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                    <text>OBSCURANTISM
IN

MODERN SCIENCE

AN ADDRESS
Delivered before the “ Heretics ” Society in Cambridge
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BY

EDWARD CLODD

[ Reprinted by

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�NATIONAL SECULAR SOCIETY

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN
SCIENCE
“ The great thing to remember is that the mind of man cannot
be enlightened permanently by merely teaching him to reject some
particular set of superstitions. There is an infinite supply of other
superstitions always at hand ; and the mind that desires such things
—that is, the mind that has not trained itself to the hard discipline of
reasonableness and honesty, will, as soon as its devils are cast out,
proceed to fill itself with their relations.”
—Gilbert Murray, Four Stages of Greek Religion, p. in.

Under the aggis of an Institution called the North
London Christian Evidence League, there was published
recently a collection of letters from experts in various
branches of science which were answers to inquiries
made by the League as to the attitude of these eminent
persons towards orthodox beliefs.1 The eagerness with
which the editor construes the vague replies of some of
the questioned into endorsement of current dogmas says
more for his shrewdness than for his candour, while the
state of mind which believes that the validity of any
creed can be settled by a referendum betrays a lack of
humour and of sense of proportion. What value can
there be in assent to a body of alleged facts to which no
tests are applicable ; to statements which can never be
submitted to the ordinary canons of evidence ; statements
contained in ancient documents which are products of
an age when the unusual was explained (if things were
By A. H. Tabrum.

1 Religious Beliefs of Scientists.
Longhurst, London.)
i

(Hunter and

�2

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

explained at all, which is doubtful) as a supernatural
event? Moreover, when assent to these reported occur­
rences is obtained, what bearing has that on the conduct
of life? What relation is there between the dogma of
the Trinity and moral codes? As Mr. Sturt says in his
Idea of a Free Church: “ Historical evidence could never
do more than predispose a man to try how a suggested
religion works in practice. It is by practice that religions
are validated or discredited. Christianity is not a system
of evidence ; it is primarily a way of looking at life ”
&lt;P- 85).
The tenacity with which the Church clung to dogmas
now discredited—as, for example, the vicarious theory of
the Atonement, and physical torture in an eternal hell—
reasserts itself as the dogmas that remain entrenched in
the citadel of the supernatural are challenged. In the
degree that men of high intelligence affirm their adher­
ence to those dogmas, comfort comes to those who sit
in uneasy chairs in Zion. Authority determines the
opinions of most of us ; in the domain of Science legiti­
mately so, because we have the consensus of the wellinformed and the means of testing for ourselves the
evidence on which their dicta are based ; but in the
domain of Theology illegitimately, because the autho­
rities are not in accord, and because no means of
testing the data on which their dicta are based are pro­
ducible. But the multitude do not discriminate ; they
assume that the man who can speak with unchallenged
authority on the subject of which he is a master is
entitled to speak with like authority on everything else.
Some satirist has said “ that mere denial of the existence
of God does not qualify a man to be heard on matters of
higher importance,” and it may be said conversely that
mere assertion of belief in a Creative Power and Ultimate
Purpose in the Universe cannot carry more weight
because the assertor has made important discoveries in
physical science.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

3

There can be little doubt that the more confident tone
adopted by recent defenders of the remnants of “the
faith once delivered to the saints ” has its explanation in
a reaction which has set in against the too dogmatic
spirit which, a couple of generations ago, pervaded
certain scientific deliverances in the enthusiasm begotten
by discoveries whose effect on men’s attitude towards
phenomena was one of revolution. “ Old things passed
away, all things became new.” But to make discoveries
of the causes of the origin of species and of the funda­
mental identity of the matter of the universe, the bases
of assumptions that only minor problems awaited solu­
tions, is to forget what manner of spirit we are of. As
M. Duclaux has finely said : “ It is because science is
sure of nothing that it is always advancing.” We may
add that in the degree that theology is sure of anything,
stagnation is its doom.
The reaction to which reference has just been made
has led minds in whom the wish to believe is greater
than the desire to know to seize the more eagerly upon
certain deliverances of men eminent in science, the
apparent effect of which is to buttress the shaken
structure of orthodox beliefs. As illustrating this, in
his day the well-nigh forgotten Sir Richard Owen
secured the benison of entirely-forgotten bishops because
of his contention against Huxley that a certain lobe in
the human brain, known as the hippocampus minor, is
lacking in the brain of anthropoid apes.
Owen was
proved to be in the wrong, but the great weight of his
authority as a comparative anatomist retarded, and in
some measure still retards, acceptance of the fact that the
differences between man and ape are differences of degree
and not of kind.
Again, as recently as 1903 a lively controversy arose
in the Times out of a statement by the late Lord Kelvin
that “ modern biologists were coming to a firm accept­
ance of a vital principle,” and that “a fortuitous con­

�4

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

course of atoms may result in the formation of a crystal,
but when we come to living- matter scientific thought is
compelled to accept the idea of Creative Power.”1 The
Times, in a leader on this letter, called this “a weighty
contribution to the formation of just opinion on the
subject ” ; whereupon, with a logic wholly lacking in that
deliverance, Sir Thiselton Dyer contended that while in
the domain of physics he would be a bold man who dare
cross swords with Lord Kelvin, “for dogmatic utterance
on biological questions there is no reason to suppose
that he is better equipped than any person of average
intelligence.”2 Then a waft of fresh air was imported
by Sir Ray Lankester in his declaration that “ the whole
order of nature, including living and non-living matter,
is a network of mechanism the main features of which
have been made more or less obvious to the wondering
intelligence of mankind by the labour and ingenuity of
scientific investigators.
But no sane man has ever
pretended that we can know, or ever can hope to know,
or conceive of the possibility of knowing, whence this
mechanism has come, why it is there, whither it is
going, and what there may or may not be beyond and
beside it which our senses are incapable of appreciating.
These things are not explained by ‘ science, and never
can be.”3 And, it may be added, the theology which
explains them has yet to be discovered.
Much to the same effect had been said before by
Huxley and Tyndall, and men of lesser. calibre, and
much to the same effect has been said since ; . but in
some influential quarters this confession of nescience is
qualified by assumptions of knowledge as to a meaning
and purpose at the core of things.
As prominent
examples of this we may take Sir Oliver Lodge and
Dr. Alfred Russel Wallace, whose re-affirmance of such
assumptions constitutes the main purpose of their most
1 Letter to the Times, May 4, 1903.
2 Times, May 7, 1903.
3 Times, May 19, 1903.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

5

recent books—Sir Oliver’s Reason and Belief (Methuen
and Co.) and Dr. Wallace’s World of Life (Chapman and
Hall).
Dr. Wallace, whose mental agility in his ninetieth
year is an answer to every counsel of despair that would
slacken energy, gives us what, practically, is his last will
and testament, because, he tells us, it is his “summary
and completion of a half-century of thought and labour
on the Darwinian theory of evolution.”1 The body of
facts therein has led him to the conclusion that there is,
“ first, a Creative Power which so constituted matter as
to render these marvels possible ; next, a directive Mind,
which is demanded at every step of what we term
growth ; and, lastly, an ultimate Purpose in the very
existence of the whole vast life-world in all its long
course of evolution throughout the aeons of geological
time. This Purpose, which alone throws light on many
of the mysteries of its mode of evolution, I hold to be
the development of Man, the one crowning product of
the whole cosmic process of life-development....... the
only being who can appreciate the hidden forces and
motions everywhere at work, and can deduce from them
a supreme and overruling Mind as their necessary
cause.” Further on Dr. Wallace asserts that “the
special purpose of this world of ours is the development
of mankind for an enduring spiritual existence....... for
which the whole object of our earth life is a preparation ”
(Preface, p. vii).
With this quotation should be linked the argument
with which Dr. Wallace’s treatise on Darwinism (pub­
lished in 1889) concludes—namely, “that there were at
least three stages in the development of the organic
world when some new cause or power must necessarily
have come into action. The first stage is the change
from the inorganic to organic; the next stage the
1 Preface, p. v.

�6

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

introduction of sensation or consciousness, constituting
the fundamental distinction between the animal and
vegetable kingdom. The third stage is the existence in
man of a number of his most characteristic and noblest
faculties, those which raise him furthest above the brutes
and open up possibilities of almost indefinite advance­
ment ” (pp. 474-75).
In his Riddles of the Sphinx Dr. Schiller remarks
that “ A matter of fact is something which must be faced,
even though it may be unpleasant to do so, whereas a
matter of opinion may be manipulated so as to suit the
exigencies of every occasion ” (p. 364).
And the
difficulty in dealing with the thesis laid down by Dr.
Wallace is that there are in it no facts to be faced, only
a series of assumptions in support of which not a shred
of evidence that can be sifted is offered. It would seem
Sufficient to say, in refutation of these assumptions, that
their acceptance would be destructive of the entire theory
of the processes of evolution which an ever-growing
body of facts proves that, if they operate anywhere, they
operate everywhere. Heedless of this, Dr. Wallace
advances, in explanation of those processes, a theory
that the “organizing mind need not be infinite in its
attributes,”1 or “ not necessarily what we may ignorantly
mean by ‘omnipotent’ or ‘benevolent’ in our mis­
interpretation of what we see around us. 2 He spurns
the apparently gratuitous creation by theologians of a
hierarchy of angels and archangels with no defined
duties but that of attendants and messengers of the
Deity,3 and, no doubt, willingly hands over explanation
of the belief in these winged animals to the comparative
1 P. 392.
2 P- 3993 “ Preaching at St. Paul’s, Harringay, the Bishop of London argued
that God and the angels were always near us ’ (Z&gt;«?Zy Chronicle,
November 6, 1911). There was published in December 1911,^
of Angels, by the Rev. J. H. Swinstead (Hodder and Stoughton) to
which Lord Halsbury contributes an Introduction. . Probably both
prelate and jurist will be cited as authorities on the subject.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

7

mythologists. But this is only to replace them by the
hypothesis that there is “an almost infinite series of
grades of beings having higher and higher powers in
regard to the origination, the development, and the
control of the Universe,” “some of them creating by
their will-power the primal universe of ether,” and others
“so acting upon it as to develop from it, in suitable
masses and at suitable distances,”1 the various elements of
matter from which nebuke and suns are formed ! Hypo­
theses have their value, as the history of advance in science
testifies ; but they must be of the workable order, and
where can place or warrant be found for this resuscitation
of animistic beliefs? The functions of this heavenly
host, as defined by Dr. Wallace, appear to be only
physical, the deity reserving to himself the moral
government of the universe, a government which
Dr. Wallace contends is wholly beneficent. He argues
that there is no cruelty in Nature; “the whole system
of life-development is that of providing food for the
higher,” and the pain which is a fundamental condition
of that system is not maleficent, but protective. In the
lowest organisms, where the rudiments of sensation are
present, it is practically absent, and the revolt of the
humane at the spectacle of animals suffering arises from
“ our whole tendency to transfer our sensations of pain
to them.”2 The action of a directive purpose meets us
everywhere ; it is evident, for example, in the myriad
swarms of mosquitoes, because these supply food for birds,
and thus indirectly minister to the existence of song and
plumage whereby the ear and eye of man are gratified !
Dr. Wallace does not explain what beneficent purpose
lies in the multiplication of blood-parasites that slay
their thousands by the appalling “ sleeping-sickness ”
whose venomous causes man is striving to extinguish ;
or in the Californian poison-vine which, when brushed
1 P- 393-

2 P- 377-

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

against, produces eczema over the whole body ; or in
the macuna bean of Zambesia, whose trodden-on spines
revenge the assault by exuding a powder so skin­
maddening that the tortured natives will jump into a
crocodile-haunted river to relieve the agony.
His
teleology is a reversion to the smug lessons of our
boyhood when “ the soul of good in things evil ” was
expounded in the namby-pamby literature of such books
as Workers without Wage, of the contents of which this
is a sample :—
Q.: Is there any use in the gadfly and his like?
A.: Yes ; they have a use in making wild cattle move
from spot to spot, and in preventing the flocks and herds
from growing too indolent.
The purposeful involves the ethical, and the ethical is
a purely human product. Neither good nor evil can be
imputed to Nature; hers is the sphere of unbroken
sequence which man can oppose only to fail in the
attempt.
And the optimism of Dr. Wallace has
dignified retort in the lines in which Thomas Hardy
addresses a deity whom he pictures as reviewing his
government of things at a year’s end :—
And what’s the good of it, I said,
What purpose made you call
From formless void this Earth I tread,
When nine and ninety could be said
Why nought should be at all ?

Yea, Sire, why shaped you us, “ who in
This tabernacle groan ? ”
If ever a joy be found therein,
Such joy no man had wished to win,
If he had never known I1

“ Bigness is not greatness,” as Emerson says, but one
would presumably expect the “Creative Power” to
1 Fortnightly Review, January, 1907.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

9

exhibit some sense of proportion. And we may well
assume absence of that saving grace if Dr. Wallace can
make good his rechauffe of the anthropocentric theory
which evolution has traversed, and, as some of us think,
demolished. A survey of cosmic development can but
suggest the reflection that the purpose which Dr. Wallace
sees in the universe might have been achieved by shorter
cuts. The justification for the existence of a myriad
heavenly bodies and, to make quick descent from these,
for the miscellaneous organisms preceding man, the
most remote star and the “ dragons of the prime” as
alike agents of his spiritual evolution, seems far to
seek. And if we judge only from the history of
these reptilian monsters we see in them a series of
unsuccessful experiments; perchance the “ ’prentice
hands ” of the angelic auxiliaries resulting in the pro­
duction of a mass of superfluous unfit to secure the
existence of the fit. Pointing to them, Nature can only
confess, with Beau Brummel’s valet when showing to a
friend of his master’s a heap of discarded ties, “ These
are our failures.”
As for an “enduring spiritual existence,” to once
more quote Dr. Schiller : “ The end and origin of the
soul are alike shrouded in perplexities which religious
dogma makes serious attempt to dispel....... Whence does
the soul come? Does it exist before the body, is it
derived from the souls or the bodies of its parents, or
created ad hoc by the Deity? Is Pre-existence, Traducianism, or Creationism the orthodox doctrine? The
first theory, although we shall see that it is the only one
on which any rational eschatology can be, or has been,
based, is difficult, and has not figured largely in religious
thought; but the other two are alike impossible and
offensive. Indeed, it would be difficult to decide which
supposition was more offensive, whether that the manu­
facture of immortal spirits should be a privilege directly
delegated to the chance passions of a male and female,

�IO

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

or that they should have the power at their pleasure to
call forth the creative energy of God.”1
Can Dr. Wallace tell us at what precise stage in
man’s development the Creative Power intervened either
directly or through his “hosts of angels”? Was the
“ enduring spiritual existence ” conferred on Pithecan­
thropus erectus, or postponed till he had become more
pronouncedly Homo sapiens; and does Eolithic or
Palaeolithic man come under that head? As to the
“almost indefinite advancement ” which this spiritual
endowment was to secure, does the history of mankind,
from the dateless Ancient Stone Age to this twentieth
century of the Christian era, show that that has been
even approximately reached ? It is all very well to point
to the altitudes to which a few units among the millions
of humankind have attained, but what of the depths in
which the myriads have remained ? Is not any tendency
to smug satisfaction checked by even the most superficial
acquaintance with the story of mankind, with its record
of the millions whose existence has been, and millions
whose existence to-day remains, less enviable than that
of the brutes? of the millions whose eyes were opened
only to close on the darkness of death? of the low
intellectual, moral, and spiritual plane on which all but
an infinitesimal number stand, and the extinguishment
of many of these in the fullness of their power and use­
fulness ? And so the survey might be extended till we
reach the degrading sequel of an “ enduring spiritual
existence ” which makes proof of its survival by raps and
knocks, and by the whole bag of tricks of the mediums
for whose integrity as claimants of communication with
the unseen Dr. Wallace goes bail.
For it is in his
belief in the validity of the phenomena of spiritualism
that the explanation of his theories is found. Take this
as culled from many proofs. When summoned as
1 Riddles of the Sphinx, p. 372.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

ii

witness in an action brought by one Archdeacon
Colley against Mr. Maskelyne, Dr. Wallace deposed
that he saw a white patch appear on the left side of a
man’s coat and grow into the distinct figure of a woman
in flowing drapery, and that he was absolutely certain
that this was a spiritual manifestation.1 Further, Dr.
Wallace, face to face with the exposure of the medium
Eusapia Palladino, averred that that detection “ in no
way got rid of the genuine phenomena previously
witnessed.”2 Of this woman’s performances the late
Mr. Frank Podmore said that the whole of them can be
■explained by the time-honoured device of substitution of
foot or hand.3 And the end and aim of the World of
Life is made obvious in the advice which Dr. Wallace
gives therein to his readers to study, “ as dealing with
the ethics and philosophy of spiritualism,” the late
.Stainton Moses’s Spirit Teaching and V. C. Desertes’s
Psychi-Philosophy.
Space forbids further criticism of the World of Life,
with its limited deity working with assistance in a
limited universe—for in his Man's Place in the Universe
Dr. Wallace contends that the sidereal system is finite
—and what remains available must be given to Sir
Oliver Lodge’s Reason and Belief.
In his Substance of Faith Allied with Science: A
Catechism for Parents and Teachers (now in its tenth
edition), Sir Oliver gives as his credo, “ Belief in one
Infinite and Eternal Being; a guiding and loving
Father, in whom all things consist.” Further, that “ the
Divine Nature is specially revealed to man through
Jesus Christ our Lord, who lived, taught, and suffered
in Palestine 1,900 years ago, and has since been
worshipped by the Christian Church as the immortal Son
of God, the Saviour of the World.” He also believes
1 Daily Mail, April 27, 1907.
2 Letter to the Daily Chronicle, January 24, 1896.
3 The Nenuer Spiritualism, p. 144.

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OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

that “ man is privileged to understand and assist the
Divine purpose on this earth ; that prayer is a means
of communication between man and God, and that the
Holy Spirit is ever ready to help us along the way
towards Goodness and Truth, so that by unselfish
service we may gradually enter into the Life Eternal,
the Communion of Saints, and the Peace of God.”
In this we have a slightly eviscerated Apostles’ Creed,
to which a supplement is given in Reason and Belief.
The basis of that book, Sir Oliver submits, is “ one of
fact.” Among the facts is the now unchallengeable
one, that of man’s ancestry “ on his bodily side through
the animals, whereby a terrestrial existence was rendered
possible for beings at a comparatively advanced stage of
spiritual evolution. Plato and Shakespeare and Newton
lay then in the womb of the future.” Probably Sir
Oliver had in his mind Tyndall’s famous sentence in
which, with a true “ scientific use of the imagination,”
he said that “ all our philosophy, poetry, science, and
art—Plato, Shakespeare, Newton, and Raphael—are
potential in the fires of the sun.”
Now for the assumption. “ There must have come
a time when at a definite stage in the long history the
triumphant hymn, ‘ It is finished ; man is made,’ was
sung.” Whether the vocalists were of the angelic type
with which the Gospels, and, with a difference, Dr.
Wallace, make us familiar, we are not told ; neither are
we helped, in seeking to arrive at the process of the
making of man by Sir Oliver’s hints at “pre-existence,”
or at our being “chips of a great mass of mind,”
individuality being attained in the incarnation of these
“spiritual fragments in their several bodies, and thereby
the permanence of personality secured,....... for no
thoughtful person can really and consistently believe
that the spirit will not survive the body ” (pp. io-ii).
In connection with this vague ontology, there follows
a chapter on the “Advent of Christ,” in whose super­

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

i3

natural birth Sir Oliver apparently believes. It is often
not easy to catch his meaning, the words are elusive ;
but he says that to him, as “ a student of science,” the
historical testimony in favour of that momentous
Christian doctrine—the Incarnation—is entirely credi­
ble.” There is a watering-down of the significance of
this in his remark, “We are all incarnations, all sons
of God in a sense, but,” etc. Anyway, the Incarnation
was necessary because man, who had hitherto been in
a state of innocency, like the animals, having arrived
at a stage when he realized that he was free and could
“discriminate between good and evil,” utilized that
power and fell, whereby sin entered into the world.
Help has been rendered by men to their fellows ; help,
too, “ by other beings and in other ways ”—“ I believe
this to be literally true ” (p. 40) adds Sir Oliver, thus
joining hands with Dr. Wallace in his theory of sub­
sidiary “ powers of the air.” Nineteen hundred years
ago “ the Great Spirit took pity on the human race and
sent the Lord from heaven to reveal to us the love, the
pity, the long-suffering ” of the God whom man had
misunderstood. In Memoriam, Wordsworth, and the
Gospel according to John are the chief “authorities”
cited for this action on the part of the deity. But for
the statement, that “while Christ was incarnate he had
in some real sense partially forgotten previous exist­
ence,” Sir Oliver is solely responsible, and what he
means is a mystery which he alone can be asked to
solve.1 We are reminded of the undergraduate’s con­
clusion in an answer about some events in the life of
Christ which Grant Duff gives in his inimitable Notes
1 A parallel obscurity is supplied in Mr. Chapman’s Introduction to
the Pentateuch (Cambridge University Press, 1911) when commenting
on the question whether Jesus, in quoting from those writings, accepted
the current belief in their Mosaic authorship. Mr. Chapman suggests
that in this and other matters bearing “ on Christ’s knowledge as Man,”
in some manner the Divine Omniscience was held in abeyance, and not
translated into the sphere of human action” (p. 304).

�14

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

from a Diary. “ These facts are not recorded in the
Gospels, and there is no allusion to them in the Fathers,
but they are fully detailed by Dr. Farrar.”
There is only brief space, and certainly small
necessity, for reference to the chapters which are
designed “to furnish hints and suggestions for the
effective treating of the Old Testament in the light of
the doctrine of Evolution.”
To Sir Oliver Lodge the miscellaneous writings
grouped under that title—writings of unknown or
disputed authorship and of unsettled date, writings
some of which are compilations and redactions of older
documents and incorporations of legendary materials
from alien sources—are to be treated as vehicles of “ a
progressive revelation, embodying the story of the
chosen race from whom Messiah was to be born”: Sir
Oliver incidentally remarks that “ we, too, are a chosen
people,” thus bandying terms about until they are
emptied of all the old connotation. There is no reason
to suspect that Sir Oliver Lodge shares the delusion of
certain eccentrics that the British are descendants of
the Ten Lost Tribes ; perhaps his remark is but the
echo of verses which, like other youths brought up in
orthodox beliefs, he may have learned in the Sunday
school.
I thank the goodness and the grace
Which on my birth has smiled,
And made me, in this Christian land,
A happy English child.
I was not born, as thousands are,
Where God is never known,
Nor taught to pray a useless prayer
To blocks of wood and stone.

And so on.
Dealing with the mythology in Genesis, he says that
the talk about Jehovah walking in the garden of Eden
“ is a poetical mode of expression for a reality, for surely

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

15

from a beautiful garden the Deity is not absent, and
some pretty verses from the late T. E. Brown are cited in
illustration. Sir Oliver does not tell us what “ reality
underlaid the sequel when the perambulating deity
asked why Adam hid himself, but the whole chapter is
more suggestive for what it omits than for what it
admits.
It is impossible even to summarize the facts confuting
the theories which in this paper are, necessarily,
presented only in briefest outline. But the onus
probandi lies on those who advance them. Assump­
tions abound, but no shred of proof is offered, both
authors exemplifying the shrewd axiom of Montaigne
that “ nothing is so firmly believed as that which is
least known.”
While admitting that the mystery of origins remains,
and that many stages in the process are obscure, there
is no justification for the conclusion that what is un­
solved is explicable only by assuming a deus ex viachina
acting sporadically and arbitrarily. The cumulative
evidence, ever increasing in volume, as to the funda­
mental relationship between the inorganic and the
organic, thereby witnessing to the unity of the cosmos,
is sufficing refutation. The real question at issue
raised in both volumes is man’s place in the universe,
and the assumption that he is its crowning, final
product. Those who assign him a special place therein
have to reckon with the evidence supplied by compara­
tive anatomy and comparative psychology. The one
has demonstrated fundamental identity between the
apparatus of animals and man ; it has proved “ that the
structural differences which separate Man from the
Gorilla and the Chimpanzee are not so great as those
which separate the Gorilla from the lower apes”;1 and
that when the blood of these last-named is mixed with
1 Huxley’s Man's Place in Nature, p. 103.

�i6

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

human blood the serum of the one destroys the blood­
cells of the other, whereas no such effect arises when
the blood of man is mixed with that of the anthropoid
apes.1 The other has demonstrated identity of behaviour
between the higher animals and man, and shown that
“the development of mind in its early stages and in
certain directions is revealed most adequately in the
animal. Its mind exhibits substantially the same pheno­
mena which the human mind exhibits in its early stages
in the child.”2
So widely-read a man as Sir Oliver Lodge cannot be
ignorant of the success which has attended the application
of the comparative method to mythology, theology, and
ethics. But not a hint of this is breathed in Reason and
Belief. The reader will close that book without an
inkling how far legendary elements enter into the
historical portions of the Bible, and how scrutiny of the
Christian documents has yielded evidence of the import
of pagan conceptions.
The author of the article
“ Nativity ” in the Encyclopedia Biblica says of the
myth of the Virgin birth that “ here we unquestionably
enter the circle of pagan ideas, ideas foreign to Judaism,”
while to such shifts are modern divines of the liberal
type of Dr. Sanday put that that scholar, seeking to
account for the silence of Mark about the Incarnation,
says that “ possibly Luke had a special source of
information connected with the court of the Herods,
perhaps through Joanna, wife of Chuza, the King’s
steward.”3 Knowledge of so “momentous” an event
has for its source a piece of back-stairs gossip I And
travelling backwards to the so-called previsions of a
Messiah, on which Sir Oliver lays stress, how will he
meet the acute question put by Dr. Reuss in his
comment on the oft-quoted and mistranslated verse in
1 Darwin and Modern Science, p. 129.
2 Baldwin, Story of the Mind, p. 35.
3 Guardian, February 4, 1903.

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

i7

Isaiah (vii, 14) about the child to be born of a “virgin,”
« What consolation would Ahaz have had if the Prophet
had said to him, ‘ Do not fear these two kings, because
in I50 years the Messiah will be born ’ P”1
All that research and inquiry, carried on in that
scientific spirit which commends itself to one who is a
«student of science,” have achieved in the foregoing
and many other cases has no reference in these inchoate
and inconclusive pages. At the end of one of the
chapters a brief list of books on Hebrew history is
given, but these are of pseudo-liberal type, and the
more advanced writings of Canon Cheyne, Driver, and
their school are named only to be dismissed as too
technical for the public for whom Sir Oliver successfully
caters. The Encyclopedia Biblica is ignored.
It is the same with Ethics. That these are a product
of social evolution, and therefore relative in their
standards; that sin is, in its essence, an anti-social
act; that morals rest not on divine codes, but on human
relations—of all this there is never a hint in Sir Oliver’s
cryptic explanation of the doctrine of the Fall. Job’s
question, «Who is this that darkeneth counsel with
words?” rises to the lips as we close this unsatisfactory
book, and hence the warrant for application of the term
« obscurantist” to both writers. For in the degree that
they affirm the truth of the unproved, and assume that
on certain questions the canon is closed, they put a bar
upon inquiry, and encourage the ignorant and the timid,
the «light half-believers of our casual creeds,” in lazy
acquiescence.
There is so much to admire in the character, so much
to imitate in the example, of Dr. Wallace, that animad­
version on the retrograde influence of his writings, in
the degree that they are speculative, is a thankless task.
It is among the romances of Science, like the inde­
1 Les Prophltes, I, p. 233 (1876).

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

pendent discovery of the planet Neptune by Adams and
Leverrier, that, when exploring in far-away Ternate,
Dr. Wallace should have hit on the identical solution of
the problem of the origin of species at which Darwin,
working in Cambridge, arrived. And it is to the
abiding honour of Dr. Wallace that Darwin’s name
and fame were permitted to eclipse his own, the one
willingly yielding to the other the glory of carrying on
a work which culminated in the publication of the Origin
of Species. For, as Professor Baldwin says in his
Darwin and the Humanities, “the Darwinian theory
might with entire appropriateness have been called
Wallaceism.” And the Professor fitly dedicates that
book to “ Alfred Russel Wallace, because, like that of
his co-worker, his interest extends to all the humanities.”
It may be said with truth that his interest is the wider
of the two. For throughout his long and strenuous
career Dr. Wallace has fought unwearyingly for the
betterment of the conditions of “ the poor also and him
that hath no helper.” Social and economic questions
have largely occupied his pen and time, and if in his
latest book his optimism shows itself in the conviction
that this is the best of all possible worlds, there are
passages in it born of a burning indignation at man’s
misdeeds towards his fellow-man which arrest approach
to the noble ideals in whose ultimate fulfilment Dr.
Wallace has a faith that we fain would share. Nor has
he ever concealed his rejection of current creeds as
having no correspondence to realities, and hence has
been under neither obligation nor inclination to attempt
to square the Christian scheme with the doctrine of
evolution. Therefore, the deeper is the regret that, in
the strange obsession of a mind so richly endowed,
there should be fostered the one heresy with which
science can make no terms—the denial of the unity and
unbroken continuity of the totality of phenomena, both
psychical and physical. Such deviations from the

�OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

i9

normal have value as supplying data for the science of
mental pathology.
It must be reluctantly admitted that when Sir Oliver
Lodge leaves the domain of physics, wherein he is a
deservedly supreme authority, for that of theology, he
passes to a lower plane. He is by far the greater
obscurantist of the two, because he bewilders most where
he should be most enlightening.
His shambling,
hesitating gait makes him no sure-footed guide for the
plain wayfarer to follow. He wrests their old, straight­
forward connotation from such terms as “revelation,
“ inspiration,” “ incarnation,” so that, meaning anything,
they may mean everything. In an Address to the Society
for Psychical Research ^Proceedings, Partxxvi,pp. 14-15),
Sir Oliver said that in dealing with psychical pheno­
mena a hazy state of mind is better than a mind “ keenly
awake ” and “on the spot,” and one has the feeling that
this sort of self-hypnotizing process has affected much
that he has to say about questions which need the
exercise of all our wits to grapple with.
But whether it be his Reason and Belief, or Dr.
Wallace’s World of Life, their radical defect is the
assumption that certitude about the significance of the
universe has been reached.
Quoting Plotinus, Sir
Oliver calls him “ the inspired,” and in his suggestive
little essay on the Inner Beauty Maeterlinck says : “ Of
all the intellects known to me that of Plotinus draws the
nearest to the divine. ” Their united tribute calls to mind
a sentence from that philosopher which Sir Oliver and
Dr. Wallace, and all of us, may take to heart : “ If a
man were to inquire of Nature the reason of her creative
authority, she would say, Ask me not, but understand
in silence.”
Note.—A recent example of the disastrous influence of the
pseudo-scientific on the poetic temperament is supplied by

�20

OBSCURANTISM IN MODERN SCIENCE

Mr. Edward Carpenter, who, in his Drama of Love and Death,
says that “the evidence for the genuineness of some such
‘ spirit ’ photographs is—to anyone who really studies it—
beyond question” (p. 186).........“Similarly with the wraiths or
phantoms which are projected from dying or lately dead
persons, the evidence for them in general is much too
abundant and well-attested to allow of disbelief” (p. 148).
“ Meanwhile, it is interesting to find, in corroboration of the
general theory, that some experiments lately carried out, in
weighing the body before and after death, have apparently
yielded the result of a decided loss of weight at, or very
shortly after, the moment of death. Dr. Duncan McDougall,
experimenting with considerable care, found that one of his
patients lost three-quarters of an ounce precisely at death ;
another lost half an ounce, with an additional loss of one
ounce during the next few minutes, after which no further
loss took place ” (p. 184).

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