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John Toland :
Father of Secular Philosophy |
No one has made a greater contribution to the development of
Freethought in Ireland than John Toland (1670-1722), and it is the
responsibility of the modern secular movement to publish and popularise
his writings which have been sadly neglected in his own country and in
Britain. Despite his reputation as a thinker and writer of the stature
of David Hume, his work has been largely published in France, Holland
and Germany, leaving him almost unknown in the English speaking world.
He was born in the remote peninsula of Inishowen, Co Donegal, and
brought up in, the Catholic faith. His exact birthplace is recorded as
Redcastle or Muff by some authorities and by a local historian as
Ardagh in the parish of Clonmany.
His first book Christianity Not Mysterious was written in 1696 and
published in 1697 but was declared heretical by the Grand Jury in the
Court of the King's Bench in Dublin. It was brought before Parliament
for examination and judgement in August of that year and was ordered to
be publicly burned by the common hangman and the author to be taken
into custody. The sentence on the book was carried out on September
11th and it was burnt in front of the Parliament House gate in the open
street, although Toland himself evaded arrest by fleeing to England.
The book and the events surrounding it, however, distinguish him as
Ireland's first dissident writer whose criticism of the established
religious perception of man, creation and the universe brought him into
conflict with both Church and State.
Toland was known locally in his youth in Donegal as 'Eoghain na
Leabhar' (Eoin of the Books) because of his addiction to literature and
reading. With the assistance of the Church of Ireland, to which he
converted at an early age, he became a student at Glasgow University.
He became a Presbyterian later and after three years went to the
University of Edinburgh where he obtained the degree of Master of Arts
in July 1690. His knowledge of classical languages by this time was
enormous and he spoke most European languages fluently.
He also had the advantage of an upbringing in the Gaelic language, then
spoken in his native birthplace, he spent a year at Oxford after
leaving Edinburgh studying manuscripts in his native tongue with a view
to compiling a Gaelic dictionary. This didn't materialise, but he wrote
a book entitled The History of the Druids as a result of these studies,
which demonstrates his grasp of Gaelic and his understanding of its
origins, lore and traditions. As with all other knowledge acquired by
him, Toland used Gaelic to explore the origins of superstition in
ancient Ireland, and The History of the Druids, not published until
1726 some years after his death, reflects this. In his book The Druids
Kendrick refers to Toland's work, describing it as 'a curious and
rambling account" ignoring the fact that it contains a wealth of
information based on a study of the Gaelic, Greek, Hebrew and. Egyptian
languages and their cultural backgrounds.
From Oxford he went to London where he became an acquaintance of John
Locke, who was prompted to publish his book The Reasonableness of
Christianity on learning that Toland planned to launch Christianity Not
Mysterious at an early date. Critiques of Christianity had to be
disguised as manuscripts that added to the richness of Christian
literature at this time, when heretics ran the risk of losing their
liberty if not their lives, as Toland's experience in Dublin
demonstrates. His sometimes indiscreet prose often offended many
liberals such as Swift and Locke, who had no desire for public
controversy.
Soon Toland was corresponding with the Huguenot savant Jean Le Clerc,
who had taken refuge in Holland. Toland sent him a copy of Gospel Truth
Stated and Vindicated by Williams with a covering letter explaining
that a controversy had developed over the book. Le Clerc published an
extract from the book on Toland's suggestion, along with his letter in
Bibliothèque Universelle of which he was editor. Williams and
his friends were so impressed with Toland's piety and zeal that they
collected money to send him to study at Leyden in 1692. His exposure to
the freethinking, tolerant atmosphere of Holland and his encounters
with heretical organisations there caused him to reject all forms of
'spiritual authority' from then on and this led to the publication of
Christianity Not Mysterious.
Toland's spirited 'defences' issued against the condemnation of his
work as 'heresy' and 'atheism' by his native Parliament earned him the
sympathy of 18th century rationalists - in particular, the German
rationalist and mathematician Gottfried Leibniz. One of those who
attacked Toland was Dr Peter Browne, Provost of Trinity College, who
afterwards became Bishop of Cork, and it was said that the latter
position was his reward for his dogmatic denunciation of Christianity
Not Mysterious. During his lifetime Toland wrote almost 100 books, and
as he gained greater understanding his writings became more sceptical
of established belief.
He also involved himself in many of the political controversies that
centred around the Crown, and being a Whig he had a liberal attitude to
the relations between Church and State. He supported the House of
Hanover in the controversy about the succession, and in defence of this
position he stated: "I have always been, now am, and ever shall be
persuaded that all sorts of magistrates are made for and by the people,
and not the people for or by the magistrates ... and consequently that
it is lawful to resist and punish tyrants of all sorts ... I am
therefore avowedly a Commonwealth's man".
In 1701 he went to Hanover as part of an official delegation headed by
Lord Macclesfield to present the Act of Settlement and bring the Order
of the Garter to George 1. The act decreed that Anne, Mary's sister and
sister-in-law of William, would succeed William to the throne. William
and the Parliament accepted this settlement because it prevented the
Stuart princes from demanding the Crown at a future date, while Toland
and his supporters were satisfied because it placed most of the real
power under the control of Parliament. He became well known to German
and Prussian royalty and on his return the following year he recorded
his impressions of the courts of Prussia and Hanover and noted: "In
both courts there was an absence of sectarian divisiveness ... and that
the clergy seldom appear at court in either Hanover or Berlin".
At this time he became friends with both the Electress Sophia and her
daughter Serena, Queen of Prussia, and later wrote a book entitled
Letters to Serena, described by Simms as 'The intelligent woman's guide
to rationalism'. This work contains his views on the origins of
superstition, prejudice and many other 'notions' which afflict humanity.
He became a colleague of Robert Harley (1661-1724), then an influential
Whig politician in the coalition government that headed the war against
Louis XW. In 1705 he offered to serve Harley in Germany, because of his
contacts and his knowledge of the language, and some writers have said
that he wanted to spy, though he himself stated that he would be
'neither minister nor spy' but a private observer. Some also imply that
he succumbed to patronage, but when Harley turned his coat and formed
the Tory ministry of 1710 to seek peace with France, Toland stood firm
for the Whig line and told Harley that he was opposed to any peace
negotiations with France. He then produced a pamphlet entitled The Art
of Restoring in which he made a comparison between Harley and General
Monk, who had abandoned the commonwealth and restored a Stuart king.
This pamphlet was reprinted no fewer than 10 times during 1714 and
contributed significantly to Harley's downfall and eventual disgrace.
Toland was concerned about the effect of Tory policy in Ireland where
the fortunes of the Stuart pretender were followed closely, and he
predicted a Catholic revival. He worked with Robert Molesworth, a
native of Dublin who was also a commonwealth man, renowned at the time
for attacking the autocratic monarchy of Denmark. His acquaintance with
George 1 and his friendship with Serena did not prevent him from
opposing the king's Declaratory Act by which the English Parliament
asserted its legislative and judicial power in Irish affairs. It is
clear that Toland's political positions were consistently liberal in
relation to the issues of the day.
In Letters to Serena we find many of his political convictions as well
as his scepticism. In this book he also correctly asserts that motion
is essential to matter and he criticises the views of Descartes and
Spinoza on the subject.
One of the books that followed this was Adeisidaemon - or the ‘Man
Without Superstition’ - written in Latin and published in 1709, in
which he asserts that superstition is more dangerous to the state than
atheism. This book also generated much hostility, especially on the
continent as it was published in Holland and it was banned by Papal
decree. It was here that he first referred to the 'pantheistic' ideas o
early philosophers, which even upset Leibniz who tried to influence him
at the time in the belief that he had gone too far. Toland was unmoved,
however, and stated that he intended to publish Adeisidaemon without
any alteration.
Another noteworthy book was ‘Nazarenus’, published in 1718, which
contains the story of an Irish manuscript of the Four Gospels in Latin.
This was a manuscript that had been stolen from the Royal Library,
Paris, and came into Toland's hands directly from the thief who brought
it into Holland and allowed him to study it for a few months.
Previously it had been assumed that it was in Anglo-Saxon characters,
but Toland noticed that they were Irish and that a colophon in Irish
showed the manuscript had been written in 1138 in Armagh by an Irish
monk named Mael Brigte. He informed Harley of the existence of the
manuscript and he later bought it for the sum of £20, and today
it is in the British Museum. The story demonstrates once again his
grasp of linguistics and learning. In the same book he gives an account
of religious dissent in ancient Ireland that is unrecorded by Christian
historians. This concerns a group called the 'Culdees' who were
actively attempting to establish a reform movement in the Irish Church
in the 8th and 9th centuries. His knowledge of the native language
enabled him to translate 'Culdees' to 'Ceili De' which is proper Irish
and means 'God's Spouses'.
In 1720 he published Pantheisticon in which he argues that 'God' is
simply a way of referring to the universe and that the conventional God
is non-existent. This book was also used as a model for masonic
movements because it contained a scheme for Socratic clubs, and it was
widely circulated in France. At that time the greatest sceptic in
pre-revolutionary France was D'Holbach, and he based much of his
thought on Toland.
Always a liberal and a republican in the true sense of the word,
preparing the way for the French and Irish revolutions of the late 18th
century, Toland edited and published James Harrington's Oceana and
other Works in 1700. According to Professor Richard Keamey of UCD, this
was the single work most responsible for the dissemination of
republican thinking in 18th century England and Ireland. In his famous
introduction to the classic republican work Toland recommended 'the
careful perusal of Greek and Roman historians' as a means of
rediscovering the sources of republican theory. It would be an
education for our so-called modern 'republicans' to study Toland and
the ancient philosophers, where they will discover that sectarianism
and republicanism are incompatible.
Professor Kearney states in his article: "At the very moment Toland
hoped to return to his own people in triumph having achieved
international acclaim in England and on the continent - they turned on
him, put a price on his head and sent him back into exile. In his own
introduction to the work that caused these events, Christianity not
Mysterious, Toland himself stated: "I believe that all men will readily
allow that none should speak with more freedom and assurance than he
that defends or illustrates the truth".
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