Advice from Isaac Watts
We are all familiar with Isaac Watts for his wonderful hymns, but did you know that he was also a thoughtful and great writer on logic and the improvement of the mind?
Read this excerpt from Improvement of the Mind by Isaac Watts. It was written with young men and women in mind and the advice is excellent.
I like this excerpt because he warns against what I see happening everywhere in American culture today - the elevation of the trivial to importance, and vice versa.
XII. He, that would raise his judgments above the vulgar rank of mankind, and learn to pass a just sentence on persons and things, must take heed of a fanciful temper of mind, and a humorous conduct in his affairs. Fancy and humor, early and constantly indulged, may expect an old age over-run with follies. A humorist is one that is greatly pleased or greatly dis- pleased with little things; who sets his heart much upon matters of very small importance; who has his will deter mined every day by trifles, his actions seldom directed by the reason and nature of things, and his passions frequently raised by things of little moment. Where this practice is allowed, it will insensibly warp the judgment to pronounce little things great, and tempt you to lay a great weight upon them. In short, this temper will incline you to pass an un- just value on almost every thing that occurs ; and every step, that you take in this path, is just so far out of the way to wisdom. XIII. For the same reason, have a care of trifling with things important and momentous, or of sporting with things awful and sacred. Do not indulge a spirit of ridicule as some witty men do on all occasions and subjects. This will as unhappily bias the judgment on the other side, and incline you to pass a low esteem on the most valuable objects. Whatsoever evil habit we indulge in practice, it will insensibly obtain a power over our understanding, and betray us into many errors. Jocander is ready with his jest, to answer every thing that he hears. He reads books m the same jovial humor, and has got the art of turning every thought and sentence into merriment How many awkward and irregular judgments does this man pass upon solemn subjects, even when he designs to be grave and in earnest? His mirth and laughing humor is formed into habit and temper, and leads his understanding shamefully astray. You will see him wandering in pursuit of a flying feather, and he is drawn by a sort of ignis fatuus into bogs and mire, almost every day of his life. XIY. Ever maintain a virtuous and pious frame of spirit; for an indulgence of vicious inclinations debases the understanding and perverts the judgment. Licentiousness and new wine, take away the health; and soul and reason of a man. Sensuality ruins the better faculties of the mind. An indulgence of appetite and passion enfeebles the powers of reason ; it makes the judgment weak and susceptible of every falsehood, and especially of such mis- takes, as have a tendency towards the gratification of the animal ; and it warps the soul aside strangely from that steadiest honesty and integrity, {hut necessarily belongs to the pursuit of truth. It is the virtuous man, who is in a fair way to wisdom. ^^ God gives to those, that are good in his sight, wisdom and knowledge and joy." Ec. 2:26. Piety toward God, as well as sobriety and virtue, are necessary qualifications to make a truly wise and judicious man. He, that abandons religion, must act in such a contradiction to his own conscience and best judgment, that he abuses and spoils the faculty itself. It is thus in the nature of things ; and it is thus by the righteous judg- ment of God. Even the pretended sages among the Heathens, "who did not like to retain God in their knowledge, were given up to a reprobate mind;" an undistinguishing or injudicious mind, so that they judged inconsistently, and practiced mere absurdities. Rom. 1:28.
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