TEXT C Why the inductive and
mathematical sciences, after their first rapid development at the culmination of
Greek civilization, advanced so slowly for two thousand years—and why in the
following two hundred years a knowledge of natural and mathematical science has
accumulated, which so vastly exceeds all that was previously known that these
sciences may be justly regarded as the products of our own times—are questions
which have interested the modern philosopher not less than the objects with
which these sciences are more immediately conversant. Was it the employment of a
new method of research, or in the exercise of greater virtue in the use of the
old methods, that this singular modern phenomenon had its origin Was the long
period one of arrested development, and is the modern era one of normal growth
Or should we ascribe the characteristics of both periods to so-called historical
accidents—to the influence of conjunctions in circumstances of which no
explanation is possible, save in the omnipotence and wisdom of a guiding
Providence The explanation which has become commonplace, that
the ancients employed deduction chiefly in their scientific inquiries, while the
moderns employ induction, proves to be too narrow, and fails upon close
examination to point with sufficient distinctness the contrast that is evident
between ancient and modem scientific doctrines and inquiries. For all knowledge
is founded on observation, and proceeds from this by analysis, by synthesis and
analysis, by induction and deduction, and if possible by verification, or by new
appeals to observation under the guidance of deduction—by steps which are indeed
correlative parts of one method; and the ancient sciences afford examples of
every one of these methods, or parts of one method, which have been generalized
from the examples of science. A failure to employ or to employ
adequately any one of these partial methods, an imperfection in the arts and
resources of observation and experiment, carelessness in observation, neglect of
relevant facts, by appeal to experiment and observation—these are the faults
which cause all failures to ascertain truth, whether among the ancients or the
moderns; but this statement does not explain why the modern is possessed of a
greater virtue, and by what means he attained his superiority. Much less does it
explain the sudden growth of science in recent time. The attempt
to discover the explanation of this phenomenon in the antithesis of "facts" and
"theories" or "facts" and "ideas"—in the neglect among the ancients of the
former, and their too exclusive attention to the latter—proves also to be too
narrow, as well as open to the charge of vagueness. For in the first place, the
antithesis is not complete. Facts and theories are not coordinate species.
Theories, if true, are facts—a particular class of facts indeed, generally
complex, and if a logical connection subsists between their constituents, have
all the positive attributes of theories. Nevertheless, this
distinction, however inadequate it may be to explain the source of true method
in science, is well founded, and connotes an important character in true method.
A fact is a proposition of simple. A theory, on the other hand, if true has all
the characteristics of a fact, except that its verification is possible only by
indirect, remote, and difficult means. To convert theories into facts is to add
simple verification, and the theory thus acquires the full characteristics of a
fact. According to the author, mathematics is ______.
A.an inductive science B.in need of simple verification C.a deductive science D.based on fact and theory