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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 14, 1870
  • Page 8
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 14, 1870: Page 8

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 8

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

both large intelligence and indomitable perseverance , were open to all men who sought them , and thus we find Moses , Pythagoras , and Plato initiates . We find secret societies among the Jews , the Greeks , the Romans , and the Egyptians , having secret means by which each member knew his brother , and devoted to

acts of charity and benevolence , as well as to the pursuit of knowledge . * * * * * These societies continued down to the Christian era , when they were gradually engulfed in the doctrines of the Cross , or became obnoxious to the Government from their decline in puritand consequent immoralit

y y . Their doctrines , so much in union with the doctrines of Christianity , caused many of the brotherhood to adopt the latter ; but they still continued their former pursuits , and still maintained their former secrecy . As with the ancients , so with these brethren , only men of intelli were admittedThere is a

gence . long gap in the annals of the secret societies till the rise of the building fraternities , and to them must be conceded the distinctive rituals of the first and second degrees . " —CHARLES PURTON COOPER .

MASTER ' S DEGREE ( pp . 206 , 308 , and 328 ) . Will Bro . Yarker say where lie " pointed out the distinction observed even in 1723 as to Master Masons and Chair Masters ? " I ask this , as I would like to see how he treated the subject at the time he refers to . Further , it was not Bro . Buehan who used the

words , " admitted Masters and Fellow Craft ; " but , as may easily be seen at page 308 , the " friend , " or correspondent there alluded to , who gives the quotation as it is in the 1723 Constitutions , where Fellow Craft is used both as singular and plural , e . q ., " a Fellow Craft" and "two Fellow Craft . " We have also the

word 'Fellows , " showing that the old Fellow of Craft was to bo turned into the degree of Fellow Craft as we now understand it , all being merely a part of the plot . Is to the Arch , Temple , Kadosh , & c ., said to have been in existence in 1722 , 1 am afraid that idea is either a mistake or ' an imposition . Bro . Tarker evidentl

y here refers to the assertion that a number of high degrees are mentioned in the 1722 Constitutions , but the said assertion is untrue j and I say so on the authority of Bro . Spencer , the owner of the book , having seen a letter of his upon the subject ; also upon the authority of Bro . Hughan , who personallexamined the woilc

y -. There may have been a reprint of this work made , say seventy years after 1722 , with additions , in which the publisher may have put in any nonsense he liked , hut in the original 1722 work I understand that no mention is made of Arch , TempleKadosh & eor svch thine / and I do not

, , ., any . , conceive how it could he . I have found no evidence ofthe existence of the Master Mason degree before 1717—fur less , then , any of the extra degrees . —W . P . BUCHAN .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

T / ie mtitor is not responsible for the opinions expressed by CorretponAenh ARISTOTLE'S PHILOSOPHY .

io Tin ; IDIIOB or Tin : iiirajusoxs' MAGAZINE AXB MASOKIC amnion . Dear Sir and Brother , —I beg to enclose the following remarks of Professor Blackie on Aristotle . There are some interesting ideas contained in his remarks

about morality and religion which are worth thinking over , and which may be useful to refer to again . Tours fraternally , W . P . BUCHAN . " Professor Blackie , of Edinburgh , delivered the

second of his series of lectures on the principles of moral philosophy at the Royal Institution on Wednesday , the 4 th inst . The first lecture was devoted to a consideration of the moral philosophy of Socrates . _ On this occasion the Professor took up the moral writings of Aristotlecontrasting the twoand showing the

, , points of difference and agreement . Mr . Blackie said they need not expect anything startling or new in the moral philosophy of Aristotle . Novelties in morals were always dangerous . Aristotle , Socrates , and Plato viewed the subject in different aspects , but the foundation of their system was essentially the same . He

then pointed out the significance of Aristotle in the history of the Greek mind , and explained at some length his doctrine of ultimate aims and of the mean or middle course , illustrating the doctrine in the case of special virtues . Morals , he said , were simply common sense , and nothing more . Virtue was essentially

manly ; and , differing in this from Hobbes , Aristotle contended that the principles of morality were inherent in man . Moral nature , however , was a moral habit , and everything depended upon education . Human beings would not grow like weeds in a garden , and that was the reason why Aristotle and Plato gave

so much prominence to education . As to the doctrine ofthe ' mean , ' he said there was much need for its careful study in these days . In order to get a good government , we should neither have oligarchy nor democracy , but a medium between the two . Democracy ought to adopt a certain amount of monarchy and

oligarchy , and in return monarchy should adopt a certain amount of democracy to preserve a just balance , without which both would be ruined . In conclusion , Mr . Blackie remarked that the sustaining power in the philosophy of Aristotle was the ambition to be a man—not onlto live wellbut to live nobly . It would

y , not make a man a missionary . It was not an aggressive power like Christianity , but was meant to keep a man from sinking into the mire , and to teach him to die rather than do a base action or think a base thought . It might be expressed in the words of Burns : —

'" Ihe fear o hell's a hangman ' s whip , To hand the wretch to order ; But where you feel your honour grip , Let that aye he your horder !' The great defect ofthe philosophy and ethics of Aristotle was the exclusion of the religious element . According to himknowledge was the most perfect kind

, of happiness . He acknowledges God as the First Cause , but he denies that the gods have anything to do in sustaining the world . It was in his ( Mr . Blackie ' s ) opinion childish to say God was the first cause , and yet that the gods had nothing to do except work out mathematical problems like German

hilop sophers or Oxford professors . God truly seemed to have confounded the wise men of the world . Aristotle ' s mind was defective ; he was a purely scientific monster without religious feeling . Modern philosophers like Newton , Bacon , and Locke were religious men ; and if in our day any person contemplated di-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-05-14, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14051870/page/8/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE M.W.G.M. Article 1
THE HAUGHFOOT LODGE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
THE SCIENCE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 3
MASONIC PROCESSIONS. Article 4
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 19 Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 11
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION. Article 19
ROYAL ARCH. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS FOR THE WEEK. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 21ST MAY, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

both large intelligence and indomitable perseverance , were open to all men who sought them , and thus we find Moses , Pythagoras , and Plato initiates . We find secret societies among the Jews , the Greeks , the Romans , and the Egyptians , having secret means by which each member knew his brother , and devoted to

acts of charity and benevolence , as well as to the pursuit of knowledge . * * * * * These societies continued down to the Christian era , when they were gradually engulfed in the doctrines of the Cross , or became obnoxious to the Government from their decline in puritand consequent immoralit

y y . Their doctrines , so much in union with the doctrines of Christianity , caused many of the brotherhood to adopt the latter ; but they still continued their former pursuits , and still maintained their former secrecy . As with the ancients , so with these brethren , only men of intelli were admittedThere is a

gence . long gap in the annals of the secret societies till the rise of the building fraternities , and to them must be conceded the distinctive rituals of the first and second degrees . " —CHARLES PURTON COOPER .

MASTER ' S DEGREE ( pp . 206 , 308 , and 328 ) . Will Bro . Yarker say where lie " pointed out the distinction observed even in 1723 as to Master Masons and Chair Masters ? " I ask this , as I would like to see how he treated the subject at the time he refers to . Further , it was not Bro . Buehan who used the

words , " admitted Masters and Fellow Craft ; " but , as may easily be seen at page 308 , the " friend , " or correspondent there alluded to , who gives the quotation as it is in the 1723 Constitutions , where Fellow Craft is used both as singular and plural , e . q ., " a Fellow Craft" and "two Fellow Craft . " We have also the

word 'Fellows , " showing that the old Fellow of Craft was to bo turned into the degree of Fellow Craft as we now understand it , all being merely a part of the plot . Is to the Arch , Temple , Kadosh , & c ., said to have been in existence in 1722 , 1 am afraid that idea is either a mistake or ' an imposition . Bro . Tarker evidentl

y here refers to the assertion that a number of high degrees are mentioned in the 1722 Constitutions , but the said assertion is untrue j and I say so on the authority of Bro . Spencer , the owner of the book , having seen a letter of his upon the subject ; also upon the authority of Bro . Hughan , who personallexamined the woilc

y -. There may have been a reprint of this work made , say seventy years after 1722 , with additions , in which the publisher may have put in any nonsense he liked , hut in the original 1722 work I understand that no mention is made of Arch , TempleKadosh & eor svch thine / and I do not

, , ., any . , conceive how it could he . I have found no evidence ofthe existence of the Master Mason degree before 1717—fur less , then , any of the extra degrees . —W . P . BUCHAN .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

T / ie mtitor is not responsible for the opinions expressed by CorretponAenh ARISTOTLE'S PHILOSOPHY .

io Tin ; IDIIOB or Tin : iiirajusoxs' MAGAZINE AXB MASOKIC amnion . Dear Sir and Brother , —I beg to enclose the following remarks of Professor Blackie on Aristotle . There are some interesting ideas contained in his remarks

about morality and religion which are worth thinking over , and which may be useful to refer to again . Tours fraternally , W . P . BUCHAN . " Professor Blackie , of Edinburgh , delivered the

second of his series of lectures on the principles of moral philosophy at the Royal Institution on Wednesday , the 4 th inst . The first lecture was devoted to a consideration of the moral philosophy of Socrates . _ On this occasion the Professor took up the moral writings of Aristotlecontrasting the twoand showing the

, , points of difference and agreement . Mr . Blackie said they need not expect anything startling or new in the moral philosophy of Aristotle . Novelties in morals were always dangerous . Aristotle , Socrates , and Plato viewed the subject in different aspects , but the foundation of their system was essentially the same . He

then pointed out the significance of Aristotle in the history of the Greek mind , and explained at some length his doctrine of ultimate aims and of the mean or middle course , illustrating the doctrine in the case of special virtues . Morals , he said , were simply common sense , and nothing more . Virtue was essentially

manly ; and , differing in this from Hobbes , Aristotle contended that the principles of morality were inherent in man . Moral nature , however , was a moral habit , and everything depended upon education . Human beings would not grow like weeds in a garden , and that was the reason why Aristotle and Plato gave

so much prominence to education . As to the doctrine ofthe ' mean , ' he said there was much need for its careful study in these days . In order to get a good government , we should neither have oligarchy nor democracy , but a medium between the two . Democracy ought to adopt a certain amount of monarchy and

oligarchy , and in return monarchy should adopt a certain amount of democracy to preserve a just balance , without which both would be ruined . In conclusion , Mr . Blackie remarked that the sustaining power in the philosophy of Aristotle was the ambition to be a man—not onlto live wellbut to live nobly . It would

y , not make a man a missionary . It was not an aggressive power like Christianity , but was meant to keep a man from sinking into the mire , and to teach him to die rather than do a base action or think a base thought . It might be expressed in the words of Burns : —

'" Ihe fear o hell's a hangman ' s whip , To hand the wretch to order ; But where you feel your honour grip , Let that aye he your horder !' The great defect ofthe philosophy and ethics of Aristotle was the exclusion of the religious element . According to himknowledge was the most perfect kind

, of happiness . He acknowledges God as the First Cause , but he denies that the gods have anything to do in sustaining the world . It was in his ( Mr . Blackie ' s ) opinion childish to say God was the first cause , and yet that the gods had nothing to do except work out mathematical problems like German

hilop sophers or Oxford professors . God truly seemed to have confounded the wise men of the world . Aristotle ' s mind was defective ; he was a purely scientific monster without religious feeling . Modern philosophers like Newton , Bacon , and Locke were religious men ; and if in our day any person contemplated di-

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