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THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF
AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS
BISHOP OF HIPPO
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK X.
IN WHICH THERE IS SHOWN TO BE ANOTHER TRINITY IN THE MIND OF MAN, AND ONE
THAT APPEARS MUCH MORE EVIDENTLY, VIZ. IN HIS MEMORY, UNDERSTANDING, AND WILL.
CHAP. 1.--THE LOVE OF THE STUDIOUS MIND, THAT IS, OF ONE DESIROUS TO KNOW,
IS NOT THE LOVE OF A THING WHICH IT DOES NOT
1. Let Us now proceed, then, in due order, with a more exact purpose, to explain
this same point more thoroughly. And first, since no one can love at all a
thing of which he is wholly ignorant, we must carefully consider of what sort
is the love of those who are studious, that is, of those who do not already
know, but are still desiring to know any branch of learning. Now certainly,
in those things whereof the word study is not commonly used, love often arises
from hearsay, when the reputation of anything for beauty inflames the mind
to the seeing and enjoying it; since the mind knows generically wherein consist
the beauties of corporeal things, from having seen them very frequently, and
since there exists within a faculty of approving that which outwardly is longed
for. And when this happens, the love that is called forth is not of a thing
wholly unknown, since its genus is thus known. But when we love a good man
whose face we never saw, we love him from the knowledge of his virtues, which
virtues we know [abstractly] in the truth itself. But in the case of learning,
it is for the most part the authority of others who praise and commend it that
kindles our love of it; although nevertheless we could not burn with any zeal
at all for the study of it, unless we had already in our mind at least a slight
impression of the knowledge of each kind of learning. For who, for instance,
would devote any care and labor to the learning of rhetoric, unless he knew
before that it was tim science of speaking? Sometimes, again, we marvel at
the results of learning itself, which we have heard of or experienced; and
hence burn to obtain, by learning, the power of attaining these results. Just
as if it were said to one who did not know his letters, that there is a kind
of learning which enables a man to send words, wrought with the hand in silence,
to one who is ever so far absent, for him in turn to whom they are sent to
gather these words, not with his ears, but with his eyes; and if the man were
to see the thing actually done, is not that man, since he desires to know how
he can do this thing, altogether moved to study with a view to the result which
he already knows and holds? So it is that the studious zeal of those who learn
is kindled: for that of which any one is utterly ignorant, he can in no way
love.
2. So
also, if any one hear an unknown sign, as, for instance, the sound of some
word of which he
does not
know the signification, he desires to know what
it is; that is, he desires to know what thing it is which it is agreed shall
be brought to mind by that sound: as if he heard the word temetum(1) uttered,
and not knowing, should ask what it is. He must then know already that it is
a sign, i.e. that the word is not an empty sound, but that something is signified
by it; for in other respects this trisyllabic word is known to him already,
and has already impressed its articulate form upon his mind through the sense
of hearing. And then what more is to be required in him, that he may go on
to a greater knowledge of that of which all the letters and all the spaces
of its several sounds are already known, unless that it shall at the same time
have become known to him that it is a sign, and shall have also moved him with
the desire of knowing of what it is the sign? The more, then, the thing is
known, yet not fully known, the more the mind desires to know concerning it
what remains to be known. For if he knew it to be only such and such a spoken
word, and did not know that it was the sign of something, he would seek nothing
further, since the sensible thing is already perceived as far as it can be
by the sense. But because he knows it to be not only a spoken word, but also
a sign, he wishes to know it perfectly; and no sign is known perfectly, except
it be known of what it is the sign. He then who with ardent carefulness seeks
to know this, and inflamed by studious zeal perseveres in the search; can such
an one be said to be without love? What then does he love? For certainly nothing
can be loved unless it is known. For that man does not love those three syllables
which he knows already. But if he loves this in them, that he knows them to
signify something, this is not the point now in question, for it is not this
which he seeks to know. But we are now asking what it is he loves, in that
which he is desirous to know, but which certainly he does not yet know; and
we are therefore wondering why he loves, since we know most assuredly that
nothing can be loved unless it be known. What then does he love, except that
he knows and perceives in the reason of things what excellence there is in
learning, in which the knowledge of all signs is contained; and what benefit
there is in the being skilled in these, since by them human fellowship mutually
communicates its own perceptions, lest the assemblies of men should be actually
worse than utter solitude, if they were not to mingle their thoughts by conversing
together? The soul, then, discerns this fitting and serviceable species, and
knows it, and loves it; and he who seeks the meaning of any words of which
he is ignorant, studies to render that species perfect in himself as much as
he can: for it is one thing to behold it in the light of truth, another to
desire it as within his own capacity. For he beholds in the light of truth
how great and how good a thing it is to understand and to speak all tongues
of all nations, and so to hear no tongue and to be heard by none as from a
foreigner. The beauty, then, of this knowledge is already discerned by thought,
and the thing being known is loved; and that thing is so regarded, and so stimulates
the studious zeal of learners, that they are moved with respect to it, and
desire it eagerly in all the labor which they spend upon the attainment of
such a capacity, in order that they may also embrace in practice that which
they know beforehand by reason. And so every one, the nearer he approaches
that capacity in hope, the more fervently desires it with love; for those branches
of learning are studied the more eagerly, which men do not despair of being
able to attain; for when any one entertains no hope of attaining his end, then
he either loves lukewarmly or does not love at all, howsoever he may see the
excellence of it. Accordingly, because the knowledge of all languages is almost
universally felt to be hopeless, every one studies most to know that of his
own nation; but if he feels that he is not sufficient even to comprehend this
perfectly, yet no one is so indolent in this knowledge as not to wish to know,
when he hears an unknown word, what it is, and to seek and learn it if he can.
And while he is seeking it, certainly he has a studious zeal of learning, and
seems to love a thing he does not know; but the case is really otherwise. For
that species touches the mind, which the mind knows and thinks, wherein the
fitness is clearly visible which accrues from the associating of minds with
one another, in the hearing and returning of known and spoken words. And this
species kindles studious zeal in him who seeks what indeed he knows not, but
gazes upon and loves the unknown form to which that pertains. If then, for
example, any one were to ask, What is temetum (for I had instanced this word
already), and it were said to him, What does this matter to you? he will answer,
Lest perhaps I hear some one speaking, and understand him not; or perhaps read
the word somewhere, and know not what the writer meant. Who, pray, would say
to such an inquirer, Do not care about understanding what you hear; do not
care about knowing what you read? For almost every rational soul quickly discerns
the beauty of that knowledge, through which the thoughts of men are mutually
made known by the enunciation of significant words; and it is on account of
this fitness thus known, and because known therefore loved, that such an unknown
word is studiously sought out. When then he hears and learns that wine was
called "temetum" by our forefathers, but that the word is already
quite obsolete in our present usage of language, he will think perhaps that
he has still need of the word on account of this or that book of those forefathers.
But if he holds. these also to be superfluous, perhaps he does now come to
think the word not worth remembering, since he sees it has nothing to do with
that species of learning which he knows with the mind, and gazes upon, and
so loves.
3. Wherefore in all cases the love of a studious mind, that is, of one that
wishes to know what it does not know, is not the love of that thing which it
does not know, but of that which it knows; on account of which it wishes to
know what it does not know. Or if it is so inquisitive as to be carried away,
not for any other cause known to it, but by the mere love of knowing things
unknown then such an inquisitive person is, doubtless distinguishable from
an ordinary student, yet does not, any more than he, love things he does not
know; nay, on the contrary, he is more fitly said to hate things he knows not,
of which he wishes that there should be none, in wishing to know everything.
But lest any one should lay before us a more difficult question, by declaring
that it is just as impossible for any one to hate what he does not know, as
to love what he does not know we will not withstand what is true; but it must
be understood that it is not the same thing to say he loves to know things
unknown, as to say he loves things unknown. For it is possible that a man may
love to know things unknown; but it is not possible that he should love things
unknown. For the word to know is not placed there without meaning; since he
who loves to know things unknown, does not love the unknown things themselves,
but the knowing of them. And unless he knew what knowing means, no one could
say confidently, either that he knew or that he did not know. For not only
he who says I know, and says so truly, must needs know what knowing is; but
he also who says, I do not know, and says so confidently and truly, and knows
that he says so truly, certainly knows what knowing is; for he both distinguishes
him who does not know from him who knows, when he looks into himself and says
truly I do not know; and whereas he knows that he says this truly, whence should
he know it, if he did not know what knowing is?
CHAP. 2.--NO ONE AT ALL LOVES THINGS UNKNOWN.
4. No studious person, then, no inquisitive person, loves things he does not
know, even while he is urgent with the most vehement desire to know what he
does not know. For he either knows already generically what he loves, and longs
to know it also in some individual or individuals, which perhaps are praised,
but not yet known to him; and he pictures in his mind an imaginary form by
which he may be stirred to love. And whence does he picture this, except from
those things which he has already known? And yet perhaps he will not love it,
if he find that form which was praised to be unlike that other form which was
figured and in thought most fully known to his mind. And if he has loved it,
he will begin to love it from that time when he learned it; since a little
before, that form which was loved was other than that which the mind that formed
it had been wont to exhibit to itself. But if he shall find it similar to that
form which report had proclaimed, and to be such that he could truly say I
was already loving thee; yet certainly not even then did he love a form he
did not know, since he had known it in that likeness. Or else we see somewhat
in the species of the eternal reason, and therein love it; and when this is
manifested in some image of a temporal thing, and we believe the praises of
those who have made trial of it, and so love it, then we do not love anything
unknown, according to that which we have already sufficiently discussed above.
Or else, again, we love something known, and on account of it seek something
unknown; and so it is by no means the love of the thing unknown that possesses
us, but the love of the thing known, to which we know the unknown thing belongs,
so that we know that too which we seek still as unknown; as a little before
I said of an unknown word. Or else, again, every one loves the very knowing
itself, as no one can fail to know who desires to know anything. For these
reasons they seem to love things unknown who wish to know anything which they
do not know, and who, on account of their vehement desire of inquiry, cannot
be said to be without love. But how different the case really is, and that
nothing at all can be loved which is not known, I think I must have persuaded
every one who. carefully looks upon truth. But since the examples which we
have given belong to those who desire to know something which they themselves
are not, we must take thought lest perchance some new notion appear, when the
mind desires to know itself.
CHAP. 3.--THAT WHEN THE MIND LOVES ITSELF, IT IS NOT UNKNOWN TO ITSELF.
5. What, then, does the mind love, when it seeks ardently to know itself,
whilst it is still unknown to itself? For, behold, the mind seeks to know itself,
and is excited thereto by studious zeal. It loves, therefore; but what does
it love? Is it itself? But how can this be when it does not yet know itself,
and no one can love what he does not know? Is it that report has declared to
it its own species, in like way as we commonly hear of people who are absent?
Perhaps, then, it does not love itself, but loves that which it imagines of
itself, which is perhaps widely different from what itself is: or if the phantasy
in the mind is like the mind itself, and so when it loves this fancied image,
it loves itself before it knew itself, because it gazes upon that which is
like itself; then it knew other minds from which to picture itself, and so
is known to itself generically. Why, then, when it knows other minds, does
it not know itself, since nothing can possibly be more present to it than itself?
But if, as other eyes are more known to the eyes of the body, than those eyes
are to themselves; then let it not seek itself, because it never will find
itself. For eyes can never see themselves except in looking-glasses; and it
cannot be supposed in any way that anything of that kind can be applied also
to the contemplation of incorporeal things, so that the mind should know itself,
as it were, in a looking-glass. Or does it see in the reason of eternal truth
how beautiful it is to know one's self, and so loves this which it sees, and
studies to bring it to pass in itself? because, although it is not known to
itself, yet it is known to it how good it is, that it should be known to itself.
And this, indeed, is very wonderful, that it does not yet know itself, and
yet knows already how excellent a thing it is to know itself. Or does it see
some most excellent end, viz. its own serenity and blessedness, by some hidden
remembrance, which has not abandoned it, although it has gone far onwards,
and believes that it cannot attain to that same end unless it know itself?
And so while it loves that, it seeks this; and loves that which is known, on
account of which it seeks that which is unknown. But Why should the remembrance
of its own blessedness be able to last, and the remembrance of itself not be
able to last as well; that so it should know itself which wishes to attain,
as well as know that to which it wishes to attain? Or when it loves to know
itself, does it love, not itself, which it does not yet know, but the very
act of knowing; and feel the more annoyed that itself is wanting to its own
knowledge wherewith it wishes to embrace all things? And it knows what it is
to know; and whilst it loves this, which knows, desires also to know itself.
Whereby, then, does it know its own knowing, if it does not know itself? For
it knows that it knows other things, but that it does not know itself; for
it is from hence that it knows also what knowing is. In what way, then, does
that which does not know itself, know itself as knowing anything? For it does
not know that some other mind knows, but that itself does so. Therefore it
knows itself. Further, when it seeks to know itself, it knows itself now as
seeking. Therefore again it knows itself. And hence it cannot altogether not
know itself, when certainly it does so far know itself as that it knows itself
as not knowing itself. But if it does not know itself not to know itself, then
it does not seek to know itself. And therefore, in the very fact that it seeks
itself, it is clearly convicted of being more known to itself than unknown.
For it knows itself as seeking and as not knowing itself, in that it seeks
to know itself.
CHAP. 4.--HOW THE MIND KNOWS ITSELF, NOT IN PART, BUT AS A WHOLE.
6. What then shall we say? Does that which knows itself in part, not know
itself in part? But it is absurd to say, that it does not as a whole know what
it knows. I do not say, it knows wholly; but what it knows, it as a whole knows.
When therefore it knows anything about itself, which it can only know as a
whole, it knows itself as a whole. But it does know that itself knows something,
while yet except as a whole it cannot know anything. Therefore it knows itself
as a whole. Further, what in it is so known to itself, as that it lives? And
it cannot at once be a mind, and not live, while it has also something over
and above, viz., that it understands: for the souls of beasts also live, but
do not understand. As therefore a mind is a whole mind, so it lives as a whole.
But it knows that it lives. Therefore it knows itself as a whole. Lastly, when
the mind seeks to know itself, it already knows that it is a mind: otherwise
it knows not whether it seeks itself, and perhaps seeks one thing while intending
to seek another. For it might happen that itself was not a mind, and so, in
seeking to know a mind, that it did not seek to know itself. Wherefore since
the mind, when it seeks to know what mind is, knows that it seeks itself, certainly
it knows that itself is a mind. Furthermore, if it knows this in itself, that
it is a mind, and a whole mind, then it knows itself as a whole. But suppose
it did not know itself to be a mind, but in seeking itself only knew that it
did seek itself. For so, too, it may possibly seek one thing for another, if
it does not know this: but that it may not seek one thing for another, without
doubt it knows what it seeks. But if it knows what it seeks, and seeks itself,
then certainly it knows itself. What therefore more does it seek? But if it
knows itself in part, but still seeks itself in part, then it seeks not itself,
but part of itself. For when we speak of the mind itself, we speak of it as
a whole. Further, because it knows that it is not yet found by itself as a
whole, it knows how much the whole is. And so it seeks that which is wanting,
as we are wont to seek to recall to the mind something that has slipped from
the mind, but has not altogether gone away from it; since we can recognize
it, when it has come back, to be the same thing that we were seeking. But how
can mind come into mind, as though it were possible for the mind not to be
in the mind? Add to this, that if, having found a part, it does not seek itself
as a whole, yet it as a whole seeks itself. Therefore as a whole it is present
to itself, and there is nothing left to be sought: for that is wanting which
is sought, not the mind which seeks. Since therefore it as a whole seeks itself,
nothing of it is wanting. Or if it does not as a whole seek itself, but the
part which has been found seeks the part which has not yet been found then
the mind does not seek itself, of which no part seeks itself. For the part
which has been found, does not seek itself; nor yet does the part itself which
has not yet been found, seek itself; since it is sought by that part which
has been already found. Wherefore, since neither the mind as a whole seeks
itself, nor does any part of it seek itself, the mind does not seek itself
at all.
CHAP. 5.--WHY THE SOUL IS ENJOINED TO KNOW ITSELF. WHENCE COME THE ERRORS
OF THE MIND CONCERNING ITS OWN SUBSTANCE.
7. Why therefore is it enjoined upon it, that it should know itself? I suppose,
in order that, it may consider itself, and live according to its own nature;
that is, seek to be regulated according to its own nature, viz., under Him
to whom it ought to be subject, and above those things to which it is to be
preferred; under Him by whom it ought to be ruled, above those things which
it ought to rule. For it does many things through vicious desire, as though
in forgetfulness of itself. For it sees some things intrinsically excellent,
in that more excellent nature which is God: and whereas it ought to remain
steadfast that it may enjoy them, it is turned away from Him, by wishing to
appropriate those things to itself, and not to be like to Him by His gift,
but to be what He is by its own, and it begins to move and slip gradually down
into less and less, which it thinks to be more and more; for it is neither
sufficient for itself, nor is anything at all sufficient for it, if it withdraw
from Him who is alone sufficient: and so through want and distress it becomes
too intent upon its own actions and upon the unquiet delights which it obtains
through them: and thus, by the desire of acquiring knowledge from those things
that are without, the nature of which it knows and loves, and which it feels
can be lost unless held fast with anxious care, it loses its security, and
thinks of itself so much the less, in proportion as it feels the more secure
that it cannot lose itself. So, whereas it is one thing not to know oneself,
and another not to think of oneself (for we do not say of the man that is skilled
in much learning, that he is ignorant of grammar, when he is only not thinking
of it, because he is thinking at the time of the art of medicine);--whereas,
then, I say it is one thing not to know oneself, and another not to think of
oneself, such is the strength of love, that the mind draws in with itself those
things which it has long thought of with love, and has grown into them by the
close adherence of diligent study, even when it returns in some way to think
of itself. And because these things are corporeal which it loved externally
through the carnal senses; and because it has become entangled with them by
a kind of daily familiarity, and yet cannot carry those corporeal things themselves
with itself internally as it were into the region of incorporeal nature; therefore
it combines certain images of them, and thrusts them thus made from itself
into itself. For it gives to the forming of them somewhat of its own substance,
yet preserves the while something by which it may judge freely of the species
of those images; and this something is more properly the mind, that is, the
rational understanding, which is preserved that it may judge. For we see that
we have those parts. of the soul which are informed by the likenesses of corporeal
things, in common also with beasts.
CHAP. 6.--THE OPINION WHICH THE MIND HAS OF ITSELF IS DECEITFUL.
8. But the mind errs, when it so lovingly and intimately connects itself with
these images, as even to consider itself to be something of the same kind.
For so it is conformed to them to some extent, not by being this, but by thinking
it is so: not that it thinks itself to be an image, but outright that very
thing itself of which it entertains the image. For there still lives in it
the power of distinguishing the corporeal thing which it leaves without, from
the image of that corporeal thing which it contains therefrom within itself:
except when these images are so projected as if felt without and not thought
within, as in the case of people who are asleep, or mad, or in a trance.
CHAP. 7.--THE OPINIONS OF PHILOSOPHERS RESPECTING THE SUBSTANCE OF THE SOUL.
THE ERROR OF THOSE WHO ARE OF OPINION THAT THE SOUL IS CORPOREAL, DOES NOT
ARISE FROM DEFECTIVE KNOWLEDGE OF THE SOUL, BUT FROM THEIR ADDING THERETO SOMETHING
FOREIGN TO IT. WHAT IS MEANT BY FINDING.
9. When,
therefore, it thinks itself to be something of this kind, it thinks itself
to be a corporeal
thing; and
since it is perfectly conscious of its
own superiority, by which it rules the body, it has hence come to pass that
the question has been raised what part of the body has the greater power in
the body; and the opinion has been held that this is the mind, nay, that it
is even the whole soul altogether. And some accordingly think it to be the
blood, others the brain, others the heart; not as the Scripture says, "I
will praise Thee, O Lord, with my whole heart;" and, "Thou shall
love the Lord thy God with all thine heart;"(1) for this word by misapplication
or metaphor is transferred from the body to the soul; but they have simply
thought it to be that small part itself of the body, which we see when the
inward parts are rent asunder. Others, again, have believed the soul to be
made up of very minute and individual corpustules, which they call atoms, meeting
in themselves and cohering. Others have said that its substance is air, others
fire. Others have been of opinion that it is no substance at all, since they
could not think any substance unless it is body, and they did not find that
the soul was body; but it was in their opinion the tempering together itself
of our body, or the combining together of the elements, by which--that flesh
is as it were conjoined. And hence all of these have held the soul to be mortal;
since, whether it were body, or some combination of body, certainly it could
not in either case continue always without death. But they who have held its
substance to be some kind of life the reverse of corporeal, since they have
found it to be a life that animates and quickens every living body, have by
consequence striven also, according as each was able, to prove it immortal,
since life cannot be without life.
For as to that fifth kind of body, I know not what, which some have added
to the four well-known elements of the world, and have said that the soul was
made of this, I do not think we need spend time in discussing it in this place.
For either they mean by body what we mean by it, viz., that of which a part
is less than the whole in extension of place, and they are to be reckoned among
those who have believed the mind to be corporeal: or if they call either all
substance, or all changeable substance, body, whereas they know that not all
substance is contained in extension of place by any length and breadth and
height, we need not contend with them about a question of words.
10. Now,
in the case of all these opinions, any one who sees that the nature of the
mind is at once
substance,
and yet not corporeal,--that is, that it
does not occupy a less extension of place with a less part of itself, and a
greater with a greater,--must needs see at the same time that they who are
of opinion that it is corporeal? do not err from defect of knowledge concerning
mind, but because they associate with it qualities without which they are not
able to conceive any nature at all. For if you bid them conceive of existence
that is without corporeal phantasms, they hold it merely nothing. And so the
mind would not seek itself, as though wanting to itself. For what is so present
to knowledge as that which is present to the mind? Or what is so present to
the mind as the mind itself? And hence what is called "invention," if
we consider the origin of the word, what else does it mean, unless that to
find out(3) is to "come into" that which is sought? Those things
accordingly which come into the mind as it were of themselves, are not usually
said to be found out,(4) although they may be said to be known; since we did
not endeavor by seeking to come into them, that is to invent or find them out.
And therefore, as the mind itself really seeks those things which are sought
by the eyes or by any other sense of the body (for the mind directs even the
carnal sense, and then finds out or invents, when that sense comes to the things
which are sought); so, too, it finds out or invents other things which it ought
to know, not with the medium of corporeal sense, but through itself, when it "comes
into" them; and this, whether in the case of the higher substance that
is in God, or of the other parts of the soul; just as it does when it judges
of bodily images themselves, for it finds these within, in the soul, impressed
through the body.
CHAP. 8.--HOW THE SOUL INQUIRES INTO ITSELF. WHENCE COMES THE ERROR OF THE
SOUL CONCERNING ITSELF.
11. It is then a wonderful question, in what manner the soul seeks and finds
itself; at what it aims in order to seek, or whither it comes. that it may
come into or find out. For what is so much in the mind as she mind itself?
But because it is in those things which it thinks of with love, and is wont
to be in sensible, that is, in corporeal things with love, it is unable to
be in itself without the images of those corporeal things. And hence shameful
error arises to block its way, whilst it cannot separate from itself the images
of sensible things, so as to see itself alone. For they have marvellously cohered
with it by the close adhesion of love. And herein consists its uncleanness;
since, while it strives to think of itself alone, it fancies itself to be that,
without which it cannot think of itself. When, therefore, it is bidden to become
acquainted with itself, let it not seek itself as though it were withdrawn
from itself; but let it withdraw that which it has added to itself. For itself
lies more deeply within, not only than those sensible things, which are clearly
without, but also than the images of them; which are indeed in some part of
the soul, viz., that which beasts also have, although these want understanding,
which is proper to the mind. As therefore the mind is within, it goes forth
in some sort from itself, when it exerts the affection of love towards these,
as it were, footprints of many acts of attention. And these footprints are,
as it were, imprinted on the memory, at the time when the corporeal things
which are without are perceived in such way, that even when those corporeal
things are absent, yet the images of them are at hand to those who think of
them. Therefore let the mind become acquainted with itself, and not seek itself
as if it were absent; but fix upon itself the act of [voluntary] attention,
by which it was wandering among other things, and let it think of itself. So
it will see that at no time did it ever not love itself, at no time did it
ever not know itself; but by loving another thing together with itself it has
confounded itself with it, and in some sense has grown one with it. And so,
while it embraces diverse things, as though they were one, it has come to think
those things to be one which are diverse.
CHAP. 9.--THE MIND KNOWS ITSELF, BY THE VERY ACT OF UNDERSTANDING THE PRECEPT
TO KNOW ITSELF.
12. Let
it not therefore seek to discern itself as though absent, but take pains
to discern itself
as present.
Nor let it take knowledge of itself as
if it did not know itself, but let it distinguish itself from that which it
knows to be another. For how will it take pains to obey that very precept which
is given it, "Know thyself," if it knows not either what "know" means
or what "thyself" means? But if it knows both, then it knows also
itself. Since "know thyself" is not so said to the mind as is "Know
the cherubim and the seraphim;" for they are absent, and we believe concerning
them, and according to that belief they are declared to be certain celestial
powers. Nor yet again as it is said, Know the will of that man: for this it
is not within our reach to perceive at all, either by sense or understanding,
unless by corporeal signs actually set forth; and this in such a way that we
rather believe than understand. Nor again as it is said to a man, Behold thy
own face; which he can only do in a looking-glass. For even our own face itself
is out of the reach of our own seeing it; because it is not there where our
look can be directed. But when it is said to the mind, Know thyself; then it
knows itself by that very act by which it understands the word "thyself;" and
this for no other reason than that it is present to itself. But if it does
not understand what is said, then certainly it does not do as it is bid to
do. And therefore it is bidden to do that thing which it does do, when it understands
the very precept that bids it.
CHAP. 10.--EVERY MIND KNOWS CERTAINLY THREE THINGS CONCERNING ITSELF--THAT
IT UNDERSTANDS, THAT IT IS, AND THAT IT LIVES,
13. Let it not then add anything to that which it knows itself to be, when
it is bidden to know itself. For it knows, at any rate, that this is said to
itself; namely, to the self that is, and that lives, and that understands.
But a dead body also is, and cattle live; but neither a dead body nor cattle
understand. Therefore it so knows that it so is, and that it so lives, as an
understanding is and lives. When, therefore, for example's sake, the mind thinks
itself air, it thinks that air understands; it knows, however, that itself
understands, but it does not know itself to be air, but only thinks so. Let
it separate that which it thinks itself; let it discern that which it knows;
let this remain to it, about which not even have they doubted who have thought
the mind to be this corporeal thing or that. For certainly every mind does
not consider itself to be air; but some think themselves fire, others the brain,
and some one kind of corporeal thing, others another, as I have mentioned before;
yet all know that they themselves understand, and are, and live; but they refer
understanding to that which they understand, but to be, and to live, to themselves.
And no one doubts, either that no one understands who does not live, or that
no one lives of whom it is not true that he is; and that therefore by consequence
that which understands both is and lives; not as a dead body is which does
not live, nor as a soul lives which does not understand, but in some proper
and more excellent manner. Further, they know that they will, and they equally
know that no one can will who is not and who does not live; and they also refer
that will itself to something which they will with that will. They know also
that they remember; and they know at the same time that nobody could remember,
unless he both was and lived; but we refer memory itself also to something,
in that we remember those things. Therefore the knowledge and science of many
things are contained in two of these three, memory and understanding; but will
must be present, that we may enjoy or use them. For we enjoy things known,
in which things themselves the will finds delight for their own sake, and so
reposes; but we use those things, which we refer to some other thing which
we are to enjoy. Neither is the life of man vicious and culpable in any other
way, than as wrongly using and wrongly enjoying. But it is no place here to
discuss this.
14. But since we treat of the nature of the mind, let us remove from our consideration
all knowledge which is received from without, through the senses of the body;
and attend more carefully to the position which we have laid down, that all
minds know and are certain concerning themselves. For men certainly have doubted
whether the power of living, of remembering, of understanding, of willing,
of thinking, of knowing, of judging, be of air, or of fire, or of the brain,
or of the blood, or of atoms, or besides the usual four elements of a fifth
kind of body, I know not what; or ,whether the combining or tempering together
of this our flesh itself has power to accomplish these things. And one has
attempted to establish this, and another to establish that. Yet who ever doubts
that he himself lives, and remembers, and understands, and wills, and thinks,
and knows, and judges? Seeing that even if he doubts, he lives; if he doubts,
he remembers why he doubts; if he doubts, he understands that he doubts; if
he doubts, he wishes to be certain; if he doubts, he thinks; if he doubts,
he knows that he does not know; if he doubts, he judges that he ought not to
assent rashly. Whosoever therefore doubts about anything else, ought not to
doubt of all these things; which if they were not, he would not be able to
doubt of anything.
15. They who think the mind to be either a body or the combination or tempering
of the body, will have all these things to seem to be in a subject, so that
the substance is air, or fire, or some other corporeal thing, which they think
to be the mind; but that the understanding (intelligentia) is in this corporeal
thing as its quality, so that this corporeal tiring is the subject, but the
understanding is in the subject: viz. that the mind is the subject, which they
judge to be a corporeal thing, but the understanding [intelligence], or any
other of those things which we have mentioned as certain to us, is in that
subject. They also hold nearly the same opinion who deny the mind itself to
be body, but think it to be the combination or tempering together of the body;
for there is this difference, that the former say that the mind itself is the
substance, in which the understanding [intelligence] is, as in a subject; but
the latter say that the mind itself is in a subject, viz. in the body, of which
it is the combination or tempering together. And hence, by consequence, what
else can they think, except that the understanding also is in the same body
as in a subject?
16. And all these do not perceive that the mind knows itself, even when it
seeks for itself, as we have already shown. But nothing is at all rightly said
to be known while its substance is not known. And therefore, when the mind
knows itself, it knows its own substance; and when it is certain about itself,
it as certain about its own substance. But it is certain about itself, as those
things which are said, above prove convincingly; although it is not at all
certain whether itself is air, or fire, or some body, or some function of body.
Therefore it is not any of these. And to that whole which is bidden to know
itself, belongs this, that it is certain that it is not any of those things
of which it is uncertain, and is certain that it is that only, which only it
is certain that it is. For it thinks in this way of fire, or air, and whatever
else of the body it thinks of. Neither can it in any way be brought to pass
that it should so think that which itself is, as it thinks that which itself
is not. Since it thinks all these things through an imaginary phantasy, whether
fire, or air, or this or that body. or that part or combination and tempering
together of the body: nor assuredly is it said to be all those things, but
some one of them. But if it were any one of them, it would think this one in
a different manner from the rest viz. not through an imaginary phantasy, as
absent things are thought, which either themselves or some of like kind have
been touched by the bodily sense; but by some inward, not feigned, but true
presence (for nothing is more present to it than itself); just as it thinks
that itself lives, and remembers, and understands, and wills. For it knows
these things in itself, and does not imagine them as though it had touched
them by the sense outside itself, as corporeal things are touched. And if it
attaches nothing to itself from the thought of these things, so as to think
itself to be something of the kind, then whatsoever remains to it from itself
that alone is itself.
CHAP. 11.--IN MEMORY, UNDERSTANDING [OR INTELLIGENCE], AND WILL, WE HAVE TO
NOTE ABILITY, LEARNING, AND USE. MEMORY, UNDERSTANDING, AND WILL ARE ONE ESSENTIALLY,
AND THREE RELATIVELY.
17. Putting aside, then, for a little while all other things, of which the
mind is certain concerning itself, let us especially consider and discuss these
three--memory, understanding, will. For we may commonly discern in these three
the character of the abilities of the young also; since the more tenaciously
and easily a boy remembers, and the more acutely he understands, and the more
ardently he studies, the more praiseworthy is he in point of ability. But when
the question is about any one's learning, then we ask not how solidly and easily
he remembers, or how shrewdly he understands; but what it is that he remembers,
and what it is that he understands. And because the mind is regarded as praiseworthy,
not only as being learned, but also as being good, one gives heed not only
to what he remembers and what he understands, but also to what he wills (velit);
not how ardently he wills, but first what it is he wills, and then how greatly
he wills it. For the mind that loves eagerly is then to be praised, when it
loves that which ought to be loved eagerly. Since, then, we speak of these
three--ability, knowledge, use--the first of these is to be considered under
the three heads, of what a man can do in memory, and understanding, and will.
The second of them is to be considered in regard to that which any one has
in his memory and in his understanding, which he has attained by a studious
will. But the third, viz. use, lies in the will, which handles those things
that are contained in the memory and understanding, whether it refer them to
anything further, or rest satisfied with them as an end. For to use, is to
take up something into the power of the will; and to enjoy, is to use with
joy, not any longer of hope, but of the actual thing. Accordingly, every one
who enjoys, uses; for he takes up something into the power of the will, wherein
he also is satisfied as with an end. But not every one who uses, enjoys, if
he has sought after that, which he takes up into the power of the will, not
on account of the thing itself, but on account of something else.
18. Since, then, these three, memory, understanding, wills are not three lives,
but one life; nor three minds, but one mind; it follows certainly that neither
are they three substances, but one substance. Since memory, which is called
life, and mind, and substance, is so called in respect to itself; but it is
called memory, relatively to something. And I should say the same also of understanding
and of will, since they are called understanding and will relatively to something;
but each in respect to itself is life, and mind, and essence. And hence these
three are one, in that they are one life, one mind, one essence; and whatever
else they are severally called in respect to themselves, they are called also
together, not plurally, but in the singular number. But they are three, in
that wherein they are mutually referred to each other; and if they were not
equal, and this not only each to each, but also each to all, they certainly
could not mutually contain each other; for not only is each contained by each,
but also all by each. For I remember that I have memory and understanding,
and will; and I understand that I understand, and will, and remember; and I
will that I will, and remember, and understand; and I remember together my
whole memory, and understanding, and will. For that of my memory which I do
not remember, is not in my memory; and nothing is so much in the memory as
memory itself. Therefore I remember the whole memory. Also, whatever I understand
I know that I understand, and I know that I will whatever I will; but whatever
I know I remember. Therefore I remember the whole of my understanding, and
the whole of my will. Likewise, when I understand these three things, I understand
them together as whole. For there is none of things intelligible which I do
not understand, except what I do not know; but what I do not know, I neither
remember, nor will. Therefore, whatever of things intelligible I do not understand,
it follows also that I neither remember nor will. And whatever of things intelligible
I remember and will, it follows that I understand. My will also embraces my
whole understanding and my whole memory whilst I use the whole that I understand
and remember. And, therefore, while all are mutually comprehended by each,
and as wholes, each as a whole is equal to each as a whole, and each as a whole
at the same time to all as wholes; and these three are one, one life, one mind,
one essence.(1)
CHAP. 12.--THE MIND IS AN IMAGE OF THE TRINITY IN ITS OWN MEMORY, AND UNDERSTANDING,
AND WILL.
19. Are we, then, now to go upward, with whatever strength of purpose we may,
to that chiefest and highest essence, of which the human mind is an inadequate
image, yet an image? Or are these same three things to be yet more distinctly
made plain in the soul, by means of those things which we receive from without,
through the bodily sense, wherein the knowledge of corporeal things is impressed
upon us in time? Since we found the mind itself to be such in its own memory,
and understanding, and will, that since it was understood always to know and
always to will itself. it was understood also at the same time always to remember
itself, always to understand and love itself, although not always to think
of itself as separate from those things which are not itself; and hence its
memory of itself, and understanding of itself, are with difficult discerned
in it. For in this case, where these two things are very closely con-joined,
and one is not preceded by the other by any time at all, it looks as if they
were not two things, but one called by two names; and love itself is not so
plainly felt to exist when the sense of need does not disclose it, since what
is loved is always at hand. And hence these things may be more lucidly set
forth, even to men of duller minds, if such topics are treated of as are brought
within reach of the mind in time, and happen to it in time; while it remembers
what it did not remember before, and sees what it did not see before, and loves
what it did not love before. But this discussion demands now another beginning,
by reason of the measure of the present book.
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