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<h2><span>Lecture VIII.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Christianity And Scientific Investigation. A Lecture Written for the School of Science.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
This is a time, Gentlemen, when not only the
Classics, but much more the Sciences, in the largest
sense of the word, are looked upon with anxiety, not
altogether ungrounded, by religious men; and, whereas
a University such as ours professes to embrace all departments
and exercises of the intellect, and since I for
my part wish to stand on good terms with all kinds of
knowledge, and have no intention of quarrelling with
any, and would open my heart, if not my intellect (for
that is beyond me), to the whole circle of truth, and
would tender at least a recognition and hospitality even
to those studies which are strangers to me, and would
speed them on their way,—therefore, as I have already
been making overtures of reconciliation, first between
Polite Literature and Religion, and next between Physics
and Theology, so I would now say a word by way of deprecating
and protesting against the needless antagonism,
which sometimes exists in fact, between divines and the
cultivators of the Sciences generally.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
Here I am led at once to expatiate on the grandeur
of an Institution which is comprehensive enough to
admit the discussion of a subject such as this. Among
the objects of human enterprise,—I may say it surely
without extravagance, Gentlemen,—none higher or
nobler can be named than that which is contemplated
in the erection of a University. To set on foot and to
maintain in life and vigour a real University, is confessedly,
as soon as the word <span class="tei tei-q">“University”</span> is understood,
one of those greatest works, great in their difficulty
and their importance, on which are deservedly expended
the rarest intellects and the most varied endowments.
For, first of all, it professes to teach whatever has to be
taught in any whatever department of human knowledge,
and it embraces in its scope the loftiest subjects of
human thought, and the richest fields of human inquiry.
Nothing is too vast, nothing too subtle, nothing too distant,
nothing too minute, nothing too discursive, nothing
too exact, to engage its attention.</p>
<p>
This, however, is not the reason why I claim for it so
sovereign a position; for, to bring schools of all knowledge
under one name, and call them a University, may
be fairly said to be a mere generalization; and to proclaim
that the prosecution of all kinds of knowledge to
their utmost limits demands the fullest reach and range
of our intellectual faculties is but a truism. My reason
for speaking of a University in the terms on which I
have ventured is, not that it occupies the whole territory
of knowledge merely, but that it is the very realm; that
it professes much more than to take in and to lodge as
in a caravanserai all art and science, all history and
philosophy. In truth, it professes to assign to each
study, which it receives, its own proper place and its just
boundaries; to define the rights, to establish the mutual
relations, and to effect the intercommunion of one and
all; to keep in check the ambitious and encroaching,
and to succour and maintain those which from time to
time are succumbing under the more popular or the
more fortunately circumstanced; to keep the peace between
them all, and to convert their mutual differences
and contrarieties into the common good. This, Gentlemen,
is why I say that to erect a University is at once
so arduous and beneficial an undertaking, viz., because
it is pledged to admit, without fear, without prejudice,
without compromise, all comers, if they come in the
name of Truth; to adjust views, and experiences, and
habits of mind the most independent and dissimilar;
and to give full play to thought and erudition in their
most original forms, and their most intense expressions,
and in their most ample circuit. Thus to draw many
things into one, is its special function; and it learns to
do it, not by rules reducible to writing, but by sagacity,
wisdom, and forbearance, acting upon a profound insight
into the subject-matter of knowledge, and by a vigilant
repression of aggression or bigotry in any quarter.</p>
<p>
We count it a great thing, and justly so, to plan and
carry out a wide political organization. To bring under
one yoke, after the manner of old Rome, a hundred
discordant peoples; to maintain each of them in its own
privileges within its legitimate range of action; to allow
them severally the indulgence of national feelings, and
the stimulus of rival interests; and yet withal to blend
them into one great social establishment, and to pledge
them to the perpetuity of the one imperial power;—this
is an achievement which carries with it the unequivocal
token of genius in the race which effects it.</p>
<br/><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left">“Tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento.”</span>
<p>
This was the special boast, as the poet considered it,
of the Roman; a boast as high in its own line as that
other boast, proper to the Greek nation, of literary pre-eminence,
of exuberance of thought, and of skill and
refinement in expressing it.</p>
<p>
What an empire is in political history, such is a
University in the sphere of philosophy and research. It
is, as I have said, the high protecting power of all knowledge
and science, of fact and principle, of inquiry and
discovery, of experiment and speculation; it maps out
the territory of the intellect, and sees that the boundaries
of each province are religiously respected, and that there
is neither encroachment nor surrender on any side. It
acts as umpire between truth and truth, and, taking into
account the nature and importance of each, assigns to all
their due order of precedence. It maintains no one
department of thought exclusively, however ample and
noble; and it sacrifices none. It is deferential and loyal,
according to their respective weight, to the claims of
literature, of physical research, of history, of metaphysics,
of theological science. It is impartial towards them all,
and promotes each in its own place and for its own
object. It is ancillary certainly, and of necessity, to the
Catholic Church; but in the same way that one of the
Queen's judges is an officer of the Queen's, and nevertheless
determines certain legal proceedings between the
Queen and her subjects. It is ministrative to the Catholic
Church, first, because truth of any kind can but minister
to truth; and next, still more, because Nature ever will
pay homage to Grace, and Reason cannot but illustrate
and defend Revelation; and thirdly, because the Church
has a sovereign authority, and, when she speaks <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ex cathedra</span></span>,
must be obeyed. But this is the remote end of a
University; its immediate end (with which alone we
have here to do) is to secure the due disposition, according
to one sovereign order, and the cultivation in that
order, of all the provinces and methods of thought which
the human intellect has created.</p>
<p>
In this point of view, its several professors are like the
ministers of various political powers at one court or conference.
They represent their respective sciences, and
attend to the private interests of those sciences respectively;
and, should dispute arise between those sciences,
they are the persons to talk over and arrange it, without
risk of extravagant pretensions on any side, of angry
collision, or of popular commotion. A liberal philosophy
becomes the habit of minds thus exercised; a breadth
and spaciousness of thought, in which lines, seemingly
parallel, may converge at leisure, and principles, recognized
as incommensurable, may be safely antagonistic.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
And here, Gentlemen, we recognize the special character
of the Philosophy I am speaking of, if Philosophy
it is to be called, in contrast with the method of a strict
science or system. Its teaching is not founded on one
idea, or reducible to certain formulæ. Newton might
discover the great law of motion in the physical world,
and the key to ten thousand phenomena; and a similar
resolution of complex facts into simple principles may
be possible in other departments of nature; but the
great Universe itself, moral and material, sensible and
supernatural, cannot be gauged and meted by even the
greatest of human intellects, and its constituent parts
admit indeed of comparison and adjustment, but not
of fusion. This is the point which bears directly on the
subject which I set before me when I began, and towards
which I am moving in all I have said or shall be saying.</p>
<p>
I observe, then, and ask you, Gentlemen, to bear in mind,
that the philosophy of an imperial intellect, for such I
am considering a University to be, is based, not so much
on simplification as on discrimination. Its true representative
defines, rather than analyzes. He aims at no
complete catalogue, or interpretation of the subjects of
knowledge, but a following out, as far as man can, what
in its fulness is mysterious and unfathomable. Taking
into his charge all sciences, methods, collections of facts,
principles, doctrines, truths, which are the reflexions of
the universe upon the human intellect, he admits them all,
he disregards none, and, as disregarding none, he allows
none to exceed or encroach. His watchword is, Live
and let live. He takes things as they are; he submits to
them all, as far as they go; he recognizes the insuperable
lines of demarcation which run between subject and
subject; he observes how separate truths lie relatively
to each other, where they concur, where they part company,
and where, being carried too far, they cease to be
truths at all. It is his office to determine how much can be
known in each province of thought; when we must be
contented not to know; in what direction inquiry is
hopeless, or on the other hand full of promise; where it
gathers into coils insoluble by reason, where it is absorbed
in mysteries, or runs into the abyss. It will be his care to
be familiar with the signs of real and apparent difficulties,
with the methods proper to particular subject-matters,
what in each particular case are the limits of a rational
scepticism, and what the claims of a peremptory faith. If
he has one cardinal maxim in his philosophy, it is, that
truth cannot be contrary to truth; if he has a second, it is,
that truth often <em><span style="font-style: italic">seems</span></em> contrary to truth; and, if a third,
it is the practical conclusion, that we must be patient
with such appearances, and not be hasty to pronounce
them to be really of a more formidable character.</p>
<p>
It is the very immensity of the system of things, the
human record of which he has in charge, which is the
reason of this patience and caution; for that immensity
suggests to him that the contrarieties and mysteries, which
meet him in the various sciences, may be simply the
consequences of our necessarily defective comprehension.
There is but one thought greater than that of the universe,
and that is the thought of its Maker. If, Gentlemen, for
one single instant, leaving my proper train of thought, I
allude to our knowledge of the Supreme Being, it is in
order to deduce from it an illustration bearing upon my
subject. He, though One, is a sort of world of worlds in
Himself, giving birth in our minds to an indefinite number
of distinct truths, each ineffably more mysterious than
any thing that is found in this universe of space and time.
Any one of His attributes, considered by itself, is the
object of an inexhaustible science: and the attempt to
reconcile any two or three of them together,—love, power,
justice, sanctity, truth, wisdom,—affords matter for an
everlasting controversy. We are able to apprehend and
receive each divine attribute in its elementary form, but
still we are not able to accept them in their infinity,
either in themselves or in union with each other. Yet
we do not deny the first because it cannot be perfectly
reconciled with the second, nor the second because it is
in apparent contrariety with the first and the third. The
case is the same in its degree with His creation material
and moral. It is the highest wisdom to accept truth of
whatever kind, wherever it is clearly ascertained to be
such, though there be difficulty in adjusting it with other
known truth.</p>
<p>
Instances are easily producible of that extreme contrariety
of ideas, one with another, which the contemplation
of the Universe forces upon our acceptance, making it
clear to us that there is nothing irrational in submitting to
undeniable incompatibilities, which we call apparent, only
because, if they were not apparent but real, they could
not co-exist. Such, for instance, is the contemplation of
Space; the existence of which we cannot deny, though its
idea is capable, in no sort of posture, of seating itself (if I
may so speak) in our minds;—for we find it impossible to
say that it comes to a limit anywhere; and it is incomprehensible
to say that it runs out infinitely; and it seems to
be unmeaning if we say that it does not exist till bodies
come into it, and thus is enlarged according to an accident.</p>
<p>
And so again in the instance of Time. We cannot
place a beginning to it without asking ourselves what
was before that beginning; yet that there should be no
beginning at all, put it as far back as we will, is simply
incomprehensible. Here again, as in the case of Space,
we never dream of denying the existence of what we
have no means of understanding.</p>
<p>
And, passing from this high region of thought (which,
high as it may be, is the subject even of a child's
contemplations), when we come to consider the mutual action
of soul and body, we are specially perplexed by
incompatibilities which we can neither reject nor explain.
How it is that the will can act on the muscles, is a question
of which even a child may feel the force, but which
no experimentalist can answer.</p>
<p>
Further, when we contrast the physical with the social
laws under which man finds himself here below, we must
grant that Physiology and Social Science are in collision.
Man is both a physical and a social being; yet he cannot
at once pursue to the full his physical end and his
social end, his physical duties (if I may so speak) and
his social duties, but is forced to sacrifice in part one or
the other. If we were wild enough to fancy that there
were two creators, one of whom was the author of our
animal frames, the other of society, then indeed we
might understand how it comes to pass that labour of
mind and body, the useful arts, the duties of a statesman,
government, and the like, which are required by the
social system, are so destructive of health, enjoyment,
and life. That is, in other words, we cannot adequately
account for existing and undeniable truths except on the
hypothesis of what we feel to be an absurdity.</p>
<p>
And so in Mathematical Science, as has been often
insisted on, the philosopher has patiently to endure the
presence of truths, which are not the less true for being
irreconcileable with each other. He is told of the existence
of an infinite number of curves, which are able to
divide a space, into which no straight line, though it be
length without breadth, can even enter. He is told, too,
of certain lines, which approach to each other continually,
with a finite distance between them, yet never
meet; and these apparent contrarieties he must bear as
he best can, without attempting to deny the existence
of the truths which constitute them in the Science in
question.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
Now, let me call your attention, Gentlemen, to what
I would infer from these familiar facts. It is, to urge
you with an argument <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">à fortiori</span></span>: viz., that, as you
exercise so much exemplary patience in the case of the
inexplicable truths which surround so many departments
of knowledge, human and divine, viewed in themselves;
as you are not at once indignant, censorious, suspicious,
difficult of belief, on finding that in the secular sciences
one truth is incompatible (according to our human intellect)
with another or inconsistent with itself; so you
should not think it very hard to be told that there
exists, here and there, not an inextricable difficulty, not
an astounding contrariety, not (much less) a contradiction
as to clear facts, between Revelation and Nature;
but a hitch, an obscurity, a divergence of tendency, a
temporary antagonism, a difference of tone, between the
two,—that is, between Catholic opinion on the one hand,
and astronomy, or geology, or physiology, or ethnology,
or political economy, or history, or antiquities, on the
other. I say that, as we admit, because we are Catholics,
that the Divine Unity contains in it attributes,
which, to our finite minds, appear in partial contrariety
with each other; as we admit that, in His revealed
Nature are things, which, though not opposed to Reason,
are infinitely strange to the Imagination; as in His works
we can neither reject nor admit the ideas of space, and
of time, and the necessary properties of lines, without
intellectual distress, or even torture; really,
Gentlemen, I am making no outrageous request, when, in the
name of a University, I ask religious writers, jurists,
economists, physiologists, chemists, geologists, and
historians, to go on quietly, and in a neighbourly way, in
their own respective lines of speculation, research, and
experiment, with full faith in the consistency of that
multiform truth, which they share between them, in a
generous confidence that they will be ultimately consistent,
one and all, in their combined results, though there
may be momentary collisions, awkward appearances,
and many forebodings and prophecies of contrariety, and
at all times things hard to the Imagination, though not,
I repeat, to the Reason. It surely is not asking them a
great deal to beg of them,—since they are forced to
admit mysteries in the truths of Revelation, taken by
themselves, and in the truths of Reason, taken by themselves—to
beg of them, I say, to keep the peace, to live
in good will, and to exercise equanimity, if, when Nature
and Revelation are compared with each other, there be,
as I have said, discrepancies,—not in the issue, but in
the reasonings, the circumstances, the associations, the
anticipations, the accidents, proper to their respective
teachings.</p>
<p>
It is most necessary to insist seriously and energetically
on this point, for the sake of Protestants, for they
have very strange notions about us. In spite of the
testimony of history the other way, they think that the
Church has no other method of putting down error than
the arm of force, or the prohibition of inquiry. They
defy us to set up and carry on a School of Science. For
their sake, then, I am led to enlarge upon the subject
here. I say, then, he who believes Revelation with that
absolute faith which is the prerogative of a Catholic, is not
the nervous creature who startles at every sudden sound,
and is fluttered by every strange or novel appearance
which meets his eyes. He has no sort of apprehension,
he laughs at the idea, that any thing can be discovered
by any other scientific method, which can contradict any
one of the dogmas of his religion. He knows full well
there is no science whatever, but, in the course of its extension,
runs the risk of infringing, without any meaning
of offence on its own part, the path of other sciences
and he knows also that, if there be any one science
which, from its sovereign and unassailable position can
calmly bear such unintentional collisions on the part of
the children of earth, it is Theology. He is sure, and
nothing shall make him doubt, that, if anything seems
to be proved by astronomer, or geologist, or chronologist,
or antiquarian, or ethnologist, in contradiction to the
dogmas of faith, that point will eventually turn out, first,
<em><span style="font-style: italic">not</span></em> to be proved, or, secondly, not <em><span style="font-style: italic">contradictory</span></em>, or thirdly,
not contradictory to any thing <em><span style="font-style: italic">really revealed</span></em>, but to
something which has been confused with revelation. And
if, at the moment, it appears to be contradictory, then he
is content to wait, knowing that error is like other delinquents;
give it rope enough, and it will be found to have
a strong suicidal propensity. I do not mean to say he
will not take his part in encouraging, in helping forward
the prospective suicide; he will not only give the error
rope enough, but show it how to handle and adjust the
rope;—he will commit the matter to reason, reflection,
sober judgment, common sense; to Time, the great interpreter
of so many secrets. Instead of being irritated
at the momentary triumph of the foes of Revelation, if
such a feeling of triumph there be, and of hurrying on
a forcible solution of the difficulty, which may in the
event only reduce the inquiry to an inextricable tangle,
he will recollect that, in the order of Providence, our
seeming dangers are often our greatest gains; that in the
words of the Protestant poet,</p>
<br/>The clouds you so much dread
<br/>Are big with mercy, and shall break
<br/>In blessings on your head.
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
To one notorious instance indeed it is obvious to allude
here. When the Copernican system first made progress,
what religious man would not have been tempted to
uneasiness, or at least fear of scandal, from the seeming
contradiction which it involved to some authoritative tradition
of the Church and the declaration of Scripture?
It was generally received, as if the Apostles had expressly
delivered it both orally and in writing, as a truth
of Revelation, that the earth was stationary, and that
the sun, fixed in a solid firmament, whirled round the
earth. After a little time, however, and on full consideration,
it was found that the Church had decided next to
nothing on questions such as these, and that Physical
Science might range in this sphere of thought almost at
will, without fear of encountering the decisions of ecclesiastical
authority. Now, besides the relief which it
afforded to Catholics to find that they were to be spared
this addition, on the side of Cosmology, to their many
controversies already existing, there is something of an
argument in this very circumstance in behalf of the
divinity of their Religion. For it surely is a very remarkable
fact, considering how widely and how long one
certain interpretation of these physical statements in
Scripture had been received by Catholics, that the
Church should not have formally acknowledged it.
Looking at the matter in a human point of view, it was
inevitable that she should have made that opinion her
own. But now we find, on ascertaining where we stand, in
the face of the new sciences of these latter times, that in
spite of the bountiful comments which from the first
she has ever been making on the sacred text, as it is her
duty and her right to do, nevertheless, she has never
been led formally to explain the texts in question, or to
give them an authoritative sense which modern science
may question.</p>
<p>
Nor was this escape a mere accident, but rather the
result of a providential superintendence; as would appear
from a passage of history in the dark age itself.
When the glorious St. Boniface, Apostle of Germany,
great in sanctity, though not in secular knowledge, complained
to the Holy See that St. Virgilius taught the
existence of the Antipodes, the Holy See was guided
what to do; it did not indeed side with the Irish philosopher,
which would have been going out of its place, but
it passed over, in a matter not revealed, a philosophical
opinion.</p>
<p>
Time went on; a new state of things, intellectual and
social, came in; the Church was girt with temporal
power; the preachers of St. Dominic were in the ascendant:
now at length we may ask with curious interest,
did the Church alter her ancient rule of action, and proscribe
intellectual activity? Just the contrary; this is
the very age of Universities; it is the classical period of
the schoolmen; it is the splendid and palmary instance
of the wise policy and large liberality of the Church, as
regards philosophical inquiry. If there ever was a time
when the intellect went wild, and had a licentious revel,
it was at the date I speak of. When was there ever a
more curious, more meddling, bolder, keener, more penetrating,
more rationalistic exercise of the reason than at
that time? What class of questions did that subtle,
metaphysical spirit not scrutinize? What premiss was
allowed without examination? What principle was not
traced to its first origin, and exhibited in its most naked
shape? What whole was not analyzed? What complex
idea was not elaborately traced out, and, as it were, finely
painted for the contemplation of the mind, till it was
spread out in all its minutest portions as perfectly and
delicately as a frog's foot shows under the intense scrutiny
of the microscope? Well, I repeat, here was something
which came somewhat nearer to Theology than physical
research comes; Aristotle was a somewhat more serious
foe then, beyond all mistake, than Bacon has been since.
Did the Church take a high hand with philosophy then?
No, not though that philosophy was metaphysical. It
was a time when she had temporal power, and could
have exterminated the spirit of inquiry with fire and
sword; but she determined to put it down by <em><span style="font-style: italic">argument</span></em>,
she said: <span class="tei tei-q">“Two can play at that, and my argument is
the better.”</span> She sent her controversialists into the
philosophical arena. It was the Dominican and Franciscan
doctors, the greatest of them being St. Thomas,
who in those medieval Universities fought the battle of
Revelation with the weapons of heathenism. It was no
matter whose the weapon was; truth was truth all the
world over. With the jawbone of an ass, with the skeleton
philosophy of pagan Greece, did the Samson of the
schools put to flight his thousand Philistines.</p>
<p>
Here, Gentlemen, observe the contrast exhibited between
the Church herself, who has the gift of wisdom, and
even the ablest, or wisest, or holiest of her children. As
St. Boniface had been jealous of physical speculations,
so had the early Fathers shown an extreme aversion to
the great heathen philosopher whom I just now named,
Aristotle. I do not know who of them could endure
him; and when there arose those in the middle age who
would take his part, especially since their intentions
were of a suspicious character, a strenuous effort was
made to banish him out of Christendom. The Church
the while had kept silence; she had as little denounced
heathen philosophy in the mass as she had pronounced
upon the meaning of certain texts of Scripture of a
cosmological character. From Tertullian and Caius to
the two Gregories of Cappadocia, from them to Anastasius
Sinaita, from him to the school of Paris, Aristotle
was a word of offence; at length St. Thomas made him
a hewer of wood and drawer of water to the Church. A
strong slave he is; and the Church herself has given her
sanction to the use in Theology of the ideas and terms
of his philosophy.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
Now, while this free discussion is, to say the least, so
safe for Religion, or rather so expedient, it is on the other
hand simply necessary for progress in Science; and I
shall now go on to insist on this side of the subject.
I say, then, that it is a matter of primary importance in
the cultivation of those sciences, in which truth is discoverable
by the human intellect, that the investigator
should be free, independent, unshackled in his movements;
that he should be allowed and enabled, without impediment,
to fix his mind intently, nay, exclusively, on his
special object, without the risk of being distracted every
other minute in the process and progress of his inquiry,
by charges of temerariousness, or by warnings against
extravagance or scandal. But in thus speaking, I must
premise several explanations, lest I be misunderstood.</p>
<p>
First, then, Gentlemen, as to the fundamental principles
of religion and morals, and again as to the fundamental
principles of Christianity, or what are called the dogmas
of faith,—as to this double creed, natural and revealed,—we,
none of us, should say that it is any shackle at all
upon the intellect to maintain these inviolate. Indeed,
a Catholic cannot put off his thought of them; and they
as little impede the movements of his intellect as the laws
of physics impede his bodily movements. The habitual
apprehension of them has become a second nature with
him, as the laws of optics, hydrostatics, dynamics, are
latent conditions which he takes for granted in the
use of his corporeal organs. I am not supposing any
collision with dogma, I am but speaking of opinions of
divines, or of the multitude, parallel to those in former
times of the sun going round the earth, or of the last day
being close at hand, or of St. Dionysius the Areopagite
being the author of the works which bear his name.</p>
<p>
Nor, secondly, even as regards such opinions, am I
supposing any direct intrusion into the province of religion,
or of a teacher of Science actually laying down the law
<em><span style="font-style: italic">in a matter of Religion</span></em>; but of such unintentional collisions
as are incidental to a discussion pursued on some
subject of his own. It would be a great mistake in such
a one to propose his philosophical or historical conclusions
as the formal interpretation of the sacred text, as Galileo
is said to have done, instead of being content to hold his
doctrine of the motion of the earth as a scientific conclusion,
and leaving it to those whom it really concerned
to compare it with Scripture. And, it must be confessed,
Gentlemen, not a few instances occur of this mistake at
the present day, on the part, not indeed of men of science,
but of religious men, who, from a nervous impatience lest
Scripture should for one moment seem inconsistent with
the results of some speculation of the hour, are ever proposing
geological or ethnological comments upon it, which
they have to alter or obliterate before the ink is well dry,
from changes in the progressive science, which they have
so officiously brought to its aid.</p>
<p>
And thirdly, I observe that, when I advocate the independence
of philosophical thought, I am not speaking
of any <em><span style="font-style: italic">formal teaching</span></em> at all, but of investigations, speculations,
and discussions. I am far indeed from allowing,
in any matter which even borders on Religion, what an
eminent Protestant divine has advocated on the most
sacred subjects,—I mean <span class="tei tei-q">“the liberty of Prophesying.”</span>
I have no wish to degrade the professors of Science, who
ought to be Prophets of the Truth, into mere advertisers
of crude fancies or notorious absurdities. I am not pleading
that they should at random shower down upon their
hearers ingenuities and novelties; or that they should
teach even what has a basis of truth in it, in a brilliant,
off-hand way, to a collection of youths, who may not
perhaps hear them for six consecutive lectures, and who
will carry away with them into the country a misty idea
of the half-created theories of some ambitious intellect.</p>
<p>
Once more, as the last sentence suggests, there must
be great care taken to avoid scandal, or shocking the
popular mind, or unsettling the weak; the association
between truth and error being so strong in particular
minds that it is impossible to weed them of the error
without rooting up the wheat with it. If, then, there is
the chance of any current religious opinion being in any
way compromised in the course of a scientific investigation,
this would be a reason for conducting it, not in light
ephemeral publications, which come into the hands of
the careless or ignorant, but in works of a grave and
business-like character, answering to the medieval schools
of philosophical disputation, which, removed as they were
from the region of popular thought and feeling, have, by
their vigorous restlessness of inquiry, in spite of their
extravagances, done so much for theological precision.</p>
<h3><span>7.</span></h3>
<p>
I am not, then, supposing the scientific investigator (1)
to be <em><span style="font-style: italic">coming into collision with dogma</span></em>; nor (2) venturing,
by means of his investigations, upon any interpretation
of <em><span style="font-style: italic">Scripture</span></em>, or upon other conclusion <em><span style="font-style: italic">in the matter of
religion</span></em>; nor (3) of his <em><span style="font-style: italic">teaching</span></em>, even in his own science,
religious parodoxes, when he should be investigating
and proposing; nor (4) of his recklessly <em><span style="font-style: italic">scandalizing the
weak</span></em>; but, these explanations being made, I still say
that a scientific speculator or inquirer is not bound, in
conducting his researches, to be every moment adjusting
his course by the maxims of the schools or by popular
traditions, or by those of any other science distinct from
his own, or to be ever narrowly watching what those
external sciences have to say to him, or to be determined
to be edifying, or to be ever answering heretics and unbelievers;
being confident, from the impulse of a generous
faith, that, however his line of investigation may swerve
now and then, and vary to and fro in its course, or
threaten momentary collision or embarrassment with
any other department of knowledge, theological or not,
yet, if he lets it alone, it will be sure to come home,
because truth never can really be contrary to truth, and
because often what at first sight is an <span class="tei tei-q">“exceptio,”</span> in the
event most emphatically <span class="tei tei-q">“probat regulam.”</span></p>
<p>
This is a point of serious importance to him. Unless he
is at liberty to investigate on the basis, and according to
the peculiarities, of his science, he cannot investigate at
all. It is the very law of the human mind in its inquiry
after and acquisition of truth to make its advances by a
process which consists of many stages, and is circuitous.
There are no short cuts to knowledge; nor does the road
to it always lie in the direction in which it terminates,
nor are we able to see the end on starting. It may often
seem to be diverging from a goal into which it will soon
run without effort, if we are but patient and resolute in
following it out; and, as we are told in Ethics to gain
the mean merely by receding from both extremes, so in
scientific researches error may be said, without a paradox,
to be in some instances the way to truth, and the only
way. Moreover, it is not often the fortune of any one
man to live through an investigation; the process is one
of not only many stages, but of many minds. What
one begins another finishes; and a true conclusion is at
length worked out by the co-operation of independent
schools and the perseverance of successive generations.
This being the case, we are obliged, under circumstances,
to bear for a while with what we feel to be error,
in consideration of the truth in which it is eventually to
issue.</p>
<p>
The analogy of locomotion is most pertinent here.
No one can go straight up a mountain; no sailing vessel
makes for its port without tacking. And so, applying
the illustration, we can indeed, if we will, refuse to allow
of investigation or research altogether; but, if we invite
reason to take its place in our schools, we must let reason
have fair and full play. If we reason, we must submit
to the conditions of reason. We cannot use it by halves;
we must use it as proceeding from Him who has also
given us Revelation; and to be ever interrupting its
processes, and diverting its attention by objections
brought from a higher knowledge, is parallel to a landsman's
dismay at the changes in the course of a vessel on
which he has deliberately embarked, and argues surely
some distrust either in the powers of Reason on the one
hand, or the certainty of Revealed Truth on the other.
The passenger should not have embarked at all, if he
did not reckon on the chance of a rough sea, of currents,
of wind and tide, of rocks and shoals; and we should
act more wisely in discountenancing altogether the exercise
of Reason than in being alarmed and impatient
under the suspense, delay, and anxiety which, from the
nature of the case, may be found to attach to it. Let
us eschew secular history, and science, and philosophy
for good and all, if we are not allowed to be sure that
Revelation is so true that the altercations and perplexities
of human opinion cannot really or eventually injure
its authority. That is no intellectual triumph of any
truth of Religion, which has not been preceded by a full
statement of what can be said against it; it is but the
ego vapulando, ille verberando, of the Comedy.</p>
<p>
Great minds need elbow-room, not indeed in the
domain of faith, but of thought. And so indeed do lesser
minds, and all minds. There are many persons in the
world who are called, and with a great deal of truth,
geniuses. They had been gifted by nature with some
particular faculty or capacity; and, while vehemently
excited and imperiously ruled by it, they are blind to
everything else. They are enthusiasts in their own line,
and are simply dead to the beauty of any line <em><span style="font-style: italic">except</span></em>
their own. Accordingly, they think their own line the
only line in the whole world worth pursuing, and they
feel a sort of contempt for such studies as move upon
any other line. Now, these men may be, and often are,
very good Catholics, and have not a dream of any thing
but affection and deference towards Catholicity, nay,
perhaps are zealous in its interests. Yet, if you insist
that in their speculations, researches, or conclusions in
their particular science, it is not enough that they should
submit to the Church generally, and acknowledge its
dogmas, but that they must get up all that divines have
said or the multitude believed upon religious matters,
you simply crush and stamp out the flame within them,
and they can do nothing at all.</p>
<p>
This is the case of men of genius: now one word on
the contrary in behalf of master minds, gifted with a
broad philosophical view of things, and a creative power,
and a versatility capable of accommodating itself to
various provinces of thought. These persons perhaps,
like those I have already spoken of, take up some idea
and are intent upon it;—some deep, prolific, eventful
idea, which grows upon them, till they develop it into a
great system. Now, if any such thinker starts from
radically unsound principles, or aims at directly false
conclusions, if he be a Hobbes, or a Shaftesbury, or a
Hume, or a Bentham, then, of course, there is an end of
the whole matter. He is an opponent of Revealed
Truth, and he means to be so;—nothing more need be
said. But perhaps it is not so; perhaps his errors are
those which are inseparable accidents of his system or
of his mind, and are spontaneously evolved, not pertinaciously
defended. Every human system, every human
writer, is open to just criticism. Make him shut up his
portfolio; good! and then perhaps you lose what, on
the whole and in spite of incidental mistakes, would
have been one of the ablest defences of Revealed Truth
(directly or indirectly, according to his subject) ever
given to the world.</p>
<p>
This is how I should account for a circumstance, which
has sometimes caused surprise, that so many great
Catholic thinkers have in some points or other incurred
the criticism or animadversion of theologians or of ecclesiastical
authority. It must be so in the nature of
things; there is indeed an animadversion which implies
a condemnation of the author; but there is another
which means not much more than the "piè legendum"
written against passages in the Fathers. The author
may not be to blame; yet the ecclesiastical authority
would be to blame, if it did not give notice of his imperfections.
I do not know what Catholic would not
hold the name of Malebranche in veneration;<SPAN id="noteref_48" name="noteref_48" href="#note_48"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">48</span></span></SPAN> but he
may have accidentally come into collision with theologians,
or made temerarious assertions, notwithstanding.</p>
<p>
The practical question is, whether he had not much
better have written as he has written, than not have
written at all. And so fully is the Holy See accustomed
to enter into this view of the matter, that it has allowed
of its application, not only to philosophical, but even to
theological and ecclesiastical authors, who do not come
within the range of these remarks. I believe I am right
in saying that, in the case of three great names, in
various departments of learning, Cardinal Noris, Bossuet,
and Muratori,<SPAN id="noteref_49" name="noteref_49" href="#note_49"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">49</span></span></SPAN>
while not concealing its sense of their
having propounded each what might have been said
better, nevertheless it has considered, that their services
to Religion were on the whole far too important to allow
of their being molested by critical observation in detail.</p>
<h3><span>8.</span></h3>
<p>
And now, Gentlemen, I bring these remarks to a conclusion.
What I would urge upon every one, whatever
may be his particular line of research,—what I would
urge upon men of Science in their thoughts of Theology,—what
I would venture to recommend to theologians,
when their attention is drawn to the subject of scientific
investigations,—is a great and firm belief in the sovereignty
of Truth. Error may flourish for a time, but
Truth will prevail in the end. The only effect of error
ultimately is to promote Truth. Theories, speculations,
hypotheses, are started; perhaps they are to die, still
not before they have suggested ideas better than themselves.
These better ideas are taken up in turn by other
men, and, if they do not yet lead to truth, nevertheless
they lead to what is still nearer to truth than themselves;
and thus knowledge on the whole makes progress. The
errors of some minds in scientific investigation are more
fruitful than the truths of others. A Science seems
making no progress, but to abound in failures, yet imperceptibly
all the time it is advancing, and it is of
course a gain to truth even to have learned what is not
true, if nothing more.</p>
<p>
On the other hand, it must be of course remembered,
Gentlemen, that I am supposing all along good faith,
honest intentions, a loyal Catholic spirit, and a deep
sense of responsibility. I am supposing, in the scientific
inquirer, a due fear of giving scandal, of seeming to
countenance views which he does not really countenance,
and of siding with parties from whom he heartily differs.
I am supposing that he is fully alive to the existence
and the power of the infidelity of the age; that he
keeps in mind the moral weakness and the intellectual
confusion of the majority of men; and that he has no
wish at all that any one soul should get harm from
certain speculations to-day, though he may have the
satisfaction of being sure that those speculations will, as
far as they are erroneous or misunderstood, be corrected
in the course of the next half-century.</p>
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