Latin and its Champions

How I ended up being cornered in a schoolyard by a teacher over that formidable fossil Latin, is a strange tale, and not one I intend to tell; suffice to say I undertook to defend that antiquity in the capacity of a bystander, not being properly a Latin teacher myself, but honoured to have taughtContinue reading “Latin and its Champions”

History and Historians

I have discovered a lurking monster in the minds of the semi-academic people who popularise history. The assumption is so enormous and so absurd that I cannot describe it as anything else; for when one cannot make a head or tail of something, it may have a hundred heads and a thousand tails. Indeed, itsContinue reading “History and Historians”

The Progressive Primate

There is a great deal to be said for stepping aside to see the oddity of the things we most insistently assert. It is so healthy for the mind that it can even cause laughter. But it is an unsettling approach, and not many are comfortable with it. If a scientist or an historian tellsContinue reading “The Progressive Primate”

Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Conclusion: On History

Humour me a little history as I begin to conclude. This whole extended essay on that English knight, Thomas Browne, has been about history, and remarkably few historical facts have been mentioned. I have written at length about modernity in the abstract, an abstract I would not venture to assert exists, though I am certainContinue reading “Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Conclusion: On History”

Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 6

So Browne’s manner of speaking is medieval. His worldview is medieval. He is not a physicist like Newton: his manner of thinking is medieval. He knows much that most medieval scholars did not know, and a little that no medieval scholars knew, but that is hardly a measure of enlightenment. If to be scientific isContinue reading “Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 6”

Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 5

The two revolutions contaminated each other in both directions. Thirty years after the publication of Copernicus’ work, the revolution on earth spread to the heavens, and strange beasts and birds were discovered in the sky – the mysterious nova stella, the ‘new star’ first recorded by Tycho Brahe; the comet, or ‘Long-haired Star’ of Halley,Continue reading “Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 5”

Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 4

The revolution in scientific theory was deep, though perhaps narrow as a result. It begins with Copernicus, and ends, if it has ended, with Newton. In a broad sense, it did not discover new entities, but rather rediscovered old entities. It began with the theory that the earth orbits the sun and is in sympathyContinue reading “Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 4”

Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 3

[At length, after an absence doubtless not unwelcome, the historian whose heavy hand is responsible for the preceding posts returns, with five weeks’ worth of writing. If he had the opportunity, no doubt, he would completely rewrite the remainder of this Chapter. As is, he must settle for some brief explanatory remarks. The first isContinue reading “Smatterings of the Philosopher’s Stone – Chapter 1, part 3”