NO
MAS
NEGATIVE
. 93-80810-1
MICROFILMED 1993
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES/NEW YORK
as part of the
"Foundations of Western Civilization Preservation Project"
Funded by the
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES
Reproductions may not be made without permission from
Columbia University Library
COPYRIGHT STATEMENT
The copyright law of the United States - Title 17, United
States Code - concerns the making of photocopies or
other reproductions of copyrighted material.
Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and
archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other
reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the
photocopy or other reproduction is not to be "used for any
purpose other than private study, scholarship, or
research.*' If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a
photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair
use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement.
This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a
copy order if, in its judgement, fulfillment of the order
would involve violation of the copyright law.
AUTHOR
LA METTRIE , JULIEN
OFFRAY DE
TITLE:
MAN A MACHINE . .
PLACE:
CHICAGO
DATE:
1912
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES
PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT
Master Negative #
BIBLIOGRAPHIC MICROFORM TARCFT
Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record
Restrictions on Use:
t Philosophy
|. D194L18
L'hornr.c-rrachine. Eng.
La Mettrie, Julien Oflfray de, 1709-1751.
Man a inaclnnc, by .hilien OJrniy do La MclLrie. Frencli-
Kn^riish. Including Fitideiick tlie Great's "Eulogy" on La
]!kIettrio and extracts from La Mettrie's "The natural history
of the soul"; pliilosoi)hical and historical notes by Gertrude
Carman Busscy ... Chicnfro, Tlie Open court pubhshinir co.,
1912.
5 p. I.. i3|, 210 p.'incl. facslm. front, (port.) 22J cm.
"The KrcMicli frxt prosentod In tills vohiiuo Is tnkc?n from timt of a
Lpyden eiiltlon of 1748 ... The title pn^e of this edltiim Is reproduced
in the piestMit volunio." — Pref.
(Continued on next curd)
|54olj
FILM SIZE:__^^_4i^
IMAGE PLACEMENT: I
DATE FILMED:
I]
TECHNICAL MICROFORM DATA
REDUCTION RATIO: ii]C_
IB IID
UJ2rXhl3_ INITIALS__(|l/i^
HLMEDBY: RESEARCI^I PUBLICATIONS. INC WOODDRIDGE. CT ""'
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES
PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT
Master Negative #
BIBLIOGRAPHIC MICROFORM TARGET
Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record
L'hoifune-machinG, Eng,
Philosophy
D194L18
T
La Mettrie, Jullen Offray de, 1709-1751. Man a machine ...
1912. (Card 2)
The translation is founded on a version made by Miss Gertrude C.
Bussey (from the French text In the edition of J. Assezat) and has
been revised by Professor M. W. Calkins, who is responsible for it in
its present form. cf. Pref.
"Works consulted and cited In the notes" : p. i205i-207.
1 Pliyslology— Early works to 1800. 2. Materialism. 3. Mind and
boilp. I. Bussey, Gertrude Carman, ffeS- vl CalTcins, Mary
Writon, 1SG3-1930, tr. in. Frledrlch ii, der GrosseTlclng of Prussia,
1712 1786. IV. Title.
13—4432
Liorary of Congress
Kestrictions on Use:
B20
j|^
FREDERIC THE CREATES EULOGY. 5
those who have reputations, to oppose the progress
of budding geniuses. This blight often fastens on
talents without destroying them, but it sometimes
injures them. M. La Mettrie, who was advancing
in the career of science at a giant's pace, suffered
from this jealousy, and his quick temper made him
too susceptible to it.
In Saint Malo, he translated the "Aphorisms" of
Boerhaave, the "Materia Medica," the "Chemical
Proceedings," the "Chemical Theory," and the "In-
stitutions," by this same author. About the same
time, he published an abstract of Sydenham. ^ The
young doctor had learned by premature experience,
that if he wished to live in peace, it was better to
translate than to compose; but it is characteristic
of genius to escape from reflection. Counting on
himself alone, if I may speak thus, and filled with
the knowledge he had gained from his infinitely skil-
ful researches into nature, he wished to communicate
to the public the useful discoveries he had made. He
published his treatise on smallpox, his "Practical
Medicine," and six volumes of commentary on the
physiology of Boerhaave. All these works appeared
at Paris, although the author had written them at
Saint Malo. He joined to the theory of his art an
always successful practice, which is no small recom-
mendation for a physician.
In 1 742, La Mettrie came to Paris, led there by
the death of M. Hunault, his old teacher. Morand
and Sidobre introduced him to the Duke of Gra-
mont, who, a few days after, obtained for him the
commission of physician of the guards. He accom-
panied the Duke to war, and was with him at the
battle of Dettingen, at the siege of Freiburg, and at
/
K'i f
O MAN A MACHINE.
the battle of Fontenoy, where he lost his patron,
who was killed by a cannon shot.
La Mettrie felt this loss all the more keenly, be-
cause it was at the same time the reef on which
his fortune was wrecked. This is what happened.
During the campaign of Freiburg, La Mettrie had
an attack of violent fever. Q^r a philosopher an
illness is a school of physiology; he believed that
he could clearly see that thought is but a conse-
quence of the organization of the machine, and that
the disturbance oi tne springs has considerable in-
fluence on that part of us which the metaphysicians
call soul. Filled with these ideas during his con-
valescence, he boldly bore the torch of experience
into the night of metaphysics ; he tried to explain
/by the aid of anatomy the thin texture of under-
standing, and he found only mechanism where
others had supposed an essence superior to matter.
He had his philosophic conjectures printed under the
*5tle of **Ihe Natural History of the Sou l.^' The
chaplain of the regiment Sounded the toc"sin against
him, and at first sight all the devotees cried out
against him.
The common ecclesiastic is like Don Quixote,
who found marvelous adventures in commonplace
events, or like the famous soldier, so engrossed
with his system that he found columns in all the
books he read. The majority of priests examine
all works of literature as if they were treatises on
theology, and filled with this one aim, they discover
heresies everywhere. To this fact are due very
many false judgments and very many accusations,
for the most part unfair, against the authors. A
book of physics should be read in the spirit of a
FREDERIC THE GREAT S EULOGY. 7
physicist; nature, the truth, is its sole judge, and
should absolve or condemn it. A book of astron-
omy should be read in the same manner. If a
poor physician proves that the blow of a stick
smartly rapped on the skull disturbs the mind, or
that at a certain degree of heat reason wanders,
one must either prove the contrary or keep quiet.
If a skilful astronomer proves, in spite of Joshua,
that the earth and all the celestial globes revolve
around the sun, one must either calculate better
than he, or admit that the earth revolves.
But the theologians, who, by their continual ap-
prehension, might make the weak believe that their
cause is bad, are not troubled by such a small matter.
They insisted on finding seeds of heresy in a work
dealing with physics. The author underwent a fright-
ful persecution, and the priests claimed that a doctor
accused of heresy could not cure the French guards.
To the hatred of the devotees was joined that
of his rivals for glory. This was rekindled by a
work of La Mettrie*s entitled "The Politics of
Physicians." A man full of cunning, and carried
away by ambition, aspired to the place, then vacant,
of first physician to the king of France. He thought
that he could gain it by heaping ridicule upon those
of his contemporaries who might lay claim to this
position. He wrote a libel against them, and abu-
sing the easy friendship of La Mettrie, he enticed
him to lend to it the volubility of his pen, and the
richness of his imagination. Nothing more was
needed to complete the downfall of a man little
known, against whom were all appearances, and
whose only protection was his merit.
For having been too sincere as a philosopher and
\\\
8
MAN A MACHINE.
too obliging as a friend, La Mettrie was compelled
to leave his country. The Duke of Duras and the
Viscount of Chaila advised him to flee from the
hatred of the priests and the revenge of the physi-
cians. Therefore, in 1746, he left the hospitals of
the army where he had been placed by M. Sechelles,
and came to Leyden to philosophize in peace. He
there composed his "Penelope,'* a polemical work
against the physicians in which, after the fashion
of Democritus, he made fun of the vanity of his
profession. The curious result was that the doctors
themselves, though their quackery was painted in
true colors, could not help laughing when they read
it, and that is a sure sign that they had found more
wit than malice in it.
M. La Mettrie after losing sight of his hospitals
and his patients, gave himself up completely to specu-
lative philosophy; he wrote his "Man a Machine"
or rather he put on paper some vigorous thoughts
bout materialism, which he doubtless planned to
rewrite. This work, which was bound to displease
men who by their position are declared enemies of
the progress of human reason, roused all the priests
of Leyden against its author. Ca^¥tfMsU, Catholics
and Lutherans forgot for the time that consubstan-
tiation, free will, mass for the dead, and the infalli-
bilityLof the pope divided them : they all united again
to persecute a philosopher who had the additional
misfortune of being French, at a time when that
monarchy was waging a successful war against their
High Powers.
The title of philosopher and the reputation of
being unfortunate were enough to procure for La
Mettrie a refuge in Prussia with a pension from
I
\ ''I
FREDERIC THE GREAX'S EULOGY. 9
the king. He came to Berlin in the month of Feb-
ruary in the year 1748; he was there received as a
member of the Royal Academy of Science. Medi-
cine reclaimed him from metaphysics, and he wrote
a treatise on dysentery, another on asthma, the best
that had then been written on these cruel diseases.
He sketched works on certain philosophical subjects
which he had proposed to look into. By a sequence
of accidents which befell him these works were
stolen, but he demanded their suppression as soon
as they appeared.
La Mettrie died in the house of Milord Tirconnel,
minister plenipotentiary of France, whose life he
had saved. It seems that the disease, knowing with
whom it had to deal, was clever enough to attack
his brain first, so that it would more surely confound
him. He had a burning fever and was violently
delirious. The invalid was obliged to depend upon
the science of his colleagues, and he did not find
there the resources which he had so often found in
his own, both for himself and for the public.
He died on the eleventh of November, 1751, at
the age of forty-three years. He had married Louise
Charlotte Dreano, by whom he left only a daughter,
five years and a few months old.
La Mettrie was born with a fund of natural and
inexhaustible gaiety ; he had a quick mind, and such
a fertile imagination that it made fiowers grow in
the field of medicine. Nature had made him an
orator and a philosopher; but a yet more precious
gift which he received from her, was a pure soul and
an obliging heart. All those who are not imposed
upon by the pious insults of the theologians mourn
in La Mettrie a good man and a wise physician.
m
\
L' H M M E
MACHINE.
J^^e lace Mm it VEjfenafttprhnet.
Que Von nous feint fi lumineuxf
l^'ce la cetEfpritfurvivant a nous mhne^
II natt avec nos fens^ croitt iaffo'iblit
comnte eux>
Helas! il phira de mkne.
VOLTAIRS.
A L £ ro E,
Db t'lMP, D'ELIE LUZAC, Fits.
MDCCXLVllI.
Facsimile of title page of the Leyden 1748 editiOD
/
, "»
UHOMME MACHINE.
IL ne suffit pas a un sage d'etudier la nature et la
verite ; il doit oser la dire en f aveur du petit nom-
bre de ceux qui veulent et peuvent penser ; car pour
les autres, qui sont volontairement esclaves des pre-
juges, il ne leur est pas plus possible d'atteindre la
verite, qu'aux grenouilles de voler.
Je reduis a deux les systemes des philosophes
sur Tame de rhomme. Le premier, et le plus an-
cien, est le systeme du materialisme ; le second est
celui du spiritualisme.
Les metaphysiciens qui ont insinue que la ma-
tiere pourrait bien avoir la faculte de penser, n'ont
pas deshonore leur raison. Pourquoi ? C'est qu'ils
ont cet avantage (car ici e'en est un) de s'etre mal
exprimes. En effet, demander si la matiere pent
penser, sans la considerer autrement qu'en elle-
meme, c*est demander si la matiere peut marquer
les heures. On voit d'avance que nous eviterons
cet ecueil, ou Mr. Locke a eu le malheur d'echouer.
Les Leibniziens, avec leurs monades, ont eleve
une hypothese inintelligible. lis ont plutot spiri-
tualise la matiere, que materialise Tame. Comment
peut-on definir un etre dont la nature nous est ab-
solument inconnue?
Descartes, et tous les Cartesiens, parmi lesquels
il y a longtemps qu'on a compte les Malebranchistes,
14
MAN A MACHINE.
ont fait la meme faute. lis ont admis deux sub-
stances distinctes dans rhomme, comme s'ils les
avaient vues et bien comptees.
Les plus sages ont dit que Tame ne pouvait se
connaitre que par les seules lumieres de la Foi:
cependant, en qualite d'etres raisonnables, ils ont cru
pouvoir se reserver le droit d'examiner ce que I'Ecri-
ture a voulu dire par le mot Esprit, dont elle se sert
en parlant de Tame humaine; et dans leurs re-
cherches, s'ils ne sont pas d'accord sur ce point avec
les theologiens, ceux-ci le sont-ils davantage en-
tr'eux sur tous les autres?
Voici en peu de mots le resultat de toutes leurs
reflexions.
S'il y a un Dieu, il est auteur de la Nature,
comme de la Revelation; il nous a donne Tune,
pour expliquer I'autre ; et la Raison, pour les accor-
der ensemble.
Se defier des connaissances qu'on peut puiser dans
les corps animes, c'est regarder la Nature et la
Revelation comme deux contraires qui se detrui-
sent; et par consequent, c'est oser soutenir cette ab-
surdite: que Dieu se contredit dans ses divers ou-
vrages, et nous trompe. .^
S'il y a une Revelation, elle ne peut done dementir
la Nature. Par la Nature seule, on peut decouvrir
le sens des paroles de TEvangile, dont I'experience
seule est la veritable interprete. En effet, les autres
commentateurs jusqu'ici n'ont fait qu'embrouiller
la verite. Nous allons en juger par I'auteur du
Spectacle de la Nature. "II est etonnant, dit-il (au
"sujet de Mr. Locke), qu'un homme qui degrade
notre ame jusqu'a la croire une ame de boue, ose
etablir la Raison pour juge et souverain arbitre
it
tijii
\
L^HOMME MACHINE.
15
"des mysteres de la Foi ; car, ajoute-t-il, quelle idee
"etonnante aurait-on du Christianisme, si Ton vou-
"lait suivre la Raison?"
Outre que ces reflexions n*eclaircissent rien par
rapport a la Foi, elles forment de si frivoles ob-
jections contre la methode de ceux qui croient pou-
voir interpreter les Livres Saints, que j'ai presque
honte de perdre le temps a les refuter.
lo. L'excellence de la Raison ne depend pas d*an
grand mot vide de sens (I'immaterialite) ; mais de
sa force, de son etendue, ou de sa clairvoyance.
Ainsi une ame de bone, qui decouvrirait, comme
d'un coup d'ceil, les rapports et les suites d'une in-
finite d'idees difficiles a saisir, serait evidemment
preferable a une ame sotte et stupide qui serait
faite des elements les plus precieux. Ce n'est pas
etre philosophe, que de rougir avec Pline de la
misere de notre origine. Ce qui parait vil, est ici la
chose la plus precieuse, et pour laquelle la nature
semble avoir mis le plus d'art et le plus d'appareil.
Mais comme Thomme, quand meme il viendrait
d'une source encore plus vile en apparence, n'en -
serait pas moins le plus parfait de tous les etres,
quelle que soit Torigine de son ame, si elle est pure,
noble, sublime, c'est une belle ame, qui rend respec-
table quiconque en est doue.
La seconde maniere de raisonner de Mr. Pluche
me parait vicieuse, meme dans son systeme, qui tient
un peu du fanatisme; car si nous avons une idee
de la Foi, qui soit contraire aux principes les plus
clairs, aux verites les plus incontestables, il faut
croire, pour I'honneur de la Revelation et de son
Auteur, que cette idee est fausse, et que nous ne
V
16
MAN A MACHINE.
connaissons point encore les sens des paroles de
TEvangile.
De deux choses Tune; ou tout est illusion, tant
la Nature meme, que la Revelation ; ou Texperience
seule pent rendre raison de la Foi. Mais quel plus
grand ridicule que celui de notre auteur ? Je m*ima-
gine entendre un peripateticien, qui dirait : "II ne faut
"pas croire Texperience de Toricelli: car si nous la
"croyions, si nous allions bannir Thorreur du vide,
"quelle etonnante philosophic aurions-nous ?"
J'ai fait voir combien le raisonnement de Mr.
Pluche est vicieux,* afin de prouver premierement
que s*il y a une Revelation, elle n'est point suffi-
samment demontree par la seule autorite de TEglise
et sans aucun examen de la Raison, comme le pre-
tendent tons ceux qui la craignent. Secondement,
pour mettre a Tabri de toute attaque la methode
de ceux qui voudraient suivre la voie que je leur
ouvre, d'interpreter les choses surnaturelles, incom-
prehensibles en soi» par les lumieres que chacun a
recue s de la nature.J
L'experience et {'observation doivent done seules
nous guider ici. Elles se trouvent sans nombre dans
les Pastes des medecins, qui ont ete philosophes, et
non dans les philosophes, qui n'ont pas ete mede-
cins. * Ceux-ci ont parcouru, ont eclaire le laby-
rinthe de Thomme; ils nous ont seuls devoile ces
ressorts caches sous des enveloppes qui derobent a
nos yeux tant de merveilles. Eux seuls, contemplant
tranquillement notre ame, I'ont mille fois surprise,
et dans sa misere, et dans sa grandeur, sans plus la
mepriser dans Tun de ces etats, que Tadmirer dans
Tautre. Encore une fois, voila les seuls physiciens
* II peche evidemment par une petition de principe.
L HOMME MACHINE.
17
qui aient droit de parler ici. Que nous diraient les
autres, et surtout les theologiens? N'est-il pas
ridicule de les entendre decider sans pudeur, sur un
sujet qu'ils n'ont point ete a portee de connaitre,
dont ils ont ete au contraire entierement detournes
par des etudes obscures, qui les ont conduits a
mille prejuges, et pour tout dire en un mot, au
fanatisme, qui ajoute encore a leur ignorance dans
le mecanisme des corps.
Mais, quoique nous ayons choisi les meilleurs
guides, nous trouverons encore beaucoup d'epines
et d'obstacles dans cette carriere.
L'homme est une machine si composee, qu'il est
impossible de s'en faire d'abord une idee claire, et
consequemment de la definir. C'est pourquoi toutes
les recherches que les plus grands philosophes ont
faites a priori, c'est a dire, en voulant se servir en
quelque sorte des ailes de I'esprit, ont ete vaines.
Ainsi ce n'est qu'a posteriori, ou en cherchant a
demeler Tame comme au t ravers les organes du
corps, qu'on pent, je ne dis pas decouvrir avec evi-
dence la nature meme de Thomme, mais atteindre
le plus grand degre de probabilite possible sur ce
sujet.
Prenons done le baton de Texperience, et laissons
la Thistoire de toutes les vaines opinions des philo-
sophes. Etre aveugle, et croire pouvoir se passer
de ce baton, c'est le comble de I'aveuglement. Qu'un
moderne a bien raison de dire qu'il n'y a que la
vanite seule qui ne tire pas des causes secondes le
meme parti que des premieres ! On peut et on doit
meme admirer tons ces beaux genies dans leurs
travaux les plus inutiles, les Descartes, les Male-
branche, les Leibnitz, les Wolf, etc. ; mais quel fruit,
A.
18
MAN A MACHINE.
je vous prie, a-t-on retire de leurs profondes medi-
tations et de tous leurs ouvrages? CommenQons
done et voyons, non ce qu*on a pense, mais ce qu'il
faut penser pour le repos de la vie.
Autant de temperaments, autant d'esprits, de ca-
racteres et de moeurs differentes. Galien meme a
connu cette verite, que Descartes, et non Hippocrate,
comme le dit Tauteur de Thistoire de T Ame,^ a pous-
see loin, jusqu'a dire que la medecine seule pouvait
changer les esprits et les moeurs avec le corps. ^ II '
est vrai, la melancolie, la bile, le phlegme, le sang
etc., suivant la nature, Tabondance et la diverse com-
binaison de ces humeurs, de chaque homme font un
homme different.
Dans les maladies, tantot Tame s'eclipse et ne
montre aucun signe d*elle-meme; tantot on dirait
qu'elle est double, tant la f ureur la transporte ; tan-
tot rimbecilite se dissipe: et la convalescence d'un
sot fait un homme d'esprit. Tantot le plus beau
genie devenu stupide, ne se reconnait plus. Adieu
toutes ces belles connaissances acquises a si grands
frais, et avec tant de peine! ^
Ici c'est un paralytique, qui demande si sa jambe
est dans son lit : la c*est un soldat qui croit avoir le
bras qu*on lui a coupe. La memoire de ses an-
ciennes sensations, et du lieu ou son ame les rap-
portait, fait son illusion et son espece de delire.
II suffit de lui parler de cette partie qui lui manque,
pour lui en rappeller et faire sentir tous les mouve-
ments; ce qui se fait avec je ne sais quel deplaisir
d'imagination qu'on ne peut exprimer.
Celui-ci pleure, comme un enfant, aux approches
de la mort, que celui-la badine. Que fallait-il a
Caius Julius, a Seneque, a Petrone pour changer
L^HOMME MACHINE.
19
leur intrepidite en pusillanimite ou en poltronnerie?
Une obstruction dans la rate, dans le foie, un em-
barras dans la veine porte. Pourquoi? Parceque
r imagination se bouche avec les visceres; et de la
naissent tous ces singuliers phenomenes de I'affec-
tion hysterique et hypocondriaque.
Que dirais-je de nouveau sur ceux qui s'imaginent
etre transformes en loups-garous, en coqs, en vam-
pires, qui croient que les morts les sucent? Pour-
quoi m'arreterais-je a ceux qui voient leur nez, ou
autres membres, de verre, et a qui il faut conseiller
de coucher sur la paille, de peur qu'ils ne se cassent,
afin qu'ils en retrouvent Tusage et la veritable chair,
lorsque mettant le feu a la paille on leur fait craindre
d'etre brules: frayeur qui a quelquefois gueri la
paralysie ? Je dois legerement passer sur des choses
connues de tout le monde. ■
Je ne serai pas plus long sur le detail des effets
du sommeil. Voyez ce soldat fatigue ! il ronfle dans
la tranchee, au bruit de cent pieces de canons ! Son
ame n'entend rien, son sommeil est une parfaite
apoplexie. Une bombe va I'ecraser ; il sentira peut-
etre moins ce coup qu un insecte qui se trouve sous
le pied.
D*un autre cote, cet homme que la jalousie, la
haine, I'avarice ou Tambition devore, ne peut
trouver aucun repos. Le lieu le plus tranquille, les
boissons les plus fraiches et les plus calmantes, tout
est inutile a qui n'a pas delivre son cceur du tour-
ment des passions.
L'ame et le corps s'endorment ensemble. A
mesure que le mouvement du sang se calme, un
doux sentiment de paix et de tranquillite se repand
dans toute la machine; Tame se sent moUement
Li
\
20
MAN A MACHINE.
s'appesantir avec les paupieres et s'affaisser avec les
fibres du cerveau : elle devient ainsi peu a peu comme
paralytique, avec tous les muscles du corps. Ceux-
ci ne peuvent plus porter le poids de la tete; celle
la ne peut plus soutenir le f ardeau de la pensee ; elle
est dans le sommeil, comme n'etant point.
La circulation se fait-elle avec trop de Vitesse?
Tame ne peut dormir. L'ame est-elle trop agitee,
le sang ne peut se calmer ; il galope dans les veines
avec un bruit qu*on entend: telles sont les deux
causes reciproques de Tinsomnie. Une seule f rayeur
dans les songes fait battre le coeur a coups redou-
bles, et nous arrache a la necessite, ou a la douceur
du repos, comme feraient une vive douleur ou des
besoins urgents. Enfin, comme la seule cessation
des fonctions de Tame procure le sommeil, il est,
meme pendant la veille (qui n'est alors qu'une demi-
veille), des sortes de petits sommeils d'ame tres
frequents, des rives a la Suisse, qui prouvent que
Tame n'attend pas toujours le corps pour dormir;
car si elle ne dort pas tout-a-fait, combien peu s*en
faut-il! puisqu'il lui est impossible d'assigner un
seul objet auquel elle ait prete quelque attention,
parmi cette foule innombrable d*idees confuses, qui
comme autant de nuages remplissent, pour ainsi dire,
J'atmosphere de notre cerveau.
^L'opium a trop de rapport avec le sommeil qu'il
t)f:ocure, pour ne pas le placer ici. Ce remede eni-
vre, ainsi que le vin, le cafe, et chacun a sa ma-
niere, et suivant sa dose. II rend Thomme heureux
dans un etat qui semblerait devoir etre le tombeau
du sentiment, comme il est Timage de la mort
Quelle douce lethargic! L'ame n'en voudrait ja-
mais sortir. Elle etait en proie aux plus grandes
f
L HOMME MACHINE.
21
douleurs; elle ne sent plus que le seul plaisir de ne
plus suffrir et de jouir de la plus charmante tran-
quillite. L'opium change jusqu'a la volonte; il
force Tame qui voulait veiller et se divertir, d'aller
se mettre au lit malgre elle. Je passe sous silence
rhistoire des poisons.
C'est en fouettant I'imagination, que le cafe, cet
antidote du vin, dissipe nos maux de tete et nos
chagrins, sans nous en menager, comme cette li-
queur, pour le lendemain.
Contemplons Tame dans ses autres besoins. )
Le corps humain est une machine qui monte elle-
A/ meme ses ressorts; vivante image du mouvement
perpetuel. Les aliments entretiennent ce que la fie-
vre excite. Sans eux Tame languit, entre en fureur
et meurt abattue. C'est une bougie dont la lumiere
se ranime, au moment de s^eteindre. Mais nourris-
sez le corps, versez dans ses tuyaux des sues vigou-
reux, des liqueurs fortes; alors Tame genereuse
comme elles s'arme d'un fier courage et le soldat
que Teau eut fait fuir, devenu feroce, court gaie-
ment a la mort au bruit des tambours. C'est ainsi
que Teau chaude agite un sang que Teau froide eut
calme.
Quelle puissance d'un repas! La joie renait
dans un cceur triste; elle passe dans Tame des
convives qui Texpriment par d'aimables chansons,
ou les Frangais excellent. Le melancolique seul est
accable, et Thomme d'etude n'y est plus propre.
La viande crue rend les animaux feroces; les
hbmmes le deviendraient par la meme nourriture;
cela esb^ vrai, que la nation anglaise, qui ne mange
pas la chMr si cuite que nous, mais rouge et san-
glante, parait participer de cette ferocite plus ou
22
MAN A MACHINE.
moins grande, qui vient en partie de tels aliments,
et d'autres causes, que Teducation pent seule rendre
impuissantes. Cette ferocite produit dans Tame Tor-
gueil, la haine, le mepris des autres nations, Tin-
docilite et autres sentiments, qui depravent le carac-
tere, comme des aliments grossiers font un esprit
lourd, epais, dont la paresse et I'indolence sont les
attributs favoris.
Mr. Pope a bien connu tout Tempire de la gour-
mandise, lorsqu'il dit : "Le grave Catius park tou-
"jours de vertu, et croit que, qui souff re les vicieux
"est vicieux lui-meme. Ces beaux sentiments durent
"jusqu'a I'heure du diner ; alors il pref ere un scele-
"rat, qui a une table delicate, a un saint frugal.
"Considerez, dit-il ailleurs, le meme homme en
"sante, ou en maladie; possedant une belle charge,
on Tayant perdue ; vous le verrez cherir la vie, ou
la detester, fou a la chasse, ivrogne dans une as-
semblee de province, poli au bal, bon ami en ville,
"sans foi a la cour." '
Nous avons eu en Suisse un bailli, nomme Stei-
guer de Wittighofen; il etait a jeun le plus in-
tegre et meme le plus indulgent des juges; mais
malheur au miserable qui se trouvait sur la sellette,
lorsquMl avait fait un grand diner ! II etait homme
a faire pendre Tinnocent, comme le coupable.
Nous pensons, et meme nous ne sommes hon-
netes gens, que comme nous sommes gais, ou braves ;
tout depend de la maniere dont notre machine est
montee. On dirait en certains moments que Tame
habite dans Testomac, et que Van Helmont, en met-
tant son siege dans le pylore, ne se serait trompe
qu'en prenant la partie pour le tout.
A quels exces la faim cruelle pent nous porter!
t(
ti
i€
L HOMME MACHINE.
23
Plus de respect pour les entrailles auxquelles on
doit ou on a donne la vie; on les dechire a belles
dents, on s'en fait d'horribles festins; et dans la
fureur dont on est transporte, le plus faible est
toujours la proie du plus fort.
La grossesse, cette emule desiree des pales cou-
leurs, ne se contente pas d'amener le plus souvent
a sa suite les gouts depraves qui accompagnent ces
deux etats : elle a quelquefois fait executer a Tame
les plus aff reux complots ; eff ets d'une manie subite,
qui etouffe jusqu'a la loi naturelle. C*est ainsi que
le cerveau, cette matrice de Tesprit, se pervertit a
sa maniere, avec celle du corps.
Quelle autre fureur d'homme ou de femme, dans
ceux que la continence et la sante poursuivent ! C^est
peu pour cette fille timide et modeste d'avoir perdu
toute honte et toute pudeur; elle ne regarde plus
rinceste, que comme une femme galante regarde
Tadultere. Si ses besoins ne trouvent pas de prompts
soulagements, ils ne se borneront point aux simples
accidents d'une passion uterine, a la manie, etc. ; cette
malheureuse mourra d'un mal, dont il y a tant de
medecins.
II ne faut que des yeux pour voir Tinfluence ne-
cessaire de I'age sur la raison. L'ame suit les
progres du corps, comme ceux de Teducation. Dans
le beau sexe, l'ame suit encore la delicatesse du
temperament: de la cette tendresse, cette affection,
ces sentiments vifs, plutot fondes sur la passion que
sur la raison, ces prejuges, ces superstitions, dont
la forte empreinte pent a peine s'effacer, etc.
L'homme, au contraire, dont le cerveau et les nerfs
participent de la fermete de tons les solides, a
Tesprit, ainsi que les traits du visage, plus nerveux ;
I k
24
L^HOMME MACHINE.
25
MAN A MACHINE.
reducation, dont manquent les femmes, ajoute en-
core de nouveaux degres de force a son ame. Avec
de tels secours de la nature et de Tart, comment ne
serait-il pas plus reconnaissant, plus genereux, plus
constant en amitie, plus ferme dans Tadversite? etc.
Mais, suivant a peu pres la pensee de Tauteur des
Lettres sur les Physionomies,' qui joint les graces
de Tesprit et du corps a presque tous les sentiments
du coeur les plus tendres et les plus delicats ne doit
point nous envier une double force, qui ne semble
avoir ete donnee a Thomme, Tune, que pour se
mieux penetrer des attraits de la beaute, Tautre,
que pour mieux servir a ses plaisirs.
II n*est pas plus necessaire d'etre aussi grand
physionomiste que cet auteur pour deviner la qua-
lite de Tesprit par la figure ou la forme des traits,
lorsqu'ils sont marques jusqu'a un certain point,
qu'il ne Test d'etre grand medecin pour connaitre
un mal accompagne de tous ses symptomes evidents.
Examinez les portraits de Locke, de Steele, de Boer-
haave, de Maupertuis, etc. vous ne serez point sur-
pris de leur trouver des physionomies fortes, des
yeux d'aigle. Parcourez-en une infinite d'autres,
vous distinguerez toujours le beau du grand genie,
et meme souvent Thonnete homme du fripon. On
a remarque, par exemple, qu'un poete celebre re-
unit (dans son portrait) Tair d'un filou, avec le
feu de Promethee.
L'histoire nous offre un memorable exemple de
la puissance de Tair. Le fameux Due de Guise etait
si fort convaincu que Henri IIL qui Tavait eu tant
de fois en son pouvoir, n'oserait jamais Tassassiner,
qu'il partit pour Blois. Le chancelier Chyverni ap-
prenant son depart, s'ecria: voild un homme perdu!
Lorsque sa fatale prediction fut justifiee par Teve-
nement, on lui en demanda la raison. II y a vingt
ans, dit-il, que je connais le Roi; il est naturellement
bon et mime faible; mais fai observe qu'un rien
Vimpatiente et le met en fureur, lorsqu'il fait froid.'
Tel peuple a I'esprit lourd et stupide; tel autre
Ta vif, leger, penetrant. D'ou cela vient-il, si ce
n'est en partie, et de la nourriture qu'il prend, et
de la semence de ses peres,* et de ce chaos de divers
elements qui nagent dans Timmensite de I'air? L*es-
prit a, comme le corps, ses maladies epidemiques et
son scorbut.
Tel est Tempire du climat, qu'un homme qui en
change se ressent malgre lui de ce changement. C'est
une plante ambulante, qui s'est elle-meme trans-
plantee; si le climat n'est plus le meme, il est juste
qu'elle degenere, ou s'ameliore.
On prend tout encore de ceux avec qui Ton vit,
leurs gestes, leurs accents, etc., comme la paupiere se
baisse a la menace du coup dont on est prevenu, ou
par la meme raison que le corps du spectateur imite
machinalement, et malgre lui, tous les mouvements
d'un bon pantomime.
Ce que je viens de dire prouve que la meilleure
compagnie pour un homme d'esprit, est la sienne,
s'il n'en trouve une semblable. L'esprit se rouille
avec ceux qui n'en ont point, faute d'etre exerce:
a la paume, on renvoie mal la balle a qui la sert mal.
J'aimerais mieux un homme intelligent, qui n'au-
rait eu aucune education, que s'il en eut eu une
mauvaise, pourvu qu'il fut encore assez jeune. Un
♦L'histoire des animaux et des hommes prouve Tempire de
la semence des peres sur I'esprit et le corps des enfants.
i
47
26
MAN A MACHINE.
esprit mal conduit est un acteur que la province
a gate.
Les divers etats de Tame sont done tou jours cor-
relatifs a ceux du corps. Mais, pour mieux demon-
trer toute cette dependance et ses causes, servons-
nous ici de Tanatomie comparee; ouvrons les en-
trailles de rhomme et des animaux. Le moyen de
connaitre la nature humaine, si Ton n'est eclaire
par un juste parallele de la structure des uns et
des autres \J
En general, la forme et la composition du cerveau
des quadrupedes est a peu pres la meme que dans
rhomme. Meme figure, meme disposition partout;
avec cette difference essentielle, que Thomme est
de tous les animaux celui qui a le plus de cerveau,
et le cerveau le plus tortueux, en raison de la
masse de son corps. Ensuite le singe, le castor,
relephant, le chien, le renard, le chat, etc., voila
les animaux qui ressemblent le plus a I'homme;
car on remarque aussi chez eux la meme analogic
graduee, par rapport au corps calleux, dans lequel
Lancisi avait etabli le siege de Tame, avant feu
Mr. de la Peyronnie, qui cependant a illustre cette
opinion par une foule d'experiences. '.
Apres tous les quadrupedes, ce sont les oiseaux
qui ont le plus de cerveau. Les poissons ont la
tete grosse; mais elle est vide de sens, comme celle
de bien des hommes. lis n'ont point de corps cal-
leux et fort peu de cerveau, lequel manque aux
insectes.
Je ne me repandrai point en un plus long detail
arietes de la nature, ni en conjectures, car
les unes et les autres sont infinies, comme on en
L'hOMME MACHINE.
27
peut juger en lisant les seuls traites de Willis, De
Cerebro, et De Anima Brutorum.
Je conclurai seulement ce qui s'en suit claire-
ment de ces incontestables observations: lo que
plus les animaux sont farouches, moins ils ont de
cerveau; 2o que ce viscere semble s'agrandir, en
quelque sorte, a proportion de leur docilite; 3° qu*il
y a ici une singuliere condition imposee eternelle-
ment par la nature, qui est que plus on gagnera du
cote de Tesprit, plus on perdra du cote de I'instinct.
Lequel Temporte, de la perte ou du gain ?
Ne croyez pas, au reste, que je veuille pretendre
par la que le seul volume du cerveau suffise pour
faire juger du degre de docilite des animaux; il
faut que la qualite reponde encore a la quantite, et
que les solides et les fluides^oient dans cet equilibre
convenable qui fait la s^nte.
Si rimbecile ne manque pas de cerveau, comme
on le remarque ordinairement, ce viscere pechera
par une mauvaise consistance, par trop de mollesse,
par exemple. II en est de meme des f ous ; les vices
de leur cerveau ne se derobent pas tou jours a nos
recherches; mais si les causes de I'imbecilite, de la
folic, etc. ne sont pas sensibles, oil aller chercher
celles de la variete de tous les esprits ? Elles echap-
peraient aux yeux des lynx et des argus. Un Hen,
une petite fibre, quelque chose que la plus subtile
anatomie ne peut decouvrir, eut fait deux sots
.i d'Erasme et de Fontenelle, qui le remarque lui
I V— •ipeme dans un de ses meilleurs Dialogues.
, Outre la mollesse de la moelle du cerveau, dans
Ifes^nfants, dans les petits chiens et dans les oi-
seaux, Willis a remarque que les corps canneles sont
effaces et comme decolores dans tous ces animaux,
28
MAN A MACHINE.
et que leurs stries sont aussi imparfaitement f ormees
que dans les paralytiques. II ajoute, ce qui est
vrai, que rhomme a la protuberance annulaire fort
grosse; et ensuite toujours diminutivement par de-
gres, le singe et les autres animaux nommes ci-
devant, tandis que le veau, le boeuf, le loup, la
brebis, le cochon, etc. qui ont cette partie d'un tres
petit volume, ont les nattes et testes fort gros.
On a beau etre discret et reserve sur les conse-
quences qu'on pent tirer de ces observations et de
tant d'autres sur Tespece d'inconstance des vais-
seaux et des nerfs, etc. : tant de varietes ne peuvent
etre des jeux gratuits de la nature. Elles prouvent
du moins la necessite d'une bonne et abondante or-
ganisation, puisque dans tout le regne animal Tame,
se raffermissant avec le corps, acquiert de la saga-
cite, a mesure qu'il prend des forces.
Arretons-nous a contempler la differente docilite
des animaux. Sans doute Tanalogie la mieux en-
tendue conduit Tesprit a croire que les causes dont
nous avons fait mention produisent toute la diver-
site qui se trouve entr'eux et nous, quoiqu'il faille
avouer que notre faible entendement, borne aux
observations les plus grossieres, ne puisse voir les
liens qui regnent entre la cause et les effets. C*est
une espece d'harmonie que les philosophes ne con-
naitront jamais^
Parmi les animaux, les uns apprennent a parler
et a chanter ; ils retiennent des airs et prennent tous
les tons aussi exactement qu'un musicien. Les au-
tres, qui montrent cependant plus d'esprit, tels que
le singe, n'en peuvent venir a bout. Pourquoi cela,
si ce n'est par un vice des organes de la parole?
Mais ce vice est-il tellement de conformation.
l'hOMME MACHINE.
29
\..
qu'on n'y puisse apporter aucun remede? en un mot
serait-il absolument impossible d'apprendre une
langue a cet animal? Je ne le crois pas.
Je prendrais le grand singe preferablement a
tout autre, jusqu*a ce que le hasard nous eut fait
decouvrir quelque autre espece plus semblable a la
notre, car rien ne repugne qu'il y en ait dans des
regions qui nous sont inconnues. Cet animal nous
ressemble si fort, que les naturalistes Tout appele
homme sauvage, ou homme des hois. Je le pren-
drais aux memes conditions des ecoliers d' Amman;
c'est-a-dire, que je voudrais qu'il ne fut ni trop
jeune ni trop vieux ; car ceux qu'on nous apporte en
Europe sont communement trop ages. Je choisirais
celui qui aurait la physionomie la plus spirituelle, et
qui tiendrait le mieux dans mille petites operations
ce qu'elle m'aurait promis. Enfin, ne me trouvant
pas digne d'etre son gouverneur, je le mettrais a
I'ecole de I'excellent maitre que je viens de nommer,
ou d'un autre aussi habile, s'il en est.
Vous savez par le livre d' Amman, et par tous
ceux* qui ont traduit sa methode, tous les prodiges
qu'il a su operer sur les sourds de naissance, dans
les yeux desquels il a, comme il le fait entendre
lui-meme, trouve des oreilles ; et en combien peu de
temps enfin il leur a appris a entendre, parler, lire,
et ecrire. Je veux que les yeux d'un sourd voient
plus clair et soient plus intelligents que s'il ne I'etait
pas, par la raison que la perte d'un membre ou d'un
sens pent augmenter la force ou la penetration d'un
autre : mais le singe voit et entend ; il comprend ce
qu'il entend et ce qu'il voit; il congoit si parfaite-
ment les signes qu'on lui fait, qu'a tout autre jeu,
♦Uauteur de I'Histoire naturelle de Tame etc.
30
MAN A MACHINE.
ou tout autre exercice, je ne doute point qu'il ne
remportat sur les disciples d' Amman. Pourquoi
done Teducation des singes serait-elle impossible?
Pourquoi ne pourrait-il enfin, a force de soins, imi-
ter, a Texemple des sourds, les mouvemens neces-
saires pour prononcer? Je n'ose decider si les or-
ganes de la parole du singe ne peuvent, quoiqu*on
f asse, rien articuler ; mais cette impossibilite absolue
me surprendrait, a cause de la grande analogic du
singe et de I'homme, et qu'il n'est point d'animal
connu jusqu'a present, dont le dedans et le dehors
lui ressemblent d\me maniere si frappante. Mr.
Locke, qui certainement n*a jamais ete suspect de
credulite, n'a pas fait difficulte de croire I'histoire
que le Chevalier Temple fait dans ses Memoires,
d*un perroquet qui repondait a propos et avait
appris, comme nous, a avoir une espece de conver-
sation suivie. Je sais qu*on s'est moque* de ce grand |
metaphysicien ; mais qui aurait annonce a I'univers
qu'il y a des generations qui se font sans oeufs et
sans femmes, aurait-il trouve beaucoup de parti-
sans? Cependant Mr. Trembley en a decouvert,
qui se font sans accouplement, et par la seule sec-
tion. Amman n*eiit-il pas aussi passe pour un fou,
s'il se fut vante, avant que d'en faire Theureuse ex-
perience, d'instruire, et en aussi peu de temps, des
ecoliers tels que les siens? Cependant ses succes
ont etonne Tunivers, et comme Tauteur de I'His-
toire des Polypes, il a passe de plein vol a Timmor-
talite. Qui doit a son genie les miracles qu'il opere,
Temporte a mon gre sur qui doit les siens au ha-
sard. Qui a trouve Tart d'embellir le plus beau des
regnes, et de lui donner des perfections qu'il n'a-
♦Uauteur de THist. de Tame.
l'homme machine.
31
V
vait pas, doit etre mis au-dessus d'un faiseur oisif
de systemes frivoles, ou d'un auteur laborieux de
steriles decouvertes. Celles d' Amman sont bien d'un
autre prix; il a tire les hommes de I'instinct auquel
ils semblaient condamnes ; il leur a donne les idees,
de I'esprit, une ame en un mot, qu'ils n'eussent
jamais eue. Quel plus grand pouvoirl
Ne bornons point les ressources de ia^ nature;
elles sont infinies, surtout aidees d'un gran^tg-t^
La meme mecanique, qui ouvre le canal d'Eu-
stachi dans les sourds, ne pourrait-il le deboucher
dans les singes? Une heureuse envie d'imiter la
prononciation du maitre, ne pourrait-elle mettre en
liberte les organes de la parole, dans les animaux
qui imitent tant d'autres signes, avec tant d'adresse
et d'intelligence ? Non seulement je defie qu'on me
cite aucune experience vraiment concluante, qui de-
cide mon pro jet impossible et ridicule ; mais la simi-
litude de la structure et des operations du singe est
telle, que je ne doute presque point, si on exerqait
parfaitement cet animal, qu'on ne vint enfin a bout
de lui apprendre a prononcer, et par consequent a
savoir une langue. Alors ce ne serait plus ni un
homme sauvage, ni un homme manque: ce serait
un homme par fait, un petit homme de ville, avec
autant d'etoffe ou de muscles que nous-memes, pour
penser et profiter de son education.
Des animaux a I'homme, la transition n'est pas
violente; les vrais philosophes en conviendront.
Qu'etait I'homme, avant I'invention des mots et
la connaissance des langues? Un animal de son
espece, qui avec beaucoup moins d'instinct naturel
que les autres, dont alors il ne se croyait pas roi,
n'etait distingue du singe et des autres animaux
32
HAN A MACHINE.
t
que comme le singe Test lui-meme ; je veux dire par
une physionomie qui annongait plus de discerne-
ment. Reduit a la seule connaissance intuitive des
Leibniziens, il ne voyait que des figures et des cou-
leurs, sans pouvoir rien distinguer entr'elles ; vieux,
comme jeune, enfant a tout age, il begayait ses sen-
sations et ses besoins, comme un chien affame, ou
ennuye de repos, demande a manger ou a se pro-
mener.
Les mots, les langues, les lois, les sciences, les
beaux-arts sont venus; et par eux enfin le diamant
brut de notre esprit a ete poli. On a dresse un
homme, comme un animal; on est devenu auteur,
comme portefaix. Un geometre a appris a faire
les demonstrations et les calculs les plus difficiles,
comme un singe a oter ou mettre son petit chapeau,
et a monter sur son chien docile. Tout s'est fait
par les signes; chaque espece a compris ce qu'elle
a pu comprendre : et c'est de cette maniere que les
hommes ont acquis la connaissance symbolique, ainsi
nommee encore par nos philosophes d'Allemagne.
Rien de si simple, comme on voit, que la meca-
ue de notre education! Tout se reduit a des
son^, ou a des mots, qui de la bouche de Tun passent
par Toreille de Tautre dans le cerveau, qui regoit
en meme temps par les yeux la figure des corps, dont
ces mots sont les signes arbitraires.
Mais qui a parle le premier? Qui a ete le pre-
mier precepteur du genre human? Qui a invente
les moyens de mettre a profit la docilite de notre
organisation ? Je n'en sais rien ; le nom de ces heu-
reux et premiers genies a ete perdu dans la nuit
des temps. Mais Tart est le fils de la nature; elle
a du longtemps le preceder.
l'homme machine.
33
On doit croire que les hommes les mieux orga-
nises, ceux pour qui la nature aura epuise ses bien-
faits, auront instruit les autres. lis n'auront pu
entendre un bruit nouveau, par exemple, eprouver de
nouvelles sensations, etre frappe de tous ces beaux
objets divers qui forment le ravissant spectacle de
la nature, sans se trouver dans le cas de ce sourd
de Chartres dont le grand Fontenelle nous a le
premier donne Thistoire, lorsqu'il entendit pour la
premiere fois a quarante ans le bruit etonnant des
cloches.
De la serait-il absurde de croire que ces premiers
mortels essayerent a la maniere de ce sourd, ou a
celle des animaux et des muets (autre espece
d'animaux), d'exprimer leurs nouveaux sentiments
par des mouvements dependants de Teconomie de
leur imagination, et consequemment ensuite par des
sons spontanes propres a chaque animal, expression
naturelle de leur surprise, de leur joie, de leurs
transports, ou de leurs besoins? Car sans doute
ceux que la nature a doues d'un sentiment plus
exquis, ont eu aussi plus de facilite pour Texprimer.
Voila comme je congois que les hommes ont em-
ploye leur sentiment, ou leur instinct, pour avoir de
Tesprit, et enfin leur esprit, pour avoir des connais-
sances. Voila par quels moyens, autant que je puis
les saisir, on s'est rempli le cerveau des idees, pour
le reception desquelles la nature Tavait forme. On
s*est aide Tun par Tautre; et les plus petits com-
mencements s'agrandissant peu a peu, toutes les
choses de Tunivers ont ete aussi facilement dis-
tinguees qu'un cercle.
Comme une corde de violon ou une touche de
clavecin fremit et rend un son, les cordes du cer-
34
MAN A MACHINE.
veau, frappees par les rayons sonores, ont ete ex-
citees a rendre ou a redire les mots qui les tou-
chaient. Mais comme telle est la construction de
ce viscere, que des qu'une fois les yeux bien formes
pour Toptique ont requ la peinture des objets, le
cerveau ne pent pas ne pas voir leurs images et leurs
differences: de meme, lorsque les signes de ces
differences ont ete marques, ou graves dans le cer-
veau, Tame en a necessairement examine les rap-
ports; examen qui lui etait impossible sans la de-
couverte des signes, ou Tinvention des langues.
Dans ces temps, ofi Tunivers etait presque muet,
Tame etait a I'egard de tous les objets, comme un
homme qui, sans avoir aucune idee des propor-
tions, regarderait un tableau, ou une piece de sculp-
ture: il n'y pourrait rien distinguer; ou comme un
petit enfant (car alors I'ame etait dans son en-
fance) qui, tenant dans sa main un certain nombre
de petits brins de paille ou de bois, les voit en gene-
ral d'une vue vague et superficielle, sans pouvoir
les compter ni les distinguer. Mais qu'on mette
une espece de pavilion, ou d'etendard, a cette piece
de bois, par exemple, qu'on appelle mat, qu*on en
mette un autre a un autre pareil corps; que le pre-
mier venu se nombre par le signe 1 et le second
par le signe ou chiffre 2; alors cet enfant pourra les
compter, et ainsi de suite il apprendra toute Tarith-
metique. Des qu'une figure lui paraitra egale a
une autre par son signe numeratify il concliara sans
peine que ce sont deux corps differents; que 1 et 1
font deux, que 2 et 2 font 4,* etc.
C'est cette similitude reelle, ou apparente, des
*I1 y a encore aujourdTiui des peuples, qui, faute d'un plus
grand nombre de signes, ne peuvent compter que jusqu'a 20.
L HOMME MACHINE.
35
V
figures, qui est la base fondamentale de toutes les
verites et de toutes nos connaissances, parmi les-
quelles il est evident que celles dont les signes sont
moins simples et moins sensibles sont plus difficiles
a apprendre que les autres, en ce qu'elles demandent
plus de genie pour embrasser et combiner cette
immense quantite de mots par lesquels les sciences
dont je park expriment les verites de leur ressort:
tandis que les sciences qui s'annoncent par des
chiffres, ou autres petits signes, s'apprennent fa-
cilement ; et c'est sans doute cette f acilite qui a fait
la fortune des calculs algebriques, plus encore que
leur evidence. /
Tout ce^-sa^oir dont le vent enfle le ballon du cer-
veau de nos pedants orgueilleux, n'est done qu'un
vaste amas de mots et de figures, qui forment
dans la tete toutes les traces par lesquelles nous
distinguons et nous nous rappellons les objets. Toutes
nos idees se reveillent, comme un jardinier qui
connait les plantes se souvient de toutes leurs
phases a leur aspect. Ces mots et ces figures qui
sont designes par eux, sont tellements lies en-
semble dans le cerveau, qu'il est assez rare qu*on
imagine une chose sans le nom ou le signe qui lui
est attache.
Je me sers tou jours du mot imaginer, parceque
je crois que tout s'imagine, et que toutes les parties
de Tame peuvent etre justement reduites a la seule
imagination, qui les forme toutes; et qu'ainsi le
jugement, le raisonnement, la memoire ne sont que
des parties de Tame nullement absolues, mais de
veritables modifications de cette espece de toile me-
dullaire, sur laquelle les objets peints dans Toeil
sont renvoyes, comme d'une lanterne magique.
36
MAN A MACHINE.
/^
Mais si tel est ce merveilleux et incomprehensible
resultat de Torganisation du cerveau ; si tout se
congoit par Timagination, si tout s'explique par elle;
pourquoi diviser le principe sensitif qui pense dans
rhomme? N'est-ce pas une contradiction mani-
feste dans les partisans de la simplicite de Tesprit?
Car une chose qu'on divise ne pent plus etre, sans
absurdite, regardee comme indivisible. Voila ou
conduit rabus des langues, et Tusage de ces grands
mots, spiritualite, immaterialite, etc., places a tout
hasard, sans etre entendus, meme par des gens
d'esprit.
Rien de plus facile que de prouver un systeme,
fonde comme celui-ci sur le sentiment intime et Tex-
perience propre de chaque individu. Uimagination,
ou cette partie fantastique du cerveau, dont la nature
nous est aussi inconnue que sa maniere d'agir, est-
elle naturellement petite, ou faible? elle aura a peine
la force de comparer I'analogie, ou la ressemblance
de ses idees; elle ne pourra voir que ce qui sera
vis-a-vis d'elle, ou ce qui Taffectera le plus yive-
ment; et encore de quelle maniere! Mais toujours
est-il Vrai que Timagination seule apergoit ; que c'est
elle qui se represente tous les objets, avec les mots
et les figures qui les caracterisent ; et qu'ainsi c'est
elle encore une fois qui est Tame, puisqu'elle en
fait tous les roles. Par elle, par son pinceau flat-
teur, le f roid squelette de la raison prend des chairs
vives et vermeilles ; par elle les sciences fleurissent,
les arts s'embellissent, les bois parlent, les echos
soupirent, les rochers pleurent, le marbre^espire,
tout prend vie parmi les corps inanimes. C'est elle
encore qui ajoute a la tendresse d'un coeur amoureux
le piquant attrait de la volupte; elle la fait ger-
i
L^HOMME MACHINE.
37
mer dans le cabinet du philosophe, et du pedant
poudreux; elle forme enfin les savants comme les
orateurs et les poetes. Sottement decriee par les
uns, vainement distinguee par les autres, qui tous
Tout mal connue, elle ne marche pas seulement a la
suite des Graces et des beaux-art, elle ne peint pas
seulement la nature, elle pent aussi la mesurer.
Elle raisonne, juge, penetre, compare, approfondit.
Pourrait-elle si bien sentir les beautees des tableaux
qui lui sont traces, sans en decouvrir les rapports?
Non; comme elle ne pent se replier sur les plaisirs
des sens, sans en gouter toute la perfection ou la
volupte, elle ne pent reflechir sur ce qu'elle a meca-
niquement congu, sans etre alors le jugement meme.
Plus on exerce Timagination, ou le plus maigre
genie, plus il prend, pour ainsi dire, d'embonpoint ;
plus il s'agrandit, devient nerveux, robuste, vaste
et capable de penser. La meilleure organisation a
besoin de cet exercice.
L'organisation est le premier merite de Thomme;
c'est en vain que tous les auteurs de morale ne
mettent point au rang des qualites estimables celles
qu'on tient de la nature, mais seulement les talents
qui s'acquierent a force de reflexions et d'industrie :
car d'ou nous vient, je vous prie, Thabilete, la sci-
ence et la vertu, si ce n'est d'une disposition qui
nous rend propres a devenir habiles, savants et ver-
tueux ? Et d'ou nous vient encore cette disposition,
si ce n'est de la nature? Nous n'avons de qualites
estimables que par elle ; nous lui devons tout ce que
nous sommes. Pourquoi done n'estimerais-je pas
autant ceux qui ont des qualites naturelles, que
ceux qui brillent par des vertus acquises, et comme
d*emprunt ? Quel que soit le merite, de quelque en-
38
MAN A MACHINE.
droit qu'il naisse, il est digne d'estime ; il ne s'agit
que de savoir le mesurer. L'esprit, la beaute, les
richesses, la noblesse, quoiqu'enfants du hasard,
ont tous leur prix, comme Tadresse, le savoir, la
vertu, etc. Ceux que la nature a combles de ses dons
les plus precieux, doivent plaindre ceux a qui ils
ont ete refuses; mais ils peuvent sentir leur supe-
riorite sans orgueil, et en connaisseurs. Une belle
femme serait aussi ridicule de se trouver laide,
qu'un homme d'esprit de se croire un sot Une
modestie outree (defaut rare a la verite) est une
sorte d'ingratitude envers la nature. Une honnete
fierte, au contraire, est la marque d'une ame belle
et grande, que decelent des traits males monies
comme par le sentiment.
Si rorganisation est un merite, et le premier me-
rite, et la source de tous les autres, I'instruction est
le second. Le cerveau le mieux construit, sans elle,
le serait en pure perte; comme sans I'usage du
monde, Thomme le mieux fait ne serait qu'un pay-
san grossier. Mais aussi quel serait le fruit de la
plus excellente ecole, sans une matrice parfaitement
ouverte a Tentree ou a la conception des idees ? II
est aussi impossible de donner une seule idee a un
homme prive de tous les sens, que de faire un
enfant a une femme a laquelle la nature aurait
pousse la distraction jusqu'a oublier de faire une
vulve, comme je Tai vu dans une, qui n'avait ni
fente, ni vagin, ni matrice, et qui pour cette raison
fut demariee apres dix ans de mariage.
Mais si le cerveau est a la fois bien organise et
bien instruit, c'est une terre feconde parfaitement
ensemencee, qui produit le centuple de ce qu'elle a
rcQu: ou (pour quitter le style figure sou vent ne-
L^HOMME MACHINE.
39
cessaire, pour mieux exprimer ce qu'on sent et
donner des graces a la Verite meme), I'imagination
elevee par I'art a la belle et rare dignite de genie,
saisit exactement tous les rapports des idees qu'elle
a conQues, embrasse avec facilite une foule eton-
nante d^objets, pour en tirer enfin une longue chaine
de consequences, lesquelles ne sont encore que de
nouveaux rapports, enfantes par la comparaison
des premiers, auxquels Tame trouve une parfaite
ressemblance. Telle est, selon moi, la generation
de Tesprit. Je dis trouve, comme j'ai donne ci-
devant Tepithete d'apparente a la similitude des
objets: non que je pense que nos sens soient tou-
jours trompeurs, comme Ta pretendu le Pere Male-
branche, ou que nos yeux naturellement un peu
ivres ne voient pas les objets tels qu'ils sont en eux
memes, quoique les microscopes nous le prouvent
tous les jours, mais pour n'avoir aucune dispute
avec les Pyrrhoniens, parmi lesquels Bayle s'est
distingue.
^\7 Je dis^e la verite en general ce que Mr. de Fon-
W tenelle dit de certaines en particulier, qu'il faut la
sacrifier au^agrements de la societe. II est de la
douceur de mon caractere d'obvier a toute dispute,
lorsqu'il ne s'agit pas d*aiguiser la conversation.
Les Cartesiens viendraient ici vainement a la charge
avec leur idees innees; je ne me donnerais certaine-
ment pas le quart de la peine qu*a prise Mr. Locke
pour attaquer de telles chimeres. Quelle utilite, en
eflfet, de faire un gros livre, pour prouver une doc-
trine qui etait erigee en axiome il y a trois mille
ans?
Suivant les principes que nous avons poses, et
que nous croyons vrais, celui qui a le plus d'imagina-
40
MAN A MACHINE.
tion doit etre regarde comme ayant le plus d'esprit,
ou de genie, car tous ces mots sont synonymes ;^ et
encore une fois c'est par un abus honteux qu'on
croit dire des choses differentes, lorsqu'on ne dit que
differents mots ou differents sons, auxquels on n'a
attache aucune idee ou distinction reelle.
La plus belle, la plus grande, ou la plus forte
imagination, est done la plus propre aux sciences,
comme aux arts. Je ne decide point s'il faut plus
d'esprit pour exceller dans I'art des Aristotes, ou
des Descartes, que dans celui des Euripides ou des
Sophocles ; et si la nature s'est mise en plus grands
frais pour faire Newton que pour former Corneille
(ce dont je doute fort), mais il est certain que
c'est la seule imagination diversement appliquee
qui a fait leur different triomphe et leur gloire im-
mortelle.
'^i quelqu'un passe pour avoir peu de jugement,
av^ beaucoup d'imagination ; cela veut dire que
rimagination trop abandonnee a elle meme, presque
tou jours comme occupee a se regarder dans le mi-
roir de ses sensations, n'a pas assez contracte I'habi-
tude de les examiner elles-memes avec attention ; plus
profondement penetree des traces, ou des images,
que de leur verite ou de leur ressemblance.
II est vrai que telle est la vivacite des ressorts de
rimagination, que si Inattention, cette cle ou mere des
sciences, ne s'en mele, il ne lui est gueres permis
que de parcourir et d^effleurer les objets.
Voyez cet oiseau sur la branche, il semble tou-
jours pret a s'envoler; rimagination est de meme.
Toujours emportee par le tourbillon du sang et des
esprits, une onde fait une trace, effacee par celle
qui suit ; I'ame court apres, souvent en vain : il faut
L HOMME MACHINE.
41
qu'elle s'attende a regretter ce qu'elle n'a pas assez
vite saisi et fixe: et c'est ainsi que rimagination,
veritable image du temps, se detruit et se renouvelle
sans cesse.
Tel est le chaos et la succession continuelle et
rapide de nos idees ; elles se chassent, comme un flot
pousse rautre; de sorte que si rimagination n*em-
ploie, pour ainsi dire, une partie de ses muscles
pour etre comme en equilibre sur les cordes du cer-
veau, pour se soutenir quelque temps sur un objet
qui va fuir et s'empecher de tomber sur un autre,
qu'il n*est pas encore temps de contempler, jamais
elle ne sera digne du beau nom de jugement. Elle
exprimera vivement ce qu'elle aura senti de meme;
elle formera des orateurs, des musiciens, des pein-
tres, des poetes, et jamais un seul philosophe. Au con-
traire si, des renfance, on accoutume rimagination
a se brider elle-meme, a ne point se laisser emporter
a sa propre impetuosite, qui ne fait que de brillants
enthousiastes, a arreter, contenir ses idees, a les
retourner dans tous les sens, pour voir toutes les
faces d*un objet, alors I'imagination prompte a
juger embrassera par le raisonnement la plus
grande sphere d 'objets, et sa vivacite, toujours de
si bon augure dans les enfants, et qu'il ne s'agit que
de regler par retude et rexercice, ne sera plus qu'une
penetration clairvoyante, sans laquelle on fait peu
de progres dans les sciences.
Tels sont les simples fondements sur lesquels a
ete bati redifice de la logique. La nature les avait
jetes pour tout le genre humain; mais les uns en
^^^j3nt profite, les autres en ont almseT^
a . "HMalgre toutes ces prerogatives'^ I'homme sur
^ les animaux, c'est lui faire honneur que de le ran-
42
MAN A MACHINE.
ger dans la meme classe. II est vrai que, jusqu'a un
certain age, il est plus animal qu'eux, parce qu'il
apporte moins d'instinct en naissant.
Quel est Tanimal qui mourrait de faim au milieu
d'une riviere de lait? L'homme seul. Semblable
a ce vieux enfant dont un moderne parle d'apres
Arnobe, il ne connait ni les aliments qui lui sont
propres, ni I'eau qui peut le noyer, ni le feu qui
peut le reduire en poudre. Faites briller pour la
premiere fois la lumiere d'une bougie aux yeux d'un
enfant, il y portera machinalement le doigt, comme
pour savoir quel est le nouveau phenomene qu'il
aperqoit; c'est a ses depens qu'il en connaitra le
danger, mais il n'y sera pas repris.
Mettez-le encore avec un animal sur le bord d'un
precipice! lui seul y tombera; il se noie, ou Tautre
se sauve a la nage. A quatorze ou quinze ans, il
entrevoit a peine les grands plaisirs qui I'attendent
dans la reproduction de son espece; deja adolescent,
il ne sait pas trop comment s'y prendre dans un jeu
que la nature apprend si vite aux animaux: il se
cache, comme s'il etait honteux d'avoir du plaisir et
d'etre fait pour etre heureux, tandis que les animaux
se font gloire d'etre cyniques. Sans education, ils
sont sans prejuges. Mais voyons encore ce chien et
cet enfant qui ont tous deux perdu leur maitre dans
un grand chemin : I'enfant pleure, il ne sait a quel
saint se vouer ; le chien, mieux servi par son odorat
_ I'autre par sa raison, I'aura bientot trouve.
La nature nous avait done faits pour etre au
^ous des animaux, ou du moins pour faire par
la meme mieux eclater les prodiges de I'education,
qui seule nous tire du niveau et nous eleye enfin
au-dessus d'eux. Mais accordera-t-on la meme dis-
L HOMME MACHINE.
43
tinction aux sourds, aux aveugles-nes, aux im-
beciles, aux fous, aux hommes sauvages, ou qui
ont ete eleves dans les bois avec les betes, a ceux
dont I'affection hypocondriaque a perdu I'imagina-
tion, enfin a toutes ces betes a figure humaine, qui
ne montrent que I'instinct le plus grossier? Non,
tous ces hommes de corps, et jion d'esprit, ne me-
,_ritent pas une classe partictJiereT/'
' Nous n'avons pas dessein de nous dissimuler les
objections qu'on peut faire en faveur de la distinc-
tion primitive de I'homme et des animaux, contre
notre sentiment. II y a, dit-on, dans I'homme une
loi naturelle, une connaissance du bien et du mal,
qui n'a pas ete gravee dans le coeur des animaux.
Mais cette objection, ou plutot cette assertion
est-elle fondee sur I'experience, sans laquelle un
philosophe peut tout rejeter? En avons-nous quel-
qu'une qui nous convainque que I'homme seul a
ete eclaire d'un rayon refuse a tous les autres ani-
maux? S'il n'y en a point, nous ne pouvons pas
plus connaitre par elle ce qui se passe dans eux, et
meme dans les hommes, que ne pas sentir ce qui
affecte I'interieur de notre etre. Nous savons que
nous pensons et que nous avons des remords: un
sentiment intime ne nous force que trop d'en con-
venir; mais pour juger des remords d'autrui, ce
sentiment qui est dans nous est insufiisant: c'est
pourquoi il en faut croire les autres hommes sur
leur parole, ou sur les signes sensibles et exterieurs
/^ que nous avons remarques en nous-memes, lorsque
nous eprouvions la meme conscience et les memes
lents.
Mais pour decider si les animaux qui ne parlent
point ont regu la loi naturelle, il faut s'en rapporter
44
MAN A MACHINE.
consequemment a ces signes dont je viens de parler,
suppose qu'ils existent. Les faits semblent le prou-
ver. Le chien qui a mordu son maitre qui Tagagait,
a paru s'en repentir le moment suivant; on I'a vu
triste, fache, n'osant se montrer, et s'avouer coupable
par un air rampant et humilie. L'histoire nous
offre un exemple celebre d'un lion qui ne voulut
pas dechirer un homme abandonne a sa fureur,
parce qu'il le reconnut pour son bienfaiteur. Qu'il
serait a souhaiter que Thomme meme montrat tou-
jours la meme reconnaissance pour les bienfaits et
le meme respect pour I'humanite ! On n'aurait plus
a craindre les ingrats, ni ces guerres qui sont le fleau
du genre humain et les vrais bourreaux de la loi
naturelle. 7
Mais Un etre a qui la nature a donne un instinct
si precoce, si eclaire, qui juge, combine, raisonne et
delibere, autant que s'etend et le lui permet la sphere
de son activite; un etre qui s'attache par les bien-
faits, qui se detache par les mauvais traitements et
va essayer un meilleur maitre ; un etre d*une struc-
ture semblable a la notre, qui fait les memes ope-
rations, qui a les memes passions, les memes dou-
leurs, les memes plaisirs, plus ou moins vifs sui-
vant Tempire de I'imagination et la delicatesse des
nerf s ; un tel etre enfin ne montre-t-il pas clairement
qu'il sent ses torts et les notres, qu'il connait le
bien et le mal et, en un mot, a conscience de ce qu'il
fait? Son ame qui marque comme la notre les
memes joies, les memes mortifications, les memes
deconcertements, serait-elle sans aucune repugnance
a la vue de son semblable dechire, ou apres I'avoir
lui-meme impitoyablement mis en pieces ? Cela pose,
le don precieux dont il s'agit n'aurait point ete
\
L HOMME MACHINE.
45
refuse aux animaux ; car puisqu'ils nous off rent des
signes evidents de leur repentir, comme de leur in-
telligence, qu'y a-t-il d'absurde a penser que des
.X etres, des machines presque aussi parfaites que
nous, soient, comme nous, faites pour penser et pour
\__^sentir la nature?
Qu'on ne m'objecte point que les animaux sont
pomNla plupart des etres feroces, qui ne sont pas
capables de sentir les maux qu'ils font; car tons les
hommes distinguent-ils mieux les vices et les ver-
tus ? II est dans notre espece de la f erocite, comme
dans la leur. Les hommes qui sont dans la bar-
bare habitude d'enfreindre la loi naturelle, n'en
sont pas si tourmentes que ceux qui la transgressent
pour la premiere fois, et que la force de I'exemple
n'a point endurcis. II en est de meme des animaux,
comme des hommes. Les uns et les autres peuvent
etre plus ou moins feroces par temperament, et ils le
deviennent encore plus avec ceux qui le sont. Mais
un animal doux, pacifique, qui vit avec d'autres
animaux semblables, et d'aliments doux, sera en-
nemi du sang et du carnage, il rougira interieure-
ment de I'avoir verse ; avec cette difference peut-etre
que, comme chez eux tout est immole aux besoins,
aux plaisirs et aux commodites de la vie, dont ils
jouissent plus que nous, leurs remords ne semblent
pas devoir etre si vifs que les notres, parceque nous
ne sommes pas dans la meme necessite qu'eux. La
coutume emousse et peut-etre etouffe les remords,
comme les plaisirs.
Mais je veux pour un moment supposer que je
me trompe, et qu'il n'est pas juste que presque tout
I'univers ait tort a ce sujet, tandis que j'aurais seul
raison; j'accorde que les animaux, meme les plus
46
MAN A MACHINE,
excellents, ne connaissent pas la 4istinction du bien
et du mal moral, qu'ils n'ont aucune memoire des
attentions qu*on a cues pour eux, du bien qu'on leur
a fait, aucun sentiment de leurs propres vertus;
que ce lion, par exemple, dont j'ai parle apres tant
d'autres, ne se souvienne pas de n^avoir pas voulu
ravir la vie a cet homme qui fut livre a sa furie,
dans un spectacle plus inhumain que tous les lions,
les tigres et les ours; tandis que nos compatriotes
se battent, Suisses contre Suisses, freres contre
freres, se reconnaissent, s'enchainent, ou se tuent
sans remords, parce qu'un prince paie leurs meur-
tres: je suppose enfin que la loi naturelle n'ait pas
ete donnea^aux animaux, quelles en seront les con-
sequences? > L'homme n'est pas petri d'un limon
plus predeux; la nature n'a employe qu'une seule
et meme pate, dont elle a seulement varie les levains.
Si done Tanimal ne se repent pas d'avoir viole le
sentiment interieur dont je parle, ou plutot s'il en
est absolument prive, il faut necessairement que
rhomme soit dans le meme cas: moyennant quoi
adieu la loi naturelle et tous ces beaux traites
qu'on a publics sur elle! Tout le regne animal en
serait generalement depourvu. Mais reciproquement
si l'homme ne pent se dispenser de convenir qu'il
distingue toujours, lorsque la sante le laisse jouir
de lui-meme, ceux qui ont de la probite, de I'huma-
nite, de la vertu, de ceux qui ne sont ni humains, ni
vertueux, ni honnetes gens; qu'il est facile de di-
stinguer ce qui est vice, ou vertu, par I'unique plaisir
ou la propre repugnance qui en sont comme les
effets naturels, il s'ensuit que les animaux formes
de la meme matiere, a laquelle il n'a peut-etre man-
que qu'un degre de fermentation pour egaler les
L HOMME MACHINE.
47
hommes en tout, doivent participer aux memes
prerogatives de I'animalite, et qu'ainsi il n'est point
d'ame, ou de substance sensitive, sans remords. La
reflexion suivante va fortifier celles-ci.
On ne pent detruire la loi naturelle. L'em-
preinte en est si forte dans tous les animaux, que
je ne doute nullement que les plus sauvages et les
plus feroces n'aient quelques moments de repentir.
Je crois que la fille sauvage de Chalons en Cham-
pagne aura porte la peine de^spn crime, s'il est vrai
qu'elle ait mange sa soeur.\ Je pense la meme chose
de tous ceux qui commett
'!!
72
MAN A MACHINE.
ou la mecanique du corps humain, et qui laissant
rame et toutes les inquietudes que cette chimere
donne aux sots et aux ignorans, n*est occupe seri-
eusement que du pur naturalisme.
Laissons done le pretendu Mr. Charp se moquer
des philosophes qui ont regarde les animaux, comme
des machines. Que je pense differemment ! Je crois
que Descartes serait un homme respectable a tous
egards, si, ne dans un siecle qu'il n'eut pas du eclairer,
il eut connu le prix de Texperience et de Tobser-
vation, et le danger de s'en ecarter. Mais il n*est
pas moins juste que je fasse ici une authentique re-
paration a ce grand homme, pour tous ces petits
philosophes mauvais plaisants, et mauvais singes de
Locke, qui, au lieu de rire impudemment au nez de
Descartes, feraient mieux de sentir que sans lui le
champ de la philosophic, comme celui du bon esprit
sans Newton, serait peut etre encore en friche.
II est vrai que ce celebre philosophe s'est beau-
coup trompe, et personne n'en disconvient. Mais
enfin il a connu la nature animale; il a le premier
parfaitement demontre que les animaux etaient de
pures machines. Or, apres une decouverte de cette
importance et qui suppose autant de sagacite, le
moyen, sans ingratitude, de ne pas faire grace a
toutes ses erreurs!
Elles sont a mes yeux toutes reparees par ce grand
aveu. Car enfin, quoiqu'il chante sur la distinction
des deux substances, il est visible que ce n*est qu*un
tour d'adresse, une ruse de style, pour faire avaler
aux theologiens un poison cache a Tombre d'une
analogic qui frappe tout le monde, et qu*eux seuls
ne voient pas. Car c*est elle, c'est cette forte
analogic qui force tous les savants et les vrais juges
I
I
L HOMME MACHINE.
73
d avouer que ces etres fiers et vains, plus distingues
par leur orgueil que par le nom d'hommes, quelque
envie qu ils aient de s'elever, ne sont au fond que
des animaux et des machines perpendiculairement
rampantes. Elles ont toutes ce merveilleux instinct,
dont 1 education fait de I'esprit, et qui a toujours
son siege dans le cerveau, et a son defaut, comme
iorsqu il manque ou est ossifie, dans la moelle allon-
gee, et jamais dans le cervelet; car je I'ai vu con-
siderablement blesse, d'autres* I'ont trouve squir-
reux. sans que I'ame cessat de faire ses fonctions.
iitre machine, sentir. penser, savoir distinguer le
bien du mal, comme le bleu du jaune, en un mot
etre ne avec de 1 'intelligence et un instinct sur de
morale, et n'etre qu'un animal, sont done des choses
qui ne sont pas plus contradictoires qu'etre un
singe ou un perroquet et savoir se donner du
piaisir. Car, puisque I'occasion se presente de le
dire qui eut jamais devine d priori qu'une goutte
de la hqueur qui se lance dans I'accouplement fit
ressentir des plaisirs divins, et qu'il en naitrait une
petite creature, qui pourrait un jour, posees cer-
tames lois, jouir des memes delices? Je crois la
pensee si peu incompatible avec la matiere organisee,
qu e le semble en etre une propriete, telle que I'elec-
tncite, la faculte motrice. I'impenetrabilite, I'eten-
due, etc.
Voulez vous de nouvelles observations? En voici
qu. sont sans replique et qui prouvent toutes que
1 homme ressemble parfaitement aux animaux dans
son origine, comme dans tout ce que nous avons
deja cru essentiel de comparer.
J'en appelle a la bonne foi de nos observateurs.
* Haller dans les Transact. Philosoph.
\
>
74
MAN A MACHINE.
Qu'ils nous disent s'il n'est pas vrai que I'homme
dans son principe n'est qu'un ver, qui devient
homme, comme la chenille papillon. Les plus
graves* auteurs nous ont appris comment il faut
s'y prendre pour voir cet animalcule. Tons les
curieux I'ont vu, comme Hartsoeker, dans la se- ^
mence de I'homme, et non dans celle de la f emme ; ^
il nV a que les sots qui s'en soient fait scrupule.
Comme chaque goutte de sperme contient une infinite
de ces petits vers lorsqu*ils sont lances a I'ovaire,
il nV a que le plus adroit, ou le plus vigoureux qui
ait la force de s'insinuer et de s'implanter dans Toeuf
que fournit la femme, et qui lui donne sa premiere
nourriture.^ Cet oeuf, quelquefois surpris dans^ les
trompes de Fallope, est porte par ces canaux a la
matrice, ou il prend racine, comme un grain de ble
dans la terre. Mais quoiqu'il y devienne monstru-
eux par sa croissance de 9 mois, il ne differe point
des oeufs des autres femelles, si ce n'est que sa peau
(Vamnios) ne se durcit jamais, et se dilate prodi-
gieusement, comme on en pent juger en comparant
les foetus trouves en situation et pres d'eclore (ce
que j'ai eu le plaisir d'observer dans une femme
morte un moment avant Taccouchement), avec
d'autres petits embryons tres proches de leur ori-
gine: car alors c'est toujours Tceuf dans sa coque,
et ranimal dans Toeuf, qui, gene dans ses mouve-
ments, cherche machinalement a voir le jour ;^ et pour
y reussir, il commence par rompre avec la tete cette
membrane, d'ou il sort, comme le poulet, Toiseau,
etc., de la leur. J'ajouterai une observation que je
ne trouve nulle part; c'est que V amnios n'tn est pas
plus mince, pour s'etre prodigieusement etendu;
♦ Boerhaave, Inst, Med, et tant d'autres.
L HOMME MACHINE.
75
semblable en cela a la matrice dont la substance
meme se gonfle de sues infiltres, independamment
de la repletion et du deploiement de tons ses coudes
vasculeux.
Voyons I'homme dans et hors de sa coque; exa-
minons avec un microscope les plus jeunes em-
bryons, de 4, de 6, de 8 ou de 15 jours; apres ce
temps les yeux suffisent. Que voit-on ? la tete seule ;
un petit ceuf rond avec deux points noirs qui
marquent les yeux. Avant ce temps, tout etant plus
informe, on n'apergoit qu'une pulpe medullaire, qui
est le cerveau, dans lequel se forme d'abord I'origine
des nerfs, ou le principe du sentiment, et le coeur
qui a deja par lui-meme dans cette pulpe la faculte
de battre : c'est le punctum saliens de Malpighi, qui
doit peut-etre deja une partie de sa vivacite a Tin-
fluence des nerfs. Ensuite peu-a-peu on voit la
tete allonger le col, qui en se dilatant forme d'abord
le thorax, ou le coeur a deja descendu, pour s'y
fixer; apres quoi vient le bas ventre qu'une cloison
(le diaphragme) separe. Ces dilatations donnent
Tune, les bras, les mains, les doigts, les ongles, et les
poils; I'autre les cuisses, les jambes, les pieds, etc.,
avec la seule difference de situation qu*on leur con-
nait, qui fait Tappui et le balancier du corps.' C'est
une vegetation frappante. Ici, ce sont des cheveux
qui couvrent le sommet de nos tetes ; la, ce sont des
,_j^illes et des fleurs. ' Partout brille le meme luxe
de la nature; et enfin Tesprit recteur des plantes
est place oij nous avons notre ame, cette autre
quintessence de I'homme.
Telle est I'uniformite de la nature qu'on com-
mence a sentir, et I'analogie du regne animal et
vegetal, de I'homme a la plante. Peut-etre meme
76
MAN A MACHINE.
y a-t-il des plantes animal, c'est-a-dire qui en vege-
tant, ou se battent comme les polypes, ou font d'au-
tres fonctions propres aux animaux?
Voila a peu pres tout ce qu*on sait de la genera-
tion. Que les parties qui s'attirent, qui sont faites
pour s'unir ensemble et pour occuper telle ou telle
place, se reunissent toutes suivant leur nature; et
qu'ainsi se forment les yeux, le coeur, Testomac et
enfin tout le corps, comme de grands hommes Tout i
ecrit, cela est possible. Mais, comme Texperience
nous abandonne au milieu des ces subtilites, je ne
supposerai rien, regardant tout ce qui ne frappe
pas mes sens comme un mystere impenetrable. II
est si rare que les deux semences se rencontrent
dans le congres, que je serais tente de croire que
la semence de la femme est inutile a la generation. ^
Mais comment en expliquer les phenomenes, sans
ce commode rapport de parties, qui rend si bien rai-
son des ressemblances des en f ants, tantot au pere,
et tantot a la mere? D'un autre cote, Tembarras d'une
explication doit-elle contrebalancer un fait? II me
parait que c'est le male qui fait tout, dans une
femme qui dort, comme dans la plus lubrique.
L'arrangement des parties serait done fait de toute
etemite dans le germe, ou dans le ver meme de
Thomme. Mais tout ceci est fort au-dessus de la
portee des plus excellents observateurs. Comme ils
n'y peuvent rien saisir, ils ne peuvent pas plus juger
de la mecanique de la formation et du developpe-
ment des corps, qu'une taupe du chemin qu*un cerf
pent parcourir.
Nous sommes de vraies taupes dans le champ
de la nature; nous ny faisons gueres que le trajet
de cet animal; et c'est notre orgueil qui donne des
L HOMME MACHINE.
77
<(
((
a
ii
bomes a ce qui n'en a point. Nous sommes dans
le cas d'une montre qui dirait: (un fabuliste en
ferait un personnage de consequence dans un ou-
vrage frivole) "Quoi! c'est ce sot ouvrier qui m*a
faite, moi qui divise le temps! moi qui marque si
exactement le cours du soleil; moi qui repete a
haute voix les heures que j'indique! non, cela ne
se peut pas." Nous dedaignons de meme, ingrats
que nous sommes, cette mere commune de tous les
rignes, comme parlent les chimistes. Nous ima-
ginons ou plutot supposons une cause superieure a
celle a qui nous devons tout, et qui a veritable-
ment tout fait d'une maniere inconcevable. Non, la
matiere n*a rien de vil, qu'aux yeux grossiers qui
la meconnaissent dans ses plus brillants ouvrages;
et la nature n'est point une ouvriere bornee. Elle
produit des millions d'hommes avec plus de facilite
et de plaisir, qu'un horloger n'a de peine a faire la
montre la plus composee. Sa puissance eclate egale-
ment et dans la production du plus vil insecte, et
dans celle de Thomme le plus superbe; le regne
animal ne lui coute pas plus que le vegetal, ni le
plus beau genie qu'un epi de ble. Jugeons done
par ce que nous voyons, de ce qui se derobe a la
curiosite de nos yeux et de nos recherches, et n'ima-
ginons rien au dela. Suivons le singe, le castor,
I'elephant, etc., dans leurs operations. S'il est evi-
dent qu'elles ne peuvent se faire sans intelligence,'
pourquoi la refuser a ces animaux? et si vous leur
accordez une ame, fanatiques, vous etes perdus;
vous aurez beau dire que vous ne decidez point sur
sa nature, tandis que vous lui otez Timmortalite ;
qui ne voit que c'est une assertion gratuite? qui ne
voit qu'elle doit etre ou mortelle, ou immortelle,
i
78
MAN A MACHINE.
comme la notre, dont elle doit subir le meme sort
quel qu'il soit! et qu'ainsi c'est tomber dans Scilla
pour vouloir eviter Carihde?
Brisez la chaine de vos prejuges ; armez-vous du
flambeau de Texperience et vous ferez a la nature
Thonneur qu'elle merite, au lieu de rien conclure
a son desavantage, de Tignorance oii elle vous a
laisse. Ouvrez les yeux seulement, et laissez-la ce
que vous ne pouvez comprendre ; et vous verrez que
ce laboureur dont Tesprit et les lumieres ne
s'etendent pas plus loin que les bords de son sillon,
ne differe point essentiellement du plus grand genie,
comme Vtxxt prouve la dissection des cerveaux de
Descartes et de Newton: vous serez persuade que
Timbecile ou le stupide sont des betes a figure
humaine, comme le singe plein d'esprit est un
petit homme sous une autre forme ; et qu'enfin tout
dependant absolument de la diversite de Torganisa-
tion, un animal bien construit, a qui on a appris
Tastronomie, pent predire une eclipse, comme la
guerison ou la mort, lorsqu'il a porte quelque temps
du genie et de bons yeux a Tecole d'Hippocrate et
au lit des malades. C'est par cette file d'observa-
tions et de verites qu'on parvient a Her a la matiere_
Tadmirable propriete de penser, sans qu'on en puisse
voir les liens, parce que le sujet de cet attribut nous
est essentiellement inconnu.
Ne disons point que toute machine, ou tout ani-
mal, perit tout-a-fait, ou prend une autre forme,
apres la mort; car nous n'en savons absolument
' rien. Mais assurer qu'une machine immortelle est
une chimere, ou un etre de raison, c'est faire un
raisonnement aussi absurde que celui que feraient
des chenilles, qui, voyant les depouilles de leurs sem-
L HOMME MACHINE.
79
blables, deploreraient amerement le sort de leur
espece qui leur semblerait s'aneantir. L'ame de
ces insectes (car chaque animal a la sienne) est
trop bornee pour comprendre les metamorphoses
de la nature. Jamais un seul des plus ruses d'entr-
eux n'eiit imagine qu'il dut devenir papillon. II
en est de meme de nous. Que savons-nous plus de
notre destinee, que de notre origine? Soumettons-
nous done a une ignorance invincible de laquelle
notre bonheur depend.
Qui pensera ainsi, sera sage, juste, tranquille sur
son sort, et par consequent heureux. II attendra
la mort, sans la craindre, ni la desirer ; et cherissant
la vie, comprenant a peine comment le degout vient
corrompre un coeur dans ce lieu plein de delices;
plein de respect pour la nature, plein de recon-
naissance, d'attachement et de tendresse, a propor-
tion du sentiment et des bien f aits qu'il en a regus,
heureux enfin de la sentir, et d'etre au charmant
spectacle de I'univers, il ne le detruira certaine-
ment jamais dans soi, ni dans les autres. Que dis-
je! plein d'humanite, il en aimera le caractere jus-
ques dans ses ennemis. Jugez comme il traitera les
autres! II plaindra les vicieux, sans les hair; ce
ne seront a ses yeux que des hommes contrefaits.
Mais en faisant grace aux defauts de la conforma-
tion de I'esprit et du corps, il n'en admirera pas
moins leurs beautes et leurs vertus. Ceux que la
nature aura favorises lui paraitront meriter plus
d'egards que ceux qu'elle aura traites en maratre.
C'est ainsi qu'on a vu que les dons naturels, la
source de tout ce qui s'acquiert, trouvent dans la
bouche et le coeur du materialiste des hommages
que tout autre leur refuse injustement. Enfin le
il
W
\
80
MAN A MACHINE.
materialiste convaincu, quoi que murmure sa propre
vanite, qu'il n'est qu'une machine, ou un animal,
ne maltraitera point ses semblables; trop instruit
sur la nature de ces actions, dont I'inhumanite est
toujours proportionnee au degre d'analogie prouvee
ci devant; et ne voulant pas en un mot, suivant la
loi naturelle donnee a tous les animaux, faire a
autrui ce qu'il ne voudrait pas qu'il lui fit.
Concluons done hardiment que I'homme est une
machine; et qu'il n'y a dans tout I'univers qu'une
seule substance diversement modifiee. Ce n'est point
ici une hypothese elevee a force de demandes et de
suppositions: ce n'est point I'ouvrage du prejuge,
ni meme de ma raison seule; j'eusse dedaigne un
guide que je crois si peu sur, si mes sens portant,
pour ainsi dire, le flambeau, ne m'eussent engage a
la suivre, en I'eclairant. L'experience m'a done
parle pour la raison ; c'est ainsi que je les ai jointes
ensemble. )
Mais on a du voir que je ne me suis permis le
raisonnement le plus rigoureux et le plus immediate-
ment tire, qu'a la suite d'une multitude d'observa-
tions physiques qu'aucun savant ne contestera; et
c'est encore eux seuls que je reconnais pour juges
des consequences que j'en tire; recusant ici tout
homme a prejuges, et qui n'est ni anatomiste, ni
au fait de la seule philosophie qui soit ici de mise,
celle du corps humain. Que pourraient contre un
chene aussi ferme et solide ces faibles roseaux de
la theologie, de la metaphysique et des ecoles;
armes pueriles, semblables aux fleurets de nos
salles, qui peuvent bien donner le plaisir de I'es-
crime, mais jamais entamer son adversaire. Faut-
il dire que je parle de ces idees creuses et triviales, de
L HOMME MACHINE.
81
ces raisonnements rebattus et pitoyables, qu'on fera
sur la pretendue incompatibilite de deux substances
qui se touchent et se remuent sans cesse I'une et
I'autre, tant qu'il restera I'ombre du prejuge ou
de la superstition sur la terre? Voila mon sys-
teme, ou plutot la verite, si je ne me trompe fort.
Elle est courte et simple. Dispute a present qui
voudra !
\
-^*^"l»sr-
)
.>^ fv
MAN A MACHINE.
TT is not enough for a wise man to study nature
A and truth; he should dare state truth for the
benefit of the few who are wilHng and able to think.
As for the rest, who are voluntarily slaves of preju-
dice, they can no more attain truth, than frogs can
fly.
I reduce to two the systems of philosophy which
deal with man's soul. The first^ndj2ld£iLii)[st^m
js materialism : the second is sp irituahsm. nTj,
The metaphysicians who have hinted that matter
may well be endowed with the faculty of thoughti^
have perhaps not reasoned ill. For there is in this
case a certain advantage in their inadequate way
of expressing their meaning. In truth, to ask
whether matter can think, without considering it
otherwise than in itself, is like asking whether mat-
ter can tell time. It may be foreseen that we shall
avoid this reef upon which Locke had the bad luck
to make shipwreck. — -^
The Leibnizians with their monads have set up
an unintelligible hypothesis. They have rather spir-
itualized matter than materialized the soul. How
can we define ^^ing whose nature is absolutely
unknown to usx2^
Des cartes a nd all the Cartesians, among whom
the followers of Malebranche have long been num-
i
f
^^
86
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
bered, have made the same mistake. They have
taken for granted two distinct substances in man,
as if they had seen them, and positively counted
em.
The wisest men have declared that the soul can
not know itself save by the light of faith. However,
as reasonable beings they have thought that they
could reserve for themselves the right of examining
what the Bible means by the word "spirit," which
it uses in speaking of the human soul. And if in
their investigation, they do not agree with the theo-
logians on this point, are the theologians more in
agreement among themselves on all other points?
Here is the result in a few words, of all their
reflections. H there is a God, He is the Author V'
of nature as well as of revelation. He has given
us the one to explain the other, and reason to make
them agree.
To distrust the knowledge that can be drawn
from the study of animated bodies, is to regard
nature and revelation as two contraries which de-
stroy each the other, and consequently to dare up-
hold the absurd doctrine, that God contradicts Him-
self in His various works and deceives us.
K there is a revelation, it can not then contradict
nature. By nature only can we understand the
meaning of the words of the Gospel, of which ex-
perience is the only true interpreter. In fact, the
commentators before our time have only obscured
the truth. We can judge of this by the author of
the "-Spectacle of Natu re.*'^ "It is astonishing,"
he says concerning Locke, "that a man who de-
grades our soul far enough to consider it a soul
of clay should dare set up reason as judge and sov-
14-15]
MAN A MACHINE.
87
ereign arbiter of the mysteries of faith, for, he
adds, "what an astonishing idea of Christianity
one would have, if one were to follow reason.
Not only do these reflections fail to elucidate
faith, but they also constitute such frivolous ob-
jections to the method of those who undertake to
interpret the Scripture, that I am almost ashamed to
waste time in refuting them.
The excellence of reason does not depend on a
big word devoid of meaning (immateriality), but
on the force, extent, and perspicuity of reason it-
self Thus a "soul of clay" which should discover,^
at one glance, as it were, the relations and the con-
sequences of an infinite number of ideas hard to
understand, would evidently be preferable to a fool-
ish and stupid soul, though that were composed of
• the most precious elements. A man is not a philos-
opher because, with Pliny, he blushes over the
wretchedness of our origin. What seems vile is
here the most precious of things, and seems to be
the object of nature's highest art and most elaborate
care. But as man, even though he should come from
an apparently still more lowly source, would yet be
the most perfect of all beings, so whatever the
origin of his soul, if it is pure, noble, and lofty,
it is a beautiful soul which dignifies the man en-
dowed with it. ^
Pluche's second way of reasoning seems vicious
tolJIT^en in his system, which smacks a little of
fanaticism; for [on his view] if we have an idea
of faith as being contrary to the clearest principles,
to the most incontestable truths, we must yet con-
clude, out of respect for revelation and its author,
/
\
/
/A-
/
)
-V
88
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
that this conception is false, and that we do not yet
understand the meaning of the words of the Gospel.
Of the two alternatives, only one is possible:
^ either everything is illusion, nature as well as reve-
lation, or experience alone can explain faith. But
what can be more ridiculous than the position of
/ our author ! Can one imagine hearing a Peripatetic
say, "We ought not to accept the experiments of
Jorrice lll^ for if we should accept them, if we
should rid ourselves of the horror of the void, what
an astonishing philosophy we should have!"
I have shown how vicious the reasoning of Pluche
is* in order to prove, in the first place, that if there
is a revelation, it is not sufficiently demonstrated
by the mere authority of the Church, and without
any appeal to reason, as all those who fear reason
claim: and in the second place, to protect against
all assault the method of those who would wish to
follow the path that I open to them, of interpreting
supernatural things, incomprehensible in themselves,
in the light oMhose ideas with which nature has
endowed jis i Experience and observation should
therefore be our only guides here. Both are to be
found throughout the records of the physicians who
were philosophers, and not in the works of the phi-
losophers who were not physicians ^^ The former
have traveled through and illuminated the labyrinth
of man ; they alone have laid bare to us those springs
[of life] hidden under the external integument
which conceals so many wonders from our eyes.
They alone, tranquilly contemplating our soul, have
surprised it, a thousand times, both in its wretched-
ness and in its glory, and they have no more despised
* He evidently errs by begging the questioa
/
/
/"
16-17I
MAN A MACHINE.
89
it in the first estate, than they have admired it in the
second. Thus, to repeat, only the physicians h$ve
a right to speak on this subject^ What could the -
others, especially the theologians, have to say ? Is
it not ridiculous to hear them shamelessly coming
to conclusions about a subject concerning which they
have had no means of knowing anything, and from
which on the contrary they have been completely
turned aside by obscure studies that have led them
to a thousand prejudiced opinions, — in a word, to
fanaticism, which adds yet more to their ignorance
of the mechanism of the body?
But even though we have chosen the best guides,
we shall still find many thorns and stumbling blocks
in the way. J\ ^ , .
Man is so co mplicated a machinftSA hat it is im-^
possiBlTto'gerircIear idea of tlie^machin^
hand, and hence impossible to define it. For this
reason, all the investigations have been vain, which
the greatest philosophers have madejaj^nori, that is
to say, in so far as they use, as it were, the wings
of the spirit. Thus it is only ajosteriori or by try-
ing to disentangle the soul from the organs of the
body, so to speak, that one can reach the highest
probability concerning man's own nature, even
though one can not discover with certainty what
his nature is.
Let us then take in our hands the staff of ex-
perience,i-paying no heed to the accounts of all
the idle theories of philosophers. To be blind and
to think that one can do without this staff is the
worst kind of blindness. How truly a contemporary
writer says that only vanity fails to gather from
secondary causes the same lessons as from primary
?.
/• — ■
1
^i\
,1
u
^1
90
\
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
causes! One can and one even ought to admire
all these fine geniuses in their most useless works,
such men as Descartes , Malebranche, Leibniz, WoJff
^ofitT^'ask, has~any one
and the rest, but whS ^ , ,
gained from their profound meditations, and from
a^^ their works ? Let us start out then to discover
not what has been thought, but what must be thought
for the sake of repose in life.
^ There are as many different minds, different char-
""acters, and different customs, as there are different
temperaments. Even Galen ^ knew this truth which
Descartes carried so fa?ls to claim that medicine
alone can change minds and morals, along with
bodies. (By the writer of 'JJlust^redeVsme;'^
this teaching is incorrectly ^attributedTo Hippoc-
ji rate^^O) It is true that melancholy, bile, phfeghi,
blood etc.— according to the nature, the abundance,
and the different combination of these humors —
make each man different from , ^nother.^^
In disease the soul is sometimes hidden, showing
no sign of life; sometimes it is so inflamed by fury
that it seems to be doubled ; sometimes, imbecility
vanishes and the convalescence of an idiot produces a
wise man. Sometimes, again, the greatest genms be-
comes imbecile and loses the sense of self. Adieu then
to all that fine knowledge, acquired at so high a price,
and with so much trouble ! Here is a paralytic who
asks if his leg is in bed with him; there is a soldier
who thinks that he still has the arm which has been
cut off. The memory of his old sensations, and of
, the place to which they were referred by hiVsoiil,
^ is the cause of his illusion, and of this kind of de-
lirium. The mere mention of the member which
he has lost is enough to recall it to his mind, and
17-19]
MAN A MACHINE.
91
to make him feel all its motions ; and this causes him
an indefinable and inexpressible kind of imaginary
suffering. This man cries like a child at death's
approach, while this other jests. What was needed
to change the bravery of Caius Julius, Seneca, or
Petronius into cowardice or faintheartedness?
Merely an obstruction in the spleen, in the liver,
an impediment in the portal vein ? Why ? Because
the imagination is obstructed along with the viscera,
/and this gives rise to all the singular phenomena of
^''hysteria and hypochondria.
V What can I add to the stories already told of
those who imagine themselves transformed into
wolf-men, cocks or vampires, or of those who think
that the dead feed upon them ? Why should I stop
to speak of the man who imagines that his nose or
some other member is of glass? The way to help
this man regain his faculties and his own flesh-and-
blood nose is to advise him to sleep on hay, lest
he break the fragile organ, and then to set fire to
the hay that he may be afraid of being burned —
a fear which has sometimes cured paralysis. But I
must touch lightly on facts which everybody knows.
Neither shall I dwell long on the details of the
effects of sleep. Here a tired soldier snores in a
trench, in the middle of the thunder of hundreds
of cannon. His soul hears nothing; his sleep is as
deep as apoplexy. A bomb is on the point of crush-
ing him. He will feel this less perhaps than he feels
an insect which is under his foot.
On the other hand, this man who is devoured by
jealousy, hatred, avarice, or ambition, can never
find any rest. The most peaceful spot, the freshest
and most calming drinks are alike useless to one
\t
J
\'i'-
^J^
92
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
who has not freed his heart from the torment of
passion.
The soul and the body fall asleep together. As
the motion of the blood is calmed, a sweet feeling
of peace and quiet spreads through the whole mech-
anism. The soul feels itself little by little growing
heavy as the eyelids droop, and loses its tenseness, as
the fibres of the brain relax ; thus little by little it be-
comes as if paralyzed and with it all the muscles
of the body. These can no longer sustain the
weight of the head, and the soul can no longer bear
the burden of thought; it is in sleep as if it were
not.
Is the circulation too quick? the soul can not
sleep. Is the soul too much excited? the blood
can not be quieted: it gallops through the veins
with an audible murmur. Such are the two opposite
causes of insomnia. A single fright in the midst
of our dreams makes the heart beat at double speed
and snatches us from needed and delicious g^CE^se,^
as a real grief or an urgentneedjvould do. \ Lastly
r"a5"Ttie"mere cessation otThe functionsoi the soul
; produces sleep, there are, even when we are awake
(or at least when we are half awake), kinds of very
frequent short naps of the mind, vergers* dreams,
^ which show that the soul does not always wait for
the body to sleep. For if the soul is not fast asleep,
it surely is not far from sleep, since it can not point
out a single object to which it has attended, among
^ the uncounted number of confused ideas which, so to
Y spe ak, fill the atmosphere of our brains like clouds.
Opium is too closely related to the sleep it pro-
duces, to be left out of consideration here. This
drug intoxicates, like wine, coffee, etc., each in
m.
I
19-21]
MAN A MACHINE.
93
\
I ^
Its own measure and according to the dosg^ It
makes a man happy in a state which would seem-
ingly be the tomb of feeling, as it is the image of
death. How sweet is this lethargy ! The soul would
long never to emerge from it. For the soul has been a
prey to the most intense sorrow, but now feels only
the joy of suffering past, and of sweetest peace.
Opium even alters the will, forcing the soul which
wished to wake and to enjoy life, to sleep in spite
of itself. I shall omit any reference to the effect
of poisons.
Coffee, the well-known antidote for wine, by
scourging the imagination, cures our headaches and
scatters our cares without laying up for us, as wine
does, other headaches for the morrow. But let us
contemplate the soul in its other needs. ^ . .
The hum an body is a machine which winds its ' , ^ ^zJ^JLAm^
ii
own sprmgs. It is the Ij vin gf image o f _perpetua l
Qt\yji/^-
pines
y|/vver^^^<^-»
away, goes mad, and dies exhausted. The soul is
a taper whose light flares up the moment before
it goes out. But nourish the body, pour into its
veins life-giving juices and strong liquors, and then
the soul grows strong like them, as if arming itself
with a proud courage, and the soldier whom water
would have made flee, grows bold and runs joy-
ously to death to the sound of drums. Thus a hot
drink sets into stormy movement the blood which
a cold drink would have calmed.
^, What power there is in a meal! Joy revives in ^ly^^^^,JUry^
a sad heart, and infects the souls of comrades, who ^^^^-^'^^^-^^'""^
express their delight in the friendly songs in whichij^
the Frenchman excels. The melancholy man alone^'^'*"'^
/
/^A/v<
\f^-.JUi
\
^
94
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
21-24I
MAN A MACHINE.
95
is dejected, and the studious man is equally out of
)lace [in such company].
Raw meat makes ani mals^fie rce, and it would
Jjave the same effect on man. This is soTrue that
the English who eaFmeat red and bloody, and not
as well done as ours, seem to share more or less in
the savagery due to this kind of food, and to other
causes which can be rendered ineffective by educa-
tion only. This savagery creates in the soul, pride,
hatred, scorn of other nations, indocility and other
sentiments which degrade the character, just as
heavy food makes a dull and heavy mind whose
usual traits are laziness and indolence.
Pope understood well the full power of greedi-
ness when he said:i£
"Catius is ever moral, ever grave,
Thinks who endures a knave is next a knave,
Save just at dinner — then prefers no doubt,
A rogue with ven'son to a saint without."
Elsewhere he says:
"See the same man in vigor, in the gout
Alone, in company, in place or out,
Early at business and at hazard late.
Mad at a fox chase, wise at a debate.
Drunk at a borough, civil at a ball.
Friendly at Hackney, faithless at White Hall."
In Switzerland we had a bailiff by the name of
M. Steigner de Wittighofen. When he fasted he
was a most upright and even a most indulgent
judge, but woe to the unfortunate man whom he
found on the culprit's bench after he had had a
large dinner! He was capable of sending the in-
nocent like the guilty to the gallows.
\ We think we are, and in fact we are, good men,
}
^
r
vy
onljLaLJSejLre^^
on the wa y our mac hinejsjmning. One is som e-
timeTincImeTto^rt^^
s tomach, m^r ^J^i^^T^^^^^'' who said that —
thc-^^aToTthrsoul was in the pylorus, made only
the mistake of taking the part for the whole.
To what excesses cruel hunger can bring us ! We y^^^^^V^
no longer regard even our own parents and chil-
dren. We tear them to pieces eagerly and make
horrible banquets of them; and in the fury with
which we are carried away, the weakest is always
the prey of the strongest
One needs only eyes to see the necessary influence
of old age o n reason. The soul follows the prog-
ress of the body, as it does the progress of educa-
tion. In the weaker sex, the soul accords also with
delicacy of temperament, and from this delicacy fol-
low tenderness, affection, quick feelings due more
to passion than to reason, prejudices, and super-
stitions, whose strong impress can hardly be effaced.
Man, on the other hand, whose braj njadjier^
partake o^
"str ^iger "UjakkLi^ ^ T ■ . ..■■ .i:::::^ .^^ — — ''^
MJ^ad^iTwhich womelTlackr^trengnrens his mind
still more. Thus with such help of nature and art,
why should not a man be more grateful, more gen-
erous, more constant in friendship, stronger in ad-
versity? But, to follow almost exactly the thought
of the author of the ^Tettres sur la ^ hymogno-
mie"^^ the sex which unites the charms of the
^rmfd'Tnd of the body with almost all the tenderest
and most delicate feelings of the heart, should not
envy us the two capacities which seem to have been
given to man, the one merely to enable him better
'i
96
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
24-26]
MAN A MACHINE.
97
^
J
"^
w
to fathom the allurements of beauty, and the other
merely to enable him to minister better to its pleas-
ures.
It is no more necessary to be just as great a
physiognomist as this author, in order to guess the
quality of the mind from the countenance or the
shape of the features, provided these are sufficiently
marked, than it is necessary to be a great doctor
to recognize a disease accompanied by all its marked
symptoms. Look at the portraits of Locke^of Steele,,
of Boerhaave,^ ^ of Maupertuis,*"^ and the rest, and
you wilPnot 6e surprised to find strong faces and
eagle eyes. Look over a multitude of others, and you
can always distinguish the man of talent from the
man of genius, and often even an honest man from a
scoundrel. For example, it has been noticed that
a celebrated poet combines (in his portrait) the
look of a pickpocket with the fire of Prometheus.
History provides us with a noteworthy example
of the power of temperature. The famous Duke
of Guise was so strongly convinced that Henry the
Third, in whose power he had so often been, would
never dare assassinate him, that he went to Blois.
When the Chancelor Chiverny learned of the duke*s
departure, he cried, "He is lost." After this fatal
prediction had been fulfilled by the event, Chiverny
was asked why he made it. "I have known the
king for twenty years," said he; "he is naturally
kind and even weakly indulgent, but I have noticed
that when it is cold, it takes nothing at all to pro-
voke him and send him into a passion." J:^^
One nation is of heavy and stupid wit, and an- \^^
other quick, light and penetrating. Whence comes \
this difference, if not in part from the difference
(
in foods, and difference in inheritance,* and in part
from the mixture of the diverse elements which
float around in the immensity of the void? The
mind, like the body, has its contagious diseases and
its scurvy.
Such is the influence of climate, that a man who
goes from one climate to another, feels the change,
in spite of himself. Hejs^a^w alking plan tjadikh
has transplanted itself: if jjae cli mf bte-ts-ircrtr'the^
s ame, it will surely either dfg^^^^^^^ ^"^ improve
Furthermore, we catch everything from those
with whom we come in contact ; their gestures, their
accent, etc. ; just as the eyelid is instinctively lowered
when a blow is foreseen, or as (for the same reason)
the body of the spectator mechanically imitates, in
spite of himself, all the motions of a good mimic-i2-
From what I have just said, it follows that a
brilliant man is his own best company, unless he
can find other company of the same sort. In the
society of the unintelligent, the mind grows rusty
for lack of exercise, as at tennis a ball that is
served badly is badly returned. I should prefer an
intelligent man without an education, if he were
still young enough, to a man badly educated. A
badly trained mind is like an actor whom the prov-
inces have spoiled.
Thus, the^ diverse states of the^^oul are always
correlative with thosc-of the bodV>^ \ But the better
to show this dependenceTinitsaTfTipleteness and
its causes, let us here make use of comparative
anatomy; let us lay bare the organs of man and
* The history of animals and of men proves how the mind
and the body of children are dominated by their mhentance
from their fathers.
\
Irflr^
V
J^
\
i
^i
98
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
26-28J
MAN A MACHINE.
99
^
V
'V
W
of animals. How can human nature be known, if
we may not derive any light from an exact com-
parison of the structure of man and of animals?
In general, the form and the structure of the
brains of quadrupeds are almost the same as those
of the brain of man; the same shape, the same ar-
rangement everywhere, with this essential differ-
ence, that of all the animals man is the one whose
brain is largest, and, in proportion to its mass, more
conv oluted t han the brain of any other animal ; then
come the monkey, the beaver, the elephant, the
dog, the fox, the cat. These animals are most like
man, for among them, too, one notes the same
progressive analogy in relation to the corpus callo-
sum in which Lancisi — anticipating the late M. de
la Peyronie^ ^ — established the seat of the soul. The
Tatter, however, illustrated the theory by innumer-
able experiments. Next after all the quadrupeds,
birds have the largest brains. Fish have large
heads, but these are void of sense, like the heads
of many men. Fish have no corpus callosum, and
very little brain, while insects entirely lack brain.
' shall not launch out into any more detail about
the varieties of nature, nor into conjectures con-
cerning them, for there is an infinite number of both,
as any one can see by reading no further than the
treatises of WjJHs "De Cerebro" and "De Anima
Bnitoriim£2i -■ — .
1 shall draw the conclusions which follow clearly
from these incontestable observations: 1st, that the
fiercer animals are, the less brain they have; 2d,
that this organ seems to increase in size in propor-
tion to the gentleness of the animal; 3d, that na-
ture seems here eternally to impose a singular con-
ll '
dition, that the more one gains in intelligence the )
more one loses in instinct. Does this bring gain '
or loss ?
Do not think, however, that I wish to infer by
that, that the size alone of the brain, is enough to
indicate the degree of tameness in animals: the
quality must correspond to the quantity, and the
solids and liquids must be in that due equilibrium
which constitutes health.
f, as is ordinarily observed, the imbecile does
not lack brain, his brain will be deficient in its con-
sistency — for instance, in being too soft. The same
thing is true of the insane, and the defects of their
brains do not always escape our investigation. But
if the causes of imbecility, insanity, etc., are not ob-
vious, where shall we look for the causes of the di-
versity of all minds ? They would escape the eyes of a^^
lynx and of an argus. A mere nothing, a tiny fibre,
something that could never be found by the most
delicate anatomy, would have made of Erasmus
andJPontenelleff two idiots, and FontenelleTiimserF
speaks of this very fact in one of his best dialogues.
Willis has noticed in addition to the softness of
the brain-substance in children, puppies, and birds,
that the corpora striata are obliterated and dis-
colored in all these animals, and that the striations
are as imperfectly formed as in paralyticsTTTT:^ ' /;
52i5^e}2i:xautious_5^^ CiA>^^^ ^^V^
the^9jQS£qiieric es that c^be dedu c ed f ronitH eseob- '
nerva tions, ana^ronT manv^^ f
kirTd^f vari ation in the o rgans, ^lerves? etc., [one
I
must admit that] so many di]
,>yMV^>^^^
\
iri^tie§^j^t
not bejhe ^atuitous play f>f ^^tn^^ Tl jey prove
at leastthe nece ssi^ f or a g opH anH vig orous phy s-
K *
100
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
28-30]
MAN A MACHINE.
101
jcal organizatio n, since thro ughout the anjrnaj_king-
tiTgains force"linth the body and ac-
guires jceenness, as the body gain s strength.
JLeFus pause to contemplate' the varying capacity
of animals to learn. Doubtless the analogy best
framed leads the mind to think that the causes we
have mentioned produce all the difference that is
found between animals and men, although we must
confess that our weak understanding, limited to the
coarsest observations, can not see the bonds that
exist between cause and effects. This is a kind of
harmony that philosophers will never know.
^Among animals, some learn to speak and sing;
they remember tunes, and strike the notes as ex-
actly as a musician. Others, for instance the ape,
show more intelligence, and yet can not learn music.
What is the reason for this, except some defect in
the organs of speech? But is this defect so essen-
tial to the structure that it could never be remedied ?
In a word, would it be absolutely impossible to
teach the ape a language P^^ I do not think so.
I should choose a large ape in preference to any
other, until by some good fortune another kind
should be discovered, more like us, for nothing
prevents there being such an one in regions un-
known to us. The ape resembles us so strongly
that naturalists have called it "wild man" or "man
of the woods./ I should take it in the condition
of the pupils of Amman^ ^^ that is to say, I should
not want it to be too young or too old; for apes
that are brought to Europe are usually too old.
I would choose the one with the most intelligent
face, and the one which, in a thousand little ways,
best lived up to its look of intelligence. Finally
/
not considering myself worthy to be his master,
I should put him in the school of that excellent
teacher whom I have just named, or with another
teacher equally skilful, if there is one.
You know by Amman's work, and by all those
who have interpreted his method, all the wonders
he has been able to accomplish for those born deaf.
In their ^yes he discovered ears, as he himself ex-
plains, and in how short a time ! In short he taught
them to hear, speak, read, and write. I grant that
a deaf person's eyes see more clearly and are keener
than if he were not deaf, for the loss of one member
or sense can increase the strength or acuteness of
another, but apes see and hear, they understand
what they hear and see, and grasp so perfectly the
signs that are made to them, that I doubt not that
they would surpass the pupils of Amman in any
other game or exercise. Why then should the edu-
cation of monkeys be impossible? Why might not
the monkey, by dint of great pains, at last imitate
after the manner of deaf mutes, the motions neces-
sary for pronunciation? I do not dare decide
whether the monkey's organs of speech, however
trained, would be incapable of articulation. But,
because of the great analogy between ape and man^
and because there is no known animal whose exter-
nal and internal organs so strikingly resemble man's,
it would surprise me if speech were absolutely im-
possible to the ape. Locke, who was certainly
never suspected of credulity, found no difficulty
in believing the story told by Sir William TempleSi
in his memoirs, about a parrot which could an-
swer rationally, and which had learned to carry
♦ The author of "The Natural History of the Soul.**
/
/
fi\
102
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
on a kind of connected conversation, as we do.
I know that people have ridiculed* this great meta-
physician; but suppose some one should have an-
nounced that reproduction sometimes takes place
without eggs or a female, would he have found
many partisans ? Yet M. Tremblev^ ^ has found
cases where reproduction takes place without copu-
lation and by fission. Would not Amman too have
passed for mad if he had boasted that he could
instruct scholars like his in so short a time, before
he had happily accomplished the feat? His suc-
cesses have, however, astonished the world; and
he, like the author of '^TbeJEIi sLorv of Polyp s." has
risen to immortality at one bound. Whoever owes
the miracles that he works to his own genius sur-
passes, in my opinion, the man who owes his to
chance. He who has discovered the art of adorning
the most beautiful of the kingdoms [of nature], and
of giving it perfections that it did not have, should be
rated above an idle creator of frivolous systems, or a
painstaking author of sterile discoveries. Amman's
discoveries are certainly of a much greater value;
he has freed men from the instinct to which they
seemed to be condemned, and has given them ideas,
intelligence, or in a word, a soul whijah the^woukL
never have had. What greater power than this !
Let us not limit the resources of nature; they
are infinite, especially when reinforced by great art.
^"^-^i^uld not the device which opens the Eustachian
canal of the deaf, open that of apes? Might not a
happy desire to imitate the master's pronunciation,
hberate the organs of speech in animals that imitate
\^o many other signs with such skill and intelligence ?
* The author of "The History of the SouL"
R
3i>-32]
MAN A MACHINE.
103
Not only do I defy any one to name any really
conclusive experiment which proves my view im-
possible and absurd ; but such is the likeness of the
structure and functions of the ape to ours that 1
have very little doubt that if this animal were prop-
erly trained he might at last be taught to Pronounce
and consequently to know, a language. Jhen t^e
would no longer be a wild man, nor a defective
man, but he would be a perfect man a little gentle
man, with as much matter or muscle as we have,
for thinking and profiting by his education.
The transition from^ninmlstojnan^n^vjj^.
le}iC^n?^e:^noio^?n^lUlSr^ was
^.oflangyageji^ An anlSl^ftT^
^h much less iiiitinct than the others. In those
days, he did not consider himself king over the other
anhnals, nor was he distinguished from he ape
and from the rest, except as the ape itself differs
?rom the other animals, i. e.. by a more mtelhgen
face Reduced to the bare intuitive knowledge of
the 'Leibnizians he saw only shapes and colors,
without being able to distinguish between them
The same, old'as young, child at all ages, he hsped
out his sensations and his needs, as a dog that is
Sungry or tired of sleeping, asks for something to
eat or for a walk. a t. c
Words, languages, laws, sciences, and the fine
arts have come, and by them finally the rough dia-
mond of our mind has been pohshed. Man has
been trained in the same way as animals He has
become an author, as they became beas^"*^"'^^^:
A geometrician has learned to perform the most
difficult demonstrations and calculations, as a mon-
f
y^
li
\
A
/
t-
\
104
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
key has learned to take his Httle hat off and on,
and to mount his tame dog. - AH h as be e n ac coqi-
V-r::plished through^gns^evsry. species has learned what
\ it could understand, and in this way men have ac-
quired symbolic knowledge, still so called by our
GernSn'pHiTosophers./^
"/- "C^ Nothin p^. as any one can se e , is so simple a s_ the-,
"^ metHamsm of our educ ation. Everything may be
reduced to sounds or words that pass from the
mouth of one through the ears of another into his
brain. At the same moment, he perceives through
his eyes the shape of the bodies of which these
words are the arbitrary signs.
But who was the first to speak? Who was the
first teacher of the human race ? Who invented the
means of utilizing the plasticity of our organism?
I can not answer : the names of these first splendid
geniuses have been lost in the night of time. But
art is the child of nature, so nature must have long
preceded it.
We must think that the men who were the most
highly organized, those on whom nature had lav-
ished her richest gifts, taught the others. They
could not have heard a new sound for instance, nor
experienced new sensations, nor been struck by all
the varied and beautiful objects that compose the
ravishing spectacle of nature without finding them-
selves in the state of mind of the deaf man of
Chartres, whose experience was first related by the
^ great Fonten elle,^^ when, at forty years, he heard
for the first time, the astonishing sound of bells.
Would it be absurd to conclude from this that
the first mortals tried after the manner of this deaf
man, or like animals and like mutes (another kind
c J
32-341
MAN A MACHINE.
105
of animals), t o express their new feelings by m o-
tions de pending on the nature ot tneir iiiU ^Jlfation,
an d^ ther efore atterwards by spontaneous sounds,
distmctive ot each animal, db LIil imUu -al expression
of their surprise, their joy, their ecstasies and their
needs ? For doubtless those whom nature endowed
with finer feeling had also greater facility in ex-
pression.
That is the way in which, I think, men have used
their feeling and their instinct to gain intelligence
and then have employed their intelligence to gain
knowledge. Those are the ways, so far as I can
understand them, in which men have filled the brain ^
with the ideas, for the reception of which nature
made it. Nature and man have helped each other ; -y-
and the smallest beginnings have, little by little,
increased, until everything in the universe could
be as easily described as a circle. -^^ -^
As a violin string or a harpsichord key vi-
brates and gives forth sound, so the cerebral fibres,
struck by waves of sound, are stimulated to render
or repeat the words that strike them. And as
the structure of the brain is such that when eyes
well formed for seeing, have once perceived the j^^
image of objects, the brain can not help seeing
their images and their differences, so ^when the
signs of these differences have been traced or im-
printed in the brain, the soul necessarily examines
their relations— an examination that would have
been impossible without the discovery of signs or
the invention of language. At the time when the
universe was almost dumb, the soul's attitude toward
all objects was that of a man without any idea
of proportion toward a picture or a piece of sculp-
\
^^ \^'
.^^^ A
vf
>3^^^" ^^'
^
/
■iiiilil
IIP'
106
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
ture, in which he could distinguish nothing; or the
soul was like a little child (for the soul was then
in its infancy ) who, holding in his hand small bits
of straw or wood, sees them in a vague and super-
ficial way without being able to count or distinguish
them. But let some one attach a kind of banner,
or standard, to this bit of wood (which perhaps is
called a mast), and another banner to another similar
object ; let the first be known by the symbol 1, and the
second by the symbol or number 2, then the child
will be able to count the objects, and in this way
he will learn all of arithmetic. As soon as one
figure seems equal to another in its numerical sign,
he will decide without difficulty that they are two
different bodies, that 1 + 1 make 2, and 2 + 2 make
4,* etc.
This real or apparent likeness of figures is the
fundamental basis of all truths and of all we know.
Among these sciences, evidently those whose signs
are less simple and less sensible are harder to
understand than the others, because more talent is
required to comprehend and combine the immense
number of words by which such sciences express
the truths in their province. On the other hand,
the sciences that are expressed by numbers or by
other small signs, are easily learned; and without
doubt' this facility rather than its demonstrability
is what has made the fortune of algebra.
All this knowledge, with which vanity fills the
balloon-like brains of our proud pedants, is there-
fore but a huge mass of words and figures, which
form in the brain all the marks by which we dis-
* There are peoples, even to-day, who, through lack of a
greater number of signs, can count only to 20.
34-36]
MAN A MACHINE.
107
tinguish and recall objects. All our ideas are awak-
ened after the fashion in which the gardener who
knows plants recalls all stages of their growth at
sight of them. These words and the objects desig-
nated by them are so connected in the brain that it is
comparatively rare to imagine a thing without the
name or sign that is attached to it.
I always use the word "imagine," because I think
that everything is the work of imagination, and
that all the faculties of the soul can be correctly
reduced to pure imagination in which^ they all con-
^sist.3^ Thus judgment, reason, andlnemory are
not absolute parts of the soul, but merely modi-
fications of this kind of medullary screen upon
which images of the objects painted in the eye are
' projected as by a magic lantern.
^ But if such is the marvelous and incomprehen-
sible result of the structure of the brain, if every-
j thing is perceived and explained by imagination,
i why should we divide the sensitive principle which
thinks in man? Is not this a clear inconsistency
m the partisans of the simplicity of the mind?
For a thing that is divided can no longer without
absurdity be regarded as indivisible. See to what
^one is brought by the abuse of language and by
j those fine words (spirituality, immateriality, etc.)
used haphazard and not understood even by the
most brilliant^
Nothing is easier than to prove a system based, as
this one is, on th^ intimate feeljn_g ani_personal
experience of_eachJndividual. If the imagination,
or, let us say, that fantastic part of the brain whose
nature is as unknown to us as its way of acting, be
naturally small or weak, it will hardly be able to
4
V
'^
.N^*
\
l\
# <-
-— <
f
> #f«*V
li
^J
\
^v^'
^
\^W^
h
108
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
compare the analogy or the resemblance of its ideas,
it will be able to see only what is face to face with
it, or what affects it very strongly; and how will
it see all this! Yet it is always im agination which
apperceives, and imagmation which represents to
itself all objects along with their names and sym-
bols; and thus, once again, imagination is the soul,
since it plays all the roles of the soul. By the im-
agination, by its flattering brush, the cold skeleton
of reason takes on living and ruddy flesh, by the
imagination the sciences flourish, the arts are
adorned, the wood speaks, the echoes sigh, the
rocks weep, marble breathes, and all inanimate ob-
!£ts gain \iie,^ t is imagination again which adds
the piquant charm of voluptuousness to the tender-
ness of an amorous heart; which makes tenderness
bud in the study of the philosopher and of the
dusty pedant, which, in a wor^, creates scholars as
well as orators and poets. ^^^Foolishly decried by
some, vainly praised by others, and misunderstood
by all ; it follows not only in the train of the graces
and of the fine arts, it not only describes, but can
also measure nature. It reasons, judges, analyze s,
compares, and investigates. Could it feel so j ceenly
the beauties of the pictures d rawn tor it^_unlgsS-Jt
fliscovered. their r elations? No, Jusi asucan not
turn its thoughts^on tfie'pleasures of the senses,
without enjoying their perfection or their volup-
tuousness, it can not reflect on what it has mechan-
ically conceived, without thus being judgment it-
self.
The more the imagination or the poorest talent
is exercised, the more it gains in embonpoint, so to
speak, and the larger it grows. It becomes sensi-
//
V
V'
36-38]
MAN A MACHINE.
109
tive, robust, broad, and capable of thinking. The
best of organisms has need of this exercise.
, ^\ Man's preeminent advantage is his organism. ^^
In vain all writers of books on morals fail to re-
gard as praiseworthy those qualities that come by
nature, esteeming only the talents gained by dint
of reflection and industry. For whence come, I
ask, skill, learning, and virtue, if not from a dis-
position that makes us fit to become skilful, wise
and virtuous? And whence again, comes this dis-
position, if not from nature? ^ Only through nature
do we have any good qualities; to her we owe all
that we are. ^ Why then should I not esteem men
with good natural qualities as much as men who
shine by acquired and as it were borrowed virtues?
Whatever the virtue may be, from whatever source
it may come, it is worthy of esteem ; the only ques-
tion is, how to estimate it. Mind, beauty, wealth,
nobility, although the children of chance, all have
their own value, as skill, learning and virtue have
theirs. Those upon whom nature has heaped her
most costly gifts should pity those to whom these
gifts have been refused; but, in their character of
experts, they may feel their superiority without
pride. A beautiful woman would be as foolish to
think herself ugly, as an intelligent man to think
himself a fool. An exaggerated modesty (a rare
fault, to be sure) is a kind of ingratitude towards
nature. An honest pride, on the contrary, is the
mark of a strong and beautiful soul, revealed by
rnanly features moulded by feeling. - '^
^ If one's organism is an advantage, and the pre-
/ eminent advantage, and the source of all others,
X ' education is the second. 'The best made brain would
/
\
\
I
i^
7
/
110
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
be a total loss without it, just as the best con-
stituted man would be but a common peasant, with-
out knowledge of the ways of the world. But, on
the other hand, what would be the use of the most
excellent school, without a matrix perfectly open
to the entrance and conception of ideas? It is
.... impossible to impart a single idea to a man
deprived of all his senses
But if the brain is at the same time well organized
and well educated, it is a fertile soil, well sown,
that brings forth a hundredfold what it has re-
ceived: or (to leave the figures of speech often
f needed to express what one means, and to add grace
to truth itself) the imagination, raised by art to the
rare and beautiful dignity of genius, apprehends
exactly all the relations of the ideas it has con-
ceived, and takes in easily an astounding number of
^bjects, in order to deduce from them a long chain
of consequences, which are again but new relations,
produced by a comparison with the first, to which
the soul finds a perfect resemblance. Such.is^_I^
think, the generation of intelligence*^^ I say "finds"
as I before gave the epithet "apparent" to the
likeness of objects, not because I think that our
senses are always deceivers, as Father Malebranche
has claimed, or that our eyes, naturally a little un-
steady, fail to see objects as they are in themselves,
(though microscopes prove this to us everyday) but
in order to avoid any dispute with the Pyrrtlon-
ians^^j^^mong whom Bayle^l^is well known.
I say of truth in general what M. de Fontenelle
says of certain truths in particular, that we must
sacrifice it in order to remain on good terms with
society. And it accords with the gentleness of my
38-40]
MAN A MACHINE.
Ill
charact|r, to avoid all disputes unless to whet conver-
sation, ^he Cartesians would here in vain make an
onset upon me with their innate ideas) I certainly
would not give myself a quarter of the trouble that
M. Locke took, to attack such chimeras^ In truth,
what is the use of writing a ponderous volume to
prove a doctrine which became an axiom three thou-
sand years ago?
According to the principles which we have laid
down, and which we consider true '*he who has the
most imagination should be regarded as having th^
J most intelligence or genius?^f or all these words are
synonymous; and again, only by a shameful abuse
[of terms] do we think that we are saying different
things, when we are merely using different words,
different sounds, to which no idea or real distinction
IS attached.
The finest, greatest, or strongest imagination is
then the one most suited to the sciences as well as
to the arts. I do not pretend to say whether more
intellect is necessary to excel in the art of Aris-
totle or of Descartes than to excel in that of Eu-
ripides or of Sophocles, and whether nature has
taken more trouble to make Newton than to make
Corneille, though I doubt this. 'But it is certain
that imagination alone, differently applied, has pro-
duced their diverse triumphs and their immortal
glory. '^ V ^^
a one is known as having little judgment and
much imagination, this means that the imagination
has been left too much alone, has, as it were oc-
cupied most of the time in looking at itself in
the mirror of its sensations, has not sufficiently
formed the habit of examining the sensations them-
h'»^
T
^
\
;
I
112
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
selves attentively. [It means that the imagination]
has been more impressed by images than by their
truth or their likeness. , , •
Truly, so quick are the responses of the imagina-
tion that if attention, that key or mother of the
sciences, does not do its part, imagination can do
little more than run over and skim its objects.
See that bird on the bough : it seems always ready
to fly away. Imagination is like the bird, always
carried onward by the turmoil of the blood and the
animal spirits. One wave leaves a mark, effaced by
the one that follows; the soul pursues it, often m
vain : it must expect to regret the loss of that which
I it has not quickly enough seized and fixed. Thus,
I imagination, the true image of time, is being cease-
'ilessly destroyed and renewed.
} Such is the chaos and the continuous quick suc-
cession of our ideas: they drive each other away
^ even as one wave yields to another. Therefore, if
"imagination does not, as it were, use one set of its
muscles to maintain a kind of equilibrium with the
fibres of the brain, to keep its attention for a while
upon an object that is on the point of disappearing,
and to prevent itself from contemplating prema-
turely another object— [unless the imagination does
all this] , it will never be worthy of the fine name
of judgment. It will express vividly what it has
perceived in the same fashion: it will create orators,
musicians, painters, poets, but never a single philos-
opher. On the contrary, if the imagination be
trained from childhood to bridle itself and to keep
from being carried away by its own impetuosity—
an impetuosity which creates only brilliant enthu-
siasts—and to check, to restrain, its ideas, to exam-
I
i^
h\
it
40-42]
MAN A MACHINE.
113
/
ine them in all their aspects in order to see all sides
of an object, then the imagination, ready in judg-
ment, will comprehend the greatest possible sphere
of objects, through reasoning; and its vivacity (al-
ways so good a sign in children, and only needing
to be regulated by study and training) will be only
a far-seeing insight without which little progress
can be made in the sciences.
Such are the simple foundations upon which the
edifice of logic has been reared. Nature has built
these foundations for the whole human race, but
some have used them, while others have abused
them.
'In spite of all these advantages of man over ani-
mals, it is doing him h onor to p lac e him in the .
same class. For, truly, up to a certain age, he is
more of an animal than they, since at birth he has
less instinct. What animal would die of hunger in
the midst of a river of milk? Man alone.^^ Like
that child of olden time to whom a modern writer,
refers, following Arnobius^he knows neither the
foods suitable for him, nor the water that can
drown him, nor the fire that can reduce him to
ashes. Light a wax candle for the first time under
a child's eyes, and he will mechanically put his
fingers in the flame as if to find out what is the
new thing that he sees. It is at his own cost that
he will learn of the danger, but he will not be caught
again. Or, put the child with an animal on a preci-
pice, the child alone falls off; he drowns where
the animal would save itself by swimming. At four-
teen or fifteen years the child knows hardly anything
of the great pleasures in store for him, in the re-
production of his species; when he is a youth, he
v^
114
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
.42-44]
MAN A MACHINE.
115
' "^ ^:?^
does not know exactly how to behave in a game
which nature teaches animals so quickly. He hides
himself as if he were ashamed of taking pleasure,
and of having been made to be happy, while animals
frankly glory in being cynics. Without education,
they are without prejudices. For one more ex-
ample, let us observe a dog and a child who have
lost their master on a highway: the child cries
and does not know to what saint to pray, while the
dog, better helped by his sense of smell than the
child by his reason, soon finds his master. A-^
r^hus nature made us to be lower than animals
\)r at least to exhibit all the more, because of that
native inferiority, the wonderful efficacy of edu-
cation which alone raises us from the level of the
animals and lifts us above them.N^ut shall we grant
this same distinction to the deaf and to the blind,
to imbeciles, madmen, or savages, or to those who
have been brought up in the woods with animals;
to those who have lost their imagination through
melancholia, or in short to all those animals in
human form who give evidence of only the rudest
instinct? No, all these, men of body but not of
mind, do not deserve to be classed by themselves.
We do not intend to hide from ourselves the
arguments that can be brought forward against our
belief and in favor of a primitiyedistinction between
men and animals. - Some say that there is in man
a natural law, a knowledge of good and evil, which
has never been imprinted on the heart of animals.
But is this objection, or rather this assertion, based
on observation? Any assertion unfounded_ on _ob-
servation may be rejected byT philosopher. Have
we ever had a single experience which convinces
us that man alone has been enlightened by a ray
denied all other animals? If there is no such expe-
rience, we can no more know what goes on in ani-
mals' minds or even in the minds of other men,
than we can help feeling what affects the inner part
of our own being. We know that we think, and
feel remorse— an intimate feeling forces us to rec-
ognize this only too well ; but this feeling in us is
insufficient to enable us to judge the remorse of
others. That is why we have to take others at
their word, or judge them by the sensible and exter-
nal signs we have noticed in ourselves when we
experienced the same accusations of conscience and
the same torments.
In order to decide whether animals which do not
talk have received the natural law, we must, there-
fore, have recourse to those signs to which I have
just referred, if any such exist. The facts seem to
prove it..- A dog that bit the master who was teas-
ing it, seemed to repent a minute afterwards; it
looked sad, ashamed, afraid to show itself, and'
seemed to confess its guilt by a crouching and
downcast air. History offers us a famous example
of a lion which'would not devour a man abandoned
to its fury, because it recognized him as its bene-
factor. How much might it be wished that man
himself always showed the same gratitude for kind-
nesses, and the same respect for humanity! Then
we should no longer fear either ungrateful wretches,
or wars which are the plague of the human race
and the real executioners of the natural law.
But a being to which nature has given such a
precocious and enlightened instinct, which judges,
combines, reasons, and deliberates as far as the
y>'i'
-\
116
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
_\
Ni
*
^
Sphere of its activity extends and permits, a being
which feels attachment because of benefits received,
and which leaving a master who treats it badly goes
to seek a better one, a being with a structure like
ours, which performs the same acts, has the same
passions, the same griefs, the same pleasures, more
or less intense according to the sway of the imagina-
tion and the delicacy of the nervous organization —
l\ does not such a being show clearly that it knows its
faults and ours, understands good and evil, and in a
word, has consciousness of what it does ? Would its
soul, which feels the same joys, the same mortifica-
tion and the same discomfiture which we feel, remain
/Utterly unmoved by disgust when it saw a fellow-
/ creature torn to bits, or when it had itself pitilessly
dismembered this fellow - creature ? If this be
granted, it follows that the precious gift now in
question would not have been denied to animals : for
since they show us sure signs of repentance,' as
well as of intelligence, whatsis there absurd in think-
ing that beings, almost as~p'erTect machines as our-
selves, are, like us, made to understand and to feel
ature ?
Let no one object that animals, for the most part,
are savage beasts, incapable of realizing the evil
that they do; for do all men discriminate better
between vice and virtue? There is ferocity in our
species as well as in theirs. Men who are in the
i)arbarous habit of breaking the natural law are
not tormented as much by it, as those who trans-
gress it for the first time, and who have not been
hardened by the force of habit. The same thing is
true of animals as of men — both may be more or
less ferocious in temperament, and both become
44-46]
MAN A MACHINE.
117
more so by living with others like themselves. But
a gentle and peaceful animal which lives among
other animals of the same disposition and of gentle
nurture, will be an enemy of blood and carnage;
itjwilTWushJntema^^ There
is perhaps this difference, that since among animals
everything is sacrificed to their needs, to their pleas-
ures, to the necessities of life, which they enjoy
more than we, their remorse apparently^ should not
be as keen as ours, because we are not in the same
state of necessity as they. Custom perhaps dulls
and perhaps stifles remorse as well as pleasures.
1 But I will suppose for a moment that I am utterly
mistaken in concluding that almost all the world
holds a wrong opinion on this subject, while I alone
am right. I will grant that animals, even the best
of them, do not know the difference between moral
good and evil, that they have no recollection of the
trouble taken for them, of the kindness done them,
no realization of their own virtues. [I will suppose],
for instance, that this lion, to which I, like so many
others, have referred, does not remember at all that
it refused to kill the man, abandoned to its fury, in
a combat more inhuman than one could find among
lions, tigers and bears, put together. For our com-
patriots fight, Swiss against Swiss, brother against
brother, recognize each other, and yet capture and
kill each other without remorse, because a prince pays
for the murder. I suppose in short that the natural
law has not been given animals. Whatjvill be the
consequences of this supposition ? »^ (fen, is not
moulded from a costlier clay; nature has used but
one dough, and has merely varied the leaven.
Therefore if animals do not repent for having vio-
0'
-^ f
t 'I
^mf
118
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
46.48]
MAN A MACHINE.
119
lated this inmost feeling which I am discussing, or
rather if they absolutely lack it, man must neces-
sarily be in the same condition. Farewell then to
the natural law and all the fine treatises published
about it! 'The whole animal kingdom in general
would be deprived of it. But, conversely, if man can
not dispense with the belief that when health permits
him to be himself, he always distinguishes the up-
right, humane, and virtuous, from those who are not
humane, virtuous, nor honorable: that it is easy
1 to tell vice from virtue, by the unique pleasure and
) the peculiar repugnance that seem to be their natural
effects, it follows that animals, composed of the
same matter, lacking perhaps only one degree of
fermentation to make it exactly like man's, must
share the same prerogatives of animal nature, and
that thus there exists no soul or sensitive substance
without remorse.^^ The following consideration
will reinforce these observations. * ^
It isimpossj ble to destroy th e natural law. The
impress ot it on all animals is so strong, that I have
no doubt that the wildest and most savage have
some moments of repentance. I believe that that
cruel maid of Chalons in Champagne must have
or rowed for her crime, if she really ate her sistejij
1 think that the same thing is Irue of all those who
commit crimes, even involuntary or temperamental
crimes: true of Gaston of Orleans who could not
help stealing; of a certain woman who was subject
to the same crime when pregnant, and whose chil-
dren inherited it; of the woman who, in the same
condition, ate her husband; of that other woman
who killed her children, salted their bodies, and ate
a piece of them every day, as a little relish ; of that
^
daughter of a thief and cannibal who at twelve
years followed in his steps, although she had been
orphaned when she was a year old, and had been
brought up by honest people; to say nothing of
many other examples of which the records_Qf_Qur
obser vers are full, all of them proving that there
/ are a thousand hereditary vices arid virtues which
j are transmitted from parents to children as those
of the foster mother pass to the children she nurses.
Now, I believe and admit that these wretches do
not for the most, part feel at the time the enormity
of their actions. rBulimia, or canine hunger, for ex-
ample, can stifle all feeling; it is a mania of the
stomach that one is compelled to satisfy, but what
remorse must be in store for those women, when
they come to themselves and grow sober, and re-
member the crimes they have committed against those
they held most dear! What a punishment for an
involuntary crime which they could not ij sijt, of
wh ich the y_ had no cons ciousness whatever! How-
ever, this is apparently not enough for the judges.
For of these women, of whom I tell, one was cruelly
beaten and burned, and another was buried alive,
realize all that is demanded by the interest of so-
ciety. But doubtless it is much to be wish ed__that
excellenij) hysicians might be the only ju dges. They
alone cpuld tell the innocent criminal from the
guilty. I Lreason is the slav e of a depr aved or ma d
Lesire, how can it control the desire? J ^(^
But if crime carries with it its own more or less
cruel punishment, if the most continued and most
barbarous habit can not entirely blot out repent-
ance in the crudest hearts, if criminals are lacerated
by the very memory of their deeds, why should we
V
^>
120
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
48-50]
MAN A MACHINE.
121
7
frighten the imagination of weak minds, by a hell,
by specters, and by precipices of fire even less real
than those of Pascal ?* Why must we have recourse
^sTas an honest pope once said himself, to
torment even the unhappy wretches who are exe-
cuted, because we do not think that they are suffi-
ciently punished by their own conscience, their first
executioner? I do not mean to say that all crim-
inals are unjustly punished; I only maintain that
those whose will is depraved, and whose conscience
IS extinguished, are punished enough by their re-
morse when they come to themselves, a remorse,
I venture to assert, from which nature should in
this case have delivered unhappy souls dragged on
by a fatal necessity.
Criminals, scoundrels, ingrates, those in short
without natural feelings, unhappy tyrants who are
unworthy of life, in vain take a cruel pleasure in
their barbarity, for there are calm moments of re-
flection in which the avenging conscience arises,
testifies against them, and condemns them to be
almost ceaselessly torn to pieces at their own hands,
/itv^hoever torments men is tormented by himself;
and the sufferings that he will experience will be
the just measure of those that he has inflicted. • '
vjOn the other hand, there is so much pleasure in
♦In a company, or at table, he always required a rampart
of chairs or else some one close to him at the left, to prevent
his seeing horrible abysses into which (in spite of his under-
standing these illusions) he sometimes feared that he might
fall. What a f^JfjllM Ifg^lt of imagination. or-MJlie^-Peciir,
liar circulation in a lob£x^ the hraial Great man on one side of
his nature, on the other he was half-mad. Madness and wisdom,
each had its compartment, or its lobe, the two separated by
a fissure. Which was the side by which he was so strongly
attached to Messieurs of Port Royal? (I have read this in an
extract from the treatise on vertigo by M. de la Mettrie.)
, y ■■'*
' :'S
t-.
doing good, in recognizing and appreciating what
one receives, so much satisfaction in practising vir-
tue, in being gentle, humane, kind, charitable, com-
passionate and generous ( for this one word includes
all the virtues), that I consider as sufficiently pun-
ished any one who is unfortunate enough not to
have been born virtuous.
We were not originally made to be learned; we
have become so perhaps by a sort of abuse of our
organic faculties, and at the expense of the State
which nourishes a host of^T uggardg ^hom vanity
has adorned with the nameSf^iilosophers. Nature
has created us all solely to be happy^^ — yes, all of
us from the crawling worm to the eagle lost in the
cloulds. xFor this cause she has given all animals
some sh^re of natural la w, a share greater or less
according to the needs of each animars organs when
irh normal condition. ^<^
' Now how shall we define nat ural law? jLis a
feelin g that teaches us what w^sh ould not do, be-
cause we would not wish it to be done to us. Should
I dare add to this common idea, that this feeling
seems to me but a kind of fear or dread, as salutary
to the race as to the individual; for may it not be
true that we respect the purse and life of others
only to save our own possessions, our honor, and
ourselves; like those Ixions of Christianity^^ who
love God and embrace so many fantastic virtues,
merely because they are afraid of hell! _\
You see that natural law is but an intimate feel-
ing that, like all other feelings (thought included),
belongs also to imagination. Evidently, therefore,
natural law does not presuppose education, revela-
tion, nor legislator, — ^provided one does not propose
' I
c
\
\i
\
— *
It
\
V
.i>
o)
\M^
122
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
to confuse natural law with civil laws, in the ridic-
ulous fashion of the theologians.
The arms of fanaticism may destroy those who
support these truths, but they will never destroy the
truths themselves.
I do not mean to call in question the existence
of a supreme being ; on the contrary it seems to me
that the greatest degree of probability is in favor
of this belief. But since the existence of this being
goes no further than that of any other toward
proving the need of worship, it is a theoretic truth
with very little practical value. Therefore, since
we may say, after such long experience, that religion
does not imply exact honesty, we are authorized by
the same reasons to think that atheism does not
e^^clude it.
13iv Furthermore, who can be sure that the reason
f 6r man's existence is not simply the fact that he
exists ?^^ Perhaps he was thrown by chance on
some spot on the earth's surface, nobody knows
how nor why, but simply that he must live and
die, like the mushrooms which appear from day
to day, or like those flowers which border the
ditches and cover the walls. T
, TCet us not lose ourselves in the infinite, for we are
not made to have the least idea thereof, and are abso-
lutely unable to get back to the origin of things.
f Besides it does not matte r for our peace of mind,
wh ether matter be eternal or have been created^
wfiether there be or be not a GoJ How foolish
to torment ourselves "SO much about things which
we can not know, and which would not make us
any happier even were we to gain knowledge about
' em ! \^.
I
50-52]
MAN A MACHINE.
123
But, some will say, read all such works as those ^
of Fenelon," of Nieuwentyt^Lof Abad.e of
Derhani,ii:irRais^and the rest. Well ! what wil
they te-^me or rather what have they taught
me? They are only tiresome repetitions of zealous
writers, one of whom adds to the other only verb-
iage, more likely to strengthen than to undermine
the foundations of atheism. The number of the
evidences drawn from the spectacle of nature does ^»M^
not give these evidences any more force. Either T>/v«r/^^, .
the mers^tructure of a finger, of an ear, of aij.eye^
r^n^dToteeTvario rLoLMalsigtufi ^^°^^fi,^^--~.
dSubtless muarbetteTthan Pescartgs an jL-Maie^
b7SSEi3SSHXoZ3nheWr evidences prove
nothing.vPeists^land even CHnstians, should there- •
f ore~S content to point out that throughout the
animal kingdom the same aims are pursued and
accomplished by an infinite number of different
mechanisms, all of them however exactly geomet-
rical. For what stronger weaftgn s could J herebe
with which to overthrow atheists?|)lt is tnle that it
^M^
h\
UiuX
i
ASy reasgmiS- es not deceive TnenBan and the whole z^,,.,,^^
(universe seem to have been designed for this unity
oT' aim. ^ThTiiH; air, water, the organism, the
shape of bodies,-everything is brought to a focus
in the eye as in a mirror that faithfully presents
\ to the imagination all the objects reflected in it, in
\ accordance with the laws required by the infinite
variety of bodies which take part in vision. ^^A
i we find everywhere a striking variety, and yet the
' difference of structure in men, animals, birds, and
fishes, does not produce different uses. AH ears are
so mathematically made, that they tend equally to
one and the same end, namely, hearing. But would
/
124
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
i5^
Chance, the deist asks, be a great enough geometri-
cian to vary thus, at pleasure, the works of which
she is supposed to be the author, without being hin-
dered by so great a diversity from gaining the same
end? Ag ain, the deist will bring fo rward as a
difficulty Jthos e parts oL the animal that are clearly
contamed in it fo r future use ^he butterfly in the
caterpillar, man in the sperm^^awliole polyp in each
of its parts, tlie valvule in theovaT orifice, the lungs
in the foetus, the^teetH~m"tTieir sockets, the bones jn
the^ fluid from which they detach themselves and
(in aa.Jncomprehensible manner) harden. And
since the partisans of this theory, far from neglect-
ing anything that would strengthen it, never tire
of piling up proof upon proof, they are willing
to avail themselves of everything, even of the
weakness of the mind in certain cases. Look,
they say, at men like Sp inoza, Vanini,^^ Desb ar-
reau."*^ and Boindin,^^ apostles who^ honor deism
more than they harm IE The duration of their
health was the measure of their unbelief, and one
rarely fails, they add, to renounce atheism when
the passions, with their instrument, the body, have
grown weak.
That is certainly the most that can be said in
favor of the existence of God : although the last argu-
ment is frivolous in that these conversions are short,
and the mind almost always regains its former opin-
ions and acts accordingly, as soon as it has regained
or rather rediscovered its strength in that of the
body. That is, at least, much more than was said
by the physician Diderot,^* in his "Pensees Philo-
sophiques," a sublime work that will not convince
a singk atheist. What reply can, in truth, be
52-541
MAN A MACHINE.
.125 J
made to a man who says,' "We do not know nature;
causes hidden in her breast might have produced
everything. Inj ^ur turn, o bserve the polyp of Trem-
bley :^Moes it not contain in itself the cause s which
bring abou tjegeneration ? W hy^ then "wmM- it
be^^ahsurdjojlimk^tha^ causes
by reason of which everything has lfeen niaderg nd
tq^whid^^ 5s
so ne cessarily b ound and^MTHarrro^
happens, could have failed to Tiappen ,B-rcauses,
of which we are so invincibly ignorant that we
have had recourse to a God, who, as some aver,
is not so much as a logical entity? Thus to de-
stroy chance is not to prove the existence of a
supreme being, since there may be some other thing
which is neither chance nor God — I mean, nature.
It follows that the study of nature can make only
unbelievers ; and the way of thinking of all its more
successful investigators proves this."
The weight of the universe therefore far from -
crushing a real atheist does not even shake him.
All these evidences of a creator, repeated thousands
and thousands of times, evidences that are placed
far above the comprehension of men like us, are
self-evident (however far one push the argument)
only to the anti-Pyrrhonians,^or to those who
have enough confidence in their reason to believe
themselves capable of judging on the basis of cer-
tain phenomena, against which, as you see, the athe-
ists can urge others perhaps equally strong and ab-
solutely opposed. For if we listen to the naturalists
again, they will tell us that the very causes which,
in a chemist's hands, by a chance combination, made
the first mirror, in the hands of nature made the
-0^
1
l^^•
^^<^T^.
^
"Lt-A -^^^-t.
ftl
r
t
126
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
pure water, the mirror of the simple shepherdess;
that the motion which keeps the world going could
have created it, that each body has taken the place
assigned to it by its own nature^Vthat the air must
have surrounded the earth, and that iron and the
other metals are produced by internal motions of
the earth, for one and the same reason ; that the sun
is as much a natural product as electricity, that it
was not made to warm the earth and its inhabitants,
whom it sometimes burns, any more than the rain
was made to make the seeds grow, which it often
spoils ; that the mirror and the water were no more
made for people to see themselves in, than were all
other polished bodies with this same property ; that
the e ye is in truth a kind of glass in w hich the soul
can contemplate the ima g£_of_ objects as_fhey_are
p resente d to it by these bod iesTlBurT Hat^it is ^ot
prove d that this orgatrwsrs ~really_made "expressly
for this contemplation _^jiQ£j urposely placed iix4ts-
socket, and in short that it mayj^lllSe that Lucre-
tius,^^ the physictSTT'l^my,^^ and all EpicSreans
both ancient and modern were right when they
sugge5ted that the eye sees only because it is fonned
and placed as it is,^^ and that, given once for_all,
the s^ e ru les of m otion followed b y nature in the
gene ration and deve lop ment of bodies , this mar-
Yflnns nrgaii ^ould not have been formed a nd placed
differently. \^ ~~
Such is tlie pro and the con, and the summary
of those fine arguments that will eternally divide
the philosophers. I do not take either side.
"Non nostrum inter vos tantas componere lites.""
This is what I said to one of my friends, a French-
1 1
"p'
54-56]
MAN A MACHINE.
127
man, as f rank a Pyrrgnian as^I, a man of much merit,
and worthy of^ betfef tate. He gave me a very
singular answer in regard to the matter. "It is
true," he told me, "that the pro and con should not
disturb at all the soul of a philosopher, who sees
that nothing is proved with clearness enough to
force his consent, and that the arguments offered
on one side are neutraHzed by those of the other.
However," he continued, "the universe will never
be happy, unless it is atheistic."^^ Here are this
wretch's reasons. If atheism, said he, were gen-
erally accepted, all the forms of religion would then
be destroyed and cut off at the roots. No more
theological wars, no more soldiers of religion — such
terrible soldiers! Nature infected with a sacred
poison, would regain its rights and its purity. Deaf
to all other voices, tranquil mortals would follow
only the spontaneous dictates of their own being
the only commands which can never be despised
with impunity and which alone can lead us to hap-
piness through the pleasant paths of virtue.
Such is natural law: whoever rigidly observes
it is a good man and deserves the confidence of
all the human race. Whoever fails to follow it
scrupulously affects, in vain, the specious exterior
of another religion; he is a scamp or a hypocrite
whom I distrust.
After this, let a vain people think otherwise, let
them dare affirm that even probity is at stake in
not believing in revelation, in a word that another
religion than that of nature is necessary, whatever
it may be. Such an assertion is wretched and piti-
able; and so is the good opinion which each one
gives us of the religion he has embraced! We do
i
128
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
56-58]
MAN A MACHINE.
129
^^V^-^thc-
.KAy^
■-..--A
■^
y^^.
-f -
T"
140
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
even though it does not remember the ideas that it
has had.
{ 1^ to the development of feehng and motion,
it is absurd to waste time seeking for its mechan-
ism. The nature of motion is as unknown to us
as that of matter.®^ How can we discover how
' it is produced unless, like the author of "Thejiis.-
tory^of the Soul," we resuscitate the old and un-
^ intelligible doctrine of substantial forms? X_am
then quite as content not to know how inert and
simple matter becomes active and highly organized,
as not to be able to look at the sun without red
glasses ; and I a m as little disquieted concerning
the other incomprehensible wonders of nature, the
production of feeling and of thought in a being
which earlier appeared to our limited eyes as a
mere clod of clay.
Grant only that organized matter is endowed with
a principle of motion, which alone differentiates it
from th e inorganic (and can one deny this in the
face oTthemost incontestable observation?) and
that among animals, as I have sufficiently proved,
everything depends upon the diversity of this_orr
ganization: these admissions suffice for guessing
the riddle of substances and of man. It [thus]
appears that there is but one [type of organization]
theuniverse, and that man is the mojt perfect
[e^aSS[ejr~^ ^^^^ *^^ ap€> and to the most intelli-
gent animats. a s jhe pl an etary pend ulum of Huy-
ghe ns^^ is to ^^"watcITo f Julien Leray-^^L-3Ipre
instr uments, more wheels "^TfTrnnre sp rinpr<; jvp^^
necessarv to mark the movements of the
jhairt omark or strike the hours ;jin(l Vauc ansQa^^^
who neiaed more skill for making his flute player
1
69-71]
MAN A MACHINE.
141
than for making his duck, would have needed still (^^^'^^^^^2>v.
more to make a talking man, a mechanism no longer
to be regarded as impossiblc^esge cially in th e hands
of another Prometheus. flTlitr fashion, it was
necessary that nature should use more elaborate
art in making and sustainiag.^j2iachine which for
a whole century could mark all motions of the
heart and of the mind; for though one does not
tell time by the pulse, it is at least the barometer
of the warmth and the vivacity by which one may
estimate the nature of the soul. I am right ! The
jjllfflan^bodyJs_a ^atch, a large watch constructe d
KitlLSuch skill andjngenuity, t hat it the whe el
_ seconds^ppens tostop, the rnin ute
idlgeUurns jiid^keeps on going its round, an d in
the_saniejvay:j[ g^ and aTl"The
Qtherrgo"gn^juanii^ the iiigM>vlieej shave \
ojider. Is it not for a similar reason" that the j
stoppage of a few blood vessels is not enough to i
destroy or suspend the strength of the movement 1
which is in the heart as in the mainspring of the
£iachine; since, on the contrary, the fluids whose
volume is diminished, having a shorter road to
travel, cover the ground more quickly, borne on as
by a fresh current which the energy of the heart
increases in proportion to the resistance it encoun-
ters at the ends of the blood-vessels ? And is not this
the reason why the loss of sight (caused by the com-
pression of the optic nerve and by its ceasing to con-
vey the images of objects) no more hinders hearing,
than the loss of hearing (caused by obstruction of
the functions of the auditory nerve) implies the loss
of sight ? In the same way, finally, does not one man
)
\
11
V'
I
142
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
\juJ^
hear (except immediately after his attack) with-
out being able to say that he hears, while another
who hears nothing, but whose lingual nerves are un-
injured in the brain, mechanically tells of all the
dreams which pass through his mind? These phe-
nomena do not surprise enlightened physicians at
all. They know what to think about man's nature,
and (more accurately to express myself in passing)
of two physicians, the better one and the one who
deserves more confidence is always, in my opinion,
the one who is more versed in the physique or mech-
anism of the human body, and who, leaving aside
the soul and all the anxieties which this chimera
gives to fools and to ignorant men, is seriously oc-
cupied only in pure naturalism.
There fore let t he pretended M. Charp deride phi-
losophers who have regarded animals as machines.
Tlow different is my view !\\I believe that Descartes
would be a man in every way worthy of respect, if,
bom in a century that he had not been obliged to
enlighten, he had known the value of experiment
and observation, and the danger of cutting loose
from them.>& But it is none the less just for me
to make an authentic reparation to this great man
for all the insignificant philosophers — poor jesters,
and poor imitators of Locke — who instead of laugh-
ing impudently at Descartes, might better realize
that without him the field^of philosophy, like the
field of science without Newton, might perhaps be
still uncultivated.
This celebrated philosopher, it is true, was much
deceived, and no one denies that. But at any rate
he understood animal nature, he was the first to
prove completely that animals are pure machines^
71-73]
MAN A MACHINE.
143
/
'
And after a discovery of this importance demand-
ing so much sagacity, how can we without ingrati-
tude fail to pardon all his errors !
In my eyes, they are all atoned for by that great
confession. For after all, although he extols the
distinctness of the two substances, this is plainly but
a trick of skill, a ruse of style, to make theologians
swallow a poison, hidden in the shade of an analogy
which strikes everybody else and which they alone
fail to notice. (F^QLiLi s^this, this strong analogy,
whi ch forces all scholars and wise7u3gesT^ n!g^nfess
^thatjtnese proug and vain beings , fflote distin guishe s^
by^their prTae^gan^b^THTname"^ . ^„^,^.
bottom only animals and machineTwhich, though
upright, go on all fqursTlTlTey'all have this maf^
yelous instinct, which is developed by education
into mind, and which always has its seat in the
brain, (or for want of that when it is lacking or
hardened, in the medulla oblongata) and never in
the cerebellum; for I have often seen the cere-
bellum injured, and other observers* have found
it hardened, when the soul has not ceased to fulfil
its functions.
TVbe amac hine, to feel to think, to know h ow
jodistinguish good from badfas well as bluTTrSm
yeflowTlna'wora; 'fo"5e bom "with an intelligence
and a sure moral instinct, and to be but an ani-
mal, are therefore characters which are no more
contradictory, than to be an ape or a parrot and
to be able to give oneself pleasure.....! believe
that thought is^.,saJittIeJncon^^ with organized
"tatter, thaLJlseems ^ bronToTltg" pro perties on
* Haller in the Transact. PhilosopK
^\
/
-SfT^
V'
1 j)--
J : ^^'
A^
/(/>^
%
u
^
\
'0>
I ^- ^
144
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
a par with electricity, the faculty of motion, im-
penetrabiHty, extension, etc.
Do you ask for further observations ? Here are
some which are incontestable and which all prove
that man resembles animals perfectly, in his origin
as well as in all the points in which we have thought
it essential to make the comparison
Let us observe man both in and out of his shell,
let us examine young embryos of four, six, eight or
fifteen days with a microscope ; after that time our
eyes are sufficient. What do we see? The head
alone; a little round tg% with two black points
which mark the eyes. Before that, everything is
formless, and one sees only a medullary pulp, which
is the brain, in which are formed first the roots of
the nerves, that is, the principle of feeling, and the
heart, which already within this substance has the
power of beating of itself; it is the punctum saliens
of Malpighi, which perhaps already owes a part of
its excitability to the influence of the nerves. Then
little by little, one sees the head lengthen from the
neck, which, in dilating, forms first the thorax in-
side which the heart has already sunk, there to be-
come stationary; below that is the abdomen which
is divided by a partition (the diaphragm). One of
these enlargements of the body forms the arms,
the hands, the fingers, the nails, and the hair; the
other forms the thighs, the legs, the feet, etc., which
differ only in their observed situation, and which
constitute the support and the balancing pole of
the body. The whole pro cess is a strange sort of
growth, li ke tha t of plants. On the tops of our
heads is hair in place of which the plants have
leaves and flowers; everywhere is shown the same
1
73-77]
MAN A MACHINE.
145
?
atchinakerj
Her power shines forth equally in creating thelow-
liest insect and in creating the most highly developed
man ; the animal kingdom costs her no more than the
vegetable, and the most splendid genius no more
than a blade of wheat. Let us then judge by what we
luxury of nature, and finally the directing principle
of plants is placed where we have our soul, that
other quintessence of man.
Such is the uniformity of nature, which we are UA^yj^^A^^
beginning to reali ze: and the analog of the animaT ' ^
with the vegetable kingdom, of man with plant. Per-
haps there even are animal plants, which in vege-
tating, either fight as polyps do, or perform other
functions characteristic of animals
We are veritable moles in the field of nature ; we
achieve little more than the mole's journey and it
is our pride which prescribes limits to the limitless.
We ^re in t he_pQsition of a watch that should say
(a writer of fables would make the watch a hero in
a silly tale) : "I was never made by that fool of a
workman, I who divide time, who mark so exactly
the course of the sun, who repeat aloud the hours
which I mark! No! that is impossible!" In the
same way, we disdain, ungrateful wretches that we
are, this common mother of all kingdoms, as the
chemists say. We imagine, or rather we infer, a cause
superior to that to which we owe all, and which
truly has wrought all things in an inconceivable
fashion. No^jna tter contains nothi n g base, except
I to the vulgar eyes which do not recognize her in her
' mgst-Sfdendjd^works ; and nature is no stupid work-
man, ^he cr eates . millions of men, with a facility
31ld_aj2leasTLirr]^reJ^^ a
u.^'
/"
n
I 4
XVt-^'
^^^"^^
146
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
see of that which is hidden from the curiosity
of our eyes and of our investigations, and let us
not imagine anything beyond. Let us observe the
ape, the beaver, the elephant, etc., in their opera-
tions. If it is clear that these activities can not
be performed without intelligence, why refuse in-
telligence to these animals? And if you grant them
a soul, you are lost, you fanatics ! You will in vain
say that you assert nothing about the nature of the
animal soul and that you deny its immortality. Who
does not see that this is a gratuitous assertion ; who
does not see that the soul of an animal must be
either mortal or immortal, whichever ours [is], and
that it must therefore undergo the same fate as
ours, whatever that may be, and that thus [in ad-
mitting that animals have souls], you fall into Scylla
in the effort to avoid Charybdis ?
Break the chain of your prejudices, arm your-
selves with the torch of experience, and you will
render to nature the honor she deserves, instead of
inferring anything to her disadvantage, from the
ignorance in which she has left you. Only open
w ide your eyes, only disreg^ard wha t you CM^not
understand, and you will see that the ploughman
wTToselnfelligence and ideas extend no further than
the bounds of his furrow, does not differ essentially
from the greatest genius, — a truth which the dis-
section of Descartes's and of Newton's brains would
have proved; you will be persuaded that the imbe-
cile and the fool are animals with human faces, as
the intelligent ape is a little man in another shape;
in short, you will le arn thar since everything^depends,
absolutely on3itference of^rganization,*ra well con-
structed^nimal which has studied astronomy, can
! /
77-79]
MAN A MACHINE.
147
predict an eclipse, as it can predict recovery or death
when it has used its genius and its clearness of
vision, for a time, in the school of Hippocrates and
at the bedside of the sick. By this line of observa-
tions and truths, we come to connect the admirable
power of thought with matter, without being able
to see the links, because the subject of this attribute
i s essentially unknown to us.
Let us not say that every machine or every animal
perishes altogether or assumes another form after '
death, for we know absolutely nothing about the
subject. On the other h\ ^d, to assert that an im-
mortal machine is a chimera or a logical fiction, is cXvv^-/-^^^ ^ 1
to reason as absurdly as caterpillars would reason
if, seeing the cast-off skins of their fellow-cater-
pillars, they should bitterly deplore the fate of their
species, which to them would seem to come to noth-
ingj^xThe soul of these insects (for each animal
has his own) is too limited to comprehend the meta-
morphoses of nature. Never one of the most skil-
ful among them could have imagined that it was
destined to become a butterfly. It is the same with
us. What more do we know of our destiny than of
our origin ? Let us then submit to an invincible ig-
norance on which our happiness depends.
He who so thinks will be wise, just, tranquil
about his fate, and therefore happy. He will await
death without either fear or desire, and will cherish
life (hardly understanding how disgust can corrupt
a heart in this place of many delights) ; he will be
t filled with reverence, gratitude, affection, and ten-
derness for nature, in proportion to his feeling of
the benefits he has received from nature; he will
be happy, in short, in feeling nature, and in being
'/fAX^'-^
{TX^}
146
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
see of that which is hidden from the curiosity
of our eyes and of our investigations, and let us
not imagine anything beyond. Let us observe the
ape, the beaver, the elephant, etc., in their opera-
tions. If it is clear that these activities can not
be performed without intelligence, why refuse in-
telligence to these animals? And if you grant them
a soul, you are lost, you fanatics ! You will in vain
say that you assert nothing about the nature of the
animal soul and that you deny its immortality. Who
does not see that this is a gratuitous assertion ; who
does not see that the soul of an animal must be
either mortal or immortal, whichever ours [is], and
that it must therefore undergo the same fate as
ours, whatever that may be, and that thus [in ad-
mitting that animals have souls], you fall into Scylla
in the effort to avoid Charybdis ?
^^ Break the chain of your prejudices, arm your-
selves with the torch of experience, and you will
render to nature the honor she deserves, instead of
inferring anything to her disadvantage, from the
ignorance in which she has left you. Only open
wide yo ur eyes, only disregard wha t you ^arrTiot
understand, and you will see that the ploughman
wTiose intelligence and ideas extend no further than
the bounds of his furrow, does not differ essentially
from the greatest genius, — a truth which the dis-
section of Descartes's and of Newton's brains would
have proved; you will be persuaded that the imbe-
cile and the fool are animals with human faces, as
the intelligent ape is a little man in another shape;
in short, you will le arn thar ^since everything^depeads_
absolutely ondifference ororganization,'Tawell con-
structed^himal which has studledTstronomy, can
*v" —
'
77-79]
MAN A MACHINE.
147
predict an eclipse, as it can predict recovery or death
when it has used its genius and its clearness of
vision, for a time, in the school of Hippocrates and
at the bedside of the sick. By this line of observa-
tions and truths, we come to connect the admirable
power of thought with matter, without being able
to see the links, because the subject of this attribute
is essentially unknown to us
II "
.et us not say that every machine or every animal
perishes altogether or assumes another form after
death, for we know absolutely nothing about the
subject. On the other hand, to assert that an im-
mortal machine is a chimera or a logical fiction, is
to reason as absurdly as caterpillars would reason
if, seeing the cast-off skins of their fellow-cater-
pillars, they should bitterly deplore the fate of their
species, which to them would seem to come to noth-
ingj^^/The soul of these insects (for each animal
has his own) is too limited to comprehend the meta-
morphoses of nature. Never one of the most skil-
ful among them could have imagined that it was
destined to become a butterfly. It is the same with
us. What more do we know of our destiny than of
our origin ? Let us then submit to an invincible ig-
norance on which our happiness depends.
He who so thinks will be wise, just, tranquil
about his fate, and therefore happy. He will await
death without either fear or desire, and will cherish
life (hardly understanding how disgust can corrupt
a heart in this place of many delights) ; he will be
t filled with reverence, gratitude, affection, and ten-
derness for nature, in proportion to his feeling of
the benefits he has received from nature; he will
be happy, in short, in feeling nature, and in being
~±i
crvvv^-w^'—^r^
•)
f
148
MAN A MACHINE.
[Text
A-J»— '
present at the enchanting spectacle of the universe,
I and he will surely never destroy nature either in
^ himself or in others. More than that! Full of
I humanity, this man will love htrnian character even
I . , in his enemies. Judge how he will treat others.
I jtX^ '^^ r^ He jwilL4nty _the wicked jvithoiit iiating -Ihem; jn
Eg^"eyes^_th€y^ wjl Lbe but mis-mad^ jnerL_ But in
pardoning the faults of the structure of mind and
body, he will none the less admlre~th'e Beauties and
the virtues of both. Those whom nature shall have
favored will seem to him to deserve more respect
than those whom she has treated in stepmotherly
fashion. Thus, as we have seen, natural gifts, the
source of all acquirements, gain from the lips and
heart of the materialist, the homage which every
other thinker unjustly refuses them. In short, the
materialist, convinced, in spite of the protests of
his vanity, that he is but a machine or an animal,
will not maltreat his kind, for he will know too well
the nature of those actions, whose humanity is al-
ways in proportion to the degree of the analogy
proved above [between human beings and animals] ;
and following the natural law given to all animals,
he will not wish to do to others what he would not
wish them to do to him.
L^tus^hen^^
anJTHaflffT^^^^
substance differently modified. This is no hypoth-
eStrsetTofthlBy^dint of a number of postulates and
assumptions; it is not the work of prejudice, nor
even of my reason alone; I should have disdained
a guide which I think to be so untrustworthy, had
not my senses, bearing a torch, so to speak, induced
me to follow reason by lighting the way themselves.
79-81]
MAN A MACHINE.
149
f.
^^.^ Experience has thus spoken to me in behalf of rea^^
son; and in this way I have combined the two.*'
But it must have been noticed that I have not'
allowed myself even the most vigorous and imme-
diately deduced reasoning, except as a result of a
multitude of observations which no scholar will con-
test ; and furthermore, I recognize only scholars as
judges of the conclusions which I draw from the
observations; and I hereby challenge_eyery jreju-
diced man who^ is iieil liei "ana tornistTrior acquainted
^^^^^^^I^^ can here be^ n-
sHereclTltinrot the li umanjK^dy. Against so strong
and sohd an oakTwhat could the weak reeds of the-
ology, of metaphysics, and of the schools, avail, —
childish amis, like our parlor foils, that may well
afford the pleasure of fencing, but can never wound
an adversary. Need I say that I refer to the
empty and trivial notions, to the pitiable and trite
arguments that will be urged (as long as the shadow
of prejudice or of superstition remains on earth)
for the supposed incompatibility of two substances
which meet and move each other unceasingly? Such
I is my sy jtem^ r rather the truth, ^ nless I am much
deceived IFTs short and simpler^lJispute It now^
- wIio~will.
7
Ill
H
w
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL.-
BY JEAN OFFRAY DE LA METTRIE.
EXTRACTS.
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL.
CHAPTER II. CONCERNING MATTER.
ALL philosophers who have examined attentively
-^^ the nature of matter, considered in itself, in-
dependently of all the forms which constitute bodies,
have discovered in this substance, diverse proper-
ties proceeding from an absolutely unknown es-
sence. Such are, (1) the capacity of taking on
different forms, which are produced in matter it-
self, by which matter can acquire moving force and
the faculty of feeling; (2) actual extension, which
these philosophers have rightly recognized as an
attribute, but not as the essence, of matter.
However, there have been some, among others
Descartes, who have insisted on reducing the es-
sence of matter to simple extension, and on limiting
all the properties of matter to those of extension;
but this opinion has been rejected by all other mod-
ern philosophers, .... so that the power of acquiring
moving force, and the faculty of feeling as well
as that of extension, have been from all time con-
sidered as essential properties®"^ of matter.
All the diverse properties that are observed in this
unknown principle demonstrate a being in which
these same properties exist, a being which must
therefore exist through itself. But we can not
conceive, or rather it seems impossible, that a being
liillii.Mlill.,:. iska. .il:ill!i.'.u;.:ll:giiNllikL.L.
Vi
154
MAN A MACHINE.
which exists through itself should be able neither
to create nor to annihilate itself. It is evident that
only the forms to which its essential properties
make it susceptible can be destroyed and reproduced
in turn. Thus, does experience force us to confess
that nothing can come from nothing.
All philosophers who have not known the light
of faith, have thought that this substantial principle
of bodies has existed and will exist forever, and
that the elements of matter have an indestructible
solidity which forbids the fear that the world is
going to fall to pieces. The majority of Christian
philosophers also recognize that the substantial prin-
ciple of bodies exists necessarily through itself, and
that the power of beginning or ending does not
accord with its nature. One finds that this view is
upheld by an author of the last century who taught
theology in Paris.
CHAPTER III. CONCERNING THE EXTENSION OF
MATTER.
Although we have no idea of the essence of mat-
ter, we can not refuse to admit the existence of the
properties which our senses discover in it.
I open my eyes, and I see around me only matter,
or the extended. Extension is then a property which
always belongs to all matter, which can belong to
matter alone, and which therefore is inseparable
from the substance of matter.
This property presupposes three dimensions in
the substance of bodies, length, width, and depth.
Truly, if we consult our knowledge, which is gained
entirely from the senses, we cannot conceive of
matter, or the substance of bodies, without having
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL. 155
the idea of a being which is at the same time long,
broad, and deep; because the idea of these three
dimensions is necessarily bound up with our idea
of every magnitude or quantity.
Those philosophers who have meditated most con-
cerning matter do not understand by the extension
of this substance, a solid extension composed of dis-
tinct parts, capable of resistance. Nothing is united,
nothing is divided in this extension ; for there must
be a force which separates to divide, and another
force to unite the divided parts. But in the opinion
of these physical philosophers matter has no actually
active force, because every force can come only
from movement, or from some impulse or tendency
toward movement, and they recognize in matter,
stripped of all form by abstraction, only a potential
moving force.
This theory is hard to conceive, but given its
principles, it is rigorously true in its consequences.
It is one of those algebraic truths which is more
readily believed than conceived by the mind.
The extension of matter is then but a metaphys-
ical extension, which according to the idea of these
very philosophers, presents nothing to affect our
senses. They rightly think that only solid exten-
sion can make an impression on our senses. It
thus seems to us that extension is an attribute which
constitutes part of the metaphysical form, but we
are far from thinking that extension constitutes its
essence.
However, before Descartes, some of the ancients
made the essence of matter consist in solid exten-
sion. But this opinion, of which all the Cartesians
have made much, has at all times been victoriously
I
PI'
156
MAN A MACHINE.
combated by clear reasons, which we will set forth
later, for order demands that we first examine to
what the properties of extension can be reduced.
CHAPTER V. CONCERNING THE MOVING FORCE
OF MATTER.
The ancients, persuaded that there is no body
without a moving force, regarded the substance of
bodies as composed of two primitive attributes. It
was held that, through one of these attributes, this
substance has the capacity for moving and, through
the other, the capacity for being moved.®® As a mat-
ter of fact, it is impossible not to conceive these
two attributes in every moving body, namely, the
thing which moves, and the same thing which is
moved.
It has just been said that formerly the name,
matter, was given to the substance of bodies, in
so far as it is susceptible of being moved. When
capable of moving this same matter was known by
the name of "active principle" . . . But these two
attributes seem to depend so essentially on each
other that Cicero, in order better to state this
essential and primitive union of matter with its
moving principle, says that each is found in the
other. This expresses very well the idea of the
ancients.
From this it is clear that modern writers have
given us but an inexact idea of matter in attempt-
ing (through a confusion ill understood) to give
this name to the substance of bodies. For, once
more, matter, or the passive principle of the sub-
stance of bodies, constitutes only one part of this
substance. Thus it is not surprising that these mod-
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL. 157
em thinkers have not discovered in matter mov-
ing force and the faculty of feeling.
It should now be evident at the first glance, it
seems to me, that if there is an active principle it
must have, in the unknown essence of matter, an-
other source than extension. This proves that sim-
ple extension fails to give an adequate idea of the
complete essence or metaphysical form of the sub-
stance of bodies, and that this failure is due solely
to the fact that extension excludes the idea of any
activity in matter. Therefore, if we demonstrate
this moving principle, if we show that matter, far
from being as indifferent as it is supposed to be, to
movement and to rest, ought to be regarded as an
active, as well as a passive substance, what resource
can be left to those who have made its essence con-
sist in extension?
The two principles of which we have just spoken,
extension and moving force, are then but poten-
tialities of the substance of bodies ; for in the same
way in which this substance is susceptible of move-
ment, without actually being moved, it also has al-
ways, even when it is not mo:^ing itself, the faculty
of spontaneous motion.
The ancients have rightly noticed that this moving
force acts in the substance of bodies onlv when the
substance is manifested in certain forms; they have
also observed that the different motions which it
produces are all subject to these different forms or
regulated by them. That is why the forms, through
which the substance of bodies can not only move,
but also move in different ways, were called material
forms.
Once these early masters had cast their eyes on
r
158
MAN A MACHINE.
all the phenomena of nature, they discovered in the
substance of bodies, the power of self-movement.
In fact, this substance either moves itself, or when
It is in motion, the motion is communicated to it
by another substance. But can anything be seen
in this substance, save the substance itself in action;
and if sometimes it seems to receive a motion that
it has not, does it receive that motion from any
cause other than this same kind of substance, whose
parts act the one upon the other?
If, then, one infers another agent, I ask what
agent, and I demand proofs of its existence. But
smce no one has the least idea of such an agent, it is
not even a logical entity. Therefore it is clear that the
ancients must have easily recognized an intrinsic
force of motion within the substance of bodies,
smce in fact it is impossible to prove or conceive
any other substance acting upon it.
Descartes, a genius made to blaze new paths and
to go astray in them, supposed with some other
philosophers that God is the only efficient cause of
motion, and that every instant He communicates
motion to all bodies. But this opinion is but an
hypothesis which he tried to adjust to the light of
faith ; and in so doing he was no longer attempting
to speak as a philosopher or to philosophers. Above
all he was not addressing those who can be con-
vinced only by the force of evidence.
The Christian Scholastics of the last centuries
have felt the full force of this reflection ; for this
reason they have wisely limited themselves to purely
philosophic knowledge concerning the motion of
matter, although they might have shown that God
Himself said that He had "imprinted an active prin-
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL. 159
ciple in the elements of matter (Gen. i; Is. Ixvi)."
One might here make up a long list of author-
ities, and take from the most celebrated professors
the substance of the doctrine of all the rest ; but it
is clear enough, without a medley of citations, that
matter contains this moving force which animates
it, and which is the immediate cause of all the laws
of motion.
CHAPTER VI. CONCERNING THE SENSITIVE
FACULTY OF MATTER.
We have spoken of two essential attributes of
matter, upon which depend the greater number of
its properties, namely extension and moving force.
We have now but to prove a third attribute: I
mean the faculty of feeling which the philosophers
of all centuries have found in this same substance.
I say all philosophers, although I am not ignorant
of all the efforts which the Cartesians have made,
in vain, to rob matter of this faculty. But in order
to avoid insurmountable difficulties, they have flung
themselves into a labyrinth from which they have
thought to escape by this absurd system "that ani-
mals are pure machines."®^
An opinion so absurd has never gained admittance
among philosophers, except as the play of wit or as
a philosophical pastime. For this reason we shall
not stop to refute it. Experience gives us no less
proof of the faculty of feeling in animals than of
feeling in men
There comes up another difficulty which more
nearly concerns our vanity: namely, the impossi-
bility of our conceiving this property as a depend-
ence or attribute of matter. Let it not be forgotten
160
MAN A MACHINE.
that this substance reveals to us only ineffable char-
acters. Do we understand better how extension is
derived from its essence, how it can be moved by
a primitive force whose action is exerted without
contact, and a thousand other miracles so hidden
from the gaze of the most penetrating eyes, that
(to paraphrase the idea of an illustrious modern
writer) they reveal or«ly the curtain which conceals
them ?
But might not one suppose as some have sup-
posed, that the feeling which is observed in ani-
mated bodies, might belong to a being distinct from
the matter of these bodies, to a substance of a
different nature united to them? Does the light of
reason allow us in good faith to admit such con-
jectures? We know in bodies only matter, and we
observe the faculty of feeling only in bodies: on
what foundation then can we erect an ideal being,
disowned by all our knowledge?
However, we must admit, with the same frank-
ness, that we are ignorant whether matter has in
itself the faculty of feeling, or only the power of
acquiring it by those modifications or forms to
which matter is susceptible; for it is true that this
faculty of feeling appears only in organic bodies.
This is then another new faculty which might
exist only potentially in matter, like all the others
which have been mentioned; and this was the
hypothesis of the ancients, whose philosophy, full
of insight and penetration, deserves to be raised
above the ruins of the philosophy of the moderns.
It is in vain that the latter disdain the sources too
remote from them. Ancient philosophy will always
hold its own among those who are worthy to judge
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUL. 161
It, because it forms (at least in relation to the subject
of which I am treating) a system that is solid and
well articulated like the body, whereas all these
scattered members of modern philosophy form no
system.
' /
ii
APPENDIX.
OUTLINES AND NOTES.
BY GERTRUDE CARMAN BUSSEY.
LA METTRIE'S RELATION TO HIS PRED-
ECESSORS AND TO HIS SUCCESSORS.
I. The Historical Relation of La Mettrie to Rene
Descartes (1596-1650).
The most direct source of La Mettrie^s work, if
the physiological aspect of his system is set aside,
is found in the philosophy of Descartes. In fact
it sometimes seems as if La Mettrie's materialism
grew out of his insistence on the contradictory char-
acter of the dualistic system of Descartes. He criti-
cises Descartes's statement that the body and soul
are absolutely independent, and takes great pains to
show the dependence of the soul on the body. Yet
though La Mettrie's system may be opposed to that
of Descartes^ from one point of view, from another
point of view it seems to be a direct consequence of
it. La Mettrie himself recognizes this relationship
and feels that his doctrine that man is a machine,
IS a natural inference from Descartes's teaching
that animals are mere machines.^ Moreover La
Mettrie carries on Descartes's conception of the
body as a machine, and many of his detailed dis-
cussions of the machinery of the body seem to have
been drawn from Descartes.
"LTiistoire naturelle de rame," chapters XI, VIII.
i«
S«1
r>-.'^^" ? ^*<=ti"«". P-, '42. Cf. U Mettrie's commentary on
ffi«^MrTome*'"^ ^'*''** ^^ ""*^'"'' P'-Wosophiiuesl"
\K
% ■
u
'tj
166
MAN A MACHINE.
It should be noted that La Mettrie did justice to
Descartes, and realized how much all philosophers
owed to him. He insisted moreover that Descartes's
errors were due to his failure to follow his own
method.3 Yet La Mettrie's method was different
from that of Descartes, for La Mettrie was an
empiricist* without rationalistic leaning. As re-
gards doctrine: La Mettrie differed from Des-
cartes m his opinion of matter. Since he disbelieved
m any spiritual reality, he gave matter the attri-
butes of motion and thought, while Descartes insisted
that the one attribute of matter is extension." It
was a natural consequence of La Mettrie's disbelief
in spiritual substance that he could throw doubt on
the existence of God.* On the other hand the be-
lief in God was one of the foundations of Des-
cartes s system. La Mettrie tried to show that
Descartes's l^elief in a soul and in God was merely
designed to hide his true thought from the priests,
and to save himself from persecution.^
Ila. The Likeness of La Mettrie to the English Ma-
terialists, Thomas Hobbcs (1588-1679) and
■ John Toland (1670-1721).
The influence of Descartes upon La Mettrie can-
not be questioned but it is more difficult to estimate
the influence upon him of materialistic philosophers.
Phktes%,^tV'"'^"'''- Descartes," p. 6, (Euvres PMloso.
I Descartes. "Principles." Part II, Prop. 4.
• "Man a Machine," pp. 122-126.
^ Ihid., p. 142.
M "
APPENDIX.
167
Hobbes published "The Leviathan" in 1651 and
"De Corpore" in 1655. Thus he wrote about a
century before La Mettrie, and since the eighteenth
century was one in which the influence of England
upon France was very great, it is easy to suppose
that La Mettrie had read Hobbes. If so, he must
have gained many ideas from him. The extent of
this influence is, however, unknown, for La Mettrie
rarely if ever quotes from Hobbes, or attributes
any of his doctrines to Hobbes.
In the first place, both Hobbes and La Mettrie
are thoroughgoing materialists. They both beHeve
that body is the only reaHty, and that anything
spiritual is unimaginable. ^ Furthermore their con-
ceptions of matter are very similar. According to
La Mettrie, matter contains the faculty of sensation
and the power of motion as well as the quality of
extension.^ This same conception of matter is held
by Hobbes, for he specifically attributes extension
and motion to matter, and then reduces sensation to
a kind of internal motion. ^^ Thus sensation also
may be an attribute of matter. Moreover Hobbes
and La Mettrie are in agreement on many smaller
points, and La Mettrie elaborates much that is sug-
gested in Hobbes. They both believe that the pas-
sions are dependent on bodily conditions. ^^ They
agree in the belief that all the diflFerences in men
are due to differences in the constitution and organi-
Xn^On^I'v"^.''?!??"" ^^1^"' Chap.34; Part I, aap.
All, Upen Court Edition, p. 169.
L'histoire naturelle de I'ame," Chapters III, V, and VI.
Tv7r^'''^vt"Vr^*'"* ^' ^^^P- ^' ^^' "Concerning Body," Part
IV, Uiap. XXV, 2.
10
U «
Man a Machine," pp. 90-91.
1^-
168
MAN A MACHINE.
zation of their bodies." They both discuss the nature
and importance of language. ^^
Hobbes differes from La Mettrie in holding that
we can be sure that God exists as the cause of this
world. 1* However even though he thinks that it
is possible to know that God exists, he does not be-
lieve that we can know his nature.
La Mettrie's system may be regarded as the ap-
plication of a system like that of Hobbes to the
special problem of the relation of soul and body in
man; for if there is nothing in the universe but mat-
ter and motion, it inevitably follows that man is
merely a very complicated machine.
There is great similarity also between the doc-
trine of La Mettrie and that of Toland. It is inter-
esting to note the points of resemblance and of
difference. Toland's "Letters to Serena," which
contain much of his philosophical teaching, were
published in 1704. There is a possibility therefore
that La Mettrie read them and gained some sugges-
tions from them.
The point most emphasized in Toland's teach-
ing's is that motion is an attribute of matter. He
argues for this belief on the ground that matter
must be essentially active in order to undergo
change,i« and that the conception of the inertness
of matter is based on the conception of absolute
rest, and that this absolute rest is nowhere to be
''Ibid., Part I, Chap. IV. Cf. "Man a Machine," p. 103.
**/Wrf., Part I, Chap. XII.
" "Letters to Serena," V, p. i6a
^Ibid., p. rg6.
APPENDIX.
169
found. '^ Since motion is essential to matter, there
is no need, Toland believes, to account for the be-
ginning of motion. Those who have regarded mat-
ter as inert have had to find some efficient cause for
motion, and to do this, they have held that all nature
is animated. But this pretended animation is utterly
useless, since matter is itself endowed with motion.'®
The likeness to La Mettrie is evident. La Mettrie
likewise opposes the doctrine of the animation of
matter, and the belief in any external cause of mo-
tion.'® Yet he feels the need of postulating some
beginning of motion,^^ and although he uses the
conception so freely, he does not agree with Toland
that the nature of motion is known. He believes
that it is impossible to know the nature of motion,^'
while Toland believes that the nature of motion is
self-evident. 2^
Another point of contrast between Toland and
La Mettrie is in their doctrines of God. Toland
believes that God, "a pure spirit or immaterial be-
ing," is necessary for his system,^^ while La Mettrie
questions God's existence and insists that immate-
riality and spirituality are fine words that no one
understands.
It must be admitted, in truth, that La Mettrie and
Toland have different interests and different points
of view. Toland is concerned to discover the essen-
tial nature of matter, while La Mettrie's problem
" Ibid., p. 203.
^^Ibid., p. 199.
" "L'histoire naturelle de rame," Chap. V, p. 94.
* "Man a Machine," p. 139.
** "Man a Machine, p. 140.
" "Letters to Serena," V, p. 227.
^Ibid.j V, p. 234.
,'
^4
170
MAN A MACHINE.
is to find the specific relation of body and mind.
On this relation, he builds his whole system.
b The Relation of La Met trie to an English Sensa-
tionalist: John Locke (1632-1704).
Locke's "Essay Concerning Human Understand-
ing" was published in 1690, and La Mettrie, like
most cultured Frenchmen of the Enlightenment, was
mfluenced by his teaching. The main agreement
between Locke and La Mettrie is in their doctrine
that all ideas are derived from sensation. Both
vigorously oppose the belief in innate ideas,24 teach-
ing that even our most complex and our most ab-
stract ideas are gained through sensation. But La
Mettrie does not follow Locke in analyzing these
ideas and in concluding that many sensible qualities
of objects— such as colors, sounds, etc.— have no
existence outside the mind.25 He rejects Locke's
doctrine of spiritual substances,2« and opposes
Locke's theistic teaching, laying stress, on the other
hand, upon Locke's admission of the possibility that
"thinking being may also be material. "^^
Ilia. The Likeness, probable but unacknozvledged,
to La Mettrie, of the French Sensationalists]
Ettenne Bonnot de Condillac (1715-1780) and
Claude Adrien Helvetius (1715-1771).
Condillac's "Traite des sensations" was published
about ten years after La Mettrie's "L'histoire na-
B^t^B^'k'n, '^.^'"''"""'"^ ^""'" Understanding.''
"Locke, "Essay," Book II, Chap, a
"/feiU, Book II, Chap. 23.
Locke'lf ?k "Ai^'-^^P- '°- «^°^^^ M^«"«'s summary of
i-ocke, cf. his Abrege dcs systemes." (Euvres, Tome 2.
APPENDIX.
171
turelle de I'ame," and therefore it is probable that
Condillac had read this work, and gained some ideas
from it. Yet Condillac never mentions La Mettrie's
name nor cites his doctrines. This omission may
be accounted for by the fact that the works of La
Mettrie had been so condemned that later philos-
ophers wished to conceal the similarity of their
doctrines to his. Whether the sensationalists were
influenced by his teachings or not, there is such a
profound likeness in their teachings, that La Mettrie
may well be regarded as one of the first French
sensationalists as well as one of the leading French
materialists of the time.
Condillac and La Mettrie agree that experience
IS the source of all knowledge. As Lange sug-
gests,^® La Mettrie's development of reason from
the imagination may have suggested to Condillac
the way to develop all the faculties from the soul.
La Mettrie asserts that reason is but the sensitive
soul contemplating its ideas, and that imagination
plays all the roles of the soul, while Condillac elab-
orates the same idea, and shows in great detail how
all the faculties of the soul are but modifications of
sensation.^^
Both La Mettrie and Condillac believe that there
is no gulf between man and the lower animals ; but
this leads to a point of disagreement between the
two philosophers, for Condillac absolutely denies
that animals can be mere machines,^^ and we must
suppose that he would the more ardently oppose the
teaching that man is merely a complicated machine !
* F. A. Lange, "History of Materialism," Vol. II, Chap. IL
""Traite des sensations," Part I.
■•"Traite des animaux," Chap. I, p. 454.
172
MAN A MACHINE.
APPENDIX.
173
Condillac finally, unlike La Mettrie, believes in the
existence of God. A final point of contrast also
concerns the theology of the two writers. La Met-
trie insists that we can not be sure that there is any
purpose in the world, while Condillac affirms that
we can discern intelligence and design throughout
the universe. ^^
Like La Mettrie and Condillac, Helvetius teaches
that all the faculties of the mind can be reduced to
sensation.«2 Unlike La Mettrie, he specifically dis-
tinguishes the mind from the soul, and describes
the mind as a later developed product of the soul
or faculty of sensation.^^ This idea may have been
suggested by La Mettrie's statement that reason
is a modification of sensation. Helvetius, however,
unlike La Mettrie, does not clearly decide that sen-
sation is but a result of bodily conditions, and he
admits that sensation may be a modification of a
spiritual substance.^^ Moreover, he claims that cli-
mate and food have no effect on the mind, and that
the superiority of the understanding is not depen-
dent on the strength of the body and its organs.^^
La Mettrie and Helvetius resemble each other
in ethical doctrine. Both make pleasure and pain
the ruling motives of man's conduct. They claim
that all the emotions are merely modifications of
corporeal pleasure and pain, and that therefore the
only principle of action in man is the desire for
pleasure and the fear of pain.^^
Traite des animaux," Chap. VI, p. 577 ff.
Treatise on Man," Sect. II, Chap. I, p. 96.
Ibid., Sect. II, Chap. II, p. 108.
'Essays on the Mind," Essay II, Chap. I. p. 35.
I "Treatise on Man," Chap. XII, p. 161.
'Ibid., Chap. IX, p. 146; Chap. VII, p. 129.
nw
U Id
b. The Likeness to La Mettrie of the French Mate-
rialist, Baron Paul Heinrich Dietrich von Hoi-
bach (1723-1789).
As Condillac and Helvetius emphasize the sensa-
tionalism taught by La Mettrie, so Holbach's book
is a reiteration and elaboration of the materialism
set forth in La Mettrie*s works. The teaching of
Holbach is so like that of La Mettrie, that the simi-
larity can hardly be a coincidence.
La Mettrie regards experience as the only teacher.
Holbach dwells on this same idea, and insists that
experience is our only source of knowledge in all
matters.^^ Holbach likewise teaches that man is
a purely material being. He disbelieves in any spir-
itual reality whatsoever, and makes matter the only
substance in the world. He lays stress, also, on one
thought which is a natural consequence of La Met-
trie's teaching. La Mettrie has limited the action
of the will and has insisted that the will is dependent
on bodily conditions. Holbach goes further and
declares lepeatedly that all freedom is a delusion,
and that man is controlled in every action by rigid
necessity.^® This teaching seems to be the natural
outcome of the belief that man is a machine.
Holbach*s atheistic theology is more extreme than
his predecessor's, for La Mettrie admits that God
may exist, while Holbach vigorously opposes the
possibility. Moreover Holbach holds the opinion,
barely suggested by La Mettrie, that an atheistic
doctrine would ameliorate the condition of man-
'Systeme de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. I, p. 6.
"Systeme de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. VI, p. 94.
91 Ut
174
MAN A MACHINE.
kind.3® He insists that the idea of God has hin-
dered the progress of reason and interfered with
natural law. Holbach is indeed the only one of
the philosophers here discussed, who frankly adopts
a fatalistic and atheistic doctrine of the universe.
In these respects, his teaching is the culmination of
French materialism.
r^-^"^" ^^!^ "u'-^^fP* ^^^' Pv45i. and Chap. XXVI, p. 485.
Cf. Man a Machine," pp. 125-126.
V
I
OUTLINE OF LA METTRIE'S METAPHYS-
ICAL DOCTRINE.
PAGES*
I. Insistence on the Empirical Standpoint. .i6f.; 88f.; 72, 142
II. Arguments in Favor of Materialism:
a. The "Soul" is Affected,
1. By Disease • i8f. ; gof.
2. By Sleep igf. ; gii.
3. By Drugs 20 ; 92
4. By Food 2if. ; 93if.
5. By Age and Sex 23! ; 95!.
6. By Temperature and Climate 24! ; g6S,
b. There is No Sharp Distinction Between Men
and Animals (Machines)
28f., looff.; 4iff., ii3ff.; 75!., I42f.
c. Bodily Movements are Due to the "Motive
Power" of the Body siff., i29flF.
III. Conception of Matter.
a. Matter is Extended 154!
b. Matter Has the Power of Motion 70, 140; i56flF.
c. Matter Has the Faculty of Feeling I59ff.
rV. Conception of Man:
a. Man is a Machine
17, 89; 21, 93; 56, 128; 69, I40f.; 73, 143; 80, 148
b. All Man's Faculties Reduce to Sense and Im-
agination 35ff., io7ff.
c. Man is Like Animals in Being Capable of
Education 38, no
d. Man is Ignorant of His Destiny 79, 147
V. Theological Doctrine:
o. The Existence of God is Unproved and Prac-
tically Unimportant 50, 122
b. The Argument from Design is Ineffective
Against the Hypothesis of Mechanical Cau-
sahty siff., i24ff.
c. Atheism Makes for Happiness 55, I26f.
* The references are to pages of this book.
:
ii
NOTES.^
NOTE ON FREDERICK THE GREAT'S EULOGY.
This translation is made from the third volume, pp. 159 ff.
of ,^"vresde Frederic II., Roi de Prusse, Publiees du vivant
de I'Auteur," Berlin. 1789.
La Mettrie was received at the court of Frederick the Great,
when he had been driven from Holland on account of the
heretical teaching of "L'Homme Machine," The "Eloge" was
read by Darget, the secretary of the king, at a public meeting
of the Academy of Berlin, to which, at the initiative of Frede-
nck. La Mettrie had been admitted.
llie careful reader wiU not fail to note that Frederick's
arithmetic is at fault, and that La Mettrie died at the age of
forty-one, not forty-three, years.
At a few points, perhaps, the Eloge demands elucidation.
Coutances like Caen, is a Norman town. St. Malo lies, just
over the border, in Brittany. U Mettrie's military service
was with the French in the Silesian wars against Maria
Theresa. The battle of Dettingen was fought in Bavaria and
was won by the Austrians through the aid given by George II
of England to Maria Theresa, The battle of Fontenoy in the
Netherlands was the only victory of the French in this war.
Other accounts of the life of La Mettrie are:
J. Assezat, Introduction to 'X'Homme Machine," Paris, 1865
F. A. Lange, "History of Materialism."
Ph. Damiron, "Histoire de la philosophie du dix-huitieme
siecle," Pans, 1858.
N. Quepat, **La philosophie materialiste au XVIII* siecle.
Essai sur La Mettrie, sa vie, ct scs ceuvres." Paris, 1873.
«r«^rt!r'^"* "^ u. *^.? ^^"^ "^"^ «° PP- '^^'^7. except ref-
erencea to Man a Machme" which are to thi. translation. ThTtrans-
wJL""^°*. .'''^•."^.* ^""'** *^ " °^^ ^"^'^^^ ^ the editor
has made use of translation or of French text
^""V^
^FTW^^'
-rrr
NOTES ON MAN A MACHINE.
I. ^'Matter may well be endowed with the faculty of
thought." Although La Mettrie attempts to "avoid this reef,"
by refraining from the use of these words, yet he asserts
throughout his work that sensations, consciousness, and the
soul itself are modifications of matter and motion.
The possibility of matter being endowed with the faculty
of thought, is denied by Elie Luzac, the publisher of "L'homme
machine," in his work "L'homme plus que machine." In this
work he tries to disprove the conclusions of "L'homme ma-
chine." He says: "We have therefore proved by the idea of
the inert state of matter, by that of motion, by that of rela-
tions, by that of activity, by that of extension, that matter can
not be possessed of the faculty of thinking". .. ."To be brief,
I say, that if, by a material substance, we understand that
matter which falls under the cognizance of our senses, and
which is endowed with the qualities we have mentioned, the
soul can not be material : so that it must be immaterial, and,
for the same reason, God could not have given the faculty of
thinking to matter, since He can not perform contradic-
tions."*
2. "How can we define a being whose nature is absolutely
unknown to us?" La Mettrie uses this as an argument against
the belief in a soul, and yet he later admits that the "nature
of motion is as unknown to us as the nature of matter." It is
difficult then to see why there is more reason to doubt the
existence of spirit, than to doubt the existence of matter.
Locke makes this point very well. "It is for want of reflec-
tion that we are apt to think that our senses show us nothing
but material things. Every act of sensation, when duly con-
Jil2^^. ^*15*i,*?u" a Machine," pp. 10, 12. For sUtement of the
editions to which these Notes malce reference, see pp. 205-207.
r
•I*^il6s»..?% a. T fti, %i^
iSL
. iT^i.^
NOTES.^
NOTE ON FREDERICK THE GREAT'S EULOGY.
This translation is made from the third volume, pp. 159 ff.
of "CEuvres de Frederic II., Roi de Prusse, Publiees du vivant
de I'Auteur/- Berlin, 1789.
La Mettrie was received at the court of Frederick the Great,
when he had been driven from Holland on account of the
heretical teaching of X'Homme Machine," The "Eloge" was
read by Darget, the secretary of the king, at a public meeting
of the Academy of Berlin, to which, at the initiative of Frede-
rick, La Mettrie had been admitted.
The careful reader will not fail to note that Frederick's
arithmetic is at fault, and that La Mettrie died at the age of
forty-one, not forty-three, years.
At a few points, perhaps, the Eloge demands elucidation.
Coutances, like Caen, is a Norman town. St. Malo lies, just
over the border, in Brittany. La Mettrie's military service
was with the French in the Silesian wars against Maria
Theresa. The battle of Dettingen was fought in Bavaria and
was won by the Austrians through the aid given by George II
of England to Maria Theresa. The battle of Fontenoy in the
Netherlands was the only victory of the French in this war.
Other accounts of the life of La Mettrie are:
J. Assezat, Introduction to "L'Homme Machine," Paris, 1865.
F. A. Lange, "History of MateriaHsm."
Ph. Damiron, "Histoire de la philosophie du dix-huitiemc
siecle," Paris, 1858. -
N. Quepat, "La philosophie materialiste au XVIIP siecle.
Essai sur La Mettrie, sa vie, ct scs oeuvrcs." Paris, 1873.
* Page-references are to the editions dted on pp. 305-307, except ref-
erences to "Man a Machine" which are to this translation. The trans-
lated or original title of a French book is dted according as the editor
has made use of translation or of French text.
NOTES ON MAN A MACHINE.
I. "Matter may well he endowed with the faculty of
thought." Although La Mettrie attempts to "avoid this reef,"
by refraining from the use of these words, yet he asserts ''
throughout his work that sensations, consciousness, and the
soul itself are modifications of matter and motion. ^
The possibility of matter being endowed with the faculty
of thought, is denied by Elie Luzac, the publisher of "L'homme
machine," in his work "L'homme plus que machine." In this
work he tries to disprove the conclusions of "L'homme ma-
chine." He says: "We have therefore proved by the idea of
the inert state of matter, by that of motion, by that of rela-
tions, by that of activity, by that of extension, that matter can
not be possessed of the faculty of thinking" "To be brief,
I say, that if, by a material substance, we understand that
matter which falls under the cognizance of our senses, and
which is endowed with the qualities we have mentioned, the
soul can not be material: so that it must be immaterial, and,
for the same reason, God could not have given the faculty of
thinking to matter, since He can not perform contradic-
tions."*
r
2. "How can we define a being whose nature is absolutely
unknown to us?" La Mettrie uses this as an argument against
the belief in a soul, and yet he later admits that the "nature
of motion is as unknown to us as the nature of matter." It is
difficult then to see why there is more reason to doubt the
existence of spirit, than to doubt the existence of matter.
Locke makes this point very well. "It is for want of reflec-
tion that we are apt to think that our senses show us nothing
but material things. Every act of sensation, when duly con-
*"Man More than a Machine," pp. 10, 12. For statement of the
editions to which these Notes make reference, see pp. 205-207.
178
MAN A MACHINE.
sidered, gives us an equal view of both parts of nature, the
corporeal and spiritual."*. .. ."If this notion of immaterial spirit
may have, perhaps, some difficulties in it not easy to be ex-
plained, we have therefore no more reason to deny or doubt
the existence of such spirits, than we have to deny or doubt
the existence of body because the notion of body is cumbered
with some difficulties, very hard and perhaps impossible to be
explained or understood by us."*
3. "Author of the 'Spectacle de la nature* " Noel Antoine
Pluche (1688-1761) was a Jansenist author. He was Director
of the College of Laon, but was deprived of his position on
account of his refusal to adhere to the bull "Unigenitus."
Rollin then recommended him to Gasville, intendant of Nor-
mandy, who entrusted him with his son's education. He
finally settled in Paris. His principal works are: "Spectacle
de la nature," (Paris, 1739) ; "Mecanique des langues et I'art
de les enseigner," (Paris, 1751) ; "Harmonic des Psaumes et
de I'Evangile," (Paris, 1764) ; "Concorde de la geographic des
diflferents ages," (Paris, 1765) *
La Mettrie describes Pluche in the "Essais sur 1 esprit et
les beaux esprits** thus: "Without wit, without taste, he is
Rollin's pedant. A superficial man, he had need of the work
of M. Reaumur, of whom he is only a stale and tiresome imi-
tator in the flat little sayings scattered in his dialogues. It
was with the works of Rollin as with the 'Spectacle de la Na-
ture,' one made the fortune of the other : Gaqon praised Person,
Person praised Ga<;on, and the public praised them both."'
This quotation from La Mettrie occurs in Assezat's edition
of La Mettrie's "L'homme machine," which was published as
the second volume of the series "Singularites physiologiques'
(1865). Assezat was a French publisher and writer. He
was at one time Secretary of the Anthropological Society, and
collaborated with other writers in the publication of "La Re-
vue Nationale," "La Revue de Paris," and "La Pensee nou-
velle." His notes to "L'Homme Machine" show great knowl-
«Locke»8 "Essay Concerning Human Understanding/' Book II. Chap.
XXIII, I IS.
• Ibid., S 31.
•Condensed and translated from La Grande EncychpSdie, Vol 26.
•Translated from a note of Assizat in "L'homme machine."
I
I
I
APPENDIX.
179
edge concerning physiological subjects. He intended to pub-
lish a complete edition of Diderot's works, but overwork on
this undermined his health, so that he was unable to complete
if
4. Torricelli was a physicist and mathematician who lived
from 1608 to 1647. He was a disciple of Galileo, and acted as
his amenuensis for three months before Galileo's death. He
was then nominated as grand-ducal mathematician and pro-
fessor of mathematics in the Florentine Academy. In 1643,
he made his most famous discovery. He found that the height
to which a liquid will rise in a closed tube, depends on the
specific gravity of the liquid, and concludes from this that the
column of liquid is sustained by atmospheric pressure. This
discovery did away with the obscure idea of a fuga vacui, and
laid bare the principle on which mercurial barometers are
constructed. For a long time the mercurial thermometer was
called the "Torricellian tube," and the vacuum which the
barometer includes is still known as a "Torricellian vacuum."'
5. "Only the physicians have a right to speak on this subject"
Luzac says: "'Tis true that if the materiality of the soul was
proved, the knowledge of her would be an object of natural
philosophy, and we might with some appearance of reason
reject all arguments to the contrary which are not drawn from
that science. But if the soul is not material, the investigation
of its nature does not belong to natural philosophy, but to
those who search into the nature of its faculties, and are called
metaphysicians."'
rfe.y'JWan is... a machine.*' This is the first clear statement of
tbir theory, which as the title of the work indicates, is S.ie
central doctrine of this work. Descartes had strongly denied
the possibility of conceiving maiTas a machine. "We may
easily conceive a machine to be so constructed that it emits
vocables, and even that it emits some correspondent to the
action upon it of external objects which cause a change in
its organs,.... but not that it should emit them variously so
•Condensed and translated from La Grande Encyclopedie, Vol. 4.
"* Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th ed., Vol. XXIII.
All references are to this edition.
•"Man More than a Machine," p. 5.
?
180
MAN A MACHINE.
\1
4
'■J
as appositely to reply to what is said in its presence, as men
of the lowest grade of intellect can do."*
et us then take in our hands the staff of experience"
trie repeatedly emphasizes the belief that knowledge
muST come from experience. Moreover he confines this ex-
perience to sense experience, and concludes "L'histoire natu-
relle de Tame" with these words: "No senses, no ideas. The
fewer senses there are: the fewer ideas. No sensations ex-
perienced, no ideas. These principles are the necessary con-
sequence of all the observations and experiences that constitute
the unassailable foundation of this work."
This doctrine is opposed to the teaching of IJcsflyJgs, who
insists that "neither our imagination nor our senses can give
us assurance of anything unless our understanding inter-
vene"*" Moreover Descartes believes that the senses are fal-
lacious, and that the ideal method for philosophy is a method
corresponding to that of mathematics." Condillac and Holbach
agree withLa Mettrie's opinion. Thus, Condillac teaches that man
is nothing more than what he has become by the use of his
senses." And Holbach says: "As soon as we take leave of
experience, we fall into the chasm where our imagination
leads us astray.""
8. "Galen (Galenus) Claudius, 130 to circa 210 A. D. An
eminent Greek physician and philosopher. Bom at Pergamus,
Mysia, he studied both the Platonic and Peripatetic systems
of philosophy. Satyrus instructed him in anatomy. He trav-
eled extensively while young to perfect his education. About
165 A. D. he moved to Rome, and became very celebrated as
a surgeon and practising physician, attending the family of
Marcus Aurelius. He returned to Pergamus, but probably
visited Rome three or four times afterwards. He wrote in
philosophy, logic, and medicine. Many, probably most, of his
works are lost He was the one medical authority for thir-
• "Discourse on Method," Part. V.
» "Discourse on Method," Part IV.
""Meditations," II.
» Traits des sensations," Part IV, Chap. IX, | $•
>* "Systime de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. I.
!
APPENDIX.
181
teen centuries, and his services to logic and to philosophy
were also great."**
9. The author of "LTiistoire de I'ame" is La Mettrie him-
self.
III. "
10. Hippocrates is often termed the "father of medicine." He
was bom in Cos in 460 B. C. He studied medicine under his
father, Heraclides, and Herodicus of Selymbria; and philos-
ophy under Gorgias and Democritus. He was the first to I
separate medicine from religion and from philosophy. He in- 1
sisted that diseases must be treated by the physician, as if
they were governed by purely natural laws. The Greeks had
such respect for dead bodies that Hippocrates could not have
dissected a human body, and consequently his knowledge of
its structure was limited, but he seems to have been an acute
and skilful observer of conditions in the living body. He
wrote several works on medicine, and in one of them showed
the first principles on which the public health must be based.
The details of his life are hidden by tradition, but it is certain
that he was regarded with great respect and veneration by the
Greeks."
fQ>T
[i.\The different combinations of these humors " Com-
partijhis with Descartes's statement that the difference in
men comes from the difference in the construction and posi-
tion of the brain, which causes a difference in the action of the
animal spirits."
12. "This drug intoxicates, like wine, coffee, etc., each in
its own measure, and according to the dose" Descartes also
speaks of the effect of wine. "The vapors of wine, entering
the blood quickly, go from the heart to the brain, where they
are converted into spirits, which being stronger and more
abundant than usual are capable of moving the body in several
strange fashions.""
"Quoted from Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology ,
Vol. I.
» Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. XI.
" "Les passions de I'ame," Part I, Art XV. and Art XXXIX.
"Ibid., Part I, Art. XV.
182
MAN A MACHINE.
13. The quotation from Pope is from the "Moral Essays,"
published 1731 to 1735, Epistle I, i, 69.
14. Jan Baptista Van Helmont (1578-1644) was a Flemish
physician and chemist. He is noted for having demonstrated
the necessity of the balance in chemistry, and for having been
among the first to use the word "gas." His works were pub-
lished as "Ortus Medicinae," 1648."
15. The author of "Lettres sur la physiognomic" was Jacques
Pernety or Pernetti. He was born at Chazelle-sur-Lyon, was
for some years canon at Lyons, and died there in 1777.'
ift
16. Boerhaave. See Note 78.
17. Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis (1698-1759) was a
French mathematician, astronomer and philosopher. He sup-
ported the Newtonian theory against the Cartesians. In 1740
he became president of the Academy of Berlin. He was the
head of the expedition which was sent by Louis XV to meas-
ure a degree of longitude in Lapland. Voltaire satirized Mau-
pertuis in the "Diatribe du Docteur Akakia.""
18. Luzac sums up the preceding facts by saying: "Here are
a great many facts, but what is it they prove? only that the
faculties of the soul arise, grow, and acquire strength in pro-
portion as the body does; so that these same faculties are
weakened in the same proportion as the body is.... But from
all these circumstances it does not follow that the faculty of
thinking is an attribute of matter, and that all depends on the
manner in which our machine is made, that the faculties of the
soul arise from a principle of animal life, from an innate heat
or force, from an irritability of the finest parts of the body,
from a subtil ethereal matter diffused through it, or in a
word, from all these things taken together."**
^ 19. ' ii^ diverse states of the soul are therefore always cor-
''Condensed from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
» Transl^d and condensed from La Grande Encyclopidie, Vol. a6.
"Condensed from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
""Man More than a Machine," p. 23.
APPENDIX.
183
relative with those of the body" This view is in diametrical
opposition to the teaching of Descartes, who says: "The soul
is_JJl.anaturejvhol^^ of the body."" Yet Des-
cartes aIso1tates~thatlhere is airrntimatFconnecTion between
the two. "The Reasonable Soul could by no means be
educed from the power of matter it must be expressly
created ; and it is not sufficient that it be lodged in the human
body, exactly like a pilot in a ship, unless perhaps to move its
members, but i Hs neces s ary for it to b ejp in^^ ?n d !TnitH
'"orecloselyjojh ejjody, in o rder to have^ensat ions and appe-
jites simTIarto ours, and thus constitute a reaHnan."^
HoTbach later emphasizes this close connectiofTbetween body
and soul, which is so insisted upon by La Mettrie. "If freed
from our prejudices we wish to see our soul, or the moving
principle which acts in us, we shall remain convinced that it is
part of our body, that it can not be distinguished from the
body except by an abstraction, that it is but the body itself
considered relatively to some of the functions or faculties to
which its nature and particular organization make it suscep-
tible. We shall see that this soul is forced to undergo the
same changes as the body, that it grows and develops with
the body Finally we can not help recognizing that at some
periods it shows evident signs of weakness, sickness, and
death.""
20. "Peyronie (Frangois Gigot de la), a French surgeon,
born in Montpellier, the fifteenth of January, 1678, died the
twenty-fifth of April, 1747. He was surgeon of the hospital
of Saint-Eloi de Montpellier and instructor of anatomy to the
Faculty; then, in 1704, served in the army. In 1717 he became
reversioner of the position of first surgeon to Louis XV; in
1731, steward of the Queen's palace; in 1735, a doctor of the
King; in 1736, first surgeon of the King, and chief of the
surgeons of the kingdom. The greatest merit of La Peyronie
is for having founded the Academy of Surgery in Paris, and
for having gained special protection for surgery and surgeons
in France. He wrote little."**
""Discourse on Method," V, last paragraph.
" "Systime de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. VIL
■* Translated from La Grande Encyclopidie, Vol. 26.
\
/
A
\
J
'V
I
^■■» —
184
MAN A MACHINE.
21. 'Willis, Thomas (1621-1675), English physician, was
born at Great Bedwin, Wiltshire, on 27th January, 162 1. He
studied at Christ Church, Oxford; and when that city was
garrisoned for the king he bore arms for the Royalists. He
took the degree of bachelor of medicine in 1646, and after the
surrender of the garrison applied himself to the practice of his
profession. In 1660, shortly after the Restoration, he became
Sedleian professor of natural philosophy in place of Dr. Joshua
Cross, who was ejected, and the same year he took the degree
of doctor of physic He was one of the first members of
the Royal Society, and was elected an honorary fellow of the
Royal College of Physicians in 1664. In 1666, he removed
to Westminster, on the invitation of Dr. Sheldon, Archbishop
of Canterbury He died at St. Martin's on nth November,
1675, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.""
22. Fontenelle, Bernard le Bovier de. Born at Rouen, France,
February 11, 1657; died at Paris, January 9, 1757. A French
advocate, philosopher, poet, and miscellaneous writer. He was
the nephew (through his mother) of Comeille, and was 'one
of the last of the Precieux, or rather the inventor of a new
combination of literature and gallantry which at first exposed
him to not a little satire' (Saintsbury). He wrote 'Poesies
pastorales' (1688), 'Dialogues des morts* (1683), 'Entretiens
sur la pluralite des mondes' (1686), 'Histoire des oracles'
(1687), 'Eloges des academiciens' (delivered 1690-1740)."*
23. "In a word, would it be absolutely impossible to teach
the ape a language f I do not think, so." Compare with
this Haeckel's statement of the relation between man's speech
and that of apes. "It is of especial interest that the speech
of apes seems on physiological comparison to be a stage in the
formation of articulate human speech. Among living apes
there is an Indian species which is musical ; the hylobates syn-
dactylus sings a full octave in perfectly pure harmonious half-
tones. No impartial philologist can hesitate any longer to
admit that our elaborate rational language has been slowly
and gradually developed out of the imperfect speech of our
Pliocene simian ancestors.""
"Quoted from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. XXIV.
* Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
" £. Haeckel, "The Riddle of the Universe," Chap. III.
APPENDIX.
185
24- Johann Conrad Amman was born at Schaflfhausen, in
Switzerland, in 1669. After his graduation at Basle, he prac-
tised medicine at Amsterdam. He devoted most of his atten-
tion to the instruction of deaf mutes. He taught them by at-
tracting their attention to the motion of his lips, tongue, and
larynx, while he was speaking, and by persuading them to
imitate these motions. In this way, they finally learned to
articulate syllables and words, and to talk. In his works
"Surdus Loquens," and "Dissertatio de Loquela," he explained
the mechanism of speech, and made public his method of in-
struction. From all accounts it seems that his success with
the deaf mutes was remarkable. He died about 1730."
25- " the great analogy between ape and man "
Compare Haeckel: "Thus comparative anatomy proves to the
satisfaction of every unprejudiced and critical student the sig-
nificant fact that the body of man and that of the anthropoid
ape are not only peculiarly similar, but they are practically one
and the same in every important respect."*
26. Sir William Temple was born in London in 1628. He
attended the Puritan College of Emmanuel, Cambridge, but
left without taking his degree. After an extensive tour on
the continent, he settled in Ireland in 1655. His political career
began with the accession of Charles II in 1660. He is par-
ticularly noted for concluding "The Triple Alliance" between
England, the United Netherlands, and Sweden, and for his
part in bringing about the marriage of William and Mary,
which completed the alliance of England and the Netherlands.
Temple was not as successful in political work at home as
abroad, for he was too honest to care to be concerned in the
intrigues in English affairs, at that time. He retired from
politics and died at Moor Park in 1699.
Temple wrote several works on political subjects. His
Memoirs" were begun in 1682; the first part was destroyed
before it was published, the second part was published without
his consent, and the third part was published by Swift after
Temple's death. His fame rests more on his diplomatic work
than on his writings.**
"Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. I.
» "The Riddle of the Universe," Chap. II.
"Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. XXIII.
«
/
186
MAN A MACHINE.
27. "Trembley (Abraham) a Swiss naturalist, born in Ge-
neva, the third of September, 1700, died in Geneva, the twelfth
of May, 1784. He was educated in his native city, and in the
Hague, where he became tutor of the son of an English resi-
dent, and later the tutor of the young duke of Richmond, with
whom he traveled in Germany and Italy. In 1760, he obtained
the position of librarian at Geneva, and gained a seat in the
council of the Two Hundred.* His admirable works on the
fresh-water snake procured for him his election as member
of the Royal Society of London, and as correspondent of the
Academy of Sciences in Paris. From 1775 to 1782 he pub-
lished several works on natural religion, and articles on
natural history in the 'Philosophical Transactions,' 1742-57-
His most important work is 'Memoires pour servir a Thistoire
d'un genre de polype d'eau douce* (Leyden, 1744; Paris, 2
volumes).""
28. *'What was man before the invention of words and the
knowledge of language? An animal." Compare this with the
statement of Hobbes: "The most noble and profitable inven-
tion of all others was that of Speech, consisting of names or
appellations, and their connexion, without which there had
been amongst men neither commonwealth, nor society, nor
contract, nor peace, no more than amongst lions, bears, and
wolves."""
29. Fontenelle. See note 22.
30. "All the faculties of the soul can he correctly reduced to
pure imagination." Compare with this La Mettrie's state-
ment in "Uhistoire naturelle de I'ame": "The more one studies
all the intellectual faculties, the more convinced one remains,
that they are all included in the faculty of sensation, upon
which they all depend so essentially that without it the soul
could never perform any of its functions."" This resembles
Condillac*s doctrine of sensation: "Judgment, reflexion, de-
sires, passions, etc., are nothing but sensation itself which is
"Translated from La Grande EncyclopSdU, Vol. 31
""Leviathan/' Part I, Chap. IV.
• "L'hiatoire naturelle de I'ame," Chap. XIV. p. I99>
APPENDIX.
187
transformed in diverse ways."** Helvetius also says : "All the
operations of the mind are reducible to sensation.""
31. "See to what one is brought by the abuse of language,
and by the use of those fine words (spirituality, immateriality,
etc.)." Compare Hobbes, "Though men may put together words
of contradictory signification, as spirit znd incorporeal; yet they
/^can never have the imagination of anything answering to
them."«*
32. "Man's preeminent advantage is his organism." Luzac
says: "This no more proves that organization is the chief
merit of man, than that the form of a musical instrument con-
stitutes the chief merit of the musician. In proportion to the
goodness of the instrument, the musician charms by his art,
and the case is the same with the soul. In proportion to the
soundness of the body, the soul is in better condition to exert
her faculties.""
33. "Such is, I think, the generation of intelligence." Luzac
argues against this statement thus: "But if thought and all
the faculties of the soul depended only on the organization
as some pretend, how could the imagination draw a long
chain of consequences from the objects it has embraced ?"*•
34. Pyrrhonism is "the doctrine of Pyrrho of Elis which has
been transmitted chiefly by his disciple Timon. More generally,
radical Scepticism in general."**
35. Pierre Bayle was bom at Carlat in 1647. Although the
child of Protestant parents, he was converted by the Jesuits.
After his reconversion to Protestantism, he was driven out
of France, and took refuge first in Geneva, and then in Holland,
In 1675 ^^ became professor of philosophy at the Protestant
College of Sedan, and in 1681 professor of philosophy and
•* "Traits des sensations," p. 50. Cf. ibid.. Chap. XII (2).
•""Treatise on Man," Sect. II, Chap. I, p. 4. Cf. "Essays
Mind," Essay I, Chap. I, p. 7.
•• "Leviathan," Part I, Chap. XII.
•*"Man More than a Machine," p. 25.
'^ Ibid., p. 26.
••Quoted from Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy, Vol. II.
\
on
"^m" I
188
MAN A MACHINE.
history at Rotterdam. In 1693 he was forced to resign from
his position on account of his religious views.
Bayle was one of the leading French sceptics of the time.
He was a Cartesian, but questioned both the certainty of
one's own existence, and the knowledge derived from it. He
Mdeclared that religion is contrary to the human reason, but
that this fact does not necessarily destroy faith. He distin-
guished religion not only from science, but also from morality,
and vigorously opposed those who considered a certain religion
necessary for morality. He did not openly attack Christianity,
yet all that he wrote awakened doubt, and his work exerted
an extensive influence for scepticism.
His principal work is the "Dictionnaire historique et cri-
tique," published 1695- 1697, and containing a vast amount
of knowledge, expressed in a piquant and popular style. This
fact made the book widely read both by scholars and by super-
ficial readers.
36. Amobius the Elder was bom at Sicca Venerea in Nu-
midia, in the latter part of the third century A. D. He was at
first an opponent of Christianity, but was afterwards converted,
and wrote "Adversus Gentes" as an apology for Christianity.
In this work, he tries to answer the complaints made against
Christians on the ground that' the disasters of the time were
due to their impiety; vindicates the divinity of Christ; and
discusses the nature of the human soul. He concludes that the
soul is not immortal, for he believes that the belief in the
immortality of the soul would have a deteriorating influence
on morality. For translation of his work compare Vol. XIX
of the "Ante-Nicene Christian Library."*®
37. "There exists no soul or sensitive substance without rC'
morse" Condillac had said: "There is something in animals
besides motion. They are not pure machines : they feel."** La
Mettrie also attributed remorse to animals, but believed that
they are none the less machines. Luzac said in comment:
"What renders these systems completely ridiculous, is, that
the persons who pronounce men machines, give them prop-
erties which belie their assertion. If beings are but machines,
why do they grant a natural law, an internal sense, a kind
*• Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. II.
<^ "Traits des animaux," Chap. I, p. 454*
4 !
APPENDIX.
189
of dread? These are ideas which can not be excited by ob-
jects which operate on our senses."** '^
38. "Nature has created us solely to be happy** This is a
statement of the doctrine, which La Mettrie developes in his
principal ethical work "Discours sur le Bonheur." He teaches^
that happiness rests upon bodily pleasure and pain. In "L'his-
toire naturelle de Tame," La Mettrie states that all the pas-
sions can be developed from two fundamental passions, of
which they are but modifications, love and hatred, or desire
and aversion.** Like La Mettrie, Helvetius makes corporeal
pleasure and pain the ruling motives for man's conduct. Thus
he writes: "Pleasure and pain are and always will be the only
principles of action in man."** "Remorse is nothing more
than a foresight of bodily pain to which some crime has ex-/
posed us."*" He definitely makes happiness the end of human
action. "The end of man is self-preservation and the attain-
ment of a happy existence Man, to find happiness, should
save up his pleasures, and refuse all those which might change
into pains The passions always have happiness as an object:
they are legitimate and natural, and can not be called good
or bad except on account of their influence on human beings.
To lead men to virtue, we must show them the advantages of
virtuous actions."*" Holbach, finally, goes further than La
Mettrie or Helvetius, and makes purely mechanical impulses
the motives of man's action. "The passions are ways of
being or modifications of the internal organs, attracted or
repulsed by objects, and are consequently subject in their
own way to the physical laws of attraction and repulsion."** ^
39. "Ixions of Christianity." Ixion, for his treachery, stricken
with madness, was cast into Erebus, where he was continually
scourged while bound to a fiery wheel, and forced to cry:
"Benefactors should be honored."
40. "Who can be sure that the reason for man's existence
**"Man More than a Machine," p. 65.
« "L'histoire naturelle de I'ame," Chap. X, S XII.
*• "Treatise on Man," Chap. X.
^Ihid., Chap. VII.
*• "Le vrai sens du systeme de la nature," Chap. IX.
«7Wi., Vol. I. Chap. VIII, p. 140.
*-i
<:
J
\
190
MAN A MACHINE.
M not simply the fact that he exists?" Luzac opposes this
by saying : "If the reason of man's existence was in man him-
self, this existence would be a necessary consequence of his
own nature; so that his own nature would contain the cause
or reason of his existence. Now since his own nature would
imply the cause of his existence, it would also imply his
existence itself, so that man could no more be considered as
non-existent than a circle can be considered without radii or
a picture without features or proportions If the existence
of man was in man himself, he would then be an invariable
being."**
41. "Fenelon (Francois de Salignac de la Mothe-Fenelon),
bom at Chateau de Fenelon, Dordogne, France, August 6,
1651, died at Cambrai, France, January 7, 1715. A celebrated
French prelate, orator, and author. He became preceptor of
the sons of the dauphin in 1689, and was appointed archbishop
of Cambrai in 1695. His works include 'Les aventures de
Telemaque* (1699), 'Dialogues des morts' (1712),, Traite de
I'education des filles' (1688), 'Explication des maximes des
saints' (1697), etc. His collected works were edited by Le-
clere (38 vols., 1827-1830).'
M4»
42. "Nieuwentyt (Bernard), a Dutch mathematician, bom
in Westgraafdak the tenth of August 1654, diet at Purmerend
the thirtieth of May, 1718. An unrelenting Cartesian, he
combated the infinitesimal calculus, and wrote a polemic
against Leibnitz, concerning this subject. He wrote a theo-
logical dissertation translated into French under the title
"L'existence de Dieu demontree par les merveilles de la
nature' (Paris, 1725).'"*
43. "Abadie, James (Jacques), bom at Nay, Basse-Pyre-
nees, probably in 1654; died at London, September 25, 1725.
A noted French Protestant theologian. He went to Berlin
about 1680 as minister of the French church there, and thence
to England and Ireland; was for a time minister of the French
church in the Savoy; and settled in Ireland as dean of Killaloe
in 1699. His chief work is the Traite de la verite de la reli-
«"Man More than a Machine," pp. 71 and 72.
•Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
" Translated from La Grand* Encyclopidie, Vol. 34.
APPENDIX.
191
gion chretienne' (1684), with its continuation Traite de la
divinite de notre Seigneur Jesus-Christ' (1689).""
44. "Derham (William), English theologian and scholar,
born in Stoughton, near Worcester, in 1657, died at Upminster
in 1735. Pastor of Upminster in the county of Essex, he
could peacefully devote himself to his taste for mechanics and
natural history. Besides making studies of watch-making, and
of fish, birds, and insects, published in part in the Transactions
of the Royal Society, he wrote several works on religious
philosophy. The most important, which was popular for a long
time and was translated into French (1726), has as title
'Physico-Theology, or the Demonstration of the Existence and
the Attributes of God, by the Works of His Creation' (1713).
He wrote as complement, in 1714, his 'Astro-Theology, or the
Demonstration of the Existence and Attributes of God by
the Observation of the Heavens.' ""
45. Rais, or Cardinal de Retz (1614-1679), was a French
politician and author. From his childhood he was intended
for the church. He took an active part in the movement
against Cardinal Mazarin, and later became cardinal, but lost
his popularity, and was imprisoned at Vincennes. After es-
caping from there he returned to France and settled in Lor-
raine, where he wrote his 'Memoires,' which tell of the court
life of his time."
46. Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694) was a renowned Italian
anatomist and physiologist. He held the position of lecturer
on medicine at Bologna in 1656, a few months later became
professor at Pisa, was made professor at Bologna in 1660,
went from there to Messina, though he later returned to Bo-
logna. In 1691 he became physician to Pope Innocent XH.
Malpighi is often known as the founder of microscopic anat-
omy. He was the first to see the marvelous spectacle of the
circulation of the blood on the surface of a frog's lung. He
discovered the vesicular structure of the human lung, the
structure of the secreting glands, and the mucous character
"Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
"Translated from La Grande Encyclopedie, Vol. 14
"Condensed from the Century Dictionary, Vol. X.
/
192
MAN A MACHINE.
of the lower stratum of the epidermis. He was the first to
undertake the finer anatomy of the braifl, and he accurately
described the distribution of grey matter, and of the fibre
tracts in the cord His works are: "De pulmonibus (Bologna,
1661), "Epistolae anatomicae narc. Malpighi et Car. Fracas-
sati" (Amsterdam, 1662), "De Viscerum Structura" (London,
1669), "Anatome Plantarum" (London, 1672), "De Structura
Glandularum conglobatarum" (London, 1689).**
47. Deism is a system of thought which arose in the latter
part of the seventeenth century. Its most important represen-
tatives in England were Toland, Collins, Chubb, Shaftsbury,
and Tindal. They insisted on freedom of thought and speech,
and claimed that reason is superior to any authority. They
denied the necessity of any supernatural revelation, and were
consequently vigorously opposed by the church. Partly be-
cause of this opposition by the church, many of them argued
against Christianity, and tried to show that an observance of
moral laws is the only religion necessary for man. They
taught that happiness is man's chief end, and that, since man is
a social being, his happiness can best be gained by mutual
helpfulness. Although they declared that nature is the work
of a perfect being, they had a mechanical conception of the
relation of CJod to the worid, and did not, like later theists,
find evidence of God's presence in all the works of nature."
48. "Vanini, Lucilio, self-styled Julius Csesar. Bom at Tau-
risano, kingdom of Naples, about 1585 ; burned at the stake at
Toulouse, France, February 19, 1619. An Italian free thinker,
condemned to death as an atheist and magician. He studied
at Rome and Padua, became a priest, traveled in Germany
and the Netheriands, and began teaching at Lyons, but was
obliged to flee to England, where he was arrested. After his
release he returned to Lyons, and about 1617 settled at Tou-
louse. Here he was arrested for his opinions, condemned,
and on the same day executed. His chief works are: *Amphi-
theatrum aetemae Providentiae' (1615), *De admirandis na-
turae reginae deaeque mortalium arcanis* (i6i6).'"*
■* Condensed from the Encyclopaedia BrUannica, Vol. XV.
«Cf. A. W. Benn, "History of English Rationalism," Vol. I, Chap.
MI. . ^
••Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. X.
APPENDIX.
193
49. Desbarreaux (Jacques Vallee). A French writer, bom
at Paris in 1602, who died at Chalon-sur-Saone the ninth of
May, 1673. He wrote a celebrated sonnet on penitence, but
was rather an unbeliever and sceptic than a penitent Guy
Patin, hearing of his death, said: "He infected poor young
people by his licence. His conversation was very dangerous
and destructive to the public.""
50. Boindin (Nicolas), French scholar and author, bom the
twenty-ninth of May 1676 at Paris, where he died the thirtieth
of November 1751. He was in the army for a while, but re-
tired on account of ill health. He then gave himself up to
literature, and wrote several plays. In 1706 he was elected
Royal censor and associate of the Academy of Inscriptions.
His liberty, or, as it was then called, license of mind, shut the
doors of the French Academy to him, and would have caused
his expulsion from the Academy of Inscriptions if he had
not been so old. He died without retracting his opinions.'
68
51. Denis Diderot (1713-1784) was one of the leaders of
the intellectual movement of the eighteenth century. He was
at first influenced by Shaftsbury, and was enthusiastic in his
support of natural religion. In his "Pensees philosophiques"
(1746) he tries to show that the discoveries of natural science
are the strongest proofs for the existence of God. The won-
ders of animal life are enough to destroy atheism "for ever.
Yet, while he opposes atheism, he also opposes vigorously the
intolerance and bigotry of the church. He claims that many
of the attributes ascribed to God are contrary to the very idea
of a just and loving God.
Later, Diderot was influenced by La Mettrie and by Hol-
bach, and became an advocate of materialism which he set
forth in "Le reve d'Alembert" and in the passages contributed
to the "Systeme de la nature." Diderot was the editor of
the "Encyclopedic.""
52. Trembley. See note 27.
"Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopedie, Vol. 14.
••Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopedie, Vol. 7.
■•Condensed from F. A. Lange, "History of Materialism," Vol. II,
Chap. I, and from W. Windelband, "History of Philosophy," Part V,
Chap. I.
\i
194
MAN A MACHINE.
53. "Nothing which happens, could have failed to happen,**
An enunciation of the doctrine so insisted upon by Holbach.
"The whole universe shows us only an immense and un-
interrupted chain of cause and effect."** "Necessity which
regulates all the movements of the physical world, controls
also those of the moral world.""
54. "All these evidences of a creator, repeated thousands. . .of
times ...are self-evident only to the anti-Pyrrhonians." La Met-
trie holds an opinion contrary not only to that of Descartes
and Locke, but also to that of Toland, Hobbes, and Condillac.
Descartes, for instance, says : "Thus I very clearly see that the
certitude and truth of all science depends on the knowledge
alone of the true God."" Hobbes asserts : "For he that from
any effect he seeth come to pass should reason to the next and
immediate cause thereof, and from thence to the cause of that
cause, shall at last come to this, that there must be, as
even the heathen philosophers confessed, one first mover, that
is a first and an eternal cause of all things, which is that
which men mean by the name of God."" Toland's words are :
"All the jumbling of atoms, all the Chances you can suppose
for it, could not bring the Parts of the Universe into their
present Order, nor continue them in the same, nor cause the
Organization of a Flower or a Fly The Infinity of Matter
....excludes an extended corporeal God, but not a pure
Spirit or immaterial Being."** Condillac writes : "A first cause,
independent, unique, infinite, eternal, omnipotent, immutable,
intelligent, free, and whose providence extends over all things :
that is the most perfect notion of God that we can form in
this life."* Locke declares: "From what has been said it is
plain to me we have a more certain knowledge of the existence
of a God than of anything our senses have not immediately
discovered to us. Nay I presume I may say, that we more
certainly know that there is a God, than that there is anything
else without us."**
••"Syst^mc de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. I, p. 12.
«/6»d.. Vol. II. Chap. XI,. Cf. Vol. I, Chap. VIL
""Meditations," III and V.
•"Leviathan," Part I, Chap. XII.
•"Letters to Serena," V, p. 235.
•"Traiti des animaux," Chap. VI, p. 585.
•"Essay Concerning Human Understanding," Book IV, Chap. X.
APPENDIX.
195
SS. 'Tucretius (Titus Lucretius Cams). Bom at Rome,
probably about 96 B. C, died October 15, 55 B. C A celebrated
Roman philosophical poet. He was the author of *De rerum
natura,' a didactic and philosophical poem in six books, treat-
ing of physics, of psychology, and (briefly) of ethics from the
Epicurean point of view. He committed suicide probably in a
fit of insanity. According to a popular but doubtless erroneous
tradition, his madness was due to a love-phiUer administered
to him by his wife.'
t>n
56. "Lamy (Bernard) was born in Mans in the year 1640.
He studied first in the college of this city. He later went to
Paris, and at Saumar studied philosophy under Charles de la
Fontenelle, and theology under Andre Martin and Jean Le-
porc. He was at length called to teach philosophy in the city
of Angers. He wrote a great many books on theological sub-
jects. His philosophical works are: *L'art de parler' (1675),
Traite de mechanique, de I'equilibre, des solides et des li-
queurs* (1679), Traite de la grandeur en general' (1680),
'Entretiens sur les sciences' (1684), 'Elements de geometrie/
(1685).""
57. "The eye sees only because it is formed and placed as it
is." La Mettrie doubts whether there is any purpose in the
world. Condillac, on the other hand, teaches that purpose and
intelligence are shown forth in the universe. "Can we see the
order of the parts of the universe, the subordination among
them, and notice how so many different things compose such
a permanent whole, and remain convinced that the cause of
the universe is a principle without any knowledge of its effects,
which without purpose, without intelligence, relates each being
to particular ends, subordinated to a general end?""
58. "Non nostrum inter vos tantas componere lites." Vergil,
Eclogue III, line 108.
59. "The universe will never he happy unless it is atheistic."
Although La Mettrie calls this a "strange opinion" it is clear
« Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
•Translated and condensed from the Dictionnatre des Sciences phiiO'
sophtques. Vol. Ill, Paris, 1847.
• "Trait* des animaux," Chap. VI.
'^v
Vi
t\
I
\
(
196
MAN A MACHINE.
that he secretly sympathizes with it. Holbach afltois this doc-
trine very emphatically. "Experience teaches us that sacred opin-
ions were the real source of the evils of human beings. Ig-
norance of natural causes created gods for them. Imposture
made these gods terrible. This idea hindered the progress of
reason."^ "An atheist is a man who destroys chimeras
harmful to the human race, in order to lead men back to
nature, to experience, and to reason, which has no need of
rfl«Qurse to ideal powers, to explain the operations of nature.
>m
^he soul is therefore but an empty word" Contrast
tl!(k wiAi Descartes's statement: "And certainly the ide* I
hsiVe^OT th^^ffliman mind.... is incomparably more distinct
. than the idea of any corporeal object.*'" Compare this doc-
trine, also, with Holbach's assertion: "Those who have dis-
tinguished the soul from the body seem to have only distin-
guished their brains from themselves. Truly the brain is the
common center, where all the nerves spread in all parts of
the human body, terminate and join together. . . .The more
experience we have, the more we are convinced that the word
'spirit' has no meaning even to those who have invented it,
and can be of no use either in the physical or in the moral
world.""
6i. William Cowper (1666-1709) was an English anatomist
He was drawn into a controversy with Bidloo, the Dutch
physician, by publishing under his own name Bidloo's work
on the anatomy of human bodies. His principal works are:
"Myotamia reformata" (London, 1694) and "Glandularum de-
scriptio" (1702)."
62. William Harvey (1578-1657), an English physician and
physiologist, is renowned for his discovery of the circulation
of the blood. He was educated at Canterbury and Cambridge,
and took his doctor's degree at Cambridge in 1602. During
^ Systimc dc la nature," Vol. II, Chap. XVI, p. 451.
» JWi.. Chap. XXVI, p. 485. Cf. Luzac's criticism in "Man More than a
Machine, p. 94.
""Meditations," IV.
" "Systcme dc la nature," Vol. I, Chap. VII, pp. 121-iaa.
*• Condensed and trantlated from La Grande Encyclopidii, Vol. 13.
APPENDIX.
197
his life he held the position of Lumleian lecturer at the Col-
lege of Physicians, and of physician extraordinary to James I.
His principal works are: "Exercitatio de motu cordis et
sanguinis" (1628), and "Exercitationes de generatione anima-
hum" (1651)."
6^. Francis Bacon (1551-1626) was one of the first to re-
volt against scholasticism and to introduce a new method into
science and philosophy. He claimed that to know reahty, and
consequently to gain new power over reality, man must stop
studying conceptions, and study matter itself. Yet he did
not himself know how to gain a more accurate knowledge of
nature, so that he could not put into practice the method
which he himself advocated. His works are full of scholastic
conceptions, though many of the implications of his system
are materialistic. Lange claims,^' indeed, that if Bacon had
been more consistent and daring, he would have reached
strictly materialistic conclusions. The account of the motion
of the heart of the dead convict is found in "Sylva Sylvarum.""
This book, published in 1627, a year after Bacon's death, con-
tains the account of Bacon's experiments, and of his theories
in matters of physiology, physics, chemistry, medicine, and
psychology.
64. Robert Boyle, one of the greatest natural philosophers
of his age, studied at Eton for three years, and then became
the private pupil of the rector of Stalbridge. He traveled
through France, Switzerland, and Italy, and while at Florence,
studied the work of Galileo. He decided to devote his life
to scientific work, and in 1645 became a member of a society
of scientific men, which later grew into the Royal Society of
London. His principal work was the improvement of the air-
pump, and by that the discovery of the laws governing the
pressure and volume of gases.
Boyle was also deeply interested in theology. He gave lib-
erally for the work of spreading C:hristianity in India and
America, and by his will endowed the "Boyle Lectures" to
"Condensed from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
" F. A. Lange, "History of Materialism," Vol. I, Sec. II, Chap. III.
""Sylva Sylvanim sive Historia Naturalis Latio Transcripta a 1.
Gruteo. Lug. Batavos, 1648. Cf. Bk. IV. Experiment 400. *^ ''
198
MAN A MACHINE.
demonstrate the Christian religion against atheists, theists,
pagans, Jews, and Mohammedans.'*
65. Nicolas Stenon was born at Copenhagen, 163 1, and died
at Schwerin in 1687. He studied at Leyden and Paris, and
then settled in Florence, where he became the physician of the
grand duke. In 1672 he became professor of anatomy at
Florence, but three years later he gave up this posiiton and
entered the church. In 1677 he was made Bishop of Heliopolis
and went to Hanover, then to Munster, and finally to Schwerin.
His principal work is the "Discours sur I'anatomie du cer-
veau" (Paris, 1669)."
66. La Mettrie's account of involuntary movements is much
like that of Descartes. Descartes says: "If any one quickly
passes his hand before our eyes as if to strike us, we shut
our eyes, because the machinery of our body is so composed
that the movement of this hand towards our eyes excites an-
other movement in the brain, which controls the animal spirits
in the muscles that close the eyelids."**
67. "The brain has its muscles for thinking, as the legs have
muscles for walking/' Neither Condillac nor Helvetius go
so far. Helvetius explicitly states that it is an open question
whether sensation is due to a material or to a spiritual sub-
stance.*
68. Giovanni Alfonso Borelli (1608-1679) was the head of
the so-called iatro-mathematical sect. He tried to apply mathe-
matics to medicine in the same way in which it had been
applied to the physical sciences. He was wise enough to
restrict the application of his system to the motion of the
muscles, but his followers tried to extend its application and
were led into many absurd conjectures. Borelli was at first
professor of mathematics at Pisa, and later professor of medi-
cine at Florence. He was connected with the revolt of Mes-
sina and was obliged to leave Florence. He retired to Rome,
*• Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. IV.
*• Translated and condensed from La Grand* Encyclopidie, Vol. 30.
» "Les passions de I'ame," Part I, Art. 13.
« "Essays on the Mind/' Essay I, Chap. I, pp. 4^.
APPENDIX.
199
where he was under the protection of Christina, Queen of
Sweden, and remained there until his death in 1679."*
|"For one order that the will gives, it bows a hundred
jto the yoke." Descartes, on the other hand, teaches that
tht^oul has direct control over its voluntary actions and
thoughts, and indirect control over its passions.** La Mettrie
goes further than to limit the extent of the will, and questions
whether it is ever free : "The sensations which affect us de-
cide the soul either to will or not to will, to love or to hate
these sensations according to the pleasure or the pain which
they cause in us. This state of the soul thus determined by
its sensations is called the will."" Holbach insists on this
point and contends that all freedom is a delusion: "[Man's]
birth depends on causes entirely outside of his power; it is
without his permission that he enters this system where he
has a place; and without his consent that, from the moment
of his birth to the day of his death, he is continually modified
by causes that influence his machine in spite of his will, modify
his being, and alter his conduct. Is not the least reflexion
enough to prove that the solids and fluids of which the body
is composed, and that the hidden mechanism that he considers
independent of external causes, are perpetually under the in-
fluence of these causes, and could not act without them? Does
he not see that his temperament does not depend on himself,
that his passions are the necessary consequences of his tem-
perament, that his will and his actions are determined by these
same passions, and by ideas that he has not given to himself.?
....In a word, everything should convince man that during
every moment of his life, he is but a passive instrument in the
hands of necessity.""
)
\7o. The
NL.. ^ ^^^^^y oi animal spirits, held by Galen and elab-
oratetHjy Descart§§^ that the nerves are hollow tubes con-
taining a v^Hatile liquid, the animal spirits. The animal spirits
were supposed to circulate from the periphery to the brain
" Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. IV.
" "Les passions de I'ame," Part I, Art. 41.
p-le'r^*"'*"**'^ naturelle de I'ame," Chap. XII, p. 164. Cf. Chap. XII.
« "Systime de la nature," Vol. I, Chap. VI, pp. B9S,
200
MAN A MACHINE.
and back again, and to perform by their action all the func-
tions of the nerves.
71. Berkeley uses the fact that the color of objects varies,
as one argument for his idealistic conclusion."
72. It is hard to tell what Pythagoras himself taught, but it
is certain that he taught the kinship of animals and men, and
upon this kinship his rule for the abstinence from flesh was
probably based. Among the writings of the later Pythagoreans
we find strange rules for diet which are plainly genuine
taboos. For example they are commanded "to abstain from
beans, not to break bread, not to eat from a whole loaf, not
to eat the heart, etc""
71. Plato forbade the use of wine in his ideal republic."
74- "Nature's first care, when the chyle enters the blood, is
to excite tn it a kind of fever." Thus, warmth is the first
necessity for the body. Compare with this, Descartes's state-
ment: "There is a continual warmth in our heart,. .. .this fire
is the bodily principle of all the movements of our members."*
This is one of the many instances in which La Mettrie's ac-
count of the mechanism of the body is similar to that of
Descartes.
75. "Stahl (George Ernst), bom at Ansbach, Bavaria, Oc-
tober 21, 1660; died at Berlin, May 14, 1734. A noted German
chemist, physician of the King of Prussia from 1716. His
works include: Theoria medica vera' (1707), *Experimenta
et observationes chemicae' (1731), etc."**
76. Philip Hecquet (1661-1737) was a celebrated French
physician. He studied at Rheims, and in 1688 became the
physician of the nuns of Port Royal des Champs. He re-
turned to Paris in 1693 and took his doctor's degree in 1697.
""Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous," I, Open Court edition;
pp. 27, 2%, 29. Cf. "Principles of Human Knowledge," par. 10, 15.
w Quoted from J. Burnet, "Early Greek Philosophy," Chap. II.
"Republic III, 403.
» 'Les passions de Tame," Part I, Art. VIII.
" Quoted from the Century Dictionary, Vol. X.
APPENDIX.
201
He was twice dean of the faculty of Paris. In 1727 he be-
came the physician of the religious Carmelites of the suburb
of Saint Jacques, and remained their physician for thirty-
two years."
77. The quotation: "All men may not go to Corinth!* is
translated from Horace, Ep. i, 19, 36. "Non cuivis homini
contigit adire Corinthum."
78. Hermann Boerhaave was born at Voorhout near Leyden,
on December 31, 1668. His father, who belonged to the cler-
ical profession, destined his son for the same calling and so
gave him a liberal education. At the University of Leyden,
he studied under Gronovius, Ryckius and Frigland. At the
death of his father, Boerhaave was left without any provision
and supported himself by teaching mathematics. Vandenberg,
the burgomaster of Leyden, advised him to study medicine,
and he decided to devote himself to this profession. In 1693
he received his degree and began to practice medicine. In
1701 he was made "Lecturer on the Institutes of Medicine" at
the University of Leyden. Thirteen years later he was ap-
pointed Rector of the University, and the same year became
Professor of Practical Medicine there. He introduced into the
university the system of clinical instruction. Boerhaave's
merit was widely recognized, and his fame attracted many
medical students from all Europe to the University of Leyden.
Among these was La Mettrie whose whole philosophy was
profoundly influenced by the teaching of Boerhaave. In 1728
Boerhaave was elected into the Royal Academy of Sciences of
Paris, and two years later he was made a member of the Royal
Society of London. In 1731 his health compelled him to resign
the Rectorship at Leyden. At this time he delivered an ora-
tion, "De Honore, Medici Servitute." He died after a long
illness on April 23, 1738. The city of Leyden erected a monu-
ment to him in the Church of St. Peter, and inscribed on it:
"Salutifero Boerhaavii genio Sacrum."
Boerhaave was a careful and brilliant student, an inspiring
teacher, and a skilful practitioner. There are remarkable ac-
counts of his skill in discovering symptoms, and in diagnosing
diseases. His chief works are: "Institutiones Medicae" (Ley-
•* Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopidie, Vol. 19.
\>
\
202
MAN A MACHINE.
\o^<^''
I
den, 1708) ; "Aphorismi de cognoscendls et curandis Morbis"
(Leyden, 1709), "Libellus de Materia Medica et Remediorum
Formulis" (Leyden, 1719), "Institutiones et Experimentae
Chemicae" (Paris, 1724)."
79. Willis. (See Note 21.)
80. Claude Perrault (1613-1688) was a French physician and
architect. He received his degree of doctor of medicine at
Paris and practised medicine there. In 1673 he became a mem-
ber of the Royal Academy of Sciences. Ahhough he never
abandoned his vjrork in mathematics, in the natural sciences, and
in medicine, he is more noted as an architect than as a phy-
sician or scientist. He was the architect of one of the colon-
nades of the Louvre, and of the Observatory."
81. "Matter is self "moved" In "L'histoire naturelle de I'ame"
(/ La Mettrie claims that motion is one of the essential properties
of matter. See "L'histoire naturelle de I'ame," Chap. V.
82. "The nature of motion is as unknown to us as that of
matter." Unlike La Mettrie, Toland holds that it is possible
to know the nature of matterT^arRr declares that motion and
matter can not be defined, because their nature is self-evi-
dent.** Holbach, resembling La Mettrie, teaches that it is
futile to seek to know the ultimate nature of matter, or the
cause for its existence. "Thus if any one shall ask whence
matter came, we shall say that it has alv/ays existed. If any
one ask, whence came movement in matter, we shall answer
that for this same reason matter must have moved from eter-
nity, since motion is a necessary consequence of its existence,
its essence, and of its primitive properties, such as extent,
weight, impenetrability, shape, etc The existence of matter
is a fact ; the existence of motion is another fact."*
83. Huyghens (Christian) was born at The Hague, 1629, and
died there in 1695. He was a Dutch physicist, mathematician,
•■Condensed from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. III.
"Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopkdie, Vol. 26.
■^^ •♦"Letters to Serena," V.
•» "Systeme de la nature," Vol. II, Chap. II, p. 32.
APPENDIX.
203
and astronomer. He is celebrated for the invention of the
pendulum clock which could measure the movements of the
planets, for the improvement of the telescope, and for the
development of the wave-theory of light. His principal work
is "Horologium Oscillatorium" (1673).'*
84. Julien Leroy (1686-1759) was a celebrated French watch-
maker. He excelled in the construction of pendulums and
of large clocks. Some have attributed the construction of the
first horizontal clock to him, but this is doubtful. Among
many other inventions and improvements of clocks, he in-
vented the compensating pendulum which bears his name.**
85. Jacques de Vaucanson (1709-1782) was a French mech-
anist. From his childhood he was always interested in mech-
anical contrivances. In 1738 he presented to the French
Academy his remarkable flute player. Soon after, he made a
duck which could swim, eat, and digest, and an asp which
could hiss and dart on Cleopatra's breast. He later held the
position of inspector of the manufacture of silk. In 1748 he
was admitted to the Academy of Sciences. His machines were
left to the Queen, but she gave them to the Academy, and in
the disturbances which followed the pieces were scattered and
lost. Vaucanson published: "Mecanisme d'un fluteur auto-
mate" (Paris, 1738).'
08
^[T^^^S^skc^^nderstood animal nature; he was the first
te completely that animals are pure machines" Contrast
this with La Mettrie's former reference in "L'histoire na-
turelle de Tame" to "this absurd system *that animals are pure
machines.' Such a laughable opinion," he adds, "has never
gained admittance among philosophers. .. .Experience does
not prove the faculty of feeling any less in animals than in
men."" It is evident that La Mettrie's opposition to this
'absurd system' was based upon his insistence on the similarity
of men and animals. In "L'homme machine" he argues from
the same premiss, that animals are machines, that men are
like animals, and that therefore men also are machines.
••Condensed from the Century Dictionary, Vol. IX.
•'Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopedie, Vol. 33.
•• Translated and condensed from La Grande Encyclopidie, VoL 3U
••"L'histoire naturelle de I'ame," Chap. VI.
■/ ('
I
/ ■
\)M
,lrt^
J
NOTES ON THE EXTRACTS FROM "L'HISTOIRE
NATURELLE DE UAME."
87. Matter, according to La Mettrie, is endowed with ex-
tensity, the power of movement ,and the faculty of sensation.
As La Mettrie says, this conception was not held by Des-
,c^es, who thought that the essential attribute of matteT¥
e^nsion. "The nature of body consists not in weight, hard-
nessTcolor, and the like but in extension alone—in its being
a substance extended in length, breadth and height. "'"» Hobbes's
conception of matter is very similar to that of La MettrlT^e
specifically attributes motion to matter: "Motion and magni-
tude are the most common accidents of all bodies."'" He does
not name sensation as an attribute of matter, but he reduces
sensation^o motion. "Sense is some internal motion in the
sentient.*'"* Since motion is one of the attributes of matter,
and since matter is the only reality in the universe, sensation
must be attributed to matter.
88. La Mettrie always insists that matter has the power of
movmg Itself, and resents any attempt to show that the motion
IS due to an outside agent. In this opinion he is in agreement
with Toland. Toland says that those who have regarded
matter as inert havThad to find some efficient cause for mo-
tion ; and to do this, they have held that all nature is animated.
This pretended animation, however, is utterly useless, since
matter is itself endowed with motion.
89. "This absurd system. . . .that animals are pure machines"
(See Note 86.)
»«> "Principles of Metaphysics," Part II, Prop. 4.
- >« "De Corpor-," Part III. Chap. XV.
^Ibid.. Part IV. Chap. XXV. (a).
V
WORKS CONSULTED AND CITED IN THE NOTES.
(An asterisk indicates the edition to which reference is made.)
JULIEN OfFRAY de LA MetTRIE.
1745 "L'histoire naturelle de I'ame." The Hague. (This
work appears as "Traite de I'ame" in La Mettrie's
collected works.)
1748 "L'homme machine." Leyden.
"L'homme machine par La Mettrie, avec une introduc-
tion et des notes." J. Assezat. Paris, 1865.
1751 "CEuvres philosophiques." London (Berlin).
1764 *"(Euvres philosophiques de Monsieur de la Mettrie,"
Amsterdam. Besides "L'homme machine" and "Traite
de Tame," the "(Euvres philosophiques" contain the
following (dates of first publication added in paren-
theses) :
"Abrege des systemes."
"L'homme plante" (1748).
**Les animaux plus que machines" (1750).
"L'Anti-Seneque" (1748).
"L'art de jouir" (1751).
*Systeme d'Epicure."
Ul
Elie Luzac.
1748 "LTiomme plus que machine." London (Leyden).
*"Man More than a Machine," translated from the French
of Elie Luzac, and printed with the translation of
"Man a Machine" for G. Smith, 1750.
R6n£ Descartes.
1637 "Essais philosophiques," including "Discours de la me-
thode.
♦"The Discourse on Method," translated by John Veitch.
Open Court Publishing Co., 1903.
1641 "Meditationes de prima philosophia."
\
206
MAN A MACHINE.
1644 "Principia philosophiae."
♦"The Meditations and Selections from the Principles of
Philosophy," translated by John Veitch. Open Court
Publishing Co., 1905.
1650 "Les passions de Tame/*
♦"(Euvres de Descartes," Vol. IV. Edited by Victor Cou-
sin, Paris, 1824.
John Toland.
1704 ♦"Letters to Serena." London. Printed for Bernard
Lintot.
Thomas Hobbes.
1650 "Human Nature or the Fundamental Elements of Poli-
cie." London.
1651 "Leviathan; Or the Matter, Form, and Power of a Com-
monwealth, Ecclesiastical & Civil." London.
1655 "Elementorum Philosophiae Sectio Prima: De Corpore."
London.
♦English Works edited by Sir William Molesworth, 1839-
45- Volume III. Leviathan.
Volume IV. Human Nature.
John Locke.
1690 "An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. London.
♦Edition of Books II and IV (with omissions) preceded
by the English version of Le Clerc's "Eloge historique
de feu Mr. Locke," ed. M. W. Calkins. Open Court
Publishing Co., 1905.
Etienne Bon not de Condillac.
1754 "Traite des sensations." Paris and London.
1755 "Traite des animaux." Paris and London.
♦"(Euvres completes," 23 vols. Edited by Guillaume Ar-
noux and Mousnier. Paris, 1798. Vol. III. "Traite
des sensations. Traite des animaux."
Baron P. H. D. von Holbach.
1770 "Systeme de la nature," par M. Mirabaud [really Von
Holbach] .
♦Nouvelle edition avec des notes et des corrections par
Diderot. Paris, 182 1.
APPENDIX.
207
C. A. Helvetius.
1758 "De I'esprit." Paris.
♦"De I'esprit, or Essays on the mind and its several facul-
ties," translated from the French by Wiliam Mulford.
London, 1810.
1772 "De I'homme, de ses facultes, et de son education." 2
vols. London.
♦"A Treatise on Man ; His Intellectual Faculties and His
Education," translated from the French, with notes,
by W. Hooper, M. D., 1810.
Frederick the Great.
♦"(Euvres de Frederic II., Roi de Prusse, publiees du
vivant de I'auteur." Berlin, 1789: "Eloge de Julien
Offray de la Mettrie," Vol. Ill, pp. IS9 ff-
Francis Bacon.
♦"Sylva Sylvarum, sive Historia Naturalis," transcripta
a J. Grutero Lug. Batavor. 1648.
F. A. Lange.
♦"History of Materialism," translated by Ernest Chester
Thomas, Boston, 1877.
W. Windelband.
♦"History of Philosophy," translated by J. H. Tufts, New
York, 1898.
A. W. Benn.
♦"History of English Rationalism in the Nineteenth Cen-
tury." London, 1906.
'Xa Grande Encyclopedic . Inventaire Raisonne des Sciences,
des Lettres, et des Arts, par une Societe de Savants et de
Gens de Lettres." Paris, 1885- 1903.
WT"
The Encyclopaedia Britannica. A Dictionary of Arts, Sci-
ences, and General Literature." Ninth Edition.
"The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia." New York.
"Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology," edited by J. M.
Baldwin. London and New York, 1901.
INDEX OF NAMES AND TITLES.
(Italicised numerals refer to pages of the French text.)
I!
Abadie, James (Jacques), 51, 123,
190.
"Abr^ge des systemes philoso-
phiques," by La Mettrie, 165,
166, 170, 205.
Academy of Berlin, 176, 182.
Academy of Inscriptions, 193.
Academy of Sciences at Paris,
186, 203.
Academy of Surgery at Paris, 183.
"Adversus (Rentes," by Arnobius,
x88.
America, 197.
Amman, Johann Conrad, ^p, 50,
100, 101, 102, 185.
"Amphitheatrum aeternae Provi-
dentiae," by Vanini, 192.
Amsterdam, 185.
"Anatome Plantarum," by Mal-
pighi, 192.
Angers, 195.
Ansbach, 200.
"Ante-Nicene Christian Library,"
188.
Anthropological Society, 178.
Anti-Pyrrhonians, 5^, 125, 194.
•'Aphorismi de cognoscendis et cu-
randis Morbis," by Boerhaave, 5,
303.
"Aphrodisiacus," by Boerhaave, 4.
Aristotle, 40, iii.
Arnobius the Elder, 42, 113, 188.
Arnoux, Guillaume, 206.
"L'art de jouir," by La Mettrie,
205.
"L'art de parler," by Lamy, 195.
Assezat, J., 176, 178, 205.
"Astro-Theology," by Derham,
191.
Bacon, Francis, 57, sg, 129, 130,
197. 207.
Baldwin, J. M., 181, 187, 207.
Basle, 185.
Bavaria, 176, 200.
Bayle, Pierre, 39, 63, no, 133,
187-188.
Benn, A. W., 192, 207.
Berkeley, George, 200.
Berlin, 9, 190, 200.
Bidloo, Nikolaus, 196.
Blois, 24^ 96.
Blondel, Frangois, 62.
Boerhaave, Hermann, 4, 5, 24, ($7,
74t 96, 138, 182, 201-202.
Boindin, Nicolas, 53, 124, 193.
Bologna, 191.
Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso, 63, 133,
198.
Boyle, Robert, 58, 129, 197.
Brittany, 4, 176.
Burnet, J., 200.
Caen, 3, 176.
Calkins, M. W., iv, 206:
Calvinists, 8.
Cambrai, 190.
Cambridge, 185, 196.
Canterbury, 184, 196.
Carlat, 187.
Carmelites, 201.
Cartesians, 13, 39, 68, 85, in, 138-
139, 155. 159, 182, 188, 190.
Catholics, 8.
)
/
210
MAN A MACHINE.
INDEX.
211
;
Catius, 22, 94.
"Century Dictionary," 182, 184,
»9o, 191, 19a, 19s. i97i aoo,
ao3, 207.
Chaila, Viscount of, 8.
Chalons, Maid of, 47, u8.
Chalon-sur-Saone, 193.
Champagne, 118.
Charles II of England, 185.
Charp, 72, 143.
Chartres, jj, 104.
Charybdis, 7%, 146.
Chateau de Fenelon, 190.
Chazelle-sur-Lyon, 182.
"Chemical Proceedings," by Boer-
haave, 5.
"Chemical Theory," by Boerhaave,
5-
Chiverny, Chancelor, 24, 96.
Christ Church, Oxford, 184.
Christianity, 75, yi^ 87, 121, 197.
Christians, 5/, 123.
Christina, Queen of Sweden, 199.
Chubb, Thomas, 192.
Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 156.
Cleopatra, 203.
College of Physicians, 197.
Collins, Anthony, 192.
"Concorde de la geographie des
differents ages." by Pluche, 178.
Condillac, Etienne Bonnot de, 170-
173, 180, 186, 188, 194, 19s, 198.
206.
Copenhagen, 198.
Cordier, 3.
Corinth, 67, 137.
Comeille, Pierre, 40, iii, 184.
Cos, 181.
Cousin, Victor, 206.
Coutances, 3, 176.
Cowper. William, 57, 129, 196.
Damiron, Ph., 176.
Darget, 176.
"De admirandis naturae reginae et
mortalium arcanis," by Vanini,
192.
"De Anima Brutorum," by Willis,
27. 98.
"De Cerebro," by Willis, 27, 98.
««i
««i
De Corpore." by Hobbcs, 167,
204, 206.
De I'esprit," by Helvetius, 307;
see "Essays on the Mind."
"De I'homme, de ses facultes, ct de
son education," by Helvetius,
207; see "A Treatise on Man."
"De pulmonibus," by Malpighi,
192.
"De rerum natura," by Lucretius,
"De Structura Glandularum con-
globatarum," by Malpighi, 193.
"De Viscerum Structura," by Mal-
pighi, 192.
Deism, 192.
Deists, 5/, 123, 124.
Democritus, 8, 181.
Derham, William, 5/, 123, 191.
Desbarreaux, Jacques Vallee, 5J,
124. 193-
Descartes, R^n6, 13, 17, j8, 40, 51,
7. 7S, 8s, 90, III, 123, 142,
M6, 153, 15s. 165-166, 179, 180,
181, 183, 194, 196, 198, 199, 200,
203, 204, 205.
Dettingen, 5, 176.
"Dialogues between Hylas and PhiT
lonous," by Berkeley, 200.
Dialogues des morts," by Fene-
lon, 190.
"Dialogues des morts," by Fontc-
nelle, 27, 184.
"Diatribe du Docteur Akakia," by
Voltaire, 182.
Dictionary of Philosophy and
Psychology," ed. by Baldwin,
181, 187, 207.
Dictionnaire des Sciences phUo-
sophiques," 195.
"Dictionnaire historique et cri-
tique," by Bayle, 188.
Diderot, Denis, 53, 124. 179, 193,
206.
"Discours sur I'anatomie du cer-
veau," by Stenon, 198.
"Discours sur le Bonheur," by La
Mettrie, 189.
"Discourse on Method," by Des-
cartes, 180, 183, 205.
* 304, 206.
Holbach, P. H. D. von, 173-174,
180, 183, 189, 193, 194, 196, 199,
202, 206.
Holland, 176, 187.
"L'homme machine," by La Met-
trie, ii-8i, 176, 178, 203, 205;
see "Man a Machine.
"L'homme plante," by La Met-
trie, 205.
"L'homme plus que machine," by
Luzac, 177, 205; see "Man more
than a machine."
Hooper, W., 207.
Horace, aoi.
"Horologium Oscillatorium," by
Huyghens, 203.
"Human Nature," by Hobbes, 206.
Hunault, 4, 5.
Huyghens, Christian, 70, 140, 202.
India, 58, 197.
Innocent XII, Pope, 191.
"Institutiones et Experimentae
Chemicae," by Boerhaave, 202.
"Institutiones Medicae," by Boer-
haave, s, 67, 74, 138, 201.
Ireland, 185, 190.
Italy, 186, 197.
Ixion, 189.
Ixions of Christianity, 50, 121, 189.
James I, 197.
Jansenist, 3, 178.
Jesuits, 187.
Jews, 198.
Joshua, 7.
Julius, Caius, 18, 91,
Killaloe, 190.
"La Grande Encydop^die," 178,
179, 182, 183, 186, 190, 191, 193,
196, 198, 201, 202, 203, 207.
La Mettrie, Julien OflFray de, the
elder, 3.
La Mettrie, Julien Offray de, the
writer, 3-9, 48, 120, 151, 165-174,
»76, 177, 180, 181, 183, x86, 188,
189, 193, 194, 195, 198, 199, 200,
201, 202, 203, 204, 205.
"La Pensee Nouvelle," 178.
"La philosophie mat^rialiste au
XVIII« siecle," by N. Quepat,
176.
"La Revue de Paris," 178.
"La Revue Nationale," 178.
Lamy, Bernard, 55, 126, 195.
Lancisi, Giovanni-Maria, 26, 98.
Lange, F. A., 171, 176, 193, 197,
207.
Laon, College of, 178.
Lapland, 182.
Le Clerc, Jean, 206.
Lecl^re, 190.
Leibnitz, 17, 90, 190.
I
INDEX.
213
«(i