152 



SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT. 



38. 



He discoun- 



campaigns in Italy and Germany, and on his expeditions 

 to Egypt and the East, he surrounded himself with some 

 of the greatest scientific authorities, such as Berthollet 

 and Monge. From political as well as personal motives, 

 he discountenanced the once fashionable sensualistic phil- 

 ^pliy. This philosophy has now fallen to the second 

 raQ k, though still represented by eminent thinkers, such 

 Mophy - as Cabanis, Destutt de Tracy, Daunou and Garat. It 

 was these thinkers of whom Xapoleon sneeringly spoke 

 under the designation of " Ideologues." l 



After all that has been said by admirers to magnify, 

 and by opponents to minimise, Xapoleon's merits in pro- 

 moting the cause of science, and in spreading the modern 

 scientific spirit, I cannot but recognise that he was, amongst 

 the great heroes and statesmen of his age, the first and 

 foremost, if not the only one, who seemed thoroughly to 

 realise the part which science was destined to play in 



guerriere et de la conquete affermie, 

 puis y developper, y exciter tous 

 lea travaux de la pensee sur une 

 echelle qu'on n'a pas vue depuis 

 Louis XIV. C'etait le but de mes 

 Prix Decennaux qu'on m'a gates par 

 de petites intrigues d'id-eologues, et 

 de couronnements ridicules, comme 

 celui du catechisme de Saint- 

 Lambert." 



1 A full account of these authors, 

 their induence and their aims, will 

 be found in F. Picavet, ' Les Ideo- 

 logues, Essai sur 1'histoire des ide'es 

 et des theories scientifiques, philo- 

 sophiques, religieuees, &c., en France 

 depuis 1789,' Paris, 1891. 



Thibaudeau, ' Le Consulat et 

 1'Empire,' gives many details re- 

 garding Napoleon's connection with 

 science, with literature, and with 

 the growing industries of France. 

 Among the latter see especially 



the great efforts made to supersede 

 colonial and foreign goods by home 

 productions. Prizes and encourage- 

 ments of all sorts were given ; 

 technical schools and colleges were 

 established ; exhibitions were pro- 

 moted. Sheep were imported from 

 Spain, sugar was made from raisins 

 and beetroot, saltpetre and soda by 

 chemical processes, the garance or 

 madder root and the kerrnes were to 

 take the place of cochcnille ; the pas- 

 tel the place of the imported indigo. 

 That an enormous impetus was 

 thus given to chemistry cannot be 

 denied. (See Thibaudeau, passim, 

 and especially vol. v. p. 248, &c.) 

 See also Cuvier's 'Rapport,' &c., 

 for an account of applications of 

 science, especially chemistry, pp. 

 376-386, and Delambre, ' Rapport,' 

 &c., pp. 326-362. 



