Friday, January 8, 2010 — In response to the general tenor of the times, and in homage to our predecessor, we re-publish a piece from our paper of October 21, 1757. In it, Daniel Fowle asks the question (we paraphrase) “Why are those who know the least, the most confident of their knowledge and wisdom?” We’re proud to say the conclusion he reaches anticipates that of scientists David Dunning and Justin Kruger by 242 years. We’re discomforted more-or-less dumbfounded to note that it also anticipated the philosopher Bertrand Russell by 175 years.
Philosophical Reasons, why the most Ignorant MEN are generally most conceited.
The vanity of the human heart is the most incurable of all moral distempers. The reason is, because every man must be his own physician, and self tenderness will not permit the use of CAUSTICS, which are as necessary to the cure of such deep rooted ulcers of the mind, as of the body: In both cases much pain must be endured: but that of the mind is most intense, because of its greater sensibility. Besides, self examination is a nauseous draught, that the squeamish stomach of self conceit will not digest; and yet it is the only preparative which can purge off the ill humours of the soul, and qualify it for the reception of healing applications; or, to change the allusion, self conceit is the dropsy* of the mind, generated by ignorance, and bloated by laziness. After the purgation before hinted, nothing can cure it radically, but constant exercise in the MINES of knowledge, which, like the most precious ore, lies deepest in the recesses of nature.
Moreover, self complaisance is delighted with the contemplation of our real or imaginary perfections, rather than to search for blemishes; and, as it is more apt to turn the magnifying lens to others faults; so, it views our own, with the other end of the perspective, which diminishes, and sets them at a vast distance. Yet it must be confessed, that self complaisannce is a natural instinct. It is the gift of God, bestowed upon man, to render his passage thro’ life, the more delectable: It is therefore like all our passions and affections, of admirable use, while under the guidance of right reason; but like other things of the most delicate nature, grows most nauseous by being corrupted. From that instinct however, men are better satisfied with their share of understanding, than with any other of the bounties of heaven; the reason is, because the short line of a little genius, cannot fathom the depths of more profound understandings; and therefore is not able to draw them into comparison: but the meanest capacity can compare the external gifts of nature, or fortune, (as mechanicks do their wares, by weight or measure) and determine the exact difference. Whence arise envyings, strife, and all the acts of malevolence which agitate a degenerate world.
To be humbly contented with those mental talents, which God has given us, is a self complaisance right, and good, but to fancy them incapable of improvemement by culture, is a gross error; and to over rate them without a comparison to those of other men, is a blunder in computation; a criminal vacuity, and the point now under consideration.
It is a common remark founded upon universal experience, and agreed by all men, that the most ignorant are generally most conceited. The fact is so notorious, that none of our moralists, so far as I can recollect, have thought it worth their pains to enquire into the causes of so common an absurdity: And yet perhaps such an enquiry, may conduce more to reform the conceited, than all the sarcasms of wit or satyr [satire]; or at least it may prove that the conceited deserve more of our pity; or less of that contempt and hatred, which is over paid to that sect of microscopic Philosophers, by the ill natured world.
But it is necessary to premise, that in all metaphysical subjects like this, we are forced to the use of figurative expressions, taken from the body, or its actions, in order to describe the faculties, or operations of the mind, for want of other words to convey our meaning. Thus strength is ascribed to the judgment, quickness to wit or perception, capaciousness to the memory, &c. Indeed it is the greater or less vigour of those faculties, that determines the different degrees of genius among Men; particularly with respect to the perceptive faculty of the mind; that being (if I may be allowed the expression) the predominant power of a bright genius; before which the map of nature lies open, as it were in one view, in its full extent, magnificence, and harmony. Thence perception draws a vast fund of ideas in their natural arrangements: and then judgment easily distinguishes all their relations, and can set a just estimate upon every thing in the way of comparison; from whence the greatest part of human knowledge results. Or to express my meaning more concisely; perception, or apprehension is the purveyor of all our ideas, and, after making the collection, disposes them in their natural arrangement, before the seat of judgment. That compares, classes, and deposits them in the store house of memory; from thence to draw them forth, as fit occasions require; and then applies them properly, to all the uses of life, whether sensative [] or moral. These conjunctive acts of a quick apprehension and judgment, we call properly good sense, as a conformity of action to their determinations is prudence, or morality.
The weakness therof of this perceptive faculty, is the primary cause of ignorance: for how can the judgment compare or estimate things, or actions, of which the mind has not any apprehension? As their perception is the eye of the understanding, whenever it is weak, dim, or short sighted, it is incapable of distinguishing any other objects, but such as are very near it; and those, being within the sphere of its short focus are magnified beyond their natural dimensions, as is the case of the purblind bodily eyes. Hence it is, that the mind which discerns only the few objects within its narrow sphere, must necessarily be ignorant of that immensity of things in the vast circuit of creation, which are beyond its reach. What is this, but an exact description of real ignorance? But then, as the purblind faculty of perception is framed, like the bodily eyes of that sort to magnify all ob [a missing line of text] on mountains, which is the cause of vanity.
But as contrarieties are best illustrated by each other, let us now consider the man of genius, whose perceptive faculty like the best organized eyes of [the] human body, discerns all objects distinctly, whether near or far off, in their natural colours, magnitudes, and arrangements. The mind thus fraught with innumerable ideas, has a large fund of the materials of knowledge; which is still capable of farther extension into the vast fields of science, by the help of the perspective glass of ANALOGY, in the hand of judgment. But after all the excursions of the brightest genius into the interminable expanse of knowledge, he will be convinced by the prospect, that the many regions he has travelled over, are but a span in comparison of what lie beyond them; and be as ready to utter this humbling confession, as the wise Socrates was, that all he knows is, that comparatively speaking, he knows nothing. These are the natural causes, why the most ignorant men are generally most conceited, and consequently, obstinate; as, on the contrary, the most knowing are the most humble, and therefore least positive.
* Dropsy — swelling of the soft tissues due to the accumulation of excess water.
Our thanks to the Portsmouth Athenæum, from whose original copy we derived this text.