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| Further Refutation of the Pythagorean Theory. The State of Contemporary Civilisation. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXX.—Further Refutation of the Pythagorean Theory. The
State of Contemporary Civilisation.
But what must we say in reply to what follows?
For, in the first place, if the living come from the dead, just as the
dead proceed from the living, then there must always remain unchanged
one and the selfsame number of mankind, even the number which
originally introduced (human) life. The living preceded the dead,
afterwards the dead issued from the living, and then again the living
from the dead. Now, since this process was evermore going on with the
same persons, therefore they, issuing from the same, must always have
remained in number the same. For they who emerged (into life) could
never have become more nor fewer than they who disappeared (in death).
We find, however, in the records of the Antiquities of Man,1713
1713 A probable allusion to
Varro’s work, De Antiqq. Rerum Humanarum. | that the human race has progressed with a
gradual growth of population, either occupying different portions of
the earth as aborigines, or as nomad tribes, or as exiles, or as
conquerors—as the Scythians in Parthia, the Temenidæ in
Peloponnesus, the Athenians in Asia, the Phrygians in Italy, and the
Phœnicians in Africa; or by the more ordinary methods of
migration, which they call ἀποικίαι or
colonies, for the purpose of throwing off redundant population,
disgorging into other abodes their overcrowded masses. The aborigines
remain still in their old settlements, and have also enriched other
districts with loans of even larger populations. Surely it is obvious
enough, if one looks at the whole world, that it is becoming daily
better cultivated and more fully peopled than anciently. All places are
now accessible, all are well known, all open to commerce; most pleasant
farms have obliterated all traces of what were once dreary and
dangerous wastes; cultivated fields have subdued forests; flocks and
herds have expelled wild beasts; sandy deserts are sown; rocks are
planted; marshes are drained; and where once were hardly solitary
cottages, there are now large cities. No longer are (savage) islands
dreaded, nor their rocky shores feared; everywhere are houses, and
inhabitants, and settled government, and civilized life. What most
frequently meets our view (and occasions complaint), is our teeming
population: our numbers are burdensome to the world, which can hardly
supply us from its natural elements; our wants grow more and more keen,
and our complaints more bitter in all mouths, whilst Nature fails in
affording us her usual sustenance. In very deed, pestilence, and
famine, and wars, and earthquakes have to be regarded as a remedy for
nations, as the means of pruning the luxuriance of the human race; and
yet, when the hatchet has once felled large masses of men, the world
has hitherto never once been alarmed at the sight of a restitution of
its dead coming back to life after their millennial exile.1714
1714 An allusion to
Plato’s notion that, at the end of a thousand years, such a
restoration of the dead, took place. See his Phædrus, p.
248, and De Republ. x. p. 614. | But such a spectacle would have become quite
obvious by the balance of mortal loss and vital recovery, if it were true that
the dead came back again to life. Why, however, is it after a thousand
years, and not at the moment, that this return from death is to take
place, when, supposing that the loss is not at once supplied, there
must be a risk of an utter extinction, as the failure precedes the
compensation? Indeed, this furlough of our present life would be quite
disproportioned to the period of a thousand years; so much briefer is
it, and on that account so much more easily is its torch extinguished
than rekindled. Inasmuch, then, as the period which, on the
hypothesis we have discussed, ought to intervene, if the living are to
be formed from the dead, has not actually occurred, it will follow that
we must not believe that men come back to life from the dead (in the
way surmised in this philosophy).E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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