As there has been a long truce
between us since
I last got
a letter from you, and as I do not intend to despatch this
here till I receive Bob's answer with your address, I have no questions
to answer, and any news would turn old by keeping, so I
intend
briefly to state my country occupations (otherwise preparation for
Cambridge,
if you please). I find that after breakfast is the
best
time for reading Greek and Latin, because if I read newspapers or any
of
those things, then it is dissipation and ruin; and if I begin with
props,
experiments, or calculations, then I would be continually
returning
on them. At first I had got pretty well accustomed to regular study
with
a Dictionary, and did about 120 lines of Eurip. a day, namely, 40
revised, 40 for to-day, and 40 for to-morrow, with the looking up
of
tomorrow's words. As I am blest with Dunbar's Lexicon, it is not very
highly
probable that I will find my word at all; if I do, it is
used
in a different sense from Dunbar's (so much the better), and it has to
be made out from the context (either of the author or the
Dictionary).
So much for [139] regular study, which I have nearly forgot,
for
when I had got to the end of the first chorus I began to think of the
rods
and wires that I had in a box. They have entirely
stopped
Eurip., for I found that if I spent the best part of the day on him,
and
took reasonable exercise, I could not much advance
the
making of the apparatus for tormenting these wires and rods. So the
rods
got the better of the Lexicon. The observations on
the
rods are good for little till they are finished; they are of three
kinds,
and are all distinguished for accuracy and agreement among themselves.
Thus—a rod bent by a weight at the
middle takes the
form of a curve,
which is calculated to be one of the fourth order. Let A C
B be the rod bent by a weight at C. Mirrors fastened to it at A and B
make
known the changes of the inclination of the tangent
to
the rod there, and a lens at C projects an image of a copper scale of
inches
and parts from A to B, where it is observed, and so
the
deflection of the rod at C becomes known. Now the
calculated
value of the elasticity deduced from the deflection differs from that
deduced
from the observations on the mirrors by about 1/140 of
either,
and as the deflection at C was about ¼ inch, the difference of
the
observed and calculated deflections is about 1/280 of an
inch,
which is near enough for home-made philosophical
instruments
to go.
Thus you see I would run on about rods and wires, and weights, angles,
and inches, and copper and iron, and silvered glass, and all
sorts
of practicalities. Where is now Eurip.?—Ay, where? On the top of the
Lexicon,
and behind bundles of observations and calculations. When
will
he come out? for he was a good soul after all, and
wise
(beg his pardon, wiser). For the rest I have been at Shakespeare and
Cowper.
I used to put Thomson and Cowper together (why?), and Thomson
first;
now they are reversed and far asunder.
As I suppose any occupations are
not very like
yours, I pray you
send me an account of what Oxford notions you have got, either
from
Oxonians, books, or observation; and as, if I was to question you, you
could but answer my questions, I leave you to
question
yourself and send me some of the answers.
The only regular College science that
I have thought
of lately is Moral
Philosophy. Whether it is an Oxford science I know not; but it must be,
if not taught, at least interesting; so I purpose to fill up this
letter
with unuttered thoughts (or cruder, which, as they are
crammed
into words, may appear like men new waked from sleep, who leap
in
confusion into one another's breeches, hardly fit to be seen of decent
men. Then think not my words mad if their clothes fit them not,
for
they have not had an opportunity of trying them on before.
There are some Moral
Philosophers whose opinions
are remarkable
for their general truth and good sense, but not for their
utility,
fixity, or novelty. They tell you that in all your actions
you ought to be virtuous, that benevolence is a virtue, that lawful
rulers
ought to be obeyed, that a man should give ear to his
conscience.
Others tell you of unalterable laws of right and wrong, of Eternal
truth
and the Everlasting fitnesses of things. Others of the duty
of following nature, of every virtue between two vices (Aristot.), and
of the golden mean. That a man should do what is best on
the
whole (1) for himself; (2) for other men only, and not himself; (3) for
the whole universe, including himself, and so on. Now I think
that
the answers to the following questions should be separate parts
of
M. Ph.:— -
1. What is
man? This is the
introduction, and
is called statical or proper Metaphysics.
2. What are
the laws of human
action? Action
being all that man does—thought, word, deed.
3. What are
the motives of
human actions?
4. What
actions do men
perform in preference
to what others, and why?
5. What is
the principle by
which men judge
some actions right, others wrong? [141]
6. What do
particular men
think of this principle?
What are their doctrines?
7. What is
the best criticism
of right and
wrong, or what (to us) is absolute right?
8. What are
the best motives
of human actions?
9. How are
these motives to
be implanted without
violating the laws of human action?
10. What
might, or rather
what will, mankind
become after this has been effected?
Moral Philosophy differs from Nat.
Phil. in this, that
the more new
things we hear of in Nat. Phil. the better; but in Mor.
Phil.
the old things are best, so that a common objection to Mor. Phil. is
that
everybody knows it all before. If a man tells you that
tyranny
and anarchy are bad things, and that a just and lawful government is a
good thing; it sounds very fine, but only means that when
men
think the government bad from excess or defect they give it
the
name of tyranny and anarchy. The ancient virtue of Tyrannicide was a
man's
determination to kill the king whenever he displeased him. Thus
it
is easy to call a dog a bad name to beat him for. But there are other
parts
of Mor. Phil. in which these are differences of opinion, such as
the nature of selfishness, self-love, appetites,
desires,
and affections, disinterestedness (what a word for a rush at!), which
belong,
to the first three questions, and so on. I have told you
something
(p. 129) of three laws which I had been considering. In all parts of
Mor.
Phil. these three laws seem to meet one, and in each system
of Morals they take a different form. Now, that I might not
deceive
myself in thinking that I was safe out of the hands of the philosophers
who argue these matters, I have been looking
into
the books of Moralists the most opposed to one another, to see what it
is that makes them differ, and wherein they agree. The
three
principles concerning, the nature of man are continually changing,
their
shape, so that it is not easy to catch them in their best shape.
Nevertheless:
Lemma: Metaphysics.—A man
thinks, feels, and
wills, and therefore
Metaphysicians give him the three faculties of cognition,
feeling,
and conation.
Cognition is what is called
Understanding, and
is most thought
of generally.
Feelings are pleasures, pains,
appetites,
desires, aversions,
approval and disapproval, love, hate, and all affections.
Conations are acts of will,
whatever they be.
Now to move a man's will it is
necessary to move
his affections.
(How? Wait!) For no convictions of the understanding
will do, for a man does what he likes to do, not what he believes to be
best for himself or others. The feelings can only be
moved by notions coming through the understanding, for cognition is the
only inlet of thoughts. Therefore, although it can be
proved that self-love leads to all goodness, or, in other words,
that
goodness is happiness, and self loves happiness, yet it can also be
proved
that men are not able to act rightly from pure
self-love; so that though self-love is a very fine theoretical
principle,
yet no man can keep it always in view, or act
reasonably
upon it. Now, most moralists take for granted that the end which men,
good
or bad, pursue is their own happiness, and that happiness,
false or true, is the motive of every action, and that it is the only
right
motive. Others say that benevolence is the only virtue, and that
any action not done expressly for the good of others is
entitled
to no praise.
Most of the ancients, and Hobbes among the moderns, are of the first
opinion. Hutcheson and Brown (I think) are of the second,
and
call the first selfish Philosophers and the selfish school. A few
consider
benevolence to the whole universe as the proper
motive
of every action, but they all (says Macintosh) confound men's motives
with
the criterion of right and wrong, the reason why a thing is right, and
that which actually causes a man to do it. In every book on
Moral Philosophy some reference is made to that precept or maxim.,
which
is declared to be the spirit of the law and the
prophets (see Matt. vii. 12), and the application of it is a good mark
of the uppermost thoughts or mode of thinking of the
author.
Hobbes lays down as the first
agreement of men to
secure their safety,
that a man should lay down so much [143] of his natural
liberty
with respect to others, as he wishes that other men should to him.
Hobbes
having shown that men, in what the poets and
moralists
call a state of nature (that is, of equality and liberty, and without
government),
must be in a state of war, every man against every other, and therefore
of danger to every man, deduces the obligation of obeying, the
powers
that be from the necessity of Power to prevent universal war. Adam
Smith's
theory of Moral Sentiments (which is the most systematic next to
Hobbes)
is that men desire others to sympathise with them, and
therefore
do those things which may be sympathised with; that is, as Smith's
opponents
say, men ought to be guided by the desire of esteem and
sympathy.
Not so. Smith does not leave us there, but I suppose
you have read him, as he is almost the only Scotch Moral Philosopher.
As it is Saturday night I will not
write very much
more. I was thinking
to-day of the duties of [the] cognitive faculty. It is
universally
admitted that duties are voluntary, and that the will governs
understanding
by giving or withholding Attention. They say that
Understanding
ought to work by the rules of right reason. These rules are,
or
ought to be, contained in Logic; but the actual science of Logic is
conversant
at present only with things either certain, impossible, or
entirely doubtful, none of which (fortunately) we have to reason on.
Therefore
the true Logic for this world is the Calculus of
Probabilities,
which takes account of the magnitude of the probability
(which
is, or which ought to be in a reasonable man's mind). This branch of
Math.,
which is generally thought to favour gambling, dicing, and
wagering, and therefore highly immoral, is the only "Mathematics for
Practical
Men," as we ought to be. Now, as human knowledge
comes
by the senses in such a way that the existence of things external
is
only inferred from the harmonious (not similar) testimony of the
different
senses, Understanding, acting by the laws of right reason, will
assign
to different truths (or facts, or testimonies, or what shall I call
them)
different degrees of probability. Now, as the senses
give new testimonies continually, and as no man ever detected in them
any
real [144] inconsistency, it follows that the
probability
and credibility of their testimony is increasing day by day,
and
the more man uses them the more he believes them. He believes them.
What
is believing? When the probability (there is no better word
found) in a man's mind of a certain proposition being true is greater
than
that of its being false, he believes it with a
proportion of faith corresponding to the probability, and this
probability
may be increased or diminished by new facts. This is
faith in general. When a man thinks he has enough of evidence
for
some notion of his he sometimes refuses to listen to any additional
evidence
pro or con, saying, "It is a settled question,
probatis
probata; it needs no evidence; it is certain." This is knowledge as
distinguished
from faith. He says, "I do not believe; I know." " If
any man thinketh that he knoweth, he knoweth yet nothing as he ought
to
know.'' This knowledge is a, shutting, of one's ears to all arguments,
and is the same as "Implicit faith" in one of its meanings.
"Childlike faith," confounded with it, is not credulity, for children
are
not credulous, but find out sooner than some think
that
many men are liars. I must now to bed, so good night; only please to
write
when you get this, if convenient, and state the
probability
of your coming here. We perhaps will be in Edinburgh when the Wise
men
are there. Now you are invited in a corner of a letter by
JAMES CLERK MAXWELL.