FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  
By no means. Simply, that we've walked too far, Or talked too much, or felt the wind in the east, etc. --Aurora Leigh.] vice versa, the strengthened sensation of the mind increase and strengthen the motions of the nerves. Thus we have a circle, in which sensation must always increase, and nervous movements every moment become more powerful and universal. Now, we know that the movements of the bodily frame which cause the feeling of pain run counter to the harmony by which it would exist in well-being; that is, that they are diseased. But disease cannot grow unceasingly, therefore they end in the total destruction of the frame. In relation to pain, it is thus proved that it aims at the death of the subject. But, the motions of the nerves under pleasant sensations being so harmonious to the continuance of the machinery that the condition of mind which constitutes pleasure is that of the greatest bodily well-being, should not rather, then, pleasant sensation prolong the bloom of the body eternally? This inference is too hasty. In a certain stage of moderation, these nervous motions are wholesome, and really a sign of health. But if they outgrow this stage, they may be the highest activity, the highest momentary perfection; but, thus, they are excess of health, no longer health itself. We only call that condition of the natural motions health in which the root of similar ones for the future lies, viz., those which confirm the perfection of succeeding motions; thus, the destiny of continuance is essentially contained in the idea of health. Thus, for example, the body of the most debilitated profligate attains to its greatest harmony at the moment of excess; but it is only momentarily, and a so much deeper abatement shows sufficiently that overstraining was not health. Therefore one may justly accept that an overstrained vigor of physical action hastens death as much as the greatest disorder or the worst illness. Both pain and pleasure draw us towards an unavoidable death, unless something be present which limits their advance. S 26.--Excellence of this Abatement. It is just this (the limit to their growth) which the abatement of the animal nature causes. It must be no other than this limitation of our fragile frame (that appeared to have lent to our opponents so strong a proof against its perfection) which ameliorates all the evil consequences that the mechanism otherwise makes
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  



Top keywords:

health

 

motions

 

perfection

 

sensation

 

greatest

 

harmony

 
continuance
 

pleasant

 

abatement

 

pleasure


condition
 

bodily

 

nerves

 

increase

 

excess

 

highest

 

moment

 

nervous

 
movements
 

accept


future

 
Therefore
 

justly

 

confirm

 

succeeding

 
debilitated
 

profligate

 
contained
 

attains

 

momentarily


sufficiently

 

overstraining

 

destiny

 

deeper

 

essentially

 

mechanism

 

consequences

 
nature
 

animal

 

Abatement


growth
 
strong
 

ameliorates

 
opponents
 
limitation
 
fragile
 

appeared

 

Excellence

 

illness

 

disorder