登陆注册
26110600000021

第21章

B/AXTER cannot be justly described as a leader or a follower of the Scottish school.His method is not really nor professedly that of inductive observation.He belongs rather to the school of Samuel Clarke, to whom he often refers, and always with admiration.But be was a Scotchman, and an independent thinker: he does not belong to the old philosophy; but he was a contemporary of the men who founded the Scottish school, and treated of many of the same topics.

He had readers both in England and Scotland in his own day, and for some years after his death; and he deserves a passing notice as the representative of a style of thought which met with considerable favor in his time, but had to give way before the new school.{43}

We have a life of him in Kippis's " Biographia Britannica," drawn up from materials supplied by his son.He was the son of a merchant in Old Aberdeen, where he was born in 1686 or 1687.His mother was Elizabeth Frazer, descended from a considerable family in the north.He was educated at King's College, Aberdeen, where, at the beginning of last century, he would be trained in the old logic and metaphysics.But, as we shall see more fully in future articles, a considerable amount of a fresh literary taste, and of a spirit of philosophical inquiry, began to spring up in Aberdeen in connection with the two Universities pretty early in that century.Baxter, besides being a good mathematician, was well acquainted with the discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton, and with the theories of Leibnitz as to matter and motion.He was familiar with the Essay on the Human Understanding, but had a deeper appreciation of the speculations of Clarke.

The chief professional employment of his life was that of tutor to young men of good family.The boys who, in our days, would be sent to the great public schools of England taught by Oxford or Cambridge masters, were very often, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, put under tutors, who went about with them to the colleges at home, or travelled with them abroad.The occupation of teaching and travelling tutor was one coveted by young men of limited means and of a reading taste, who did not wish officially to enter the church, and had no other office open to them than that referred to, fitted to furnish them with means of study.When the tutor had trained and travelled with the heir of a good estate, the family felt bound to make provision for him for life.It was thus that, in the seventeenth century, Hobbes had been tutor to two successive Earls of Devonshire; that, in the eighteenth century, Thomson the poet became tutor to the Lord Chancellor Talbot's son on the Grand Tour; that Hume coveted the office of travelling tutor to Murray of Broughton; and Turnbull and A.Smith gave up chairs in the Scottish colleges to become tutors, -- the one to the Wauchopes of Niddrie (?) and the other to the Duke of Buccleuch Baxter was tutor, among others, to Lord John Gray, Lord Blantyre, and Mr.Hay of Drummelzier.

In the spring Of 1741, he went abroad with Mr.Hay, having also Lord Blantyre under his care.He resided some years at Utrecht, and thence made excursions into Flanders, France, and Germany.Carlyle met him -- " Immateriality Baxter," as he calls him -- at Utrecht in 1745, and says of him, 'though he was a profound philosopher and a hard student, he was at the same time a man of the world, and of such pleasing conversation as attracted the young." His son bad described him as being at polite assemblies in Holland, and a favorite of ladies; but a writer in the Corrigenda of the following volume of the " Biographia," after mentioning that he saw him daily for more than two years at Utrecht, declares: " His dress was plain and ******, -- not that of a priggish French man, but of a mathematician who was not a sloven.I am pretty well persuaded that while in the Low Countries, he never had any conversation with women of higher or lower degree, unless it were to ask for the bill at an ordinary, or desire the servant maid to bring up the turf for his chimney." The same writer describes him as a "plain, decent, good humored man, who passed all his time, but {44} what was bestowed at his meals, in meditation and study." His son describes him as social and cheerful, and extremely studious, sometimes' sitting up whole nights reading and writing.

In 1724, he had married the daughter of Mr.Mebane, a minister in Berwickshire; and, while he was abroad, his wife and family seem to have resided at Berwick-on-Tweed.In 1747, he returned to Scotland, and resided till his death at Whittingham, in East Lothian, where he employed himself in country affairs, and in his philosophic studies.In his latter years, he was much afflicted with gout and gravel.In January 29, 1750, he wrote to (the afterwards notorious)John Wilkes, with whom he bad formed a friendship in Holland, " I am a trouble to all about me, especially my poor wife, who has the life of a slave night and day in helping to take care of a diseased carcass." He had long, be states, considered the advantages of a separate state, but "I shall soon know more than all men I leave behind me." He died April 13, 1750, and was buried in the family vault of Mr.Hay at Whittingham.

He wrote a book in two volumes entitled " Matho," being a compend of the universal scientific knowledge of the day.

He published his principal work, " An Inquiry into the Nature of the Human Soul," in 1733, and it reached a second edition in 1737.In 1750, shortly after his death, was published, "An Appendix to his Inquiry into the Nature of the Human Soul." He had taken a great body of manuscripts with him to Holland; in the letter referred to, he speaks fondly of his unfinished manuscripts, in which he had discussed " a great many miscellaneous subjects in philosophy of a very serious nature, few of them ever considered before, as I know of" In 1779, the Rev.Dr.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 花羡人间:幻舞月隐剑

    花羡人间:幻舞月隐剑

    舞霓裳从来不信爱情,那天大师兄说,“霓裳,等杀了轩辕沂水,铲除不安份子之后,我们就成婚吧。”她想都没想说,“如果那时我还活着,我就嫁给你。”只因那是师命?她一直以为一辈子就这样了,可当真相慢慢的浮出水面,仇人不再是仇人的时候,她又该何去何从。天之涯崖顶她又想起了那个白衣少年,吹着琴哨,可他始终没有在出现了
  • 天师也疯狂

    天师也疯狂

    穿越到一个光怪陆离的巅峰道术世界,宗门万千,百家争鸣,妖魔鬼怪,旁门左道屡见不鲜。然大道三千,我自行我道,仗剑高歌,走出一条独一无二逆天道。“什么?魔道圣术身外化身?看我道门最强道术一气化三清!”“什么?旁门的第二元婴?看我道门至高象征三花聚顶!”想看道术繁衍至巅峰的情景吗?请看“天师也疯狂”________________________漫漫修道路,坎坷无尽阻,各位道友可否收藏本书,与我一起走?(通天之路:59802635)
  • 女主掉线了八年

    女主掉线了八年

    十年前,俞知乐是大余子涣八岁。十年后,在余子涣的人生中消失了八年的俞知乐依然是二十二岁。时间开的小玩笑,女主颜控痴汉傻白甜,男主美貌忠犬。
  • 神恨修罗

    神恨修罗

    人们挖掘信仰的瞬间,神魔仙佛就注定会被创造。次元出现的瞬间,种族就必将划分等级高贵贫贱。可是,被人类创造的神魔仙佛居然身居云端,手握紫玉杯,如同观看小丑的表演般,俯视众生。不服!不甘心!去吧!完成修罗王的遗愿,去为人类开创一个崭新的未来!“要去掠夺神明的一切吗?功法,血脉,天赋,答应我这一切,只手可得!”当大名鼎鼎的第三代英雄阴笑着对着年幼的龙帝枭这样说着的时候。集合世界两大最强传承的怪物出现了!九个次元,划分世界,无上传承,修真修仙修神,遥遥仙路,永无止境。我!将神明扯下王座!
  • 花开来年,已不为我

    花开来年,已不为我

    青春总是一段可歌可泣的回忆,或许平淡无味,但是带着自己的悲伤和喜爱,或许喜欢的是她回眸一笑,或许喜欢的是他阳光帅气,那段从记忆里抹不去的回忆,现在翻出来只能笑笑而已
  • 雪月界

    雪月界

    这是一个五族共存的世界,这是一个四处充满着危机的世界。姜天魂,一介凡人,在各方阴谋的推动之下得知自身身世之谜,并带领五族历经千难万阻战胜灭世危机,成为五族共尊。PS:感谢起点论坛封面组提供的封面!
  • 将军的下堂哑妻

    将军的下堂哑妻

    她穿越成了待产的小妾,被人陷害毒哑,卖给了一个带着三个孩子的骡夫!他空有一身功夫,却被家人所累,背着克妻的名声艰苦度日,为了不让母亲再受苦,他买下了她。谁知,这个外表柔弱的哑女,既然是一个蕙质兰心的女子,她有无穷的新奇点子,她有着惊人的才华,她有着大丈夫一般的宽阔胸怀。情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 奇秒之缘

    奇秒之缘

    本小说也是来自游戏中的真实故事经历改编。生活本身就如此精彩,幸福与否只在我们心中。人生并没有绝对的痛苦与幸福,有的只是一种状态与另一种状态的对比。且看主人公在这一片奇幻世界中的奇遇,在修行路上的种种艰难与幸福、生死抉择、爱情纠葛,在真实与虚幻之间探寻人生的真谛!
  • 流氓小神仙

    流氓小神仙

    一个人界的热血少年,在踏入仙界后却在神仙的授意下变成一个流氓……他究竟会演变成什么样子呢?
  • 遇见潜意识的自己:直觉修炼课

    遇见潜意识的自己:直觉修炼课

    本书从人的潜意识出发,指出每个人的心灵是一个“聚能点”,主动和自己的心灵交流,感知体内的潜能,不断地以明示和暗示的方法遇见潜意识的自己,正视过去,接纳不同的新观点,摒弃旧思想,创造新的生活模式,用全新的思维思考身边的人和事,迈上成功之路。