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  • June 30, 1835
  • Page 23
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, June 30, 1835: Page 23

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    Article REMARKS ← Page 7 of 10 →
Page 23

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Remarks

UNDERSTANDING . ASPONTANIETY , or Active Faculty , which produces Fon . ii or UNITY , by connecting Time and Space according to The CATEGORIES of Quantity . Quality . Relation . Modality . Unity Reality Substance and Accident Possibility Multitude Negation Cause and Effect Existence Totality Limitation Action and Re-action Necessity .

REASON . A Sr-ONTA . N-iETY , free from Time and Space , which connects the Categories into the Ideas of Absolute Absolute Absolute Substance Absolute Totality Limitation Absolute Cause Necessity . Absolute Concurrence .

He who looks at this table for the first time , if he be at once uninformed and not desirous of knowledge , considers its author mad ; he whose head has been stored with the mixture of metaphysical and physical jumble , known by the names of phrenology , materialism , immaterialism , & c , fancies that these circles , triangles , & c , refer to some supposed shape or proportions of the constituents of the mind . We doubt

not that in time the hammer of our language might render the heads of both sufficientl y malleable to imbibe the fact , that nothing is intended by the diagram , except , through the means of a gross sensual typification , to render the whole of the scheme , which is in a transendental degree pure and mental , easy of comprehension by those who have too much accustomed themselves to sensual or empyrical reasonings . But we have no time to wait for these unpromising pupils , and therefore proceed to the instruction of those of freer powers , requesting them simply to

inspect the table , and after reading our exposition , return to the contemplation of it . The first steps taken by the understanding to acquire knowledge of any object are to determine its quantity , its quality , and its relations . Every thing , before it can be a clear object for the understanding to operate upon , must have its quantity determined . However simple it may be , or however indeterminate by any artificial or relative standard ,

it must possess these properties of number : —It must be one , or it would be a mere confusion ; it must be separable into many , for the mind can divide ad infinitum ; and its parts must he capable of combination , or of forming a whole . Hence every conception has in the language of the system , unity , multitude , and totality . If any one can present us with a conception which has not these conditions , we abandon the science . 2 dly . To a clear conceptionit is necessary that its qualities be three : it

, must be a reality , or the thing itself ; but it must be bounded by negations , that is , by that which is not itself but something different , and between them must exist lines of demarcation or limits . Hence we say every conception involves a reality , negation , and limitation . Of a reality , to which we conceive no limits , nothing further can be known . We can conceive such a thing to be , but can predicate nothing of it ; it never can form a subject of inquiry , since it must occupy all nature ,

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1835-06-30, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30061835/page/23/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE PRESENT ASPECT. Article 1
ON FREEMASONRY. Article 9
LIFE AND DEATH. Article 16
REMARKS Article 17
MY BIRTHDAY. Article 27
My Birthday. Article 28
THE DEFENCE OF SOCRATES. Article 29
CHARACTER OF ST. CLAIR OF ROSSLYN, Article 33
THE BURIAL OF BERTRAND DE BLANCHFORT. Article 34
NOTITIÆ TEMPLARIÆ, No. 4. Article 36
FREEMASONRY AMONG THE ANCIENTS. Article 42
A MEDITATION. Article 44
ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF MASONRY. Article 45
RUINA TEMPLI. Article 47
THE WIDOW OF NAPLES. Article 48
MASONIC ANECDOTE. Article 49
THE MYSTERIOUS MR. B. Article 50
THE GILKES TRIBUTE. Article 52
TO THE EDITOR. Article 53
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 55
ESPECIAL GRAND LODGE.—APRIL 29. Article 55
GRAND FESTIVAL OF THE ORDER. Article 57
THE GLEE ROOM. Article 60
SUPREME ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER. Article 70
THE ASYLUM FOR THE AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASON. Article 77
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 82
Masonic Obituary. Article 84
PROVINCIAL. Article 87
EDINBURGH. Article 102
IRELAND. Article 106
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 113
SCENES IN AMERICA. Article 115
REVIEW OF LITERATURE, DRAMA, &c. Article 122
THE DRAMA. Article 126
MISCELLANEOUS. Article 128
CONTENTS. Article 129
LE MIROIR DE LA SAGESSE.—Under this titl... Article 130
THE FREEMASON'S QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 131
Books. &;c.y for Review should be sent a... Article 132
FREEMASON'S QUARTERLYADVERTISER. Article 133
FREEMASON'S QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. Article 134
ASYLUM for THE AGED and DECAYED FREEMASO... Article 135
FREEMASONRY. G REID, returns bis sincere... Article 135
FREEMASONRY. T P. ACKLAM, MASONIC JEWEL ... Article 135
FREEMASONRY. JOHN CANHAM, SEX., DEALER e... Article 135
FREEMASONRY. SARAH GODFREY, (AVIDOAV OF ... Article 135
FREEMASONRY. BRO. M. POVEY, BOOKBINDER, ... Article 135
PLOUGH TAVERN, BLACKWALL Brother James B... Article 136
FREEMASONS SAUCE. Wm. BachhofFner, for m... Article 136
REMEDIES FOR BILE AND INDIGESTION. T)R. ... Article 136
. FREEMASONRY. BROTHER GEO. UNDERTON ** ... Article 136
BOOKS. ' |~\R. RAMADGE ON CONSUMP-*-* TI... Article 136
THE M I R R O R, the First - J-*- Establ... Article 136
Just published, A FAMILIAR TREATISE on S... Article 136
Mit. O'BRIEN'S PROTEST AGAINST MR. MOORE... Article 137
NEAVSPAPERS from every County are regula... Article 137
T^LASTIC PEN-HOLDER.—Patent -" -¦¦' Perr... Article 137
HOLBORN BARS. FAMILIES FURNISHING will d... Article 138
Nearly forty years established, for the ... Article 138
DESTRUCTIVE ANIMALCULiE,— During the sum... Article 138
C COVII-rrON, 10, Old Bailey, Lon-• don,... Article 138
¦ ra jrOODHOUSE'S yETHERIAL »» ESSENCE o... Article 139
T ALBERT,TAILOR & DRAPER, " • King AAlll... Article 139
Muc/nii est ventas et pnevalcbit. p ALL'... Article 139
SEIDLITZ POWDERS. To Travellers , Mercha... Article 140
SI GHT RESTORED, NERVOUS HEAD-ACHE CURED... Article 140
T NSTANTANEOUS RELI EF.-BICK--"- NELL an... Article 140
Untitled Ad 141
TWEEDS not WORDS, are the Maxims of the ... Article 142
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Page 23

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

Remarks

UNDERSTANDING . ASPONTANIETY , or Active Faculty , which produces Fon . ii or UNITY , by connecting Time and Space according to The CATEGORIES of Quantity . Quality . Relation . Modality . Unity Reality Substance and Accident Possibility Multitude Negation Cause and Effect Existence Totality Limitation Action and Re-action Necessity .

REASON . A Sr-ONTA . N-iETY , free from Time and Space , which connects the Categories into the Ideas of Absolute Absolute Absolute Substance Absolute Totality Limitation Absolute Cause Necessity . Absolute Concurrence .

He who looks at this table for the first time , if he be at once uninformed and not desirous of knowledge , considers its author mad ; he whose head has been stored with the mixture of metaphysical and physical jumble , known by the names of phrenology , materialism , immaterialism , & c , fancies that these circles , triangles , & c , refer to some supposed shape or proportions of the constituents of the mind . We doubt

not that in time the hammer of our language might render the heads of both sufficientl y malleable to imbibe the fact , that nothing is intended by the diagram , except , through the means of a gross sensual typification , to render the whole of the scheme , which is in a transendental degree pure and mental , easy of comprehension by those who have too much accustomed themselves to sensual or empyrical reasonings . But we have no time to wait for these unpromising pupils , and therefore proceed to the instruction of those of freer powers , requesting them simply to

inspect the table , and after reading our exposition , return to the contemplation of it . The first steps taken by the understanding to acquire knowledge of any object are to determine its quantity , its quality , and its relations . Every thing , before it can be a clear object for the understanding to operate upon , must have its quantity determined . However simple it may be , or however indeterminate by any artificial or relative standard ,

it must possess these properties of number : —It must be one , or it would be a mere confusion ; it must be separable into many , for the mind can divide ad infinitum ; and its parts must he capable of combination , or of forming a whole . Hence every conception has in the language of the system , unity , multitude , and totality . If any one can present us with a conception which has not these conditions , we abandon the science . 2 dly . To a clear conceptionit is necessary that its qualities be three : it

, must be a reality , or the thing itself ; but it must be bounded by negations , that is , by that which is not itself but something different , and between them must exist lines of demarcation or limits . Hence we say every conception involves a reality , negation , and limitation . Of a reality , to which we conceive no limits , nothing further can be known . We can conceive such a thing to be , but can predicate nothing of it ; it never can form a subject of inquiry , since it must occupy all nature ,

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