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Valerius Terminus: Of the Interpretation of Nature

Chapter 9: CHAPTER 12.
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About This Book

The essay examines the proper ends and limits of human knowledge, arguing that natural inquiry must be governed by religion and oriented to practical use. It warns against confusing investigation of created things with discovery of the divine will, criticizes both excessive speculative learning and excessive hostility to exploration, and defends the systematic pursuit of natural philosophy and inventions. The author surveys impediments that arise when sciences are treated in isolation, calls for an inventory of existing inventions and the identification of unmet needs, and proposes guiding principles to shape a disciplined, useful expansion of knowledge.

CHAPTER 12.

That in deciding and determining of the truth of knowledge, men have put themselves upon trials not competent. That antiquity and authority; common and confessed notions; the natural and yielding consent of the mind; the harmony and coherence of a knowledge in itself; the establishing of principles with the touch and reduction of other propositions unto them; inductions without instances contradictory; and the report of the senses; are none of them absolute and infallible evidence of truth, and bring no security sufficient for effects and operations. That the discovery of new works and active directions not known before, is the only trial to be accepted of; and yet not that neither, in ease where one particular giveth light to another; but where particulars induce an axiom or observation, which axiom found out discovereth and designeth new particulars. That the nature of this trial is not only upon the point, whether the knowledge be profitable or no, but even upon the point whether the knowledge be true or no; not because you may always conclude that the Axiom which discovereth new instances is true, but contrariwise you may safely conclude that if it discover not any new instance it is in vain and untrue. That by new instances are not always to be understood new recipes but new assignations, and of the diversity between these two. That the subtilty of words, arguments, notions, yea of the senses themselves, is but rude and gross in comparison of the subtilty of things; and of the slothful and flattering opinions of those which pretend to honour the mind of man in withdrawing and abstracting it from particulars, and of the inducements and motives whereupon such opinions have been conceived and received.