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  • Oct. 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1855: Page 1

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    Article PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 1

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Professional Authority.

PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY .

The opinions of mankind upon subjects which they do not , and cannot , understand , because they have not studied them , are framed on very curious grounds . The popular mind is pretty generally swayed by professional dicta . It is very reasonably conjectured that men who have devoted their lives to particular studies should understand them better than , others . Hence professional opinions are

respected , and sometimes bought and paid for at a fictitious price : but so unstable is the human mind , that the experience of ages is often set at nought , and even goes for nothing , when established opinions are besieged and stormed with sufficient arrogance and impudence . It is only necessary that an anonymous scribbler ( whose lucrubations by some accident have found a place in a periodical

which has been puffed into popularity ) should be sufficiently dogmatical , unscrupulous , and mendacious , —and thousands will be gulled into the belief that he is right . A writer in a recent number of The Times has had the modesty to assume that he ( the representative of the fourth estate ) understands the mysteries of every calling as well as , nay , better than , those whose attention has been professionally

engaged upon it during a large portion of the whole life . He knows better how to conduct a campaign or a siege than any commander-inchief ; he takes the lawyers by the shoulders and sets them right ; he understands divinity , physic , architecture , music , poetry , and politics , better than any divine , physician , architect , musician , doctor , or cabinet councillor ; and one can only regret that he is not at once

constituted Prime Minister , Metropolitan Archbishop , President of the College of Physicians , Lord Chancellor , Poet Laureate , —universal professor of all arts , sciences , and literature . True , this conceit , in its milder ratios , has found favour with great minds . We have some recollection of a paper in the " Rambler , " wherein Dr . Johnson undertakes to prove to demonstration , for the benefit of the then vol . i . 4 II

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-10-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101855/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
METROPOLITAN. Article 35
ROSE CROIX. Article 34
PROVINCIAL. Article 35
GERMANY. Article 60
Obituary. Article 61
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 34
CATHEDRAL CHURCHES. Article 14
MASONIC INSCRIPTION FOR A FOUNTAIN. Article 14
ON THE SCARABCEUS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 18
PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY. Article 1
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 23
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 32
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 30
IRELAND Article 58
COLONIAL. Article 59
AMERICA. Article 60
CORNWALL. Article 62
NOTICE. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Professional Authority.

PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY .

The opinions of mankind upon subjects which they do not , and cannot , understand , because they have not studied them , are framed on very curious grounds . The popular mind is pretty generally swayed by professional dicta . It is very reasonably conjectured that men who have devoted their lives to particular studies should understand them better than , others . Hence professional opinions are

respected , and sometimes bought and paid for at a fictitious price : but so unstable is the human mind , that the experience of ages is often set at nought , and even goes for nothing , when established opinions are besieged and stormed with sufficient arrogance and impudence . It is only necessary that an anonymous scribbler ( whose lucrubations by some accident have found a place in a periodical

which has been puffed into popularity ) should be sufficiently dogmatical , unscrupulous , and mendacious , —and thousands will be gulled into the belief that he is right . A writer in a recent number of The Times has had the modesty to assume that he ( the representative of the fourth estate ) understands the mysteries of every calling as well as , nay , better than , those whose attention has been professionally

engaged upon it during a large portion of the whole life . He knows better how to conduct a campaign or a siege than any commander-inchief ; he takes the lawyers by the shoulders and sets them right ; he understands divinity , physic , architecture , music , poetry , and politics , better than any divine , physician , architect , musician , doctor , or cabinet councillor ; and one can only regret that he is not at once

constituted Prime Minister , Metropolitan Archbishop , President of the College of Physicians , Lord Chancellor , Poet Laureate , —universal professor of all arts , sciences , and literature . True , this conceit , in its milder ratios , has found favour with great minds . We have some recollection of a paper in the " Rambler , " wherein Dr . Johnson undertakes to prove to demonstration , for the benefit of the then vol . i . 4 II

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