Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

Corpasenti Webulance Directory 20
Page 07

Another way to achieve Corpasenti Webulance is to try harder.

Corpasenti Webulance

Corpasenti Webulance Home

Corpasenti Webulance Sitemap

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 01

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 02

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 03

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 04

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 05

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 06

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 07

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 08

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 09

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 10

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 11

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 12

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 13

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 14

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 15

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 16

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 17

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 18

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 19

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 20

Corpasenti Webulance Directory 20
Page 07

THE greatest trust, between man and man, is the trust of giving counsel. For in other confidences, men commit the parts of life; their lands, their goods, their children, their credit, some particular affair; but to such as they make their counsellors, they commit the whole: by how much the more, they are obliged to all faith and integrity. The wisest princes need not think it any diminution to their greatness, or derogation to their sufficiency, to rely upon counsel. God himself is not without, but hath made it one of the great names of his blessed Son: The Counsellor. Solomon hath pronounced, that in counsel is stability. Things will have their first, or second agitation: if they be not tossed upon the arguments of counsel, they will be tossed upon the waves of fortune; and be full of inconstancy, doing and undoing, like the reeling of a drunken man. Solomon's son found the force of counsel, as his father saw the necessity of it. For the beloved kingdom of God, was first rent, and broken, by ill counsel; upon which counsel, there are set for our instruction, the two marks whereby bad counsel is for ever best discerned; that it was young counsel, for the person; and violent counsel, for the matter.

For their children; the tragedies likewise of dangers from them, have been many. And generally, the entering of fathers into suspicion of their children, hath been ever unfortunate. The destruction of Mustapha (that we named before) was so fatal to Solyman's line, as the succession of the Turks, from Solyman until this day, is suspected to be untrue, and of strange blood; for that Selymus the Second, was thought to be suppositious. The destruction of Crispus, a young prince of rare towardness, by Constantinus the Great, his father, was in like manner fatal to his house; for both Constantinus and Constance, his sons, died violent deaths; and Constantius, his other son, did little better; who died indeed of sickness, but after that Julianus had taken arms against him. The destruction of Demetrius, son to Philip the Second of Macedon, turned upon the father, who died of repentance. And many like examples there are; but few or none, where the fathers had good by such distrust; except it were, where the sons were up in open arms against them; as was Selymus the First against Bajazet; and the three sons of Henry the Second, King of England.

Three well-known writers, Professor Max Muller, Professor Mivart, and Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace have lately maintained that though the theory of descent with modification accounts for the development of all vegetable life, and of all animals lower than man, yet that man cannot--not at least in respect of the whole of his nature--be held to have descended from any animal lower than himself, inasmuch as none lower than man possesses even the germs of language. Reason, it is contended--more especially by Professor Max Muller in his "Science of Thought," to which I propose confining our attention this evening--is so inseparably connected with language, that the two are in point of fact identical; hence it is argued that, as the lower animals have no germs of language, they can have no germs of reason, and the inference is drawn that man cannot be conceived as having derived his own reasoning powers and command of language through descent from beings in which no germ of either can be found. The relations therefore between thought and language, interesting in themselves, acquire additional importance from the fact of their having become the battle-ground between those who say that the theory of descent breaks down with man, and those who maintain that we are descended from some ape-like ancestor long since extinct.


[ Sec 20 Page 01 ] [ Sec 20 Page 02 ] [ Sec 20 Page 03 ] [ Sec 20 Page 04 ] [ Sec 20 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 20 Page 06 ] [ Sec 20 Page 07 ] [ Sec 20 Page 08 ] [ Sec 20 Page 09 ] [ Sec 20 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Corpasenti Webulance and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Corpasenti Webulance provides no guarantees concerning the quality or content of other sites to which Corpasenti links. In fact, links from Corpasenti are only provided as a courtesy and do not imply any sort of endorsement or approval by Corpasenti.