1. Chapter I
Of Ideas in general, and their Original
1. Idea is the object of thinking.
Every man being conscious to himself that he thinks; and that which his mind is
applied about whilst thinking being the ideas that are there, it is past doubt that men have in their minds several
ideas,--such as are those expressed by the words whiteness, hardness, sweetness, thinking, motion, man,
elephant, army, drunkenness, and others: it is in the first place then to be inquired, How he comes by them?
I know it is a received doctrine, that men have native ideas, and original characters, stamped upon their minds in
their very first being. This opinion I have at large examined already; and, I suppose what I have said in the
foregoing Book will be much more easily admitted, when I have shown whence the understanding may get all the
ideas it has; and by what ways and degrees they may come into the mind;--for which I shall appeal to every one's
own observation and experience.
2. All ideas come from sensation or reflection.
Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white paper, void of
all characters, without any ideas:--How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store which the
busy and boundless fancy of man has painted on it with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials
of reason and knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from Experience. In that all our knowledge is founded;
and from that it ultimately derives itself. Our observation employed either, about external sensible objects, or
about the internal operations of our minds perceived and reflected on by ourselves, is that which supplies our
understandings with all the materials of thinking. These two are the fountains of knowledge, from whence all the
ideas we have, or can naturally have, do spring.
3. The objects of sensation one source of ideas.
First, our Senses, conversant about particular sensible objects, do
convey into the mind several distinct perceptions of things, according to those various ways wherein those objects
do affect them. And thus we come by those ideas we have of yellow, white, heat, cold, soft, hard, bitter, sweet,
and all those which we call sensible qualities; which when I say the senses convey into the mind, I mean, they
from external objects convey into the mind what produces there those perceptions. This great source of most of
the ideas we have, depending wholly upon our senses, and derived by them to the understanding, I call Sensation.
4. The operations of our minds, the other source of them.
Secondly, the other fountain from which experience
furnisheth the understanding with ideas is,--the perception of the operations of our own mind within us, as it is
employed about the ideas it has got;--which operations, when the soul comes to reflect on and consider, do
furnish the understanding with another set of ideas, which could not be had from things without. And such are
perception, thinking, doubting, believing, reasoning, knowing, willing, and all the different actings of our own
minds;--which we being conscious of, and observing in ourselves, do from these receive into our understandings
as distinct ideas as we do from bodies affecting our senses. This source of ideas every man has wholly in himself;
and though it be not sense, as having nothing to do with external objects, yet it is very like it, and might properly
enough be called internal sense. But as I call the other Sensation, so I Call this Reflection, the ideas it affords
being such only as the mind gets by reflecting on its own operations within itself. By reflection then, in the
following part of this discourse, I would be understood to mean, that notice which the mind takes of its own
operations, and the manner of them, by reason whereof there come to be ideas of these operations in the
understanding. These two, I say, viz., external material things, as the objects of Sensation, and the operations of
our own minds within, as the objects of Reflection, are to me the only originals from whence all our ideas take
their beginnings. The term operations here I use in a large sense, as comprehending not barely the actions of the
mind about its ideas, but some sort of passions arising sometimes from them, such as is the satisfaction or
uneasiness arising from any thought.
5. All our ideas are of the one or the other of these.
The understanding seems to me not to have the least
glimmering of any ideas which it doth not receive from one of these two. External objects furnish the mind with
the ideas of sensible qualities, which are all those different perceptions they produce in us; and the mind furnishes
the understanding with ideas of its own operations.
These, when we have taken a full survey of them, and their several modes, combinations, and relations, we shall
find to contain all our whole stock of ideas; and that we have nothing in our minds which did not come in one of
these two ways. Let any one examine his own thoughts, and thoroughly search into his understanding; and then let
him tell me, whether all the original ideas he has there, are any other than of the objects of his senses, or of the
operations of his mind, considered as objects of his reflection. And how great a mass of knowledge soever he
imagines to be lodged there, he will, upon taking a strict view, see that he has not any idea in his mind but what
one of these two have imprinted;--though perhaps, with infinite variety compounded and enlarged by the
understanding, as we shall see hereafter.
6. Observable in children.
He that attentively considers the state of a child, at his first coming into the world, will
have little reason to think him stored with plenty of ideas, that are to be the matter of his future knowledge. It is
by degrees he comes to be furnished with them. And though the ideas of obvious and familiar qualities imprint
themselves before the memory begins to keep a register of time or order, yet it is often so late before some
unusual qualities come in the way, that there are few men that cannot recollect the beginning of their acquaintance
with them. And if it were worth while, no doubt a child might be so ordered as to have but a very few, even of the
ordinary ideas, till he were grown up to a man. But all that are born into the world, being surrounded with bodies
that perpetually and diversely affect them, variety of ideas, whether care be taken of it or not, are imprinted on the
minds of children. Light and colours are busy at hand everywhere, when the eye is but open; sounds and some
tangible qualities fail not to solicit their proper senses, and force an entrance to the mind;--but yet, I think, it will
be granted easily, that if a child were kept in a place where he never saw any other but black and white till he
were a man, he would have no more ideas of scarlet or green, than he that from his childhood never tasted an
oyster, or a pine-apple, has of those particular relishes.
7. Men are differently furnished with these, according to the different objects they converse with.
Men then come
to be furnished with fewer or more simple ideas from without, according as the objects they converse with afford
greater or less variety; and from the operations of their minds within, according as they more or less reflect on
them. For, though he that contemplates the operations of his mind, cannot but have plain and clear ideas of them;
yet, unless he turn his thoughts that way, and considers them attentively, he will no more have clear and distinct
ideas of all the operations of his mind, and all that may be observed therein, than he will have all the particular
ideas of any landscape, or of the parts and motions of a clock, who will not turn his eyes to it, and with attention
heed all the parts of it. The picture, or clock may be so placed, that they may come in his way every day; but yet
he will have but a confused idea of all the parts they are made up of, till he applies himself with attention, to
consider them each in particular.
8. Ideas of reflection later, because they need attention.
And hence we see the reason why it is pretty late before
most children get ideas of the operations of their own minds; and some have not any very clear or perfect ideas of
the greatest part of them all their lives. Because, though they pass there continually, yet, like floating visions, they
make not deep impressions enough to leave in their mind clear, distinct, lasting ideas, till the understanding turns
inward upon itself, reflects on its own operations, and makes them the objects of its own contemplation. Children
when they come first into it, are surrounded with a world of new things, which, by a constant solicitation of their
senses, draw the mind constantly to them; forward to take notice of new, and apt to be delighted with the variety
of changing objects. Thus the first years are usually employed and diverted in looking abroad. Men's business in
them is to acquaint themselves with what is to be found without; and so growing up in a constant attention to
outward sensations, seldom make any considerable reflection on what passes within them, till they come to be of
riper years; and some scarce ever at all.
9. The soul begins to have ideas when it begins to perceive.
To ask, at what time a man has first any ideas, is to
ask, when he begins to perceive;--having ideas, and perception, being the same thing. I know it is an opinion, that
the soul always thinks, and that it has the actual perception of ideas in itself constantly, as long as it exists; and
that actual thinking is as inseparable from the soul as actual extension is from the body; which if true, to inquire
after the beginning of a man's ideas is the same as to inquire after the beginning of his soul. For, by this account,
soul and its ideas, as body and its extension, will begin to exist both at the same time.
10. The soul thinks not always; for this wants proofs.
But whether the soul be supposed to exist antecedent to, or
coeval with, or some time after the first rudiments of organization, or the beginnings of life in the body, I leave to
be disputed by those who have better thought of that matter. I confess myself to have one of those dull souls, that
doth not perceive itself always to contemplate ideas; nor can conceive it any more necessary for the soul always to
think, than for the body always to move: the perception of ideas being (as I conceive) to the soul, what motion is
to the body; not its essence, but one of its operations. And therefore, though thinking be supposed never so much
the proper action of the soul, yet it is not necessary to suppose that it should be always thinking, always in action.
That, perhaps, is the privilege of the infinite Author and Preserver of all things, who "never slumbers nor sleeps;"
but is not competent to any finite being, at least not to the soul of man. We know certainly, by experience, that we
sometimes think; and thence draw this infallible consequence,--that there is something in us that has a power to
think. But whether that substance perpetually thinks or no, we can be no further assured than experience informs
us. For, to say that actual thinking is essential to the soul, and inseparable from it, is to beg what is in question,
and not to prove it by reason;--which is necessary to be done, if it be not a self-evident proposition. But whether
this, "That the soul always thinks," be a self-evident proposition, that everybody assents to at first hearing, I
appeal to mankind. It is doubted whether I thought at all last night or no. The question being about a matter of
fact, it is begging it to bring, as a proof for it, an hypothesis, which is the very thing in dispute: by which way one
may prove anything, and it is but supposing that all watches, whilst the balance beats, think, and it is sufficiently
proved, and past doubt, that my watch thought all last night. But he that would not deceive himself, ought to build
his hypothesis on matter of fact, and make it out by sensible experience, and not presume on matter of fact,
because of his hypothesis, that is, because he supposes it to be so; which way of proving amounts to this, that I
must necessarily think all last night, because another supposes I always think, though I myself cannot perceive
that I always do so.
But men in love with their opinions may not only suppose what is in question, but allege wrong matter of fact.
How else could any one make it an inference of mine, that a thing is not, because we are not sensible of it in our
sleep? I do not say there is no soul in a man, because he is not sensible of it in his sleep; but I do say, he cannot
think at any time, waking or sleeping: without being sensible of it. Our being sensible of it is not necessary to
anything but to our thoughts; and to them it is; and to them it always will be necessary, till we can think without
being conscious of it.
11. It is not always conscious of it.
I grant that the soul, in a waking man, is never without thought, because it is
the condition of being awake. But whether sleeping without dreaming be not an affection of the whole man, mind
as well as body, may be worth a waking man's consideration; it being hard to conceive that anything should think
and not be conscious of it. If the soul doth think in a sleeping man without being conscious of it, I ask whether,
during such thinking, it has any pleasure or pain, or be capable of happiness or misery? I am sure the man is not;
no more than the bed or earth he lies on. For to be happy or miserable without being conscious of it, seems to me
utterly inconsistent and impossible. Or if it be possible that the soul can, whilst the body is sleeping, have its
thinking, enjoyments, and concerns, its pleasures or pain, apart, which the man is not conscious of nor partakes
in,--it is certain that Socrates asleep and Socrates awake is not the same person; but his soul when he sleeps, and
Socrates the man, consisting of body and soul, when he is waking, are two persons: since waking Socrates has no
knowledge of, or concernment for that happiness or misery of his soul, which it enjoys alone by itself whilst he
sleeps, without perceiving anything of it; no more than he has for the happiness or misery of a man in the Indies,
whom he knows not. For, if we take wholly away all consciousness of our actions and sensations, especially of
pleasure and pain, and the concernment that accompanies it, it will be hard to know wherein to place personal
identity.
12. If a sleeping man thinks without knowing it, the sleeping and waking man are two persons.
The soul, during
sound sleep, thinks, say these men. Whilst it thinks and perceives, it is capable certainly of those of delight or
trouble, as well as any other perceptions; and it must necessarily be conscious of its own perceptions. But it has all
this apart: the sleeping man, it is plain, is conscious of nothing of all this. Let us suppose, then, the soul of Castor,
while he is sleeping, retired from his body; which is no impossible supposition for the men I have here to do with,
who so liberally allow life, without a thinking soul, to all other animals. These men cannot then judge it
impossible, or a contradiction, that the body should live without the soul; nor that the soul should subsist and
think, or have perception, even perception of happiness or misery, without the body. Let us then, I say, suppose
the soul of Castor separated during his sleep from his body, to think apart. Let us suppose, too, that it chooses for
its scene of thinking the body of another man, v.g. Pollux, who is sleeping without a soul. For, if Castor's soul can
think, whilst Castor is asleep, what Castor is never conscious of, it is no matter what place it chooses to think in.
We have here, then, the bodies of two men with only one soul between them, which we will suppose to sleep and
wake by turns; and the soul still thinking in the waking man, whereof the sleeping man is never conscious, has
never the least perception. I ask, then, whether Castor and Pollux, thus with only one soul between them, which
thinks and perceives in one what the other is never conscious of, nor is concerned for, are not two as distinct
persons as Castor and Hercules, or as Socrates and Plato were? And whether one of them might not be very
happy, and the other very miserable? Just by the same reason, they make the soul and the man two persons, who
make the soul think apart what the man is not conscious of. For, I suppose nobody will make identity of persons
to consist in the soul's being united to the very same numercial particles of matter. For if that be necessary to
identity, it will be impossible, in that constant flux of the particles of our bodies, that any man should be the same
person two days, or two moments, together.
13. Impossible to convince those that sleep without dreaming, that they think.
Thus, methinks, every drowsy nod
shakes their doctrine, who teach that the soul is always thinking. Those, at least, who do at any time sleep without
dreaming, can never be convinced that their thoughts are sometimes for four hours busy without their knowing of
it; and if they are taken in the very act, waked in the middle of that sleeping contemplation, can give no manner of
account of it.
14. That men dream without remembering it, in vain urged.
It will perhaps be said,--That the soul thinks even in
the soundest sleep, but the memory retains it not. That the soul in a sleeping man should be this moment busy a
thinking, and the next moment in a waking man not remember nor be able to recollect one jot of all those
thoughts, is very hard to be conceived, and would need some better proof than bare assertion to make it be
believed. For who can without any more ado, but being barely told so, imagine that the greatest part of men do,
during all their lives, for several hours every day, think of something, which if they were asked, even in the
middle of these thoughts, they could remember nothing at all of? Most men, I think, pass a great part of their sleep
without dreaming. I once knew a man that was bred a scholar, and had no bad memory, who told me he had never
dreamed in his life, till he had that fever he was then newly recovered of, which was about the five or six and
twentieth year of his age. I suppose the world affords more such instances: at least every one's acquaintance will
furnish him with examples enough of such as pass most of their nights without dreaming.
15. Upon this hypothesis, the thoughts of a sleeping man ought to be most rational.
To think often, and never to
retain it so much as one moment, is a very useless sort of thinking; and the soul, in such a state of thinking, does
very little, if at all, excel that of a looking-glass, which constantly receives variety of images, or ideas, but retains
none; they disappear and vanish, and there remain no footsteps of them; the looking-glass is never the better for
such ideas, nor the soul for such thoughts. Perhaps it will be said, that in a waking man the materials of the body
are employed, and made use of, in thinking; and that the memory of thoughts is retained by the impressions that
are made on the brain, and the traces there left after such thinking; but that in the thinking of the soul, which is not
perceived in a sleeping man, there the soul thinks apart, and making no use of the organs of the body, leaves no
impressions on it, and consequently no memory of such thoughts. Not to mention again the absurdity of two
distinct persons, which follows from this supposition, I answer, further,--That whatever ideas the mind can
receive and contemplate without the help of the body, it is reasonable to conclude it can retain without the help of
the body too; or else the soul, or any separate spirit, will have but little advantage by thinking. If it has no memory
of its own thoughts; if it cannot lay them up for its own use, and be able to recall them upon occasion; if it cannot
reflect upon what is past, and make use of its former experiences, reasonings, and contemplations, to what
purpose does it think? They who make the soul a thinking thing, at this rate, will not make it a much more noble
being than those do whom they condemn, for allowing it to be nothing but the subtilist parts of matter. Characters
drawn on dust, that the first breath of wind effaces; or impressions made on a heap of atoms, or animal spirits, are
altogether as useful, and render the subject as noble, as the thoughts of a soul that perish in thinking; that, once out
of sight, are gone forever, and leave no memory of themselves behind them. Nature never makes excellent things
for mean or no uses: and it is hardly to be conceived that our infinitely wise Creator should make so admirable a
faculty which comes nearest the excellency of his own incomprehensible being, to be so idly and uselessly
employed, at least a fourth part of its time here, as to think constantly, without remembering any of those
thoughts, without doing any good to itself or others, or being any way useful to any other part of the creation, If
we will examine it, we shall not find, I suppose, the motion of dull and senseless matter, any where in the
universe, made so little use of and so wholly thrown away.
16. On this hypothesis, the soul must have ideas not derived from sensation or reflection, of which there is no
appearance.
It is true, we have sometimes instances of perception whilst we are asleep, and retain the memory of
those thoughts: but how extravagant and incoherent for the most part they are; how little conformable to the
perfection and order of a rational being, those who are acquainted with dreams need not be told. This I would
willingly be satisfied in,--whether the soul, when it thinks thus apart, and as it were separate from the body, acts
less rationally than when conjointly with it, or no. If its separate thoughts be less rational, then these men must
say, that the soul owes the perfection of rational thinking to the body: if it does not, it is a wonder that our dreams
should be, for the most part, so frivolous and irrational; and that the soul should retain none of its more rational
soliloquies and meditations.
17. If I think when I know it not, nobody else can know it.
Those who so confidently tell us that the soul always
actually thinks, I would they would also tell us, what those ideas are that are in the soul of a child, before or just at
the union with the body, before it hath received any by sensation. The dreams of sleeping men are, as I take it, all
made up of the waking man's ideas; though for the most part oddly put together. It is strange, if the soul has ideas
of its own that it derived not from sensation or reflection, (as it must have, if it thought before it received any
impressions from the body,) that it should never, in its private thinking, (so private, that the man himself perceives
it not,) retain any of them the very moment it wakes out of them, and then make the man glad with new
discoveries. Who can find it reason that the soul should, in its retirement during sleep, have so many hours'
thoughts, and yet never light on any of those ideas it borrowed not from sensation or reflection; or at least
preserve the memory of none but such, which, being occasioned from the body, must needs be less natural to a
spirit? It is strange the soul should never once in a man's whole life recall over any of its pure native thoughts, and
those ideas it had before it borrowed anything from the body; never bring into the waking man's view any other
ideas but what have a tang of the cask, and manifestly derive their original from that union. If it always thinks,
and so had ideas before it was united, or before it received any from the body, it is not to be supposed but that
during sleep it recollects its native ideas; and during that retirement from communicating with the body, whilst it
thinks by itself, the ideas it is busied about should be, sometimes at least, those more natural and congenial ones
which it had in itself, underived from the body, or its own operations about them: which, since the waking man
never remembers, we must from this hypothesis conclude either that the soul remembers something that the man
does not; or else that memory belongs only to such ideas as are derived from the body, or the mind's operations
about them.
18. How knows any one that the soul always thinks? For if it be not a self-evident proposition, it needs proof.
I would be glad also to learn from these men who so confidently pronounce that the human soul, or, which is all
one, that a man always thinks, how they come to know it; nay, how they come to know that they themselves think
when they themselves do not perceive it. This, I am afraid, is to be sure without proofs, and to know without
perceiving. It is, I suspect, a confused notion, taken up to serve an hypothesis; and none of those clear truths, that
either their own evidence forces us to admit, or common experience makes it impudence to deny. For the most
that can be said of it is, that it is possible the soul may always think, but not always retain it in memory. And I
say, it is as possible that the soul may not always think; and much more probable that it should sometimes not
think, than that it should often think, and that a long while together, and not be conscious to itself, the next
moment after, that it had thought.
19. "That a man should be busy in thinking, and yet not retain it the next moment," very improbable.
To suppose
the soul to think, and the man not to perceive it, is, as has been said, to make two persons in one man. And if one
considers well these men's way of speaking, one should be led into a suspicion that they do so. For they who tell
us that the soul always thinks, do never, that I remember, say that a man always thinks. Can the soul think, and
not the man? Or a man think, and not be conscious of it? This, perhaps, would be suspected of jargon in others. If
they say the man thinks always, but is not always conscious of it, they may as well say his body is extended
without having parts. For it is altogether as intelligible to say that a body is extended without parts, as that
anything thinks without being conscious of it, or perceiving that it does so. They who talk thus may, with as much
reason, if it be necessary to their hypothesis, say that a man is always hungry, but that he does not always feel it;
whereas hunger consists in that very sensation, as thinking consists in being conscious that one thinks. If they say
that a man is always conscious to himself of thinking, I ask, How they know it? Consciousness is the perception
of what passes in a man's own mind. Can another man perceive that I am conscious of anything, when I perceive
it not myself? No man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience. Wake a man out of a sound sleep, and ask
him what he was that moment thinking of. If he himself be conscious of nothing he then thought on, he must be a
notable diviner of thoughts that can assure him that he was thinking. May he not, with more reason, assure him he
was not asleep? This is something beyond philosophy; and it cannot be less than revelation, that discovers to
another thoughts in my mind, when I can find none there myself, And they must needs have a penetrating sight
who can certainly see that I think, when I cannot perceive it myself, and when I declare that I do not; and yet can
see that dogs or elephants do not think, when they give all the demonstration of it imaginable, except only telling
us that they do so. This some may suspect to be a step beyond the Rosicrucians; it seeming easier to make one's
self invisible to others, than to make another's thoughts visible to me, which are not visible to himself. But it is but
defining the soul to be "a substance that always thinks," and the business is done. If such definition be of any
authority, I know not what it can serve for but to make many men suspect that they have no souls at all; since they
find a good part of their lives pass away without thinking. For no definitions that I know, no suppositions of any
sect, are of force enough to destroy constant experience; and perhaps it is the affectation of knowing beyond what
we perceive, that makes so much useless dispute and noise in the world.
20. No ideas but from sensation and reflection, evident, if we observe children.
I see no reason, therefore, to
believe that the soul thinks before the senses have furnished it with ideas to think on; and as those are increased
and retained, so it comes, by exercise, to improve its faculty of thinking in the several parts of it; as well as,
afterwards, by compounding those ideas, and reflecting on its own operations, it increases its stock, as well as
facility in remembering, imagining, reasoning, and other modes of thinking.
21. State of a child in the mother's womb.
He that will suffer himself to be informed by observation and
experience, and not make his own hypothesis the rule of nature, will find few signs of a soul accustomed to much
thinking in a new-born child, and much fewer of any reasoning at all. And yet it is hard to imagine that the
rational soul should think so much, and not reason at all. And he that will consider that infants newly come into
the world spend the greatest part of their time in sleep, and are seldom awake but when either hunger calls for the
teat, or some pain (the most importunate of all sensations), or some other violent impression on the body, forces
the mind to perceive and attend to it;--he, I say, who considers this, will perhaps find reason to imagine that a
fœtus in the mother's womb differs not much from the state of a vegetable, but passes the greatest part of its time
without perception or thought; doing very little but sleep in a place where it needs not seek for food, and is
surrounded with liquor, always equally soft, and near of the same temper; where the eyes have no light, and the
ears so shut up are not very susceptible of sounds; and where there is little or no variety, or change of objects, to
move the senses.
22. The mind thinks in proportion to the matter it gets from experience to think about.
Follow a child from its
birth, and observe the alterations that time makes, and you shall find, as the mind by the senses comes more and
more to be furnished with ideas, it comes to be more and more awake; thinks more, the more it has matter to think
on. After some time it begins to know the objects which, being most familiar with it, have made lasting
impressions. Thus it comes by degrees to know the persons it daily converses with, and distinguishes them from
strangers; which are instances and effects of its coming to retain and distinguish the ideas the senses convey to it.
And so we may observe how the mind, by degrees, improves in these; and advances to the exercise of those other
faculties of enlarging, compounding, and abstracting its ideas, and of reasoning about them, and reflecting upon
all these; of which I shall have occasion to speak more hereafter.
23. A man begins to have ideas when he first has sensation.
What sensation is.
If it shall be demanded then, when
a man begins to have any ideas, I think the true answer is,--when he first has any sensation. For, since there
appear not to be any ideas in the mind before the senses have conveyed any in, I conceive that ideas in the
understanding are coeval with sensation; which is such an impression or motion made in some part of the body, as
produces some perception in the understanding. It is about these impressions made on our senses by outward
objects that the mind seems first to employ itself, in such operations as we call perception, remembering,
consideration, reasoning, etc.
24. The original of all our knowledge.
In time the mind comes to reflect on its own operations about the ideas got
by sensation, and thereby stores itself with a new set of ideas, which I call ideas of reflection. These are the
impressions that are made on our senses by outward objects that are extrinsical to the mind; and its own
operations, proceeding from powers intrinsical and proper to itself, which, when reflected on by itself, become
also objects of its contemplation--are, as I have said, the original of all knowledge. Thus the first capacity of
human intellect is,--that the mind is fitted to receive the impressions made on it; either through the senses by
outward objects, or by its own operations when it reflects on them. This is the first step a man makes towards the
discovery of anything, and the groundwork whereon to build all those notions which ever he shall have naturally
in this world. All those sublime thoughts which tower above the clouds, and reach as high as heaven itself, take
their rise and footing here: in all that great extent wherein the mind wanders, in those remote speculations it may
seem to be elevated with, it stirs not one jot beyond those ideas which sense or reflection have offered for its
contemplation.
25. In the reception of simple ideas, the understanding is for the most part passive.
In this part the understanding
is merely passive; and whether or no it will have these beginnings, and as it were materials of knowledge, is not in
its own power. For the objects of our senses do, many of them, obtrude their particular ideas upon our minds
whether we will or not; and the operations of our minds will not let us be without, at least, some obscure notions
of them. No man can be wholly ignorant of what he does when he thinks. These simple ideas, when offered to the
mind, the understanding can no more refuse to have, nor alter when they are imprinted, nor blot them out and
make new ones itself, than a mirror can refuse, alter, or obliterate the images or ideas which the objects set before
it do therein produce. As the bodies that surround us do diversely affect our organs, the mind is forced to receive
the impressions; and cannot avoid the perception of those ideas that are annexed to them.