登陆注册
5170600000022

第22章

OF THE GRADUAL PERFECTING OF BOOKS

While assiduously seeking out the wisdom of the men of old, according to the counsel of the Wise Man (Eccles.xxxix.): The wise man, he says, will seek out the wisdom of all the ancients, we have not thought fit to be misled into the opinion that the first founders of the arts have purged away all crudeness, knowing that the discoveries of each of the faithful, when weighed in a faithful balance, makes a tiny portion of science, but that by the anxious investigations of a multitude of scholars, each as it were contributing his share, the mighty bodies of the sciences have grown by successive augmentations to the immense bulk that we now behold.For the disciples, continually melting down the doctrines of their masters, and passing them again through the furnace, drove off the dross that had been previously overlooked, until there came out refined gold tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times to perfection, and stained by no admixture of error or doubt.

For not even Aristotle, although a man of gigantic intellect, in whom it pleased Nature to try how much of reason she could bestow upon mortality, and whom the Most High made only a little lower than the angels, sucked from his own fingers those wonderful volumes which the whole world can hardly contain.But, on the contrary, with lynx-eyed penetration he had seen through the sacred books of the Hebrews, the Babylonians, the Egyptians, the Chaldaeans, the Persians and the Medes, all of which learned Greece had transferred into her treasuries.Whose true sayings he received, but smoothed away their crudities, pruned their superfluities, supplied their deficiencies, and removed their errors.And he held that we should give thanks not only to those who teach rightly, but even to those who err, as affording the way of more easily investigating truth, as he plainly declares in the second book of his Metaphysics.Thus many learned lawyers contributed to the Pandects, many physicians to the Tegni, and it was by this means that Avicenna edited his Canon, and Pliny his great work on Natural History, and Ptolemy the Almagest.

For as in the writers of annals it is not difficult to see that the later writer always presupposes the earlier, without whom he could by no means relate the former times, so too we are to think of the authors of the sciences.For no man by himself has brought forth any science, since between the earliest students and those of the latter time we find intermediaries, ancient if they be compared with our own age, but modern if we think of the foundations of learning, and these men we consider the most learned.What would Virgil, the chief poet among the Latins, have achieved, if he had not despoiled Theocritus, Lucretius, and Homer, and had not ploughed with their heifer? What, unless again and again he had read somewhat of Parthenius and Pindar, whose eloquence he could by no means imitate? What could Sallust, Tully, Boethius, Macrobius, Lactantius, Martianus, and in short the whole troop of Latin writers have done, if they had not seen the productions of Athens or the volumes of the Greeks?

Certes, little would Jerome, master of three languages, Ambrosius, Augustine, though he confesses that he hated Greek, or even Gregory, who is said to have been wholly ignorant of it, have contributed to the doctrine of the Church, if more learned Greece had not furnished them from its stores.As Rome, watered by the streams of Greece, had earlier brought forth philosophers in the image of the Greeks, in like fashion afterwards it produced doctors of the orthodox faith.The creeds we chant are the sweat of Grecian brows, promulgated by their Councils, and established by the martyrdom of many.

Yet their natural slowness, as it happens, turns to the glory of the Latins, since as they were less learned in their studies, so they were less perverse in their errors.In truth, the Arian heresy had all but eclipsed the whole Church; the Nestorian wickedness presumed to rave with blasphemous rage against the Virgin, for it would have robbed the Queen of Heaven, not in open fight but in disputation, of her name and character as Mother of God, unless the invincible champion Cyril, ready to do single battle, with the help of the Council of Ephesus, had in vehemence of spirit utterly extinguished it.Innumerable are the forms as well as the authors of Greek heresies; for as they were the original cultivators of our holy faith, so too they were the first sowers of tares, as is shown by veracious history.And thus they went on from bad to worse, because in endeavouring to part the seamless vesture of the Lord, they totally destroyed primitive simplicity of doctrine, and blinded by the darkness of novelty would fall into the bottomless pit, unless He provide for them in His inscrutable prerogative, whose wisdom is past reckoning.

Let this suffice; for here we reach the limit of our power of judgment.One thing, however, we conclude from the premises, that the ignorance of the Greek tongue is now a great hindrance to the study of the Latin writers, since without it the doctrines of the ancient authors, whether Christian or Gentile, cannot be understood.And we must come to a like judgment as to Arabic in numerous astronomical treatises, and as to Hebrew as regards the text of the Holy Bible, which deficiencies, indeed, Clement V.

provides for, if only the bishops would faithfully observe what they so lightly decree.Wherefore we have taken care to provide a Greek as well as a Hebrew grammar for our scholars, with certain other aids, by the help of which studious readers may greatly inform themselves in the writing, reading, and understanding of the said tongues, although only the hearing of them can teach correctness of idiom.

同类推荐
  • 大乘大悲分陀利经

    大乘大悲分陀利经

    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。
  • 修丹妙用至理论

    修丹妙用至理论

    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。
  • 万氏秘传外科心法

    万氏秘传外科心法

    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。
  • Sartor Resartus

    Sartor Resartus

    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。
  • 佛说菩萨十住经一卷

    佛说菩萨十住经一卷

    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
  • 空中花园

    空中花园

    四个下岗失业、生活落魄的老知青,老大、博士、老鼠和二姐回到辽宁北部的群山之中,在凭吊已故战友小羊羔的墓地旁,他们选择了第二次下乡创业,谱写了一曲21世纪的青春之歌。当年山洞里的一夜情,父辈们的嗜血的恩怨,子女们的爱情游戏交织在一起。作者把亲身经历过的故事融入自己的审美取向和浪漫情情,同读者一起感叹人生的爱恨情仇。
  • 他日待我君临天下

    他日待我君临天下

    君临天下,看众生,千万大世界,我就是唯一。
  • 开心休夫

    开心休夫

    她堂堂二十一世纪特警精英,医学世家传人,只因遭人陷害才命归黄泉,不幸穿越到一名柔弱的和亲公主身上,最可恨的是被当成替王妃冲喜的小妾,还在洞房当晚被王爷推得撞死过去,再次醒过来时,她的柔弱换成了强势,外加冷漠腹黑.既然他们兄弟不仁,将她拉进这皇权的争夺中,就别怪她不义,她可不是好捏的软柿子!凭着特警的敏锐和高超的医术,抽丝剥茧揭开层层面纱,方才知从一开始自己便入了局,一切只不过是一场阴谋!
  • 环球风情

    环球风情

    《巅峰阅读文库·我的第一本探索书
  • 去冉庄看地道

    去冉庄看地道

    苏建设没时间琢磨老朱怪异的行为,他现在只是在想薛大夫,他清楚,他和薛大夫今后肯定不是朋友了,二十多年的友谊因为一个女人肯定要结束了。而这个女人余琼,还有他身后的那个男人周证券,却是这样不可思议,无论是与他们的接触还是来自老朱的介绍,都不可捉摸,搞不清楚他们说的话和做的事,是真还是假,他们的行为实在令人怀疑!苏建设在屋里像一头驴一样转着圈,想起这次去冉庄的纷乱之行,他在心里说,搞不准在余琼和他丈夫的背后还真有一条隐蔽的地道,而这条地道,说不定就是他们夫妇俩共同开挖呢……苏建设感到浑身发冷。就在这时,他的手机响了,来电显示竟是薛大夫。苏建设拿手机的手都在颤抖,他搞不清楚薛大夫找他会说什么事,他也想不好是接还是不接。
  • 血族之生死帖

    血族之生死帖

    生死帖的战场故事要从接受生死帖邀约开始传说生死帖,接下来便不曾生还过一个人带有诅咒的死亡与噩运会一直延续到下一代黑狐面具下冷厉的面容,只为了复仇而开始不择手段。孤儿的假身份,遗硕双眼下的面具一直以来的冰冷皆由一人温暖誓死不休的战场,因爱谱写的奏章以剑之名,奉名遗瑰场场厮杀过后的腥风血雨只为了保护那遗失的,故人的遗孀
  • 爆宠前妻:老公,不可以

    爆宠前妻:老公,不可以

    “夏安暖!这一次就算是折断你的双脚,我也不会再让你离开我!”原本她以为他们之间不会再有任何牵扯,却不曾想,五年后的再见,他会如此失态。“我和你早就已经没关系了!”“没关系了?”他邪肆的勾了勾唇角,“可是,就在刚刚你还在求我,就成了没关系了吗?”她的小脸爆红,“闭嘴!”咔嚓一声,卧室的房门被推开,好奇宝宝一脸疑惑。“爹爹妈咪,你们已经喊了一天了,你们不累啊?我听着就好累噻。”她原以为他爱的人不是她,却是在很久之后,她才知道,在她离开他后,他吞下了整整一瓶安眠药……
  • 给你30000天,你怎样活

    给你30000天,你怎样活

    《给你30000天,你该怎么活?》讲述的是你可能想过“人究竟是为什么活着”这个宽泛而无解的问题,这个问题可能是一下划过你的脑子,宛如一道暴风雨中的闪电,或是风吹杨柳时那飘在你脸上的枯叶,或是电影中不经意地所拍蜻蜓掠水的镜头一样,让你毫不犹豫地选择了放弃对于它的思考。人的生命不过30000天,在30000天里,我们睁眼、咿呀学语、蹒跚学步,长牙齿,上学,恋爱,工作,寻找爱人,养育子女,然后冲淡父母的角色养育儿女,看着儿女睁眼、咿呀学语、蹒跚学步,长牙齿,上学,恋爱,工作,寻找爱人,养育子女,最后年老离去。
  • 蜜宠甜妻:顾少请指教

    蜜宠甜妻:顾少请指教

    “主动亲一口,我让你所有片子都演女一号……”“谁稀罕!”“主动陪一晚,我帮你搞垮林氏集团……”“滚远点!”“主动领个证,我可以给你整个……”“有完没完?跪键盘去!”一次见死不救,换来一辈子追悔莫及,看我们腹黑霸气却偏偏毒舌欠抽的顾少,如何挽回小女人的心,既对她一手遮天,掐尽烂桃花,又护她完好无恙,征战娱乐圈,除尽林氏一窝渣。
  • 贤行润身

    贤行润身

    本书收录了季羡林关于人生、治学、生活等方面的文章,从中我们可以窥见这位学术大家的生活态度,以及对于人生意义与价值的追寻过程,是其结合自己九十多年的生活体验,对于人生和世事的感悟的集大成之作。