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  • Oct. 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1856: Page 5

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    Article MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. ← Page 5 of 9 →
Page 5

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Masonic Philosophy.

and characterized by attributes which belong to no other substances , and which , consequently , establish the special existence of the being in whom they are organized . Amongst the variety of souls , he preeminently distinguishes the Supreme Soul as the seat of eternal knowledge . After the soul comes the body , the seat of effort or of

intentional action ; of the organs of sensation , of pain , and of pleasure ; it is composed of terrestrial particles , and participates in the qualities of the earth , as expressly affirmed in more than one passage of the Vedas . The organs of sensation are the instruments of intelligence associated to the body , and are themselves imperceptible to

the senses . The Nyayan philosophy , therefore , is eminently spiritual , although its researches are extended to the material part of the immaterial soul , for the intelligent substance is the object of knowledge with which it is essentially occupied , Its direct application is ,

to analyze the faculties of recognition , comprehension , recollection , and the principle of activity , which renders man capable of virtue 01 * vice , and which excites in him desire , passion , aversion , fear , & c . It endeavours to penetrate through all questions relative to the condition of the immortal soul , and raises the hypothesis of transmigration , retribution , pains and penalties , deliverance or enfranchisement

from all evil , which , as we have seen , was considered the last state of perfect beatitude . To this discipline every candidate was submitted in his passage through the valley of the shadow of death , until he was purified to emerge into the region of light , where he took his First Degree . We next come to the philosophy of Vaiseshika , or Yelchiska , a

Hindoo word signifying distinction . This system , founded by Kauadi , or Canada , embraces the science of physics , or the distinction of sensible objects and the study of their distinctive qualities , and this system also rests upon the authority of the Vedas . It adopts the same starting-point as that of Nyaya , recognises the same categories , admits the same rules of logic , the same conditions , and the same

characteristics of proof So far the two schools are scarcely distinguishable from each other ; and by expounding the first part of the doctrines of Kanadi , we should only repeat what we have said before . " . But however analogous these two systems may appear in their common origin , they are as widely separated in their development and in the application of their common principles . Wo have already seen , that as soon as the Nyayan philosophy attached itself to researches upon the essential objects of knowledge , it stopped on the

very threshold with man , and made his spiritual portion , or the soul , its more particular study . It attempted to discover all the categories here below which could essentially aid it in this inquiry into its state of intelligence alone ; whilst the system of Kanadi selects , as its principal object of knowledge , a dominion of research which the school of G autainu wholly neglected . Without entirely laying aside matters connected only with human intelligence , it more especially attaches itself to study the objects of our sensations . The phono-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-10-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01101856/page/5/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 1
COMMON DESCENT OF OUR RACE. Article 9
PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 10
AN INCIDENT. Article 22
THE NOAH'S ARK. Article 23
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 24
FINE ARTS. Article 25
CAUTIOUS SECRECY. Article 25
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND THE CRAFT. Article 26
THE GRAND MASTER OF WORCESTERSHIRE AND THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 27
VISIT OF THE FEMALE CHILDREN TO THE CRYSTAL PALACE. Article 28
MYSTERY. Article 28
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 29
METROPOLITAN. Article 37
PROVINCIAL. Article 38
WORCESTERSHIRE. Article 57
ROYAL ARCH. Article 58
MARK MASONRY. Article 60
SCOTLAND, Article 60
IRELAND. Article 65
INDIA. Article 65
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR SEPTEMBER. Article 68
Obituary. Article 71
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Philosophy.

and characterized by attributes which belong to no other substances , and which , consequently , establish the special existence of the being in whom they are organized . Amongst the variety of souls , he preeminently distinguishes the Supreme Soul as the seat of eternal knowledge . After the soul comes the body , the seat of effort or of

intentional action ; of the organs of sensation , of pain , and of pleasure ; it is composed of terrestrial particles , and participates in the qualities of the earth , as expressly affirmed in more than one passage of the Vedas . The organs of sensation are the instruments of intelligence associated to the body , and are themselves imperceptible to

the senses . The Nyayan philosophy , therefore , is eminently spiritual , although its researches are extended to the material part of the immaterial soul , for the intelligent substance is the object of knowledge with which it is essentially occupied , Its direct application is ,

to analyze the faculties of recognition , comprehension , recollection , and the principle of activity , which renders man capable of virtue 01 * vice , and which excites in him desire , passion , aversion , fear , & c . It endeavours to penetrate through all questions relative to the condition of the immortal soul , and raises the hypothesis of transmigration , retribution , pains and penalties , deliverance or enfranchisement

from all evil , which , as we have seen , was considered the last state of perfect beatitude . To this discipline every candidate was submitted in his passage through the valley of the shadow of death , until he was purified to emerge into the region of light , where he took his First Degree . We next come to the philosophy of Vaiseshika , or Yelchiska , a

Hindoo word signifying distinction . This system , founded by Kauadi , or Canada , embraces the science of physics , or the distinction of sensible objects and the study of their distinctive qualities , and this system also rests upon the authority of the Vedas . It adopts the same starting-point as that of Nyaya , recognises the same categories , admits the same rules of logic , the same conditions , and the same

characteristics of proof So far the two schools are scarcely distinguishable from each other ; and by expounding the first part of the doctrines of Kanadi , we should only repeat what we have said before . " . But however analogous these two systems may appear in their common origin , they are as widely separated in their development and in the application of their common principles . Wo have already seen , that as soon as the Nyayan philosophy attached itself to researches upon the essential objects of knowledge , it stopped on the

very threshold with man , and made his spiritual portion , or the soul , its more particular study . It attempted to discover all the categories here below which could essentially aid it in this inquiry into its state of intelligence alone ; whilst the system of Kanadi selects , as its principal object of knowledge , a dominion of research which the school of G autainu wholly neglected . Without entirely laying aside matters connected only with human intelligence , it more especially attaches itself to study the objects of our sensations . The phono-

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