Thomas Traherne and the Felicities of the Mind
Powered By Xquantum

Thomas Traherne and the Felicities of the Mind By James Balakier

Chapter 1:  Thomas Traherne, Hobbism, and the Seventeenth-Century Sciences: “Handmaids” to Felicity
Read
image Next

This is a limited free preview of this book. Please buy full access.


(Gardner 3–5). The First Partition of Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy in particularlays out concepts and terminology that, like Hobbes’ theory of sensation, influenced John Locke’s empirical philosophy. Burton categorizes, in his inimitable way, the writings of others on the operations and maladies associated with thought. Ranging through a wealth of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance material, he incorporates the latest medical findings on “the physiology of thought” (Stahmer). Of special significance, he cites Peter Abelard’s position that “there is nothing in the understanding which was not first in the sense” (Pt. I, Sec. I. Mem. 2. Subs. 10), which is also a Hobbesian postulation. Conceptually and lexically, he sets the stage for Locke’s sensory model of cognition with terms like Imagination, Reflection, Senses, and Understanding, while at the same time voicing proto-Hobbesian ideas.

Ever his own authority, Hobbes—possibly reacting to Burton’s over-the-top, maddening style—represents a starting point, practically speaking, for a more intensely focused and disciplined study of cognition. He “definitely held” from the outset, “that all that exists, including all human cognitive processes and actions, was nothing but motion” (Martinich 90). He moreover states at the beginning of Leviathan that individual thoughts “are every one a Representation or Apparence, of some quality, or other Accident of a body without us; which is commonly called an Object” (Leviathan 13). He enlarges by stating definitively that

[t]he Originall of them all, is that which we call SENSE; (For there is no conception in a mans mind, which hath not at first, totally, or by parts, been begotten upon the organs of Sense). (Leviathan 13)

His premise is that there is no a priori existence to thought. Thoughts simply result from pressure upon the senses which,

by the mediation of Nerves, and other strings, and membranes of the body, continued inwards to the Brain, and Heart, causeth there a resistance, or counter-pressure, or endeavour of the heart, to deliver itself: which endeavour because Outward, seemeth to be some matter without. (Leviathan 13–14)