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Show bbbbbbbbbbbb! A Serious Condition: Knowledge Has H Outstripped the Moral Sense H By W. M. FLINDERS PETUIE, in Yale Review. t M - 1 - H bbbbbbbbH A very serious condition of the last century has been that knowledge H has outstripped the moral sense. The greatly increased powers over na- H ture linve not been used with corresponding growths' df control nnd'se?ise of responsibility. The gnins of mechanics nnd of chemistry, of movement in air and in water, have been most actively developed for destruction. In genornl, the cinema has been exploited rather to degrade our ideas than j to confer any real benefit. The right use of our opportunities has been H dwarfed by their wrong use. H The questions which arise from the fact that knowledge is growing faster than the moral sense, and of how to uso knowledge, tiro almost in soluble Yet they threaten all civilization. H 1 The idea of a union of scicutifio woikors dictating how their discov- erios are to be used, or agreeing lo conceal dangerous knowlcdgo, is quite H flit ilo. Whntcvor can bo tired for destruction will be so used by the least -criijuilous power and that will set the standard to the other powers by dim necessity. H bbbbbbbbI |