| NUMBER 1451. - January 24, 2001 |
ISSN
0882-3731
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By Eli Siegel English literature has a great deal about education. Even the novels have: The Newcomes of Thackeray, and David Copperfield and Dombey and Son of Dickens - there are schools aplenty. And none of the schools at the present time seem good enough. The history of education has been written from a factual point of view, but in terms of how people felt, it hasn't been written. Education went on in the 13th century; it went on in Jerusalem hundreds of years ago; it went on in Syria and in Egypt; went on in the Middle Ages - the method of having younger people told about the world. There's a Jewish song that is about that: "Oif'n Pripechuk," one of the most popular songs in Yiddish. It shows that education, long before the New York school system, went on. Robert Boyle: Religion & PhysicsAn interesting meaning of both religion and science is that your mind can be wide and deal with the unseen. The large question as to religion is: Are the things that make the world go, all seeable; or are there forces that are just as forceful that you can't see so well? And Newton, for example, pointed to a force which no one has seen: gravity. Gravity will not go on the stage because it isn't that kind of girl. Let's take the life of Boyle, with its confusions. He is immortal, because there is something which is still called Boyle's Law. It's about pressure and elasticity. So what can you do if something about pressure and elasticity is called by your name? You've got to be immortal, that's all. Robert Boyle was the seventh son of Richard, first Earl of Cork ... and was born at Lismore Castle in Munster, on the 25th of January 1627. His education at home gave him a mastery of French and Latin .... It was at Geneva ... that he first experienced, at the age of fourteen, an impulse to religious meditation which never left him.Boyle is almost exactly contemporary with Pascal. Pascal made some discoveries in physics, about how a thing falls, the pressure of fluids; he added to Torricelli, added somewhat to Galileo; and at the same time was one of the most religious persons ever. Pascal was taken by the obvious and the mysteries. By the death of his father in 1644 [Boyle] inherited ... considerable wealth, which was ... devoted in abundant measure ... to the spread of scriptural knowledge, and to the aid of poor students of science.He really wanted other people to learn. In physics Boyle is of course renowned as the discoverer ... of the air-pump, and in a lesser degree for "Boyle's Law" of the relation between elasticity and pressure.Elasticity is a being able to change and be yourself, even under pressure. "We may notice also his improvement in the thermometer, and his experiments in electricity." That is very early, because electricity needed the centuries. But there was some awareness that there was a force having to do with amber and wax called electricity. I'm sure if his name hadn't been used for Boyle's Law, he might have made himself immortal through electricity: something Edison sold might be called a Boyle now. Art & Science: About the Same ThingHe guarded himself carefully from even the knowledge of a priori theory which might lead to prepossessions inimical to the impartial conduct of experiment, save, one must suppose, in so far as hypothesis is absolutely necessary to the first stages.A priori, from the point of view of Aesthetic Realism, is completely correct - but make sure that you don't mingle the a priori with certain wishes of your own. A priori is just as useful in science as the a posteriori, or the experimental, way. You can get from certain principles to objects, and you can go from objects to principles. Both are poetic. "[His] excellent work in science ... was rather due to an untiring persistence than to great gifts of intellect." In judging scientists, we find there are two things: one, care, caution even, persistency, being able to experiment and experiment some more; and then, the having of what can be called intuition. The reason that Newton is the scientist of the 17th century, or of any century, is that he had great ideas with a capacity for work. Those are two opposites. Boyle is described here as having greater persistence than gift of intellect. But he had a gift of intellect too, or he wouldn't be remembered, and he wouldn't have come to Boyle's Law. A work of his is in the Everyman Library. "He had hardly a disinterested love of knowledge; he valued it as it 'had a tendency to use.'" And another thing is: how knowledge is good in itself, as Newman said, and how also it is useful. This is like art: art is useful, but is also what it is. Education Is the OppositesThey are principal in education, and they've always been felt. There was a day when the students could do anything in a school, including keeping the schoolmaster out: it was called a barring out; it was part of the English educational way. And the feeling that both "culture and anarchy" are necessary is around. We find things corresponding to them. There's a sense of insight, something which comes to one, the feeling that there's a new symmetry in the world; and then also there's the being able to follow out a previous thought. In science you have to get to a thought you never had before, and you also have to learn how to develop a thought you've had. There Is StyleFrom the greater masters of sonorous English, Boyle was as far removed as from the clear-cut simplicity and directness of Swift. His style is not involved, and is not affected; it is merely rarefied and verbose.We come to the problem, Would a study of suction, pliability, elasticity, pressure, malleability, porosity - all things having to do with physics - enable one to have a better sense of style, if one saw them as in the same world? I think so. All these things have to do with style: flexibility, malleability, suction, porosity, pressure, rarefaction, condensation, and so on. (It has been said that Swift's Journal to Stella is too repetitive, which it is. Stella does hear the same thing too often.) About Boyle's time, Christopher Wren tried to solve the problem of heaviness and lightness in St. Paul's Cathedral. Architecture has those two opposites, which all art has, and science has too. A gale, a hurricane, is a study in lightness and force. So at this time we can ask, what had Boyle to learn? Every writer has something to learn. This is part of education in its fullest sense.
*Henry Craik, ed., English Prose Selections, with Critical Introductions by Various Writers (1894), 3:63-64. |