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is an insubstantial illusion. The chronic belief of mankind, that events may happen for the sake of their personal significance, is an abomination; and the notions of our grandfathers about oracles and omens, divinations and apparitions, miraculous changes of heart and wonders worked by inspired persons, answers to prayer and providential leadings, are a fabric absolutely baseless, a mass of sheer untruth.
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Now, of course, we must all admit that the excesses to which the romantic and personal view of nature may lead, if wholly unchecked by impersonal rationalism, are direful. Central African Mumbo-jumboism is one of unchecked romanticism’s fruits. One ought accordingly to sympathize with that abhorrence of romanticism as a sufficient world -theory; one ought to
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understand that lively intolerance of the least grain of romanticism in the views of life of other people, which are such character istic marks of those who follow the scientific
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professions to-day. Our debt to science is literally boundless, and our gratitude for what is positive in her teachings must be correspondingly immense. But the S. P. R.’s Proceedings have, it seems to me, conclusively proved one thing to the candid reader; and that is that the verdict of pure insanity, of gratuitous preference for error, of superstition without an excuse, which the scientists of our day are led by their intellectual training to pronounce upon the entire thought of the past, is a most shallow verdict. The personal and romantic view of life has other roots besides wanton exuberance of imagination and perversity of heart. It is perennially fed by facts of experience, whatever the ulterior interpretation of those facts may prove to be; and at no time in human history would it have been less easy than now—at most times it would have been much more easy —for advocates with a little industry to collect in
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its favor an array of contemporary documents as good as those which our publications present. These documents all relate to real experiences of persons. These experiences have three characters in common: They are capricious, discontinuous, and not easily controlled; they require peculiar persons for their production; their significance seems to be wholly for personal life. Those who preferentially attend to them, and still more those who are individually subject to them, not only easily may find, but are logically bound to find, in them valid arguments for their romantic and personal conception of the world’s course. Through my slight participation in the investigations of the S. P. R. I have become acquainted with numbers of persons of this sort, for whom the very word ‘ science’ has become a name of
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reproach, for reasons that I now both understand and respect. It is the intolerance of science
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for such phenomena as we are studying, her peremptory denial either of their existence or of their significance (except as proofs of man’s absolute innate folly), that has set science so apart from the common sympathies of the race. I confess that it is on this, its humanizing mission, that the Society ’s best claim to the gratitude of our generation seems to me to
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depend. It has restored continuity to history. It has shown some reasonable basis for the most superstitious aberrations of the foretime. It has bridged the chasm, healed the hideous rift that science, taken in a certain narrow way, has shot into the human world.
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140
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I will even go one step farther. When from our present advanced standpoint we look back
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upon the past stages of human thought, whether it be scientific thought or theological thought, we are amazed that a universe which appears to us of so vast and mysterious a complication should ever have seemed to any one so little and plain a thing. Whether it be Descartes ’s world or Newton ’s, whether it be that of the materialists of the last century or that
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of the Bridgewater treatises of our own, it always looks the same to us,—incredibly perspectiveless and short. Even Lyell’ s, Faraday ’s, Mill’s, and Darwin’s consciousness of
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their respective subjects are already beginning to put on an infantile and innocent look. Is it then likely that the science of our own day will escape the common doom; that the minds of its votaries will never look old -fashioned to the grandchildren of the latter? It would be folly
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to suppose so. Yet if we are to judge by the analogy of the past, when our science once becomes old -fashioned, it will be more for its omissions of fact, for its ignorance of whole
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ranges and orders of complexity in the phenomena to be explained, than for any fatal lack in its spirit and principles. The spirit and principles of science are mere affairs of method; there is nothing in them that need hinder science from dealing successfully with a world in which personal forces are the starting -point of new effects. The only form of thing that we directly
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encounter, the only experience that we concretely have, is our own personal life. The only complete category of our thinking, our professors of philosophy tell us, is the category of personality, every other category being one of the abstract elements of that. And this systematic denial on science’s part of personality as a condition of events, this rigorous belief that in its own essential and innermost nature our world is a strictly impersonal world, may, conceivably, as the whirligig of time goes round, prove to be the very defect that our descen dants will be most surprised at in our own boasted science, the omission that to their
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eyes will most tend to make it look perspectiveless and short.
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THE END
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*************** I'm Julie, the woman who runs Global Grey - the website where this ebook was
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published. These are my own formatted editions, and I hope you enjoyed reading this
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particular one.
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If you have this book because you bought it as part of a collection – thank you so much
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f
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or your support.
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If you downloaded it for free – please consider (if you haven’t already) making a small donation to help keep the site running.
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If you bought this from Amazon or anywhere else, you have been ripped off by someone taking free ebooks from my site and selling them as their own. You should definitely get a refund :/
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Thanks for reading this and I hope you visit the site again - new books are added regularly so you'll always find something of interest :)
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141
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