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| The Academic Philosophy. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
12.—The Academic Philosophy.
First, of what sort and how great
is the very knowledge itself that a man can attain, be he ever so
skillful and learned, by which our thought is formed with truth,
when we speak what we know? For to pass by those things that come
into the mind from the bodily senses, among which so many are
otherwise than they seem to be, that he who is overmuch pressed
down by their resemblance to truth, seems sane to himself, but
really is not sane;—whence it is that the
Academic987
987 [Not the Old Academy of Plato and
his immediate disciples, who were anti-skeptical; but the new
Academy, to which Augustin has previously referred (XIV. xix. 26).
This was skeptical—W.G.T.S.] | philosophy
has so prevailed as to be still more wretchedly insane by doubting
all things;—passing by, then, those things that come into the
mind by the bodily senses, how large a proportion is left of things
which we know in such manner as we know that we live? In regard to
this, indeed, we are absolutely without any fear lest perchance we
are being deceived by some resemblance of the truth; since it is
certain, that he who is deceived, yet lives. And this again is not
reckoned among those objects of sight that are presented from
without, so that the eye may be deceived in it; in such way as it
is when an oar in the water looks bent, and towers seem to move as
you sail past them, and a thousand other things that are otherwise
than they seem to be: for this is not a thing that is discerned by
the eye of the flesh. The knowledge by which we know that we live
is the most inward of all knowledge, of which even the Academic
cannot insinuate: Perhaps you are asleep, and do not know it, and
you see things in your sleep. For who does not know that what
people see in dreams is precisely like what they see when awake?
But he who is certain of the knowledge of his own life, does not
therein say, I know I am awake, but, I know I am alive; therefore,
whether he be asleep or awake, he is alive. Nor can he be deceived
in that knowledge by dreams; since it belongs to a living man both
to sleep and to see in sleep. Nor can the Academic again say, in
confutation of this knowledge: Perhaps you are mad, and do not know
it: for what madmen see is precisely like what they also see who
are sane; but he who is mad is alive. Nor does he answer the
Academic by saying, I know I am not mad, but, I know I am alive.
Therefore he who says he knows he is alive, can neither be deceived
nor lie. Let a thousand kinds, then, of deceitful objects of sight
be presented to him who says, I know I am alive; yet he will fear
none of them, for he who is deceived yet is alive. But if such
things alone pertain to human knowledge, they are very few indeed;
unless that they can be so multiplied in each kind, as not only not
to be few, but to reach in the result to infinity. For he who says,
I know I am alive, says that he knows one single thing. Further, if
he says, I know that I know I am alive, now there are two; but that
he knows these two is a third thing to know. And so he can add a
fourth and a fifth, and innumerable others, if he holds out. But
since he cannot either comprehend an innumerable number by
additions of units, or say a thing innumerable times, he
comprehends this at least, and with perfect certainty, viz.
that this is both true and so innumerable that he cannot truly
comprehend and say its infinite number. This same thing may be
noticed also in the case of a will that is certain. For it would be
an impudent answer to make to any one who should say, I will to be
happy, that perhaps you are deceived. And if he should say, I know
that I will this, and I know that I know it, he can add yet a third
to these two, viz. that he knows these two; and a fourth,
that he knows that he knows these two; and so on ad
infinitum. Likewise, if any one were to say, I will not to be
mistaken; will it not be true, whether he is mistaken or whether he
is not, that nevertheless he does will not to be mistaken? Would it
not be most impudent to say to him, Perhaps you are deceived? when
beyond doubt, whereinsoever he may be deceived, he is nevertheless
not deceived in thinking that he wills not to be deceived. And if
he says he knows this, he adds any number he chooses of things
known, and perceives that number to be infinite. For he who says, I
will not to be deceived, and I know that I will not to be so, and I
know that I know it, is able now to set forth an infinite number
here also, however awkward may be the expression of it. And other
things too are to be found capable of refuting the Academics, who
contend that man can know nothing. But we must restrict ourselves,
especially as this is not the subject we have undertaken in the
present work. There are three books of ours on that subject,988
988 Libri Tres contra
Academicos | written in
the early time of our conversion, which he who can and will read,
and who understands them, will doubtless not be much moved by any
of the many arguments which they have found out against the
discovery of truth. For whereas there are two kinds of knowable
things,—one, of those things which the mind perceives by the
bodily senses; the other, of those which it perceives by
itself,—these philosophers have babbled much against the bodily
senses, but have never been able to throw doubt upon those most
certain perceptions of things true, which the mind knows by itself,
such as is that which I have mentioned, I know that I am alive. But
far be it from us to doubt the truth of what we have learned by the
bodily senses; since by them we have learned to know the heaven and
the earth, and those things in them which are known to us, so
far as He who created both us and them has willed them to be
within our knowledge. Far be it from us too to deny, that we know
what we have learned by the testimony of others: otherwise we know
not that there is an ocean; we know not that the lands and cities
exist which most copious report commends to us; we know not that
those men were, and their works, which we have learned by reading
history; we know not the news that is daily brought us from this
quarter or that, and confirmed by consistent and conspiring
evidence; lastly, we know not at what place or from whom we have
been born: since in all these things we have believed the testimony
of others. And if it is most absurd to say this, then we must
confess, that not only our own senses, but those of other persons
also, have added very much indeed to our knowledge.
22. All these things, then, both
those which the human mind knows by itself, and those which it
knows by the bodily senses, and those which it has received and
knows by the testimony of others, are laid up and retained in the
storehouse of the memory; and from these is begotten a word that is
true when we speak what we know, but a word that is before all
sound, before all thought of a sound. For the word is then most
like to the thing known, from which also its image is begotten,
since the sight of thinking arises from the sight of knowledge;
when it is a word belonging to no tongue, but is a true word
concerning a true thing, having nothing of its own, but wholly
derived from that knowledge from which it is born. Nor does it
signify when he learned it, who speaks what he knows; for sometimes
he says it immediately upon learning it; provided only that the
word is true, i.e. sprung from things that are
known. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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