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<h2> THOMAS HOBBES. </h2>
<p>This distinguished Freethinker was born on the 5th of April, 1588, at
Malmesbury; hence his cognomen of "the philosopher of Malmesbury." In
connection with his birth, we are told that his mother, being a loyal
Protestant, was so terrified at the rumored approach of the Spanish
Armada, that the birth of her son was hastened in consequence. The
subsequent timidity of Hobbes is therefore easily accounted for. The
foundation of his education was laid in the grammar school of his native
town, where most probably his father (being a clergyman) would officiate
as tutor. At the age of fifteen he was sent to Oxford. Five years of
assiduous study made him proficient as a tutor; this, combined with his
amiability and profound views of society, gained him the respect of the
Earl of Devonshire, and he was appointed tutor to the Earl's son, Lord
Cavendish. From 1610 to 1628, he was constantly in the society of this
nobleman, in the capacity of secretary. In the interval of this time he
travelled in France, Germany, and Italy; cultivating in each capital the
society of the leading statesmen and philosophers. Lord Herbert, of
Cherbury, the first great English Deist, and Ben Jonson, the dramatist,
were each his boon companions. In the year 1628, Hobbes again made the
tour of the Continent for three years with another pupil, and became
acquainted at Pisa with Galileo. In 1631 he was entrusted with the
education of another youth of the Devonshire family, and for near five
years remained at Paris with his pupil.</p>
<p>Hobbes returned to England in 1636. The troublous politics of this age,
with its strong party prejudices, made England the reverse of a pleasant
retirement, for either Hobbes or his patrons; so, perceiving the outbreak
of the Revolution, he emigrated to Paris. There in the enjoyment of the
company of Gassendi and Descartes, with the <i>elite</i> of Parisian
genius, he was for awhile contented and happy. Here he engaged in a series
of mathematical quarrels, which were prolonged throughout the whole of his
life, on the quadrature of the circle. Seven years after, he was appointed
mathematical tutor to the Prince of Wales, afterwards Charles II. In 1642,
Hobbes published the first of his principal works, "De Cive, or
Philosophical Rudiments Concerning Government and Society." It was written
to curb the spirit of anarchy, then so rampant in England, by exposing the
inevitable results which must of necessity spring from the want of a
coherent government amongst a people disunited and uneducated. The
principles inculcated in this work were reproduced in the year 1651, in
the "Leviathan, or the Matter, Form, and Power of a Commonwealth,
Ecclesiastical and Civil;" this, along with a "Treatise on Human Nature,"
and a small work on "The Body Politic," form the groundwork of the
"selfish schools" of moral philosophy. As soon as they were published,
they were attacked by the clergy of every country in Europe. They were
interdicted by the Pontiffs of the Roman and Greek Church, along with the
Protestants scattered over Europe, and the Episcopal authorities of
England. Indeed, to such an extent did this persecution rise, that even
the royalist exiles received warning that there was no chance for their
ostracism being removed, unless "the unclean thing (Hobbes) was put away
from their midst." The young prince, intimidated by those ebullitions of
vengeance against his tutor? was obliged to withdraw his protection from
him, and the old man, then near seventy years of age, was compelled to
escape from Paris by night, pursued by his enemies, who, according to Lord
Clarendon, tracked his footsteps from France. Fortunately for Hobbes, he
took refuge with his old protectors, the Devonshire family, who were too
powerful to be wantonly insulted. While residing at Chatsworth, he would
no doubt acutely feel the loss of Descartes, the Cardinal de Richelieu,
and Gassendi; in the place of those men he entered into a warm friendship
with Cowley, the poet, Selden, Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation
of the blood, Charles Blount, and the witty Sir Thomas Brown.</p>
<p>In 1654, he published a "Letter upon Liberty and Necessity;" this brief
tractate is unsurpassed in Free-thought literature for its clear, concise,
subtle, and demonstrative proofs of the self-determining power of the
will, and the truth of philosophical necessity. All subsequent writers on
this question have largely availed themselves of Hobbes's arguments,
particularly the pamphleteers of Socialism. It is a fact no less true than
strange, that Communism is derived from the system of Hobbes, which has
always been classed along with that of Machiavelli, as an apology for
despotism. The grand peculiarity of Hobbes is his method. Instead of
taking speculation and reasoning upon theories, he carried out the
inductive system of Bacon in its entirety, reasoning from separate generic
facts, instead of analogically. By this means he narrowed the compass of
knowledge, and made everything demonstrative that was capable of proof.
Belief was consequently placed upon its proper basis, and a rigid analysis
separated the boundaries of Knowing and Being. Hobbes looked at the great
end of existence and embodied it in a double axiom. 1st. The desire for
self-preservation. 2nd. To render ourselves happy. From those duplex
principles which are inherent in all animals, a modern politician has
perpetrated a platitude which represents in a sentence the end and aim of
all legislation, "the greatest happiness for the greatest number." This is
the <i>ultimatum</i> of Hobbes's philosophy. Its method of accomplishment
was by treating society as one large family, with the educated and skilled
as governors, having under their care the training of the nation. All
acting from one impulse (self-preservation,) and by the conjoint
experience of all, deriving the greatest amount of happiness from this
activity. Hobbes opposed the Revolution, because it degenerated into a
faction; and supported Charles Stuart because there were more elements of
cohesion within his own party, than amongst his enemies. It was here where
the cry of despotism arose; the "Round-heads" seeing they could not detach
the ablest men from the King's party, denounced their literary opponents
as "lovers of Belial, and of tyranny." This was their most effective
answer to the "Leviathan." In after years, when the Episcopal party no
longer stood in need of the services of Hobbes, they heaped upon him the
stigma of heresy, until his <i>ci-devant</i> friends and enemies were
united in the condemnation of the man they most feared. Mr. Owen, in his
schema of Socialism, took his leading idea on non-responsibility from
Hobbes's explanation of necessity, and the freedom of the will. The old
divines had inculcated a doctrine to the effect that the "will" was a
separate entity of the human mind, which swayed the whole disposition, and
was of itself essentially corrupt. Ample testimony from the Bible
substantiated this position. But in the method of Hobbes, he lays down the
facts that we can have no knowledge without experience, and no experience
without sensation. The mind therefore is composed of classified
sensations, united together by the law of an association of ideas. This
law was first discovered by Hobbes, who makes the human will to consist in
the strongest motive which sways the balance on any side. This is the
simplest explanation which can be given on a subject more mystified than
any other in theology.</p>
<p>A long controversy betwixt Bishop Bramhall, of Londonderry, followed the
publication of Hobbes's views on Liberty and Necessity. Charles II. on his
restoration, bestowed an annual pension of £100 on Hobbes, but this did
not prevent the parliament, in 1666, censuring the "De Cive" and
"Leviathan," besides his other works. Hobbes also translated the Greek
historian, Thucydides, Homer's Odyssey, and the Illiad. The last years of
his life were spent in composing "Behemoth; or, a History of the Civil
Wars from 1640 to 1660," which was finished in the year he died, but not
published until after his death. At the close of the year 1679, he was
taken seriously ill. At the urgent request of some Christians, they were
permitted to intrude their opinions upon his dying bed, telling him
gravely that his illness would end in death, and unless he repented, he
would go straight to hell. Hobbes calmly replied, "I shall be glad then to
find a hole to creep out of the world." For seventy years he had been a
persecuted man, but during that time his enemies had paid him that tribute
of respect which genius always extorts from society. He was a man who was
hated and dreaded. He had reached the age of ninety-two when he died. His
words were pregnant with meaning; and he never used an unnecessary
sentence. A collection of moral apothegms might be gathered from his
table-talk. When asked why he did not read every new book which appeared,
he said, "If I had read as much as other men, I should have been as
ignorant." His habits were simple; he rose early in the morning, took a
long walk through the grounds of Chatsworth, and cultivated healthful
recreation. The after part of the day was devoted to study and
composition. Like Sir Walter Raleigh, he was a devoted admirer of the
"fragrant herb." Charles II.'s constant witticism, styled Hobbes as "a
bear against whom the Church played their young dogs, in order to exercise
them."</p>
<p>If there had been a few more similar "bears," the priestly "dogs" would
long since have been exterminated, for none of them escaped unhurt from
their encounters with the "grizzly" of Malmesbury, except it was in the
mathematical disputes with Dr. Wallis.</p>
<p>He was naturally of a timid disposition: this was the result of the
accident which caused his premature birth, and being besides of a reserved
character, he was ill-fitted to meet the physical rebuffs of the world. It
is said that he was so afraid of his personal safety, that he objected to
be left alone in an empty house; this charge is to some extent true, but
we must look to the mitigating circumstances of the case. He was a feeble
man, turned the age of three-score and ten, with all the clergy of England
hounding on their dupes to murder an old philosopher because he had
exposed their dogmas. It was but a few years before, that Protestants and
Papists had complimented each other's religion by burning those who were
the weakest, and long after Hobbes's death, Protestants murdered, ruined,
disgraced, and placed in the pillory Dissenters and Catholics alike, and
Thomas Hobbes had positive proof that it was the intention of the Church
of England to <i>burn him alive</i>, on the stake, a martyr for his
opinions. This, then, is a sufficient justification for Hobbes feeling
afraid, and instead of it being thrown as a taunt at this illustrious
Freethinker, it is a standing stigma on those who would re-enact the
tragedy of persecution, if public opinion would allow it.</p>
<p>Sir James Mackintosh says: * "The style of Hobbes is the very perfection
of didactic language. Short, clear, precise, pithy, his language never has
more than one meaning, which never requires a second thought to find. By
the help of his exact method, it takes so firm a hold on the mind, that it
will not allow attention to slacken. His little tract on human nature has
scarcely an ambiguous or a needless word. He has so great a power of
always choosing the most significant term, that he never is reduced to the
poor expedient of using many in its stead. He had so thoroughly studied
the genius of the language, and knew so well how to steer between pedantry
and vulgarity, that two centuries have not superannuated probably more
than a dozen of his words."</p>
<p>* Second Dissertation: Encyclopaedia Brit., p. 318.<br/></p>
<p>Lord Clarendon describes the personal character of Hobbes as "one for whom
he always had a great esteem as a man, who besides his eminent parts of
learning and knowledge, hath been always looked upon as a man of probity,
and a life free from scandal."</p>
<p>We now proceed to make a selection of quotations from the works of this
writer, commencing with those on the "Necessity of the Will," in reply to
Bishop Bramhall.</p>
<p>"The question is not whether a man be a free agent—that is to say,
whether he can write, or forbear, speak, or be silent, according to his
will; but whether the will to write, and the will to forbear, come upon
him according to his will, or according to anything else in his own power.
I acknowledge this liberty, that I can <i>do</i>, if I <i>will</i>, but to
say, I can <i>will</i> if I <i>will</i>, I take to be an absurd speech."
Further replying to Bramhall's argument, that we do not learn the "idea of
the freedom of the will" from our tutors, but we know it intuitively,
Hobbes says, "It is true very few have learned from tutors that a man is
not free to will; nor do they find it much in books. That they and in
books that which the poets chaunt in the theatres, and the shepherds on
the mountains, that which the pastors teach in the churches, and the
doctors in the universities; and that which the common people in the
markets, and all the people do assent unto, is the same that I assent
unto; namely, that a man hath freedom to do if he will; but whether he
hath freedom to will, is a question which it seems neither the Bishop nor
they ever thought of.... A wooden top that is lashed by the boys, and runs
about, sometimes to one wall, sometimes to another, sometimes spinning,
sometimes hitting men on the shins, if it were sensible of its own motion,
would think it proceeded from its own will, unless it felt what lashed it.
And is a man any wiser when he runs to one place for a benifice, to
another for a bargain, and troubles the world with writing errors, and
requiring answers, because he thinks he does it without other cause than
his own will, and seeth not what are the lashings which cause that will?"</p>
<p>Hobbes casually mentions the subject of "praise or dispraise," in
reference to the will; those who are old enough will remember this was one
of the most frequent subjects of discussion amongst the earlier
Socialists. "These depend not at all in the necessity of the action
praised or dispraised. For what is it else to praise, but to say <i>a
thing is good?</i> Good, I say, for me, or for somebody else, or for the
State and Commonwealth. And what is it to say an action is good, but to
say it is as I would wish, or as another would have it, or according to
the will of the State—that is to say, according to the law! Does my
lord think that no action could please me, or the commonwealth, that
should proceed from necessity! Things may be therefore necessary, and yet
praiseworthy, as also necessary, and yet dispraised, and neither of them
both in vain; because praise and dispraise, and likewise reward and
punishment, do, by example, make and conform the will to good or evil. It
was a very great praise, in my opinion, that Vellerius Paterculus gives
Cato, where he says that he was good by nature, '<i>et quia aliter esse
non potuit</i>.''—'And because he could not do otherwise.'" This
able treatise was reprinted, and extensively read about twenty years ago;
but, like many other of our standard works, it is at present out of print.</p>
<p>The "Leviathan" is still readable, a bold masculine book. It treats
everything in a cool, analytic style. The knife of the Socialist is
sheathed in vain; no rhapsody can overturn its impassioned teachings.
Rhetoric is not needed to embellish the truths he has to portray, for the
wild flowers of genius but too frequently hide the yawning chasms in the
garden of Logic. It is not to be expected that this book will be read now
with the interest with which it was perused two centuries ago; then every
statement was impugned, every argument denied, and the very tone of the
book called forth an interference from parliament to stop the progress of
its heresies. Now the case is widely different, and the general tenor of
the treatise is the rule in which are illustrated alike the works of the
philosophers and the dreams of the sophists (priests.) We give part of the
introduction. "Nature (the art whereby God hath made and governs the
world) is, by the art of man, as in many other things, so in this also,
imitated, that it can make an artificial animal. For seeing life is but a
motion of limbs, the beginning whereof is in some principal part within;
why may we not say that all automata (engines that move themselves by
springs and wheels, as doth a watch) have an artificial life? For what is
the heart but a spring; and the nerves but so many strings; and the joints
but so many wheels, giving motion to the whole body, such as was intended
by the Artificer? Art goes yet further, imitating that rational and most
excellent work of nature, man. For by art is created that great leviathan,
called a Commonwealth, or State, which is but an artificial man though of
greater stature and strength than the natural, for whose protection and
defence it was intended, and the sovereignty of which is an artificial
soul, as giving life and motion to the whole body. To describe the nature
of this artificial man, I will consider,</p>
<p>"1st. The <i>matter</i> thereof, and the <i>artificer</i>, both which is
man.</p>
<p>"2nd. <i>How</i>, and by what <i>covenants</i> it is made, what are the <i>rights</i>
and <i>just</i> power or authority of a sovereign; and what it is that <i>preserveth</i>
and dissolveth it.</p>
<p>"3rd. What is a Christian Commonwealth.</p>
<p>"Lastly, what is the kingdom of darkness.</p>
<p>"The first chapter treats of 'Senses.' Concerning the thoughts of man, I
will consider them first singly, and afterwards in train, or dependence
upon one another. Singly, they are every one a representation, or
appearance, of some quality or accident of a body without us, which is
commonly called an object. Which object worketh on the eyes, ears, and
other parts of a man's body, and by diversity of working, produceth
diversity of appearances. The original of them all is that which we call
sense, for there is no conception in a man's mind, which hath not at first
totally or by parts been begotten upon the organs of sense; the rest are
derived from that original."</p>
<p>Speaking of "Imagination," Hobbes says, "That when a thing lies still,
unless somewhat else stir it, it will lie still forever, is a truth no one
doubts of. But that when a thing is in motion, it will eternally be in
motion, unless somewhat else stay it, though the reason be the same—namely,
that nothing can change itself—is not so easily assented to. For men
measure not only other men, but all other things, by themselves; and
because they find themselves subject after motion to pain and lassitude,
think everything else grows weary of motion, and seeks repose of its own
accord—little considering whether it be not some other motion,
wherein that desire of rest they find in themselves consisteth.... When a
body is once in motion, it moveth (unless something else hinder it)
eternally, and whatsoever hindereth it, cannot in an instant, but in time,
and by degrees, quite extinguish it; and as we see in the water, though
the wind cease, the waves give not over rolling for a long time after; so
also it happeneth in that motion which is made in the internal parts of
man, then, when he sees, dreams, etc. For after the object is removed, or
the eye shut, we still retain an image of the thing seen, though more
obscure than when we see it.... The decay of sense in men waking, is not
the decay of the motion made in sense, but an obscuring of it, in such
manner as the light of the sun obscureth the light of the stars; which
stars do no less exercise their virtue, by which they are visible in the
day, than in the night. But because amongst many strokes which our eyes,
ears and other organs receive from external bodies, the predominant only
is sensible; therefore the light of the sun being only predominant, we are
not affected with the actions of the stars.... This decaying sense, when
we would express the thing itself (I mean fancy itself), we call
imagination, as I said before, but when we would express the Decay, and
signify the sense is fading, old and past, it is called Memory: so that
imagination and memory are but one thing, which, for divers
considerations, hath divers names." *</p>
<p>Such is the commencement of this celebrated book, it is based upon
materialism; every argument must stand this test upon Hobbes's principles,
and characteristically are they elaborated. Hobbes ("De Cive") says of the
immortality of the soul, "It is a belief grounded upon other men's
sayings, that they knew it supernaturally; or that they knew those who
knew them, that knew others, that knew it supernaturally." A sparkling
sneer, and perhaps the truest answer to so universal an error. Dugald
Stewart, in his analysis of the works of Hobbes, says, ** The fundamental
doctrines inculcated in the political works of Hobbes, are contained in
the following propositions:—All men are by nature equal, and, prior
to government, they had all an equal right to enjoy the good things of
this world. Man, too, is by nature, a solitary and purely selfish animal;
the social union being entirely an interested league, suggested by
prudential views of personal advantage. The necessary consequence is, that
a state of nature must be a state of perpetual warfare, in which no
individual has any other means of safety than his own strength or
ingenuity; and in which there is no room for regular industry, because no
secure enjoyment of its fruits. In confirmation of this view of the origin
of society, Hobbes appeals to facts falling daily within the cycle of our
experience. "Does not a man, (he asks) when taking a journey, arm himself,
and seek to go well accompanied? When going to sleep, does he not lock his
doors? Nay, even in his own house, does he not lock his chests? Does he
not there accuse mankind by his action, as I do by my words?" For the sake
of peace and security, it is necessary that each individual should
surrender a part of his natural right, and be contented with such a share
of liberty as he is willing to allow to others; or, to use Hobbes's own
language, "every man must divest himself of the right he has to all things
by nature; the right of all men to all things, being in effect no better
than if no man had a right to anything." In consequence of this
transference of natural rights to an individual, or to a body of
individuals, the multitude become one person, under the name of a State,
or Republic, by which person the common will and power are exercised for
the common defence. The ruling power cannot be withdrawn from those to
whom it has been committed; nor can they be punished for misgovern-ment.
The interpretation of the laws is to be sought, not from the comments of
philosophers, but from the authority of the ruler; otherwise society would
every moment be in danger of resolving itself into the discordant elements
of which it was at first composed.—The will of the magistrate,
therefore, is to be regarded as the ultimate standard of right and wrong,
and his voice to be listened to by every citizen as the voice of
conscience."</p>
<p>* Leviathan. Ed. 1651.<br/>
<br/>
** Dissertation on the Progress of Ethical Science, p. 41.<br/></p>
<p>Such are the words of one of Hobbes's most powerful opponents. Dr.
Warburton says, "The philosopher of Malmesbury was the terror of the last
age, as Tin-dal and Collins are of this. The press sweats with
controversy; and every young churchman militant would try his arms in
thundering on Hobbes's steel cap." This is a modest acknowledgment of the
power of Hobbes, from the most turbulent divine of the eighteenth century.</p>
<p>Victor Comyin gives the following as his view of the philosophy of Hobbes:—"There
is no other certain evidence than that of the senses. The evidence of the
senses attests only the existence of bodies; then there is no existence
save that of bodies, and philosophy is only the science of bodies.</p>
<p>"There are two sorts of bodies: 1st, Natural bodies, which are the theatre
of a multitude of regular phenomena, because they take place by virtue of
fixed laws, as the bodies with which physics are occupied; 2nd, Moral and
political bodies, societies which constantly change and are subject to
variable laws.</p>
<p>"Hobbes's system of physics is that of Democritus, the atomistic and
corpuscular of the Ionic school.</p>
<p>"His metaphysics are its corollary; all the phenomena which pass in the
consciousness have their source in the organization, of which the
consciousness in itself is simply a result. All the ideas come from the
senses. To think, is to calculate; and intelligence is nothing else than
an arithmetic. As we do not calculate with out signs, we do not think
without words; the truth of the thought is in the relation of the words
among themselves, and metaphysics are reduced to a perfect language.
Hobbes is completely a nominalist. With Hobbes there are no other than
contingent ideas; the finite alone can be conceived; the infinite is only
a negation of the finite; beyond that it is a mere word invented to honor
a being whom faith alone can reach. The idea of good and evil has no other
foundation than agreeable or disagreeable sensations; to agreeable or
disagreeable sensation it is impossible to apply any. other law than
escape from the one and search after the other; hence the morality of
Hobbes, which is the foundation of his politics. Man is capable of
enjoying and of suffering; his only law is to suffer as little, and enjoy
as much, as possible. Since such is his only law, he has all the rights
that this law confers upon him; he may do anything for his preservation
and his happiness; he has the right to sacrifice everything to himself.
Behold? then, men upon this earth, where the objects of desire are not
superabundant, all possessing equal rights to whatever may be agreeable or
useful to them, by virtue of the same capacity for enjoyment and
suffering. This is a state of nature, which is nothing less than a state
of war, the anarchy of the passions, a combat in which every man is
arrayed against his neighbor. But this state being opposed to the
happiness of the majority of individuals who share it, utility, the
offspring of egotism itself, demands its exchange for another, to wit, the
social state. The social state is the institution of a public power,
stronger than all individuals, capable of making peace succeed war, and
imposing on all the accomplishment of whatever it shall have judged to be
useful, that is, just."</p>
<p>Before we dismiss the father of Freethought from our notice, there remains
a tribute of respect to be paid to one whom it is our duty to associate
with the author of the "Leviathan," and who has but just passed away—one
man amongst the British aristocracy with the disposition of a tribune of
the people, coupled with thoughts at once elevated and free, and a
position which rendered him of essential service to struggling opinion.
This man saw the greatness, the profound depth, the attic style, and the
immense importance of the works of Hobbes, along with their systematic
depreciation by those whose duty it should be to explain them, especially
at a time when those works were not reprinted, and the public were obliged
to glean their character from the refutations (so called) by mangled
quotations, and a distorted meaning. Impelled by this thought, and anxious
to protect the memory of a philosopher, his devoted disciple, at a cost of
£10,000, translated the Latin, and edited the English works of Hobbes, in
a manner worthy alike of the genius of the author, and the discernment of
his editor. For this kindness, a seat in Parliament was lost by the
organization of the clergy in Cornwall. The name of this man was Sir
William Molesworth. Let Freethinkers cherish the memory of their
benefactor.</p>
<p>We now take our leave of Thomas Hobbes. He had not the chivalry of
Herbert; the vivacity of Raleigh; the cumulative power of Bacon; or the
winning policy of Locke. If his physical deformities prevented him from
being as daring as Vane, he was as bold in thought and expression as
either Descartes, or his young friend Blount. He gave birth to the
brilliant constellation of genius in the time of Queen Anne. He did not
live to see his system extensively promulgated; but his principles moulded
the character of the men who formed the revolution of 1688, equally as
much as Hume established the Scotch and German schools of philosophy; and
Voltaire laid the train by which the French Revolution was proclaimed.
Peace to his memory! It was a stormy struggle during his life; its frowns
cannot hurt him now. Could we believe in the idea of a future life, we
should invoke his blessings on our cause. That cause which for near two
hundred years has successfully struggled into birth, to youth, and
maturity. Striking down in its onward course superstitions which hath
grown with centuries, and where it does not exterminate them, it supplies
a purer atmosphere, and extracts the upas-sting which has laid low so
many, and which must yet be finally exterminated. The day is rapidly
dawning when our only deities will be the works of genius, and our only
prayer the remembrance of our most illustrious chiefs.</p>
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