Modern Materialism: Its Attitude Towards TheologyWilliams & Norgate, 1876 - 80 pages |
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Page 2
... object has been to reduce that problem to its essential factors , and remove the disguises thrown around it by ill - understood words . To the demand for exactitude of method in dealing with the border - land between Natural Knowledge ...
... object has been to reduce that problem to its essential factors , and remove the disguises thrown around it by ill - understood words . To the demand for exactitude of method in dealing with the border - land between Natural Knowledge ...
Page 8
... object , that I avow distrust ; and if there be an " over- shadowing awe " from the mere sense of a blank conscious- ness and an enveloping darkness , I can see in it no more than the negative condition of a religion yet to come . human ...
... object , that I avow distrust ; and if there be an " over- shadowing awe " from the mere sense of a blank conscious- ness and an enveloping darkness , I can see in it no more than the negative condition of a religion yet to come . human ...
Page 17
... object , the assumption of which is a figment of our mind . ( Gemüth ) , a necessary one it seems , rendered imperative by our organization . " * Another answer may be given thus : - ' You may make anything a predicate of matter which ...
... object , the assumption of which is a figment of our mind . ( Gemüth ) , a necessary one it seems , rendered imperative by our organization . " * Another answer may be given thus : - ' You may make anything a predicate of matter which ...
Page 21
... object of the definition is to specify the attributes which alone are to be considered in giving the name , and in reasoning from it . The atomist who is not content with my account of his premisses should oblige me with a better ...
... object of the definition is to specify the attributes which alone are to be considered in giving the name , and in reasoning from it . The atomist who is not content with my account of his premisses should oblige me with a better ...
Page 36
... objects , all repeating the same internal movements , an arbitrary number of unlike types , in each of which this demand is reproduced , and a definite selec- * Lehrbuch der organischen Chemie , ap . Lange , Geschichte des Materialismus ...
... objects , all repeating the same internal movements , an arbitrary number of unlike types , in each of which this demand is reproduced , and a definite selec- * Lehrbuch der organischen Chemie , ap . Lange , Geschichte des Materialismus ...
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Common terms and phrases
affinity alighted answer assumption atomist atoms attributed Balfour Stewart body Bois-Reymond brain carbon carry causality chemical chemical affinity chemical elements chemistry Clerk Maxwell cognition conception consciousness Conservation of Energy datum deduction definite Democritus Descartes determinate discovery Divine doctrine dynamic elements Empedocles essence expression fact Fechner forces disappears formula Fortnightly Review Geschichte des Materialismus heat Herbert Spencer higher homogeneous human hydrogen hypothesis idea ideal identical illusion immanent inner inorganic intel intellectual interpretation kosmos law of Conservation logical matter meaning mechanical energy ment metaphysical mind MODERN MATERIALISM molecular molecules monistic motion movements natural science necessity never object observe organic phase of force phenomena philosophical phosphorus physical position possible predicate present principle Professor Tyndall properties quæsita racter relation religion rest says Lange scientific simply stand theology theory things thought tion traced transmutations truth undulations universe UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN whence whole words
Popular passages
Page 29 - But the passage from the physics of the brain to the corresponding facts of consciousness is unthinkable. Granted that a definite thought, and a definite molecular action in the brain occur simultaneously; we do not possess the intellectual organ, nor apparently any rudiment of the organ, which would enable us to pass, by a process of reasoning, from the one to the other.
Page 54 - It is our own immediate consciousness of effort, when we exert force to put matter in motion, or to oppose and neutralize force, which gives us this internal conviction of power and causation, so far as it refers to the material world, and compels us to believe that whenever we...
Page 30 - If, on the other hand, you drop attributes from the mass in your retreat to the elements, on your return you can never pick them up again : starve your atom down to a hard, geometrically perfect minimum, and you have parted with the possibility of feeding it up to the qualitative plenitude of our actual material forms ; for in mere resistance — which is all that is left — you have no source of new properties, only the power of excluding other competitors for its place. Accordingly, the " atom...
Page 33 - are conformed," we are assured, " to a constant type with a precision which is not to be found in the sensible properties of the bodies which they constitute. In the first place, the mass of each individual," " and all its other properties, are absolutely unalterable.
Page 28 - ... find their way, its phenomena being intrinsically inappreciable by their instruments of research. Here, then, in this establishment of two spheres of cognition, separated by an impassable gulf, we surely have a breach in the continuity of our knowledge : on the one side, all the phenomena of matter and motion ; on the other, those of living consciousness and thought. Step by step the " Naturforscher " may press his advance, through even the contiguous organic provinces; but at this line his movement...
Page 5 - That the upper zones of human affection, above the clouds of self and passion, take us into the sphere of a Divine communion. Into this overarching scene it is that growing thought and enthusiasm have expanded to catch their light and fire.
Page 24 - This is not a process of reasoning, but an act of will — a decretal enveloped in a scientific nimbus. Nothing can be less relevant than to show (and nothing else is attempted) that the forces of heat, of attraction, of life, of consciousness, are attached to material media and organisms, which they move and weave and animate : this is questioned by no one.
Page 19 - ... as in the expansive energy which propels a loaded shell, or within, as in that which ultimately bursts it. In any case, you have here a clear dynamic addition to that scheme of regimented and marshalled phenomena which results from the lonely conception of matter. Will you rid yourself of the dualism by insisting, while you concede the power, that it is only a property of the matter ? " See," says Lange, " whether here you are not in danger of a logical circle.
Page 54 - Matter we find recurring the same dualism which presents itself in the ideas of God and the world, of soul and body ; the same want which once impelled men to people bush and fountain, rock, air, and sea, with creatures of their imagination. What do we gain by saying it is reciprocal Attraction whereby two particles of matter approach each other ? Not the shadow of any insight into the nature of the process.
Page 21 - ... explanation of natural processes."* And respecting the law of Conservation of energy, Lange observes that, taken in its " strictest and most consequent meaning it is anything but proved: it is only an 'Ideal of the Reason?