登陆注册
20096900000135

第135章 60(1)

BUT THE WORLD HAD UNDERGONE ANOTHER

CHANGE WHICH WAS OF GREATER

IMPORTANCE THAN EITHER THE POLITICAL

OR THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONS.

AFTER GENERATIONS OF OPPRESSION

AND PERSECUTION, THE SCIENTIST HAD

AT LAST GAINED LIBERTY OF ACTION

AND HE WAS NOW TRYING TO DISCOVER

THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS WHICH GOVERN

THE Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Chaldeans, the Greeks and the Romans, had all contributed something to the first vague notions of science and scientific investigation. But the great migrations of the fourth century had destroyed the classical world of the Mediterranean, and the Christian Church, which was more interested in the life of the soul than in the life of the body, had regarded science as a manifestation of that human arrogance which wanted to pry into divine affairs which belonged to the realm of Almighty God, and which therefore was closely related to the seven deadly sins.

The Renaissance to a certain but limited extent had broken through this wall of Mediaeval prejudices. The Reformation, however, which had overtaken the Renaissance in the early 16th century, had been hostile to the ideals of the "new civilisation," and once more the men of science were threatened with severe punishment, should they try to pass beyond the narrow limits of knowledge which had been laid down in Holy Writ.

Our world is filled with the statues of great generals, atop of prancing horses, leading their cheering soldiers to glorious victory. Here and there, a modest slab of marble announces that a man of science has found his final resting place. A thousand years from now we shall probably do these things differently, and the children of that happy generation shall know of the splendid courage and the almost inconceivable devotion to duty of the men who were the pioneers of that abstract knowledge, which alone has made our modern world a practical possibility.

Many of these scientific pioneers suffered poverty and contempt and humiliation. They lived in garrets and died in dungeons.

They dared not print their names on the title-pages of their books and they dared not print their conclusions in the land of their birth, but smuggled the manuscripts to some secret printing shop in Amsterdam or Haarlem. They were exposed to the bitter enmity of the Church, both Protestant and Catholic, and were the subjects of endless sermons, inciting the parishioners to violence against the "heretics."

Here and there they found an asylum. In Holland, where the spirit of tolerance was strongest, the authorities, while regarding these scientific investigations with little favour, yet refused to interfere with people's freedom of thought. It became a little asylum for intellectual liberty where French and English and German philosophers and mathematicians and physicians could go to enjoy a short spell of rest and get a breath of free air.

In another chapter I have told you how Roger Bacon, the great genius of the thirteenth century, was prevented for years from writing a single word, lest he get into new troubles with the authorities of the church. And five hundred years later, the contributors to the great philosophic "Encyclopaedia" were under the constant supervision of the French gendarmerie. Half a century afterwards, Darwin, who dared to question the story of the creation of man, as revealed in the Bible, was denounced from every pulpit as an enemy of the human race.

Even to-day, the persecution of those who venture into the unknown realm of science has not entirely come to an end.

And while I am writing this Mr. Bryan is addressing a vast multitude on the "Menace of Darwinism," warning his hearers against the errors of the great English naturalist.

All this, however, is a mere detail. The work that has to be done invariably gets done, and the ultimate profit of the discoveries and the inventions goes to the mass of those same people who have always decried the man of vision as an unpractical idealist.

The seventeenth century had still preferred to investigate the far off heavens and to study the position of our planet in relation to the solar system. Even so, the Church had disapproved of this unseemly curiosity, and Copernicus who first of all had proved that the sun was the centre of the universe, did not publish his work until the day of his death. Galileo spent the greater part of his life under the supervision of the clerical authorities, but he continued to use his telescope and provided Isaac Newton with a mass of practical observations, which greatly helped the English mathematician when he dis- covered the existence of that interesting habit of falling objects which came to be known as the Law of Gravitation.

同类推荐
  • 佛说文殊师利一百八名梵赞

    佛说文殊师利一百八名梵赞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 观世音菩萨救苦经

    观世音菩萨救苦经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 萃善录

    萃善录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 襄阳记

    襄阳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Pageant of Summer

    Pageant of Summer

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 名动仙河

    名动仙河

    从小门派走向大世界,从默默无闻到搅动风云,陆云在一个叫做青云宗的地方开始了他的传奇之路。
  • 我是大美人

    我是大美人

    镁光灯下的明星们,对于美的要求那可是非常的严苛,绝不允许脸上出现任何瑕疵。纵然工作缠身,却仍然“国色天香”,想不想探究一下她们美丽的秘密呢?都说女明星们驻颜有术,演艺界的大美女说起养颜来,可是各有想法各有妙招。偷偷告诉你明星们的私房养颜绝招,只要照着做,你也会越来越漂亮喔!
  • 超级使魔

    超级使魔

    超级使魔一个姐姐被强奸后,逃避现实成为宅男的人。在一次购买恋爱养成游戏的时候被一个贫乳美少女召唤成使魔,成为了魔法学院垫底生,任何魔法都使不出的魔法师。不靠谱的魔法师与不靠谱的使魔。
  • 乾坤天

    乾坤天

    一个拥有数百年基业的修真当铺,一夜之间人间蒸发!没有人知道当铺何去何从。因为当铺已经化成了一卷卷轴,而百年来累积的宝物也都被封印其中。宁铭拿着乾坤卷,看着里面的宝物发愁,虽然其中宝物本来就是自家的,却需要灵石才能置换出来。《小周天练气功》,三块灵石可以置换。地灵丹,四块灵石可以置换。火蛇符,二十块灵石可以置换。土行外丹,五百块灵石可以置换。……宁铭没有发现,每当自己投入一块灵石,乾坤卷就会产生一点变化,而且随着对乾坤卷的掌握,一个千年的谜局浮出水面!
  • 醉妖

    醉妖

    醉卧云端揽星月,逍遥酌酒笑红尘。倾世如梦任我狂,纵横天下唯一妖。
  • TFBOYS之依溪记得你

    TFBOYS之依溪记得你

    她究竟是谁?是世界第一集团樱雪的总裁?还是冷酷无情的黑道惊羽帮的帮主?还是……她和他的爱情,会如何?
  • 离殇

    离殇

    他们的新婚前夕,他杀了她爹被她撞见,一路狂追,她被迫掉入断木崖,而他也由此中了血咒。他温文尔雅,为她倾尽于天下,背后却有着不可告人的秘密触及到他的真实身份。所有的一切都在复仇之下,都是为了揭发背后同一个预谋者。
  • 帝业:饮鸩止渴

    帝业:饮鸩止渴

    在天愿作比翼鸟,在地愿为连理枝。天长地久有时尽,此恨绵绵无绝期。父亲篡位前,她是相府千金,养在深闺人未识;父亲登基后,她是姝华公主,回眸一笑百媚生;父亲去世后,她是一国之君,身居高位不胜寒;后群雄四起,征战沙场,金戈铁马,自以为在这场豪赌中险胜,又怎知这本就是他预谋已久,步步为营的大计!一直以为男人与男人之间才有生死相争,今日方知,男人与女人之间也可生死不容,恋上你这杯酒,注定我在此边缘徘徊……
  • 旧时光,小故事

    旧时光,小故事

    这里有许多的故事,有我的,也有别人的。这里有许多的人,是我,也是你。
  • 赏金猎人之收猎者

    赏金猎人之收猎者

    当今社会,犯罪份子手段越发高明,警察抓捕越来艰难,这时候涌现出一群人,他们靠警察发布的悬赏抓捕犯人为生,看一个原本普通的高中生怎样成为赏金猎人。