THE DILEMMA OF DETERMINISM
WILLIAM JAMES
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William James was born in New York City on
January 11, 1842, to an affluent, cosmopolitan,
and deeply religious family. His father Henry
dabbled in theology, doted on his five children,
was well connected to literary and philosophical
luminaries of the day, and often took the
family for extended stays in Europe. His
journeys to the continent were primarily
theological and philosophical odysseys intended
to resolve his conflicting spiritual bouts.
His right leg had been amputated after burns
suffered in a boyhood accident failed to
heal. His spirit never quite recovered. A
devoted father, he sought to provide his
children with the sort of education that
might enable them some day to outdistance
their countrymen both in erudition and in
breadth of knowledge. To this end, he enrolled
them in fine schools, obtained for them gifted
tutors, and saw to it that they frequented
museums and attended lectures and the theater
with regularity. William and two of his siblings
would give fruit to their father's liberal
educational efforts. Brother Henry became
one of America's most famed novelists, and
sister Alice acquired a literary reputation
of her own after her diaries were posthumously
published.
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THE DILEMMA OF DETERMINISM.
By William James
A common opinion prevails that the juice
has ages ago been pressed out of the free-will
controversy, and that no new champion can
do more than warm up stale arguments which
everyone has heard. This is a radical mistake.
I know of no subject less worn out, or in
which inventive genius has a better chance
of breaking open new ground--not, perhaps,
of forcing a conclusion or of coercing assent,
but of deepening our sense of what the issue
between the two parties really is, of what
the ideas of fate and of free will imply.
At our very side almost, in the past few
years, we have seen falling in rapid succession
from the press works that present the alternative
in entirely novel lights. Not to speak of
the English disciples of Hegel, such as Green
and Bradley; not to speak of Hinton and Hodgson,
nor of Hazard here --we see in the writings
of Renouvier, Fouillée, and Delbouf how completely
changed and refreshed is the form of all
the old disputes.
I cannot pretend to vie in originality with
any of the masters I have named, and my ambition
limits itself to just one little point. If
I can make two of the necessarily implied
corollaries of determinism clearer to you
than they have been made before, I shall
have made it possible for you to decide for
or against that doctrine with a better understanding
of what you are about. And if you prefer
not to decide at all, but to remain doubters,
you will at least see more plainly what the
subject of your hesitation is. I thus disclaim
openly on the threshold all pretension to
prove to you that the freedom of the will
is true. The most I hope is to induce some
of you to follow my own example in assuming
it true, and acting as if it were true. If
it be true, it seems to me that this is involved
in the strict logic of the case. Its truth
ought not to be forced willy-nilly down our
indifferent throats. It ought to be freely
espoused by men who can equally well turn
their backs upon it. In other words, our
first act of freedom, if we are free, ought
in all inward propriety to be to affirm that
we are free. This should exclude, it seems
to me, from the freewill side of the question
all hope of a coercive demonstrations,--
a demonstration which I, for one, am perfectly
contented to go without.
With thus much understood at the outset,
we can advance. But not without one more
point understood as well. The arguments I
am about to urge all proceed on two suppositions:
first, when we make theories about the world
and discuss them with one another, we do
so in order to attain a conception of things
which shall give us subjective satisfaction;
and, second, if there be two conceptions,
and the one seems to us, on the whole, more
rational than the other, we are entitled
to suppose that the more rational one is
the truer of the two. I hope that you are
all willing to make these suppositions with
me; for I am afraid that if there be any
of you here who are not, they will find little
edification in the rest of what I have to
say. I cannot stop to argue the point; but
I myself believe that all the magnificent
achievements of mathematical and physical
science--our doctrines of evolution, of uniformity
of law, and the rest--proceed from our indomitable
desire to cast the world into a more rational
shape in our minds than the shape into which
it is thrown there by the crude order of
our experience. The world has shown itself,
to a great extent, plastic to this demand
of ours for rationality. How much farther
it will show itself plastic no one can say.
Our only means of finding out is to try;
and I, for one, feel as free to try conceptions
of moral as of mechanical or of logical rationality.
If a certain formula for expressing the nature
of the world violates my moral demand, I
shall feel as free to throw it overboard,
or at least to doubt it, as if it disappointed
my demand for uniformity of sequence, for
example; the one demand being, so far as
I can see, quite as subjective and emotional
as the other is. The principle of causality,
for example--what is it but a postulate,
an empty name covering simply a demand that
the sequence of events shall some day manifest
a deeper kind of belonging of one thing with
another than the mere arbitrary juxtaposition
which now phenomenally appears? It is as
much an altar to an unknown god as the one
that Saint Paul found at Athens. All our
scientific and philosophic ideals are altars
to unknown gods. Uniformity is as much so
as is free will. If this be admitted, we
can debate on even terms. But if anyone pretends
that while freedom and variety are, in the
first instance, subjective demands, necessity
and uniformity are something altogether different,
I do not see how we can debate at all.
To begin, then, I must suppose you acquainted
with all the usual arguments on the subject.
I cannot stop to take up the old proofs from
causation, from statistics, from the certainty
with which we can foretell one another's
conduct, from the fixity of character, and
all the rest. But there are two words which
usually encumber these classical arguments,
and which we must immediately dispose of
if we are to make any progress. One is the
eulogistic word freedom, and the other is
the opprobrious word chance. The word "chance"
I wish to keep, but I wish to get rid of
the word "freedom." Its eulogistic
associations have so far overshadowed all
the rest of its meaning that both parties
claim the sole right to use it, and determinists
today insist that they alone are freedom's
champions. Old-fashioned determinism was
what we may call hard determinism. It did
not shrink from such words as fatality, bondage
of the will, necessitation, and the like.
Nowadays, we have a soft determinism which
abhors harsh words, and, repudiating fatality,
necessity, and even predetermination, says
that its real name is freedom; for freedom
is only necessity understood, and bondage
to the highest is identical with true freedom.
Even a writer as little used to making capital
out of soft words as Mr. Hodgson hesitates
not to call himself a "free-will determinist."
Now, all this is a quagmire of evasion under
which the real issue of fact has been entirely
smothered. Freedom in all these senses presents
simply no problem at all. No matter what
the soft determinist means by it,--whether
he means the acting without external constraint;
whether he means the acting rightly, or whether
he means the acquiescing in the law of the
whole,--who cannot answer him that sometimes
we are free and sometimes we are not? But
there is a problem, an issue of fact and
not of words, an issue of the most momentous
importance, which is often decided without
discussion in one sentence,--nay, in one
clause of a sentence,--by those very writers
who spin out whole chapters in their efforts
to show what "true" freedom is;
and that is the question of determinism,
about which we are to talk tonight.
Fortunately, no ambiguities hang about this
word or about its opposite, indeterminism.
Both designate an outward way in which things
may happen, and their cold and mathematical
sound has no sentimental associations that
can bribe our partiality either way in advance.
Now, evidence of an external kind to decide
between determinism and indeterminism is,
as I intimated a while back, strictly impossible
to find. Let us look at the difference between
them and see for ourselves. What does determinism
profess?
It professes that those parts of the universe
already laid down absolutely appoint and
decree what the other parts shall be. The
future has no ambiguous possibilities bidden
in its womb; the part we call the present
is compatible with only one totality. Any
other future complement than the one fixed
from eternity is impossible. The whole is
in each and every part, and welds it with
the rest into an absolute unity, an iron
block, in which there can be no equivocation
or shadow of turning.
With earth's first clay they did the last
man knead,
And there of the last harvest sowed the seed.
And the first morning of creation wrote
What the last dawn of reckoning shall read.
Indeterminism, on the contrary, says that
the parts have a certain amount of loose
play on one another, so that the laying down
of one of them does not necessarily determine
what the others shall be. It admits that
possibilities may be in excess of actualities,
and that things not yet revealed to our knowledge
may really in themselves be ambiguous. Of
two alternative futures which we conceive,
both may now be really possible; and the
one becomes impossible only at the very moment
when the other excludes it by becoming real
itself. Indeterminism thus denies the world
to be one unbending unit of fact. It says
there is a certain ultimate pluralism in
it; and, so saying, it corroborates our ordinary
unsophisticated view of things. To that view,
actualities seem to float in a wider sea
of possibilities from out of which they are
chosen; and, somewhere, indeterminism says,
such possibilities exist, and form a part
of truth.
Determinism, on the contrary, says they exist
nowhere, and that necessity on the one hand
and impossibility on the other are the sole
categories of the real. Possibilities that
fail to get realized are, for determinism,
pure illusions: they never were possibilities
at all. There is nothing inchoate, it says,
about this universe of ours, all that was
or is or shall be actual in it having been
from eternity virtually there. The cloud
of alternatives our minds escort this mass
of actuality withal is a cloud of sheer deceptions,
to which "impossibilities" is the
only name that rightfully belongs.
The issue, it will be seen, is a perfectly
sharp one, which no eulogistic terminology
can smear over or wipe out. The truth must
lie with one side or the other, and its lying
with one side makes the other false.
The question relates solely to the existence
of possibilities, in the strict sense of
the term, as things that may, but need not,
be. Both sides admit that a volition, for
instance, has occurred. The indeterminists
say another volition might have occurred
in its place: the determinists swear that
nothing could possibly have occurred in its
place. Now, can science be called in to tell
us which of these two point-blank contradicters
of each other is right? Science professes
to draw no conclusions but such as are based
on matters of fact, things that have actually
happened; but how can any amount of assurance
that something actually happened give us
the least grain of information as to whether
another thing might or might not have happened
in its place? Only facts can be proved by
other facts. With things that are possibilities
and not facts, facts have no concern. If
we have no other evidence than the evidence
of existing facts, the possibility-question
must remain a mystery never to be cleared
up.
And the truth is that facts practically have
hardly anything to do with making us either
determinists or indeterminists. Sure enough,
we make a flourish of quoting facts this
way or that; and if we are determinists,
we talk about the infallibility with which
we can predict one another's conduct; while
if we are indeterminists, we lay great stress
on the fact that it is just because we cannot
foretell one another's conduct, either in
war or statecraft or in any of the great
and small intrigues and businesses of men,
that life is so intensely anxious and hazardous
a game. But who does not see the wretched
insufficiency of this so-called objective
testimony on both sides? What fills up the
gaps in our minds is something not objective,
not external. What divides us into possibility
men and anti-possibility men is different
faiths or postulates,--postulates of rationality.
To this man the world seems more rational
with possibilities in it,--to that man more
rational with possibilities excluded; and
talk as we will about having to yield to
evidence, what makes us monists or pluralists,
determinists or indeterminists, is at bottom
always some sentiment like this.
The stronghold of the deterministic sentiment
is the antipathy to the idea of chance. As
soon as we begin to talk indeterminism to
our friends, we find a number of them shaking
their heads. This notion of alternative possibilities,
they say, this admission that any one of
several things may come to pass, is, after
all, only a roundabout name for chance; and
chance is something the notion of which no
sane mind can for an instant tolerate in
the world. What is it, they ask, but barefaced
crazy unreason, the negation of intelligibility
and law? And if the slightest particle of
it exists anywhere, what is to prevent the
whole fabric from falling together, the stars
from going out, and chaos from recommencing
her topsy-turvy reign?
Remarks of this sort about chance will put
an end to discussion as quickly as anything
one can find. I have already told you that
"chance" was a word I wished to
keep and use. Let us then examine exactly
what it means, and see whether it ought to
be such a terrible bugbear to us. I fancy
that squeezing the thistle boldly will rob
it of its sting.
The sting of the word "chance"
seems to lie in the assumption that it means
something positive, and that if anything
happens by chance, it must needs be something
of an intrinsically irrational and preposterous
sort. Now, chance means nothing of the kind.
It is a purely negative and relative term,
giving us no information about that of which
it is predicated, except that it happens
to be disconnected with something else- not
controlled, secured, or necessitated by other
things in advance of its own actual presence.
As this point is the most subtile one of
the whole lecture, and at the same time the
point on which all the rest hinges, I beg
you to pay particular attention to it. What
I say is that it tells us nothing about what
a thing may be in itself to call it "chance."
It may be a bad thing, it may be a good thing.
It may be lucidity, transparency, fitness
incarnate, matching the whole system of other
things, when it has once befallen, in an
unimaginably perfect way. All you mean by
calling it "chance" is that this
is not guaranteed, that it may also fall
out otherwise. For the system of other things
has no positive hold on the chance-thing.
Its origin is in a certain fashion negative:
it escapes, and says, Hands off! coming,
when it comes, as a free gift, or not at
all.
This negativeness, however, and this opacity
of the chance-thing when thus considered
ab extra, or from the point of view of previous
things or distant things, do not preclude
its having any amount of positiveness and
luminosity from within, and at its own place
and moment. All that its chance-character
asserts about it is that there is something
in it really of its own, something that is
not the unconditional property of the whole.
If the whole wants this property, the whole
must wait till it can get it, if it be a
matter of chance. That the universe may actually
be a sort of joint-stock society of this
sort, in which the sharers have both limited
liabilities and limited powers, is of course
a simple and conceivable notion.
Nevertheless, many persons talk as if the
minutest dose of disconnectedness of one
part with another, the smallest modicum of
independence, the faintest tremor of ambiguity
about the future, for example, would ruin
everything, and turn this goodly universe
into a sort of insane sand-heap or nulliverse,
no universe at all. Since future human volitions
are as a matter of fact the only ambiguous
things we are tempted to believe in, let
us stop for a moment to make ourselves sure
whether their independent and accidental
character need be fraught with such direful
consequences to the universe as these.
What is meant by saying that my choice of
which way to walk home after the lecture
is ambiguous and matter of chance as far
as the present moment is concerned? It means
that both Divinity Avenue and Oxford Street
are called; but that only one, and that one
either one, shall be chosen. Now, I ask you
seriously to suppose that this ambiguity
of my choice is real; and then to make the
impossible hypothesis that the choice is
made twice over, and each time falls on a
different street. In other words, imagine
that I first walk through Divinity Avenue,
and then imagine that the powers governing
the universe annihilate ten minutes of time
with all that it contained, and set me back
at the door of this hall just as I was before
the choice was made. Imagine then that, everything
else being the same, I now make a different
choice and traverse Oxford Street. You, as
passive spectators, look on and see the two
alternative universes,--one of them with
me walking through Divinity Avenue in it,
the other with the same me walking through
Oxford Street. Now, if you are determinists
you believe one of these universes to have
been from eternity impossible: you believe
it to have been impossible because of the
intrinsic irrationality or accidentality
somewhere involved in it. But looking outwardly
at these universes, can you say which is
the impossible and accidental one, and which
the rational and necessary one? I doubt if
the most ironclad determinist among you could
have the slightest glimmer of light on this
point. In other words, either universe after
the fact and once there would, to our means
of observation and understanding, appear
just as rational as the other. There would
be absolutely no criterion by which we might
judge one necessary and the other matter
of chance. Suppose now we relieve the gods
of their hypothetical task and assume my
choice, once made, to be made forever. I
go through Divinity Avenue for good and all.
If, as good determinists, you now begin to
affirm, what all good determinists punctually
do affirm, that in the nature of things I
couldn't have gone through Oxford Street,--had
I done so it would have been chance, irrationality,
insanity, a horrid gap in nature,--I simply
call your attention to this, that your affirmation
is what the Germans call a Machtspruch, a
mere conception fulminated as a dogma and
based on no insight into details. Before
my choice, either street seemed as natural
to you as to me. Had I happened to take Oxford
Street, Divinity Avenue would have figured
in your philosophy as the gap in nature;
and you would have so proclaimed it with
the best deterministic conscience in the
world.
But what a hollow outcry, then, is this against
a chance which, if it were presented to us,
we could by no character whatever distinguish
from a rational necessity! I have taken the
most trivial of examples, but no possible
example could lead to any different result.
For what are the alternatives which, in point
of fact, offer themselves to human volition?
What are those futures that no seem matters
of chance? Are they not one and all like
the Divinity Avenue and Oxford Street of
our example? Are they not all of them kinds
of things already here and based in the existing
frame of nature? Is anyone ever tempted to
produce an absolute accident, something utterly
irrelevant to the rest of the world? Do not
an the motives that assail us, all the futures
that offer themselves to our choice, spring
equally from the soil of the past; and would
not either one of them, whether realized
through chance or through necessity, the
moment it was realized, seem to us to fit
that past, and in the completest and most
continuous manner to interdigitate with the
phenomena already there?
The more one thinks of the matter, the more
one wonders that so empty and gratuitous
a hubbub as this outcry against chance should
have found so great an echo in the hearts
of men. It is a word which tells us absolutely
nothing about what chances, or about the
modus operandi of the chancing; and the use
of it as a war cry shows only a temper of
intellectual absolutism, a demand that the
world shall be a solid block, subject to
one control,--which temper, which demand,
the world may not be found to gratify at
all. In every outwardly verifiable and practical
respect, a world in which the alternatives
that now actually distract your choice were
decided by pure chance would be by me absolutely
undistinguished from the world in which I
now live. I am, therefore, entirely willing
to call it, so far as your choices go, a
world of chance for me. To yourselves, it
is true, those very acts of choice, which
to me are so blind, opaque, and external,
are the opposites of this, for you are within
them and effect them. To you they appear
as decisions; and decisions, for him who
makes them, are altogether peculiar psychic
facts. Self-luminous and self-justifying
at the living moment at which they occur,
they appeal to no outside moment to put its
stamp upon them or make them continuous with
the rest of nature. Themselves it is rather
who seem to make nature continuous; and in
their strange and intense function of granting
consent to one possibility and withholding
it from another, to transform an equivocal
and double future into an unalterable and
simple past.
But with the psychology of the matter we
have no concern this evening. The quarrel
which determinism has with chance fortunately
has nothing to do with this or that psychological
detail. It is a quarrel altogether metaphysical.
Determinism denies the ambiguity of future
volitions, because it affirms that nothing
future can be ambiguous. But we have said
enough to meet the issue. Indeterminate future
volitions do mean chance. Let us not fear
to shout it from the house-tops if need be;
for we now know that the idea of chance is,
at bottom, exactly the same thing as the
idea of gift,--the one simply being a disparaging,
and the other a eulogistic, name for anything
on which we have no effective claim. And
whether the world be the better or the worse
for having either chances or gifts in it
will depend altogether on what these uncertain
and unclaimable things turn out to be.
And this at last brings us within sight of
our subject. We have seen what determinism
means: we have seen that indeterminism is
rightly described as meaning chance; and
we have seen that chance, the very name of
which we are urged to shrink from as from
a metaphysical pestilence, means only the
negative fact that no part of the world,
however big, can claim to control absolutely
the destinies of the whole. But although,
in discussing the word "chance,"
I may at moments have seemed to be arguing
for its real existence, I have not meant
to do so yet. We have not yet ascertained
whether this be a world of chance or no;
at most, we have agreed that it seems so.
And I now repeat what I said at the outset,
that, from any strict theoretical point of
view, the question is insoluble. To deepen
our theoretic sense of the difference between
a world with chances in it and a deterministic
world is the most I can hope to do; and this
I may now at last begin upon, after all our
tedious clearing of the way.
I wish first of all to show you just what
the notion that this is a deterministic world
implies. The implications I call your attention
to are all bound up with the fact that it
is a world in which we constantly have to
make what I shall, with your permission,
call judgments of regret. Hardly an hour
passes in which we do not wish that something
might be otherwise; and happy indeed are
those of us whose hearts have never echoed
the wish of Omar Khayam-
That we might clasp, ere closed, the book
of fate,
And make the writer on a fairer leaf
Inscribe our names, or quite obliterate.
Ah! Love, could you and I with fate conspire
To mend this sorry scheme of things entire,
Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
Remold it nearer to the heart's desire?
Now, it is undeniable that most of these
regrets are foolish, and quite on a par in
point of philosophic value with the criticisms
on the universe of that friend of our infancy,
the hero of the fable "The Atheist and
the Acorn,"--
Fool! had that bough a pumpkin bore,
Thy whimsies would have worked no more, etc.
Even from the point of view of our own ends,
we should probably make a botch of remodeling
the universe. How much more then from the
point of view of ends we cannot see! Wise
men therefore regret as little as they can.
But still some regrets are pretty obstinate
and hard to stifle,--regrets for acts of
wanton cruelty or treachery, for example,
whether performed by others or by ourselves.
Hardly any one can remain entirely optimistic
after reading the confession of the murderer
at Brockton the other day: how, to get rid
of the wife whose continued existence bored
him, he inveigled her into a desert spot,
shot her four times, and then, as she lay
on the ground and said to him, "You
didn't do it on purpose, did you, dear?"
replied, "No, I didn't do it on purpose,"
as he raised a rock and smashed her skull.
Such an occurrence, with the mild sentence
and self-satisfaction of the prisoner, is
a field for a crop of regrets, which one
need not take up in detail. We feel that,
although a perfect mechanical fit to the
rest of the universe, it is a bad moral fit,
and that something else would really have
been better in its place.
But for the deterministic philosophy the
murder, the sentence, and the prisoner's
optimism were all necessary from eternity;
and nothing else for a moment had a ghost
of a chance of being put in their place.
To admit such a chance, the determinists
tell us, would be to make a suicide of reason;
so we must steel our hearts against the thought.
And here our plot thickens, for we see the
first of those difficult implications of
determinism and monism, which it is my purpose
to make you feel. If this Brockton murder
was called for by the rest of the universe,
if it had to come at its preappointed hour,
and if nothing else would have been consistent
with the sense of the whole, what are we
to think of the universe? Are we stubbornly
to stick to our judgment of regret, and say,
though it couldn't be, yet it would have
been a better universe with something different
from this Brockton murder in it? That, of
course, seems the natural and spontaneous
thing for us to do; and yet it is nothing
short of deliberately espousing a kind of
pessimism. The judgment of regret calls the
murder bad. Calling a thing bad means, if
it means anything at all, that the thing
ought not to be, that something else ought
to be in its stead. Determinism, in denying
that anything else can be in its stead, virtually
defines the universe as a place in which
what ought to be is impossible,--in other
words, as an organism whose constitution
is afflicted with an incurable taint, an
irremediable flaw. The pessimism of a Schopenhauer
says no more than this,--that the murder
is a symptom; and that it is a vicious symptom
because it belongs to a vicious whole, which
can express its nature no otherwise than
by bringing forth just such a symptom as
that at this particular spot. Regret for
the murder must transform itself, if we are
determinists and wise, into a larger regret.
It is absurd to regret the murder alone.
Other things being what they are, it could
not be different. What we should regret is
that whole frame of things of which the murder
is one member. I see no escape whatever from
this pessimistic conclusion if, being determinists,
our judgment of regret is to be allowed to
stand at all.
The only deterministic escape from pessimism
is everywhere to abandon the judgment of
regret. That this can be done, history shows
to be not impossible. The devil, quoad existentiam,
may be good. That is, although he be a principle
of evil, yet the universe, with such a principle
in it, may practically be a better universe
than it could have been without. On every
hand, in a small way, we find that a certain
amount of evil is a condition by which a
higher form of good is brought. There is
nothing to prevent anybody from generalizing
this view, and trusting that if we could
but see things in the largest of all ways,
even such matters as this Brockton murder
would appear to be paid for by the uses that
follow in their train. An optimism quand
même, a systematic and infatuated optimism
like that ridiculed by Voltaire in his Candide,
is one of the possible ideal ways in which
a man may train himself to look on life.
Bereft of dogmatic hardness and lit up with
the expression of a tender and pathetic hope,
such an optimism has been the grace of some
of the most religious characters that ever
lived.
Throb thine with Nature's throbbing breast,
And all is clear from east to west.
Even cruelty and treachery may be among the
absolutely blessed fruits of time, and to
quarrel with any of their details may be
blasphemy. The only real blasphemy, in short,
may be that pessimistic temper of the soul
which lets it give way to such things as
regrets, remorse, and grief.
Thus, our deterministic pessimism may become
a deterministic optimism at the price of
extinguishing our judgments of regret.
But does not this immediately bring us into
a curious logical predicament? Our determinism
leads us to call our judgments of regret
wrong, because they are pessimistic in implying
that what is impossible yet ought to be.
But how then about the judgments of regret
themselves? If they are wrong, other judgments,
judgments of approval presumably, ought to
be in their place. But as they are necessitated,
nothing else can be in their place; and the
universe is just what it was before,--namely,
a place in which what ought to be appears
impossible. We have got one foot out of the
pessimistic bog, but the other one sinks
all the deeper. We have rescued our actions
from the bonds of evil, but our judgments
are now held fast. When murders and treacheries
cease to be sins, regrets are theoretic absurdities
and errors. The theoretic and the active
life thus play a kind of see-saw with each
other on the ground of evil. The rise of
either sends the other down. Murder and treachery
cannot be good without regret being bad:
regret cannot be good without treachery and
murder being bad. Both, however, are supposed
to have been foredoomed; so something must
be fatally unreasonable, absurd, and wrong
in the world. It must be a place of which
either sin or error forms a necessary part.
From this dilemma there seems at first sight
no escape. Are we then so soon to fall back
into the pessimism from which we thought
we had emerged? And is there no possible
way by which we may, with good intellectual
consciences, call the cruelties and treacheries,
the reluctances and the regrets, all good
together?
Certainly there is such a way, and you are
probably most of you ready to formulate it
yourselves. But, before doing so, remark
how inevitably the question of determinism
and indeterminism slides us into the question
of optimism and pessimism, or, as our fathers
called it, "the question of evil."
The theological form of all these disputes
is the simplest and the deepest, the form
from which there is the least escape-not
because, as some have sarcastically said,
remorse and regret are clung to us with a
morbid fondness by the theologians as spiritual
luxuries, but because they are existing facts
of the world, and as such must be taken into
account in the deterministic interpretation
of all that is fated to be. If they are fated
to be error, does not the bat's wing of irrationality
still cast its shadow over the world?
The refuge from the quandary lies, as I said,
not far off. The necessary acts we erroneously
regret may be good, and yet our error in
so regretting them may be also good, on one
simple condition; and that condition is this:
The world must not be regarded as a machine
whose final purpose is the making real of
any outward good, but rather as a contrivance
for deepening the theoretic consciousness
of what goodness and evil in their intrinsic
natures are. Not the doing either of good
or evil is what nature cares for, but the
knowing of them. Life is one long eating
of the fruit of the tree of knowledge. I
am in the habit, in thinking to myself, of
calling this point of view the gnostical
point of view. According to it, the world
is neither an optimism nor a pessimism, but
a gnosticism. But as this term may perhaps
lead to some misunderstandings, I will use
it as little as possible here, and speak
rather of subjectivism, and the subjectivistic
point of view.
Subjectivism has three great branches,--we
may call them scientificism, sentimentalism,
and sensualism, respectively. They all agree
essentially about the universe, in deeming
that what happens there is subsidiary to
what we think or feel about it. Crime justifies
its criminality by awakening our intelligence
of that criminality and eventually our remorses
and regrets; and the error included in remorses
and regrets, the error of supposing that
the past could have been different, justifies
itself by its use. Its use is to quicken
our sense of what the irretrievably lost
is. When we think of it as that which might
have been ("the saddest words of tongue
or pen"), the quality of its worth speaks
to us with a wilder sweetness; and, conversely,
the dissatisfaction wherewith we think of
what seems to have driven it from its natural
place gives us the severer pang. Admirable
artifice of nature! we might be tempted to
exclaim,--deceiving us in order the better
to enlighten us, and leaving nothing undone
to accentuate to our consciousness the yawning
distance of those opposite poles of good
and evil between which creation swings.
We have thus clearly revealed to our view
what may be called the dilemma of determinism,
so far as determinism pretends to think things
out at all. A merely mechanical determinism,
it is true, rather rejoices in not thinking
them out. It is very sure that the universe
must satisfy its postulate of a physical
continuity and coherence, but it smiles at
anyone who comes forward with a postulate
of moral coherence as well. I may suppose,
however, that the number of purely mechanical
or hard determinists among you this evening
is small. The determinism to whose seductions
you are most exposed is what I have called
soft determinism,--the determinism which
allows considerations of good and bad to
mingle with those of cause and effect in
deciding what sort of a universe this may
rationally be held to be. The dilemma of
this determinism is one whose left horn is
pessimism and whose right horn is subjectivism.
In other words, if determinism is to escape
pessimism, it must leave off looking at the
goods and ills of life in a simple objective
way, and regard them as materials, indifferent
in themselves, for the production of consciousness,
scientific and ethical, in us.
To escape pessimism is, as we all know, no
easy task. Your own studies have sufficiently
shown you the almost desperate difficulty
of making the notion that there is a single
principle of things, and that principle absolute
perfection, rhyme together with our daily
vision of the facts of life. If perfection
be the principle, how comes there any imperfection
here? If God be good, how came he to create--or,
if he did not create, how comes he to permit--the
devil? The evil facts must be explained as
seeming: the devil must be whitewashed, the
universe must be disinfected, if neither
God's goodness nor His unity and power are
to remain impugned. And of all the various
ways of operating the disinfection, and making
bad seem less bad, the way of subjectivism
appears by far the best.
For, after all, is there not something rather
absurd in our ordinary notion of external
things being good or bad in themselves? Can
murders and treacheries, considered as mere
outward happenings, or motions of matter,
be bad without anyone to feel their badness?
And could paradise properly be good in the
absence of a sentient principle by which
the goodness was perceived? Outward goods
and evils seem practically indistinguishable
except in so far as they result in getting
moral judgments made about them. But then
the moral judgments seem the main thing,
and the outward facts mere perishing instruments
for their production. This is subjectivism.
Everyone must at some time have wondered
at that strange paradox of our moral nature,
that, though the pursuit of outward good
is the breath of its nostrils, the attainment
of outward good would seem to be its suffocation
and death. Why does the painting of any paradise
or utopia, in heaven or on earth, awaken
such yawnings for nirvana and escape? The
white-robed harp-playing heaven of our sabbath-schools,
and the ladylike tea-table elysium represented
in Mr. Spencer's Data of Ethics, as the final
consummation of progress, are exactly on
a par in this respect,--lubberlands, pure
and simple, one and all. We look upon them
from this delicious mess of insanities and
realities, strivings and deadnesses, hopes
and fears, agonies and exultations, which
forms our present state, and tedium vitae
is the only sentiment they awaken in our
breasts. To our crepuscular natures, born
for the conflict, the Rembrandtesque moral
chiaroscuro, the shifting struggle of the
sunbeam in the gloom, such pictures of light
upon light are vacuous and expressionless,
and neither to be enjoyed nor understood.
If this be the whole fruit of the victory,
we say; if the generations of mankind suffered
and laid down their lives; if prophets confessed
and martyrs sang in the fire, and all the
sacred tears were shed for no other end than
that a. race of creatures of such unexampled
insipidity should succeed, and protract in
saecula saeculorum their contented and inoffensive
lives,--why, at such a rate, better lose
than win the battle, or at all events better
ring down the curtain before the last act
of the play, so that a business that began
so importantly may be saved from so singularly
flat a winding-up.
All this is what I should instantly say,
were I called on to plead for gnosticism;
and its real friends, of whom you will presently
perceive I am not one, would say without
difficulty a great deal more. Regarded as
a stable finality, every outward good becomes
a mere weariness to the flesh. It must be
menaced, be occasionally lost, for its goodness
to be fully felt as such. Nay, more than
occasionally lost. No one knows the worth
of innocence till he knows it is gone forever,
and that money cannot buy it back. Not the
saint, but the sinner that repenteth, is
he to whom the full length and breadth, and
height and depth, of life's meaning is revealed.
Not the absence of vice, but vice there,
and virtue holding her by the throat, seems
the ideal human state. And there seems no
reason to suppose it not a permanent human
state. There is a deep truth in what the
school of Schopenhauer insists on,--the illusoriness
of the notion of moral progress. The more
brutal forms of evil that go are replaced
by others more subtle and more poisonous.
Our moral horizon moves with us as we move,
and never do we draw nearer to the far-off
line where the black waves and the azure
meet. The final purpose of our creation seems
most plausibly to be the greatest possible
enrichment of our ethical consciousness,
through the intensest play of contrasts and
the widest diversity of characters. This
of course obliges some of us to be vessels
of wrath, while it calls others to be vessels
of honor. But the subjectivist point of view
reduces all these outward distinctions to
a common denominator. The wretch languishing
in the felon's cell may be drinking draughts
of the wine of truth that will never pass
the lips of the so-called favorite of fortune.
And the peculiar consciousness of each of
them is an indispensable note in the great
ethical concert which the centuries as they
roll are grinding out of the living heart
of man.
So much for subjectivism! If the dilemma
of determinism be to choose between it and
pessimism, I see little room for hesitation
from the strictly theoretical point of view.
Subjectivism seems the more rational scheme.
And the world may possibly, for aught I know,
be nothing else. When the healthy love of
life is on one, and all its forms and its
appetites seem so unutterably real; when
the most brutal and the most spiritual things
are lit by the same sun, and each is an integral
part of the total richness,--why, then it
seems a grudging and sickly way of meeting
so robust a universe to shrink from any of
its facts and wish them not to be. Rather
take the strictly dramatic point of view,
and treat the whole thing as a great unending
romance which the spirit of the universe,
striving to realize its own content, is eternally
thinking out and representing to itself.
No one, I hope, will accuse me, after I have
said all this, of underrating the reasons
in favor of subjectivism. And now that I
proceed to say why those reasons, strong
as they are, fail to convince my own mind,
I trust the presumption may be that my objections
are stronger still.
I frankly confess that they are of a practical
order. If we practically take up subjectivism
in a sincere and radical manner and follow
its consequences, we meet with some that
make us pause. Let a subjectivism begin in
never so severe and intellectual a way, it
is forced by the law of its nature to develop
another side of itself and end with the corruptest
curiosity. Once dismiss the notion that certain
duties are good in themselves, and that we
are here to do them, no matter how we feel
about them; once consecrate the opposite
notion that our performances and our violations
of duty are for a common purpose, the attainment
of subjective knowledge and feeling, and
that the deepening of these is the chief
end of our lives,--and at what point on the
downward slope are we to stop? In theology,
subjectivism develops as its "left wing"
antinomianism. In literature, its left wing
is romanticism. And in practical life it
is either a nerveless sentimentality or a
sensualism without bounds.
Everywhere it fosters the fatalistic mood
of mind. It makes those who are already too
inert more passive still; it renders wholly
reckless those whose energy is already in
excess. All through history we find how subjectivism,
as soon as it has a free career, exhausts
itself in every sort of spiritual, moral,
and practical license. Its optimism turns
to an ethical indifference, which infallibly
brings dissolution in its train. It is perfectly
safe to say now that if the Hegelian gnosticism,
which has begun to show itself here and in
Great Britain, were to become a popular philosophy,
as it once was in Germany, it would certainly
develop its left wing here as there, and
produce a reaction of disgust. Already I
have heard a graduate of this very school
express in the pulpit his willingness to
sin like David, if only he might repent like
David. You may tell me he was only sowing
his wild, or rather his tame, oats; and perhaps
he was. But the point is that in the subjectivistic
or gnostical philosophy oat-sowing, wild
or tame, becomes a systematic necessity and
the chief function of life. After the pure
and classic truths, the exciting and rancid
ones must be experienced; and if the stupid
virtues of the philistine herd do not then
come in and save society from the influence
of the children of light, a sort of inward
putrefaction becomes its inevitable doom.
Look at the last runnings of the romantic
school, as we see them in that strange contemporary
Parisian literature, with which we of the
less clever countries are so often driven
to rinse out our minds after they have become
clogged with the dullness and heaviness of
our native pursuits. The romantic school
began with the worship of subjective sensibility
and the revolt against legality of which
Rousseau was the first great prophet: and
through various fluxes and refluxes, right
wings and left wings, it stands today with
two men of genius, M. Renan and M. Zola,
as its principal exponents,--one speaking
with its masculine, and the other with what
might be called its feminine, voice. I prefer
not to think now of less noble members of
the school, and the Renan I have in mind
is of course the Renan of latest dates. As
I have used the term gnostic, both he and
Zola are gnostics of the most pronounced
sort. Both are athirst for the facts of life,
and both think the facts of human sensibility
to be of all facts the most worthy of attention.
Both agree, moreover, that sensibility seems
to be there for no higher purpose,--certainly
not, as the Philistines say, for the sake
of bringing mere outward rights to pass and
frustrating outward wrongs. One dwells on
the sensibilities for their energy, the other
for their sweetness; one speaks with a voice
of bronze, the other with that of an Aeolian
harp; one ruggedly ignores the distinction
of good and evil, the other plays the coquette
between the craven unmanliness of his Philosophic
Dialogues and the butterfly optimism of his
Souvenirs de Jeunesse. But under the pages
of both there sounds incessantly the hoarse
bass of vanitas vanitatum, omnia vanitas,
which the reader may hear, whenever he will,
between the lines. No writer of this French
romantic school has a word of rescue from
the hour of satiety with the things of life,--the
hour in which we say, "I take no pleasure
in them",--or from the hour of terror
at the world's vast meaningless grinding,
if perchance such hours should come. For
terror and satiety are facts of sensibility
like any others, and at their own hour they
reign in their own right. The heart of the
romantic utterances, whether poetical, critical,
or historical, is this inward remedilessness,
what Carlyle calls this far-off whimpering
of wail and woe. And from this romantic state
of mind there is absolutely no possible theoretic
escape. Whether, like Renan, we look upon
life in a more refined way, as a romance
of the spirit; or whether, like the friends
of M. Zola, we pique ourselves on our "scientific"
and "analytic" character, and prefer
to be cynical, and call the world a roman
expérimental on an infinite scale,--in either
case the world appears to us potentially
as what the same Carlyle once called it,
a vast, gloomy, solitary Golgotha and mill
of death.
The only escape is by the practical way.
And since I have mentioned the nowadays much-reviled
name of Carlyle, let me mention it once more,
and say it is the way of his teaching. No
matter for Carlyle's life, no matter for
a great deal of his writing. What was the
most important thing he said to us? He said:
"Hang your sensibilities! Stop your
snivelling complaints, and your equally snivelling
raptures! Leave off your general emotional
tomfoolery, and get to WORK like men!"
But this means a complete rupture with the
subjectivist philosophy of things. It says
conduct, and not sensibility, is the ultimate
fact for our recognition. With the vision
of certain works to be done, of certain outward
changes to be wrought or resisted, it says
our intellectual horizon terminates. No matter
how we succeed in doing these outward duties,
whether gladly and spontaneously, or heavily
and unwillingly, do them we somehow must;
for the leaving of them undone is perdition.
No matter how we feel; if we are only faithful
in the outward act and refuse to do wrong,
the world will in so far be safe, and we
quit of our debt toward it. Take, then, the
yoke upon our shoulders; bend our neck beneath
the heavy legality of its weight; regard
something else than our feeling as our limit,
our master, and our law; be willing to live
and die in its service,--and, at a stroke,
we have passed from the subjective into the
objective philosophy of things, much as one
awakens from some feverish dream, full of
bad lights and noises, to find one's self
bathed in the sacred coolness and quiet of
the air of the night.
But what is the essence of this philosophy
of objective conduct so old-fashioned and
finite, but so chaste and sane and strong,
when compared with its romantic rival? It
is the recognition of limits, foreign and
opaque to our understanding. It is the willingness,
after bringing about some external good,
to feel at peace; for our responsibility
ends with the performance of that duty, and
the burden of the rest we may lay on higher
powers.
Look to thyself, O Universe,
Thou are better and not worse,
we may say in that philosophy, the moment
we have done our stroke of conduct, however
small. For in the view of that philosophy
the universe belongs to a plurality of semi-independent
forces, each one of which may help or hinder,
and be helped or hindered by, the operations
of the rest.
But this brings us right back, after such
a long detour, to the question of indeterminism
and to the conclusion of all I came here
to say tonight. For the only consistent way
of representing a pluralism and a world whose
parts may affect one another through their
conduct being either good or bad is the indeterministic
way. What interest, zest, or excitement can
there be in achieving the right way, unless
we are enabled to feel that the wrong way
is also a possible and a natural way,--nay,
more, a menacing and an imminent way? And
what sense can there be in condemning ourselves
for taking the wrong way, unless we need
have done nothing of the sort, unless the
right way was open to us as well? I cannot
understand the willingness to act, no matter
how we feel, without the belief that acts
are really good and bad. I cannot understand
the belief that an act is bad, without regret
at its happening. I cannot understand regret
without the admission of real, genuine possibilities
in the world. Only then is it other than
a mockery to feel, after we have failed to
do our best, that an irreparable opportunity
is gone from the universe, the loss of which
it must forever after mourn.
If you insist that this is all superstition,
that possibility is in the eye of science
and reason impossibility, and that if I act
badly 'tis that the universe was foredoomed
to suffer this defect, you fall right back
into the dilemma, the labyrinth, of pessimism
and subjectivism, from out of whose toils
we have just found our way.
Now, we are of course free to fall back,
if we please. For my own part, though, whatever
difficulties may beset the philosophy of
objective right and wrong, and the indeterminism
it seems to imply, determinism, with its
alternative of pessimism or romanticism,
contains difficulties that are greater still.
But you will remember that I expressly repudiated
a while ago the pretension to offer any arguments
which could be coercive in a so-called scientific
fashion in this matter. And I consequently
find myself, at the end of this long talk,
obliged to state my conclusions in an altogether
personal way. This personal method of appeal
seems to be among the very conditions of
the problem; and the most anyone can do is
to confess as candidly as he can the grounds
for the faith that is in him, and leave his
example to work on others as it may.
Let me, then, without circumlocution say
just this. The world is enigmatical enough
in all conscience, whatever theory we may
take up toward it. The indeterminism I defend,
the free-will theory of popular sense based
on the judgment of regret, represents that
world as vulnerable, and liable to be injured
by certain of its parts if they act wrong.
And it represents their acting wrong as a
matter of possibility or accident, neither
inevitable nor yet to be infallibly warded
off. In all this, it is a theory devoid either
of transparency or of stability. It gives
us a pluralistic, restless universe, in which
no single point of view can ever take in
the whole scene; and to a mind possessed
of the love of unity at any cost, it will,
no doubt, remain forever unacceptable. A
friend with such a mind once told me that
the thought of my universe made him sick,
like the sight of the horrible motion of
a mass of maggots in their carrion bed.
But while I freely admit that the pluralism
and the restlessness are repugnant and irrational
in a certain way, I find that every alternative
to them is irrational in a deeper way. The
indeterminism with its maggots, if you please
to speak so about it, offends only the native
absolutism of my intellect,--an absolutism
which, after all, perhaps, deserves to be
snubbed and kept in check. But the determinism
with its necessary carrion, to continue the
figure of speech, and with no possible maggots
to eat the latter up, violates my sense of
moral reality through and through. When,
for example, I imagine such carrion as the
Brockton murder, I cannot conceive it as
an act by which the universe, as a whole,
logically and necessarily expresses its nature
without shrinking from complicity with such
a whole. And I deliberately refuse to keep
on terms of loyalty with the universe by
saying blankly that the murder, since it
does flow from the nature of the whole, is
not carrion. There are some instinctive reactions
which I, for one, will not tamper with. The
only remaining alternative, the attitude
of gnostical romanticism, wrenches my personal
instincts in quite as violent a way. It falsifies
the simple objectivity of their deliverance.
It makes the goose flesh the murder excites
in me a sufficient reason for the perpetration
of the crime. It transforms life from a tragic
reality into an insincere melodramatic exhibition,
as foul or as tawdry as anyone's diseased
curiosity pleases to carry it out. And with
its consecration of the roman naturalists
state of mind, and its enthronement of the
baser crew of Parisian littérateurs among
the eternally indispensable organs by which
the infinite spirit of things attains to
that subjective illumination which is the
task of its life, it leaves me in presence
of a sort of subjective carrion considerably
more noisome than the objective carrion I
called it in to take away.
No! better a thousand times, than such systematic
corruption of our moral sanity, the plainest
pessimism, so that it be straightforward;
but better far than that the world of chance.
Make as great an uproar about chance as you
please, I know that chance means pluralism
and nothing more. If some of the members
of the pluralism are bad, the philosophy
of pluralism, whatever broad views it may
deny me, permits me, at least, to turn to
the other members with a clean breast of
affection and an unsophisticated moral sense.
And if I still wish to think of the world
as a totality, it lets me feel that a world
with a chance in it of being altogether good,
even if the chance never come to pass, is
better than a world with no such chance at
all. That "chance" whose very notion
I am exhorted and conjured to banish from
my view of the future as the suicide of reason
concerning it, that "chance" is--what?
Just this,--the chance that in moral respects
the future may be other and better than the
past has been. This is the only chance we
have any motive for supposing to exist. Shame,
rather, on its repudiation and its denial!
For its presence is the vital air which lets
the world live, the salt which keeps it sweet.
And here I might legitimately stop, having
expressed all I care to see admitted by others
tonight. But I know that if I do stop here,
misapprehensions will remain in the minds
of some of you, and keep all I have said
from having its effect; so I judge it best
to add a few more words.
In the first place, in spite of all my explanations,
the word "chance" will still be
giving trouble. Though you may yourselves
be adverse to the deterministic doctrine,
you wish a pleasanter word than "chance"
to name the opposite doctrine by; and you
very likely consider my preference for such
a word a perverse sort of a partiality on
my part. It certainly is a bad word to make
converts with; and you wish I had not thrust
it so butt-foremost at you,--you wish to
use a milder term.
Well, I admit there may be just a dash of
perversity in its choice. The spectacle of
the mere word-grabbing game played by the
soft determinists has perhaps driven me too
violently the other way; and, rather than
be found wrangling with them for the good
words, I am willing to take the first bad
one which comes along, provided it be unequivocal.
The question is of things, not of eulogistic
names for them; and the best word is the
one that enables men to know the quickest
whether they disagree or not about the things.
But the word "chance," with its
singular negativity, is just the word for
this purpose. Whoever uses it instead of
"freedom," squarely and resolutely
gives up all pretense to control the things
he says are free. For him, he confesses that
they are no better than mere chance would
be. It is a word of impotence, and is therefore
the only sincere word we can use, if, in
granting freedom to certain things, we grant
it honestly, and really risk the game. "Who
chooses me must give and forfeit all he hath."
Any other word permits of quibbling, and
lets us, after the fashion of the soft determinists,
make a pretense of restoring the caged bird
to liberty with one hand, while with the
other we anxiously tie a string to it leg
to make sure it does not get beyond our sight.
But now you will bring up your final doubt.
Does not the admission of such an unguaranteed
chance or freedom preclude utterly the notion
of a Providence governing the world? Does
it not leave the fate of the universe at
the mercy of the chance-possibilities, and
so far insecure? Does it not, in short, deny
the craving of our nature for an ultimate
peace behind all tempests, for a blue zenith
above all clouds?
To this my answer must be very brief. The
belief in free will is not in the least incompatible
with the belief in Providence, provided you
do not restrict the Providence to fulminating
nothing but fatal degrees. If you allow him
to provide possibilities as well as actualities
to the universe, and to carry on his own
thinking in those two categories just as
we do ours, chances may be there, uncontrolled
even by him, and the course of the universe
be really ambiguous; and yet the end of all
things may be just what he intended it to
be from all eternity.
An analogy will make the meaning of this
clear. Suppose two men before a chessboard,--the
one a novice, the other an expert player
of the game. The expert intends to beat.
But he cannot foresee exactly what any one
actual move of his adversary may be. He knows,
however, all the possible moves of the latter;
and he knows in advance how to meet each
of them by a move of his own which leads
in the direction of victory. And the victory
infallibly arrives, after no matter how devious
a course, in the one predestined form of
check-mate to the novice's king.
Let now the novice stand for us finite free
agents, and the expert for the infinite mind
in which the universe lies. Suppose the latter
to be thinking out his universe before he
actually creates it. Suppose him to say,
I will lead things to a certain end, but
I will not now decide on all the steps thereto.
At various points, ambiguous possibilities
shall be left open, either of which, at a
given instant, may become actual. But whichever
branch of these bifurcations becomes real,
I know what I shall do at the next bifurcation
to keep things from drifting away from the
final result I intend."
The creator's plan of the universe would
thus be left blank as to many of its actual
details, but all possibilities would be marked
down. The realization of some of these would
be left absolutely to chance; that is, would
only be determined when the moments of realization
came. Other possibilities would be contingently
determined; that is, their decision would
have to wait till it was seen how the matters
of absolute chance fell out. But the rest
of the plan, including its final upshot,
would be rigorously determined once for all.
So the creator himself would not need to
know all the details of actuality until they
came; and at any time his own view of the
world would be a view partly of facts and
partly of possibilities, exactly as ours
is now. Of one thing, however, he might be
certain; and that is that his world was safe,
and that no matter how much of it might zigzag
he could surely bring it home at last.
Now, it is entirely immaterial, in this scheme,
whether the creator leave the absolute chance-possibilities
to be decided by himself, each when its proper
moment arrives, or whether, on the contrary,
he alienate this power from himself, and
leave the decision out and out to finite
creatures such as we men are. The great point
is that the possibilities are really here.
Whether it be we who solve them, or he working
through us, at those soul-trying moments
when fate's scales seem to quiver, and good
snatches the victory from evil or shrinks
nerveless from the fight, is of small account,
so long as we admit that the issue is decided
nowhere else than here and now. That is what
gives the palpitating reality to our moral
life and makes it tingle, as Mr. Mallock
says, with so strange and elaborate an excitement.
This reality, this excitement, are what the
determinisms, hard and soft alike, suppress
by their denial that anything is decided
here and now, and their dogma that all things
were foredoomed and settled long ago. If
it be so, may you and I then have been foredoomed
to the error of continuing to believe in
liberty. It is fortunate for the winding
up of controversy that in every discussion
with determinism this argumentum ad hominem
can be its adversary's last word.
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