EIGHT
THE
training of the logical reason must necessarily follow the training of the
faculties which collect the material on which the logical reason must work. Not
only so but the mind must have some development of the faculty of
dealing with words before it can deal successfully with ideas. The question is,
once this preliminary work is done, what is the best way of teaching the boy to
think correctly from premises. For the logical reason cannot proceed without
premises. It either infers from facts to a conclusion, or from previously formed
conclusions to a fresh one, or from one fact to another. It either induces,
deduces or simply infers. I see the sunrise day after day, I conclude or induce
that it rises as a law daily after a varying interval of darkness. I have
already ascertained that wherever there is smoke, there is fire. I have induced
that general rule from an observation of facts. I deduce that in a particular
case of smoke there is a fire behind. I infer that a man must have lit it from
the improbability of any other cause under the particular circumstances. I
cannot deduce it because fire is not always created by human kindling; it may be
volcanic or caused by a stroke of lightning or the sparks from some kind of
friction in the neighbourhood. Page-226
No fact is supposed to be mare perfectly established than the universality of
the Law of Gravitation as an imperative rule, yet a single new fact
inconsistent with it would upset this sup- posed universality. And such facts
exist. Nevertheless by care and keenness the fallibility may be reduced to its
minimum. Page-227 |