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<h2> SECT. XIV. OF THE IDEA OF NECESSARY CONNEXION. </h2>
<p>Having thus explained the manner, in which we reason beyond our immediate
impressions, and conclude that such particular causes must have such
particular effects; we must now return upon our footsteps to examine that
question, which [Sect. 2.] first occured to us, and which we dropt in our
way, viz. What is our idea of necessity, when we say that two objects are
necessarily connected together. Upon this head I repeat what I have often
had occasion to observe, that as we have no idea, that is not derived from
an impression, we must find some impression, that gives rise to this idea
of necessity, if we assert we have really such an idea. In order to this I
consider, in what objects necessity is commonly supposed to lie; and
finding that it is always ascribed to causes and effects, I turn my eye to
two objects supposed to be placed in that relation; and examine them in
all the situations, of which they are susceptible. I immediately perceive,
that they are contiguous in time and place, and that the object we call
cause precedes the other we call effect. In no one instance can I go any
farther, nor is it possible for me to discover any third relation betwixt
these objects. I therefore enlarge my view to comprehend several
instances; where I find like objects always existing in like relations of
contiguity and succession. At first sight this seems to serve but little
to my purpose. The reflection on several instances only repeats the same
objects; and therefore can never give rise to a new idea. But upon farther
enquiry I find, that the repetition is not in every particular the same,
but produces a new impression, and by that means the idea, which I at
present examine. For after a frequent repetition, I find, that upon the
appearance of one of the objects, the mind is determined by custom to
consider its usual attendant, and to consider it in a stronger light upon
account of its relation to the first object. It is this impression, then,
or determination, which affords me the idea of necessity.</p>
<p>I doubt not but these consequences will at first sight be received without
difficulty, as being evident deductions from principles, which we have
already established, and which we have often employed in our reasonings.
This evidence both in the first principles, and in the deductions, may
seduce us unwarily into the conclusion, and make us imagine it contains
nothing extraordinary, nor worthy of our curiosity. But though such an
inadvertence may facilitate the reception of this reasoning, it will make
it be the more easily forgot; for which reason I think it proper to give
warning, that I have just now examined one of the most sublime questions
in philosophy, viz. that concerning the power and efficacy of causes;
where all the sciences seem so much interested. Such a warning will
naturally rouze up the attention of the reader, and make him desire a more
full account of my doctrine, as well as of the arguments, on which it is
founded. This request is so reasonable, that I cannot refuse complying
with it; especially as I am hopeful that these principles, the more they
are examined, will acquire the more force and evidence.</p>
<p>There is no question, which on account of its importance, as well as
difficulty, has caused more disputes both among antient and modern
philosophers, than this concerning the efficacy of causes, or that quality
which makes them be followed by their effects. But before they entered
upon these disputes, methinks it would not have been improper to have
examined what idea we have of that efficacy, which is the subject of the
controversy. This is what I find principally wanting in their reasonings,
and what I shall here endeavour to supply.</p>
<p>I begin with observing that the terms of EFFICACY, AGENCY, POWER, FORCE,
ENERGY, NECESSITY, CONNEXION, and PRODUCTIVE QUALITY, are all nearly
synonymous; and therefore it is an absurdity to employ any of them in
defining the rest. By this observation we reject at once all the vulgar
definitions, which philosophers have given of power and efficacy; and
instead of searching for the idea in these definitions, must look for it
in the impressions, from which it is originally derived. If it be a
compound idea, it must arise from compound impressions. If simple, from
simple impressions.</p>
<p>I believe the most general and most popular explication of this matter, is
to say [See Mr. Locke, chapter of power.], that finding from experience,
that there are several new productions in matter, such as the motions and
variations of body, and concluding that there must somewhere be a power
capable of producing them, we arrive at last by this reasoning at the idea
of power and efficacy. But to be convinced that this explication is more
popular than philosophical, we need but reflect on two very obvious
principles. First, That reason alone can never give rise to any original
idea, and secondly, that reason, as distinguished from experience, can
never make us conclude, that a cause or productive quality is absolutely
requisite to every beginning of existence. Both these considerations have
been sufficiently explained: and therefore shall not at present be any
farther insisted on.</p>
<p>I shall only infer from them, that since reason can never give rise to the
idea of efficacy, that idea must be derived from experience, and from some
particular instances of this efficacy, which make their passage into the
mind by the common channels of sensation or reflection. Ideas always
represent their objects or impressions; and vice versa, there are some
objects necessary to give rise to every idea. If we pretend, therefore, to
have any just idea of this efficacy, we must produce some instance,
wherein the efficacy is plainly discoverable to the mind, and its
operations obvious to our consciousness or sensation. By the refusal of
this, we acknowledge, that the idea is impossible and imaginary, since the
principle of innate ideas, which alone can save us from this dilemma, has
been already refuted, and is now almost universally rejected in the
learned world. Our present business, then, must be to find some natural
production, where the operation and efficacy of a cause can be clearly
conceived and comprehended by the mind, without any danger of obscurity or
mistake.</p>
<p>In this research we meet with very little encouragement from that
prodigious diversity, which is found in the opinions of those
philosophers, who have pretended to explain the secret force and energy of
causes. [See Father Malbranche, Book vi. Part 2, chap. 3. And the
illustrations upon it.] There are some, who maintain, that bodies operate
by their substantial form; others, by their accidents or qualities;
several, by their matter and form; some, by their form and accidents;
others, by certain virtues and faculties distinct from all this. All these
sentiments again are mixed and varyed in a thousand different ways; and
form a strong presumption, that none of them have any solidity or
evidence, and that the supposition of an efficacy in any of the known
qualities of matter is entirely without foundation. This presumption must
encrease upon us, when we consider, that these principles of substantial
forms, and accidents, and faculties, are not in reality any of the known
properties of bodies, but are perfectly unintelligible and inexplicable.
For it is evident philosophers would never have had recourse to such
obscure and uncertain principles, had they met with any satisfaction in
such as are clear and intelligible; especially in such an affair as this,
which must be an object of the simplest understanding, if not of the
senses. Upon the whole, we may conclude, that it is impossible in any one
instance to shew the principle, in which the force and agency of a cause
is placed; and that the most refined and most vulgar understandings are
equally at a loss in this particular. If any one think proper to refute
this assertion, he need not put himself to the trouble of inventing any
long reasonings: but may at once shew us an instance of a cause, where we
discover the power or operating principle. This defiance we are obliged
frequently to make use of, as being almost the only means of proving a
negative in philosophy.</p>
<p>The small success, which has been met with in all the attempts to fix this
power, has at last obliged philosophers to conclude, that the ultimate
force and efficacy of nature is perfectly unknown to us, and that it is in
vain we search for it in all the known qualities of matter. In this
opinion they are almost unanimous; and it is only in the inference they
draw from it, that they discover any difference in their sentiments. For
some of them, as the CARTESIANS in particular, having established it as a
principle, that we are perfectly acquainted with the essence of matter,
have very naturally inferred, that it is endowed with no efficacy, and
that it is impossible for it of itself to communicate motion, or produce
any of those effects, which we ascribe to it. As the essence of matter
consists in extension, and as extension implies not actual motion, but
only mobility; they conclude, that the energy, which produces the motion,
cannot lie in the extension.</p>
<p>This conclusion leads them into another, which they regard as perfectly
unavoidable. Matter, say they, is in itself entirely unactive, and
deprived of any power, by which it may produce, or continue, or
communicate motion: But since these effects are evident to our senses, and
since the power, that produces them, must be placed somewhere, it must lie
in the DEITY, or that divine being, who contains in his nature all
excellency and perfection. It is the deity, therefore, who is the prime
mover of the universe, and who not only first created matter, and gave it
it's original impulse, but likewise by a continued exertion of
omnipotence, supports its existence, and successively bestows on it all
those motions, and configurations, and qualities, with which it is
endowed.</p>
<p>This opinion is certainly very curious, and well worth our attention; but
it will appear superfluous to examine it in this place, if we reflect a
moment on our present purpose in taking notice of it. We have established
it as a principle, that as all ideas are derived from impressions, or some
precedent perceptions, it is impossible we can have any idea of power and
efficacy, unless some instances can be produced, wherein this power is
perceived to exert itself. Now, as these instances can never be discovered
in body, the Cartesians, proceeding upon their principle of innate ideas,
have had recourse to a supreme spirit or deity, whom they consider as the
only active being in the universe, and as the immediate cause of every
alteration in matter. But the principle of innate ideas being allowed to
be false, it follows, that the supposition of a deity can serve us in no
stead, in accounting for that idea of agency, which we search for in vain
in all the objects, which are presented to our senses, or which we are
internally conscious of in our own minds. For if every idea be derived
from an impression, the idea of a deity proceeds from the same origin; and
if no impression, either of sensation or reflection, implies any force or
efficacy, it is equally impossible to discover or even imagine any such
active principle in the deity. Since these philosophers, therefore, have
concluded, that matter cannot be endowed with any efficacious principle,
because it is impossible to discover in it such a principle; the same
course of reasoning should determine them to exclude it from the supreme
being. Or if they esteem that opinion absurd and impious, as it really is,
I shall tell them how they may avoid it; and that is, by concluding from
the very first, that they have no adequate idea of power or efficacy in
any object; since neither in body nor spirit, neither in superior nor
inferior natures, are they able to discover one single instance of it.</p>
<p>The same conclusion is unavoidable upon the hypothesis of those, who
maintain the efficacy of second causes, and attribute a derivative, but a
real power and energy to matter. For as they confess, that this energy
lies not in any of the known qualities of matter, the difficulty still
remains concerning the origin of its idea. If we have really an idea of
power, we may attribute power to an unknown quality: But as it is
impossible, that that idea can be derived from such a quality, and as
there is nothing in known qualities, which can produce it; it follows that
we deceive ourselves, when we imagine we are possest of any idea of this
kind, after the manner we commonly understand it. All ideas are derived
from, and represent impressions. We never have any impression, that
contains any power or efficacy. We never therefore have any idea of power.</p>
<p>Some have asserted, that we feel an energy, or power, in our own mind; and
that having in this manner acquired the idea of power, we transfer that
quality to matter, where we are not able immediately to discover it. The
motions of our body, and the thoughts and sentiments of our mind, (say
they) obey the will; nor do we seek any farther to acquire a just notion
of force or power. But to convince us how fallacious this reasoning is, we
need only consider, that the will being here considered as a cause, has no
more a discoverable connexion with its effects, than any material cause
has with its proper effect. So far from perceiving the connexion betwixt
an act of volition, and a motion of the body; it is allowed that no effect
is more inexplicable from the powers and essence of thought and matter.
Nor is the empire of the will over our mind more intelligible. The effect
is there distinguishable and separable from the cause, and coued not be
foreseen without the experience of their constant conjunction. We have
command over our mind to a certain degree, but beyond that, lose all
empire over it: And it is evidently impossible to fix any precise bounds
to our authority, where we consult not experience. In short, the actions
of the mind are, in this respect, the same with those of matter. We
perceive only their constant conjunction; nor can we ever reason beyond
it. No internal impression has an apparent energy, more than external
objects have. Since, therefore, matter is confessed by philosophers to
operate by an unknown force, we should in vain hope to attain an idea of
force by consulting our own minds. [FN 8.]</p>
<p>[FN 8. The same imperfection attends our ideas of the<br/>
Deity; but this can have no effect either on religion or<br/>
morals. The order of the universe proves an omnipotent mind;<br/>
that is, a mind whose wili is CONSTANTLY ATTENDED with the<br/>
obedience of every creature and being. Nothing more is<br/>
requisite to give a foundation to all the articles of<br/>
religion, nor is It necessary we shoud form a distinct idea<br/>
of the force and energy of the supreme Being.]<br/></p>
<p>It has been established as a certain principle, that general or abstract
ideas are nothing but individual ones taken in a certain light, and that,
in reflecting on any object, it is as impossible to exclude from our
thought all particular degrees of quantity and quality as from the real
nature of things. If we be possest, therefore, of any idea of power in
general, we must also be able to conceive some particular species of it;
and as power cannot subsist alone, but is always regarded as an attribute
of some being or existence, we must be able to place this power in some
particular being, and conceive that being as endowed with a real force and
energy, by which such a particular effect necessarily results from its
operation. We must distinctly and particularly conceive the connexion
betwixt the cause and effect, and be able to pronounce, from a simple view
of the one, that it must be followed or preceded by the other. This is the
true manner of conceiving a particular power in a particular body: and a
general idea being impossible without an individual; where the latter is
impossible, it is certain the former can never exist. Now nothing is more
evident, than that the human mind cannot form such an idea of two objects,
as to conceive any connexion betwixt them, or comprehend distinctly that
power or efficacy, by which they are united. Such a connexion would amount
to a demonstration, and would imply the absolute impossibility for the one
object not to follow, or to be conceived not to follow upon the other:
Which kind of connexion has already been rejected in all cases. If any one
is of a contrary opinion, and thinks he has attained a notion of power in
any particular object, I desire he may point out to me that object. But
till I meet with such-a-one, which I despair of, I cannot forbear
concluding, that since we can never distinctly conceive how any particular
power can possibly reside in any particular object, we deceive ourselves
in imagining we can form any such general idea.</p>
<p>Thus upon the whole we may infer, that when we talk of any being, whether
of a superior or inferior nature, as endowed with a power or force,
proportioned to any effect; when we speak of a necessary connexion betwixt
objects, and suppose, that this connexion depends upon an efficacy or
energy, with which any of these objects are endowed; in all these
expressions, so applied, we have really no distinct meaning, and make use
only of common words, without any clear and determinate ideas. But as it
is more probable, that these expressions do here lose their true meaning
by being wrong applied, than that they never have any meaning; it will be
proper to bestow another consideration on this subject, to see if possibly
we can discover the nature and origin of those ideas, we annex to them.</p>
<p>Suppose two objects to be presented to us, of which the one is the cause
and the other the effect; it is plain, that from the simple consideration
of one, or both these objects we never shall perceive the tie by which
they are united, or be able certainly to pronounce, that there is a
connexion betwixt them. It is not, therefore, from any one instance, that
we arrive at the idea of cause and effect, of a necessary connexion of
power, of force, of energy, and of efficacy. Did we never see any but
particular conjunctions of objects, entirely different from each other, we
should never be able to form any such ideas.</p>
<p>But again; suppose we observe several instances, in which the same objects
are always conjoined together, we immediately conceive a connexion betwixt
them, and begin to draw an inference from one to another. This
multiplicity of resembling instances, therefore, constitutes the very
essence of power or connexion, and is the source from which the idea of it
arises. In order, then, to understand the idea of power, we must consider
that multiplicity; nor do I ask more to give a solution of that
difficulty, which has so long perplexed us. For thus I reason. The
repetition of perfectly similar instances can never alone give rise to an
original idea, different from what is to be found in any particular
instance, as has been observed, and as evidently follows from our
fundamental principle, that all ideas are copyed from impressions. Since
therefore the idea of power is a new original idea, not to be found in any
one instance, and which yet arises from the repetition of several
instances, it follows, that the repetition alone has not that effect, but
must either discover or produce something new, which is the source of that
idea. Did the repetition neither discover nor produce anything new, our
ideas might be multiplyed by it, but would not be enlarged above what they
are upon the observation of one single instance. Every enlargement,
therefore, (such as the idea of power or connexion) which arises from the
multiplicity of similar instances, is copyed from some effects of the
multiplicity, and will be perfectly understood by understanding these
effects. Wherever we find anything new to be discovered or produced by the
repetition, there we must place the power, and must never look for it in
any other object.</p>
<p>But it is evident, in the first place, that the repetition of like objects
in like relations of succession and contiguity discovers nothing new in
any one of them: since we can draw no inference from it, nor make it a
subject either of our demonstrative or probable reasonings;[Sect. 6.] as
has been already proved. Nay suppose we coued draw an inference, it would
be of no consequence in the present case; since no kind of reasoning can
give rise to a new idea, such as this of power is; but wherever we reason,
we must antecedently be possest of clear ideas, which may be the objects
of our reasoning. The conception always precedes the understanding; and
where the one is obscure, the other is uncertain; where the one fails, the
other must fail also.</p>
<p>Secondly, It is certain that this repetition of similar objects in similar
situations produces nothing new either in these objects, or in any
external body. For it will readily be allowed, that the several instances
we have of the conjunction of resembling causes and effects are in
themselves entirely independent, and that the communication of motion,
which I see result at present from the shock of two billiard-balls, is
totally distinct from that which I saw result from such an impulse a
twelve-month ago. These impulses have no influence on each other. They are
entirely divided by time and place; and the one might have existed and
communicated motion, though the other never had been in being.</p>
<p>There is, then, nothing new either discovered or produced in any objects
by their constant conjunction, and by the uninterrupted resemblance of
their relations of succession and contiguity. But it is from this
resemblance, that the ideas of necessity, of power, and of efficacy, are
derived. These ideas, therefore, represent not anything, that does or can
belong to the objects, which are constantly conjoined. This is an
argument, which, in every view we can examine it, will be found perfectly
unanswerable. Similar instances are still the first source of our idea of
power or necessity; at the same time that they have no influence by their
similarity either on each other, or on any external object. We must,
therefore, turn ourselves to some other quarter to seek the origin of that
idea.</p>
<p>Though the several resembling instances, which give rise to the idea of
power, have no influence on each other, and can never produce any new
quality in the object, which can be the model of that idea, yet the
observation of this resemblance produces a new impression in the mind,
which is its real model. For after we have observed the resemblance in a
sufficient number of instances, we immediately feel a determination of the
mind to pass from one object to its usual attendant, and to conceive it in
a stronger light upon account of that relation. This determination is the
only effect of the resemblance; and therefore must be the same with power
or efficacy, whose idea is derived from the resemblance. The several
instances of resembling conjunctions lead us into the notion of power and
necessity. These instances are in themselves totally distinct from each
other, and have no union but in the mind, which observes them, and
collects their ideas. Necessity, then, is the effect of this observation,
and is nothing but an internal impression of the mind, or a determination
to carry our thoughts from one object to another. Without considering it
in this view, we can never arrive at the most distant notion of it, or be
able to attribute it either to external or internal objects, to spirit or
body, to causes or effects.</p>
<p>The necessary connexion betwixt causes and effects is the foundation of
our inference from one to the other. The foundation of our inference is
the transition arising from the accustomed union. These are, therefore,
the same.</p>
<p>The idea of necessity arises from some impression. There is no impression
conveyed by our senses, which can give rise to that idea. It must,
therefore, be derived from some internal impression, or impression of
reflection. There is no internal impression, which has any relation to the
present business, but that propensity, which custom produces, to pass from
an object to the idea of its usual attendant. This therefore is the
essence of necessity. Upon the whole, necessity is something, that exists
in the mind, not in objects; nor is it possible for us ever to form the
most distant idea of it, considered as a quality in bodies. Either we have
no idea of necessity, or necessity is nothing but that determination of
the thought to pass from causes to effects, and from effects to causes,
according to their experienced union.</p>
<p>Thus as the necessity, which makes two times two equal to four, or three
angles of a triangle equal to two right ones, lies only in the act of the
understanding, by which we consider and compare these ideas; in like
manner the necessity or power, which unites causes and effects, lies in
the determination of the mind to pass from the one to the other. The
efficacy or energy of causes is neither placed in the causes themselves,
nor in the deity, nor in the concurrence of these two principles; but
belongs entirely to the soul, which considers the union of two or more
objects in all past instances. It is here that the real power of causes is
placed along with their connexion and necessity.</p>
<p>I am sensible, that of all the paradoxes, which I, have had, or shall
hereafter have occasion to advance in the course of this treatise, the
present one is the most violent, and that it is merely by dint of solid
proof and reasoning I can ever hope it will have admission, and overcome
the inveterate prejudices of mankind. Before we are reconciled to this
doctrine, how often must we repeat to ourselves, that the simple view of
any two objects or actions, however related, can never give us any idea,
of power, or of a connexion betwixt them: that this idea arises from the
repetition of their union: that the repetition neither discovers nor
causes any thing in the objects, but has an influence only on the mind, by
that customary transition it produces: that this customary transition is,
therefore, the same with the power and necessity; which are consequently
qualities of perceptions, not of objects, and are internally felt by the
soul, and not perceivd externally in bodies? There is commonly an
astonishment attending every thing extraordinary; and this astonishment
changes immediately into the highest degree of esteem or contempt,
according as we approve or disapprove of the subject. I am much afraid,
that though the foregoing reasoning appears to me the shortest and most
decisive imaginable; yet with the generality of readers the biass of the
mind will prevail, and give them a prejudice against the present doctrine.</p>
<p>This contrary biass is easily accounted for. It is a common observation,
that the mind has a great propensity to spread itself on external objects,
and to conjoin with them any internal impressions, which they occasion,
and which always make their appearance at the same time that these objects
discover themselves to the senses. Thus as certain sounds and smells are
always found to attend certain visible objects, we naturally imagine a
conjunction, even in place, betwixt the objects and qualities, though the
qualities be of such a nature as to admit of no such conjunction, and
really exist no where. But of this more fully hereafter [Part IV, Sect.
5.]. Mean while it is sufficient to observe, that the same propensity is
the reason, why we suppose necessity and power to lie in the objects we
consider, not in our mind that considers them; notwithstanding it is not
possible for us to form the most distant idea of that quality, when it is
not taken for the determination of the mind, to pass from the idea of an
object to that of its usual attendant.</p>
<p>But though this be the only reasonable account we can give of necessity,
the contrary notion if; so riveted in the mind from the principles
above-mentioned, that I doubt not but my sentiments will be treated by
many as extravagant and ridiculous. What! the efficacy of causes lie in
the determination of the mind! As if causes did not operate entirely
independent of the mind, and would not continue their operation, even
though there was no mind existent to contemplate them, or reason
concerning them. Thought may well depend on causes for its operation, but
not causes on thought. This is to reverse the order of nature, and make
that secondary, which is really primary, To every operation there is a
power proportioned; and this power must be placed on the body, that
operates. If we remove the power from one cause, we must ascribe it to
another: But to remove it from all causes, and bestow it on a being, that
is no ways related to the cause or effect, but by perceiving them, is a
gross absurdity, and contrary to the most certain principles of human
reason.</p>
<p>I can only reply to all these arguments, that the case is here much the
same, as if a blind man should pretend to find a great many absurdities in
the supposition, that the colour of scarlet is not the same with the sound
of a trumpet, nor light the same with solidity. If we have really no idea
of a power or efficacy in any object, or of any real connexion betwixt
causes and effects, it will be to little purpose to prove, that an
efficacy is necessary in all operations. We do not understand our own
meaning in talking so, but ignorantly confound ideas, which are entirely
distinct from each other. I am, indeed, ready to allow, that there may be
several qualities both in material and immaterial objects, with which we
are utterly unacquainted; and if we please to call these POWER or
EFFICACY, it will be of little consequence to the world. But when, instead
of meaning these unknown qualities, we make the terms of power and
efficacy signify something, of which we have a clear idea, and which is
incompatible with those objects, to which we apply it, obscurity and error
begin then to take place, and we are led astray by a false philosophy.
This is the case, when we transfer the determination of the thought to
external objects, and suppose any real intelligible connexion betwixt
them; that being a quality, which can only belong to the mind that
considers them.</p>
<p>As to what may be said, that the operations of nature are independent of
our thought and reasoning, I allow it; and accordingly have observed, that
objects bear to each other the relations of contiguity and succession:
that like objects may be observed in several instances to have like
relations; and that all this is independent of, and antecedent to the
operations of the understanding. But if we go any farther, and ascribe a
power or necessary connexion to these objects; this is what we can never
observe in them, but must draw the idea of it from what we feel internally
in contemplating them. And this I carry so far, that I am ready to convert
my present reasoning into an instance of it, by a subtility, which it will
not be difficult to comprehend.</p>
<p>When any object is presented to us, it immediately conveys to the mind a
lively idea of that object, which is usually found to attend it; and this
determination of the mind forms the necessary connexion of these objects.
But when we change the point of view, from the objects to the perceptions;
in that case the impression is to be considered as the cause, and the
lively idea as the effect; and their necessary connexion is that new
determination, which we feel to pass from the idea of the one to that of
the other. The uniting principle among our internal perceptions is as
unintelligible as that among external objects, and is not known to us any
other way than by experience. Now the nature and effects of experience
have been already sufficiently examined and explained. It never gives us
any insight into the internal structure or operating principle of objects,
but only accustoms the mind to pass from one to another.</p>
<p>It is now time to collect all the different parts of this reasoning, and
by joining them together form an exact definition of the relation of cause
and effect, which makes the subject of the present enquiry. This order
would not have been excusable, of first examining our inference from the
relation before we had explained the relation itself, had it been possible
to proceed in a different method. But as the nature of the relation
depends so much on that of the inference, we have been obliged to advance
in this seemingly preposterous manner, and make use of terms before we
were able exactly to define them, or fix their meaning. We shall now
correct this fault by giving a precise definition of cause and effect.</p>
<p>There may two definitions be given of this relation, which are only
different, by their presenting a different view of the same object, and
making us consider it either as a philosophical or as a natural relation;
either as a comparison of two ideas, or as an association betwixt them. We
may define a CAUSE to be An object precedent and contiguous to another,
and where all the objects resembling the former are placed in like
relations of precedency and contiguity to those objects that resemble the
latter. I If this definition be esteemed defective, because drawn from
objects foreign to the cause, we may substitute this other definition in
its place, viz. A CAUSE is an object precedent and contiguous to another,
and so united with it, that the idea, of the one determines the mind to
form the idea of the other, and the impression of the one to form a more
lively idea of the other. 2 should this definition also be rejected for
the same reason, I know no other remedy, than that the persons, who
express this delicacy, should substitute a juster definition in its place.
But for my part I must own my incapacity for such an undertaking. When I
examine with the utmost accuracy those objects, which are commonly
denominated causes and effects, I find, in considering a single instance,
that the one object is precedent and contiguous to the other; and in
inlarging my view to consider several instances, I find only, that like
objects are constantly placed in like relations of succession and
contiguity. Again, when I consider the influence of this constant
conjunction, I perceive, that such a relation can never be an object of
reasoning, and can never operate upon the mind, but by means of custom,
which determines the imagination to make a transition from the idea of one
object to that of its usual attendant, and from the impression of one to a
more lively idea of the other. However extraordinary these sentiments may
appear, I think it fruitless to trouble myself with any farther enquiry or
reasoning upon the subject, but shall repose myself on them as on
established maxims.</p>
<p>It will only be proper, before we leave this subject, to draw some
corrollaries from it, by which we may remove several prejudices and
popular errors, that have very much prevailed in philosophy. First, We may
learn from the foregoing, doctrine, that all causes are of the same kind,
and that in particular there is no foundation for that distinction, which
we sometimes make betwixt efficient causes and causes sine qua non; or
betwixt efficient causes, and formal, and material, and exemplary, and
final causes. For as our idea of efficiency is derived from the constant
conjunction of two objects, wherever this is observed, the cause is
efficient; and where it is not, there can never be a cause of any kind.
For the same reason we must reject the distinction betwixt cause and
occasion, when supposed to signify any thing essentially different from
each other. If constant conjunction be implyed in what we call occasion,
it is a real cause. If not, it is no relation at all, and cannot give rise
to any argument or reasoning.</p>
<p>Secondly, The same course of reasoning will make us conclude, that there
is but one kind of necessity, as there is but one kind of cause, and that
the common distinction betwixt moral and physical necessity is without any
foundation in nature. This clearly appears from the precedent explication
of necessity. It is the constant conjunction of objects, along with the
determination of the mind, which constitutes a physical necessity: And the
removal of these is the same thing with chance. As objects must either be
conjoined or not, and as the mind must either be determined or not to pass
from one object to another, it is impossible to admit of any medium
betwixt chance and an absolute necessity. In weakening this conjunction
and determination you do not change the nature of the necessity; since
even in the operation of bodies, these have different degrees of constancy
and force, without producing a different species of that relation.</p>
<p>The distinction, which we often make betwixt POWER and the EXERCISE of it,
is equally without foundation.</p>
<p>Thirdly, We may now be able fully to overcome all that repugnance, which
it is so natural for us to entertain against the foregoing reasoning, by
which we endeavoured to prove, that the necessity of a cause to every
beginning of existence is not founded on any arguments either
demonstrative or intuitive. Such an opinion will not appear strange after
the foregoing definitions. If we define a cause to be an object precedent
and contiguous to another, and where all the objects resembling the farmer
are placed in a like relation of priority and contiguity to those objects,
that resemble the latter; we may easily conceive, that there is no
absolute nor metaphysical necessity, that every beginning of existence
should be attended with such an object. If we define a cause to be, AN
OBJECT PRECEDENT AND CONTIGUOUS TO ANOTHER, AND SO UNITED WITH IT IN THE
IMAGINATION, THAT THE IDEA OF THE ONE DETERMINES THE MIND TO FORM THE IDEA
OF THE OTHER, AND THE IMPRESSION OF THE ONE TO FORM A MORE LIVELY IDEA OF
THE OTHER; we shall make still less difficulty of assenting to this
opinion. Such an influence on the mind is in itself perfectly
extraordinary and incomprehensible; nor can we be certain of its reality,
but from experience and observation.</p>
<p>I shall add as a fourth corrollary that we can never have reason to
believe that any object exists, of which we cannot form an idea. For as
all our reasonings concerning existence are derived from causation, and as
all our reasonings concerning causation are derived from the experienced
conjunction of objects, not from any reasoning or reflection, the same
experience must give us a notion of these objects, and must remove all
mystery from our conclusions. This is so evident, that it would scarce
have merited our attention, were it not to obviate certain objections of
this kind, which might arise against the following reasonings concerning
matter and substance. I need not observe, that a full knowledge of the
object is not requisite, but only of those qualities of it, which we
believe to exist.</p>
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