(B)
-第 6 講一
でし
It is evident that, until doubt begins, progress is impossible. For the advance of
V
F#
on
perfectly
civilization) solely depends on the acquisitions (made by the human intellect, and
the extent (to which those acquisitions are diffused. But men who are
satisfied with their own knowledge will never attempt to increase it.
S
(2)]
Men who are
5 perfectly convinced of the accuracy of their opinions will never bother to examine the
basis on which they are built. They look always with wonder, and often with horror,
0
on views (contrary to those which they inherited (from their fathers, and while they
Views
are in this state of mind it is impossible that they should receive any new truth
which interferes with their own conclusions.