PRELUDE TO THE EPOCH OF NEWTOX. 301 



BUS in consequence. It is obvious that, at this time, the cause of Car 

 tesianisra Avas looked upon as the cause of free inquiry and moderr. 

 discovery, in. opposition to that of bigotry, prejudice, and ignorance. 

 Probably the poet was far from being a very severe or profound critic 

 of the truth of such claims. "This petition of the Masters of -Art-, 

 Professors and Regents of the University of Paris, humbly showeth. 

 that it is of public notoriety that the sublime and incomparable Aris- 

 totle was, without contest, the first founder of the four elements, fire, 

 air, earth, and water ; that he did, by special grace, accord unto them 

 a simplicity which belongeth not to them of natural right ;" and so on. 

 " Nevertheless, since, a certain time past, two individuals, named Rea- 

 son and Experience, have leagued themselves together to dispute his 

 claim to the rank Avhich of justice pertains to him, and have tried to 

 erect themselves a throne on the ruins of his authority ; and, in order 

 the better to gain their ends, have excited certain factious spirits, who, 

 under the names of Cartesians and Gassendists, have begun td shako 

 off the yoke of their master, Aristotle ; and, contemning his authority, 

 with unexampled temerity, would dispute the right which he had ac- 

 quired of making true pass for false and false for true;" In fact, this 

 production does not exhibit any of the peculiar tenets of Descartes, 

 although, probably, the positive points of his doctrines obtained a foot- 

 ing in the University of Paris, under the cover of this assault on his 

 adversaries. The Physics of Rohatilt, a zealous disciple of Descartes, 

 was published at Paris about 1G70, 12 and was, for a time, the standard 

 book for students of this subject, both in France and in England. I 

 do not here speak of the later defenders of the Cartesian system, for, in 

 their hands, it was much modified by the struggle which it had to 

 maintain against the Newtonian system. 



We are concerned with Descartes and his school only as they form 

 part of the picture of the intellectual condition of Europe just before 

 the publication of Newton's discoveries. Beyond this, the Cartesian 

 speculations are without value. When, indeed, Descartes' country- 

 men could no longer refuse their assent and admiration to the New- 

 tonian theory, it came to be the fashion among them to say that Des- 

 cartes had been the necessary precursor of Newton ; and to adopt a 

 favorite saying of Leibnitz, that the Cartesian philosophy was the ante- 

 chamber of Truth. Yet this comparison is far from being happy : it 

 appeared' rather as if these suitors had mistaken the door; for those 



12 And n second edition in 1GT'2. 



