MEDITATION III.
OF GOD: THAT HE EXISTS.
1. I WILL now close my eyes, I will stop my ears, I will turn away my senses from
their objects, I will even efface from my consciousness all the images of
corporeal things; or at least, because this can hardly be accomplished, I will
consider them as empty and false; and thus, holding converse only with myself,
and closely examining my nature, I will endeavor to obtain by degrees a more
intimate and familiar knowledge of myself. I am a thinking (conscious) thing,
that is, a being who doubts, affirms, denies, knows a few objects, and is
ignorant of many, [who loves, hates], wills, refuses, who imagines likewise,
and perceives; for, as I before remarked, although the things which I perceive
or imagine are perhaps Nothing at all apart from me [and in themselves], I
am nevertheless assured that those modes of consciousness which I call
perceptions and imaginations, in as far only as they are modes of
consciousness, exist in me.
2. And in the little I have said I think I have summed
up all that I really know, or at least all that up to this time I was aware I
knew. Now, as I am endeavoring to extend my knowledge more widely, I will use
circumspection, and consider with care whether I can still discover in myself
anything further which I have not yet hitherto observed. I am certain that I am
a thinking thing; but do I not therefore likewise know what is required to
render me certain of a truth? In this first knowledge, doubtless, there is
nothing that gives me assurance of its truth except the clear and distinct
perception of what I affirm, which would not indeed be sufficient to give me
the assurance that what I say is true, if it could ever happen that anything I
thus clearly and distinctly perceived should prove false, and accordingly it
seems to me that I may now take a general rule, that all that is very clearly
and distinctly apprehended (conceived) is true.
3. Nevertheless I before received and admitted many things as wholly certain and
manifest, which yet I afterward found to be doubtful. What, then, were those?
They were the earth, the sky, the stars, and all the other objects which I was
in the habit of perceiving by the senses. But what was it that I clearly [and
distinctly] perceived in them? Nothing more than that the ideas and the
thoughts of those objects were presented to my mind. And even now I do not deny
that these ideas are found in my mind. But there was yet another thing which I
affirmed, and which, from having been accustomed to believe it, I thought I
clearly perceived, although, in truth, I did not perceive it at all; I mean the
existence of objects external to me, from which those ideas proceeded, and to
which they had a perfect resemblance; and it was here I was mistaken, or if I
judged correctly, this assuredly was not to be traced to any knowledge I
possessed (the force of my perception, Lat.).
4. But when I considered any matter in arithmetic and geometry, that was very
simple and easy, as, for example, that two and three added together make five,
and things of this sort, did I not view them with at least sufficient clearness
to warrant me in affirming their truth 7 Indeed, if I afterward judged that we
ought to doubt of these things, it was for no other reason than because it
occurred to me that a God might perhaps have given me such a nature as that I
should be deceived, even respecting the matters that appeared to me the most
evidently true. But as often as this preconceived opinion of the sovereign
power of a God presents itself to my mind, I am constrained to admit that it is
easy for him, if he wishes it, to cause me to err even in matters where I think
I possess the highest evidence; and, on the other hand, as often as I direct my
attention to things which I think I apprehend with great clearness, I am so
persuaded of their truth that I naturally break out into expressions such as
these: Deceive me who may, no one will yet ever be able to bring it about that
I am not, so long as I shall be conscious that I am, or at any future time
cause it to be true that I have never been, it being now true that I am, or
make two and three more or less than five, in supposing which, and other like
absurdities, I discover a manifest contradiction. And in truth, as I have no ground for believing that Deity is deceitful, and
as, indeed, I have not even considered the reasons by which the existence of a
Deity
of any kind is established, the ground of doubt that rests only on this
supposition is very slight, and, so to speak, metaphysical. But, that I may be
able wholly to remove it, I must inquire whether there is a God, as soon as an
opportunity of doing so shall present itself; and if I find that there is a
God, I must examine likewise whether he can be a deceiver; for, without the
knowledge of these two truths, I do not see that I can ever be certain of
anything. And that I may be enabled to examine this without interrupting the
order of meditation I have proposed to myself [which is, to pass by degrees
from the notions that I shall find first in my mind to those I shall afterward
discover in it], it is necessary at this stage to divide all my thoughts into
certain classes, and to consider in which of these classes truth and error
are, strictly speaking, to be found.
5. Of my thoughts some are, as it were, images of things, and to these alone
properly belongs the name IDEA; as when I think [represent to my mind] a man,
a chimera, the sky, an angel or God. Others, again, have certain other forms;
as when I will, fear, affirm, or deny, I always, indeed, apprehend something as
the object of my thought, but I also embrace in thought something more than the
representation of the object; and of this class of thoughts some are called
volitions or affections, and others judgments.
6. Now, with respect to ideas, if these are considered only in themselves, and are
not referred to any object beyond them, they cannot, properly speaking, be
false; for, whether I imagine a goat or chimera, it is not less true that I
imagine the one than the other. Nor need we fear that falsity may exist in the
will or affections; for, although I may desire objects that are wrong, and even
that never existed, it is still true that I desire them. There thus only remain
our judgments, in which we must take diligent heed that we be nod deceived.
But the chief and most ordinary error that arises in them consists in judging
that the ideas which are in us are like or conformed to the things that are
external to us; for assuredly, if we but considered the ideas themselves as
certain modes of our thought (consciousness), without referring them to
anything beyond, they would hardly afford any occasion of error.
7. But among these ideas, some appear to me to be innate, others adventitious, and
others to be made by myself (factitious); for, as I have the power of
conceiving what is called a thing, or a truth, or a thought, it seems to me
that I hold this power from no other source than my own nature; but if I now
hear a noise, if I see the sun, or if I feel heat, I have all along judged that
these sensations proceeded from certain objects existing out of myself; and,
in fine, it appears to me that sirens, hippogryphs, and the like, are
inventions of my own mind. But I may even perhaps come to be of opinion that
all my ideas are of the class which I call adventitious, or that they are all
innate, or that they are all fictitious; for I have not yet clearly discovered
their true origin.
8. What I have here principally to do is to consider, with
reference to those that appear to come from certain objects without me, what
grounds there are for thinking them like these objects. The first of these grounds is that it seems to me I am so taught by nature; and
the second that I am conscious that those ideas are not dependent on my will,
and therefore not on myself, for they are frequently presented to me against my
will, as at present, whether I will or not, I feel heat; and I am thus
persuaded that this sensation or idea (sensum vel ideam) of heat is
produced in me by something different from myself, viz., by the heat of the
fire by which I sit. And it is very reasonable to suppose that this object
impresses me with its own likeness rather than any other thing.
9. But I must consider whether these reasons are sufficiently strong and
convincing. When I speak of being taught by nature in this matter, I understand
by the word nature only a certain spontaneous impetus that impels me to believe
in a resemblance between ideas and their objects, and not a natural light that
affords a knowledge of its truth. But these two things are widely different;
for what the natural light shows to be true can be in no degree doubtful,
as, for example, that I am because I doubt, and other truths of the like kind;
inasmuch as I possess no other faculty whereby to distinguish truth from error,
which can teach me the falsity of what the natural light declares to be true,
and which is equally trustworthy; but with respect to [seemingly] natural
impulses, I have observed, when the question related to the choice of right or
wrong in action, that they frequently led me to take the worse part; nor do I
see that I have any better ground for following them in what relates to truth
and error.
10. Then, with respect to the other reason, which is that because these
ideas do not depend on my will, they must arise from objects existing without
me, I do not find it more convincing than the former, for just as those natural
impulses, of which I have lately spoken, are found in me, notwithstanding that
they are not always in harmony with my will, so likewise it may be that I
possess some power not sufficiently known to myself capable of producing ideas
without the aid of external Objects, and, indeed, it has always hitherto
appeared to me that they are formed during sleep, by some power of this
nature, without the aid of Ought external.
11. And, in fine, although I should
grant that they proceeded from those objects, it is not a necessary consequence
that they must be like them. On the contrary, I have observed, in a number of
instances, that there was a great difference between the object and its idea.
Thus, for example, I find in my mind two wholly diverse ideas of the sun; the
one, by which it appears to me extremely small draws its origin from the
senses, and should be placed in the class of adventitious ideas; the other, by
which it seems to be many times larger than the whole earth, is taken up on
astronomical grounds, that is, elicited from certain notions born with me, or
is framed by myself in some other manner. These two ideas cannot certainly both
resemble the same sun; and reason teaches me that the one which seems to have
immediately emanated from it is the most unlike.
12. And these things sufficiently
prove that hitherto it has not been from a certain and deliberate judgment, but
only from a sort of blind impulse, that I believed existence of certain things
different from myself, which, by the organs of sense, or by whatever other
means it might be, conveyed their ideas or images into my mind Land impressed
it with their likenesses].
13. But there is still another way of inquiring whether, of the objects whose ideas
are in my mind, there are any that exist out of me. If ideas are taken in so
far only as they are certain modes of consciousness, I do not remark any
difference or inequality among them, and all seem, in the same manner, to
proceed from myself; but, considering them as images, of which one represents
one thing and another a different, it is evident that a great diversity obtains
among them. For, without doubt, those that represent substances are something
more, and contain in themselves, so to speak, more objective reality [that is,
participate by representation in higher degrees of being or perfection], than
those that represent only modes or accidents; and again, the idea by which I
conceive a God [sovereign], eternal, infinite, [immutable], all-knowing,
all-powerful, and the creator of all things that are out of himself, this, I say, has
certainly in it more objective reality than those ideas by which finite
substances are represented.
14. Now, it is manifest by the natural light that there must at least be as much
reality in the efficient and total cause as in its effect; for whence can the
effect draw its reality if not from its cause? And how could the cause
communicate to it this reality unless it possessed it in itself 7 And hence it
follows, not only that what is cannot be produced by what is not, but likewise
that the more perfect, in other words, that which contains in itself more
reality, cannot be the effect of the less perfect; and this is not only
evidently true of those effects, whose reality is actual or formal, but
likewise of ideas, whose reality is only considered as objective. Thus, for
example, the stone that is not yet in existence, not only cannot now commence
to be, unless it be produced by that which possesses in itself, formally or
eminently, all that enters into its composition, [in other words, by that which
contains in itself the same properties that are in the stone, or others
superior to them]; and heat can only be produced in a subject that was before
devoid of it, by a cause that is of an order, [degree or kind], at least as
perfect as heat; and so of the others. But further, even the idea of the heat,
or of the stone, cannot exist in me unless it be put there by a cause that
contains, at least, as much reality as I conceive existent in the heat or in
the stone for although that cause may not transmit into my idea anything of its
actual or formal reality, we ought not on this account to imagine that it is
less real; but we ought to consider that, [as every idea is a work of the
mind], its nature is such as of itself to demand no other formal reality than
that which it borrows from our consciousness, of which it is but a mode [that
is, a manner or way of thinking]. But in order that an idea may contain this
objective reality rather than that, it must doubtless derive it from some cause
in which is found at least as much formal reality as the idea contains of
objective; for, if we suppose that there is found in an idea anything which was
not in its cause, it must of course derive this from nothing. But, however
imperfect may be the mode of existence by which a thing is objectively [or by
representation] in the understanding by its idea, we certainly cannot, for all
that, allege that this mode of existence is nothing, nor, consequently, that
the idea owes its origin to nothing.
15. Nor must it be imagined that, since the
reality which considered in these ideas is only objective, the same reality
need not be formally (actually) in the causes of these ideas, but only
objectively: for, just as the mode of existing objectively belongs to ideas by
their peculiar nature, so likewise the mode of existing formally appertains to
the causes of these ideas (at least to the first and principal), by their
peculiar nature. And although an idea may give rise to another idea, this
regress cannot, nevertheless, be infinite; we must in the end reach a first
idea, the cause of which is, as it were, the archetype in which all the reality
[or perfection] that is found objectively [or by representation] in these ideas
is contained formally [and in act]. I am thus clearly taught by the natural
light that ideas exist in me as pictures or images, which may, in truth,
readily fall short of the perfection of the objects from which they are taken,
but can never contain anything greater or more perfect.
16. And in proportion to the time and care with which I examine all those matters, the
conviction of their truth brightens and becomes distinct. But, to sum up, what
conclusion shall I draw from it all? It is this: if the objective reality [or
perfection] of any one of my ideas be such as clearly to convince me, that this
same reality exists in me neither formally nor eminently, and if, as follows
from this, I myself cannot be the cause of it, it is a necessary consequence
that I am not alone in the world, but that there is besides myself some other
being who exists as the cause of that idea; while, on the contrary, if no such
idea be found in my mind, I shall have no sufficient ground of assurance of the
existence of any other being besides myself, for, after a most careful
search, I have, up to this moment, been unable to discover any other ground.
17. But, among these my ideas, besides that which represents myself, respecting
which there can be here no difficulty, there is one that represents a God;
others that represent corporeal and inanimate things; others angels; others
animals; and, finally, there are some that represent men like myself.
18. But with
respect to the ideas that represent other men, or animals, or angels, I can
easily suppose that they were formed by the mingling and composition of the
other ideas which I have of myself, of corporeal things, and of God, although
they were, apart from myself, neither men, animals, nor angels.
19. And with regard
to the ideas of corporeal objects, I never discovered in them anything so great
or excellent which I myself did not appear capable of originating; for, by
considering these ideas closely and scrutinizing them individually, in the same
way that I yesterday examined the idea of wax, I find that there is but little
in them that is clearly and distinctly perceived. As belonging to the class of
things that are clearly apprehended, I recognize the following, viz., magnitude
or extension in length, breadth, and depth; figure, which results from the
termination of extension; situation, which bodies of diverse figures preserve
with reference to each other; and motion or the change of situation; to which
may be added substance, duration, and number. But with regard to light, colors,
sounds, odors, tastes, heat, cold, and the other tactile qualities, they are
thought with so much obscurity and confusion, that I cannot determine even
whether they are true or false; in other words, whether or not the ideas I have
of these qualities are in truth the ideas of real objects. For although I
before remarked that it is only in judgments that formal falsity, or falsity
properly so called, can be met with, there may nevertheless be found in ideas a
certain material falsity, which arises when they represent what is nothing as
if it were something. Thus, for example, the ideas I have of cold and heat are
so far from being clear and distinct, that I am unable from them to discover
whether cold is only the privation of heat, or heat the privation of cold; or
whether they are or are not real qualities: and since, ideas being as it were
images there can be none that does not seem to us to represent some object, the
idea which represents cold as something real and positive will not improperly
be called false, if it be correct to say that cold is nothing but a privation
of heat; and so in other cases.
20. To ideas of this kind, indeed, it is not
necessary that I should assign any author besides myself: for if they are
false, that is, represent objects that are unreal, the natural light teaches me
that they proceed from nothing;
in other words, that they are in me only because something is wanting to the
perfection of my nature; but if these ideas are true, yet because they exhibit
to me so little reality that I cannot even distinguish the object represented
from nonbeing, I do not see why I should not be the author of them.
21. With reference to those ideas of corporeal things that are clear and distinct,
there are some which, as appears to me, might have been taken from the idea I
have of myself, as those of substance, duration, number, and the like. For when
I think that a stone is a substance, or a thing capable of existing of itself,
and that I am likewise a substance, although I conceive that I am a thinking
and non-extended
thing, and that the stone, on the contrary, is extended and unconscious, there
being thus the greatest diversity between the two concepts, yet these two ideas
seem to have this in common that they both represent substances. In the same
way, when I think of myself as now existing, and recollect besides that I
existed some time ago, and when I am conscious of various thoughts whose number
I know, I then acquire the ideas of duration and number, which I can afterward
transfer to as many objects as I please. With respect to the other qualities
that go to make up the ideas of corporeal objects, viz., extension, figure,
situation, and motion, it is true that they are not formally in me, since I am
merely a thinking being; but because they are only certain modes of substance,
and because I my self am a substance, it seems possible that they may be
contained in me eminently.
22. There only remains, therefore, the idea of God, in which I must consider
whether there is anything that cannot be supposed to originate with myself. By
the name God, I understand a substance infinite, [eternal, immutable],
independent, all-knowing,
all-powerful,
and by which I myself, and every other thing that exists, if any such there be,
were created. But these properties are so great and excellent, that the more
attentively I consider them the less I feel persuaded that the idea I have of
them owes its origin to myself alone And thus it is absolutely necessary
to conclude, from all that I have before said, that God exists.
23. For though the
idea of substance be in my mind owing to this, that I myself am a substance, I
should not, however, have the idea of an infinite substance, seeing I am a
finite being, unless it were given me by some substance in reality infinite.
24. And I must not imagine that I do not apprehend the infinite by a true idea, but
only by the negation of the finite, in the same way that I comprehend repose
and darkness by the negation of motion and light: since, on the contrary, I
clearly perceive that there is more reality in the infinite substance than in
the finite, and therefore that in some way I possess the perception (notion) of
the infinite before that of the finite, that is, the perception of God before
that of myself, for how could I know that I doubt, desire, or that something is
wanting to me, and that I am not wholly perfect, if I possessed no idea of a
being more perfect than myself, by comparison of which I knew the deficiencies
of my nature?
25. And it cannot be said that this idea of God is perhaps materially false, and
consequently that it may have arisen from nothing [in other words, that it may
exist in me from my imperfections as I before said of the ideas of heat and
cold, and the like: for, on the contrary, as this idea is very clear and
distinct, and contains in itself more objective reality than any other, there
can be no one of itself more true, or less open to the suspicion of falsity.
The idea, I say, of a being supremely perfect, and infinite, is in the highest
degree true; for although, perhaps, we may imagine that such a being does not
exist, we cannot, nevertheless, suppose that his idea represents nothing real,
as I have already said of the idea of cold. It is likewise clear and distinct
in the highest degree, since whatever the mind clearly and distinctly conceives
as real or true, and as implying any perfection, is con
tained entire in this idea. And this is true, nevertheless, although I do not
comprehend the infinite, and although there may be in God an infinity of things
that I cannot comprehend, nor perhaps even compass by thought in any way; for
it is of the nature of the infinite that it should not be comprehended by the
finite; and it is enough that I rightly understand this, and judge that all
which I clearly perceive, and in which I know there is some perfection, and
perhaps also an infinity of properties of which I am ignorant, are formally or
eminently in God, in order that the idea I have of him may be come the
most true, clear, and distinct of all the ideas in my mind.
26. But perhaps I am something more than I suppose myself to be, and it may be that
all those perfections which I attribute to God, in some way exist potentially
in me, although they do not yet show themselves, and are not reduced to
act. Indeed, I am already conscious that my knowledge is being increased [and
perfected] by degrees; and I see nothing to prevent it from thus gradually
increasing to infinity, nor any reason why, after such increase and perfection,
I should not be able thereby to acquire all the other perfections of the Divine
nature; nor, in fine, why the power I possess of acquiring those perfections,
if it really now exist in me, should not be sufficient to produce the ideas of
them.
27. Yet, on looking more closely into the matter, I discover that this cannot
be; for, in the first place, although it were true that my knowledge daily
acquired new degrees of perfection, and although there were potentially in my
nature much that was not as yet actually in it, still all these excellences
make not the slightest approach to the idea I have of the Deity, in whom there
is no perfection merely potentially [but all actually] existent; for it is even
an unmistakable token of imperfection in my knowledge, that it is augmented by
degrees. Further, although my knowledge increase more and more, nevertheless I
am not, therefore, induced to think that it will ever be actually infinite,
since it can never reach that point beyond which it shall be incapable of
further increase. But I conceive God as actually infinite, so that nothing can
be added to his perfection. And, in fine, I readily perceive that the objective
being of an idea cannot be produced by a being that is merely potentially
existent, which, properly speaking, is nothing, but only by a being existing
formally or actually.
28. And, truly, I see nothing in all that I have now said which it is not easy for
any one, who shall carefully consider it, to discern by the natural light; but
when I allow my attention in some degree to relax, the vision of my mind being
obscured, and, as it were, blinded by the images of sensible objects, I do not
readily remember the reason why the idea of a being more perfect than myself,
must of necessity have proceeded from a being in reality more perfect. On this
account I am here desirous to inquire further, whether I, who possess this idea
of God, could exist supposing there were no God.
29. And I ask, from whom could I,
in that case, derive my existence? Perhaps from myself, or from my parents, or
from some other causes less perfect than God; for anything more perfect, or
even equal to God, cannot be thought or imagined.
30. But if I [were independent of
every other existence, and] were myself the author of my being, I should doubt
of nothing, I should desire nothing, and, in fine, no perfection would be
awanting to me; for I should have bestowed upon myself every perfection of
which I possess the idea, and I should thus be God. And it must not be imagined
that what is now wanting to me is perhaps of more difficult acquisition than
that of which I am already possessed; for, on the contrary, it is quite
manifest that it was a matter of much higher difficulty that I, a thinking
being, should arise from nothing, than it would be for me to acquire the
knowledge of many things of which I am ignorant, and which are merely the
accidents of a thinking substance; and certainly, if I possessed of myself the
greater perfection of which I have now spoken [in other words, if I were the
author of my own existence], I would not at least have denied to myself things
that may be more easily obtained [as that infinite variety of knowledge of
which I am at present destitute]. I could not, indeed, have denied to myself
any property which I perceive is contained in the idea of God, because there is
none of these that seems to me to be more difficult to make or acquire; and if
there were any that should happen to be more difficult to acquire, they would
certainly appear so to me (supposing that I myself were the source of the other
things I possess), because I should discover in them a limit to my power.
31. And
though I were to suppose that I always was as I now am, I should not, on this
ground, escape the force of these reasonings, since it would not follow, even
on this supposition, that no author of my existence needed to be sought after.
For the whole time of my life may be divided into an infinity of parts, each of
which is in no way dependent on any other; and, accordingly, because I was in
existence a short time ago, it does not follow that I must now exist, unless in
this moment some cause create me anew as it were, that is, conserve me. In
truth, it is perfectly clear and evident to all who will attentively consider
the nature of duration, that the conservation of a substance, in each moment of
its duration, requires the same power and act that would be necessary to create
it, supposing it were not yet in existence; so that it is manifestly a dictate
of the natural light that conservation and creation differ merely in respect of
our mode of thinking [and not in reality].
32. All that is here required,
therefore, is that I interrogate myself to discover whether I possess any power
by means of which I can bring it about that I, who now am, shall exist a moment
afterward: for, since I am merely a thinking thing (or since, at least, the
precise question, in the meantime, is only of that part of myself ), if such a
power resided in me, I should, without doubt, be conscious of it; but I am
conscious of no such power, and thereby I manifestly know that I am dependent
upon some being different from myself.
33. But perhaps the being upon whom I am dependent is not God, and I have been
produced either by my parents, or by some causes less perfect than Deity. This
cannot be: for, as I before said, it is perfectly evident that there must at
least be as much reality in the cause as in its effect; and accordingly, since
I am a thinking thing and possess in myself an idea of God, whatever in the end
be the cause of my existence, it must of necessity be admitted that it is
likewise a thinking being, and that it possesses in itself the idea and all the
perfections I attribute to Deity. Then it may again be inquired whether this
cause owes its origin and existence to itself, or to some other cause. For if
it be self-existent,
it follows, from what I have before laid down, that this cause is God; for,
since it possesses the perfection of self-existence,
it must likewise, without doubt, have the power of actually possessing every
perfection of which it has the idea in other words, all the perfections I
conceive to belong to God.
34. But if it owe its existence to another cause than
itself, we demand again, for a similar reason, whether this second cause exists
of itself or through some other, until, from stage to stage, we at length
arrive at an ultimate cause, which will be God. And it is quite manifest that
in this matter there can be no infinite regress of causes, seeing that the
question raised respects not so much the cause which once produced me, as that
by which I am at this present moment conserved.
35. Nor can it be supposed that several causes concurred in my production, and that
from one I received the idea of one of the perfections I attribute to Deity,
and from another the idea of some other, and thus that all those perfections
are indeed found somewhere in the universe, but do not all exist together in a
single being who is God; for, on the contrary, the unity, the simplicity, or
inseparability of all the properties of Deity, is one of the chief perfections
I conceive him to possess; and the idea of this unity of all the perfections of
Deity could certainly not be put into my mind by any cause from which I did not
likewise receive the ideas of all the other perfections; for no power could
enable me to embrace them in an inseparable unity, without at the same time
giving me the knowledge of what they were [and of their existence in a
particular mode].
36. Finally, with regard to my parents [from whom it appears I sprung], although
all that I believed respecting them be true, it does not, nevertheless, follow
that I am conserved by them, or even that I was produced by them, in so far
as I am a thinking being. All that, at the most, they contributed to my
origin was the giving of certain dispositions (modifications) to the matter
in which I have hitherto judged that I or my mind, which is what alone I now
consider to be myself, is inclosed; and thus there can here be no difficulty
with respect to them, and it is absolutely necessary to conclude from this
alone that I am, and possess the idea of a being absolutely perfect, that is,
of God, that his existence is most clearly demonstrated.
37. There remains only the inquiry as to the way in which I received this idea from
God; for I have not drawn it from the senses, nor is it even presented to me
unexpectedly, as is usual with the ideas of sensible objects, when these are
presented or appear to be presented to the external organs of the senses; it is
not even a pure production or fiction of my mind, for it is not in my power to
take from or add to it; and consequently there but remains the alternative that
it is innate, in the same way as is the idea of myself.
38. And, in truth, it is
not to be wondered at that God, at my creation, implanted this idea in me, that
it might serve, as it were, for the mark of the workman impressed on his work;
and it is not also necessary that the mark should be something different from
the work itself; but considering only that God is my creator, it is highly
probable that he in some way fashioned me after his own image and likeness, and
that I perceive this likeness, in which is contained the idea of God, by the
same faculty by which I apprehend myself, in other words, when I make myself
the object of reflection, I not only find that I am an incomplete, [imperfect]
and dependent being, and one who unceasingly aspires after something better and
greater than he is; but, at the same time, I am assured likewise that he upon
whom I am dependent possesses in himself all the goods after which I aspire
[and the ideas of which I find in my mind], and that not merely indefinitely
and potentially, but infinitely and actually, and that he is thus God. And the
whole force of the argument of which I have here availed myself to establish
the existence of God, consists in this, that I perceive I could not possibly be
of such a nature as I am, and yet have in my mind the idea of a God, if God did
not in reality exist this same God, I say, whose idea is in my mind that is,
a being who possesses all those lofty perfections, of which the mind may have
some slight conception, without, however, being able fully to comprehend them,
and who is wholly superior to all defect [and has nothing that marks
imperfection]: whence it is sufficiently manifest that he cannot be a deceiver,
since it is a dictate of the natural light that all fraud and deception
spring from some defect.
39. But before I examine this with more attention, and pass on to the consideration
of other truths that may be evolved out of it, I think it proper to remain here
for some time in the contemplation of God himself that I may ponder at leisure
his marvelous attributes and behold, admire, and adore the beauty of this
light so unspeakably great, as far, at least, as the strength of my mind, which
is to some degree dazzled by the sight, will permit. For just as we learn by
faith that the supreme felicity of another life consists in the contemplation
of the Divine majesty alone, so even now we learn from experience that a like
meditation, though incomparably less perfect, is the source of the highest
satisfaction of which we are susceptible in this life.