Shakespeare Explained
Posted: April 13th, 2006, 9:29 pm
Shakespeare Explained
September 1997
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy,
--Hamlet, Act I, v, 166-7
"Your philosophy" (where "your" does not refer to Horatio personally, but is used as an impersonal pronoun) is, in this case, what we would now call "science." (The word "science" did not come to be used in its modern sense till the nineteenth century.)
These two lines have been used for three and a half centuries to beat down what has been conceived to be scientific dogmatism and have usually been so used by mystics of one sort or another.
Nevertheless, scientists are perfectly aware of the truth of these lines--without it there would, in fact, be no need for scientific research--and search humbly for just those things that might as yet be undreamed of. It is the mystics who, for their part, do not search but think they "know"--by revelation, intuition, or other non-rational fashion--and it is they who are usually the arrogant ones.
-- Guide to Shakespeare
Isaac Asimov
http://www.humanistsofutah.org/1997/sha ... ained.html
September 1997
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy,
--Hamlet, Act I, v, 166-7
"Your philosophy" (where "your" does not refer to Horatio personally, but is used as an impersonal pronoun) is, in this case, what we would now call "science." (The word "science" did not come to be used in its modern sense till the nineteenth century.)
These two lines have been used for three and a half centuries to beat down what has been conceived to be scientific dogmatism and have usually been so used by mystics of one sort or another.
Nevertheless, scientists are perfectly aware of the truth of these lines--without it there would, in fact, be no need for scientific research--and search humbly for just those things that might as yet be undreamed of. It is the mystics who, for their part, do not search but think they "know"--by revelation, intuition, or other non-rational fashion--and it is they who are usually the arrogant ones.
-- Guide to Shakespeare
Isaac Asimov
http://www.humanistsofutah.org/1997/sha ... ained.html