Buckle s Generalizations as will
Buckle's Generalizations-as will be hereafter shown-a half-truth, a correct statement of one side of a verity, good so far as it goes, but essentially false when put for the whole, as in the present instance, or when held so as to exclude the opposite half-truth.
It is this fact, that basic truth is everywhere made up of a _union_of_opposites_, each of which seems, at first sight, to exclude the other, which the Historian himself so forcibly expresses when he exclaims: 'In the moral world, as in the physical world, nothing is anomalous; nothing is unnatural; nothing is strange. All is order, symmetry, and law. _There_are_opposites,_but_there_are_no_contradictions.'_ Had he understood the full meaning of this statement of the _inherently_paradoxical_nature_of_truth_, and been able to give the Principle which it establishes a universal application in unfolding the various domains of human intelligence and activity, he would have grasped the Knowledge for which he vainly strove, would have discovered the veritable Science of the Sciences, the long-sought Criterion of Truth.
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