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<h2> HUXLEY'S MISTAKE. </h2>
<p>No one will suspect us of any prejudice against Professor Huxley. We have
often praised his vigorous writings, and his admirable service to
Freethought. We recognise him as a powerful fighter in the great battle
between Reason and Faith. He is a born controversialist, he revels in the
vivisection of a theological opponent, and it is easy to understand how
the more placid Darwin could cry to him admiringly, "What a man you are!"</p>
<p>But for some reason or other it seems the fate of Professor Huxley, as it
is the fate of Herbert Spencer, to be made use of by the enemies of
Freethought; and it must be admitted that, to a certain extent, he
gratuitously plays into their hands.</p>
<p>Mr. Herbert Spencer has been a perfect god-send to the Christians with his
"Unknowable"—the creation of which was the worst day's work he ever
accomplished. It is only a big word, printed with a capital letter, to
express the objective side of the relativity of human, knowledge. It
connotes all that we do not know. It is a mere confession of ignorance; it
is hollowness, emptiness, a vacuum, a nothing. And this nothing, which Mr.
Spencer adorns with endless quasi-scientific rhetoric, is used as a
buttress to prop up tottering Churches.</p>
<p>Professor Huxley has been nearly as serviceable to the Churches with his
"Agnosticism," which belongs to the same category of substantially
meaningless terms as the "Unknowable." No doubt it serves the turn of a
good many feeble sceptics. It sounds less offensive than "Atheism." An
Agnostic may safely be invited to dinner, while an Atheist would pocket
the spoons. But this pandering to "respectability" is neither in the
interest of truth nor in the interest of character. An Atheist is without
God; an Agnostic does not know anything about God, so he is without God
too. They come to the same thing in the end. An Agnostic is simply an
Atheist with a tall hat on. Atheism carries its own name at the Hall of
Science; when it occupies a fine house at Eastbourne, and moves in good
society, it calls itself Agnosticism. And then the Churches say, "Ah, the
true man of science shrinks from Atheism; he is only an Agnostic; he
stands reverently in the darkness, waiting for the light."</p>
<p>Nor is this the only way in which Professor Huxley has helped "the enemy."
He is, for instance, far too fond of pressing the "possibility" of
miracles. We have no right, he says, to declare that miracles are
impossible; it is asserting more than we know, besides begging the
question at issue. Perfectly true. But Professor Huxley should remember
that he uses "possibility" in one sense and the theologians in another. He
uses it theoretically, and they use it practically. They use it where it
has a meaning, and he uses it where it has no meaning at all, except in an
<i>à priori</i> way, like a pair of brackets with nothing between them.
When the Agnostic speaks of the "possibility" of miracles, he only means
that we cannot prove a universal negative.</p>
<p>Let us take an instance. Suppose some one asserts that a man can jump over
the moon. No one can demonstrate that the feat is impossible. It is <i>possible</i>,
in the sense that <i>anything</i> is possible. But this is theoretical
logic. According to practical logic it is impossible, in the sense that no
rational man would take a ticket for the performance.</p>
<p>Why then does Professor Huxley press the "possibility" of miracles against
his Freethinking friends? He is not advancing a step beyond David Hume. He
is merely straining logical formulæ in the interest of the Black Army.</p>
<p>Now let us take another instance. In a recent letter to the <i>Times</i>,
with respect to the famous letter of the thirty-eight clergymen who have
given the Bible a fresh certificate, Professor Huxley is once more careful
to point out that science knows nothing of "the primal origin" of the
universe. But who ever said that it did? Atheists, at any rate, are not
aware that the universe ever <i>had</i> an origin. As to the "ultimate
cause of the evolutionary process," it seems to us mere metaphysical
jargon, as intolerable as anything in the mounding phraseology of the
theologians.</p>
<p>But this is not all. Professor Huxley delivers himself of the following
utterance: "In fact it requires some depth of philosophical incapacity to
suppose that there is any logical antagonism between Theism and the
doctrine of Evolution." This is food and drink to a paper like the <i>Christian
World</i>. But what does it mean? Certainly there is no antagonism between
the terms "Theism" and "Evolution." They do not fight each other in the
dictionary. But is there not antagonism between Evolution and any kind of
Theism yet formulated? The word "God" means anything or nothing. Give your
God attributes, and see if they are consistent with Evolution. That is the
only way to decide whether there is any "logical antagonism" between
Evolution and Theism. The trouble begins when you are "logical" enough to
deal in definitions; and the only definition of God that will stand the
test of Evolution is "a sort of a something."</p>
<p>We leave Professor Huxley to present that highly edifying Theistic
conclusion to his old theological opponents, and, if he likes, to flaunt
it in the faces of his Freethinking friends. But is it really worth while
for Samson to grind chaff for the Philistines? We put the question to
Professor Huxley with all seriousness. Let him teach truth and smite
falsehood, without spending so much time in showing that they harmonise
when emptied of practical meaning. A sovereign and a feather fall with
equal rapidity in a vacuum; and if you take away fact and experience, one
proposition is as "possible" as another. But why should a great man waste
his energies in propagating such a barren truism?</p>
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