《evolution and ethics and other essays》

下载本书

添加书签

evolution and ethics and other essays- 第19部分


按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!

Thus; various external influences may have contributed to the rise of
philosophy among the Ionian Greeks of the sixth century。 But the
assimilative '108' capacity of the Greek mindits power of
Hellenizing whatever it touchedhas here worked so effectually; that;
so far as I can learn; no indubitable traces of such extraneous
contributions are now allowed to exist by the most authoritative
historians of Philosophy。  Nevertheless; I think it must be admitted
that the coincidences between the Heracleito…stoical doctrines and
those of the older Hindu philosophy are extremely remarkable。 In both;
the cosmos pursues an eternal succession of cyclical changes。 The
great year; answering to the Kalpa; covers an entire cycle from the
origin of the universe as a fluid to its dissolution in fire〃Humor
initium; ignis exitus mundi;〃 as Seneca has it。 In both systems; there
is immanent in the cosmos a source of energy; Brahma; or the Logos;
which works according to fixed laws。 The individual soul is an efflux
of this world…spirit; and returns to it。 Perfection is attainable only
by individual effort; through ascetic discipline; and is rather a
state of painlessness than of happiness; if indeed it can be said to
be a state of anything; save the negation of perturbing emotion。 The
hatchment motto 〃In Coelo Quies〃 would serve both Hindu and Stoic; and
absolute quiet is not easily distinguishable from annihilation。

Zoroasterism; which; geographically; occupies a position intermediate
between Hellenism and Hinduism; agrees with the latter in recognizing
the essential evil of the cosmos; but differs from both in its
intensely anthropomorphic personification of the two antagonistic
principles; to the one of which it ascribes all the good; and; to the
other; all the evil。

'109' In fact; it assumes the existence of two worlds; one good and one
bad; the latter created by the evil power for the purpose of damaging
the former。  The existing cosmos is a mere mixture of the two; and the
〃last judgment〃 is a root…and…branch extirpation of the work of
Ahriman。

Note 12 (p。 69)。

There is no snare in which the feet of a modern student of ancient lore
are more easily entangled; than that which is spread by the similarity
of the language of antiquity to modern modes of expression。 I do not
presume to interpret the obscurest of Greek philosophers; all I wish
is to point out; that his words; in the sense accepted by competent
interpreters; fit modern ideas singularly well。

So far as the general theory of evolution goes there is no difficulty。
The aphorism about the river; the figure of the child playing on the
shore; the kingship and fatherhood of strife; seem decisive。 The
'Greek phrase osod ano kato mie' expresses; with singular aptness; the
cyclical aspect of the one process of organic evolution in individual
plants and animals: yet it may be a question whether the Heracleitean
strife included any distinct conception of the struggle for existence。
Again; it is tempting to compare the part played by the Heracleitean
〃fire〃 with that ascribed by the moderns to heat; or rather to that
cause of motion of which heat is one expression; and a little
ingenuity might find a foreshadowing of the doctrine of the
conservation of energy; in the saying '110' that all the things are
changed into fire and fire into all things; as gold into goods and
goods into gold。

Note 13 (p。 71)。

Pope's lines in the Essay on Man(Ep。 i。 267…8);

     All are but parts of one stupendous whole;
     Whose body Nature is; and God the soul;〃

simply paraphrase Seneca's 〃quem in hoc mundo locum deus obtinet; hunc
in homine animus: quod est illic materia; id nobis corpus est。〃(Ep。
lxv。 24); which again is a Latin version of the old Stoical doctrine;
'Greek phrase eis apan tou kosou meros diekei o nous; kataper aph emon
e psuche'。

So far as the testimony for the universality of what ordinary people
call 〃evil〃 goes; there is nothing better than the writings of the
Stoics themselves。 They might serve; as a storehouse for the epigrams
of the ultra…pessimists。 Heracleitus (circa 500 B。C。) says just as
hard things about ordinary humanity as his disciples centuries later;
and there really seems no need to seek for the causes of this dark
view of life in the circumstances of the time of Alexander's
successors or of the early Emperors of Rome。 To the man with an
ethical ideal; the world; including himself; will always seem full of
evil。

Note 14 (P。 73)。

I use the well…known phrase; but decline responsibility for the libel
upon Epicurus; whose doctrines '111' were far less compatible with
existence in a style than those of the Cynics。 If it were steadily
borne in mind that the conception of the 〃flesh〃 as the source of
evil; and the great saying 〃Initium est salutis notitia peccati;〃 are
the property of Epicurus; fewer illusions about Epicureanism would
pass muster for accepted truth。

Note 15 (P。 75)。

The Stoics said that man was a 'Greek phrase zoon logikon politikon
philallelon'; or a rational; a political; and an altruistic or
philanthropic animal。 In their view; his higher nature tended to
develop in these three directions; as a plant tends to grow up into
its typical form。 Since; without the introduction of any consideration
of pleasure or pain; whatever thwarted the realization of its type by
the plant might be said to be bad; and whatever helped it good; so
virtue; in the Stoical sense; as the conduct which tended to the
attainment of the rational; political; and philanthropic ideal; was
good in itself; and irrespectively of its emotional concomitants。

Man is an 〃animal sociale communi bono genitum。〃 The safety of society
depends upon practical recognition of the fact。 〃Salva autem esse
societas nisi custodia et amore partium non possit;〃 says Seneca。 (De。
Ira; ii。 31。)

Note 16 (P。 75)。

The importance of the physical doctrine of the Stoics lies in its
clear recognition of the universality '112' of the law of causation;
with its corollary; the order of nature: the exact form of that order
is an altogether secondary consideration。

Many ingenious persons now appear to consider that the incompatibility
of pantheism; of materialism; and of any doubt about the immortality
oxf the soul; with religion and morality; is to be held as an
axiomatic truth。 I confess that I have a certain difficulty in
accepting this dogma。 For the Stoics were notoriously materialists and
pantheists of the most extreme character; and while no strict Stoic
believed in the eternal duration of the individual soul; some even
denied its persistence after death。 Yet it is equally certain that of
all gentile philosophies; Stoicism exhibits the highest ethical
development; is animated by the most religious spirit; and has exerted
the profoundest influence upon the moral and religious development not
merely of the best men among the Romans; but among the moderns down to
our own day。

Seneca was claimed as a Christian and placed among the saints by the
fathers of the early Christian Church; and the genuineness of a
correspondence between him and the apostle Paul has been hotly
maintained in our own time; by orthodox writers。 That the letters; as
we possess them; are worthless forgeries is obvious; and writers as
wide apart as Baur and Lightfoot agree that the whole story is devoid
of foundation。

The dissertation of the late Bishop of Durham (Epistle to the
Philippians) is particularly worthy of study; apart from this
question; on account of '113' evidence which it supplies of the
numerous similarities of thought between Seneca and the writer of the
Pauline epistles。 When it is remembered that the writer of the Acts
puts a quotation from Aratus; or Cleanthes; into the mouth of the
apostle; and that Tarsus was a great seat of philosophical and
especially stoical learning (Chrysippus himself was a native of the
adjacent town of Soli); there is no difficulty in understanding the
origin of these resemblances。 See; on this subject; Sir Alexander
Grant's dissertation in his edition of The Ethics of Aristotle (where
there is an interesting reference to the stoical character of Bishop
Butler's ethics); the concluding pages of Dr。 Weygoldt's instructive
little work Die Philosophie der Stoa; and Aubertin's Seneque et Saint
Paul。

It is surprising that a writer of Dr。 Lightfoot's stamp should speak
of Stoicism as a philosophy of 〃despair。〃 Surely; rather; it was a
philosophy of men who; having cast off all illusions; and the
childishness of despair among them; were minded to endure in patience
whatever conditions the cosmic process might create; so long as those
conditions were compatible with the progress towards virtue; which
alone; for them; conferred a worthy object on existence。 There is no
note of despair in the stoical declaration that the perfected 〃wise
man〃 is the equal of Zeus in everything but the duration of his
existence。 And; in my judgment; there is as little pride about it;
often as it serves for the text of discourses on stoical arrogance。
Grant the stoical postulate that there is no good except virtue; grant
that '114' the perfected wise man is altogether virtuou
小提示:按 回车 [Enter] 键 返回书目,按 ← 键 返回上一页, 按 → 键 进入下一页。 赞一下 添加书签加入书架