Wesley Collected Works Vol 10
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-10-560 |
| Words | 380 |
Are not even the moods and figures
above my comprehension? Do not I poorly endeavour to
cover my ignorance, by affecting to laugh at their barbarous
names P Can I even reduce an indirect mood to a direct;
an hypothetic to a categorical syllogism ? Rather, have not
my stupid indolence and laziness made me very ready to
believe, what the little wits and pretty gentlemen affirm, “that
logic is good for nothing?” It is good for this at least,
(wherever it is understood,) to make people talk less; by
showing them both what is, and what is not, to the point;
and how extremely hard it is to prove anything. Do I under
stand metaphysics; if not the depths of the Schoolmen, the
subtleties of Scotus or Aquinas, yet the first rudiments, the
general principles, of that useful science? Have I conquered
so much of it, as to clear my apprehension and range my
ideas under proper heads; so much as enables me to read
with ease and pleasure, as well as profit, Dr. Henry More's
Works, Malebranche’s “Search after Truth,” and Dr. Clarke's
“Demonstration of the Being and Attributes of God?” Do
I understand natural philosophy? If I have not gone deep
therein, have I digested the general grounds of it? Have I
mastered Gravesande, Keill, Sir Isaac Newton’s Principia,
with his “Theory of Light and Colours?” In order thereto,
have I laid in some stock of mathematical knowledge? Am
I master of the mathematical A B C of Euclid's Elements? If I have not gone thus far, if I am such a novice still, what
have I been about ever since I came from school? (6.) Am I acquainted with the Fathers; at least with those
venerable men who lived in the earliest ages of the Church? Have I read over and over the golden remains of Clemens
Romanus, of Ignatius and Polycarp; and have I given one
reading, at least, to the works of Justin Martyr, Tertullian,
Origen, Clemens Alexandrinus, and Cyprian 2
(7.) Have I any knowledge of the world? Have I studied
men, (as well as books,) and observed their tempers, maxims,
and manners? Have I learned to beware of men; to add
the wisdom of the serpent to the innocence of the dove?