§ 1. If, as laid down in the two preceding chapters, the foundation of all sciences, even deductive or demonstrative sciences, is Induction1; if every step in the ratiocinations even of geometry is an act of induction; and if a train of reasoning is but bringing many inductions2 to bear upon the same subject of inquiry3, and drawing a case within one induction by means of another; wherein lies the peculiar4 certainty always ascribed to the sciences which are entirely5, or almost entirely, deductive? Why are they called the Exact Sciences? Why are mathematical certainty, and the evidence of demonstration6, common phrases to express the very highest degree of assurance attainable7 by reason? Why are mathematics by almost all philosophers, and (by some) even those branches of natural philosophy which, through the medium of mathematics, have been converted into deductive sciences, considered to be independent of the evidence of experience and observation, and characterized as systems of Necessary Truth?
The answer I conceive to be, that this character of necessity, ascribed to the truths of mathematics, and even (with some reservations to be hereafter made) the peculiar certainty attributed to them, is an illusion; in order to sustain which, it is necessary to suppose that those truths relate to, and express the properties of, purely8 imaginary objects. It is acknowledged that the conclusions of geometry are deduced, partly at least, from the so-called Definitions, and that those definitions are assumed to be correct representations, as far as they go, of the objects with which geometry is conversant10. Now we have pointed11 out that, from a definition as such, no proposition, unless it be one concerning the meaning of a word, can ever follow; and that what apparently12 follows [Pg 252]from a definition, follows in reality from an implied assumption that there exists a real thing conformable thereto. This assumption, in the case of the definitions of geometry, is false: there exist no real things exactly conformable to the definitions. There exist no points without magnitude; no lines without breadth, nor perfectly13 straight; no circles with all their radii14 exactly equal, nor squares with all their angles perfectly right. It will perhaps be said that the assumption does not extend to the actual, but only to the possible, existence of such things. I answer that, according to any test we have of possibility, they are not even possible. Their existence, so far as we can form any judgment15, would seem to be inconsistent with the physical constitution of our planet at least, if not of the universe. To get rid of this difficulty, and at the same time to save the credit of the supposed system of necessary truth, it is customary to say that the points, lines, circles, and squares which are the subject of geometry, exist in our conceptions merely, and are part of our minds; which minds, by working on their own materials, construct an à priori science, the evidence of which is purely mental, and has nothing whatever to do with outward experience. By howsoever high authorities this doctrine17 may have been sanctioned, it appears to me psychologically incorrect. The points, lines, circles, and squares, which any one has in his mind, are (I apprehend18) simply copies of the points, lines, circles, and squares which he has known in his experience. Our idea of a point, I apprehend to be simply our idea of the minimum visibile, the smallest portion of surface which we can see. A line, as defined by geometers, is wholly inconceivable. We can reason about a line as if it had no breadth; because we have a power, which is the foundation of all the control we can exercise over the operations of our minds; the power, when a perception is present to our senses, or a conception to our intellects, of attending to a part only of that perception or conception, instead of the whole. But we cannot conceive a line without breadth; we can form no mental picture of such a line: all the lines which we have in our minds are lines possessing breadth. If any one doubts this, we may refer him to his own [Pg 253]experience. I much question if any one who fancies that he can conceive what is called a mathematical line, thinks so from the evidence of his consciousness: I suspect it is rather because he supposes that unless such a conception were possible, mathematics could not exist as a science: a supposition which there will be no difficulty in showing to be entirely groundless.
Since, then, neither in nature, nor in the human mind, do there exist any objects exactly corresponding to the definitions of geometry, while yet that science cannot be supposed to be conversant about non-entities; nothing remains19 but to consider geometry as conversant with such lines, angles, and figures, as really exist; and the definitions, as they are called, must be regarded as some of our first and most obvious generalizations20 concerning those natural objects. The correctness of those generalizations, as generalizations, is without a flaw: the equality of all the radii of a circle is true of all circles, so far as it is true of any one: but it is not exactly true of any circle; it is only nearly true; so nearly that no error of any importance in practice will be incurred21 by feigning23 it to be exactly true. When we have occasion to extend these inductions, or their consequences, to cases in which the error would be appreciable—to lines of perceptible breadth or thickness, parallels which deviate24 sensibly from equidistance, and the like—we correct our conclusions, by combining with them a fresh set of propositions relating to the aberration25; just as we also take in propositions relating to the physical or chemical properties of the material, if those properties happen to introduce any modification26 into the result; which they easily may, even with respect to figure and magnitude, as in the case, for instance, of expansion by heat. So long, however, as there exists no practical necessity for attending to any of the properties of the object except its geometrical properties, or to any of the natural irregularities in those, it is convenient to neglect the consideration of the other properties and of the irregularities, and to reason as if these did not exist: accordingly, we formally announce in the definitions, that we intend to proceed on this plan. But it is [Pg 254]an error to suppose, because we resolve to confine our attention to a certain number of the properties of an object, that we therefore conceive, or have an idea of, the object, denuded27 of its other properties. We are thinking, all the time, of precisely28 such objects as we have seen and touched, and with all the properties which naturally belong to them; but, for scientific convenience, we feign22 them to be divested29 of all properties, except those which are material to our purpose, and in regard to which we design to consider them.
The peculiar accuracy, supposed to be characteristic of the first principles of geometry, thus appears to be fictitious30. The assertions on which the reasonings of the science are founded, do not, any more than in other sciences, exactly correspond with the fact; but we suppose that they do so, for the sake of tracing the consequences which follow from the supposition. The opinion of Dugald Stewart respecting the foundations of geometry, is, I conceive, substantially correct; that it is built on hypotheses; that it owes to this alone the peculiar certainty supposed to distinguish it; and that in any science whatever, by reasoning from a set of hypotheses, we may obtain a body of conclusions as certain as those of geometry, that is, as strictly31 in accordance with the hypotheses, and as irresistibly32 compelling assent33, on condition that those hypotheses are true.
When, therefore, it is affirmed that the conclusions of geometry are necessary truths, the necessity consists in reality only in this, that they correctly follow from the suppositions from which they are deduced. Those suppositions are so far from being necessary, that they are not even true; they purposely depart, more or less widely, from the truth. The only sense in which necessity can be ascribed to the conclusions of any scientific investigation34, is that of legitimately35 following from some assumption, which, by the conditions of the inquiry, is not to be questioned. In this relation, of course, the derivative36 truths of every deductive science must stand to the inductions, or assumptions, on which the science is founded, and which, whether true or untrue, certain or doubtful in themselves, are always supposed certain for the purposes of the [Pg 255]particular science. And therefore the conclusions of all deductive sciences were said by the ancients to be necessary propositions. We have observed already that to be predicated necessarily was characteristic of the predicable Proprium, and that a proprium was any property of a thing which could be deduced from its essence, that is, from the properties included in its definition.
§ 2. The important doctrine of Dugald Stewart, which I have endeavoured to enforce, has been contested by Dr. Whewell, both in the dissertation37 appended to his excellent Mechanical Euclid, and in his elaborate work on the Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences; in which last he also replies to an article in the Edinburgh Review, (ascribed to a writer of great scientific eminence38), in which Stewart's opinion was defended against his former strictures. The supposed refutation of Stewart consists in proving against him (as has also been done in this work) that the premises39 of geometry are not definitions, but assumptions of the real existence of things corresponding to those definitions. This, however, is doing little for Dr. Whewell's purpose; for it is these very assumptions which are asserted to be hypotheses, and which he, if he denies that geometry is founded on hypotheses, must show to be absolute truths. All he does, however, is to observe, that they at any rate, are not arbitrary hypotheses; that we should not be at liberty to substitute other hypotheses for them; that not only "a definition, to be admissible, must necessarily refer to and agree with some conception which we can distinctly frame in our thoughts," but that the straight lines, for instance, which we define, must be "those by which angles are contained, those by which triangles are bounded, those of which parallelism may be predicated, and the like."[19] And this is true; but this has never been contradicted. Those who say that the premises of geometry are hypotheses, are not bound to maintain them to be hypotheses which have no relation whatever to fact. Since an hypothesis framed for the purpose of scientific inquiry must [Pg 256]relate to something which has real existence, (for there can be no science respecting non-entities,) it follows that any hypothesis we make respecting an object, to facilitate our study of it, must not involve anything which is distinctly false, and repugnant to its real nature: we must not ascribe to the thing any property which it has not; our liberty extends only to slightly exaggerating some of those which it has, (by assuming it to be completely what it really is very nearly,) and suppressing others, under the indispensable obligation of restoring them whenever, and in as far as, their presence or absence would make any material difference in the truth of our conclusions. Of this nature, accordingly, are the first principles involved in the definitions of geometry. That the hypotheses should be of this particular character, is however no further necessary, than inasmuch as no others could enable us to deduce conclusions which, with due corrections, would be true of real objects: and in fact, when our aim is only to illustrate40 truths, and not to investigate them, we are not under any such restriction41. We might suppose an imaginary animal, and work out by deduction42, from the known laws of physiology43, its natural history; or an imaginary commonwealth44, and from the elements composing it, might argue what would be its fate. And the conclusions which we might thus draw from purely arbitrary hypotheses, might form a highly useful intellectual exercise: but as they could only teach us what would be the properties of objects which do not really exist, they would not constitute any addition to our knowledge of nature: while on the contrary, if the hypothesis merely divests45 a real object of some portion of its properties, without clothing it in false ones, the conclusions will always express, under known liability to correction, actual truth.
§ 3. But though Dr. Whewell has not shaken Stewart's doctrine as to the hypothetical character of that portion of the first principles of geometry which are involved in the so-called definitions, he has, I conceive, greatly the advantage of Stewart on another important point in the theory of geometrical reasoning; the necessity of admitting, among those first [Pg 257]principles, axioms as well as definitions. Some of the axioms of Euclid might, no doubt, be exhibited in the form of definitions, or might be deduced, by reasoning, from propositions similar to what are so called. Thus, if instead of the axiom, Magnitudes which can be made to coincide are equal, we introduce a definition, "Equal magnitudes are those which may be so applied46 to one another as to coincide;" the three axioms which follow (Magnitudes which are equal to the same are equal to one another—If equals are added to equals the sums are equal—If equals are taken from equals the remainders are equal,) may be proved by an imaginary superposition, resembling that by which the fourth proposition of the first book of Euclid is demonstrated. But though these and several others may be struck out of the list of first principles, because, though not requiring demonstration, they are susceptible47 of it; there will be found in the list of axioms two or three fundamental truths, not capable of being demonstrated: among which must be reckoned the proposition that two straight lines cannot inclose a space, (or its equivalent, Straight lines which coincide in two points coincide altogether,) and some property of parallel lines, other than that which constitutes their definition: one of the most suitable for the purpose being that selected by Professor Playfair: "Two straight lines which intersect each other cannot both of them be parallel to a third straight line."[20]
The axioms, as well those which are indemonstrable as those which admit of being demonstrated, differ from that other class of fundamental principles which are involved in the [Pg 258]definitions, in this, that they are true without any mixture of hypothesis. That things which are equal to the same thing are equal to one another, is as true of the lines and figures in nature, as it would be of the imaginary ones assumed in the definitions. In this respect, however, mathematics are only on a par9 with most other sciences. In almost all sciences there are some general propositions which are exactly true, while the greater part are only more or less distant approximations to the truth. Thus in mechanics, the first law of motion (the continuance of a movement once impressed, until stopped or slackened by some resisting force) is true without qualification or error. The rotation48 of the earth in twenty-four hours, of the same length as in our time, has gone on since the first accurate observations, without the increase or diminution49 of one second in all that period. These are inductions which require no fiction to make them be received as accurately50 true: but along with them there are others, as for instance the propositions respecting the figure of the earth, which are but approximations to the truth; and in order to use them for the further advancement51 of our knowledge, we must feign that they are exactly true, though they really want something of being so.
§ 4. It remains to inquire, what is the ground of our belief in axioms—what is the evidence on which they rest? I answer, they are experimental truths; generalizations from observation. The proposition, Two straight lines cannot inclose a space—or in other words, Two straight lines which have once met, do not meet again, but continue to diverge52—is an induction from the evidence of our senses.
This opinion runs counter to a scientific prejudice of long standing53 and great strength, and there is probably no proposition enunciated54 in this work for which a more unfavourable reception is to be expected. It is, however, no new opinion; and even if it were so, would be entitled to be judged, not by its novelty, but by the strength of the arguments by which it can be supported. I consider it very fortunate that so eminent55 a champion of the contrary opinion as Dr. Whewell, has [Pg 259]found occasion for a most elaborate treatment of the whole theory of axioms, in attempting to construct the philosophy of the mathematical and physical sciences on the basis of the doctrine against which I now contend. Whoever is anxious that a discussion should go to the bottom of the subject, must rejoice to see the opposite side of the question worthily56 represented. If what is said by Dr. Whewell, in support of an opinion which he has made the foundation of a systematic57 work, can be shown not to be conclusive58, enough will have been done, without going further in quest of stronger arguments and a more powerful adversary59.
It is not necessary to show that the truths which we call axioms are originally suggested by observation, and that we should never have known that two straight lines cannot inclose a space if we had never seen a straight line: thus much being admitted by Dr. Whewell, and by all, in recent times, who have taken his view of the subject. But they contend, that it is not experience which proves the axiom; but that its truth is perceived à priori, by the constitution of the mind itself, from the first moment when the meaning of the proposition is apprehended60; and without any necessity for verifying it by repeated trials, as is requisite61 in the case of truths really ascertained62 by observation.
They cannot, however, but allow that the truth of the axiom, Two straight lines cannot inclose a space, even if evident independently of experience, is also evident from experience. Whether the axiom needs confirmation63 or not, it receives confirmation in almost every instant of our lives; since we cannot look at any two straight lines which intersect one another, without seeing that from that point they continue to diverge more and more. Experimental proof crowds in upon us in such endless profusion64, and without one instance in which there can be even a suspicion of an exception to the rule, that we should soon have stronger ground for believing the axiom, even as an experimental truth, than we have for almost any of the general truths which we confessedly learn from the evidence of our senses. Independently of à priori evidence, we should certainly believe it with an intensity65 of [Pg 260]conviction far greater than we accord to any ordinary physical truth: and this too at a time of life much earlier than that from which we date almost any part of our acquired knowledge, and much too early to admit of our retaining any recollection of the history of our intellectual operations at that period. Where then is the necessity for assuming that our recognition of these truths has a different origin from the rest of our knowledge, when its existence is perfectly accounted for by supposing its origin to be the same? when the causes which produce belief in all other instances, exist in this instance, and in a degree of strength as much superior to what exists in other cases, as the intensity of the belief itself is superior? The burden of proof lies on the advocates of the contrary opinion: it is for them to point out some fact, inconsistent with the supposition that this part of our knowledge of nature is derived66 from the same sources as every other part.[21]
This, for instance, they would be able to do, if they could prove chronologically67 that we had the conviction (at least practically) so early in infancy68 as to be anterior69 to those impressions on the senses, upon which, on the other theory, the conviction is founded. This, however, cannot be proved: the point being too far back to be within the reach of memory, and too obscure for external observation. The advocates of the à priori theory are obliged to have recourse to other arguments. [Pg 261]These are reducible to two, which I shall endeavour to state as clearly and as forcibly as possible.
§ 5. In the first place it is said that if our assent to the proposition that two straight lines cannot inclose a space, were derived from the senses, we could only be convinced of its truth by actual trial, that is, by seeing or feeling the straight lines; whereas in fact it is seen to be true by merely thinking of them. That a stone thrown into water goes to the bottom, may be perceived by our senses, but mere16 thinking of a stone thrown into the water would never have led us to that conclusion: not so, however, with the axioms relating to straight lines: if I could be made to conceive what a straight line is, without having seen one, I should at once recognise that two such lines cannot inclose a space. Intuition is "imaginary looking;"[22] but experience must be real looking: if we see a property of straight lines to be true by merely fancying ourselves to be looking at them, the ground of our belief cannot be the senses, or experience; it must be something mental.
To this argument it might be added in the case of this particular axiom, (for the assertion would not be true of all axioms,) that the evidence of it from actual ocular inspection70 is not only unnecessary, but unattainable. What says the axiom? That two straight lines cannot inclose a space; that after having once intersected, if they are prolonged to infinity71 they do not meet, but continue to diverge from one another. [Pg 262]How can this, in any single case, be proved by actual observation? We may follow the lines to any distance we please; but we cannot follow them to infinity: for aught our senses can testify, they may, immediately beyond the farthest point to which we have traced them, begin to approach, and at last meet. Unless, therefore, we had some other proof of the impossibility than observation affords us, we should have no ground for believing the axiom at all.
To these arguments, which I trust I cannot be accused of understating, a satisfactory answer will, I conceive, be found, if we advert72 to one of the characteristic properties of geometrical forms—their capacity of being painted in the imagination with a distinctness equal to reality: in other words, the exact resemblance of our ideas of form to the sensations which suggest them. This, in the first place, enables us to make (at least with a little practice) mental pictures of all possible combinations of lines and angles, which resemble the realities quite as well as any which we could make on paper; and in the next place, make those pictures just as fit subjects of geometrical experimentation73 as the realities themselves; inasmuch as pictures, if sufficiently74 accurate, exhibit of course all the properties which would be manifested by the realities at one given instant, and on simple inspection: and in geometry we are concerned only with such properties, and not with that which pictures could not exhibit, the mutual75 action of bodies one upon another. The foundations of geometry would therefore be laid in direct experience, even if the experiments (which in this case consist merely in attentive76 contemplation) were practised solely77 upon what we call our ideas, that is, upon the diagrams in our minds, and not upon outward objects. For in all systems of experimentation we take some objects to serve as representatives of all which resemble them; and in the present case the conditions which qualify a real object to be the representative of its class, are completely fulfilled by an object existing only in our fancy. Without denying, therefore, the possibility of satisfying ourselves that two straight lines cannot inclose a space, by merely thinking of straight lines without actually looking at them; I contend, that we do not [Pg 263]believe this truth on the ground of the imaginary intuition simply, but because we know that the imaginary lines exactly resemble real ones, and that we may conclude from them to real ones with quite as much certainty as we could conclude from one real line to another. The conclusion, therefore, is still an induction from observation. And we should not be authorized78 to substitute observation of the image in our mind, for observation of the reality, if we had not learnt by long-continued experience that the properties of the reality are faithfully represented in the image; just as we should be scientifically warranted in describing an animal which we have never seen, from a picture made of it with a daguerreotype80; but not until we had learnt by ample experience, that observation of such a picture is precisely equivalent to observation of the original.
These considerations also remove the objection arising from the impossibility of ocularly following the lines in their prolongation to infinity. For though, in order actually to see that two given lines never meet, it would be necessary to follow them to infinity; yet without doing so we may know that if they ever do meet, or if, after diverging81 from one another, they begin again to approach, this must take place not at an infinite, but at a finite distance. Supposing, therefore, such to be the case, we can transport ourselves thither82 in imagination, and can frame a mental image of the appearance which one or both of the lines must present at that point, which we may rely on as being precisely similar to the reality. Now, whether we fix our contemplation upon this imaginary picture, or call to mind the generalizations we have had occasion to make from former ocular observation, we learn by the evidence of experience, that a line which, after diverging from another straight line, begins to approach to it, produces the impression on our senses which we describe by the expression, "a bent83 line," not by the expression, "a straight line."[23]
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§ 6. The first of the two arguments in support of the theory that axioms are à priori truths, having, I think, been sufficiently answered; I proceed to the second, which is usually the most relied on. Axioms (it is asserted) are conceived by us not only as true, but as universally and necessarily true. Now, experience cannot possibly give to any proposition this [Pg 265]character. I may have seen snow a hundred times, and may have seen that it was white, but this cannot give me entire assurance even that all snow is white; much less that snow must be white. "However many instances we may have observed of the truth of a proposition, there is nothing to assure us that the next case shall not be an exception to the rule. If it be strictly true that every ruminant animal yet known has cloven hoofs84, we still cannot be sure that some creature will not hereafter be discovered which has the first of these attributes, without having the other.... Experience must always consist of a limited number of observations; and, however numerous these may be, they can show nothing with regard to the infinite number of cases in which the experiment has not been made." Besides, Axioms are not only universal, they are also necessary. Now "experience cannot offer the smallest ground for the necessity of a proposition. She can observe and record what has happened; but she cannot find, in any case, or in any accumulation of cases, any reason for what must happen. She may see objects side by side; but she cannot see a reason why they must ever be side by side. She finds certain events to occur in succession; but the succession supplies, in its occurrence, no reason for its recurrence85. She contemplates86 external objects; but she cannot detect any internal bond, which indissolubly connects the future with the past, the possible with the real. To learn a proposition by experience, and to see it to be necessarily true, are two altogether different processes of thought."[24] And Dr. Whewell adds, "If any one does not clearly comprehend this distinction of necessary and contingent87 truths, he will not be able to go along with us in our researches into the foundations of human knowledge; nor, indeed, to pursue with success any speculation88 on the subject."[25]
In the following passage, we are told what the distinction is, the non-recognition of which incurs89 this denunciation. "Necessary truths are those in which we not only learn that the proposition is true, but see that it must be true; in which [Pg 266]the negation90 of the truth is not only false, but impossible; in which we cannot, even by an effort of imagination, or in a supposition, conceive the reverse of that which is asserted. That there are such truths cannot be doubted. We may take, for example, all relations of number. Three and Two added together make Five. We cannot conceive it to be otherwise. We cannot, by any freak of thought, imagine Three and Two to make Seven."[26]
Although Dr. Whewell has naturally and properly employed a variety of phrases to bring his meaning more forcibly home, he would, I presume, allow that they are all equivalent; and that what he means by a necessary truth, would be sufficiently defined, a proposition the negation of which is not only false but inconceivable. I am unable to find in any of his expressions, turn them what way you will, a meaning beyond this, and I do not believe he would contend that they mean anything more.
This, therefore, is the principle asserted: that propositions, the negation of which is inconceivable, or in other words, which we cannot figure to ourselves as being false, must rest on evidence of a higher and more cogent91 description than any which experience can afford.
Now I cannot but wonder that so much stress should be laid on the circumstance of inconceivableness, when there is such ample experience to show, that our capacity or incapacity of conceiving a thing has very little to do with the possibility of the thing in itself; but is in truth very much an affair of accident, and depends on the past history and habits of our own minds. There is no more generally acknowledged fact in human nature, than the extreme difficulty at first felt in conceiving anything as possible, which is in contradiction to long established and familiar experience; or even to old familiar habits of thought. And this difficulty is a necessary result of the fundamental laws of the human mind. When we have often seen and thought of two things together, and have never in any one instance either seen or thought of them [Pg 267]separately, there is by the primary law of association an increasing difficulty, which may in the end become insuperable, of conceiving the two things apart. This is most of all conspicuous92 in uneducated persons, who are in general utterly93 unable to separate any two ideas which have once become firmly associated in their minds; and if persons of cultivated intellect have any advantage on the point, it is only because, having seen and heard and read more, and being more accustomed to exercise their imagination, they have experienced their sensations and thoughts in more varied94 combinations, and have been prevented from forming many of these inseparable associations. But this advantage has necessarily its limits. The most practised intellect is not exempt95 from the universal laws of our conceptive faculty96. If daily habit presents to any one for a long period two facts in combination, and if he is not led during that period either by accident or by his voluntary mental operations to think of them apart, he will probably in time become incapable97 of doing so even by the strongest effort; and the supposition that the two facts can be separated in nature, will at last present itself to his mind with all the characters of an inconceivable phenomenon.[27] There are remarkable98 instances of this in the history of science: instances in which the most instructed men rejected as impossible, because inconceivable, things which their posterity99, by earlier practice and longer perseverance100 in the attempt, found it quite easy to conceive, and which everybody now knows to be true. There was a time when men of the most cultivated intellects, and the most emancipated101 from the dominion102 of early prejudice, could not credit the existence of antipodes; were unable to conceive, in opposition103 to old association, the force of gravity acting104 upwards105 instead of downwards106. The Cartesians long rejected the Newtonian doctrine of the gravitation [Pg 268]of all bodies towards one another, on the faith of a general proposition, the reverse of which seemed to them to be inconceivable—the proposition that a body cannot act where it is not. All the cumbrous machinery107 of imaginary vortices, assumed without the smallest particle of evidence, appeared to these philosophers a more rational mode of explaining the heavenly motions, than one which involved what seemed to them so great an absurdity108.[28] And they no doubt found it as impossible to conceive that a body should act upon the earth at the distance of the sun or moon, as we find it to conceive an end to space or time, or two straight lines inclosing a space. Newton himself had not been able to realize the conception, or we should not have had his hypothesis of a subtle ether, the occult cause of gravitation; and his writings prove, that though he deemed the particular nature of the intermediate agency a matter of conjecture109, the necessity of some such agency appeared to him indubitable. It would seem that even now the majority of scientific men have not completely got over this very difficulty; for though they have at last learnt to conceive the sun attracting the earth without any intervening fluid, they cannot yet conceive the sun illuminating110 the earth without some such medium.
If, then, it be so natural to the human mind, even in a high state of culture, to be incapable of conceiving, and on that ground to believe impossible, what is afterwards not only found to be conceivable but proved to be true; what wonder [Pg 269]if in cases where the association is still older, more confirmed, and more familiar, and in which nothing ever occurs to shake our conviction, or even suggest to us any conception at variance111 with the association, the acquired incapacity should continue, and be mistaken for a natural incapacity? It is true, our experience of the varieties in nature enables us, within certain limits, to conceive other varieties analogous112 to them. We can conceive the sun or moon falling; for though we never saw them fall, nor ever perhaps imagined them falling, we have seen so many other things fall, that we have innumerable familiar analogies to assist the conception; which, after all, we should probably have some difficulty in framing, were we not well accustomed to see the sun and moon move (or appear to move,) so that we are only called upon to conceive a slight change in the direction of motion, a circumstance familiar to our experience. But when experience affords no model on which to shape the new conception, how is it possible for us to form it? How, for example, can we imagine an end to space or time? We never saw any object without something beyond it, nor experienced any feeling without something following it. When, therefore, we attempt to conceive the last point of space, we have the idea irresistibly raised of other points beyond it. When we try to imagine the last instant of time, we cannot help conceiving another instant after it. Nor is there any necessity to assume, as is done by a modern school of metaphysicians, a peculiar fundamental law of the mind to account for the feeling of infinity inherent in our conceptions of space and time; that apparent infinity is sufficiently accounted for by simpler and universally acknowledged laws.
Now, in the case of a geometrical axiom, such, for example, as that two straight lines cannot inclose a space,—a truth which is testified to us by our very earliest impressions of the external world,—how is it possible (whether those external impressions be or be not the ground of our belief) that the reverse of the proposition could be otherwise than inconceivable to us? What analogy have we, what similar order of facts in any other branch of our experience, to facilitate to us [Pg 270]the conception of two straight lines inclosing a space? Nor is even this all. I have already called attention to the peculiar property of our impressions of form, that the ideas or mental images exactly resemble their prototypes, and adequately represent them for the purposes of scientific observation. From this, and from the intuitive character of the observation, which in this case reduces itself to simple inspection, we cannot so much as call up in our imagination two straight lines, in order to attempt to conceive them inclosing a space, without by that very act repeating the scientific experiment which establishes the contrary. Will it really be contended that the inconceivableness of the thing, in such circumstances, proves anything against the experimental origin of the conviction? Is it not clear that in whichever mode our belief in the proposition may have originated, the impossibility of our conceiving the negative of it must, on either hypothesis, be the same? As, then, Dr. Whewell exhorts113 those who have any difficulty in recognising the distinction held by him between necessary and contingent truths, to study geometry,—a condition which I can assure him I have conscientiously115 fulfilled,—I, in return, with equal confidence, exhort114 those who agree with him, to study the general laws of association; being convinced that nothing more is requisite than a moderate familiarity with those laws, to dispel116 the illusion which ascribes a peculiar necessity to our earliest inductions from experience, and measures the possibility of things in themselves, by the human capacity of conceiving them.
I hope to be pardoned for adding, that Dr. Whewell himself has both confirmed by his testimony117 the effect of habitual118 association in giving to an experimental truth the appearance of a necessary one, and afforded a striking instance of that remarkable law in his own person. In his Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences he continually asserts, that propositions which not only are not self-evident, but which we know to have been discovered gradually, and by great efforts of genius and patience, have, when once established, appeared so self-evident that, but for historical proof, it would have been impossible to conceive that they had not been recognised from the [Pg 271]first by all persons in a sound state of their faculties119. "We now despise those who, in the Copernican controversy120, could not conceive the apparent motion of the sun on the heliocentric hypothesis; or those who, in opposition to Galileo, thought that a uniform force might be that which generated a velocity121 proportional to the space; or those who held there was something absurd in Newton's doctrine of the different refrangibility of differently coloured rays; or those who imagined that when elements combine, their sensible qualities must be manifest in the compound; or those who were reluctant to give up the distinction of vegetables into herbs, shrubs122, and trees. We cannot help thinking that men must have been singularly dull of comprehension, to find a difficulty in admitting what is to us so plain and simple. We have a latent persuasion123 that we in their place should have been wiser and more clear-sighted; that we should have taken the right side, and given our assent at once to the truth. Yet in reality such a persuasion is a mere delusion124. The persons who, in such instances as the above, were on the losing side, were very far, in most cases, from being persons more prejudiced, or stupid, or narrow-minded, than the greater part of mankind now are; and the cause for which they fought was far from being a manifestly bad one, till it had been so decided125 by the result of the war.... So complete has been the victory of truth in most of these instances, that at present we can hardly imagine the struggle to have been necessary. The very essence of these triumphs is, that they lead us to regard the views we reject as not only false but inconceivable."[29]
This last proposition is precisely what I contend for; and I ask no more, in order to overthrow126 the whole theory of its author on the nature of the evidence of axioms. For what is that theory? That the truth of axioms cannot have been learnt from experience, because their falsity is inconceivable. But Dr. Whewell himself says, that we are continually led, by the natural progress of thought, to regard as inconceivable what our forefathers127 not only conceived but believed, nay128 even [Pg 272](he might have added) were unable to conceive the reverse of. He cannot intend to justify129 this mode of thought: he cannot mean to say, that we can be right in regarding as inconceivable what others have conceived, and as self-evident what to others did not appear evident at all. After so complete an admission that inconceivableness is an accidental thing, not inherent in the phenomenon itself, but dependent on the mental history of the person who tries to conceive it, how can he ever call upon us to reject a proposition as impossible on no other ground than its inconceivableness? Yet he not only does so, but has unintentionally afforded some of the most remarkable examples which can be cited of the very illusion which he has himself so clearly pointed out. I select as specimens130, his remarks on the evidence of the three laws of motion, and of the atomic theory.
With respect to the laws of motion, Dr. Whewell says: "No one can doubt that, in historical fact, these laws were collected from experience. That such is the case, is no matter of conjecture. We know the time, the persons, the circumstances, belonging to each step of each discovery."[30] After this testimony, to adduce evidence of the fact would be superfluous131. And not only were these laws by no means intuitively evident, but some of them were originally paradoxes132. The first law was especially so. That a body, once in motion, would continue for ever to move in the same direction with undiminished velocity unless acted upon by some new force, was a proposition which mankind found for a long time the greatest difficulty in crediting. It stood opposed to apparent experience of the most familiar kind, which taught that it was the nature of motion to abate133 gradually, and at last terminate of itself. Yet when once the contrary doctrine was firmly established, mathematicians134, as Dr. Whewell observes, speedily began to believe that laws, thus contradictory135 to first appearances, and which, even after full proof had been obtained, it had required generations to render familiar to the minds of the scientific world, were under "a demonstrable necessity, compelling them to be such as they are and no [Pg 273]other;" and he himself, though not venturing "absolutely to pronounce" that all these laws "can be rigorously traced to an absolute necessity in the nature of things,"[31] does actually so think of the law just mentioned; of which he says: "Though the discovery of the first law of motion was made, historically speaking, by means of experiment, we have now attained136 a point of view in which we see that it might have been certainly known to be true, independently of experience."[32] Can there be a more striking exemplification than is here afforded, of the effect of association which we have described? Philosophers, for generations, have the most extraordinary difficulty in putting certain ideas together; they at last succeed in doing so; and after a sufficient repetition of the process, they first fancy a natural bond between the ideas, then experience a growing difficulty, which at last, by the continuation of the same progress, becomes an impossibility, of severing137 them from one another. If such be the progress of an experimental conviction of which the date is of yesterday, and which is in opposition to first appearances, how must it fare with those which are conformable to appearances familiar from the first dawn of intelligence, and of the conclusiveness138 of which, from the earliest records of human thought, no sceptic has suggested even a momentary139 doubt?
The other instance which I shall quote is a truly astonishing one, and may be called the reductio ad absurdum of the theory of inconceivableness. Speaking of the laws of chemical composition, Dr. Whewell says:[33] "That they could never have been clearly understood, and therefore never firmly established, without laborious140 and exact experiments, is certain; but yet we may venture to say, that being once known, they possess an evidence beyond that of mere experiment. For how in fact can we conceive combinations, otherwise than as definite in kind and quality? If we were to suppose each element ready to combine with any other indifferently, and indifferently in any quantity, we should have a [Pg 274]world in which all would be confusion and indefiniteness. There would be no fixed141 kinds of bodies. Salts, and stones, and ores, would approach to and graduate into each other by insensible degrees. Instead of this, we know that the world consists of bodies distinguishable from each other by definite differences, capable of being classified and named, and of having general propositions asserted concerning them. And as we cannot conceive a world in which this should not be the case, it would appear that we cannot conceive a state of things in which the laws of the combination of elements should not be of that definite and measured kind which we have above asserted."
That a philosopher of Dr. Whewell's eminence should gravely assert that we cannot conceive a world in which the simple elements should combine in other than definite proportions; that by dint142 of meditating143 on a scientific truth, the original discoverer of which was still living, he should have rendered the association in his own mind between the idea of combination and that of constant proportions so familiar and intimate as to be unable to conceive the one fact without the other; is so signal an instance of the mental law for which I am contending, that one word more in illustration must be superfluous.
In the latest and most complete elaboration of his metaphysical system (the Philosophy of Discovery), as well as in the earlier discourse144 on the Fundamental Antithesis145 of Philosophy, reprinted as an appendix to that work, Dr. Whewell, while very candidly146 admitting that his language was open to misconception, disclaims147 having intended to say that mankind in general can now perceive the law of definite proportions in chemical combination to be a necessary truth. All he meant was that philosophical148 chemists in a future generation may possibly see this. "Some truths may be seen by intuition, but yet the intuition of them may be a rare and a difficult attainment149."[34] And he explains that the inconceivableness [Pg 275]which, according to his theory, is the test of axioms, "depends entirely upon the clearness of the Ideas which the axioms involve. So long as those Ideas are vague and indistinct, the contrary of an Axiom may be assented150 to, though it cannot be distinctly conceived. It may be assented to, not because it is possible, but because we do not see clearly what is possible. To a person who is only beginning to think geometrically, there may appear nothing absurd in the assertion, that two straight lines may inclose a space. And in the same manner, to a person who is only beginning to think of mechanical truths, it may not appear to be absurd, that in mechanical processes, Reaction should be greater or less than Action; and so, again, to a person who has not thought steadily151 about Substance, it may not appear inconceivable, that by chemical operations, we should generate new matter, or destroy matter which already exists."[35] Necessary truths, therefore, are not those of which we cannot conceive, but "those of which we cannot distinctly conceive, the contrary."[36] So long as our ideas are indistinct altogether, we do not know what is or is not capable of being distinctly conceived; but, by the ever increasing distinctness with which scientific men apprehend the general conceptions of science, they in time come to perceive that there are certain laws of nature, which, though historically and as a matter of fact they were learnt from experience, we cannot, now that we know them, distinctly conceive to be other than they are.
The account which I should give of this progress of the scientific mind is somewhat different. After a general law of nature has been ascertained, men's minds do not at first acquire a complete facility of familiarly representing to themselves the phenomena152 of nature in the character which that law assigns to them. The habit which constitutes the scientific cast of mind, that of conceiving facts of all descriptions conformably to the laws which regulate them—phenomena of all descriptions according to the relations which have been ascertained really to exist between them; this habit, in the case of newly [Pg 276]discovered relations, comes only by degrees. So long as it is not thoroughly153 formed, no necessary character is ascribed to the new truth. But in time, the philosopher attains154 a state of mind in which his mental picture of nature spontaneously represents to him all the phenomena with which the new theory is concerned, in the exact light in which the theory regards them: all images or conceptions derived from any other theory, or from the confused view of the facts which is anterior to any theory, having entirely disappeared from his mind. The mode of representing facts which results from the theory, has now become, to his faculties, the only natural mode of conceiving them. It is a known truth, that a prolonged habit of arranging phenomena in certain groups, and explaining them by means of certain principles, makes any other arrangement or explanation of these facts be felt as unnatural155: and it may at last become as difficult to him to represent the facts to himself in any other mode, as it often was, originally, to represent them in that mode.
But, further, if the theory is true, as we are supposing it to be, any other mode in which he tries, or in which he was formerly156 accustomed, to represent the phenomena, will be seen by him to be inconsistent with the facts that suggested the new theory—facts which now form a part of his mental picture of nature. And since a contradiction is always inconceivable, his imagination rejects these false theories, and declares itself incapable of conceiving them. Their inconceivableness to him does not, however, result from anything in the theories themselves, intrinsically and à priori repugnant to the human faculties; it results from the repugnance157 between them and a portion of the facts; which facts as long as he did not know, or did not distinctly realize in his mental representations, the false theory did not appear other than conceivable; it becomes inconceivable, merely from the fact that contradictory elements cannot be combined in the same conception. Although, then, his real reason for rejecting theories at variance with the true one, is no other than that they clash with his experience, he easily falls into the belief, that he rejects them because they are inconceivable, and that he adopts the true theory because [Pg 277]it is self-evident, and does not need the evidence of experience at all.
This I take to be the real and sufficient explanation of the paradoxical truth, on which so much stress is laid by Dr. Whewell, that a scientifically cultivated mind is actually, in virtue158 of that cultivation159, unable to conceive suppositions which a common man conceives without the smallest difficulty. For there is nothing inconceivable in the suppositions themselves; the impossibility is in combining them with facts inconsistent with them, as part of the same mental picture; an obstacle of course only felt by those who know the facts, and are able to perceive the inconsistency. As far as the suppositions themselves are concerned, in the case of many of Dr. Whewell's necessary truths the negative of the axiom is, and probably will be as long as the human race lasts, as easily conceivable as the affirmative. There is no axiom (for example) to which Dr. Whewell ascribes a more thorough character of necessity and self-evidence, than that of the indestructibility of matter. That this is a true law of nature I fully79 admit; but I imagine there is no human being to whom the opposite supposition is inconceivable—who has any difficulty in imagining a portion of matter annihilated160: inasmuch as its apparent annihilation, in no respect distinguishable from real by our unassisted senses, takes place every time that water dries up, or fuel is consumed. Again, the law that bodies combine chemically in definite proportions is undeniably true; but few besides Dr. Whewell have reached the point which he seems personally to have arrived at, (though he only dares prophesy161 similar success to the multitude after the lapse162 of generations,) that of being unable to conceive a world in which the elements are ready to combine with one another "indifferently in any quantity;" nor is it likely that we shall ever rise to this sublime163 height of inability, so long as all the mechanical mixtures in our planet, whether solid, liquid, or a?riform, exhibit to our daily observation the very phenomenon declared to be inconceivable.
According to Dr. Whewell, these and similar laws of nature cannot be drawn164 from experience, inasmuch as they are, on [Pg 278]the contrary, assumed in the interpretation165 of experience. Our inability to "add to or diminish the quantity of matter in the world," is a truth which "neither is nor can be derived from experience; for the experiments which we make to verify it presuppose its truth.... When men began to use the balance in chemical analysis, they did not prove by trial, but took for granted, as self-evident, that the weight of the whole must be found in the aggregate166 weight of the elements."[37] True, it is assumed; but, I apprehend, no otherwise than as all experimental inquiry assumes provisionally some theory or hypothesis, which is to be finally held true or not, according as the experiments decide. The hypothesis chosen for this purpose will naturally be one which groups together some considerable number of facts already known. The proposition that the material of the world, as estimated by weight, is neither increased nor diminished by any of the processes of nature or art, had many appearances in its favour to begin with. It expressed truly a great number of familiar facts. There were other facts which it had the appearance of conflicting with, and which made its truth, as an universal law of nature, at first doubtful. Because it was doubtful, experiments were devised to verify it. Men assumed its truth hypothetically, and proceeded to try whether, on more careful examination, the phenomena which apparently pointed to a different conclusion, would not be found to be consistent with it. This turned out to be the case; and from that time the doctrine took its place as an universal truth, but as one proved to be such by experience. That the theory itself preceded the proof of its truth—that it had to be conceived before it could be proved, and in order that it might be proved—does not imply that it was self-evident, and did not need proof. Otherwise all the true theories in the sciences are necessary and self-evident; for no one knows better than Dr. Whewell that they all began by being assumed, for the purpose of connecting them by deductions167 with those facts of experience on which, as evidence, they now confessedly rest.
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1 induction | |
n.感应,感应现象 | |
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2 inductions | |
归纳(法)( induction的名词复数 ); (电或磁的)感应; 就职; 吸入 | |
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3 inquiry | |
n.打听,询问,调查,查问 | |
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4 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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5 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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6 demonstration | |
n.表明,示范,论证,示威 | |
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7 attainable | |
a.可达到的,可获得的 | |
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8 purely | |
adv.纯粹地,完全地 | |
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9 par | |
n.标准,票面价值,平均数量;adj.票面的,平常的,标准的 | |
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10 conversant | |
adj.亲近的,有交情的,熟悉的 | |
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11 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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12 apparently | |
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎 | |
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13 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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14 radii | |
n.半径;半径(距离)( radius的名词复数 );用半径度量的圆形面积;半径范围;桡骨 | |
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15 judgment | |
n.审判;判断力,识别力,看法,意见 | |
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16 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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17 doctrine | |
n.教义;主义;学说 | |
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18 apprehend | |
vt.理解,领悟,逮捕,拘捕,忧虑 | |
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19 remains | |
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹 | |
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20 generalizations | |
一般化( generalization的名词复数 ); 普通化; 归纳; 概论 | |
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21 incurred | |
[医]招致的,遭受的; incur的过去式 | |
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22 feign | |
vt.假装,佯作 | |
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23 feigning | |
假装,伪装( feign的现在分词 ); 捏造(借口、理由等) | |
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24 deviate | |
v.(from)背离,偏离 | |
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25 aberration | |
n.离开正路,脱离常规,色差 | |
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26 modification | |
n.修改,改进,缓和,减轻 | |
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27 denuded | |
adj.[医]变光的,裸露的v.使赤裸( denude的过去式和过去分词 );剥光覆盖物 | |
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28 precisely | |
adv.恰好,正好,精确地,细致地 | |
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29 divested | |
v.剥夺( divest的过去式和过去分词 );脱去(衣服);2。从…取去…;1。(给某人)脱衣服 | |
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30 fictitious | |
adj.虚构的,假设的;空头的 | |
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31 strictly | |
adv.严厉地,严格地;严密地 | |
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32 irresistibly | |
adv.无法抵抗地,不能自持地;极为诱惑人地 | |
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33 assent | |
v.批准,认可;n.批准,认可 | |
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34 investigation | |
n.调查,调查研究 | |
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35 legitimately | |
ad.合法地;正当地,合理地 | |
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36 derivative | |
n.派(衍)生物;adj.非独创性的,模仿他人的 | |
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37 dissertation | |
n.(博士学位)论文,学术演讲,专题论文 | |
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38 eminence | |
n.卓越,显赫;高地,高处;名家 | |
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39 premises | |
n.建筑物,房屋 | |
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40 illustrate | |
v.举例说明,阐明;图解,加插图 | |
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41 restriction | |
n.限制,约束 | |
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42 deduction | |
n.减除,扣除,减除额;推论,推理,演绎 | |
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43 physiology | |
n.生理学,生理机能 | |
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44 commonwealth | |
n.共和国,联邦,共同体 | |
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45 divests | |
v.剥夺( divest的第三人称单数 );脱去(衣服);2。从…取去…;1。(给某人)脱衣服 | |
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46 applied | |
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用 | |
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47 susceptible | |
adj.过敏的,敏感的;易动感情的,易受感动的 | |
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48 rotation | |
n.旋转;循环,轮流 | |
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49 diminution | |
n.减少;变小 | |
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50 accurately | |
adv.准确地,精确地 | |
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51 advancement | |
n.前进,促进,提升 | |
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52 diverge | |
v.分叉,分歧,离题,使...岔开,使转向 | |
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53 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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54 enunciated | |
v.(清晰地)发音( enunciate的过去式和过去分词 );确切地说明 | |
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55 eminent | |
adj.显赫的,杰出的,有名的,优良的 | |
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56 worthily | |
重要地,可敬地,正当地 | |
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57 systematic | |
adj.有系统的,有计划的,有方法的 | |
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58 conclusive | |
adj.最后的,结论的;确凿的,消除怀疑的 | |
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59 adversary | |
adj.敌手,对手 | |
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60 apprehended | |
逮捕,拘押( apprehend的过去式和过去分词 ); 理解 | |
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61 requisite | |
adj.需要的,必不可少的;n.必需品 | |
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62 ascertained | |
v.弄清,确定,查明( ascertain的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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63 confirmation | |
n.证实,确认,批准 | |
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64 profusion | |
n.挥霍;丰富 | |
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65 intensity | |
n.强烈,剧烈;强度;烈度 | |
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66 derived | |
vi.起源;由来;衍生;导出v.得到( derive的过去式和过去分词 );(从…中)得到获得;源于;(从…中)提取 | |
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67 chronologically | |
ad. 按年代的 | |
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68 infancy | |
n.婴儿期;幼年期;初期 | |
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69 anterior | |
adj.较早的;在前的 | |
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70 inspection | |
n.检查,审查,检阅 | |
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71 infinity | |
n.无限,无穷,大量 | |
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72 advert | |
vi.注意,留意,言及;n.广告 | |
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73 experimentation | |
n.实验,试验,实验法 | |
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74 sufficiently | |
adv.足够地,充分地 | |
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75 mutual | |
adj.相互的,彼此的;共同的,共有的 | |
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76 attentive | |
adj.注意的,专心的;关心(别人)的,殷勤的 | |
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77 solely | |
adv.仅仅,唯一地 | |
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78 authorized | |
a.委任的,许可的 | |
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79 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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80 daguerreotype | |
n.银板照相 | |
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81 diverging | |
分开( diverge的现在分词 ); 偏离; 分歧; 分道扬镳 | |
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82 thither | |
adv.向那里;adj.在那边的,对岸的 | |
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83 bent | |
n.爱好,癖好;adj.弯的;决心的,一心的 | |
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84 hoofs | |
n.(兽的)蹄,马蹄( hoof的名词复数 )v.(兽的)蹄,马蹄( hoof的第三人称单数 ) | |
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85 recurrence | |
n.复发,反复,重现 | |
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86 contemplates | |
深思,细想,仔细考虑( contemplate的第三人称单数 ); 注视,凝视; 考虑接受(发生某事的可能性); 深思熟虑,沉思,苦思冥想 | |
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87 contingent | |
adj.视条件而定的;n.一组,代表团,分遣队 | |
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88 speculation | |
n.思索,沉思;猜测;投机 | |
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89 incurs | |
遭受,招致,引起( incur的第三人称单数 ) | |
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90 negation | |
n.否定;否认 | |
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91 cogent | |
adj.强有力的,有说服力的 | |
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92 conspicuous | |
adj.明眼的,惹人注目的;炫耀的,摆阔气的 | |
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93 utterly | |
adv.完全地,绝对地 | |
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94 varied | |
adj.多样的,多变化的 | |
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95 exempt | |
adj.免除的;v.使免除;n.免税者,被免除义务者 | |
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96 faculty | |
n.才能;学院,系;(学院或系的)全体教学人员 | |
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97 incapable | |
adj.无能力的,不能做某事的 | |
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98 remarkable | |
adj.显著的,异常的,非凡的,值得注意的 | |
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99 posterity | |
n.后裔,子孙,后代 | |
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100 perseverance | |
n.坚持不懈,不屈不挠 | |
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101 emancipated | |
adj.被解放的,不受约束的v.解放某人(尤指摆脱政治、法律或社会的束缚)( emancipate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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102 dominion | |
n.统治,管辖,支配权;领土,版图 | |
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103 opposition | |
n.反对,敌对 | |
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104 acting | |
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的 | |
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105 upwards | |
adv.向上,在更高处...以上 | |
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106 downwards | |
adj./adv.向下的(地),下行的(地) | |
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107 machinery | |
n.(总称)机械,机器;机构 | |
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108 absurdity | |
n.荒谬,愚蠢;谬论 | |
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109 conjecture | |
n./v.推测,猜测 | |
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110 illuminating | |
a.富于启发性的,有助阐明的 | |
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111 variance | |
n.矛盾,不同 | |
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112 analogous | |
adj.相似的;类似的 | |
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113 exhorts | |
n.劝勉者,告诫者,提倡者( exhort的名词复数 )v.劝告,劝说( exhort的第三人称单数 ) | |
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114 exhort | |
v.规劝,告诫 | |
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115 conscientiously | |
adv.凭良心地;认真地,负责尽职地;老老实实 | |
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116 dispel | |
vt.驱走,驱散,消除 | |
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117 testimony | |
n.证词;见证,证明 | |
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118 habitual | |
adj.习惯性的;通常的,惯常的 | |
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119 faculties | |
n.能力( faculty的名词复数 );全体教职员;技巧;院 | |
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120 controversy | |
n.争论,辩论,争吵 | |
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121 velocity | |
n.速度,速率 | |
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122 shrubs | |
灌木( shrub的名词复数 ) | |
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123 persuasion | |
n.劝说;说服;持有某种信仰的宗派 | |
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124 delusion | |
n.谬见,欺骗,幻觉,迷惑 | |
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125 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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126 overthrow | |
v.推翻,打倒,颠覆;n.推翻,瓦解,颠覆 | |
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127 forefathers | |
n.祖先,先人;祖先,祖宗( forefather的名词复数 );列祖列宗;前人 | |
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128 nay | |
adv.不;n.反对票,投反对票者 | |
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129 justify | |
vt.证明…正当(或有理),为…辩护 | |
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130 specimens | |
n.样品( specimen的名词复数 );范例;(化验的)抽样;某种类型的人 | |
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131 superfluous | |
adj.过多的,过剩的,多余的 | |
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132 paradoxes | |
n.似非而是的隽语,看似矛盾而实际却可能正确的说法( paradox的名词复数 );用于语言文学中的上述隽语;有矛盾特点的人[事物,情况] | |
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133 abate | |
vi.(风势,疼痛等)减弱,减轻,减退 | |
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134 mathematicians | |
数学家( mathematician的名词复数 ) | |
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135 contradictory | |
adj.反驳的,反对的,抗辩的;n.正反对,矛盾对立 | |
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136 attained | |
(通常经过努力)实现( attain的过去式和过去分词 ); 达到; 获得; 达到(某年龄、水平、状况) | |
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137 severing | |
v.切断,断绝( sever的现在分词 );断,裂 | |
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138 conclusiveness | |
n.最后; 释疑; 确定性; 结论性 | |
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139 momentary | |
adj.片刻的,瞬息的;短暂的 | |
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140 laborious | |
adj.吃力的,努力的,不流畅 | |
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141 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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142 dint | |
n.由于,靠;凹坑 | |
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143 meditating | |
a.沉思的,冥想的 | |
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144 discourse | |
n.论文,演说;谈话;话语;vi.讲述,著述 | |
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145 antithesis | |
n.对立;相对 | |
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146 candidly | |
adv.坦率地,直率而诚恳地 | |
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147 disclaims | |
v.否认( disclaim的第三人称单数 ) | |
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148 philosophical | |
adj.哲学家的,哲学上的,达观的 | |
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149 attainment | |
n.达到,到达;[常pl.]成就,造诣 | |
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150 assented | |
同意,赞成( assent的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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151 steadily | |
adv.稳定地;不变地;持续地 | |
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152 phenomena | |
n.现象 | |
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153 thoroughly | |
adv.完全地,彻底地,十足地 | |
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154 attains | |
(通常经过努力)实现( attain的第三人称单数 ); 达到; 获得; 达到(某年龄、水平、状况) | |
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155 unnatural | |
adj.不自然的;反常的 | |
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156 formerly | |
adv.从前,以前 | |
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157 repugnance | |
n.嫌恶 | |
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158 virtue | |
n.德行,美德;贞操;优点;功效,效力 | |
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159 cultivation | |
n.耕作,培养,栽培(法),养成 | |
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160 annihilated | |
v.(彻底)消灭( annihilate的过去式和过去分词 );使无效;废止;彻底击溃 | |
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161 prophesy | |
v.预言;预示 | |
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162 lapse | |
n.过失,流逝,失效,抛弃信仰,间隔;vi.堕落,停止,失效,流逝;vt.使失效 | |
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163 sublime | |
adj.崇高的,伟大的;极度的,不顾后果的 | |
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164 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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165 interpretation | |
n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理 | |
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166 aggregate | |
adj.总计的,集合的;n.总数;v.合计;集合 | |
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167 deductions | |
扣除( deduction的名词复数 ); 结论; 扣除的量; 推演 | |
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