Read On the Nature of the Universe (Oxford World’s Classics) Online
Authors: Ronald Melville,Don,Peta Fowler
If you look down its whole length from one end | |
It gradually takes the outlines of a cone | |
Quite joining roof to floor and right to left | 430 |
Until the invisible apex of the cone is reached. | |
At sea, to sailors from the waves the sun | |
Appears to rise, then set and hide its light in them. | |
This is because they see only sea and sky, | |
Lest you should readily believe the senses | 435 |
Are everywhere confused and undermined. | |
To landsmen ignorant of the sea a ship | |
In harbour seems to struggle against the waves | |
Maimed, its poop broken. For whatever part | |
Of the oar is raised above the sea is straight | |
And the rudders above are straight; but the parts submerged | 440 |
Below the water appear all broken back | |
And wrenched and turned flat upwards and so bent | |
Right back almost to float upon the surface. | |
And when at night the winds drive scattered clouds | |
Across the sky, the shining stars appear | |
To glide against the clouds and pass above them | 445 |
On a way far different from their actual course. | |
And if you place a hand below one eye | |
And press it, then a new sensation comes. | |
Everything we see is doubled by our vision. | |
Two lights of lamps a-flowering with flames, | 450 |
Two sets of furniture all through the house, | |
And men with double faces and two bodies. | |
When in sweet slumber sleep has bound our limbs | |
And in deep quiet all the body lies | |
Yet we seem then to ourselves to be awake | 455 |
And move our limbs, and in the night’s blind dark | |
We think we see the sun and light of day, | |
That in our narrow room we pass in turn | |
Over sky and sea, rivers and mountains; | |
We see ourselves walking across wide plains. | |
We hear sounds, though the stern silence of night | 460 |
Reigns everywhere; we speak, but still are silent. | |
And many marvels in this way we see | |
Which seek as it were to break the credit of our senses, | |
But all in vain, since the most part of them | |
Deceive because of notions of the mind | 465 |
Which we ourselves bring to them, so that things | |
Seem so be seen which senses have not seen. | |
For nothing is more difficult than to distinguish | |
And separate plain things from doubtful things | |
Which all at once are added by the mind. | |
Now here’s another thing: if someone thinks | |
That nothing is known, he does not even know | |
Whether that can be known, since he declares | 470 |
That he knows nothing. Therefore I will spare | |
To argue a case against a man like this | |
Who has put his head where his feet ought to be. | |
And yet, if I were to grant that he does know, then | |
I ask him this: since you could see no truth | |
In anything before, how do you know | |
What it is to know, and what again not to know? | 475 |
What gave you the idea of true and false, | |
What proves to you that there’s a difference, | |
That the doubtful and the certain are not the same? | |
You will find that it is from the senses | |
In the first place that the concept of truth has come, | |
And that the senses cannot be refuted. | |
For some standard must be found of greater credit | 480 |
Able of itself to refute false things with true. | |
And what can be held to tell the truth more clearly | |
Than the senses? or shall reasoning derived | |
From false senses prevail against those senses | |
Being itself wholly derived from them? | |
Unless they are true, all reasoning is false. | 485 |
Will the ear be able to convict the eye? | |
Or the touch the ear? Or taste refute the touch, | |
Or nose confound it or eye discredit it? | |
Not so, I think. For each has its own force | |
And separate power, so it needs must be | 490 |
That softness and cold or heat and colour each | |
Is separately perceived and separately | |
We see whatever is involved in colour. | |
The taste in our mouth has its separate power, and smells | |
Have separate birth, and sounds. So it must be | 495 |
That one sense never can refute another | |
Nor can they possibly convict themselves | |
Since each must always equally be trusted. | |
Accordingly whatever at any time | |
Has seemed to the senses to be true, is true. | |
And if reason cannot explain the cause | 500 |
Why objects seen as square close to at a distance | |
Seem round, yet it is better that a man | |
Lacking reason should give a faulty explanation | |
Than to let slip from your hands in any way | |
Your grip upon the obvious, and break | |
The trust upon which all depends, and tear up | 505 |
All the foundations on which life is built. | |
For not only would all reason come to ruin, | |
Life itself also would at once collapse, | |
Unless you dare to place trust in your senses, | |
Avoiding precipices and such things | |
As must be shunned, and follow the contrary. | 510 |
Believe me, all that array of words is vain | |
That has been massed and deployed against the senses. | |
Lastly, in a building, if the ruler is crooked | |
And the square is faulty and misses the straight line | |
And the level is even slightly unbalanced, | 515 |
The whole house then will of necessity | |
Be wrongly constructed and be falling over, | |
Warped, sloping, leaning forward, leaning back, | |
All out of proportion, so that some parts seem | |
Ready to collapse, and the whole destined to fall, | |
A victim to the first false measurements. | |
So your reasoning about things must be false and warped | 520 |
Whenever it is based upon false senses. | |
And now I have no stony path to tread | |
In showing how the other senses work. | |
In the first place, every sound and voice is heard | |
When it has crept into the ears, and then | 525 |
Made impact with its body upon the senses. | |
For we must confess that voice and sound also | |
Have bodies, since they strike upon the senses. | |
Besides, the voice often scrapes the throat. A shout | |
Roughens the windpipe on its outward course. | 530 |
For when the voice’s atoms massed together | |
Make their way out through the narrow passage, | |
As the mouth is filled the gateway is scraped. | |
There is no doubt therefore that words and voices | |
Consist of bodily elements, since they can hurt. | |
You see also how much the body is worn, | 535 |
How much is drawn from man’s very thews and sinews | |
By a speech that lasts from the first gleam of dawn | |
To the black shades of night, especially | |
If the words are shouted, at the top of the voice. | |
Therefore the voice must be made of bodily stuff, | 540 |
Since much speaking diminishes the body. | |
The roughness of the voice moreover comes | |
From the roughness of its atoms, and smoothness from smooth. | |
The atoms that enter the ear are not of the same shape | |
When the horn bellows with deep and hollow roar | 545 |
And the land re-echoes with its barbarous boom | |
As when swans from the glens of Helicon | |
With liquid voice uplift their mournful plaint. | |
When therefore from deep within our body | |
We force the voices out and send them forth | 550 |
Straight through the mouth, the quickly moving tongue, | |
The cunning fashioner of words, joints them | |
And moulds them, and the shaping of the lips | |
Plays its due part in giving form to them. | |
When there is no great distance for the voice | |
To run, it follows that the words themselves | |
Are clearly heard, each separate syllable. | 555 |
For the sound keeps its shape and keeps its form. | |
But if the space between is unduly long, | |
Words passing through much air must be confused | |
And the voice distorted as it flies through the air. | |
And that is why, though you can hear the sound, | 560 |
You cannot grasp the meaning of the words, | |
The voice is so obstructed and confused. | |
Often one voice can penetrate the ears | |
Of a whole crowd, when uttered by a cryer. | |