The 1907 edition of
The Nuttall Encyclopædia contains entries on the following Carlylean terms: ;
Cash Nexus : The reduction (under
capitalism) of all human relationships, but especially relations of production, to monetary exchange. ;
Dismal Science : Carlyle's name for the
political economy that with self-complacency leaves everything to settle itself by the law of
supply and demand, as if that were all the law and the prophets. The name is applied to every science that affects to dispense with the spiritual as a ruling factor in human affairs. ;
Eternities, The Conflux of : Carlyle's expressive phrase for Time, as in every moment of it a centre in which all the forces to and from Eternity meet and unite, so that by no past and no future can we be brought nearer to Eternity than where we at any moment of Time are; the Present Time, the youngest born of Eternity, being the child and heir of all the Past times with their
good and evil, and the parent of all the Future, the import of which (see
Matt.
xvi. 27) it is accordingly the first and most sacred duty of every successive age, and especially the leaders of it, to know and lay to heart as the only link by which Eternity lays hold of it and it of Eternity. ;
Everlasting No, The : Carlyle's name for the spirit of unbelief in God, especially as it manifested itself in his own, or rather Teufelsdröckh's, warfare against it; the spirit, which, as embodied in the
Mephistopheles of Goethe, is for ever denying—
der stets verneint—the reality of the divine in the thoughts, the character, and the life of humanity, and has a malicious pleasure in scoffing at everything high and noble as hollow and void. ;
Everlasting Yea, The : Carlyle's name for the spirit of faith in God in an express attitude of clear, resolute, steady, and uncompromising antagonism to the Everlasting No, on the principle that there is no such thing as faith in God except in such antagonism, no faith except in such antagonism against the spirit opposed to God. ;
Gigman : Carlyle's name for a man who prides himself on, and pays all respect to, respectability; derived from a definition once given in a court of justice by a witness who, having described a person as respectable, was asked by the judge in the case what he meant by the word; "one that keeps a
gig", was the answer. ;
Immensities, Centre of : an expression of Carlyle's to signify that wherever any one is, he is in touch with the whole universe of being, and is, if he knew it, as near the heart of it there as anywhere else he can be. ;
Logic Spectacles : Carlyle's name for eyes that can only discern the external relations of things, but not the inner nature of them. ;
Natural Supernaturalism : Carlyle's name in "Sartor" for the supernatural found latent in the natural, and manifesting itself in it, or of the miraculous in the common and everyday course of things; name of a chapter which, says
Dr. Stirling, "contains the very first word of a higher philosophy as yet spoken in Great Britain, the very first English word towards the restoration and rehabilitation of the dethroned Upper Powers"; recognition at bottom, as the
Hegelian philosophy teaches, and the life of
Christ certifies, of the finiting of the infinite in the transitory forms of space and time. ;
Silence, Worship of : Carlyle's name for the sacred respect for restraint in speech till "thought has silently matured itself, ... to hold one's tongue till
some meaning lie behind to set it wagging", a doctrine which many misunderstand, almost wilfully, it would seem; silence being to him the very womb out of which all great things are born. == Influence ==