The
sun appears to be poured down, and in all directions indeed it is diffused, yet
it is not effused. For this diffusion is extension. Accordingly its rays are
called extensions, because they are extended.
But
one may judge what kind of a thing a ray is, if he looks at the sun's light
passing through a narrow opening into a darkened room, for it is extended in a
right line, and as it were is divided when it meets with any solid body which
stands in the way and intercepts the air beyond; but there the light remains
fixed, and does not glide or fall off.
Such
then ought to be the outpouring and diffusion of the understanding, and it
should in no way be an effusion, but an extension, and it should make no
violent or impetuous collision with the obstacles which are in its way; nor yet
fall down, but be fixed, and enlighten that which receives it.
For
a body will deprive itself of the illumination, if it does not admit it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
I once met a
freshman at M.I.T. who was struggling to tell me how light was both like a wave
and a particle, while at the same time being neither. To his credit, he was
trying awfully hard, but he ended up falling back on a rather amusing claim. “Well,
we’re the scientists, so you’re just going to have to trust us.” I’d heard that from theologians discussing the Holy Trinity all the time, so I understood
completely.
The scientists
may always be working on explaining exactly why it is happening, though we can all
surely describe a little something about how it is happening. Light seems to move
straight from its source, far faster than I can follow it, and when it comes up
against an object, it will behave in all sorts of interesting ways.
The rays of
light may be absorbed, or reflected, or bent, or spread about, but they
continue to act upon things, to extend outward, and not simply to fall away or
cease to be. The rays are not effused, Marcus Aurelius says, but diffused, in
that they do not flow away like a liquid but are cast toward things and at
things. Using another analogy, the rays of light stand firm and are always
directed, even as they do not force themselves with violence upon things.
This can tell
us something about why light is often used as an image of understanding, and
why the actions of mind can be fittingly compared to illumination.
Light radiates
outward from its source, coming in contact with the objects around it, acting
upon them, making them clear and visible as the rays move into them, through
them, around them, and off of them.
So too, mind
radiates outward from its source, coming in contact with the objects around it,
acting upon them, making them clear and intelligible as the thoughts move into
them, through them, around them, and off of them.
As the sun is
to things as visible, so mind is to things as intelligible. As light remains
focused, so thought should remain focused. As a ray casts itself upon things,
so understanding casts itself upon things. It acts, reacts, is diffused, and
transforms, yet it does not overwhelm what it meets, or just fade into
nothingness.
This is all the
more fitting for the Stoic, because just as light remains directed yet
adaptable to objects, mind remains directed yet adaptable to the circumstances
of our lives. For a man to cast his own light is not to blind others, or to
burn away what is around him, but for the brightness to show him the clear path
for his own choices and actions.
Mind is diffused,
not effused.
Written in 6/2008
No comments:
Post a Comment