REA'SON, that particular faculty in man of which either the exclusive or the inure intense enjoyment distinguishes him from the rest of the animal creation. Like most of the terms in the science of mind, that of reason has been employed in a great variety of significations. Du gald Stewart takes it in its widest sense, and comprises under it all the operations of the intellect upon the materials of knowledge which are furnished in the first instance by sense and perception. Its office is to distinguish the true from the false, right from wrong, and to cum bine means for the attainment of partic ular ends. According to this definition. therefore, the province of reason is coex tensive with the range of human activity, and it directs itself to the three supreme objects of desire to man—the good. the beautiful, and the true. Mr. flume, however, withdraws the discernment of right and wrong, and of the beautiful and its contrary, from the domain of rea son ; and, on the other hand, also, denies the certainty of the truth which it enun ciates, and limits its convincing force merely to a certain weight of probability. Locke's usage of the term, again, par taking as it does of the general looseness of his phraseology, is very different. In one passage reason is declared to be the faculty which finds out the means, and rightly applies them, to discover either the certain agreement or disagreement of two ideas, or their probable connection. But, in another place, it is said to be conversant with certainty alone ; while the discovery of what, as probable, en forces a contingent assent or opinion, is ascribed to an especial faculty, which is called the judgment. Bird, on the other hand, confines the latter term to the ap prehension of intuitive truth ; but agrees so far with Locke as to make it one part of reason, whose other part is reasoning, both demonstrative and moral. On the whole, however, it is clear that in the mind of Locke the terms reasoning and reason were nearly, if not quite equiva lent. But reasoning and deduction are evidently not the source either of the dignity or the authority of the human intellect. The discursive faculty can establish any other than a condi tional truth, which predisposes some an terior and pro-established verity as its basis and verification. If there were not.
in the human mind something primary, unconditional, and absolute, to which all reasonings might be referred, as to their source and foundation, the discursive pro cess would proceed into infinity, and its conclusions be, as Hume asserts that they are, without any power to enforce assent. But there are unquestionably in the hu man mind certain necessary and univer sal principles, which, shining with an intrinsic light of evidence, are themselves above proof, but the authority for all mediate and contingent principles. That which is thus above reasoning is the rea son. In the language of English philoso phy, the terms reason and understanding are nearly identical, and are so used by Stewart; but in the critical philosophy of Kant a broad distinetirn has been drawn between them. Reason is the principle of principles ; either specula tively verifies every special principle, or practically determines the proper ends of human action. Approximately, it may ho called the sum of what, in Scotch philosophy, has been denominated the laws of man's intellectual constitution. The understanding, on the other hand, is coextensive with the vernacular use of reason. It is that which conceives of sensible objects under certain general notions, which again it compares one with another, or with particular repre sentations of them, or with the objects themselves. It is, therefore, the faculty of reflection and generalization. But the act of comparison is called a judgment ; and the understanding, when it enunci ates its conceptions, becomes also the faculty of judging. But the truth of a proposition which is not identical, or the enunciation of a primary truth, cannot be immediately certain. To prove it, recourse must be had to other proposi. tions previously adinitted ; the under standing, that is, must deduce one judg ment front another, and so becomes the discursive faculty, or reasoning. Farther, in discovering these mediate truths, and in the regular and methodical disposition of them for the purpose of conclusion, as well as in the s.eleetion of means for the accomplishment of its ends, it exhibits itself as a power of adaptation.