GEEAT QUESTIONS IN LITTLE 



course. One cannot see where there is any room for 

 a physical change, but the mental grovvtli may \>g 

 enormous, incalculable. All our theories of knowl- 

 edge, all our beliefs, are founded upon the assui illa- 

 tion that we have reached the summit of human life. 

 But just as the men of a few centuries ago were 

 children in the arts and sciences, compared with us, 

 so we shall doubtless appear as children when com- 

 pared with men a few centuries hence. The mental 

 powers of man may not have increased since Aris- 

 totle and Plato, but that is only a brief time. Local, 

 and, as it were, accidental, causes may accoimt f(3r 

 that. Wait five or ten thousand years, and then see. 

 It is a long road and it is up and down hill. Man is 

 now armed with the w^eapons of science as he never 

 has been before, and his conquest over Nature is 

 bound to be more and more complete. 



Whole tribes and families of animals have become 

 extinct in the past, and others will probably lxN?ome 

 extinct in the future, but one can think of the race 

 of man as becoming extinct only on some radical 

 cosmic change in the earth, such as there has been in 

 some of the other planets and in oiu* moon. This 

 change will come, but not in millions of years. 



Unless the waste of the fertility of the land into 

 the sea through man's agency is checked, the fertil- 

 ity of the soil in the course of countless ages will no 

 longer support the race, but this as a cause working 

 against the perpetuity of the race can be and doubl- 



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