retain their actual and innate condition +of ignorance, than to destroy the whole fabric of their reasoning +and start afresh. They therefore laid down as an axiom, that +God's judgments far transcend human understanding. Such a +doctrine might well have sufficed to conceal the truth from the +human race for all eternity, if mathematics had not furnished +another standard of verity in considering solely the essence and +properties of figures without regard to their final causes. +There are other reasons (which I need not mention here) besides +mathematics, which might have caused men's minds to be directed +to these general prejudices, and have led them to the knowledge +of the truth. + +I have now sufficiently explained my first point. There is no +need to show at length, that nature has no particular goal in +view, and that final causes are mere human figments. This, I +think, is already evident enough, both from the causes and +foundations on which I have shown such prejudice to be based, +and also from Prop. xvi., and the Corollary of Prop. xxxii., +and, in fact, all those propositions in which I have shown, that +everything in nature proceeds from a sort of necessity, and with +the utmost perfection. However, I will add a few remarks in +order to overthrow this doctrine of a final cause utterly. That +which is really a cause it considers as an effect, and vice +versa: it makes that which is by nature first to be last, and +that which is highest and most perfect to be most imperfect. +Passing over the questions of cause and priority as +self-evident, it is plain from Props. xxi., xxii., xxiii. that +the effect is most perfect which is produced immediately by God; +the effect which requires for its production several +intermediate causes is, in that respect, more imperfect. But if +those things which were made immediately by God were made to +enable him to attain his end, then the things which come after, +for the sake of which the first were made, are necessarily the +most excellent of all. + +Further, this doctrine does away with the perfection of God: +for, if God acts for an object, he necessarily desires something +which he lacks. Certainly, theologians and metaphysicians draw +a distinction between the object of want and the object of +assimilation; still they confess that God made all things for +the sake of himself, not for the sake of creation. They are +unable to point to anything prior to creation, except God +himself, as an object for which God should act, and are +therefore driven to admit (as they clearly must), that God +lacked those things for whose attainment he created means, and +further that he desired them. + +We must not omit to notice that the followers of this doctrine, +anxious to display their talent in assigning final causes, have +imported a new method of argument in proof of their +theory--namely, a reduction, not to the impossible, but to +ignorance; thus showing that they have no other method of +exhibiting their doctrine. For example, if a stone falls from a +roof onto someone's head, and kills him, they will demonstrate +by their new method, that the stone fell in order to kill the +man; for, if it had not by God's will fallen with that object, +how could so many circumstances (and there are often many +concurrent circumstances) have all happened together by chance? +Perhaps you will answer that the event is due to the facts that +the wind was blowing, and the man was walking that way. "But +why," they will insist, "was the wind blowing, and why was the +man at that very time walking that way?" If you again answer, +that the wind had then sprung up because the sea had begun to be +agitated the day before, the weather being previously calm, and +that the man had been invited by a friend, they will again +insist: "But why was the sea agitated, and why was the man +invited at that time?" So they will pursue their questions from +cause to cause, till at last you take refuge in the will of +God--in other words, the sanctuary of ignorance. So, again, +when they survey the frame of the human body, they are amazed; +and being ignorant of the causes of so great a work of art, +conclude that it has been fashioned, not mechanically, but by +divine and supernatural skill, and has been so put together that +one part shall not hurt another. + +Hence anyone who seeks for the true causes of miracles, and +strives to understand natural phenomena as an intelligent being, +and not to gaze at them like a fool, is set down and denounced +as an impious heretic by those, whom the masses adore as the +interpreters of nature and the gods. Such persons know that, +with the removal of ignorance, the wonder which forms their only +available means for proving and preserving their authority would +vanish also. But I now quit this subject, and pass on to my +third point. + +After men persuaded themselves, that everything which is created +is created for their sake, they were bound to consider as the +chief quality in everything that which is most useful to +themselves, and to account those things the best of all which +have the most beneficial effect on mankind. Further, they were +bound to form abstract notions for the explanation of the nature +of things, such as goodness, badness, order, confusion, warmth, +cold, beauty, deformity, and so on; and from the belief that +they are free agents arose the further notions of praise and +blame, sin and merit. + +I will speak of these latter hereafter, when I treat of human +nature; the former I will briefly explain here. + +Everything which conduces to health and the worship of God they +have called good, everything which hinders these objects they +have styled bad; and inasmuch as those who do not understand the +nature of things do not verify phenomena in any way, but merely +imagine them after a fashion, and mistake their imagination for +understanding, such persons firmly believe that there is an +order in things, being really ignorant both of things and their +own nature. When phenomena are of such a kind, that the +impression they make on our senses requires little effort of +imagination, and can consequently be easily remembered, we say +that they are well-ordered; if the contrary, that they are +ill-ordered or confused. Further, as things which are easily +imagined are more pleasing to us, men prefer order to +confusion--as though there were any order in nature, except in +relation to our imagination--and say that God has created all +things in order; thus, without knowing it, attributing +imagination to God, unless, indeed, they would have it that God +foresaw human imagination, and arranged everything, so that it +should be most easily imagined. If this be their theory, they +would not, perhaps, be daunted by the fact that we find an +infinite number of phenomena, far surpassing our imagination, +and very many others which confound its weakness. But enough +has been said on this subject. The other abstract notions are +nothing but modes of imagining, in which the imagination is +differently affected: though they are considered by the +ignorant as the chief attributes of things, inasmuch as they +believe that everything was created for the sake of themselves; +and, according as they are affected by it, style it good or bad, +healthy or rotten or corrupt. For instance, if the motion which +objects we see communicate to our nerves be conducive to health, +the objects causing it are styled beautiful; if a contrary motion +be excited, they are styled ugly. + +Things which are perceived through our sense of smell are styled +fragrant or fetid; if through our taste, sweet or bitter, +full-flavored or insipid; if through our touch, hard or soft, +rough or smooth, &c. + +Whatsoever affects our ears is said to give rise to noise, sound, +or harmony. In this last case, there are men lunatic enough to +believe, that even God himself takes pleasure in harmony; and +philosophers are not lacking who have persuaded themselves, that +the motion of the heavenly bodies gives rise to harmony--all of +which instances sufficiently show that everyone judges of things +according to the state of his brain, or rather mistakes for +things the forms of his imagination. We need no longer wonder +that there have arisen all the controversies we have witnessed, +and finally skepticism: for, although human bodies in many +respects agree, yet in very many others they differ; so that what +seems good to one seems confused to another; what is pleasing to +one displeases another, and so on. I need not further +enumerate, because this is not the place to treat the subject at +length, and also because the fact is sufficiently well known. +It is commonly said: "So many men, so many minds; everyone is +wise in his own way; brains differ as completely as palates." +All of which proverbs show, that men judge of things according +to their mental disposition, and rather imagine than understand: +for, if they understood phenomena, they would, as +mathematicians attest, be convinced, if not attracted, by what I +have urged. + +We have now perceived, that all the explanations commonly given +of nature are mere modes of imagining, and do not indicate the +true nature of anything, but only the constitution of the +imagination; and, although they have names, as though they were +entities, existing externally to the imagination, I call them +entities imaginary rather than real; and, therefore, all +arguments against us drawn from such abstractions are easily +rebutted. + +Many argue in this way. If all things follow from a necessity of +the absolutely perfect nature of God, why are there so many +imperfections in nature? such, for instance, as things corrupt +to the point of putridity, loathsome deformity, confusion, evil, +sin, &c. But these reasoners are, as I have said, easily +confuted, for the perfection of things is to be reckoned only +from their own nature and power; things are not more or less +perfect, according as they are serviceable or repugnant to +mankind. To those who ask why God did not so create all men, +that they should be governed only by reason, I give no answer +but this: because matter was not lacking to him for the creation +of every degree of perfection from highest to lowest; or, more +strictly, because the laws of his nature are so vast, as to +suffice for the production of everything conceivable by an +infinite intelligence, as I have shown in Prop. xvi. + +Such are the misconceptions I have undertaken to note; if there +are any more of the same sort, everyone may easily dissipate +them for himself with the aid of a little reflection. + + + + + +END OF PART I + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Ethics [Part I], by Benedict de Spinoza + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ETHICS [PART I] *** + +***** This file should be named 919.txt or 919.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/9/1/919/ + +Produced by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer. + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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By that which is 'self-caused' I mean that of which the +essence involves existence, or that of which the nature is only +conceivable as existent. + +II. A thing is called 'finite after its kind' when it can be +limited by another thing of the same nature; for instance, a body +is called finite because we always conceive another greater body. +So, also, a thought is limited by another thought, but a body is +not limited by thought, nor a thought by body. + +III. By 'substance' I mean that which is in itself, and is +conceived through itself: in other words, that of which a +conception can be formed independently of any other conception. + +IV. By 'attribute' I mean that which the intellect perceives as +constituting the essence of substance. + +V. By 'mode' I mean the modifications ("affectiones") of +substance, or that which exists in, and is conceived through, +something other than itself. + +VI. By 'God' I mean a being absolutely infinite--that is, a +substance consisting in infinite attributes, of which each +expresses eternal and infinite essentiality. + +>>>>>Explanation--I say absolutely infinite, not infinite after +its kind: for, of a thing infinite only after its kind, infinite +attributes may be denied; but that which is absolutely infinite, +contains in its essence whatever expresses reality, and involves +no negation. + +VII. That thing is called 'free,' which exists solely by the +necessity of its own nature, and of which the action is +determined by itself alone. On the other hand, that thing is +necessary, or rather constrained, which is determined by +something external to itself to a fixed and definite method of +existence or action. + +VIII. By 'eternity' I mean existence itself, in so far as it is +conceived necessarily to follow solely from the definition of +that which is eternal. + +>>>>>Explanation--Existence of this kind is conceived as an +eternal truth, like the essence of a thing and, therefore, +cannot be explained by means of continuance or time, though +continuance may be conceived without a beginning or end. + + AXIOMS. I. Everything which exists, exists either in itself or +in something else. + +II. That which cannot be conceived through anything else must be +conceived through itself. + +III. From a given definite cause an effect necessarily follows; +and, on the other hand, if no definite cause be granted, it is +impossible that an effect can follow. + +IV. The knowledge of an effect depends on and involves the +knowledge of a cause. + +V. Things which have nothing in common cannot be understood, the +one by means of the other; the conception of one does not involve +the conception of the other. + +VI. A true idea must correspond with its ideate or object. + +VII. If a thing can be conceived as non-existing, its essence +does not involve existence. + + PROPOSITIONS. I. Substance is by nature prior to its +modifications. + +>>>>>Proof--This is clear from Deff. iii. and v. + +II. Two substances, whose attributes are different, have +nothing in common. + +>>>>>Proof--Also evident from Def. iii. For each must exist in +itself, and be conceived through itself; in other words, the +conception of one does not imply the conception of the other. + +III. Things which have nothing in common cannot be one the cause +of the other. + +>>>>>Proof--If they have nothing in common, it follows that one +cannot be apprehended by means of the other (Ax. v.), and, +therefore, one cannot be the cause of the other (Ax. iv.). +Q.E.D. + +IV. Two or more distinct things are distinguished one from the +other, either by the difference of the attributes of the +substances, or by the difference of their modifications. + +>>>>>Proof--Everything which exists, exists either in itself or +in something else (Ax. i.),-- that is (by Deff. iii. and v.), +nothing is granted in addition to the understanding, except +substance and its modifications. Nothing is, therefore, given +besides the understanding, by which several things may be +distinguished one from the other, except the substances, or, in +other words (see Ax. iv.), their attributes and modifications. +Q.E.D. + +V. There cannot exist in the universe two or more substances +having the same nature or attribute. + +>>>>>Proof--If several distinct substances be granted, they must +be distinguished one from the other, either by the difference of +their attributes, or by the difference of their modifications +(Prop. iv.). If only by the difference of their attributes, it +will be granted that there cannot be more than one with an +identical attribute. If by the difference of their +modifications--as substance is naturally prior to its +modifications (Prop. i.)--it follows that setting the +modifications aside, and considering substance in itself, that is +truly, (Deff. iii and vi.), there cannot be conceived one +substance different from another--that is (by Prop. iv.), there +cannot be granted several substances, but one substance only. +Q.E.D. + +VI. One substance cannot be produced by another substance. + +>>>>>Proof--It is impossible that there should be in the universe +two substances with an identical attribute, i.e. which have +anything common to them both (Prop ii.), and, therefore (Prop. +iii.), one cannot be the cause of the other, neither can one be +produced by the other. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<VI. Corollary--Hence it follows that a substance cannot be +produced by anything external to itself. For in the universe +nothing is granted, save substances and their modifications (as +appears from Ax. i. and Deff. iii. and v.). Now (by the last +Prop.) substance cannot be produced by another substance, +therefore it cannot be produced by anything external to itself. +Q.E.D. This is shown still more readily by the absurdity of the +contradictory. For, if substance be produced by an external +cause, the knowledge of it would depend on the knowledge of its +cause (Ax. iv.), and (by Deff. iii.) it would itself not be +substance. + +VII. Existence belongs to the nature of substances. + +>>>>>Proof--Substance cannot be produced by anything external +(Cor., Prop vi.), it must, therefore, be its own cause--that is, +its essence necessarily involves existence, or existence belongs +to its nature. + +VIII. Every substance is necessarily infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--There can only be one substance with an identical +attribute, and existence follows from its nature (Prop. vii.); +its nature, therefore, involves existence, either as finite or +infinite. It does not exist as finite, for (by Deff. ii.) it +would then be limited by something else of the same kind, which +would also necessarily exist (Prop. vii.); and there would be two +substances with an identical attribute, which is absurd (Prop. +v.). It therefore exists as infinite. Q.E.D. + +*****Note I.--As finite existence involves a partial negation, +and infinite existence is the absolute affirmation of the given +nature, it follows (solely from Prop. vii.) that every substance +is necessarily infinite. + +*****Note II.--No doubt it will be difficult for those who think +about things loosely, and have not been accustomed to know them +by their primary causes, to comprehend the demonstration of +Prop. vii.: for such persons make no distinction between the +modifications of substances and the substances themselves, and +are ignorant of the manner in which things are produced; hence +they may attribute to substances the beginning which they observe +in natural objects. Those who are ignorant of true causes make +complete confusion--think that trees might talk just as well as +men--that men might be formed from stones as well as from seed; +and imagine that any form might be changed into any other. So, +also, those who confuse the two natures, divine and human, +readily attribute human passions to the deity, especially so +long as they do not know how passions originate in the mind. +But, if people would consider the nature of substance, they would +have no doubt about the truth of Prop. vii. In fact, this +proposition would be a universal axiom, and accounted a truism. +For, by substance, would be understood that which is in itself, +and is conceived through itself--that is, something of which the +conception requires not the conception of anything else; whereas +modifications exist in something external to themselves, and a +conception of them is formed by means of a conception of the +things in which they exist. Therefore, we may have true ideas +of non-existent modifications; for, although they may have no +actual existence apart from the conceiving intellect, yet their +essence is so involved in something external to themselves that +they may through it be conceived. Whereas the only truth +substances can have, external to the intellect, must consist in +their existence, because they are conceived through themselves. +Therefore, for a person to say that he has a clear and +distinct--that is, a true--idea of a substance, but that he is +not sure whether such substance exists, would be the same as if +he said that he had a true idea, but was not sure whether or no +it was false (a little consideration will make this plain); or if +anyone affirmed that substance is created, it would be the same +as saying that a false idea was true--in short, the height of +absurdity. It must, then, necessarily be admitted that the +existence of substance as its essence is an eternal truth. And +we can hence conclude by another process of reasoning--that there +is but one such substance. I think that this may profitably be +done at once; and, in order to proceed regularly with the +demonstration, we must premise:-- + ++++++1. The true definition of a thing neither involves nor +expresses anything beyond the nature of the thing defined. From +this it follows that-- + ++++++2. No definition implies or expresses a certain number of +individuals, inasmuch as it expresses nothing beyond the nature +of the thing defined. For instance, the definition of a triangle +expresses nothing beyond the actual nature of a triangle: it +does not imply any fixed number of triangles. + ++++++3. There is necessarily for each individual existent thing +a cause why it should exist. + ++++++4. This cause of existence must either be contained in the +nature and definition of the thing defined, or must be postulated +apart from such definition. + +It therefore follows that, if a given number of individual things +exist in nature, there must be some cause for the existence of +exactly that number, neither more nor less. For example, if +twenty men exist in the universe (for simplicity's sake, I will +suppose them existing simultaneously, and to have had no +predecessors), and we want to account for the existence of these +twenty men, it will not be enough to show the cause of human +existence in general; we must also show why there are exactly +twenty men, neither more nor less: for a cause must be assigned +for the existence of each individual. Now this cause cannot be +contained in the actual nature of man, for the true definition of +man does not involve any consideration of the number twenty. +Consequently, the cause for the existence of these twenty men, +and, consequently, of each of them, must necessarily be sought +externally to each individual. Hence we may lay down the absolute +rule, that everything which may consist of several individuals +must have an external cause. And, as it has been shown already +that existence appertains to the nature of substance, existence +must necessarily be included in its definition; and from its +definition alone existence must be deducible. But from its +definition (as we have shown, Notes ii., iii.), we cannot infer +the existence of several substances; therefore it follows that +there is only one substance of the same nature. Q.E.D. + +IX. The more reality or being a thing has, the greater the +number of its attributes (Def. iv.). + +X. Each particular attribute of the one substance must be +conceived through itself. + +>>>>>Proof--An attribute is that which the intellect perceives of +substance, as constituting its essence (Def. iv.), and, +therefore, must be conceived through itself (Def. iii.). Q.E.D. + +*****Note--It is thus evident that, though two attributes are, in +fact, conceived as distinct--that is, one without the help of the +other--yet we cannot, therefore, conclude that they constitute +two entities, or two different substances. For it is the nature +of substance that each of its attributes is conceived through +itself, inasmuch as all the attributes it has have always existed +simultaneously in it, and none could be produced by any other; +but each expresses the reality or being of substance. It is, +then, far from an absurdity to ascribe several attributes to one +substance: for nothing in nature is more clear than that each +and every entity must be conceived under some attribute, and that +its reality or being is in proportion to the number of its +attributes expressing necessity or eternity and infinity. +Consequently it is abundantly clear, that an absolutely infinite +being must necessarily be defined as consisting in infinite +attributes, each of which expresses a certain eternal and +infinite essence. + +If anyone now ask, by what sign shall he be able to distinguish +different substances, let him read the following propositions, +which show that there is but one substance in the universe, and +that it is absolutely infinite, wherefore such a sign would be +sought in vain. + +XI. God, or substance, consisting of infinite attributes, of +which each expresses eternal and infinite essentiality, +necessarily exists. + +>>>>>Proof--If this be denied, conceive, if possible, that God +does not exist: then his essence does not involve existence. +But this (Prop. vii.) is absurd. Therefore God necessarily +exists. + +>>>>>Another proof--Of everything whatsoever a cause or reason +must be assigned, either for its existence, or for its +non-existence--e.g. if a triangle exist, a reason or cause must +be granted for its existence; if, on the contrary, it does not +exist, a cause must also be granted, which prevents it from +existing, or annuls its existence. This reason or cause must +either be contained in the nature of the thing in question, or be +external to it. For instance, the reason for the non-existence +of a square circle is indicated in its nature, namely, because it +would involve a contradiction. On the other hand, the existence +of substance follows also solely from its nature, inasmuch as its +nature involves existence. (See Prop. vii.) + + But the reason for the existence of a triangle or a circle does +not follow from the nature of those figures, but from the order +of universal nature in extension. From the latter it must +follow, either that a triangle necessarily exists, or that it is +impossible that it should exist. So much is self-evident. It +follows therefrom that a thing necessarily exists, if no cause or +reason be granted which prevents its existence. + +If, then, no cause or reason can be given, which prevents the +existence of God, or which destroys his existence, we must +certainly conclude that he necessarily does exist. If such a +reason or cause should be given, it must either be drawn from the +very nature of God, or be external to him--that is, drawn from +another substance of another nature. For if it were of the same +nature, God, by that very fact, would be admitted to exist. But +substance of another nature could have nothing in common with God +(by Prop. ii.), and therefore would be unable either to cause or +to destroy his existence. + +As, then, a reason or cause which would annul the divine +existence cannot be drawn from anything external to the divine +nature, such cause must perforce, if God does not exist, be drawn +from God's own nature, which would involve a contradiction. To +make such an affirmation about a being absolutely infinite and +supremely perfect is absurd; therefore, neither in the nature of +God, nor externally to his nature, can a cause or reason be +assigned which would annul his existence. Therefore, God +necessarily exists. Q.E.D. + +>>>>>Another proof--The potentiality of non-existence is a +negation of power, and contrariwise the potentiality of existence +is a power, as is obvious. If, then, that which necessarily +exists is nothing but finite beings, such finite beings are more +powerful than a being absolutely infinite, which is obviously +absurd; therefore, either nothing exists, or else a being +absolutely infinite necessarily exists also. Now we exist either +in ourselves, or in something else which necessarily exists (see +Ax. i. and Prop. vii.). Therefore a being absolutely +infinite--in other words, God (Def. vi.)--necessarily exists. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--In this last proof, I have purposely shown God's +existence 'a posteriori,' so that the proof might be more easily +followed, not because, from the same premises, God's existence +does not follow 'a priori.' For, as the potentiality of +existence is a power, it follows that, in proportion as reality +increases in the nature of a thing, so also will it increase its +strength for existence. Therefore a being absolutely infinite, +such as God, has from himself an absolutely infinite power of +existence, and hence he does absolutely exist. Perhaps there will +be many who will be unable to see the force of this proof, +inasmuch as they are accustomed only to consider those things +which flow from external causes. Of such things, they see that +those which quickly come to pass--that is, quickly come into +existence--quickly also disappear; whereas they regard as more +difficult of accomplishment --that is, not so easily brought into +existence--those things which they conceive as more complicated. + +However, to do away with this misconception, I need not here show +the measure of truth in the proverb, "What comes quickly, goes +quickly," nor discuss whether, from the point of view of +universal nature, all things are equally easy, or otherwise: I +need only remark that I am not here speaking of things, which +come to pass through causes external to themselves, but only of +substances which (by Prop. vi.) cannot be produced by any +external cause. Things which are produced by external causes, +whether they consist of many parts or few, owe whatsoever +perfection or reality they possess solely to the efficacy of +their external cause; wherefore the existence of substance must +arise solely from its own nature, which is nothing else but its +essence. Thus, the perfection of a thing does not annul its +existence, but, on the contrary, asserts it. Imperfection, on +the other hand, does annul it; therefore we cannot be more +certain of the existence of anything, than of the existence of a +being absolutely infinite or perfect--that is, of God. For +inasmuch as his essence excludes all imperfection, and involves +absolute perfection, all cause for doubt concerning his existence +is done away, and the utmost certainty on the question is given. +This, I think, will be evident to every moderately attentive +reader. + +XII. No attribute of substance can be conceived from which it +would follow that substance can be divided. + +>>>>>Proof--The parts into which substance as thus conceived +would be divided either will retain the nature of substance, or +they will not. If the former, then (by Prop. viii.) each part +will necessarily be infinite, and (by Prop vi.) self-caused, and +(by Prop. v.) will perforce consist of a different attribute, so +that, in that case, several substances could be formed out of one +substance, which (by Prop. vi.) is absurd. Moreover, the parts +(by Prop. ii.) would have nothing in common with their whole, and +the whole (by Def. iv. and Prop. X) could both exist and be +conceived without its parts, which everyone will admit to be +absurd. If we adopt the second alternative--namely, that the +parts will not retain the nature of substance--then, if the +whole substance were divided into equal parts, it would lose the +nature of substance, and would cease to exist, which (by Prop. +vii.) is absurd. + +XIII. Substance absolutely infinite is indivisible. + +>>>>>Proof--If it could be divided, the parts into which it was +divided would either retain the nature of absolutely infinite +substance, or they would not. If the former, we should have +several substances of the same nature, which (by Prop. v.) is +absurd. If the latter, then (by Prop. vii.) substance +absolutely infinite could cease to exist, which (by Prop. xi.) is +also absurd. + +<<<<<Corollary--It follows that no substance, and consequently no +extended substance, in so far as it is substance, is divisible. + +*****Note--The indivisibility of substance may be more easily +understood as follows. The nature of substance can only be +conceived as infinite, and by a part of substance, nothing else +can be understood than finite substance, which (by Prop. viii.) +involves a manifest contradiction. + +XIV. Besides God no substance can be granted or conceived. + +>>>>>Proof--As God is a being absolutely infinite, of whom no +attribute that expresses the essence of substance can be denied +(by Def. vi.), and he necessarily exists (by Prop. xi.); if any +substance besides God were granted, it would have to be explained +by some attribute of God, and thus two substances with the same +attribute would exist, which (by Prop. v.) is absurd; therefore, +besides God no substance can be granted, or consequently be +conceived. If it could be conceived, it would necessarily have to +be conceived as existent; but this (by the first part of this +proof) is absurd. Therefore, besides God no substance can be +granted or conceived. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Clearly, therefore: 1. God is one, that is +(by Def. vi.) only one substance can be granted in the universe, +and that substance is absolutely infinite, as we have already +indicated (in the note to Prop. x.). + +<<<<<Corollary II.--It follows: 2. That extension and thought +are either attributes of God or (by Ax. i.) accidents +("affectiones") of the attributes of God. + +XV. Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or +be conceived. + +>>>>>Proof--Besides God, no substance is granted or can be +conceived (by Prop. xiv.), that is (by Def. iii.) nothing which +is in itself and is conceived through itself. But modes (by Def. +v.) can neither be, nor be conceived without substance; +wherefore they can only be in the divine nature, and can only +through it be conceived. But substances and modes form the sum +total of existence (by Ax. i.), therefore, without God nothing +can be, or be conceived. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Some assert that God, like a man, consists of body and +mind, and is susceptible of passions. How far such persons have +strayed from the truth is sufficiently evident from what has been +said. But these I pass over. For all who have in anywise +reflected on the divine nature deny that God has a body. Of this +they find excellent proof in the fact that we understand by body +a definite quantity, so long, so broad, so deep, bounded by a +certain shape, and it is the height of absurdity to predicate +such a thing of God, a being absolutely infinite. But meanwhile +by other reasons with which they try to prove their point, they +show that they think corporeal or extended substance wholly apart +from the divine nature, and say it was created by God. Wherefrom +the divine nature can have been created, they are wholly +ignorant; thus they clearly show that they do not know the +meaning of their own words. I myself have proved sufficiently +clearly, at any rate in my own judgment (Cor. Prop. vi., and Note +2, Prop. viii.), that no substance can be produced or created by +anything other than itself. Further, I showed (in Prop. xiv.) +that besides God no substance can be granted or conceived. +Hence we drew the conclusion that extended substance is one of +the infinite attributes of God. However, in order to explain +more fully, I will refute the arguments of my adversaries, which +all start from the following points:-- + +Extended substance, in so far as it is substance, consists, as +they think, in parts, wherefore they deny that it can be +infinite, or consequently, that it can appertain to God. This +they illustrate with many examples, of which I will take one or +two. If extended substance, they say, is infinite, let it be +conceived to be divided into two parts; each part will then be +either finite or infinite. If the former, then infinite +substance is composed of two finite parts, which is absurd. If +the latter, then one infinite will be twice as large as another +infinite, which is also absurd. + +Further, if an infinite line be measured out in foot lengths, it +will consist of an infinite number of such parts; it would +equally consist of an infinite number of parts, if each part +measured only an inch: therefore, one infinity would be twelve +times as great as the other. + +Lastly, if from a single point there be conceived to be drawn two +diverging lines which at first are at a definite distance apart, +but are produced to infinity, it is certain that the distance +between the two lines will be continually increased, until at +length it changes from definite to indefinable. As these +absurdities follow, it is said, from considering quantity as +infinite, the conclusion is drawn that extended substance must +necessarily be finite, and, consequently, cannot appertain to the +nature of God. + +The second argument is also drawn from God's supreme perfection. +God, it is said, inasmuch as he is a supremely perfect being, +cannot be passive; but extended substance, insofar as it is +divisible, is passive. It follows, therefore, that extended +substance does not appertain to the essence of God. + +Such are the arguments I find on the subject in writers, who by +them try to prove that extended substance is unworthy of the +divine nature, and cannot possibly appertain thereto. However, I +think an attentive reader will see that I have already answered +their propositions; for all their arguments are founded on the +hypothesis that extended substance is composed of parts, and such +a hypothesis I have shown (Prop. xii., and Cor. Prop. xiii.) to +be absurd. Moreover, anyone who reflects will see that all these +absurdities (if absurdities they be, which I am not now +discussing), from which it is sought to extract the conclusion +that extended substance is finite, do not at all follow from the +notion of an infinite quantity, but merely from the notion that +an infinite quantity is measurable, and composed of finite parts: +therefore, the only fair conclusion to be drawn is that infinite +quantity is not measurable, and cannot be composed of finite +parts. This is exactly what we have already proved (in Prop. +xii.). Wherefore the weapon which they aimed at us has in +reality recoiled upon themselves. If, from this absurdity of +theirs, they persist in drawing the conclusion that extended +substance must be finite, they will in good sooth be acting like +a man who asserts that circles have the properties of squares, +and, finding himself thereby landed in absurdities, proceeds to +deny that circles have any center, from which all lines drawn to +the circumference are equal. For, taking extended substance, +which can only be conceived as infinite, one, and indivisible +(Props. viii., v., xii.) they assert, in order to prove that it +is finite, that it is composed of finite parts, and that it can +be multiplied and divided. + +So, also, others, after asserting that a line is composed of +points, can produce many arguments to prove that a line cannot be +infinitely divided. Assuredly it is not less absurd to assert +that extended substance is made up of bodies or parts, than it +would be to assert that a solid is made up of surfaces, a surface +of lines, and a line of points. This must be admitted by all who +know clear reason to be infallible, and most of all by those who +deny the possibility of a vacuum. For if extended substance +could be so divided that its parts were really separate, why +should not one part admit of being destroyed, the others +remaining joined together as before? And why should all be so +fitted into one another as to leave no vacuum? Surely in the +case of things, which are really distinct one from the other, one +can exist without the other, and can remain in its original +condition. As, then, there does not exist a vacuum in nature (of +which anon), but all parts are bound to come together to prevent +it, it follows from this that the parts cannot really be +distinguished, and that extended substance in so far as it is +substance cannot be divided. + +If anyone asks me the further question, Why are we naturally so +prone to divide quantity? I answer, that quantity is conceived by +us in two ways; in the abstract and superficially, as we imagine +it; or as substance, as we conceive it solely by the intellect. +If, then, we regard quantity as it is represented in our +imagination, which we often and more easily do, we shall find +that it is finite, divisible, and compounded of parts; but if we +regard it as it is represented in our intellect, and conceive it +as substance, which it is very difficult to do, we shall then, as +I have sufficiently proved, find that it is infinite, one, and +indivisible. This will be plain enough to all who make a +distinction between the intellect and the imagination, +especially if it be remembered that matter is everywhere the +same, that its parts are not distinguishable, except in so far as +we conceive matter as diversely modified, whence its parts are +distinguished, not really, but modally. For instance, water, in +so far as it is water, we conceive to be divided, and its parts +to be separated one from the other; but not in so far as it is +extended substance; from this point of view it is neither +separated nor divisible. Further, water, in so far as it is +water, is produced and corrupted; but, in so far as it is +substance, it is neither produced nor corrupted. + +I think I have now answered the second argument; it is, in fact, +founded on the same assumption as the first--namely, that matter, +in so far as it is substance, is divisible, and composed of +parts. Even if it were so, I do not know why it should be +considered unworthy of the divine nature, inasmuch as besides God +(by Prop. xiv.) no substance can be granted, wherefrom it could +receive its modifications. All things, I repeat, are in God, and +all things which come to pass, come to pass solely through the +laws of the infinite nature of God, and follow (as I will shortly +show) from the necessity of his essence. Wherefore it can in +nowise be said that God is passive in respect to anything other +than himself, or that extended substance is unworthy of the +divine nature, even if it be supposed divisible, so long as it is +granted to be infinite and eternal. But enough of this for the +present. + +XVI. From the necessity of the divine nature must follow an +infinite number of things in infinite ways--that is, all things +which can fall within the sphere of infinite intellect. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition will be clear to everyone, who +remembers that from the given definition of any thing the +intellect infers several properties, which really necessarily +follow therefrom (that is, from the actual essence of the thing +defined); and it infers more properties in proportion as the +definition of the thing expresses more reality, that is, in +proportion as the essence of the thing defined involves more +reality. Now, as the divine nature has absolutely infinite +attributes (by Def. vi.), of which each expresses infinite +essence after its kind, it follows that from the necessity of its +nature an infinite number of things (that is, everything which +can fall within the sphere of an infinite intellect) must +necessarily follow. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Hence it follows, that God is the efficient +cause of all that can fall within the sphere of an infinite +intellect. + +<<<<<Corollary II.--It also follows that God is a cause in +himself, and not through an accident of his nature. + +<<<<<Corollary III.--It follows, thirdly, that God is the +absolutely first cause. + +XVII. God acts solely by the laws of his own nature, and is not +constrained by anyone. + +>>>>>Proof--We have just shown (in Prop. xvi.), that solely from +the necessity of the divine nature, or, what is the same thing, +solely from the laws of his nature, an infinite number of things +absolutely follow in an infinite number of ways; and we proved +(in Prop. xv.), that without God nothing can be nor be conceived; +but that all things are in God. Wherefore nothing can exist +outside himself, whereby he can be conditioned or constrained to +act. Wherefore God acts solely by the laws of his own nature, +and is not constrained by anyone. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I--It follows: 1. That there can be no cause +which, either extrinsically or intrinsically, besides the +perfection of his own nature, moves God to act. + +<<<<<Corollary II--It follows: 2. That God is the sole free +cause. For God alone exists by the sole necessity of his nature +(by Prop. xi. and Prop. xiv., Cor. i.), and acts by the sole +necessity of his own nature, wherefore God is (by Def. vii.) the +sole free cause. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Others think that God is a free cause, because he can, +as they think, bring it about, that those things which we have +said follow from his nature--that is, which are in his power, +should not come to pass, or should not be produced by him. But +this is the same as if they said, that God could bring it about, +that it should follow from the nature of a triangle that its +three interior angles should not be equal to two right angles; or +that from a given cause no effect should follow, which is absurd. + +Moreover, I will show below, without the aid of this +proposition, that neither intellect nor will appertain to God's +nature. I know that there are many who think that they can show, +that supreme intellect and free will do appertain to God's +nature; for they say they know of nothing more perfect, which +they can attribute to God, than that which is the highest +perfection in ourselves. Further, although they conceive God as +actually supremely intelligent, they yet do not believe that he +can bring into existence everything which he actually +understands, for they think that they would thus destroy God's +power. If, they contend, God had created everything which is in +his intellect, he would not be able to create anything more, and +this, they think, would clash with God's omnipotence; therefore, +they prefer to asset that God is indifferent to all things, and +that he creates nothing except that which he has decided, by some +absolute exercise of will, to create. However, I think I have +shown sufficiently clearly (by Prop. xvi.) that from God's +supreme power, or infinite nature, an infinite number of +things--that is, all things have necessarily flowed forth in an +infinite number of ways, or always flow from the same necessity; +in the same way as from the nature of a triangle it follows from +eternity and for eternity, that its three interior angles are +equal to two right angles. Wherefore the omnipotence of God has +been displayed from all eternity, and will for all eternity +remain in the same state of activity. This manner of treating the +question attributes to God an omnipotence, in my opinion, far +more perfect. For, otherwise, we are compelled to confess that +God understands an infinite number of creatable things, which he +will never be able to create, for, if he created all that he +understands, he would, according to this showing, exhaust his +omnipotence, and render himself imperfect. Wherefore, in order +to establish that God is perfect, we should be reduced to +establishing at the same time, that he cannot bring to pass +everything over which his power extends; this seems to be a +hypothesis most absurd, and most repugnant to God's omnipotence. + +Further (to say a word concerning the intellect and the will +which we attribute to God), if intellect and will appertain to +the eternal essence of God, we must take these words in some +significance quite different from those they usually bear. For +intellect and will, which should constitute the essence of God, +would perforce be as far apart as the poles from the human +intellect and will, in fact, would have nothing in common with +them but the name; there would be about as much correspondence +between the two as there is between the Dog, the heavenly +constellation, and a dog, an animal that barks. This I will +prove as follows. If intellect belongs to the divine nature, it +cannot be in nature, as ours is generally thought to be, +posterior to, or simultaneous with the things understood, +inasmuch as God is prior to all things by reason of his causality +(Prop. xvi., Cor. i.). On the contrary, the truth and formal +essence of things is as it is, because it exists by +representation as such in the intellect of God. Wherefore the +intellect of God, in so far as it is conceived to constitute +God's essence, is, in reality, the cause of things, both of their +essence and of their existence. This seems to have been +recognized by those who have asserted, that God's intellect, +God's will, and God's power, are one and the same. As, +therefore, God's intellect is the sole cause of things, namely, +both of their essence and existence, it must necessarily differ +from them in respect to its essence, and in respect to its +existence. For a cause differs from a thing it causes, +precisely in the quality which the latter gains from the former. + +For example, a man is the cause of another man's existence, but +not of his essence (for the latter is an eternal truth), and, +therefore, the two men may be entirely similar in essence, but +must be different in existence; and hence if the existence of one +of them cease, the existence of the other will not necessarily +cease also; but if the essence of one could be destroyed, and be +made false, the essence of the other would be destroyed also. +Wherefore, a thing which is the cause both of the essence and of +the existence of a given effect, must differ from such effect +both in respect to its essence, and also in respect to its +existence. Now the intellect of God is the cause both of the +essence and the existence of our intellect; therefore, the +intellect of God in so far as it is conceived to constitute the +divine essence, differs from our intellect both in respect to +essence and in respect to existence, nor can it in anywise agree +therewith save in name, as we said before. The reasoning would +be identical in the case of the will, as anyone can easily see. + +XVIII. God is the indwelling and not the transient cause of all +things. >>>>>Proof--All things which are, are in God, and must be +conceived through God (by Prop. xv.), therefore (by Prop. xvi., +Cor. i.) God is the cause of those things which are in him. +This is our first point. Further, besides God there can be no +substance (by Prop. xiv.), that is nothing in itself external to +God. This is our second point. God, therefore, is the +indwelling and not the transient cause of all things. Q.E.D. + +XIX. God, and all the attributes of God, are eternal. +>>>>>Proof--God (by Def. vi.) is substance, which (by Prop. xi.) +necessarily exists, that is (by Prop. vii.) existence appertains +to its nature, or (what is the same thing) follows from its +definition; therefore, God is eternal (by Def. vii.). Further, +by the attributes of God we must understand that which (by Def. +iv.) expresses the essence of the divine substance--in other +words, that which appertains to substance: that, I say, should +be involved in the attributes of substance. Now eternity +appertains to the nature of substance (as I have already shown in +Prop. vii.); therefore, eternity must appertain to each of the +attributes, and thus all are eternal. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--This proposition is also evident from the manner in +which (in Prop. xi.) I demonstrated the existence of God; it is +evident, I repeat, from that proof, that the existence of God, +like his essence, is an eternal truth. Further (in Prop. xix. of +my "Principles of the Cartesian Philosophy"), I have proved the +eternity of God, in another manner, which I need not here +repeat. + +XX. The existence of God and his essence are one and the same. + +>>>>>Proof--God (by the last Prop.) and all his attributes are +eternal, that is (by Def. viii.) each of his attributes expresses +existence. Therefore the same attributes of God which explain +his eternal essence, explain at the same time his eternal +existence--in other words, that which constitutes God's essence +constitutes at the same time his existence. Wherefore God's +existence and God's essence are one and the same. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I.--Hence it follows that God's existence, like +his essence, is an eternal truth. + +<<<<<Corollary II.--Secondly, it follows that God, and all the +attributes of God, are unchangeable. For if they could be +changed in respect to existence, they must also be able to be +changed in respect to essence--that is, obviously, be changed +from true to false, which is absurd. + +XXI. All things which follow from the absolute nature of any +attribute of God must always exist and be infinite, or, in other +words, are eternal and infinite through the said attribute. + +>>>>>Proof--Conceive, if it be possible (supposing the +proposition to be denied), that something in some attribute of +God can follow from the absolute nature of the said attribute, +and that at the same time it is finite, and has a conditioned +existence or duration; for instance, the idea of God expressed in +the attribute thought. Now thought, in so far as it is supposed +to be an attribute of God, is necessarily (by Prop. xi.) in its +nature infinite. But, in so far as it possesses the idea of God, +it is supposed finite. It cannot, however, be conceived as +finite, unless it be limited by thought (by Def. ii.); but it is +not limited by thought itself, in so far as it has constituted +the idea of God (for so far it is supposed to be finite); +therefore, it is limited by thought, in so far as it has not +constituted the idea of God, which nevertheless (by Prop. xi.) +must necessarily exist. + +We have now granted, therefore, thought not constituting the idea +of God, and, accordingly, the idea of God does not naturally +follow from its nature in so far as it is absolute thought (for +it is conceived as constituting, and also as not constituting, +the idea of God), which is against our hypothesis. Wherefore, if +the idea of God expressed in the attribute thought, or, indeed, +anything else in any attribute of God (for we may take any +example, as the proof is of universal application) follows from +the necessity of the absolute nature of the said attribute, the +said thing must necessarily be infinite, which was our first +point. + +Furthermore, a thing which thus follows from the necessity of the +nature of any attribute cannot have a limited duration. For if +it can, suppose a thing, which follows from the necessity of the +nature of some attribute, to exist in some attribute of God, for +instance, the idea of God expressed in the attribute thought, and +let it be supposed at some time not to have existed, or to be +about not to exist. + +Now thought being an attribute of God must necessarily exist +unchanged (by Prop. xi., and Prop. xx., Cor. ii.); and beyond the +limits of the duration of the idea of God (supposing the latter +at some time not to have existed, or not to be going to exist) +thought would perforce have existed without the idea of God, +which is contrary to our hypothesis, for we supposed that, +thought being given, the idea of God necessarily flowed +therefrom. Therefore the idea of God expressed in thought, or +anything which necessarily follows from the absolute nature of +some attribute of God, cannot have a limited duration, but +through the said attribute is eternal, which is our second point. +Bear in mind that the same proposition may be affirmed of +anything, which in any attribute necessarily follows from God's +absolute nature. + +XXII. Whatsoever follows from any attribute of God, in so far as +it is modified by a modification, which exists necessarily and as +infinite, through the said attribute, must also exist necessarily +and as infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--The proof of this proposition is similar to that of +the preceding one. + +XXIII. Every mode, which exists both necessarily and as +infinite, must necessarily follow either from the absolute nature +of some attribute of God, or from an attribute modified by a +modification which exists necessarily, and as infinite. + +>>>>>Proof--A mode exists in something else, through which it +must be conceived (Def. v.), that is (Prop. xv.), it exists +solely in God, and solely through God can be conceived. If +therefore a mode is conceived as necessarily existing and +infinite, it must necessarily be inferred or perceived through +some attribute of God, in so far as such attribute is conceived +as expressing the infinity and necessity of existence, in other +words (Def. viii.) eternity; that is, in so far as it is +considered absolutely. A mode, therefore, which necessarily +exists as infinite, must follow from the absolute nature of some +attribute of God, either immediately (Prop. xxi.) or through the +means of some modification, which follows from the absolute +nature of the said attribute; that is (by Prop. xxii.), which +exists necessarily and as infinite. + +XXIV. The essence of things produced by God does not involve +existence. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition is evident from Def. i. For that of +which the nature (considered in itself) involves existence is +self-caused, and exists by the sole necessity of its own nature. + +<<<<<Corollary--Hence it follows that God is not only the cause +of things coming into existence, but also of their continuing in +existence, that is, in scholastic phraseology, God is cause of +the being of things (essendi rerum). For whether things exist, +or do not exist, whenever we contemplate their essence, we see +that it involves neither existence nor duration; consequently, it +cannot be the cause of either the one or the other. God must be +the sole cause, inasmuch as to him alone does existence +appertain. (Prop. xiv. Cor. i.) Q.E.D. + +XXV. God is the efficient cause not only of the existence of +things, but also of their essence. + +>>>>>Proof--If this be denied, then God is not the cause of the +essence of things; and therefore the essence of things can (by +Ax. iv.) be conceived without God. This (by Prop. xv.) is +absurd. Therefore, God is the cause of the essence of things. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--This proposition follows more clearly from Prop. xvi. +For it is evident thereby that, given the divine nature, the +essence of things must be inferred from it, no less than their +existence--in a word, God must be called the cause of all things, +in the same sense as he is called the cause of himself. This +will be made still clearer by the following corollary. + +<<<<<Corollary--Individual things are nothing but modifications +of the attributes of God, or modes by which the attributes of God +are expressed in a fixed and definite manner. The proof appears +from Prop. xv. and Def. v. + +XXVI. A thing which is conditioned to act in a particular +manner, has necessarily been thus conditioned by God; and that +which has not been conditioned by God cannot condition itself to +act. + +>>>>>Proof--That by which things are said to be conditioned to +act in a particular manner is necessarily something positive +(this is obvious); therefore both of its essence and of its +existence God by the necessity of his nature is the efficient +cause (Props. xxv. and xvi.); this is our first point. Our +second point is plainly to be inferred therefrom. For if a +thing, which has not been conditioned by God, could condition +itself, the first part of our proof would be false, and this, as +we have shown is absurd. + +XXVII. A thing, which has been conditioned by God to act in a +particular way, cannot render itself unconditioned. + +>>>>>Proof--This proposition is evident from Ax. iii. + +XXVIII. Every individual thing, or everything which is finite +and has a conditioned existence, cannot exist or be conditioned +to act, unless it be conditioned for existence and action by a +cause other than itself, which also is finite, and has a +conditioned existence; and likewise this cause cannot in its turn +exist, or be conditioned to act, unless it be conditioned for +existence and action by another cause, which also is finite, and +has a conditioned existence, and so on to infinity. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is conditioned to exist and act, has been +thus conditioned by God (by Prop. xxvi. and Prop. xxiv., Cor.) + +But that which is finite, and has a conditioned existence, cannot +be produced by the absolute nature of any attribute of God; for +whatsoever follows from the absolute nature of any attribute of +God is infinite and eternal (by Prop. xxi.). It must, therefore, +follow from some attribute of God, in so far as the said +attribute is considered as in some way modified; for substance +and modes make up the sum total of existence (by Ax. i. and Def. +iii., v.), while modes are merely modifications of the +attributes of God. But from God, or from any of his attributes, +in so far as the latter is modified by a modification infinite +and eternal, a conditioned thing cannot follow. Wherefore it +must follow from, or be conditioned for, existence and action by +God or one of his attributes, in so far as the latter are +modified by some modification which is finite, and has a +conditioned existence. This is our first point. Again, this +cause or this modification (for the reason by which we +established the first part of this proof) must in its turn be +conditioned by another cause, which also is finite, and has a +conditioned existence, and, again, this last by another (for the +same reason); and so on (for the same reason) to infinity. +Q.E.D. + +*****Note--As certain things must be produced immediately by God, +namely those things which necessarily follow from his absolute +nature, through the means of these primary attributes, which, +nevertheless, can neither exist nor be conceived without God, it +follows: 1. That God is absolutely the proximate cause of those +things immediately produced by him. I say absolutely, not after +his kind, as is usually stated. For the effects of God cannot +either exist or be conceived without a cause (Prop. xv. and Prop. +xxiv. Cor.). 2. That God cannot properly be styled the remote +cause of individual things, except for the sake of +distinguishing these from what he immediately produces, or rather +from what follows from his absolute nature. For, by a remote +cause, we understand a cause which is in no way conjoined to the +effect. But all things which are, are in God, and so depend on +God, that without him they can neither be nor be conceived. + +XXIX. Nothing in the universe is contingent, but all things are +conditioned to exist and operate in a particular manner by the +necessity of the divine nature. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is, is in God (Prop. xv.). But God cannot +be called a thing contingent. For (by Prop. xi.) he exists +necessarily, and not contingently. Further, the modes of the +divine nature follow therefrom necessarily, and not contingently +(Prop. xvi.); and they thus follow, whether we consider the +divine nature absolutely, or whether we consider it as in any way +conditioned to act (Prop. xxvii.). Further, God is not only the +cause of these modes, in so far as they simply exist (by Prop. +xxiv., Cor.), but also in so far as they are considered as +conditioned for operating in a particular manner (Prop. xxvi.). +If they be not conditioned by God (Prop. xxvi.), it is +impossible, and not contingent, that they should condition +themselves; contrariwise, if they be conditioned by God, it is +impossible, and not contingent, that they should render +themselves unconditioned. Wherefore all things are conditioned by +the necessity of the divine nature, not only to exist, but also +to exist and operate in a particular manner, and there is nothing +that is contingent. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--Before going any further, I wish here to explain, what +we should understand by nature viewed as active (natura +naturans), and nature viewed as passive (natura naturata). I say +to explain, or rather call attention to it, for I think that, +from what has been said, it is sufficiently clear, that by nature +viewed as active we should understand that which is in itself, +and is conceived through itself, or those attributes of +substance, which express eternal and infinite essence, in other +words (Prop. xiv., Cor. i., and Prop. xvii., Cor. ii.) God, in so +far as he is considered as a free cause. + +By nature viewed as passive I understand all that which follows +from the necessity of the nature of God, or of any of the +attributes of God, that is, all the modes of the attributes of +God, in so far as they are considered as things which are in God, +and which without God cannot exist or be conceived. + +XXX. Intellect, in function (actu) finite, or in function +infinite, must comprehend the attributes of God and the +modifications of God, and nothing else. + +>>>>>Proof--A true idea must agree with its object (Ax. vi.); in +other words (obviously) that which is contained in the intellect +in representation must necessarily be granted in nature. But in +nature (by Prop. xiv., Cor. i.) there is no substance save God, +nor any modifications save those (Prop. xv.) which are in God, +and cannot without God either be or be conceived. Therefore the +intellect, in function finite, or in function infinite, must +comprehend the attributes of God and the modifications of God, +and nothing else. Q.E.D. + +XXXI. The intellect in function, whether finite or infinite, as +will, desire, love, &c., should be referred to passive nature and +not to active nature. + +>>>>>Proof--By the intellect we do not (obviously) mean absolute +thought, but only a certain mode of thinking, differing from +other modes, such as love, desire, &c., and therefore (Def. v.) +requiring to be conceived through absolute thought. It must (by +Prop. xv. and Def. vi.), through some attribute of God which +expresses the eternal and infinite essence of thought, be so +conceived, that without such attribute it could neither be nor be +conceived. It must therefore be referred to nature passive +rather than to nature active, as must also the other modes of +thinking. Q.E.D. + +*****Note--I do not here, by speaking of intellect in function, +admit that there is such a thing as intellect in potentiality: +but, wishing to avoid all confusion, I desire to speak only of +what is most clearly perceived by us, namely, of the very act of +understanding, than which nothing is more clearly perceived. For +we cannot perceive anything without adding to our knowledge of +the act of understanding. + +XXXII. Will cannot be called a free cause, but only a necessary +cause. + +>>>>>Proof--Will is only a particular mode of thinking, like +intellect; therefore (by Prop. xxviii.) no volition can exist, +nor be conditioned to act, unless it be conditioned by some cause +other than itself, which cause is conditioned by a third cause, +and so on to infinity. But if will be supposed infinite, it must +also be conditioned to exist and act by God, not by virtue of his +being substance absolutely infinite, but by virtue of his +possessing an attribute which expresses the infinite and eternal +essence of thought (by Prop. xxiii.). Thus, however it be +conceived, whether as finite or infinite, it requires a cause by +which it should be conditioned to exist and act. Thus (Def. +vii.) it cannot be called a free cause, but only a necessary or +constrained cause. Q.E.D. + +<<<<<Corollary I--Hence it follows, first, that God does not act +according to freedom of the will. + +<<<<<Corollary II--It follows, secondly, that will and intellect +stand in the same relation to the nature of God as do motion, and +rest, and absolutely all natural phenomena, which must be +conditioned by God (Prop. xxix.) to exist and act in a particular +manner. For will, like the rest, stands in need of a cause, by +which it is conditioned to exist and act in a particular manner. +And although, when will or intellect be granted, an infinite +number of results may follow, yet God cannot on that account be +said to act from freedom of the will, any more than the infinite +number of results from motion and rest would justify us in saying +that motion and rest act by free will. Wherefore will no more +appertains to God than does anything else in nature, but stands +in the same relation to him as motion, rest, and the like, which +we have shown to follow from the necessity of the divine nature, +and to be conditioned by it to exist and act in a particular +manner. + +XXXIII. Things could not have been brought into being by God in +any manner or in any order different from that which has in fact +obtained. + +>>>>>Proof--All things necessarily follow from the nature of God +(Prop. xvi.), and by the nature of God are conditioned to exist +and act in a particular way (Prop. xxix). If things, therefore, +could have been of a different nature, or have been conditioned +to act in a different way, so that the order of nature would +have been different, God's nature would also have been able to +be different from what it now is; and therefore (by Prop. +xi.)that different nature also would have perforce existed, and +consequently there would have been able to be two or more Gods. +This (by Prop. xiv., Cor. i.) is absurd. Therefore, things +could not have been brought into being by God in any other +manner, &c. Q.E.D. + +*****Note I--As I have thus shown, more clearly than the sun at +noonday, that there is nothing to justify us in calling things +contingent, I wish to explain briefly what meaning we shall +attach to the word contingent; but I will first explain the words +necessary and impossible. + +A thing is called necessary either in respect to its essence or +in respect to its cause; for the existence of a thing +necessarily follows, either from its essence and definition, or +from a given efficient cause. For similar reasons a thing is +said to be impossible; namely, inasmuch as its essence or +definition involves a contradiction, or because no external cause + is granted, which is conditioned to produce such an effect; but +a thing can in no respect be called contingent, save in relation +to the imperfection of our knowledge. + +A thing of which we do not know whether the essence does or does +not involve a contradiction, or of which, knowing that it does +not involve a contradiction, we are still in doubt concerning +the existence, because the order of causes escapes us,--such a +thing, I say, cannot appear to us either necessary or +impossible. Wherefore we call it contingent or possible. + +*****Note II--It clearly follows from what we have said, that +things have been brought into being by God in the highest +perfection, inasmuch as they have necessarily followed from a +most perfect nature. Nor does this prove any imperfection in +God, for it has compelled us to affirm his perfection. From its +contrary proposition, we should clearly gather (as I have just +shown), that God is not supremely perfect, for if things had been +brought into being in any other way, we should have to assign to +God a nature different from that, which we are bound to +attribute to him from the consideration of an absolutely perfect +being. + +I do not doubt, that many will scout this idea as absurd, and +will refuse to give their minds up to contemplating it, simply +because they are accustomed to assign to God a freedom very +different from that which we (Def. vii.) have deduced. They +assign to him, in short, absolute free will. However, I am also +convinced that if such persons reflect on the matter, and duly +weigh in their minds our series of propositions, they will reject +such freedom as they now attribute to God, not only as nugatory, +but also as a great impediment to organized knowledge. There is +no need for me to repeat what I have said in the note to Prop. +xvii. But, for the sake of my opponents, I will show further, +that although it be granted that will pertains to the essence of +God, it nevertheless follows from his perfection, that things +could not have been by him created other than they are, or in a +different order; this is easily proved, if we reflect on what +our opponents themselves concede, namely, that it depends solely +on the decree and will of God, that each thing is what it is. If +it were otherwise, God would not be the cause of all things. +Further, that all the decrees of God have been ratified from all +eternity by God himself. If it were otherwise, God would be +convicted of imperfection or change. But in eternity there is no +such thing as when, before, or after; hence it follows solely +from the perfection of God, that God never can decree, or never +would have decreed anything but what is; that God did not exist +before his decrees, and would not exist without them. But, it +is said, supposing that God had made a different universe, or +had ordained other decrees from all eternity concerning nature +and her order, we could not therefore conclude any imperfection +in God. But persons who say this must admit that God can change +his decrees. For if God had ordained any decrees concerning +nature and her order, different from those which he has +ordained--in other words, if he had willed and conceived +something different concerning nature--he would perforce have +had a different intellect from that which he has, and also a +different will. But if it were allowable to assign to God a +different intellect and a different will, without any change in +his essence or his perfection, what would there be to prevent +him changing the decrees which he has made concerning created +things, and nevertheless remaining perfect? For his intellect +and will concerning things created and their order are the same, +in respect to his essence and perfection, however they be +conceived. + +Further, all the philosophers whom I have read admit that God's +intellect is entirely actual, and not at all potential; as they +also admit that God's intellect, and God's will, and God's +essence are identical, it follows that, if God had had a +different actual intellect and a different will, his essence +would also have been different; and thus, as I concluded at +first, if things had been brought into being by God in a +different way from that which has obtained, God's intellect and +will, that is (as is admitted) his essence would perforce have +been different, which is absurd. + +As these things could not have been brought into being by God in +any but the actual way and order which has obtained; and as the +truth of this proposition follows from the supreme perfection of +God; we can have no sound reason for persuading ourselves to +believe that God did not wish to create all the things which were +in his intellect, and to create them in the same perfection as +he had understood them. + +But, it will be said, there is in things no perfection nor +imperfection; that which is in them, and which causes them to be +called perfect or imperfect, good or bad, depends solely on the +will of God. If God had so willed, he might have brought it +about that what is now perfection should be extreme +imperfection, and vice versa. What is such an assertion, but +an open declaration that God, who necessarily understands that +which he wishes, might bring it about by his will, that he +should understand things differently from the way in which he +does understand them? This (as we have just shown) is the height +of absurdity. Wherefore, I may turn the argument against its +employers, as follows:--All things depend on the power of God. +In order that things should be different from what they are, +God's will would necessarily have to be different. But God's +will cannot be different (as we have just most clearly +demonstrated) from God's perfection. Therefore neither can +things be different. I confess, that the theory which subjects +all things to the will of an indifferent deity, and asserts that +they are all dependent on his fiat, is less far from the truth +than the theory of those, who maintain that God acts in all +things with a view of promoting what is good. For these latter +persons seem to set up something beyond God, which does not +depend on God, but which God in acting looks to as an exemplar, +or which he aims at as a definite goal. This is only another +name for subjecting God to the dominion of destiny, an utter +absurdity in respect to God, whom we have shown to be the first +and only free cause of the essence of all things and also of +their existence. I need, therefore, spend no time in refuting +such wild theories. + +XXXIV. God's power is identical with his essence. + +>>>>>Proof--From the sole necessity of the essence of God it +follows that God is the cause of himself (Prop. xi.) and of all +things (Prop. xvi. and Cor.). Wherefore the power of God, by +which he and all things are and act, is identical with his +essence. Q.E.D. + +XXXV. Whatsoever we conceive to be in the power of God, +necessarily exists. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever is in God's power, must (by the last +Prop.) be comprehended in his essence in such a manner, that it +necessarily follows therefrom, and therefore necessarily exists. +Q.E.D. + +XXXVI. There is no cause from whose nature some effect does not +follow. + +>>>>>Proof--Whatsoever exists expresses God's nature or essence +in a given conditioned manner (by Prop. xxv., Cor.); that is, +(by Prop. xxxiv.), whatsoever exists, expresses in a given +conditioned manner God's power, which is the cause of all +things, therefore an effect must (by Prop. xvi.) necessarily +follow. Q.E.D. + + APPENDIX: In the foregoing I have explained the nature and +properties of God. I have shown that he necessarily exists, +that he is one: that he is, and acts solely by the necessity of +his own nature; that he is the free cause of all things, and how +he is so; that all things are in God, and so depend on him, that +without him they could neither exist nor be conceived; lastly, +that all things are predetermined by God, not through his free +will or absolute fiat, but from the very nature of God or +infinite power. I have further, where occasion afforded, taken +care to remove the prejudices, which might impede the +comprehension of my demonstrations. Yet there still remain +misconceptions not a few, which might and may prove very grave +hindrances to the understanding of the concatenation of things, +as I have explained it above. I have therefore thought it worth +while to bring these misconceptions before the bar of reason. + +All such opinions spring from the notion commonly entertained, +that all things in nature act as men themselves act, namely, +with an end in view. It is accepted as certain, that God +himself directs all things to a definite goal (for it is said +that God made all things for man, and man that he might worship +him). I will, therefore, consider this opinion, asking first, +why it obtains general credence, and why all men are naturally so +prone to adopt it?; secondly, I will point out its falsity; +and, lastly, I will show how it has given rise to prejudices +about good and bad, right and wrong, praise and blame, order and +confusion, beauty and ugliness, and the like. However, this is +not the place to deduce these misconceptions from the nature of +the human mind: it will be sufficient here, if I assume as a +starting point, what ought to be universally admitted, namely, +that all men are born ignorant of the causes of things, that all +have the desire to seek for what is useful to them, and that +they are conscious of such desire. Herefrom it follows, first, +that men think themselves free inasmuch as they are conscious of +their volitions and desires, and never even dream, in their +ignorance, of the causes which have disposed them so to wish and +desire. Secondly, that men do all things for an end, namely, for +that which is useful to them, and which they seek. Thus it +comes to pass that they only look for a knowledge of the final +causes of events, and when these are learned, they are content, +as having no cause for further doubt. If they cannot learn such +causes from external sources, they are compelled to turn to +considering themselves, and reflecting what end would have +induced them personally to bring about the given event, and thus +they necessarily judge other natures by their own. Further, as +they find in themselves and outside themselves many means which +assist them not a little in the search for what is useful, for +instance, eyes for seeing, teeth for chewing, herbs and animals +for yielding food, the sun for giving light, the sea for +breeding fish, &c., they come to look on the whole of nature as a +means for obtaining such conveniences. Now as they are aware, +that they found these conveniences and did not make them, they +think they have cause for believing, that some other being has +made them for their use. As they look upon things as means, they +cannot believe them to be self-created; but, judging from the +means which they are accustomed to prepare for themselves, they +are bound to believe in some ruler or rulers of the universe +endowed with human freedom, who have arranged and adapted +everything for human use. They are bound to estimate the nature +of such rulers (having no information on the subject) in +accordance with their own nature, and therefore they assert that +the gods ordained everything for the use of man, in order to +bind man to themselves and obtain from him the highest honor. +Hence also it follows, that everyone thought out for himself, +according to his abilities, a different way of worshipping God, +so that God might love him more than his fellows, and direct the +whole course of nature for the satisfaction of his blind cupidity +and insatiable avarice. Thus the prejudice developed into +superstition, and took deep root in the human mind; and for this +reason everyone strove most zealously to understand and explain +the final causes of things; but in their endeavor to show that +nature does nothing in vain, i.e. nothing which is useless to +man, they only seem to have demonstrated that nature, the gods, +and men are all mad together. Consider, I pray you, the result: +among the many helps of nature they were bound to find some +hindrances, such as storms, earthquakes, diseases, &c.: so they +declared that such things happen, because the gods are angry at +some wrong done to them by men, or at some fault committed in +their worship. Experience day by day protested and showed by +infinite examples, that good and evil fortunes fall to the lot +of pious and impious alike; still they would not abandon their +inveterate prejudice, for it was more easy for them to class such +contradictions among other unknown things of whose use they were +ignorant, and thus to retain their actual and innate condition +of ignorance, than to destroy the whole fabric of their reasoning +and start afresh. They therefore laid down as an axiom, that +God's judgments far transcend human understanding. Such a +doctrine might well have sufficed to conceal the truth from the +human race for all eternity, if mathematics had not furnished +another standard of verity in considering solely the essence and +properties of figures without regard to their final causes. +There are other reasons (which I need not mention here) besides +mathematics, which might have caused men's minds to be directed +to these general prejudices, and have led them to the knowledge +of the truth. + +I have now sufficiently explained my first point. There is no +need to show at length, that nature has no particular goal in +view, and that final causes are mere human figments. This, I +think, is already evident enough, both from the causes and +foundations on which I have shown such prejudice to be based, +and also from Prop. xvi., and the Corollary of Prop. xxxii., +and, in fact, all those propositions in which I have shown, that +everything in nature proceeds from a sort of necessity, and with +the utmost perfection. However, I will add a few remarks in +order to overthrow this doctrine of a final cause utterly. That +which is really a cause it considers as an effect, and vice +versa: it makes that which is by nature first to be last, and +that which is highest and most perfect to be most imperfect. +Passing over the questions of cause and priority as +self-evident, it is plain from Props. xxi., xxii., xxiii. that +the effect is most perfect which is produced immediately by God; +the effect which requires for its production several +intermediate causes is, in that respect, more imperfect. But if +those things which were made immediately by God were made to +enable him to attain his end, then the things which come after, +for the sake of which the first were made, are necessarily the +most excellent of all. + +Further, this doctrine does away with the perfection of God: +for, if God acts for an object, he necessarily desires something +which he lacks. Certainly, theologians and metaphysicians draw +a distinction between the object of want and the object of +assimilation; still they confess that God made all things for +the sake of himself, not for the sake of creation. They are +unable to point to anything prior to creation, except God +himself, as an object for which God should act, and are +therefore driven to admit (as they clearly must), that God +lacked those things for whose attainment he created means, and +further that he desired them. + +We must not omit to notice that the followers of this doctrine, +anxious to display their talent in assigning final causes, have +imported a new method of argument in proof of their +theory--namely, a reduction, not to the impossible, but to +ignorance; thus showing that they have no other method of +exhibiting their doctrine. For example, if a stone falls from a +roof onto someone's head, and kills him, they will demonstrate +by their new method, that the stone fell in order to kill the +man; for, if it had not by God's will fallen with that object, +how could so many circumstances (and there are often many +concurrent circumstances) have all happened together by chance? +Perhaps you will answer that the event is due to the facts that +the wind was blowing, and the man was walking that way. "But +why," they will insist, "was the wind blowing, and why was the +man at that very time walking that way?" If you again answer, +that the wind had then sprung up because the sea had begun to be +agitated the day before, the weather being previously calm, and +that the man had been invited by a friend, they will again +insist: "But why was the sea agitated, and why was the man +invited at that time?" So they will pursue their questions from +cause to cause, till at last you take refuge in the will of +God--in other words, the sanctuary of ignorance. So, again, +when they survey the frame of the human body, they are amazed; +and being ignorant of the causes of so great a work of art, +conclude that it has been fashioned, not mechanically, but by +divine and supernatural skill, and has been so put together that +one part shall not hurt another. + +Hence anyone who seeks for the true causes of miracles, and +strives to understand natural phenomena as an intelligent being, +and not to gaze at them like a fool, is set down and denounced +as an impious heretic by those, whom the masses adore as the +interpreters of nature and the gods. Such persons know that, +with the removal of ignorance, the wonder which forms their only +available means for proving and preserving their authority would +vanish also. But I now quit this subject, and pass on to my +third point. + +After men persuaded themselves, that everything which is created +is created for their sake, they were bound to consider as the +chief quality in everything that which is most useful to +themselves, and to account those things the best of all which +have the most beneficial effect on mankind. Further, they were +bound to form abstract notions for the explanation of the nature +of things, such as goodness, badness, order, confusion, warmth, +cold, beauty, deformity, and so on; and from the belief that +they are free agents arose the further notions of praise and +blame, sin and merit. + +I will speak of these latter hereafter, when I treat of human +nature; the former I will briefly explain here. + +Everything which conduces to health and the worship of God they +have called good, everything which hinders these objects they +have styled bad; and inasmuch as those who do not understand the +nature of things do not verify phenomena in any way, but merely +imagine them after a fashion, and mistake their imagination for +understanding, such persons firmly believe that there is an +order in things, being really ignorant both of things and their +own nature. When phenomena are of such a kind, that the +impression they make on our senses requires little effort of +imagination, and can consequently be easily remembered, we say +that they are well-ordered; if the contrary, that they are +ill-ordered or confused. Further, as things which are easily +imagined are more pleasing to us, men prefer order to +confusion--as though there were any order in nature, except in +relation to our imagination--and say that God has created all +things in order; thus, without knowing it, attributing +imagination to God, unless, indeed, they would have it that God +foresaw human imagination, and arranged everything, so that it +should be most easily imagined. If this be their theory, they +would not, perhaps, be daunted by the fact that we find an +infinite number of phenomena, far surpassing our imagination, +and very many others which confound its weakness. But enough +has been said on this subject. The other abstract notions are +nothing but modes of imagining, in which the imagination is +differently affected: though they are considered by the +ignorant as the chief attributes of things, inasmuch as they +believe that everything was created for the sake of themselves; +and, according as they are affected by it, style it good or bad, +healthy or rotten or corrupt. For instance, if the motion which +objects we see communicate to our nerves be conducive to health, +the objects causing it are styled beautiful; if a contrary motion +be excited, they are styled ugly. + +Things which are perceived through our sense of smell are styled +fragrant or fetid; if through our taste, sweet or bitter, +full-flavored or insipid; if through our touch, hard or soft, +rough or smooth, &c. + +Whatsoever affects our ears is said to give rise to noise, sound, +or harmony. In this last case, there are men lunatic enough to +believe, that even God himself takes pleasure in harmony; and +philosophers are not lacking who have persuaded themselves, that +the motion of the heavenly bodies gives rise to harmony--all of +which instances sufficiently show that everyone judges of things +according to the state of his brain, or rather mistakes for +things the forms of his imagination. We need no longer wonder +that there have arisen all the controversies we have witnessed, +and finally skepticism: for, although human bodies in many +respects agree, yet in very many others they differ; so that what +seems good to one seems confused to another; what is pleasing to +one displeases another, and so on. I need not further +enumerate, because this is not the place to treat the subject at +length, and also because the fact is sufficiently well known. +It is commonly said: "So many men, so many minds; everyone is +wise in his own way; brains differ as completely as palates." +All of which proverbs show, that men judge of things according +to their mental disposition, and rather imagine than understand: +for, if they understood phenomena, they would, as +mathematicians attest, be convinced, if not attracted, by what I +have urged. + +We have now perceived, that all the explanations commonly given +of nature are mere modes of imagining, and do not indicate the +true nature of anything, but only the constitution of the +imagination; and, although they have names, as though they were +entities, existing externally to the imagination, I call them +entities imaginary rather than real; and, therefore, all +arguments against us drawn from such abstractions are easily +rebutted. + +Many argue in this way. If all things follow from a necessity of +the absolutely perfect nature of God, why are there so many +imperfections in nature? such, for instance, as things corrupt +to the point of putridity, loathsome deformity, confusion, evil, +sin, &c. But these reasoners are, as I have said, easily +confuted, for the perfection of things is to be reckoned only +from their own nature and power; things are not more or less +perfect, according as they are serviceable or repugnant to +mankind. To those who ask why God did not so create all men, +that they should be governed only by reason, I give no answer +but this: because matter was not lacking to him for the creation +of every degree of perfection from highest to lowest; or, more +strictly, because the laws of his nature are so vast, as to +suffice for the production of everything conceivable by an +infinite intelligence, as I have shown in Prop. xvi. + +Such are the misconceptions I have undertaken to note; if there +are any more of the same sort, everyone may easily dissipate +them for himself with the aid of a little reflection. + + + + + +END OF PART I +of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza + diff --git a/old/1spne10.zip b/old/1spne10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..86c35ed --- /dev/null +++ b/old/1spne10.zip |
