登陆注册
20269000000024

第24章

'No,' I said; ' while I think of animals which have volition in their nature, I can find in them no desire to throw away their determination to remain as they are, or to hasten to perish of their own accord, so long as there are no external forces compelling them thereto.Every animal labours for its preservation, shunning death and extinction.But about trees and plants, I have great doubts as to what I should agree to in their case, and in all inanimate objects.'

'But in this case too,' she said,' you have no reason to be in doubt, when you see how trees and plants grow in places which suit them, and where, so far as nature is able to prevent it, they cannot quickly wither and perish.For some grow in plains, others on mountains; some are nourished by marshes, Page 91others cling to rocks; some are fertilised by otherwise barren sands, and would wither away if one tried to transplant them to better soil.Nature grants to each what suits it, and works against their perishing while they can possibly remain alive.I need hardly remind you that all plants seem to have their mouths buried in the earth, and so they suck up nourishment by their roots and diffuse their strength through their pith and bark:

the pith being the softest part is always hidden away at the heart and covered, protected, as it were, by the strength of the wood; while outside, the bark, as being the defender who endures the best, is opposed to the unkindness of the weather.Again, how great is nature's care, that they should all propagate themselves by the reproduction of their seed; they all, as is so well known, are like regular machines not merely for lasting a time, but for reproducing themselves for ever, and that by their own kinds.Things too which are supposed to be inanimate, surely do all seek after their own by a like process.For why is flame carried upward by its lightness, while solid things are carried down by their weight, unless it be that these positions and movements are suitable to each? Further, each thing preserves what is suitable to itself, and what is harmful, it destroys.Hard things, such as stones, cohere with the utmost tenacity of their parts, and resist easy dissolution; while liquids, water, and air, yield easily to division, but quickly slip back to mingle their parts Page 92which have been cut asunder.And fire cannot be cut at all.

'We are not now discussing the voluntary movements of a reasoning mind, but the natural instinct.For instance, we unwittingly digest the food we have eaten, and unconsciously breathe in sleep.Not even in animals does this love of self-preservation come from mental wishes, but from elementary nature.For often the will, under stress of external causes, embraces the idea of death, from which nature revolts in horror.1 And, on the other hand, the will sometimes restrains what nature always desires, namely the operation of begetting, by which alone the continuance of mortal things becomes enduring.Thus far, then, this love of self-preservation arises not from the reasoning animal s intention, but from natural instinct.

Providence has given to its creatures this the greatest cause of permanent existence, the instinctive desire to remain existent so far as possible.

Wherefore you have no reason to doubt that all things, which exist, seek a permanent existence by nature, and similarly avoid extinction.'

'Yes,' I said,' I confess that I see now beyond all doubt what appeared to me just now uncertain.'

'But,' she continued,' that which seeks to continue its existence, aims at unity; for take 92:1 -- Boethius is possibly thinking here of passages in Plato's Republic , Bk.iv.(439-441) where Socrates points out the frequent opposition of reason and instinct.Page 93this away, and none will have any chance of continued existence.'

'That is true.'

'Then all things desire unity,' she said, and I agreed.

'But we have shewn unity to be identical with the good?

'

'Yes,' said I.

'Then all things desire the good; and that you may define as being the absolute good which is desired by all.'

'Nothing could be more truthfully reasoned.For either everything is brought back to nothing, and all will flow on at random with no guiding head; or if there is any universal aim, it will be the sum of all good.'

'Great is my rejoicing, my son,' said she, 'for you have set firmly in your mind the mark of the central truth.And hereby is made plain to you that which you a short time ago said that you knew not.'

'What was that? '

'What was the final aim of all things,' she said,' for that is plainly what is desired by all: since we have agreed that that is the good, we must confess that the good is the end of all things.

'If any man makes search for truth with all his penetration, and would be led astray by no deceiving paths, let him turn upon himself the light of an inward gaze, let him bend by force the long-drawn wanderings of his thoughts into Page 94one circle; let him tell surely to his soul, that he has, thrust away within the treasures of his mind, all that he labours to acquire without.

Then shall that truth, which now was hid in error's darkening cloud, shine forth more clear than Phoebus's self.For the body, though it brings material mass which breeds forgetfulness, has never driven forth all light from the mind.The seed of truth does surely cling within, and can be roused as a spark by the fanning of philosophy.For if it is not so, how do ye men make answers true of your own instinct when teachers question you?

Is it not that the quick spark of truth lies buried in the heart's low depths? And if the Muse of Plato sends through those depths the voice of truth, each man has not forgotten and is but reminding himself of what he learns.' 1 When she made an end, I said,' I agree very strongly with Plato; for this is the second time that you have reminded me of these thoughts.The first time I had lost them through the material influence of the body; the second, when overwhelmed by this weight of trouble.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • EXO之灿白结婚了

    EXO之灿白结婚了

    因为一次相亲,让两人走到一起,在员工面前是高冷总裁,但却在自己喜欢的面前是逗比,一连串的事情扑面而来...
  • 花剑春秋

    花剑春秋

    这是一个花与剑的世界,在这个绮丽与杀戮的世界里,正义与邪恶对立,阴谋与诡计角逐。爱恨情仇,演绎着有情与无情的故事;生离死别,勾勒出有心与无心的江湖。花界十二花仙的故事!魔、漠、灵三族的恩怨纠葛!盛世华都的衰落,哭妖天城的由来,净沙城的危急,虫族的崛起!星界和葬界入侵,引发的三界大战!空、涅、净、玄四域蓄谋已久的战争,将如史诗般一一上演。这样一个大坑,邵苏只能一章章的慢慢挖,并欢迎大家踊跃跳坑。
  • 论非酋到欧皇的转变

    论非酋到欧皇的转变

    千岛带着小弟跑啦!留着一群智障跟离岛面对外敌!
  • 魔峰承天

    魔峰承天

    人间界、魔界、天界三界融合,魔力涌现,乱战开启!修炼一途,破除阻碍,继承遗志,抵达巅峰!
  • 实知篇

    实知篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天经变

    天经变

    道门灭,九教起。旷古大教一夜灭门,其中隐藏着何种秘密?道门遗孤道无乡,偶得道门无上真传,手掌阴阳战九教,拨开云雾灭神魔!扬昔日辉煌,震慑九教!
  • 死亡边缘之地狱客

    死亡边缘之地狱客

    这是一段尘封的记忆,记忆着我一生的经历,在与那些未知的事物,未知的生物打交道,多年的人生观一次次被打破一次次被震惊所冲击,我不知道该如何对你们诉说,所有的未知,科学有时显得那么的脆弱。一次次的被未知的恐惧包围,一次次的生死考验,一次次看着队友们的离去,然而这仿佛是一个巨大的阴谋一般,到底是谁导演了这些悲剧?是谁制造了那些可怕的,未知的生物,而我所做的,却紧紧是将这些写下来!让我来带你们走进这神秘而又刺激的世界。
  • 都市王人

    都市王人

    作为一个外表清秀,内心狂野的少年,瞿小白常常以微笑示人。只是他今晚看着病床上骨瘦如柴,奄奄一息的张老头,也忍不住偷偷抹了抹眼角,这可是他活了十八年来第一次流泪。“咳咳……小白,你忒娘的铁石心肠,居然也会哭?”一阵剧烈的咳喘过后,病床上的张老头惊讶道。“你还真病的不轻,连眼都花了。”
  • 遥远的山海

    遥远的山海

    此山非山,此海非海。山海无魂,生灵尽封。然,山海有主,众生所敬。远古世纪的末端山主归墟,海主消匿,山海界沉沉浮浮。上古世纪尚未开启,山海却已经遥远.....少年姬如意应世而出!深藏的隐秘!狂暴的邪魅!妖异的前世!追寻远古的传说,一步步破解不为人知的惊天诡计!是儒雅的书生?还是嗜血的魔神?是神圣的天骄?还是霸绝的神兽?世界在我手中崩乱!山海在我掌中沉浮!
  • 秦时之烟雨朦胧

    秦时之烟雨朦胧

    “没有人能知道你对我的重要性,很可悲的是,我也不清楚......”