CHAPTER XVII
Do not imagine that only Metaphysics should be taught with reserve
to the common people and to the uninitiated; for the same is also the case with
the greater part of Natural Science. In this sense we have repeatedly made use of
the expression of the Sages, “Do not expound the chapter on the Creation in the
presence of two” [vide Introd. page 2]. This principle was not peculiar to our Sages;
ancient philosophers and scholars of other nations were likewise wont to treat of
the principia rerum obscurely, and to use figurative language in discussing such
subjects. Thus Plato and his predecessors called Substance the female, and Form
the male. (You are aware that the principia of all existing transient things are
three, viz., Substance, Form, and Absence of a particular form; the last-named principle
is always inherent in the substance, for otherwise the substance would be incapable
of receiving a new form: and it is from this point of view that absence [of a particular
form] is included among the principia. As soon, then, as a substance has received
a certain form, the privation of that form, namely, of that which has just been
received, has ceased, and is replaced by the privation of another form, and so on
with all possible forms, as is explained in treatises on natural philosophy.) —
Now, if those philosophers who have nothing to fear from a lucid explanation of
these metaphysical subjects still were in the habit of discussing them in figures
and metaphors, how much more should we, having the interest of religion at heart,
refrain from elucidating to the mass any subject that is beyond their comprehension,
or that might be taken in a sense directly opposite to the one intended. This also
deserves attention.