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Bentham By John Stuart Mill Essay Research (стр. 3 из 4)

marshalled in an orderly manner before him, he does not, like

people who use a looser method, forget and overlook a thing on

one occasion to remember it on another. Hence there is probably

no philosopher of so wide a range, in whom there are so few

inconsistencies. If any of the truths which he did not see, had

come to be seen by him, he would have remembered it everywhere

and at all times, and would have adjusted his whole system to it.

And this is another admirable quality which he has impressed upon

the best of the minds trained in his habits of thought: when

those minds open to admit new truths, they digest them as fast as

they receive them.

But this system, excellent for keeping before the mind of the

thinker all that he knows, does not make him know enough; it does

not make a knowledge of some of the properties of a thing suffice

for the whole of it, nor render a rooted habit of surveying a

complex object (though ever so carefully) in only one of its

aspects, tantamount to the power of contemplating it in all. To

give this last power, other qualities are required: whether

Bentham possessed those other qualities we now have to see.

Bentham’s mind, as we have already said, was eminently

synthetical. He begins all his inquiries by supposing nothing to

he known on the subject, and reconstructs all philosophy ab

initio, without reference to the opinions of his predecessors.

But to build either a philosophy or anything else, there must be

materials. For the philosophy of matter, the materials are the

properties of matter; for moral and political philosophy, the

properties of man, and of man’s position in the world. The

knowledge which any inquirer possesses of these properties,

constitutes a limit beyond which, as a moralist or a political

philosopher, whatever be his powers of mind, he cannot reach.

Nobody’s synthesis can be more complete than his analysis. If in

his survey of human nature and life he has left any element out,

then, wheresoever that element exerts any influence, his

conclusions will fail, more or less, in their application. If he

has left out many elements, and those very important, his labours

may be highly valuable; he may have largely contributed to that

body of partial truths which, when completed and corrected by one

another, constitute practical truth; but the applicability of his

system to practice in its own proper shape will be of an

exceedingly limited range.

Human nature and human life are wide subjects, and whoever

would embark in an enterprise requiring a thorough knowledge of

them, has need both of large stores of his own, and of all aids

and appliances from elsewhere. His qualifications for success

will be proportional to two things: the degree in which his own

nature and circumstances furnish them with a correct and complete

picture of man’s nature and circumstances; and his capacity of

deriving light from other minds.

Bentham failed in deriving light from other minds. His

writings contain few traces of the accurate knowledge of any

schools of thinking but his own; and many proofs of his entire

conviction that they could teach him nothing worth knowing. For

some of the most illustrious of previous thinkers, his contempt

was unmeasured. In almost the only passage of the ‘Deontology’

which, from its style, and from its having before appeared in

print, may be known to be Bentham’s, Socrates, and Plato are

spoken of in terms distressing to his great admirers; and the

incapacity to appreciate such men, is a fact perfectly in unison

with the general habits of Bentham’s mind. He had a phrase,

expressive of the view he took of all moral speculations to which

his method had not been applied, or (which he considered as the

same thing) not founded on a recognition of utility as the moral

standard; this phrase was ‘vague generalities’. Whatever

presented itself to him in such a shape, he dismissed as unworthy

of notice, or dwelt upon only to denounce as absurd. He did not

heed, or rather the nature of his mind prevented it from

occurring to him, that these generalities contained the whole

unanalysed experience of the human race.

Unless it can be asserted that mankind did not know anything

until logicians taught it to them that until the last hand has

been put to a moral truth by giving it a metaphysically precise

expression, all the previous rough-hewing which it has undergone

by the common intellect at the suggestion of common wants and

common experience is to go for nothing; it must be allowed, that

even the originality which can, and the courage which dares,

think for itself, is not a more necessary part of the

philosophical character than a thoughtful regard for previous

thinkers, and for the collective mind of the human race. What has

been the opinion of mankind, has been the opinion of persons of

all tempers and dispositions, of all partialities and

prepossessions, of all varieties in position, in education, in

opportunities of observation and inquiry. No one inquirer is all

this; every inquirer is either young or old, rich or poor, sickly

or healthy, married or unmarried, meditative or active, a poet or

a logician, an ancient or a modern, a man or a woman; and if a

thinking person, has, in addition, the accidental peculiarities

of his individual modes of thought. Every circumstance which

gives a character to the life of a human being, carries with it

its peculiar biases; its peculiar facilities for perceiving some

things, and for missing or forgetting others. But, from points of

view different from his, different things are perceptible; and

none are more likely to have seen what he does not see, than

those who do not see what he sees. The general opinion of mankind

is the average of the conclusions of all minds, stripped indeed

of their choicest and most recondite thoughts, but freed from

their twists and partialities: a net result, in which everybody’s

point of view is represented, nobody’s predominant. The

collective mind does not penetrate below the surface, but it sees

all the surface; which profound thinkers, even by reason of their

profundity, often fail to do: their intenser view of a thing in

some of its aspects diverting their attention from others.

The hardiest assertor, therefore, of the freedom of private

judgment the keenest detector of the errors of his predecessors,

and of the inaccuracies of current modes of thought — is the

very person who most needs to fortify the weak side of his own

intellect, by study of the opinions of mankind in all ages and

nations, and of the speculations of philosophers of the modes of

thought most opposite to his own. It is there that he will find

the experiences denied to himself — the remainder of the truth

of which he sees but half — the truths, of which the errors he

detects are commonly but the exaggerations. If, like Bentham, he

brings with him an improved instrument of investigation, the

greater is the probability that he will find ready prepared a

rich abundance of rough ore, which was merely waiting for that

instrument. A man of clear ideas errs grievously if he imagines

that whatever is seen confusedly does not exist: it belongs to

him, when he meets with such a thing, to dispel the mist, and fix

the outlines of the vague form which is looming through it.

Bentham’s contempt, then, of all other schools of thinkers;

his determination to create a philosophy wholly out of the

materials furnished by his own mind, and by minds like his own;

was his first disqualification as a philosopher. His second, was

the incompleteness of his own mind as a representative of

universal human nature. In many of the most natural and strongest

feelings of human nature he had no sympathy; from many of its

graver experiences he was altogether cut off; and the faculty by

which one mind understands a mind different from itself, and

throws itself into the feelings of that other mind, was denied

him by his deficiency of Imagination.

With Imagination in the popular sense, command of imagery and

metaphorical expression, Bentham was, to a certain degree,

endowed. For want, indeed, of poetical culture, the images with

which his fancy supplied him were seldom beautiful, but they were

quaint and humorous, or bold, forcible, and intense: passages

might be quoted from him both of playful irony, and of

declamatory eloquence, seldom surpassed in the writings of

philosophers. The Imagination which he had not, was that to which

the name is generally appropriated by the best writers of the

present day; that which enables us, by a voluntary effort, to

conceive the absent as if it were present, the imaginary as if it

were real, and to cloth it in the feelings which, if it were

indeed real, it would bring along with it. This is the power by

which one human being enters into the mind and circumstances of

another. This power constitutes the poet, in so far as he does

anything but melodiously utter his own actual feelings. It

constitutes the dramatist entirely. It is one of the constituents

of the historian; by it we understand other times; by it Guizot

interprets to us the middle ages; Nisard, in his beautiful

Studies on the later Latin poets, places us in the Rome of the

Caesars; Michelet disengages the distinctive characters of the

different races and generations of mankind from the facts of

their history. Without it nobody knows even his own nature,

further than circumstances have actually tried it and called it

out; nor the nature of his fellow-creatures, beyond such

generalizations as he may have been enabled to make from his

observation of their outward conduct.

By these limits, accordingly, Bentham’s knowledge of human

nature is bounded. It is wholly empirical; and the empiricism of

one who has had little experience. He had neither internal

experience nor external; the quiet, even tenor of his life, and

his healthiness of mind, conspired to exclude him from both. He

never knew prosperity and adversity, passion nor satiety. he

never had even the experiences which sickness gives; he lived

from childhood to the age of eighty-five in boyish health. He

knew no dejection, no heaviness of heart. He never felt life a

sore and a weary burthen. He was a boy to the last.

Self-consciousness, that daemon of the men of genius of our time,

from Wordsworth to Byron, from Goethe to Chateaubriand, and to

which this age owes so much both of its cheerful and its mournful

wisdom, never was awakened in him. How much of human nature

slumbered in him he knew not, neither can we know. He had never

been made alive to the unseen influences which were acting on

himself, nor consequently on his fellow-creatures. Other ages and

other nations were a blank to him for purposes of instruction. He

measured them but by one standard; their knowledge of facts, and

their capability to take correct views of utility, and merge all

other objects in it. His own lot was cast in a generation of the

leanest and barrenest men whom England had yet produced, and he

was an old man when a better race came in with the present

century. He saw accordingly in man little but what the vulgarest

eye can see; recognized no diversities of character but such as

he who runs may read. Knowing so little of human feelings, he

knew still less of the influences by which those feelings are

formed: all the more subtle workings both of the mind upon

itself, and of external things upon the mind, escaped him; and no

one, probably, who, in a highly instructed age, ever attempted to

give a rule to all human conduct, set out with a more limited

conception either of the agencies by which human conduct is, or

of those by which it should be, influenced.

This, then, is our idea of Bentham. He was a man both of

remarkable endowments for philosophy, and of remarkable

deficiencies for it: fitted, beyond almost any man, for drawing

from his premises, conclusions not only correct, but sufficiently

precise and specific to be practical: but whose general

conception of human nature and life furnished him with an

unusually slender stock of premises. It is obvious what would be

likely to be achieved by such a man; what a thinker, thus gifted

and thus disqualified, could do in philosophy. He could, with

close and accurate logic, hunt half-truths to their consequences

and practical applications, on a scale both of greatness and of

minuteness not previously exemplified; and this is the character

which posterity will probably assign to Bentham.

We express our sincere and well-considered conviction when we

say, that there is hardly anything positive in Bentham’s

philosophy which is not true: that when his practical conclusions

are erroneous, which in our opinion they are very often, it is

not because the considerations which he urges are not rational

and valid in themselves, but because some more important

principle, which he did not perceive, supersedes those

considerations, and turns the scale. The bad part of his writings

is his resolute denial of all that he does not see, of all truths

but those which he recognizes. By that alone has he exercised any

bad influence upon his age; by that he has, not created a school

of deniers, for this is an ignorant prejudice, but put himself at

the head of the school which exists always, though it does not

always find a great man to give it the sanction of philosophy.

thrown the mantle of intellect over the natural tendency of men

in all ages to deny or disparage all feelings and mental states

of which they have no consciousness in themselves.

The truths which are not Bentham’s, which his philosophy

takes no account of, are many and important; but his

non-recognition of them does not put them out of existence; they

are still with us, and it is a comparatively easy task that is

reserved for us, to harmonize those truths with his. To reject

his half of the truth because he overlooked the other half, would

be to fall into his error without having his excuse. For our own

part, we have a large tolerance for one-eyed men, provided their

one eye is a penetrating one: if they saw more, they probably

would not see so keenly, nor so eagerly pursue one course of

inquiry. Almost all rich veins of original and striking

speculation have been opened by systematic half-thinkers: though

whether these new thoughts drive out others as good, or are

peacefully superadded to them, depends on whether these

half-thinkers are or are not followed in the same track by

complete thinkers. The field of man’s nature and life cannot be

too much worked, or in too many directions; until every clod is

turned up the work is imperfect; no whole truth is possible but

by combining the points of view of all the fractional truths,

nor, therefore, until it has been fully seen what each fractional

truth can do by itself.

What Bentham’s fractional truths could do, there is no such

good means of showing as by a review of his philosophy: and such

a review, though inevitably a most brief and general one, it is

now necessary to attempt.

The first question in regard to any man of speculation is,

what is his theory of human life? In the minds of many

philosophers, whatever theory they have of this sort is latent,

and it would be a revelation to themselves to have it pointed out

to them in their writings as others can see it, unconsciously

moulding everything to its own likeness. But Bentham always knew

his own premises, and made his reader know them: it was not his

custom to leave the theoretic grounds of his practical

conclusions to conjecture. Few great thinkers have afforded the

means of assigning with so much certainty the exact conception

which they had formed of man and of man’s life.

Man is conceived by Bentham as a being susceptible of

pleasures and pains, and governed in all his conduct partly by

the different modifications of self-interest, and the passions

commonly classed as selfish, partly by sympathies, or

occasionally antipathies, towards other beings. And here

Bentham’s conception of human nature stops. He does not exclude

religion; the prospect of divine rewards and punishments he

includes under the head of ’self-regarding interest’, and the