A TREATISE ON THE SOUL (CHAP. I to CHAP. XXVIII)
IX. A TREATISE ON THE SOUL.(1)
[TRANSLATED BY PETER HOLMES, D.D.]
CHAP. I.--IT IS NOT TO THE PHILOSOPHERS THAT WE RESORT FOR INFORMATION ABOUT
THE SOUL BUT TO GOD.(2)
HAVING discussed with Hermogenes the single point of the origin of the
soul, so far as his assumption led me, that the soul consisted rather in an
adaptation(3) of matter than of the inspiration(4) of God, I now turn to the other
questions incidental to the subject; and (in my treatment of these) I shall
evidently have mostly to contend with the philosophers. In the very prison of
Socrates they skirmished about the state of the soul. I have my doubts at once
whether the time was an opportune one for their (great) master--(to say nothing of
the place), although that perhaps does not much matter. For what could the soul
of Socrates then contemplate with clearness and serenity? The sacred ship had
returned (from Delos), the hemlock draft to which he had been condemned had been
drunk, death was now present before him: (his mind) was,(5) as one may
suppose,(6) naturally excited(6) at every emotion; or if nature had lost her influence,
it must have been deprived of all power of thought.(7) Or let it have been as
placid and tranquil so you please, inflexible, in spite of the claims of
natural duty,(8) at the tears of her who was so soon to be his widow, and at the
sight of his thenceforward orphan children, yet his soul must have been moved even
by its very efforts to suppress emotion; and his constancy itself must have
been shaken, as he struggled against the disturbance of the excitement around him.
Besides, what other thoughts could any man entertain who had been unjustly
condemned to die, but such as should solace him for the injury done to him?
Especially would this be the case with that glorious creature, the philosopher, to
whom injurious treatment would not suggest a craving for consolation, but rather
the feeling of resentment and indignation. Accordingly, after his sentence,
when his wife came to him with her effeminate cry, O Socrates, you are unjustly
condemned! he seemed already to find joy in answering, Would you then wish me
justly condemned? It is therefore not to be wondered at, if even in his prison,
from a desire to break the foul hands of Anytus and Melitus, he, in the face of
death itself, asserts the immortality of the soul by a strong assumption such as
was wanted to frustrate the wrong (they had inflicted upon him). So that all
the wisdom of Socrates, at that moment, proceeded from the affectation of an
assumed composure, rather than the firm conviction of ascertained truth. For by
whom has truth ever been discovered without God? By whom has God ever been found
without Christ? By whom has Christ ever been explored without the Holy Spirit?
By whom has the Holy Spirit ever been attained without the mysterious gift of
faith?(9) Socrates, as none can doubt, was actuated by a different spirit. For
they say that a demon clave to him from his boyhood--the very worst teacher
certainly, notwithstanding the high place assigned to it by poets and
philosophers--even next to, (nay, along with) the gods themselves. The teachings of the
power of Christ had not yet been given--(that power) which alone can confute this
most pernicious influence of evil that has nothing good in it, but is rather the
author of all error, and the seducer from all truth. Now if Socrates was
pronounced the wisest of men by the oracle of the Pythian demon, which, you may be
sure, neatly managed the business for his friend, of how much greater dignity
and constancy is the assertion of the Christian wisdom, before the very breath of
which the whole host of demons is scattered! This wisdom of the school of
heaven frankly and without reserve denies the gods of this world, and shows no such
inconsistency as to order a "cock to be sacrificed to AEsculapius:"(1) no new
gods and demons does it introduce, but expels the old ones; it corrupts not
youth, but instructs them in all goodness and moderation; and so it bears the
unjust condemnation not of one city only, but of all the world, in the cause of
that truth which incurs indeed the greater hatred in proportion to its fulness: so
that it tastes death not out of a (poisoned) cup almost in the way of jollity;
but it exhausts it in every kind of bitter cruelty, on gibbets and in
holocausts.(2) Meanwhile, in the still gloomier prison of the world amongst your
Cebeses and Phaedos, in every investigation concerning (man's) soul, it directs its
inquiry according to the rules of God. At all events, you can show us no more
powerful expounder of the soul than the Author thereof. From God you may learn
about that which you hold of God; but from none else will you get this knowledge,
if you get it not from God. For who is to reveal that which God has hidden? To
that quarter must we resort in our inquiries whence we are most safe even in
deriving our ignorance. For it is really better for us not to know a thing,
because He has not revealed it to us, than to know it according to man's wisdom,
because he has been bold enough to assume it.
CHAP. II.--THE CHRISTIAN HAS SURE AND SIMPLE KNOWLEDGE CONCERNING THE SUBJECT
BEFORE US.
Of course we shall not deny that philosophers have sometimes thought the
same things as ourselves. The testimony of truth is the issue thereof. It
sometimes happens even in a storm, when the boundaries of sky and sea are lost in
confusion, that some harbour is stumbled on (by the labouring ship) by some happy
chance; and sometimes in the very shades of night, through blind luck alone,
one finds access to a spot, or egress from it. In nature, however, most
conclusions are suggested, as it were, by that common intelligence wherewith God has
been pleased to endow the soul of man. This intelligence has been caught up by
philosophy, and, with the view of glorifying her own art, has been inflated (it is
not to be wondered at that I use this language) with straining after that
facility of language which is practised in the building up and pulling down of
everything, and which has greater aptitude for persuading men by speaking than by
teaching. She assigns to things their forms and conditions; sometimes makes them
common and public, sometimes appropriates them to private use; on certainties
she capriciously stamps the character of uncertainty; she appeals to
precedents, as if all things are capable of being compared together; she describes all
things by rule and definition, allotting diverse properties even to similar
objects; she attributes nothing to the divine permission, but assumes as her
principles the laws of nature. I could bear with her pretensions, if only she were
herself true to nature, and would prove to me that she had a mastery over nature
as being associated with its creation. She thought, no doubt, that she was
deriving her mysteries from sacred sources, as men deem them, because in ancient
times most authors were supposed to be (I will not say godlike, but) actually
gods: as, for instance, the Egyptian Mercury,(3) to whom Plato paid very great
deference;(4) and the Phrygian Silenus, to whom Midas lent his long ears, when the
shepherds brought him to him; and Hermotimus, to whom the good people of
Clazomenae built a temple after his death; and Orpheus; and Musaeus; and Pherecydes,
the master of Pythagoras. But why need we care, since these philosophers have
also made their attacks upon those writings which are condemned by us under the
title of apocryphal,(5) certain as we are that nothing ought to be received
which does not agree with the true system of prophecy, which has arisen in this
present age;(6) because we do not forget that there have been false prophets, and
long previous to them fallen spirits, which have instructed the entire tone
and aspect of the world with cunning knowledge of this (philosophic) cast? It is,
indeed, not incredible that any man who is in quest of wisdom may have gone so
far, as a matter of curiosity, as to consult the very prophets; (but be this
as it may), if you take t he philosophers, you would find in them more diversity
than agreement, since even in their agreement their diversity is discoverable.
Whatever things are true in their systems, and agreeable to prophetic wisdom,
they either recommend as emanating from some other source, or else perversely
apply(1) in some other sense. This process is attended with very great detriment
to the truth, when they pretend that it is either helped by falsehood, or else
that falsehood derives support from it. The following circumstance must needs
have set ourselves and the philosophers by the ears, especially in this present
matter, that they sometimes clothe sentiments which are common to both sides,
in arguments which are peculiar to themselves, but contrary in some points to
our rule and standard of faith; and at other times defend opinions which are
especially their, own, with arguments which both sides acknowledge to be valid,
and occasionally conformable to their system of belief. The truth has, at this
rate, been well-nigh excluded by the philosophers, through the poisons with which
they have infected it; and thus, if we regard both the modes of coalition
which we have now mentioned, and which are equally hostile to the truth, we feel
the urgent necessity of freeing, on the one hand, the sentiments held by us in
common with them from the arguments of the philosophers, and of separating, on
the other hand, the arguments which both parties employ from the opinions of the
same philosophers. And this we may do by recalling all questions to God's
inspired standard, with the obvious exception of such simple cases as being free
from the entanglement of any preconceived conceits, one may fairly admit on mere
human testimony; because plain evidence of this sort we must sometimes borrow
from opponents, when our opponents have nothing to gain from it. Now I am not
unaware what a vast mass of literature the philosophers have accumulated
concerning the subject before us, in their own commentaries thereon--what various
schools of principles there are, what conflicts of opinion, what prolific sources of
questions, what perplexing methods of solution. Moreover, I have looked into
Medical Science also, the sister (as they say) of Philosophy, which claims as her
function to cure the body, and thereby to have a special acquaintance with the
soul. From this circumstance she has great differences with her sister,
pretending as the latter does to know more about the soul, through the more obvious
treatment, as it were, of her in her domicile of the body. But never mind all
this contention between them for pre-eminence! For extending their several
researches on the soul, Philosophy, on the one hand, has enjoyed the full scope of
her genius; while Medicine, on the other hand, has possessed the stringent
demands of her art and practice. Wide are men's inquiries into uncertainties; wider
still are their disputes about conjectures. However great the difficulty of
adducing proofs, the labour of producing conviction is not one whit less; so that
the gloomy Heraclitus was quite right, when, observing the thick darkness which
obscured the researches of the inquirers about the soul, and wearied with their
interminable questions, he declared that he had certainly not explored the
limits of the soul, although he had traversed every road in her domains. To the
Christian, however, but few words are necessary for the clear understanding of
the whole subject. But in the few words there always arises certainty to him; nor
is he permitted to give his inquiries a wider range than is compatible with
their solution; for "endless questions" the apostle forbids.(2) It must, however,
be added, that no solution may be found by any man, but such as is learned
from God; and that which is learned of God is the sum and substance of the whole
thing.
CHAP. III.--THE SOUL'S ORIGIN DEFINED OUT OF THE SIMPLE WORDS OF SCRIPTURE.
Would to God that no "heresies had been ever necessary, in order that they
which are; approved may be made manifest!"(3) We should then be never required
to try our strength in contests about the soul with philosophers, those
patriarchs of heretics, as they may be fairly called.(4) The apostle, so far back as
his own time, foresaw, indeed, that philosophy would do violent injury to the
truth.(5) This admonition about false philosophy he was induced to offer after
he had been at Athens, had become acquainted with that loquacious city,(6) and
had there had a taste of its huckstering wiseacres and talkers. In like manner
is the treatment of the soul according to the sophistical doctrines of men which
"mix their wine with water."(1) Some of them deny the immortality of the soul;
others affirm that it is immortal, and something more. Some raise disputes
about its substance; others about its form; others, again, respecting each of its
several faculties. One school of philosophers derives its state from various
sources, while another ascribes its departure to different destinations. The
various schools reflect the character of their masters, according as they have
received their impressions from the dignity(2) of Plato, or the vigour(3) of Zeno,
or the equanimity(4) of Aristotle, or the stupidity(5) of Epicurus, or the
sadness(6) of Heraclitus, or the madness(7) of Empedocles. The fault, I suppose, of
the divine doctrine lies in its springing from Judaea(8) rather than from
Greece. Christ made a mistake, too, in sending forth fishermen to preach, rather
than the sophist. Whatever noxious vapours, accordingly, exhaled from philosophy,
obscure the clear and wholesome atmosphere of truth, it will be for Christians
to clear away, both by shattering to pieces the arguments which are drawn from
the principles of things--I mean those of the philosophers--and by opposing to
them the maxims of heavenly wisdom--that is, such as are revealed by the Lord;
in order that both the pitfalls wherewith philosophy captivates the heathen
may be removed, and the means employed by heresy to shake the faith of Christians
may be repressed. We have already decided one point in our controversy with
Hermogenes, as we said at the beginning of this treatise, when we claimed the
soul to be formed by the breathing(9) of God, and not out of matter. We relied
even there on the clear direction of the inspired statement which informs us how
that "the Lord God breathed on man's face the breath of life, so that man became
a living soul"(10)--by that inspiration of God, of course. On this point,
therefore, nothing further need be investigated or advanced by us. It has its own
treatise,(11) and its own heretic. I shall regard it as my introduction to the
other branches of the subject.
CHAP. IV.--IN OPPOSITION TO PLATO, THE SOUL WAS CREATED AND ORIGINATED AT
BIRTH.
After settling the origin of the soul, its condition or state comes up
next. For when we acknowledge that the soul originates in the breath of God, it
follows that we attribute a beginning to it. This Plato, indeed, refuses to
assign to it, for he will have the soul to be unborn and unmade.(12) We, however,
from the very fact of its having had a beginning, as well as from the nature
thereof, teach that it had both birth and creation. And when we ascribe both birth
and creation to it, we have made no mistake: for being born, indeed, is one
thing, and being made is another,--the former being the term which is best suited
to living beings. When distinctions, however, have places and times of their
own, they occasionally possess also reciprocity of application among themselves.
Thus, the being made admits of being taken in the sense of being brought
forth;(13) inasmuch as everything which receives being or existence, in any way
whatever, is in fact generated. For the maker may really be called the parent of the
thing that is made: in this sense Plato also uses the phraseology. So far,
therefore, as concerns our belief in the souls being made or born, the opinion of
the philosopher is overthrown by the authority of prophecy(14) even.
CHAP. V.--PROBABLE VIEW OF THE STOICS, THAT THE SOUL HAS A CORPOREAL NATURE.
Suppose one summons a Eubulus to his assistance, and a Critolaus, and a
Zenocrates, and on this occasion Plato's friend Aristotle. They may very possibly
hold themselves ready for stripping the soul of its corporeity, unless they
happen to see other philosophers opposed to them in their purpose--and this, too,
in greater numbers--asserting for the soul a corporeal nature. Now I am not
referring merely to those who mould the soul out of manifest bodily substances,
as Hipparchus and Heraclitus (do) out of fire; as Hippon and Thales (do) out of
water; as Empedocles and Critias (do) out of blood; as Epicurus (does) out of
atoms, since even atoms by their coherence form corporeal masses; as Critolaus
and his Peripatetics (do) out of a certain indescribable quintessence,(15) if
that may be called a body which rather includes and embraces bodily
substances;--but I call on the Stoics also to help me, who, while declaring almost in our
own terms that the soul is a spiritual essence (inasmuch as breath and spirit are
in their nature very near akin to each other), will yet have no difficulty in
persuading (us) that the soul is a corporeal substance. Indeed, Zeno, defining
the soul to be a spirit generated with (the body,(1)) constructs his argument
in this way: That substance which by its departure causes the living being to
die is a corporeal one. Now it is by the departure of the spirit, which is
generated with (the body,) that the living being dies; therefore the spirit which is
generated with (the body) is a corporeal substance. But this spirit which is
generated with (the body) is the soul: it follows, then, that the soul is a
corporeal substance. Cleanthes, too, will have it that family likeness passes from
parents to their children not merely in bodily features, but in characteristics
of the soul; as if it were out of a mirror of (a man's) manners, and faculties,
and affections, that bodily likeness and unlikeness are caught and reflected
by the soul also. It is therefore as being corporeal that it is susceptible of
likeness and unlikeness. Again, there is nothing in common between things
corporeal and things incorporeal as to their susceptibility. But the soul certainly
sympathizes with the body, and shares in its pain, whenever it is injured by
bruises, and wounds, and sores: the body, too, suffers with the soul, and is
united with it (whenever it is afflicted with anxiety, distress, or love) in the
loss of vigour which its companion sustains, whose shame and fear it testifies by
its own blushes and paleness. The soul, therefore, is (proved to be) corporeal
from this inter-communion of susceptibility. Chrysippus also joins hands in
fellowship with Cleanthes when he lays it down that it is not at all possible for
things which are endued with body to be separated from things which have not
body; because they have no such relation as mutual contact or coherence.
Accordingly Lucretius says:(2)
"Tangere enim et tangi nisi corpus nulla potest res."
"For nothing but body is capable of touching or of being touched."
(Such severance, however, is quite natural between the soul and the body); for
when the body is deserted by the soul, it is overcome by death. The soul,
therefore, is endued with a body; for if it were not corporeal, it could not desert
the body.
CHAP. VI.--THE ARGUMENTS OF THE PLATONISTS FOR THE SOUL'S INCORPOREALITY,
OPPOSED, PERHAPS FRIVOLOUSLY.
These conclusions the Platonists disturb more by subtilty than by truth.
Every body, they say, has necessarily either an animate nature(3) or an
inanimate one.(4) If it has the inanimate nature, it receives motion externally to
itself; if the animate one, internally. Now the soul receives motion neither
externally nor internally: not externally, since it has not the inanimate nature; nor
internally, because it is itself rather the giver of motion to the body. It
evidently, then, is not a bodily substance, inasmuch as it receives motion
neither way, according to the nature and law of corporeal substances. Now, what first
surprises us here, is the unsuitableness of a definition which appeals to
objects which have no affinity with the soul. For it is impossible for the soul to
be called either an animate body or an inanimate one, inasmuch as it is the
soul itself which makes the body either animate, if it be present to it, or else
inanimate, if it be absent from it. That, therefore, which produces a result,
cannot itself be the result, so as to be entitled to the designation of an
animate thing or an inanimate one. The soul is so called in respect of its own
substance. If, then, that which is the soul admits not of being called an animate
body or an inanimate one, how can it challenge comparison with the nature and law
of animate and inanimate bodies? Furthermore, since it is characteristic of a
body to be moved externally by something else, and as we have already shown that
the soul receives motion from some other thing when it is swayed (from the
outside, of course, by something else) by prophetic influence or by madness,
therefore I must be right in regarding that as bodily substance which, according to
the examples we have quoted, is moved by some other object from without. Now,
if to receive motion from some other thing is characteristic of a body, how much
more is it so to impart motion to something else! But the soul moves the body,
all whose efforts are apparent externally, and from without. It is the soul
which gives motion to the feet for walking, and to the hands for touching, and to
the eyes for sight, and to the tongue for speech--a sort of internal image
which moves and animates the surface. Whence could accrue such power to the soul,
if it were incorporeal? How could an unsubstantial thing propel solid objects?
But in what way do the senses in man seem to be divisible into the corporeal
and the intellectual classes? They tell is that the qualities of things
corporeal, such as earth and fire, are indicated by the bodily senses--of touch and
sight; whilst (the qualities) of incorporeal things--for instance, benevolence and
malignity--are discovered by the intellectual faculties. And from this (they
deduce what is to them) the manifest conclusion, that the soul is incorporeal,
its properties being comprehended by the perception not of bodily organs, but of
intellectual faculties. Well, (I shall be much surprised) if I do not at once
cut away the very ground on which their argument stands. For I show them how
incorporeal things are commonly submitted to the bodily senses--sound, for
instance, to the organ of hearing; colour, to the organ of sight; smell, to the
olfactory organ. And, just as in these instances, the soul likewise has its contact
with(1) the body; not to say that the incorporeal objects are reported to us
through the bodily organs, for the express reason that they come into contact with
the said organs. Inasmuch, then, as it is evident that even incorporeal
objects are embraced and comprehended by corporeal ones, why should not the soul,
which is corporeal, be equally comprehended and understood by incorporeal
faculties? It is thus certain that their argument fails. Among their more conspicuous
arguments will be found this, that in their judgment every bodily substance is
nourished by bodily substances; whereas the soul, as being an incorporeal
essence, is nourished by incorporeal aliments--for instance, by the studies of
wisdom. But even this ground has no stability in it, since Soranus, who is a most
accomplished authority in medical science, affords us as answer, when he asserts
that the soul is even nourished by corporeal aliments; that in fact it is, when
failing and weak, actually refreshed oftentimes by food. Indeed, when deprived
of all food, does not the soul entirely remove from the body? Soranus, then,
after discoursing about the soul in the amplest manner, filling four volumes with
his dissertations, and after weighing well all the opinions of the
philosophers, defends the corporeality of the soul, although in the process he has robbed
it of its immortality. For to all men it is not given to believe the truth
which Christians are privileged to hold. As, therefore, Soranus has shown us from
facts that the soul is nourished by corporeal aliments, let the philosopher
(adopt a similar mode of proof, and) show that it is sustained by an incorporeal
food. But the fact is, that no one has even been able to quench this man's(2)
doubts and difficulties about the condition of the soul with the honey-water of
Plato's subtle eloquence, nor to surfeit them with the crumbs from the minute
nostrums of Aristotle. But what is to become of the souls of all those robust
barbarians, which have had no nurture of philosopher's lore indeed, and yet are
strong in untaught practical wisdom, and which although very starvelings in
philosophy, without your Athenian academies and porches, and even the prison of
Socrates, do yet contrive to live? For it is not the soul's actual substance which
is benefited by the aliment of learned study, but only its conduct and
discipline; such ailment contributing nothing to increase its bulk, but only to enhance
its grace. It is, moreover, a happy circumstance that the Stoics affirm that
even the arts have corporeality; since at the rate the soul too must be
corporeal, since it is commonly supposed to be nourished by the arts. Such, however, is
the enormous preoccupation of the philosophic mind, that it is generally unable
to see straight before it. Hence (the story of) Thales falling into the
well.(3) It very commonly, too, through not understanding even its own opinions,
suspects a failure of its own health. Hence (the story of) Chrysippus and the
hellebore. Some such hallucination, I take it, must have occurred to him, when he
asserted that two bodies could not possibly be contained in one: he must have
kept out of mind and sight the case of those pregnant women who, day after day,
bear not one body, but even two and three at a time, within the embrace of a
single womb. One finds likewise, in the records of the civil law, the instance of a
certain Greek woman who gave birth to a quint(4) of children, the mother of
all these at one parturition, the manifold parent of a single brood, the prolific
produce from a single womb, who, guarded by so many bodies--I had almost said,
a people--was herself no less then the sixth person! The whole creation
testifies how that those bodies which are naturally destined to issue from bodies,
are already (included) in that from which they proceed. Now that which proceeds
from some other thing must needs be second to it. Nothing, however, proceeds out
of another thing except by the process of generation; but then they are two
(things).
CHAP.VII. --THE SOUL'S CORPOREALITY DEMONSTRATED OUT OF THE GOSPELS.
So far as the philosophers are concerned, we have said enough. As for our
own teachers, indeed, our reference to them is ex abundanti--a surplusage of
authority: in the Gospel itself they will be found to have the clearest evidence
for the corporeal nature of the soul. In hell the soul of a certain man is in
torment, punished in flames, suffering excruciating thirst, and imploring from
the finger of a happier soul, for his tongue, the solace of a drop of water.(1)
Do you suppose that this end of the blessed poor man and the miserable rich man
is only imaginary? Then why the name of Lazarus in this narrative, if the
circumstance is not in (the category of) a real occurrence? But even if it is to be
regarded as imaginary, it will still be a testimony to truth and reality. For
unless the soul possessed corporeality, the image of a soul could not possibly
contain a finger of a bodily substance; nor would the Scripture feign a
statement about the limbs of a body, if these had no existence. But what is that which
is removed to Hades(2) after the separation of the body; which is there
detained; which is reserved until the day of judgment; to which Christ also, on
dying, descended? I imagine it is the souls of the patriarchs. But wherefore (all
this), if the soul is nothing in its subterranean abode? For nothing it certainly
is, if it is not a bodily substance. For whatever is incorporeal is incapable
of being kept and guarded in any way; it is also exempt from either punishment
or refreshment. That must be a body, by which punishment and refreshment can be
experienced. Of this I shall treat more fully in a more fitting place.
Therefore, whatever amount of punishment or refreshment the soul tastes in Hades, in
its prison or lodging,(3) in the fire or in Abraham's bosom, it gives proof
thereby of its own corporeality. For an incorporeal thing suffers nothing, not
having that which makes it capable of suffering; else, if it has such capacity, it
must be a bodily substance. For in as far as every corporeal thing is capable
of suffering, in so far is that which is capable of suffering also corporeal.(4)
CHAP. VIII.--OTHER PLATONIST ARGUMENTS CONSIDERED.
Besides, it would be a harsh and absurd proceeding to exempt anything from
the class cf corporeal beings, on the ground that it is not exactly like the
other constituents of that class. And where individual creature's possess
various properties, does not this variety in works of the same class indicate the
greatness of the Creator, in making them at the same time different and yet like,
amicable yet rivals? Indeed, the philosophers themselves agree in saying that
the universe consists of harmonious oppositions, according to Empedocles'
(theory of) friendship and enmity. Thus, then, although corporeal essences are
opposed to incorporeal ones, they yet differ from each other in such sort as to
amplify their species by their variety, without changing their genus, remaining all
alike corporeal; contributing to God's glory in their manifold existence by
reason of their variety; so various, by reason of their differencs; so diverse, in
that some of them possess one kind of perception, others another; some feeding
on one kind of aliment, others on another; some, again, possessing visibility,
while others are invisible; some being weighty, others light. They are in the
habit of saying that the soul must be pronounced incorporeal on this account,
because the bodies of the dead, after its departure from them, become heavier,
whereas they ought to be lighter, being deprived of the weight of a body--since
the soul is a bodily substance. But what, says Soranus (in answer to this
argument), if men should deny that the sea is a bodily substance, because a ship
out of the water becomes a heavy and motionless mass? How much truer and
stronger, then, is the soul's corporeal essence, which carries about the body, which
eventually assumes so great a weight with the nimblest motion! Again, even if the
soul is invisible, it is only in strict accordance with the condition of its
own corporeality, and suitably to the property of its own essence, as well as to
the nature of even those beings to which its destiny made it to be invisible.
The eyes of the owl cannot endure the sun, whilst the eagle is so well able to
face his glory, that the noble character of its young is determined by the
unblinking strength of their gaze; while the eaglet, which turns away its eye from
the sun's ray, is expelled from the nest as a degenerate creature! So true is
it, therefore, than to one eye an object is invisible, which may be quite
plainly seen by another,--without implying any incorporeality in that which is not
endued with an equally strong power (of vision). The sun is indeed a bodily
substance, because it is (composed of) fire; the object, however, which the eaglet
at once admits the existence of, the owl denies, without. any prejudice,
nevertheless, to the testimony of the eagle. There is the selfsame difference in
respect of the soul's corporeality, which is (perhaps) invisible to the flesh, but
perfectly visible to the spirit. Thus John, being "in the Spirit" of God,(1)
beheld plainly the souls of the martyrs.(2)
CHAP. IX.--PARTICULARS OF THE ALLEGED COMMUNICATION TO A MONTANIST SISTER.
When we aver that the soul has a body of a quality and kind peculiar to
itself, in this special condition of it we shall be already supplied with a
decision respecting all the other accidents of its corporeity; how that they belong
to it, because we have shown it to be a body, but that even they have a quality
peculiar to themselves, proportioned to the special nature of the body (to
which they belong); or else, if any accidents (of a body) are remarkable in this
instance for their absence, then this, too, results from the peculiarity of the
condition of the soul's corporeity, from which are absent sundry qualities
which are present to all other corporeal beings. And yet, notwithstanding all this,
we shall not be at all inconsistent if we declare that the more usual
characteristics of a body, such as invariably accrue to the corporeal condition, belong
also to the soul--such as form(3) and limitation; and that triad of
dimensions(4)--I mean length, and breadth and height--by which philosophers gauge al
bodies. What now remains but for us to give the soul a figure?(5) Plato refuses to
do this, as if it endangered the soul's immortality.(6) For everything which
has figure is, according to him, compound, and composed of parts;(7) whereas the
soul is immortal; and being immortal, it is therefore indissoluble; and being
indissoluble, it is figureless: for if, on the contrary, it had figure, it would
be of a composite and structural formation. He, however, in some other manner
frames for the soul an effigy of intellectual forms, beautiful for its just
symmetry and tuitions of philosophy, but misshapen by some contrary qualities. As
for ourselves, indeed, we inscribe on the soul the lineaments of corporeity,
not simply from the assurance which reasoning has taught us of its corporeal
nature, but also from the firm conviction which divine grace impresses on us by
revelation. For, seeing that we acknowledge spiritual charismata, or gifts, we too
have merited the attainment of the prophetic gift, although coming after John
(the Baptist). We have now amongst us a sister whose lot it has been to be
favoured with sundry gifts of revelation, which she experiences in the Spirit by
ecstatic vision amidst the sacred rites of the Lord's day in the church: she
converses with angels, and sometimes even with the Lord; she both sees and hears
mysterious communications;(8) some men's hearts she understands, and to them who
are in need she distributes remedies. Whether it be in the reading of
Scriptures, or in the chanting of psalms, or in the preaching of sermons, or in the
offering up of prayers, m all these religious services matter and opportunity are
afforded to her of seeing visions. It may possibly have happened to us, whilst
this sister of ours was rapt in the Spirit, that we had discoursed in some
ineffable way about the soul. After the people are dismissed at the conclusion of
the sacred services, she is in the regular habit of reporting to us whatever
things she may have seen in vision (for all her communications are examined with
the most scrupulous care, in order that their truth may be probed). "Amongst
other things," says she, "there has been shown to me a soul in bodily shape, and a
spirit has been in the habit of appearing to me; not, however, a void and empty
illusion, but such as would offer itself to be even grasped by the hand, soft
and transparent and of an etherial colour, and in form resembling that of a
human being in every respect." This was her vision, and for her witness there was
God; and the apostle most assuredly foretold that there were to be "spiritual
gifts" in the church.(9) Now, can you refuse to believe this, even if
indubitable evidence on every point is forthcoming for your conviction? Since, then, the
soul is a corporeal substance, no doubt it possesses qualities such as those
which we have just mentioned, amongst them the property of colour, which is
inherent in every bodily substance. Now what colour would you attribute to the soul
but an etherial transparent one? Not that its substance is actually the ether
or air (although this was the opinion of Aenesidemus and Anaximenes, and I
suppose of Heraclitus also, as some say of him), nor transparent light (although
Heraclides of Pontus held it to be so). "Thunder-stones,"(10)indeed, are not of
igne-ous substance, because they shine with ruddy redness; nor are beryls
composed of aqueous matter, because they are of a pure wavy whiteness. How many things
also besides these are there which their colour would associate in the same
class, but which nature keeps widely apart! Since, however, everything which is
very attenuated and transparent bears a strong resemblance to the air, such
would be the case with the soul, since in its material nature(1) it is wind and
breath, (or spirit); whence it is that the belief of its corporeal quality is
endangered, in consequence of the extreme tenuity and subtilty of its essence.
Likewise, as regards the figure of the human soul from your own conception, you can
well imagine that it is none other than the human form; indeed, none other
than the shape of that body which each individual soul animates and moves about.
This we may at once be induced to admit from contemplating man's original
formation. For only carefully consider, after God hath breathed upon the face of man
the breath of life, and man had consequently become a living soul, surely that
breath must have passed through the face at once into the interior structure,
and have spread itself throughout all the spaces of the body; and as soon as by
the divine inspiration it had become condensed, it must have impressed itself
on each internal feature, which the condensation had filled in, and so have
been, as it were, congealed in shape, (or stereotyped). Hence, by this densifying
process, there arose a fixing of the soul's corporeity; and by the impression
its figure was formed and moulded. This is the inner man, different from the
outer, but yet one in the twofold condition.(2) It, too, has eyes and ears of its
own, by means of which Paul must have heard and seen the Lord;(3) it has,
moreover all the other members of the body by the help of which it effects all
processes of thinking and all activity in dreams. Thus it happens that the rich man
in hell has a tongue and poor (Lazarus) a finger and Abraham a bosom.(4) By
these features also the souls of the martyrs under the altar are distinguished and
known. The soul indeed which in the beginning was associated with Adam's body,
which grew with its growth and was moulded after its form proved to be the germ
both of the entire substance (of the human soul) and of that (part of) creation
CHAP. X.--THE SIMPLE NATURE OF THE SOUL IS ASSERTED WITH PLATO. THE IDENTITY
OF SPIRIT AND SOUL.
It is essential to a firm faith to declare with Plato(5) that the soul is
simple; in other words uniform and uncompounded; simply that is to say in
respect of its substance. Never mind men's artificial views and theories, and away
with the fabrications of heresy!(6) Some maintain that there is within the soul
a natural substance--the spirit--which is different from it:(7) as if to have
life--the function of the soul--were one thing; and to emit breath--the
alleged(8) function of the spirit--were another thing. Now it is not in all animals
that these two functions are found; for there are many which only live but do not
breathe in that they do not possess the organs of respiration--lungs and
windpipes.(9) But of what use is it, in an examination of the soul of man, to borrow
proofs from a gnat or an ant, when the great Creator in His divine arrangements
has allotted to every animal organs of vitality suited to its own disposition
and nature, so that we ought not to catch at any conjectures from comparisons
of this sort? Man, indeed, although organically furnished with lungs and
windpipes, will not on that account be proved to breathe by one process, and to live
by another;(10) nor can the ant, although defective in these organs, be on that
account said to be without respiration, as if it lived and that was all. For by
whom has so clear an insight into the works of God been really attained, as to
entitle him to assume that these organic resources are wanting to any living
thing ? There is that Herophilus, the well-known surgeon, or (as I may almost
call him) butcher, who cut up no end of persons,(11) in order to investigate the
secrets of nature, who ruthlessly handled(12) human creatures to discover
(their form and make): I have my doubts whether he succeeded in clearly exploring
all the internal parts of their structure, since death itself changes and
disturbs the natural functions of life, especially when the death is not a natural
one, but such as must cause irregularity and error amidst the very processes of
dissection. Philosophers have affirmed it to be a certain fact, that gnats, and
ants, and moths have no pulmonary or arterial organs. Well, then, tell me, you
curious and elaborate investigator of these mysteries, have they eyes for seeing
withal? But yet they proceed to whatever point they wish, and they both shun
and aim at various objects by processes of sight: point out their eyes to me,
show me their pupils. Moths also gnaw and eat: demonstrate to me their mandibles,
reveal their jaw-teeth. Then, again, gnats hum and buzz, nor even in the dark
are they unable to find their way to our ears:(1) point out to me, then, not
only the noisy tube, but the stinging lance of that mouth of theirs. Take any
living thing whatever, be it the tiniest you can find, it must needs be fed and
sustained by some food or other: show me, then, their organs for taking into
their system, digesting, and ejecting food. What must we say, therefore? If it is
by such instruments that life is maintained, these instrumental means must of
course exist in all things which are to live, even though they are not apparent
to the eye or to the apprehension by reason of their minuteness. You can more
readily believe this, if you remember that God manifests His creative greatness
quite as much in small objects as in the very largest. If, however, you suppose
that God's wisdom has no capacity for forming such infinitesimal corpuscles,
you can still recognise His greatness, in that He has furnished even to the
smallest animals the functions of life, although in the absence of the suitable
organs,--securing to them the power of sight, even without eyes; of eating, even
without teeth; and of digestion, even without stomachs. Some animals also have
the ability to move forward without feet, as serpents, by a gliding motion; or as
worms, by vertical efforts; or as snails and slugs, by their slimy crawl. Why
should you not then believe that respiration likewise may be effected without
the bellows of the lungs, and without arterial canals? You would thus supply
yourself with a strong proof that the spirit or breath is an adjunct of the human
soul, for the very reason that some creatures lack breath, and that they lack
it because they are not furnished with organs of respiration. You think it
possible for a thing to live without breath; then why not suppose that a thing might
breathe without lungs? Pray, tell me, what is it to breathe? I suppose it
means to emit breath from yourself. What is it not to live? I suppose it means not
to emit breath from yourself. This is the answer which I should have to make,
if "to breathe" is not the same thing as "to live." It must, however, be
characteristic of a dead man not to respire: to respire, therefore, is the
characteristic of a living man. But to respire is likewise the characteristic of a
breathing man: therefore also to breathe is the characteristic of a living man. Now,
if both one and the other could possibly have been accomplished without the
soul, to breathe might not be a function of the soul, but merely to live. But
indeed to live is to breathe, and to breathe is to live. Therefore this entire
process, both of breathing and living, belongs to that to which living belongs--that
is, to the soul. Well, then, since you separate the spirit (or breath) and the
soul, separate their operations also. Let both of them accomplish some act
apart from one another--the soul apart, the spirit apart. Let the soul live
without the spirit; let the spirit breathe without the soul. Let one of them quit
men's bodies, let the other remain; let death and life meet and agree. If indeed
the soul and the spirit are two, they may be divided; and thus, by the
separation of the one which departs from the one which remains, there would accrue the
union and meeting together of life and of death. But such a union never will
accrue: therefore they are not two, and they cannot be divided; but divided they
might have been, if they had been (two). Still two things may surely coalesce in
growth. But the two in question never will coalesce, since to live is one
thing, and to breathe is another. Substances are distinguished by their operations.
How much firmer ground have you for believing that the soul and the spirit are
but one, since you assign to them no difference; so that the soul is itself
the spirit, respiration being the function of that of which life also is! But
what if you insist on supposing that the day is one thing, and the light, which is
incidental to the day, is another thing, whereas day is only the light itself?
There must, of course, be also different kinds of light, as (appears) from the
ministry of fires. So likewise will there be different sorts of spirits,
according as they emanate from God or from the devil. Whenever, indeed, the question
is about soul and spirit, the soul will be (understood to be) itself the
spirit, just is the day is the light itself. For a thing is itself identical with
that by means of which itself exists.
CHAP. XI.--SPIRIT--A TERM EXPRESSIVE OF AN OPERATION OF THE SOUL, NOT OF ITS
NATURE. TO BE CAREFULLY DISTINGUISHED FROM THE SPIRIT OF GOD.
But the nature of my present inquiry obliges me to call the soul spirit or
breath, because to breathe is ascribed to another substance. We, however,
claim this (operation) for the soul, which we acknowledge to be an indivisible
simple substance, and therefore we must call it spirit in a definitive sense--not
because of its condition, but of its action; not in respect of its nature, but
of its operation; because it respires, and not because it is spirit in any
especial sense.(1) For to blow or breathe is to respire. So that we are driven to
describe, by (the term which indicates this respi-ration--that is to say)
spirit--the soul which we hold to be, by the propriety of its action, breath.
Moreover, we properly and especially insist on calling it breath (or spirit), in
opposition to Hermogenes, who derives the soul from matter instead of from the
afflatus or breath of God. He, to be sure, goes flatly against the testimony of
Scripture, and with this view converts breath into spirit, because he cannot believe
that the (creature on which was breathed the) Spirit of God fell into sin, and
then into condemnation; and therefore he would conclude that the soul came
from matter rather than from the Spirit or breath of God. For this reason, we on
our side even from that passage, maintain the soul to be breath and not the
spirit, in the scriptural and distinctive sense of the spirit; and here it is with
regret that we apply the term spirit at all in the lower sense, in consequence
of the identical action of respiring and breathing. In that passage, the only
question is about the natural substance; to respire being an act of nature. I
would not tarry a moment longer on this point, were it not for those heretics who
introduce into the soul some spiritual germ which passes my comprehension:
(they make it to have been) conferred upon the soul by the secret liberality of
her mother Sophia (Wisdom), without the knowledge of the Creator.(2) But (Holy)
Scripture, which has a better knowledge of the soul's Maker, or rather God, has
told us nothing more than that God breathed on man's face the breath of life,
and that man became a living soul, by means of which he was both to live and
breathe; at the same time making a sufficiently clear distinction between the
spirit and the soul,(3) in such passages as the following, wherein God Himself
declares: "My Spirit went forth from me, and I made the breath of each. And the
breath of my Spirit became soul."(4) And again: "He giveth breath unto the people
that are on the earth, and Spirit to them that walk thereon."(5) First of all
there comes the (natural) soul, that is to say, the breath, to the people that
are on the earth,--in other words, to those who act carnally in the flesh; then
afterwards comes the Spirit to those who walk thereon,--that is, who subdue the
works of the flesh; because the apostle also says, that "that is not first
which is spiritual, but that which is natural, (or in possession of the natural
soul,) and afterward that which is spiritual."(6) For, inasmuch as Adam
straightway predicted that "great mystery of Christ and the church,"(7) when he said,
"This now is bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; therefore shall a man leave
his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife, and they two shall
become one flesh,"(8) he experienced the influence of the Spirit. For there
fell upon him that ecstasy, which is the Holy Ghost's operative virtue of
prophecy. And even the evil spirit too is an influence which comes upon a man. Indeed,
the Spirit of God not more really "turned Saul into another man,"(9) that is to
say, into a prophet, when "people said one to another, What is this which is
come to the son of Kish? Is Saul also among the prophets?"(10) than did the evil
spirit afterwards turn him into another man--in other words, into an apostate.
Judas likewise was for a long time reckoned among the elect (apostles), and
was even appointed to the office of their treasurer; he was not yet the traitor,
although he was become fraudulent; but afterwards the devil entered into him.
Consequently, as the spirit neither of God nor of the devil is naturally planted
with a man's soul at his birth, this soul must evidently exist apart and
alone, previous to the accession to it of either spirit: if thus apart and alone, it
must also be simple and un-compounded as regards its substance; and therefore
it cannot respire from any other cause than from the actual condition of its
own substance.
CHAP. XII.--DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE MIND AND THE SOUL, AND THE RELATION BETWEEN
THEM.
In like manner the mind also, or animus, which the Greeks designate
NO<greek>US</greek>, is taken by us in no other sense than as indicating that faculty
or apparatus(11) which is inherent and implanted in the soul, and naturally
proper to it, whereby it acts, whereby it acquires knowledge, and by the
possession of which it is capable of a spontaneity of motion within itself, and of thus
appearing to be impelled by the mind, as if it were another substance, as is
maintained by those who determine the soul to be the moving principle of the
universe(12)--the god of Socrates, Valentinus' "only-begotten" of his father(13)
Bythus, and his mother Sige. How confused is the opinion of Anaxagoras! For,
having imagined the mind to be the initiating principle of all things, and
suspending on its axis the balance of the universe; affirming, moreover, that the mind
is a simple principle, unmixed, and incapable of admixture, he mainly on this
very consideration separates it from all amalgamation with the soul; and yet in
another passage he actually incorporates it with(1) the soul. This
(inconsistency) Aristotle has also observed: but whether he meant his criticism to be
constructive, and to fill up a system of his own, rather than destructive of the
principles of others, I am hardly able to decide. As for himself, indeed,
although he postpones his definition of the mind, yet he begins by mentioning, as one
of the two natural constituents of the mind,(2) that divine principle which he
conjectures to be impassible, or incapable of emotion, and thereby removes from
all association with the soul. For whereas it is evident that the soul is
susceptible of those emotions which it falls to it naturally to suffer, it must
needs suffer either by the mind or with the mind. Now if the soul is by nature
associated with the mind, it is impossible to draw the conclusion that the mind is
impassible; or again, if the soul suffers not either by the mind or with the
mind, it cannot possibly have a natural association with the mind, with which it
suffers nothing, and which suffers nothing itself. Moreover, if the soul
suffers nothing by the mind and with the mind, it will experience no sensation, nor
will it acquire any knowledge, nor will it undergo any emotion through the
agency of the mind, as they maintain it will. For Aristotle makes even the senses
passions, or states of emotion And rightly too. For to exercise the senses is to
suffer emotion, because to suffer is to feel. In like manner, to acquire
knowledge is to exercise the senses; and to undergo emotion is to exercise the
senses; and the whole of this is a state of suffering. But we see that the soul
experiences nothing of these things, in such a manner as that the mind also is
affected by the emotion, by which, indeed, and with which, all is effected. It
follows, therefore, that the mind is capable of admixture, in opposition to
Anaxagoras; and passible or susceptible of emotion, contrary to the opinion of
Aristotle. Besides, if a separate condition between the soul and mind is to be
admitted, so that they be two things in substance, then of one of them, emotion and
sensation, and every sort of taste, and all action and motion, will be the
characteristics; whilst of the other the natural condition will be calm, and repose,
and stupor. There is therefore no alternative: either the mind must be useless
and void, or the soul. But if these affections may certainly be all of them
ascribed to both, then in that case the two will be one and the same, and
Democritus will carry his point when he suppresses all distinction between the two. The
question will arise how two can be one--whether by the confusion of two
substances, or by the disposition of one? We, however, affirm that the mind coalesces
with(3) the soul,--not indeed as being distinct from it in substance, but as
being its natural function and agent.(4)
CHAP. XIII.--THE SOUL'S SUPREMACY.
It next remains to examine where lies the supremacy; in other words, which
of the two is superior to the other, so that with which the supremacy clearly
lies shall be the essentially superior substance;(5) whilst that over which
this essentially superior substance shall have authority shall be considered as
the natural functionary of the superior substance. Now who will hesitate to
ascribe this entire authority to the soul, from the name of which the whole man has
received his own designation in common phraseology? How many souls, says the
rich man, do I maintain? not how many minds. The pilot's desire, also, is to
rescue so many souls from shipwreck, not so many minds; the labourer, too, in his
work, and the soldier on the field of battle, affirms that he lays down his soul
(or life), not his mind. Which of the two has its perils or its vows and
wishes more frequently on men's lips--the mind or the soul? Which of the two are
dying persons, said to have to do with the mind or the soul? In short,
philosophers themselves, and medical men, even when it is their purpose to discourse about
the mind, do in every instance inscribe on their title-page(6) and table of
contents,(7) "De Anima" ("A treatise on the soul"). And that you may also have
God's voucher on the subject, it is the soul which He addresses; it is the soul
which He exhorts and counsels, to turn the mind and intellect to Him. It is the
soul which Christ came to save; it is the soul which He threatens to destroy in
hell; it is the soul (or life) which He forbids being made too much of; it is
His soul, too (or life), which the good Shepherd Himself lays down for His
sheep. It is to the soul, therefore, that you ascribe the supremacy; in it also you
possess that union of substance, of which you perceive the mind to be the
instrument, not the ruling power.
CHAP. XIV.--THE SOUL VARIOUSLY DIVIDED BY THE PHILOSOPHERS; THIS DIVISION IS
NOT A MATERIAL DISSECTION.
Being thus single, simple, and entire in itself, it is as incapable of
being composed and put together from external constituents, as it is of being
divided in and of itself, inasmuch as it is indissoluble. For if it had been
possible to construct it and to destroy it, it would no longer be immortal. Since,
however, it is not mortal, it is also incapable of dissolution and division. Now,
to be divided means to be dissolved, and to be dissolved means to die. Yet
(philosophers) have divided the soul into parts: Plato, for instance, into two;
Zeno into three; Panaetius, into five or six; Soranus, into seven; Chrysippus,
into as many as eight; and Apollophanes, into as many as nine; whilst certain of
the Stoics have found as many as twelve parts in the soul. Posidonius makes
even two more than these: he starts with two leading faculties of the soul,--the
directing faculty, which they designate <greek>hgemonikon</greek>; and the
rational faculty, which they call <greek>logikon</greek>,--and ultimately subdivided
these into seventeen(1) parts. Thus variously is the soul dissected by the
different schools. Such divisions, however, ought not to be regarded so much as
parts of the soul, as powers, or faculties, or operations thereof, even as
Aristotle himself has regarded some of them as being. For they are not portions or
organic parts of the soul's substance, but functions of the soul--such as those
of motion, of action, of thought, and whatsoever others they divide in this
manner; such, likewise, as the five senses themselves, so well known to
all--seeing, hearing, tasting, touching, smelling. Now, although they have allotted to the
whole of these respectively certain parts of the body as their special
domiciles, it does not from that circumstance follow that a like distribution will be
suitable to the sections of the soul; for even the body itself would not admit
of such a partition as they would have the soul undergo. But of the whole
number of the limbs one body is made up, so that the arrangement is rather a
concretion than a division. Look at that very wonderful piece of organic mechanism by
Archimedes,--I mean his hydraulic organ, with its many limbs, parts, bands,
passages for the notes, outlets for their sounds, combinations for their harmony,
and the array of its pipes; but yet the whole of these details constitute only
one instrument. In like manner the wind, which breathes throughout this organ
at the impulse of the hydraulic engine, is not divided into separate portions
from the fact of its dispersion through the instrument to make it play: it is
whole and entire in its substance, although divided in its operation. This example
is not remote from (the illustration) of Strato, and AEnesidemus, and
Heraclitus: for these philosophers maintain the unity of the soul, as diffused over the
entire body, and yet in every part the same.(2) Precisely like the wind blown
in the pipes throughout the organ, the soul displays its energies in various
ways by means of the senses, being not indeed divided, but rather distributed in
natural order. Now, under what designations these energies are to be known, and
by what divisions of themselves they are to be classified, and to what special
offices and functions in the body they are to be severally confined, the
physicians and the philosophers must consider and decide: for ourselves, a few
remarks only will be proper.
CHAP. XV.--THE SOUL'S VITALITY AND INTELLIGENCE. ITS CHARACTER AND SEAT IN MAN.
In the first place, (we must determine) whether there be in the soul some
supreme principle of vitality and intelligence(3) which they call "the ruling
power of the soul"--<greek>to</greek> <greek>hgemonikon</greek> for if this be
not admitted, the whole condition of the soul is put in jeopardy. Indeed, those
men who say that there is no such directing faculty, have begun by supposing
that the soul itself is simply a nonentity. One Dicaearchus, a Messenian, and
amongst the medical profession Andreas and Asclepiades, have thus destroyed the
(soul's) directing power, by actually placing in the mind the senses, for which
they claim the ruling faculty. Asclepiades rides rough-shod over us with even
this argument, that very many animals, after losing those parts of their body in
which the soul's principle of vitality and sensation is thought mainly to
exist, still retain life in a considerable degree, as well as sensation: as in the
case of flies, and wasps, and locusts, when you have cut off their heads; and of
she-goats, and tortoises, and eels, when you have pulled out their hearts. (He
concludes), therefore, that there is no especial principle or power of the
soul; for if there were, the soul's vigour and strength could not continue when it
was removed with its domiciles (or corporeal organs). However, Dicaearchus has
several authorities against him--and philosophers too--Plato, Strato,
Epicurus, Democritus, Empedocles, Socrates, Aristotle; whilst in opposition to Andreas
and Asclepiades (may be placed their brother) physicians Herophilus,
Erasistratus, Diocles, Hippocrates, and Soranus himself; and better than all others,
there are our Christian authorities. We are taught by God concerning both these
questions--viz. that there is a ruling power in the soul, and that it is
enshrined(3) in one particular recess of the body. For, when one reads of God as being
"the searcher and witness of the heart;"(2) when His prophet is reproved by His
discovering to him the secrets of the heart;(3) when God Himself anticipates in
His people the thoughts of their heart,(4) "Why think ye evil in your
hearts?"(5) when David prays "Create in me a clean heart, O God,"(6) and Paul declares,
"With the heart man believeth unto righteousness,"(7) and John says, "By his
own heart is each man condemned;"(8) when, lastly, "he who looketh on a woman so
as to lust after her, hath already committed adultery with her in his
heart,"(9)--then both points are cleared fully up, that there is a directing faculty of
the soul, with which the purpose of God may agree; in other words, a supreme
principle of intelligence and vitality (for where there is intelligence, there
must be vitality), and that it resides in that most precious part(10) of our
body to which God especially looks: so that you must not suppose, with Heraclitus,
that this sovereign faculty of which we are treating is moved by some external
force; nor with Moschion,(11) that it floats about through the whole body; nor
with Plato, that it is enclosed in the head; nor with Zenophanes, that it
culminates in the crown of the head; nor that it reposes in the brain, according to
the opinion of Hippocrates; nor around the basis of the brain, as Herophilus
thought; nor in the membranes thereof, as Strato and Erasistratus said; nor in
the space between the eyebrows, as Strato the physician held; nor within the
enclosure(12) of the breast, according to Epicurus: but rather, as the Egyptians
have always taught, especially such of them as were accounted the expounders of
sacred truths;(13) in accordance, too, with that verse of Orpheus or Empedocles:
"Namque homini sanguis circumcordialis est sensus."(14)
"Man has his (supreme) sensation in the blood around his heart."
Even Protagoras(15) likewise, and Apollodorus, and Chrysippus, entertain
this same view, so that (our friend) Asclepiades may go in quest of his goats
bleating without a heart, and hunt his flies without their heads; and let all
those (worthies), too, who have predetermined the character of the human soul from
the condition of brute animals, be quite sure that it is themselves rather who
are alive in a heartless and brainless state.
CHAP. XVI.--THE SOUL'S PARTS. ELEMENTS OF THE RATIONAL SOUL.
That position of Plato's is also quite in keeping with the faith, in which
he divides the soul into two parts--the rational and the irrational. To this
definition we take no exception, except that we would not ascribe this twofold
distinction to the nature (of the soul). It is the rational element which we
must believe to be its natural condition, impressed upon it from its very first
creation by its Author, who is Himself esentially rational. For how should that
be other than rational, which God produced on His own prompting; nay more,
which He expressly sent forth by His own afflatus or breath? The irrational
element, however, we must understand to have accrued later, as having proceeded from
the instigation of the serpent--the very achievement of (the first)
transgression--which thenceforward became inherent in the soul, and grew with its growth,
assuming the manner by this time of a natural development, happening as it did
immediately at the beginning of nature. But, inasmuch as the same Plato speaks
of the rational element only as existing in the soul of God Himself, if we were
to ascribe the irrational element likewise to the nature which our soul has
received from God, then the irrational element will be equally derived from God,
as being a natural production, because God is the author of nature. Now from the
devil proceeds the incentive to sin. All sin, however, is irrational:
therefore the irrational proceeds from the devil, from whom sin proceeds; and it is
extraneous to God, to whom also the irrational is an alien principle. The
diversity, then, between these two elements arises from the difference of their
authors. When, therefore, Plato reserves the rational element (of the soul) to God
alone, and subdivides it into two departments the irascible, which they call
<greek>qumikon</greek>, and the concupiscible, which they designate by the term
<greek>epiqumhtikon</greek> (in such a way as to make the first common to us and
lions, and the second shared between ourselves and flies, whilst the rational
element is confined to us and God)--I see that this point will have to be
treated by us, owing to the facts which we find operating also in Christ. For you may
behold this triad of qualities in the Lord. There was the rational element, by
which He taught, by which--discoursed, by which He prepared the way of
salvation; there was moreover indignation in Him, by which He inveighed against the
scribes and the Pharisees; and there was the principle of desire, by which He so
earnestly desired to eat the pass over with His disciples.(1) In our own cases,
accordingly, the irascible and the concupiscible elements of our soul must not
invariably be put to the account of the irrational (nature), since we are sure
that in our Lord these elements operated in entire accordance with reason. God
will be angry, with perfect reason, with all who deserve His wrath; and with
reason, too, will God desire whatever objects and claims are worthy of Himself.
For He will show indignation against the evil man, and for the good man will He
desire salvation. To ourselves even does the apostle allow the concupiscible
quality. "If any man," says he, "desireth the office of a bishop, he desireth a
good work."(2) Now, by saying "a good work," he shows us that the desire is a
reasonable one. He permits us likewise to feel indignation. How should he not,
when he himself experiences the same? "I would," says he, "that they were even
cut off which trouble you."(3) In perfect agreement with reason was that
indignation which resulted from his desire to maintain discipline and order. When,
however, he says, "We were formerly the children of wrath,"(4) he censures an
irrational irascibility, such as proceeds not from that nature which is the
production of God, but from that which the devil brought in, who is himself styled the
lord or "master" of his own class, "Ye cannot serve two masters,"(5) and has
the actual designation of "father:" "Ye are of your father the devil."(6) So
that you need not be afraid to ascribe to him the mastery and dominion over that
second, later, and deteriorated nature (of which we have been speaking), ,when
you read of him as "the sewer of tares, and the nocturnal spoiler of the crop of
corn.(7)
CHAP. XVII.--THE FIDELITY OF THE SENSES, IMPUGNED BY PLATO, VINDICATED BY
CHRIST HIMSELF.
Then, again, when we encounter the question (as to the veracity of those
five senses which we learn with our alphabet; since from this source even there
arises some support for our heretics. They are the faculties of seeing, and
hearing, and smelling, and tasting, and touching. The fidelity of these senses is
impugned with too much severity by the Platonists,(8) and according to some by
Heraclitus also, and Diocles, and Empedocles; at any rate, Plato, in the
Timoeus, declares the operations of the senses to be irrational, and vitiated(9) by
our opinions or beliefs. Deception is imputed to the sight, because it asserts
that oars, when immersed in the water, are inclined or bent, notwithstanding
the certainty that they are straight; because, again, it is quite sure that
distant tower with its really quadrangular contour is round; because also it will
discredit the fact of the truly parallel fabric of yonder porch or arcade, by
supposing it to be narrower and narrower towards its end; and because it will join
with the sea the sky which hangs at so great a height above it. In the same
way, our hearing is charged with fallacy: we think, for instance, that is a noise
in the sky which is nothing else than the rumbling of a carriage; or, if you
prefer it(10) the other way, when the thunder rolled at a distance, we were
quite sure that it was a carriage which made the noise. Thus, too, are our
faculties of smell and taste at fault, because the selfsame perfumes and wines lose
their value after we have used them awhile. On the same principle our touch is
censured, when the identical pavement which seemed rough to the hands is felt by
the feet to be smooth enough; and in the baths a stream of warm water is
pronounced to be quite hot at first, and beautifully temperate afterwards. Thus,
according to them, our senses deceive us, when all the while we are (the cause of
the discrepancies, by) changing our opinions. The Stoics are more moderate in
their views; for they do not load with the obloquy of deception every one of the
senses, and at all times. The Epicureans, again, show still greater consistency,
in maintaining that all the senses are equally true in their testimony, and
always so--only in a different way. It is not our organs of sensation that are
at fault, but our opinion. The senses only experience sensation, they do not
exercise opinion; it is the soul that opines. They separated opinion from the
senses, and sensation from the soul. Well, but whence comes opinion, if not from
the senses? Indeed, unless the eye had descried a round shape in that tower, it
could have had no idea that it possessed roundness. Again, whence arises
sensation if not from the soul? For if the soul had no body, it would have no
sensation. Accordingly, sensation comes from the soul, and opinion from sensation; and
the whole (process) is the soul. But further, it may well be insisted on that
there is a something which causes the discrepancy between the report of the
senses and the reality of the facts. Now, since it is possible, (as we have seen),
for phenomena to be reported which exist not in the objects, why should it not
be equally possible for phenomena to be reported which are caused not by the
senses, but by reasons and conditions which intervene, in the very nature of the
case? If so, it will be only right that they should be duly recognised. The
truth is, that it was the water which was the cause of the oar seeming to be
inclined or bent: out of the water, it was perfectly straight in appearance (as
well as in fact). The delicacy of the substance or medium which forms a mirror by
means of its luminosity, according as it is struck or shaken, by the vibration
actually destroys the appearance of the straightness of a right line. In like
manner, the condition of the open space which fills up the interval between it
and us, necessarily causes the true shape of the tower to escape our notice; for
the uniform density of the surrounding air covering its angles with a similar
light obliterates their outlines. So, again, the equal breadth of the arcade is
sharpened or narrowed off towards its termination, until its aspect, becoming
more and more contracted under its prolonged roof, comes to a vanishing point
in the direction of its farthest distance. So the sky blends itself with the
sea, the vision becoming spent at last, which had maintained duly the boundaries
of the two elements, so long as its vigorous glance lasted. As for the (alleged
cases of deceptive) hearing, what else could produce the illusion but the
similarity of the sounds? And if the perfume afterwards was less strong to the
smell, and the wine more flat to the taste, and the water not so hot to the touch,
their original strength was after all found in the whole of them pretty well
unimpaired. In the matter, however, of the roughness and smoothness of the
pavement, it was only natural and right that limbs like the hands and the feet, so
different in tenderness and callousness, should have different impressions. In
this way, then, there cannot occur an illusion in our senses without an adequate
cause. Now if special causes, (such as we have indicated,) mislead our senses
add (through our senses) our opinions also, then we must no longer ascribe the
deception to the senses, which follow the specific causes of the illusion, nor to
the opinions we form; for these are occasioned and controlled by our senses,
which only follow the causes. Persons who are afflicted with madness or
insanity, mistake one object for another. Orestes in his sister sees his mother; Ajax
sees Ulysses in the slaughtered herd; Athamas and Agave descry wild beasts in
their children. Now is it their eyes or their phrenzy which you must blame for so
vast a fallacy? All things taste bitter, in the redundancy of their bile, to
those who have the jaundice. Is it their taste which you will charge with the
physical prevarication, or their ill state of health? All the senses, therefore,
are disordered occasionally, or imposed upon, but only in such a way as to be
quite free of any fault in their own natural functions. But further still, not
even against the specific causes and conditions themselves must we lay an
indictment of deception. For, since these physical aberrations happen for stated
reasons, the reasons do not deserve to be regarded as deceptions. Whatever ought to
occur in a certain manner is not a deception. If, then, even these
circumstantial causes must be acquitted of all censure and blame, how much more should we
free from reproach the senses, over which the said causes exercise a liberal
sway! Hence we are bound most certainly to claim for the senses truth, and
fidelity, and integrity, seeing that they never render any other account of their
impressions than is enjoined on them by the specific causes or conditions which
in all cases produce that discrepancy which appears between the report of the
senses and the reality of the objects. What mean you, then, O most insolent
Academy? You overthrow the entire condition of human life; you disturb the whole
order of nature; you obscure the good providence of God Himself: for the senses of
man which God has appointed over all His works, that we might understand,
inhabit, dispense, and enjoy them, (you reproach) as fallacious and treacherous
tyrants! But is it not from these that all creation receives our services? Is it
not by their means that a second form is impressed even upon the world?--so many
arts, so many industrious resources, so many pursuits, such business, such
offices, such commerce, such remedies, counsels, consolations, modes,
civilizations, and accomplishments of life! All these things have produced the very relish
and savour of human existence; whilst by these senses of man, he alone of all
animated nature has the distinction of being a rational animal, with a capacity
for intelligence and knowledge--nay, an ability to form the Academy itself! But
Plato, in order to disparage the testimony of the senses, in the Phoedrus
denies (in the person of Socrates) his own ability to know even himself, according
to the injunction of the Delphic oracle; and in the Theoetetus he deprives
himself of the faculties of knowledge and sensation; and again, in the Phoedrus he
postpones till after death the posthumous knowledge, as he calls it, of the
truth; and yet for all he went on playing the philosopher even before he died. We
may not, I say, we may not call into question the truth of the (poor vilified)
senses,(1) lest we should even in Christ Himself, bring doubt upon(2) the truth
of their sensation; lest perchance it should be said that He did not really
"behold Satan as lightning fall from heaven;"(3) that He did not really hear the
Father's voice testifying of Himself;(4) or that He was deceived in touching
Peter's wife's mother;(5) or that the fragrance of the ointment which He
afterwards smelled was different from that which He accepted for His burial;(6) and
that the taste of the wine was different from that which He consecrated in memory
of His blood.(7) On this false principle it was that Marcion actually chose to
believe that He was a phantom, denying to Him the reality of a perfect body.
Now, not even to His apostles was His nature ever a matter of deception. He was
truly both seen and heard upon the mount;(8) true and real was the draught of
that wine at the marriage of (Cana in) Galilee;(9) true and real also was the
touch of the then believing Thomas.(10) Read the testimony of John: "That which we
have seen, which we have heard, which we have looked upon with our eyes, and
our hands have handled, of the Word of life."(11) False, of course, and
deceptive must have been that testimony, if the witness of our eyes, and ears, and
hands be by nature a lie.
CHAP. XVIII.--PLATO SUGGESTED CERTAIN ERRORS TO THE GNOSTICS. FUNCTIONS OF THE
SOUL.
I turn now to the department of our intellectual faculties, such as Plato
has handed it over to the heretics, distinct from our bodily functions, having
obtained the knowledge of them before death.(12) He asks in the Phoedo, What,
then, (do you think) concerning the actual possession of knowledge? Will the
body be a hindrance to it or not, if one shall admit it as an associate in the
search after knowledge? I have a similar question to ask: Have the faculties of
their sight and hearing any truth and reality for human beings or not? Is it not
the case, that even the poets are always muttering against us, that we can
never hear or see anything for certain? He remembered, no doubt, what Epicharmus
the comic poet had said: "It is the mind which sees, the mind that hears--all
else is blind and deaf." To the same purport he says again, that man is the wisest
whose mental power is the clearest; who never applies the sense of sight, nor
adds to his mind the help of any such faculty, but employs the intellect itself
in unmixed serenity when he indulges in contemplation for the purpose of
acquiring an unalloyed insight into the nature of things; divorcing himself with all
his might from his eyes and ears and (as one must express himself) from the
whole of his body, on the ground of its disturbing the soul, and not allowing it
to possess either truth or wisdom, whenever it is brought into communication
with it. We see, then, that in opposition to the bodily senses another faculty is
provided of a much more serviceable character, even the powers of the soul,
which produce an understanding of that truth whose realities are not palpable nor
open to the bodily senses, but are very remote from men's everyday knowledge,
lying in secret--in the heights above, and in the presence of God Himself. For
Plato maintains that there are certain invisible substances, incorporeal,
celestial,(13) divine, and eternal, which they call ideas, that is to say,
(archetypal) forms, which are the patterns and causes of those objects of nature which
are manifest to us, and lie under our corporeal senses: the former, (according
to Plato,) are the actual verities, and the latter the images and likenesses of
them. Well, now, are there not here gleams of the heretical principles of the
Gnostics and the Valentinians? It is from this philosophy that they eagerly
adopt the difference between the bodily senses and the intellectual faculties,--a
distinction which they actually apply to the parable of the ten virgins: making
the five foolish virgins to symbolize the five bodily senses, seeing that these
are so silly and so easy to be deceived; and the wise virgin to express the
meaning of the intellectual faculties, which are so wise as to attain to that
mysterious and supernal truth, which is placed in the pleroma. (Here, then, we
have) the mystic original of the ideas of these heretics. For in this philosophy
lie both their AEons and their genealogies. Thus, too, do they divide sensation,
both into the intellectual powers from their spiritual seed, and the sensuous
faculties from the animal, which cannot by any means comprehend spiritual
things. From the former germ spring invisible things; from the latter, visible
things which are grovelling and temporary, and which are obvious to the senses,
placed as they are in palpable forms.(1) It is because of these views that we have
in a former passage stated as a preliminary fact, that the mind is nothing else
than an apparatus or instrument of the soul,(2) and that the spirit is no
other faculty, separate from the soul, but is the soul itself exercised in
respiration; although that influence which either God on the one hand, or the devil on
the other, has breathed upon it, must be regarded in the light of an additional
element.(3) And now, with respect to the difference between the intellectual
powers and the sensuous faculties, we only admit it so far as the natural
diversity between them requires of us. (There is, of course, a difference) between
things corporeal and things spiritual, between visible and invisible beings,
between objects which are manifest to the view and those which are hidden from it;
because the one class are attributed to sensation, and the other to the
intellect. But yet both the one and the other must be regarded as inherent in the
soul, and as obedient to it, seeing that it embraces bodily objects by means of the
body, in exactly the same way that it conceives incorporeal objects by help of
the mind, except that it is even exercising sensation when it is employing the
intellect. For is it not true, that to employ the senses is to use the
intellect? And to employ the intellect amounts to a use of the senses?(4) What indeed
can sensation be, but the understanding of that which is the object of the
sensation? And what can the intellect or understanding be, but the seeing of that
which is the object understood? Why adopt such excruciating means of torturing
simple knowledge and crucifying the truth? Who can show me the sense which does
not understand the object of its sensation, or the intellect which perceives
not the object which it understands, in so clear away as to prove to me that the
one can do without the other? If corporeal things are the objects of sense, and
incorporeal ones objects of the intellect, it is the classes of the objects
which are different, not the domicile or abode of sense and intellect; in other
words, not the soul (anima) and the mind (animus). By what, in Short, are
corporeal things perceived? If it is by the soul,(5) then the mind is a sensuous
faculty, and not merely an intellectual power; for whilst it understands, it also
perceives, because without the perception there is no understanding. If,
however, corporeal things are perceived by the soul, then it follows that the soul's
power is an intellectual one, and not merely a sensuous faculty; for while it
perceives it also understands, because without understanding there is no
perceiving. And then, again, by what are incorporeal things understood? If it is by the
mind,(6) where will be the soul? If it is by the soul, where will be the mind?
For things which differ ought to be mutually absent from each other, when they
are occupied in their respective functions and duties. It must be your
opinion, indeed, that the mind is absent from the soul on certain occasons; for (you
suppose) that we are so made and constituted as not to know that we have seen or
heard something, on the hypothesis(7) that the mind was absent at the time. I
must therefore maintain that the very soul itself neither saw nor heard, since
it was at the given moment absent with its active power--that is to say, the
mind. The truth is, that whenever a man is out of his mind,(8) it is his soul
that is demented--not because the mind is absent, but because it is a
fellow-sufferer (with the soul) at the time.(9) Indeed, it is the soul which is principally
affected by casualties of such a kind. Whence is this fact confirmed? It is
confirmed from the following consideration: that after the soul's departure, the
mind is no longer found in a man: it always follows the soul; nor does it at
last remain behind it alone, after death. Now, since it follows the soul, it is
also indissolubly attached to it; just as the understanding is attached to the
soul, which is followed by the mind, with which the understanding is
indissolubly connected. Granted now that the understanding is superior to the senses, and
a better discoverer of mysteries, what matters it, so long as it is only a
peculiar faculty of the soul, just as the senses themselves are? It does not at all
affect my argument, unless the understanding were held to be superior to the
senses, for the purpose of deducing from the allegation of such superiority its
separate condition likewise. After thus combating their alleged difference, I
have also to refute this question of superiority, previous to my approaching the
belief (which heresy propounds) in a superior god. On this point, however, of
a (superior) god, we shall have to measure swords with the heretics on their
own ground.(1) Our present subject concerns the soul, and the point is to prevent
the insidious ascription of a superiority to the intellect or understanding.
Now, although the objects which are touched by the intellect are of a higher
nature, since they are spiritual, than those which are embraced by the senses,
since these are corporeal, it will still be only a superiority in the objects--as
of lofty ones contrasted with humble--not in the faculties of the intellect
against the senses. For how can the intellect be superior to the senses, when it
is these which educate it for the discovery of various truths? It is a fact,
that these truths are learned by means of palpable forms; in other words,
invisible things are discovered by the help of visible ones, even as the apostle tells
us in his epistle: "For the invisible things of Him are clearly seen from the
creation of the world, being understood by the things that are made;"(2) and as
Plato too might inform our heretics: "The things which appear are the image(3)
of the things which are concealed from view,"(4) whence it must needs follow
that this world is by all means an image of some other: so that the intellect
evidently uses the senses for its own guidance, and authority, and mainstay; and
without the senses truth could not be attained. How, then, can a thing be
superior to that which is instrumental to its existence, which is also indispensable
to it, and to whose help it owes everything which it acquires? Two conclusions
therefore follow from what we have said:(1) That the intellect is not to be
preferred above the senses, on the (supposed) ground that the agent through which
a thing exists is inferior to the thing itself; and(2) that the intellect must
not be separated from the senses, since the instrument by which a thing's
existence is sustained is associated with the thing itself.
CHAP. XIX.--THE INTELLECT COEVAL WITH THE SOUL IN THE HUMAN BEING. AN EXAMPLE
FROM ARISTOTLE CONVERTED INTO EVIDENCE FAVOURABLE TO THESE VIEWS.
Nor must we fail to notice those writers who deprive the soul of the
intellect even for a short period of time. They do this in order to prepare the way
of introducing the intellect--and the mind also--at a subsequent time of life,
even at the time when intelligence appears in a man. They maintain that the
stage of infancy is supported by the soul alone, simply to promote vitality,
without any intention of acquiring knowledge also, because not all things have
knowledge which possess life. Trees, for instance, to quote Aristotle's example,(5)
have vitality, but have not knowledge; and with him agrees every one who gives
a share to all animated beings of the animal substance, which, according to our
view, exists in man alone as his special property,--not because it is the work
of God, which all other creatures are likewise, but because it is the breath
of God, which this (human soul) alone is, which we say is born with the full
equipment of its proper faculties. Well, let them meet us with the example of the
trees: we will accept their challenge, (nor shah we find in it any detriment to
our own argument;) for it is an undoubted fact, that whilst trees are yet but
twigs and sprouts, and before they even reach the sapling stage, there is in
them their own proper faculty of life, as soon as they spring out of their native
beds. But then, as time goes on, the vigour of the tree slowly advances, as it
grows and hardens into its woody trunk, until its mature age completes the
condition which nature destines for it. Else what resources would trees possess in
due course for the inoculation of grafts, and the formation of leaves, and the
swelling of their buds, and the graceful shedding of their blossom, and the
softening of their sap, were there not in them the quiet growth of the full
provision of their nature, and the distribution of this life over all their branches
for the accomplishment of their maturity?
Trees, therefore, have ability or knowledge; and they derive it from
whence they also derive vitality--that is, from the one source of vitality and
knowledge which is peculiar to their nature, and that from the infancy which they,
too, begin with. For I observe that even the vine, although yet tender and
immature, still understands its own natural business, and strives to cling to some
support, that, leaning on it, and lacing through it,(1) it may so attain its
growth. Indeed, without waiting for the husbandman's training, without an
espalier, without a prop, whatever its tendrils catch, it will fondly cling to,(2) and
embrace with really greater tenacity and force by its own inclination than by
your volition. It longs and hastens to be secure. Take also ivy-plants, never
mind how young: I observe their attempts from the very first to grasp, objects
above them, and outrunning everything else, to hang on to the highest thing,
preferring as they do to spread over walls with their leafy web and woof rather
than creep on the ground and be trodden under by every foot that likes to crush
them. On the other hand, in the case of such trees as receive injury from contact
with a building, how do they hang off as they grow and avoid what injures
them! You can see that their branches were naturally meant to take the opposite
direction, and can very well understand the vital instincts(3) of such a tree from
its avoidance of the wall. It is contented (if it be only a little shrub) with
its own insignificant destiny, which it has in its foreseeing instinct
thoroughly been aware of from its: infancy, only it still fears even a ruined
building. On my side, then, why should I not contend for these wise and sagacious
natures of trees? Let them have vitality, as the philosophers permit it; but let
them have knowledge too, although the philosophers disavow it. Even the infancy of
a log, then, may have an intellect (suitable to it): how much more may that of
a human being, whose soul (which may be compared with the nascent sprout of a
tree) has been derived from Adam as its root, and has been propagated amongst
his posterity by means of woman, to whom it has been entrusted for transmission,
and thus has sprouted into life with all its natural apparatus, both of
intellect and of sense! I am much mistaken if the human person, even from his
infancy, when he saluted life with his infant cries, does not testify to his actual
possession of the faculties of sensation and intellect by the fact of his birth,
vindicating at one and the same time the use of all his senses--that of seeing
by the light, that of hearing by sounds, that of taste by liquids, that of
smell by the air, that of touch by the ground. This earliest voice of infancy,
then, is the first effort of the senses, and the initial impulse of mental
perceptions.(4) There is also the further fact, that some persons understand this
plaintive cry of the infant to be an augury of affliction in the prospect of our
tearful life, whereby from the very moment of birth (the soul) has to be regarded
as endued with prescience, much more with intelligence. Accordingly by this
intuition(5) the babe knows his mother, discerns the nurse, and even recognises
the waiting-maid; refusing the breast of another woman, and the cradle that is
not his own, and longing only for the arms to which he is accustomed. Now from
what source does he acquire this discernment of novelty and custom, if not from
instinctive knowledge? Holy does it happen that he is irritated and quieted, if
not by help of his initial intellect? It would be very strange indeed that
infancy were naturally so lively, if it had not mental power; and naturally so
capable of impression and affection, if it had no intellect. But (we hold the
contrary): for Christ, by "accepting praise out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings,"(6) has declared that neither childhood nor infancy is without
sensibility,(7)--the former of which states, when meeting Him with approving shouts, proved
its ability to offer Him testimony;(8) while the other, by being slaughtered, for
His sake of course, knew what violence meant.(9)
CHAP. XX.--THE SOUL, AS TO ITS NATURE UNIFORM, BUT ITS FACULTIES VARIOUSLY
DEVELOPED. VARIETIES ONLY ACCIDENTAL.
And here, therefore, we draw our conclusion, that all the natural
properties of the soul are inherent in it as parts of its substance; and that they grow
and develope along with it, from the very moment of its own origin at birth.
Just as Seneca says, whom we so often find on our side:(10) "There are implanted
within us the seeds of all the arts and periods of life. And God. our Master,
secretly produces our mental dispositions;" that is, from the germs which are
implanted and hidden in us by means of infancy, and these are the intellect: for
from these our natural dispositions are evolved. Now, even the seeds of plants
have, one form in each kind, but their development varies: some open and
expand in a healthy and perfect state, while others either improve or degenerate,
owing to the conditions of weather and soil, and from the appliance of labour and
care; also from the course of the seasons, and from the occurrence of casual
circumstances. In like manner, the soul may well be(1) uniform in its seminal
origin, although multiform by the process of nativity.(2) And here. local
influences, too, must be taken into account. It has been said that dull and brutish
persons are born at Thebes; and the most accomplished in wisdom and speech at
Athens, where in the district of Colythus(3) children speak--such is the
precocity of their tongue--before they are a month old. Indeed, Plato himself tells
us, in the Timoeus, that Minerva, when preparing to found her great city, only
regarded the nature of the country which gave promise of mental dispositions of
this kind; whence he himself in Tree Laws instructs Megillus and Clinias to be
careful in their selection of a site for building a city. Empedocles, however,
places the cause of a subtle or an obtuse intellect in the quality of the blood,
from which he derives progress and perfection in learning and science. The
subject of national peculiarities has grown by this time into proverbial
notoriety. Comic poets deride the Phrygians for their cowardice; Sallust reproaches the
Moors for their levity, and the Dalmatians for their cruelty; even the apostle
brands the Cretans as "liars."(4) Very likely, too, something must be set down
to the score of bodily condition and the state of the health. Stoutness hinders
knowledge, but a spare form stimulates it; paralysis prostrates the mind, a
decline preserves it. How much more will those accidental circumstances have to
be noticed, which, in addition to the state of one's body or one's health, tend
to sharpen or to dull the intellect! It is sharpened by learned pursuits, by
the sciences, the arts, by experimental knowledge, business habits, and studies;
it is blunted by ignorance, idle habits, inactivity, lust, inexperience,
listlessness, and vicious pursuits. Then, besides these influences, there must
perhaps(5) be added the supreme powers. Now these are the supreme powers: according
to our (Christian) notions, they are the Lord God and His adversary the devil;
but according to men's general opinion about providence, they are fate and
necessity; and about fortune, it is man's freedom of will. Even the philosophers
allow these distinctions; whilst on our part we have already undertaken to treat
of them, on the principles of the (Christian) faith, in a separate work.(6) It
is evident how great must be the influences which so variously affect the one
nature of the soul, since they are commonly regarded as separate "natures." Still
they are not different species, but casual incidents of one nature and
substance--even of that which God conferred on Adam, and made the mould of all
(subsequent ones). Casual incidents will they always remain, but never will they
become!specific differences. However great, too, at present is the variety of men's
maunders, it was not so in Adam, the founder of their race. But all these
discordances ought to have existed in him as the fountainhead, and thence to have
descended to us in an unimpaired variety, if the variety had been due to nature.
CHAP. XXI.--AS FREE-WILL ACTUATES AN INDIVIDUAL SO MAY HIS CHARACTER CHANGE.
Now, if the soul possessed this uniform and simple nature from the
beginning in Adam, previous to so many mental dispositions (being developed out of
it), it is not rendered multiform by suck various development, nor by the
triple(7) form predicated of it in "the Valentinian trinity" (that we may still keep
the condemnation of that heresy in view), for not even this nature is
discoverable in Adam. What had he that was spiritual? Is it because he prophetically
declared "the great mystery of Christ and the church?"(8) "This is bone of my bone,
and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman. Therefore shall a man leave
his father and mother, and he shall cleave unto his wife; and they two shall be
one flesh."(9) But this (gift of prophecy) only came on him afterwards, when
God infused into him the ecstasy, or spiritual quality, in which prophecy
consists. If, again, the evil of sin was developed in him, this must not be accounted
as a natural disposition: it was rather produced by the instigation of the
(old) serpent as far from being incidental to his nature as it was from being
material in him, for we have already excluded belief in "Matter."(10) Now, if
neither the spiritual element, nor what the heretics call the material element, was
properly inherent in him (since, if he had been created out of matter, the germ
of evil must have been an integral part of his constitution), it remains that
the one only original element of his nature was what is called the animal (the
principle of vitality, the soul), which we maintain to be simple and uniform in
its condition. Concerning this, it remains for us to inquire whether, as being
called natural, it ought to be deemed subject to change. (The heretics whom we
have referred to) deny that nature is susceptible of any change,(1) in order
that they may be able to establish and settle their threefold theory, or
"trinity," in all its characteristics as to the several natures, because "a good tree
cannot produce evil fruit, nor a corrupt tree good fruit; and nobody gathers
figs of thorns, nor grapes of brambles."(2) If so, then "God will not be able any
longer to raise up from the stones children unto Abraham; nor to make a
generation of vipers bring forth fruits of repentance."(3) And if so, the apostle too
was in error when he said in his epistle, "Ye were at one time darkness, (but
now are ye light in the Lord:)"(4) and, "We also were by nature children of
wrath;"(5) and, "Such were some of you, but ye are washed."(6) The statements,
however, of holy Scripture will never be discordant with truth. A corrupt tree
will never yield good fruit, unless the better nature be grafted into it; nor will
a good tree produce evil fruit, except by the same process of cultivation.
Stones also will become children of Abraham, if educated in Abraham's faith; and a
generation of vipers will bring forth the fruits of penitence, if they reject
the poison of their malignant nature. This will be the power of the grace of
God, more potent indeed than nature, exercising its sway over the faculty that
underlies itself within us--even the freedom of our will, which is described as
<greek>autexousios</greek> (of independent authority); and inasmuch as this
faculty is itself also natural and mutable, in whatsoever direction it turns, it
inclines of its own nature. Now, that there does exist within us naturally this
independent authority (<greek>to</greek> <greek>autexousion</greek>), we have
already shown in opposition both to Marcion(7) and to Hermogenes.(8) if, then,
the natural condition has to be submitted to a definition, it must be determined
to be twofold--there being the category of the born and the unborn, the made
and not-made. Now that which has received its constitution by being made or by
being born, is by nature capable of being changed, for it can be both born again
and re-made; whereas that which is not-made and unborn will remain for ever
immoveable. Since, however, this state is suited to God alone, as the only Being
who is unborn and not-made (and therefore immortal and unchangeable), it is
absolutely certain that the nature of all other existences which are born and
created is subject to modification and change; so that if the threefold state is to
be ascribed to the soul, it must be supposed to arise from the mutability of
its accidental circumstances, and not from the appointment of nature.
CHAP. XXII.--RECAPITULATION. DEFINITION OF THE SOUL.
Hermogenes has already heard from us what are the other natural faculties
of the soul, as well as their vindication and proof; whence it may be seen that
the soul is rather the offspring of God than of matter. The names of these
faculties shall here be simply repeated, that they may not seem to be forgotten
and passed out of sight. We have assigned, then, to the soul both that freedom of
the will which we just now mentioned, and its dominion over the works of
nature, and its occasional gift of divination, independently of that endowment of
prophecy which accrues to it expressly from the grace of God. We shall therefore
now quit this subject of the soul's disposition, in order to set out fully in
order its various qualities.(9) The soul, then, we define to be sprung from the
breath of God, immortal, possessing body, having form, simple in its substance,
intelligent in its own nature, developing its power in various ways, free in
its determinations, subject to be changes of accident, in its faculties mutable,
rational, supreme, endued with an instinct of presentiment, evolved out of one
(archetypal soul). It remains for us now to consider how it is developed out
of this one original source; in other words, whence, and when, and how it is
produced.
CHAP. XXIII.--THE OPINIONS OF SUNDRY HERETICS WHICH ORIGINATE ULTIMATELY WITH
PLATO.
Some suppose that they came down from heaven, with as firm a belief as
they are apt to entertain, when they indulge in the prospect of an undoubted
return thither. Saturninus, the disciple of Menander, who belonged to Simon's sect,
introduced this opinion: he affirmed that man was made by angels. A futile,
imperfect creation at first, weak and unable to stand, he crawled upon the ground
like a worm, because he wanted the strength to maintain an erect posture; but
afterwards having, by the compassion of the Supreme Power (in whose image, which
had not been fully understood, he was clumsily formed), obtained a slender
spark of life, this roused and righted his imperfect form, and animated it with a
higher vitality, and provided for its return, on its relinquishment of life, to
its original principle. Carpocrates, indeed, claims for himself so extreme an
amount of the supernal qualities, that his disciples set their own souls at
once on an equality with Christ (not to mention the apostles); and sometimes, when
it suits their fancy, even give them the superiority--deeming them, forsooth,
to have partaken of that sublime virtue which looks down upon the
principalities that govern this world. Apelles tells us that our souls were enticed by
earthly baits down from their super-celestial abodes by a fiery angel, Israel's God;
and ours, who then enclosed them firmly within our sinful flesh. The hive of
Valen-tinus fortifies the soul with the germ of Sophia, or Wisdom; by means of
which germ they recognise, in the images of visible objects, the stories and
Milesian fables of their own AEons. I am sorry from my heart that Plato has been
the caterer to all these heretics. For in the Phoedo he imagines that souls
wander from this world to that, and thence back again hither; whilst in the Timoeus
he supposes that the children of God, to whom had been assigned the production
of mortal creatures, having taken for the soul the germ of immortality,
congealed around it a mortal body,--thereby indicating that this world is the figure
of some other. Now, to procure belief in all this--that the soul had formerly
lived with God in the heavens above, sharing His ideas with Him, and afterwards
came down to live with us on earth, and whilst here recollects the eternal
patterns of things which it had learnt before--he elaborated his new formula,
<greek>maqhseis</greek> <greek>anamnhseis</greek>, which means that "learning is
reminiscence;" implying that the souls which come to us from thence forget the
things amongst which they formerly lived, but that they afterwards recall them,
instructed by the objects they see around them. Forasmuch, therefore, as the
doctrines which the heretics borrow from Plato are cunningly defended by this kind
of argument, I shall sufficiently refute the heretics if I overthrow the
argument of Plato.
CHAP. XXIV.--PLATO'S INCONSISTENCY. HE SUPPOSES THE SOUL SELF-EXISTENT, YET
CAPABLE OF FORGETTING WHAT PASSED IN A PREVIOUS STATE.
In the first place, I cannot allow that the soul is capable of a failure
of memory; because he has conceded to it so large an amount of divine quality as
to put it on a par with God. He makes it unborn, which single attribute I
might apply as a sufficient attestation of its perfect divinity; he then adds that
the soul is immortal, incorruptible, incorpo-real-since he believed God to be
the same--invisible, incapable of delineation, uniform, supreme, rational, and
intellectual. What more could he attribute to the soul, if he wanted to call it
God? We, however, who allow no appendage to God(1) (in the sense of equality),
by this very fact reckon the soul as very far below God: for we suppose it to
be born, and hereby to possess something of a diluted divinity and an attenuated
felicity, as the breath (of God), though not His spirit; and although
immortal, as this is an attribute of divinity, yet for all that passible, since this is
an incident of a born condition, and consequently from the first capable of
deviation from perfection and right,(2) and by consequence susceptible of a
failure in memory. This point I have discussed sufficienly with Hermogenes.(3) But
it may be further observed, that if the soul is to merit being accounted a god,
by reason of all its qualities being equal to the attributes of God, it must
then be subject to no passion, and therefore to no loss of memory; for this
defect of oblivion is as great an injury to that of which you predicate it, as
memory is the glory thereof, which Plato himself deems the very safeguard of the
senses and intellectual faculties, and which Cicero has designated the treasury of
all the sciences. Now we need not raise the doubt whether so divine a faculty
as the soul was capable of losing memory: the question rather is, whether it is
able to recover afresh that which it has lost. I could not decide whether
that, which ought to have lost memory, if it once incurred the loss, would be
powerful enough to recollect itself, Both alternatives, indeed, will agree very well
with my soul, but not with Plato's. In the second place, my objection to him
will stand thus: (Plato,) do you endow the soul with a natural competency for
understanding those well-known ideas of yours? Certainly I do, will be your
answer. Well, now, no one will concede to you that the knowledge, (which you say is)
the gift of nature, of the natural sciences can fail. But the knowledge of the
sciences fails; the knowledge of the various fields of learning and of the
arts of life fails; and so perhaps the knowledge of the faculties and affections
of our minds fails, although they seem to be inherent in our nature, but really
are not so: because, as we have already said,(1) they are affected by accidents
of place, of manners and customs, of bodily condition, of the state of man's
health--by the influences of the Supreme Powers, and the changes of man's
free-will. Now the instinctive knowledge of natural objects never fails, not even in
the brute creation. The lion, no doubt, will forget his ferocity, if surrounded
by the softening influence of training; he may become, with his beautiful
mane, the plaything of some Queen Berenice, and lick her cheeks with his tongue. A
wild beast may lay aside his habits, but his natural instincts will not be
forgotten. He will not forget his proper food, nor his natural resources, nor his
natural alarms; and should the queen offer him fishes or cakes, he will wish for
flesh; and if, when he is ill, any antidote be prepared for him, he will still
require the ape; and should no hunting-spear be presented against him, he will
yet dread the crow of the cock. In like manner with man, who is perhaps the
most forgetful of all creatures, the knowledge of everything natural to him will
remain in-eradicably fixed in him,--but this alone, as being alone a natural
instinct. He will never forget to eat when he is hungry; or to drink when he is
thirsty; or to use his eyes when he wants to see; or his ears, to hear; or his
nose, to smell; or his mouth, to taste; or his hand, to touch. These are, to be
sure, the senses, which philosophy depreciates by her preference for the
intellectual faculties. But if the natural knowledge of the sensuous faculties is
permanent, how happens it that the knowledge of the intellectual faculties fails,
to which the superiority is ascribed? Whence, now, arises that power of
forgetfulness itself which precedes recollection? From long lapse of time, he says.
But this is a shortsighted answer. Length of time cannot be incidental to that
which, according to him, is unborn, and which therefore must be deemed most
certainly eternal. For that which is eternal, on the ground of its being unborn,
since it admits neither of beginning nor end of time, is subject to no temporal
criterion. And that which time does not measure, undergoes no change in
consequence of time; nor is long lapse of time at all influential over it. If time is a
cause of oblivion, why, from the time of the soul's entrance into the body,
does memory fail, as if thenceforth the soul were to be affected by time? for the
soul, being undoubtedly prior to the body, was of course not irrespective of
time. Is it, indeed, immediately on the soul's entrance into the body that
oblivion takes place, or some time afterwards? If immediately, where will be the long
lapse of the time which is as yet inadmissible in the hypothesis?(2) Take, for
instance, the case of the infant. If some time afterwards, will not the soul,
during the interval previous to the moment of oblivion, Still exercise its
powers of memory? And how comes it to pass that the soul subsequently forgets, and
then afterwards again remembers? How long, too, must the lapse of the time be
regarded as having been, during which the oblivion oppressed the soul? The whole
course of one's life, I apprehend, will be insufficient to efface the memory
of an age which endured so long before the soul's assumption of the body. But
then, again, Plato throws the blame upon the body, as if it were at all credible
that a born substance could extinguish the power of one that is unborn. There
exist, however, among bodies a great many differences, by reason of their
rationality, their bulk, their condition, their age, and their health. Will there
then be supposed to exist similar differences in obliviousness? Oblivion, however,
is uniform and identical. Therefore bodily peculiarity, with its manifold
varieties, will not become the cause of an effect which is an invariable one. There
are likewise, according to Plato's own testimony, many proofs to show that the
soul has a divining faculty, as we have already advanced against Hermogenes.
But there is not a man living, who does not himself feel his soul possessed with
a presage and augury of some omen, danger, or joy. Now, if the body is not
prejudicial to divination, it will not, I suppose, be injurious to memory. One
thing is certain, that souls in the same body both forget and remember. If any
corporeal condition engenders forgetfulness, how will it admit the opposite state
of recollection? Because recollection, after forgetfulness, is actually the
resurrection of the memory. Now, how should not that which is hostile to the
memory at first, be also prejudicial to it in the second instance? Lastly, who have
better memories than little children, with their fresh, unworn souls, not yet
immersed in domestic and public cares, but devoted only to those studies the
acquirement of which is itself a reminiscence? Why, indeed, do we not all of us
recollect in an equal degree, since we are equal in our forgetfulness? But this
is true only of philosophers! But not even of the whole of them. Amongst so many
nations, in so great a crowd of sages, Plato, to be sure, is the only man who
has combined the oblivion and the recollection of ideas. Now, since this main
argument of his by no means keeps its ground, it follows that its entire
superstructure must fall with it,namely, that souls are supposed to be unborn, and to
live in the heavenly regions, and to be instructed in the divine mysteries
thereof; moreover, that they descend to this earth, and here recall to memory their
previous; existence, for the purpose, of course, of supplying to our heretics
the fitting materials for their systems.
CHAP. XXV.--TERTULLIAN REFUTES, PHYSIOLOGICALLY, THE NOTION THAT THE SOUL IS
INTRODUCED AFTER BIRTH.
I shall now return to the cause of this digression, in order that I may
explain how all souls are derived from one, when and where and in what manner
they are produced. Now, touching this subject, it matters not whether the question
be started by the philosopher, by the heretic, or by the crowd. Those who
profess the truth care nothing about their opponents, especially such of them as
begin by maintaining that the soul is not conceived in the womb, nor is formed
and produced at the time that the flesh is moulded, but is impressed from without
upon the infant before his complete vitality, but after the process of
parturition. They say, moreover, that the human seed having been duly deposited ex
concubiter in the womb, and having been by natural impulse quickened, it becomes
condensed into the mere substance of the flesh, which is in due time born, warm
from the furnace of the womb, and then released from its heat. (This flesh)
resembles the case of hot iron, which is in that state plunged into cold water;
for, being smitten by the cold air (into which it is born), it at once receives
the power of animation, and utters vocal sound. This view is entertained by the
Stoics, along with AEnesidemus, and occasionally by Plato himself, when he
tells us that the soul, being quite a separate formation, originating elsewhere and
externally to the womb, is inhaled(1) when the new-born infant first draws
breath, and by and by exhaled(2) with the man's latest breath. We shall see
whether this view of his is merely fictitious. Even the medical profession has not
lacked its Hicesius, to prove a traitor both to nature and his own calling. These
gentlemen, I suppose, were too modest to come to terms with women on the
mysteries of childbirth, so well known to the latter. But how much more is there for
them to blush at, when in the end they have the women to refute them, instead
of commending them. Now, in such a question as this, no one can be so useful a
teacher, judge, or witness, as the sex itself which is so intimately concerned.
Give us your testimony, then, ye mothers, whether yet pregnant, or after
delivery (let barren women and men keep silence),--the truth of your own nature is
in question, the reality of your own suffering is the point to be decided. (Tell
us, then,) whether you feel in the embryo within you any vital force(3) other
than your own, with which your bowels tremble, your sides shake, your entire
womb throbs, and the burden which oppresses you constantly changes its position?
Are these movements a joy to you, and a positive removal of anxiety, as making
you confident that your infant both possesses vitality and enjoys it? Or,
should his restlessness cease, your first fear would be for him; and he would be
aware of it within you, since he is disturbed at the novel sound; and you would
crave for injurious diet,(4) or would even loathe your food--all on his account;
and then you and he, (in the closeness of your sympathy,) would share together
your common ailments--so far that with your contusions and bruises would he
actually become marked,--whilst within you, and even on the selfsame parts of the
body, taking to himself thus peremptorily(5) the injuries of his mother! Now,
whenever a livid hue and redness are incidents of the blood, the blood will not
be without the vital principle,(6) or soul; or when disease attacks the soul or
vitality, (it becomes a proof of its real existence, since) there is no
disease where there is no soul or principle of life. Again, inasmuch as sustenance by
food, and the want thereof, growth and decay, fear and motion, are conditions
of the soul or life, he who experiences them must be alive.
And, so, he at last ceases to live, who ceases to experience them. And
thus by and by infants are still-born; but how so, unless they had life? For how
could any die, who had not previously lived? But sometimes by a cruel necessity,
whilst yet in the womb, an infant is put to death, when lying awry in the
orifice of the womb he impedes parturition, and kills his mother, if he is not to
die himself. Accordingly, among surgeons' tools there is a certain instrument,
which is formed with a nicely-adjusted flexible frame for opening the uterus
first of all, and keeping it open; it is further furnished with an annular
blade,(1) by means of which the limbs within the womb are dissected with anxious but
unfaltering care; its last appendage being a blunted or covered hook, wherewith
the entire foetus is extracted(2) by a violent delivery. There is also (another
instrument in the shape of) a copper needle or spike, by which the actual
death is managed in this furtive robbery of life: they give it, from its
infanticide function, the name of <greek>embruosqakths</greek>, the slayer of the infant,
which was of course alive. Such apparatus was possessed both by Hippocrates,
and Asclepiades, and Erasistratus, and Herophilus, that dissector of even
adults, and the milder Soranus himself, who all knew well enough that a living being
had been conceived, and pitied this most luckless infant state, which had first
to be put to death, to escape being tortured alive. Of the necessity of such
harsh treatment I have no doubt even Hicesius was convinced, although he
imported their soul into infants after birth from the stroke of the frigid air,
because the very term for soul, forsooth, in Greek answered to such a
refrigeration!(3) Well, then, have the barbarian and Roman nations received souls by some
other process, (I wonder;) for they have called the soul by another name than
<greek>yukh</greek>? How many nations are there who commence life(4) under the
broiling sun of the torrid zone, scorching their skin into its swarthy hue? Whence
do they get their souls, with no frosty air to help them? I say not a word of
those well-warmed bed-rooms, and all that apparatus of heat which ladies in
childbirth so greatly need, when a breath of cold air might endanger their life. But
in the very bath almost a babe will slip into life, and at once his cry is
heard! if, however, a good frosty air is to the soul so indispensable a treasure,
then beyond the German and the Scythian tribes, and the Alpine and the Argaean
heights, nobody ought ever to be born! But the fact really is, that population
is greater within the temperate regions of the East and the West, and men's
minds are sharper; whilst there is not a Sarmatian whose wits are not dull and
humdrum. The minds of men, too, would grow keener by reason of the cold, if their
souls came into being amidst nipping frosts; for as the substance is, so must
be its active power. Now, after these preliminary statements, we may also refer
to the case of those who, having been cut out of their mother's womb, have
breathed and retained life--your Bacchuses(5) and Scipios.(6) If, however, there be
any one who, like Plato,(7) supposes that two souls cannot, more than two
bodies could, co-exist in the same individual, I, on the contrary, could show him
not merely the co-existence of two souls in one person, as also of two bodies in
the same womb, but likewise the combination of many other things in natural
connection with the soul--for instance, of demoniacal possession; and that not
of one only, as in the case of Socrates' own demon; but of seven spirits as in
the case of the Magdalene;(8) and of a legion in number, as in the Gadarene.(9)
Now one soul is naturally more susceptible of conjunction with another soul, by
reason of the identity of their substance, than an evil spirit is, owing to
their diverse natures. But when the same philosopher, in the sixth book of The
Laws, warns us to beware lest a vitiation of seed should infuse a soil into both
body and soul from an illicit or debased concubinage, I hardly know whether he
is more inconsistent with himself in respect of one of his previous statements,
or of that which he had just made. For he here shows us that the soul proceeds
from human seed (and warns us to be on our guard about it), not, (as he had
said before,) from the first breath of the new-born child. Pray, whence comes it
that from similarity of soul we resemble our parents in disposition, according
to the testimony of Cleanthes,(10) if we are not produced from this seed of the
soul? Why, too, used the old astrologers to cast a man's nativity from his
first conception, if his soul also draws not its origin from that moment? To this
(nativity) likewise belongs the inbreathing of the soul, whatever that is.
CHAP. XXVI.--SCRIPTURE ALONE OFFERS CLEAR KNOWLEDGE ON THE QUESTIONS WE HAVE
BEEN CONTROVERTING.
Now there is no end to the uncertainty and irregularity of human opinion,
until we come to the limits which God has prescribed. I shall at last retire
within our own lines and firmly hold my ground there, for the purpose of proving
to the Christian (the soundness of) my answers to the Philosophers and the
Physicians. Brother (in Christ), on your own foundation(1) build up your faith.
Consider the wombs of the most sainted women instinct with the life within them,
and their babes which not only breathed therein, but were even endowed with
prophetic intuition. See how the bowels of Rebecca are disquieted,(2) though her
child-bearing is as yet remote, and there is no impulse of (vital) air. Behold, a
twin offspring chafes within the mother's womb, although she has no sign as
yet of the twofold nation. Possibly we might have regarded as a prodigy the
contention of this infant progeny, which struggled before it lived, which had
animosity previous to animation, if it had simply disturbed the mother by its
restlessness within her. But when her womb opens, and the number of her offspring is
seen, and their presaged condition known, we have presented to us a proof not
merely of the (separate) souls of the infants, but of their hostile struggles
too. He who was the first to be born was threatened with detention by him who was
anticipated in birth, who was not yet fully brought forth, but whose hand only
had been born. Now if he actually imbibed life, and received his soul, in
Platonic style, at his first breath; or else, after the Stoic rule, had the earliest
taste of animation on touching the frosty air; what was the other about, who
was so eagerly looked for, who was still detained within the womb, and was
trying to detain (the other) outside? I suppose he had not yet breathed when he
seized his brother's heel;(3) and was still warm with his mother's warmth, when he
so strongly wished to be the first to quit the womb. What an infant! so
emulous, so strong, and already so contentious; and all this, I suppose, because even
now full of life! Consider, again, those extraordinary conceptions, which were
more wonderful still, of the barren woman and the virgin: these women would
only be able to produce imperfect offspring against the course of nature, from the
very fact that one of them was too old to bear seed, and the other was pure
from the contact of man. If there was to be bearing at all in the case, it was
only fitting that they should be born without a soul, (as the philosopher would
say,) who had been irregularly conceived. However, even these have life, each of
them in his mother's womb. Elizabeth exults with joy, (for) John had leaped in
her womb;(4) Mary magnifies the Lord, (for) Christ had instigated her
within.(5) The mothers recognise each their own offspring, being moreover each
recognised by their infants, which were therefore of course alive, and were not souls
merely, but spirits also. Accordingly you read the word of God which was spoken
to Jeremiah, "Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee."(6) Since God
forms us in the womb, He also breathes upon us, as He also did at the first
creation, when "the Lord God formed man, and breathed into him the breath of
life."(7) Nor could God have known man in the womb, except in his entire nature: "And
before thou camest forth out of the womb, I sanctified thee."(8) Well, was it
then a dead body at that early stage? Certainly not. For "God is not the God of
the dead, but of the living."
CHAP. XXVII.--SOUL AND BODY CONCEIVED, FORMED AND PERFECTED IN ELEMENT
SIMULTANEOUSLY.
How, then, is a living being conceived? Is the substance of both body and
soul formed together at one and the same time? Or does one of them precede the
other in natural formation? We indeed maintain that both are conceived, and
formed, and perfectly simultaneously, as well as born together; and that not a
moment's interval occurs in their conception, so that, a prior place can be
assigned to either.(9) Judge, in fact, of the incidents of man's earliest existence
by those which occur to him at the very last. As death is defined to be nothing
else than the separation of body and soul,(10) life, which is the opposite of
death, is susceptible of no other definition than the conjunction of body and
soul. If the severance happens at one and the same time to both substances by
means of death, so the law of their combination ought to assure us that it occurs
simultaneously to the two substances by means of life. Now we allow that life
begins with conception, because we contend that the soul also begins from
conception; life taking its commencement at the same moment and place that the soul
does. Thus, then, the processes which act together to produce separation by
death, also combine in a simultaneous action to produce life. If we assign priority
to (the formation of) one of the natures, and a subsequent time to the other,
we shall have further to determine the precise times of the semination,
according to the condition and rank of each. And that being so, what time shall we
give to the seed of the body, and what to the seed of the soul? Besides, if
different periods are to be assigned to the seminations then arising out of this
difference in time, we shall also have different substances.(1) For although we
shall allow that there are two kinds of seed--that of the body and that of the
soul--we still declare that they are inseparable, and therefore contemporaneous
and simultaneous in origin. Now let no one take offence or feel ashamed at an
interpretation of the processes of nature which is rendered necessary (by the
defence of the truth). Nature should be to us an object of reverence, not of
blushes. It is lust, not natural usage, which has brought shame on the intercourse of
the sexes. It is the excess, not the normal state, which is immodest and
unchaste: the normal condition has received a blessing from God, and is blest by
Him: "Be fruitful, and multiply, (and replenish the earth.)"(2) Excess, however,
has He cursed, in adulteries, and wantonness, and chambering.(3) Well, now, in
this usual function of the sexes which brings together the male and the female
in their common intercourse, we know that both the soul and the flesh discharge
a duty together: the soul supplies desire, the flesh contributes the
gratification of it; the soul furnishes the instigation, the flesh affords the
realization. The entire man being excited by the one effort of both natures, his seminal
substance is discharged, deriving its fluidity from the body, and its warmth
from the soul. Now if the soul in Greek is a word which is synonymous with
cold,(4) how does it come to pass that the body grows cold after the soul has quitted
it? Indeed (if I run the risk of offending modesty even, in my desire to prove
the truth), I cannot help asking, whether we do not, in that very heat of
extreme gratification when the generative fluid is ejected, feel that somewhat of
our soul has gone from us? And do we not experience a faintness and prostration
along with a dimness of sight? This, then, must be the soul-producing seed,
which arises at once from the out-drip of the soul, just as that fluid is the
body-producing seed which proceeds from the drainage of the flesh. Most true are
the examples of the first creation. Adam's flesh was formed of clay. Now what is
clay bug an excellent moisture, whence should spring the generating fluid? From
the breath of God first came the soul. But what else is the breath of God than
the vapour of the spirit, whence should spring that which we breathe out
through the generative fluid? Forasmuch, therefore, as these two different and
separate substances, the clay and the breath, combined at the first creation in
forming the individual man, they then both amalgamated and mixed their proper
seminal rudiments in one, and ever afterwards communicated to the human race the
normal mode of its propagation, so that even now the two substances, although
diverse from each other, flow forth simultaneously in a united channel; and finding
their way together into their appointed seed-plot, they fertilize with their
combined vigour the human fruit out of their respective natures. And inherent in
this human product is his own seed, according to the process which has been
ordained for every creature endowed with the functions of generation. Accordingly
from the one (primeval) man comes the entire outflow and redundance of men's
souls--nature proving herself true to the commandment of God, "Be fruitful, and
multiply."(5) For in the very preamble of this one production, "Let us make
man,"(6) man's whole posterity was declared and described in a plural phrase, "Let
them have dominion over the fish of the sea," etc.(7) And no wonder: in the
seed lies the promise and earnest of the crop.
CHAP. XXVIII.--THE PYTHAGOREAN DOCTRINE OF TRANSMIGRATION SKETCHED AND
CENSURED.
What, then, by this time means that ancient saying, mentioned by Plato,(8)
concerning the reciprocal migration of souls; how they remove hence and go
thither, and then return hither and pass through life, and then again depart from
this life, and afterwards become alive from the dead? Some will have it that
this is a saying of Pythagoras; Albinus supposes it to be a divine announcement,
perhaps of the Egyptian Mercury.(9) But there is no divine saying, except of
the one true God, by whom the prophets, and the apostles, and Christ Himself
declared their grand message. More ancient than Saturn a good deal (by some nine
hundred years or so), and even than his grandchildren, is Moses; and he is
certainly much more divine, recounting and tracing out, as he does, the course of the
human race from the very beginning of the world, indicating the several births
(of the fathers of mankind) according to their names and their epochs; giving
thus plain proof of the divine character of his work, from its divine authority
and word. If, indeed, the sophist of Samos is Plato's authority for the
eternally revolving migration of souls out of a constant alternation of the dead and
the living states, then no doubt did the famous Pythagoras, however excellent
in other respects, for the purpose of fabricating such an opinion as this, rely
on a falsehood, which was not only shameful, but also hazardous. Consider it,
you that are ignorant of it, and believe with us. He feigns death, he conceals
himself underground, he condemns himself to that endurance for some seven years,
during which he learns from his mother, who was his sole accomplice and
attendant, what he was to relate for the belief of the world concerning those who had
died since his seclusion;(1) and when he thought that he had succeeded in
reducing the frame of his body to the horrid appearance of a dead old man, he comes
forth from the place of his concealment and deceit, and pretends to have
returned from the dead. Who would hesitate about believing that the man, whom he had
supposed to have died, was come back again to life? especially after hearing
from him facts about the recently dead,(1) which he evidently could only have
discovered in Hades itself! Thus, that men are made alive after death, is rather
an old statement. But what if it be rather a recent one also? The truth does
not desire antiquity, nor does falsehood shun novelty. This notable saying I hold
to be plainly false, though ennobled by antiquity. How should that not be
false, which depends for its evidence on a falsehood?--How can I help believing
Pythagoras to be a deceiver, who practises deceit to win my belief? How will he
convince me that, before he was Pythagoras, he had been AEthalides, and
Euphorbus, and the fisherman Pyrrhus, and Hermotimus, to make us believe that men live
again after they have died, when he actually perjured himself afterwards as
Pythagoras. In proportion as it would be easier for me to believe that he had
returned once to life in his own person, than so often in the person of this man and
that, in the same degree has he deceived me in things which are too hard to be
credited, because he has played the impostor in matters which might be readily
believed. Well, but he recognised the shield of Euphorbus, which had been
formerly consecrated at Delphi, and claimed it as his own, and proved his claim by
signs which were generally unknown. Now, look again at his subterranean
lurking-place, and believe his story, if you can. For, as to the man who devised such
a tricksty scheme, to the injury of his health, fraudulently wasting his life,
and torturing it for seven years underground, amidst hunger, idleness, and
darkness--with a profound disgust for the mighty sky--what reckless effort would he
not make, what curious contrivance would he not attempt, to arrive at the
discovery of this famous shield? Suppose now, that he found it in some of those
hidden researches; suppose that he recovered some slight breath of report which
survived the now obsolete tradition; suppose him to have come to the knowledge of
it by an inspection which he had bribed the beadle to let him have,--we know
very well what are the resources of magic skill for exploring hidden secrets:
there are the catabolic spirits, which floor their victims;(2) and the paredral
spirits, which are ever at their side(3) to haunt them; and the pythonic
spirits, which entrance them by their divination and ventriloquistic(4) arts. For was
is not likely that Pherecydes also, the master of our Pythagoras, used to
divine, or I would rather say rave and dream, by such arts and contrivances as
these? Might not the self-same demon have been in him, who, whilst in Euphorbus,
transacted deeds of blood? But lastly, why is it that the man, who proved himself
to have been uphorbus by the evidence of the shield, did not also recognise any
of his former Trojan comrades? For they, too, must by this time have recovered
life, since men were rising again from the dead: