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BOOK IV.

HISTORY

OF

PHYSICAL SCIENCE IN THE MIDDLE AGES;

OR,

VIEW OF THE STATIONARY PERIOD OF

INDUCTIVE SCIENCE.

In vain, in vain! the all-composing hour
Resistless falls.

As one by one, at dread Medea's strain,
The sickening stars fade off th' ethereal plain;
As Argus' eyes, by Hermes' wand opprest,
Closed one by one to everlasting rest;
Thus at her felt approach and secret might,
Art after art goes out, and all is night.
See skulking Truth to her old cavern fled,
Mountains of casuistry heaped on her head;
Philosophy, that reached the heavens before,
Shrinks to her hidden cause, and is no more.
Physic of Metaphysic begs defence,
And Metaphysic calls for aid to Sense:
See Mystery to Mathematics fly!

In vain! they gaze, turn giddy, rave, and die.

Dunciad, b. iv.

INTRODUCTION.

We have now to consider more especially a long and barren period, which intervened between the scientific activity of ancient Greece, and that of modern Europe; and which we may, therefore, call the Stationary Period of Science. It would be to no purpose to enumerate the various forms in which, during these times, men reproduced the discoveries of the inventive ages: or to trace in them the small successes of art, void of any principle of genuine philosophy. Our object requires rather that we should point out the general and distinguishing features of the intellect and habits of those times. We must endeavour to delineate the character of the Stationary Period, and, as far as possible, to analyse its defects and errors; and thus to obtain some knowledge of the causes of its barrenness and darkness.

We have already stated, that real scientific progress requires distinct general ideas, applied to many special and certain facts. In the period of which we now have to speak, men's ideas were obscured, their disposition to bring their general views into accordance with facts was enfeebled. They were thus led to employ themselves unprofitably, among

indistinct and unreal notions. And the evil of these tendencies was further inflamed, by moral peculiarities in the character of those times;-by an abjectness of thought on the one hand, which could not help looking towards some intellectual superior; and by an impatience of dissent on the other. To this must be added an enthusiastic temper, which, when introduced into speculation, tends to subject the mind's operations to ideas altogether distorted and delusive.

These characteristics of the stationary period, its obscurity of thought, its servility, its intolerant disposition, and its enthusiastic temper, will be treated of in the four following chapters, on the Indistinctness of Ideas, the Commentatorial Spirit, the Dogmatism, and the Mysticism of the Middle Ages.

CHAPTER I.

ON THE INDISTINCTNESS OF IDEAS OF THE
MIDDLE AGES.

THAT firm and entire possession of certain clear and distinct general ideas which is necessary to sound science, was the character of the minds of those of the ancients who created the several sciences which arose among them. It was indispensable, that such inventors should have a luminous and steadfast apprehension of certain general relations, such as those of space or number, of order and cause; and should be able to apply these notions with perfect readiness and precision to special facts and cases. It is necessary that such scientific notions should be more definite and precise than those which common language conveys; but even in this state of unusual clearness, they must be so familiar to the philosopher, that they are the language in which he thinks. And the discoverer is thus led to doctrines which other men adopt and follow out, in proportion as they seize the fundamental ideas, and become acquainted with the leading facts. Thus Hipparchus, conceiving clearly the motions and combinations of motion which enter into his theory, saw that the relative lengths of the seasons were sufficient data

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