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god the known and god the unknown-第1章

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God the Known and God the Unknown



by Samuel Butler










                         Prefatory Note

       

〃GOD the Known and God the Unknown〃 first appeared in the form of 

a series of articles which were published in 〃The Examiner〃 in 

May; June; and July; 1879。  Samuel Butler subsequently revised 

the text of his work; presumably with the intention of 

republishing it; though he never carried the intention into 

effect。  In the present edition I have followed his revised 

version almost without deviation。  I have; however; retained a 

few passages which Butler proposed to omit; partly because they 

appear to me to render the course of his argument clearer; and 

partly because they contain characteristic thoughts and 

expressions of which none of his admirers would wish to be 

deprived。  In the list of Butler's works 〃God the Known and God 

the Unknown〃 follows 〃Life and Habit;〃 which appeared in 1877; 

and 〃Evolution; Old and New;〃 which was published in May; 1879。  

It is scarcely necessary to point out that the three works are 

closely akin in subject and treatment; and that 〃God the Known 

and God the Unknown〃 will gain in interest by being considered in 

relation to its predecessors。



                      R。  A。  STREATFEILD





                        God the Known and

                         God the Unknown



                        BY SAMUEL BUTLER



       

                            CHAPTER 1

       

                          INTRODUCTION

       

MANKIND has ever been ready to discuss matters in the inverse 

ratio of their importance; so that the more closely a question is 

felt to touch the hearts of all of us; the more incumbent it is 

considered upon prudent people to profess that it does not exist; 

to frown it down; to tell it to hold its tongue; to maintain that 

it has long been finally settled; so that there is now no 

question concerning it。



So far; indeed; has this been carried through all time past that 

the actions which are most important to us; such as our passage 

through the embryonic stages; the circulation of our blood; our 

respiration; etc。  etc。; have long been formulated beyond all 

power of reopening question concerning them … the mere fact or 

manner of their being done at all being ranked among the great 

discoveries of recent ages。  Yet the analogy of past settlements 

would lead us to suppose that so much unanimity was not arrived 

at all at once; but rather that it must have been preceded by 

much smouldering 'sic' discontent; which again was followed by 

open warfare; and that even after a settlement had been 

ostensibly arrived at; there was still much secret want of 

conviction on the part of many for several generations。



There are many who see nothing in this tendency of our nature but 

occasion for sarcasm; those; on the other hand; who hold that the 

world is by this time old enough to be the best judge concerning 

the management of its own affairs will scrutinise 'sic' this 

management with some closeness before they venture to satirise 

'sic' it; nor will they do so for long without finding 

justification for its apparent recklessness; for we must all fear 

responsibility upon matters about which we feel we know but 

little; on the other hand we must all continually act; and for 

the most part promptly。  We do so; therefore; with greater 

security when we can persuade both ourselves and others that a 

matter is already pigeon…holed than if we feel that we must use 

our own judgment for the collection; interpretation; and 

arrangement of the papers which deal with it。  Moreover; our 

action is thus made to appear as if it received collective 

sanction; and by so appearing it receives it。  Almost any 

settlement; again; is felt to be better than none; and the more 

nearly a matter comes home to everyone; the more important is it 

that it should be treated as a sleeping dog; and be let to lie; 

for if one person begins to open his mouth; fatal developments 

may arise in the Babel that will follow。



It is not difficult; indeed; to show that; instead of having 

reason to complain of the desire for the postponement of 

important questions; as though the world were composed mainly of 

knaves or fools; such fixity as animal and vegetable forms 

possess is due to this very instinct。  For if there had been no 

reluctance; if there were no friction and vis inertae to 

be encountered even after a  theoretical equilibrium had been 

upset; we  should have had no fixed organs nor settled  

proclivities; but should have been daily and  hourly undergoing 

Protean transformations;  and have still been throwing out 

pseudopodia like the amoeba。  True; we might have come to like 

this fashion of living as well as our more steady…going system if 

we had taken to it many millions of ages ago when we were yet 

young; but we have contracted other habits which have become so 

confirmed that we cannot break with them。  We therefore now hate 

that which we should perhaps have loved if we had practised 'sic' 

it。  This; however; does not affect the argument; for our concern 

is with our likes and dislikes; not with the manner in which 

those likes and dislikes have come about。  The discovery that 

organism is capable of modification at all has occasioned so much 

astonishment that it has taken the most enlightened part of the 

world more than a hundred years to leave off expressing its 

contempt for such a crude; shallow; and preposterous conception。  

Perhaps in another hundred years we shall learn to admire the 

good sense; endurance; and thorough Englishness of organism in 

having been so averse to change; even more than its versatility 

in having been willing to change so much。



Nevertheless; however conservative we may be; and however much 

alive to the folly and wickedness of tampering with settled 

convictions…no matter what they are…without sufficient cause; 

there is yet such a constant though gradual change in our 

surroundings as necessitates corresponding modification in our 

ideas; desires; and actions。  We may think that we should like to 

find ourselves always in the same surroundings as our ancestors; 

so that we might be guided at every touch and turn by the 

experience of our race; and be saved from all self…communing or 

interpretation of oracular responses uttered by the facts around 

us。  Yet the facts will change their utterances in spite of us; 

and we; too; change with age and ages in spite of ourselves; so 

as to see the facts around us as perhaps even more changed than 

they actually are。  It has been said; 〃Tempora mutantur nos et 

mutamur in illis。〃 The passage would have been no less true 

if it had stood; 〃Nos mutamur et tempora mutantur in 

nobis。〃 Whether the organism or the surroundings began 

changing first is a matter of such small moment that the two may 

be left to fight it out bet
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