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ON SAMENESS AND IDENTITY.


      *      *      *      *      *      *

     PHILOSOPHICAL SERIES.

     NUMBERS IN PREPARATION.


     NO. II. STUDIES FROM THE LABORATORY OF EXPERIMENTAL
     PSYCHOLOGY.

     Researches are in progress on: Memory and the Least
     Noticeable Difference in Sensation; Measurement in the
     Diagnosis of Diseases of the Nervous System; The Rate at
     which the Nervous Impulse Travels; The Personal Difference in
     the Time of Mental Processes; The Rate, Extent, and Force of
     Movement; Accuracy of Perception as a Function of the Time
     of Stimulation; The Correlation of Mental Time, Intensity,
     and Extensity; The Relative Value to Science of Experiment,
     Observation, and Memory; The Building of Complex Perceptions;
     etc.

     NO. III. DESCARTES' "MEDITATIONS," with Latin and English
     Texts, and Philosophical Analysis. By George Stuart Fullerton
     and William Romaine Newbold.

      *      *      *      *      *      *


Publications of the University of Pennsylvania

PHILOSOPHICAL SERIES.

Edited by

George Stuart Fullerton
Professor of Philosophy
and
James McKeen Cattell
Professor of Psychology.


No. 1.      April, 1890.

ON SAMENESS AND IDENTITY.

A Psychological Study: Being a Contribution to the Foundations
of a Theory of Knowledge.

by

GEORGE STUART FULLERTON.






Philadelphia
University of Pennsylvania Press
Publishers





On Sameness and Identity.




PART I.

THE KINDS OF SAMENESS.

     And some require everything accurately stated; whereas, this
     accuracy annoys others, either because of their inability
     to follow a train of reasoning through, or because of its
     hair-splitting character; for accuracy does involve some
     hair-splitting.

                    Aristotle, Metaph. Book I, The Less, c. 3.


SECTION 1. There are few words the ambiguity of which has led to
more confusion and profitless dispute than that of the word _same_.
Men constantly use this word as though it had but one meaning, and
that meaning were always clear, whereas it really gives expression
to a number of widely different experiences, some of which are quite
difficult of analysis. It is highly desirable that these experiences
should not be confounded with each other, but kept clearly separate,
as the consequences of such misconception are very far-reaching. How
far-reaching, I shall in the pages to follow try to indicate.

It is my purpose to point out the differences in connotation of the
several senses of this highly ambiguous word, to show the element
which they have in common, and to trace some of the difficulties and
absurdities which have sprung from using the word loosely and without
proper discrimination. I shall have to plead guilty to something very
like hair-splitting, but I may put forward in excuse the undeniable
fact that "accuracy does involve some hair-splitting." If anyone
prefers the self-contradictions and preposterous conclusions to which
loose and unanalytic thought has so often led the unwary, he is welcome
to them. I shall hold a few of these up to inspection after a while.
For my part, I prefer a little quibbling at the outset of a discussion
to a systematic incoherence all through it, with the chances of finding
myself in a _cul-de-sac_ at the end. Whether I am successful in
dissipating to some degree the fog which has hung about samenesses and
obliterated important distinctions, each one must judge for himself.

The kinds of sameness I find to be as follows:


SEC. 2. I. We speak of any sensation, feeling, or idea, or complex of
sensations, feelings, or ideas, as being the same with itself at any
one instant. The pain in my finger is what it is at this moment. The
finger itself (the immediate object of knowledge, a complex from sense
and imagination) is, at each moment, what it is. It is to this sense
of the word that the logical laws of Identity and Contradiction have
ultimate reference.


SEC. 3. II. A sensation, feeling, or idea, or complex of sensations,
feelings, or ideas, considered in itself and without reference to
the world of material things, is called the same with one previously
existent when the two are alike. I say, for example, that I feel to-day
the same pain I felt yesterday, or that I have dreamt the same dream
three times. This is evidently not sameness of the kind first mentioned.


SEC. 4. III. We speak of seeing the same material thing at different
times. Suppose a man passing along a country road to look across a
field at a distant tree. What he actually sees is a small bluish patch
of color, which, interpreting in terms furnished by his previous
experience, he supplements with material drawn from memory and
imagination. On the following day he looks at the tree again from a
nearer point and sees a larger green patch of color with distinct
differences of shading and with a clear outline. This he interprets in
a similar manner.

Now, without being a philosopher at all, and without conscious
reference to anything beyond what he has experienced or can experience,
he affirms that he has on two successive days seen the same tree. I
ask, just what is the significance of the word same as used in this
connection? What peculiar experience has it been employed to mark? What
is perceived on the one occasion is not the same as what is perceived
on the other in the sense of the word first given (by "perceived"
I mean existing in consciousness as a complex of mental elements.
With the supposed external correlates of our percepts I am not now
concerned). And it is equally clear that two such percepts need not be
the same in the second sense of the word, for they may be quite unlike.
In this case they are unlike, so far at least as what is actually in
sensation is concerned.

What peculiar experience then does the word mark when the observer
declares that he has seen the same tree twice?

We are now in the sphere of material objects (_i. e._, as experienced;
I refer to the mental content and nothing more), and are not concerned
with our experiences as isolated elements, but as grouped and arranged
in series. Our total possible experience of any one object is a
collection of partly simultaneous and partly successive actual and
possible sensations which condition each other, and which we regard as
a unit. The Idealist believes that this is all there is of the object,
and all we mean when we commonly employ the word. The Realist assumes
that there is something beyond and corresponding to this experience,
and which is to be regarded as the real thing. He, however, must admit
that all we can know of any object, in whatever sense we choose to
employ that word, all our evidence for maintaining its existence and
determining its qualities, must be drawn from this group of sensations.
It is this that we immediately know, and anything inferred must be
inferred from this.

From this it follows that when any one, whether Realist, or Idealist,
or unreflective man, feels justified in asserting that what he
perceives to-day is the same object he perceived yesterday, he is
led to make this assertion on the strength of some distinction in his
immediate experience, and he refers only secondarily, if at all, to
anything beyond and external to this. The distinction which he marks
by the word is this: He has reason to believe that the two percepts
in question belong to the one series,--to the one life history,
so to speak. He believes that had he cared to do so he could have
filled up the gap between them by a continuous series of percepts,
each conditioned by the preceding, and forming the one chain. Each
represents to him the one object, in that each stands for the whole
series, and his thought is much more taken up with the series as
a whole than with the individuals composing it. He knows that the
percepts in such a series can only be successive, never simultaneous.
Had he reason to suspect that the two percepts we are discussing belong
to different series of this kind, and that there is nothing in the
nature of the case to prevent their being simultaneous, he would decide
for two trees.

But each percept contains more than one mental element, and just as we
may regard each percept as representing the whole series, so we may
regard each element as representing the whole complex which may be
experienced at one time, and through this the whole series of percepts.
I say that the orange I smell is the same with the one I see; that
I can reveal by striking a light the chair I fell over in the dark;
that I hear rattling down the street the coach I stepped out of a few
moments ago. It is not worth while to distinguish this use from the
use of the word same just mentioned, for they agree in making a single
experience stand for a whole group or series, which is assumed to
be at least potentially present with each one. When we have had two
experiences thus representing the one group, we say that we have in two
ways, or on two occasions, experienced the same object. In this sense
has the man in our illustration seen yesterday and to-day the same
tree. In this sense could he at the one time see and touch the same
tree.

It is in this sense also that we use the word when we say that the
object seen with the naked eye and the object seen through a telescope
or under a microscope are the same. If I look at a distant object
with the naked eye and then look at it through a telescope, what I
actually see (or what is actually in the sense) is in the two cases
very different. But just as seeing an object from a distance with the
naked eye, I may walk towards it and substitute for the dim and vague
percept which I first had a series of percepts increasing in clearness
and ending in one which I regard as altogether satisfactory, so I may
substitute at once this clear percept for the dim one, by the use of
the telescope, and may know that it properly belongs to the series
which, taken as a whole, constitutes my notion of the object. This
I may know from the relations which this percept bears to the other
percepts of the series, and which allow me to pass in my inferences
from it to them as I can from any one of them to another. If, seeing
a dim object upon the horizon, I raise a telescope and through it
perceive the figure of a man, I know that I could have had a similar
percept without any telescope by simply approaching the object.
Conversely, on perceiving a man near at hand, I know I could have a
similar percept from a distance by looking through a telescope. I call
the man seen through the telescope the same as the man seen with the
naked eye, for the same reason as I call the man seen by the eye at a
distance the same with the man seen near at hand.

And the apparently non-extended speck which I see with the naked eye
looks very different from the curious insect I see when I place a
microscope over this speck, but I call them the same for the reason
just given. If the insect as seen under the glass be divided, so is
the speck as seen by the eye; if the insect is taken away, the speck
disappears too. The series of percepts made possible through the
microscope may be regarded as a continuation of the series which arises
from approaching the eye to the object. Each member in it stands in a
relation to this primary series similar to that illustrated above in
the case of the telescope, and similar to that held by the terms of the
primary series to each other. It should be kept clearly in mind that
in all these cases the object (immediately perceived) is the same only
in the sense pointed out, _i. e._, two or more percepts, which may,
in themselves considered, be quite unlike each other, are recognized
as in a certain relation to each other, as each representing the one
series to which all belong. If one thinks he has reason to believe each
percept represents not merely the series of percepts, but something
different, which he infers and is pleased to call the "real" thing, he
may be inclined to believe that in saying he sees the same object on
two occasions he is referring to this something. It must be clear to
him, however that all his evidence for the sameness of this something
lies in the experience I have described, and it is to this that he
must point in proof that it is the same. The percepts themselves are
certainly not the same in any other sense than the one given. They are
not identical, and they need not be alike. They merely stand for each
other. Should one forget this, he will fall into blunders which I will
illustrate at length when I speak of the common opinion on the subject
of the infinite divisibility of space.

John Locke, in his famous "Essay,"[1] has made a distinction between
the sameness of masses of inorganic matter and the sameness of
organisms. That of the former, he says, consists in the sameness of
their particles, while the sameness of a plant or animal does not
consist in that of the particles which compose it at this time or at
that, for they are in continual flux, but in the participation in the
one life of the organism. It does not, however, appear to me that we
have here a real difference in the kind of experience marked by the
word. The difference is merely that in the one case we connect this
experience, not with the object as a whole, but with the separate
particles which compose it, which we take as so many separate objects
each having a sameness of the kind just discussed, while in the other
case we look upon the object as a whole, as a unit, and disregard any
reference to its component parts. But whether we regard the object as
a unit or take each of its ultimate parts as separate objects, we are
thinking of the one kind of sameness. We are thinking of a certain
life-history in which any one link may represent the whole, and any
two links may be, from this point of view, regarded as equivalent.
It is not merely with reference to plants and animals that we speak
of sameness without regard to a sameness of constituent parts. We
do it in this case simply because the organism furnishes us with a
convenient unit, and one much more important as a unit than as an
aggregate. We can make similar units when we please, and consider their
sameness without thinking of their parts. We speak of the same nation
as existing through many generations, and of the same corporation
as surviving many deaths. Whether the object we are considering be
naturally indivisible, or composite and assumed a unit for convenience,
when we speak of it as the same at two different times we are referring
to the one experience. Locke does make here a distinction worth
noticing, but it does not mark two fundamentally different uses of the
word.

  [1] Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Bk. 2, Chap. 27, § 3.


SEC. 5. IV. Two objects are called the same, and two other mental
experiences occurring at the one time are called the same, from the
fact that they are recognized as alike. The botanist, finding that
two plants belong to the one class calls them the same without
any intention of confounding the two individuals. Nor does one who
places his two hands in warm water and declares that he has the same
feeling in both, confound the two streams of sensation. The fact
that only likeness is meant is here clearly recognized. It is not, I
think, as clearly recognized when similar sensations or other mental
experiences (considered singly), occurring at _different_ times, are
called the same. In that case they are sometimes spoken of as if they
were material objects having a continuous sameness after the fashion
explained above.


SEC. 6. V. The word same is used to signify the relation between any
mental experience and that which is regarded as its representative.
This representative may or may not resemble it. We speak, for example,
of calling up in memory this or that object seen at some past time. The
memory-image is certainly not the same with the original percept in
Sense I. When we say that the object of memory is the past, we cannot
mean this, for it is plainly false. Nor is it thought of as merely like
it, as in Sense II. It is thought of as a something which represents
it--stands for it in a peculiar way. Just what this implies I will not
here attempt to discover. It is enough for my purpose to point out that
when we say a man remembers an object we do not mean merely to indicate
the presence in his imagination of a resembling picture, but to include
a certain relation between this picture and an original percept.

It is not easy to describe what is present in an act of memory. When I
am thinking of another man as calling to mind something from his past
experience, I bring before my own mind two pictures, one representing
his original percept, and one his present memory-image. Holding these
before me together, I recognize them as related, but distinct. I
use the word same to denote their relation. But the person who is
exercising his memory does not have before his mind two objects, an
original and a copy, with an observed relation between them. He has
not the original, or it would not be an act of memory. When, however,
he reflects upon his experience as I have done, he represents it to
himself as I have represented it to myself. He speaks as if, in the
act of remembering, he were conscious of two objects and could compare
them. He speaks of recognizing the memory picture as a copy and
representative of the original percept. Language, as commonly used,
adapts itself to this way of regarding the matter, and I may leave a
further analysis of it to the student of the memory, merely pointing
out that, whatever is implied in the experience, a common use of the
word same is to denote this relation between any mental experience and
the memory-image which represents it.

It will be seen that this kind of sameness may be presupposed in
affirming sameness in other senses of the word. When I compare a
present sensation with one felt some days since, and affirm that they
are the same, the latter must enter into the comparison through its
representative in memory. It is not itself present at the time of the
comparison.

And when I say that I have seen the same tree yesterday and to-day,
I mean, as I have explained, that the two percepts belong to the one
series; but since my experience of yesterday cannot be itself present
in my consciousness to-day, it can take its place in the series, as
thought to-day, only by proxy. When I say that I have in my mind the
same series on two successive days, I evidently mean that it is the
same series in the sense in which any experience and its representative
in memory are the same.

Other less important instances might be given of this use of the
word same to express the relation between any experience and its
representative. We say that we see an object in a mirror, when we mean
that we see its reflected image. We speak of seeing in a picture this
man or that. When we have found for anything a satisfactory substitute
we say it is the same thing. Such uses of the word are not likely to
deceive anyone, and I will not dwell upon them. Their meaning is too
plain to be mistaken.


SEC. 7. VI. We constantly speak of two men as seeing the same
thing. In this we have a sense of the word which demands careful
analysis. For the sake of clearness, and to avoid ambiguity, I will
confine myself here, as I have done in the foregoing sections, to an
examination of what is actually experienced by the men, and will defer
all consideration of existences assumed as lying beyond a possible
experience in an extra-mental world, for discussion in sections to
follow.

The question which interests me at present is simply this: What
experience is it that leads a man to affirm that he and someone else
are perceiving the same object? The Realist (in the modern sense) would
say that this experience is only his evidence that he and another are
perceiving the same object, meaning by object what I have referred to
as believed to lie beyond his experience; while the Idealist would
say that this experience exhausts the whole matter. The Realist must,
however, admit, as I have brought out in a different connection, that
all his evidence for the existence of the object (in his sense), and
for any affirmations whatever regarding it, lying within the field of
the immediately known, any words, which have been coined to express
qualities of, or distinctions concerning, this object, would retain a
use and significance as marking distinctions within this field even
if the object were supposed non-existent. Whether any such duplicate
of what is immediately perceived exists or not is a question apart.
Since we admittedly draw all our distinctions from the field of the
immediately known and then carry them over to such objects, and not
_vice versa_, we may be sure that we would go on saying that two men
see the same object in any case. I myself give the preference to
that the existence of which is an indubitable fact, and prefer using
the word _object_ to indicate the complex in consciousness. I have,
however, no desire to assume any point in dispute by juggling with a
word, and will try to keep clearly in mind the meaning of the word thus
assumed whenever I use it.

Now, the experience which leads me to say that I and another man see
the same object is just this: I perceive a particular object, and in a
certain relation to it I perceive the body of another man. From a past
experience of my own body in relation to objects and from reasoning
by analogy, I have come to connect such a relation of another body to
the object with the thought of another consciousness of the object as
connected with that body. Just as I perceive my own body to perform
certain actions when I am conscious of perceiving the object, so
I perceive this other body with which I have connected in thought
a consciousness of the object to perform similar acts in response
to similar relations towards the object. It is wholly a matter of
observation in my own case that the perception of my own body in this
or that relation to an object is a _sine qua non_ to the perception of
the object. And it is wholly a matter of reasoning from like to like
that leads me to connect in thought sensations or percepts with any
other animal body whatever. When I say, therefore, that I and another
man are perceiving the same thing, there is in my mind a complex
consisting of a percept or idea of the thing, a percept or idea of the
man's body, and the thought of a percept connected with this body. When
I say that he is thinking of us both as seeing the same thing, I call
up in mind a similar complex and connect it in thought with his body.
Whatever I may believe as to the existence or non-existence of things
lying beyond this sphere, and supposed to cause these experiences,
these are the experiences to which I ultimately refer when I speak of
two men as seeing the same object, and these furnish the whole ground
for the existence of the phrase.

The percept of the object which I connect in thought with the other
man's body need not be wholly similar to my percept of the object.
The man who has discovered that he is color-blind, does not suppose
that men not similarly afflicted see just what he does in looking
at a cherry tree full of ripe fruit. Nevertheless, he still speaks
of himself and others as seeing the same objects. If another man's
body is not exactly like mine, I am not justified by argument from
similarity in reading into it an exactly similar experience. It is not
the similarity of the two percepts that I am thinking of chiefly when
I speak of them as percepts of the same object. I am thinking of the
relation in which I suppose them to stand to each other. I think of the
possible existence of the one under given circumstances as conditioning
the possible existence of the other.


SEC. 8. VII. When a man in an early stage of reflection upon his
experience has decided that objects immediately perceived are not the
real things but merely their mental copies or representatives, he may
think of these "real" things in several ways. He may believe in a world
of "real" things, consisting of groups of "real" qualities, external
to consciousness; he may accept such "real" things, but add to them a
substratum or substance, distinct from the qualities; or he may believe
that the "real" exists as mere substratum, substance, or noumenon,
and that all qualities, being merely its revelation to mind, exist
within the circle of consciousness alone. The first position is one not
often taken. The second is that held by Locke,[2] who believed that,
corresponding to our ideas of objects, there exist substances possessed
of certain primary qualities, and having an underlying substance or
substratum. The third represents the view of the Kantian,[3] who, to be
consistent, must deny to his noumenon any qualities whatever. How he is
to do this without having it lapse into utter nothingness is a problem
for him to solve.

  [2] Essay Concerning Human Understanding. Bk. 2, Chap. 2, § I, and
  Bk. 2, Chap. 23, § 1. _et seq._

  [3] Kritik der reinen Vernunft.--"Von dem Grunde der Unterscheidung
  aller Gegenstände überhaupt in _Phænomena_ und _Noumena_." Kant's
  Sämmtliche Werke, herausgegeben von Hartenstein. Leipzig, 1867, 3er
  Band, s. 209, _et seq._ See also, Kritik der Praktischen Vernunft;
  Vorrede; and the discussion: "Wie eine Erweiterung der reinen
  Vernunft in praktischer Absicht, ohne damit ihr Erkenntniss als
  speculativ, zugleich zu erweitern, zu denken möglich sei?" I Th. II
  B. II Hptst.; same edition, 5er Bd., s. 5, 140. I am not concerned
  here with the inner contradiction of the Kantian system. The notion
  of noumena predominantly in Kant's mind, was, I think, about as
  I have stated. He would not, of course, have denied "reality" to
  phenomena, but his misconception of Berkeley, and the satisfaction
  with which he settles down to the noumenal in the Critique of the
  Practical Reason, show that he felt toward the "blos Erscheinung"
  very much as Locke felt toward mere ideas. Cf. "Essay," Bk. 4, Chap.
  11, § 7.

The disciple of Locke has, therefore, in discussing all the uses of the
word same, to consider the sameness of:

1. Things immediately known.

2. Groups of "real" qualities in an extra-mental world, more or less
like what is immediately known.

3. Substance; the "I know not what" to which Locke clung through all
difficulties.

The man who holds the first of the three views above mentioned need
only consider the first and the second of these; and the Kantian
need only consider the first and the third, rebaptizing the latter
"noumenon" or "thing-in-itself."

Omitting for later consideration the sameness of the self or ego, I
have already discussed the uses of the word same within the field of
the immediately known. It remains to consider the sameness of what is
believed to lie beyond this, and to belong to a different kind of a
world.

When men discuss these supposed realities, in what senses of the word
same may they reasonably think of them as the same?

When a common, unreflective man, whose mind has not been, in the words
of Bishop Berkeley, "debauched by learning," looks at a tree and thinks
about it, he believes he sees a real tree, at a certain real distance
from his body, and of a given real height and figure. It does not occur
to him to make any distinction between the tree immediately perceived,
and an inferred second tree, not immediately perceived, but represented
by the former. There is the tree; he sees it; he can touch it; it seems
to him but one: and he always talks as if there were but one tree to
be discussed in the premises. That one tree, he thinks, is really
extended; is really out in space beyond his body; is, in short, what it
appears to be. To his unreflective mind this tree does not seem to be a
representative or to be seen through a representative, but to be seen
immediately and just where it really is.

But when a man has begun to battle with the difficulties of reflection,
and has learned to make a distinction between things and his ideas
of the things, he will probably fall into unforeseen perplexities
about this tree. He reflects that, when he closes his eyes, the tree
disappears; that when he approaches it it looks green, and when he
recedes from it it grows blue; that a man with a peculiar defect in
his vision does not see it colored as he does; that when he makes a
pressure on the side of one eyeball he sees two trees where before he
saw only one; that when he makes such a pressure upon both eyeballs and
moves them about a little he sees two trees moving about, although he
knows real trees can not ordinarily be made to move about so easily.
Such reflections lead him to distinguish between the tree as he sees
it, and the tree as it really is, and he defines the tree as he sees it
as the tree immediately known, and the real tree as the tree mediately
known, a cause of the existence of the former. He now thinks that he
sees directly only copies or representatives of real things, and as he
believes these copies or representatives to be in his mind, and usually
talks as if his mind were in his head, or at least in his body, he
concludes that things immediately known must in many instances be much
smaller than they seem, or perhaps lack extension altogether. How can
a tree thirty feet high be in a man's mind? It is true, that, when I
press upon my eyeballs in the manner described, I seem to see two trees
of that size moving; but must it not be a mistake? Must we not assume
that what is immediately seen only _seems_ extended, and stands for an
extended thing which is grasped through it? So our philosopher learns
to distrust the immediate object of knowledge; to regard it as in some
sense unreal as compared with what it represents; and to deny to it
those properties which it apparently possesses. It is not extended, but
it stands for extension; it is not colored, but it stands for color; it
is not real, but it stands for reality.

It is natural, however, for one who has gone thus far to go farther.
When he reflects again upon the fact that he sees the tree of a
different color at different distances; when he remembers that colors
vary with the quality of the light by which they are seen; when he and
his neighbor dispute concerning the true color of the one tree which
he sees dotted with red leaves, and which his opponent claims to see
of a uniform color; then he may well begin to ask himself what is the
true color of the "real" tree, or whether it is certain that it has
any color at all? May not, then, the "real" tree have only some of the
qualities that we ordinarily attribute to trees? Perhaps, the space
qualities?

Or, worse yet, since some of the qualities that the ordinary man
attributes to trees may be regarded as existing only in a shadowy way
in our ideas, why may not the same be true of all the other qualities?
How do we know that "real" trees are extended? How do we know that
"real" extension must be assumed as the cause of the delusive apparent
extension of our ideas, if it is true that "real" color need not thus
be assumed as a cause of our sensations of color? What if the "real"
thing exists only as an indescribable and incomprehensible somewhat,
which we must assume as a cause of the immediately known, but of
which we can know nothing more? When one has once begun this slippery
descent, it is not easy to say where he may find a peg to stay him in
his course.

Suppose, however, he is content to strip the "real" thing of what are
commonly called the secondary qualities of matter, and to leave to it
what are known as the primary. He will follow the example of the wholly
unreflective man and speak of it in such a way as to suggest that the
thing itself is something apart from its "real" qualities. A tree, he
will say, _has_ qualities. It would certainly sound odd to hear him
say it _is_ qualities. And he will very possibly go on to justify the
use of the language he employs by distinguishing between the "real"
qualities represented by his mental picture of the tree and an obscure
something which he assumes as underlying them; thus embracing the
Lockian distinction of ideas, "real" qualities, and substance. He may
conclude, it is true, that substance in this sense of the word is
chimerical, and that the belief in it arises out of a misunderstanding
of the significance of language; but if he has gone so far as to
assume duplicates of things immediately known, in the form of "real"
qualities, it is more probable that he will be inclined to complete his
classes of beings by adding the third.[4]

  [4] There is, of course, no reason why he may not add as many more
  classes as he pleases, and justify the additions as he justifies
  this. Men do not do this, as a matter of fact, but that is no reason.

Now, it does not concern me to consider whether this change of view
is to be regarded as a real progress in reflective knowledge or as a
progressive decline and fall of the unreflective man. The point which
concerns me is this: The unreflective man talks as if but one tree were
under discussion. The man who reflects uses the same forms of speech:
and even when he believes that he must distinguish between the tree
immediately known and the obscure something which he has come to look
upon as its cause, or between the tree immediately known, the bundle of
"real" qualities inferred, and the obscure something that he connects
with these, he still goes on talking as if he had only one thing to
talk about. The danger of such a proceeding is obvious. If I talk
about two or three things as though they were one, it is but natural
that I should sometimes confuse them with each other. Should proof be
forthcoming for one of these, it would be but natural for me to fall
occasionally into the error of supposing that it somehow applies to the
others. If I go on saying "the tree" when I mean one tree and something
else, two trees, or two trees and something else, it is only to be
expected that I sooner or later come to grief in my reasonings.

And it should be noted that this peculiar ambiguity in the names of
things entails a parallel ambiguity in the use of the words by which we
indicate the mind's recognition of the presence of things. We commonly
speak of a drunken man's _seeing_ two trees, where a sober man sees
one. We speak of an insane man as _hearing_ voices, when no one has
spoken. We say that we _see_ the maples are turning red, even when we
believe that color may not properly be attributed to the mediate object
of knowledge. On the other hand, those who hold to the existence of
"real" objects of the kind before mentioned, generally maintain that
in referring to things in space, their positions and mutual relations,
we are giving attention, not to the immediately known, but to its
"external" double. "I see, feel, perceive," it is "said, not the image,
and not the constituents of the image (the ideas), but the external
object by _means_ of the image."[5] If one holds that this "external"
object presupposes a substance, a something distinct from a group of
qualities, there is nothing to prevent his maintaining, should he
wish to do so, that in saying "I see a tree," primary reference is
had to this substance or "reality." Of course, if, in the sentence
"I see a tree," the word "tree" can have three meanings, it follows
that there is also a possibility of taking in three senses the word
"see." It is hardly necessary to point out that, unless one is very
careful, "seeing" in one sense may result in "believing" in another,
as "kicking" did in the famous case of Dr. Johnson and the stone. The
caution is pertinent with respect to any other word used in the same
general way as we use the word "see."

  [5] Ueberweg. See Krauth's Ed. of Berkeley's "Principles," Phila.,
  1874, p. 343.

I have said that when a man abandons his original unreflective
position and learns to distinguish between things immediately known
and other things they are supposed to represent, he goes on using the
common language, and talking as though there were but one thing under
consideration. Now, men do not do this merely in common conversation
and in writing about matters of everyday life, but they do it in the
very books that have been written to prove that each thing is thus
double or triple. John Locke, for example, begins the very chapter
in which he is about to draw the distinction between the secondary
and primary qualities of bodies (_i. e._, between the constituents
of things immediately known and the constituents of their "external"
correlates), as well as to enlighten us on our ideas of substances,
with the following words:[6]

  [6] "Essay", Bk. 2, Chap. 23, § 1.

"The mind being, as I have declared, furnished with a great number
of the simple ideas, conveyed in by the senses, as they are found in
exterior things, or by reflexion on its own operations, takes notice
also, that a certain number of these simple ideas go constantly
together; which, being presumed to belong to one thing, and words
being suited to common apprehensions, and made use of for quick
despatch, are called, so united in one subject, by one name; which,
by inadvertency, we are apt afterward to talk of, and consider
as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas
together: because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple
ideas can subsist by themselves, we accustom ourselves to suppose some
_substratum_ wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result,
and which therefore we call _substance_."

It is clear enough from this, as it is clear enough from other passages
in the same book, that Locke talked as though the complex of simple
ideas in consciousness were the very same thing (in Sense I) as the
group of "real" qualities outside of consciousness. And no careful
reader of his book can avoid seeing that the confusion of his language
is a fair index to the confusion of his thoughts with regard to the
two.[7] It is little better in the case of "bodies" and substance. In
the passage just given, he would seem to make _substance_ an obscure
something underlying groups of ideas, and not groups of real qualities,
but in the next sentence he makes it a substratum of the qualities
which produce in us ideas. In many passages[8] he distinguishes between
_substance_ and _substances_, by which latter he means groups of "real"
qualities with the added substratum or substance; as such substances he
instances oak, elephant, iron. He emphasizes the fact that substance
is not to be confounded with substances, which are things of different
sorts.[9] In so far as the substances are bundles of qualities, they
are known to us through sensation.[10] In so far as they are also
substance, they cannot be known to us through sensation, for the idea
of substance is not known through sensation.[11] We are not then to
look upon substance as such a constituent part of "a substance" as a
quality is. The two belong to different classes. And if we offer proof
for the existence of "real" substances, which is evidently applicable
to them only as bundles of qualities--proof from sensation--then
substance is overlooked altogether. It is significant that Locke,
having thus put together under one head as "a substance" an oak viewed
as a bundle of "real" qualities and an oak viewed as substratum,
proceeded to argue as if he had but one thing to prove when he felt
called upon to defend the real existence of substances. In his chapters
on "The Extent of Human Knowledge," the "Reality of Knowledge," and
"Our Knowledge of the Existence of Other Things,"[12] he devotes
himself wholly to proving things as bundles of qualities, and pays no
more attention to substance than if it had never entered his thought.
If we take these chapters as authoritative, we must banish substance
from the sphere of knowledge altogether.

  [7] "Essay," Bk. 4, Chap. 2, § 14; Bk. 4, Chap. 4 and Chap. 11.

  [8] _Ibid._, Bk. 2, Chap. 12, § 6; Bk. 2, Chap. 23, § 1, with note
  (Phila., 1846, p. 183, _et seq._).

  [9] See note to § 1, Chap. 23, Bk. 2.

  [10] Bk. 4, Chap. 11, _et passim_.

  [11] "I confess there is another idea, which would be of general use
  for mankind to have, as it is of general talk, as if they had it; and
  that is the idea of substance, which we neither have, nor can have,
  by sensation or reflection." Bk. 1, Chap. 4, § 18 of the "Essay."

  [12] "Essay," Bk. 4, Chaps. 3, 4 and 11.

As another instance of a use of language calculated to produce
confusion, I may offer the following from Sir William Hamilton:
"Whatever we know is not known as it is, but only as it seems to us
to be,"[13]--a use of words which would certainly indicate that the
immediate and mediate objects of knowledge are one. And what would
we infer from such a sentence as this: "Thus the consciousness of
an Inscrutable Power manifested to us through all phenomena, has
been growing ever clearer; and must eventually be freed from its
imperfections. The certainty that on the one hand such a Power exists,
while on the other hand its nature transcends intuition and is beyond
imagination, is the certainty towards which intelligence has from the
first been progressing."[14] Or this: "We are obliged to regard every
phenomenon as a manifestation of some Power by which we are acted upon;
though Omnipresence is unthinkable, yet, as experience discloses no
bounds to the diffusion of phenomena, we are unable to think of limits
to the presence of this Power; while the criticisms of Science teach
us that this Power is Incomprehensible. And this consciousness of an
Incomprehensible Power, called Omnipresent from inability to assign its
limits, is just that consciousness on which Religion dwells."[15]

  [13] Lectures on Metaph., VIII, N. Y., 1880, p. 102.

  [14] Herbert Spencer, "First Principles." Part I, Chap. V, § 31,
  N. Y., 1888, p. 108.

  [15] "First Principles." Part I, Chap. V, § 27.

"After concluding that we cannot know the ultimate nature of that
which is manifested to us, there arise the questions--What is it that
we know? In what sense do we know it?"[16] Or what shall one say to
this: "Our consciousness of the unconditioned being literally the
unconditioned consciousness, or raw material of thought, to which in
thinking we give definite forms, it follows that an ever-present sense
of real existence is the very basis of our intelligence."[17]

  [16] Part II, Chap. I, § 35.

  [17] Part I, Chap. IV, § 26.

Now, if the consciousness of an "inscrutable power" is not the
"inscrutable power" itself; if the existence of such a "power" does
not mean simply its existence in consciousness; if the phenomena
in which, it is assumed, a "power" is manifested, are to be kept
separate in thought from the "power," so that we shall be in no
danger of confounding a consciousness of certain phenomena with
consciousness of an "incomprehensible power;" if our "consciousness
of the unconditioned" is to be kept in mind as signifying merely our
"unconditioned consciousness," and an "ever-present sense of real
existence" as signifying only an ever-present sense of "raw material"
in consciousness; then it is high time that these sentences and all
such as these be re-written with some regard for lucidity, accuracy
and consistency. How can a reader help confounding things when he is
thus taught by the very man whose business it is to distinguish between
them? The blind led by the blind is a cheerful spectacle compared with
this.

Nothing can be more evident than that the man who has abandoned his
original unreflective belief in the singleness of the perceived
object, and has come to believe in it as having one or more "external"
correlates, should keep distinctly in mind that an immediate and a
mediate object are, by hypothesis, two distinct things: that he has
never had any direct experience whatever save of the one; and that
all distinctions that he makes with regard to the other, the very
notions of its existence, reality, and externality, have been drawn
from the sphere of the immediate and carried over to it in thought.
And he should never allow himself to forget, that, when he says he has
passed in thought from the immediate to the mediate object, he cannot
mean literally that his thought is now occupied directly upon this
"external" thing--that it is itself present to mind. He should remember
that he can only mean that he has such an experience as the following:

He has in mind the immediate object, and a mental picture of a
duplicate of this standing in a causal relation to it and represented
by it; or, he has (if a Lockian), in addition to these two, a third
highly vague and indefinite mental image (the idea of "substance"),
which he connects with the image just described, as he has connected
that with the immediate object; or (if a Kantian), he has in mind the
immediate object, and, connected directly with that, such a vague image
as has just been described. This is what he actually has in mind so
far as _objects_ are concerned. He does not, however, merely recognize
the existence in his mind of these different images in their relations
to each other, but he looks upon this mental arrangement as somehow
justified by experience and embodying truth.

When we ask what the word "_justified_" can mean in this connection,
it is not easy to find an answer. Within the sphere of the immediately
known the meaning of the word is plain enough. When I have constructed
in my imagination a certain image or complex of images embodying a
belief as to matter of fact, I say the mental operation is justified
when I can substitute for the idea the percept which it is supposed to
represent, or can know indirectly that this might be done according
to known laws of the appearance and disappearance of percepts. Thus
I perceive the outside of a tree-trunk and form an idea of what lies
under the bark. I have reason to know that by stripping off the
bark I can substitute for the image I have formed the corresponding
percept. And if I see at a distance a similar tree growing upon an
inaccessible cliff, and form an image of what lies under its bark, I
may still regard this as justified by the possibility of referring to
cases in which a similar image, arising out of a similar experience,
has been found to be justified. It is a legitimate inference that, if
circumstances were somewhat different, the proper percept might take
the place of this image too. It is evident, however, that the word
"justified" cannot be used in this or any analogous sense in speaking
of the relation not of an image to a percept, but of an image or a
percept to a something that, by hypothesis, cannot itself enter into
experience at all. What then can the word mean? It at first interests
us to know that "some Snarks are Boojums," but our interest lapses when
we discover that we have absolutely no mark by which we may know a
Boojum from anything else.

But I must not be drawn into digressions. The points with which I am
concerned are these:--FIRST: When a man says he sees this tree or that
house, he ordinarily speaks as if there were but the one object in his
thought. If he distinguishes at all between an immediate and a mediate
object, the language that he uses would not indicate that he does so.
And even after men have entered into lengthy arguments for the purpose
of marking this distinction, and insisting that things are not single
as they seem to the unreflective, they still indulge in this peculiar
use of language, which would imply either that they have forgotten for
the time being their own distinction between the immediate and the
mediate, or that they regard the two as the same in Sense I, and to be
treated as one. Certainly, in their reasonings upon this subject, men
who hold to the two kinds of objects do confound them with one another,
and strengthen their faith in the two by this misconception, as I shall
show later. We have here, then, what we may call a kind of sameness, or
pseudo-sameness, which deserves investigation, and which one should be
careful not to confound with sameness of other kinds. Whether the word
same is commonly applied in the premises is indifferent to my purpose.
In the remainder of the present section I will consider the relation
between the mental representative and its assumed correlatives.

SECOND: If we are to accept not merely the world of objects immediately
known, but also a world or two worlds corresponding to this, and yet
distinct from it, we cannot be sure our list of samenesses is complete
unless we traverse in our search for the different kinds all the
spheres of being in which we believe, and of which we think we can
have some knowledge. In the section following this one I will try to
discover the kinds of sameness which a believer in "external" things
may reasonably attribute to them within their own sphere. In this
there is no question of the relation of something in one sphere to a
correlative something in another.

For the first point. What is in a man's mind when he is thinking of his
percept as having a "real" object corresponding to it, I have shown
to be as follows: He has in mind an immediate object and a duplicate
of this, not necessarily altogether like it, imagined as standing
in a causal relation to it and represented by it. When it occurs to
him that this imagined duplicate is itself an immediate object and
not the "real" one, he does as much for it, and provides it with a
similar duplicate. In every case, when he tries to think of an object
immediately perceived as having a "real" correlate, he simply furnishes
it with an imaginary double in this way. What else is he to do? He
is trying to think of two objects; the "real" object cannot, it is
said, be in the mind; he must then imagine it. If he is a Lockian he
will have in mind the immediate object and two imaginary ones, one
signifying the "real" object as a bundle of qualities, and the other, a
highly vague one, picturing the "substance."

Now, since this is all that can be before the man's mind, any kind of
sameness which concerns the percept and the "real" thing _must mean
to him some relation between the immediate object and the image or
images of which I have spoken_. When this is realized it is seen that
we have here not a new kind of sameness, a distinct experience, but a
kind already discussed. The relation between the immediate object and
the images described is simply that between representative and thing
represented. This I have already examined within the field of what
is recognized as immediately known. Here, too, it would seem that we
are in the field of the immediately known, since we have to do with
percepts and ideas, but though these images are in this field, they are
here, so to speak, under protest, and their framing is supposed to be
justified[18] only by something assumed to be not in this field. When
this something is thought of at all it is thought of in just the way
I have described. This is what thinking it means. Nevertheless, this
duplicate world is assumed to be a world apart, and for this reason I
have considered the sameness of percepts and their corresponding "real"
objects by itself. It gives us sameness in sense seventh.

  [18] I have already pointed out the vagueness in this word.

In writing the foregoing I have had in mind chiefly the position of
the Lockian. I need not consider at length that taken by the Kantian,
for what I have said will, with little change, apply to it also. If I
hold to a "noumenon" as corresponding to my "phenomenon," and yet deny
to it all qualities whatsoever, I must, to retain any appearance of
consistency, represent it in my mind in the very vaguest possible way.
Nevertheless, I must represent it, or I am not thinking of it at all,
and I must relate the phenomenon and this vague representation in the
way described. A true consistency would, of course, make impossible the
whole process, for it would make impossible the giving of any quality
at all to the representation, and the putting any relation between it
and the phenomenon. In so dark a night cats do not merely turn grey,
they disappear. On the other hand, if one is too liberal with this
"noumenon," it palpably ceases to be a "noumenon," and degenerates into
something very like a "phenomenon." The illusion must not be lost. Both
these conflicting tendencies may be well illustrated in Mr. Spencer's
"Unknowable." If we really refuse to allow to the consciousness of it
"any qualitative or quantitative expression whatever,"[19] our vague
image wholly disappears and there is nothing left in our consciousness
but the "phenomenon." While if we follow the "First Principles"
in coaxing it back into existence by allowing it reality,[20] and
causality,[21] and a freedom from limits,[22] and printing its name
with a capital letter,[23] as though it were even better than other
things--if we do all this there is danger of the convalescent's
becoming too robust altogether. The problem has its parallel in the
practical problem of paying wages:--one must not pay too little, or he
loses his laborer; nor too much, or he loses his money. The thing is to
find the happy mean which will keep an object of thought before a man's
mind and yet not make him lose all appearance of consistency.

  [19] First Principles. Part I, Chap. 4, § 26. N. Y., 1888, p. 91.

  [20] _Ibid._ Chap. 4, § 24; Chap. 5, §§ 31, 32, _et passim_.

  [21] _Ibid._ Chap. 5, § 31, _et passim_.

  [22] _Ibid._ Chap. 4, § 24.

  [23] _Ibid._ Chap. 5, § 32, _et passim_.

But in which ever of the ways mentioned a man thinks of "real" things,
he does what I have described. And when he implies that the immediately
known and the "real" are in some sense the same, as he does when he
talks as if there were but the one object, or asserts that we do not
know things as they are in themselves but only as they appear to us;
he really uses the word same in the fifth sense that I have given. The
fact that he is using it to indicate the relation between percepts and
a certain class of ideas which he has come to regard as duplicates of
his percepts does not make the use of the word a new one. Whatever may
be the state of affairs outside of his consciousness, this is all that
takes place within it; and the word same, used in this connection, can
mean no more to him than I have said.


SEC. 9. To avoid needless prolixity I will class together and very
briefly treat of the kinds of sameness which one may attribute
to "external" things. It is not necessary to go at length into
the discussion of these, for since the "external" world, as it is
assumed by those who have faith in it, is, to the man thinking it,
simply a more or less modified duplicate of the world of things
immediately perceived; and since all ground for attributing to it
any determinations at all must be found in that which is immediately
perceived; we may naturally look to find in it nothing that we have
not already found in this immediate world. How, indeed, could anything
else get into it? We cannot have _in_ mind what is by hypothesis _out_
of mind. The "real" world is then, in the mind of the man who thinks
it, a world of imagined objects, and the world of imagination depends
for its material upon the world of sense. A little reflection will show
that the kinds of sameness of these "realities" are only the kinds of
sameness already discussed duplicated, and assumed to belong to a new
world.

1. An "external" quality or group of qualities may be said to be the
_same_ with itself at any one instant. Here we have Sense I carried
over into the field of imagined duplicates.

2. An "external" quality existing at one time may be said to be the
_same_ with an "external" quality existing at another time, to indicate
that the two are similar. The same thing may be true of any group of
qualities. Here we have Sense II.

3. The "external" bundle of qualities, which formed for Locke the
knowable element in a thing or "body," may be regarded as being the
_same_ at two different times--as having, so to speak, a life-history.
Here one is simply calling up in thought the experience described under
Sense III.

4. Two "external" things (bundles of "real" qualities), or two
"external" qualities, existing at one time, may be called the _same_ to
mark similarity. Here we have Sense IV.

5. An "external" thing (in the sense just indicated), or an "external"
quality, may be called the _same_ with its representative. If this
representative be the immediate object of knowledge, we have the
experience described as Sense VII. If it be another "external" thing
or quality, _e. g._, an "external" picture in an "external" mirror, an
"external" statue in "external" marble, etc., we have Sense V.

6. Two men may be said to perceive the _same_ "external" thing. In
saying this one simply calls up in mind the complex described at length
under VI, but makes the duplicate, which is, to him, the thing, stand
in the complex in the place of the percept, this being now regarded as
a mere representative.

7. An "external" thing may be said to be the _same_ with its
representative in consciousness or with the substance or noumenon
assumed to underlie it. Here we have Sense VII.

It would seem scarcely necessary to mention this last, since, if
the representative in consciousness can be called the same with its
"real" correlate, it would seem self-evident that the "real" correlate
may be called the same with it. I add it, however, for the sake of
completeness. It should be noted that in this last kind of sameness
we step over the limits of any one class of being, ideas, things (as
bundles of qualities), or substance. The word is used to denote a
relation between something in one class and a corresponding thing in
another class.

In the foregoing I have been considering the sameness of "real"
or "external" things regarded as bundles of qualities. If one ask
concerning the sameness of Locke's "substance," or the "noumenon" of
other writers, I would say that our notions of this must vary with
the kind of being we allow this nebulous entity. Strict consistency
in dealing with a noumenon as sometimes defined means, of course, its
utter collapse. If, however, we keep anything in mind at all, we must
carry over to it at least the first of the kinds of sameness described.
I do not think it would be hard to show that several other kinds are
carried over in despite of consistency by men who hold to this shadowy
something under one name or another.

As, however, we do not find here any new sense of the word same, but
mere repetition in a new field (if one may call it such), it seems
unnecessary to dwell upon this part of my subject.

I have not discussed at all the sameness of things from the point of
view of an adherent of that Natural Realism which claims that we know
immediately real things and yet holds that real things are not our
perceptions themselves, but something extra-mental. This view is so
incoherent that it is not likely to be taken seriously by men who
have learned to reflect at all. I may say, however, _en passant_, that
it does not add to the kinds of sameness I have described: it merely
confounds them one with another, and falls into the inconsequences
which naturally result from so doing.


SEC. 10. When we come to the question of the sameness of the Self or
Ego we are, if possible, on more debatable ground than heretofore.
The whole subject of our knowledge of the Self lies as yet, in the
opinion of many, very much in the dark. Without undertaking the task of
defining narrowly what this elusive something is, it would seem that I
may safely make concerning it at least the following assertions:

In using the word self, we may have reference either to what is
immediately known as appearing in the circle of consciousness, the
phenomenon, or to a something supposed to lie beyond this sphere and to
be known only through its representative in consciousness.

Now this something beyond may be looked at in various ways. John
Locke, in discussing the not-self, made the three-fold division of
idea, bundle of "real" qualities, and substance. He might with equal
reason have distinguished in a similar way between the self as idea
(the immediately known), the self as a bundle of "real" qualities (not
immediately known), and the self as substance. As a matter of fact,
however, he did not put the not-self and the self upon the same plane.
He seemed to think that we know the self more immediately, and to hold
that it enters consciousness as the bundle of "real" qualities[24]
which, in the case of matter, is assumed to lie beyond. The "substance"
of the self, however, he condemns to outer darkness and the company
of material substance. To me there seems no reason, admitting the
right to pass at all beyond the immediately perceived, for making
the distinction which he does make. And as one, who has followed him
with assent in his treatment of the not-self, may, with some justice
complain of his inconsistency and refuse to follow him here, I mention
the position he might have taken as well as the position he actually
did take with respect to the self and its existences.

  [24] Compare Bk. 4, Ch. 9, § 3 of the "Essay," with Bk. 4, Ch. 11,
  §§ 1, 4, 7, 8, and 9.


SEC. 11. The word self may then be regarded as referring either:

1. To the self as phenomenon, a something immediately perceived, a part
or the whole of our conscious experience;

2. To a complex of "real" qualities beyond and represented by the self
as it appears in consciousness;

3. To the substance of self, or self as noumenon, a vague and
ill-defined something, supposed to be distinct from and to underlie
phenomena or "real" qualities; or

4. To two, or to all, of these taken together.

If the word is used in the last of these senses any inquiry concerning
sameness must split up its complex meaning and treat separately the
different elements included. It remains, then, to inquire what kinds of
sameness we may attribute to the self in the first three senses given.
I will take them in reverse order.


SEC. 12. With respect to the third sense, which makes it refer to
the "substance" of Locke or the "noumenon" of other writers: all the
difficulties which arise out of the endeavor to attribute sameness of
any kind to any substance or noumenon obtain here also. But it seems
on the surface more glaringly inconsistent in the adherent of noumena
to discriminate between different kinds as admitting of differences of
treatment than it does for him to suppose them capable of treatment
at all. Things that differ cannot be conceived as differing except
in qualities, and here there is question not of qualities but of
noumena. If one is to retain any appearance of consistency, he must
not maintain that the word same is applicable in any given sense to
certain noumena and not to others. If he does so, he openly abandons
his noumena to a phenomenal fate. And, as a matter of fact, I think it
is plain that those believers in noumena, who distinguish them from
one another, yet think of them in just the one way. If we take the
utterances of a good representative of the class, Sir William Hamilton,
we may see that although he distinguishes between the noumenal ego and
the noumenal non-ego, not only do his clearest statements make such
a distinction out of the question, but the distinction drawn is so
vague and insignificant[25] that the two noumena may be thought of and
reasoned about in the one way. Phenomena being abstracted, what was in
his mind when he spoke of the one was probably in no respect different
from what was in his mind when he spoke of the other. In so far, then,
as the noumena themselves are concerned, it would seem that any kind
of sameness which we may predicate of the noumenal not-self we may
predicate on the same ground and with equal justice of the noumenal
self, and _vice versa_. If, however, any sense of the word same marks
a relation between a noumenon and some other thing or things, and if
the two noumena differ as respects this relation, then this kind of
sameness may be attributed to the one and not to the other. It may
be claimed that we indicate just such a relation in using the word
same in Sense VI; and that, whatever one might do, one would under no
circumstances speak of two men as perceiving the same self, noumenal
or any other. I shall discuss this point when I come to discuss the
sameness of self as phenomenon.

  [25] Lectures on Metaphysics, VIII, N. Y., 1880, p. 97.

I may add here that when one obliterates the distinction between
noumena by plunging them into the darkness of the "unknowable," there
can, of course, be no question of a new sense of the word same in the
field I am discussing. On the general question of noumenal sameness,
all that it seems to me necessary to say I have said before.


SEC. 13. The second sense of the word self would make it a complex of
"real" qualities beyond, and represented by, the self as it appears
in consciousness. Now, I do not think that the fact that one would
attribute to the self, so considered, one class of qualities, and to
the not-self another class, would, when the two "real" objects are
considered in themselves, prevent one's ascribing to the former all the
kinds of sameness which one may ascribe to the latter, or would justify
the assumption of a new kind of sameness proper only to the former. In
discussing the sameness of "external" things I have not made any one
kind of it dependent upon the peculiar quality of their qualities, if I
may so speak. I considered them only as groups of qualities in general,
supposed to be external to consciousness. The idea of the "real" self
is in its general character essentially similar to that of the "real"
not-self. Provided that the two classes of qualities have enough in
common to be properly called qualities, and to be capable of being
related to each other in groups, they may differ in kind _toto cœlo_
without necessitating a difference of treatment from the point of view
with which I am at present concerned. It is very evident, however,
that those who have thought of the self as a "real" thing, distinct
from consciousness, and yet to be in some way intelligibly represented
in thought, have had a tendency to represent it very much as they
have represented material objects. There has been a general effort to
get rid of the idea of extension, but this has been shown rather in
reducing the size of the object and attributing to it inconsistent
space relations than in denying it such relations altogether. Bishop
Butler's argument for immortality from the indiscerptibility of the
uncompounded shows that he thought of the self as he thought of a
material atom,[26] and Sir William Hamilton's scholastic notion of the
ubiquity of the soul in the bodily organism--"all in the whole and all
in every part"[27]--makes it sufficiently clear that he thought of it
so, too; though, to be sure, such ubiquity would make of it a very
queer atom indeed. If, then, the man, who holds to the self in the
second sense of the word, calls up in using the word a mental complex
like that which represents to him a "real" not-self, there is all the
more reason why we should not expect to find anything in his thought
which would suggest a new kind of sameness within the sphere of the
"real" self. It remains, of course, to notice here, as in the case of
the noumenal self, that any sense of the word same which has reference
not so much to the things under discussion as to the relations of these
things to other things, may, if self and not-self differ as to these
relations, be applicable to the one and not to the other. Thus Sense
VI may be regarded as inapplicable to the "real" self. I will discuss
this point more fully in a few moments. With this one exception we
may, therefore, I think, apply the kinds of sameness enumerated under
Sec. 9 as obtaining in the sphere of "external" things to the "real"
self also, and it would seem that no new kinds are to be added. It is
unnecessary to repeat here the classification already given.

  [26] "Analogy," Part 1. Chap. I.

  [27] Lectures on Metaphysics, XXV., N. Y., 1880, p. 356. Hamilton's
  utterances concerning "reality" are incoherent, and inconsistent.
  I do him no injustice, however, if I give the above as "one of his
  views."


SEC. 14. We come finally to the self as a something immediately
perceived, the self as phenomenon or idea. I do not mean to use
these names in a question-begging way, and I will try to exhaust all
reasonable possibilities in discussing it and its samenesses.

Now, whatever the self is, it would seem that it must be, in so far
as it is a thing immediately known, either a part or the whole of
consciousness, or one or the other of these regarded in some peculiar
aspect or relation.

If it be a part of consciousness, recognized as distinct from another
part, the non-ego, we may reasonably maintain:

1. That the perceived self is at any moment what it is--is the same
with itself. The question whether it be simple and unanalyzable does
not affect the problem. This is sameness in sense I.

2. That if it be simple and unanalyzable, this simple element of
consciousness may be the same at two different times, and if complex,
two elements or two complexes of elements, belonging to different times
may be the same. This is sameness in sense II.

3. That if we regard the self as an object having a life-history, as
consisting of successive elements united in a series as sense elements
are united in the series which is for us a material object (immediately
known), we may speak of its being the same on two successive days, even
though it exhibit dissimilar qualities, primary reference being had not
to likeness of elements, but to the experience which has been described
at length in discussing sense III.

4. That we may speak of two selves, of two elements of two selves (if
selves be complex), or of two elements of one self (if one self may
contain two such elements), as at any one time the same, to indicate
that they are similar. This is sameness in sense IV. It should be
kept in mind, however, that we never look upon one consciousness as
containing two selves as it contains one self, or as it may contain
two material objects (immediately known). The second self in mind is
recognized as present only as an imagined object. Nevertheless it
would seem quite proper to use the word same to mark this relation of
similarity between the perceived self and an imagined self, just as we
use it to mark a likeness of two material objects, or of one material
object and the memory image of such an object.

5. That we may speak of the self and its representative as the same.
The memory image of a later time may stand for the self as experienced
at an earlier. Unless it be claimed that yesterday's consciousness
of self is actually to-day's consciousness, one must admit that the
self remembered is the self known through its proxy. And one may in
his reasonings about the self use as a symbol the pronoun "I," paying
little attention as he goes along to what it stands for, and yet
knowing it may serve in place of the obscure something it represents.
These are instances of sameness in sense V.

6. That we never use the word same in sense VI in speaking of the self
as we do in speaking of the not-self. We do not say two men perceive
the same self as we say they perceive the same tree or house. The
familiar distinction between the subjective and the objective marks out
the latter as in a sense, peculiar to itself, common and impersonal.

I have already shown what we have in mind when we say two men see the
same material thing. We have a picture of the thing, and of the bodies
of the two men in a certain relation to it; and we imagine a copy of
the thing as in some way connected with each of these bodies, and due
to its relation to the thing. When relations to a material object are
in question all the bodies in a consciousness are on a par. We may
directly perceive the one thing and two or more bodies holding similar
relations to it. But it is not so in the case of selves. The one self
that we find in each consciousness seems to be peculiarly related to
one body to the exclusion of others. And as we have not, in the case of
this self, the conditions which led us to mark the similar relations
of two human bodies (our representatives of the men) to one material
object, by saying two men see the same thing, we, of course, do not
say that two men see the same self. The word same, in sense VI, we may
regard, then, as inapplicable to the self as immediately known.[28]
This appears to be due, however, not to the nature of this self in
itself considered, but to its peculiar relation to the other things in
a consciousness.

  [28] Owing to the ambiguity already pointed out as existing in terms
  which stand for our objects of knowledge and our knowledge of these
  objects, it would seem almost impossible to avoid misconception
  without unendurable reiteration. In the above paragraph, by the words
  "body," "object," "self," etc., I always refer to things immediately
  known.

Moreover, since the other two selves, the self as group of "real"
qualities and the self as noumenon, are to us, as it were, shadows
cast by the self immediately known--assumed to exist only because this
is known to exist, and thought of as "present" only because this is
known to be present--since, I say, these two selves hold in our thought
this peculiar relation of dependence upon the self in consciousness,
it is to be expected that we never find any one speaking of two men
as seeing the same "real" self as one might readily speak of two men
as seeing the same "real" tree. One says he has evidence that two men
see the same "real" tree, when he has or can have in consciousness an
immediately perceived tree and two immediately perceived human bodies
in a certain relation to it. If no one had ever had this experience in
the sphere of the immediately known, we have no reason to think any one
would ever have thought of applying the phrase in question to a tree
mediately known. And as we do not have a similar experience touching
the self in consciousness, it is only natural to find that no one
applies the phrase to any self out of consciousness. When things differ
their shadows ought to differ too. Sameness in sense VI we may regard,
then, as not attributable to self in any of the three senses of the
word.

7. That, finally, there seems no more reason why one should not call
the self as immediately known the same with the self as "external"
thing, or with the self as noumenon, than the not-self as similarly
perceived the same with the not-self as similarly inferred. The
supposed relationships are in the two cases exactly alike. Here we have
sameness in sense VII.


SEC. 15. If we claim that by the self as immediately known we
understand not a part but the whole of consciousness, we should
seem, unless we in some way modify our statement, to obliterate the
distinction between self and not-self. Still, taking the words simply,
and assuming that we mean by self all that is immediately known, we do
not find that this will necessitate any important difference in the
discussion of its samenesses. Consciousness as a whole is certainly
what it is, or the same with itself, at any instant: two elements in it
belonging to different times, or two complexes of elements belonging to
different times may be the same, as being alike; it may be regarded as
having a life history, and may from this point of view be called the
same at different times without regard to similarity; two simultaneous
elements or complexes of elements in it may be called the same to mark
the fact that they resemble each other, or it, as a whole, may for the
same reason be called the same with another consciousness (imagined);
it and its representative (for example, the memory-image of its former
self), may be called the same; and we may use the word same to indicate
its relation to its supposed "real" correlate in an extra-consciousness
world, whether we make this "thing" or "noumenon."

It will be observed that in the preceding I have allowed the self,
considered as the whole of consciousness, all the kinds of sameness
upon my list except the sixth. There is, however, no objection,
except that arising from oddity of expression, against allowing it
this kind of sameness too. If we really mean by the self the whole of
consciousness, then everything immediately perceived is a part of the
self. If then, it is proper to say two men see the same tree, one
may go on to say, if one choses, that two men see a part of the one
self. Such an expression could, of course, be used only in speaking of
the objective part of this self, the part which those who distinguish
between ego and non-ego call the not-self. It is needless to say that
no one ever thinks of talking in this way. I merely mention the point
for the sake of completeness in my analysis.


SEC. 16. If by the self we do not understand a part or the whole of
consciousness taken simply, but the one or the other of these regarded
from some peculiar point of view, does it affect the question of the
kinds of sameness we may attribute to it? It may be asserted, for
example, that when we are thinking of the world of things immediately
perceived as conditioned by its relation to a particular organism (also
immediately perceived)--as duplicated by a pressure on the eyes, as
annihilated by a blow on the head--we make these things mental, and
properly include them under the head of self; whereas, when we abstract
these same things in thought from the organism, and, so to speak,
objectify them, we properly include them under the head of not-self. We
are thus to regard the one thing as an element of the self or of the
not-self, according to the light in which it is viewed. But it does not
seem to me that if we take the word self in the sense just described,
or in any analogous sense, we need alter the list of samenesses already
given. We are still considering a part or the whole of consciousness,
and the fact that we are viewing it in one light rather than another
would not apparently influence in any way its kinds of sameness.


SEC. 17. This would certainly appear to be the case if we take the
words _part_ and _whole_ of consciousness in their common acceptation,
as denoting a portion or the totality of mental elements (sensations,
feelings, volitions, ideas), in their various relations to each other.
It remains, however, to consider a position, which, it may be claimed,
is not covered by the foregoing classification of possible positions,
when the words "part" and "whole" are thus understood. Suppose that
one distinguishes in the Kantian fashion between the _form_ and the
_matter_ of what appears in consciousness, and maintains that the
formal element, the arrangement, or "unity" of consciousness is to
be attributed to mind, or, if you please, is mind, and for "mind" I
may here write "self," while the matter or content, the raw material
to be elaborated and related, is to be distinguished from this as a
thing apart. Can it be shown that the above given kinds of sameness
have significance in regard to the self so understood? Whether we
call this a _part_ of consciousness or not will depend on our use of
terms. It is not a part, as commonly understood, nor is it the whole of
consciousness.

Now, it has seemed to me that those who have laid most emphasis upon
this formal element in consciousness have been very vague in their
treatment of it. On the part of many writers there is little evidence
of even an attempt at scientific exactitude. And yet it does not
appear that the subject admits of treatment only in this loose and
unsatisfactory way. If we can discuss it at all, there seems no reason
why, with increasing knowledge, we may not expect to discuss it with
accuracy and precision.

If we consider this formal element of consciousness in a concrete
instance, it may help us to classify our ideas concerning it. Let
us imagine three points in such relations to each other that when
each is connected with the other two by straight lines we have an
equilateral triangle. The three points are, of course, what they are at
any instant. And whatever a relation may be, if the mutual relations
of these three points are capable of being considered apart from the
points, as a distinct element in consciousness, there appears no reason
why we should not assert with equal justice that these relations are
what they are at any instant. When we take note of the points we take
note of the relations, and we do not confound the one with the other.

And just as I may say that such a set of three points imagined or
observed now is the same with another and a similar set imagined or
observed at some former time, meaning by the word same to indicate
similarity, and not sameness in the strict sense mentioned just above;
so there appears no reason at all why I may not say that the mutual
relations of the one set of points are the same with the mutual
relations of the other, making here, too, the distinction between
sameness in the former, stricter, sense, and sameness in this second
sense of similarity. If what is contained in a consciousness at any one
instant, is, _ipso facto_, to be distinguished from what is contained
in it at any other instant, there seems equal reason for making this
distinction in the material element and in the formal. It is quite
true that men are not accustomed to carrying this distinction into the
region of form. The whole history of the dispute as to universals is
evidence of the way in which men have confounded the kinds of sameness;
but I fancy that even those who would clearly recognize that red
color imagined yesterday and red color imagined to-day are the same
merely in being similar, or in standing in a relation of original and
representative, would yet not think of distinguishing triangularity
noticed yesterday from triangularity noticed to-day, and marking that
they are not the same in the first and strictest sense of the word.
And yet it would be hard to show why two indistinguishably similar
color sensations, existing in consciousness at different times, are to
be kept apart in thought and recognized as two sensations, while two
occurrences of the consciousness of triangularity (I use the clumsy
phrase to avoid any question-begging word), are not to be distinguished
as separate in a similar way. To say that the formal element is not
a thing, but an activity, does not alter the position. If an activity
is enough of a thing to be talked about and distinguished from other
things, we may surely recognize an activity in consciousness yesterday
as numerically different from an activity in consciousness to-day.

Furthermore, if, instead of taking as simple an instance of form as
the relations of the three points I have been discussing, I choose to
take the sum total of the relations between the material elements (here
I use _material_ as correlative to _formal_), which go to make up the
life history of a material object, say a tree, why may I not speak of
the formal tree as being the same at two times, meaning thereby that
the group of relations co-existent at any one time may be regarded as
representative of any other group belonging to the one series or of
the whole series? To be sure, I am not justified by common usage in
thus speaking, since common usage marks only distinctions which are
practically important, and by the words "the same tree" includes both
form and matter. Nevertheless, I can see no reason why, if this element
of form does admit of being considered apart, it is not at least
possible to find in this field the kind of sameness we have in mind
when we say that we have seen on two successive days the same tree.

Again, if I can speak of two simultaneous sensations of redness in one
consciousness (_e. g._, the two halves of a red surface), as the same,
meaning to indicate simply similarity, why may I not also speak of two
simultaneous "experiences of triangularity" in one consciousness as the
same, and keep clearly in mind here, too, that I mean only to indicate
similarity? If I can speak of a sensation or a complex of sensations
in one consciousness as the same with a similar sensation or group of
sensations in another, and yet not forget that I am dealing with two
things, why may I not do as much for two similar relations or groups
of relations in two consciousnesses? If in the one case I do not
confound sameness in the sense of similarity with sameness of the kind
we mean when we say each thing is at each instant the same with itself,
why should I do so in the other case? If, I repeat, the formal element
in consciousness is enough of a thing to be distinguished from the
material element and discussed, there appears no reason why it should
not be open to distinctions of this kind.

And when I call up in memory a triangle once seen, the memory image
would seem to stand as a representative of the original in both its
elements, form and matter. In neither should the representative be
confounded with the original. If we may use the word same to indicate
this peculiar relation of representation between two things yet
recognized as two, it would seem only just to allow this distinction as
much in the case of triangularity as in the case of redness or blueness.

As to the sixth kind of sameness. May we grant this to the self, if by
self we mean the formal element of consciousness? I have said a little
way back, before taking up the distinction of formal and material,
that, if we make the word self cover all the immediately known, there
is nothing to prevent one's saying that two men see a part of the
same self, for material objects (immediately known) would have to be
regarded as such parts. And here it is evident that if we make self to
cover the whole of the formal element in a consciousness, it of course
includes the formal element in what we may call the objective side of
consciousness--the side which is, in some sense of the words, common
and impersonal. Now, we do say that two men see the same tree, and by
tree, the man who distinguishes between form and matter means a certain
complex containing both formal and material elements. These elements
he believes he can distinguish from one another, and pay attention
predominantly now to the one, and now to the other. Does it not seem
to follow that a man may as truly be said to see the formal element as
the material, and that two men who see the same tree may with justice
be said to see the same shape or arrangement of parts? In other words,
may we not apply the sixth sense of the word same to the formal element
in consciousness if this element is a thing capable of treatment at
all? And if this formal element in a tree seen by two men is a part of
the self, why may we not say that two men see a part of the same self,
even though we make self mere form? It would sound very odd to say so,
of course, but that should not weigh with a philosopher, if consistency
require it.

Finally, if I may call an immediately perceived object the same with
its supposed "external" correlate, not confounding the two, but
merely marking by the word a peculiar instance of the representative
relation, why may I not, if I believe that "external" things stand in
"real" relations to each other truly represented by our perceptions
of things and their relations--why, in this case, may I not speak of
the relations, "external" and "internal," as the same, without on that
account forgetting that I am pointing out a relation between two things
(if I may thus speak of relations), numerically different? Are they not
as different as the "matter" of consciousness and its correlate in the
"outer" world?


SEC. 18. In the foregoing I have endeavored to make my list of the
kinds of sameness complete. I can think of nothing that has been
overlooked; but as I have been trying to force a path through a thicket
few have made any sustained effort to penetrate, it is quite possible
my map of the ground may need emendation. I shall be very glad of any
criticism which will help me to improve it. And as the many divisions
made, and the many distinctions drawn, may very possibly tend to
produce in one who has followed the discussion thus far, a state of
mind akin to that of the "true-begotten" Gobbo, when he was obligingly
directed to the Jew's house by his hopeful son, a short summary of the
results obtained may serve to facilitate apprehension and intelligent
criticism.

What has been done is this:

I began by considering the kinds of sameness of things immediately
known, leaving out of consideration for the time being the sameness of
the self or ego. This resulted in the following kinds:

I. Any mental element or complex of mental elements may be said to be
the same with itself at any instant.

II. Any mental element or complex of mental elements in existence at
one time may be called the same with a mental element or complex of
mental elements existing at another time, to indicate that the two are
similar.

III. We may say that we perceive the same object (complex of mental
elements) at two different times, when we do not mean that what is
actually experienced on the two occasions is the same in either of the
preceding senses; but only that the two experiences are terms in a
certain series, the whole of which may be regarded as represented by
any part. In this sense does one see the same tree on two succeeding
days.

IV. Any two mental elements or complexes of mental elements in
consciousness at the one time may be called the same to mark the fact
that they are alike.

V. Any mental element or complex of mental elements may be called the
same with its representative, whether this representative resemble it
or not.

VI. When a man has learned from experience of his own body (as a thing
immediately known) that a consciousness of his body in a certain
peculiar relation to a given object (complex of mental elements) is a
presupposition to a consciousness of the object, and wishes to mark
the fact that he is perceiving or imagining two human bodies in this
relation to a single object, and connecting in thought with each of
them a picture of the object, he may say that he is perceiving or
imagining two men seeing the same object. This sense of the word same
obviously expresses quite a complex thought.

VII. In addition to these kinds of sameness found within the sphere of
the immediately known, we obtain one kind by stepping beyond it, which,
since we step beyond it, so to speak, with only one foot, may be here
mentioned as belonging at least partially to the world of immediate
objects. When we have come to believe that things in consciousness
have their correlates in a world outside of consciousness, we may
speak of the things in consciousness as the same with their "external"
correlates; or, at any rate, we may talk of them as if they were the
same in some sense of the word which will allow us to include the two
(or three) distinct things under one name, and treat them as one. This
is constantly done. The importance of remembering that we have really
more than one thing to consider, it would seem scarcely necessary to
emphasize. How far this is really a new kind of sameness I discussed at
some length.

After having marked these seven kinds of sameness as having to do with
the immediately known, I proceeded to consider the kinds of sameness
which may obtain in a world or worlds beyond consciousness. It was
pointed out that one may look upon the "external" in three ways. One
may believe in "external" things as merely bundles of "real" qualities,
and may stop there: or one may believe in such bundles of "real"
qualities, and in addition hold to "substance" or "substratum" as an
obscure something implied by these "real" qualities: or, lastly, one
may hold that the only correlate of the thing in consciousness is
"noumenon," a thing not distinguishable from the "substance" above
mentioned.

It was then shown that a realm of "external" things, consisting of
bundles of "real" qualities in a world beyond consciousness, would,
since it is to the man thinking it merely a duplicate of the immediate
world, admit of the existence of all the kinds of sameness above
enumerated, and would not furnish any one kind which might increase the
list. And with respect to the "external" as noumenon, it was stated
that if the noumenal be represented to the mind at all, at least the
first kind of sameness must be attributed to it, and that other kinds
will be, in proportion to the degree of clearness allowed this vague
and inconsistent entity. No new kind of sameness need, however, be
looked for in this field. If one hold to the "external" in both kinds,
he must, of course, search three distinct realms of being before he
can be sure that he has not overlooked any legitimate sense of the
word same. As a result of the foregoing analysis we may maintain
that, whatever be his belief as to ideas, things, and noumena, his
search will not result in more than the seven kinds of sameness I have
given. In the assumed new fields we find mere repetition. The pure
Idealist would reduce the list to six by dropping off the seventh kind
altogether.

Next, as to the sameness of the Self or Ego. It was pointed out that
one may take the word self to mean: (1) the self in consciousness,
or as phenomenon; (2) the self as bundle of "real" qualities out of
consciousness; (3) the self as "substance" or "noumenon;" (4) two of
these, or all of these, taken together.

It was said that as the fourth sense is sufficiently discussed in
examining the first three, it would not be separately considered. The
three remaining senses were then taken up in reverse order. The third
and the Second were found to furnish no new kind of sameness, and to
be on a par with the corresponding senses of the word "not-self,"
except as touching the sixth kind of sameness. As respects this, it
was admitted that no one would speak of two men as perceiving the same
self, whether as bundle of "real" qualities or as noumenon. It was
remarked, however, that this is due not to a difference in the self
and not-self in themselves considered, but to a difference in their
relation to other things in a consciousness.

The self in consciousness, or as immediately known, was then discussed.
It was stated that we may safely assume this to be either a part or
the whole of consciousness, or the one or the other of these in some
peculiar aspect or relation. Self, viewed as a part of consciousness,
was found to furnish no new kind of sameness, and was found to admit of
all the kinds discovered except the sixth; this one being inadmissible
from the fact that when we make the self a part of consciousness we
always make it the subjective part and not the objective. Self, viewed
as the whole of consciousness, was likewise found to furnish no new
kind of sameness, and it was found to admit of all the seven kinds
discovered--even of the sixth, though in a modified way, since this
kind can belong only to a part of the self, the objective part, which
is in some sense common and impersonal. It may, to be sure, be objected
that it would be contrary to common usage to speak of two men as seeing
the same self in any sense of that word; but in making the self the
whole of consciousness one has already abandoned the common standpoint,
and one may as well be consistent in carrying out the consequences.
Assuming the self to be not a part or the whole of consciousness
simply, but regarded in some peculiar aspect or relation, was not found
to be significant as concerns kinds of sameness.

It still remained to consider a possible position; that of the man
who distinguishes between the formal and the material element in
consciousness, and identifies self or mind with the former. The formal
element of consciousness is not a part of consciousness as the word
part is commonly used, nor is it the whole of consciousness, in the
ordinary acceptation of the word whole. And though this view might
very well have been brought under a former head by stretching a little
the meaning of the word part, yet such is its importance that I chose
rather to omit it when discussing self as a part of consciousness
(there using the word part in a limited sense), and to take it up later
by itself.

It was insisted that if the formal element in consciousness is
enough of a thing to be distinguished from something else, and to
be discussed, it is enough of a thing to admit of distinctions and
differences much as other things do. After examination it appeared, as
a matter of fact, that there is no reason why the believer in "form"
should not attribute to it all of the seven kinds of sameness before
described--even (in the modified way described a moment ago) the sixth
kind. And it also appeared that no new kind of sameness is discoverable
in this field. With this closed the search for samenesses.

It will be observed that we have passed in review the self and the
not-self as immediately known, the self and the not-self as bundles of
"real" qualities out of consciousness, and the self and the not-self as
noumenon or substance. I know of no other field in which the search may
be prosecuted, unless such be invented gratuitously by increasing the
"layers" of being in a way no one seems inclined to increase them. And
in view of the fact that the samenesses found in any "layer" below the
first seem to be only repetitions of what we find in that one, we could
have no reason to hope that any such needless increase in strata could
add a single new kind of sameness to those described.


SEC. 19. Now that we have obtained a list of the different kinds of
sameness, we may pass our eye over it with a view to discovering what
the various kinds have in common, and what is the reason that we
express such diverse experiences by the use of the one word. Such an
examination reveals the fact that the common notion which unites them
is the idea of similarity. In some cases this notion lies more in the
foreground than in others, but in all cases it is present, and forms
the bond of union. I will run through the list and point this out,
beginning, however, with the second kind, and reserving the first for
discussion after the others.

II. A mere mention of the second kind of sameness is, in this
connection, sufficient. Two mental experiences are there avowedly
called the same to mark similarity.

III. When we speak of the same object as perceived on two occasions, we
do not, as has been noticed, mean that what is actually in the sense at
the two different times is similar. Nevertheless, we find here, too,
the notion of similarity, for the two experiences are not considered
merely in themselves, but as elements in a group or series, and as
each representing the whole series. When, therefore, we have the two
experiences, we regard ourselves as having in them two experiences
of the one series; which means, to be more explicit, that we have in
mind on the two occasions two complexes which are similar, and which,
when thought of together, are related to each other as the memory
image and its original are related. Here the likeness lies in what is
represented, not in the representatives.

IV. As in the second kind of sameness, so in the fourth, the reference
to similarity is unmistakable. We call qualities or things the same
when they are of the one kind, when they are observed to resemble each
other.

V. The relation of representative and thing represented evidently
implies the notion of similarity. It is quite true that we often
recognize as in this relation things that we do not think of as
being similar at all, and yet a little reflection will show that one
thing can stand for another only _in so far_ as it resembles it. The
resemblance may lie in the qualities of the things in themselves
considered, or it may lie in external relations of which the things
are capable, or functions which they may serve. The very notion of a
proxy is a something which, for the purpose in hand, may be regarded as
capable of assuming the functions of another. In so far as it can do
this it is like the other. Things wholly different (if things could be
wholly different) could not represent each other.

VI. When a man thinks of two other men as perceiving the same object,
he must recognize, if he reflect, that he has in mind a picture of
the object, of two human bodies in a peculiar relation to it, and two
images of the object somehow connected with these bodies. He need
not think of these images as wholly resembling his picture of the
object or each other. He does, indeed, make them more or less like his
picture of the object, but what is prominent in his mind is the thought
of them as representatives, as related to and giving information
concerning the object. I say concerning the object, but this phrase is
ambiguous. If the man under discussion believes in "real" objects in an
extra-consciousness world, he will look upon the images as representing
such a "real" object; though, of course, his guarantee for this
"real" object, and all his information concerning, it must be found
in his picture of the object, and this, or its copy, will stand for
the "real" object in any mental complex he may construct. If the man
be an Idealist, accepting only what can be found in a consciousness,
he will look upon the two images as related to his picture of the
object and representative of that. In any case he must regard them
as representatives, and in this sense the same with the thing they
represent. The notion of similarity which is at the bottom of this idea
of representative and thing represented is then implied in sameness of
the sixth kind also.

VII. And since those who distinguish between the immediate and the
mediate objects of knowledge make the former representative of the
latter, we have evidently this implied notion of similarity in the
seventh kind of sameness as well as in the sixth. The mediate object
is said to be known _through_ the immediate: that is, the qualities
and relations of the one are made to stand for and serve in place of
the qualities and relations of the other. This they can do, of course,
only in so far as the two sets of qualities and relations are similar.
It is easy enough to see that this notion of similarity is present
when we think of an idea or complex of ideas as representing a "real"
thing beyond consciousness, and giving information concerning it. When,
however, we sublimate our "real" thing into a noumenon and strip it of
the determinations which, taken together, make up our idea of a thing,
we destroy, if we are consistent and thorough-going, all notion of
similarity between the two; but in doing this we destroy our noumenon
altogether. If, for instance, we refuse to allow to our notion of a
thing "any qualitative or quantitative expression whatever," we cannot
think of the thing as having reality or existence, or any mark by which
it is to be distinguished from nothing at all. In this case the idea is
no longer representative, for it has nothing to represent. If, on the
other hand, we do not wholly destroy the noumenon, but still allow it a
diluted existence of an indefinite kind, in so far as it has this, and
can be represented in mind at all, it resembles the idea, and just so
far may the idea stand as its representative.

I have already pointed out that several of those who pin their faith to
"external" realities seem to apprehend at times but dimly, if at all,
that the relation of phenomenon and noumenon, or of idea and "real"
thing, is that of representative and thing represented, and that we
have here two things and not one. Certainly they sometimes pass from
one to the other without rhyme or reason, and apparently in complete
unconsciousness of the fact that they have made any change at all.
If, for the time being, they really take the two for one, they are
not thinking of the seventh kind of sameness, but of another kind. As
this is done through mere inadvertence and looseness of reasoning, and
cannot be justified on their own assumptions, it is not worth while to
dwell upon it farther. Where one really has in mind the seventh kind of
sameness, the elements I have mentioned will be found in it.

I. Finally, we come to the perplexing case that I postponed at the
outset. What has sameness of the first kind in common with the rest?
How can we speak of similarity when strictly one thing is in question?
Not one thing in the loose sense in which we call a material object
one thing in its successive states, nor one in the sense in which
the memory image and its original are one, but one thing as a single
element of knowledge is itself at any one instant? How can the idea of
likeness hold here? Dundreary's bird flocking all by itself would seem
to have found its philosophical prototype.

It may be said that though the thing in question is strictly one, yet
we divide it from itself in thought and then affirm it of itself. We
give expression to the logical law of identity by saying that x is
x. But here the difficulty meets us that, if we are really talking
about only the one x, we have said quite all we have to say in merely
saying x; while if, to complete our thought, we must add the second
x, we have not an identical proposition, in any strict sense of the
word, but a synthetic one. It is easy enough in words to divide a
"thing" from "itself," since the words "thing" and "itself" are two,
and may readily be distinguished. In the same way it is easy in words
to affirm a thing to be and not to be at the one time. There is no
law to prevent one's stringing sounds together as he may please. But
if one is interested not in the mere symbols, but in that which they
are supposed to represent, one must see that the expression "x is x,"
to be a significant proposition, must have a subject and a predicate,
and affirm a relation between them. Here we have, by hypothesis,
strictly one thing for subject and predicate. The proposition "x is
x" must then consist of one thing and a relation between it--which
is about as significant as the statement that a door may consist of
one side and a relation between it. Between what? One side.[29] Every
form of proposition employed to give expression to the law of identity
implies this difficulty. Whether we say "x is x," or "whatever is
is," or "everything is identical with itself," our proposition, taken
literally, is either useless (since we have said all we have to say in
mentioning the subject alone), or untrue (since we add a new element in
adding the predicate).

  [29] This abnormal door has its parallel in the now discredited
  _causa sui_. Note the following from Descartes: "De même, lorsque
  nous disons que Dieu est par soi, nous pouvons aussi à la vérité
  entendre cela négativement, comme voulant dire qu'il n'a point de
  cause; mais si nous avons auparavant recherché la cause pourquoi
  il est ou pourquoi il ne cesse point d'être, et que, considérant
  l'immense et incompréhensible puissance qui est contenue dans son
  idée, nous l'ayons reconnue si pleine et si abondante qu'en effet
  elle soit la vraie cause pourquoi il est, et pourquoi il continue
  ainsi toujours d'être, et qu'il n'y en puisse avoir d'autre que
  celle-là, nous disons que Dieu est _par soi_, non plus négativement,
  mais au contraire très positivement. Car, encore qu'il n'est pas
  besoin de dire qu'il est la cause efficiente de soi-même, de peur que
  peut-être on n'entre en dispute du mot; néanmoins, parce que nous<
  voyons que ce qui fait qu'il est par soi, ou qu'il n'a point de cause
  différente de soi-même, ne procède pas du néant, mais de la réelle et
  véritable immensité de sa puissance, il nous est tout a fait loisible
  de penser qu'il fait en quelque façon la même chose a l'égard de
  soi-même que la cause efficiente à l'égard de son effet, et partant
  qu'il est par soi positivement."--Réponses aux Premières Objections.

It is then sufficiently evident that the forms used to express the
logical law of identity do not, taken strictly, express at all the kind
of sameness with which we are now concerned, but, on the contrary,
something very different. We are considering a sameness in which there
is no duality whatever, but our expressions would seem to have no
meaning except as indicating a relation between two. They are then
significant, not as _expressing_ sameness of the first kind, but as
_suggesting_ it, and this they certainly serve to do. The reason for
this I shall try to give in a moment.

It has been said that in the other kinds of sameness we always find
the notion of similarity. When, however, we distinguish two things
as two and yet recognize them as similar, we must have what I may
call a mixed experience of likeness and unlikeness. In any two things
compared, the degrees of likeness and unlikeness may vary, and we
may fix attention upon similarities or differences. In proportion to
the attention given to dissimilar elements will the two objects be
clearly distinguished from each other and discriminated as two. If the
purpose in hand does not require a careful attention to differences,
and if what is prominent in mind is the likeness of the two objects,
the sense of duality may fall into the background, and the man pass
readily from one object to the other with little consciousness that
he has made a change. As I now look at the two ink-stands on my desk,
I clearly recognize them as two and yet as of the one kind. Here I
am as distinctly aware that they are two as I am that they are in
some respects the same. But in some of the kinds of sameness I have
described this sense of duality falls more into the shade. When I
speak of seeing the same ink-stand twice, or when I call up in memory
an ink-stand once seen, I am likely, unless I take particular pains
to reflect upon my mental operation, to have but a dim realization of
the fact that I have two distinct things to deal with. How those who
distinguish between the immediate and the mediate objects of knowledge
have a tendency to forget their distinction, and to pass unconsciously
from one to the other, I have dwelt upon sufficiently.

Suppose, now, that from two objects which we recognize as similar
and yet distinct, we abstract one by one the elements which differ.
So long as there is any difference left, we still have "identity in
diversity"--similarity in the ordinary sense of the term, which implies
a recognition of two things as two. When, however, the last difference
disappears, all sense of duality must disappear with it, for any
division or distinction within what remains is inadmissible. Things
which are distinguished are distinguished through some difference.
A sense of duality implies a discrimination between two, and where
it is impossible to discriminate duality vanishes. Similarity, as we
commonly use the word, must then disappear with the disappearance of
all dissimilarity between two objects. I say "between two objects" in
default of a better expression, for, of course, we have at this point
no longer two objects. My meaning is, however, sufficiently plain.
A sense of duality implies difference, and similarity, as commonly
understood, implies duality. The similarity will then take itself off
with the last difference.

It may be objected that _a consciousness of duality_ and _a
consciousness of similarity_ are only possible on the ground that
I mention, but that duality and similarity themselves may really
obtain when no difference between two is perceptible. But a moment's
reflection will make it plain that one who speaks thus is simply
supplying in himself the elements that he is supposing absent in the
case of another. If he uses the words "duality" and "similarity," and
they really mean anything to him, they imply all that I have said. He
cannot represent to himself two things at all without distinguishing
them from each other, and he can not distinguish them from each other
unless they differ in some way. If, then, he speak of two things as
being two and yet completely indistinguishable, he is, taken literally,
talking nonsense. He may, of course, mean the misleading phrase to be
understood as indicating something not actually expressed by the words.
He may mean to point out that, under certain circumstances, in which he
has an experience which he calls a recognition of two objects as two
and as similar, he has reason to think another mind has an experience
partly like and partly unlike his own--like in as much as it contains
what corresponds to that which is _common_ to the two objects he has
in mind; unlike in as much as it contains nothing which corresponds to
the elements which make it possible for him to recognize two objects.
It is this that is in his mind when he speaks of thinking of two
objects as really two and yet indistinguishable to this man or that.
If, however, the expression "two things may be indistinguishable" is
used to indicate this experience, it should be carefully borne in mind
that the proposition must not be taken literally, for the good reason
that the subject and predicate are not in the one consciousness. The
"two objects" are in the mind of Smith, and the "indistinguishable"
element in the mind of Jones. When we speak of two men as seeing the
same thing, I have shown that we are using the word same in a looser
sense which should never be confounded with the stricter sense.
Strictly speaking, then, the "two things" are never indistinguishable,
but that which corresponds to the two things in a consciousness from
which all recognition of duality is absent. That one man may have a
consciousness of duality while another man has not, and that these two
experiences may be related as the experiences of different minds are
related when we say they are experiencing the same thing, no one would
care to dispute. Should a man say that he can think of himself as
unable to distinguish two things which are nevertheless two, the case,
would not be materially different. The man cannot, of course, think of
_the two things_ as indistinguishable, but he may think of two things
and connect with this thought the thought of himself as having an
experience in which there is no consciousness of duality.

But, it may be insisted, we are still only talking about consciousness;
let us come to "real" things. Suppose no one able to distinguish
between them, abstract all consciousness of difference, would not
two "real" things remain two, however we might confound them? Can a
thing in one place be a thing in another place, however closely it may
resemble it, or however ignorant we may be?

To this I answer that when one speaks of _two_ "real" things the words
only mean something to him because he has present in mind what I have
said must be present if one is to have a consciousness of duality. A
"thing in one place" and a "thing in another place" are to him two
simply because he thinks them as differing--in place. When one has come
to the conclusion that he must duplicate his experience, distinguish
between the world of immediate and the world of mediate objects, and
place the latter in a region "outside," there is nothing to prevent him
from thinking of two "real" things as two, although all distinctions
within the field of immediate objects have been obliterated. Still,
in thinking these "real" things as two, he does just what he does in
thinking two immediate objects as two--he recognizes difference. The
twoness depends upon difference as much in the one case as in the
other, and to speak of two objects in a "real" world as two and yet
having no differing element would be to use words without meaning. In
talking about a "real" world, if we are really to talk and not merely
to utter a series of sounds, our words must be significant. To say
"this or that may be in a 'real' world, though we may not be able to
conceive it," would, if "this" or "that" implies a contradiction, be
to say nothing. The fact is that this "external" world, as we think
it, implies the notions of before and after, in this place and that,
all the distinctions and differences which make it to us a world of
distinct objects. Of course it follows that things in the "external"
world are thought as distinct from each other, but this does not affect
my statement that distinction is impossible without difference.

We may, then, have a series of experiences, beginning with one in
which two objects are recognized as similar and yet are very clearly
distinguished as two objects, continued in others in which the sense
of duality falls more and more into the background, and ending in
one in which there is no consciousness of duality at all. The last
of these experiences is not wholly different from the others. There
is in it no experience of similarity in so far as this word is used
to express identity in difference, or a relation between two. There
can be no such relation unless there are two, and here there are not
two. But it should be marked that this experience differs from the
others, not in the element which has led us to declare two objects
similar--the element which they have in common--but in that which has
led us to declare them two and different. It is by adding to this last
experience, so to speak, that we get the others. They contain it and
more. Usage will not allow us to apply the term similarity in speaking
of an experience in which two things are not distinguished, and this is
proper enough; but it should never be forgotten that this experience is
at the bottom of all our experiences of similarity--is, so to speak,
their common core. When, therefore, I said some pages back that all
the kinds of sameness under discussion contain the idea of similarity,
I was using the word in a certain broad sense to indicate that which
is the ground of all our experiences of similarity, and is also found
in the first kind of sameness on the list. I preferred to use there
the word similarity, because it was easy to show that this notion is
really contained in six of the seven uses of the word same, and it was
convenient afterward to show the connection between the first kind of
sameness and the notion of similarity.

And now it is not difficult to guess why we employ such expressions as
we do to indicate strict identity. If I habitually use the proposition
"x is y" to indicate a relation between two things having similar
elements and yet regarded as distinct, and look upon the proposition
as justified by the similar elements, observing that, these remaining
unchanged, the dissimilar elements may be very variable without
affecting the truth of the proposition, what more natural than that I
should go on using the propositional form when the dissimilar elements
have diminished to zero--when the proposition has become "x is x"? To
be sure, no one can take such a proposition literally, any more than
one can soberly believe that one divided by zero results in infinity.
Such expressions have their use and value, but they must be properly
understood. If one uses the expression "x is x" to emphasize the fact
that one is not to pass from x to any y or z--that one is to rule out
all distinction or sense of difference, the use cannot be harmful.
And the use of the propositional form has this great convenience: it
puts a period, so to speak, to one's thinking, and prevents one from
casting about for a completion of the thought. If one merely say to me
"x," I shall probably take it as a subject and busy myself to find a
predicate. If he say "x is x," he says really no more than x, but he
makes me fix my thoughts upon x alone.


SEC. 20. In the foregoing search for the element that the kinds of
sameness have in common, I have had in mind chiefly the samenesses of
things immediately known. It is not necessary to repeat the search in
the field of the "external." We have but the seven kinds of sameness,
and whatever may be the things that are the same in these several ways,
the elements I have indicated must be present if our words are to be
significant. But one thing remains for me to do in this part of my
monograph, and that will not detain me long. I must distinguish between
sameness and identity, or rather point out to what kinds of sameness
this latter word is commonly applied.

The word is often used quite loosely, but where the attempt is made
to distinguish between identity and sameness in a looser sense, and
to use terms with some precision, the former word serves to indicate
sameness in which there is no consciousness of duality, or in which
the consciousness of duality has fallen into the background and may
easily be overlooked. Sameness of the first kind, for example, is
spoken of as identity. This is the only kind of sameness in which there
is no element of duality at all. The use of the word identity is not,
however, restricted to this. Locke's inquiry concerning the identity of
masses of inorganic matter, of vegetables, of animals, and of persons,
has to do with sameness of the third kind on the list. In this kind
of sameness there is no clear consciousness that one is dealing with
more than one thing, and Locke's discussion is conducted throughout as
though one were not.

It may be objected that in certain other kinds there is often no clear
consciousness of duality, and yet one does not think of using the
term identity. This is quite true. The two kinds mentioned have been
thought worthy of special discussion by logician and philosopher, and
have been given a technical name. The others have not. Still, although
the word is not commonly used in such cases, it would, I fancy, seem
natural to use it in a direct ratio to the degree in which the sense
of duality falls into the background. Dr. Johnson would probably have
been willing to say that the stone he saw himself kick was identical
with the one the existence of which he wanted to prove. Bishop Berkeley
could have felt only disgust at such a use of the term. Scarcely
anyone, I suppose, would regard himself as speaking strictly if he
called the fourth kind of sameness identity. The co-existence of the
two things compared would prevent their being confounded. Without,
then, attempting to assign any very exact limits to the application of
a somewhat loosely used word, I may repeat my former statement that men
use the word identity to mark certain kinds of sameness in which there
is little or no consciousness of duality, and they are not inclined to
use it to mark samenesses in which things are recognized as similar but
clearly distinct.

With this I end the first part of my discussion, and I confess I draw
a long breath in doing so. When I sat down to write it was with the
impression that I could say all that was necessary about the kinds of
sameness in a much smaller number of pages; but finding it impossible
to avoid misunderstandings without being more explicit and detailed,
I have had to change my plan. Now, that I am through, I must confess
to myself that most persons will find this hair-splitting anything but
entertaining--which would be held by the inconsiderate to furnish a
presumption against the truth it contains, if ancient adages go for
anything. It should be remembered, however, that the old saw which puts
truth in a well does not indicate that the well may not be a dry one.
With this consolatory reflection I turn to the second part of my task.




PART II.

HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL.

     Those now who propose to hold mutual discussion must needs
     understand one another somewhat: for without this how can
     they have any mutual discussion? Each of their words then,
     must be familiar and have definite meaning, and not many
     meanings, but one only, and if it have more meanings than
     one, they must make it clear in which of these senses it is
     used.

                    Aristotle, Metaph., Book X, c. 5, § 3.


SECTION 21. When Heraclitus of Ephesus, moved thereto by his view
of the constant flux of things, declared it impossible to enter the
same river twice,[30] he evidently supposed that a river can be the
same only in the first and strictest sense of the word. He denied,
consequently, a right to use the word, as it constantly is used, to
indicate that certain phenomena belong to a group or series, which,
in its totality, is to us a single object. When we say that we have
entered the same river twice we have no reference to the actual
experiences of the two occasions considered merely as experiences. Of
course, these are not the same, as each is itself, and they may even be
somewhat dissimilar. Nor have we reference to the separate particles
of which the body of water is composed. We all admit that the water in
a river changes, and yet we never think of saying that the river is
no longer the same. The two kinds of sameness are quite distinct, yet
both are legitimate; and both were as familiar to the ancient Greek as
to the modern American. Socrates was considered Socrates from boyhood
through youth to manhood. The Ilissus was the Ilissus whether swollen
or shrunken. The philosopher's difficulty with the river did not arise
out of the fact that this kind of sameness was not perfectly well
recognized in language and in common thought. It arose out of the fact
that the beginnings of reflection make many things seem strange which
before passed unnoticed, and sometimes lead to assertion and denial
evidently contrary to experience and common sense. The unreflective man
calls the river the same on two successive days, but he has no clear
notion of what the word implies. In a loose way he opposes "same" to
"different." Heraclitus saw that the water in a river is constantly
changing. He who enters twice does not enter precisely the same body of
water. What more natural, and what more fallacious, than to assert that
he does not twice enter the same river?

  [30] Aristotle, Metaph., Bk. III, c. 5, § 7.


SEC. 22. And well might Cratylus hold his peace and move his finger[31]
when he had capped the climax with the statement that the same river
could not be entered once. Heraclitus had merely denied sameness of
the third kind to be sameness, since it implies duality. Cratylus,
surprised by a discovery of duality where he had not before suspected
it, will not allow the term where there is no duality whatever. It is
not surprising that he came at last to be "of opinion that one ought to
speak of nothing." Upon such a basis speech loses its significance.

  [31] Aristotle, Metaph. III, c. 5, § 7.


SEC. 23. The Parmenidean argument for the eternity of Being[32] rests
partly upon a confusion of the first kind of sameness with the fourth.
Being has had no origin, for from what could it have been derived?
Not from the non-existent, for this has no existence: and not from
the existent, for it is itself the existent. The quibble about the
non-existent we need not consider, though it is seriously repeated by
more than one writer of our time. The last part of the argument, "not
from the existent, for it is itself the existent," draws its whole
force from the assumption that "it" is "the existent" as a thing is
itself, or in the first sense of the word same. But if this be the
case, the argument is a mere farce, an argument only in words. The
phrase, "derived from the existent," means nothing at all unless it
means that the existent in question is before the thing derived. To
say it is the thing derived, is to reduce the words to nothing. If it
mean anything to speak of the existent as derived from the existent, it
is because each of these is _an_ existent--that is, a thing belonging
to a class and distinguished from other members of this class by some
difference. In this case the difference is that of before and after. An
existent derived from an existent is the same with it only as things
of a class are the same. If we choose to eliminate all differences and
speak of "_the_ existent" we may do so; but then it is inadmissible
to raise questions about its derivation, and bring in those very time
distinctions between different "existents" which we are supposing
absent.

  [32] Ueberweg. Hist. of Philos., Vol. I, § 19, N. Y., 1877, p. 57.


SEC. 24. The nihilistic doctrine of Gorgias of Leontini,[33] who taught
that nothing exists, that if it did exist it could not be known, and
that if it did exist and could be known the knowledge of it could not
be communicated by one mind to another, is founded in part upon such
bad reasoning that it is rather surprising that Gorgias should have
been guilty of it. That part of it, however, which has to do with
the communicability of knowledge is rather better than the rest, and
indicates some progress in reflection. A sign, he says, differs from
the thing it signifies. How can one communicate the notion of color
by words, since the ear hears sounds and not colors? Besides, how can
the same idea be in two different persons? This reasoning would seem
at least plausible, I think, to many minds at the present day. It is
evidently the offspring of a confusion of samenesses. A sign differs,
it is true, from the thing signified. The word blue heard by the ear
is not like the color blue seen or imagined. But if any one pronounce
the word, and ask me if I am thinking of the color he has mentioned, I
say yes. The sound is not like the color, but it is its representative,
and one of the proper uses of the word same (the fifth) indicates just
this relation between representative and thing represented. Any attempt
to discredit communication of knowledge on the ground that one cannot
speak colors, and that, therefore, one man is speaking one thing and
the other thinking another, goes on the supposition that what is said
and what is thought must be the same in sense first (strict identity)
or in sense fourth (must be a thing of the same kind). And as to the
existence of the same thing in two minds; here Gorgias has evidently
discovered with some surprise that sameness in sense sixth differs from
sameness in sense first, and has felt impelled to deny it the name
altogether. He has perceived a duality where most men have not noticed
it; and, instead of observing that there are samenesses and samenesses,
and that the communication of knowledge is concerned with the sixth
kind in this connection, and not with the first, he has denied the
communication of knowledge. Had he found it necessary to carry out
his theoretic premises to practical conclusions he would have stopped
talking, which he did not; though presumably the irrepressible didactic
instinct would have led him, spite of consistency, to imitate Cratylus
in moving his finger.

  [33] Ueberweg. Hist. of Philos., Vol. I, § 29, p. 77.


SEC. 25. The reasoning in the Platonic Dialogues is very frequently
not above suspicion; but it is not easy to find anywhere such a nest
of paralogisms as we have in the Parmenides. How far Plato was in
earnest in all this quibbling, and what was his aim, I will not pretend
to say. He has, however, very well illustrated the possibilities of
equivocation in juggling with samenesses, and I shall quote a bit
of the argument concerning the one and the many to show how readily
this is done. Almost any part of the dialogue would do, but I choose
the first bout between Parmenides and Aristoteles. I take Professor
Jowett's version:[34]

  [34] The Dialogues of Plato. N. Y., 1878. Vol. III, p. 255.

Parmenides proceeded: If one is, he said, the one cannot be many?

Impossible.

Then the one cannot have parts, and cannot be a whole?

How is that?

Why, the part would surely be the part of a whole?

Yes.

And that of which no part is wanting, would be a whole?

Certainly.

Then, in either case, one would be made up of parts; both as being a
whole, and also as having parts?

Certainly.

And in either case, the one would be many, and not one?

True.

But, surely, one ought to be not many, but one?

Surely.

Then, if one is to remain one, it will not be a whole, and will not
have parts?

No.

And if one has no parts, it will have neither beginning, middle, nor
end; for these would be parts of one?

Right.

But then, again, a beginning and an end are the limits of everything?

Certainly.

Then the one, neither having beginning nor end, is unlimited?

Yes, unlimited.

And therefore formless, as not being able to partake either of round or
straight.

How is that?

Why, the round is that of which all the extreme points are equidistant
from the centre?

Yes.

And the straight is that of which the middle intercepts the extremes?

True.

Then the one would have parts, and would be many, whether it partook of
a straight or of a round form?

Assuredly.

But having no parts, one will be neither straight nor round?

Right.

Then, being of such a nature, one cannot be in any place, for it cannot
be either in another or in itself.

How is that?

Because, if one be in another, it will be encircled in that other in
which it is contained, and will touch it in many places; but that which
is one and indivisible, and does not partake of a circular nature,
cannot be touched by a circle in many places.

Certainly not.

And one being in itself, will also contain itself, and cannot be other
than one, if in itself; for nothing can be in anything which does not
contain it.

Impossible.

But then, is not that which contains other than that which is
contained? for the same whole cannot at once be affected actively and
passively; and one will thus be no longer one, but two?

True.

Then one cannot be anywhere, either in itself or in another?

No.

Further consider, whether that which is of such a nature can have
either rest or motion.

Why not?

Why, because motion is either motion in place or change in self; these
are the only kinds of motion.

Yes.

And the one, when changed in itself, cannot possibly be any longer one.

It cannot.

And therefore cannot experience this sort of motion?

Clearly not.

Can the motion of one, then, be in place?

Perhaps.

But if one moved in place, must it not either move round and round in
the same place, or from one place to another?

Certainly.

And that which moves round and round in the same place, must go round
upon a centre; and that which goes round upon a centre must have other
parts which move around the centre; but that which has no centre and no
parts cannot possibly be carried round upon a centre?

Impossible.

But perhaps the motion of the one consists in going from one place to
another?

Perhaps so, if it moves at all.

And have we not already shown that one can not be in anything?

Yes.

And still greater is the impossibility of one coming into being in
anything?

I do not see how that is.

Why, because anything which comes into being in anything, cannot as
yet be in that other thing while still coming into being, nor remain
entirely out of it, if already coming into being in it.

Certainly.

And therefore whatever comes into being in another must have parts, and
the one part may be in that other, and the other part out of it; but
that which has no parts cannot possibly be at the same time a whole,
which is either within or without anything.

True.

And how can that which has neither parts, nor a whole, come into being
anywhere either as a part or a whole? Is not that a still greater
impossibility?

Clearly.

Then one does not change by a change of place, whether by going
somewhere and coming into being in something; or again, by going round
in the same place; or again, by change in itself?

True.

The one, then, is incapable of any kind of motion?

Incapable.

But neither can the one exist in anything, as we affirm?

Yes, that is affirmed by us.

Then it is never in the same?

Why not?

Because being in the same is being in something which is the same.

Certainly.

But it cannot be in itself, and cannot be in other?

True.

Then one is never the same?[35]

  [35] The text of Stallbaum (1848) does not harmonize with
  this. The version I quote leaves out ἐν, and reads τὸ αὐτό
  in the nominative.

It would seem not.

And that which is never in the same has no rest, and stands not still?

It cannot stand still.

One, then, as would seem, is neither standing still nor in motion?

Clearly not.

Neither will one be the same with itself or other; nor again, other
than itself, or other.

How is that?

If other than itself it would be other than one, and would not be one.

True.

And if the same with other, it would be that other, and not itself; so
that upon this supposition, too, it would not have the nature of one,
but would be other than one?

It would.

Then it will not be the same with other, or other than itself?

It will not.

Neither will one be other than other, while it remains one; for not the
one, but only the other, can be other of other, and nothing else.

True.

Then not by virtue of being one, will one be other?

Certainly not.

But if not by virtue of being one, not by virtue of being itself; and
if not by virtue of being itself, not itself, and itself not being
other at all, will not be other of anything?

Right.

Neither will one be the same with itself.

Why not?

Because the nature of the one is surely not the nature of the same.

Why is that?

Because when a thing becomes the same with anything, it does not
necessarily become one.

Why not?

That which becomes the same with the many necessarily becomes many and
not one.

True.

And yet, if there were no difference between the one and the same, when
a thing became the same, it would always become one; and when it became
one, the same.

Certainly.

And, therefore, if one be the same with one, it is not one with one,
and will therefore be one and also not one.

But that is surely impossible.

And therefore the one can neither be other of other, nor the same with
one.

Impossible.

And thus one is neither the same, nor other, in relation to itself or
other?

No.

Neither will one be like or unlike itself or other.

Why not?

Because likeness is sameness of affections.

Yes.

And sameness has been shown to be a nature distinct from oneness?

That has been shown.

But if one had any other affection than that of being one, it would be
affected in such a way as to be more than one; and that is impossible.

True.

Then one can never have the same affections either as another or as
itself?

Clearly not.

Then it cannot be like other, or like itself.

No.

Nor can it be affected so as to be other, for then it would be affected
in such a way as to be more than one.

It would.

That which is affected in a manner other than itself or other, will be
unlike itself or other, if sameness of affections is likeness.

True.

But the one, as appears, never having affections other than its own, is
never unlike itself or other?

Never.

Then the one is never either like or unlike itself or other?

Plainly not.

In reading this extract one cannot but admire the courtesy or wonder at
the simplicity of Aristoteles. He always answers just as he should to
keep the ball rolling; and he is in no wise compelled to do this under
the circumstances, for the argument is loose in the extreme. Briefly
stated, the reasoning is as follows:

One cannot be a whole, and cannot have parts, for then it would not
be one, but many. But if it has no parts it has no beginning, middle,
or end, and is formless. It is then in no place, for it cannot be in
itself, since the container must be different from the thing contained;
nor can it be in other, for it would have to be encircled by that
other, and touched in many parts, which is impossible. It follows that
it can neither be at rest nor in motion. Not in motion; for it cannot
have change in itself, or it would no longer be one; nor can it have
motion in place, whether circular motion upon a centre or motion from
place to place; the former for the reason that circular motion implies
a centre and parts around the centre; and the latter because one is
in no place: and as to coming into being in anything, which may be
regarded as a kind of motion, while doing this it would have to be part
in and part not in, which is impossible. It cannot be at rest, for one
is never in the same; to be in the same, is to be in something which
is the same, and one cannot be in anything. Nor, farther, can one be
the same with itself or other, nor other than itself or other. If other
than itself it would not be one; and if the same with other it would
be that other, and not itself. On the other hand only other can be
the other of other, and not one; and the one cannot be the same with
itself, for the nature of the one is not the nature of the same, since
that which becomes the same with the many does not become one. Finally,
one cannot be like or unlike itself or other, for likeness is sameness
of affections, and sameness is not oneness; one must, however, have no
affection except oneness, or it becomes more than one. It cannot, then,
have the same affections as itself or other. As, for the same reason,
it cannot have other affections than itself or other, it cannot be
unlike.

We have here one chief error, which runs through almost the whole
of the argument--is, indeed, the "Kern" of the "Pudel"--and several
subsidiary errors of different kinds. Some of these last are very
readily discovered, as that about the coming into being in a thing.
With these, however, I am not concerned. I merely remark _en passant_
that they may all be cleared up with a little care and accuracy, and
I turn to the main error, which consists in a constant confusion of
two kinds of sameness. The fact is that Parmenides is always passing
from "the one," or one in the abstract, mere oneness, to "a one,"
or one object. These are no more identical in the strict sense than
"manhood" and "a man," and in overlooking their difference he is simply
confounding the first and the fourth kinds of sameness. "The one"
cannot have parts, for the good reason that it is a quality taken by
itself, and not a thing, which is thought as a bundle of qualities. "A
one," on the other hand, may have parts, and each of these parts may be
"a one" too. "A one" by no means consists of a single element, oneness,
but of this element combined with others; and each such group may be
distinguished from each other such group, and all be recognized as
similar, or the same in a true sense of the word. The question whether
one can be in a place, too, evidently has to do, not with "the one,"
but "a one," for spacial or temporal differences are individualizing,
and distinguish a thing from another thing of the same kind. To ask
whether "the one" may or may not be in a place is inadmissible.

The same error is at the bottom of the argument about the one's being
in motion or at rest. The question has no significance except in
reference to "a one." If we speak of "the one" as in motion, we at
once put this abstract element in such a relation to other elements
that we have no longer "the one" but "a one." "The one" cannot have
change in itself and remain "the one," but "a one" may change a good
deal and still be "a one." And without admitting the justice of the
argument, that what has no parts cannot be in anything, the proof of
the impossibility of motion in space may be condemned merely upon the
ground that it is only "the one" which cannot have parts, while it is
only "a one" which is concerned in the problem of motion. The same
may be said for the argument against the one's coming into being in
anything. It is only "a one" which can be thought as coming into being
in a thing, and "a one" may have parts. As for the impossibility of the
one's being at rest, on the ground that to be at rest, a thing must be
in the same, and one cannot be in anything--this is a repetition of the
former error. "A one" may be in something, as has been pointed out,
even on the basis established at the outset, and it is with this, and
not with "the one," that we are concerned in the problem of rest and
motion.

The rest of the argument is based upon errors of a different kind, and
in it one may keep to "the one" throughout, if one choose. There is,
of course, no reason to think that the speaker did this. He probably
here, as before, carried over to "a one," one thought as an individual
thing, distinctions drawn in view of "the one," one viewed in the
abstract. As some of the statements made may be true or false as one
is taken in this sense or that; and particularly as the antinomy rests
upon a misconception as to the nature of sameness, I will continue the
analysis. What is to be proved is, first, that one cannot be the same
with itself or other, or other than itself or other; and second, that
it cannot be like or unlike itself or other. The position that the one,
if other than itself, would not be one, and if the same with other,
would be that other, is somewhat ambiguous. If "a one" is in question,
it may undoubtedly be "a one" and yet be other than any particular one;
and it may be the same with other--another one--without ceasing to
be one, if by same we mean similar. The play upon words in "other of
other" it is not necessary to consider. The conclusion that one cannot
be the same with itself is based upon the supposition that sameness
is a quality superadded to the other qualities of a thing; but in its
first sense the word does not even serve to indicate a relation; it is
merely used to point out the absence of duality. Both "a one" and "the
one" may be the same with themselves perfectly well, and in saying so
we do not in thought endow them with any quality not already possessed.
This last error serves also as a basis to the second paradoxical
position, that one cannot be like or unlike itself or other. It assumes
likeness and unlikeness to be qualities added to the other qualities
of things which are like or unlike.

A possible objection to my use of the term "a one" I must forestall
before passing on. I have used this as synonymous with "one object."
One horse is one object, and so is one part of a horse. It may be said,
however, that "a one" may also be used to signify a single occurrence
of oneness, as distinguished from another occurrence of oneness. That
any element of consciousness may be distinguished from any similar
element merely by spatial or temporal differences I have argued in the
first part of my monograph. Why may not then "a one" mean the oneness
of this one horse, or the oneness of this part of the horse? And if it
may, can "a one" of this kind have parts any more than "the one?"

I answer, it cannot; for it is then only a particular occurrence of
the quality (if I may so use the word) of oneness. But, then, if we so
understand the term, the argument loses all significance. We cannot
call "a one" of this kind a container or a thing contained, or talk
of it as encircled by anything. We do not even try to imagine it as
moving on its centre, or passing from place to place, or coming into
being in anything, or being at rest in anything. Such language we use
only in speaking of things. It seems to me plain that the speaker is
thinking of one as a thing, and it is this that gives its charm to the
bundle of paradoxes. The Eleatic "one" was always a thing and not mere
unity or an occurrence of unity. My criticism of the reasoning is, I
think, just. And whether Plato is responsible for the Parmenides or
not, we must agree that such a confusion of "the one" and "a one" (as
an object) would not be foreign to his modes of thought. His world of
Ideas is peopled with "the"'s turned into "a"'s, a fact which his acute
pupil Aristotle was not slow to discover.[36]

  [36] Metaph. XII, c. 4.


SEC. 26. Aristotle has again and again discussed with his usual
keenness the kinds of sameness. He saw well enough that the word
is ambiguous, and may with equal right be employed in speaking of
experiences which do or do not contain an element of duality. He has
pointed out that the law of non-contradiction has to do with sameness
of the first kind, and not with the others.[37] His question as to
"Socrates" and "Socrates sitting," his treatment of "Coriscus" and "the
musical Coriscus," his statement that the white and the musical are
the same when they are accidents in the same subject,[38] show that
he clearly understood the significance of sameness in sense third.
He gives us sense fourth when he says that things may be called the
same when they belong to the same species or genus.[39] In his polemic
against the Protagorean doctrine of relativity,[40] senses sixth
and seventh come to the surface, though they are not very clearly
or exhaustively discussed. The fallacy in the apparent possibility
of attributing contradictory predicates to the same subject, from
the fact that the same wine may appear sweet to one taster and not
sweet to another, or at one time sweet and at another not sweet to
the one palate, is laid bare in the distinction between kinds of
sameness. Aristotle distinguishes between the wine itself and the
sensations it produces in different persons, and he recognizes the
fact that one man's perception of the "same" wine need not be wholly
like that of another. But this does not imply any violation of the
law of non-contradiction, for each sensation is just what it is at
any instant; and the statement that the same wine is sweet and not
sweet at the one moment amounts only to saying that the one object can
cause dissimilar sensations in two minds at one moment. As much may be
said for the non-simultaneous sensations of the one man. Sensations
differing in time are two, and may differ without violating any law.
In marking the fact that when we say two men perceive the same thing
we do not mean that the immediate object of knowledge is in the two
cases strictly one, but merely that these two objects are related in
a peculiar way, Aristotle draws the line between sameness in sense
first and in sense sixth. As to sense seventh. He distinguishes between
the apparent and the real, and yet goes on speaking, quite in modern
fashion, as though one thing could serve for both. He points out, _à
propos_ of pressing upon the eyeball and doubling the visual image,
that there is a distinction between the apparent and the real, and
then closes the paragraph with the remark that "to those persons who
do not move their organ of vision that which is one appears one."[41]
This language would certainly seem to indicate that that which is
appears--or that they are the same in some strict sense of the word.
The sentence reads much in the style of Mr. Spencer or Sir William
Hamilton.

  [37] Metaph. III, c. 5, § 10; c. 6, § 3.

  [38] _Ibid._ III, c. 2, § 6; IV, c. 6, § 1, and c. 9, § 1.

  [39] _Ibid._ IV, c. 9, § 1, and c. 6.

  [40] _Ibid._ III, c. 5, § 10; X, c. 6, § 6.

  [41] Metaph. X, c. 6, § 2.

It appears, then, that Aristotle recognized a sameness in which there
is no sense of duality, and samenesses in which two things are called
the same and yet distinguished as two. Our way of expressing strict
identity, however, a way which, as I have shown, does not properly
express it all--seems to have misled him into finding a sort of
quasi duality even here, where he knows it to be really absent. In a
chapter[42] devoted to sameness and diversity, he closes his list of
samenesses with the remark: "It is plain that sameness is a oneness
either of two or more things with reference to their essence, or of one
thing treated as two; as when you say a thing is the same with itself,
for then you do treat it as two." We do employ two words, undoubtedly;
but if we are really thinking a thing as itself, we are not making
it dual in any sense whatever. The quotation smacks just a little of
Cratylus.

  [42] _Ibid._ IV, c. 9.


SEC. 27. The sceptical arguments of Pyrrho are excellent instances of a
confusion of samenesses. The argument, for example, that since an apple
seen by the eye as yellow seems to the taste sweet, and to the smell as
fragrant, "that which is seen is just as likely to be something else as
the reality;"[43] this argument gains what little plausibility it may
have from the assumption that an object seen and an object tasted are
(or ought to be) the same in sense first instead of sense third.

  [43] Diogenes Laërtius. IX, 9.

And the complaints, that things believed to be large, sometimes, as
when at a distance, appear small; that things which we believe to be
straight, sometimes seem bent; that the sun has one appearance in the
morning, and another at noon;[44] these, and all others like them,
assume that an object seen near at hand and then seen at a distance, a
stick seen as straight and then seen as crooked, the sun on the horizon
and the sun at the zenith, are in each case one strictly, and not
merely one as each element in a complex of experiences is one with each
other element, when any one may represent the whole. The conclusion
that, since it is not possible to view things without reference to
"place and position," their true nature cannot be known,[45] is founded
upon this error.

  [44] _Ibid._ loc. cit.

  [45] _Ibid._ loc. cit.

This becomes clear when one asks, what is it, after all, the nature
of which is so in doubt? Is it a stick? the sun? These words are
ambiguous. Two consecutive experiences of the same stick--as we
ordinarily use this word in speaking of sticks--are not strictly
identical, and need not be alike. The stick seen on two occasions is
not the same stick in sense I. If I limit the meaning of the words "the
stick" to one of these experiences, then the true nature of the stick
is just what is experienced on that occasion. What is experienced on
the second occasion is another stick, and its true nature is also just
what it seems to be. If, however, by "the stick" I do not mean only the
experience of one moment, but a series of experiences differing more or
less from one another, then I am under no necessity to select one of
them as the true nature of the stick, for its true nature is nothing
more nor less than the whole group of experiences. If I try to discover
or to invent some new experience which I may call the true nature of
the group, I am simply adding to it in thought another experience which
takes its place among those the group already contains. I am playing
with the word nature. This last experience could not be more important
than those among which it is placed, and it could not stand for any one
of them in any other way than each of them could stand for it. Should
it be objected that by "the stick" one does not mean either a single
experience of the stick or the sum total of the group of experiences,
but a something distinct from all these and inferred through them,
I answer, that in this case the argument from the variability of
experiences is not to the point. Such a "stick" as this would be the
same with either of those just discussed only in the seventh sense
of the word, and its nature would be the same with their nature only
in that sense too. An experience of the stick out of "place and
position," if that were conceivable, would not give us this "stick,"
for such an experience would still be an experience. It must never be
forgotten that this "external" stick is quite distinct from any or all
experiences, and could not be given in experiences of any kind. It
can only be inferred. If an unvarying series of experiences is good
ground for inferring an unvarying "external" stick, similar to what is
experienced, one would suppose a varying series of experiences would
furnish a basis for inference of a varying "external" stick, in its
successive phases like what is experienced. Unless some reason is given
for a discrimination in favor of the unvarying series, the argument
from variation does not affect the "external" stick at all.

It is evident, however, that in this particular argument, at least,
the "external" is not in Pyrrho's mind at all. What perplexes him is,
that what he is accustomed to call a straight stick sometimes looks
crooked. On reflection he discovers that he calls it straight only
because it seems straight on some occasions; and if it may at one time
seem straight and at another seem crooked, which is it in reality?
The question is a very natural one. The unreflective do not ask it,
because they assume that one of the experiences is to be taken as
expressing the true nature of the object and the other relegated to
the sphere of more or less deceptive appearance. The man who has begun
to reflect does ask it, because he sees that the assumed true nature
is an appearance too, and it naturally occurs to him that it also may
be deceptive. If he reflected more, he would see that he is partly
right and partly wrong. We do not regard as equally important every
element in the group of experiences which we call an object. Certain
elements, notably the tactual qualities and those visual experiences
which give us the best opportunity of inferring the tactual qualities,
stand in the foreground when we speak of the object. We name the object
according to these. In saying "a straight stick" we have prominently
in mind certain tactual experiences, and certain visual experiences
which normally are connected with these and give us the right to
infer them. We call any appearance delusive which leads us to infer
tactual experiences, and visual experiences of a kind regarded as
best representative of these tactual experiences, when such cannot be
actually experienced. Certain elements in the total group, which is
to us an experienced object, may then properly be regarded as in a
sense the true nature of the object, they are the most important part,
and the part to which other elements are referred. These elements may
justly be regarded as delusive when they mislead us in our inferences
as to the important elements. So far the common man is right. And as
no element is delusive in itself, but only in so far as it refers
the mind to something else, and to the wrong something else, those
elements which are ultimate and not used as signs of others, cannot be
delusive. In raising this question with regard to them Pyrrho is wrong.
These elements may, to be sure, be used as signs or indications of any
other elements in the group, and in their turn made stepping stones;
but this is not commonly done, and language and common thought rarely
mark logical possibilities. The language in use fairly expresses the
attitude of the average man towards the elements in his thought.

On the other hand, the unreflective man speaks as if the less
important, or perhaps I had better say less prominent, experiences
were not a part of the object as he knows it. He seems to regard the
whole object as actually present, when a single experience only is
present. In putting all experiences on the same plane, so to speak, the
Pyrrhonist makes a genuine advance. Wherein he errs is this: He sees
that a stick seen near at hand is as much an experience or appearance
as a stick seen at a distance, and that one of these phenomena does not
differ in kind from the other; he sees also that to assume that one is
the real stick and the other is not, seems to go upon the assumption
that they differ in kind; he is consequently unwilling to call any one
of his experiences the real stick, and yet he insists upon looking
for a real stick, which may be expressed in a single experience. It
never seems to occur to him that the real stick may be the name of the
whole series of experiences in their appropriate relations. He wishes
a sameness in the strict sense, with no element of duality. The stick
seen straight in the air, and seen bent in the water, is the same stick
in sense third. It takes both of these experiences to express the
true nature of this stick. No one experience could serve. It is the
battle between stick as a single experience, and stick as a group of
experiences, that leads to all the confusion.

I have given as much space to Pyrrho as I care to, and I will not
delay over him and his successors. These furnish good material to one
fond of analysis. There is, however, a great deal of repetition among
the sceptics. They occupy themselves chiefly either in confounding
the first kind of sameness with the third, as in the preceding; or
in confounding the first kind with the sixth, as in the argument for
uncertainty drawn from the varying guise under which the same object
appears to different persons. The ambiguity of the word same, as
here used, is apparent, and it is in this ambiguity that they become
entangled.


SEC. 28. Into the labyrinths of the scholastic philosophy I hesitate to
enter, and yet I could hardly be excused for passing on to the moderns
without at least a reference to the great dispute over Universals--a
dispute which is, at bottom, a quarrel concerning samenesses. I shall
speak of it very briefly.

The object of the general term or class name is in question. Plato,
distinguishing between the universal and the individual, between man
and men, thought it necessary, according to Aristotle, who has not,
I think, done him injustice, to assume an object for the universal
outside of and apart from all the individuals forming a class. The Idea
is a real thing, _the_ real thing in which the individuals participate,
or of which they are copies; but it is not itself to be found in any
or all of them, except, so to speak, in a figurative or metaphorical
way. Aristotle, finding no reason to assume a new individual, for so he
regarded the Platonic Idea, placed the universal _in_ the individuals
composing the class. Certain of the schoolmen, emphasizing the
distinction between real things and mental representations, maintained
that only individuals have real existence, and asserted either that
universals exist merely as peculiar combinations of mental elements
which serve to think the objects forming a class, or that the universal
is the word, which may be applied indifferently to many individuals
of one kind. In these views we have the _universalia ante rem_, the
_universalia in re_, and the _universalia post rem_; or extreme
Realism, moderate Realism, and Nominalism in its two forms.

The examination into the respective merits of the positions which
have been taken with regard to universals will be facilitated by
distinguishing carefully between the different spheres of being; that
is, between things immediately known and "real" things mediately
known, as also between things contained in one consciousness and those
contained in another. It is plainly important not to confound these
classes with each other.

Let us take, first, a number of resembling objects in a single
consciousness. I have already pointed out that when we say several
such objects are the same we do not at all mean to deny that they
are distinct objects. We merely wish to indicate that each possesses
certain elements which, taken by themselves, and after making
abstraction from all other elements, render impossible any distinction
between different objects. We distinguish two objects as two through
some difference, even if it be only local or temporal. Redness combined
with x and redness combined with y are recognized as two occurrences of
redness, but this only on account of x and y. Redness perceived to-day
and redness perceived yesterday are two occurrences of redness, marked
as such by the "to-day" and the "yesterday." Redness considered simply
contains nothing which will allow of such distinctions. This does not
imply at all that redness considered simply is _an occurrence of
redness_--that since we have not two or more occurrence of the quality
we have a single occurrence of it, an individual. We have not, if we
have really abstracted from all save the redness, any "occurrence" or
"occurrences" at all, for these imply just the elements of difference
which we are endeavoring to eliminate. An "occurrence" of redness means
redness with a difference which will mark it out from other redness,
from another "occurrence." If, then, one gives to twenty individuals a
common name to indicate that they resemble each other, or are in some
sense the same, he should keep clearly in mind just what this means.
It means that along with various differing elements each contains
the element x. He should remember that each individual is the same
with each other individual only in this sense, sense fourth. When he
proposes to separate the x from the other elements, and consider it
separately, he should be most careful to see that he is really taking
it separately, and not allowing shreds of foreign matter to hang to it
and give rise to difficulties and perplexities. He should not overlook
the fact that there is a fallacy in the very question, Whether the x
in one individual is identical (the same in sense first) with the x
in any other individual? If these two x's are distinguishable as in
two individuals, one is not considering x merely, but x with other
elements. The separation of the x element from the other elements in
the objects is here not complete, or one would be considering not "an
x" or "x's," but x. Any one who sees this must see that he who asks
such a question is retaining a duality, and then trying to get out of
it an identity with no element of duality. He is "milking the he-goat."
He is trying to reduce sameness in sense fourth to sameness in sense
first.

Twenty objects immediately known must not be confounded with twenty
"real" things not immediately known, and of which the objects are
supposed to be representatives. These two classes are the same with
each other only in sense seventh. I have discussed in detail in the
first part of my monograph the samenesses of "real" things, and it is
not necessary to repeat what I have said. It is enough to state that it
was there made evident that when we speak of a number of similar "real"
things as the same, we use the word in sense fourth, and have in mind
just the elements which are present when we speak of several similar
immediate objects of knowledge as the same. We are merely carrying
over to a set of imagined duplicates a distinction which we observe
in objects recognized as within consciousness. When, therefore, we
give twenty "real" things a common name, and form them into a class,
because they are alike, we mean that along with various other "real"
elements, each of these objects contains the "real" element x. The word
same means to us just what it does when we speak of twenty similar
immediate objects as the same. We have changed only the objects; we
have not changed the sameness and all that depends upon it. Two such
objects are the same in sense fourth, and never in sense first. If they
could be the same in sense first, they would not be two. When a man
undertakes to separate in thought the "real" x element from the other
"real" elements in two or more such objects, he should be careful, as
in the case of immediate objects, to make a complete separation and not
a partial one. He should see here, too, that the question whether the x
in one object and the x in another are strictly identical, is a foolish
one. "This x" and "that x" are not strictly identical, or they would
not be "this x" and "that x." Remove completely the "this" and the
"that" and all other differing elements--leave, that is, only x, and
the possibility of any such question simply disappears. If there still
seem to anyone ground for a question in the premises, it is evidence
that he is not considering merely x. He is trying to keep two things
two, and yet make them one.

Twenty objects in one consciousness must not be confounded with twenty
objects in another. When we speak of two men as seeing the same thing,
we do not mean that the object in one mind is the same with the
object in the other in sense first, but in sense sixth. This does not
prevent them from being two. A single object in one mind may be the
same with itself in sense first. A number of similar objects in one
mind may be the same in sense fourth. Two objects or two classes of
objects in different minds may be the same in sense sixth. One may, to
be sure, think of twenty objects in one mind, and of the same (sense
sixth) twenty objects in another mind as forty objects. Philosophical
reflection naturally leads to this. I am inducing a reader to do it
when I tell him that an object in one mind and the same object in
another are two objects. But in doing this, one must bear in mind the
fact that the forty objects belong to two quite distinct classes, and
that common language would not reckon them as forty, but as twenty. In
this there is, of course, a pitfall for the unwary.

Now, when Plato looked for the object of the general name, for the x
contained in a class of similar objects, what did he do? He created
a new object distinct from and apart from all the others. He is very
vague in his statements, and he was probably quite as vague in his
thought; but I cannot see how anyone familiar with the Phaedrus, the
Republic, the Timaeus, the Symposium and the Parmenides, and familiar
with Plato's concrete way of thinking in images, can avoid coming to
the conclusion that the Idea was to him predominantly an object, an
individual--a vague and inconsistent object, if you please, but still
an object. But _an_ x is in no sense a universal. It is the same with
other x's only in sense fourth; that is, it is like them. The x that
they have in common must be x considered simply, not x considered as
here or there, in this place or in that. All such differences must be
eliminated if one is to get not an individual, but a universal. If the
Idea may be considered as _apart_ from objects, it is an object in so
far not essentially differing from the others. Again, the Platonic Idea
is an object, but not to be put upon the same plane with other objects.
They suffer change, while it is immutable; they are perceivable by
the senses, and it is not. The objects of sense and the Idea are in
different worlds; and though we cannot accuse Plato of drawing the
distinctions of the modern hypothetical realist, he has certainly given
us a suggestive parallel to the Lockian ideas and "real" things. The
trouble has arisen out of his difficulty in keeping an abstraction
abstract; he has turned it into a concrete, and, finding in the world
of sense no place for this concrete, this new individual, he has given
it a world of its own. Whatever this object in this world apart may be,
it is certainly not what is common to twenty individuals in the world
of sensible things.

Aristotle, seeing this difficulty, placed the idea _in_ the objects
forming the class. It may be objected that putting x _in_ a place
individualizes it as much as putting it _out of_ a place. This is quite
true if the "in" is taken locally--taken as it is when we speak of a
man as being in one room rather than another. The x in one object is
not identically the x in another object. We do not get the universal,
x in the abstract, until we lose the distinctions "in the one object,"
and "in the other object." Two x's cannot be the same in sense first,
from the mere fact that they are two; an x in one place and an x in
another place are always two. If, however, by the statement that the
universal is in the objects, one mean merely that the universal is that
element x, which, combined with certain elements, forms a total which
is known as this object, and combined with certain others forms a total
which is known as that, but taken by itself contains no distinction of
this and that; if this is all that is meant by the "in," there is no
objection to the use of the statement, and it is strictly true. The x
element is a part of each of the objects, but, until some addition is
made to it, it is not "the x in this object" or "the x in that object";
it is what they have in common. The "in common" means just this.

The Nominalistic doctrine that only individuals have real existence,
and that the universal, whatever it may be, is to be sought in the
mind, distinguishes between the spheres of being and denies to one what
it allows to another. Of the extreme nominalistic position, that the
only true universal is the word, which may be applied indifferently
to several distinct objects, I shall not here speak. I have discussed
this wholly untenable view elsewhere.[46] But the more reasonable
Nominalism, the conceptualistic, is worthy of examination here. In
so far as it holds that the mind can form a concept, which shall
consist of the element or elements several objects have in common, we
have no quarrel with it. Here we find a true universal, obtained by
discarding differences which distinguish objects from one another.
We obtain by this that mental core common to several similar mental
objects. If, however, we distinguish between mental objects and
"real" things corresponding to them, we have evidently two distinct
fields to consider. When we say a number of objects in consciousness
are alike, we are simply pointing out the fact that they contain a
universal element as well as individual differences. Can we say that a
number of "real" objects are alike? If so, what do we mean in saying
it? If there is nothing to prevent us from calling them individuals,
there would seem to be nothing to prevent us from affirming that they
are "really" alike. Does likeness ever mean anything except sameness
in difference? Is not, then, the element in which several objects
resemble each other a universal element, whether the objects be mental
or "real?" What else does universal mean? The excuse for speaking
ceases when language ceases to be significant. One does not in the
least explain the similarity, or sameness in the fourth sense, of a
number of "real" objects, by assuming a universal in a quite different
world--one which could not possibly exist in the world of the objects.
This solution of the problem is Platonic. The element which twenty
real objects have in common must be a "real" element, or it cannot be
a constituent part of each object. If it is not a constituent part
of each object, it is absurd to speak of the objects as having it in
common. If they have nothing in common, it is absurd to say that they
are alike. Twenty similar objects must have a universal element, to
whatever sphere of being they belong; and this element must belong
to the same sphere as the objects. A mental universal is the same
with a "real" universal only in sense seventh, and it can furnish no
explanation of the likeness of "real" things.

  [46] See my "Conception of the Infinite," Ch. VI (J. B. Lippincott
  Co., Philadelphia). It is but fair to state that my criticism of
  Realism in this volume is directed against the "_ante rem_" Realism.
  I did not have the Moderate Realism in mind, and what I said will not
  apply to it.

In the light of the foregoing analysis a goodly number of the
scholastic arguments regarding universals are easily seen to contain
errors. The Anselmic view of genera and species as universal
substances,[47] for instance, makes an abstraction a thing and
distinguishes it from other things. It fails to keep it abstract.
The doctrine attributed to William of Champeaux, by Abelard, that
universals are essentially and wholly present in each of their
individuals, in which latter there is no diversity of essence, but only
variety through accidents,[48] is tenable or not according to the
sense in which the words are taken. The word "wholly" is an awkward
one, and would incline one to the view that William regarded the
universal as a thing, a concrete, which may be in this place or that.
If this were his opinion, and it is perhaps more reasonable to believe
that it was, the objection of Abelard, that this would necessitate
the same thing's being in different places at the same time, would
hold good. If the essence of humanity be wholly in Socrates, it must
be where Socrates is. It cannot, then, be somewhere else in Plato.
Manifestly humanity, so regarded, is not a universal at all. It is
"this humanity" or "that humanity," _i. e._, this or that occurrence
of humanity; and two occurrences of a quality or group of qualities
are two individuals. The word "in" I have shown to be ambiguous. Any
element, regarded as, in one sense, _in_ an individual, retains the
local flavor which makes universality impossible. But if William
meant nothing more by his statement than that the element common to
the individuals is a constituent part of each, and that there is in
it no distinction which will allow us to put it part here and part
there, the polemic of Abelard is not justifiable. Whatever he may
have intended to say, there can be no mistake as to the meaning of
the following sentence from Robert Pulleyn: "The species is the whole
substance of individuals, and the whole species is the same in each
individual: therefore the species is one substance, but its individuals
many persons, and these many persons are that one substance."[49]
The dialectician represented as saying this, ought to have been a
prey to profound melancholy; his samenesses are clearly in deplorable
confusion. He makes his universal an individual, and then imposes upon
it duties which no individual can fulfil with credit. It is to be one
and yet not one: distinct from something else, and yet identical with
it. It is to be a universal and not a universal. It is by no means to
be envied. The conceptualistic position of Abelard, that we may gain a
subjective universal by abstraction, but that only individuals exist
in reality, is open to the objections that I advanced in discussing
Nominalism. The position is supported[50] by the argument that we
may abstract the form from the substantial subject to which it is
united, and consider it separately, while in nature there is no such
abstraction, the form and the subject forming a united whole. To this
one may answer, as I have indicated above, that, whatever it may be
united with, the form in the several individuals is in some sense the
same, or the individuals would not be alike, and the concept would be
of no service in representing it. What is meant by such sameness? Is
it anything but sameness in sense fourth? When several objects are the
same in sense fourth, is not the element common to them a universal?
Why make this conceptualistic discrimination between things in mind and
"real" things?

  [47] Hauréau. _Philos. Scholastique._ Paris, 1872. I, p. 281.

  [48] _Historia Calamitatum_, quoted by Hauréau. I, p. 324.

  [49] _Species est tota substantia individuorum, totaque species
  eademque in singulis reperitur individuis: itaque species una est
  substantia, ejus vero individua multæ personæ, et hæ multæ personæ
  sunt illa una substantia._ (_Sentent._, p. I, c. III.)--Quoted by
  Hauréau, I, p. 328.

  [50] Hauréau, I, 380-381. The argument is taken from the _De
  Intellectibus_.

Finally, in passing from scholasticism, I would suggest that it is
conducive to clearness in thinking to bear in mind that when Albert,
or Thomas, or Duns, declares in favor of all three kinds of universal,
_ante rem_, _in re_, and _post rem_, he is declaring for three things
and not one. He is not at all in the position of the old Platonic
Realist; but is rather, if I may so express it, a kind of triple
Aristotelian. One may perfectly well hold to all three universals,
by putting one in the mind of God, one in things, and one in a human
mind; but an individual may be given this three-fold existence quite as
well as a universal. In the old Realism the problem of the universal
called into existence a new sphere of being. Here a new sphere of
being, assumed upon extraneous grounds, furnishes one more universal.
The universals in the mind of God are not assumed as the object of
the general name applied to twenty "real" objects. The object of this
name is the _in re_. The _ante rem_ universal cannot, then, be gotten
as Plato got it. In this distinction between the different spheres
of being we have an advance in reflection; but as I have said, on
this new ground the individual may demand its rights. The _ante rem_
Realism of the great scholastics of the thirteenth century should not
be confounded with that of an earlier period. It is not open to the
same objections. But on the other hand, it has not the same excuse for
existence. It is a historical relic.


SEC. 29. The first of the moderns to whom I shall refer is Descartes.
There are certain passages in the Meditations which will well
illustrate the efforts made by this remarkable man in the direction
of accurate analysis, as also the errors into which he fell through a
confusion of the kinds of sameness. I shall quote from the second and
third Meditations:

"Let us now accordingly consider the things which are commonly thought
the easiest of all to know, and which are thought also to be the most
distinctly known, that is, the bodies that we touch and see; not indeed
bodies in general, for these general notions are usually a little more
confused: but let us consider a single one of them. Let us take, for
example, this bit of wax; it has just been taken from the hive; it
has not yet lost the sweetness of the honey it contained; it still
keeps something of the odor of the flowers from which it has been
gathered; its color, its figure, its size, are apparent; it is hard,
it is cold, it is easily handled, and if struck it gives a sound. In
a word, everything that can make a body distinctly known is found in
this one. But notice, while I speak, it is placed near the fire; what
remained of savor and odor disappears, its color changes, its figure
is lost, its size increases, it becomes liquid, grows hot, one can
scarcely handle it, and when struck it no longer gives a sound. Does
the same wax remain after this change? One must admit that it does; no
one doubts it; no one judges otherwise. What then was it that was known
with so much distinctness in this bit of wax? Certainly nothing that I
perceived by means of the senses, for all the things which fall under
taste, smell, sight, touch and hearing, are changed, and yet the same
wax remains. Perhaps it was what I think now, namely, that this wax
was neither the sweetness of honey, the agreeable odor of flowers, the
whiteness, the figure, nor the sound, but only a body which a little
before appeared to my senses under these forms, and which now appears
to them under others. But to speak precisely, what do I imagine when I
think it in this way? Let us consider it attentively, and abstracting
all that does not belong to the wax, let us see what remains. Surely
nothing remains but something extended, flexible and mutable. But what
is that, flexible and mutable? Is it not that I imagine that this bit
of wax, being round, is capable of becoming square and of changing
from square to triangular? No, it is certainly not that, for I think
it capable of an infinite number of similar changes; but I could not
run through this infinite number by my imagination, and consequently
this conception that I have of the wax is not due to the faculty of
imagination. But what now is this extension? Is it not also unknown?
For it becomes greater when the wax melts, greater when it boils, and
still greater when the heat increases, and I could not conceive clearly
and truly what wax is, if I did not think that even this bit that we
are considering is capable of receiving more varieties of extension
than I have ever imagined. It must then be admitted that I could not
comprehend by imagination even what this bit of wax is, and that only
my understanding can comprehend it. I say this particular bit of wax;
for as for wax in general, it is still more evident. But what is this
bit of wax that cannot be comprehended save by the understanding or
the mind? It is certainly the same that I see, that I touch, that
I imagine; it is, in a word, the same that I have always thought it
from the beginning. But, what is important to note here is, that my
perception is not a sensation of sight, nor of touch, nor an act of the
imagination, and it has never been this, although it may have seemed so
before; but it is merely an intuition (_inspection_) of the mind, which
may be imperfect and confused as it was before, or clear and distinct
as it is at present, according as my attention is directed more or less
to the elements in it, and of which it is composed.

"However, I cannot be too much surprised when I consider the weakness
of my mind and its proneness to be carried insensibly into error.
For even when I consider all this in my own mind, and without using
language, the words arrest me, and I am almost deceived by the terms in
common use; for we say that we see the same wax if it be present, and
not that we judge that it is the same, from its having the same color
and figure; whence I might be tempted to conclude that one knows the
wax by the sight of the eyes, and not merely by the intuition of the
mind, were it not that, in looking from a window at men passing in the
street, I say that I see men, just as I say that I see the wax; and yet
what do I see from this window except hats and cloaks which might cover
machines moved by springs? But I judge that they are men, and thus
comprehend only by the power of judging, which is in my mind, what I
thought I saw with my eyes."[51]

  [51] Méditation Deuxième.--Ed. Simon, Paris, 1860, pp. 76-78.

  In this extract the author attempts to distinguish between what
  is thought and what is perceived by the senses or imagined. Had
  he remained within the sphere of the immediately known, one could
  not have objected to such a distinction. Sameness in sense third
  is something highly complex, implying that elaboration of mental
  elements which we call thought. It is quite just to distinguish
  the notion "a bit of wax" from any single sense experience or
  picture of the imagination. In doing this Descartes was searching
  for sameness in sense third. But when he leaves the sphere of
  consciousness, and assumes that what remains the same in the bit
  of wax is something distinct from the sum total of experiences, as
  men are distinct from their garments, he falls into error. It is
  against this that the criticism in the text is directed.

What Descartes is feeling for in this is sameness in sense third.
When we use the words "a bit of wax," we do not have in mind a single
experience. The wax in a solid and the wax in a liquid state is to us
the same wax. I have pointed out what the word same, so used, means.
It means that these two experiences are recognized as belonging to the
one group or series of experiences; and the wax, completely known,
is the sum total of the series. Descartes saw very well that the two
experiences under discussion are not strictly identical (the same in
sense first), and he saw also that they are very unlike. He naturally
asked, In what then are they the same? or, what is there that is here
the same? And, instead of accepting the fact that such a sameness as
this cannot be reduced to one of the others, he solved the problem by
passing from the experiences, the "hats and cloaks," to a "real" thing
underlying. In other words, to explain the sameness of two experiences
of a bit of wax, sameness in sense third, he assumed "real" wax, which
is the same with the experiences which represent it only in sense
seventh. This real wax, or something in it, he supposes to remain the
same on two occasions. It is this to which he makes the mind refer when
it calls the wax the same. But when a man advances statements about
a bit of wax, his information rests ultimately upon his experiences,
if it be grounded at all. From the experience one infers the "real"
thing, and not _vice versa_. No one knew this better than Descartes,
with his fundamental principle of the certainty of consciousness and
the uncertainty of what is "external." He got his "real" world by
a process of reasoning, and put it in a realm wholly cut off from
direct observation. This being the case, one cannot but wonder at
his inconsistency in the present instance. Is one to remain in doubt
whether a piece of wax felt to be hard, and then melted before the
fire, is the same, until one has had some means of discovering that the
same "real" wax is present on the two occasions? How is one to find
out whether "real" wax is ever present unless he infer its presence
from some experience? And how is one to know that the same "real" wax
is present on two occasions unless he infer it from the fact that
what is directly perceived on the two occasions is the same in some
sense of the word? Whatever sameness there is rests ultimately for its
evidence upon the experiences. There is nothing else to judge from.
The reasoning, which would base the sameness of what is experienced
upon the sameness of a corresponding "real" thing, when the sameness
of this latter is to be inferred from the former, reminds one of the
stupid argument, still occasionally met with, which would infer a God
from data of consciousness, and then found a belief in the veracity of
consciousness upon the goodness of God. One may believe, if one please,
that, when we have two distinct experiences so connected that we call
them two perceptions of the same wax, there is in some way connected
with them a bit of "real" wax which remains in some sense the same. But
one should never suppose that any given experienced wax is proved the
same by reference to this. It is judged the same upon observation.

Descartes then was inconsistent with his own principles when he made
this jump to a new sphere of being. The sameness of the experienced
object is ultimate; the only pertinent question is, what does it mean?
It means, as I have said, that the wax hard and the wax soft are
the same in sense third. But sameness in sense third admits of wide
dissimilarities in the experiences it unites into the notion of the one
object. Descartes looked for a sameness without these dissimilarities.
He would reduce sense third to sense first, or, perhaps, to sense
second. To do this he must go behind the experiences to a "real" thing,
which is to remain the same as a proxy for what is evidently variable.
This makeshift is only satisfactory to one who overlooks, or allows
to fall into the background, the plain fact that representative and
thing represented are two separate things and not to be confused;
that is, who confuses sameness in sense first with sameness in sense
seventh. Descartes distinguished carefully between ideas and external
things, but he sometimes overlooked the distinction. "But what is this
bit of wax that cannot be comprehended save by the understanding or
the mind? It is certainly the same that I see, that I touch, that I
imagine; it is, in a word, the same that I have always thought it from
the beginning." How ambiguous! is it the same in sense first or sense
seventh? The sentence following would indicate sense seventh, but the
spirit of the whole discussion would argue for sense first. One must
delude oneself into believing that one can get at "real" wax directly,
in some way or other, or one cannot think of making it an ultimate
ground of reasoning. Descartes, like so many others, would seem to have
vibrated between a clear consciousness that ideas and "real" things are
distinct, belonging to different worlds, and a confused belief that
they belong to the one world, and that "real" things are open to direct
observation.

I shall take still another extract from this author. It contains
similar errors.

"Now, among these ideas, some appear to me to be inborn, others to
be foreign and to come from without, and still others to be made and
invented by myself. For, as to the faculty of conceiving that which, in
general, one calls a thing, or a truth, or a thought, it appears to me
that I do not get that from any other source than my own nature; but
if now I hear a sound, if I see the sun, if I feel the heat, up to the
present I have judged that these sensations proceed from things which
exist without me; and lastly, it seems to me that syrens, hippogriffs,
and all similar chimeras are fictions and inventions of my mind. But
perhaps I can persuade myself, that all these ideas belong to the class
of those that I call foreign, and that come to me from without, or that
they are all innate, or else that they are all created by myself; for
I have not yet clearly discovered their true source. And my chief duty
here is to consider, touching those which seem to come from objects
without me, what reasons I have for thinking them like their objects.

"The first of the reasons is that I seem to be taught to do so by
nature; and the second, that I perceive that these ideas are not
dependent upon my will; for often they present themselves to me in
spite of me, as now, whether I wish it or not, I feel heat, and
consequently am persuaded that this sensation or idea of heat is
produced in me by something different from me, to wit: by the heat of
the fire by which I am sitting. And I cannot see that anything is more
reasonable than to judge that this external object emits and impresses
upon me its resemblance rather than anything else.

"Now I must see if these reasons are sufficiently strong and
convincing. When I say that I seem to be taught so by nature, I mean
merely by this word nature a certain inclination which leads me to
believe it, and not a natural light which gives me certain knowledge
that it is true. But these two ways of speaking are very different, for
I cannot doubt anything that the natural light shows me to be true,
as it has just shown me that from the fact of my doubting I may infer
my existence; inasmuch as I have not in me any other faculty or power
of distinguishing the true from the false to teach me that what this
light shows me to be true is not true, and in which I may have as much
confidence as in it. But as concerns inclinations which also seem to me
natural, I have often remarked, when it has been a question of choice
between virtues and vices, that they do not less incline to evil than
to good; it follows that I have no more reason to follow them when
the true and the false are in question. And as for the other reason,
which is that these ideas must come from without, since they are not
dependent on my will, I do not find it more convincing. For while these
inclinations of which I have just spoken are in me, notwithstanding
that they are not always in harmony with my will, perhaps there is in
me some faculty or power capable of producing these ideas without the
aid of external things, although it is yet unknown to me; as indeed it
has always seemed to me up to this time that when I sleep they are thus
formed in me without the aid of the objects they represent. Finally,
even should I admit that they are caused by these objects, it does not
necessarily follow that they must be like them. On the contrary, I have
often remarked in many instances, that there is a great difference
between an object and its idea: as, for example, I find in me two very
different ideas of the sun; the one has its source in the senses, and
should be placed in the class of those which I have said above come
from without, and from this it seems to me very small; the other has it
origin in astronomical reasonings, that is to say, in certain notions
which are inborn, or else formed in some way or other by myself, and
from this it seems to me many times greater than the whole earth.
Surely, these two ideas which I have of the sun cannot both be like
the same sun; and reason convinces me that the one which is derived
directly from its appearance is the one which is most unlike it. All
of which proves to me that, up to this hour, it has not been by a sure
and premeditated judgment, but merely by a blind and rash impulse,
that I have been led to believe that there are things without me, and
different from my being, which, by the organs of my senses, or by
whatever other means, convey to me their ideas or images, and impress
upon me their resemblances."[52]

  [52] Méditation Troisième, pp. 83-85.

From the earlier portions of this extract one may see how clearly
Descartes distinguished between the idea, or the thing immediately
known, and the external thing which he assumed as corresponding to the
idea; from the latter part one may see how he sometimes confounded
them. He finds that he may doubt whether ideas have any external
correlatives; and, granting that they have, whether the two resemble
each other at all. All this would imply that "external" things are
completely cut off from observation. And yet he states with _naïveté_
that he has "often remarked in many instances that there is a great
difference between an object and its idea." Now, if this can really be
remarked in many instances, the doubt as to the existence of objects
would seem to be groundless. How can it be remarked? On this point
Descartes is silent. He has evidently fallen back upon the popular
notion that under favorable circumstances one can get a look at a
"real" thing, just as it is. The "reason" which convinces him that
the astronomer's notion of the sun is the true notion is nothing but
this. It could certainly not be deduced from his only argument for the
existence of external things--the veracity of God. How does he know,
that in giving us several different ideas of the sun, God has chosen
to have this one only resemble it? It is a pure assumption. Reason is
of service when one has something to go upon; but in the absence of
premises it will not carry one far. This assumption is an illustration
of what I had occasion to remark upon in criticizing Pyrrho; of the
fact that, from the series of possible perceptions which we group
together as one object, we are apt to select one, to us for some reason
the most satisfactory one, and to regard it as more truly representing
the object than the others. Descartes has followed this impulse, and
made this perception the best representative of the "real" object. Had
he always distinguished sameness in sense first from sameness in sense
seventh, he would have seen how purely gratuitous is his assumption.

The statement, too, that two different ideas of the sun cannot both
resemble the same sun, shows how little he comprehended what it meant
by the word same when used in the third sense. If by the sun we mean a
whole series of possible perceptions, perhaps quite unlike each other,
but all united and related in certain ways, there is nothing to prevent
very dissimilar things from being like the same sun. Each of them need
only resemble a single link in the series. By the words "the same sun"
Descartes meant the same in sense first, but this sins against the
proper meaning of the term. The difficulty is self-created.

Descartes' sun reminds me of Berkeley's moon. This latter writer
clearly perceived that there may be multiplicity and diversity where
one attributes sameness in sense third. Note the following:

"But for a fuller explication of this point, and to show that the
immediate objects of sight are not so much as the ideas or resemblances
of things placed at a distance, it is requisite that we look nearer
into the matter, and carefully observe what is meant in common
discourse when one says that which he sees is at a distance from him.
Suppose, for example, that looking at the moon I should say it were
fifty or sixty semidiameters of the earth distant from me. Let us see
what moon this is spoken of. It is plain it cannot be the visible
moon, or anything like the visible moon, or that I see--which is only
a round, luminous plain, of about thirty visible points in diameter.
For, in case I am carried from the place where I stand directly toward
the moon, it is manifest the object varies still as I go on; and,
by the time that I am advanced fifty or sixty semidiameters of the
earth, I shall be so far from being near a small, round, luminous flat
that I shall perceive nothing like it--this object having long since
disappeared, and, if I would recover it, it must be by going back to
the earth from whence I set out."[53]

  [53] "Essay towards a New Theory of Vision." Sec. 44. Works: ed.
  Fraser. Oxford 1871. Vol. I, p. 53.

So much for dissimilar experiences of the same object. And Berkeley is
not impelled to assume an external something to explain how the object
can be the same under the circumstances. The case, he finds, stands
thus:

"Having of a long time experienced certain ideas perceivable by
touch--as distance, tangible figure, and solidity--to have been
connected with certain ideas of sight, I do, upon perceiving these
ideas of sight, forthwith conclude what tangible ideas are, by the
wonted ordinary course of nature, like to follow. Looking at an object,
I perceive a certain visible figure and color, with some degree of
faintness and other circumstances, which, from what I have formerly
observed, determine me to think that if I advance forward so many
paces, miles, etc., I shall be affected with such and such ideas of
touch."[54]

  [54] _Ibid._, § 45.

And need one ask a clearer illustration of sameness in sense third than
the case of the coach, which occurs in the following section:

"Sitting in my study I hear a coach drive along the street; I look
through the casement and see it; I walk out and enter into it. Thus,
common speech would incline one to think I heard, saw, and touched the
same thing, to wit, the coach. It is, nevertheless, certain the ideas
intromitted by each sense are widely different and distinct from each
other; but, having been observed constantly to go together, they are
spoken of as one and the same thing."


SEC. 30. It would be easy to select from Spinoza, that master of
reasonings apparently very exact but really very loose, many good
instances of confused samenesses. I shall confine myself to a single
one, his argument to prove that every substance is necessarily
infinite. It is the eighth proposition in Part I of the Ethics.

"There cannot be more than one substance with the same attribute, and
this exists of its own nature. It belongs, then, to its nature to exist
either as finite or as infinite. But it cannot be finite, for then it
would have to be limited by another of the same kind, which would also
necessarily exist; there would then be two substances with the same
attribute, which is absurd. It is, therefore, infinite."[55]

  [55] _Substantia unius attributi non nisi unica existit, et ad
  ipsius naturam pertinet existere. Erit ergo de ipsius natura vel
  finita vel infinita existere. At non finita. Nam deberet terminari
  ab alia eiusdem naturæ, quæ etiam necessario deberet existere;
  adeoque darentur duæ substantiæ eiusdem attributi, quod est
  absurdum. Existit ergo infinita_; q. e. d.--_Ethices, Pars prima;
  VIII. Omnis substantia est necessario infinita._ Leipzig, 1875,
  p. 84.

Among its defects this argument includes a confusion of sameness in
sense fourth with sameness in sense first. Attribute Spinoza has
defined as that which is conceived as the essence of substance. Mode is
a modification of substance. Two substances, he has argued, cannot be
distinguished from each other by their modifications, for substance is
prior to its modifications, and we may set these aside and consider it
as it is in itself. Substances cannot then, be distinguished except by
their attributes; and if the attribute be the same, how can we say that
there are two substances? There cannot, consequently, be two substances
with the same attribute.

But, the argument continues, since there cannot be two substances
with the same attribute, every substance must be infinite; for, to
be finite, a thing must be limited by something: and nothing can be
limited except by a thing of the same kind (for example, a material
thing cannot be limited by a thought). But if a thing be limited
by another thing of the same kind, the thing limited and the thing
limiting have the same attribute. It follows that they are not two
things, but one. The thing in question is not limited but infinite.

In criticizing this, I may call attention, in passing, to the highly
disputable and gratuitously assumed premise, that, to be finite, a
thing must be limited by _something_. If this be denied, the ground
of the reasoning is removed; while, if it be granted, no argument is
needed to prove that something is infinite, for one has only said
in other words that all limits must be limits within something. The
question is begged at once. With this, however, I am not concerned.
What interests me is this: The argument assumes a limited thing and
a something beyond it, and then asserts that they are one. But two
things of the same kind in different places, or marked as different
by distinctions of any sort, are readily distinguished as two. To
come to the concrete, extension conceived as on this side of a point
and extension conceived as beyond the point are not extension simply,
but "this" extension and "that" extension. They are the same only
in sense fourth, not in sense first. We have here not merely the
attribute extension, but the further elements "this" and "that." The
conclusion, then, that what we started out with is infinite, is wholly
unwarranted. It is not this that is infinite, but this with something
else which is to some degree like it, although not wholly so. That is
to say, the thing assumed as finite can only be proved to be infinite
by confounding two samenesses. The thing proved to be infinite is a
new object including it and what it is assumed to presuppose. If it be
not permissible to make this distinction between the object assumed as
finite, for the sake of the argument, and the object which is proved
to be infinite, it is also not permissible to assert that an object
to be finite "would have to be limited by another of the same kind."
If the two are one, these words are meaningless. If they are not
one, one cannot conclude from the argument that every substance is
necessarily infinite, but only that something is necessarily infinite,
a conclusion already given in the single premise that what is limited
must be limited by something of the same kind. As a matter of fact,
Spinoza retains in his argument not only the attribute, but the mode,
the "this" and the "beyond this;" and then he overlooks the mode and
considers merely the attribute, which gives him strict identity. This
procedure we have met before in the dispute concerning universals.


SEC. 31. In the former part of my monograph I have mentioned Locke's
confusion of sameness in sense seventh with sameness in sense first.
I shall now quote a few sections from the "Essay concerning Human
Understanding" to show how significant his error is, and to what an
extent it is responsible for his position regarding ideas, things, and
substance. My extracts are from the eleventh chapter of the fourth
book, entitled "Of our Knowledge of the Existence of Other Things."
Locke argues as follows:[56]

  [56] Locke's Essays, Philadelphia, 1846, p. 415, _et seq._

"The knowledge of our own being we have by intuition. The existence of
a God reason clearly makes known to us, as has been shown.

"The knowledge of the existence of any other thing we can have only by
sensation: for there being no necessary connection of real existence
with any idea a man hath in his memory, nor of any other existence but
that of God, with the existence of any particular man; no particular
man can know the existence of any other being, but only when by actual
operating upon him it makes itself perceived by him. For the having
the idea of anything in our mind no more proves the existence of that
thing, than the picture of a man evidences his being in the world, or
the visions of a dream make thereby a true history.

"It is therefore the actual receiving of ideas from without, that gives
us notice of the existence of other things, and makes us know that
something doth exist at that time without us, which causes that idea
in us, though perhaps we neither know nor consider how it does it:
for it takes not from the certainty of our senses, and the ideas we
receive by them, that we know not the manner wherein they are produced,
_v. g._, whilst I write this I have, by the paper affecting my eyes,
that idea produced in my mind which, whatever object causes, I call
white; by which I know that that quality or accident (_i. e._, whose
appearance before my eyes always causes that idea) doth really exist,
and hath a being without me. And of this, the greatest assurance I can
possibly have, and to which my faculties can attain, is the testimony
of my eyes, which are the proper and sole judges of this thing, whose
testimony I have reason to rely on as so certain, that I can no more
doubt, whilst I write this, that I see white and black, and that
something really exists that causes that sensation in me, than that I
write or move my hand: which is a certainty as great as human nature
is capable of, concerning the existence of anything but a man's self
alone, and of God.

"The notice we have by our senses of the existing of things without us,
though it be not altogether so certain as our intuitive knowledge, or
the deductions of our reason, employed about the clear abstract ideas
of our own minds; yet it is an assurance that deserves the name of
knowledge. If we persuade ourselves that our faculties act and inform
us right, concerning the existence of those objects that affect them,
it cannot pass for an ill-grounded confidence: for I think nobody can,
in earnest, be so sceptical as to be uncertain of the existence of
those things which he sees and feels. At least, he that can doubt so
far (whatever he may have with his own thoughts) will never have any
controversy with me; since he can never be sure I say anything contrary
to his own opinion. As to myself, I think God has given me assurance
enough of the existence of things without me; since by their different
application I can produce in myself both pleasure and pain, which
is one great concernment of my present state. This is certain, the
confidence that our faculties do not herein deceive us is the greatest
assurance we are capable of, concerning the existence of material
beings. For we cannot act anything but by our faculties; nor talk of
knowledge itself, but by the helps of those faculties which are fitted
to apprehend even what knowledge is. But besides the assurance we have
from our senses themselves, that they do not err in the information
they give us, of the existence of things without us, when they are
affected by them, we are farther confirmed in this assurance by other
concurrent reasons.

"First, it is plain those perceptions are produced in us by exterior
causes affecting our senses: because those that want the organs of any
sense never can have the ideas belonging to that sense produced in
their minds. This is too evident to be doubted: and therefore we cannot
but be assured that they come in by the organs of that sense, and no
other way. The organs themselves, it is plain, do not produce them; for
then the eyes of a man in the dark would produce colors, and his nose
smell roses in the winter: but we see nobody gets the relish of a pine
apple till he goes to the Indies, where it is, and tastes it.

"Secondly, because sometimes I find that I cannot avoid the having
those ideas produced in my mind. For though when my eyes are shut,
or windows fast, I can at pleasure recall to my mind the ideas of
light, or the sun, which former sensations had lodged in my memory;
so I can at pleasure lay by that idea, and take into my view that of
the smell of a rose, or taste of sugar. But if I turn my eyes at noon
towards the sun, I cannot avoid the ideas which the light, or sun,
then produces in me. So that there is a manifest difference between
the ideas laid up in my memory (over which, if they were there only,
I should have constantly the same power to dispose of them, and lay
them by at pleasure), and those which force themselves upon me, and
I cannot avoid having. And therefore it must needs be some exterior
cause, and the brisk acting of some objects without me, whose efficacy
I cannot resist, that produces those ideas in my mind, whether I will
or no. Besides, there is nobody who doth not perceive the difference
in himself between contemplating the sun, as he hath the idea of it in
his memory, and actually looking upon it; of which two his perception
is so distinct, that few of his ideas are more distinguishable one from
another. And therefore, he hath certain knowledge, that they are not
both memory, or the actions of his mind, and fancies only within him;
but that actual seeing hath a cause without.

"Thirdly, add to this, that many of those ideas are produced in us
with pain, which afterward we remember without the least offense. Thus
the pain of heat or cold, when the idea of it is revived in our minds,
gives us no disturbance; which, when felt, was very troublesome, and
is again when actually repeated; which is occasioned by the disorder
the external object causes in our bodies when applied to it. And we
remember the pains of hunger, thirst, or the headache, without any
pain at all; which would either never disturb us, or else constantly
do it, as often as we thought of it, were there nothing more but ideas
floating in our minds, and appearances entertaining our fancies,
without the real existence of things affecting us from abroad. The
same may be said of pleasure accompanying several actual sensations,
and though mathematical demonstrations depend not upon sense, yet
the examining them by diagrams gives great credit to the evidence of
our sight, and seems to give it a certainty approaching to that of
demonstration itself. For it would be very strange that a man should
allow it for an undeniable truth, that two angles of a figure, which he
measures by lines and angles of a diagram, should be bigger one than
the other; and yet doubt of the existence of those lines and angles,
which by looking on he makes use of to measure that by.

"Fourthly, our senses in many cases bear witness to the truth of each
other's report, concerning the existence of sensible things without us.
He that sees a fire may, if he doubt whether it be anything more than
a bare fancy, feel it too; and be convinced by putting his hand in it:
which certainly could never be put into such exquisite pain by a bare
idea or phantom, unless that the pain, be a fancy too, which yet he
cannot, when the burn is well, by raising the idea of it, bring upon
himself again.

"Thus I see, whilst I write this, I can change the appearance of the
paper: and by designing the letters tell beforehand what new idea it
shall exhibit the very next moment, by barely drawing my pen over it:
which will neither appear (let me fancy as much as I will), if my hands
stand still; or though I move my pen, if my eyes be shut: nor, when
those characters are once made on the paper, can I choose afterward but
see them as they are: that is, have the ideas of such letters as I have
made. Whence it is manifest, that they are not barely the sport and
play of my own imagination, when I find that the characters that were
made at the pleasure of my own thought, do not obey them; nor yet cease
to be, whenever I shall fancy it; but continue to affect the senses
constantly and regularly, according to the figures I made them. To
which if we will add, that the sight of those shall, from another man,
draw such sounds as I beforehand design they shall stand for; there
will be little reason left to doubt that those words I write do really
exist without me, when they cause a long series of regular sounds to
affect my ears, which could not be the effect of my imagination, nor
could my memory retain them in that order."

This is quite a long citation, but I have given it at length because
it may stand as the type of by far the greater part of the objections
urged against Idealism, and because a better instance of the confusion
of two samenesses could scarcely be desired. Notice how constantly it
is assumed that the thing given in perception is the "real" thing, a
thing which is, nevertheless, characterized as distinct from, and the
cause of, the idea.

At the outset Locke distinguishes well enough between the idea and the
"external" thing. The having the idea of any thing in the mind, he
declares, no more proves the existence of that thing than the picture
of a man evidences his being in the world. It is only the receiving
of ideas from without that gives us notice of things as causes of the
ideas. It would seem quite fair here to ask how we know that some ideas
come from without? Of course, if the realm of the "without" were open
to inspection, the question could be answered at once. But it is not
open to inspection--certainly not to a consistent Lockian. How, then,
may I distinguish ideas coming from without from other ideas? No ideas
are perceived until they are what Locke would call "within."

The appeal to the testimony of the eyes needs examination. To what eyes
does one appeal? The immediately known or idea-eyes, or the "external"
organs whose existence is the matter of dispute? Surely not to the
last, for it is only as a result of the argument that we may assume
these at all. And what hand is it so certain that I move in writing?
The complex of ideas immediately known, or the something beyond, whose
existence is to be established? If it be the latter, all discussion is
unnecessary. If, on the other hand, the eyes and the hand concerned are
ideas, it is not clear how the appeal to them can be of any service.
Does a sense give anything but sensations? And if the very sense organ
as immediately known be a group of sensations, how can the testimony of
a sense land one in a world beyond that of sensations? And the argument
that God has given me assurance of the existence of things without
me, since by applying them to myself I can produce in myself pain and
pleasure, presupposes that I can apply such things to myself and know
that I am doing so. If this be the fact, it is trifling to discuss
whether things I move to and fro exist. If, however, it is still to be
proved that there are such things, and that they are moved to and fro,
the argument is wholly baseless. Locke here makes appeal to the common
experience that certain objects applied to the body cause pleasure,
and certain others pain; a fact which no reasonable man would think of
denying or questioning, as it is matter of daily observation. But in
such experiences, all that is immediately evident is that an object
immediately perceived (Locke's idea) is applied to another object
immediately perceived (idea) with a resulting (idea) pain. Whether or
not certain duplicates of the things immediately known are brought
into a peculiar conjunction at the same time is wholly problematic,
and would seem to remain so until some evidence be advanced of the
existence of such duplicates. This argument on the part of our author
shows most clearly that for the time being he lost the distinction
between ideas and "real" things. They are the same in sense seventh; he
assumed them to be the same in sense first. He falls into this error
again and again.

The general appeal to the testimony of the senses is followed by
four special arguments. According to the first of these, it is plain
that perceptions are produced in us by exterior causes affecting our
senses, "because those that want the organs of any sense never can have
the ideas belonging to that sense produced in their minds." This is
supposed to prove that they come in by the organs of that sense, and in
no other way. But here again one may ask, What is meant by the organs
of any sense? If the "real" external organ be meant, one may object
that its existence has not yet been proved. If the organ immediately
known be meant, one has only called attention to the fact that certain
ideas are a _sine qua non_ to the existence of certain other ideas. How
this tends to prove the existence of something distinct from ideas is
not apparent. Locke's impulse in this argument finds its source in our
common experience that bodily organs immediately perceived are proved
by observation to be prerequisites to the experiencing of ideas. We see
a given object in a certain relation to a normal human body, and we
infer an idea of the object connected with that body. We say the man
has an idea of the object, and can only infer the object itself. We
connect the idea with some particular part of his body, and regard this
as the medium through which he gains the idea. All this is reasonable
enough. It is well to remember, however, that in all this the "real"
object is not observed to play any part. The object which I certainly
see in relation to the body which I certainly see is what Locke would
call an idea. The man's body is an idea. The idea which I assume the
man to have is to me, if I remain within the sphere of the observable,
an idea of the (idea) object I see. If I am to get any "real" object
at all it is not by reference to observation or experience. If I am to
get it by inference, some ground must be furnished for inference. Again
Locke has confounded the observable with the "real." It is only on this
ground that the appeal to the sense organ has any force.

The second and the third arguments busy themselves to show that there
are unmistakable differences between ideas which have their origin
in the "brisk acting" of objects without and ideas of memory or
imagination. The two classes are shown to be distinct, and it is very
properly held that ideas of different kinds should not be confounded.
But the statement, that ideas may be divided into two classes, is a
very different one from the statement that the two classes differ in
that one has external correlates and the other has not. One may admit
all the distinctions which Locke makes in the field of ideas; and,
it being once proved that such distinctions imply a world of "real"
things in relation to certain ideas, may grant very readily that these
ideas have corresponding to them "real" things, or that ideas caused
by "real" things differ by such and such marks from other ideas. But,
until it be proved that the marks in question do give a right to infer
"real" things, it should not be assumed that any given class of ideas
is caused by "real" things. What is to be discovered is assumed. And it
is assumed here, as above, because Locke could not keep distinct the
two classes of things. He is capable of saying, "But if I turn my eyes
at noon towards the sun, I cannot avoid the ideas which the light, or
sun, then produces in me," when the whole dispute is over the question
whether there be a "real" sun toward which "real" eyes may be turned.
How does he know that he is turning his eyes toward the sun? Does he
not see it up there? Is he not "actually looking upon it?" His error is
too plain to overlook. But if one could doubt his confusion of the two
suns, the apparent and the "real," his illustration from the diagrams
used in mathematical demonstration would lay the doubt once for all.
"Real" lines exist, "for it would be very strange that a man should
allow it for an undeniable truth, that two angles of a figure, which he
measures by lines and angles of a diagram, should be bigger one than
the other; and yet doubt of the existence of those lines and angles,
which by looking on he makes use of to measure that by." The English is
not as bad as the reasoning.

The fourth argument is derived from the fact that one sense supports
the testimony of another. "He that sees a fire may, if he doubt whether
it be anything more than a bare fancy, feel it too." A bare fancy,
Locke is sure, would not cause such acute pain. This comes back to the
second and third arguments and may be criticized in the same way. If
one could refer to a single observation of the fact that "real" things
do not accompany ideas of the fancy and that they do accompany ideas
of a different class, the argument would be unobjectionable. Wanting
this observation, or something to take its place, nothing is proved.
And as to the senses helping each other to "real" things, if each sense
only gives the idea appropriate to it, it is not easy to see how two
together prove more than one alone. In this section, too, Locke is
assuming that "real" things belong to the world of things immediately
perceived. He can, he says, make what characters he pleases on the
paper before him, but once having made them, cannot choose but see
them as they are. "Whence it is manifest, that they are not barely the
sport and play of my own imagination, when I find that the characters
that were made at the pleasure of my own thought, do not obey them; nor
yet cease to be, whenever I shall fancy it; but continue to affect the
senses constantly and regularly, according to the figures I made them."
That is, the ideas which he concludes not to be ideas of imagination
are the things "which continue to affect the senses," or the "real"
things. There is little wonder that this author believed in "real"
things.


SEC. 32. Excellent work has been done by Berkeley in distinguishing
samenesses. His treatment of sameness in sense third I have already
quoted. His discussion of the infinite divisibility of finite
lines,[57] a matter of which I shall speak more fully later, again
brings out sense third. Almost his whole philosophy consists in the
endeavor to keep clearly in mind the significance of sense seventh,
and to develop what it implies. On the other hand, he has fallen into
the error of confusing sense first and sense sixth, and of using this
confusion to silence an objection to his doctrine.

  [57] "A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge,"
  §§ 123-132. Ed. Fraser, Vol. I, pp. 220-225.

He takes up in the "Principles," for the purpose of refuting it, the
objection that his doctrine makes things every moment annihilated
and created anew.[58] This, he argues, "will not be found reasonably
charged on the principles we have premised, so as in truth to make
any objection at all against our notions. For, though we hold indeed
the objects of sense to be nothing else but ideas which cannot exist
unperceived; yet we may not hence conclude they have no existence
except only while they are perceived by us, since there may be some
other spirit that perceives them though we do not. Wherever bodies are
said to have no existence without the mind, I would not be understood
to mean this or that particular mind, but all minds whatsoever. It does
not therefore follow from the foregoing principles that bodies are
annihilated and created every moment, or exist not at all during the
intervals between our perception of them."

  [58] §§ 45-48, pp. 178-180.

To the reader of Mill it is clear enough that Berkeley is not content
to assume potential existence as an integral part of the life history
of an object. It seems odd that he should not do so, as he has himself
pointed out the double sense of the word exist.[59] However, he demands
actual existence. Any lapse in the actual existence of the immediate
object seems to him a destruction of the object. He has the common
feeling that it is contrary to nature that things should be destroyed
and created from moment to moment. They must exist continuously. They
evidently do not actually exist continuously in the one mind. So he
assumes that, during the periods of their absence from one mind, they
must exist in another: otherwise they could not be said to exist at all.

  [59] "Principles," §3, p. 157.

Of course, all this assumes that the objects in one mind are
identically (sense first) the objects in another. If they be recognized
as two distinct things, belonging to different worlds--worlds so
different that what is in one can enter the other only through its
representative--the whole argument is seen to be fallacious. One can
no more make a consistent whole of elements taken from two different
consciousnesses, than one can piece out a grief with a smell. The
attempt is the result of overlooking the duality implied in sameness in
sense sixth.


SEC. 33. There is a clear and forcible passage in John Stuart Mill's
"System of Logic," in which he distinguishes certain samenesses from
certain others. It is to be regretted that he dismissed the subject
with so slight an examination, for it could not but have gained
by a careful analysis at the hands of this keen man. I quote more
particularly to bring out what Mill has to say about sameness in sense
second.

"While speaking of resemblance, it is necessary to take notice of an
ambiguity of language, against which scarcely any one is sufficiently
on his guard. Resemblance, when it exists in the highest degree of all,
amounting to undistinguishableness, is often called identity, and the
two similar things are said to be the same. I say often, not always;
for we do not say that two visible objects, two persons, for instance,
are the same, because they are so much alike that one might be mistaken
for the other: but we constantly use this mode of expression when
speaking of feelings; as when I say that the sight of any object gives
me the _same_ sensation or emotion to-day that it did yesterday, or
the _same_ which it gives to some other person. This is evidently an
incorrect application of the word _same_; for the feeling which I had
yesterday is gone, never to return; what I have to-day is another
feeling, exactly like the former, perhaps, but distinct from it; and it
is evident that two different persons cannot be experiencing the same
feeling, in the sense in which we say that they are both sitting at the
same table. By a similar ambiguity we say, that two persons are ill of
the _same_ disease; that two persons hold the _same_ office; not in
the sense in which we say that they are engaged in the same adventure,
or sailing in the same ship, but in the sense that they fill offices
exactly similar, though, perhaps, in distant places. Great confusion of
ideas is often produced, and many fallacies engendered, in otherwise
enlightened understandings, by not being sufficiently alive to the fact
(in itself not always to be avoided), that they use the same name to
express ideas so different as those of identity and undistinguishable
resemblance."[60]

  [60] "A System of Logic," Book I, Chap. III, § 11, N. Y., 1882,
  p. 62.

It will be seen that Mill here draws a line between sameness in sense
first and the samenesses in which there is an element of duality.
He also draws attention to the fact--a fact to which I have already
referred--that successive mental elements, considered in themselves,
are more likely to be confounded than material things, though these
last may be quite as closely similar. Language shows how men overlook
the duality of two similar feelings which differ only in time. They
may speak of two similar objects as the same, as they frequently do,
and yet they will not usually lose the sense of their twoness. They
say _these_ objects are the same. But when they compare a feeling
experienced to-day with one experienced yesterday, they say _this_ is
the same feeling I had yesterday. There is nothing in the language used
to indicate duality at all.

I have said that, in the extract given, a line is drawn between
samenesses which imply duality and the sameness which does not; and
yet such illustrations are used to represent the latter as a man, a
table, and a ship--objects which are the same in sense third as well
as in sense first, and which consequently imply duality, in some
sense of the word. But, if one is not considering single members of
the chain of experiences which, taken together, we call a man, but is
considering the whole group as a unit, this difficulty disappears.
This is evidently what Mill has in mind, and he cannot be taxed with
inconsistency. One may, however, object to the statement that it is an
improper use of the word same to speak of things merely similar as the
same. The word has many meanings, and we can hardly say that any one
of them is illegitimate. It is merely illegitimate to confound them.
And one should not take quite literally the description of resemblance
in the highest degree as "amounting to undistinguishableness." Strict
undistinguishableness removes all duality, and consequently makes
impossible what we call resemblance or similarity. To be similar,
things must be distinguished as two. Finally, one may object to a
treatment of samenesses which merely groups them into two classes,
when there are at least seven kinds that should, in the interests of
clear thinking, be kept separate. It is only by carefully marking such
distinctions that fallacious reasonings are to be avoided. As, however,
this discussion of samenesses is merely a side issue where it occurs in
the Logic, it would perhaps be unjust to blame Mill for not going into
it more fully.


SEC. 34. At this point I leave the realms of the dead and emerge into
the land of the living. The errors that I have been criticizing still
live, and it would not be difficult to glean a goodly number of them
from the authors of our day. I shall be moderate, and will content
myself with one or two representative instances.

It would be surprising if as loose and incautious a reasoner as Mr.
Herbert Spencer did not furnish some examples of confused samenesses.
To certain of his errors in this direction I have briefly referred in
the earlier part of my monograph. Here I shall treat of him a little
more at length, though even here it is impossible to do justice to the
subject, as that would involve my quoting and commenting upon at least
a large part of the first division of the "First Principles." I shall
take only the conclusion of the argument by which he establishes the
existence of his "Unknowable," or "Inscrutable Power," or "Ultimate
Cause," or "Unseen Reality," or "Absolute." This contains two
confusions of no little significance. Mr. Spencer writes:

"Hence our firm belief in objective reality--a belief which
metaphysical criticisms cannot for a moment shake. When we are taught
that a piece of matter, regarded by us as existing externally, cannot
be really known, but that we can know only certain impressions produced
on us, we are yet, by the relativity of our thought, compelled to
think of these in relation to a positive cause--the notion of a real
existence which generated these impressions becomes nascent. If it be
proved to us that every notion of a real existence which we can frame
is utterly inconsistent with itself--that matter, however conceived
by us, cannot be matter as it actually is, our conception, though
transfigured, is not destroyed: there remains the sense of reality,
dissociated as far as possible from those special forms under which
it was before represented in thought. Though Philosophy condemns
successively each attempted conception of the Absolute--though it
proves to us that the Absolute is not this, nor that, nor that--though
in obedience to it we negative, one after another, each idea as it
arises; yet, as we cannot expel the entire contents of consciousness,
there ever remains behind an element which passes into new shapes. The
continual negation of each particular form and limit, simply results in
the more or less complete abstraction of all forms and limits; and so
ends in an indefinite consciousness of the unformed and unlimited.

"And here we come face to face with the ultimate difficulty--How can
there possibly be constituted a consciousness of the unformed and
unlimited, when, by its very nature, consciousness is possible only
under forms and limits? If every consciousness of existence is a
consciousness of existence as conditioned, then how, after the negation
of conditions, can there be any residuum? Though not directly withdrawn
by the withdrawal of its conditions, must not the raw material of
consciousness be withdrawn by implication? Must it not vanish when the
conditions of its existence vanish? That there must be a solution of
this difficulty is manifest; since even those who would put it, do,
as already shown, admit that we have some such consciousness; and the
solution appears to be that above shadowed forth. Such consciousness
is not, and cannot be, constituted by any single mental act; but is
the product of many mental acts. In each concept there is an element
which persists. It is alike impossible for this element to be absent
from consciousness, and for it to be present in consciousness alone:
either alternative involves unconsciousness--the one from the want of
the substance; the other from the want of the form. But the persistence
of this element under successive conditions, _necessitates_ a sense of
it as distinguished from the conditions, and independent of them. The
sense of a something that is conditioned in every thought, cannot be
got rid of, because the something cannot be got rid of. How then must
the sense of this something be constituted? Evidently by combining
successive concepts deprived of their limits and conditions. We form
this indefinite thought, as we form many of our definite thoughts, by
the coalescence of a series of thoughts. Let me illustrate this: A
large complex object, having attributes too numerous to be represented
at once, is yet tolerably well conceived by the union of several
representations, each standing for part of its attributes. On thinking
of a piano, there first rises in imagination its visual appearance, to
which are instantly added (though by separate mental acts) the ideas
of its remote side and of its solid substance. A complete conception,
however, involves the strings, the hammers, the dampers, the pedals;
and while successively adding these to the conception, the attributes
first thought of lapse more or less completely out of consciousness.
Nevertheless, the whole group constitutes a representation of the
piano. Now as in this case we form a definite concept of a special
existence, by imposing limits and conditions in successive acts; so,
in the converse case, by taking away the limits and conditions in
successive acts, we form an indefinite notion of general existence.
By fusing a series of states of consciousness, in each of which, as
it arises, the limitations and conditions are abolished, there is
produced a consciousness of something unconditioned. To speak more
rigorously:--this consciousness is not the abstract of any one group
of thoughts, ideas, or conceptions; but it is the abstract of _all_
thoughts, ideas, or conceptions. That which is common to them all,
and cannot be got rid of, is what we predicate by the word existence.
Dissociated as this becomes from each of its modes by the perpetual
change of those modes, it remains as an indefinite consciousness
of something constant under all modes--of being apart from its
appearances. The distinction we feel between special and general
existence, is the distinction between that which is changeable in us,
and that which is unchangeable. The contrast between the Absolute and
the Relative in our minds, is really the contrast between that mental
element which exists absolutely, and those which exist relatively.

"By its very nature, therefore, this ultimate mental element is at
once necessarily indefinite and necessarily indestructible. Our
consciousness of the unconditioned being literally the unconditioned
consciousness, or raw material of thought to which in thinking we give
definite forms, it follows that an ever-present sense of real existence
is the very basis of our intelligence. As we can in successive mental
acts get rid of all particular conditions and replace them by others,
but cannot get rid of that undifferentiated substance of consciousness
which is conditioned anew in every thought; there ever remains with
us a sense of that which exists persistently and independently of
conditions. At the same time that by the laws of thought we are
rigorously prevented from forming a conception of absolute existence;
we are by the laws of thought equally prevented from ridding ourselves
of the consciousness of absolute existence: this consciousness being,
as we here see, the obverse of our self-consciousness. And since the
only possible measure of relative validity among our beliefs, is the
degree of their persistence in opposition to the efforts made to change
them, it follows that this which persists at all times, under all
circumstances, and cannot cease until consciousness ceases, has the
highest validity of any.

"To sum up this somewhat too elaborate argument:--We have seen how
in the very assertion that all our knowledge, properly so called,
is Relative, there is involved the assertion that there exists a
Non-relative. We have seen how, in each step of the argument by which
this doctrine is established, the same assumption is made. We have
seen how, from the very necessity of thinking in relations, it follows
that the Relative is itself inconceivable, except as related to a real
Non-relative. We have seen that unless a real Non-relative or Absolute
be postulated, the Relative itself becomes absolute; and so brings
the argument to a contradiction. And on contemplating the process of
thought, we have equally seen how impossible it is to get rid of
the consciousness of an actuality lying behind appearances; and how,
from this impossibility, results our indestructible belief in that
actuality."[61]

  [61] "First Principles," Part 1, Chap. IV, § 26, N. Y., 1888,
  pp. 93-97.

Such an extract as this is very tempting to the critic, but I shall
try not to be drawn into criticisms which do not immediately concern
my purpose in quoting. The points which chiefly interest me are Mr.
Spencer's evident confusion of sameness in sense seventh with sameness
in sense first, and of sameness in sense second with sameness in sense
first. I shall begin with the first confusion.

Every careful reader of the extract given above must see that the
Absolute with which Mr. Spencer's argument is concerned is an Absolute
in consciousness. It is "an indefinite consciousness," "raw material
of consciousness," an "indefinite thought," an "abstract of _all_
thoughts, ideas, or conceptions." It is the element of existence
which is common to all these thoughts, ideas, or conceptions. If
there could be any doubt as to the nature of this Absolute in which
the argument results, it should be set at rest by the very emphatic
statement that "our consciousness of the unconditioned" is "literally
the unconditioned consciousness, or raw material of thought to which
in thinking we give definite forms." It is this "undifferentiated
substance of consciousness which is conditional anew in every
thought" that remains with us as an Absolute through all forms of the
conditioned.

Now this Absolute, the element of existence which accompanies all other
elements in consciousness, is the only one with which the argument has
at all concerned itself, and yet this is evidently not the Absolute in
which the author is chiefly interested. There can be no good reason
for calling this Absolute either Unknowable, Incomprehensible, or
Inscrutable. It is not a "Power" for it is simply the element of
existence, nor is it a "Reality," for the "abstract of _all_ thoughts,
ideas, or conceptions" must be common to the unreal or imaginary as
well as to the real. It is (mental) existence pure and simple. If the
argument be good, this element is known completely and just as it is;
indefinitely, it is true, but then it is indefinite, and if known
definitely would not be known as it is. There is nothing farther about
it to know. It is in no sense Unknowable. If the objection be to the
use of the word "know" where the knowledge is indefinite, we should
invent some word to apply to an indefinite consciousness; but such
consciousness, if denied to be knowledge, should not be classed with
ignorance. Moreover, as knowledge is of all degrees of definiteness,
we should need a series of words to express the gradations. The series
would be a long one.

But the Absolute which interests Mr. Spencer, and which throws that
halo of the mysterious about his philosophy, is a something distinct
from the Absolute in consciousness, and not known as it is. It is by
no means that which is common to "impressions" made upon us, but the
something assumed to make these impressions. It is "under," "apart
from," and "behind" appearances and modes--which an Absolute, which
is simply that which is common to appearances and modes, cannot be.
Phenomena (the things immediately known) are only "a manifestation
of some Power by which we are acted upon,"[62] and this Absolute
cannot take its place among phenomena, as the former must. The two
Absolutes are, indeed, quite distinct things: one of them, the one in
consciousness, has been shown to exist; no argument is forthcoming to
prove the existence of the other. Manifestly it is not immediately
known, for then it would be a phenomenon, however indefinite. Upon what
ground is it inferred? It is the old problem of Descartes and Locke.

  [62] "First Principles." Chap. V, § 27, p. 99.

This problem Mr. Spencer solves in the same way as they, by assuming
the "external" object to be given immediately; but there is this
important difference, that whereas Descartes and Locke fall into the
error from inadvertence, the author of the "First Principles" and the
"Principles of Psychology" embraces it deliberately. The two earlier
writers were sometimes able to recognize as two things a something in
consciousness and an assumed something without. They confused them only
now and then. Mr. Spencer has been unable to distinguish them with
clearness at any time, and he elevates the confusion into a principle.

"The postulate with which metaphysical reasoning sets out, is that we
are primarily conscious only of our sensations--that we certainly know
we have these, and that if there be anything beyond these serving as
cause for them, it can be known only by inference from them.

"I shall give much surprise to the metaphysical reader if I call in
question this postulate; and the surprise will rise into astonishment
if I distinctly deny it. Yet I must do this. Limiting the proposition
to those epi-peripheral feelings produced in us by external objects
(for these are alone in question) I see no alternative but to affirm
that the thing primarily known, is not that a sensation has been
experienced, but that there exists an outer object."[63]

  [63] "Principles of Psychology," Part VII, Chap. VI, N. Y., 1883,
  Vol. II, p. 369.

"The question here is--What does consciousness directly testify? And
the direct testimony of consciousness is, that Time and Space are not
within but without the mind; and so absolutely independent of it that
they cannot be conceived to become non-existent even were the mind to
become non-existent."[64]

  [64] "First Principles," Part I, Chap. III, § 15, ed. cit. p. 49.

The moral of the first bit quoted would seem to be, unless we make
the word "primarily" refer only to order in time, that one knows
immediately what is beyond consciousness and mediately what is in
it--a use of words satisfactory, I should think, to no one but Mr.
Spencer. If, by "primarily" be meant "previously," and the two classes
of being are known in just the same way, why distinguish between the
classes? Moreover, in this case a thing would not be known "through"
appearances, but before them. Upon the other supposition, to be sure,
appearances would be known "through" it--a mode of speaking not in
harmony with the language of the "First Principles." It seems a choice
between Scylla and Charybdis.

The second extract makes consciousness "directly testify" not only to
what is beyond its pale, but, putting on the spirit of prophecy, even
to what does not belong to the present, but to a possible future. When
we speak of consciousness as testifying to a sensation, we mean simply
that the sensation is in consciousness. The word cannot be used in this
sense in speaking of what is beyond consciousness. In what sense is it
used? It would seem to mean, if it mean anything, that consciousness
gives one the right to infer a something beyond--a right which
thoughtful men believe should be established by proof. This proof,
one cannot, of course, expect from a man who makes the thing beyond
consciousness the thing "primarily" known. It would be more consistent
in him to attempt a proof that there is something in consciousness.

This complete confusion in Mr. Spencer's mind of things in
consciousness and things without, will explain why he keeps talking
of his two Absolutes as if there were only one, as if this one were
the one of which we are conscious, and yet as if this one were beyond
consciousness. His pages swarm with illustrations which I might
give. I shall give only the following: "Thus the consciousness of
an Inscrutable Power manifested to us through all phenomena, has
been growing ever clearer; and must eventually be freed from its
imperfections."[65] If Mr. Spencer ever comes to a consciousness that
sameness in sense seventh is not sameness in sense first, he will find
work before him in remodeling his doctrine.

  [65] "First Principles," Part I, Chap. V, § 31, p. 108.

The second confusion upon which I wish to comment comes to the surface
in a sentence occurring near the end of the lengthy extract quoted at
the outset: "And since the only possible measure of relative validity
among our beliefs, is the degree of their persistence in opposition
to the efforts made to change them, it follows that this which
persists at all times, under all circumstances, and cannot cease until
consciousness ceases, has the highest validity of any."

Now that which, it has been argued, persists at all times and under
all circumstances, is the "raw material of thought," the element
of existence which is the "abstract of _all_ thoughts, ideas, or
conceptions." It is merely that which they have in common, and can
include none of those elements in which they differ. If, however,
persistence mean anything, it means persistence in time. That which
exists at this time and that which exists at that are not one, strictly
speaking, but two. That is, they are not the same in sense first,
but in some looser sense which will admit of duality. If, then, we
are dealing with the Absolute, existence pure and simple, and are
abstracting from all differences which may mark out _this_ existence
from _that_, we must abstract from temporal distinctions too. If we
do this, we can no longer speak of the Absolute as persisting. If
we do not do this, something may persist, but it is no Absolute.
Mental elements otherwise similar, but distinguished from each other
by temporal differences are the same in sense second, not in sense
first. The existence of which I am conscious to-day and the existence
of which I was conscious yesterday are not the same existence in any
sense save this. Yesterday's existence does not persist to-day; it is
replaced by another. Mr. Spencer has evidently fallen into the error of
those schoolmen who endeavored to abstract the element which several
things have in common, but created unnecessary difficulties by making
an incomplete abstraction and treating it as though it were complete.
Other defects of this fallacious argument to prove our belief in the
Absolute valid, I will not here discuss.


SEC. 35. I next take a few passages which will illustrate the confusion
of samenesses first and seventh, from Dr. James McCosh's late work on
"First and Fundamental Truths." They are selected from the chapter on
"Our Intuition of Body by the Senses."[66]

  [66] Part II, Book I, Chap. II.

"We are following the plainest dictates of consciousness, we avoid
a thousand difficulties, and we get a solid ground on which to rest
and to build, when we maintain that the mind in its first exercises
acquires knowledge; not, indeed, scientific or arranged, not of
qualities of objects and classes of objects, but still knowledge--the
knowledge of things presenting themselves, and as they present
themselves; which knowledge, individual and concrete, is the foundation
of all other knowledge, abstract, general and deductive. In particular,
the mind is so constituted as to attain a knowledge of body or of
material objects. It may be difficult to ascertain the exact point
or surface at which the mind and body come together and influence
each other, in particular, how far into the body (Descartes without
proof thought to be in the pineal gland), but it is certain that when
they do meet mind knows body as having its essential properties of
extension and resisting energy. It is through the bodily organism that
the intelligence of man attains its knowledge of all material objects
beyond. This is true of the infant mind; it is true also of the mature
mind. We may assert something more than this regarding the organism. It
is not only the medium through which we know all bodily objects beyond
itself; it is itself an object primarily known; nay, I am inclined
to think that, along with the objects immediately affecting it, it
is the only object originally known. Intuitively man seems to know
nothing beyond his own organism, and objects directly affecting it; in
all further knowledge there is a process of inference proceeding on a
gathered experience. This theory seems to me to explain all the facts,
and it delivers us from many perplexities."[67]

  [67] N. Y., 1889, pp. 62-63.

"In our primitive cognition of body there is involved a knowledge
of Outness or Externality. We know the object perceived, be it the
organism or the object affecting the organism, as not in the mind, but
as out of the mind. In regard to some of the objects perceived by us,
we may be in doubt as to whether they are in the organism or beyond it,
but we are always sure that they are extra-mental."[68]

  [68] Pp. 68-69.

"We know the Objects as Affecting Us. I have already said that we
know them as independent of us. This is an important truth. But it is
equally true and equally important that these objects are made known
to us as somehow having an influence on us. The organic object is
capable of affecting our minds, and the extra-organic object affects
the organism which affects the mind. Upon this cognition are founded
certain judgments as to the relations of the objects known to the
knowing mind."[69]

  [69] P. 70.

"But it will be vehemently urged that it is most preposterous to
assert that we know all this by the senses. Upon this I remark that
the phrase _by the senses_ is ambiguous. If by senses he meant the
mere bodily organism--the eye, the ears, the nerves and the brain--I
affirm that we know, and can know, nothing by this bodily part, which
is a mere organ or instrument; that so far from knowing potency or
extension, we do not know even color, or taste, or smell. But if by the
senses he meant the mind exercised in sense-perception, summoned into
activity by the organism, and contemplating cognitively the external
world, then I maintain that we do know, and this intuitively, external
objects as influencing us; that is, exercising powers in reference to
us. I ask those who would doubt of this doctrine of what it is that
they suppose the mind to be cognizant in sense-perception. If they
say a mere sensation or impression in the mind, I reply that this is
not consistent with the revelation of consciousness, which announces
plainly that what we know is something extra-mental. If they say, with
Kant, a mere phenomenon in the sense of appearance, then I reply that
this, too, is inconsistent with consciousness, which declares that we
know the thing."[70]

  [70] Pp. 71 and 72.

The statements contained in these extracts are plainly in a state of
civil war, and might be left, without foreign aid, to complete their
own destruction. I shall first let them criticize each other.

(1) It is asserted that it may be difficult to ascertain the exact
point or surface at which the mind and body come together and influence
each other--in particular how far into the body--but that it is certain
that _when they do meet_ mind knows body as having its essential
properties of extension and resisting energy.

This knowledge is said to arise _when they meet_, be it marked, and not
before.

(2) It is also asserted that it is _through the body_ that the mind
attains its knowledge of _all_ material objects beyond.

This makes our knowledge of objects beyond the body mediate and not
immediate. Why are objects beyond the body regarded as mediately
known? No reason is suggested except that they are not themselves
in contact with the mind, but only in contact with that which is in
contact with the mind. It is then presumable that _any parts of the
bodily organism which never themselves meet the mind (if there are any
such) are not known immediately_, but only through the parts which
do meet the mind. That is, they are known mediately, too. That there
are, or at least may be, such parts, is directly inferrible from the
statement that we do not know "how far into the body" mind and body
come together.

(3) It is stated that the body is an object "primarily" known. It
is regarded by the author as probable that, along with the objects
immediately affecting it, it is the only object "originally" known. He
thinks that man knows "intuitively" nothing beyond his own organism and
objects directly affecting it.

But what is meant by the words "primarily," "originally,"
"intuitively"? If things not in direct contact with mind are not known
immediately but through something else, and if the point or surface
at which mind and body meet is at some uncertain distance from the
surface of the body, surely the only material thing immediately known
is that portion of the body in contact with mind, and not the whole
body with the objects directly affecting it. Knowledge of these mediate
objects must be due to a process of inference from what is directly
experienced. _Things known "primarily," "originally" and "intuitively"
are then known mediately and inferentially_--even in some cases so
imperfectly known that it is not known what and where they are, whether
in or beyond the body.

(4) The doctrine that we are conscious in sense-perception of a mere
sensation or impression in the mind is answered by the statement that
this is not consistent with the revelation of consciousness, which
announces plainly that what we know is something extra-mental. Kant's
phenomenalism is met by the claim that consciousness declares that we
know the thing.

A thing known mediately, however, cannot be more certainly known than
the thing known immediately, and from which its existence is inferred.
_The immediate revelation of consciousness cannot do more than give as
a knowledge of the point or surface at which mind and body meet._ It
is only here that mind can directly know body "as having its essential
properties of extension and resisting energy." _But so far from
consciousness testifying to the extension and resistance of this part
of the body, it does not, as Dr. McCosh admits, testify to this part of
the body at all._ If it reveal nothing as to what it knows immediately,
what can its statement as to what it knows mediately be worth? And if
consciousness testifies that it knows immediately what Dr. McCosh has
maintained to be mediately known, he must hold that its revelation is
false and delusive. It certainly seems to me that my consciousness
reveals the ink-stand before me as it does not reveal the part of my
body with which the mind has "come together," since it does not even
reveal whether this part be a point or a surface. If my knowledge of
the ink-stand must rest upon my knowledge of this, and can have no
greater certainty, my faith in the ink-stand must go. A tower cannot be
more firm than its foundation.

So much for the consistency of the extracts themselves. I now turn to
a criticism on a different basis. The difficulties connected with this
inconsistent doctrine naturally arise out of the standpoint occupied by
the author. He accepts as final, and as justifiable in metaphysics, the
convenient psychological assumption that the group of sensations gained
from an object is a something distinct from the object itself; that the
object may be external to the organism, but that the mind, with its
sensations, is, or may be treated as if it were, somewhere within the
organism; that the sensations are gained from real things, but are not
themselves real things, so that a world of sensations--things being
abstracted--must be an unreal and phantom world.

Now, the man who has thus distinguished between things and sensations,
if he regard the sensations as our only immediate representatives
of the things, will find it difficult, without making an evidently
gratuitous assumption somewhere, to prove his right to reach things
at all. Dr. McCosh sees this difficulty, and so he assumes that
consciousness reveals both sensations and things. He allows us
"perceptions mingled with sensations."[71] Where are these mingled
perceptions and sensations? In the mind. Where is the mind? In the
body. In what body? The body perceived. Is this body perceived itself
in the mind and mingled with sensations? No. It is then distinct from
the mental percept--the perception of it is somewhere in it, but is not
it. How do we know, then, that there is a body? We infer it from the
percept; consciousness (the percept) "reveals" it. On what principle
is it inferred? The question is a just one if the knowledge be not
immediate. Our author does not even see that there is a question.
The fact is that this doctrine seems to avoid the difficulties of a
representative perception only while it is allowed to remain loose
and vague. If things are not to be known representatively, they
must either be themselves in consciousness--_and then they are not
extra-mental_--or they must be directly known in some other way than
as in consciousness, _and then consciousness does not reveal them and
cannot be appealed to_. An appeal to consciousness, unless the thing
itself is in consciousness, is fatal.

  [71] Chap. III, p. 75.

But this discrimination between sensations and the thing causing the
sensations, and the assumption that consciousness testifies to the
two classes of things, does not seem to be borne out by the facts.
Consciousness does not testify to the two classes. The common man
thinks that he knows directly the things that he sees and feels, and
the distinction between these things and his ideas of the things, or
his sensations gathered from the things, arises only upon reflection
and after a comparison of his experiences with those of other men. He
sees the ink-stand in front of another man's body. He discovers that
the other man sees the ink-stand--that is, has an experience like his
own. He finds, after investigation, that this other man does not have
the experience until after some influence has been conducted by the
nerves to the brain. He accordingly concludes that the mind of this
other man, and all that it _immediately_ knows, is situated somewhere
in the brain. He thus distinguishes between the ink-stand and the
representative of the ink-stand in the mind of the other man. This is
precisely what Dr. McCosh has done, though he has preferred to use
the word perception instead of sensation or impression. Having gone
as far as this, the man in question reflects, if he be consistent,
that his own case must be essentially similar to that of the man he is
considering, and concludes that he, too, sees only (immediately, at
least) some representative of the ink-stand, and not the thing itself.
Dr. McCosh does not conclude this, because he is not consistent. But
an ink-stand, a tree, a house, in the brain, cannot be very much like
a real ink-stand, tree or house. Then one does not see things as they
are, but is condemned to a phantom world. Having gone thus far, our
common man is appalled at his own conclusions, as well he may be.

He may, however, be readily reassured, if one will point out to him the
error in his argument. The whole argument began by assuming that he has
evidence that some object is in front of his body and in front of the
body of another man; that he has a body and so has the other man. If
this knowledge be immediate, of course it may furnish the basis of an
argument; but if it be not immediate, one has no right to begin with
it, but should go back to what is immediate. Let us assume that it is
immediate. What I am then conscious of is my own body, the other man's
body and the object in relation to them. Upon this basis I argue to
some representative of the object I immediately see, and I connect it
with the man's brain. Does the man now see two objects or only one? If
only one, which one? The one I refer to his brain, or the one I see?
Does the one he sees seem to him to be in his brain? Probably he has
not the least notion that it is connected with that organ. Am I, then,
in his case? Do I also see only a copy of the object in my brain? And
may this not be true, although I have no immediate knowledge of my
brain and its relation to that object? But--and this is the important
point--if all this be true, how about the position with which I
started? My argument is based upon two real bodies and a real object. I
see that I was wholly in error in supposing that I saw these and could
reason from them. Then the reasoning is not good. Then the conclusion
is not reliable, and it is not proved that I see immediately only an
image in, or in some sort of contact with, my brain. The fallacious
character of the argument is plain enough; where is the flaw? It lies
in this:

I assume that I see the two bodies and the object immediately.
Consciousness seems to reveal them. After granting the man opposite
me a representative of that object I apply the same reasoning to
myself, forgetting that I assumed at the outset that I see the real
object. I can certainly not put the object I see in my brain, for the
brain in any way I can be conceived to know it belongs to precisely
the same class of things as this object, and they are beside each
other in consciousness. The representative the other man has is a
representative of the object in my consciousness, and not--at least, I
have no evidence that it is--a representative of a something else of
which my object is also a representative. And if the object of which I
am immediately conscious is extended and without my body (immediately
perceived), I may assume that the object in his consciousness is also
extended and without the body in his consciousness. His representative
of my object is not in the head I see, for his head as I see it is
in my consciousness, if the object I see is, and any object in his
consciousness is the same with any corresponding object in mine only
in sense sixth--a sense of sameness which I have explained at length
in the earlier part of my work. This reasoning is, it seems to me,
clear enough and consistent enough, and should be plain to any one
who will take the trouble to follow it carefully. It lands one in no
such difficulties and inconsistencies as result from the doctrine I
have been criticizing. Should it be said this is a form of Idealism,
and at least abandons what is extra-mental, I answer, the name is a
matter of taste and of little significance; what is important is that
this doctrine does not found its reasoning upon an assumption which
its conclusion declares to be false; nor does it maintain that what is
immediately known is not extended, figured, external to the body, as
it seems to be, but something quite different and dissimilar. It is
in harmony with the revelation of consciousness. Should it still be
objected that it makes no distinction between things and the sensations
or impressions which represent them, I answer, one can object to things
being regarded as complexes of sensations only as long as he separates
sensations and things, making the former unlike the things and
relegating them to a place (the brain) where the things are not, and
to exist in which they must be very bad copies of the things indeed.
The doctrine I advocate does not deny the things as perceived at all;
it merely holds that consciousness does declare for the things, and
not for a set of representatives much unlike them and said to exist
in a place in which we are not conscious of perceiving anything. It
objects to seeing double through an incomplete reflection upon what
consciousness reveals.

Now it is very evident that Dr. McCosh, in his anxiety to prove an
extra-mental world, is actuated by a desire to retain real things.
He is under the impression that, unless the extra-mental is known,
our knowledge is confined to shadows and unrealities. He combats
the Idealist, because he supposes him to deny the body of which we
are conscious; whereas, all that the Idealist is denying (if he be
consistent with his principles) is the hypothetical representative of
the body, assumed to exist within the body, and to which consciousness
does not testify. It is this that is the unreality. The body to
which the Idealist holds is the very body to which Dr. McCosh thinks
consciousness testifies; but this body is not beyond consciousness,
nor in any proper sense of the words extra-mental. The above argument
for the extra-mental is consequently due to a misconception--to
the misconception that the body revealed by consciousness is the
extra-mental body, and that the only body left to an Idealist is an
unreal phantom of this body, and distinct from it. And it is the
attempt to make this body revealed by consciousness both in mind and
out of mind that has occasioned the difficulties and inconsequences
of the reasoning I have quoted. This attempt is due to a confusion
of sameness in sense seventh with sameness in sense first. My excuse
for so minute a criticism of this plainly untenable position is that
we have here a representative instance of an error quite common, and
indeed characteristic of a certain stage of reflection.


SEC. 36. The last confusion of samenesses that I shall discuss lies at
the bottom of the common opinion on the infinite divisibility of space,
and causes the antinomies which arise from it. The position I shall
criticize is well set forth in Professor W. K. Clifford's popular
lecture entitled "Of Boundaries in General."[72] From this I take a few
passages which will suffice to illustrate his doctrine.

  [72] "Seeing and Thinking," London, Macmillan & Co., 1879.

"Now the idea expressed by that word _continuous_ is one of extreme
importance; it is the foundation of all exact science of things; and
yet it is so very simple and elementary that it must have been almost
the first clear idea that we got into our heads. It is only this: I
cannot move this thing from one position to another, without making it
go through an infinite number of intermediate positions. _Infinite_; it
is a dreadful word, I know, until you find out that you are familiar
with the thing which it expresses. In this place it means that between
any two positions there is some intermediate position; between that
and either of the others, again, there is some other intermediate; and
so on _without any end_. Infinite means without any end. If you went
on with that work of counting forever, you would never get any further
than the beginning of it. At last you would only have two positions
very close together, but not the same; and the whole process might be
gone over again, beginning with those as many times as you like."

* * * * "When a point moves, it moves along some line; and you may
say that it traces out or describes the line. To look at something
definite, let us take the point where this boundary of red on paper is
cut by the surface of water. I move all about together. Now you know
that between any two positions of the point there is an infinite number
of intermediate positions. Where are they all? Why, clearly, in the
line along which the point moved. That line is the place where all such
points are to be found."

* * * * "It seems a very natural thing to say that space is made up
of points. I want you to examine very carefully what this means,
and how far it is true. And let us first take the simplest case, and
consider whether we may safely say that a line is made up of points.
If you think of a very large number--say, a million--of points all in
a row, the end ones being an inch apart; then this string of points
is altogether a different thing from a line an inch long. For if you
single out two points which are next one another, then there is no
point of the series between them; but if you take two points on a line,
however close together they may be, there is an infinite number of
points between them. The two things are different _in kind_, not in
degree."

* * * * "When a point moves along a line, we know that between any two
positions of it there is an infinite number (in this new sense[73]) of
intermediate positions. That is because the motion is continuous. Each
of those positions is where the point was at some instant or other.
Between the two end positions on the line, the point where the motion
began and the point where it stopped, there is no point of the line
which does not belong to that series. We have thus an infinite series
of successive positions of a continuously moving point, and in that
series are included all the points of a certain piece of line-room. May
we say then that the line is made up of that infinite series of points?

  [73] Professor Clifford has used the word _number_ in two senses,
  a quantitative and a qualitative. By number in the latter sense he
  means simply _unlimited units_.

"Yes; if we mean no more than that the series makes up the _points_ of
the line. But _no_, if we mean that the line is made up of those points
in the same way that it is made up of a great many very small pieces of
line. A point is not to be regarded as a _part_ of a line, in any sense
whatever. It is the boundary between two parts."

These extracts suffice, I think, to show what the common doctrine is,
and to show also the unavoidable difficulties connected with it.
These were clearly seen long ago. Motion, argues Zeno of Elea,[74]
cannot begin, because a body in motion must pass through an infinite
number of intermediate places before it can arrive at any other place.
Achilles can never overtake the tortoise, for by the time that he has
reached the place where it was, it has always moved a little beyond.
If Professor Clifford could not move a thing from one position to
another, without making it go though an infinite number of intermediate
positions, if these positions must be gone through with successively,
and if infinite really mean _without any end_, then the final member
of the series could never have been reached, for the plain reason that
there is no final member to an endless series. If the new position is
reached without passing through every member of the series and leaving
none farther to pass through, it is not reached by passing through an
infinite number of intermediate positions. The difficulty here is a
hopeless one; either the series has a final member, _and then it is not
infinite_; or it has not, _and then one cannot come to the end_.

  [74] Ueberweg, Hist. of Philos., Vol. I, § 20. N. Y., 1877,
  pp. 57-58.

The attempt sometimes made to avoid this difficulty by calling upon
a precisely similar one for aid is of not the least avail. The time
of the motion, it is said, is divisible just as is the space over
which the body moves; the spaces and the times then vary together,
and as the spaces become very small the times become very small;
infinitesimal spaces are passed over in infinitesimal times, and all
these infinitesimals are included in the finite space and finite time
of the motion. But if there be a difficulty in arriving at the end of
an endless series of places or positions, there is surely no less a
difficulty in reaching the end of an endless series of times. If the
series of times to be successively exhausted be truly endless, then
an end of the motion can never be reached. Quibbling over the size
of the members of the series in the case of either space or time is
useless. Whether things are big or little, if the supply of them is
truly endless, one can never get to the end of the supply. The rapidity
with which they are exhausted has nothing to do with the question,
for an increase in rapidity has obviously no effect in facilitating
an approach to what is assumed not to exist, a final term. It is,
then, perfectly clear that, if, in order to move a body, I must come
to the end of an endless series, I may reasonably conclude that I
cannot move a body. Granting the assumption upon which it is based,
Zeno's argument is unanswerable. It is not a question of an ordinary
difficulty, a trifling evil; it is a question of an impossibility, a
flat contradiction; to move an inch, to endure for a minute, one is to
accomplish the feat of reaching the end of the endless. One thing is
quite certain; no rival doctrine can present a greater difficulty.

It is possible that some one may wish to find a way out of this
difficulty by distinguishing, as Clifford has done, between the
_points_ of the line and the _parts_ of the line. But this distinction
is of no service. All these points are declared to be on the line, and
anything that passes over the whole line must exhaust them one by one
until it arrives at the final point. By hypothesis, there is no final
point to the series--the series is without any end. Unless, then, the
line can be passed over without passing over the points, there would
seem to be no help in turning to line pieces. Moreover, it appears
reasonable to assume that there are as many parts to the line as there
are points. For all these points are on the line, and no two of them
are in precisely the same position on the line; they must consequently
be on different parts of the line. If it be objected that, having no
extension, they cannot properly be said to be _on_ parts of the line, I
answer that, even on this hypothesis, they must be _at_ different parts
of the line, in order to be distinguished from each other. The part of
the line between any two of them is certainly not the same as the part
between any other two. It follows that the number of parts of which the
line is made up is at least as great as the number of points less one,
if we refuse to say that the points are on the line; and is as great
as the number of points, if we are willing to say that they are on the
line. To move over the whole line, then, a point must come within one
term of the end of an endless series, or it must pass over an endless
number of small pieces of line until it comes to the very end. Does
this seem a sensible doctrine?

The rival doctrine, sometimes called the Berkeleyan, contains no
such difficulties, and it makes evident that the difficulties
discussed above arise simply out of a confusion of samenesses, and
are gratuitous. Its discussion demands that I call to mind a few
distinctions already made.

One must bear in mind, in the first place, that a line immediately
known, existing in consciousness, is the same with an "external" line
corresponding to it, not in sense first, but in sense seventh. That is,
they are two lines, not one, and in the interests of clearness they
should be considered separately.

One should remember, in the second place, that a line in consciousness
at one moment is not, in the strictest sense, the same with a line in
consciousness at another moment. One may stand for the other and thus
be the same with it in sense fifth; or the two may be regarded as both
belonging to the one series of experiences, which, taken together,
represent to us "an object," in which case they are the same in sense
third. A thing the same with another thing in either of these senses
is not necessarily much like it. It must only be able to serve as its
representative.

Now I see a line about an inch long on the paper before me. It is a
certain distance from my eyes. I shall concern myself for the present
only with the line immediately perceived, which means for me so much
sensation. If I move this line (which remains the same in sense
third), nearer to me or farther away, I do not perceive the identical
thing that I did before. My quantity of sensation is increased or
diminished. If I keep the line at the same distance and change none
of the conditions, the quantity of sensation remains presumably the
same. The question arises, Is this line as actually experienced at
this moment infinitely divisible or not? I can certainly conceive of
it as divisible to some extent, for I see part out of part, and I can
think of these parts as separated. But if this line were divided, the
division would soon result in parts which could be seen, but which
could not be seen to consist of part out of part. Were these apparently
non-extended parts (they would remain the same in sense third),
approached to the eyes, they, too, would be seen to consist of part out
of part, but then I should simply have substituted for the apparently
non-extended a representative which was extended. This would not
prove that what was before in consciousness was extended and could be
divided. Consciousness certainly seems to testify that any particular
line in consciousness is composed of a limited number of indivisible
parts, and when one adds to this reflection the consideration that a
point moving over a given line does not appear to have an endless task
before it, but soon arrives at the final term, one is irresistibly
impelled to the conclusion that the parts of the line are not infinite,
but that the division results in the indivisible, the simple element of
sensation, which, joined with other such elements, makes an extended
object, but which taken alone is not extended at all. The whole
difficulty lies in keeping to the line and the parts with which one
started. It is so easy to pass from sameness in sense first to sameness
in sense third or sense fifth; it is so natural to bring an object
which is, as we say, imperfectly seen, closer to the eye and thus
substitute for what was seen before a new experience connected with it
in the order of nature, confident that any system of relations derived
from the latter may safely be carried over to all possible experiences
connected with the former; one does this so instinctively that a man
may very readily suppose that he is still busied about the apparently
non-extended element with which he started, when he is in reality
dividing and sub-dividing its representative, which is evidently
extended. But the question is not whether, when one has divided a
line until the parts cannot be seen to consist of parts, one may
substitute for these parts what evidently does consist of parts, and go
on dividing that. The question is, whether an apparently non-extended
element of a line in consciousness is divisible or not. Any argument
from the possibility of dividing its substitutes evidently has nothing
to do with this point.

It is plain that this doctrine, which makes any particular finite line
in consciousness to consist of a limited number of simple parts, is not
open to the objection that it necessitates the absurdity of exhausting
an endless series. Moving along such a line, Achilles could overtake
the tortoise, for the successively diminishing distances between them
do not constitute an endless series. The descending series results
after a limited number of terms in the simple, and the series is
broken, for the simple does not consist of parts. In this there is at
least no contradiction. It remains to see what other objections may lie
against it.

It may be argued, first, as it often is argued, that it is impossible
to conceive of any part of a line as not itself extended and having
parts. It may be admitted that the small parts arrived at do not seem
to have part out of part; that these sub-parts are not observed in
them, but still it is said that one who thinks about them cannot but
think of them as really having such parts. I ask one who puts forward
this objection to look into his own mind and see whether he does not
mean by "thinking about them," bringing them in imagination nearer
to the eye, or by some means substituting for them what can be seen
to have part out of part. That one can do this no one would think of
denying, but, as I have said, this does not prove the original parts to
be extended.

It may be objected again that extension can never be built up out of
the non-extended--that if one element of a given kind has, taken alone,
no extension at all, two or more such elements together cannot have
any extension either. I answer that a straight line has no angularity
at all, and yet two straight lines may obviously make an angle; that
one man is not in the least a crowd, but that one hundred men may be;
that no single tree is a forest, but that many trees together do make
a forest; that a uniform expanse of color is in no sense a variegated
surface, but that several such together do make a variegated surface.
It may be that extension is simply the name we give to several simple
sense-elements of a particular kind taken together. One cannot say
off-hand that it is not.

Should one object, finally, that, if a given line in consciousness be
composed of a limited number of indivisible elements of sensation,
consciousness ought to distinguish these single elements and testify
as to their number; I answer that what is in consciousness is not
necessarily in a clear analytical consciousness, nor well distinguished
from other elements. For example, I am at present conscious of a stream
of sensations which I connect with the hand that holds my pen. The
single elements in this complex I cannot distinguish from each other,
nor can I give their number. It does not follow that I am to assume
the number to be infinite. Much less should I be impelled to make
this assumption, if it necessitated my accepting as true what I see
to be flatly contradictory, as in the case under discussion. It was
because of this vagueness and lack of discrimination in the testimony
of consciousness that I said, some distance back, that consciousness
_seems_ to testify that any finite line in it is composed of simple
parts. If the testimony were quite clear, the matter would be settled
at once. As it is not quite clear, the matter has to be settled on
a deductive basis. The most reasonable solution appears to be the
Berkeleyan.

So much for the line immediately perceived, the line in consciousness.
What shall we say to one who is willing to admit that this line is not
infinitely divisible, but is composed of simple sense-elements; and yet
who maintains that there exists an "external" line corresponding to
it, which is not immediately perceived, and is infinitely divisible?
We may begin by suggesting to him that an "external" point moving
over this "external" line must perform the wholly impossible feat to
which Clifford condemns a point moving over a line; and we may farther
suggest that, if the "external" world be an intelligible world at
all, a contradiction may be as much out of place in it as anywhere
else. And if the existence of this world be problematic, a thing not
self-evident, it seems quite reasonable to demand very good proof
indeed of the existence, of that which contains in its very conception
such excellent reasons for believing in its non-existence. This proof,
the student of the history of speculation will testify, has not as yet
been forthcoming.


SEC. 37. With this I close my analysis of samenesses, and of confusions
which have resulted in needless embarrassments and gratuitous
difficulties. More instances of the latter could be given, of course.
The reader will be able to furnish, I presume, many like them. Those
which I have given seem to me quite sufficient to prove the need
of much greater care and exactitude than one commonly finds in
metaphysical reasonings. Loose reasoning is bad reasoning, and leads
to bad results. Its one virtue is that it does not require much mental
application on the part of either author or reader. On the other
hand, the attempt to be cautious and exact, to distinguish between
things easily confounded, and to keep strictly to the thing in dispute
through a long discussion, these things are wearisome to all concerned.
Although I am quite conscious of this fact, I have tried to do these
things: with what result, my fellow-analysts must judge. I feel
reasonably sure that I have succeeded in being wearisome, and for this
I make due apology.




CONTENTS.


  PART I.

  THE KINDS OF SAMENESS.
                                                           PAGE.

  SEC. 1. Object of the Monograph,                                     5

   "   2. Sameness in Sense First, or Strict Identity,                 6

   "   3. Sameness in Sense Second,                                    6

   "   4. Sameness in Sense Third,                                     6

   "   5. Sameness in Sense Fourth,                                   11

   "   6. Sameness in Sense Fifth,                                    12

   "   7. Sameness in Sense Sixth,                                    14

   "   8. Sameness in Sense Seventh,                                  16

   "   9. The Samenesses of "External" Things,                        31

   "  10. Ambiguity of the Word "Self,"                               34

   "  11. The Samenesses of the Self,                                 35

   "  12. Samenesses of the Self as Noumenon or Substance,            35

   "  13. Samenesses of the "Real" Self out of Consciousness,         37

   "  14. Samenesses of the Self in Consciousness,                    38

   "  15. Samenesses of the Self in Consciousness (continued),        42

   "  16. Samenesses of the Self in Consciousness (continued),        43

   "  17. The Self as "Form," and its Samenesses,                     43

   "  18. Summary of Results of the Foregoing Analysis,               48

   "  19. The Element Common to the Kinds of Sameness,                54

   "  20. Use of the Word Identity,                                   64


  PART II.

  HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL.

  SEC. 21. The Error of Heraclitus,                                   67

   "   22. The Climax of Cratylus,                                    68

   "   23. The Parmenidean Argument for the Eternity of "Being,"      68

   "   24. Gorgias and Samenesses Fifth and Sixth,                    69

   "   25. Plato and the Eleatic "One,"                               70

   "   26. Aristotle's Treatment of Samenesses,                       82

   "   27. The Confusions of Pyrrho, and Their Results,               84

   "   28. Sameness and the Dispute concerning Universals,            88

   "   29. Descartes' Confusion of Samenesses,                        98

   "   30. Spinoza's Argument to Prove every Substance Infinite,     108

   "   31. Locke's Confusion of Sense First and Sense Seventh,       111

   "   32. Berkeley's Error concerning Sense Sixth,                  120

   "   33. John Stuart Mill on the Kinds of Sameness,                122

   "   34. The Spencerian "Unknowable," and Samenesses Seventh
           and Second,                                               124

   "   35. The Confusions at the Basis of Dr. McCosh's "Realism,"    134

   "   36. Sameness and the Infinite Divisibility of Space,          143

   "   37. Conclusion,                                               152




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Transcriber's note:

Inconsistencies in hyphenation and punctuation have not been corrected.

Transcriber's corrections:

  page   original text                    correction
  17     aller Gergenstände                aller Gegenstände
  48     element in consciousnesss        element in consciousness
  55     found in a consciousnesss,       found in a consciousness,
  58     parce que vous voyons            parce que nous voyons
  58     Premiéres Objections.            Premières Objections.
  79     differences are invidualizing    differences are individualizing
  101    upon his expe-ences,             upon his experiences,