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Question VII
Whether Witches can Sway the Minds of Men to Love or Hatred.
It
is asked whether devils, through the medium of witches, can change or incite the
minds of men to inordinate love or hatred; and it is argued that, following the
previous conclusions, they cannot do so. For there are three things in man:
will, understanding, and body. The first is ruled by God (for, The heart of the
king is in the hand of the Lord); the second is enlightened by an Angel; and the
body is governed by the motions of the stars. And as the devils cannot effect
changes in the body, even less have they power to incite love or hatred in the
soul. The consequence is clear; that though they have more power over things
corporeal than over things spiritual, they cannot change even the body, as has
been often proved. For they cannot induce any substantial or accidental form,
except is as it were their artificer. In this connexion is quoted what has been
said before; that whoever believes that any creature can be changed for the
better or worse or transformed into another kind or likeness, except by the
Creator of all things, is worse than a pagan and a heretic.
Besides, everything that acts with
design knows its own effect. If, therefore, the devil could change the minds of
men to hatred or love, he would also be able to see the inner thoughts of the
heart; but this is contrary to what is said in the Book of Ecclesiastic Dogma:
The devil cannot see our inner thoughts. And again in the same place: Not all
our evil thoughts are from the devil, but sometimes they arise from our own
choice.
Besides, love and hatred are a matter
of the will, which is rooted in the soul; therefore they cannot by any cunning
be caused by the devil. The conclusion holds that He alone (as S. Augustine
says) is able to enter into the soul, Who created it.
Besides, it is not valid to argue
that because he can influence the inner emotions, therefore he can govern the
will. For the emotions are stronger than physical strength; and the devil can
effect nothing in a physical way, such as the formation of flesh and blood;
therefore he can effect nothing through the emotions.
But against this. The devil is
said to tempt men not only visibly but also invisibly; but this would not be
true unless he were able to exert some influence over the inner mind. Besides,
S. John Damascene says: All evil and all filthiness is devised by the devil. And
Dionysius, de Divin. Nom. IV: The multitude of devils is the cause of all
evil, etc.
Answer. First, one sort of
cause is to be distinguished from another: secondly, we shall show how the devil
can affect the inner powers of the mind, that is the emotions; and thirdly, we
shall draw the fit conclusion. And as to the first, it is to be considered that
the cause of anything can be understood in two ways; either as direct, or as
indirect. For when something cause a disposition to some effect, it is said to
be an occasional and indirect cause of that effect. In this way it may be said
that he who chops wood is the cause of the actual fire. And similarly we may say
that the devil is the cause of all our sins; for he incited the first man to
sin, from whose sin it has been handed down to the whole human race to have an
inclination towards sin. And in this way are to be understood the words of S.
John Damascene and Dionysius.
But a direct cause is one that
directly causes an effect; and in this sense the devil is not the cause of all
sin. For all sins are not committed at the instigation of the devil, but some
are of our own choosing. For Origen says: Even if the devil were not, men would
still lust after food and venery and such things. And from these inordinate
lusts much may result, unless such appetites be reasonably restrained. But to
restrain such ungoverned desire is the part of man's free-will, over which even
the devil has no power.
And because this distinction is not
sufficient to explain how the devil at times produces a frantic infatuation of
love, it is further to be noted that though he cannot cause that inordinate love
by directly compelling a man's will, yet he can do so by means of persuasion.
And this again in two ways, either visibly or invisibly. Visibly, when he
appears to witches in the form of a man, and speaks to them materially,
persuading them to sin. So he tempted our first parents in Paradise in the form
of a serpent; and so he tempted Christ in the wilderness, appearing to Him in
visible form.
But it is not to be thought that this
is the only way he influences a man; for in that case no sin would proceed from
the devil's instruction, except such as were suggested by him in visible form.
Therefore it must be said that even invisibly he instigates man to sin. And this
he does in two ways, either by persuasion or by disposition. By persuasion, he
presents something to the understanding as being a good thing. And this he can
do in three ways; for he presents it either to the intellect, or to the inner
perceptions, or to the outer. And as for the intellect; the human intellect can
be helped by a good Angel to understand a thing by means of enlightenment, as
Dionysius says; and to understand a thing, according to Aristotle, is to suffer
something: therefore the devil can impress some form upon the intellect, by
which the act of understanding is called forth.
And it may be argued that the devil
can do this by his natural power, which is not, as had been shown, diminished. It
is to be said, however, that he cannot do this by means of enlightenment,
but by persuasion. For the intellect of man is of that condition that, the more
it is enlightened, the more it knows the truth, and the more it can defend
itself from deception. And because the devil intends his deception to be
permanent, therefore no persuasion that he uses can be called enlightenment:
although it may be called revelation, in that when he invisibly uses persuasion,
by means of some impression he plants something on the inner or outer sense. And
by this the reasoning intellect is persuaded to perform some action.
But as to how he is enabled to create
an impression on the inner sense, it is to be noted that the bodily
nature is naturally born to be moved locally by the spiritual; which is clear
from the case of our own bodies, which are moved by souls; and the same is the
case with the stars. But it is not by nature adapted to be directly subject to
influences, by which we mean outside influences, not those with which it is
informed. Wherefore the concurrence of some bodily agent is necessary, as is
proved in the 7th book of the Metaphysics. Corporeal matter naturally
obeys a good or bad angel as to the local motion; and it is due to this that
devils can through motion collect semen, and employ it for the production of
wonderful results. This was how it happened that Pharao's magicians produced
serpents and actual animals, when corresponding active and passive agents were
brought together. Therefore there is nothing to prevent the devils from
effecting anything that appertains to the local motion of corporeal matter,
unless God prevent it.
And now let us examine how the devil
can through local motion excite the fancy and inner sensory perceptions of a man
by apparitions and impulsive actions. It is to be noted that Aristotle (De
Somno et Uigilia) assigns the cause of apparitions in dreams through local
motion to the fact that, when an animal sleeps the blood flows to the inmost
seat of the senses, from which descend motions or impressions which remain from
past impressions preserved in the mind or inner perception; and these are Fancy
or Imagination, which are the same thing according to S. Thomas, as will be
shown.
For fancy or imagination is as it
were the treasury of ideas received through the senses. And through this it
happens that devils stir up the inner perceptions, that is the power of
conserving images, that they appear to be a new impression at that moment
received from exterior things.
It is true that all do not agree to
this; but if anyone wishes to occupy himself with this question, he must
consider the number and the office of the inner perceptions. According to
Avicenna, in his book On the Mind, these are five: namely, Common Sense,
Fancy, Imagination, Thought, and Memory. But S. Thomas, in the First Part of
Question 79, says that they are only four, since Fancy and Imagination are the
same thing. For fear of prolixity I omit much more that has variously been said
on this subject.
Only this must be said; that fancy is
the treasury of ideas, but memory appears to be something different. For fancy
is the treasury or repository of ideas received through the senses; but memory
is the treasury of instincts, which are not received through the senses. For
when a man sees a wolf, he runs away, not because of its ugly colour or
appearance, which are ideas received through the outer senses and conserved in
his fancy; but he runs away because the wolf is his natural enemy. And this he
knows through some instinct or fear, which is apart from thought, which
recognized the wolf as hostile, but a dog as friendly. But the repository of
those instincts is memory. And reception and retention are two different things
in animal nature; for those who are of a humid disposition receive readily, but
retain badly; and the contrary is the case of those with a dry humour.
To return to the question. The
apparitions that come in dreams to sleepers proceed from the ideas retained in
the repository of their mind, through a natural local motion caused by the flow
of blood to the first and inmost seat of their faculties of perception; and we
speak of an instrinsic local motion in the head and the cells of the brain.
And this can also happen through a
similar local motion created by devils. Also such things happen not only to the
sleeping, but even to those who are awake. For in these also the devils can stir
up and excite the inner perceptions and humours, so that ideas retained in the
repositories of their minds are drawn out and made apparent to the faculties of
fancy and imagination, so that such men imagine these things to be true. And
this is called interior temptation.
And it is no wonder that the devil
can do this by his own natural power; since any man by himself, being awake and
having the use of his reason, can voluntarily draw from his repositories the
images he has retained in them; in such a way that he can summon to himself the
images of whatsoever things he pleases. And this being granted, it is easy to
understand the matter of excessive infatuation in love.
Now there are two ways in which
devils can, as has been said, raise up this kind of images. Sometimes they work
without enchaining the human reason, as has been said in the matter of
temptation, and the example of voluntary imagination. But sometimes the use of
reason is entirely chained up; and this may be exemplified by certain naturally
defective persons, and by madmen and drunkards. Therefore it is no wonder that
devils can, with God's permission, chain up the reason; and such men are called
delirious, because their senses have been snatched away by the devil. And this
they do in two ways, either with or without the help of witches. For Aristotle,
in the work we have quoted, says that anyone who lives in passion is moved by
only a little thing, as a lover by the remotest likeness of his love, and
similarly with one who feels hatred. Therefore devils, who have learned from
men's acts to which passions they are chiefly subject, incite them to this sort
of inordinate love or hatred, impressing their purpose on men's imagination the
more strongly and effectively, as they can do so the more easily. And this is
the more easy for a lover to summon up the image of his love from his memory,
and retain it pleasurably in his thoughts.
But they work by witchcraft when they
do these things through and at the instance of witches, by reason of a pact
entered into with them. But it is not possible to treat of such matters in
detail, on account of the great number of instances both among the clergy and
among the laity. For how many adulterers have put away the most beautiful wives
to lust after the vilest of women!
We know of an old woman who,
according to the common account of the brothers in that monastery even up to
this day, in this manner not only bewitched three successive Abbots, but even
killed them, and in the same way drove the fourth out of his mind. For she
herself publicly confessed it, and does not fear to say: I did so and I do so,
and they are not able to keep from loving me because they have eaten so much of
my dung - measuring off a certain length on her arm. I confess, moreover, that
since we had no case to prosecute her or bring her to trial, she survives to
this day.
It will be remembered that it was
said that the devil invisibly lures a man to sin, not only by means of
persuasion, as has been said, but also by the means of disposition. Although
this is not very pertinent, yet be it said that by a similar admonition of the
disposition and humours of men, he renders some more disposed to anger, or
concupiscence, or other passions. For it is manifest that a man who has a body
so disposed is more prone to concupiscence and anger and such passions; and when
they are aroused, he is more apt to surrender to them. But because it is
difficult to quote precedents, therefore an easier method must be found of
declaring them for the admonition of the people. And in the Second Part of this
book we treat of the remedies by which men so bewitched can be set free.
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