Philosophical Fragments: Written During Intervals of Business

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Longmans & Company, 1878 - 278 pages
 

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Page 171 - ... of the Abbeville and Amiens gravel-beds. No logical proof can be adduced that the peculiar shapes of these flints were given to them by Human hands; but does any unprejudiced person now doubt it? The evidence of design, to which, after an examination of one or two such specimens, we should only be justified in attaching a probable value, derives an irresistible cogency from accumulation. On the other hand, the improbability that these flints acquired their peculiar shape by accident, becomes...
Page 171 - Sense," disciplined and enlarged by appropriate culture, becomes one of our most valuable instruments of Scientific inquiry; affording in many instances the best, and sometimes the only, basis for a rational conclusion. Let us take as a typical case, in which no special knowledge is required, what we are accustomed to call the "flint implements" of the Abbeville and Amiens gravel-beds. No logical proof can be adduced that the peculiar shapes of these flints were given to them by Human hands; but...
Page 171 - ... such specimens, we should only be justified in attaching a probable value, derives an irresistible cogency from accumulation. On the other hand, the improbability that these flints acquired their' peculiar shape by accident, becomes to our minds greater and greater as more and more such specimens are found ; until at last this hypothesis, although it cannot be directly disproved, is felt to be almost inconceivable, except by minds previously " possessed " by the " dominant idea
Page 171 - Spectrum not attributable to any substance then known. In a large number of other cases, moreover, our Scientific interpretations are clearly matters of judgment; and this is eminently a personal act, the value of its results depending in each case upon the qualifications of the individual for arriving at a correct decision. The surest of such judgments are those dictated by what we term "Common Sense...
Page 172 - Even hi this most exact of Sciences, therefore, we cannot proceed a step, without translating the actual Phenomena of Nature into Intellectual Representations of those phenomena ; and it is because the Newtonian conception is not only the most simple, but is also, up to the extent of our present knowledge, universal in its conformity to the facts of observation, that wo accept it as the only Scheme of the Universe yet promulgated, which satisfies our Intellectual requirements.
Page 172 - Nature by the use of that faculty comes to be more and more individual — things being perfectly " self-evident" to men of special culture, which ordinary men, or men whose training has lain in a different direction, do not apprehend as such. Of all departments of science, geology seems to me to be the one that most depends on this speciallytrained
Page 165 - ... has advanced. Each new ontological theory, from time to time propounded in lieu of previous ones shown to be untenable, has been followed by a new criticism leading to a new scepticism.
Page 108 - IMMANENCE implies the unity of the intelligent principle in creation, in the creation itself, and of course includes in it every genuine form of pantheism. Transcendence implies the existence of a separate divine intelligence, and of another and spiritual state of being, intended to perfectionate our...
Page 171 - Sense decision arises from its dependence, not on any one set of Experiences, but upon our unconscious co-ordination of the whole aggregate of our Experiences,— not on the collusiveness of any one train of Reasoning, but on the convergence of all our lines of thought towards this one centre. Now this "Common Sense...
Page 101 - The fundamental idea is, indeed, precisely the same as that of Schelling, with this difference only — that the idealistic language of the German speculator is here translated into the more ordinary language of physical science. That Comte borrowed his views from Schelling we can by no means affirm ; but that the whole conception of the affiliation of the sciences in the order of their relative simplicity, and the expansion of the same law of development so as to include the exposition of human...

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