"The bodies of brute animals are actuated by a principle of a like kind with what is placed in man, but greatly inferior with regard to the degrees of reason and intelligence which it possesses: in the more perfect brutes, this principle is plainly intelligent as well as sentient; and their actions so evidently shew them to be endued, not only with a strong memory, but with reflexion and some degrees of reason, that it is really wonderful to find Descartes and his disciples so far imposing upon themselves, as seriously to believe these were machines formed entirely of matter, and, as it were, so many curious pieces of clock-work wound up and set a-going."

— Whytt, Robert (1714-1766)


Place of Publication
Edinburgh
Publisher
Printed by Hamilton, Balfour, and Neill
Date
1751
Metaphor
"The bodies of brute animals are actuated by a principle of a like kind with what is placed in man, but greatly inferior with regard to the degrees of reason and intelligence which it possesses: in the more perfect brutes, this principle is plainly intelligent as well as sentient; and their actions so evidently shew them to be endued, not only with a strong memory, but with reflexion and some degrees of reason, that it is really wonderful to find Descartes and his disciples so far imposing upon themselves, as seriously to believe these were machines formed entirely of matter, and, as it were, so many curious pieces of clock-work wound up and set a-going."
Metaphor in Context
The bodies of brute animals are actuated by a principle of a like kind with what is placed in man, but greatly inferior with regard to the degrees of reason and intelligence which it possesses: in the more perfect brutes, this principle is plainly intelligent as well as sentient; and their actions so evidently shew them to be endued, not only with a strong memory, but with reflexion and some degrees of reason, that it is really wonderful to find Descartes and his disciples so far imposing upon themselves, as seriously to believe these were machines formed entirely of matter, and, as it were, so many curious pieces of clock-work wound up and set a-going. Nor is it less surprising that the generality of Theological writers should, till of late, have been so far mistaken in this matter, as not to have perceived, that, after once admitting all the actions of the most perfect brutes to result from mere mechanism, the ascribing every thing in man to no higher a principle, would be a natural and easy consequence.
(Sect XI, pp. 291-2)
Categories
Provenance
Searching in Google Books
Citation
3 entries in ESTC (1751, 1763, 1768).

Robert Whytt, An Essay on the Vital and Other Involuntary Motions of Animals (Edinburgh: Printed by Hamilton, Balfour, and Neill, 1751). <Link to Google Books>
Date of Entry
04/25/2012

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.