ON THE SUBJECT OF THE SOUL
ON THE SUBJECT OF THE SOUL.(1)
You have instructed us, most excellent Tatian,(2) to forward for your use
a discourse upon the soul, laying it out in effective demonstrations. And this
you have asked us to do without making use of the testimonies of Scripture,--a
method which is opened to us, and which, to those who seek the pious mind,
proves a manner of setting forth doctrine more convincing than any reasoning of
man.(3) You have said, however, that you desire this, not with a view to your own
full assurance, taught as you already have been to hold by the Holy Scriptures
and traditions, and to avoid being shaken in your convictions by any subtleties
of man's disputations, but with a view to the confuting of men who have
different sentiments, and who do not admit that such credit is to be given to the
Scriptures, and who endeavour, by a kind of cleverness of speech, to gain over
those who are unversed in such discussions. Wherefore we were led to comply
readily with this commission of yours, not shrinking from the task on account of
inexperience in this method of disputation, but taking encouragement froth the
knowledge of your good-will toward us. For your kind and friendly disposition
towards us will make you understand how to put forward publicly whatever you may
approve of as rightly expressed by us, and to pass by and conceal whatever
statement of ours yon may judge to come short of what is proper. Knowing this,
therefore, I have betaken myself with all confidence to the exposition. And in my
discourse I shall use a certain order and consecution, such as those who are very
expert in these matters employ towards those who desire to investigate any
subject intelligently.
First of all, then, I shall propose to inquire by what criterion the soul
can, according to its nature, be apprehended; then by what means it can be
proved to exist; thereafter, whether it is a substance or an accident;(4) then
consequently on these points, whether it is a body or is incorporeal; then, whether
it is simple or compound; next, whether it is mortal or immortal; and finally,
whether it is rational or irrational.
For these are the questions which are wont, above all, to be discussed, in
any inquiry about the soul, as most important, and as best calculated to mark
out its distinctive nature. And as demonstrations for the establishing of these
matters of investigation, we shall employ those common modes of
consideration(5) by which the credibility of matters under hand is naturally attested. But
for the purpose of brevity and utility, we shall at present make use only of
those modes of argumentation which are most cogently demonstrative on the subject
of our inquiry, in order that clear and intelligible(6) notions may impart to us
some readiness for meeting the gainsayers. With this, therefore, we shall
commence our discussion.
I.WHEREIN IS THE CRITERION FOR THE APPREHENSION OF THE SOUL.
All things that exist are either known by sense(7) or apprehended by
thought.(8) And what falls under sense has its adequate demonstration in sense
itself; for at once, with the application, it creates in us the impression(9) of
what underlies it. But what is apprehended by thought is known not by itself, but
by its operations.(10) The soul, consequently, being unknown by itself, shall
be known property by its effects.
II. WHETHER THE SOUL EXISTS.
Our body, when it is put in action, is put in action either from without
or from within. And that it is not put in action from without, is manifest from
the circumstance that it is put in action neither by impulsion(11) nor by
traction,(12) like soulless things. And again, if it is put in action from within,
it is not put in action according to nature, like fire. For fire never loses its
action as long as there is fire; whereas the body, when it has become dead, is
a body void of action. Hence, if it is put in action neither from without,
like soulless things, nor according to nature, after the fashion of fire, it is
evident that it is put in action by the soul, which also furnishes life to it.
If, then, the soul is shown to furnish the life to our body, the soul will also
be known for itself by its operations.
III. WHETHER THE SOUL IS A SUBSTANCE.
That the soul is a substance,(1) is proved in the following manner. In the
first place, because the definition given to the term substance suits it very
well. And that definition is to the effect, that substance is that which, being
ever identical, and ever one in point of numeration with itself, is yet
capable of taking on contraries in succession.(2) And that this soul, without passing
the limit of its own proper nature, takes on contraries in succession, is, I
fancy, clear to everybody. For righteousness and unrighteousness, courage and
cowardice, temperance and intemperance, are seen in it successively; and these
are contraries. If, then, it is the property of a substance to be capable of
taking on contraries in succession, and if the soul is shown to sustain the
definition in these terms, it follows that the soul is a substance. And in the second
place, because if the body is a substance, the soul must also be a substance.
For it cannot be, that what only has life imparted should be a substance, and
that what imparts the life should be no substance: unless one should assert that
the non-existent is the cause of the existent; or unless, again, one were
insane enough to allege that the dependent object is itself the cause of that very
thing in which it has its being, and without which it could not subsist.(3)
IV. WHETHER THE SOUL IS INCORPOREAL.
That the soul is in our body, has been shown above. We ought now,
therefore, to ascertain in what manner it is in the body. Now, if it is in
juxtaposition with it, as one pebble with another, it follows that the soul will be a body,
and also that the whole body will not be animated with soul,(4) inasmuch as
with a certain part it will only be in juxtaposition. But if again, it is mingled
or fused with the body, the soul will become multiplex,(5) and not simple, and
will thus be despoiled of the rationale proper to a soul. For what is
multiplex is also divisible and dissoluble; and what is dissoluble, on the other hand,
is compound;(6) and what is compound is separable in a threefold manner.
Moreover, body attached to body makes weight;(7) but the soul, subsisting in the
body, does not make weight, but rather imparts life. The soul, therefore, cannot be
a body, but is incorporeal.
Again, if the soul is a body, it is put in action either from without or
from within. But it is not put in action from without; for it is moved neither
by impulsion nor by traction, like soulless things. Nor is it put in action from
within, like objects animated with soul; for it is absurd to talk of a soul of
the soul: it cannot, therefore, be a body, but it is incorporeal.
And besides, if the soul is a body, it has sensible qualities, and is
maintained by nurture. But it is not thus nurtured. For if it is nurtured, it is
not nurtured corporeally, like the body, but incorporeally; for it is nurtured by
reason. It has not, therefore, sensible qualities: for neither is
righteousness, nor courage, nor any one of these things, something that is seen; yet these
are the qualities of the soul. It cannot, therefore, be a body, but is
incorporeal.
Still further, as all corporeal substance is divided into animate and
inanimate, let those who hold that the soul is a body tell us whether we are to
call it animate or inanimate.
Finally, if every body has colour, and quantity, and figure, and if there
is not one of these qualities perceptible in the soul, it follows that the soul
is not a body.(8)
V. WHETHER THE SOUL IS SIMPLE OR COMPOUND.
We prove, then, that the soul is simple, best of all, by those arguments
by which its incorporeality has been demonstrated. For if it is not a body,
while every body is compound, and what is composite is made up of parts, and is
consequently multiplex, the soul, on the other hand, being incorporeal, is simple;
since thus it is both uncompounded and indivisible into parts.
VI. WHETHER OUR SOUL IS IMMORTAL.
It follows, in my opinion, as a necessary consequence, that what is simple
is immortal. And as to how that follows, hear my explanation: Nothing that
exists is its own corrupter,(9) else it could never have had any thorough
consistency, even from the beginning. For things that are subject to corruption are
corrupted by contraries: wherefore everything that is corrupted is subject to
dissolution; and what is subject to dissolution is compound; and what is compound
is of many parts; and what is made up of parts manifestly is made up of diverse
parts; and the diverse is not the identical: consequently the soul, being
simple, and not being made up of diverse parts, but being uncompound and
indissoluble, must be, in virtue of that, incorruptible and immortal.
Besides, everything that is put in action by something else, and does not
possess the principle of life in itself, but gets it from that which puts it in
action, endures just so long as it is held by the power that operates in it;
and whenever the operative power ceases, that also comes to a stand which has
its capacity of action from it. But the soul, being self-acting, has no cessation
of its being. For it follows, that what is self-acting is ever-acting; and
what is ever-acting is unceasing; and what is unceasing is without end; and what
is without end is incorruptible; and what is incorruptible is immortal.
Consequently, if the soul is self-acting, as has been shown above, it follows that it
is incorruptible and immortal, in accordance with the mode of reasoning already
expressed.
And further, everything that is not corrupted by the evil proper to
itself, is incorruptible; and the evil is opposed to the good, and is consequently
its corrupter. For the evil of the body is nothing else than suffering, and
disease, and death; just as, on the other hand, its excellency is beauty, life,
health, and vigour. If, therefore, the soul is not corrupted by the evil proper to
itself, and the evil of the soul is cowardice, intemperance, envy, and the
like, and all these things do not despoil it of its powers of life and action, it
follows that it is immortal.
VII. WHETHER OUR SOUL IS RATIONAL.
That our soul is rational, one might demonstrate by many arguments. And
first of all from the fact that it has discovered the arts that are for the
service of our life. For no one could say that these arts were introduced casually
and accidentally, as no one could prove them to be idle, and of no utility for
our life. If, then, these arts contribute to what is profitable for our life,
and if the profitable is commendable, and if the commendable is constituted by
reason, and if these things are the discovery of the soul, it follows that our
soul is rational.
Again, that our soul is rational, is also proved by the fact that our
senses are not sufficient for the apprehension of things. For we are not competent
for the knowledge of things by the simple application of the faculty of
sensation. But as we do not choose to rest in these without inquiry,(1) that proves
that the senses, apart from reason, are felt to be incapable of discriminating
between things which are identical in form and similar in colour, though quite
distinct in their natures. If, therefore, the senses, apart from reason, give us
a false conception of things, we have to consider whether things that are can
be apprehended in reality or not. And if they can be apprehended, then the power
which enables us to get at them is one different from, and superior to, the
senses. And if they are not apprehended, it will not be possible for us at all to
apprehend things which are different in their appearance from the reality. But
that objects are apprehensible by us, is clear from the fact that we employ
each in a way adaptable to utility, and again turn them to what we please.
Consequently, if it has been shown that things which are can be apprehended by us,
and if the senses, apart from reason, are an erroneous test of objects, it
follows that the intellect(2) is what distinguishes all things in reason, and
discerns things as they are in their actuality. But the intellect is just the rational
portion of the soul, and consequently the soul is rational.
Finally, because we do nothing without having first marked it out for
ourselves; and as that is nothing else than just the high prerogative(3) of the
soul,--for its knowledge of things does not come to it from without, but it rather
sets out these things, as it were, with the adornment of its own thoughts, and
thus first pictures forth the object in itself, and only thereafter carries it
out to actual fact,--and because the high prerogative of the soul is nothing
else than the doing of all things with reason, in which respect it also differs
from the senses, the soul has thereby been demonstrated to be rational.
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Substance or accident, p. 54.)
This essay is "rather the work of a philosopher than a bishop," says
Dupin. He assigns it to an age when "Aristotle began to be in some reputation,"--a
most important concession as to the estimate of this philosopher among the early
faithful. We need not wonder that such admissions, honourable to his candour
and to his orthodoxy, brought on him the hatred and persecutions of the Jesuits.
Even Bossuet thought he went too far, and wrote against him. But, the whole
system of Roman dogma being grounded in Aristotle's physics as well as in his
metaphysics, Dupin was not orthodox in the eyes of the society that framed
Aristotle into a creed, and made it the creed of the "Roman-Catholic Church." Note,
e.g., "transubstantiation," which is not true if Aristotle's theory of accidents,
etc., is false.(1) It assumes an exploded science.
II. (Prerogative of the soul, p. 56.)
If this "Discourse" be worthy of study, it may be profitably contrasted,
step by step, with Tertullian's treatises on kindred subjects.(2) That the early
Christians should reason concerning the Soul, the Mind, the immortal Spirit,
was natural in itself. But it was also forced upon them by the "philosophers"
and the heretics, with whom they daily came into conflict. This is apparent from
the Anti-Marcion(3) of the great Carthaginian. The annotations upon that
treatise, and those On the Soul's Testimony and On the Soul, may suffice as pointing
out the best sources(4) of information on speculative points and their bearings
on theology. Compare, however, Athenagoras(5) and the great Clement of
Alexandria.(6)