登陆注册
20283600000017

第17章 POLITICAL CONDITIONS(12)

The position of such divines as Paley,Watson,and Hey was not so much that the Unitarians were wrong,as that the mysterious doctrines were mere sets of words,over which it was superfluous to quarrel.The doctrine was essentially traditional;for it was impossible to represent the doctrines of the church of England as deductions from any abstract philosophy.But the traditions were not regarded as having any mysterious authority.Abstract philosophy might lead to deism or infidelity.Paley and his like rejected such philosophy in the spirit of Locke or even Hume.But it was always possible to treat a tradition like any other statement of fact.It could be proved by appropriate evidence.The truth of Christianity was therefore merely a question of facts like the truth of any other passages of history.It was easy enough to make out a case for the Christian miracles,and then the mysteries,after it had been sufficiently explained that they really meant next to nothing,could be rested upon the authority of the miracles.In other words,the accepted doctrines,like the whole constitution of the church,could be so modified as to suit the prejudices and modes of thought of the laity.The church,it may be said,was thoroughly secularised.The priest was no longer a wielder of threats and an interpreter of oracles,but an entirely respectable gentleman,who fully sympathised with the prejudices of his patron and practically admitted that he had very little to reveal,beyond explaining that his dogmas were perfectly harmless and eminently convenient.He preached,however,a sound common-sense morality,and was not divided from his neighbours by setting up the claims characteristic of a sacerdotal caste.Whether he has become On the whole better or worse by subsequent changes is a question not to be asked here;but perhaps not quite so easily answered as is sometimes supposed.

The condition of the English church and universities may be contrasted with that of their Scottish rivals.The Scottish church and universities had no great prizes to offer and no elaborate hierarchy.But the church was a national institution in a sense different from the English.The General Assembly was a powerful body,not overshadowed by a great political rival.

To rise to be a minister was the great ambition of poor sOns of farmers and tradesmen.They had to study at the universities in the intervals,perhaps,of agricultural labour;and if the learning was slight and the scholarship below the English standard,the young aspirant had at least to learn to preach and to acquire such philosophy as would enable him to argue upon grace and freewill with some hard-headed Davie Deans.It Was doubtless owing in part to these conditions that the Scottish universities produced many distinguished teachers throughout the century.Professors had to teach something which might at least pass for philosophy,though they were more or less restrained by the necessity of respecting orthodox prejudices.At the end of the century,the only schools of philosophy in the island were to be found in Scotland,where Reid (1710-1796)and Adam Smith (1723-1790)had found intelligent disciples,and where Dugald Stewart,of whom I shall speak presently,had become the recognised philosophical authority,VII.THEORYWhat theory corresponds to this practical order?It implies,in the first place,a constant reference to tradition.The system has grown up without any reference to abstract principles or symmetrical plan.The legal order supposes a traditional common law,as the ecclesiastical order a traditional creed,and the organisation is explicable only by historical causes.The system represents a series of compromises,not the elaboration of a theory.

If the squire undertook by way of supererogation to justify his position he appealed to tradition and experience.He invoked the 'wisdom of our ancestors,'the system of 'checks and balances'which made our Constitution an unrivalled mixture of monarchy,aristocracy,and democracy deserving the 'dread and envy of the world.'The preion for compounding that mixture could obviously be learned by nothing but experiment.Traditional means empirical.By instinct,rather than conscious reasoning,Englishmen had felt their way to establishing the 'palladia of our liberties':trial by jury,the 'Habeas Corpus'Act,and the substitution of a militia for a standing army.The institutions were cherished because they had been developed by long struggles and were often cherished when their real justification had disappeared.The Constitution had not been 'made'but had 'grown';or,in other words,the one rule had been the rule of thumb.That is an excellent rule in its way,and very superior to an abstract rule which neglects or overrides experience.The 'logic of facts,'moreover,may be trusted to produce a certain harmony:and general principles,though not consciously invoked,tacitly govern the development of institutions worked out under uniform conditions.The simple reluctance to pay money without getting money's worth might generate the important principle that representation should go with taxation,without embodying any theory of a 'social contract'such as was offered by an afterthought to give a philosophical sanction.Englishmen,it is said,had bought their liberties step by step,because at each step they were in a position to bargain with their rulers.

What they had bought they were determined to keep and considered to be their inalienable property.One result is conspicuous.In England the ruling classes did not so much consider their privileges to be something granted by the state,as the power of the state to be something derived from their concessions.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 王俊凯之遥不可及的梦

    王俊凯之遥不可及的梦

    偶然相遇,是错过还是白头偕老?遭人陷害,是相信还是失望?他们的结局又将怎样?敬请期待吧!
  • 农门凤凰:狂妃倾世

    农门凤凰:狂妃倾世

    上一世,她被迫成为机密特工,退出组织,却身患绝症,不治身亡。这一世,她成为农家的养女,与养母、养兄、养弟和儿女相依为命。啥?养奶,养爷和养爹在京城享福,留他们在农村受苦受难?行啊,分分钟让你高攀不起!只是,包子们,咱们能不能少找些爹爹候选人,她已经相亲相到腿软了。偶的乖乖女,乖乖儿,别这样坑娘好吗?!
  • 武贵族与庶民

    武贵族与庶民

    一位特别的贵族少年,在一次偶然的事件中碰到一位美丽的蓝发少女。记忆里从未谋面的他,对她却有似曾相识的感觉。她到底是什么人?后来命运的安排,让他又碰到了善良的小偷、三无落魄公主等等一些身份与其相差甚远的人。少年从未嫌弃她们,并收养她们……然而,无数次悲剧让少年明白了世界的腐朽……为了心爱的人,他将何去何从?在魔法和兵器兼备的世界中,以一人之力,颠覆世界吧!
  • 墨曲

    墨曲

    兼相爱交相利当程牧第一次听到这句话时,他想笑,因为这套理论在修仙界绝不可行;当程牧第二次听到这句话时,他想哭,因为说话的人是他自己。
  • 都市无命人

    都市无命人

    王点天生无命,为了活下去,他不得不与人争,与天争。且看他如何在这条布满荆棘的续命之路上前行着……
  • 记忆阅览室

    记忆阅览室

    不够强,你可以在记忆阅览室中阅读宇宙第一强者的记忆;想要永生,你可以在植物回馈室中提取植物生命力;想要宇宙第一功法,你可以在工程化简实验室中化简提取一亿部宇宙功法的精华合而为一……当地球第一纨绔贱少与宇宙第一腹黑系统“小天”(ps:性别未知)遇上后,又会擦出多少火花。“我说了,我不想当宇宙王的男人。小天不要逼我”羽天无奈地说到。想歪了的读者请自动阅读本文,三天内有好事发生哦(ps:没想歪的也一样。额!可能吧!)本小说决定将系统文进行到底,希望读者喜欢。另外喜欢星空的读者也可以看一下。本人觉得本小说更适合定义为星空文。
  • 未爱新欢,冷妻不上道

    未爱新欢,冷妻不上道

    她,为的是他的钱。一次次的缠绵,不过是冰冷的交易。当真相被揭穿,两人形同水“你怎么会这么狠毒,她肚子里的孩子不过才三个月。”厉衍之掐着她的脖子,暴怒道。可郁茉却满脸的骄傲:“你跟你的好大嫂苟且得来的孽种,我怎么能让它生下来?”“那它呢?郁茉,一命赔一命,天经地义。”说着,厉衍之的另一只手覆上了她浑圆的肚子。脸色惨白,郁茉凄厉道:“它是你的骨肉,你的儿子啊!”
  • 《教主,爱上了吗》

    《教主,爱上了吗》

    (本故事纯属虚幻)权利相争,她变成了权利斗争中的牺牲品,十几年来她一直为了喜欢的人活着,她从来没有去选择自己到底想要什么。当身边重要的人一个一个离开,她终于看懂她自己要的到底是什么。她要为自己活下去。
  • 凤逆九天:至尊狂妃千千岁

    凤逆九天:至尊狂妃千千岁

    本文已弃,请勿入坑~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  • 网游之冰洁法师

    网游之冰洁法师

    在虚拟网游的世界中杀出一片天地!与众不同的专门职业,风骚的走位,无人不敌!