登陆注册
5437500000028

第28章 CHAPTER X(1)

UNITED effort through geological time in front is but the beginning of an idea. I am convinced that much more can be done, and that the length of time may be almost immeasurably shortened. The general principles that are now in operation are of the simplest and most elementary character, yet they have already made considerable difference. I am not content with these. There must be much more--there must be things which are at present unknown by whose aid advance may be made. Research proceeds upon the same old lines and runs in the ancient grooves. Further, it is restricted by the ultra-practical views which are alone deemed reasonable. But there should be no limit placed on the mind. The purely ideal is as worthy of pursuit as the practical, and the mind is not to be pinned to dogmas of science any more than to dogmas of superstition. Most injurious of all is the continuous circling on the same path, and it is from this that I wish to free my mind.

The pursuit of theory--the organon of pure thought--has led incidentally to great discoveries, and for myself I am convinced it is of the highest value. The process of experiment has produced much, and has applied what was previously found.

Empiricism is worthy of careful re-working out, for it is a fact that most things are more or less empirical, especially in medicine. Denial may be given to this statement, nevertheless it is true, and I have had practical exemplification of it in my own experience. Observation is perhaps more powerful an organon than either experiment or empiricism. If the eye is always watching, and the mind on the alert, ultimately chance supplies the solution.

The difficulties I have encountered have generally been solved by chance in this way. When I took an interest in archaeological matters--an interest long since extinct--I considered that a part of an army known to have marched in a certain direction during the Civil War must have visited a town in which I was interested. But I exhausted every mode of research in vain; there was no evidence of it. If the knowledge had ever existed it had dropped again. Some years afterwards, when my interest had ceased, and I had put such inquiries for ever aside (being useless, like the Egyptian papyri), I was reading in the British Museum. Presently I returned my book to the shelf, and then slowly walked along the curving wall lined with volumes, looking to see if I could light on anything to amuse me. I took out a volume for a glance; it opened of itself at a certain page, and there was the information I had so long sought--a reprint of an old pamphlet describing the visit of the army to the town in the Civil War. So chance answered the question in the course of time.

And I think that, seeing how great a part chance plays in human affairs, it is essential that study should be made of chance; it seems to me that an organon from experiment. Then there is the inner consciousness--the psyche--that has never yet been brought to bear upon life and its questions.

Besides which there is a super-sensuous reason. Often I have argued with myself that such and such a course was the right one to follow, while in the intervals of thinking about it an undercurrent of unconscious impulse has desired me to do the reverse or to remain inactive.

Sometimes it has happened that the supersensuous reasoning has been correct, and the most faultless argument wrong. I presume this supersensuous reasoning, preceeding independently in the mind, arises from preceptions too delicate for analysis. From these considerations alone I am convinced that, by the aid of ideas yet to be discovered, the geological time in front may be immeasurably shortened. These modes of research are not all. The psyche--the soul in me--tells me that there is much more, that these are merely beginnings of the crudest kind.

I fully recognise the practical difficulty arising from the ingrained, hereditary, and unconscious selfishness which began before history, and has been crossed and cultivated for twelve thousand years since. This renders me less sanguine of united effort through geological time ahead, unless some idea can be formed to give a stronger impulse even than selfishness, or unless the selfishness can be utilised. The complacency with which the mass of people go about their daily task, absolutely indifferent to all other considerations, is appalling in its concentrated stolidity. They do not intend wrong--they intend rightly: in truth, they work against the entire human race.

So wedded and so confirmed is the world in its narrow groove of self, so stolid and so complacent under the immense weight of misery, so callous to its own possibilities, and so grown to its chains, that I almost despair to see it awakened. Cemeteries are often placed on hillsides, and the white stones are visible far off. If the whole of the dead in a hillside cemetery were called up alive from their tombs, and walked forth down into the valley, it would not rouse the mass of people from the dense pyramid of stolidity which presses on them.

There would be gaping and marvelling and rushing about, and what then? In a week or two the ploughman would settle down to his plough, the carpenter to his bench, the smith to his anvil, the merchant to his money, and the dead come to life would be utterly forgotten. No matter in what manner the possibilities of human life are put before the world, the crowd continues as stolid as before. Therefore nothing hitherto done, or suggested, or thought of,is of much avail; but this fact in no degree stays me from the search. On the contrary,the less there has been accomplished the more anxious I am; the truth it teaches is that the mind must be lifted out of its old grooves before anything will be certainly begun. Erase the past from the mind--stand face to face with the real now--and work out all anew. Call the soul to our assistance; the soul tells me that outside all the ideas that have yet occurred there are others, whole circles of others.

同类推荐
  • 善女人传

    善女人传

    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。
  • 集古今佛道论衡实录

    集古今佛道论衡实录

    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。
  • 禅林宝训音义

    禅林宝训音义

    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。
  • 物不迁论辩解

    物不迁论辩解

    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。
  • 起世经

    起世经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 不科学的名侦探柯南

    不科学的名侦探柯南

    琴酒一枪掀开一辆T90坦克的炮塔?伏特加手持几百斤加特林干掉百人帮会毫发无伤?毛利兰随手掀起两吨重的汽车救下受伤的孩子?(某人瑟瑟发抖中)当随手弹飞一枚硬币,冒着黑烟的灰机轰然落下的时候,路风发现,这个不柯学的世界他还是能玩耍的。
  • 独家暖爱:盛宠国民夫人

    独家暖爱:盛宠国民夫人

    突如其来的一场噩耗,让唐雪原本的生活都发生了天翻地覆变化。当她以为她是老天最不眷顾的哪一个人,以为身边不会再有温暖。……六年后她带着女儿华丽归来,她成了金马奖最受欢迎的影后,牵着心爱的女儿走红地毯,向媒体和全国人民展示最幸福的笑容……身边还有他,给她极致的宠,极致的爱。唐雪问他“我有那么多缺点你为什么还喜欢我”他回答她“不管你有多少缺点,只要你来到我的身边就够了”
  • 超级大侦探:一分钟破案

    超级大侦探:一分钟破案

    本书精选了200多个古今中外的经典案例,融知识性、趣味性于一体,让你过一把侦探瘾。打开它,就如同走进了一所神秘的大侦探学校。它首先综述破案的常识和技巧,然后以相应的破案故事来加以说明。在侦破每个案件时,为适合中小学生的阅读心理,按照一分钟阅读的编排,对每个破案故事的讲述简短而生动,并配以与故事相关的现场插图,生动形象,让你开动脑筋,充分发挥逆向思维、发散思维、创造思维等思维模式,通过分析推理巧破疑案、奇案、悬案。在讲述完案情后,会给你一个欲说还休的破案密钥,为你稍作提示,如果你还是不得要领,可以参见书后的详细答案,相信此时你一定会有恍然大悟、豁然开朗的感觉!
  • 二荷花史

    二荷花史

    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。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 拾不起的琐碎

    拾不起的琐碎

    20—30岁是一个人的黄金十年,以后大半辈子的工作生活几乎是对这十年的发展和补充。这十年,我们坚守善良与真诚,不忘初心,满怀梦想,努力前行,追寻幸福。这十年,记录了我们朝气蓬勃的青春,承载着我们美好快乐的回忆。回忆是如此美丽,值得灵魂为之粉身碎骨!本书借助朴实的文字,开启尘封的记忆,记录这十年一些美好的时刻和快乐的瞬间,送给曾经的你,送给未来的我,送给慢慢变老的我们。本书的主题是情,亲情、恋情、友情、师生情、同学情……正是这些情,给予我们前进的动力,赋予我们生命的意义。
  • 千岁钟少的追妻秘籍

    千岁钟少的追妻秘籍

    千年之前,钟何卿卷入战乱,与一生挚爱的黎双生死离别。千年之后,他改名钟黎,带着前世的记忆来寻她,可她却心属他人。竺璃:“你别跟着我了。”钟黎:“我是你上辈子欠下的情债,你可要对我负责。”竺璃:“我不记得你是谁!”钟黎:“忘记并不可怕,我会让你重新爱上我。”竺璃:“你不要脸!”钟黎:“脸不是用来要的,是用来亲的。”说完,仰起脸,勾唇一笑。
  • 叶罗丽之嗜血妖姬

    叶罗丽之嗜血妖姬

    如果可以,请将我深埋!噬血:我,嗜血如命,罪不可赦……鲜血横流才能勾起我内心最大的欢愉……血,永远都是这世界上最美的存在!妖姬:世人所想,我非人非仙,就是如妖姬一般,祸害天下苍生……这样的我足够肮脏邪恶,可是你……为什么要步我的后尘?也许这个世界没有值得留恋的地方吧……
  • 合欢树

    合欢树

    我跟兰姐在网上聊得火热的时候,父亲打电话来说有人正在拆的治安亭,让我快帮忙想想办法。兰姐是我门对门的邻居,有个接近白痴的网名,迷惘。有人要拆的治安亭?我电脑都没关,飞也似地跑了出去。物业管理公司的几位保安在拆治安亭,指挥的是肥队长。这位肥队长与我倒是有点交情,几个月前朋友请喝酒,他刚好也在;之后,我们在小区内遇见就停下来互表景仰之情,敬支烟什么的。治安亭和旁边的合欢树都长一块了,树冠几乎把整个治安亭都包裹在里头。亏了这一左一右两棵合欢树,在大热天的时候,在这个一半铝合金一半玻璃的治安亭里头呆得下去。
  • 工作无小事

    工作无小事

    老子说:“天下难事,必作于易;天下大势,必作于细。”作为一名普通人,我们在日常工作中,经常都是重复地做着一些小事。可是,在工作中,却没有任何一件事情小到可以被抛弃,也没有任何一个细节细到应该被忽略。近年来,灾难事故时常见诸报端。虽然这其中不排除有一些是“天灾”,但更多的却是“人祸”所致。频繁发生的矿难、不符合安全卫生标准的食品等,这些都给人们的生活带来了巨大的痛苦。这一切的发生,在很大程度上就是由于人们在工作中忽略了细节,不重视小事,以至于最终使这些小事情变成了影响人们生存发展的大事件。