登陆注册
4610900000047

第47章

Moreover, the division thus implied corresponded, on the whole, to that between the realms of the known (or what was thought to be known) and the unknown. The Church, whether Christian or pre-Christian, had very precise (comparatively speaking)doctrine concerning the soul's origin, duties, and destiny, backed up by tremendous authority, and speculative philosophy had advanced very far by the time PLATO began to concern himself with its problems. Nature, on the other hand, was a mysterious world of magical happenings, and there was nothing deserving of the name of natural science until alchemy was becoming decadent.

It is not surprising, therefore, that the alchemists--these men who wished to probe Nature's hidden mysteries--should reason from above to below; indeed, unless they had started _de novo_--as babes knowing nothing,--there was no other course open to them. And that they did adopt the obvious course is all that my former thesis amounts to. In passing, it is interesting to note that a sixteenth-century alchemist, who had exceptional opportunities and leisure to study the works of the old masters of alchemy, seems to have come to a similar conclusion as to the nature of their reasoning. He writes:

"The Sages . . . after having conceived in their minds a Divine idea of the relations of the whole universe . . . selected from among the rest a certain substance, from which they sought to elicit the elements, to separate and purify them, and then again put them together in a manner suggested by a keen and profound observation of Nature."[1c]

[1a] _op cit_., pp,. 65 and 110, _cf_. p. 154.

[1b] _Vide_ a rather frivolous review of my _Alchemy: Ancient and Modern_in _The Outlook_ for 14th January 1911.

[1c] EDWARD KELLY: _The Humid Path_. (See _The Alchemical Writings_of EDWARD KELLY, edited by A. E. WAITE, 1893, pp. 59-60.)In describing the realm of spirit as _ex hypothesi_ known, that of Nature unknown, to the alchemists, I have made one important omission, and that, if I may use the name of a science to denominate a complex of crude facts, is the realm of physiology, which, falling within that of Nature, must yet be classed as _ex hypothesi_ known.

But to elucidate this point some further considerations are necessary touching the general nature of knowledge.

Now, facts may be roughly classed, according to their obviousness and frequency of occurrence, into four groups.

There are, first of all, facts which are so obvious, to put it paradoxically, that they escape notice; and these facts are the commonest and most frequent in their occurrence.

I think it is Mr CHESTERTON who has said that, looking at a forest one cannot see the trees because of the forest;and, in _The Innocence of Father Brown_, he has a good story ("The Invisible Man") illustrating the point, in which a man renders himself invisible by dressing up in a postman's uniform.

At any rate, we know that when a phenomenon becomes persistent it tends to escape observation; thus, continuous motion can only be appreciated with reference to a stationary body, and a noise, continually repeated, becomes at last inaudible.

The tendency of often-repeated actions to become habitual, and at last automatic, that is to say, carried out without consciousness, is a closely related phenomenon.

We can understand, therefore, why a knowledge of the existence of the atmosphere, as distinct from the wind, came late in the history of primitive man, as, also, many other curious gaps in his knowledge.

In the second group we may put those facts which are common, that is, of frequent occurrence, and are classed as obvious.

Such facts are accepted at face-value by the primitive mind, and are used as the basis of explanation of facts in the two remaining groups, namely, those facts which, though common, are apt to escape the attention owing to their inconspicuousness, and those which are of infrequent occurrence. When the mind takes the trouble to observe a fact of the third group, or is confronted by one of the fourth, it feels a sense of surprise.

Such facts wear an air of strangeness, and the mind can only rest satisfied when it has shown them to itself as in some way cases of the second group of facts, or, at least, brought them into relation therewith. That is what the mind--at least the primitive mind--means by "explanation". "It is obvious," we say, commencing an argument, thereby proclaiming our intention to bring that which is at first in the category of the not-obvious, into the category of the obvious.

It remains for a more sceptical type of mind--a later product of human evolution--to question obvious facts, to explain them, either, as in science, by establishing deeper and more far-reaching correlations between phenomena, or in philosophy, by seeking for the source and purpose of such facts, or, better still, by both methods.

Of the second class of facts--those common and obvious facts which the primitive mind accepts at face-value and uses as the basis of its explanations of such things as seem to it to stand in need of explanation--one could hardly find a better instance than sex.

The universality of sex, and the intermittent character of its phenomena, are both responsible for this. Indeed, the attitude of mind I have referred to is not restricted to primitive man;how many people to-day, for instance, just accept sex as a fact, pleasant or unpleasant according to their predilections, never querying, or feeling the need to query, its why and wherefore?

It is by no means surprising, that when man first felt the need of satisfying himself as to the origin of the universe, he should have done so by a theory founded on what he knew of his own generation.

Indeed, as I queried on a former occasion, what other source of explanation was open to him? Of what other form of origin was he aware?

同类推荐
  • 不空罥索心咒王经

    不空罥索心咒王经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 妙法莲华经忧波提舍

    妙法莲华经忧波提舍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 海上和柴军使清明书

    海上和柴军使清明书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 和清真词

    和清真词

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玉钥匙门法

    玉钥匙门法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 沉寂之地

    沉寂之地

    有时候错误的情感才往往是悲剧发生的主谋。
  • 明鹿鼎记

    明鹿鼎记

    天启四年,木匠皇帝只剩下三年寿命,崇祯眼下还只是信王。天启四年,他还在山海卫种田打猎,为他的科举路攒着路费。天启四年,他遥望顺天府,仿佛看到了那里的灯红酒醉,夜夜笙歌。我这一生,不信命运,不畏生死,只求轰轰烈烈,快意逍遥。
  • 华为财务管理如何与国际接轨

    华为财务管理如何与国际接轨

    在财务管理上,华为进行了一系列的规章制定与改革,以适应华为财务管理的国际化。
  • 帝宫欢

    帝宫欢

    金丝帐升,夜夜赐恩。他,坤朝最俊美冷情的帝王,竟只要一名抢来的罪女为他诞下帝子。他曾三日间连续晋封那名女子从卑微的宫女直至六宫最高的位置……他曾为那名女子用仇人的鲜血将一望无垠的曼陀罗华悉数染成红色……他一生只有一位帝子,最终,他赐了帝子的生母凌迟极刑……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 血龙幻神

    血龙幻神

    我们不是神,无法决定自己的出身,但是可以决定自己如何活着,委曲求全?还是迎难而上?乱世将至,天才尽出,异族将现,少年谷烈自小镇出发,伴噬空兽,走遗迹,闯兽山,登符塔,斗天才。八荒九幽十二域谁与争锋,少年谷烈将演绎一段自己的传奇。
  • 魔力岛

    魔力岛

    呃......讲一个不那么热血的故事,轻松向。故事很长,我慢慢写.......emmm书友群+859341881
  • 给大忙人看的佛法书

    给大忙人看的佛法书

    你忙,我忙,他忙。大街上人们行色匆匆,办公室里人们忙忙碌碌,工作台前人们废寝忘食……有人忙出了功成名就,有人忙出了事半功倍,有人忙出了身心疲惫,有人忙出了迷惘无助……
  • 孙子智慧故事

    孙子智慧故事

    开阔知识视野,造就智慧人生。 本书汇集的是最经典、最有趣、最发人深思、最耐人寻味的孙子兵法中的智慧故事。该书内容丰富,文字优美,情节生动,这些充满智慧的故事,仿佛是一盏盏明灯,照亮我们成长的一程又一程。
  • 喜欢你是我最好的秘密

    喜欢你是我最好的秘密

    自以为胜券在握的童心在高中毕业谢师宴上对男神表白了。结局是男神从此杳无音信,七年。七年后,自我定位“透明小粉丝”的童心,与男神重逢后,不敢动心了。谁知男神面对她的一躲再躲,终于怒了:“童心,你敢躲一辈子,我就敢追你一辈子。”在给学生们上班会课的童心,昧着良心教导孩子们远离早恋,看到悄然出现在门外的某人,心里直打鼓。夜深,某人在她耳边低声道:“不早恋,你怎么拐走的我?”双向暗恋x甜文x伪都市文
  • 我的玉雕不正常

    我的玉雕不正常

    (ps:新书《鸽力无穷》已发,大家可移步观看。)喝了口玉壶中的白开水,觉得全身冷热交替,仿佛游离于冰火两重天,一口气做了百来个俯卧撑不带喘气的……翻开玉简,发现本来无字的玉简上布满了金色符文,触摸了符文,脑海里似乎多了点什么……洗了个澡冷静一下,发现胸前佩戴的玉佛沾水后开始吟诵经文,体内似乎多了些东西……接着,周易发现所有他雕的玉雕似乎都不太正常了....灵气复苏的时代,妖魔横行,周易开始研究这些不正常的玉雕...