The Nun’s Priest’s
Tale
The Nun’s Priest’s
Tale is one of the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. It contains a passing
reference to the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 and for that reason it is believed to
have been written some time in the mid-1380s. Although it is highly prized as a
treasure of English literature, its worth as a classic of early English
philosophy has been much less appreciated. In that respect, its format, being a
work of humorous verse, has been a drawback, obscuring the fact that it deals
with philosophical issues of mind, body, freewill and determinism. Behind the
colourful display of medieval romance and comedy, a sharp intelligence is at
work, comparing human with animal behaviour and challenging us to clarify our
belief that free will is a distinguishing feature of human actions.
The story of the
vain cock and the cunning fox was an ancient folk-tale even in Chaucer’s time.
It is a fable, closely related to those gathered by Aesop in the sixth century
BCE, which the Romans later spread across Europe. Several medieval versions
survive, including one in the Roman de Renard from the 12th century
which gives the cock the same name as in Chaucer’s version, ie. Chauntecler. The
medieval audience which heard or read Chaucer’s Tale would probably have been
familiar with the basic story-line.
Thus the very act
of telling the Tale becomes an illustration of one of the philosophical issues:
the freedom that Chaucer has as a creative artist is bound within the limits of
the traditional tale. The audience know that Chauntecler will escape by
tricking the fox in the same way that the cock himself was tricked, but they do
not know how that conclusion will be reached. The Tale has new details, new
dialogue and new events, all the creation of Chaucer, and so the audience find
it a fresh, unpredictable telling of the Tale, even though they know the final
outcome. In this way free choice and predestination are combined. Chaucer has
free choice in the way he tells the Tale, but his freedom is limited by the
necessity of the predetermined conclusion. Conversely, the audience have
foreknowledge in that they know how the Tale will end, but their knowledge is
incomplete since they do not know how Chaucer will bring them to that
conclusion.
The issue of free
choice and foreknowledge is first broached in the Tale through a discussion of
the nature of dreams. Chauntecler has had a frightening dream in which a beast
seized him and tried to kill him. Believing the dream to be a premonition, he
tells his lady-love, Pertelote the hen, about it, but she heaps scorn upon his
fear, telling him that dreams are caused by overeating and that all he needs is
a laxative. Pertelote appears to be a materialist in her outlook, relegating
dreams to the world of causes and treating them as ephemeral by-products like
bubbles on the surface of a stream. Chauntecler disagrees. For him, dreams
belong to the world of intentions and he believes that his dream is a warning of
impending disaster. He cites several classical authors in support of his
opinion and his trump card, given the hegemonic role of religion in medieval
culture, is to refer to examples of dreams-as-warnings in the Bible. So
Chauntecler has Biblical authority for believing that dreams can be
premonitions of events to come.
The problem of free
will versus predestination soon follows. If a dream can represent truthfully a
future state of affairs, then that scenario must in some sense already exist.
The future must already be mapped out so that the prophetic dreamer can catch a
glimpse of it. If the future was a nothing, because future events have not yet
happened, then there would be nothing for the dreamer to see.
Prediction, as
practised by prophetic dreamers, is a form of foreknowledge. It is a patchy
version of the total foreknowledge attributed to God. Patchy or total, however,
foreknowledge runs counter to common sense belief in free will. If certain
scenarios have been foreseen and are therefore inevitable, the human agents
involved can have no real freedom of action. Otherwise, they could spoil the
predicted scenarios, making choices which result in different scenarios and
thereby reducing God’s foreknowledge to mere guesswork. The actions of a free
agent must be unpredictable, if the agent is truly free to act as he or she
thinks fit. Therefore predictable scenarios, including the whole future as
claimed for God’s foreknowledge, cannot include any free agents.
Chaucer refers to
the great debate on this issue among theologians, mentioning Augustine,
Boethius and his own contemporary, Bradwardine. They regarded God’s absolute
foreknowledge as a given and then endeavoured to accommodate human free will
within that framework. Chaucer expresses the contradiction between
foreknowledge and free will thus (lines 477ff):
"Wheither that Goddes worthy
forwityng {Whether God’s
divine foreknowledge
Streyneth me nedely for to doon a
thyng, {compels me of
necessity to do a thing,
…Or elles if free choys be graunted me {or if free choice be granted
me
To do that same thyng or do it
noght…." { to do that
thing or not …
The conclusion that
Chaucer seems to favour is that of limited free choice, or ‘conditional
necessity’. This means that God, like the audience for the Tale, knows what the
outcome will be, but free will is granted in the choice of pathway to that
destination. This solution is unsatisfactory. First, it allows only patchy
foreknowledge, ie. the conclusion is known, not the path taken, but God’s
foreknowledge is supposed to be total. Secondly, it relegates free choice to
minor matters of detail while accepting determinism for the great decisions of
life, ie. you can decide to wear pink socks but you cannot do anything about
going to heaven or hell. So the theological paradox is not solved by
introducing ‘conditional necessity.’
Cast in religious
terms, this debate is of limited interest to a modern audience. Once you cease
to believe in God, problems arising from his alleged foreknowledge evaporate
immediately. But there is more to this issue than mere theological dispute. The
extent to which we humans have free will, if at all, is still a valid question
and Chaucer shows that he is aware of the non-religious aspects too. Remove
God’s foreknowledge from the problem and other deterministic factors loom
large. Character is shown to be one such factor.
In Chaucer’s
version of the tale much emphasis is placed on the different characters of the
protagonists. They act as they do because that is the nature of their characters.
Chauntecler is vain and therefore his actions tend to follow a pattern. For
example, he has the choice whether to heed his dream and stay out of harm’s way
on his perch, or to ignore it and display his fine feathers in the yard as
usual. True to his character, he chooses the latter course. He is driven by his
vanity and the fox exploits that weakness in order to seize him. For his part,
the fox is cunning and ruthless. Flattery and deceit come easy to him. His
actions are all of a kind and show the set traits of his character. As for
Pertelote, she is domineering and dim-witted. Her arguments are deeply flawed,
but she pronounces them with great conviction. She fails to distinguish between
courage and foolhardiness and demands both of Chauntecler as proof of his
manhood. Her actions tend to hasten the disaster and her character causes her
to commit those actions.
A medieval account
of character differs from ours today because it involved astrology and the
theory of the humours (choler, melancholy, sanguinity and phlegm). The
configurations of the stars and the mixture of humours in the body were thought
to influence a person’s actions and to shape his or her character. This
deterministic view of character has its modern counterpart in the belief that
the body is best understood in terms of genetics, hormones and nutrition, while
social conditioning and personal experience contribute to a person’s
psychological formation. Thus, if someone is suffering from depression, all
those various factors will be examined to see what is causing the depression.
In a less acute form, depression may be thought of as simply sadness, or
perhaps as a habitually pessimistic outlook. Thus we move from the medical
condition, depression, to a consideration of character, thought of as an
accumulation of habits and assumptions, an accretion which produces an
identifiable pattern of behaviour. Our freedom of action is therefore
constrained by factors which derive from our personal histories and physical
constitutions.
Vanity is a human
character trait. The rapacity of the fox, however, shades over into instinctual
animal behaviour. When we describe animal behaviour we often attribute it to
instinct and thereby deny that any free will was involved. A young cuckoo, for
example, never meets its natural parents. It is reared by an unsuspecting host
of a different species and yet, at maturity, it behaves like a cuckoo and acts
out its parasitic role by instinct. We now think of instinct as behaviour which
is programmed into an organism as part of its genetic make-up.
The Prologue to the
Canterbury Tales shows that Chaucer was prepared to link humans and animals in
terms of instinctual patterns of behaviour. He says that Spring revives all of
nature: the sun returns and it wakens the seeds, it starts the birds singing,
and it inspires people to go on pilgrimages.
"So priketh hem nature in hir
corages" (l. 11) {Thus Nature drives
them in their inclinations
No doubt Chaucer
makes this comparison with a mildly humorous intent, but that does not detract
from its validity.
However, the more
significant forms of instinctual behaviour in humans are to do with sex and
parenting. We humans have evolved differently from our close relatives, the
other species in the mammal group, but the basic functions of sex and parenting
are not so different. Such basic functions have been programmed into us by long
millennia of evolution, some of which we share with the other mammals in terms
of our common ancestors. Unfortunately for Chaucer, he lived in pre-scientific
times, five centuries before Darwin and had no conception of the real links
between humans and other animal species. Nevertheless, he can see that sex is a
driving force in human and in animal behaviour.
Chauntecler, who is
of course the cock of the story, is at times driven by lust. Thus, although he
speaks at length on the life-threatening danger which he believes is imminent,
he ignores all his own reasoning and flies down into the yard because of his
passion for Pertelote (lines 410ff)
"Real he was, he was namore
aferd; {Royal he
was, he was no more afraid;
He fethered Pertelote twenty tyme, {he caressed Pertelote
twenty times
And trad as ofte, er that it was
prime." {and mounted her as
often, before morning.
Chauntecler cannot
follow the advice that his own arguments provided. His lust drives him to have
sex with Pertelote twenty times and his vanity drives him to strut around the
yard in his pride at his accomplishments. His reason is the slave of his
passions, to use Hume’s phrase. He knows what he ought to do, but the force of
reason cannot compete with the other forces that are driving him.
Chaucer did not
have the benefit of being able to refer to studies in comparative psychology
and zoology, etc., but his observations accord well with the way we now think
of, for example, the role of sex hormones in explaining behaviour patterns.
Human freedom is limited by the fact that we are essentially bodies and
therefore subject to biological imperatives which drive our behaviour, just as
they drive the rest of the biosphere. The cocks and hens which mate and
procreate in the farmyard are obeying instincts which are also seen to operate
in human life. Part of the comedy of the Tale is to see the similarity between
human sexual behaviour, for example, courtship rituals, and animal behaviour
where we see similar forms of competitive display. The preening and strutting
of Chauntecler in the farmyard is both a satirical comment on human
sexually-motivated display and a realistic description of instinctual animal
behaviour.
So far we have only
considered the ways in which causal factors shape human behaviour. Clearly,
human freedom has its limitations. But are there grounds for thinking that we
have any freedom at all? Is it possible that free choice is an illusion and
that causal explanation is all that is required?
In theological
terms, insisting upon God’s absolute foreknowledge can lead to the complete
denial of human freedom. Predestination theologies, which segregate people into
the Damned and the Elect from the moment of birth, sacrifice freedom in order
to admit absolute foreknowledge. Likewise, in scientific terms, an
uncompromising belief in the methodological principle that every event has a
cause leads to a similar conclusion: human behaviour is governed by causal laws
which admit no exceptions and therefore no free choice.
But human freedom
is easy to prove. You tell me what you predict that I am going to do and I
shall disprove the prediction. Even if you gather up all the causal information
that is possible in order to make your prediction, I shall prove my freedom by
breaking your prediction. The same applies to God’s foreknowledge: if God tells
me what She "knows" I am going to do, I shall have no hesitation in
doing something quite different. Confounding predictions is one way to exercise
freedom.
The basis of our
freedom is surely language. Language gives us the ability to model different
possible futures. We can describe different scenarios and compare them. On the
basis of that comparison, we can then decide which course of action to take.
Thus language lifts us out of the ruts of necessity and gives us the power to
choose. We are enslaved neither by God’s foreknowledge nor by the chains of
universal causality.
But let us not
overstate the case. We are not creatures of pure reason, mere sentence-makers
living in a realm of words. No, we are flesh and blood bodies, immersed in the
world of causal connections, but able to use language to give us leverage on
the world. Human behaviour is therefore a mixture of freedom and necessity.
On this point
Chaucer succumbs to comedy. The traditional folktale which forms the basis of
his Tale clouds the argument about human freedom by granting the power of
language to birds and animals. The essentially human attribute of speech is
given to Chauntecler, Pertelote and Russell, the fox. Here Chaucer follows
tradition, but he adds to it by making his characters speak in a ridiculously
learned and oratorical style. All three characters cite Roman and Greek writers
as authorities and their speeches are in the manner of learned disputation. In
this way Chaucer applies a reductio ad absurdum to the notion that animals
could have the power of language. So the opposite is implied: that language is
a distinctly human activity. Language gives humans a freedom which animals
lack.
It is noteworthy
too that the Tale ends with an appeal to the audience (line 672ff)
"But ye that holden this tale a
folye {As for you
who think this tale a silly thing
As of a fox, or of a cok and hen, {dealing with a fox,
or a cock and hen,
Taketh the moralite, goode men." {take the moral from
it, good sirs.
The whole point of
a moral tale is to make the audience think again – to make them think about the
turning points in the narrative and apply them to their own lives, eg.
Chauntecler courting disaster by yielding to lust. The moral tale is a clear
representative of the power of language. It asks the audience to model
different scenarios and to amend their lives in the light of those models. Are
you vain? Do you have bad habits? Do you give in to lust? These are the
familiar challenges of the moral fable and Chaucer implies them in his
reference to ‘the moralite’. But they have added resonance after the points
that Chaucer has made in the course of the Tale. The moral challenge assumes
that there is freedom of action, freedom to change one’s ways and be a better
person. The moral challenge uses language to present different possible futures
and exhorts us, as language users, to think through the possibilities and
choose the better way. We do not have total freedom, but we are not helpless in
the face of Destiny.
In conclusion, I
have a confession and an attempted vindication. No doubt in my attempt to
provide a commentary on Chaucer’s Tale, I may have grafted some ideas of my own
onto his. For example, I do not deny that there is a change of emphasis in this
essay from Chaucer’s conditional necessity to limited freedom. Perhaps it is
more than just a change of emphasis. But I feel sure that Chaucer would have
appreciated the way that the resulting combination of ideas illustrates yet
again the interplay of freedom and necessity: my freedom to interpret,
extrapolate and (yes) distort, operates within the necessity to acknowledge the
ideas and insights which Chaucer has left us in his work. We are indeed
fortunate to have this record of his wit and thought. His words enhance our
freedom.
Les Reid
2002