登陆注册
38541000000102

第102章

But the march of craniology or phrenology, by whatever name it is called, is directly the reverse of this. It assigns to us organs, as far as the thing is explained by the professors either to the public or to their own minds, which are entailed upon us from our birth, and which are altogether independent, or nearly so, of any discipline or volition that can be exercised by or upon the individual who drags their intolerable chain. Thus I am told of one individual that he wants the organ of colour; and all the culture in the world can never supply that defect, and enable him to see colour at all, or to see it as it is seen by the rest of mankind. Another wants the organ of benevolence; and his case is equally hopeless. I shrink from considering the condition of the wretch, to whom nature has supplied the organs of theft and murder in full and ample proportions. The case is like that of astrology (Their stars are more in fault than they), with this aggravation, that our stars, so far as the faculty of prediction had been supposed to be attained, swayed in few things; but craniology climbs at once to universal empire; and in her map, as I have said, there are no vacant places, no unexplored regions and happy wide-extended deserts.

It is all a system of fatalism. Independently of ourselves, and far beyond our control, we are reserved for good or for evil by the predestinating spirit that reigns over all things. Unhappy is the individual who enters himself in this school. He has no consolation, except the gratified wish to know distressing truths, unless we add to this the pride of science, that he has by his own skill and application purchased for himself the discernment which places him in so painful a preeminence. The great triumph of man is in the power of education, to improve his intellect, to sharpen his perceptions, and to regulate and modify his moral qualities. But craniology reduces this to almost nothing, and exhibits us for the most part as the helpless victims of a blind and remorseless destiny.

In the mean time it is happy for us, that, as this system is perhaps the most rigorous and degrading that was ever devised, so it is in almost all instances founded upon arbitrary assumptions and confident assertion, totally in opposition to the true spirit of patient and laborious investigation and sound philosophy.

It is in reality very little that we know of the genuine characters of men. Every human creature is a mystery to his fellow. Every human character is made up of incongruities. Of nearly all the great personages in history it is difficult to say what was decidedly the motive in which their actions and system of conduct originated. We study what they did, and what they said; but in vain. We never arrive at a full and demonstrative conclusion. In reality no man can be certainly said to know himself. "The heart of man is deceitful above all things."

But these dogmatists overlook all those difficulties, which would persuade a wise man to suspend his judgment, and induce a jury of philosophers to hesitate for ever as to the verdict they would pronounce. They look only at the external character of the act by which a man honours or disgraces himself. They decide presumptuously and in a lump, This man is a murderer, a hero, a coward, the slave of avarice, or the votary of philanthropy; and then, surveying the outside of his head, undertake to find in him the configuration that should indicate these dispositions, and must be found in all persons of a similar character, or rather whose acts bear the same outward form, and seem analogous to his.

Till we have discovered the clue that should enable us to unravel the labyrinth of the human mind, it is with small hopes of success that we should expect to settle the external indications, and decide that this sort of form and appearance, and that class of character, will always be found together.

But it is not to be wondered at, that these disorderly fragments of a shapeless science should become the special favourites of the idle and the arrogant. Every man (and every woman), however destitute of real instruction, and unfitted for the investigation of the deep or the sublime mysteries of our nature, can use his eyes and his hands. The whole boundless congregation of mankind, with its everlasting varieties, is thus at once subjected to the sentence of every pretender:

And fools rush in, where angels fear to tread.

Nothing is more delightful to the headlong and presumptuous, than thus to sit in judgment on their betters, and pronounce ex cathedra on those, "whose shoe-latchet they are not worthy to stoop down and unloose." I remember, after lord George Gordon's riots, eleven persons accused were set down in one indictment for their lives, and given in charge to one jury. But this is a mere shadow, a nothing, compared with the wholesale and indiscriminating judgment of the vulgar phrenologist.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 东朝纪

    东朝纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 霜月剑

    霜月剑

    师门一夜间覆灭,年幼的她身世成谜,深爱的他竟然是灭门仇敌之子,她到底应该放下仇恨,还是挥剑斩断情丝?残阳如血,寒月如霜,当然,如果你认为这是一个凄美的故事,那,你就错了....
  • 小宁少的司命仙官

    小宁少的司命仙官

    #几句话也说不清楚,自己看吧#^_^1v1!!!【此为练手作,不妥之处,请指教~】
  • 非常试题大公布

    非常试题大公布

    “更快,更高,更强!”奥林匹克的格言充分表达了奥林匹克不断进取、永不满足的奋斗精神,它已成为人类战胜自我、奋勇向前的精神力量。奥林匹克运动的倡导者顾拜旦说,奥林匹克精神是人类吸收古代传统构筑未来的力量之一,这种力量虽“不足以确保社会和平”,但仍可促进和平;虽“不能更加均衡地为人类分配生产和消费物质必需品的权力”,但仍可促进公平;虽“不能够为青少年提供免费接受智力培训的机会”,但仍可促进教育。和平、公平性、教育性,在他看来就是完整、民主的奥林匹克精神。
  • 法师巅峰

    法师巅峰

    抛弃世俗的一切,领悟魔法的真谛。魔法元素为我所用,魔法天下唯我驰骋。站在法师世界巅峰,笑望天下江山形势。天要亡我,我便逆了这天,我就是天!QQ1157348499
  • 第五人格特意打卡

    第五人格特意打卡

    主角杜磊在玩第五人格时获得了神奇的第五人格补助系统……
  • 大宫雏菊曲

    大宫雏菊曲

    他,是母亲的旧情人,也是一国之尊!她,是托孤幼女,却成为他的枕边人……那一夜,他趁着酒醉强行夺取了她的纯洁!一道圣旨,她成为后宫最尊贵的女人,却听见青梅竹马的爱人唤她母妃。一段孽缘,一曲哀歌,看幽怨深宫,浮华一世,谁能一直征服那高高在上的万岁宝座……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 狂神怒目

    狂神怒目

    一个遭遇过重生者仇杀的少年,一个在异界从不避讳自己身份的穿越者。在追寻着前世羁绊的路上,一步一步睥睨天下。
  • 飞升破尘缘

    飞升破尘缘

    吾,无情无欲。吾,从未留恋。吾,只修大道。吾,与世无争。未想,神界消散。天道消散前,告诉吾,找其子,重修神界。原以为,这是任务,未想,这是劫。