CHAPTER IV
That the Earth and Mankind had an
Original, and were not from Eternity: Prov'd against Aristotle. The first
proposition of our Theory laid down, viz. That the Ante-diluvian Earth
was of a different form and construction from tlze present. This is prov'd by
Divine Authority, and from the nature and form of the Chaos, out of which the
Earth was made.
WE are now to enquire
into the Original of the Earth, and in what form it was built at first, that we
may lay our foundation for the following Theory, deep and sure. It hath been the general opinion and consent of the Learned of
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all Nations, that the Earth arose from a Chaos. This is
attested by History, both Sacred and Profane; only Aristotle, whom so
great a part of the Christian world have made their Oracle or Idol, hath
maintain'd the Eternity of the Earth, and the Eternity of mankind; that the
Earth and the World were from Everlasting, and in that very form they are in
now, with Men and Women and all living Creatures. Trees and Fruit, Metals and
Minerals, and whatsoever is of Natural production. We say all these things arose
and had their first existence or production not six thousand years ago; He saith,
they have subsisted thus for ever, through an infinite Series of past
Generations, and shall continue as long, without first or last: And if so, there
was neither Chaos, nor any other beginning to the Earth. This takes away the
subject of our discourse, and therefore we must first remove this stone out of
the way, and prove that the Earth had an Original, and that from a Chaos, before
we show how it arose from a Chaos, and what was
the first habitable form that it setled into.
We are assur'd by Divine Authority, that the Earth and Mankind had a beginning; Moses saith, In the beginning God made the Heavens and the
Earth. Speaking it as of a certain Period or Term from whence he counts the
Age of the World. And the same Moses tells us, that Adam was the
first Man, and Eve the first Woman, from whom sprung the race of Mankind;
and this within the compass of six thousand years. We are also assured from the
Prophets, and our Christian Records, that the world shall have an end, and that
by a general Conflagration, when all Mankind shall be destroy'd, with the form
and all the furniture of the Earth. And as this proves the second part of Aristotle's
Doctrine to be false immediately, so doth it the first, by a true
consequence: for what hath an end had a beginning, what is not immortal, was not
Eternal; for what exists by the strength of its own Nature at first, the same
Nature will enable it to exist for ever; and indeed what exists of it self,
exists necessarily; and what exists necessarily,
exists eternally.
Having this infallible assurance of the Origin of the Earth and of Mankind, from
Scripture, we proceed to refute the same Doctrine of Aristotle's by
natural Reason. And we will first consider the form of the Earth, and then
Mankind ; and shew from plain evidence and observation, neither of them to have
been Eternal. 'Tis natural to the mind of man to consider that which is
compound, as having been once more simple; whether that composition be a mixture
of many ingredients, as most Terrestrial bodies are, or whether it be Organical;
but especially if it be Organical; For a thing that consists of a multitude of
pieces aptly joyn'd, we cannot but conceive to have had those pieces, at one
time or another, put together. 'Twere hard to conceive an eternal Watch, whose
pieces were never separate one from another, nor ever in any other form than
that of a Watch. Or an eternal House, whose materials were never a-sunder, but
always in the form of an House. And 'tis as hard to conceive an eternal
Earth, or an eternal World: These are made up of more various
substances, more ingredients, and a far greater composition; and the living part
of the World, Plants and Animals, have far more variety of parts and
multifarious construction, than any House, or any other artificial thing: So
that we are led as much by Nature and
43
necessity to conceive this great machine of the World, or of
the Earth, to have been once in a state of greater simplicity than now it is, as
to conceive a Watch, an House, or any other structure, to have been once in its
first and simple materials. This I speak without reference to immediate
Creation, for Aristotle did not own any such thing, and therefore the
argument stands good against him, upon those grounds and notions that he goes.
Yet I guess what answer would be made by him or his followers to this
argumentation; They would say there is not the same reason for Natural things,
as for Artificial, though equally compounded. Artificial things could not be
from Eternity, because they suppose Man, by whose Art they were made,
pre-existent to them; the workman must be before the work, and whatsoever hath
any thing before it, is not Eternal. But may not the same thing be said of
Natural things ? do not most of them require the action of the Sun, and the
influence of the Heavens for their production, and longer preparations than any
Artificial things do ? Some Years or Ages would be necessary for the concoction
and maturation of Metals and Minerals; Stones themselves, at least some sorts of
them, were once liquors or fluid masses ; and all Vegetable productions require
the heat of the Sun, to pre-dispose and excite the Earth, and the Seeds. Nay,
according to Aristotle, 'tis not Man by himself that begets a Man, but
the Sun is his Coadjutor. You see then 'twas as necessary that the Sun, that
great workman of Nature, should pre-exist to Natural things, produc'd in or upon
the Earth, as that Man should pre-exist to Artificial. So that the Earth under
that form and constitution it now hath, could no more be Eternal, than a Statue
or Temple, or any work of Art.
Besides, that form, which the Earth is under at present, is in
some sort preternatural, like a Statue made and broken again ; and so hath still
the less appearance or pretence of being Eternal. If the Elements had lain in
that order to one another, as Aristotle hath dispos'd them, and as seems
to be their first disposition, the Earth altogether in a mass in the middle, or
towards the Center; then the Water in a Spherical mass about that; the Air above
the Water, and then a Sphere of Fire, as he fansied, in the highest Circle of
the Air: If they had lain, I say, in this posture, there might have been some
pretence that they had been Eternally so J because that might seem to be their
Original posture, in which Nature had first plac'd them. But the form and
posture we find them in at present is very different, and according to his
Doctrine must be lookt upon as unnatural and violent; and no violent state by
his own Maxim, can be perpetual, or can have been so.
But there is still a more pressing consideration against this
Opinion. If this present state and form of the Earth had been from Eternity, it
would have long ere this destroy'd it self, and chang'd it self: the Mountains
sinking by degrees into the Valleys, and into the Sea, and the Waters rising
above the Earth; which form it would certainly have come into sooner or later,
and in it continu'd drown'd and uninhabitable, for all succeeding Generations.
For 'tis certain, that the Mountains and higher parts of the Earth grow lesser
and lesser from Age to Age ; and that from many causes, sometimes the roots of
them are weaken'd and eaten by Subterraneous Fires, and sometimes they are torn
and tumbled down by
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Earthquakes, and fall into those Caverns that are under them;
and though those violent causes are not constant, or universal, yet if the Earth
had stood from Eternity, there is not a Mountain would have escap'd this fate in
one Age or other. The course of these exhalations or Fires would have reach'd
them all sooner or later, if through infinite Ages they had stood expos'd to
them. But there are also other causes that consume them insensibly, and make
them sink by degrees; and those are chiefly the Winds, Rains, and Storms, and
heat of the Sun without; and within, the soaking of Water and Springs, with
streams and Currents in their veins and crannies. These two sorts of causes
would certainly reduce all the Mountains of the Earth, in tract of time, to
equality ; or rather lay them all under Water: For whatsoever moulders or is
washt away from them, is carried down into the lower grounds, and into the Sea,
and nothing is ever brought back again by any circulation: Their losses are not
repair'd, nor any proportionable recruits made from any other parts of Nature.
So as the higher parts of the Earth being continually spending, and the lower
continually gaining, they must of necessity at length come to an equality; and
the Waters that lie in the lower parts and in the Chanels, those Chanels and
Valleys being fi1l'd up with Earth, would be thrust out and rise every where
upon the surface of the Earth; Which new post when they had once seiz'd on, they
would never quit it, nor would any thing be able to dispossess them; for 'tis
their natural place and situation which they always tend to, and from which
there is no progress nor regress in a course of Nature. So that the Earth would
have been, both now, and from innumerable Generations before this, all under
water and uninhabitable; if it had stood from everlasting, and this form of it
had been its first original form.
Nor can he doubt of this argumentation, that considers the
coherence of it, and will allow time enough for the effect. I do not say the
Earth would be reduc'd to this uninhabitable form in ten thousand years time,
though I believe it would : but take twenty, if you please, take an hundred
thousand, take a million, 'tis all one, for you may take the one as easily as
the other out of Eternity ; and they make both equally against their
supposition. Nor is it any matter how little you suppose the Mountains to
decrease, 'tis but taking more time, and the same effect still follows. Let them
but waste as much as a grain of Mustardseed every day, or a foot in an Age, this
would be more than enough in ten thousand Ages to consume the tallest Mountain
upon Earth. The Air alone, and the little drops of Rain have defac'd the
strongest and the proudest monuments of the Greeks and Romans ;
and allow them but time enough, and they will of themselves beat down the Rocks
into the Sea, and the Hills into the Valleys. But if we add to these all those
other foremention'd causes that work with more violence, and the weight of the
Mountains themselves, which upon any occasion offer'd, is ready to sink them
lower, we shall shorten the time, and make the effect more sure.
We need add no more here in particular, against this Aristotelian
Doctrine, that makes the present form of the Earth to have been from
Eternity, for the truth is, this whole Book is one continued argument against
that Opinion; shewing that it hath de facto chang'd its form; both in
that we have prov'd that it was not capable of an universal Deluge in this form,
and consequently was once under
45
another; and also in that we shall prove at large hereafter,
throughout the Third and Fourth Sections, that it hath been broken and dissolv'd.
We might also add one consideration more, that if it had stood always under this
form, it would have been under Fire, if it had not been under Water; and the
Conflagration, which it is to undergo, would have overtaken it long ere this.
For St. Peter saith, the Heavens and the Earth that are now, as oppos'd
to the Ante-diluvian, and considered in their present form and constitution,
are fitted to be consum'd by Fire. And whosoever understands the progress and
revolutions of Nature, will see that neither the present form of the Earth, nor
its first form, were permanent and immutable forms, but transient and temporary
by their own frame and constitution; which the Author of Nature, after certain
periods of time, had design'd for change and for destruction.
Thus much for the body of the Earth, that it could not have
been from Eternity, as Aristotle pretended, in the form it hath. Now
let's consider the Origination of Mankind; and that we shall find could much
less be Eternal than the other; for whatsoever destroy'd the form of the Earth,
would also destroy Mankind; and besides, there are many particular marks
and arguments, that the Generations of Men have not been from Everlasting. All
History, and all monuments of Antiquity of what kind soever, are but of a few
thousand of years date; we have still the memory of the golden Age, of the first
state of Nature, and how mortals liv'd then in innocency and simplicity. The
invention of Arts, even those that are necessary or useful to humane life, hath
been within the knowledge of Men : How imperfect was the Geography of the
Ancients, how imperfect their knowledge of the Earth, how imperfect their
Navigation ? Can we imagine, if there had been Men from Everlasting, a Sea as
now, and all materials for Shipping as much as we have, that men could have been
so ignorant, both of the Land and of the Sea, as 'tis manifest they have been
till of late Ages ? They had very different fansies concerning the figure of the
Earth ? They knew no Land beyond our Continent, and that very imperfectly too;
and the Torrid Zone they thought utterly uninhabitable. We think it strange,
taking that short date of the World, which we give it, that Men should not have
made more progress in the knowledge of these things; But how impossible is it
then, if you suppose them to have been from Everlasting ? They had the same wit
and passions that we have, the same motives that we have, can we then imagine,
that neither the ambition of Princes, nor Interest or gain in private persons,
nor curiosity and the desire of Knowledge, nor the glory of discoveries, nor any
other passion or consideration could ever move them in that endless time, to try
their fortunes upon the Sea, and know something more of the World
they inhabited? Though you should suppose them generally stupid, which there is
no reason to do, yet in a course of infinite Generations, there would be some
great Genio's, some extraordinary persons that would attempt things above the
rest. We have done more within the compass of our little World, which we can but
count, as to this, from the general Deluge, than those Eternal Men had done in
their innumerable Ages foregoing.
You will say, it may be, they had not the
advantages and opportunities for Navigation as we have, and for discoveries;
because the use of the Loadstone,
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and the Mariners Needle was not then known. But that's the
wonder, that either that invention, or any other should not be brought to light
till t' other day, if the World had stood from Eternity. I say this or any other
practical invention; for such things when they are once found out and known, are
not easily lost again, because they are of daily use. And 'tis in most other
practical Arts as in Navigation, we generally know their Original and History :
who the Inventors, and by what degrees improv'd, and how few of them brought to
any perfection till of late Ages. All the Artificial and Mechanical World is, in
a manner, new; and what you may call the Civil World too is in a great
measure so. What relates to Government, and Laws; to Wars and Discipline; we
can trace these things to their Origin, or very near it. The use of Money and of
Coins, nay the use of the very Elements; for they tell us of the first invention
of Fire by Prometheus, and the imploying of Wind or Water to turn the
Mills and grind their Corn was scarce known before the Romans ; and that
we may think nothing Eternal here, they tell us the Ages and Genealogies of
their very Gods. The measures of Time for the common uses of life, the dividing
it into Hours, with the Instruments for those purposes, are not of an unknown
date: Even the Arts for preparing Food and Clothing, Medicines and medicaments,
Building, Civil and Military, Letters and Writing, which are the foundations of
the World Civil: These, with all their retinue of lesser Arts and Trades that
belong to them, History and Tradition tell us, when they had their beginning, or
were very imperfect; and how many of their Inventors and inventresses were
deifi'd. The World hath not stood so long but we can still run it up to those
Artless Ages, when mortals liv'd by plain Nature; when there was but one Trade
in the World, one Calling, to look to their Flocks ; and afterwards to Till the
Ground, when Nature grew less liberal : And may we not reasonably think this the
beginning of Mankind, or very near it ? If Man be a creature both naturally
sagacious to find out its own conveniencies, and naturally sociable and inc1in'd
to live in a Community, a little time would make them find out and furnish
themselves with what was necessary in these two kinds, for the conveniencies of
single life, and the conveniencies of Societies ; they would not have liv'd
infinite Ages unprovided of them. If you say Necessity is the Mother of
Arts and Inventions, and there was no necessity before, and therefore these
things were so slowly invented. This is a good answer upon our supposition, that
the World began but some Ages before these were found out, and was abundant with
all things at first; and Men not very numerous, and therefore were not put so
much to the use of their wits for living commodiously. But this is no answer
upon their supposition; for if the World was Eternal and Men too, there were no
first Ages, no new and fresh Earth ; Men were never less numerous, nor the Earth
more fruitful; and consequently there was never less necessity at any time than
is now. This also brings to mind another argument against this opinion (viz.)
from the gradual increase of Mankind. 'Tis certain the World was not so
populous one or two thousand years since, as it is now, seeing 'tis observ'd, in
particular Nations, that within the space of two or three hundred years,
notwithstanding all casualties, the number of Men doubles. If then the Earth had
stood from Everlasting, it had been over-stockt long ere this,
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and would not have been capable to contain its Inhabitants
many Ages and Millions of Ages ago. Whereas we find the Earth is not yet
sufficiently Inhabited, and there is still room for some Millions. And we must
not flie to universal Deluges and Conflagrations to destroy Mankind; for besides
that the Earth was not capable of a Deluge in this present form, nor would have
been in this form after a Conflagration, Aristotle doth not admit of
these universal changes, nor any that hold the form of the Earth to be Eternal.
But to return to our Arts and Inventions.
We have spoken of practical Arts and Inventions useful in
humane life; then for Theoretical Learning and Sciences, there is nothing
yet finish'd or compleat in these; and what is known hath been chiefly the
production of latter Ages. How little hath been discover'd till of late, either
of our own Bodies, or of the body of the Earth, and of the functions or motions
of Nature in either ? What more obvious, one would think, than the Circulation
of the Bloud ? What can more excite our curiosity than the flowing and ebbing of
the Sea ? Than the nature of Metals and Minerals ? These are either yet unknown,
or were so at least till this last Age; which seems to me to have made a greater
progress than all Ages before put together, since the beginning of the
World. How unlikely is it then that these Ages were Eternal ? That the
Eternal studies of our Forefathers could not effect so much as a few years have
done of late ? And the whole mass of knowledge in this Earth doth not seem
to be so great, but that a few Ages more, with two or three happy Genius's in
them, may bring to light all that we are capable to understand in this state of
mortality.
To these arguments concerning the novelty of
the Earth, and the Origin of Mankind, I know there are some shuffling excuses
made, but they can have little effect upon those instances we have chosen. And I
would ask those Eternalists one fair question, What mark is there that they
could expect or desire of the novelty of a World, that is not found in this ? Or
what mark is there of Eternity that is found in this ? If then their opinion be
without any positive argument, and against all appearances in Nature, it may be
justly rejected as unreasonable upon all accounts. 'Tis not the bold asserting
of a thing that makes it true, or that makes it credible against evidence. If
one should assert that such an one had liv'd from all Eternity, and I could
bring witnesses that knew him a sucking Child, and others that remembred him a
School-boy, I think it would be a fair proof, that the Man was not
Eternal. So if there be evidence, either in Reason or History, that it is not
very many Ages since Nature was in her minority, as appears by all those
instances we have given above; some whereof trace her down to her very infancy :
This, I think, may be taken for a good proof that she is not Eternal. And I do
not doubt, but if the History of the World was writ Philosophically, giving an
account of the several states of Mankind in several Ages, and by what steps or
degrees they came from their first rudeness or simplicity to that order of
things, both Intellectual and Civil, which the World is advanc'd to at present,
that alone would be a full conviction, that the Earth and Mankind had a
beginning. As the story of Rome, how it rise from a mean Original, by
what degrees it increas'd, and how it chang'd its form and government till it
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came to its greatness, doth satisfie us very well, that the Roman
Empire was not Eternal.
Thus much concerning the Temporal Original of the Earth. We
are now to consider the manner of it, and to shew how it rise from a Chaos. I do
not remember that any of the Ancients that acknowledge the Earth to have had
an Original, did deny that Original to have been from a Chaos. We are assur'd of
both from the authority of Moses, who saith, that in the beginning the
Earth was Tohu Bohu, without form and void; a fluid, dark, confus'd mass,
without distinction of Elements; made up of all variety of parts, but without
Order, or any determinate Form; which is the true description of a Chaos: And so
it is understood by the general consent of Interpreters, both Hebrew and
Christian. We need not therefore spend any time here to prove, that the Origin
of the Earth was from a Chaos, seeing that is agreed on by all that give it any
Origin. But we will proceed immediately to examine into what form it first rise
when it came out of that Chaos; or what was the primæval form of the Earth,
that continued till the Deluge, and how the Deluge depended upon it, and upon
its dissolution.
And that we may proceed in this enquiry by such easie steps as
anyone may readily follow, we will divide it into three Propositions, whereof
the first is this in general; That the Form of the Ante-diluvian Earth, or of
the Earth that rise first from the Chaos, was different from the Form of the
present Earth. I say different in general, without specifying yet
what its particular form was, which shall be exprest in the following
Proposition.
The first Proposition we have in effect
prov'd in the Second Chapter; where we have shewn, that if the Earth had been
always in this form, it would not have been capable of a Deluge; seeing that
could not have been effected without such an infinite mass of water as could
neither be brought upon the Earth, nor afterwards any way removed from it. But
we will not content our selves with that proof only, but will prove it also from
the nature of the Chaos, and the manifest consequences of it. And because this
is a leading Proposition, we think it not improper to prove it also from Divine
authority, there being a pregnant passage to this purpose in the writings of St.
Peter .Where treating of this very subject, the Deluge, He manifestly
puts a difference between the Ante-diluvian Earth and present Earth, as to their
form and constitution. The Discourse is in the Second Epistle of St. Peter, the
Third Chapter, where certain Deists, as they seem to have been, laught at the
prophecy of the day of Judgment, and of the Conflagration of the World, using
this argument against it, That since the Fathers fell asleep, all things have
continued as they were from the beginning. All external Nature hath
continued the same without any remarkable change or alteration, and why should
we believe (say they) there will be any ? what appearance or what foundation is
there of such a revolution, that all Nature will be dissolv'd, and the Heavens
and the Earth consum'd with Fire, as your prophecies pretend? So from the
permanency and immutability of Nature hitherto, they argu'd its permanency and
immutability for the future. To this the Apostle answers, that they are
willing to forget that the Heavens and the Earth of old had a particular form
and constitution as to Water, by reason whereof the World that then was, perisht
by a
49
Deluge. And the Heavens and the Earth that are now, or since
the Deluge, have a particular constitution in reference to Fire, by reason
whereof they are expos'd to another sort of destruction or dissolution, namely
by Fire, or by an universal Conflagration. The words of the Apostle are these; For
this they are willingly ignorant of, that by the Word of God the Heavens were of
old, and the Earth, consisting of Water, and by Water,. or (as we render
it) standing out of the Water, and in the Water ...whereby the World that
then was, being overflow'd with Water, perisht. But the Heavens and the
Earth that are now, by the same Word are kept in store, reserv'd unto Fire
against the day of Judgment. We shall have occasion, it may be, hereafter to
give a full illustration of these words; but at present we shall only take
notice of this in general, that the Apostle here doth plainly intimate some
difference that was between the Old World and the present World, in their form
and constitution; or betwixt the Ante-diluvian and the present Earth, by reason
of which difference, that was subject to perish by a Deluge, as this is subject
to perish by Conflagration. And as this is the general Air and importance of
this discourse of the Apostles, which every one at first sight would discover;
so we may in several particular ways prove from it our first Proposition, which
now we must return to; (viz.) That the form and constitution of the Ante-diluvian
Earth was different from that of the present Earth. This may be infer'd from
the Apostle's discourse, first, because he makes an opposition betwixt these two
Earths, or these two natural Worlds; and that not only in respect of their fate,
the one perishing by Water, as the other will perish by Fire, but also in
respect of their different disposition and constitution leading to this
different fate, for otherwise his fifth verse is superfluous, and his
Inference in the sixth ungrounded; you see he premiseth in the fifth
verse as the ground of his discourse, what the constitution of the Ante-diluvian
Heavens and Earth was, and then infers from it in the sixth verse, that
they therefore perisht in a Deluge of water. Now if they had been the same with
ours, there had neither been any ground for making an opposition betwixt them,
nor any ground of making a contrary inference as to their fate. Besides, in that
he implies, that the constitution of the Ante-diluvian Earth was such, as made
it subject to a Deluge; he shews, that it was different from the constitution of
the present Earth ; for the form of that is such, as makes it rather incapable
of a Deluge, as we have shewn in the second Chapter. Then we are to observe
further, that when he saith (verse 6.) that the first World perish'd in a
Deluge, or was destroy'd by it; this is not to be understood of the Animate
world only, Men and living Creatures, but of the Natural world, and the frame of
it; for he had describ'd it before by the Heavens and the Earth, which make the
Natural world. And the objection of the Atheists, or Deists rather, which he was
to answer, proceeded upon the Natural world. And lastly, this perishing of the
World in a Deluge, is set against, or compar'd with the perishing of the world
in the Conflagration, when the frame of Nature will be dissolv'd. We must
therefore, according to the tenor of the Apostle's arguing, suppose, that the
Natural world was destroy'd or perisht in the Deluge; and seeing it did not
perish as to matter and substance, it must be as to the form, frame, and
composition of it, that it perisht; and consequently, the present Earth is of
another form and
50
frame from what it had before the Deluge; which was the thing to be proved. Lastly) let us consider what it is the Apostle tells these Scoffers that they were ignorant of: not that there was a Deluge) they could not be ignorant of that; nor doth he tell them that they were; But he tells them that they were ignorant that the Heavens and the Earth of old were so and so constituted) after a different manner than they are now) and that the state of Nature was chang'd at the Deluge. If they had known or attended to this) they had made no such objection) nor us'd any such argument as they did against the future Conflagration of the world. They pretended that there had been no change in Nature since the beginning) and the Apostle in answer tells them) that they are willingly ignorant of the first constitution of the Heavens) and the Earth) and of that change and dissolution that happen'd to them in the Deluge; and how the present Heavens and Earth have another constitution) whereby in like manner they are expos'd) in God's due time) to be consum'd or dissolv'd by Fire. This is the plain) easie and natural import of the Apostles discourse; thus all the parts of it are coherent) and the sence genuine and apposite) and this is a full confirmation of our first and general assertion) That the Ante-diluvian Earth was of another form from the present Earth. This hath been observ'd formerly by some of the Ancients from this Text, but that it hath not been generally observ'd) was) partly because they had no Theory to back such an interpretation) and make it intelligible; and partly because they did not observe) that the Apostle's discourse here was an argumentation, and not a bare affirmation) or simple contradiction to those that rais'd the scruple; 'tis an answer upon a ground taken) he premiseth and then infers; in the fifth and sixth Verses) concerning the Deluge; and in the seventh) concerning the Conflagration. And when I had discover'd in my thoughts from the consideration of the Deluge) and other natural reasons) that the Earth was certainly once in another form) it was a great assurance and confirmation to me) when I reflected on this place of St. Peter's; which seems to be so much directed and intended for the same purpose) or to teach us the same conclusion) that though I design'd chiefly a Philosophical Theory of these things) yet I should not have thought we had been just to Providence) if we had neglected to take notice of this passage and Sacred evidence; which seems to have been left us on purpose) to excite our enquiries) and strengthen our reasonings) concerning the first state of things. Thus much from Divine Authority: We proceed now to prove the same proposition from Reason and Philosophy) and the contemplation of the Chaos) from whence the first Earth arose.
We need not upon this occasion make a
particular description of the Chaos) but only consider it as a Fluid Mass) or a
Mass of all sorts of little parts and particles of matter) mixt together) and
floating in confusion) one with another. 'Tis impossible that the surface of
this mass should be of such a form and figure) as the surface of our present
Earth is. Or that any concretion or consistent state which this mass could flow
into immediately) or first settle in) could be of such a form and figure as our
present Earth. The first of these Assertions is of easie proof; for a fluid
body) we know) whether it be water or any other liquor) always casts it self
into a smooth and spherical surface; and if any parts) by chance, or
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by some agitation, become higher than the rest, they do
not continue so, but glide down again every way into the lower places, till they
all come to make a surface of the same height, and of the same distance every
where from the center of their gravity .A mountain of water is a thing
impossible in Nature, and where there are no Mountains, there are no Valleys. So
also a Den or Cave within the water, that hath no walls but the liquid Element,
is a structure unknown to Art or Nature; all things there must be full within,
and even and level without, unless some External force keep them by violence in
another posture. But is this the form of our Earth, which is neither regularly
made within nor without ? The surface and exteriour parts are broken into all
sorts of inequalities, Hills and Dales, Mountains and Valleys ; and the plainer
tracts of it lie generally inclin'd or bending one way or other, sometimes upon
an easie descent, and other times with a more sensible and uneasie steepiness;
and though the great Mountains of the Earth were taken all away, the
remaining parts would be more unequal than the roughest Sea; whereas the face of
the Earth should resemble the face of the calmest Sea, if it was still in the
form of its first mass. But what shall we say then to the huge Mountains of the
Earth, which lie sometimes in lumps or clusters heapt up by one another,
sometimes extended in long ridges or chains for many hundred miles in length ?
And 'tis remarkable, that in every Continent, and in every ancient and original
Island, there is either such a cluster, or such a chain of Mountains. And can
there be any more palpable demonstrations than these are, that the surface of
the Earth is not in the same form that the surface of the Chaos was, or that any
fluid mass can stand or hold it self in ?
Then for the form of the Earth within or under its
surface, 'tis no less impossible for the Chaos to imitate that; for 'tis full of
cavities and empty places, of dens and broken holes, whereof some are open to
the Air, and others cover'd and enclosed wholly within the ground. These are
both of them unimitable in any liquid substance, whose parts will necessarily
flow together into one continued mass, and cannot be divided into apartments and
separate rooms, nor have vaults or caverns made within it; the walls would sink,
and the roof fall in : For liquid bodies have nothing to sustain their parts,
nor any thing to cement them; they are all loose and incoherent, and in a
perpetual flux: Even an heap of Sand, or fine Powder will suffer no
hollowness within them, though they be dry substances, and though the parts of
them being rough, will hang together a little, and stand a little upon an heap;
but the parts of liquors being glib, and continually in motion, they falloff
from one another, which way soever gravity inclines them, and can neither have
any hills or eminencies on their surface, nor any hollowness within their
substance.
You will acknowledge, it may be, that this is true, and that a
liquid mass or Chaos, while it was liquid, was incapable of either the outward
or inward form of the Earth ; but when it came to a concretion, to a state of
consistency and firmness, then it might go, you'll say, into any form. No, not
in its first concretion, nor in its first state of consistence; for that would
be of the same form that the surface of it was when it was liquid; as water,
when it congeals, the surface of the Ice is smooth and level, as the surface of
the water was before; so
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Metals, or any other substances melted, or Liquors that of themselves grow stiff and harden, always settle into the same form which they had when they were last liquid, and are always solid within, and smooth without, unless they be cast in a mould, that hinders the motion and flux of the parts. So that the first concrete state or consistent surface of the Chaos, must be of the same form or figure with the last liquid state it was in; for that is the mould, as it were, upon which it is cast; as the shell of an Egg is of the like form with the surface of the liquor it lies upon. And therefore by analogy with all other liquors and concretions, the form of the Chaos, whether liquid or concrete, could not be the same with that of the present Earth, or like it: And consequently, that form of the first or primigenial Earth which rise immediately out of the Chaos, was not the same, nor like to that of the present Earth. Which was the first and preparatory Proposition we laid down to be prov'd. And this being prov'd by the authority both of our Reason and our Religion, we will now proceed to the Second which is more particular.