tTif'l Hesperian Student. VOL. -I, , ocTonLit, University or Nebraska. rco s Qui Jionri'oilolt.lcilolt. 1875. Tin influence of Metaphysical Speculation. The opinion, prevails extensively thai questions of abstract thought arc so re mole from thu uses of our daily life that tlicy may be safely dismissed from serious consideration, or handed over for investi gation to men who have leisure for suuh trifle-. .Most of these questions, it is pliUMbly maintained, cannot bo deter mined with certainly, and in the hurry ami bustling excitements of practical af fairs, It would be folly to give time mid labor to the study of questions which yield such small results, and which after all cannot bo satisfactorily settled. It is also alleged, that such subjects have been violently contrdfrcrtcd.hnvo originat ed diverse schools of thought, have en gendered animosities, and created sects ready to enforce their opinions by the poorest of all arguments, an appeal to force, the ultima ratio reyuin. Hence it is argued that all philosophizing on ques tions that cannot be determined experi mentally should be discouraged, and men should betake themselves to studies and pursuits which have u practical ami ap- pieciable bearing on human progress and happiness. It is our purpose to show by example chiefly, how some of the most abstract and recondite principles become both practi cal and enicient in moulding society, and that the investigation of them cannot be safely left to shallow sciolists, and super ficial inquirers into the laws of matter or of mind. It has been but a fuw years since all motion in our solar system has been re ferred to one genetic source, the sun, which operating in Innumerable ways, be comes mediately or immediately the cause ol all physical changes. So a single prin- ciple discovered in the realm of abstract thought often becomes the moving energy of intellectual and social chnnges, which entirely transfigure the face of human af fairs. Men decry and disparage these subtle, transforming inlluences, because they are unable to trace their effects, or to grasp them in their operatic::. Xc temple, whether built on mount Zioii, or in the enduring structmes of hu man institutions, was ever framed aright which viw not first devised in the ideal chambers of the brain. Wo arc all castle builder, by a necessity of our being; and little will that system be worth whose uni- 0', harmony, coherence and proportion lix.i not been idealized by the creative fiierir'C'H of mind. For our first illustration of the influence of metaphysical speculation, let us take the doctrine of the Origin of Ideas. To a superficial thinker it may seem of small consequence how we explain the origin of ideas, but when considered historically it will bj found to be u vital question. About two hundred years ago, John Wko attempted to prove that all our. idcas.have their origin in sensation and and argument to overthrow the prevailing notions respecting innate ideas. His work had a powerful client on the English mind, and soon found Its way to the Con tinent. Condillac ni Franco accepted one half ol Locke's theory, and sought to prove that all our ideas are derived from sensations. According to this philosophy, a man can know nothing except by ini pressions received from external nature. Memory, attention, conscience, and all the faculties were transformed sensations. The elleet of this system, clear and com prehensible on account of its shallowness, was immense. Physical investigation, under its stimulus, was greatly promoted, and the morals and politics of France wero revolutionized. This doctrine, ap parently so harmless, was essentially a revolutionary one. For if the senses are the only medium of idea, then there is no knowledge pos sible except by contact with Nature around u, and from its interpretations by the senses. Hence material Nature is all that can be known to us, and it is irralion al to look for anything beyond Nature. By such irresistible logic, all certitude was denied to every spiritual idea, or con ception of the divine. It is historically true that during this period, some of the most remarkable dis coveries wero made in the physical sci- the eight- ences. The extraordinary devotion of scientists to the interrogation of nature during the last haU)of the eighteenth ecu- lury, gave an impulse to this class of dis coveries, the effects of which are felt to the present time. But in the realm of morals and of poli tics tiic inilucuco of this philosophy was not equally beneficent. It became in fact a deadly Upas, blighting all within the reach of its pestiferous exhalations. It was during this period also that the gre.il High Priests of immorality and irreligion appeared in France, and whoso chief fimc tion seemed to be to guillotine their fol lowers. Adopting the philosophy of sensation, as it was called, they wore led to teat every idea of virtue and morality by its relation to the bcnscs, and with thorn all morality consisted in the conformity of actions to the demands of sense; and to fatich a pitch did this philosophical ex travaganco rise, that one of the most eminent writers of this school ventures to assort, "that the pas sions are superior to the intellect, undone becomes stunJd when ho ceases to exer cise them". With respect to the inlluenoo f thoso principles, it is sni.1 by contemporary writers, that the book of Ilelvetius, who carried out this philosophy to its rigorous conclusion of atheism and revolution, was found on all tables, and that its success was not surprising, as it told the secret of every body. For fifty years or in..r this was the prevailing tone of philosophy in France, and as its natural progeny, irre ligion, atheism and an utter disregards!" life and human rights wore born from it. Nor was this philosophy less potent in its relation to the politics of tenth century. It is found in history that religions and moral chnnges, are con nected by some necessary law of sequence with political revolutions.' The' snmo phi losophizing that changed the ethical be lief of France, and' brought religion into contempt, dealt also' a staggering blow at the political system of the country. If it be admittted that men are merely the crea turcs of sense, and arc mado what they arc by the objects that surround them, and if they arc not in as good a condition as they desire to be, then the remedy is found in changing the form of government. Upon just such reasoning as this, the an cient regime of France was overthrown, and the philosophy of sensation became not only the philosophy of immorality, but of revolution. Oilier speculative principles, no less pernicious, wero working in men's minds at this time, to the statement of which we 111113' return at another time, and which contributed in their measure to effect the great social and political changes, that took place in France at this period, the effects of which are felt to this day. It is enough for the purpose wc have in view to show how, and in what degree metaphysical speculation has worked in human society, and to claim for this ap parcntly nbstrusc study that consideration and appreciation which it demands from those who wish to understand the events of history in their evolution and effects. A. It. B. Goodie's Wilhelm Meister. The one book of the German philosopher that has created discordant opinions among men of culture and literary acumen. Wc take up a Review upon this work, -and find il criticised most severely for senti mentality, and lack of cool-headed de cision in the hero of the incidents. The first Book pictures to us nothing more than a love sick youth, whose ontimental convulsions of expression come to a rea soning reviewer as if it were the " dog re turning to his vomit" in being forced to read it. But we must except from this as sertion the clean-carved manner the author had of dealing with the mentalities, if wc may so express it, of the persons made known. Still, it is nothing more than every boy of little more than average abil ity has experienced. His love for Mari aim, his puppet-show excitements, and his dread of business life during these early days, are common experiences of imagin ative minds. But wc must, we confess, allow that tiio great German made the be ginning fof a more than ordinary intellect, when he laid the puppet scenes, and men tal occupation of the poetical youth there at. The ease with which Wilhelm com milted volumes of verse, at an early ago lifted him almost to the height in every good mind's experience, when ambition deems fortune a puppet, and boasts that fate rests with his own finger-ring; that our way is in we choose to hew. But ho was ouioklv thrown back upon himself by his frequent blunders. But he never commlltcd the same blunder twice. Aiul just' as he is coining into manhood, -wre. have a comparison of characters, him self and his friciuT Werner, that must cior ry more tl'ian one mind back to college days; when the Fellows could plainly set in John, the future diplomatist; in Charles,, the cool-headed financier, whose debit were never more than his credits; in an other, the polished Chesterfield of some future Washington society. In Werner wc have the common man of upholstery culture; the man of trade and comfort In Wilhelm, an enthusiast in ideas; the personal exposition of the idea that a superior thinker, a literary man, can not possibly be a good mechanic. There hiiTc becn those in literary lite, whom work alone seemed to have lifted there; but there was an undoubted motor to inspire tho work. I remember in reading a criti cism of Ilazlitt upon a reviewer and think er, of his t'ay, to have been struck by the idca picscnted, that the author criticised was only mechanically a genius. At the same time, Mr. Ilazlitt mentioned that the same gentleman spent one whole day ran sacking a renowned author's prolific works, in order to ascertain the exact ori gin of a sentence quoted nt a dinner-table. There is a genius that compels such labor. An ordinary mind could not fly so high as. to be stirred by a simple sentence. But even while under the pangs or ic suspicious love, our hero finds conversa tion with Werner that leads us to think him not altogether woman-minded. We, find him doing the inevitable work of a. mind growing to maturity, retrospectively glancing at his beginnings, that lie wonldi sooner seo in ghost-phantasies than in re ality. And here he argues with Werner,, in such a manner that one could think he were almost entering the portals of an exchange:. "Because every maa who Is incompetent to produce the best,, should wholly abstain from art, and carefully avoid all its temptations. There exists hi every man a certain unaccountable desire to imitate the object which he sees, but this desire is far from proving that he pos sesses the capacity for succeeding in what" ho may undertake;" this is in justifies lion of his burning all his manuscripts poems, etc., which would leave many a. youthful mind stranded on the barrenness--of unexerted faculties, hnd not Werner' sensibly objected that " there were many; idle hours which could be thus profitably; employed." Then follows an cnergctie argument by Wilhelm, maintaining, ljkt every inexperienced mind, that catch hours in bushiest! intervals aro incompati ble with poecy. Then we think we see a little of what is called "literary enthusi asm," or affectation of what is not' felt,, when Wilhelm, after a long burst of elo quence, confidingly confesses that " thesft fantasies ever pursue me. - Who could have foretold that the arms T my spirit with which I had hoped to seize; something great, and perhaps grasp infim- ty, woum so soon be shattered?" Here. you imagine for a moment that 'you sec a. i relk'ullon. He thought by this inquiry t!WIWJL BBBHMMBBBnMHHMBnMBMMMMiHliBflHMIMJMnWlHMHH