TOE SUNDAY Oil EG ONI AX, PORTLAND, MARCH 2G, 1016. SCIENTIFIC THEORIES AND RELIGIOUS BELIEF LINKED Rev. William G. Eliot Declares That Life Has Practically Only Two Goals, Maternity Hospital and Cemetery Perplexity Blamed to Confused Ideas. i - BY WILUAU O. ELIOT, JR., Pastor of the Church of Our Father1. '. Text: When T consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man. that thou art mindful of him? And the son of man. that thou visltest him? For thou hast made him but little lower than the angels, and crownest him with Klory and honor. Psalm vlli:3. WHAT we think about human nature will Influence our char acter and conduct. Much of our present-day perplexity concerning both personal and social problems is due to confused ideas of what we human be ings really are. me p confusion arises out of the conflict be- t tween two ways of thin kins, two in terpretations of the facts as known. 5 The first of these ,. two tendencies' claims to be more f ' scientific and tOi t Record better with S 3 scientific d i s c o v eries. The second Is rather the classic or established view. I will attempt to describe these two views in rough out line and, if possible. Rev. W. G. Eliot. Jr. to clear the confusion. I. According to the exclusively sci entific way of thinking, man is a very small part of a very vast universe. He is an inhabitant of the planet .t.artn. The nearest fixed star is distant about 7000 times the distance light could travel in a year of 31,000,000 seconds at the rate of 186 miles per second. According to this way of thinking. therefore, man is a very small part of a very vast universe! But. furthermore, the time that has thus far elapsed in the history of the universe presents a fact that is Just as stupendous and staggering. Suffice it only to mention that quite apart from the history of the universe at large, and quite aside from the his tory of this planet before the appear ance of man," man, by discovered rec ords, is known to have been an inhab itant of the earth for over 300,000 years. The known story of his oV ganization, ideas and progress, his his tory in the ordinary sense, is not much more than 6000 years; and the average life on earth of a single individual is easily included in a single century. Population Is Vast. At the present time there are more than 1,500,000.000 people on the planet. One person is a very small portion of this great number, but a yet smaller portion of the total number of Human beings that have inhabited the earth during the past 300.000 years. Thus an individual man is a very email part of a very great universe; occupies a very small portion of all time; is one of a very great number of creatures like himself. But if to complete our view we turn to a closer examination of man's physi cal constitution, the human body, we shall discover facts that are quite as amazing! The human body is a system of cells. They are so arranged as to make up the different parts and organs of the body. But those which form bone, muscle, arteries, glands, etc., are very different from those which make up the nervous system. These are. some of them, a yard or more in length, and there are by estimate about 9,000,000, 000 in or terminating in the cerebral cortex, a little patch of brain at the back of the head. Vitality I. Ie In Tissues. Cell-tissue is breaking down all the time and has to be replaced by new cell tissue; hence the digestive and nutritive systems. These and other systems must be kept in position and in connection with each other; hence the supporting tissues. The motor sys tems are for the requirements of mo tion and locomotion, and so on. With man, as with other animals, in the face of the universal fact of physical de cease, the race is perpetuated by sexual reproduction, and the individual is sao riticed or wasted that the race may per sist. And these sex functions are again carried forward by the action of living cells, the essential parts of which are known as chromosomes. One other fact discovered concern ing the human body remains to be men tioned, and then we shall have touched the present bounds of our knowledge, namely, the several glandular systems and especially those glands like the thyroid, which appear to supply cer tain mysterious fluids whose existence and proper quality and quantity affect the life of the individual profoundly. It would seem, then, from the ordi nary scientific point of view and way of thinking, that any further real knowledge about man's nature would be found by further penetration into the neurones, or nerve cells, centering in the cerebral cortex; into the chro mosomes, essential and determinative in reproduction; and into the hormones, or fluids just mentioned. Analysis of Body Made. And especially does the scientific man take hope of further discoveries and solutions, and especially does he pin his faith in further knowledge exclu sively to this way of thinking because the observable actions of the cells and fluids of the body appear to be essen tially physical or chemical that i3 to say, in the last analysis, mechanical, and thus to conform to the laws of the vast universe of which that human body is so small a fraction. The philosopher's long dream of unity is the scientist's goal, and to the scientist with these facts about man's nature now discovered the goal seems almost in sight. For, to go one step further, it seems to many scientists practically proven that there is no separateness whatever between the self and the body, that cerebral cortex and personality are one and the same and their origin and destiny identical. II. Such at any rate is the conclusion reached by many scientific thinkers; and it is the view which I would con trast with the established or classic view, which is: That-the body and soul are essentially separable; that they are not measured by the same sort of units of measurement; that the con nection between is not permanent, but temporary; that the connection is for purposes of existence in the world of space and time and not therefore either absolute or final; and that, above all. the body and the soul are not identical. Theories Are Separated. And as we turn now to this second way of thinking it is necessary to dis tinguish between the facts discovered concerning our bodies and the infer ences to be drawn from them. What ever may be our' prejudices, we shall err if we are disposed to deny any single demonstrable fact upon any ex cuse whatsoever. We may, however, and as I believe, should doubt if the facts discovered are the only kind of facts to be considered; we may rightly question the adequacy of methods that confine themselves to wUat is visible, tangible and accurately meas urable, and we may properly investi gate those inferences that follow from the exclusively scientific method and point of approach. Back of anything that can be observed in outward evi dence is the conscious side of memory, thought, feeling, will. When you add the sense of moral, affectional, spirit ual values; when you add to these the miracle of creative impulse, with the power to project ideals, and to this, creative imagination whereby the future is invaded and made, you have a group of facts that would seem to justify the conclusion that the human life and experience is something more than a cerebral cortex, which a can nibal could fry and eat for his break fast. Naive Arguments Cited. Are not many of the arguments for identifying the soul and the body al most as naive as arguments might be which attempted to identify telegraph wire and ticker with the message and its sender? Moreover, I know of no scientist who would say that any definite piece or portion of the cerebral cortex is a thought, or a feeling, or a memory, or a hope. But does it not seem anoma lous to contend that that which could not be a thought could forsooth be the thinker? That the cerebral cortex Is quite as truly the instrument by means of which we forget is quite as true, with Bergson, as that it is the instrument with which we remember! Again, even if we grant that our bodies and nervous systems are the BROTHER OF MEMBER OF HOUSE IS INVOLVED Dr. J. Van Pelt Oglesby Said to Have Used Income From Property Belong ing to Insane Wife. , - t i V 4 if ill mm I p ' " WJd. 0g2eshy. A LIVELY family controversy which has got into the courts involves a brother of W. R. Oglesby, Representative in Congress from New York. He married a mem ber of an Oglesby family in Georgia no blood relation of the New York Oglesby. Dr. J. Van Pelt Oglesby mar ried another of the Georgia family. Sometime ago Mrs. (Dr.) Oglesby was sent to the State Hospital for the Insanse, a charitable institution, while her husband drew the income from her property, amounting to more than $60,000. The Georgia family are try ing to have Mrs. Oglesby's property taken from the husband on the ground that she was insane when she made certain transfer to him. necessary Instruments for life in this world and especially that the nervous system is requisite and necessary for receiving and conveying ordinary communications, still is nothing to be gained by looking into the lim itations of our bodily and nervous capacity? Do we not by reflection perceive in our affectional and moral consciousness that which would be too big for such limited possibilities of intercommunication as we have, and which could be fully satisfied only by what goes beyond all such instru ments entirely? The window is the means whereby we see out doors and whereby out door light shines in. But is the window anything more than an aperture in a wall that shuts out more than the aperture reveals? ' Test for Scientists Given. Let scientists who confine, their thinking exclusively to the methods of natural science turn for a moment from the study of the apertures and attempt to realize what the wall shuts out. Let such scientists turn -from what they can see with the micro scope in the light of the sun to what they may see by the mind's eye in that consciousness which receives the report of the 'microscope and judges it in the light of reason. Does any one suppose that for normal beings an existence would be impossible that would be as much more highly equipped than we are now, as we are more highly equipped than Helen Kel ler? And is there any conceivable limit to the benefits of enlarging the windows, if we could, until there were no walls at all? Do the apertures measure the light? Do the senses measure the soul's capacity? Is the brain a soul's limit? Is it not rather the soul's limitation? Or again, if the microscope could see and think and answer man's searching eyes, I think it would see back through eye and optic nerve and cerebral cortex and discern an eye capable of ten times more vision if the microscope were ten times more powerful; of ten times more capacity if the optic nerve were not limited to certain colors of the spectrum; of ten time nay of 10,000 times, more ca pacity for the practising of everything deep within the soul of knowledge, pity, love, duty. if the instrument, the cerebral cortex, were not, with all its marvels and intricacies after all the poor limited thing it is. Moreover, what has the exclusively scientific way of thinking to say to human sorrow, or to the pathetic but sometimes helpless pain of a parent for an erring child? We have the scientific way of thinking itself to thank for the certainty that no least motion in all the universe is really Inconsequential or ends in nothing. And, if so, it would seem that all af fectionate longings (if by any stretch of "imagination we can call these mo tions at all) and all sorrow for loss and all grief over the sin and weak ness of loved ones must have conse quences, logical consequences, morally consistent consequences, consequences in kind, somewhere or somehow! By all these considerations, partial hints they are, we seem to come to a sense of something deeper in our hu man nature than is likely ever to be fully discovered, if discovered at all, by any amount of physical dissection, experiment and analysis. All that any knife or metrotome can ever expose is a fresh surface, a fresh face of things, to the edge of the blade, as it were, creating a new surface in front of itself wherever it moves. All that chemistry can do is to take apart and put together things and rearrange forces moving in space and time. The thinker's thought must penetrate into something else than things. The think er's thought must penetrate Into thought itself. Whatever, then, has been or ever will be discovered concerning the minute intricacies of physical processes, however far these facts may be analyzed into chemical reactions of carbohydrates and electrons and what not, it would seem to me that thought and thinker are still unreached, and still impossible of interpretation by means of anything smaller and less val uable than themselves. Give me triumphantly the final finding of the physical laboratory, I would still turn to the laboratory of human values, to human history. I confront the mteroscopist and the chemist with Homer, Eschylus, Sophocles, Euripides; with Socrates, Plato, Aristotle. I con front the scientific thinker with I-,a Marcke, Darwin. Mendel, De Vries, Weismann and a host of other brave and original thinkers I confront the scientist with himself. I confront him with personalities; with Jesus, Paul, St. Francis, Abraham Lincoln with his own friends, parents, children, in earth or in heaven. I confront him with miracles of moral conversion and courage for conscience sake; with i WOMAN AT 85 SEES FIRST DONKEY ENGINE IN OP- t ERATION. ' t t " It I - K . ,1 t wonders of poetic Insight and visions of supernal beauty; .with heavenly song and haunting strains that strings and reeds and tubes can only partly utter. There is an inherent fallacy In val uing man by the fraction which his body is of the vast universe and by the fraction which his lifetime on earth is of all past time; for space, however big, and time, however long, cannot consider me, and I can con sider them! Let me, in conclusion, make myself clear. I am not reproaching science or scientific methods or the facts got by these methods. I am differing only with the assumption that such methods are adequate to our problem and with such appraisal of our human nature as does not go beyond the tangible material facts. I deny none of the scientist's facts; I profoundly doubt interpretations that stop with those facts. I find no hope in identifying the soul and the body no significance in human experience, no significance in social progress; I see no adequate meaning in personal or social life un less I am permitted to see with my mind the things of the mind as well as with my eye the things of the eye, and to i-eport what I see in a world which, in its values and possibilities, goes beyond the motions of force in space and clock-time goes beyond, and validates our affections and moral strivings and vindicates our sorrows and heroisms. I see a line of cleav age running through all our confusions in political, educational and religious theory, depending upon the view men take of human nature. The most crit ical and vital issues before the world today are wrapped up in this funda mental issue. Upon its decision the course of future history turns. Wa are the victims of the things of space and time, at once prisoners and prison in a three-dimension universe and ths two goals of life are the maternity hos pital and the cemetery; or else eternity is our true home and we know or may know a transcendent order whereby we poetize the temporal, sacramentalize the literal and live lives increasingly capable of education, service and blessedness live lives increasingly re deemed from the surface of things into the invisible and immortal realities of heaven. MOTHER GETS VERDICT Mrs. Sarah Nowell. COTTAGE GROVE, Or.. March 25. (Special.) Although she lives within half a mile from a lumber camp. Mrs. Sarah Nowell. of London, the mother of 12 chil dren, had never seen a donkey engine at work in the woods until she was 85 years of age. Re- cently, with her two daughters, she made a trip to the camp and watched the engine in operation. At 85 she is still in possession of her faculties and has quite a local reputation as a seamstress. She has never had occasion to wear glasses. Since her hus band's death, in 1900, she has made her home with her daugh ters, Mrs. M. H. Brasher and Mrs. E. R. Thordenberg, of London. Others of her children living are Frank C. Nowell, Los Angeles; Howard W. Nowell, San Fran cisco, and Willis E. Nowell, Cot tage Grove. Woman Twice Mother of Triplets Gets $5000 From Hospital. NEW YORK. March 20. Mrs. Kath rine Horan, twice mother of triplets, won a verdict of $5000 yesterday in damage action brought before Justice Hotchkiss and a jury in the Supreme Court because of the death of her hus band, Michael Horan. He had been taken to Bellevue Hospital and placed in the alcoholic ward after falling from a truck which he had been driv ing on the pier at Thirtieth street and the Hudson River. An hour after he had been placed under treatment for drunkenness he died of a fractured skull. Albert H. Hastorf, owner of the pier, was defendant in the action, on the ground that one of the wheels of the truck had fallen through a fissure of the pier, throwing Horan from his seat. Several internes of Bellevue testified that Horan appeared to have been drinking heavily, but admitted on cross examination that the cold weather of January, 1914, might have been respon sible for the flushed face of the truck man. Only two of Mrs. Horan's child ren are now living. FIRST HALF OF FLORAL ALPHABET FOR BRIDE'S LINEjNT SHOWN iv5 '44 sar-Q rw (JJloQr 80 many requests oontlnua to oome In for this floral alphabet that an other one Is printed, different In design from the one vrs published .before, but fully as attractive. Those initials are essentially suitable for delieate markinK of all house hold linens and lingerie. A satin stitch or a combination of satin, outline, and buttonhole give exoellent results. Detail drawings show method of working. In using the printed design from the paper the directions are as .follows: If the material is sheer, the easiest way Is to lay It over the design, whloh will show through plainly, and draw over each line with a hard, sharp lead penoil. If your linen is heavy, buy a pleoe of Impression paper the kind that does not rub off lay it on your material, place the design over it, and trace with a hard penoil. Tou will find the design neatly transferred. OUT-J A , YE LET AMD BUTTOM-HOLf. jSTtCHES