SECTION IV.
PRIVATIVE TERMS.
Privative terms are distinguished from other terms, by this; that other terms are marks for objects, as present or existent; privative terms are marks for objects, as not present or not existent.[24]
[24] The author gives the name of Privative terms to all those which are more commonly known by the designation of Negative; to all which signify non-existence or absence. It is usual to reserve the term Privative for names which signify not simple absence, but the absence of something usually present, or of which the presence might have been expected. Thus blind is classed as a privative term, when applied to human beings. When applied to stocks and stones, which are not expected to see, it is an admitted metaphor.
This, however, being understood, there is no difficulty in following the author’s exposition by means of his own language.—Ed.
Thus the word Light, is the mark of a certain well-known object, as existent or present.
The word Darkness, on the contrary, is the mark of the same object, as not existent or not present. Ask any man, what he means by darkness; he says the absence of light. But the absence of light, is only another name for light absent; and light absent, is only another name for light not present. Darkness, therefore, is another name for light not present.
It thus appears, that the idea called up by the 100 word light, is that of a certain object associated with its presence; the idea called up by the word darkness, is that of the same object associated with its absence.
After the explanations which have been so often given, what I mean, when I speak of the idea of an object, as one thing; the idea of its presence, as another thing; ought not to be obscure. Its presence, is its existence; its absence, is its non-existence; at least, at a particular time and place. What ideas and sensations I mark by the word existent, has [already] been explained. The word non-existent is the mere negation of the same sensations and ideas.
We have repeatedly seen, that what we call existence, is an inference from our sensations. We have clusters of sensations; these call up the ideas of antecedents, which we call qualities; these the idea of an antecedent common to all the qualities, which we call Substratum; and the Substratum, with its qualities, we call the Object.