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Madame, there is a great
dispute between the princes of
philosophy, Plato and Aristotle, over the condition of the intellectual
soul,
which they admit openly to be celestial, divine, immortal, and separable from the body. But
Plato holds that it is of itself knowledgeable in all things
and that the memory of them is erased and lost the instant the sou; is
submerged and mired in our moist and soft bodies. Then, as our bodies
dry up
little by little, the soul once again clean and shining remembers and
recognizes
all things bit by bit, as though learning them for the first time. For,
according to Plato, what we call learning is but a remembering.
Aristotle,
on the
contrary, affirms that our soul comes to the body ignorant of
everything, but
capable and very quick to conceive all things, being a truly simple
spirit, but
in potency capable of grasping everything. He compares it to a virgin
tablet on
which nothing has been engraved, ready to receive all the colors and
shapes
desired. This latter notion has had more of a following than the former
and is
held as the true one among those who philosophize best. For if one
became
knowledgeable through the drying of the body, it would follow that
there would
be no need for doctrine, and that error would have no foothold in our
souls
(provided that the external senses were complete and in working order);
but
both these conclusions are patently absurd.
What
need would one
have of doctrine or teaching if the soul of itself became, or became
once
again, knowledgeable? And if it were only because of the superfluous
moisture
of the body that the soul did not know everything, whatever could be
shown to
it would not be understood or retained, and we would have to wait until
it
dried up to remember the things forgotten.
In such a case, doctrine would be vain and totally
useless (unless it
served to put someone lost back onto the path), for after the drying of
the
body, the soul would still be as lost as ever, continuing in its
forgetfulness.
Furthermore, all people of the same age and makeup would have to be
equally
knowledgeable, since their bodies would be equally dried and their
souls
equally less moist. As for error, what place could it have if the soul
knew
everything, as long as the external senses did not deceive it by
showing it one
thing for another? The soul would not know what it had not yet
discovered or
recognized, but this is not error, for at least what it knew would be
true,
since all knowledge is verifiable.
Now
nothing is more
common and ordinary in the soul than error and false opinion. They must
come
from somewhere and make their way in from the outside, namely, from
false
doctrine and evil persuasion. It is true enough that the soul is able
to forge
error and lies for itself (as is the case in most men), abusing itself
through
ignorance. For in wishing to reason and argue about something, the
soul,
ignorant of some aspects and not sure of others, forms a faulty
syllogism and
then a bad conclusion, with which it remains satisfied, holding it in
ignorance
because it is unable to discern the truth from the false. Thus is error
engendered, and it will be more firmly rooted in the souls of the
presumptuous—forgers of false opinions---than it will in the souls of
the
credulous, who accept false doctrine without argument or difficulty.
There,
madame is
the source of error. This shows well that the soul is ignorant of it
self and
capable only of receiving what one wishes to paint or engrave upon it,
whether
good or evil, true or false. Just as water is without character,
receiving all
flavors indifferently, and just as white wool takes on all colors, so,
too, is
the soul modified with each quality. Happy indeed is the soul that
meets up
with good masters, especially for rudimentary learning, so that it will
not be
engraved, tainted, saturated, or impregnated with evil traits, colors,
humors,
or odors that are false, corrupted and vicious from the start. For it
is almost
as difficult, if not impossible, to erase, repair, or reform false
opinions
inscribed and imprinted in a soft medium, which receives them very
quickly, as
it is to change the luster, tint, and color already imprinted in the
countenance and complexion, or to alter humors engendered by pernicious
nutrients. From all these come similar manners and similar actions,
which, like
foul odors, refuse emendation without first reforming the entire humor
engendering them and thus offend not only the nose but also the mind of
those
having more sense.
From POPULAR ERRORS (1587) by Laurent
Joubert translated by
Gregory David de Rocher, The University of Alabama Press in 1989.
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