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  • April 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1855: Page 20

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of animal n & ture . Whatever , then , is purely animal in its nature man must partake of , for man is an animal ,, and something more . But the brute partakes not of that which constitutes the exalted nature of man . It is not reason , however , in its popular sense , which ..

distinguishes man from the brute , although it is just possible ( as Dugald Stewart has suggested ) that the higher processes of ratiocination , such as abstract induction , or even the faculty of generalisation in its more subtle and recondite development , may be peculiar to man .

We shall now endeavour to trace the links of this ravelled chain , by observing the actions or movements of animate and inanimate matter , in a series commencing in the lowest order of being , the inorganic , and rising ' , to . the organized tribes of vegetables and animals , and , ultimately , up to man himself- We shall then $ ee where instinct begins in the series , and where it ends ; and next , we shall

Jearn what it is , and lor what purposes it was bestowed * Action , or motion , is the constant condition of all created matter . We know of nothing in the whole universe absolutely at rest . But the sources of motion are various . Inorganized matter , or that which has . no life , moves . Every atom of which this globe consists , every grain of sand , every drop of water , every particle of gas , is

spinning perpetually round the axis of the earth , as well as whirling incessantly round the sun . The sun himself , and all his fellow stars , are ever revolving round some distant centre , and this around others yet more distant . Here , then , is motion , perpetual motion , the source of which is a universal principle of attraction in all matter , called , when it acts on vast masses , the attraction of gravitation .

This motion is strictly mechanical , and is uninfluenced by the laws of chemistry , as well as by the laws of life . The discharge of a bullet or cannon ball , or of ignited gunpowder , the effervescence of sodawater or champagne , is another kind of motion , depending upon chemical attraction . Lightning , galvanic action , & c , originate in electric attraction or repulsion ; the movements of the magnetic

needle m the attraction of magnetism . All these are instances of spontaneous action in inorganic or dead matter . But living beings move or act in obedience to other laws—the laws of vital * attraction . The vital principle gives rise , first , to simply organic or involuntary actions ; secondly , to instinctive , actions ; thirdly , to rational actions . 1 . Involuntary actions . These are of the lowest and simplest order , and appear to be but one step removed from the changes in

inanimate matter , produced by chemical or electro-magnetic attraction or affinity . In fact , these actions are in part chemical , in part mechanical , and in part vital : for we find the influence of the living principle controlling , and directing , and modifying the agencies of

gravitation , chemistry , electricity , and magnetism . These actions are constantly going on in every portion of every structure endowed with life , from the most simple of vegetable forms to the complicated structure of the animal , and even the human mechanism . Some writers have confounded these with instinctive actions , but they have a very

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-04-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01041855/page/20/.
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Title Category Page
" WHAT IS MASONRY DOING FOR INTELLECTUAL PROGRESS?"* Article 1
BRO. SIB EDWABD FFRENCH BROMHEAD, BART. Article 72
BRO. JOHN WILLIAM GARTHSIDE. Article 72
BRO. LEWIS SWEETING. Article 72
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 17
METROPOLITAN. Article 42
BIOGRAPHIES OF CELEBRATED MASONS. Article 10
MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 13
CONTINENTAL FREEMASONRY. Article 22
SUPREME CONSEIL RIT ECOSSAIS Article 26
SONNET ON MARCH, 1855. Article 27
INTRODUCTORY LECTURE DELIVERED TO LODGE OF UNITY, WAREHAM, DORSET. Article 28
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 32
LIST OF NEW BOOKS Article 35
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 71
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 36
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 37
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 38
Obituary Article 72
PROVINCIAL. Article 44
SCOTLAND. Article 57
COLONIAL. Article 59
INDIA. Article 64
ON THE POLITICAL CONDITION OF THE ENGLISH PEASANTRY DURING THE MIDDLE AGES.* Article 5
CHINA. Article 66
METBOPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR THE MONTH OF APRIL. Article 68
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 70
THE R.W. BRO. WILLIAM TUCKER Article 72
MISS CREW. Article 73
MRS. GEORGE ROUTLEDGE. Article 73
NOTICE. Article 74
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 74
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

of animal n & ture . Whatever , then , is purely animal in its nature man must partake of , for man is an animal ,, and something more . But the brute partakes not of that which constitutes the exalted nature of man . It is not reason , however , in its popular sense , which ..

distinguishes man from the brute , although it is just possible ( as Dugald Stewart has suggested ) that the higher processes of ratiocination , such as abstract induction , or even the faculty of generalisation in its more subtle and recondite development , may be peculiar to man .

We shall now endeavour to trace the links of this ravelled chain , by observing the actions or movements of animate and inanimate matter , in a series commencing in the lowest order of being , the inorganic , and rising ' , to . the organized tribes of vegetables and animals , and , ultimately , up to man himself- We shall then $ ee where instinct begins in the series , and where it ends ; and next , we shall

Jearn what it is , and lor what purposes it was bestowed * Action , or motion , is the constant condition of all created matter . We know of nothing in the whole universe absolutely at rest . But the sources of motion are various . Inorganized matter , or that which has . no life , moves . Every atom of which this globe consists , every grain of sand , every drop of water , every particle of gas , is

spinning perpetually round the axis of the earth , as well as whirling incessantly round the sun . The sun himself , and all his fellow stars , are ever revolving round some distant centre , and this around others yet more distant . Here , then , is motion , perpetual motion , the source of which is a universal principle of attraction in all matter , called , when it acts on vast masses , the attraction of gravitation .

This motion is strictly mechanical , and is uninfluenced by the laws of chemistry , as well as by the laws of life . The discharge of a bullet or cannon ball , or of ignited gunpowder , the effervescence of sodawater or champagne , is another kind of motion , depending upon chemical attraction . Lightning , galvanic action , & c , originate in electric attraction or repulsion ; the movements of the magnetic

needle m the attraction of magnetism . All these are instances of spontaneous action in inorganic or dead matter . But living beings move or act in obedience to other laws—the laws of vital * attraction . The vital principle gives rise , first , to simply organic or involuntary actions ; secondly , to instinctive , actions ; thirdly , to rational actions . 1 . Involuntary actions . These are of the lowest and simplest order , and appear to be but one step removed from the changes in

inanimate matter , produced by chemical or electro-magnetic attraction or affinity . In fact , these actions are in part chemical , in part mechanical , and in part vital : for we find the influence of the living principle controlling , and directing , and modifying the agencies of

gravitation , chemistry , electricity , and magnetism . These actions are constantly going on in every portion of every structure endowed with life , from the most simple of vegetable forms to the complicated structure of the animal , and even the human mechanism . Some writers have confounded these with instinctive actions , but they have a very

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