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Bertrand Russell: The Problems of Philosophy

Chapter 3
The Nature Of Matter
In the preceding chapter we agreed, though without being able to find demonstrative
reasons, that it is rational to believe that our sense-data -- for example,
those which we regard as associated with my table -- are really signs of
the existence of something independent of us and our perceptions. That
is to say, over and above the sensations of colour, hardness, noise, and
so on, which make up the appearance of the table to me, I assume that there
is something else, of which these things are appearances. The colour
ceases to exist if I shut my eyes, the sensation of hardness ceases to
exist if I remove my arm from contact with the table, the sound ceases
to exist if I cease to rap the table with my knuckles. But I do not believe
that when all these things cease the table ceases. On the contrary, I believe
that it is because the table exists continuously that all these sense-data
will reappear when I open my eyes, replace my arm, and begin again to rap
with my knuckles. The question we have to consider in this chapter is:
What is the nature of this real table, which persists independently of
my perception of it?
To this question physical science gives an answer, somewhat incomplete
it is true, and in part still very hypothetical, but yet deserving of respect
so far as it goes. Physical science, more or less unconsciously, has drifted
into the view that all natural phenomena ought to be reduced to motions.
Light and heat and sound are all due to wave-motions, which travel from
the body emitting them to the person who sees light or feels heat or hears
sound. That which has the wave-motion is either aether or 'gross matter',
but in either case is what the philosopher would call matter. The only
properties which science assigns to it are position in space, and the power
of motion according to the laws of motion. Science does not deny that it
may have other properties; but if so, such other properties are
not useful to the man of science, and in no way assist him in explaining
the phenomena.
It is sometimes said that 'light is a form of wave-motion', but
this is misleading, for the light which we immediately see, which we know
directly by means of our senses, is not a form of wave-motion, but
something quite different -- something which we all know if we are not
blind, though we cannot describe it so as to convey our knowledge to a
man who is blind. A wave-motion, on the contrary, could quite well be described
to a blind man, since he can acquire a knowledge of space by the sense
of touch; and he can experience a wave-motion by a sea voyage almost as
well as we can. But this, which a blind man can understand, is not what
we mean by light: we mean by light just that which a blind
man can never understand, and which we can never describe to him.
Now this something, which all of us who are not blind know, is not,
according to science, really to be found in the outer world: it is something
caused by the action of certain waves upon the eyes and nerves and brain
of the person who sees the light. When it is said that light is
waves, what is really meant is that waves are the physical cause of our
sensations of light. But light itself, the thing which seeing people experience
and blind people do not, is not supposed by science to form any part of
the world that is independent of us and our senses . And very similar remarks
would apply to other kinds of sensations.
It is not only colours and sounds and so on that are absent from the
scientific world of matter, but also space as we get it through
sight or touch. It is essential to science that its matter should be in
a space, but the space in which it is cannot be exactly the space
we see or feel. To begin with, space as we see it is not the same as space
as we get it by the sense of touch; it is only by experience in infancy
that we learn how to touch things we see, or how to get a sight of things
which we feel touching us. But the space of science is neutral as between
touch and sight; thus it cannot be either the space of touch or the space
of sight.
Again, different people see the same object as of different shapes,
according to their point of view. A circular coin, for example, though
we should always judge it to be circular, will look oval
unless we are straight in front of it. When we judge that it is
circular, we are judging that it has a real shape which is not its apparent
shape, but belongs to it intrinsically apart from its appearance. But this
real shape, which is what concerns science, must be in a real space, not
the same as anybody's apparent space. The real space is public, the apparent
space is private to the percipient. In different people's private
spaces the same object seems to have different shapes; thus the real space,
in which it has its real shape, must be different from the private spaces.
The space of science, therefore, though connected with the spaces
we see and feel, is not identical with them, and the manner of its connexion
requires investigation.
We agreed provisionally that physical objects cannot be quite like our
sense-data, but may be regarded as causing our sensations. These
physical objects are in the space of science, which we may call 'physical'
space. It is important to notice that, if our sensations are to be caused
by physical objects, there must be a physical space containing these objects
and our sense-organs and nerves and brain. We get a sensation of touch
from an object when we are in contact with it; that is to say, when some
part of our body occupies a place in physical space quite close to the
space occupied by the object. We see an object (roughly speaking) when
no opaque body is between the object and our eyes in physical space. Similarly,
we only hear or smell or taste an object when we are sufficiently near
to it, or when it touches the tongue, or has some suitable position in
physical space relatively to our body. We cannot begin to state what different
sensations we shall derive from a given object under different circumstances
unless we regard the object and our body as both in one physical space,
for it is mainly the relative positions of the object and our body that
determine what sensations we shall derive from the object.
Now our sense-data are situated in our private spaces, either the space
of sight or the space of touch or such vaguer spaces as other senses may
give us. If, as science and common sense assume, there is one public all-embracing
physical space in which physical objects are, the relative positions of
physical objects in physical space must more or less correspond to the
relative positions of sense-data in our private spaces. There is no difficulty
in supposing this to be the case. If we see on a road one house nearer
to us than another, our other senses will bear out the view that it is
nearer; for example, it will be reached sooner if we walk along the road.
Other people will agree that the house which looks nearer to us is nearer;
the ordnance map will take the same view; and thus everything points to
a spatial relation between the houses corresponding to the relation between
the sense-data which we see when we look at the houses. Thus we may assume
that there is a physical space in which physical objects have spatial relations
corresponding to those which the corresponding sense-data have in our private
spaces. It is this physical space which is dealt with in geometry and assumed
in physics and astronomy.
Assuming that there is physical space, and that it does thus correspond
to private spaces, what can we know about it? We can know only what
is required in order to secure the correspondence. That is to say, we can
know nothing of what it is like in itself, but we can know the sort of
arrangement of physical objects which results from their spatial relations.
We can know, for example, that the earth and moon and sun are in one straight
line during an eclipse, though we cannot know what a physical straight
line is in itself, as we know the look of a straight line in our visual
space. Thus we come to know much more about the relations of distances
in physical space than about the distances themselves; we may know that
one distance is greater than another, or that it is along the same straight
line as the other, but we cannot have that immediate acquaintance with
physical distances that we have with distances in our private spaces, or
with colours or sounds or other sense-data. We can know all those things
about physical space which a man born blind might know through other people
about the space of sight; but the kind of things which a man born blind
could never know about the space of sight we also cannot know about physical
space. We can know the properties of the relations required to preserve
the correspondence with sense-data, but we cannot know the nature of the
terms between which the relations hold.
With regard to time, our feeling of duration or of the lapse
of time is notoriously an unsafe guide as to the time that has elapsed
by the clock. Times when we are bored or suffering pain pass slowly, times
when we are agreeably occupied pass quickly, and times when we are sleeping
pass almost as if they did not exist. Thus, in so far as time is constituted
by duration, there is the same necessity for distinguishing a public and
a private time as there was in the case of space. But in so far as time
consists in an order of before and after, there is no need to make
such a distinction; the time-order which events seem to have is, so far
as we can see, the same as the time-order which they do have. At any rate
no reason can be given for supposing that the two orders are not the same.
The same is usually true of space: if a regiment of men are marching along
a road, the shape of the regiment will look different from different
points of view, but the men will appear arranged in the same order
from all points of view. Hence we regard the order as true also
in physical space, whereas the shape is only supposed to correspond to
the physical space so far as is required for the preservation of the order.
In saying that the time-order which events seem to have is the
same as the time-order which they really have, it is necessary to
guard against a possible misunderstanding. It must not be supposed that
the various states of different physical objects have the same time-order
as the sense-data which constitute the perceptions of those objects. Considered
as physical objects, the thunder and lightning are simultaneous; that is
to say, the lightning is simultaneous with the disturbance of the air in
the place where the disturbance begins, namely, where the lightning is.
But the sense-datum which we call hearing the thunder does not take place
until the disturbance of the air has travelled as far as to where we are.
Similarly, it takes about eight minutes for the sun's light to reach us;
thus, when we see the sun we are seeing the sun of eight minutes ago. So
far as our sense-data afford evidence as to the physical sun they afford
evidence as to the physical sun of eight minutes ago; if the physical sun
had ceased to exist within the last eight minutes, that would make no difference
to the sense-data which we call 'seeing the sun'. This affords a fresh
illustration of the necessity of distinguishing between sense-data and
physical objects.
What we have found as regards space is much the same as what we find
in relation to the correspondence of the sense-data with their physical
counterparts. If one object looks blue and another red, we may reasonably
presume that there is some corresponding difference between the physical
objects; if two objects both look blue, we may presume a corresponding
similarity. But we cannot hope to be acquainted directly with the quality
in the physical object which makes it look blue or red. Science tells us
that this quality is a certain sort of wave-motion, and this sounds familiar,
because we think of wave-motions in the space we see. But the wave-motions
must really be in physical space, with which we have no direct acquaintance;
thus the real wave-motions have not that familiarity which we might have
supposed them to have. And what holds for colours is closely similar to
what holds for other sense-data. Thus we find that, although the relations
of physical objects have all sorts of knowable properties, derived from
their correspondence with the relations of sense-data, the physical objects
themselves remain unknown in their intrinsic nature, so far at least as
can be discovered by means of the senses. The question remains whether
there is any other method of discovering the intrinsic nature of physical
objects.
The most natural, though not ultimately the most defensible, hypothesis
to adopt in the first instance, at any rate as regards visual sense-data,
would be that, though physical objects cannot, for the reasons we have
been considering, be exactly like sense-data, yet they may be more
or less like. According to this view, physical objects will, for example,
really have colours, and we might, by good luck, see an object as of the
colour it really is. The colour which an object seems to have at any given
moment will in general be very similar, though not quite the same, from
many different points of view; we might thus uppose the 'real' colour to
be a sort of medium colour, intermediate between the various shades which
appear from the different points of view.
Such a theory is perhaps not capable of being definitely refuted, but
it can be shown to be groundless. To begin with, it is plain that the colour
we see depends only upon the nature of the light-waves that strike the
eye, and is therefore modified by the medium intervening between us and
the object, as well as by the manner in which light is reflected from the
object in the direction of the eye. The intervening air alters colours
unless it is perfectly clear, and any strong reflection will alter them
completely. Thus the colour we see is a result of the ray as it reaches
the eye, and not simply a property of the object from which the ray comes.
Hence, also, provided certain waves reach the eye, we shall see a certain
colour, whether the object from which the waves start has any colour or
not. Thus it is quite gratuitous to suppose that physical objects have
colours, and therefore there is no justification for making such a supposition.
Exactly similar arguments will apply to other sense-data.
It remains to ask whether there are any general philosophical arguments
enabling us to say that, if matter is real, it must be of such and
such a nature. A explained above, very many philosophers, perhaps most,
have held that whatever is real must be in some sense mental, or at any
rate that whatever we can know anything about must be in some sense mental.
Such philosophers are called 'idealists'. Idealists tell us that what appears
as matter is really something mental; namely, either (as Leibniz held)
more or less rudimentary minds, or (as Berkeley contended) ideas in the
minds which, as we should commonly say, 'perceive' the matter. Thus idealists
deny the existence of matter as something intrinsically different from
mind, though they do not deny that our sense-data are signs of something
which exists independently of our private sensations. In the following
chapter we shall consider briefly the reasons -- in my opinion fallacious
-- which idealists advance in favour of their theory.
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