John is frowning, wondering what I am getting at.
“What I’m driving at,” I say, “is the notion that before the beginning of the 
earth, before the sun and the stars were formed, before the primal generation 
of anything, the law of gravity existed.”
“Sure.”
“Sitting there, having no mass of its own, no energy of its own, not in 
anyone’s mind because there wasn’t anyone, not in space because there was no 
space either, not anywhere…this law of gravity still existed?”
Now John seems not so sure.
“If that law of gravity existed,” I say, “I honestly don’t know what a thing 
has to do to be nonexistent. It seems to me that law of gravity has passed 
every test of nonexistence there is. You cannot think of a single attribute of 
nonexistence that that law of gravity didn’t have. Or a single scientific 
attribute of existence it did have. And yet it is still ‘common sense’ to 
believe that it existed.”
John says, “I guess I’d have to think about it.”
“Well, I predict that if you think about it long enough you will find yourself 
going round and round and round and round until you finally reach only one 
possible, rational, intelligent conclusion. The law of gravity and gravity 
itself did not exist before Isaac Newton. No other conclusion makes sense.
“And what that means,” I say before he can interrupt, “and what that means is 
that that law of gravity exists nowhere except in people’s heads! It’s a ghost! 
We are all of us very arrogant and conceited about running down other people’s 
ghosts but just as ignorant and barbaric and superstitious about our own.”
“Why does everybody believe in the law of gravity then?”
“Mass hypnosis. In a very orthodox form known as ‘education.’” [...]
They are just looking at me so I continue: “Laws of nature are human 
inventions, like ghosts. Laws of logic, of mathematics are also human 
inventions, like ghosts. The whole blessed thing is a human invention, 
including the idea that it isn’t a human invention. The world has no existence 
whatsoever outside the human imagination. It’s all a ghost, and in antiquity 
was so recognized as a ghost, the whole blessed world we live in. It’s run by 
ghosts. We see what we see because these ghosts show it to us, ghosts of Moses 
and Christ and the Buddha, and Plato, and Descartes, and Rousseau and Jefferson 
and Lincoln, on and on and on. Isaac Newton is a very good ghost. One of the 
best. Your common sense is nothing more than the voices of thousands and 
thousands of these ghosts from the past. Ghosts and more ghosts. Ghosts trying 
to find their place among the living.”





"By this he (James) meant that subjects and objects are not the starting points 
of experience. Subjects and objects are secondary. They are concepts derived 
from something more fundamental which he described as 'the immediate flux of 
life which furnishes the material to our later reflection with its conceptual 
categories.' In this basic flux of experience, the distinctions of reflective 
thought, as as those between consciousness and content, subject and object, 
mind and matter, have not yet emerged in the forms which we make them. Pure 
experience cannot be called either physical or psychical; it logically precedes 
this distinction. 


"The first great pitfall from which such a radical standing by experience will 
save us is an artificial conception of the relations between knower and known. 
Throughout the history of philosophy the subject and its object have been 
treated as absolutely discontinuous entities; and thereupon the presence of the 
latter to the former, or the 'apprehension' by the former of the latter, has 
assumed a paradoxical character which all sorts of theories had to be invented 
to overcome."                                         
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