From: Perpall <pl...@va...> - 2009-09-01 21:25:54
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World, and between the forces exerted by the latter and all other forces, I can see no reason for doubting that all are co-ordinate terms of nature's great progression, from formless to formed, from the inorganic to the organic, from blind force to conscious intellect and will." _Huxley's Evidence of Man's Place in Nature_, London, 1864, p. 107. A writer in the _Spectator_ charged Professor Huxley with Atheism. The professor replies, in the number of that paper for February 10, 1866, thus: "I do not know that I care very much about popular odium, so there is no great merit in saying that if I really saw fit to deny the existence of a God I should certainly do so for the sake of my own intellectual freedom, and be the honest Atheist you are pleased to say I am. As it happens, however, I can not take this position with honesty, inasmuch as it is, and always has been, a favorite tenet that Atheism is as absurd, logically speaking, as Polytheism." In the same sheet, he says: "The denying the possibility of miracles seems to me quite as unjustifiable as Atheism." Is Huxley in conflict with Huxley? THE TRIUMPHING REIGN OF LIGHT. The next psychic cycle, it seems to me, will witness a synthesis of thought and faith, a recognition of the fact that it is impossible for reason to find solid ground that is not consecrated ground; that all philosophy and all science belong to religion; that all truth is a revelation of God; that the truths of written revelation, if not intelligible to reason, are nevertheless consonant with reason; and that divine agency, instead of standing removed from man by infinite intervals of time and space, is, indeed, the true name of those energies which work their myriad phenomena in the natural world around us. This consummation--at once the inspiration of a fervent religion and the prophecy of the loftiest science--is to be the noontide reign of wedded intellect and faith, whose morning rays already stream far above our horizon.--_Winchell._ Re. and Sci. p. 84. ------------------------------------- "Experience proves to us that the matter which we regard as inert and dead, assumes action, intelligence, and life, whe |