<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SECT. X. OF THE INFLUENCE OF BELIEF. </h2>
<p>But though education be disclaimed by philosophy, as a fallacious ground
of assent to any opinion, it prevails nevertheless in the world, and is
the cause why all systems are apt to be rejected at first as new and
unusual. This perhaps will be the fate of what I have here advanced
concerning belief, and though the proofs I have produced appear to me
perfectly conclusive, I expect not to make many proselytes to my opinion.
Men will scarce ever be persuaded, that effects of such consequence can
flow from principles, which are seemingly so inconsiderable, and that the
far greatest part of our reasonings with all our actions and passions, can
be derived from nothing but custom and habit. To obviate this objection, I
shall here anticipate a little what would more properly fall under our
consideration afterwards, when we come to treat of the passions and the
sense of beauty.</p>
<p>There is implanted in the human mind a perception of pain and pleasure, as
the chief spring and moving principle of all its actions. But pain and
pleasure have two ways of making their appearance in the mind; of which
the one has effects very different from the other. They may either appear
in impression to the actual feeling, or only in idea, as at present when I
mention them. It is evident the influence of these upon our actions is far
from being equal. Impressions always actuate the soul, and that in the
highest degree; but it is not every idea which has the same effect. Nature
has proceeded with caution in this came, and seems to have carefully
avoided the inconveniences of two extremes. Did impressions alone
influence the will, we should every moment of our lives be subject to the
greatest calamities; because, though we foresaw their approach, we should
not be provided by nature with any principle of action, which might impel
us to avoid them. On the other hand, did every idea influence our actions,
our condition would not be much mended. For such is the unsteadiness and
activity of thought, that the images of every thing, especially of goods
and evils, are always wandering in the mind; and were it moved by every
idle conception of this kind, it would never enjoy a moment's peace and
tranquillity.</p>
<p>Nature has, therefore, chosen a medium, and has neither bestowed on every
idea of good and evil the power of actuating the will, nor yet has
entirely excluded them from this influence. Though an idle fiction has no
efficacy, yet we find by experience, that the ideas of those objects,
which we believe either are or will be existent, produce in a lesser
degree the same effect with those impressions, which are immediately
present to the senses and perception. The effect, then, of belief is to
raise up a simple idea to an equality with our impressions, and bestow on
it a like influence on the passions. This effect it can only have by
making an idea approach an impression in force and vivacity. For as the
different degrees of force make all the original difference betwixt an
impression and an idea, they must of consequence be the source of all the
differences in the effects of these perceptions, and their removal, in
whole or in part, the cause of every new resemblance they acquire.
Wherever we can make an idea approach the impressions in force and
vivacity, it will likewise imitate them in its influence on the mind; and
vice versa, where it imitates them in that influence, as in the present
case, this must proceed from its approaching them in force and vivacity.
Belief, therefore, since it causes an idea to imitate the effects of the
impressions, must make it resemble them in these qualities, and is nothing
but A MORE VIVID AND INTENSE CONCEPTION OF ANY IDEA. This, then, may both
serve as an additional argument for the present system, and may give us a
notion after what manner our reasonings from causation are able to operate
on the will and passions.</p>
<p>As belief is almost absolutely requisite to the exciting our passions, so
the passions in their turn are very favourable to belief; and not only
such facts as convey agreeable emotions, but very often such as give pain,
do upon that account become more readily the objects of faith and opinion.
A coward, whose fears are easily awakened, readily assents to every
account of danger he meets with; as a person of a sorrowful and melancholy
disposition is very credulous of every thing, that nourishes his
prevailing passion. When any affecting object is presented, it gives the
alarm, and excites immediately a degree of its proper passion; especially
in persons who are naturally inclined to that passion. This emotion passes
by an easy transition to the imagination; and diffusing itself over our
idea of the affecting object, makes us form that idea with greater force
and vivacity, and consequently assent to it, according to the precedent
system. Admiration and surprize have the same effect as the other
passions; and accordingly we may observe, that among the vulgar, quacks
and projectors meet with a more easy faith upon account of their
magnificent pretensions, than if they kept themselves within the bounds of
moderation. The first astonishment, which naturally attends their
miraculous relations, spreads itself over the whole soul, and so vivifies
and enlivens the idea, that it resembles the inferences we draw from
experience. This is a mystery, with which we may be already a little
acquainted, and which we shall have farther occasion to be let into in the
progress of this treatise.</p>
<p>After this account of the influence of belief on the passions, we shall
find less difficulty in explaining its effects on the imagination, however
extraordinary they may appear. It is certain we cannot take pleasure in
any discourse, where our judgment gives no assent to those images which
are presented to our fancy. The conversation of those who have acquired a
habit of lying, though in affairs of no moment, never gives any
satisfaction; and that because those ideas they present to us, not being
attended with belief, make no impression upon the mind. Poets themselves,
though liars by profession, always endeavour to give an air of truth to
their fictions; and where that is totally neglected, their performances,
however ingenious, will never be able to afford much pleasure. In short,
we may observe, that even when ideas have no manner of influence on the
will and passions, truth and reality are still requisite, in order to make
them entertaining to the imagination.</p>
<p>But if we compare together all the phenomena that occur on this head, we
shall find, that truth, however necessary it may seem in all works of
genius, has no other effect than to procure an easy reception for the
ideas, and to make the mind acquiesce in them with satisfaction, or at
least without reluctance. But as this is an effect, which may easily be
supposed to flow from that solidity and force, which, according to my
system, attend those ideas that are established by reasonings from
causation; it follows, that all the influence of belief upon the fancy may
be explained from that system. Accordingly we may observe, that wherever
that influence arises from any other principles beside truth or reality,
they supply its place, and give an equal entertainment to the imagination.
Poets have formed what they call a poetical system of things, which though
it be believed neither by themselves nor readers, is commonly esteemed a
sufficient foundation for any fiction. We have been so much accustomed to
the names of MARS, JUPITER, VENUS, that in the same manner as education
infixes any opinion, the constant repetition of these ideas makes them
enter into the mind with facility, and prevail upon the fancy, without
influencing the judgment. In like manner tragedians always borrow their
fable, or at least the names of their principal actors, from some known
passage in history; and that not in order to deceive the spectators; for
they will frankly confess, that truth is not in any circumstance
inviolably observed: but in order to procure a more easy reception into
the imagination for those extraordinary events, which they represent. But
this is a precaution, which is not required of comic poets, whose
personages and incidents, being of a more familiar kind, enter easily into
the conception, and are received without any such formality, even though
at first night they be known to be fictitious, and the pure offspring of
the fancy.</p>
<p>This mixture of truth and falshood in the fables of tragic poets not only
serves our present purpose, by shewing, that the imagination can be
satisfyed without any absolute belief or assurance; but may in another
view be regarded as a very strong confirmation of this system. It is
evident, that poets make use of this artifice of borrowing the names of
their persons, and the chief events of their poems, from history, in order
to procure a more easy reception for the whole, and cause it to make a
deeper impression on the fancy and affections. The several incidents of
the piece acquire a kind of relation by being united into one poem or
representation; and if any of these incidents be an object of belief, it
bestows a force and vivacity on the others, which are related to it. The
vividness of the first conception diffuses itself along the relations, and
is conveyed, as by so many pipes or canals, to every idea that has any
communication with the primary one. This, indeed, can never amount to a
perfect assurance; and that because the union among the ideas is, in a
manner, accidental: But still it approaches so near, in its influence, as
may convince us, that they are derived from the same origin. Belief must
please the imagination by means of the force and vivacity which attends
it; since every idea, which has force and vivacity, is found to be
agreeable to that faculty.</p>
<p>To confirm this we may observe, that the assistance is mutual betwixt the
judgment and fancy, as well as betwixt the judgment and passion; and that
belief not only gives vigour to the imagination, but that a vigorous and
strong imagination is of all talents the most proper to procure belief and
authority. It is difficult for us to withhold our assent from what is
painted out to us in all the colours of eloquence; and the vivacity
produced by the fancy is in many cases greater than that which arises from
custom and experience. We are hurried away by the lively imagination of
our author or companion; and even he himself is often a victim to his own
fire and genius.</p>
<p>Nor will it be amiss to remark, that as a lively imagination very often
degenerates into madness or folly, and bears it a great resemblance in its
operations; so they influence the judgment after the same manner, and
produce belief from the very same principles. When the imagination, from
any extraordinary ferment of the blood and spirits, acquires such a
vivacity as disorders all its powers and faculties, there is no means of
distinguishing betwixt truth and falshood; but every loose fiction or
idea, having the same influence as the impressions of the memory, or the
conclusions of the judgment, is received on the same footing, and operates
with equal force on the passions. A present impression and a customary
transition are now no longer necessary to enliven our ideas. Every chimera
of the brain is as vivid and intense as any of those inferences, which we
formerly dignifyed with the name of conclusions concerning matters of
fact, and sometimes as the present impressions of the senses.</p>
<p>We may observe the same effect of poetry in a lesser degree; and this is
common both to poetry and madness, that the vivacity they bestow on the
ideas is not derived from the particular situations or connexions of the
objects of these ideas, but from the present temper and disposition of the
person. But how great soever the pitch may be, to which this vivacity
rises, it is evident, that in poetry it never has the same feeling with
that which arises in the mind, when we reason, though even upon the lowest
species of probability. The mind can easily distinguish betwixt the one
and the other; and whatever emotion the poetical enthusiasm may give to
the spirits, it is still the mere phantom of belief or persuasion. The
case is the same with the idea, as with the passion it occasions. There is
no passion of the human mind but what may arise from poetry; though at the
same time the feelings of the passions are very different when excited by
poetical fictions, from what they are when they are from belief and
reality. A passion, which is disagreeable in real life, may afford the
highest entertainment in a tragedy, or epic poem. In the latter case, it
lies not with that weight upon us: It feels less firm and solid: And has
no other than the agreeable effect of exciting the spirits, and rouzing
the attention. The difference in the passions is a clear proof of a like
difference in those ideas, from which the passions are derived. Where the
vivacity arises from a customary conjunction with a present impression;
though the imagination may not, in appearance, be so much moved; yet there
is always something more forcible and real in its actions, than in the
fervors of poetry and eloquence. The force of our mental actions in this
case, no more than in any other, is not to be measured by the apparent
agitation of the mind. A poetical description may have a more sensible
effect on the fancy, than an historical narration. It may collect more of
those circumstances, that form a compleat image or picture. It may seem to
set the object before us in more lively colours. But still the ideas it
presents are different to the feeling from those, which arise from the
memory and the judgment. There is something weak and imperfect amidst all
that seeming vehemence of thought and sentiment, which attends the
fictions of poetry.</p>
<p>We shall afterwards have occasion to remark both the resemblance and
differences betwixt a poetical enthusiasm, and a serious conviction. In
the mean time I cannot forbear observing, that the great difference in
their feeling proceeds in some measure from reflection and GENERAL RULES.
We observe, that the vigour of conception, which fictions receive from
poetry and eloquence, is a circumstance merely accidental, of which every
idea is equally susceptible; and that such fictions are connected with
nothing that is real. This observation makes us only lend ourselves, so to
speak, to the fiction: But causes the idea to feel very different from the
eternal established persuasions founded on memory and custom. They are
somewhat of the same kind: But the one is much inferior to the other, both
in its causes and effects.</p>
<p>A like reflection on general rules keeps us from augmenting our belief
upon every encrease of the force and vivacity of our ideas. Where an
opinion admits of no doubt, or opposite probability, we attribute to it a
full conviction: though the want of resemblance, or contiguity, may render
its force inferior to that of other opinions. It is thus the understanding
corrects the appearances of the senses, and makes us imagine, that an
object at twenty foot distance seems even to the eye as large as one of
the same dimensions at ten.</p>
<p>We may observe the same effect of poetry in a lesser degree; only with
this difference, that the least reflection dissipates the illusions of
poetry, and Places the objects in their proper light. It is however
certain, that in the warmth of a poetical enthusiasm, a poet has a
counterfeit belief, and even a kind of vision of his objects: And if there
be any shadow of argument to support this belief, nothing contributes more
to his full conviction than a blaze of poetical figures and images, which
have their effect upon the poet himself, as well as upon his readers.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />