Logic Static and Life Kinetic
From ‘First and Last things’. H.G.Wells
“There is another infirmity of the mind to which my attention has been called
by an able paper read this spring to the Cambridge Moral Science Club by my
friend Miss Amber Reeves. In this she has developed a suggestion of Mr.
F.C.S. Schiller’s. The current syllogistic logic rests on the assumption that
either A is B or it is not B. The practical reality, she contends, is that nothing
is permanent; A is always becoming more or less B or ceasing to be more or
less B. But it would seem the human mind cannot manage with that. It has
to hold a thing still for a moment before it can think it. It arrests the present
moment for its struggle as Joshua stopped the sun. It cannot contemplate
things continuously, and so it has to resort to a series of static snapshots. It
has to kill motion in order to study it, as a naturalist kills and pins out a
butterfly in order to study life.
You see the mind is really pigeon-holed and discontinuous in two respects,
in respect to time and in respect to classification; whereas one has a strong
persuasion that the world of fact is unbounded or continuous.”