The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte, 
 freely translated and condensed by Harriet Martineau 
 (NY: Calvin Blanchard, 1855)
  
   
  
   
  Auguste Comte
 
Positive Philosophy
  
Introduction.
 
Chapter I.
 
Account of the Aim of This  Work—View of the Nature and Importance of the Positive Philosophy.
 
A  GENERAL statement of any system of philosophy may be either a sketch of a  doctrine to be established, or a summary of a doctrine already established. If  greater value belongs to the last, the first is still important, as  characterizing from its origin the. subject to be treated. In a case like the  present, where the proposed study is vast and hitherto indeterminate, it is  especially important that the field of research should be marked out with all  possible accuracy. For this purpose, I will glance at the considerations which  have originated this work, and which will be fully elaborated in the course of  it.
 
In order to understand the true value and character of the  Positive Philosophy, we must take a brief general view of the progressive course  of the human-mind, regarded as a whole; for no conception can be understood  otherwise than through its history.
 
[Law of human progress.]
  
From the study of the development of human intelligence, in all directions,  and through all times, the discovery arises of a great fundamental law, to which  it is necessarily subject, and which has a solid foundation of proof, both in  the facts of our organization and in our historical experience. The law is  this:—that each of our leading conceptions each branch of our knowledge—passes  successively through three different theoretical conditions:: the Theological,  or fictitious; the Metaphysical, or abstract; and the Scientific, or positive.  In other words, the human mind, by its nature, employs in its progress three  methods of philosophizing, the character of which is essentially different, and  even radically opposed: viz., the theological method, the metaphysical, and the  positive. Hence arise three philosophies, or general systems of conceptions on  the aggregate of phenomena, [26] each of which excludes the others. The first is  the necessary point of departure of the human understanding; and the third is  its fixed and definite state. The second is merely a state of transition.
  
{First Stage}
 
In the theological state, the human mind, seeking  the essential nature of beings. the first and final causes (the origin and  purpose) of all effects—in short, Absolute knowledge—supposes all phenomena to  be produced by the immediate action of supernatural beings.
 
{Second  Stage}
 
In the metaphysical state, which is only a modification of the  first, the mind supposes, instead of supernatural beings, abstract forces,  veritable entities (that is, personified abstractions) inherent in all beings,  and capable of producing all phenomena. What is called the explanation of  phenomena is, in this stage, a mere reference of each to its proper entity. 
 
{Third Stage.}
 
In the final, the positive state, the mind  has given over the vain search after Absolute notions, the origin and  destination of the universe, and the causes of phenomena, and applies itself to  the study of their laws—that is, their invariable relations of succession and  resemblance. Reasoning and observation, duly combined, are the means of this  knowledge. What is now understood when we speak of an explanation of facts is  simply the establishment of a connection between single phenomena and some  general facts, the number of which continually diminishes with the progress of  science.
 
{Ultimate point of each.}
 
The Theological system  arrived at the highest perfection of which it is capable when it substituted the  providential action of a single Being for the varied operations of the numerous  divinities which had been before imagined. In the same way, in the last stage of  the Metaphysical system, men substitute one great entity (Nature) as the cause  of all phenomena, instead of the multitude of entities at first supposed. In the  same way, again, the ultimate perfection of the Positive system would be (if  such perfection could be hoped for) to represent all phenomena as particular  aspects of a single general fact—such as Gravitation, for instance.
  
The importance of the working of this general law will be established  hereafter. At present, it must suffice to point out some of the grounds of it. 
 
{Evidences of the law.}
 
There is no science which, having  attained the positive stage, does not bear marks of having passed through the  others. Some time since it was (whatever it might be) composed, as we can now  perceive, of metaphysical abstractions; and, further back in the course of time,  it took its form from theological conceptions. {Actual} We shall have only too  much occasion to see. as we proceed. that our most advanced sciences still bear  very evident marks of the two earlier periods through which they have passed. 
 
The progress of the individual mind is not only an illustration, [27]  but an indirect evidence of that of the general mind. The point of departure of  the individual and of the race being the same, the phases of the mind of a man  correspond to the epochs of the mind of the race. Now, each of us is aware, if  he looks back upon his own history, that he was a theologian in his childhood, a  metaphysician in his youth, and a natural philosopher in his manhood. All men  who are up to their age can verify this for themselves.
 
Besides the  observation of facts, we have theoretical reasons in support of this law.
  
{Theoretical.}
 
The most important of these reasons arises from the  necessity that always exists for some theory to which to refer our facts,  combined with the clear impossibility that, at the outset of human knowledge,  men could have formed theories out of the observation of facts. All good  intellects have repeated, since Bacon's time, that there can be no real  knowledge but that which is based on observed facts. This is incontestable, in  our present advanced stage; but, if we look back to the primitive stage of human  knowledge, we shall see that it must have been otherwise then. If it is true  that every theory must be based upon observed facts, it is equally true that  facts can not be observed without the guidance of some theory. Without such  guidance, our facts would be desultory and fruitless; we could not retain them:  for the most part we could not even perceive them.
 
Thus, between the  necessity of observing facts in order to form a theory, and having a theory in  order to observe facts, the human mind would have been entangled in a vicious  circle, but for the natural opening afforded by Theological conceptions. This is  the fundamental reason for the theological character of the primitive  philosophy. This necessity is confirmed by the perfect suitability of the  theological philosophy to the earliest researches of the human mind. It is  remarkable that the most inaccessible questions —those of the nature of beings,  and the origin and purpose of phenomena—should be the first to occur in a  primitive state, while those which are really within our reach are regarded as  almost unworthy of serious study. The reason is evident enough:—that experience  alone can teach us the measure of our powers; and if men had not begun by an  exaggerated estimate of what they can do, they would never have done all that  they are capable of. Our organization requires this. At such a period there  could have been no reception of a positive philosophy, whose function is to  discover the laws of phenomena, and whose leading characteristic it is to regard  as interdicted to human reason those sublime mysteries which theology explains,  even to their minutes" details, with the most attractive facility. It is just so  under a practical view of the nature of the researches with which men first  occupied themselves. Such inquiries offered the powerful charm of unlimited  empire over the external world—a world destined wholly for our use, and involved  in every way with our existence. The theological philosophy presenting this  view, administered exactly the stimulus [28] necessary to incite the human mind  to the irksome labor without which it could make no progress. We can now  scarcely conceive of such a state of things, our reason having become  sufficiently mature to enter upon laborious scientific researches, without  needing any such stimulus as wrought upon the imaginations of astrologers and  alchemists. We have motive enough in the hope of discovering the laws of  phenomena, with a view to the confirmation or rejection of a theory. But it  could not be so in the earliest days; and it is to the chimeras of astrology and  alchemy that we owe the long series of observations and experiments on which our  positive science is based. Kepler felt this on behalf of astronomy, and  Berthollet on behalf of chemistry. Thus was a spontaneous philosophy, the  theological, the only possible beginning, method, and provisional system, out of  which the Positive philosophy could grow. It is easy, after this, to perceive  how Metaphysical methods and doctrines must have afforded the means of  transition from the one to the other.
 
The human understanding, slow in  its advance, could not step at once from the theological into the positive  philosophy. The two are so radically opposed, that an intermediate system of  conceptions has been necessary to render the transition possible. It is only in  doing this, that metaphysical conceptions have any utility whatever. In  contemplating phenomena, men substitute for supernatural direction a  corresponding entity. This entity may have been supposed to be derived from the  supernatural action: but it is more easily lost sight of, leaving attention free  from the facts themselves, till, at length, metaphysical agents have ceased to  be anything more than the abstract names of phenomena. It is not easy to say by  what other process than this our minds could-have passed from supernatural  considerations to natural; from the theological system to the positive.
  
The law of human development being thus established, let consider what is  the proper nature of the Positive Philosophy.
 
{Character of the  Positive Philosophy.}
 
As we have seen, the first characteristic of the  Positive Philosophy is that it regards all phenomena as subjected to invariable  natural Laws. Our business is—seeing how vain is any research into what are  called Causes, whether first or final,—to pursue an accurate discovery  of these Laws, with a view to reducing them to the smallest possible number. By  speculating upon causes, we could solve no difficulty about origin and purpose.  Our real business is to analyse accurately the circumstances of phenomena, and  to connect them by the natural relations of succession and resemblance The best  illustration of this is in the case of the doctrine of Gravitation. We say that  the general phenomena of the universe are explained by it, because it  connects under one head the whole immense variety of astronomical facts;  exhibiting the constant tendency of atoms toward each other in direct proportion  to their masses, and in inverse proportion to the squares of their distance;  while the general fact itself is a mere extension [29] of one which is perfectly  familiar to us, and which we therefore say that we know;-the weight of bodies on  the surface of the earth. As to what weight and attraction are, we have nothing  to do with that, for it is not a matter of knowledge at all. Theologians and  metaphysicians may imagine and refine about such questions; but positive  philosophy rejects them. When any attempt has been made to explain them, it has  ended only in saying that attraction is universal weight, and that weight is  terrestrial attraction: that is, that the two orders of phenomena are identical;  which is the point from which the question set out. Again, M. Fourier, in his  fine series of researches on Heat, has given us all the most important and  precise laws of the phenomena of heat, and many large and new truths, without  once inquiring into its nature, as his predecessors had done when they disputed  about calorific matter and the action of a universal ether. In treating his  subject in the Positive method, he finds inexhaustible material for all his  activity of research, without betaking himself to insoluble questions.
  
{History of the Positive Philosophy .}
 
Before ascertaining the  stage which the Positive Philosophy has reached, we must bear in mind that the i  different kinds of our knowledge have passed through the three stages of  progress at different rates, and have not therefore arrived at the same time.  The rate of advance depends on the nature of the knowledge in question, so  distinctly that, as we shall see hereafter, this consideration constitutes an  accessary to the fundamental law of progress. Any kind of knowledge reaches the  positive stage early in proportion to its generality, simplicity, and  independence of other departments. Astronomical science, which is above all made  up of facts that are general, simple, and independent of other sciences, arrived  first; then terrestrial Physics; then Chemistry; and, at length, Physiology. 
 
It is difficult to assign any precise date to this revolution in  science. It may be said, like everything else, to have been always going on; and  especially since the labors of Aristotle and the school of Alexandria; and then  from the introduction of natural science into the West of Europe by the Arabs.  But, if we must fix upon some marked period, to serve as a rallying point, it  must be that,—about two centuries ago,—when the human mind was astir under the  precepts of Bacon, the conceptions of Descartes, and the discoveries of Galileo.  Then it was that the spirit of the Positive philosophy rose up in opposition to  that of the superstitious and scholastic systems which had hitherto obscured the  true character of all science. Since that date, the progress of the Positive  philosophy, and the decline of the other two, have been so marked that no  rational mind now doubts that the revolution is destined to go on to its  completion,—every branch of knowledge being, sooner or later, brought within the  operation of Positive philosophy. This is not yet the case. Some are still lying  outside: and not till they are brought in will the Positive philosophy possess  [30] that character of universality which is necessary to its definitive  constitution.
 
In mentioning just now the four principal categories of  phenomena,—astronomical, physical, chemical, and physiological,—there was an  omission which will have been noticed. Nothing was said {New department of  Positive philosophy} of Social phenomena. Though involved with the  physiological, Social phenomena demand a distinct classification, both on  account of their importance and of their difficulty. They arc the most  individual, the most complicated, the most dependent on all others; and  therefore they must be the latest,—even if they had no special obstacle to  encounter. This branch of science has not hitherto entered into the domain of  Positive philosophy. Theological and metaphysical methods, exploded in other  departments, arc as yet exclusively applied, both in the way of inquiry and  discussion, in all treatment of Social subjects, though the best minds are  heartily weary of eternal disputes about divine right and the sovereignty of the  people. This is the great, while it is evidently the only gap which has to be  filled, to constitute, solid and entire, the Positive Philosophy. Now that the  human mind has grasped celestial and terrestrial physics,— mechanical and  chemical; organic physics, both vegetable and animal,—there romaine one science,  to fill up the series of sciences of observation,—Social physics. This is what  men have now most need of: and this it is the principal aim of the present work  to establish.
 
{Social Physics.}
 
It would be absurd to  pretend to offer this new science at once in a complete state. Others, less new.  are in very unequal conditions of forwardness. But the same character of  positivity which is impressed on all the others will be shown to belong to this.  This once done, the philosophical system of the moderns will be in fact  complete, as there will then be no phenomenon which does not naturally enter  into some one of the five great categories. All our fundamental conceptions  having become homogeneous, the Positive state will be fully established. It can  never again change its character, though it will be for ever in course of  development by additions of new knowledge. Having acquired the character of  universality which has hitherto been the only advantage resting with the two  preceding systems, it will supersede them by its natural superiority, and leave  to them only an historical existence.
 
{Secondary aim of this work: To  review the philosophy of the Sciences.}
 
We have stated the special aim  of this work. Its secondary and general aim is this:—to review what has been  effected in the Sciences, in order to show that they are not radically separate,  but all branches from the same trunk. If we had confined ourselves to the first  and special object of the work, we should have produced merely a study of Social  physics: whereas, in introducing the second and general, we offer study of  Positive philosophy,-passing in review all the positive sciences already formed.  [31]
 
The purpose of this work is not to give an account of the Natural  Sciences. Besides that it would be endless. and that it would require a  scientific preparation such as no one man possesses, it would be apart from our  object, which is to go through a course of not Positive Science, but Positive  Philosophy. We have only to consider each fundamental science in its relation to  the whole positive system, and to the spirit which characterizes it; that is,  with regard to its methods and its chief results.
 
The two aims, though  distinct, are inseparable; for, on the one hand, there can be no positive  philosophy without a basis of social science, without which it could not be  all-comprehensive; and, on the other hand, we could not pursue Social science  without having been prepared by the study of phenomena less complicated than  those of society, and furnished with a knowledge of laws and anterior facts  which have a bearing upon social science. Though the fundamental sciences are  not all equally interesting to ordinary minds, there is no one of them that can  be neglected in an inquiry like the present; and, in the eye of philosophy, all  are of equal value to human welfare. Even those which appear the least  interesting have their own value, either on account of the perfection of their  methods,. or as being the necessary basis of all the others.
  
{Speciality}
 
Lest it should be supposed that our course will lead  us into a wilderness of such special studies as are at present the bane of a  true positive philosophy, we will briefly advert to the existing prevalence of  such special pursuit. In the primitive state of human knowledge there is no  regular division of intellectual labor. Every student cultivates all the  sciences. As knowledge accrues, the sciences part off; and students devote  themselves each to some one branch. It is owing to this division of employment,  and concentration of whole minds upon a single department, that science has made  so prodigious an advance in modern times ; .and the perfection of this division  is one of the most important characteristics of the Positive philosophy. But,  while admitting all the merits of this change, we can not be blind to the  eminent disadvantages which arise from the limitation of minds to a particular  study. It is inevitable that each should be possessed with exclusive notions,  and be therefore incapable of the general superiority of ancient students, who  actually owed that general superiority to the inferiority of their knowledge. We  must consider whether the evil can be avoided without losing the good of the  modern arrangement; for the evil is becoming urgent. We all acknowledge that the  divisions established for the convenience of scientific pursuit are radically  artificial; and yet there are very few who can embrace in idea the whole of any  one science: each science moreover being itself only a part of a great whole.  Almost every one is busy about his own particular section' without much thought  about its relation to the general system of positive knowledge. We must not be  blind to the evil, nor slow [32] in seeking a remedy.. We must not forget that  this is the weak side of the positive philosophy, by which it may yet be  attacked, with some hope of success, by the adherents of the theological and  metaphysical systems. As to the remedy, it certainly does not lie in a return to  the ancient confusion of pursuits, which would be mere retrogression, if it were  possible, which it is not. It lies in perfecting the division of employments  itself,—in carrying it one degree higher,—in constituting one more speciality  from the study of scientific generalities.
 
{Proposed new class of  students.}
 
*Let us have a new class of students, suitably prepared,  whose business it shall be to take the respective sciences as they are,  determine the spirit of each, ascertain their relations and mutual connection,  and reduce their respective principles to the smallest number of general  principles, in conformity with the fundamental rules of the Positive Method. At  the same time, let other students be prepared for their special pursuit by an  education which recognises the whole scope of positive science,, so as to profit  by the labors of the students of generalities and so as to correct reciprocally,  under that guidance, the results obtained by each. We see some approach already  to this arrangement. Once established, there would be nothing to apprehend from  any extent of division of employments. When we once have a class of learned men,  at the disposal of all others, whose business it shall be to connect each new  discovery with the general system, we may dismiss all fear of the great whole  being lost sight of in the pursuit of the details of knowledge. The organization  of scientific research will then be complete; and it will henceforth have  occasion only to extend its development, and not to change its character. After  all, the formation of such a new class as is proposed would be merely an  extension of the principle which has created all the classes we have. While  science was narrow, there was only one class: as it expanded, more were  instituted. With a further advance a fresh need arises, and this new class will  be the result.
 
{Advantages of the Positive Philosophy.}
 
The  general spirit of a course of Positive Philosophy having been thus set forth, we  must now glance at the chief advantages which may he derived on behalf of  human progression, from the study of it. Of these advantages, four may be  especially pointed out.
 
{1. Illustrates the Intellectual function.} 
I. The study of the Positive Philosophy affords the only rational means of  exhibiting the logical laws of the human mind. which have hitherto been sought  by unfit methods. To explain what is meant by this, we may refer to a saying of  M. de Blainville, in his work on Comparative Anatomy, that every active, and  especially every living being, may be regarded under two relations—the Statical  and the Dynamical; that is, under conditions or in action. It is clear that all  considerations range themselves under the one or the other of these heads. Let  us apply this classification to the intellectual functions.
 
If we  regard these functions under their Statical aspect—that is, [33] if we consider  the conditions under which they exist-we must determine the organic  circumstances of the case, which inquiry involves it with anatomy and  physiology. If we look at the Dynamic aspect, we have to study simply the  exercise and results of the intellectual powers of the human race, which is  neither more nor less than the general object of the Positive Philosophy. In  short, looking at all scientific theories as so many great logical facts, it is  only by the thorough observation of these facts that we can arrive at the  knowledge of logical laws. These being the only means of knowledge of  intellectual phenomena, the illusory psychology, which is the last phase of  theology, is excluded. It pretends to accomplish the discovery of the laws of  the human mind by contemplating it in itself; that is, by separating it from  causes and effects. Such an attempt, made in defiance of the physiological study  of our intellectual organs, and of the observation of rational methods of  procedure, can not succeed at this time of day.
 
The Positive  Philosophy, which has been rising since the time of Bacon, has now secured such  a preponderance, that the metaphysicians themselves profess to ground their  pretended science on an observation of facts. They talk of external and internal  facts, and say that their business is with the latter. This is much like saying  that vision is explained by luminous objects painting their images upon the  retina. To this the physiologists reply that another eye would be needed to see  the image. In the same manner, the mind may observe all phenomena but its own.  It may be said that a man's intellect may observe his passions, the seat of the  reason being somewhat apart from that of the emotions in the brain; but there  can be nothing like scientific observation of the passions, except from without,  as the stir of the emotions disturbs the observing faculties more or less. It is  yet more out of the question to make an intellectual observation of intellectual  processes. The observing and observed organ are here the same, and its action  can not be pure and natural. In order to observe, your intellect must pause from  activity; yet it is this very activity that you want to observe. If you can not  effect the pause, you can not observe: if you do effect it, there is nothing to  observe. The results of such a method are in proportion to its absurdity. After  two thousand years of psychological pursuit, no one proposition is established  to the satisfaction of its followers. They are divided, to this day, into a  multitude of schools, still disputing about the very elements of their doctrine.  This interior observation gives birth to almost as many theories as there are  observers. We ask in vain for any one discovery, great or small, which has been  made under this method. The psychologists have done some good in keeping up the  activity of our understandings, when there was no better work for our faculties  to do; and they may have added something to our stock of knowledge. If they have  done so, it is by practising the Positive method—by observing the progress of  the human mind [34] in the light of science; that is, by ceasing, for the  moment, to be psychologists.
 
The view just given in relation to  logical Science becomes yet more striking when we consider the logical Art. 
 
The Positive Method can be judged of only in action. It can not be  looked at by itself, apart from the work on which it is employed. At all events,  such a contemplation would be only a dead study, which could produce nothing in  the mind which loses time upon it. We may talk for ever about the method, and  state it in terms very wisely, without knowing half so much about it as the man  who has once put it in practice upon a single particular of actual research,  even without any philosophical intention. Thus it is that psychologists, by dint  of reading the precepts of Bacon and the discourses of Descartes, have mistaken  their own dreams for science.
 
Without saying whether it will ever be  possible to establish, a prior), a true method of investigation,  independent of a philosophical study of the sciences, it is clear that the thing  has never been done yet, and that we are not capable of doing it now. We can  not, as yet, explain the great logical procedures, apart from their  applications. If we ever do, it will remain as necessary then as now to form  good intellectual habits by studying the regular application of the scientific  methods which we shall have attained.
 
This, then, is the first great  result of the Positive Philosophy— the manifestation by experiment of the laws  which rule the Intellect in the investigation of truth; and, as a consequence,  the knowledge of the general rules suitable for that object.
 
{II. Must  regenerate Education.}
 
II. The second effect of the Positive  Philosophy, an effect not less important and far more urgently wanted, will be  to regenerate Education.
 
The best minds -are agreed that our European  education, still essentially theological, metaphysical, and literary, must be  superseded by a Positive training, conformable to our time and needs. Even the  governments of our day have shared, where they have not originated, the attempts  to establish positive instruction; and this is a striking indication of the  prevalent sense of what is wanted. While encouraging such endeavors to the  utmost, we must not however, conceal from ourselves that everything yet done is  inadequate to the object. The present exclusive speciality of our pursuits, and  the consequent isolation of the sciences, spoil our teaching. If any student  desires to form an idea of natural philosophy as a whole, he is compelled to go  through each department as it is now taught, as if he were to be only an  astronomer, or only- a chemist; so that, be his intellect what it may, his  training must remain very imperfect. And yet his object requires that he should  obtain general positive conceptions of all the classes of natural phenomena. It  is such an aggregate of conceptions, whether on a great or on a small scale,  which must henceforth be the permanent basis of [35] all human combinations. It  will constitute the mind of future generations. In order to this regeneration of  our intellectual system, it is necessary that the sciences, considered as  branches from one trunk, should yield us, as a whole, their chief methods and  their most important results. the specialities of science can be pursued by  those whose vocation lies in that direction. They are indispensable; and they  are not likely to be neglected; but they can never of themselves renovate our  system of Education; and, to be of their full use, they must rest upon the basis  of that general instruction which is a direct result of the Positive Philosophy. 
 
{III. Advances sciences by combining them.}
 
III. The same  special study of scientific generalities must also aid the progress of the  respective positive sciences: and this constitutes our third head of advances. 
 
The divisions which we establish between the sciences are, though not  arbitrary, essentially artificial. The subject of our researches is one: we  divide it for our convenience, in order to deal the more easily with its  difficulties. But it sometimes happens-and especially with the most important  doctrines of each science—that we need what we can not obtain under the present  isolation of the sciences—a combination of several special points of view; and  for want of this, very important problems wait for their solution much longer  than they otherwise need do. To go back into the past for example: Descartes'  grant conception with regard to analytical geometry is a discovery which has  changed the whole aspect of mathematical science, and yielded the germ of all  future progress; and it issued from the union of two sciences which had always  before been separately regarded and pursued. The case of pending questions is  yet more impressive; as, for instance, in Chemistry, the doctrine of Definite  Proportions. Without entering upon the discussion of the fundamental principle  of this theory, we may say with assurance that, in order to determine it—in  order to determine whether it is a law of nature that atoms should necessarily  combine in fixed numbers—it will be indispensable that the chemical point of  view should be united with the physiological. The failure of the theory with  regard to organic bodies indicates that the cause of this immense exception must  be investigated, and such an inquiry belongs as much to physiology as to  chemistry. Again, it is as yet undecided whether azote is a simple or a compound  body. It was concluded by almost all chemists that azote is a simple body; the  illustrious Berzilius hesitated, on purely chemical considerations; but he was  also influenced by the physiological observation that animals which receive no  azote in their food have as much of it in their tissues as carnivorous animals.  From this we see how physiology must unite with chemistry to inform us whether  azote is simple or compound, and to institute a new series of researches upon  the relation between the composition of living bodies and their mode of  alimentation.
 
Such is the advantage which, in the third place, we-  shall owe to [36] Positive philosophy—the elucidation of the respective sciences  by their combination. In the fourth place
 
{IV. Must reorganize  society.}
 
IV. The Positive Philosophy offers the only solid basis for  that Social Reorganization which must succeed the critical condition in which  the most civilized nations are now living.
 
It can not be necessary to  prove to anybody who reads this work that Ideas govern the world, or throw it  into chaos; in other words, that all social mechanism rests upon Opinions. The  great political and moral crisis that societies are now undergoing is shown by a  rigid analysis to arise out of intellectual anarchy. While stability in  fundamental maxims is the first condition of genuine social order, we are  suffering under an utter disagreement which may be called universal. Till a  certain number of general ideas can be acknowledged as a rallying-point of  social doctrine, the nations will remain in a revolutionary state, whatever  palliatives may be devised; and their institutions can be only provisional But  whenever the necessary agreement on first principles can be obtained,  appropriate institutions will issue from them, without shock or resistance; for  the causes of disorder will have been arrested by the mere fact of the  agreement. It is in this direction that those must look who desire a natural and  regular, a normal state of society.
 
Now, the existing disorder is  abundantly accounted for by the existence, all at once, of three incompatible  philosophies—the theological, the metaphysical, and the positive. Any one of  these might alone secure some sort of social order; but while the three  co-exist, it is impossible for us to understand one another upon any essential  point whatever. If this is true, we have only to ascertain which of the  philosophies must, in the nature of things, prevail; and, this ascertained,  every man, whatever may have been his former news, can not but concur in its  triumph. The problem once recognised, can not remain long unsolved; for all  considerations whatever point to the Positive Philosophy as the one destined to  prevail. It alone has been advancing during a course of centuries throughout  which the others have been declining. The fact is incontestable. Some may  deplore it, but none can destroy it, nor therefore neglect it but under penalty  of being betrayed by illusory speculations. This general revolution of the human  mind is nearly accomplished. We have only to complete the Positive Philosophy by  bringing Social phenomena within its comprehension, and afterward consolidating  the whole into one body of homogeneous doctrine. The marked preference which  almost all minds, from the highest to the commonest, accord to positive  knowledge over vague and mystical conceptions, is a pledge of what the reception  of this philosophy will be when it has acquired the only quality that it now  wants—a character of due generality. When it has become complete, its supremacy  will take place spontaneously. and will re-establish order throughout society.  There is, at present [37 no conflict but between the theological and the  metaphysical philosophies. They are contending for the task of reorganizing  society; but it is a work too mighty for either of them. The positive philosophy  has hitherto intervened only to examine both, and both are abundantly  discredited by the process. It is time now to be doing something more effective,  without wasting our forces in needless controversy. It is time to complete the  vast intellectual operation begun by Bacon, Descartes, and Galileo, by  constructing the system of general ideas which must henceforth prevail among the  human race. This is the way to put an end to the revolutionary crisis which is  tormenting the civilized nations of the world.
 
Leaving these four  points of advantage, we must attend to one precautionary redaction.
  
{No hope of reduction to a single law}
 
Because it is proposed to  consolidate the whole of our acquired knowledge into one body of homogeneous  doctrine, it must not be supposed that we are going to study this vast variety  as proceeding from a single principle, and as subjected to a single law. There  is something so chimerical in attempts at universal explanation by a single law,  that it may be as well to secure this Work at once from any imputation of the  kind, though its development will show how undeserved such an imputation would  be. Our intellectual resources are too narrow, and the universe is too complex,  to leave any hope that it will ever be within our power to carry scientific  perfection to its last degree of simplicity. Moreover, it appears as if the  value of such an attainment,, supposing it possible, were greatly overrated. The  only way, for instance, in which we could achieve the business, would be by  connecting all natural phenomena with the most general law we know —which is  that of gravitation, by which astronomical phenomena are already connected with  a portion of terrestrial physics. Laplace has indicated that chemical phenomena  may be regarded as simple atomic effects of the Newtonian attraction, modified  by the form and mutual position of the atoms. But supposing this view proveable  (which it can not be while we are without data about the constitution of  bodies), the difficulty of its application would doubtless be found so great  that we must still maintain the existing division between astronomy and  chemistry, with the difference that we now regard as natural that division which  we should then call artificial. Laplace himself presented his idea only as a  philosophic device, incapable of exercising any useful influence over the  progress of chemical science. Moreover, supposing this insuperable difficulty  overcome, we should be no nearer to scientific unity, since we then should still  have to connect the whole of physiological phenomena with the same law, which  certainly would not be the least difficult part of the enterprise. Yet, all  things considered, the hypothesis we have glanced at would be the most favorable  to the desired unity.
 
The consideration of all phenomena as referable  to a single origin [38] is by no means necessary to the systematic formation of  science, any more than to the realization of the great and happy consequences  that we anticipate from the positive philosophy. The only necessary unity is  that of Method, which is already in great part established. As for the doctrine,  it need not be one; it is enough that it be homogeneous. It  is, then, under the double aspect of unity of method and homogeneousness of  doctrine that we shall consider the different classes of positive theories in  this work. While pursuing the philosophical aim of all science, the lessening of  the number of general laws requisite for the explanation of natural phenomena,  we shall regard as presumptuous every attempt, in all future time, to reduce  them rigorously to one.
 
Having thus endeavored to determine the spirit  and influence of the Positive Philosophy, and to mark the goal of our labors, we  have now to proceed to the exposition of the system; that is, to the  determination of the universal, or encyclopaedic order, which must regulate the  different classes of natural phenomena, and consequently the corresponding  positive sciences.
 
Chapter Ii.
View of the Hierarchy of the  Positive Sciences.
 
{Failure of previous classifications.}
 
IN  proceeding to offer a Classification of the Sciences, we must leave on one side  all others that have as yet been attempted. Such scales as those of Bacon and  D'Alembert are constructed upon an arbitrary division of the faculties of the  mind; whereas, our principal faculties are often engaged at the same time in any  scientific pursuit. As for other classifications, they have failed, through one  fault or another, to command assent: so that there are almost as many schemes as  there are individuals to propose them. The failure has been so conspicuous, that  the best minds feel a prejudice against this kind of enterprise, in any shape. 
 
Now, what is the reason of this ?—For one reason, the distribution of  the sciences, having become a somewhat discredited task, has of late been  undertaken chiefly by persons who have no sound knowledge of any science at all.  A more important and less personal reason, however, is the want of  homogeneousness in the different parts of the intellectual system,—some having  successively become positive, while others remain theological or metaphysical.  Among such incoherent materials, Classification is of course impossible . Every  attempt at a distribution has failed from this cause, without the distributor  being able to see why:—without his discovering that a radical contrariety  existed between the materials [39] he was endeavoring to combine. The fact was  clear enough, if it had but been understood, that the enterprise was premature;  and that it was useless to undertake it till our principal scientific  conceptions should all have become positive. The preceding chapter seems to show  that this indispensable condition may now be considered fulfilled:: and thus the  time has arrived for laying down a sound and durable system of scientific order. 
 
We may derive encouragement from the example set by recent botanists  and zoologists, whose philosophical labors have exhibited the true principle of  Classification; viz., that the Classification must proceed from the study of the  things to be classified, and must by no means be determined by a priori  considerations. The real affinities and natural connections presented by objects  being allowed to determine their order, the Classification itself becomes the  expression of the most general fact. And thus does the positive method apply to  the question of Classification itself, as well as to the objects included under  it. It follows that the mutual dependence of the sciences,—a dependence  resulting
{True principle of classification.}
from that of the  corresponding phenomena,—must determine the arrangement of the system of human  knowledge. Before proceeding to investigate this mutual dependence, we have only  to ascertain the real bounds of the Classification proposed: in other words, to  settle what we mean by human knowledge, as the subject of this work.
  
{Boundaries of our field}
 
The field of human labor is either  speculation or action: and thus, we are accustomed to divide knowledge into the  theoretical and the practical. It is obvious that, in this inquiry, we have to  do only with the theoretical. We are not going to treat of all human notions  whatever, but of those fundamental conceptions of the different orders of  phenomena which furnish a solid basis to all combinations, and are not founded  on any antecedent intellectual system. In such a study, speculation is our  material, and not the application of it,—except where the application may happen  to throw back light on its speculative origin. This is probably what Bacon meant  by that First Philosophy which he declared to be an extract from the whole of  Science, and which has been so differently and so strangely interpreted by his  metaphysical commentators.
 
There can be no doubt that Man's study of  nature must furnish the only basis of his action upon nature; for it is only by  knowing the laws of phenomena, and thus being able to foresee them, that we can,  in active life, set them to modify one another for our advantage. Our direct  natural power over everything about us is extremely weak, and altogether  disproportioned to our needs. Whenever we effect anything great, it is through a  knowledge of natural laws, by which we can set one agent to work upon another,  even very weak modifying elements producing a change in the results of a large  aggregate of causes. The relation of science to art may be summed up in a brief  expression: [40]
 
From Science comes Prevision: from Prevision comes  Action.
 
We must not, however fall into the error of our time, of  regarding Science chiefly as a basis of Art. However great may be the services  rendered to Industry by science, however true may be the saying that Knowledge  is Power, we must never forget that the sciences have a higher destination  still; and not only higher, but more direct—that of satisfying the craving of  our understanding to know the laws of phenomena. 'To feel how deep and urgent  this need is, we have only to consider for a moment the physiological effects of  consternation, and to remember that the most terrible sensation we arc  capable of, is that which we experience when any phenomenon seems to arise in  violation of the familiar laws of nature. This need of disposing facts in a  comprehensible order (which is the proper object of all scientific theories) is  so inherent in our organization, that if we could not satisfy it by positive  conceptions,, we must inevitably return to those theological and metaphysical  explanations which had their origin in this very fact of human nature. It is  this original tendency which acts as a preservative, in the minds of men of  science,, against the narrowness and incompleteness which the practical habits  of our age are apt to produce. It is through this that we arc able to maintain  just and noble ideas of the importance anti destination of the sciences; and if  it wore not thus, the human understanding would soon, as Condorcet has observed,  come to a stand, even as to the practical applications for the sake of which  higher things had been sacrificed; for, if tile arts flow from science, the  neglect of science must destroy the consequent arts. Some of the most important  arts arc derived from speculations pursued during long ages with a purely  scientific intention. For instance, the ancient Greek geometers delighted  themselves with beautiful speculations on Conic Sections; those speculations  wrought, after a long series of generations, the renovation of astronomy; and  out of this has the art of navigation attained a perfection which it never could  have reached otherwise than through the speculative labors of Archimedes and  Apollonius: so that, to use Condorcet's illustration, "the sailor who is  preserved from shipwreck by the exact observation of the longitude, owes his  life to a theory conceived two thousand years before by men of genius who had in  view simply geometrical speculations."
 
Our business, it is clear, is  with theoretical researches, letting alone their practical application  altogether. Though we may conceive of a course of study which should unite the  generalities of speculation and application, the time is not come for it. To say  nothing of its vast extent, it would require preliminary achievements which have  not yet been attempted. We must first be in possession of appropriate Special  conceptions, formed according to scientific theories, and for these we have yet  to wait. Meantime, an intermediate class is rising up, whose particular  destination is to organize the relation of theory and practice; such as the  engineers, who do not labor in the advancement of science, but who [41] study it  in its existing state,, to apply it to practical purposes. Such classes arc  furnishing us with the elements of a future body of doctrine on the theories of  the different arts. Already, Monge, in his view of descriptive geometry, has  given us a general theory of the arts of construction. But we have as yet only a  few scattered instances of this nature. The time will come when out of such  results, a department of Positive philosophy may arise; but it will be in a  distant future. If we remember that several sciences are implicated in every  important art,—that, for instance, a true theory of Agriculture requires a  combination of physiological, chemical, mechanical, and even astronomical and  mathematical science,—it will be evident that true theories of the arts must  wait for a large and equable development of these constituent sciences. 
 {Abstract science. Concrete science.}
 
One more  preliminary remark occurs,, before we finish the prescription of our limits,—the  ascertainment of our field of inquiry. We must distinguish between the two  classes of Natural science; —the abstract or general, which have for their  object the discovery of the laws which regulate phenomena in all conceivable  cases: and the concrete, particular, or descriptive, which arc sometimes called  Natural sciences in a restricted sense, whose function it is to apply these laws  to the actual history of existing beings. The first arc fundamental; and our  business is with them alone, as the second arc derived, and however important,  not rising into the rank of our subjects of contemplation. We shall treat of  physiology, but not of botany and zoology, which arc derived from it. We shall  treat of chemistry, but not of mineralogy, which is secondary to it.—We may say  of Concrete Physics, as these secondary sciences arc called, the same thing that  we said of theories of the arts,—that they require a preliminary knowledge of  several sciences, and an advance of those sciences not yet achieved; so that, if  there were no other reason, we must leave* these secondary classes alone. At a  future time Concrete Physics will have made progress, according to the  development of Abstract Physics, and will afford a mass of less incoherent  materials than those which it now presents. At present, too few of the students  of these secondary sciences appear to be even aware that a due acquaintance with  the primary sciences is requisite to all successful prosecution of their own. 
 
We have now considered,
 
First, that science being  composed of speculative knowledge and of practical knowledge, we have to deal  only with the first; and
 
Second, that theoretical knowledge,  or science properly so called, being divided into general and particular, or  abstract and concrete science, we have again to deal only with the first.
  
Being thus in possession of our proper subject, duly prescribed, we may  proceed to the ascertainment of the true order of the fundamental sciences. [42] 
 
{Difficulty of classification.}
 
This Classification of the  sciences is not so easy a matter as it may appear. However natural it may be, it  will always involve something, if not arbitrary, at least artificial; and in so  far, it will always involve imperfection. It is impossible to fulfil,, quite  rigorously, the object of presenting the sciences in their natural connection,  and according to their mutual dependence, so as to avoid the smallest danger of  being involved in a vicious circle. It is easy to show why.
  
{Historical and dogmatic methods.}
 
Every science may be exhibited  under two methods or procedures, the Historical and the Dogmatic. These are  wholly distinct from each other and any other method can be nothing but some  combination of these two. By the first method knowledge is presented in the same  order in which it was actually obtained by the human mind, together with the way  in which it was obtained. By the second, the system of ideas is presented as it  might be conceived of at this day, by a mind which, duly prepared and placed at  the right point of view, should begin to reconstitute the science as a whole. A  new science must be pursued historically, the only thing to be done being to  study in chronological order the different works which have contributed to the  progress of the science. But when such materials have become recast to form a  general system, to meet the demand for a more natural logical order, it is  because the science is too far advanced for the historical order to be  practicable or suitable. The more discoveries are made, the greater becomes the  labor of the historical method of study, and the more effectual the dogmatic,  because the new conceptions bring forward the earlier ones in a fresh light.  Thus, the education of an ancient geometer consisted simply in the study, in  their due order, of the very small number of original treatises then existing on  the different parts of geometry. The writings of Archimedes and Apollonius were,  in fact, about all. On the contrary, a modern geometer commonly finishes his  education without having read a single original work dating further back than  the most recent discoveries, which can not be known by any other means. Thus the  Dogmatic Method is for ever superseding the Historical, as we advance to a  higher position in science. If every mind had to pass through all the stages  that every predecessor in the study had gone through, it is clear that, however  easy it is to learn rather than invent, it would be impossible to effect the  purpose of education,—to place the student on the vantage-ground gained by the  labors of all the men who have gone before. By the dogmatic method this is done,  even though the living student may have only an ordinary intellect, and the dead  may have been men of lofty genius. By the dogmatic method therefore must every  advanced science be attained, with so much of the historical combined with it as  is rendered necessary by discoveries too recent to be studied elsewhere than in  their own records. The only objection to the preference of the Dogmatic method  is that it does not show how the science was attained; but a moment's reflection  [43] will show that this is the case also with the Historical method. To pursue  a science historically is quite a different thing from learning the history of  its progress. This last pertains to the study of human history, as we shall see  when we reach the final division of this work. It is true that a science can not  be completely understood without a knowledge of how it arose; and again, a  dogmatic knowledge of any science is necessary to an understanding of its  history; and therefore we shall notice, in treating of the fundamental sciences,  the incidents of their origin, when distinct and illustrative; and we shall use  their history, in a scientific sense,, in our treatment of Social Physics; but  the historical study, important, even essential, as it is, remains entirely  distinct from the proper dogmatic study of science. These considerations, in  this place, tend to define more precisely the spirit of our course of inquiry,  while they more exactly determine the conditions under which we may hope to  succeed in the construction of a true scale of the aggregate fundamental  sciences. Great confusion would arise from any attempt to adhere strictly to  historical order in our exposition of the sciences, for they have not all  advanced at the same rate; and we must be for ever borrowing from each some fact  to illustrate another, without regard to priority of origin. Thus, it is clear  that, in the system of the sciences, astronomy must come before physics,  properly so called: and yet, several branches of physics, above all, optics, are  indispensable to the complete exposition of astronomy. Minor defects, if  inevitable, can not invalidate a Classification which, on the whole, fulfils the  principal conditions of the case. They belong to what is essentially artificial  in our division of intellectual labor. In the main, however, our classification  agrees with the history of science; the more general and simple sciences  actually occurring first and advancing best in human history, and being followed  by the more complex and restricted, though all were, since the earliest times,  enlarging simultaneously.
 
A simple mathematical illustration will  precisely represent the difficulty of the question we have to resolve, while it  will sum up the preliminary considerations we have just concluded.
 
We  propose to classify the fundamental sciences. They are six, as we shall soon  see. We can not make them less; and most scientific men would reckon them as  more. Six objects admit of 720 different dispositions, or, in popular language,  changes. Thus we have to choose the one right order (and there can be but one  right) out of 720 possible ones. Very few of these have ever been proposed; yet  we might venture to say that there is probably not one in favor of which some  plausible reason might not be assigned; for we see the wildest divergences among  the schemes which have been proposed,—the sciences which are placed by some at  the head of the scale being sent by others to the further extremity. Our problem  is, then, to find the one rational order, among a host of possible systems. [44] 
 
{True principle of classification.}
 
Now we must remember  that we have to look for the principle of Classification in the comparison of  the different orders of phenomena, through which Science discovers the laws  which are her object. What we have to determine is the real dependence of  scientific studies. Now, this dependence can result only from that of the  corresponding phenomena. All observable phenomena may be included within a very  few natural categories, so arranged as that the study of each category may be  grounded on the principal laws of the preceding, and serve as the basis of the  next ensuing.
{Generality
Dependence.}
This order is determined by  the degree of simplicity, or, what comes to the same thing, of generality of  their phenomena. Hence results their successive dependence, and the greater or  lesser facility for being studied.
 
It is clear, a priori,  that the most simple phenomena must be the most general; for whatever is  observed in the greatest number of cases is of course the most disengaged from  the incidents of particular cases. We must begin then with the study of the most  general or simple phenomena, going on successively to the more particular or  complex. This must be the most methodical way, for this order of generality or  simplicity fixes the degree of facility in the study of phenomena, while it  determines the necessary connection of the sciences by the successive dependence  of their phenomena; It is worthy of remark in this place that the most general  and simple phenomena are the furthest removed from Man's ordinary sphere, and  must thereby be studied in a calmer and more rational frame of mind than those  in which he is more nearly implicated; and this constitutes a new ground for the  corresponding sciences being developed more rapidly.
 
We have now  obtained our rule. Next we proceed to our classification.
 
{Inorganic  and Organic phenomena.}
 
We are first struck by the clear division of  all natural phenomena into two classes—of inorganic and of organic bodies. The  organized are evidently, in fact, more complex and less general than the  inorganic, and depend upon them, instead of being depended on by them. Therefore  it is that physiological study should begin with inorganic phenomena; since the  organic include all the qualities belonging to them, with a special order added,  viz., the vital phenomena, which belong to organization. We have not to  investigate the nature of either; for the positive philosophy does not inquire  into natures. Whether their natures be supposed different or the same, it is  evidently necessary to separate the two studies of inorganic matter and of  living bodies. Our Classification will stand through any future decision as to  the way in which living bodies are to be regarded; for, on any supposition, the  general laws of inorganic physics must be established before we can proceed with  success to the examination of a dependent class of phenomena. [45]
 
{I.  Inorganic.}
 
Each of these great halves of natural philosophy has  subdivisions. Inorganic physics must, in accordance with our rule of generality  and the order of dependence of phenomena, be divided into two sections—of  celestial and terrestrial phenomena. Thus we have Astronomy, geometrical and  mechanical, and Terrestrial Physics. The necessity of this division is exactly  the same as in the former case.
 
{1. Astronomy.}
 
Astronomical  phenomena are the most general, simple, and abstract of all; and therefore the  study of natural philosophy must clearly begin with them. They are themselves  independent,, while the laws to which they are subject influence all others  whatsoever. The general effects of gravitation preponderate, in all terrestrial  phenomena, over all effects which may be peculiar to them, and modify the  original ones. It follows that the analysis of the simplest terrestrial  phenomenon, not only chemical, but even purely mechanical, presents a greater  complication than the most compound astronomical phenomenon. The most difficult  astronomical question involves less intricacy than the simple movement of even a  solid body, when the determining circumstances are to be computed. Thus we see  that we must separate these two studies, and proceed to the second only through  the first, from which it is derived.
 
{2. Physics. 3. Chemistry.}
  
In the same manner, we find a natural division of Terrestrial Physics into  two. according as we regard bodies in their mechanical or their chemical  character. Hence we have Physics, properly so called, and Chemistry. Again, the  second class must be studied through the first.
 
Chemical phenomena are  more complicated than mechanical, and depend upon them, without influencing them  in return. Every one knows that all chemical action is first submitted to the  influence of weight, heat, electricity, etc., and presents moreover something  which modifies all these. Thus, while it follows Physics, it presents itself as  a distinct science.
 
Such are the divisions of the sciences relating to  inorganic matter. An analogous division arises in the other half of Natural  Philosophy—the science of organized bodies.
 
{II. Organic.}
  
{4. Physiology. 5. Sociology.}
 
Here we find ourselves presented  with two orders of phenomena; those which relate to the individual, and those  which relate to the species, especially when it is gregarious. With regard to  Man, especially, this distinction is fundamental. The last order of phenomena is  evidently dependent on the first, and is more complex. Hence we have two great  sections in organic physics—Physiology, properly so called, and Social Physics,  which is dependent on it. In all Social phenomena we perceive the working of the  physiological laws of the individual; and moreover something which modifies  their effects, and which belongs to the influence of individuals over each other  —singularly complicated in the case of the human race by the [46] influence of  generations on their successors. Thus it is clear that our social science must  issue from that which relates to the life of the individual. On the other hand,  there is no occasion to suppose, as some eminent physiologists have done, that  Social Physics is only an appendage to physiology. The phenomena of the two are  not identical, though they are homogeneous; and it is of high importance to hold  the two sciences separate. As social conditions modify the operation of  physiological laws, Social Physics must have a set of observations of its own. 
 
It would be easy to make the divisions of the Organic half of Science  correspond with those of the Inorganic, by dividing physiology into vegetable  and animal, according to popular custom. But this distinction, however important  in Concrete Physics (in that secondary and special class of studies before  declared to be inappropriate to this work), hardly extends into those Abstract  Physics with which we have to do. Vegetables and animals come alike under our  notice, when our object is to learn the general laws of life—that is, to study  physiology. To say nothing of the feet that the distinction grows ever fainter  and more dubious with new discoveries, it bears no relation to our plan of  research; and we shall therefore consider that there is only one division in the  science of organized bodies.
 
{Five Natural Sciences.}
 
Thus  we have before us Five fundamental Sciences in successive dependence-Astronomy  Physics Chemistry, Physiology, and finally Social Physics.. The first considers  the most general, simple, abstract, and remote phenomena known to us, and those  which affect all others without being affected by them. The last considers the  most particular, compound, concrete phenomena, and those which are the most  interesting to Man. Between these two, the degrees of speciality, of complexity,  and individuality, are in regular proportion to the place of the respective  sciences in the scale exhibited. This—casting out everything arbitrary—we must  regard as the true filiation of the sciences; and in it we find the plan of this  work.
 
{Their filiation. Filiation of their parts.}
 
As we  proceed. we shall find that the same principle which gives this order to the  whole body of science arranges the parts of each science: and its soundness will  therefore be freshly attested as often as it presents itself afresh. There is no  refusing a principle which distributes the interior of each science after the  same method with the aggregate sciences. But this is not the place in which to  do more than indicate what we shall contemplate more closely hereafter. We must  now rapidly review some of the leading properties of the hierarchy of science  that has been disclosed.
 
{1. This classification follows the order or  disclosure of sciences.}
 
This gradation is in essential conformity  with the order which has spontaneously taken place among the branches of natural  philosophy, when pursued separately, and without any purpose of establishing  such order. Such an accordance is a strong presumption [47] that the arrangement  is natural. Again, it coincides with the actual development of natural  philosophy. If no leading science can be effectually pursued otherwise than  through those which precede it in the scale, it is evident that no vast  development of any science could take place prior to the great astronomical  discoveries to which we owe the impulse given to the whole. the progression may  since have been simultaneous; but it has taken place in the order we have  recognised.
 
{2. Solves heterogeneousness.}
 
This  consideration is so important that it is difficult to understand without it the  history of the human mind.
 
The general law which governs this history,  as we have already seen, can not be verified, unless we combine it with the  scientific gradation just laid down: for it is according to this gradation that  the different human theories have attained in succession the theological state,  the metaphysical, and finally the positive. If we do not bear in mind the law  which governs progression, we shall encounter insurmountable difficulties; for  it is clear that the theological or metaphysical state of some fundamental  theories must have temporarily coincided with the positive state of others which  precede them in our established gradation, and actually have at times coincided  with them; and this must involve the law itself in an obscurity which can be  cleared up only by the Classification we have proposed.
 
{3 Marks  relative perfection in sciences.}
 
Again, this classification marks,  with precision, the relative perfection of the different sciences, which  consists in the degree of precision of knowledge, and in the relation of its  different branches. It is easy to see that the more general, simple, and  abstract any phenomena are, the less they depend on others, and the more precise  they are in themselves, and the more clear in their relations with each other.  Thus, organic phenomena are less exact and systematic than inorganic; and of  these again terrestrial are less exact and systematic than those of astronomy.  This fact is completely accounted for by the gradation we have laid down; and we  shall see as we proceed, that the possibility of applying mathematical analysis  to the study of phenomena is exactly in proportion to the rank which they hold  in the scale of the whole.
 
There is one liability to be guarded  against, which we may mention here. We must beware of confounding the degree of  precision which we are able to attain in regard to any science, with the  certainty of the science itself. The certainty of science, and our precision in  the knowledge of it, are two very different things, which have been too often  confounded; and are so still, though less than formerly. A very absurd  proposition may be very precise; as if we should say, for instance, that the sum  of the angles of a triangle is equal to three right angles; and a very certain  proposition may be wanting in precision in our statement of it; as, for  instance, when we assert that every man will die. If the different sciences  offer to us a varying degree of [48] precision, it is from no want of certainty  in themselves. but of our mastery of their phenomena.
 
{4. Effect on  Education}
 
The most interesting property of our formula of gradation  is its effect on education. both general and scientific. This is its direct and  unquestionable result. It will be more and more evident as we proceed, that no  science can be effectually pursued without the preparation of a competent  knowledge of the anterior sciences on which it depends. Physical philosophers  can not understand Physics without at least a general knowledge of Astronomy;  nor Chemists, without Physics and Astronomy; nor Physiologists, without  Chemistry, Physics, and Astronomy; nor, above all, the students of Social  philosophy, without a general knowledge of all the anterior sciences. As such  conditions are, as yet, rarely fulfilled,, and as no organization exists for  their fulfilment,, there is among us, in fact, no rational scientific education.  To this may be attributed, in great part, the imperfection of even the most  important sciences at this day. If the fact is so in regard to scientific  education, it is no less striking in regard to general education. Our  intellectual system can not be renovated till the natural sciences arc studied  in their proper order. Even the highest understandings are apt to associate  their ideas according to the order in which they were received: and it is only  an intellect here and there, in any age, which in its utmost vigor can, like  Bacon, Descartes, and Leibnitz, make a clearance in their field of knowledge, so  as to reconstruct from the foundation their system of ideas.
 
{Effect  on Method}
 
Such is the operation of our great law upon scientific  education through its effect on Doctrine. We cannot appreciate it duly without  seeing how it affects Method.
 
As the phenomena which are homogeneous  have been classed under one science, while those which belong to other sciences  are heterogeneous, it follows that the Positive Method must be constantly  modified in a uniform manner in the range of the same fundamental science, and  will undergo modifications, different and more and more compound, in passing  from one science to another. Thus, under the scale laid down, we shall meet with  it in all its varieties; which could not happen if we were to adopt a scale  which should not fulfil the conditions we have admitted. This is an all  important consideration; for if, as we have already seen, we can not understand  the positive method in the abstract, but only by its application, it is clear  that we can have no adequate conception of it but by studying it in its  varieties of application. No one science, however well chosen, could exhibit it.  Though the Method is always the same, its procedure is varied. For instance, it  should be Observation with regard to one kind of phenomena, and Experiment with  regard to another; and different kinds of experiment, according to the case. In  the same way, a general precept, derived from one fundamental science, however  applicable to another, must have its spirit preserved by a reference to its  origin; as in the case of [49] the theory of Classifications. The best idea of  the Positive Method would, of course, be obtained by the study of the most  primitive and exalted of the sciences, if we were confined to one; but this  isolated view would give no idea of its capacity of application to others in a  modified form. Each science has its own proper advantages; and without some  knowledge of them all, no conception can be formed of the power of the Method. 
 
{Orderly study of sciences.}
 
One more consideration must be  briefly adverted to. It is necessary. not only to have a general knowledge of  all the sciences, but to study them in their order. What can come of a study of  complicated phenomena, if the student have not learned, by the contemplation of  the simpler, what a Law is, what it is to Observe; what a Positive conception  is; and even what a chain of reasoning is ? Yet this is the way our young  physiologists proceed every day—plunging into the study of living bodies,  without any other preparation than a knowledge of a dead language or two, or at  most a superficial acquaintance with Physics and Chemistry, acquired without any  philosophical method, or reference to any true point of departure in Natural  philosophy. In the same way, with regard to Social phenomena, which are yet more  complicated, what can be effected but by the rectification of the intellectual  instrument, through an adequate study of the range of anterior phenomena? There  are many who admit this: but they do not see how to set about the work, nor  understand the Method itself, for want of the preparatory study; and thus, the  admission remains barren, and social theories abide in the theological or  metaphysical state? in spite of the efforts of those who believe themselves  positive reformers.
 
These, then, are the four points of view under  which we have recognised the importance of a Rational and Positive  Classification.
 
{Mathematics.}
 
It can not but have been  observed, that in our enumeration of the sciences there is a prodigious  omission.
 
We have said nothing of Mathematical science. The omission  was intentional; and the reason is no other than the vast importance of  mathematics. This science will be the first of which we shall treat. Meantime,  in order not to omit from our sketch a department so prominent, we may indicate  here the general results of the study we are about to enter upon.
 
In  the present state of our knowledge, we must regard Mathematics less as a  constituent part of natural philosophy than as having been. since the time of  Descartes and Newton, the true basis of the whole of natural philosophy; though  it is, exactly speaking, both the one and the other. To us it is of less value  for the knowledge of which it consists, substantial and valuable as that  knowledge is, than as being the most powerful instrument that the human mind can  employ in the investigation of the laws of natural phenomena. [50]
 
In  due precision, Mathematics must be divided into two great sciences, quite  distinct from each other—Abstract Mathematics, or the Calculus (taking the word  in its most extended sense), and Concrete Mathematics, which is composed of  General Geometry and of Rational Mechanics. The Concrete part is necessarily  founded on the Abstract, and it becomes in its turn the basis of all natural  philosophy; all the phenomena of the universe being regarded, as far as  possible, as geometrical or mechanical.
 
The Abstract portion is the  only one which is purely instrumental, it being simply an immense extension of  natural logic to a certain order of deductions. Geometry and mechanics must, on  the contrary, be regarded as true natural sciences, founded, like all others, on  observation though. by the extreme simplicity of their phenomena, they can be  systematized to much greater perfection. It is this capacity which has caused  the experimental character of their first principles to be too much lost sight  of. But these two physical sciences have this peculiarity, that they are now,  and will be more and more, employed rather as method than as doctrine.
  
It needs scarcely to be pointed out that, in placing Mathematics at the head  of Positive Philosophy, we are only extending the application of the principle  which has governed our whole classification. We are simply carrying back our  principle to its first manifestation. Geometrical and Mechanical phenomena are  the most general, the most simple, the most abstract of all,—the most  irreducible to others, the most independent of them; serving, in fact, as a  basis to all others. It follows that the study of them is an indispensable  preliminary to that of all others. Therefore must Mathematics hold the first  place in the hierarchy of the sciences, and be the point of departure of all  Education, whether general or special. In an empirical way. this has hitherto  been the custom,—a custom which arose from the great antiquity of mathematical  science. We now see why it must be renewed on a rational foundation.
  
{Rational Plan and Order of the Sciences.}
 
We have now considered,  in the form of a philosophical problem, the rational plan of the study of the  Positive Philosophy. The order that results is this; an order which of all  possible arrangements is the only one that accords with the natural  manifestation of all phenomena. Mathematics, Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry,  Physiology, Social Physics.
  
  
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