Book contents
- Frontmatter
- NOTICE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- BOOK I TERRESTRIAL ADAPTATIONS
- BOOK II COSMICAL ARRANGEMENTS
- BOOK III RELIGIOUS VIEWS
- CHAP. I The Creator of the Physical World is the Governor of the Moral World
- CHAP. II On the Vastness of the Universe
- CHAP. III On Man's Place in the Universe
- CHAP. IV On the Impression produced by the Contemplation of Laws of Nature; or, on the Conviction that Law implies Mind
- CHAP. V On Inductive Habits; or, on the Impression produced on Men's Minds by discovering Laws of Nature
- CHAP. VI On Deductive Habits; or, on the Impression produced on Men's Minds by tracing the consequences of ascertained Laws
- CHAP. VII On Final Causes
- CHAP. VIII On the Physical Agency of the Deity
CHAP. III - On Man's Place in the Universe
from BOOK III - RELIGIOUS VIEWS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- NOTICE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- BOOK I TERRESTRIAL ADAPTATIONS
- BOOK II COSMICAL ARRANGEMENTS
- BOOK III RELIGIOUS VIEWS
- CHAP. I The Creator of the Physical World is the Governor of the Moral World
- CHAP. II On the Vastness of the Universe
- CHAP. III On Man's Place in the Universe
- CHAP. IV On the Impression produced by the Contemplation of Laws of Nature; or, on the Conviction that Law implies Mind
- CHAP. V On Inductive Habits; or, on the Impression produced on Men's Minds by discovering Laws of Nature
- CHAP. VI On Deductive Habits; or, on the Impression produced on Men's Minds by tracing the consequences of ascertained Laws
- CHAP. VII On Final Causes
- CHAP. VIII On the Physical Agency of the Deity
Summary
The mere aspect of the starry heavens, without taking into account the view of them to which science introduces us, tends strongly to force upon man the impression of his own insignificance. The vault of the sky arched at a vast and unknown distance over our heads; the stars, apparently infinite in number, each keeping its appointed place and course, and seeming to belong to a wide system of things which has no relation to the earth; while man is but one among many millions of the earth's inhabitants;—all this makes the contemplative spectator feel how exceedingly small a portion of the universe he is; how little he must be, in the eyes of an intelligence which can embrace the whole. Every person, in every age and country, will recognize as irresistibly natural the train of thought expressed by the Hebrew psalmist: “when I consider the heavens the work of thy hands—the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained—Lord what is man that thou art mindful of him, or the son of man that thou regardest him?”
If this be the feeling of the untaught person, when he contemplates the aspect of the skies, such as they offer themselves to a casual and unassisted glance, the impression must needs be incalculably augmented, when we look at the universe with the aid of astronomical discovery and theory.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1833