On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
last . —They are good , therefore , because they terminate in pleasure , and in the prevention of other pains ; and there is nothing on account of which things can be called good , except pleasure and pain . —Admitted . —Then pleasure is the same thing with good , and pain with
evil : and if a pleasure is bad , it is because it prevents a greater pleasure , or causes a ^ pain which exceeds the pleasure : if a pain is good , it is because it prevents a greater pain , or leads to a greater pleasure . For , if this were not so , you could point out some other end , with reference to which , things are good or evil : but you cannot . —Granted .
But if all this be true , ( still addressing the vulgar , ) how absurd , we may tell them , was the opinion you expressed , that a man often , although knowing evil to be evil , practises it nevertheless , being overpowered bv pleasure ? How ridiculous this is , will be plainly seen if ^ we drop some of the terms which we have hitherto used , and since the pleasant and the good are but one thing , call them by one name ; as likewise , the painful and the bad . You say , that knowing evil to be evil , a man yet practises it , being overpowered ; by what ? They cannot now say , by pleasure ; since we have now another name for it , viz . good . Being
overpowered by good ! It is strange , and absurd , if a man practises evil , knowing it to be evil , being overpowered by good . If we ask whether the good is worthy or not worthy to overpower the evil , they must answer , Not worthy ; for , otherwise , to be so overpowered would be no fault . How , then , we must answer , can good be unworthy to overpower evil , or evil to overpower good , but by reason of its smaller amount ? It is clear , then , that what you call , to be overpowered by pleasure , is to choose a greater evil for the sake of a less good . If we now drop the words good and evil , and resume the words pain and pleasure , we find , in like manner , that he who is said to be overpowered by pleasure , is overpowered by a pleasure which is unworthy to overpower : and a pleasure is unworthy to overpower a pain , only by being
less in amount . For , if it be said , The immediately pleasant differs greatly from the ultimately so , I answer , only in the degree of pleasure and pain . If we sum up the pleasure and the pain , and place them in opposite scales , we ought to choose the greater pleasure , or the less pain , whether they are immediate or remote .
Now , is it not true that magnitudes appear smaller at a distance , greater when close at hand ? that sounds appear louder when nearer , fainter when more distant , and the like?—Undoubtedly . —If , then , our well-doing depended upon our possessing great magnitudes , and avoiding small ones , what would our safety depend upon ? Upon the faculty of seeing things merely aa they appear , which leads to perpetual errors in the estimation of magnitudes ; or upon the art of measurement , which teaches us to detect false appearances , and ascertain the real magnitudes of bodies ?—Upon the latter . —If our safety in lifed epended upon always choosing the larger number , and eschewing the less , what would be our
safeguard ? surely knowledge : one of the kinds of knowledge of measurement , since it relates to excess and defect ; and ( since it relates to numbers ) , the knowledge of arithmetic ?—Undoubtedly . Since , then , it is upon the proper choice of pleasures and pains that our well doing in life depends , viz . upon choosing always the greater pleasure , or the smaller pain , what we here » tand in need of is likewise measurement , since this also relates to exceta and defect . But if it be
Untitled Article
Plato ' s Dialogues ; the Protagoras . 209
Untitled Article
No . 87 . Q
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 2, 1834, page 209, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2631/page/53/
-