| LX.The
idols imposed by words on the understanding are of two kinds. They are either
names of things which do not exist (for as there are things left unnamed through
lack of observation, so likewise are there names which result from fantastic suppositions
and to which nothing in reality corresponds), or they are names of things which
exist, but yet confused and ill-defined, and hastily and irregularly derived from
realities. Of the former kind are Fortune, the Prime Mover, Planetary Orbits,
Element of Fire, and like fictions which owe their origin to false and idle theories.
And this class of idols is more easily expelled, because to get rid of them it
is only necessary that all theories should be steadily rejected and dismissed
as obsolete.
But the other class, which springs out of a faulty
and unskilful abstraction, is intricate and deeply rooted. Let us take
for example such a word as humid; and see how far the several things
which the word is used to signify agree with each other; and we shall
find the word humid to be nothing else than a mark loosely and
confusedly applied to denote a variety of actions which will not bear
to be reduced to any constant meaning. For it both signifies that which
easily spreads itself round any other body; and that which in itself is
indeterminate and cannot solidise; and that which readily yields in every
direction; and that which easily divides and scatters itself; and that
which easily unites and collects itself; and that which readily flows
and is put in motion; and that which readily clings to another body and
wets it; and that which is easily reduced to a liquid, or being solid
easily melts. Accordingly when you come to apply the word,
-- if you take it in one sense, flame is humid; if in another, air is
not humid; if in another, fine dust is humid; if in another, glass is
humid. So that it is easy to see that the notion is taken by abstraction
only from water and common and ordinary liquids, without any due verification.
There are however in words
certain degrees of distortion and error. One of the least faulty kinds is that
of names of substances, especially of lowest species and well-deduced (for the
notion of chalk and of mud is good, of earth bad); a more
faulty kind is that of actions, as to generate, to corrupt, to
alter; the most faulty is of qualities (except such as are the immediate objects
of the sense) as heavy, light, rare, dense, and the
like. Yet in all these cases some notions are of necessity a little better
than others, in proportion to the greater variety of subjects that fall within
the range of the human sense. | |