<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE issue SYSTEM "spectator.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet href="spectator.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<?cocoon-process type="xslt"?>
<issue>
<title>The Spectator 239</title>
<header>
  <number>no. 239</number>
  <date>1711-12-04</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>--------Bella, horrida bella!------Virg.<link name="(*)" url="http://tabula.rutgers.edu/latintexts/vergil/aeneid_georgics/aeneid6.html"></link></quotation>
  <translation>Virg. &#198;n. vi. 86.</translation>
  <translation>Wars, horrid wars! --Dryden.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>I HAVE sometimes amused myself with
considering the several Methods of managing a Debate which have
obtained in the World.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The first Races of Mankind used to dispute,
as our ordinary People do now-a-days, in a kind of wild Logick,
uncultivated by Rules of Art.</paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Socrates</italic> introduced a catechetical
Method of Arguing. He would ask his Adversary Question upon
Question, till he had convinced him out of his own Mouth that his
Opinions were wrong. This Way of Debating drives an Enemy up into a
Corner, seizes all the Passes through which he can make an Escape,
and forces him to surrender at Discretion.</paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Aristotle</italic> changed this
Method of Attack, and invented a great Variety of little Weapons,
call'd Syllogisms. As in the <italic>Socratick</italic> Way of Dispute you agree to
every thing which your Opponent advances, in the <italic>Aristotelick</italic> you
are still denying and contradicting some Part or other of what he
says. <italic>Socrates</italic> conquers you by Stratagem, <italic>Aristotle</italic> by Force: The
one takes the Town by Sap, the other Sword in Hand.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The Universities of <italic>Europe,</italic> for many Years, carried on their Debates by
Syllogism, insomuch that we see the Knowledge of several Centuries
laid out into Objections and Answers, and all the good Sense of the
Age cut and minced into almost an Infinitude of Distinctions.</paragraph>
<paragraph>When our Universities found that there was no End of Wrangling this Way,
they invented a kind of Argument, which is not reducible to any
Mood or Figure in <italic>Aristotle.</italic> It was called the <italic>Argumentum Bacilinum</italic>
(others write it <italic>Bacilinum</italic> or <italic>Baculinum</italic>) which is pretty well
express'd in our <italic>English</italic> Word <italic>Club-Law.</italic> When they were not able to
confute their Antagonist, they knock'd him down. It was their
Method in these polemical Debates, first to discharge their
Syllogisms, and afterwards to betake themselves to their Clubs,
till such Time as they had one Way or other confounded their
Gainsayers. There is in <italic>Oxford</italic> a narrow [Defile,<footnote name="(1)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote>] (to make use
of a military Term) where the Partizans used to encounter, for
which Reason it still retains the Name of Logic-Lane. I have heard
an old Gentleman, a Physician, make his Boasts, that when he was a
young Fellow he marched several Times at the Head of a Troop of
<italic>Scotists,</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote>
and cudgel'd a Body of <italic>Smiglesians</italic><footnote name="(3)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote> half the
length of High-Street, 'till they had dispersed themselves for
Shelter into their respective Garrisons.</paragraph>
<paragraph>This Humour, I find, went
very far in <italic>Erasmus's</italic> Time. For that Author tells us,<footnote name="(4)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote> That upon
the Revival of Greek Letters, most of the Universities in <italic>Europe</italic>
were divided into <italic>Greeks</italic> and <italic>Trojans.</italic> The latter were those who
bore a mortal Enmity to the Language of the <italic>Grecians,</italic> insomuch that
if they met with any who understood it, they did not fail to treat
him as a Foe. <italic>Erasmus</italic> himself had, it seems, the Misfortune to fall
into the Hands of a Party of <italic>Trojans,</italic> who laid him on with so many
Blows and Buffets that he never forgot their Hostilities to his
dying Day.</paragraph>
<paragraph>There is away of managing an Argument not much unlike
the former, which is made use of by States and Communities, when
they draw up a hundred thousand Disputants on each Side, and
convince one another by Dint of Sword. A certain Grand Monarch<footnote name="(5)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote>
was so sensible of his Strength in this way of Reasoning, that he
writ upon his Great Guns--<italic>Ratio ultima Regum, The Logick of Kings;</italic>
but, God be thanked, he is now pretty well baffled at his own
Weapons. When one has to do with a Philosopher of this kind, one
should remember the old Gentleman's Saying, who had been engaged in
an Argument with one of the Roman Emperors.<footnote name="(6)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote> Upon his Friend's
telling him, That he wonder'd he would give up the Question, when
he had visibly the Better of the Dispute; <italic>I am never asham'd,</italic> says
he, <italic>to be confuted by one who is Master of fifty Legions.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>I shall but just mention another kind of Reasoning, which may be called
arguing by Poll; and another which is of equal Force, in which
Wagers are made use of as Arguments, according to the celebrated
Line in <italic>Hudibras.</italic><footnote name="(7)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>But the most notable way of managing a
Controversy, is that which we may call <italic>Arguing by Torture.</italic> This is
a Method of Reasoning which has been made use of with the poor
Refugees, and which was so fashionable in our Country during the
Reign of Queen <italic>Mary,</italic> that in a Passage of an Author quoted by
Monsieur <italic>Bayle,</italic><footnote name="(8)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote> it is said the Price of Wood was raised in
<italic>England,</italic> by reason of the Executions that were made in <italic>Smithfield.</italic>
These Disputants convince their Adversaries with a <italic>Sorites,</italic><footnote name="(9)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote239.xml"></footnote>
commonly called a Pile of Faggots. The Rack is also a kind of
Syllogism which has been used with good Effect, and has made
Multitudes of Converts. Men were formerly disputed out of their
Doubts, reconciled to Truth by Force of Reason, and won over to
Opinions by the Candour, Sense and Ingenuity of those who had the
Right on their Side; but this Method of Conviction operated too
slowly. Pain was found to be much more enlightning than Reason.
Every Scruple was looked upon as Obstinacy, and not to be removed
but by several Engines invented for that Purpose. In a Word, the
Application of Whips, Racks, Gibbets, Gallies, Dungeons, Fire, and
Faggot, in a Dispute, may be look'd upon as Popish Refinements upon
the old Heathen Logick.</paragraph>
<paragraph>There is another way of Reasoning which
seldom fails, tho' it be of a quite different Nature to that I have
last mentioned. I mean, convincing a Man by ready Money, or as it
is ordinarily called, bribing a Man to an Opinion. This Method has
often proved successful, when all the others have been made use of
no purpose. A Man who is furnished with Arguments from the Mint
will convince his Antagonist much sooner than one who draws them
from Reason and Philosophy. Gold is a wonderful Clearer of the
Understanding; it dissipates every Doubt and Scruple in an Instant;
accommodates itself to the meanest Capacities; silences the Loud
and Clamorous, and brings over to the most Obstinate and
Inflexible. <italic>Philip of Macedon</italic> was a Man of most invincible Reason
this Way. He refuted by it all the Wisdom of <italic>Athens,</italic> confounded
their Statesmen, struck their Orators dumb, and at length argued
them out of all their Liberties.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Having here touched upon the
several Methods of Disputing, as they have prevailed in different
Ages of the World, I shall very suddenly give my Reader an Account
of the whole Art of Cavilling; which shall be a full and
satisfactory Answer to all such Papers and Pamphlets as have yet
appeared against the SPECTATOR.</paragraph>
<paragraph>C.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. [Defil&#233;]</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. The followers of
the famous scholastic philosopher, Duns Scotus (who taught at
Oxford and wed in 1308), were Realists, and the Scotists were as
Realists opposed to the Nominalists, who, as followers of Thomas
Aquinas, were called Thomists. Abuse, in later time, of the
followers of Duns gave its present sense to the word Dunce.</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. The followers of Martin Smiglecius, a Polish Jesuit, who taught
Philosophy (or four years and Theology for ten years at Vilna, in
Lithuania, and died at Kalisch in 1618. Besides theological works
he published a book of Disputations upon Logic.</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. Erasm. Epist.</paragraph>
<paragraph>5. Louis XIV.</paragraph>
<paragraph>6. Adrian, cited in Bacon's Apophthegms.</paragraph>
<paragraph>7. Hudibras, Pt. II. c. I, v. 297. See note to No.145.</paragraph>
<paragraph>8. And Ammonius in Bayle's Life of him, but the saying was of the reign, of Henry VIII.</paragraph>
<paragraph>9. A Sorites, in Logic, from &#963;&#964;&#961;&#959;&#962;,
a heap - is a pile of syllogisms so compacted that the conclusion
of one serves as a premiss to the next.</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
