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THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF
AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS
BISHOP OF HIPPO
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK XI.
A KIND OF IMAGE OF THE TRINITY IS POINTED OUT, EVEN IN THE OUTER MAN; FIRST
OF ALL, IN THOSE THINGS WHICH ARE PERCEIVED FROM WITHOUT, VIZ. IN THE BODILY
OBJECT THAT IS SEEN, AND IN THE FORM THAT IS IMPRESSED BY IT UPON THE SIGHT
OF THE SEER, AND IN THE PURPOSE OF THE WILL THAT COMBINES THE TWO; ALTHOUGH
THESE THREE ARE NEITHER MUTUALLY EQUAL, NOR OF ONE SUBSTANCE. NEXT, A KIND
OF TRINITY, IN THREE SOMEWHATS OF ONE SUBSTANCE, IS OBSERVED TO EXIST IN THE
MIND ITSELF, AS IT WERE INTRODUCED THERE FROM THOSE THINGS THAT ARE PERCEIVED
FROM WITHOUT; VIZ. THE IMAGE OF THE BODILY OBJECT WHICH IS IN THE MEMORY, AND
THE IMPRESSION FORMED THEREFROM WHEN THE MIND'S EYE OF THE THINKER IS TURNED
TO IT, AND THE PURPOSE OF THE WILL COMBINING BOTH. AND THIS LATTER TRINITY
IS ALSO SAID TO PERTAIN TO THE OUTER MAN, IN THAT IT IS INTRODUCED INTO THE
MIND FROM BODILY OBJECTS, WHICH ARE PERCEIVED FROM WITHOUT.
CHAP. 1.--A TRACE OF THE TRINITY ALSO IN THE OUTER MAN.
1. No
one doubts that, as the inner man is endued with understanding, so is the
outer with bodily
sense. Let
us try, then, if we can, to discover in this
outer man also, some trace, however slight, of the Trinity, not that itself
also is in the same manner the; image of God. For the opinion of the apostle
is evident, which declares the inner man to be renewed in the knowledge of
God after the image of Him that created him:(1) whereas he says also in another
place, "But though our outer man perish, yet the inward man is renewed
day by day."(2) Let us seek, then, so far as we can, in that which perishes,
some image of the Trinity, if not so express, yet perhaps more easy to be discerned.
For that outer man also is not called man to no purpose, but because there
is in it some likeness of the inner man. And owing to that very order of our
condition whereby we are made mortal and fleshly, we handle things visible
more easily and more familiarly than things intelligible; since the former
are outward, the latter inward; and the former are perceived by the bodily
sense, the latter are understood by the mind; and we ourselves, i.e. our minds,
are not sensible things, that is, bodies, but intelligible things, since we
are life. And yet, as I said, we are so familiarly occupied with bodies, and
our thought has projected itself outwardly with so wonderful a proclivity towards
bodies, that, when it has been withdrawn from the uncertainty of things corporeal,
that it may be fixed with a much more certain and stable knowledge in that
which is spirit, it flies back to those bodies, and seeks rest there whence
it has drawn weakness. And to this its feebleness I we must suit our argument;
so that, if we would endeavor at any time to distinguish more aptly, and intimate
more readily, the inward spiritual thing, we must take examples of likenesses
from outward things pertaining to the body. The outer man, then, endued as
he is with the bodily sense, is conversant with bodies. And this bodily sense,
as is easily observed, is fivefold; seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching.
But it is both a good deal of trouble, and is not necessary, that we should
inquire of all these five senses about that which we seek. For that which one
of them declares to us, holds also good in the rest. Let us use, then, principally
the testimony of the eyes. For this bodily sense far surpasses the rest; and
in proportion to its difference of kind, is nearer to the sight of the mind.
CHAP. 2.--A CERTAIN TRINITY IN THE SIGHT. THAT THERE ARE THREE THINGS IN SIGHT,
WHICH DIFFER IN THEIR OWN NATURE. IN WHAT MANNER FROM A VISIBLE THING VISION
IS PRODUCED, OR THE IMAGE OF THAT THING WHICH IS SEEN. THE MATTER IS SHOWN
MORE CLEARLY BY AN EXAMPLE. HOW THESE THREE COMBINE IN ONE.
2. When, then, we see any corporeal object, these three things, as is most
easy to do, are to be considered and distinguished: First, the object itself
which we see; whether a stone, or flame, or any other thing that can be seen
by the eyes; and this certainly might exist also already before it was seen;
next, vision or the act of seeing, which did not exist before we perceived
the object itself which is presented to the sense; in the third place, that
which keeps the sense of the eye in the object seen, so long as it is seen,
viz. the attention of the mind. In these three, then, not only is there an
evident distinction, but also a diverse nature. For, first, that visible body
is of a far different nature from the sense of the eyes, through the incidence
of which sense upon it vision arises. And what plainly is vision itself other
than perception informed by that thing which is perceived? Although there is
no vision if the visible object be withdrawn, nor could there be any vision
of the kind at all if there were no body that could be seen; yet the body by
which the sense of the eyes is informed, when that body is seen, and the form
itself which is imprinted by it upon the sense, which is called vision, are
by no means of the same substance. For the body that is seen is, in its own
nature, separable; but the sense, which was already in the living subject,
even before it saw what it was able to see, when it fell in with something
visible,--or the vision which comes to be in the sense from the visible body
when now brought into connection with it and seen,--the sense, then, I say,
or the vision, that is, the sense informed from without, belongs to the nature
of the living subject, which is altogether other than that body which we perceive
by seeing, and by which the sense is not so formed as to be sense, but as to
be vision. For unless the sense were also in us before the presentation to
us of the sensible object, we should not differ from the blind, at times when
we are seeing nothing, whether in darkness, or when our eyes are closed. But
we differ from them in this, that there is in us, even when we are not seeing,
that whereby we are able to see, which is called the sense; whereas this is
not in them, nor are they called blind for any other reason than because they
have it not. Further also, that attention of the mind which keeps the sense
in that thing which we see, and connects both, not only differs from that visible
thing in its nature; in that the one is mind, and the other body; but also
from the sense and the vision itself: since this attention is the act of the
mind alone; but the sense of the eyes is called a bodily sense, for no other
reason than because the eyes themselves also are members of the body; and although
an inanimate body does not perceive, yet the soul commingled with the body
perceives through a corporeal instrument, and that instrument is called sense.
And this sense, too, is cut off and extinguished by suffering on the part of
the body, when any one is blinded; while the mind remains the same; and its
attention, since the eyes are lost, has not, indeed, the sense of the body
which it may join, by seeing, to the body without it, and so fix its look thereupon
and see it, yet by the very effort shows that, although the bodily sense be
taken away, itself can neither perish nor be diminished. For there remains
unimpaired a desire [appetitus] of seeing, whether it can be carried into effect
or not. These three, then, the body that is seen, and vision itself, and the
attention of mind which joins both together, are manifestly distinguishable,
not only on account of the properties of each, but also on account of the difference
of their natures.
3. And since, in this case, the sensation does not proceed from that body
which is seen, but from the body of the living being that perceives, with which
the soul is tempered together in some wonderful way of its own; yet vision
is produced, that is, the sense itself is informed, by the body which is seen;
so that now, not only is there the power of sense, which can exist also unimpaired
even in darkness, provided the eyes are sound, but also a sense actually informed,
which is called vision. Vision, then, is produced from a thing that is visible;
but not from that alone, unless there be present also one who sees. Therefore
vision is produced from a thing that is visible, together with one who sees;
in such way that, on the part of him who sees, there is the sense of seeing
and the intention of looking and gazing at the object; while yet that information
of the sense, which is called vision, is imprinted only by the body which is
seen, that is, by some visible thing; which being taken away, that form remains
no more which was in the sense so long as that which was seen was present:
yet the sense itself remains, which existed also before anything was perceived;
just as the trace of a thing in water remains so long as the body itself, which
is impressed on it, is in the water; but if this has been taken away, there
will no longer be any such trace, although the water remains, which existed
also before it took the form of that body. And therefore we cannot, indeed,
say that a visible thing produces the sense; yet it produces the form, which
is, as it were, its own likeness, which comes to be in the sense, when we perceive
anything by seeing. But we do not distinguish, through the same sense, the
form of the body which we see, from the form which is produced by it in the
sense of him who sees; since the union of the two is so close that there is
no room for distinguishing them. But we rationally infer that we could not
have sensation at all, unless some similitude of the body seen was wrought
in our own sense. For when a ring is imprinted on wax, it does not follow that
no image is produced, because we cannot discern it unless when it has been
separated. But since, after the wax is separated, what was made remains, so
that it can be seen; we are on that account easily persuaded that there was
already also in the wax a form impressed from the ring before it was separated
from it. But if the ring were imprinted upon a fluid, no image at all would
appear when it was withdrawn; and yet none the less for this ought the reason
to discern that there was in that fluid before the ring was withdrawn a form
of the ring produced from the ring, which is to be distinguished from that
form which is in the ring, whence that form was produced which ceases to be
when the ring is withdrawn, although that in the ring remains, whence the other
was produced. And so the [sensuous] perception of the eyes may not be supposed
to contain no image of the body, which is seen as long as it is seen, [merely]
because when that is withdrawn the image does not remain. And hence it is very
difficult to persuade men of duller mind that an image of the visible thing
is formed in our sense, when we see it, and that this same form is vision.
4. But if any perhaps attend to what I am about to mention, they will find
no such trouble in this inquiry. Commonly, when we have looked for some little
time at a light, and then shut our eyes, there seem to play before our eyes
certain bright colors variously changing themselves, and shining less and less
until they wholly cease; and these we must understand to be the remains of
that form which was wrought in the sense, while the shining body was seen,
and that these variations take place in them as they slowly and step by step
fade away. For the lattices, too, of windows, should we happen to be gazing
at them, appear often in these colors; so that it is evident that our sense
is affected by such impressions from that thing which is seen. That form therefore
existed also while we were seeing, and at that time it was more clear and express.
But it was then closely joined with the species of that thing which was being
perceived, so that it could not be at all distinguished from it; and this was
vision itself. Why, even when the little flame of a lamp is in some way, as
it were, doubled by the divergent rays of the eyes, a twofold vision comes
to pass, although the thing which is seen is one. For the same rays, as they
shoot forth each from its own eye, are affected severally, in that they are
not allowed to meet evenly and conjointly, in regarding that corporeal thing,
so that one combined view might be formed from both. And so, if we shut one
eye, we shall not see two flames, but one as it really is. But why, if we shut
the left eye, that appearance ceases to be seen, which was on the right; and
if, in turn, we shut the right eye, that drops out of existence which was on
the left, is a matter both tedious in itself, and not necessary at all to our
present subject to inquire and discuss. For it is enough for the business in
hand to consider, that unless some image,precisely like the thing we perceive,
were produced in our sense, the appearance of the flame would not be doubled
according to the number of the eyes; since a certain way of perceiving has
been employed, which could separate the union of rays. Certainly nothing that
is really single can be seen as if it were double by one eye, draw it down,
or press, or distort it as you please, if the other is shut.
5. The case then being so, let us remember how these three things, although
diverse in nature, are tempered together into a kind of unity; that is, the
form of the body which is seen, and the image of it impressed on the sense,
which is vision or sense informed, and the will of the mind which applies the
sense to the sensible thing, and retains the vision itself in it. The first
of these, that is, the visible thing itself, does not belong to the nature
of the living being, except when we discern our own body. But the second belongs
to that nature to this extent, that it is wrought in the body, and through
the body in the soul; for it is wrought in the sense, which is neither without
the body nor without the soul. But the third is of the soul alone, because
it is the will. Although then the substances of these three are so different,
yet they coalesce into such a unity that the two former can scarcely be distinguished,
even with the intervention of the reason as judge, namely the form of the body
which is seen, and the image of it which is wrought in the sense, that is,
vision. And the will so powerfully combines these two, as both to apply the
sense, in order to be informed, to that thing which is perceived, and to retain
it when informed in that thing. And if it is so vehement that it can be called
love, or desire, or lust, it vehemently affects also the rest of the body of
the living being; and where a duller and harder matter does not resist, changes
it into like shape and color. One may see the little body of a chameleon vary
with ready change, according to the colors which it sees. And in the case of
other animals, since their grossness of flesh does not easily admit change,
the offspring, for the most part, betray the particular fancies of the mothers,
whatever it is that they have beheld with special delight. For the more tender,
and so to say, the more formable, are the primary seeds, the more effectually
and capably they follow the bent of the soul of the mother, and the phantasy
that is wrought in it through that body, which it has greedily beheld. Abundant
instances might be adduced, but one is sufficient, taken from the most trustworthy
books; viz. what Jacob did, that the sheep and goats might give birth to offspring
of various colors, by placing variegated rods before them in the troughs of
water for them to look at as they drank, at the time they had conceived.(1)
CHAP. 3.--THE UNITY OF THE THREE TAKES PLACE IN THOUGHT, VIZ. OF MEMORY, OF
INTERNAL VISION, AND OF WILL COMBINING BOTH.
6. The rational soul, however, lives in a degenerate fashion,when it lives
according to a trinity of the outer man; that is, when it applies to those
things which form the bodily sense from without, not a praiseworthy will, by
which to refer them to some useful end, but a base desire, by which to cleave
to them. Since even if the form of the body, which was corporeally perceived,
be withdrawn, its likeness remains in the memory, to which the will may again
direct its eye, so as to be formed thence from within, as the sense was formed
from without by the presentation of the sensible body. And so that trinity
is produced from memory, from internal vision, and from the will which unites
both. And when these three things are combined into one, from that combination(2)
itself they are called conception.(3) And in these three there is no longer
any diversity of substance. For neither is the sensible body there, which is
altogether distinct from the nature of the living being, nor is the bodily
sense there informed so as to produce vision, nor does the will itself perform
its office of applying the sense, that is to be informed, to the sensible body,
and of retaining it in it when informed; but in place of that bodily species
which was perceived from without, there comes the memory retaining that species
which the soul has imbibed through the bodily sense; and in place of that vision
which was outward when the sense was informed through the sensible body, there
comes a similar vision within, while the eye of the mind is informed from that
which the memory retains, and the corporeal things that are thought of are
absent; and the will itself, as before it applied the sense yet to be informed
to the corporeal thing presented from without, and united it thereto when informed,
so now converts the vision of the recollecting mind to memory, in order that
the mental sight may be informed by that which the memory has retained, and
so there may be in the conception a like vision. And as it was the reason that
distinguished the visible appearance by which the bodily sense was informed,
from the similitude of it, which was wrought in the sense when informed in
order to produce vision (otherwise they had been so united as to be thought
altogether one and the same); so, although that phantasy also, which arises
from the mind thinking of the appearance of a body that it has seen, consists
of the similitude of the body which the memory retains, together with that
which is thence formed in the eye of the mind that recollects; yet it so seems
to be one and single, that it can only be discovered to be two by the judgment
of reason, by which we understand that which remains in the memory, even when
we think it from some other source, to be a different thing from that which
is brought into being when we remember, that is, come back again to the memory,
and there find the same appearance. And if this were not now there, we should
say that we had so forgotten as to be altogether unable to recollect. And if
the eye of him who recollects were not informed from that thing which was in
the memory, the vision of the thinker could in no way take place; but the conjunction
of both, that is, of that which the memory retains, and of that which is thence
expressed so as to inform the eye of him who recollects, makes them appear
as if they were one, because they are exceedingly like. But when the eye of
the concipient is turned away thence, and has ceased to look at that which
was perceived in the memory, then nothing of the form that was impressed thereon
will remain in that eye, and it will be informed by that to which it had again
been turned, so as to bring about another conception. Yet that remains which
it has left in the memory, to which it may again be turned when we recollect
it, and being turned thereto may be informed by it, and become one with that
whence it is informed.
CHAP. 4.--HOW THIS UNITY COMES TO PASS.
7. But if that will which moves to and fro, hither and thither, the eye that
is to be informed, and unites it when formed, shall have wholly converged to
the inward phantasy, and shall have absolutely turned the mind's eye from the
presence of the bodies which lie around the senses, and from the l very bodily
senses themselves, and shall have, wholly turned it to that image, which is
perceived within; then so exact a likeness of the bodily species expressed
from the memory is presented, that not even reason itself is permitted to discen
whether the body itself is seen without, or only something of the kind thought
of within. For men sometimes either allured or frightened by over-much thinking
of visible things, have even suddenly uttered words accordingly, as if in real
fact they were engaged in the very midst of such actions or sufferings. And
I remember some one telling me that he was wont to perceive in thought, so
distinct and as it were solid, a form of a female body, as to be moved, as
though it were a reality. Such power has the soul over its own body, and such
influence has it in turning and changing the quality of its [corporeal] garment;
just as a man may be affected when clothed, to whom his clothing sticks. It
is the same kind of affection, too, with which we are beguiled through imaginations
in sleep. But it makes a very great difference, whether the senses of the body
are lulled to torpor, as in the case of sleepers, or disturbed from their inward
structure, as in the case of madmen, or distracted in some other mode, as in
that of diviners or prophets; and so from one or other of these causes, the
intention of the mind is forced by a kind of necessity upon those images which
occur to it, either from memory, or by some other hidden force through certain
spiritual commixtures of a similarly spiritual substance: or whether, as sometimes
happens to people in health and awake, that the will occupied by thought turns
itself away from the senses, and so informs the eye of the mind by various
images of sensible things, as though those sensible things themselves were
actually perceived. But these impressions of images not only take place when
the will is directed upon such things by desiring them, but also when, in order
to avoid and guard against them, the mind is carried away to look upon these
very thing so as to flee from them. And hence, not only desire, but fear, causes
both the bodily eye to be informed by the sensible things themselves, and the
mental eye (acies) by the images of those sensible things. Accordingly, the
more vehement has been either fear or desire, the more distinctly is the eye
informed, whether in the case of him who [sensuously] perceives by means of
the body that which lies close to him in place, or in the case of him who conceives
from the image of the body which is contained in the memory. What then a body
in place is to the bodily sense, that, the similitude of a body in memory is
to the eye of the mind; and what the vision of one who looks at a thing is
to that appearance of the body from which the sense is informed, that, the
vision of a concipient is to the image of the body established in the memory,
from which the eye of the mind is informed; and what the intention of the will
is towards a body seen and the vision to be combined with it, in order that
a certain unity of three things may therein take place, although their nature
is diverse, that, the same intention of the will is towards combining the image
of the body which is in the memory, and the vision of the concipient, that
is, the form which the eye of the mind has taken in returning to the memory,
in order that here too a certain unity may take place of three things, not
now distinguished by diversity of nature, but of one and the same substance;
because this whole is within, and the whole is one mind.
CHAP. 5.--THE TRINITY OF THE OUTER MAN, OR OF EXTERNAL VISION, IS NOT AN IMAGE
OF GOD. THE LIKENESS OF GOD IS DESIREDEVEN IN SINS. IN EXTERNAL VISION THE
FORM OF THE CORPOREAL THING IS AS IT WERE THE PARENT, VISION THE OFFSPRING;
BUT THE WILL THAT UNITES THESE SUGGESTS THE HOLY SPIRIT.
8. But
as, when [both] the form and species of a body have perished, the will cannot
recall to it
the sense
of perceiving; so, when the image which memory
bears is blotted out by forgetfulness, the will will be unable to force back
the eye of the mind by recollection, so; as to be formed thereby. But because
the i mind has great power to imagine not only things forgotten, but also things
that it never l saw, or experienced, either by increasing, or diminishing,
or changing, or compounding, after its pleasure, those which have not dropped
out of its remembrance, it often imagines things to be such as either it knows
they are not, or does not know that they are. And in this case we have to take
care, lest it either speak falsely that it may deceive, or hold an opinion
so as to be deceived. And if it avoid these two evils, then imagined phantasms
do not hinder it: just as sensible things experienced or retained by memory
do not hinder it, if they are neither passionately sought for when pleasant,
nor basely shunned when unpleasant. But when the will leaves better things,
and greedily wallows in these, then it becomes unclean; and they are so thought
of hurtfully, when they are present, and also more hurtfully when they are
absent. And he therefore lives badly and degenerately who lives according to
the trinity of the outer man; because it is the purpose of using things sensible
and corporeal, that has begotten also that trinity, which although it imagines
within, yet imagines things without. For no one could use those things even
well, unless the images of things perceived by the senses were retained in
the memory. And unless the will for the greatest part dwells. in the higher
and interior things, and unless that will itself, which is accommodated either
to bodies without, or to the images of them within, refers whatever it receives
in them to a better and truer life, and rests in that end by gazing at which
it judges that those things ought to be done; what else do we do, but that
which the apostle prohibits us from doing, when he says, "Be not conformed
to this world"?(1) And therefore that trinity is not an image of God since
it is produced in the mind itself through the bodily sense, from the lowest,
that is, the corporeal creature, than which the mind is higher. Yet neither
is it altogether dissimilar: for what is there that has not a likeness of God,
in proportion to its kind and measure, seeing that God made all things very
good,(2) and for no other reason except that He Himself is supremely good?
In so far, therefore, as anything that is, is good, in so far plainly it has
still some likeness of the supreme good, at however, great a distance; and
if a natural likeness, then certainly a right and well-ordered one; but if
a faulty likeness, then certainly a debased and perverse one. For even souls
in their very sins strive after nothing else but some kind of likeness of God,
in a proud and preposterous, and, so to say, slavish liberty. So neither could
our first parents have been persuaded to sin unless it had been said, "Ye
shall be as gods."(3) No doubt every thing in the creatures which is in
any way like God, is not also to be called His image; but that alone than which
He Himself alone is higher. For that only is in all points copied from Him,
between which and Himself no nature is interposed.
9. Of that vision then; that is, of the form which is wrought in the sense
of him who sees; the form of the bodily thing from which it is wrought, is,
as it were, the parent. But it is not a true parent; whence neither is that
a true offspring; for it is not altogether born therefrom, since something
else is applied to the bodily thing in order that it may be formed from it,
namely, the sense of him who sees. And for this reason, to love this is to
be estranged.4 Therefore the will which unites both, viz. the quasi-parent
and the quasi-child, is more spiritual than either of them. For that bodily
thing which is discerned, is not spiritual at all. But the vision which comes
into existence in the sense, has something spiritual mingled with it, since
it cannot come into existence without the soul. But it is not wholly spiritual;
since that which is formed is a sense of the body. Therefore the will which
unites both is confessedly more spiritual, as I have said; and so it begins
to suggest (insinuare), as it were, the person of the Spirit in the Trinity.
But it belongs more to the sense that is formed, than to the bodily thing whence
it is formed. For the sense and will of an animate being belongs to the soul,
not to the stone or other bodily thing that is seen. It does not therefore
proceed from that bodily thing as from a parent; yet neither does it proceed
from that other as it were offspring, namely, the vision and form that is in
the sense. For the will existed before the vision came to pass, which will
applied the sense that was to be formed to the bodily thing that was to be
discerned; but it was not yet satisfied. For how could that which was not yet
seen satisfy? And satisfaction means a will that rests content. And, therefore,
we can neither call the will the quasi-offspring of vision, since it existed
before vision; nor the quasi-parent, since that vision was not formed and expressed
from the will, but from the bodily thing that was seen.
CHAP. 6.--OF WHAT KIND WE ARE TO RECKON THE REST (REQUlES), AND END (FINIS),
OF THE WILL IN VISION.
10. Perhaps we can rightly call vision the end and rest of the will, only
with respect tO this one object [namely, the bodily thing that is visible].
For it will not will nothing else merely because it sees something which it
is now willing. It is not therefore the whole will itself of the man, of which
the end is nothing else than blessedness; but the will provisionally directed
to this one object, which has as its end in seeing, nothing but vision, whether
it refer the thing seen to any other thing or not. For if it does not refer
the vision to anything further, but wills only to see this, there can be no
question made about showing that the end of the will is the vision; for it
is manifest. But if it does refer it to anything further, then certainly it
does will something else, and it will not be now a will merely to see; or if
to see, not one to see the particular thing. Just as, if any one wished to
see the scar, that from thence he might learn that there had been a wound;
or wished to see the window, that through the window he might see the passers-by:
all these and other such acts of will have their own proper [proximate] ends,
which are referred to that [final] end of the will by which we will to live
blessedly, and to attain to that life which is not referred to anything else,
but suffices of itself to him who loves it. The will then to see, has as its
end vision; and the will to see this particular thing, has as its end the vision
of this particular thing. Therefore the will to see the scar, desires its own
end, that is, the vision of the scar, and does not reach beyond it; for the
will to prove that there had been a wound, is a distinct will, although dependent
upon that, of which the end also is to prove that there had been a wound. And
the will to see the window, has as its end the vision of the window; for that
is another and further will which depends upon it, viz. to see the passers-by
through the window, of which also the end is the vision of the passers-by.
But all the several wills that are bound to each other, are a once right, if
that one is good, to which all are referred; and if that is bad, then all are
bad. And so the connected series of right wills is a sort of road which consists
as it were of certain steps, whereby to ascend to blessedness; but the entanglement
of depraved and distorted wills is a bond by which he will be bound who thus
acts, so as to be cast into outer darkness.(1) Blessed therefore are they who
in act and character sing the song of the steps [degrees];(2) and woe to those
that draw sin, as it were a long rope.(3) And it is just the same to speak
of the will being in repose, which we call its end, if it is still referred
to something further, as if we should say that the foot is at rest in walking,
when it is placed there, whence yet another foot may be planted in the direction
of the man's steps. But if something so satisfies, that the will acquiesces
in it with a certain delight; it is nevertheless not yet that to which the
man ultimately tends; but this too is referred to something further, so as
to be regarded not as the native country of a citizen, but as a place of refreshment,
or even of stopping, for a traveller.
CHAP. 7.--THERE IS ANOTHER TRINITY IN THE MEMORY OF HIM WHO THINKS OVER AGAIN
WHAT HE HAS SEEM.
11. But yet again, take the case of another trinity, more inward indeed than
that which is in things sensible, and in the senses, but which is yet conceived
from thence; while now it is no longer the sense of the body that is informed
from the body, but the eye of the mind that is informed from the memory, since
the species of the body which we perceived from without has inhered in the
memory itself. And that species, which is in the memory, we call the quasi-parent
of that which is wrought in the phantasy of one who conceives. For it was in
the memory also, before we conceived it, just as the body was in place also
before we [sensuously] perceived it, in order that vision might take place.
But when it is conceived, then from that form which the memory retains, there
is copied in the mind's eye (acie) of him who conceives, and by remembrance
is formed, that species, which is the quasi-offspring of that which the memory
retains. But neither is the one a true parent, nor the other a true offspring.
For the mind's vision which is formed from memory when we think anything by
recollection, does not proceed from that species which we remember as seen;
since we could not indeed have remembered those things, unless we had seen
them; yet the mind's eye, which is informed by the recollection, existed also
before we saw the body that we remember; and therefore how much more before
we committed it to memory? Although therefore the form which is wrought in
the mind's eye of him who remembers, is wrought from that form which is in
the memory; yet the mind's eye itself does not exist from thence, but existed
before it. And it follows, that if the one is not a true parent, neither is
the other a true offspring. But both that quasi-parent and that quasi-offspring
suggest something, whence the inner and truer things may appear more practically
and more certainly.
12. Further, it is more difficult to discern clearly, whether the will which
connects the vision to the memory is not either the parent or the offspring
of some one of them; and the likeness and equality of the same nature and substance
cause this difficulty of distinguishing. For it is not possible to do in this
case, as with the sense that is formed from without (which is easily discerned
from the sensible body, and again the will from both), on account of the difference
of nature which is mutually in all three, and of which we have treated sufficiently
above. For although this trinity, of which we at present speak, is introduced
into the mind from without; yet it is transacted within, and there is no part
of it outside of the nature of the mind itself. In what way, then, can it be
demonstrated that the will is neither the quasi-parent, nor the quasi-offspring,
either of the corporeal likeness which is contained in the memory, or of that
which is copied thence in recollecting; when it so unites both in the act of
conceiving, as that they appear singly as one, and cannot be discerned except
by reason? It is then first to be considered that there cannot be any will
to remember, unless we retain in the recesses of the memory either the whole,
or some part, of that thing which we wish to remember. For the very will to
remember cannot arise in the case of a thing which we have forgotten altogether
and absolutely; since we have already remembered that the thing which we wish
to remember is or has been, in our memory. For example, if I wish to remember
what I supped on yesterday, either I have already remembered that I did sup,
or if not yet this, at least I have remembered something about that time itself,
if nothing else; at all events, I have remembered yesterday, and that part
of yesterday in which people usually sup, and what supping is. For if I had
not remembered anything at all of this kind, I could not wish to remember what
I supped on yesterday. Whence we may perceive that the will of remembering
proceeds, indeed, from those things which are retained in the memory, with
the addition also of those which, by the act of discerning, are copied thence
through recollection; that is, from the combination of something which we have
remembered, and of the vision which was thence wrought, when we remembered,
in the mind's eye of him who thinks. But the will itself which unites both
requires also some other thing, which is, as it were, close at hand, and adjacent
to him who remembers. There are, then, as many trinities of this kind as there
are remembrances; because there is no one of them wherein there are not these
three things, viz. that which was stored up in the memory also before it was
thought, and that which takes place in the conception when this is discerned,
and the will that unites both, and from both and itself as a third, completes
one single thing. Or is it rather that we so recognize some one trinity in
this kind, as that we are to speak generally, of whatever corporeal species
lie hidden in the memory, as of a single unity, and again of the general vision
of the mind which remembers and conceives such things, as of a single unity,
to the combination of which two there is to be joined as a third the will that
combines them, that this whole may be a certain unity made up from three?
CHAP. 8.--DIFFERENT MODES OF CONCEIVING.
But since the eye of the mind cannot look at all things together, in one glance,
which the memory retains, these trinities of thought alternate in a series
of withdrawals and successions, and so that trinity becomes most innumerably
numerous; and yet not infinite, if it pass not beyond the number of things
stored up in the memory. For, although we begin to reckon from the earliest
perception which any one has of material things through any bodily sense, and
even take in also those things which he has forgotten, yet the number would
undoubtedly be certain and determined, although innumerable. For we not only
call infinite things innumerable, but also those, which, although finite, exceed
any one's power of reckoning.
13. But we can hence perceive a little more clearly that what the memory stores
up and retains is a different thing from that which is thence copied in the
conception of the man who remembers, although, when both are combined together,
they appear to be one and the same; because we can only remember just as many
species of bodies as we have actually seen, and so great, and such, as we have
actually seen; for the mind imbibes them into the memory from the bodily sense;
whereas the things seen in conception, although drawn from those things which
are in the memory, yet are multiplied and varied innumerably, and altogether
without end. For I remember, no doubt, but one sun, because according to the
fact, I have seen but one; but if I please, I conceive of two, or three, or
as many as I will; but the vision of my mind, when I conceive of many, is formed
from the same memory by which I remember one. And I remember it just as large
as I saw it. For if I remember it as larger or smaller than I saw it, then
I no longer remember what I saw, and so I do not remember it. But because I
remember it, I remember it as large as I saw it; yet I conceive of it as greater
or as less according to my will. And I remember it as I saw it; but I conceive
of it as running its course as I will, and as standing still where I will,
and as coming whence I will, and whither I will. For it is in my power to conceive
of it as square, although I remember it as round; and again, of what color
I please, although I have never seen, and therefore do not remember, a green
sun; and as the sun, so all other things. But owing to the corporeal and sensible
nature of these forms of things, the mind falls into error when it imagines
them to exist without, in the same mode in which it conceives them within,
either when they have already ceased to exist without, but are still retained
in the memory, or when in any other way also, that which we remember is formed
in the mind, not by faithful recollection, but after the variations of thought.
14. Yet it very often happens that we believe also a true narrative, told
us by others, of things which the narrators have themselves perceived by their
senses. And in this case, when we conceive the things narrated to us, as we
hear them, the eye of the mind does not seem to be turned back to the memory,
in order to bring up visions in our thoughts; for we do not conceive these
things from our own recollection, but upon the narration of another; and that
trinity does not here seem to come to its completion, which is made when the
species lying hid in the memory, and the vision of the man that remembers,
are combined by will as a third. For I do not conceive that which lay hid in
my memory, but that which I hear, when anything is narrated to me. I am not
speaking of the words themselves of the speaker, lest any one should suppose
that I have gone off to that other trinity, which is transacted without, in
sensible things, or in the senses: but I am conceiving of those species of
material things, which the narrator signifies to me by words and sounds; which
species certainly I conceive of not by remembering, but by hearing. But if
we consider the matter more carefully, even in this case, the limit of the
memory is not overstepped. For I could not even understand the narrator, if
I did not remember generically the individual things of which he speaks, even
although I then hear them for the first time as connected together in one tale.
For he who, for instance, describes to me some mountain stripped of timber,
and clothed with olive trees, describes it to me who remembers the species
both of mountains, and of timber, and of olive trees; and if I had forgotten
these, I should not know at all of what he was speaking, and therefore could
not conceive that description. And so it comes to pass, that every one who
conceives things corporeal, whether he himself imagine anything, or hear, or
read, either a narrative of things past, or a foretelling of things future,
has recourse to his memory, and finds there the limit and measure of all the
forms at which he gazes in his thought. For no one can conceive at all, either
a color or a form of body, which he never saw, or a sound which he never heard,
or a flavor which he never tasted, or a scent which he never smelt, or any
touch of a corporeal thing which he never felt. But if no one conceives anything
corporeal except what he has [sensuously] perceived, because no one remembers
anything corporeal except what he has thus perceived, then, as is the limit
of perceiving in bodies, so is the limit of thinking in the memory. For the
sense receives the species from that body which we perceive, and the memory
from the sense; but the mental eye of the concipient, from the memory.
15. Further, as the will applies the sense to the bodily object, so it applies
the memory to the sense, and the eye of the mind of the concipient to the memory.
But that which harmonizes those things and unites them, itself also disjoins
and separates them, that is, the will. But it separates the bodily senses from
the bodies that are to be perceived, by movement of the body, either to hinder
our perceiving the thing, or that we may cease to perceive it: as when we avert
our eyes from that which we are unwilling to see, or shut them; so, again,
the ears from sounds, or the nostrils from smells. So also we turn away from
tastes, either by shutting the mouth, or by casting the thing out of the mouth.
In touch, also, we either remove the bodily thing, that we may not touch what
we do not wish, or if we were already touching it, we fling or push it away.
Thus the will acts by movement of the body, so that the bodily sense shall
not be joined to the sensible things. And it does this according to its power;
for when it endures hardship in so doing, on account of the condition of slavish
mortality, then torment is the result, in such wise that nothing remains to
the will save endurance. But the will averts the memory from the sense; when,
through its being intent on something else, it does not suffer things present
to cleave to it. As any one may see, when often we do not seem to ourselves
to have heard some one who was speaking to us, because we were thinking of
something else. But this is a mistake; for we did hear, but we do not remember,
because the words of the speaker presently slipped out of the perception of
our ears, through the bidding of the will being diverted elsewhere, by which
they are usually fixed in the memory. Therefore, we should say more accurately
in such a case, we do not remember, than, we did not hear; for it happens even
in reading, and to myself very frequently, that when I have read through a
page or an epistle, I do not know what I have read, and I begin it again. For
the purpose of the will being fixed on something else, the memory was not so
applied to the bodily sense, as the sense itself was applied to the letters.
So, too, any one who walks with the will intent on something else, does not
know where he has got to; for if he had not seen, he would not have walked
thither, or would have felt his way in walking with greater attention, especially
if he was passing through a place he did not know; yet, because he walked easily,
certainly he saw; but because the memory was not applied to the sense itself
in the same way as the sense of the eyes was applied to the places through
which he was passing, he could not remember at all even the last thing he saw.
Now, to will to turn away the eye of the mind from that which is in the memory,
is nothing else but not to think thereupon.
CHAP. 9.--SPECIES IS PRODUCED BY SPECIES IN SUCCESSION.
16. In this arrangement, then, while we begin from the bodily species and
arrive finally at the species which comes to be in the intuition (contuitu)
of the concipient, we find four species born, as it were, step by step one
from the other, the second from the first, the third from the second, the fourth
from the third: since from the species of the body itself, there arises that
which comes to be in the sense of the percipient; and from this, that which
comes to be in the memory; and from this, that which comes to be in the mind's
eye of the concipient. And the will, therefore, thrice combines as it were
parent with offspring: first the species of the body with that to which it
gives birth in the sense of the body; and that again with that which from it
comes to be in the memory; and this also, thirdly, with that which is born
from it in the intuition of the concipient's mind. But the intermediate combination
which is the second, although it is nearer to the first, is yet not so like
the first as the third is. For there are two kinds of vision, the one of [sensuous]
perception (sentientis), the other of conception (cogitantis). But in order
that the vision of conception may come to be, there is wrought for the purpose,
in the memory, from the vision of [sensuous] I perception something like it,
to which the eye of the mind may turn itself in conceiving, as the glance (acies)
of the eyes turns itself in [sensuously] perceiving to the bodily object. have,
therefore, chosen to put forward two trinities in this kind: one when the vision
of [sensuous] perception is formed from the bodily object, the other when the
vision of conception is formed from the memory. But I have refrained from commending
an intermediate one; because we do not commonly call it vision, when the form
which comes to be in the sense of him who perceives, is on-trusted to the memory.
Yet in all cases the will does not appear unless as the combiner as it were
of parent and offspring; and so, proceed from whence it may, it can be called
neither parent nor offspring.(1)
CHAP. 10.--THE IMAGINATION ALSO ADDS EVEN TO THINGS WE HAVE NOT SEEN, THOSE
THINGS WHICH WE HAVE SEEN ELSEWHERE.
17. But if we do not remember except what we have [sensuously] perceived,
nor conceive except what we remember; why do we often conceive things that
are false, when certainly we do not remember falsely those things which we
have perceived, unless it be because that will (which I have already taken
pains to show as much as I can to be the uniter and the separater of things
of this kind) leads the vision of the conceiver that is to be formed, after
its own will and pleasure, through the hidden stores of the memory; and, in
order to conceive [imagine] those things which we do not remember, impels it
to take one thing from hence, and another from thence, from those which we
do remember; and these things combining into one vision make something which
is called false, because it either does not exist externally in the nature
of corporeal things, or does not seem copied from the memory, in that we do
not remember that we ever saw such a thing. For who ever saw a black swan?
And therefore no one remembers a black swan; yet who is there that cannot conceive
it? For it is easy to apply to that shape which we have come to know by seeing
it, a black color, which we have not the less seen in other bodies; and because
we have seen both, we remember both. Neither do I remember a bird with four
feet, because I never saw one; but I contemplate such a phantasy very easily,
by adding to some winged shape such as I have seen, two other feet, such as
I have likewise seen.(1) And therefore, in conceiving conjointly, what we remember
to have seen singly, we seem not to conceive that which we remember; while
we really do this under the law of the memory, whence we take everything which
we join together after our own pleasure in manifold and diverse ways. For we
do not conceive even the very magnitudes of bodies, which magnitudes we never
saw, without help of the memory; for the measure of space to which our gaze
commonly reaches through the magnitude of the world, is the measure also to
which we enlarge the bulk of bodies, whatever they may be, when we conceive
them as great as we can. And reason, indeed, proceeds still beyond, but phantasy
does not follow her; as when reason announces the infinity of number also,
which no vision of him who conceives according to corporeal things can apprehend.
The same reason also teaches that the most minute atoms are infinitely divisible;
yet when we have come to those slight and minute particles which we remember
to have seen, then we can no longer behold phantasms more slender and more
minute, although reason does not cease to continue to divide them. So we conceive
no corporeal things, except either those we remember, or from those things
which we remember.
CHAP. 11.--NUMBER, WEIGHT, MEASURE.
18. But because those things which are impressed on the memory singly, can
be conceived according to number, measure seems to belong to the memory, but
number to the vision; because, although the multiplicity of such visions is
innumerable, yet a limit not to be transgressed is prescribed for each in the
memory. Therefore, measure appears in the memory, number in the vision of things:
as there is some measure in visible bodies themselves, to which measure the
sense of those who see is most numerously adjusted, and from one visible object
is formed the vision of many beholders, so that even a single person sees commonly
a single thing under a double appearance, on account of the number of his two
eyes, as we have laid down above. Therefore there is some measure in those
things whence visions are copied, but in the visions themselves there is number.
But the will which unites and regulates these things, and combines them into
a certain unity, and does not quietly rest its desire of [sensuously] perceiving
or of conceiving, except in those things from whence the visions are formed,
resembles weight. And therefore I would just notice by way of anticipation
these three things, measure, number, weight, which are to be perceived in all
other things also. In the meantime, I have now shown as much as I can, and
to whom I can, that the will is the uniter of the visible thing and of the
vision; as it were, of parent and of offspring; whether in [sensuous] perception
or in conception, and that it cannot be called either parent or offspring.
Wherefore time admonishes us to seek for this same trinity in the inner man,
and to strive to pass inwards from that animal and carnal and (as he is called)
outward man, of whom I have so long spoken. And here we hope to be able to
find an image of God according to the Trinity, He Himself helping our efforts,
who as things themselves show, and as Holy Scripture also witnesses, has regulated
all things in measure, and number, and weight.(2)
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